
The chiming of the carillon in the Bell Tower was in my ears. Seeing him so, I knew I dreamed, and from that knew, even while I slept, that the visions I had had of him before had not been dreams. Dorcas was torn from my arms, and I drew Terminus Est to cut down those between us and found I was about to strike Master Malrubius, who stood calmly, my dog Triskele at his side, in the midst of the tumult. On these riders, the tide of travelers broke as a wave on a rock, some turning left, some right. The men wore helmets and capes of indanthrene blue and carried lances whose heads ran with blue fire their faces were more akin than the faces of brothers. A burning cariole tainted the clean air with smoke.įive riders sat destriers whose hooked tushes were encrusted with lazulite. Between them lay the road, grown up in fresh grass, and on it were the bodies of men and women. Such a mighty structure was the Wall that it divided the world as the mere line between their covers does two books before us now stood such a wood as might have been growing since the founding of Urth, trees as high as cliffs, wrapped in pure green. Blood gushed from Dorcas's cheek, and though so many screamed and shouted, I could hear it pattering to the ground. When I found light at last, it was the green road stretching from the shadow of the Piteous Gate. I tried to reach the bars to tell her to be quiet, and at once became lost in the darkness of the cell. Outside, Eusebia, Morwenna's accuser, howled like a witch. Instead I saw framed within them (as though I were the Increate, peeping through his rent in Eternity to behold the World of Time) the farm, Stachys her husband tossing in agony upon his bed, little Chad at the pond, bathing his fevered face. Morwenna's face floated in the single beam of light, lovely and framed in hair dark as my cloak blood from her neck pattered to the stones.
