The Stone of Destiny

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The Stone of Destiny Page 1

by Jim Ware




  To view the Santa Piedra map online go to www.davidccook.com/explore/stoneofdestiny/Santa_Piedra.jpg

  To view The Sidhe map online go to www.davidccook.com/explore/stoneofdestiny/The_Sidhe.jpg

  THE STONE OF DESTINY

  Published by David C Cook

  4050 Lee Vance View

  Colorado Springs, CO 80918 U.S.A.

  David C Cook Distribution Canada

  55 Woodslee Avenue, Paris, Ontario, Canada N3L 3E5

  David C Cook U.K., Kingsway Communications

  Eastbourne, East Sussex BN23 6NT, England

  David C Cook and the graphic circle C logo

  are registered trademarks of Cook Communications Ministries.

  All rights reserved. Except for brief excerpts for review purposes,

  no part of this book may be reproduced or used in any form

  without written permission from the publisher.

  This story is a work of fiction. All characters and events are the product of the author’s imagination. Any resemblance to any person, living or dead, is coincidental.

  Genesis 28:10–12, 16, 18–19 in chapter 23 are taken from the King James Version of the Bible. (Public Domain.) The first segment of Deuteronomy 26:5 in chapter 9 is taken from the New American Standard Bible, © Copyright 1960, 1995 by The Lockman Foundation. Used by permission. The second segment of Deuteronomy 26:5 is taken from The Holy Bible, English Standard Version. Copyright © 2000; 2001 by Crossway Bibles, a division of Good News Publishers. Used by permission. All rights reserved.

  LCCN 2010942615

  ISBN 978-1-4347-6464-5

  eISBN 978-1-4347-0363-7

  © 2011 Jim Ware

  The author is represented by MacGregor Literary.

  The Team: John Blase, Andrew Meisenheimer, Amy Kiechlin, Caitlyn York, Karen Athen.

  Cover Illustrations: Luke Flowers Design, Luke Flowers, © David C Cook.

  First Edition 2011

  To Joni,

  who never stopped believing in the story

  Contents

  Prologue

  Part 1

  Chapter One: Right Field

  Chapter Two: The Tower Lab

  Chapter Three: Madame Medea

  Chapter Four: Simon Brach

  Chapter Five: Lia Fail

  Chapter Six: There Are Other Stories

  Chapter Seven: La Cueva de los Manos

  Chapter Eight: Mist and Shadows

  Chapter Nine: Tremors

  Part 2

  Chapter Ten: The Green Island

  Chapter Eleven: The Tunnel of Light

  Chapter Twelve: Pursued

  Chapter Thirteen: The Song of the Stone

  Chapter Fourteen: The Fir Bolg

  Chapter Fifteen: The Tale of Eithne

  Chapter Sixteen: The Maelstrom

  Chapter Seventeen: The Legend of Compostela

  Chapter Eighteen: Lapis Exsilis

  Part 3

  Chapter Nineteen: The Mission

  Chapter Twenty: Oisin

  Chapter Twenty-One: Elixir Vitae

  Chapter Twenty-Two: Jacob’s Ladder

  Chapter Twenty-Three: Ollamh Folla

  Chapter Twenty-Four: Harp’s Haven

  Chapter Twenty-Five: Broken Trust

  Chapter Twenty-Six: The Battle for the Stone

  Chapter Twenty-Seven: Lost and Found

  Chapter Twenty-Eight: More Than Enough

  Epilogue

  AfterWords

  An Interview with the Author

  Pronunciation Guide

  Glossary

  Prologue

  October 31, -----

  J. Q. P. Izaak

  Institute of Linguistics

  Santa Piedra, California

  Only a few moments are left to me now. While time remains, I will make my last confession.

  I will confess that I was not expecting to see her again.

  I will confess that I did not think it possible.

  Until quite recently, much as I admired the philosophy expounded in the books that bear their names, I had given little serious thought to the actual, literal existence of such persons. The uncanny thing, the thing that even now I find hard to believe, is that each one eventually answered my call: Hermes, Stephanos, Jabir; Scot, Flamel, Paracelsus. And then finally, she came to me as well. From somewhere out of the unknown they responded to my burning curiosity. They showed me wisdom and granted my pleas for power. Higher and higher, step by step, they lifted me up along the ascending stairway of knowledge.

  But not without cost. She in particular demanded compensation. In exchange for her favors, she placed me under oath to seek the thing she seeks. She charged me to tell her at once if ever I should discover the smallest clue as to its whereabouts.

  And now, against all odds, that clue has actually fallen into my hands. It came to me when I least expected it. Why, I cannot say; how, I dare not.

  This, too, I must confess.

  But I will also confess that, having what she wants, I am at last resolved to keep it from her. Though she torment me, yet will I keep the secret. She knows all this, of course. She knows that I know. And yet she does not know exactly what I know. My suspicion is that she thinks I know much more than I do. And so she returns to claim her due.

  Something approaches through the darkness, a swirling spot of deeper blackness rising up against the night sky across La Coruna Inlet. Out of the iron heart of the gray sea mist, it advances—a swelling shadow, a dark man-shape, a lumbering giant looming over the sleeping town. A vast hand sweeps upward over the stony slope above the shore.

  I can see it all from my window here at the Institute.

  The Board of Regents will be astonished to learn that such experiments were being conducted under their very noses. For this I bear a burden of sincere remorse. I realize that activities of this nature do not normally figure into the routine of a linguist and teacher of language.

  But words are powerful things, and the quest for deeper meanings sometimes produces unintended results.

  To my young son I bequeath what remains of the Great Work. My books and instruments—pestle and mortar, hermetic jars and alembics, scissors, shovels, bottles, spoons, and pans—must go to him as soon as he is old enough to learn their uses. May he succeed where I have failed. May he climb the stairway of wisdom. May he learn more than I have been able to learn about the appropriate way to blend knowledge and light. At the top of that ladder stands the door to Power. All the Power of the stars. Of this I remain convinced.

  I could say more, but I dare not linger. From the room across the hall come sounds of shattering glass. An intangible, invisible, yet palpable, presence pauses at the door. The shadows in the corners grow deeper.

  Now that it comes to it, I confess a desperate and sickening desire to escape the trial of this last encounter.

  Now that it comes to it, I confess—

  Part 1

  Chapter One

  Right Field

  Morgan Izaak hated Santa Piedra Middle School—he loathed physical education; he detested competitive games like football, soccer, and baseball and the twisted social caste system that was founded upon them; and most of all, he resented the people who had somehow been granted the power to use these instruments of torture to oppress him and make his life wretched.

  What could a boy like Morgan do against that kind o
f power? Nothing. Not for the time being, anyway. But one of these days, he would throw off the shackles of his bondage; one of these days he’d wield a power greater than anything they’d ever imagined. One of these days he’d show them all.

  He’d do it through alchemy.

  Mercury, sulphur, salt.

  It was a warm, dreamy afternoon in early spring, and Morgan was standing out in deep right field, his skinny legs spread wide apart, his lanky arms akimbo. Over and over again he rehearsed the formula to himself: Mercury, sulphur, salt. Sticking his forefinger into his mouth, he picked a scrap of lettuce from his braces—the last remains of lunch—and spat on the ground. Lazily he swung his fielder’s glove at a passing fly and breathed out a prayer that the ball wouldn’t come his way. Good thing nobody ever hits to right field, he thought. Mercury, sulphur, salt …

  Not the substances themselves, but their essential qualities … essential qualities extracted from the raw materials … One primal element … in it all the power of the stars.…

  Off in the distance the game was dragging on, but Morgan hadn’t the slightest notion of the inning or the score. His mind was fixed upon weightier matters: mineral spirits and elemental emanations; earth, air, fire, and water; the power of the stars and the unity of all things; freedom and release. He yawned. He stretched. He kicked idly at a dandelion that had pushed its way up through a tussock of tough crabgrass.

  Then he turned and stared out to the west.

  Across the field, past the chain-link fence, over the tops of the dark green pines and cypresses that covered the seaward slope beyond the schoolyard, he could see the afternoon sunlight glinting on the blue face of La Coruna Inlet. Like gold, he thought with a smile. Essence of gold. Again his mind drifted off into dreams of power—power to turn lead or tin into gold. Power to change things. Mercury, sulphur, salt.

  “Hey, batta, batta, batta! Swing, batta, swing!”

  Dimly, gradually, the remote shouts of his classmates elbowed their way back in among the jumble of his wandering thoughts. He glanced at the infield and frowned. Shoving a clump of yellow hair out of his eyes, he lifted his face to the sky and squinted. The sun was sailing far out over the ocean, and there was a damp, salty fragrance in the air—a sure sign that the sea-fog would soon be washing ashore down on Front Street.

  It must be past three o’clock by now, he thought impatiently. It has to be! He pursed his lips, closed his eyes, and pictured himself leaning over the stained and mottled workbench in his lab, adjusting the Bunsen burner, leafing through the pages of a dusty old copy of Paracelsus.

  Recombine the essences in an alembic over a flame of very low heat.… Fixed principle … Volatile principle … Quintessence of earth.…

  Crack!

  Only in the vaguest way was he aware of it: the sharp report of a bat and ball connecting somewhere, followed by the scuffle of running feet and the swelling babble of urgent voices raised in anxious shouts.

  “Right field!” someone shouted.

  “Wake up, Izaak!”

  “Oh no!” breathed Morgan. They were calling his name! Was it the ball? Could it be? He shook himself, spun around, and feverishly searched the bright expanse of the sky. Blinded by the sun, he pawed the air helplessly with his glove.

  Whoosh! A blast of wind like a passing truck.

  Whump! A stunning blow to his abdomen, like the kick of a mule directly to the solar plexus.

  Morgan gasped. He clutched his stomach. Stars clouded his vision. He saw a baseball drop to the ground at his feet. Then numb, dumb, and deflated, he doubled over and collapsed into the sweetly fragrant turf, straining for air, staring in wide-eyed shock at the grass-stained toes of his tennis shoes.

  In the next moment his teammates gathered in a huddle above his head. Lower and lower they bent over him, a confused mass of dark shapes, blocking out the sunlight. A hand seized him roughly by the shoulder, ripping the sleeve of his new blue Oxford shirt. Someone yanked him mercilessly to his feet. He blinked, staggered, and swayed.

  “Idiot!”

  For all his dizziness, he couldn’t help but recognize the voice of Baxter Knowles, captain of the team. “What have you been doing out here, Izaak? Daydreaming?”

  Morgan lurched and retched and tried to speak but found he couldn’t utter a sound. The muscles of his chest were completely paralyzed. There wasn’t a single molecule of air left in his lungs, and he felt helpless to refill them no matter how hard he tried. Steadying himself as best he could, he gazed mutely from one end of the semicircle of hostile faces to the other while the scene oscillated, blurred, and spun crazily before his eyes.

  “We’ve had it with you, Izaak!” Baxter said, glaring at him from under the bill of a San Francisco Giants baseball cap. “You’re out of the game!” Baxter’s face was red and glistening with perspiration. “Nick, you’ll just have to cover center and right. We don’t have a chance with him on the team!”

  Murmurs of assent all around. Baxter let go of Morgan’s shirt and turned away. Morgan crumpled into the grass like an old rag doll.

  “Next time ask the Wizard for a brain, Strawhead!” Baxter said over his shoulder as the rest of the team followed him back to the infield.

  “Robot-Mouth!” said another boy.

  “Freckle-Nose!” added a third.

  Morgan squeezed his eyes shut. He wanted desperately to yell something back at them. He wanted to tell them that he that he was glad to be out of the game. Most of all, he wanted to slay Baxter with a swift, rapierlike insult—to blow him and all his kind clean off the face of the earth. But he couldn’t. He was absolutely powerless. He didn’t even have the breath to moan or groan. And so, still struggling for air, he rolled over on his side, gripped his abdomen, and slipped back into the laboratory inside his mind.

  The fusing of these materials into a new and unknown substance … the single substance of which all material is composed … yielding in the end a fine white powder … a powder with transmutative properties … in it—

  all the power of the stars …

  Chapter Two

  The Tower Lab

  The tall Gothic tower of St. Halistan’s Church rose blue-gray and hazy in the gathering mist as Morgan came trudging up Iglesia Street. Upon reaching home—a white stucco duplex that he and his mother shared with the Ariello family—he cast an anxious glance at the darkened window. I hope Mom’s feeling better this afternoon, he thought.

  He hated to keep her waiting alone in an empty house, especially when she wasn’t well. But he couldn’t neglect his work, not now, not when he’d been making such encouraging progress. To tell her what he was up to was out of the question. So he let her believe that he’d been helping George Ariello around the church every day after school. That way, she didn’t worry, and he didn’t feel quite so guilty.

  It was a harmless deception.

  Besides, he had the consolation of knowing that once his experiments succeeded he’d be in a position to offer her some real help. With the Elixir, he’d be able to cure her every ailment. Smiling at the thought, he stepped carefully over the gaping cracks in the ancient sidewalk where the roots of an old jacaranda tree had pushed the pavement up into a steep little hill of broken concrete. Then he jumped off the curb and dashed across the street to the double oak doors at the base of the square stone tower.

  Slinging his backpack over his left shoulder, Morgan seized the brass handle and opened the massive door. From within came the sweet tones of a violin. He had heard the tune many times before—a sad old Irish air called “The May Morning Dew.” Almost involuntarily he paused for a moment to listen. Then he poked his head inside and squinted up through the confused jumble of light and shadow on the tower staircase.

  At the top of the first flight, sitting on the last stone step below the first wooden landing, was a slim girl with a fiddle u
nder her chin. At the sound of Morgan’s steps, she lowered the instrument, shook a strand of copper-colored hair out of her face, and turned to him. Of all the striking things about her remarkable appearance, her eyes were the most remarkably striking of all, for they were of two very different colors. The right one, in keeping with her dark olive complexion, was a lustrous brown, but the left was sky blue—a blue so pale and clear that it seemed almost luminous in the dim and shifting light.

  “Hey, Eny,” said Morgan.

  “Hullo, Morgan,” she replied. “How’s your day?”

  Eny, the only child of George and Moira Ariello, St. Halistan’s resident caretakers, spent a big part of her free time here on the tower stairs. The stairwell was one of her favorite haunts—the place to which she most naturally resorted when she wasn’t at home or in school or down by the sea caves of La Punta Lira. Here she would sit almost every afternoon, reading or playing her violin. When she grew tired of stories or music, she would lift her face to the light and ponder the tall, arched stained-glass window above the landing: a colorful, jewel-like depiction of angels ascending and descending between heaven and earth on Jacob’s golden ladder.

  “My day?” said Morgan in answer to her question. “The usual. Baxter Knowles is still Baxter Knowles.”

  Besides his mother, Eny was the one person in the world with whom Morgan felt he could speak freely and openly. She could be dreamy and quiet, but she was also an unfailingly good listener. Though nearly two years his junior, she was practically Morgan’s only friend. He thought of her as his soror mystica—the “mystical sister” every good alchemist needs to assist him in the Great Work.

  “Anyway,” he continued as he came clumping up the stairs, “I didn’t come to talk about Baxter. There’s something I want to show you. Up in my lab. Come with me?”

  Without a word she laid the fiddle gently in its case and leaned it in a corner on the landing. Then she followed him up two flights of creaking wooden stairs until they reached a small green door on a dingy gray-carpeted landing. Morgan fumbled in the pocket of his brown corduroys, pulled out a little brass key, and unlocked the door. Inside lay a bare atticlike room where a rickety wooden ladder led to a square opening in the ceiling. Quickly he scaled the steps and flung open the trap door.

 

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