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Song of the Dark Crystal #2

Page 6

by J. M. Lee


  The light in Naia’s hands intensified, then seeped into Gurjin’s chest, over his heart. A soft blue glow surfaced where Naia’s heart was, as well. The healing process had begun, and it was working.

  “If Naia can do this, then it means the Skeksis might be able to do what they want, doesn’t it?” Kylan whispered to Tavra as he watched Naia work. “The Skeksis can’t find out about this. If they do, they’ll work even harder to capture them both.”

  “Don’t get so caught up in ifs, Song Teller,” Tavra advised. She watched the healing miracle with a closer and closer eye.

  The blue light enveloped the two Drenchen for some time. Although Gurjin’s arms remained thin and his cheeks wan, his posture straightened, and his breathing became steadier. When Naia was done, she let out a big sigh and lowered herself to the ground so she could rest.

  Kylan knelt beside her and assessed Gurjin. By no means was he ready to wade into battle, but his constitution had wholly changed. Energy had returned to his face, lighting his eyes with alertness. Kylan imagined the Gurjin he saw now was leagues closer to the Gurjin that had left the Swamp of Sog to join the guard of the Castle of the Crystal. Once he regained his lost weight and spent some time recovering his warrior’s build, he would be formidable.

  “It seems like it worked,” Kylan said. “For better or for worse. Are you sure you’re all right?”

  “We had a long day. I’m tired. But you’re right. It did work, and I will be just fine.”

  Kylan took it for what it was and moved to the next step: appealing to Tavra.

  “In the morning, all four of us will head on to see Aughra.”

  Tavra grimaced and said nothing.

  CHAPTER 9

  Kylan was the second to wake, though the only evidence that he was not the first was that Tavra was nowhere to be found. Coals smoldered in the fire, but the morning was still cold and a bit damp. Kylan pulled his cloak tight and took his tablet and scroll from the traveling pack he shared with Naia. His friend and her brother shared a deep sleep nearby as Neech finished his morning preening on Naia’s shoulder. Neither Drenchen stirred as Kylan sat up and propped his tablet on his knees, spreading the scroll across it and taking time in the quiet morning to record his journey thus far.

  It had been several days since the last time he chronicled their journey. Dream-etching the words that described all that had happened since first arriving at the Castle of the Crystal took time. As the second Brother rose and the air began to warm, he heard footsteps coming from the forest. Kylan looked up from his tablet to see Tavra emerge from the brush, bearing a weighty bundle wrapped in her cloak.

  “You’re almost at the end of that scroll,” she remarked as she lowered the bundle of breakfast to the ground. She let the corners fall, revealing a collection of fruit, fragrant flowers, tubers, and nuts.

  “I’ve got more,” Kylan said. He rolled the paper and stowed it once more in the traveling pack. “But I suppose this story is far from over . . . Do you think that there are scrolls for trade in Ha’rar?”

  “Daughters of the All-Maudra do not trade. They are given whatever they desire.”

  The boast seemed strange coming from a Gelfling who had kept her lineage a secret for so long. Tavra sat cross-legged and plucked a red-and-white blossom from the collection, picking a petal off and munching quietly on it. It was hard to believe the serious Silverling was truly one of the All-Maudra’s daughters. Kylan wondered what it was like to have siblings—he thought back on Mythra, and her tireless attempts to cheer her brother. Even Naia had Gurjin, and her sisters back in Sog.

  Kylan realized he was staring when Tavra met his eyes. Hers were lavender, though somewhat sunken in her weary face. The draining had certainly taken its toll on her, but despite the worn, almost deathly exhaustion, the soldier still had an ethereal, ghostly beauty. He looked away and felt his cheeks warm.

  “I climbed a tree and saw the High Hill this morning,” she went on. “The directions Rian gave you are good. As expected of a Stonewood. Assuming the twins wake up and are able to travel, we’re in good standing to make it there without much time lost. We can exchange our words with Aughra and get moving to Ha’rar.”

  “Have you spoken with Aughra before?”

  Tavra shook her head. “She rarely leaves the High Hill, and few bother to venture to her orrery, so we rarely hear from her. She keeps to herself.”

  “You sound as if you don’t believe she’ll help us.”

  “Why should she? She’s the voice of Thra—she hears the songs of the world that many do not. She must have known what the Skeksis were doing, and yet she said nothing. If she said nothing then, and all this time, why would she say anything now? She has no interest in politics.”

  “This isn’t politics, is it? The Skeksis are supposed to be the protectors of the Heart of Thra. The Crystal. We, and all creatures of Thra, entrusted the castle to them.”

  “Perhaps some creatures believe we still should.”

  It was an abrupt and peculiar thing to say, and Kylan didn’t know how to react, so he said nothing. Tavra finished the flower and tossed her hair.

  “Wake the twins. We need to get moving if we’re going to catch up to Rian.”

  Naia and Gurjin joined the others around the dying fire for a breakfast of petals and pulpy fruit. They left the fruit pits and seeds in the cool ashes of the fire to sprout, packed up, and continued northeast. Tavra took the lead, always plowing ahead without looking back, left hand on the hilt of her sword while the right held a stick that she used to push brush aside as they passed. There was a path, albeit a not-well-traveled one, and up the trail they went.

  Kylan walked with Naia, who took the rear and watched Gurjin from behind. The ailing Drenchen guard was not spritely, but he had energy to his step, and the color was returning to his skin, deepening in its dappled gray-green hues. Naia, on the other hand, had paled slightly, though only enough to seem tired, which would have been understandable even if she hadn’t shared her vliya with her brother.

  “How are you feeling?” Kylan asked her.

  “Could have slept better, but not bad. It feels good to be moving. It feels good to have Gurjin and Tavra both here.”

  Kylan adjusted the pack on his shoulders. He was already sore, but he knew there was no other way to grow into it. Naia reached over her own shoulder and massaged where her wings joined her back. It seemed she was in the same situation.

  “The past couple of days have been quite an adventure,” he agreed. “Tavra offered all the scrolls I could need to write it down, so at least it’ll be quite a tale for others someday. They won’t have to worry about all the unglamorous aspects.”

  “You’ll change the bit where we were almost eaten by a plant?”

  “Absolutely.”

  She laughed, and Kylan laughed with her. It felt good. He had been worried about her, especially after her resolve to share her life with her brother. Instead, though her body was weakened, her heart seemed rejuvenated. That would go a long way.

  The highland was less dense here than below. From their vantage as they climbed, Kylan realized that they had been on a consistent ascent since they’d left the Spriton Plains so many days ago. The Dark Wood, and the Castle of the Crystal, nestled in the arms of the highlands, were lush and bountiful from the Black River that flowed down and within it. The landscape reminded Kylan of a youngling basket, a cradle—from which Olyeka-Staba, the Cradle-Tree, was named, he guessed.

  They had not gone far when Tavra signaled for them to stop. She proceeded slowly and the others followed, Naia putting her hand on the hilt of her dagger and picking up her pace to join the Silverling at the front. Kylan stayed back with Gurjin, who stooped to pick up a hand-size rock as a makeshift weapon.

  “Slowly now,” Tavra said over her shoulder. “There’s a blockage up ahead. Spiders. If we’re quiet and don’t disturb the
m, they’ll leave us alone. If we wake them, though, we’re in for big trouble. These are death-sting spiders, and like other spiders, they care not for Gelfling one bit.”

  The path widened and curved to accommodate an outcrop of boulders, half a dozen big things that were probably the last remains of an ancient avalanche. Most remarkable about the structure, though, was the frothy white mass of cobwebs that covered it. Had Kylan not heard Tavra say spiders, he might have thought the rocks had grown fur or some kind of mold or fungus. No spiders were in sight, but the boulders had plenty of nooks and crannies for a dark sleeping space.

  Kylan had never heard of death-sting spiders, but he could infer enough from the name to be careful. Just to be sure they understood, Tavra added quietly, “One sting will kill you. Don’t do anything stupid.”

  Tavra stepped lightly, circumventing the rocks, and they followed. Kylan marveled at the webbing, despite what dangers it might hide. It shone in the early morning sun like spun silver, draped in thick tapestries inlaid with delicate patterns.

  They had nearly passed the formation when Kylan saw something beneath the webs. At first he thought it was a trick of the eye, but he squinted and took a careful step closer.

  “Kylan, don’t,” Naia said.

  “I’m just looking . . . There’s something there. I think it’s dream-etching.”

  He edged forward, but the motion brought a chittering noise from deep inside the boulders. He dared not get closer at risk of waking the nest, but there was definitely something written on the rocks where the web was thickest. He could only make out one of the words:

  HER.

  “Leave it alone. You’ll wake them,” Tavra urged.

  “You all go on ahead. If I’m quiet, and gentle, I think I can make it out. So few can dream-etch. If someone took the time to write something, it must be important.”

  Naia crossed her arms. Though she whispered, her voice was no less firm.

  “I’m not leaving you with a swarm of death-stingers that are sure to be cranky if you wake them. If you stay, I stay.”

  Tavra would not have it. She said, “None of us are staying. We’re leaving. Now.”

  “Maybe Tavra’s right,” Gurjin said. “One or two spiders is no problem, but a whole nest . . . Who knows how deep it goes. These mountains are probably full of underground caves and tunnels. There could be thousands of them.”

  While the others argued quietly, Kylan scooted closer yet, as quietly as possible. He could almost make out the other words. He was so close!

  “You two go ahead,” Naia said. “I’ll stay here with Kylan. If he thinks this is important, then I do, too. If the spiders wake up, I might be able to dreamfast with them and explain we mean no harm. If worst comes, I’ll throw Kylan over my shoulder and run if I have to.”

  “They will not—” Tavra began, but Naia wasn’t asking.

  “Go!” she said, loud enough that the clicking, chirping, skittering noise from within the nest intensified. Gurjin stepped back, and Tavra glared at the Drenchen girl.

  “Fine,” the Silverling said. “But I warned you.”

  Then she continued up the trail. Gurjin hesitated, but Naia shooed him.

  “You’re not in a state to outrun anything right now,” she said. “We’ll be fine. Kylan and I have been through worse. We can handle this. It won’t take long.”

  “Be careful,” Gurjin said, and hurried after Tavra.

  Naia faced the rocks with Kylan.

  “I hope this is worth picking a fight with a Silverling,” she said. “Something must be bothering her. She’s as touchy as a . . . well, as a sleeping spider nest. Ha!”

  Kylan and Naia took slow steps closer to the rocks. No matter how quiet, each step stirred the shadows within the nest. Veiled by the gauzy web, the spiders inside were almost impossible to see, though as they neared, Kylan thought he could make out a rolling coat of shining black bodies. Web-wrapped lumps hung in the draped nest, some with the feet and tails of woodland creatures sticking out.

  More words etched into the rock also became clear, written in Gelfling hand:

  TRUST HER.

  Kylan almost took it for what it was, whatever it meant, but he could see there was still more hidden beneath the web. To reveal the last part of the message, he would have to brush the web aside. He picked up a stick, glancing within the nest, where some of the spiders were emerging, tiny black things crawling along the strands of the webbing. He held the stick carefully, to show he was not a threat, and to indicate to Naia what he was about to do.

  “You don’t have to stay,” Kylan whispered.

  “I know,” Naia replied.

  He took the last step, close enough to reach the rock with the web. Naia stayed back, watching the nest as it slowly came to life. Kylan reached out with the stick and poked at the web near the writing. As soon as the stick touched the web, spiders emerged, in small numbers at first, and then more.

  “Hurry,” Naia said.

  The web was sticky and thick, and he had to exert more effort than he expected to tear the netting to the side. The sounds of the nest grew louder as the larger spiders awoke, some the size of Kylan’s hand.

  “Hurry,” Naia said again, more urgently.

  Finally, the web came away. The remaining words that completed the etching were startling, and Kylan forgot about the spiders. Naia grabbed him by the pack and yanked him away, nearly picking up him and the pack in the process. Kylan took his eyes off the writing and willed his legs to move. They sprinted away from the outcrop and up the trail.

  When they were in the clear, they stopped to catch their breath. Tavra’s and Gurjin’s footprints marked the trail, and Kylan could make out their forms in the wood ahead. He panted and wiped his forehead, sweating more from shock than the physical exertion.

  “What did it say?” Naia asked, less winded but still weaker than usual. “You went pale as a cloud, and that’s saying something for a Spriton!”

  Kylan tried to tell her two times before finally getting the words out.

  “DO NOT TRUST HER,” he panted. “The words said DO NOT TRUST HER.”

  Naia’s eyes went wide, then narrow, and she looked up the trail, where eventually they would reach High Hill and the ram-horned mother-creature that lived there. Kylan wondered whether the message had been about Aughra. Or someone else? Did it mean nothing, or could it make all the difference?

  “Who do you think wrote it? Who is it about?” Kylan asked, though there was no reason Naia would know any better than he did. “Do you think it means . . . Aughra?”

  “I don’t know. For now, let’s keep this between us. We don’t need to give Tavra any more reasons to avoid Aughra.”

  Kylan didn’t like keeping secrets, but Naia was right.

  “She really is set on finding Rian,” he said. “Was she always like this? All duty and no joy?”

  “No . . . I don’t know. I wonder now if I ever really got to know her in the first place. Looking into the Crystal must have changed her.”

  “I think that would change anyone. No one else has even survived it. Perhaps now that she’s free of the castle, she’ll come around.”

  “Let’s hope so,” Naia said, and they hurried up the trail to where the others waited.

  CHAPTER 10

  On the second morning, a crag appeared in the mountains above. It was shrouded in fog, a big protrusion from the highlands that peered over the wood like the head of a beast gazing into the heavens. Aughra’s High Hill was not casually named. Within the mountainous forest, it was the highest point in all the land, near where the Black River originated, closest to the suns and moons and stars. Not a high hill, but the High Hill.

  Tavra never asked about what they had found written on the rock, and when Gurjin asked his sister, she shrugged and told him only that Kylan hadn’t been sure what it had meant,
and that she’d share its meaning if they ever decided they fully understood it.

  With their destination finally in view, the party quickened their pace. Even Gurjin’s steps were full of energy. He chatted with his sister as they maintained the rear of the group, leaving Kylan to watch Tavra quietly, to take in the misty, arid surroundings, and to think. That was his role, it seemed: to think. If that was his job in all of this, then he would gladly take on the burden.

  So he thought about the message on the stone, hidden beneath the spiderwebs. If only he could understand who it was for and who it was about. He had always thought of words as the best way to pass on meaning, but in this case, they fell far short. Without context, they meant nothing.

  He wanted to talk about it, and ask all the questions that didn’t have answers, but he couldn’t with Gurjin and Tavra around. Naia was right: If they asked Tavra’s opinion, the Silverling would undoubtedly use it as an excuse to abort their journey to the High Hill and pursue Rian instead. After they met with Aughra, then maybe they could bring it up.

  He scratched his arm where he still felt the phantom tingling of spiders crawling. It reminded him of something Tavra had said. He trotted ahead to where she was forging their path.

  “Tavra, may I ask you something?”

  She didn’t say no. She didn’t say anything.

  “What did you mean back there, about the spiders not caring for Gelfling?” he asked.

  To his surprise, she replied.

  “Spiders hate Gelfling . . . All Vapra know this.”

  “They hate us? All of them?”

 

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