never wanted to harm my sparring partners. And I never wanted to be a Ferrier. “Will you be all right?”
She nods and squeezes my hand. “Go. Ailesse needs you.”
I suck in a steadying breath and race for the staff. I feel like I’m diving into the lagoon all over again, but this time it’s a horde of Chained that can’t be killed, not a tiger shark, that threatens my best friend.
I kick through the shallow water, grab the staff, and dash back to the beach, grateful for my graced speed. Almost every Chained who’s on the shore is engaged by a Ferrier. Another flare of chazoure draws my focus to a Chained man. He’s climbing the cliff wall to get to Ailesse. He’s too high for me to reach, so I draw an arrow from my quiver. I shoot and miss. It takes a second try for me to hit him. His body lurches, but he doesn’t fall; he keeps climbing.
I cast off my bow and quiver and bolt for him, praying my nighthawk grace will help me clear enough air. I plunge the end of my staff in the sand and vault as high as I can. I fly even higher than the Chained man and kick him as I arc down.
He’s knocked from the wall. Before I drop any farther, I push off the wall and flip backward. My landing isn’t elegant, but the sand absorbs most of the shock as I crash and tumble on the ground. I’m up again in a moment. The Chained is just pulling himself to his feet. His chazoure face turns a shade darker as he growls with rage.
I pluck up my staff, amazed at what I just did. Ailesse will laugh with pride when I tell her.
Ailesse.
My pulse quickens. She can’t defeat all these Chained on her own. I glance up. Some souls have already climbed over the cliff, and two more are nearing the top. I can’t vault that high.
The Chained I attacked lunges for me. I swing my staff and bring it down on his head. It strikes with a sickening crack, but there’s no gash, no blood. He cries out in pain and stumbles to his knees. I cast aside my quiver and bow—the staff is a better weapon—and rush for the opening of the cave and toward the base of the hidden stairs. I’ll get up to Ailesse this way.
The cave isn’t empty. Three of the dead are also racing for the stairs at the back. Dolssa is in here, fighting to drive them away. Her staff whips one direction then the next as she attacks from all angles. I jump in to assist her.
I strike one of the Chained from behind. He’s thrown into the air. Dolssa skewers him. I swallow against the brutality and turn to confront the next soul. A man. Unchained. The one with that hat who asked me why the land bridge led to nothing. He tries to scurry past me to the stairs, but I block him. “You shouldn’t go up there.”
His lip trembles. “But the song . . . it’s calling me home. My wife is already there.”
My chest sinks. “That isn’t the way home. You need to stay near the land bridge until you hear the song again.” Odiva might get the bone flute back tonight, but it can’t make the tides recede. That won’t happen again for another month. What will the Ferriers do about the dead until then?
“I’ve waited long enough!” he says, and shoves me back with surprising strength.
Just as I fall to the ground, Dolssa swings her staff. The man’s head jerks to the side, and he crumples. I blink at her in shock. “He was Unchained!”
Her face is severe and unrelenting. “All the dead are dangerous now.”
Another Unchained soul barrels into the cave. Dolssa runs to stave her off. More Chained are darting from the beach toward us—toward the hidden staircase in the cave. They’re after Ailesse.
I push to my feet and begin my chase up the flight.
I’ll battle every soul on the 167 steps, if I have to.
I’ll get to Ailesse first.
27
Ailesse
MY MOTHER IS CALF-DEEP IN the water above the sinking land bridge. Our eyes briefly meet as she charges forward, fighting three souls at once. She’s still struggling to get to me—to the flute—but she’s only made it halfway down the flooding bridge.
On my left, a flare of chazoure rises over the cliff—a man with a shaved head and a thick neck