XIV. Uprising
Thomas stared from the
bowl of stew in his lap to the knife on his knee to the stern and unsmiling
amphibian face of three-eyed Brak and back to the stew. The outside of the bowl
had dripped a ring onto the legs of his trousers, wet from condensation in the
little cave and from the slippery-but-sure spindly fingers of Thomas’s Vathca
host. It smelled delicious, especially to Thomas’s growling stomach. He looked
back up at Brak.
“Eat first, human boy,”
said Brak, gesturing, a few stray droplets flying from his fingertips and
hissing in the fire. The three-eyed frog-creature stoked it with a small metal
implement, added a few long strips of bark as kindling, and served himself a
steaming bowl. He then hunched next to Thomas, back against the wall, still crouching
instead of sitting.
“You seem perplexed,”
Brak continued, slurping from his bowl. “Take a few bites, at least, so that
you do not faint midway through your story. And when you have finished the
tale, then I will relate to you the story of my own woes at the crooked hands
of the violet witch.”
Thomas took a sip of
the stew. It was hot and herbed and heavenly. He gulped down large mouthfuls,
then used the knife to pierce a chunk of the strange brownish-purple vegetable.
He took a tentative bite. It was chewy, soft, with a taste like wood and
onions. He finished it off and drank from the bowl again.
“Bekroot,” said Brak,
ladling more stew into both bowls. “Hearty if unappetizing. Strong for the
bones and sleek for the muscles.”
“I like the taste,” Thomas
said, trying another chunk.
Brak nodded, as though
those words were the answer to some great question. He slurped down some more
of the stew.
With his immediate and
gnawing hunger now at bay for at least a few minutes, Thomas set his bowl and
the knife aside. He wiped his fingers off on his trousers. “I came upon the
witch by accident,” he began, “when I was picking blackberries on Wednesday.
I’d gone into the—”
“What is Wednesday?”
interrupted Brak, blinking his center and left eyes.
“Wednesday? It’s . . .”
Thomas paused for a moment, unsure how to explain. “It’s one of the seven days
in a week. Today’s Saturday, I think—or it will be when the sun’s up.”
“Hmm,” said Brak. “I
did not know the names of days. Humans have cleverer minds than I thought, it
seems. When was the day named Wednesday?”
“Three days ago,”
replied Thomas. The realization that he’d nearly reached the halfway point to
his deadline with the witch turned the hot stew cold in his stomach. He gulped
down another mouthful to wash away the sick feeling and pressed on with his
story. “So three days ago,” he said, wiping his mouth, “I was picking
blackberries in the hills, and I saw one that was bigger than any I’d ever seen
. . .”
Thomas carried on with
the story of his encounter with the witch and Eleanor’s abduction. Brak
interrupted infrequently with small queries about the details of the tale or,
more commonly, about the phrases Thomas used to describe the events. For the
most part, however, the Vathca crouched against the wall and slurped bowl after
bowl of the simmering stew and let Thomas recount his woes.
“ . . . and
so we decided not to go into the Grimgrove after dark, and we fell asleep on
the shoreline,” Thomas concluded at last. “When I woke up, I was being paddled
down the river by—well, by one of your kin, I assume. And that brings us here,
I guess.”
Brak had a grave look
on his face. “I see your travail,” he said slowly, setting his empty bowl
aside. “It is nearly as terrible as my own. You would have been most distraught,
I think, if I had eaten you and you hadn’t been able to save your sister from
the witch.”
Thomas nodded. He was
feeling sleepy now that the stew had settled and his erstwhile captor had
suggested, if not actually said, that he no longer meant Thomas any harm.
Thomas tried to think back to his last full night of sleep—the last time he’d
slumbered in a proper bed with blankets and pillows and moonlight through a
window to dapple his cheek. This cave was certainly no proper place for sleep,
but the fire looked cheerier now than before, and the boy was certain he could
find something soft in Brak’s piles and boxes upon which to lay his head to
rest.
Thomas was about to
suggest as much when the three-eyed Vathca spoke again. “I came upon the violet
witch some time ago,” he said slowly. “Many, many Wednesdays and Saturdays ago,
by the reckoning of human boys, I think. So long ago that the river is new and
the trees are old. I was a young thing then and spry; sleek and lithe and
comely; a child of my people and welcomed. Beloved, no, not that: but welcomed.
I was not an outcast.
“I was splashing in a
pond with my playmates, my brood-friends, when the witch came to me. She
presented herself fair and beautiful by the eyes of the Vathca—skin glistening
like the dusk on the lake, long-limbed and agile, her hair white and straight
and sharp.
“She differed from my
kind only in her eyes. They were two and they were violet, like the night sky
before nightfall.” Brak gave Thomas a look and a blink of his right and center
eyes. “It was a guise meant to trick, of course. When she appeared to you, was
she beautiful to behold?”
Thomas gave it some
thought. “I suppose,” he said. “White skin like a statue, black hair like a
waterfall, and a lovely embroidered dress. But her eyes were black; it was her
dress that was violet. I wouldn’t have called her beautiful as much as
mysterious.”
Brak rubbed his brow.
“Sometimes they are the same,” he said. “It seems the witch favors violet
however she can display it. And the truth of her nature, as ever, lies within
her eyes. I should have known as much. But I was a young thing and unwise. My
playmates scattered at her coming; I stayed, curious, interested in this
beautiful creature who looked so much like the others I had seen but who only
had two eyes.
“The witch voiced no
shadow of a reason for her actions. She did not accuse me of thievery or malice
or misdeed. Instead she drew near and gripped me by the nape and thrust me into
the pond.” Brak splayed his webbed right hand for Thomas to see a long, thin
scar that puckered the skin between the second and third fingers. “I struck
myself upon a sharp rock at the pond-bed in my struggle to escape, but the
witch was too strong. The water was cold and dark and I soon began to gasp my
last.
“The witch yanked me
from the water mere moments before it filled me up, gills or no. I spluttered
on the shoreline where she tossed me. No longer did she appear pleasant to the
eye; now she stared with sunfire in her eyes and spoke with cold metal on her tongue.
She cursed me then, commanded the waters to take and shape me into something
hideous. They rose up like snakes and covered my face. When they receded, the
witch was gone, and I was left as you see me now.”
Brak gestured to his
face. “You may not see me as my kin, but assuredly I am a twisted wreck of the
witch’s dark designs. Never did she give reason or justification for her
actions. I do not even think she hated me. She seemed to curse me of a whim.
And I am sure that my survival was a delight to her, for I have been an outcast
since that moment, reviled by my kind and all others, forced into thievery and
shadows.
“I would like nothing
more than to find the violet witch and slice her up into little strips and eat
her until she is gone and throw her bones into the bog. Perhaps that will
return my features to their rightful order; perhaps not. But I will have my
just revenge.”
They sat in silence for
many moments. Thomas cleared his throat and said, “I’m sorry, Brak. You didn’t
deserve that, just like Eleanor didn’t deserve to be kidnapped.”
“Nor did you deserve
her punishment,” Brak said quietly. “Even unwitting thievery is not so great a
crime as that. The witch is a callous creature, a monster more than many. What
will you do when you collect your four items and return them to her?”
Thomas stared into the
fire. “I don’t know,” he said. “I just want to get Eleanor back. I’d like to
have revenge or justice for the witch as well, but saving my sister is more
important. Besides, I don’t know if I can do anything to the witch. I’ve been
powerless to stop her so far.”
“What about your
companions? Can they not attack the violet witch at your side?”
“They’ll certainly
try,” Thomas said with a smile. “They are brave, though in different ways. But
neither of them has magic. I don’t think the three of us can stop the witch.”
“Well,” said Brak,
rising to his full height. “I have no magic, but if I meet the violet witch a
third time, that will not stop me from claiming what is mine. I will take what
she has stolen from me and more besides.”
“The third time?”
Thomas asked, while Brak turned to the fire and stoked it with a long stick.
“You mean you encountered the witch a second time?”
“Ah.” Brak looked back
at Thomas, blinked with all three eyes. “Yes. I have forgotten that part of my
story, perhaps in my anger at the curse. The second time I met the witch was
not a close encounter; I only saw her from a distance. And I was unable to
reach her before she vanished again. But perhaps this story too will help you,
human boy.”
The Vathca crouched
back against the wall, leaning his head back on the rock with eyes closed. With
his wet webbed right hand he traced little lines in the dust of the cave floor,
seemingly aimless scribbles. When he spoke, his voice was softer than before,
and he kept all three eyes closed.
“The second time I met
the witch was many days after the first and many days ago still. I had become
an outcast but was not yet reduced to the lowly state in which you see me now;
my kin tolerated my occasional presence and raised little fuss if a trout or a
hummingbird went missing from their Waspan-nights.
“I spent much of my
days and nights roving beyond the traditional grounds of the Vathca. Even a few
times I went beyond the waters and trees of the Grimgrove into places we tread
little for fear of humans or bears or larger beasts. One day, as I was crossing
back into the Grimgrove, I became enamored of the sunfire that washed the sky
in metal-red and flower-yellow, and I floated slowly upon my back along the
stream toward the den I was using to sleep and shelter.”
The black-skinned
frog-thing cracked open his central eye for a brief moment. “You have surely
seen the prowess of the Vathca in swimming, yes, human boy? Even the fishes are
not so swift.”
“Aye,” said Thomas,
settling in more comfortably against the cave wall. “You seem to swim better
than birds can fly.”
“Indeed,” said Brak,
closing his eye once more, “and I the chiefest among my kin, my deformities and
aberrations notwithstanding. Once I competed in great games among my kind,
winning prizes and the finest morsels of victory; but this is not that story
but another.
“While I floated
denward, idling and enjoying the setting sun, my view was blocked for a moment
by a silhouette of a bird far above. I had never seen its shape before, and I
swiveled in the stream to follow its flight. The bird looked to be an eagle or
similar, a large bird and majestic, glittering in golden sunfire and swooping
proudly above the treetops of the Grimgrove. I watched the bird circle for
several minutes, and then it dropped into the shadows of the trees.
“I surmised that the
golden eagle had dropped into its eyrie to roost the night away. I thought to
follow: but the darkness of the Grimgrove is treacherous, as you have said,
even to my kind, and I knew not the region wherein the golden eagle had
disappeared. So I paddled quickly to my den and ate my meager meal of crickets
and sparrowflesh and slept in bright anticipation of seeking out the golden
eagle when the sun returned to the sky.
“I watched the blue and
gray and pink above for three more days before I caught another afternoon’s
glimpse of the proud bird and his gold-tipped wings. That day, I crept upon the
shores of the river and tracked his flight through the trees to watch where he
made his nest. I watched him descend until I was sure I had the right tree, the
very branch. It was a tall and sturdy tree of red wood and silver-patched bark,
of great spiked leaves and plump acorns. It seemed to suit the golden eagle.
“I left and returned
another morning soon after, creeping up the side of a nearby red-and-silver
tree to wait for the proud golden eagle. I am not nearly so adept with climbing
bark-skinned trees, but I safely perched opposite the golden eagle’s nest and
sat in shadows to wait.
“The golden eagle
appeared that afternoon, his wings alight with fire from the red-gold sun. He
gripped the branch with sure talons and swiveled his head left and right to
survey the forest around him. His eyrie was not in the tallest of the trees; sunlight
and treeshadow surrounded him, half illuminating, half concealing. He was
beautiful: I wanted a closer look.
“I tried to creep along
the branch to see him better, but slick Vathca hands are not meant for bark or
smooth wood, and I slipped and fell. The fall was higher than the rumble of
water outside my cave”—Brak inclined his head toward the velvet night at the
mouth of the cave and the waterfall beyond—“and there was no safe pool to
cradle my bones when I landed. I surely was dead.
“But the golden eagle
saw me fall and leapt to my rescue. He gripped my shoulder and my upper leg in
his sharp talons and yanked me away from the shadows of the Grimgrove and
carried me back to his eyrie, where he deposited me roughly and alive in a
jumble of leaves and eggshells and small crunchy bones. I righted myself and
blinked the leaf-dust from my three eyes and looked up at the golden eagle on
his proud branch.”
Brak fell silent a
moment, blinking his eyes in turn. “While I waited for him to return, earlier,
I pondered what to do with him. He was beautiful. I thought I would snatch his
feathers and use them for my bed. I thought I would fashion his talons into
clever tools. I thought I would eat his golden flesh and that it would give me
strength. I thought perhaps I would fight and kill him and place his body in
the pool so that the water would take him back into dirt. I thought that maybe
I should take his bones somewhere high so that he could be near to the sun
after he died.
“But then, later, after
he saved me and I was crouched in his eyrie looking up at him, I decided not to
kill or eat him. I would perhaps ask for a golden feather, but I would not do
him harm, even if he wished me harm.” Brak gave Thomas a very serious
three-eyed stare. “I am not the velvet witch. She takes without cause. I take
only with need or want. And I realized I neither needed nor wanted to take
anything from the golden eagle who saved me, except perhaps a beautiful
feather.
“I think the golden
eagle, when he saw me fall, wanted to eat me as well. But then, later, after he
saved me and he was perched in his eyrie looking down at me, he must have
decided not to kill or eat me. He regarded me with that curious look of all
birds—all arched eyebrows and swift tilts of the head and a keen piercing gaze.
“So, instead, he spoke
to me. ‘Hello,’ he said. ‘You are a frog-thing and I saved you from dying.’ And
I tell you now truly, human boy, that I laughed with mirth at the eagle’s
words, for it had been many Wednesdays since any had freely spoken to me
without rancor. And I told the golden eagle so. ‘You saved me from dying and I
thank you, beautiful golden eagle,’ I said. ‘I followed you to your nest
because I wanted to see you more closely. I have no friends or kin, so I do not
often share in beautiful things.’
“The golden eagle made
a chirping noise that I later learned was a laugh of his own. ‘You are welcome
to my nest and home and friendship,’ he told me. He was noble then and kind. He
told me his name. We did become friends, and later roamed the Grimgrove
together, by air and water, catching fishes and gathering nuts and sharing our
time and talk.”
Brak made a noise that
might have been a sigh. “We shared another thing, human boy—the hatred of the
velvet witch. My friend told me about his own trouble with the witch. She had
come to his people in the guise of a silver eagle with violet-tipped wings, had
flattered them with serpent’s words and promised many treasures to them. One by
one the golden eagles believed the witch and gave her their gathered hoards of
trinkets and jewels and precious feathers. Then some of the golden eagles
started hurting their kin, following the witch’s words to attack any who spoke
her ill. Slowly a division spread among the golden eagles, ire growing like
root-rot.
“My friend told me that
he and some of his kin had decided to resist those who followed the violet
witch. By the time we spoke of it, she had abandoned her pretense of appearing
as a silver eagle and walked among them looked like a human woman. My friend
spoke of the difficulty of injuring his fellows and friends. He was mournful
and sad when we spoke.”
Again Brak stopped
speaking. When he continued his story, his voice was strained. “I arrived at
the bottom of my friend’s tree one morning and began climbing up to meet with
him, but before I reached the eyrie I heard him calling warnings to me—wordless
cries of worry and pain. I scrambled up to the nearest branch and looked up. I
saw my friend grappling by talon and beak with a silver eagle with violet-tipped
wings. Both were bloodied. My friend told me to flee and then he broke away
from the violet witch and flew away. She followed him, nipping at his
tail-feathers with her beak.
“I climbed up to the
ravaged eyrie and watched them soar above the treetops until they disappeared
beyond my sight, flying toward the heart of the Grimgrove. I thought about
following, but I knew I would not catch up in time to help and that I would not
find the violet witch without her consent. I also knew that, if my friend
survived, he would seek me out of his own will. So I returned to my cave at the
pool to wait.”
Brak blinked three
heavy tears from his eyes. “I have waited a very long time for my friend the
golden eagle, Thomas,” he said. “But I have not seen him yet. I have heard, by
listening to the Vathca gossip during their Waspan-nights, that more and more
of the golden eagles have been taken by the glamor of the violet witch. I have
also heard that some of the golden eagles remain unbewitched and have sought
refuge deep in the Grimgrove, in the Great Trees that are their true home. My
friend told me of the Great Trees many times, promised to take me there if he
could. I hope that he is there now. But I do not know.”
“Brak,” said Thomas,
reaching out to place his hand upon the Vathca’s soft, wet arm. “I’m sorry
about your friend. I hope he’s safe in the Great Trees. If there are other
golden eagles there, maybe they protected him from the witch.”
Brak nodded. “Maybe.
But I do not know.” He pushed himself away from the cave wall, still in a
crouch. His voice was stronger now, his eyes dry. “I have heard one more thing
that you will want to know, human boy. The golden eagles claim many treasures
in their Great Trees, items they have collected or stolen or crafted. I have
heard stories about a prized acorn that was dropped from the Greatest Tree when
the first golden eagles were hatchlings and the Grimgrove was a cluster of
saplings. They hold this acorn among their sacred possessions and have hidden
it in the safest eyrie of the Great Trees. If these stories are true—”
“—then that’s the acorn
that I’m supposed to collect for the witch!” Thomas finished. “Maybe she
realized she can’t steal it from the golden eagles so easily, and she wants me
to do it for her.” He let out a long, frowning breath. “That doesn’t sound
possible.”
“No,” agreed Brak. “But
friendship often makes impossible things seem possible. Perhaps if you help the
golden eagles, they will help you by allowing you to take their acorn.”
Thomas nodded. “But how
do I help the golden eagles? I can’t fight off the witch by myself.”
Brak straightened up a
little. “Not by yourself, no. But you are not by yourself. You have several
friends, yes? You just need to find them and they will help you. And, human
boy, I will help you also.” He gave Thomas an expression that mimicked a smile.
“And I am an outcast from my kin, my former friends, but even so I believe that
they will help you, though they may not realize that is what they are doing. I
have a few ideas about how to make them help you.”
“Really?” Thomas
scrambled up from his seat. “You’ll help me, Brak?”
“Yes. But listen, human
boy—do you hear the splashing?”
Thomas listened
intently. Outside, beyond the cave, in the pool at the base of the waterfall,
he could hear splashing: soft and rhythmic, almost like music.
“That is the waking of
the Melusi, the winged fish-women of the pool. They will soon begin to swim
down the river in flight from the sun. When the splashing has stopped, we must
leave the cave. I have a plan, and we will not have much time after the Melusi
leave before the Vathca awaken from the Waspan. In that brief time, we must find
your friends and enact my plan. Are we agreed?”
Thomas nodded
enthusiastically. “Thank you, Brak.”
“Yes,” said the
three-eyed creature. “Take what you need from my cave, human boy, and be
prepared for flight and cunning and blood. We will probably die before the sun
is gone from the day.” Brak tilted his head to one side and blinked. “But maybe
not.”
#
Thomas soon learned
that Brak’s plan was both audaciously dangerous and startlingly simple.
When the splashing of
the Melusi stopped, Thomas and Brak leapt from the cave’s mouth and darted
along the muddy shoreline. The three-eyed creature made little sound as he
loped through the dirt and the brush, reaching down now and then to steady his
gait with a webbed hand. Thomas, for his part, tried to keep quiet while
balancing his new belongings in the rucksack over his shoulder. He’d taken from
Brak’s cave whatever he thought might be useful: a stone knife, a length of
rope, a wooden box, flint, a bent metal disk, and a bunch of carrots. The leafy
tops of the carrots tickled his cheek while he ran, hunched over to duck
beneath low branches and stay out of sight.
Thomas had wanted to
catch a glimpse of the Melusi in the pool, or even to get a look at his surroundings
and better acquaint himself with Brak’s cave and pool. But he only managed a
glimpse of the waterfall thundering down across the pool before Brak was gone
into the trees and Thomas lagging behind, so the boy turned his every attention
toward keeping pace.
The first step of the
plan, Brak had explained, was to reunite Thomas with his companions. Since
neither the Vathca nor the boy could fly, they decided to start with Cathán
Caolán, the doughty First Captain of the Thistledown Kingdom, whom Thomas
sorely missed.
Thomas had asked, while
waiting in the cave for the Melusi’s flight, how they might track down a small
mouse in the darkness of the Grimgrove. Brak had responded by sniffing Thomas’s
clothes and hands, his nostrils mere slits in his black and slippery face.
“I will find the mouse,”
he said. “I am deformed, not useless.”
And so Thomas found
himself leaping logs and shouldering past nosy ferns and trying to keep his
footing on wild ground while the keen-scented Vathca trailed the Mouse Knight.
They ran until Thomas
was sure he could run no farther and he gasped to a halt. To Thomas’s good
fortune, at that moment Brak paused his searching and held up a webbed hand to
ward Thomas.
“Close now,” said the
Vathca. “Close as I can track a living thing. Call your friend, human boy.”
“Cathán!” shouted
Thomas, his voice faint with panting. “Cathán, if you’re here, we—”
Brak let out a hiss and
a gurgling noise of anger or pain. Thomas looked to see the Vathca pulling a
small splinter from his shoulder and glaring at it—a tiny dart from a tiny bow.
Another arrow blossomed
in the back of the three-eyed creature’s hand, and he made another noise, a
pipe-like sound of clear anger. Thomas heard a small rustle in the bushes to
his left.
“Wait!” the boy cried
out, spinning around. He saw a flash of gray-brown in the air at the height of
his face. Impulsively, Thomas flashed out a hand and snatched the flying shape
in caged fingers. Something poked the inside of his palm; Thomas gritted his
teeth and lifted his hand to his face and opened his fingers.
“Friend Thomas!” cried
Cathán the Mouse Knight. His joyous expression was undercut by the realization
that his sword was sticking out of Thomas’s palm. Cathán squeaked anxiously and
plucked the sword free, stanching the droplet of blood with a tiny soft paw.
“Cathán!” Thomas
returned, bothered not at all by the pinprick. “I’m so glad to see you.”
“And I you, my valiant
friend.” The Mouse Knight squeaked again, happier, and darted a tight circle on
Thomas’s palm. “I saw you taken from the feast of the frog-things but not what
happened after. Through the night I have battled many dark things within the
cursèd Grimgrove; but never did I lose hope of our reunion in safety. I am sure
that you as well have battled many dangers—ever bravely!”
Cathán turned now to
peer through Thomas’s fingers at Brak, who remained a few paces distant,
grasping two arrows between his webbed fingers.
“A defeated foe?” asked
the Mouse Knight, whiskers twitching. “A captive, perhaps, or an informant?”
“A new friend,” Thomas
told him, “and an ally against the witch.” Quickly he related what had
transpired since his awakening on the river-plank and a shortened version of
Brak’s story about the golden eagles and the violet witch. “We’ve got to gather
Avery,” Thomas said in closing. “And then Brak has a plan to help the eagles
and get the acorn at once.”
“A thrilling tale,”
Cathán proclaimed. He scampered down Thomas’s arm and trouser-leg and stood
before Brak. “I thank you, fearsome creature and friend, for your actions
toward mine own dear companion and his safety and need. We will carry out
whatever bold plan you have conceived, that we might all gain victory and glory
this day.”
Brak crouched down to
closely peer at the Mouse Knight. “Take these back, then,” he said, handing the
arrows over. “I don’t care for victory or glory, just revenge and friendship,
but it will be as you say. You are brave and quick, little mouse. I will not
eat you unless you stick me with your sharpened splinters again.”
“Argued and agreed,”
replied Cathán, undaunted. He scampered back up Thomas’s side to take his
position on Thomas’s left shoulder.
The boy breathed a sigh
of relief at the familiar warm and weight there. “Cathán, I’m so glad to have
found you safely,” Thomas said. “Do you know where we can find Avery?”
“Aye,” said Cathán, “I’ve
an idea. Back at the feast of the Vathca—I think he has a perch somewhere
nearby.”
“Very good,” said Brak.
“My kin will still be slumbering there. Come.” And he loped off into the trees.
#
“He should be somewhere
close,” Cathán called out.
They’d run a long
while; Thomas again gasped to a halt. Brak seemed unperturbed, sniffing the air
from his customary crouch, looking this way and that.
“The air is ripe with
feast-wreck and the nightly things of the Grimgrove,” Brak said, blinking his
left and right eyes. “I cannot smell correctly the bird. Mouse, perhaps you can
find him up the trees? I’ve little talent for climbing.”
“No need,” came Cathán’s
voice: but it did not come from Cathán, who stood atop Thomas’s shoulder,
glancing around bewildered.
“None of you could find
me unless I chose it,” came the voice again, now a different tone. When it
spoke a third time, Thomas finally recognized it: “I am of the Blackhill Clan,
and we are master of the air and wind and sky. We cannot be captured.”
A black shape ruffled
down into the clearing, finding purchase on a branch a few feet higher than
Thomas’s head. Feathers shuffled and materialized into the grinning countenance
of Avery.
“Thought you could
sneak up on me, eh? I expected better of two of you,” Avery clucked. “This frog-thing,
of course, can’t be blamed for the attempt at sneaking. I’ve seen the dull wits
and blanking blinking stares of his kin.”
“My kin,” said Brak
calmly, “detestable though their actions are, took two of your feathers from
you last night at the Waspan, raven. I can smell the hurt and anger on you. I
would not strut so at such a loss.”
Avery, for perhaps the
first time since Thomas had met him, was caught without words. He clacked his
beak and shook his feathers and hopped from foot to foot. Finally the bird
squawked and fluttered from the branch to alight on Thomas’s right shoulder.
“Thomas, friend,” said
Avery, “why are you with this strange creature? We’re back together safely now.
Let’s get out of this despicable forest and get on with finding the prized
acorn for the witch.”
“Avery,” replied
Thomas, “I’m so glad we found you and you’re not hurt. But this is Brak, and he’s
our friend too. He wants to help.”
Avery squawked in
dismay. “Help? Hardly, I should think, just by knowing what I do about the rest
of them. They wanted to eat us last night, Thomas, don’t forget; and now he’s
got three of us together.”
“Just listen to Thomas
and Brak,” counseled Cathán from Thomas’s other shoulder. “We share common
interests, common enemies.”
So again Thomas
recounted what he knew. Avery’s protests soon hushed, and by the end of the
story, he was nodded his beak in Brak’s direction.
“Fairly put, Vathca. I
see your loyalty to your friend. What has been done to the golden eagles is
terrible and must be accounted for to the violet witch. We can help each other
in this, then. A temporary peace between us.”
“Yes,” said Brak. “I
will not eat you, raven, not while we try to find the acorn and help the golden
eagles.”
“And you’ll keep your
eyes and ears, then,” said Avery, apparently unwilling to let the Vathca have
the last word. “So—this plan of yours. What of it? How do we get the help of
the kin that hate your being?”
Then Brak explained his
plan in full to them, and Thomas learned that it was both audaciously dangerous
and startlingly simple. “We will bait the Vathca into attacking the Great Trees
of the golden eagles,” Brak told the others. “We will trick them. While they
are attacking the Great Trees, we will sneak past them and find the acorn and
perhaps help the golden eagles who have not been swayed by the violet witch.
Then we will leave and I will return to my cave by the pool.”
Silence fell upon them.
“Why would the Vathca attack the golden eagles?” asked Thomas.
“They already do not
like the golden eagles,” said Brak. “The golden eagles often steal food and
trinkets from my kin. Also, since the arrival many long Wednesdays ago of the
violet witch, the golden eagles have been aggressive and derisive of my kin,
more even than their nature would drive them. The Vathca are on the verge of
attacking.”
“How will we sneak into
the Great Trees and find the acorn?” asked Cathán.
“I know a small stream
that winds through the Grimgrove into the heart of the Great Trees,” said Brak.
“It feeds their roots. Then we will climb. And then I will smell and we will
sneak.”
“What will we use as
bait to draw the Vathca out?” asked Avery.
“Me,” said Brak. He
shrugged. “They already hate me. I will taunt them and lead them away toward
the Great Trees.”
Avery whistled at that.
“A bold plan, but that’s the only foolish bit,” he said. “You want them to
attack the golden eagles, not you. And you’re not very talented at taunting.
No, what you need is an actual golden eagle to taunt them—a trick to get them
thinking about how much they hate the golden eagles. Then nothing can stop them
from attacking.”
“We do not have a
golden eagle to help us,” said Brak.
Thomas could see Avery’s
grin out of the corner of his eye, could feel the raven’s proud preening as his
feathers brushed the boy’s ear.
“Give me some dust and
larkspur and onionskin,” said Avery, now in a booming and majestic voice that
thundered through the trees with authority. “I’ll show you what a real golden eagle is like. I’ll make
those snoring Vathca jump up with bright anger for every slight the golden
eagles have ever shown them!”
#
And so it happened that
Avery disguised himself as a golden eagle. He colored his feathers with
larkspur stems and onionskin until they gleamed gold in the rising sunlight,
layering dust between each feather to rain down upon the sleeping Vathca around
the remnants of their Waspan-feast. He practiced his booming and majestic
voice, caring not at all that it matched very little with what Brak told him of
the real timbre of the golden eagles. He strutted and prancing in the trees and
tried out various japes and taunts against Brak.
Only once did the
latter respond, flinging a small pebble toward Avery that caught the
raven-turned-golden-eagle on his talon. Avery squawked and then laughed. “I’ll
remember that one, then.”
Swiftly their
preparations were made and the plan enacted. Thomas was disappointed when Brak
instructed him to head back to the river and wait there. “You and I will follow
down the stream from a distance,” Brak said to Thomas, “while the mouse rides
the raven, leading the Vathca toward the Great Trees. We are best adapted to
flight down the river, and less conspicuous there. You would make a fine meal
for any Vathca. And your raven-friend has spoken true that my kin would not
hesitate to ridicule and attack me were I to present myself among them again.”
Thomas saw the wisdom
there, though it pained him to leave his friends, even momentarily, and disappointed
him to miss Avery’s show. The raven promised to recount every action, intended
and real, at a later date around a roaring fire while they shared the spoils of
their adventures. Then Cathán hopped onto Avery’s back and the two disappeared,
glittering gold, into the sky above the treetops.
“Go on, human boy,”
said Brak, pointing him to the river. “I’ll join you when the raven has made
his entrance at the Waspan.” And the Vathca left afoot into the trees.
Thomas picked his way
through the brush back to the shores of the stream. There he sat, dangling his
bare feet in the slow water and trying to wash them clean. He wished he had his
shoes, but thankfully the floor of the Grimgrove was soft and earthy. He wished
he had his satchel and travelling book and jacket and the rest of his
belongings; he could only hope that the bit of boar’s tusk was safe at their
campsite of the previous night.
Sitting there, Thomas
realized anew how little time remained before the witch’s deadline. Wednesday,
Thursday, and Friday had passed; Saturday was still dawning, early and eager,
stretching broad yellow fingers over the blue sky like a housecat after a nap.
Thomas tried to avoid thinking too much about what remained after the acorn,
focusing instead on Brak’s plan and on preparing himself for what surely would
become a dangerous battle between the Vathca and the golden eagles.
At length, and perhaps
too soon in the pleasant stillness of the shoreline, Brak emerged from the
trees at Thomas’s back and placed a webbed hand on the boy’s shoulder.
“Into the water, human
boy, and I will swim us onward.” The Vathca sounded almost pleased with
himself. “The raven has proven true to his boasts and stirred my kin to a
hatred and frenzy I have never seen. This plan may perhaps work. Listen! even now
they howl and moan and crash through the trees.”
Distantly, and growing
in strength, Thomas heard angry pipe-noises and the rustle of leaf and branch.
He stood and cinched his rucksack tight and nodded. Whatever his worries of the
coming days and tasks, for now, he needed only to swim and sneak and do what he
could to find the prized acorn and help the bewitched and beleaguered golden
eagles.
He nodded to Brak. “I’m
ready,” Thomas said, stepping into the water.
Brak gripped his arm
firmly and dove them both forward into the slow sparkling water of the stream
with astonishing speed.
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