against the frame stones and ran her hand over the metal as Shade sniffed the portal’s base.
“Here’s the separation,” she whispered.
Shade backed up and sat at the passage’s other side as Wynn traced the seam with her index finger.
Chane came up behind her, studying the flat panels. He saw no handles or latches, not even a lock or empty brackets for a bar. Wynn fingered her way around the left door’s outer edge, inch by inch along the groove where it disappeared into stone.
“What are you looking for?” he asked.
“Trip mechanisms, catches . . . anything,” she answered. “I can’t reach the top, so you start there. Feel every spot carefully for anything abnormal.”
Frowning, Chane stepped in beside her. He probed slowly along the top but found only smooth iron all the way to where the door slipped deep into a groove in the stone. He worked toward the other side, but Wynn finished more quickly.
Chane wished there were something to be found, but he had doubted it from the start. When he finished, he saw no resignation in Wynn’s expression. She continued to study the doors, undaunted.
“All right, we start on the walls,” she said. “Last night, Shade heard a grinding sound from beyond the doors. Someone opened them from inside, and Cinder-Shard wasn’t in the passage. So there has to be a way through, some hidden access he used.”
Chane shook his head. “Why not take the others the same way? Why bother opening the doors at all?”
“Maybe the other access was too small for the litter, and these main doors aren’t used unless necessary.”
“Then would not the access be blocked as well?” he countered.
Wynn ignored him and sidestepped left along the passage, inspecting the stone wall beyond the arch.
Chane found her stubborn certainty unsettling. He finally turned to inspect the wall on the arch’s other side. Together, they went over every speck of stone, going farther down the passage than Chane thought reasonable. Only then did Wynn’s certainty begin fracturing.
“It has to be here!” she insisted, her words rolling along the stone passage. “How else could Cinder-Shard get inside?”
At Wynn’s too-loud voice, Shade lifted her head where she lay. Wynn did not even notice as she stared at the seam between the doors.
“Get out your sword.”
Chane shook his head in disbelief. “You cannot be ser—”
“I’m not walking away. Not when we’re this close. Seven hells, Chane! You’re undead. Put your strength to use.”
Wynn’s recent penchant for cursing was another sign that much had changed in her.
“This doorway was built by dwarves,” he argued. “Rationally, it can withstand them. So why do you think I would fare any better?”
“Try to pry it open,” she urged, “at least enough to peek inside. I know I heard grinding in Shade’s memory after the doors were closed. We need to know what caused it.”
Chane looked at the narrow seam. He wanted to agree with her, especially for as little as they had uncovered. But as he drew his long sword and set its point to the seam, he had no confidence in the effort.
“This will leave marks on the doors,” he said.
“I don’t care.”
Chane gripped the hilt with one hand, keeping the blade in place, and stepped back as far as his reach allowed. He lunged sharply forward with all his mass, slamming his free hand’s palm against the cross guard.
The sword’s tip pierced the seam with a metallic shriek that echoed along the passage.
He peered closer. The point had sunk two fingers’ width, more than expected, but the seam had widened only to the blade’s thickness. It was not enough to peek through.
“Step back,” he ordered. “Have your crystal ready. If the doors part, I do not know how long I can hold them.”
Wynn backed up, joining Shade, and Chane shifted to the right of his embedded sword. He pulled up his cloak’s hem and wrapped the fabric around the blade. With one hand gripping near the hilt, and the other nearer the tip, he began to push.
The blade flexed slightly, but the doors did not budge.
Chane released his pressure and turned sideways, facing the doors. He reached out his right foot, braced it against the arch’s inner stones, and pushed again. This time, he let hunger come.
It flooded his dead flesh, and all his senses came alive as they opened fully. The crystal’s light upon the iron was brighter to his eyes, almost uncomfortable. A faint sound rose from somewhere inside the walls.
Like a pinch of sand spilled upon stone.
He