The Ironwood Tree

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The Ironwood Tree Page 1

by Tony DiTerlizzi




  LIST OF FULL-PAGE ILLUSTRATIONS

  LETTER FROM HOLLY BLACK

  LETTER FROM THE GRACE KIDS

  MAP OF THE SPIDERWICK ESTATE

  CHAPTER ONE: IN WHICH

  THERE IS BOTH A FIGHT AND A DUEL

  CHAPTER TWO: IN WHICH

  THE GRACE TWINS ARE TRIPLETS

  CHAPTER THREE: IN WHICH

  SIMON SOLVES A RIDDLE

  CHAPTER FOUR: IN WHICH

  THE TWINS DISCOVER A TREE UNLIKE ANY OTHER

  CHAPTER FIVE: IN WHICH

  JARED AND SIMON WAKE SLEEPING BEAUTY

  CHAPTER SIX: IN WHICH

  THE STONES SPEAK

  CHAPTER SEVEN: IN WHICH

  THERE IS AN UNEXPECTED BETRAYAL

  ABOUT TONY DITERLIZZI AND HOLLY BLACK

  MAP OF THE SPIDERWICK ESTATE AND SURROUNDING AREAS

  “IT’S AN ABANDONED QUARRY.”

  “I BET HE LIKES YOU.”

  “I LIKE FENCING BETTER WITHOUT ALL THIS JUNK.”

  CLANG OF THIN METAL BLADES

  THE COACH STOPPED HIM.

  “DON’T YOU KNOW ME?”

  “WHAT KIND OF FAERIE DO YOU THINK IT WAS?”

  “MALLORY?”

  JARED FROZE.

  SEEM TO TRICK HEN TOOK PEN

  “THAT’S PRETTY FAR DOWN.”

  “WHAT HAVE WE HERE? PRISONERS!”

  “BEHOLD, MORTALS, A BEAUTY THAT WILL NEVER FADE.”

  “MY LORD KORTING.”

  “YOU’RE GOING TO HAVE TO FEED US.”

  “THEY’RE NOT HERE, EITHER.”

  “LEAN ON THE SWORD LIKE A CANE.”

  “THE STONES. THE STONESSPEAK. THEYSPEAKTOME.”

  “THESTONESSPEAK.”

  TOGETHER THEY LEAPED.

  METAL DOGS BURST INTO THE ROOM.

  “WHAT HAPPENED?”

  “KILL THEM!”

  For my grandmother, Melvina, who said I should write a book just like this one and to whom I replied that I never would

  —H. B.

  For Arthur Rackham, may you continue to inspire others as you have me

  —T. D.

  Dear Reader,

  Over the years that Tony and I have been friends, we’ve shared the same childhood fascination with faeries. We did not realize the importance of that bond or how it might be tested.

  One day Tony and I—along with several other authors—were doing a signing at a large bookstore. When the signing was over, we lingered, helping to stack books and chatting, until a clerk approached us. He said that there had been a letter left for us. When I inquired which one of us, we were surprised by his answer.

  “Both of you,” he said.

  The letter was exactly as reproduced on the following page. Tony spent a long time just staring at the photocopy that came with it. Then, in a hushed voice, he wondered aloud about the remainder of the manuscript. We hurriedly wrote a note, tucked it back into the envelope, and asked the clerk to deliver it to the Grace children.

  Not long after, a package arrived on my doorstep, bound in red ribbon. A few days after that, three children rang the bell and told me this story.

  What has happened since is hard to describe. Tony and I have been plunged into a world we never quite believed in. We now see that faeries are far more than childhood stories. There is an invisible world around us and we hope that you, dear reader, will open your eyes to it.

  Holly Black

  Dear Mrs. Black and Mr. DiTerlizzi:

  I know that a lot of people don’t believe in faeries, but I do and I think that you do too. After I read your books, I told my brothers about you and we decided to write. We know about real faeries. In fact, we know a lot about them.

  The page attached* to this one is a photocopy from an old book we found in our attic. It isn’t a great copy because we had some trouble with the copier. The book tells people how to identify faeries and how to protect themselves. Can you please give this book to your publisher? If you can, please put a letter in this envelope and give it back to the store. We will find a way to send the book. The normal mail is too dangerous.

  We just want people to know about this. The stuff that has happened to us could happen to anyone.

  Sincerely,

  Mallory, Jared, and Simon Grace

  * Not included.

  “It’s an abandoned quarry.”

  Chapter One

  IN WHICH There Is Both a Fight and a Duel

  The engine of the station wagon was already running. Mallory leaned against the door, her everyday sneakers grungy against the bright white of her long fencing socks. Her hair was gelled and pulled back into a ponytail so tight that it made her eyes bulge. Mrs. Grace stood on the driver’s side, her hands on her hips.

  “I found him!” Jared panted, running up to join them.

  “Simon,” their mother called. “Where were you? We looked everywhere!”

  “The carriage house,” Simon said. “Taking care of the . . . uh, a bird I found.” Simon looked uncomfortable. He wasn’t used to having to lie. That was mostly Jared’s job.

  Mallory rolled her eyes. “Too bad Mom wouldn’t leave without you.”

  “Mallory,” their mother said, shaking her head in disapproval. “All of you—get in the car. We’re going to be late already, and I still have to drop something off.”

  As Mallory turned to put her bag in the trunk, Jared noticed that her chest looked strange. Stiff and weirdly . . . big.

  “What are you wearing?” he asked, pointing.

  “Shut up,” she said.

  He snickered. “It’s just that you look like you’ve got—”

  “Shut up!” she said again, getting into the front seat of the car while the boys climbed in the back. “It’s for protection, and I have to have it on.”

  Jared smiled against the window and watched the woods go by. There hadn’t been any faerie activity in more than two weeks—even Thimbletack had been quiet—and occasionally Jared had to remind himself that it was real. Sometimes it seemed like everything could be explained away. Even the burning water had been dismissed as simply being from a contaminated well. Until the old plumbing could be connected to a central line, they used gallons of supermarket water without Mom thinking it was strange. But there was Simon’s griffin, and that couldn’t be explained by anything but Arthur’s field guide.

  “Stop chewing on your ponytail,” their mother said to Mallory. “What is making you so jittery? Is this new team really that good?”

  “I’m fine,” Mallory said.

  Back in New York she’d fenced in sweatpants and a team jacket chosen from a pile. There had been a guy who’d hold up his hand on your side if you had scored. But at the new school, fencers wore real uniforms and had electric rapiers wired to a scoring machine that flashed lights when someone got hit. Jared thought that was enough to make anyone jumpy.

  Apparently their mother had another explanation. “It’s that boy, isn’t it? The one you were talking to on Wednesday when I picked you up.”

  “What boy?” Simon asked from the backseat, already starting to laugh.

  “Be quiet,” said their mother, but she answered anyway. “Chris, the fencing captain. He is the captain, isn’t he?”

  Their sister grunted noncommittally.

  “Chris and Mallory sitting in a tree, K-I-S-S-I-N-G,” Simon sang. Jared giggled, and Mallory turned toward the backseat, eyes narrowed.

  “Want to lose all your baby teeth at once?”

  “Don’t listen to them,” their mother said. “And don’t worry. You’re a smart, pretty girl and a great fencer. I bet he likes you.”

  “Mom!” Mallory groaned and sank lower in the front seat.

  Their mother stopped at the library where she work
ed, dropped off some paperwork, and returned to the idling car, somewhat out of breath.

  “I bet he likes you.”

  “Come on! I can’t be late,” Mallory said, smoothing her hair back unnecessarily. “It’s my first match!”

  Their mother sighed. “We’re almost there.”

  Jared resumed looking out the window in time to see what looked like a deep crater. They were driving over a stone bridge. The school bus never went this way.

  “Simon, look! What’s that?”

  “It’s an abandoned quarry,” Mallory said impatiently. “Where people used to dig up rocks.”

  “A quarry,” Jared echoed. He remembered something from the map they’d found in their great-uncle Arthur’s study.

  “Think they found any fossils?” Simon asked, half crawling over Jared to look out the window. “I wonder what dinosaurs lived in this area.”

  Their mother was already pulling the car into the school parking lot. She didn’t answer.

  Jared, Simon, and their mother climbed up onto the gymnasium bleachers while Mallory went to sit with her team. Already seated were a few other families and a smattering of people Jared recognized from school. A rectangular pad was spread out on the floor with lines taped on it. Mallory called it a piste, but Jared thought it just looked like a long, black mat. Behind it was a folding table where the scoreboard sat, its large, colored buttons making it look more like a game than something important. The director was fiddling with the wires, connecting them to a foil and testing the force needed to make the buzzer sound and the lights flash.

  Mallory sat down on a metal chair at one end of the piste and started unpacking her bag. Chris squatted down to talk with Mallory. The other team milled around the opposite end. All the uniforms were so white, they made Jared’s eyes hurt.

  Finally the director announced it was time for the first bout. He called two fencers up and made each of them strap a small receiver to the back of their pants, then attached cords to their foils. It all looked so professional. As the fencers began, Jared tried to recall what Mallory had said about the flashing lights, but he couldn’t.

  “This is stupid. I like fencing better without all this junk,” Jared said to no one in particular.

  Two matches later Jared had figured out that the colored lights meant that the hit was good, but the white light meant that the hit didn’t count. Only hits in the chest counted. Which was dumb, really, Jared had always thought. Getting hit in the leg hurt plenty, and Jared had practiced with Mallory enough to know.

  Finally Mallory was called to the mat. Her opponent—a tall boy called Daniel Something-or-Other—snickered as he put on his mask. He obviously had no idea what was coming.

  Jared elbowed Simon as his brother put a pretzel into his mouth. “He’s going to get it.”

  “Ow,” said Simon. “Cut it out.”

  Mallory’s ponytail bounced as she advanced. Her sword struck Daniel hard in the chest before he could parry. The director raised one hand, and the scoreboard lit up with a point for Mallory. Jared grinned.

  Their mother was craning her whole body forward as if there were something to hear other than the clang of thin metal blades locked in the pattern of attack, parry, and riposte. Daniel lunged desperately, too upset to control his advance. Mallory countered, turning her defense into an attack and scoring another point.

  “I like fencing better without all this junk.”

  Their sister beat Daniel without being touched once. They saluted each other formally, and the boy took off his mask, red-faced and breathing hard. When Mallory’s mask came off, she smiled, eyes slitted with satisfaction.

  On the way back to the metal chairs the fencing captain gave Mallory a quick awkward hug. Jared couldn’t see very well, but he could have sworn that Mallory’s face flushed darker than it had been when she stepped off the mat.

  The bouts went on, with Mallory’s team doing pretty well. When it was the captain’s turn to fence, Mallory cheered loudly. Unfortunately it didn’t seem to help. He was defeated by a narrow margin. Slinking back to his seat, he walked past her without a word and shrugged off her attempts to talk to him.

  When Mallory was called to the mat again, Chris didn’t even look up.

  Jared watched from the stands and scowled. His scowl deepened when he noticed a blond-haired girl in white fencing garb rooting through his sister’s bag.

  “Who’s that?” Jared pointed.

  Simon shrugged. “I dunno. She hasn’t fenced yet.”

  Could the girl be a friend of his sister? Maybe she was just borrowing something? The furtive way the girl stopped when anyone from the team looked her way made Jared think she was stealing. But what would anyone want in a bag of Mallory’s dirty socks and spare foils?

  Clang of thin metal blades

  Jared stood up. He had to do something. Didn’t anyone else notice what was happening?

  “Where are you going?” his mother asked.

  “Bathroom,” he lied automatically, even though his mother would be able to see him walking across the gym. He wished he could tell her the truth, but she would have made up some excuse for the girl. She thought the best of everyone, except him.

  Jared climbed down the bleachers and, staying close to the wall, crossed the court to where the girl was still rummaging. But as Jared approached the chairs, the coach stopped him.

  The fencing coach was wiry and short, with patchy white stubble on his face. “Sorry, kid, you can’t come over here during the meet.”

  The coach stopped him.

  “But that girl’s trying to steal my sister’s stuff!”

  The coach turned. “Who?”

  As Jared swung around to point her out, though, he realized that she’d disappeared. He fumbled for an explanation. “I don’t know who she is. She hasn’t fenced yet.”

  “Everybody’s fenced, kid. I think you’d better go back to your seat.”

  Jared turned back to the bleachers, embarrassed, then thought better of it. He’d go out to the bathroom so that maybe his mother would ask fewer questions when he returned. Just before he walked through the blue gym doors, he stopped and looked back. Now Simon was fumbling through Mallory’s bag. But Simon was wearing his clothes! Everyone would think it was him. He narrowed his eyes, wishing what he saw made sense.

  Then a horrible suspicion formed in his mind. Glancing up into the stands, he caught sight of his brother sitting beside his mother, chewing on pretzels. Whatever that thing was, it wasn’t Simon.

  “Don’t you know me?”

  Chapter Two

  IN WHICH the Grace Twins Are Triplets

  Jared couldn’t move from the doorway. He heard the clanging of swords and cheering, but the sounds seemed to come from far away. He watched in horror as the coach confronted his double. The man got red in the face, and some of the other players looked at Jared’s double in shock.

  “Great.” Jared grimaced. There was no way he could explain this.

  The coach pointed toward the large gym door, and he watched Not-Jared stalk toward it—and toward him. As Not-Jared got closer to Jared, it smirked. Jared clenched his hands into fists.

  Not-Jared passed Jared without a single glance, slamming through the double doors. Jared wanted to find some way to wipe that smile off its face. He followed after it, into a hallway lined with lockers.

  “Who are you?” Jared demanded. “What do you want?”

  Not-Jared turned to face him, and something in its eyes made Jared go cold all over. “Don’t you know me? Am I not your own self?” Its mouth curled into a sneer.

  It was strange to watch it move and speak. It wasn’t like watching Simon, with his tidy hair and the smear of toothpaste on his upper lip. And it wasn’t quite himself either—the hair was messier, and the eyes were darker and . . . different. It took a step toward him.

  Jared took a step back, wishing for any kind of faerie protection, and then he remembered the pocketknife in his jeans. Faeries hated iron, and stee
l was at least part iron. He opened one of the blades. “Why don’t you all just leave us alone?”

  The creature threw back its head and laughed. “You can never get away from your own self.”

  “Shut up! You’re not me.” Jared pointed the knife at his double.

  “Put that toy away,” Not-Jared said, its voice low and harsh.

  “I don’t know who you are, or who sent you, but bet I know what you’re looking for,” said Jared. “The Guide. Well, you’re never going to get it.”

  The creature’s grin widened into something that still wasn’t really a smile. Then suddenly it shrank back as though frightened. Jared watched in amazement as the Not-Jared’s body shrank, its dark hair paled into a sandy brown, and its now blue eyes went wide with terror.

  Before Jared could fully comprehend what he was seeing, he heard a woman’s voice behind him.

  “What’s going on here? Put that knife down.”

  The vice principal rushed up, grabbing Jared’s wrist. The pocketknife clattered to the linoleum floor. Jared stared at the blade as the sandy-haired boy ran off down the hall, his sobs sounding a lot like laughter.

  “I can’t believe you brought your knife to school,” Simon whispered to Jared as they sat together outside the vice principal’s office.

  Jared shot him a look. He had explained several times—even once to the police—that he was only showing the kid the knife, but they’d never found the other boy to confirm the story. Then the vice principal had asked Jared to wait outside. Their mother had been in the vice principal’s office a long time, but Jared couldn’t hear what was going on.

  “What kind of faerie do you think that thing was?” Simon asked.

 

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