in the forest floor. The statues rocked slowly backwards and forwards on their plinths, and Elizabeth held her breath, but gradually the earth began to settle, and after a sigh and a groan, it was still. With a last rattle the statues too came to rest.
Nicolei had not been so lucky. He was still on the steps, but he had been toppled from his feet. Darcy started to move towards him in concern but Nicolei called out to him in a quavery voice, reassuring them that he was not hurt.
‘Go on!’ he called to Darcy, as Georgio helped him to his feet. ‘You must finish what you have started. It is the only way.’
Darcy nodded then turned his attention back to the tablet.
‘This word is break…’ he said.
There was another rumble from below and the earth shifted again, the small cracks widening and new cracks appearing. Something hit Elizabeth on the shoulder, and looking up, she saw that the movement of the earth had caused cracks to appear in the cavern roof too, and that small pieces of rock were falling.
‘Hurry,’ she said to Darcy.
‘All will be bright,’ said Darcy, reading, ‘if… if… choices…’
The ground rolled and Elizabeth was thrown forward. Darcy caught her and righted her, but there was no one to catch the statues which rocked with greater force, back and forth like giant pendulums, whilst large stones hailed down from above. More alarmingly, a tongue of flame darted up from one of the cracks and was followed by smaller flames from surrounding fissures.
Darcy and Elizabeth glanced at each other and then Darcy read, ‘…have no fright… no fear… starting to crumble… falling, breaking, destroying…’
The rumbling, which had been low and throaty, now broke forth into a roar as giant spurs of rock thrust their way up through the fissures, toppling the statues and sending them crashing to the ground, where they broke into petrified pieces, sending a cloud of dust whirling upwards into the flame-filled air.
There was a sickening cracking sound, and looking round as one, Elizabeth and Darcy saw that a giant chasm had opened halfway up the flight of stairs, cutting them off from the door. Nicolei, still supported by Georgio, was a small, frail figure on the other side.
‘We cannot go back now, even if we wanted to,’ said Elizabeth.
Darcy held the torch higher and moved a few steps to the side, the better to see the inscription.
‘Hold on…’ he read, as the roaring grew louder, drowning out the forest’s hum, ‘…hold on to the truth… no, hold on to that which is true.’
There was a great splintering sound and a deep fissure opened between Darcy and Elizabeth, widening with frightening speed until they were separated by a sea of molten lava, and another appeared, and then another, separating him from the tablet.
‘The inscription!’ cried Elizabeth.
‘It’s finished,’ shouted Darcy, above the noise of the flame. ‘That is all it said.’
‘Then do as it says,’ called Nicolei. ‘Hold on to that which is true. It is the tablet, Old One. The tablet is true.’
Darcy looked at the tablet. But as he was about to spring across the vast lava-filled chasm, he experienced a moment of calm, and whilst the tempest raged all around, a voice spoke in the quiet of his soul.
‘No,’ he said, ‘It’s Elizabeth. Elizabeth is true.’
He leapt to the opposite chasm and held on to her as the ground heaved and the mighty trees collapsed and roof began to fall. Huge pieces of stone rained down on them, and he cradled Elizabeth protectively to his chest, sheltering her head with his hands.
The ground was seething all around, a boiling mass of garish red, and a fierce wind sprang up with a wild roar, buffeting them and battering them, threatening to whip them from their island and cast them into the lava. Elizabeth clung to Darcy and he to her.
And then the waters appeared. Up from the newly made crevices they spurted, drawn from the deepest reaches of the earth, as an icy river started to rise.
Elizabeth watched in horrified fascination, torn between despair and hope as fire and water waged battle before her. The fire boiled the water into steam, but still the water rose, consuming the fires in a great hissing rasp.
‘It’s going to be all right,’ she said with wild hope as she saw the flames flicker and die.
But her hope was short-lived. As the fires died all around them, the waters kept on rising, creeping over the island of