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The Lost Heir (The Gryphon Chronicles, Book 1)

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by E. G. Foley




  E.G. FOLEY

  THE GRYPHON CHRONICLES, BOOK ONE:

  THE LOST HEIR

  By E.G. Foley

  The Gryphon Chronicles

  Book 1: THE LOST HEIR

  Book 2: JAKE & THE GIANT

  Credits & Copyright

  The Gryphon Chronicles, Book 1: The Lost Heir

  Copyright 2012 by E.G. Foley.

  Foley Publications.

  Cover Illustration by Mike Motz.

  Cover Design by Kim Killion.

  All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. No part of this book may be reproduced, transmitted, downloaded, recorded, or stored in any information storage and retrieval system, in any form or by any means, whether electronic or mechanical, now known or hereinafter invented, without the express written permission of the publisher, except for brief quotations for review purposes.

  First edition, 2012

  Dedication

  This book is dedicated to all the wonderful children in our lives, especially Rebecca, Deidre, Arthur, and Teagan; Samantha, Ashley, and Daniel; Gracie and Alex; and Mackenzie, too, with special thanks to Erin (a grownup) for the encouragement. This book is also warmly dedicated to the many hundreds of E’s “kids” who’ve made teaching a joy. Thanks for listening to my stories—this one’s for you!

  Table of Contents

  Cover

  Also by this Author

  PART I

  Prologue: An Urgent Message

  Chapter 1. The Pickpocket

  Chapter 2. A Family Resemblance

  Chapter 3. A Knight of the Order

  Chapter 4. Dani O’Dell

  Chapter 5. Witness for the Defense

  PART II

  Chapter 6. The Fairy Prisoner

  Chapter 7. The Ghosts of Newgate

  Chapter 8. Haunted

  Chapter 9. A Treacherous Lullaby

  Chapter 10. (Bad) Luck of the Irish

  Chapter 11. Beacon House

  Chapter 12. The Enchanted Library

  Chapter 13. Secrets of the Past

  Chapter 14. The Seashell Summons

  Chapter 15. Below the Surface

  PART III

  Chapter 16. Grounded

  Chapter 17. Of Parting Ways & Flying Machines

  Chapter 18. Bradford Park

  Chapter 19. Gentleman and Lady

  Chapter 20. The Mission of Malwort

  Chapter 21. How To Be An Ear

  Chapter 22. The Frog Problem

  Chapter 23. A Visit to Gryphondale

  Chapter 24. Sweet Goes Sour

  Chapter 25. Jake Gets Consequences

  Chapter 26. The Oboedire Spell

  Chapter 27. A Secret in the Forest

  Chapter 28. Where’s Jake?

  PART IV

  Chapter 29. The Talk of the Town

  Chapter 30. Say Uncle

  Chapter 31. A Familiar Apparition

  Chapter 32. Hidden Memories

  Chapter 33. Lost Fairy Found

  Chapter 34. Jake Goes To the Ball

  Chapter 35. Family Secrets

  PART V

  Chapter 36. The Fairy Courier

  Chapter 37. Big Red

  Chapter 38. Revenge of the Gryphon

  Chapter 39. A Shocking Claim

  Chapter 40. Born To Fly

  Chapter 41. Her Majesty, the Queen

  Chapter 42. Home Again

  Epilogue: Fairy Dust

  What’s Next?

  About the Authors

  Blood will tell.

  ~Old English Proverb

  PART I

  PROLOGUE

  An Urgent Message

  Chains clanked in the darkness as the creature paced and prowled its cell, letting out another throaty snarl.

  Full eleven years, the beast had been a prisoner in this dungeon, and every day its anger grew—but never before to this ferocious pitch, as it heard what its captors were scheming. Their voices echoed down the stone chute from somewhere above.

  The traitor and the witch.

  “The boy must die.”

  “Don’t be so impatient, Waldrick! Think of his powers! A lad like that is too useful to waste. Just capture him, and we will make him serve us.”

  “No, Fionnula! The risk is too great! He could destroy everything we’ve worked for. Don’t you understand that?”

  The beast roared in protest.

  “Shut up down there!” the hag hollered. “Waldrick, did you forget to feed the monster?”

  “Of course not. I threw a goat down to it yesterday—just the way it likes its prey, alive and kicking. Vicious thing.”

  “What does it want, then? Sometimes I swear that thing can understand us.”

  “Who cares? It’s just a stupid animal,” he said.

  “That happens to be about a thousand years old,” the witch muttered with considerably more respect.

  The creature’s golden eyes gleamed with intelligence and futile vengeance in the shadows. But the co-conspirators in the stone-carved lair above forgot about the beast once more and returned to the topic at hand.

  “If you bring the boy back to me alive, my lord, I might be able to transfer his powers to you.”

  “Or to yourself?” he countered suspiciously.

  “Don’t be tedious! Why should I need more magic? You know who I am. While you, poor dear, were robbed. It’s only fitting you should take from him what was stolen from you.”

  “Tempting…”

  The beast could hear the earl’s boot-heels thumping slowly across the stone floor above as he paced in thought.

  “Very tempting, indeed. But still not worth it,” he concluded after a moment. “No matter what happens, the past must stay hidden, and you had better assist me in this, after all I’ve done for you—”

  “Calm yourself! And don’t even think about threatening me. There’s no need to get yourself into a snit,” she huffed. “If you want him dead, then dead the boy will be. But we have one small problem.”

  “What’s that?”

  “Not even my Seeing Bowl will show me where he is. The Kinderveil is still protecting him.”

  “Is it? Well, if he is still cloaked by that old spell, at least the others won’t be able to find him, either. Even better, until it fully dissolves, his powers won’t be at full strength yet—and I say, we’d better kill him while we still can. Before long, he may be too powerful, if he’s anything like his father.”

  “Well, how are we going to find him, then? Half the magical world is already out looking for the brat!”

  “Don’t worry, the only one I need to find is Guardian Derek Stone. Poor, disgraced has-been,” he added with a sneer. “The Order is sure to send a messenger to summon the great warrior just as soon as they get a lead on where the boy is. Then Stone will rush to Jacob’s side to protect him. But we’ll beat him to the punch.”

  “How?”

  “Simple,” he said. “Intercept the message.” With that, the heavy door above creaked shut as the earl marched off to carry out his treacherous plan. The creature threw back its head and roared in useless fury.

  As if the boy could hear.

  Swift as a shooting star, a tiny shape no larger than a hummingbird zipped across the glowing face of Big Ben, then disappeared into the night sky in a trail of golden sparkles.

  The fairy Gladwin flew at top speed to bring the Guardian his orders. Strapped across her back, the scrolled message she carried was only as big as a matchstick, but the news it bore was huge. The boy was alive!

  The Lost Heir of Griffon had finally been spotted!

  The sighting was confirmed. Captain
Lydia Brackwater of the Thames water nymphs, of all people, had come face to face with him. Which was rather ironic, Gladwin thought, considering it was Lydia and her sisters who had lost the boy in the first place. Ah, but the watery folk could be shifty, unreliable. If you wanted something done right, ask a fairy, she thought stoutly.

  In any case, young Jacob Everton was in more danger than he knew. He needed protection—the best the Order could provide. She raced on.

  Far below, where Waterloo Bridge straddled a meander of the Thames, London shimmered with the lights of a spring night. Carriages with high-stepping horses rolled through the cobbled streets of the theatre district. Gentlemen in top hats escorted ladies in satin bustle-gowns to operas, fancy dinners, concerts, plays.

  Here and there, through mansion windows, brilliant chandeliers lit up glittering ballrooms, where elegant couples waltzed and whirled—and most of them had no inkling of all the enchantment tucked into the byways and corners of their world.

  Humans, Gladwin thought with a snort. Shaking her head to herself, she zoomed away from the city. The air tasted sweeter over the countryside. Instead of roofs and chimneys and a maze of cramped streets, she now looked down on stone-walled meadows, where cows and sheep had bedded down for the night.

  Frogs sang in the ponds. Owls hooted in the great, old trees, and the road was a pale ribbon winding through the gentle hills.

  She sped toward the distant hilltop, where Guardian Derek Stone was believed to be encamped among the lonely ruins of an old abbey. Along the way, she noticed a thatched-roof tavern by the roadside and paused.

  He had better not be in there, she thought, hovering over it with a frown. It did rather seem like the sort of disreputable place where the wandering warrior might like to get into a brawl. Rumor had it the tragedy surrounding this boy’s parents had made the Guardian even meaner and more dangerous…

  Deciding to hope for the best, Gladwin flew on. A few minutes later, she descended on a cautious angle over the treetops, approaching the hollowed stone shell of the ancient cathedral. Her iridescent wings beating at half-speed to slow her pace, she buzzed lower, gazing down at medieval columns tumbled to the ground and overgrown with weeds. Then she saw the place where Derek Stone had set up camp, but the Guardian was not at home.

  “Oh, crocodile!” she whispered. Scowling, she alighted on the log where his worn leather knapsack leaned across from the extinguished campfire. Humph! I knew he was in that pub! Well, he’d better get back soon. She adjusted the message across her back, then folded her arms with a feisty little huff and proceeded to keep a lookout, marching back and forth along the log.

  Fortunately, (because fairies are not known for their patience), she did not have long to wait. About time! Hearing someone approach, she turned, expecting to see the Guardian…but the man who stepped out of the shadows was not Derek Stone.

  She gasped and with a flick of her wings darted for cover inside the hollow log. She peeped out through a knotty hole in the wood. Who—what is that? A giant?

  Well, not that big, but almost.

  The meaty bruiser marching into Derek’s camp had a boxer’s flattened nose and a bald head like a cannonball. Spotting her fairy trail still fading, he sneered in her direction. “Come out, little courier! You carry a message of interest to our master!”

  Oh, no! Gladwin gulped, spotting a second man walking toward the log, and a third. Ambushed. Worse, a whiff of sulfur warned her they were servitors—magically created servants. Not good. Her heart began to pound.

  An experienced messenger for the Order of the Yew Tree, however, she kept her wits about her. I’ve got to get out of here. Gliding silently through the dark tunnel of the old hollow log, she came out the other end and stayed low to the ground, weaving among the weeds and wildflowers.

  Suddenly the tall grass parted and she nearly ran straight into a pair of giant knees looming right in front of her. “She’s ’ere!” the ruffian boomed, trying to use his coat like a butterfly net, swiping at her.

  She dodged aside in the nick of time.

  She found herself surrounded, flying every which way for her life. She dove to the right, close enough to feel the breeze as another tried to catch her in his hat.

  She flew a few inches higher on a diagonal. The next grab caught at her foot and sent her tumbling in a midair somersault. But she quickly righted herself and flew on, shaking her head to clear away the dizziness.

  Only one clear path remained open: straight ahead. She raced forward at top speed, too fast even for a Guardian’s supernatural reflexes to catch her, but then—disaster.

  Too late, she saw the spider web ahead.

  She couldn’t stop in time! She let out a cry, but the next thing she knew, she was trapped in a net of horrid, sticky strands.

  Her arms were caught; she tried to kick free, but she was hopelessly glued. Then she looked up in dread as the hulking builder of the web crept toward her.

  Brown and hairy with white spots, fat and bulbous in the moonlight, the huge spider fixed its many cold eyes eagerly upon her. “Heh, heh, fairy blood is fizzy-sweet like root-beer!”

  “I say! Good boy, now. There’s a nice spider. Let’s not do anything hasty,” she said with a gulp. “Won’t you please free me from your web? I am not a fly, as you can see, and I-I really must be going.” She shrieked when it hopped closer, much too agile on its eight long legs. “Stay back! I’m in the service of the Queen, I’ll have you know!”

  “Yummy yum!” the spider twittered in its clinkety arachnid voice.

  But just as it opened its pincer fangs to bite her, the spider froze at the sound of a deep, cultured voice. “Now, now, Malwort, we discussed this. You are not to drink her. Fairies aren’t food.”

  “Yesssss, Master.” The disappointed spider backed away to a slightly safer distance.

  With her cheek stuck on a strand of web, Gladwin could not turn her head to see who had spoken until the gentleman strolled into view. He wore a splendid long coat, despite the balmy temperature of the spring night. He swept off his top hat politely, revealing brown hair sculpted into waves by a shiny, crusted helmet of Macassar oil. “My, my. A royal garden fairy. What an honor,” he said with a bow.

  Ladies probably thought he was handsome, but his icy smile sent a chill all the way down to Gladwin’s wingtips, and as he stared at her, his cold gray eyes held a faraway look, as though he were distracted, listening to some mad waltz forever playing in his head.

  “Tasty morsel?” the spider whined.

  “Of course. Excellent work, Malwort! You really are the cleverest spider in England.” He tossed a large, stunned horsefly to the spider.

  “Thaaaank you, oh, thank you, master!” Malwort ran off to fetch the fly, then huddled in the corner to devour it.

  Gladwin winced. She looked at the sinister gentleman again and found him studying her intently, the moonlight gleaming on his ivory-handled walking stick. “Ah, you look surprised. My little pet there,” he said. “Talking spider. Arachno-sapiens. They’re very rare,” he added with an arrogant little wave of his hand. “I acquired him in my travels.”

  He stepped closer and leaned down, inspecting her prettiest feature: her wings.

  She was rather vain of them, in truth.

  “Do forgive me for staring, little one.” He let out a wistful sigh. “It’s been a long time since I’ve seen one of your people. Beautiful thing. I shall enjoy adding you to my collection.”

  Collection? Gladwin looked at him in dread.

  “Oxley, keep an eye out for the Guardian,” he ordered the bald giant with a quick glance over his shoulder. “We must be gone before Stone arrives. Wouldn’t want things to get—messy now, would we?”

  “Aye, milord.” The muscleman trudged off to watch the road for the dark and dangerous Derek Stone.

  “Who are you? What do you want with me?” Gladwin demanded, but he just shook his head at her.

  “I’m sorry, dear heart, but I don’t speak bumblebee. I
have no idea what you’re saying, and to be honest—I really don’t care.”

  Gladwin scowled, but kept trying to fight free. Whoever he was, if he could not understand the fairy tongue, that meant he was an ordinary human and had no magic of his own.

  “There, there, don’t fret,” he chided. “I’m not going to harm you. I just want to help you…with this heavy burden. Surely it’s too much for you to carry, tiny as you are. I’ll take that, if you don’t mind.”

  “No!” She shook her head frantically as his giant hand came toward her, encased in a fine leather glove. He reached down with thumb and forefinger, and plucked the scroll away from where it was snugly secured between her wings. “Give that back!” Oh, this is terrible! thought Gladwin. “Help! Help! Derek Stone! Where are you?”

  But there still was no sign of the once-heroic knight.

  Guardian Derek Stone, in fact, was slumped on a barstool in the tavern, just as she had feared, nursing his pint of ale, and growling at anyone who came too close to him. The raucous music and the cheering around the farmers’ arm-wrestling match nearby made it hard for him to hear the faint warning instinct beginning to sound the alarm in the back of his mind.

  He was trying so hard to sense the boy’s location, though he wasn’t even sure his Guardian finding-instinct worked anymore. If only the rumor were true—if the kid was really alive, then maybe he wasn’t an utter failure, despite how he had failed his dear friends, poor Jacob and Elizabeth. But it was no use.

  The Kinderveil’s powerful spell that protected all magical children from birth still clung on, cloaking their son’s whereabouts. Meanwhile, his own dark, inward searching made Derek Stone oblivious to the disaster befalling the tiny fairy back at his camp.

  Gladwin’s heart pounded as she realized she was on her own in this.

  She could do nothing but watch in helpless fury as the wicked stranger unrolled the message and read it. “So, it is true!” he murmured to himself. “My brother’s brat survived, after all. I hardly believed it myself until this moment. Well! I have to see young Jacob for myself before he dies. Time to go!” he barked at his men.

 

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