Jim Morgan and the Pirates of the Black Skull

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Jim Morgan and the Pirates of the Black Skull Page 23

by James Raney

“I suppose that will be two of us then,” Jim said, standing up beside his friend.

  “I have no further gift to give you, Jim Morgan, for I have already given you much. But take these at least from the river. Use them to right your wrong.” Tanaquill pointed to the flowing waters behind Jim and George and two flames burst from the river and floated through the air toward Jim. Jim knew what they were. He reached out to take Lacey’s book of stars and the compass. The Queen of the Faeries offered Jim a smile that brightened even the glow of her aura. She leaned forward in the air and kissed Jim gently on the forehead. From that place, warmth drifted down into Jim’s fingers and toes.

  “Take heart, Jim. There are few joys in the world greater than a broken bridge mended.”

  “Thank you, Tanaquill. Thank you for everything.”

  Tanaquill raised her hands and called out into the night with words that Jim would never learn. Bursts of light streaked into the night air from the long grass on the hill and flew into the darkened sky. They burned in nearly every color imaginable. In auras of blue and green and gold, they twirled and wound through the air. Embers of light trailed down behind them like sparks from a torch.

  “That lizard,” said George, his eyes staring through the display of light and color before him. “ That blasted lizard, Twisttail, lied to us. He sent us away from this Field of Lights where the faeries woulda helped us. He said they were evil spirits! Almost got us killed! Why?”

  “I don’t know why, George. Maybe just for sport.”

  “He lied to us,” George said again. A darkness fell over his face then, a darkness Jim had last seen when the King of Thieves had betrayed the Ratts in London.

  “Do not give into anger, George Ratt,” said Tanaquill, hovering before George. “Even in the face of great pain you have the gift of joy in times of hurt. That is a gift greater than any I could give you.”

  “Could you…” George began to ask. He swiped his hat from his head and twisted it in his hands, blushing fiercely. “Could you at least give me a kiss like Jim?” he asked, looking down at his feet. Tanaquill laughed, a laugh full of lightness and joy like chimes in the wind.

  “You may have two kisses, George Ratt, and you deserve them both!” With that the Queen of the Faeries kissed George once on each cheek. Jim thought for a moment that his friend’s feet were about to leave the ground and he would begin floating above the grass along with the faeries.

  “Thank you, ma’am,” George replied, slapping his hat back on his head all but staggering over beside Jim.

  “Pull yourself together, mate,” Jim whispered with a smile, elbowing his friend in the ribs.

  “Now you must go, for there is little time.” Tanaquill called again to her people. The glowing lights on the hill swirled together into a great river of light. They wound their way through the air toward Jim and George. The two of them were swept up in the tide, rolled over by a wave of light. The grass blurred beneath Jim like a rushing green carpet as the faeries whisked him and George over the fields and rolling hills toward the mountain. All the while the nighttime sky slowly turned from black to gray. The stars that Lacey so loved winked out one by one. Jim’s friends were in terrible danger, and morning was coming. It loomed just over the horizon, and with it, a prison of stone.

  TWELVE

  he flying river of faeries raced to the edge of their land and crashed to a halt at the foot of the dark mountain, exploding like a wave against invisible rocks. Streaks of light splashed into the air and Jim and George went tumbling into the soft grass. Jim’s body hummed from head to toe as he picked himself up from the ground. He and George were wind-blown and breathless from their flight over Queen Tanaquill’s domain.

  “Couldn’t ‘ave just set us down, could ya ‘ave?” George said to the faeries as he readjusted his hat and his jacket. The army of pixies just laughed with a sound like soft rain on a pond. They pointed and waved at the boys - a sea of flickering candle flames. Jim could have watched them fly and play for hours and hours, mesmerized by the lights. But the dawn crept close behind them.

  “Come on, George,” Jim whispered. The two boys ran the rest of the way, to where the grass grew thin and the rocks slowly became the foot of the dark mountain. The black shape stood tall in the sky and masked what remained of the stars and the moon. Yet even in the shadow of the mountain, Jim and George quickly found the sign Tanaquill had promised.

  Two trees, white blossoms bright even in the dark, stood in columns before the rock. Green ivy grew in an archway on the stone. Between the trees and beneath the ivy Jim found the hidden entrance to the cave. The door was carved from the rock itself. Beside it hung an unlit torch upon a grommet, the striking stone dangling there by a string. As it had been in the Pirate Vault of Treasures, a warning was carved deep into the face of the stone door.

  “Another door, another warning.” Jim said to himself.

  “What does it say?” George asked, plucking the torch from the grommet and handing it to Jim.

  “Magic, Monsters, and Doom Beyond this Door.

  Ye Have Been Warned.”

  “Well, that sounds about right, don’t it?” George said. He took a deep breath and swallowed hard, his face more than a bit pale.

  “You don’t have to go in, Georgie,” Jim said as he struck the stone on the wall and lit the torch with the sparks. “I’ve done this sort of thing before, and it wasn’t fun the first time, I promise you. So if you want to wait here—”

  “People’ll call you all sorts o’ stuff, in this life, Jim, but don’t ever let chicken be one of ‘em.” George said. “So my father always – well, so I always say.” Jim smiled back at his friend.

  “So, in we go?”

  “In we go,” said George.

  Jim held the torch high and leaned against the stone door. It opened with the crunching grate of stone against stone. A gust of air rushed from the blackness beyond and the scent of ancient time swirled thick about them. The torch flame whispered and whipped in the wind. Jim summoned his courage and fixed his thoughts on Peter, Paul, and Lacey. He stepped into the darkness with George just behind.

  The shadows on the cave walls swam about Jim and George as they followed the tunnel beneath the mountain. Darkness loomed on all sides, kept at bay only by the fire-lit reach of Jim’s torch. Teeth of sharp stone jutted down over the boys’ heads, and above the whisper of Jim’s flame, the steady drip, drop of water echoed in the deep.

  Jim and George stuck close together, tucking themselves in the center of the torchlight’s sphere. But more than fear of the dark hastened their steps. The doom of sunrise followed close behind.

  After a long while, the pair had gone so far that Jim feared they had missed a turn somewhere. He worried if they carried on much farther, they would descend to the very center of the earth. But he and George crept through an archway in the stone and the torchlight burst into the free space of a massive cavern. The ceiling above curved like a great dome, arching far over the boys’ heads. Jim stared up at the high cavern roof, awed in spite of all his fears and worries. George whistled low and urgently tugged at Jim’s tattered sleeve.

  “Would you look at that?” George whispered. Jim raised the torch in his hand a little higher. His own eyes went wider still.

  On the walls before them, polished smooth as glass and shining nearly like mirrors in the torchlight, enormous paintings lined the way from one entrance of the cavern to the other. Each drawing was taller than Jim and George and wider than their outstretched arms, a great mural from ancient times.

  “It’s the painted cave, George. We found it! Now we just need to find the entrance to the Hidden Chamber within.”

  “You know, Jim,” George said. “Reminds me o’ the stained glass back at St. Anne’s, if you know what I mean. Like they’re religious pictures that go in a story or somethin’.” Jim ran the torch from the tunnel entrance to the other side of the cavern, where the tunnel resumed once more.

  “I think you’re right, George.�
� A frightful story it was, too. The paintings told of a great city, peopled by giants - a city more vast and powerful than even London. But by the final image, the city had fallen into the sea. Only one building, a temple of some sort, remained. Over and over the symbol of the Treasure of the Ocean, the very same trident as was carved onto Jim’s box, appeared amidst the calamitous tale. Death and destruction, Jim thought to himself. Those were the fates that surrounded the Treasure of the Ocean, Queen Melodia had warned him.

  “That entire city was destroyed,” Jim finally said. “I wonder how a whole city could be destroyed, George.”

  “Don’t know about that, Jim, but maybe that giant snake over there had somethin’ to do with it.” Jim turned to find a serpent’s face glaring at him from the far wall - mouth open, fangs bared, ready to devour any creature fool enough to tempt its wrath. The painting was so life like that it gave Jim a start, but he saw nearly at once that this drawing differed from the rest. Tanaquill’s words from the riverbank came back to him, reminding him that the entrance to the Hidden Chamber lay behind a fanged doorway.

  The two boys approached the hideous image with caution, for the open mouth was wide enough to swallow a handful of grown men whole.

  “This must be the entrance to the hidden chamber,” Jim said. But George ran his hand along the snake’s fangs and found only solid rock behind the painting.

  “Nothin’ here but a big old’ wall o’ rock, Jim.”

  “That’s why they call it a hidden chamber, George,” Jim said. He stepped back a few paces from the serpent’s mouth and stretched his torch toward the wall. “There must be some magic words or something.” An idea stole into Jim’s mind. Without wasting time he gave voice to the thought.

  “Magic, monsters, and doom wait for me beyond this door.

  I have been warned…but I’m not turning back.”

  The torch’s whisper was the only reply. But just when George opened his mouth to say something smart, a slow grinding of stone cut through the quiet.

  A dark hole broke through the cavern wall.

  Jagged chunks of rock pulled away from one another like teeth in a beast’s mouth. When the entrance fully opened, it appeared to Jim as though the painting had come to life in the rock – as though the great serpent bared its fangs for real. Jim and George looked at each other, then back at the newly formed hole in the wall. Their mouths hung open and the great spark of adventure caught fire once again in their hearts.

  “Jim, if we ever do get to live in a house,” George said, eyes sparkling in the torchlight. “This is the door I want to me room, ‘cept with bigger fangs – definitely bigger fangs.”

  “I’m not sure Lacey would approve, Georgie. Not so sure how much I’d want to go in either, really.”

  “Yet in you must go, young Morgan,” a voice said from behind them. “And in you shall go this very night!” The boys whirled around and found only darkness at their backs - until a second voice rasped from a black recess of the painted cave.

  “Nara Lahaba!”

  At those words three torches sparked to life. Beneath the flames, drenched in writhing shadows, the faces of Count Cromier, Bartholomew, and Splitbeard the Pirate leered at Jim and George. Lacey, Peter, and Paul struggled and squirmed in the villains’ grasps, rough hands clamped over their mouths.

  THIRTEEN

  romier!” Jim shouted. His angry voice echoed off the vaulted cavern walls. “Let them go, you coward!” “You are in no position to demand anything, young Morgan,” the Count snarled. His purple scar twisted and turned on his face. “Why do you persist in fighting the inevitable? You challenge death as haughtily and foolishly as your father. Yet you also bear in common with Lindsay his foolish courage, and even more of his dumb luck. Now you will use those cursed Morgan gifts to fetch for me the Hunter’s Shell and lay it at my feet.”

  “Never!” Jim cried.

  “Never?” the Count asked. He drew his sword and set the blade at Lacey’s throat. Bartholomew took his sword in hand as well, resting the sharp edge on Peter’s shoulder. “Never say never, Jim.”

  “I hoped you would say no, Morgan,” Bartholomew seethed, his mouth twitching at the corners. “I want you to watch me do to every one of your friends what I should have done to you in your father’s study. You can watch me run my blade through their hearts.”

  “Cowards!” Cornelius croaked weakly. He lifted his battered frame from Lacey’s arms and raised a tattered wing to challenge Bartholomew. “To hide behind these young ones, to use them as your shields, marks you as curs and cheapens what traces of honor still cling to your name. You, who would claim the right to Lindsay Morgan’s treasure, would hang another as bait upon a hook, out of fear for your own necks. You call yourself a captain of the sea? For shame, sir!”

  Cornelius might have continued his barrage of insults at the Cromiers indefinitely, but the Count, a sneer upon his face, sheathed his sword and swatted Cornelius from Lacey’s arms. The brave bird fell hard onto the rocky ground, where Cromier kicked him across the floor until he came to a rolling stop at Jim’s feet. Broken feathers lay strewn across the rocks and the raven groaned in pain. Lacey shouted out and wrenched herself free of the Count’s grasp. She ran to Cornelius and shielded him with her body. Gently, she stroked his feathers with her fingers and whispered that it would be all right. George had to hold Jim back from leaping across the cave and charging the Count, sword or no sword.

  “Preach not to me of honor or chivalry or any of that rot, Darkfeather, you twit!” The Count raged. “You speak of good men and honor, but you know as well as I that Lindsay Morgan was nothing more than an arrogant thief. He was a man too frightened or too stupid to wield the power he had discovered. Nor speak to me of cowardice, for I am the one, the only Pirate of our order, willing to do what is necessary to unlock the greatest force of magic the world has ever known. If I must sacrifice some vagrant children to do so, then so be it.”

  “Perhaps we should skip straight to the sacrificing, Father,” Bartholomew said. “Dawn is coming, Jim. So either stand here and watch your friends die by my blade or by stone, or bring my father his prize!”

  “Speakin’ o’ dawn comin’, you blackguard,” George said, his fists balled up at his sides. “Maybe you should be just as worried about turnin’ to stone as us!” It was Splitbeard who answered, a sly smile on his face and a curved dagger in his hand at Paul’s throat.

  “Have you not seen, oh callow thief? Splitbeard the Pirate has no fear of curses or death, nor has he need to flee with haste to the gate of the Devil’s Horns. Thanks to Splitbeard’s secret ways, the venerable Count Cromier and I have far more time than you think.”

  Jim rubbed his sweat-slicked palms against his breeches. One look at Peter and Paul, quivering with fear, and Lacey, tending to poor Cornelius, told Jim his hopes of beating the Cromiers were dashed. Once again, his friends’ lives would hang in the balance as he risked a magical trial for his father’s treasure – a magical trial that could easily end in his own death.

  “Alright, Count,” Jim said, his shoulders slumping in defeat. “I’ll do it. But when I bring you the shell, swear to me that you will release my friends. Let them at least try for the Horns before dawn.” George grabbed Jim by the arm and whispered harshly into his ear.

  “Jim, are you sure about this? They may free us, mate, but you know that blighter, Bartholomew’ll never let you go!”

  “It’s the only way, George. ” But Jim knew in his heart George was right. Bartholomew would never let him live once the Count had the shell.

  “Done,” said the Count. He strode forward to stand over Lacey, who was still on her knees, cradling Cornelius. “But know this, young Morgan - if you attempt to deceive me as you did that petty criminal in London…” The Count pressed his blade beneath Lacey’s chin until she gave a sharp gasp and a trickle of red ran down her neck. “Dawn will be the least of your friends’ worries.” The blackened rose’s magic no longer held sway over Jim’s heart
or mind, but in that moment, he wanted nothing more than to knock the wicked smiles from the Cromiers’ faces.

  “Don’t be afraid, Lacey,” he said. He looked into her eyes with as much courage as he could find within himself. “I got the Amulet, remember? I’ll get this shell as well.” Jim reached into his pockets and withdrew the book of stars and the compass that had been lost in the river. He knelt down and set them on the ground beside Lacey. “I’m sorry,” he said, his chin quivering. “I’m sorry for what I said and what I did. I’m going to make it right, I promise.” Blade at her neck or no, Lacey threw an arm around Jim and pulled him close. Jim could feel her tears on his own cheek.

  “Let me go with you, master Morgan,” squawked a thin voice from the cradle of Lacey’s arm. It was Cornelius, blinking open one bleary eye and stretching out one broken wing to touch Jim’s face. “It will be just like old times, and I could always use a new story to tell, lad.”

  “Not this time,” Jim said, patting the brave raven’s head. “It looks like I’ll need to walk into this vault on my own.”

  “You are your father’s son, Jim Morgan,” Cornelius said. When Jim frowned at this, the raven tapped him again with his wing. “That is a compliment, my son. Never believe otherwise.”

  “Thank you, Cornelius,” Jim said. But the Count had seen enough. He took his blade from Lacey’s throat and thrust the point to within an inch of Jim’s nose.

  “Enough! You will go into the cave and fetch me my prize now, Morgan. And do not delay, boy, for whether by my sword or a tomb of stone, doom lies just over the horizon.”

  “If I think for even a moment that you’ve hurt my friends,” Jim growled in return. “I will lose the shell forever, and no one will have the Treasure of the Ocean. I swear it!” With that, Jim stood and turned on his heel to face the serpent’s mouth - the entrance to the hidden chamber.

  “Good luck, Jim,” George managed.

  “You make it back to us, Jim Morgan,” Lacey added.

 

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