The Trell seemed to be staring at something at his feet. 'What have you found?' Fiddler asked.
'Come closer — almost impossible to see otherwise, though that makes little sense …'
The others approached.
A gaping hole yawned, a ragged gap where Iskaral Pust had simply fallen through and vanished. Fiddler knelt, edging closer to the hole. 'Hood's breath!' he groaned. The tiles were no more than an inch thick. Beneath them was not solid ground. Beneath them there was … nothing.
'Is that the way out, do you think?' Mappo asked behind him.
The sapper edged back, the slick tiles suddenly feeling like the thinnest ice. 'Damned if I know, but I don't plan on jumping in and finding out.'
'I share your caution,' the Trell rumbled. He turned back to where Icarium lay and gathered his companion once again in his arms.
'That hole might spread,' Crokus said. 'I suggest we get moving. Any direction, just away from here.'
Apsalar hesitated. 'And Iskaral Pust? Perhaps he's lying unconscious on a ledge or something?'
'Not a chance,' Fiddler replied. 'From what I saw, the poor man's still falling. One look and every bone in me screamed
'A sad demise,' she said. 'I had grown almost fond of him.'
Fiddler nodded. 'Our very own pet scorpion, aye.'
Crokus took the lead as they moved away from the hole. Had they waited a few minutes longer, they would have seen a dull yellow mist rise from the gaping darkness, thickening until it was opaque. The mist remained for a time, then it began to dissipate, and when it finally vanished, so too had the hole — as if it had never been. The mosaic was complete once more.
Apsalar leapt forward, her fingertips touching shoulder, then braids, then nothing. Her momentum took her forward, into the place where Mappo and Icarium had been a moment earlier. She fell towards a yawning darkness.
Crying out, Crokus grasped her ankles. He was pulled momentarily along the tiles towards the gaping hole before a fisherman's strong hands closed on him and anchored him down.
Together, the two men dragged Apsalar from the pit's edge. A dozen paces beyond it stood Fiddler — the Daru's cry had been the first intimation of trouble.
'They're gone!' Crokus shouted. 'They fell through — there was no warning, Fid! Nothing at all!'
The sapper softly cursed, lowering himself into an uneasy crouch.