THE CRYSTAL LAIR
Inventor-in-Training
Book Two
by
D.M. Darroch
Illustrations by Jennifer L. Hotes
Kindle Edition
ISBN 978-1-890797-08-9
Copyright text © 2013 by D.M. Darroch
Copyright illustrations and cover image © 2013 by Jennifer L. Hotes
All rights reserved.
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.
Published in the United States by Sleepy Cat Press. No part of this publication may be reproduced in any form, except for brief quotations in printed reviews, without written permission of the publisher.
To Aidan and Matt
A Note to My Readers
I want to remind my faithful readers that I, your author, am a storyteller, not a scientist. While I did copious research for The Crystal Lair, I strongly urge any inventors-in-training to visit your local natural history museums, ask your librarians and science teachers for guidance, and speak with geologists, anthropologists, and paleontologists before attempting any lab work of your own.
You never know into which world a scientific mishap will send you.
Chapter One: In a Frozen World
The day Angus Clark transported himself to a snowy wasteland didn’t begin like any other mundane day in his previously mundane life.
Ever since he had built the Insect Incinerator that had turned out to be a World Jumper, nothing in his life was routine. First, he had accidentally transported himself to a pirate world. He had survived a crew of nasty pirates who had stolen the invention that was his only way back home. He’d only had time to make a few adjustments to his World Jumper before having another accident. Now, he was in yet another world completely surrounded by icy whiteness.
Angus Clark was an inventor-in-training. He still had a lot to learn before becoming a full-fledged inventor.
Angus brushed snow from the front of his shirt and jeans. His jump across worlds had landed him face down in a snow pile. He gazed about in curiosity and wonder. He stood on a large plateau. To his left a grove of evergreen trees sloped gently downward toward a thick forest. Above him a blue sky was beginning to darken as clouds moved in. In the distance, to his right, a rocky outcropping grew into foothills. He turned around slowly, his feet crunching and compressing the snow.
“Ivy!” he called. “Ivy! Are you here?” There was no response. “Yoo-hoo! Anyone? Anyone here?” He heard nothing but the wind whistling through the trees.
The sky grew darker.
Lazy flakes began to fall from the sky. Angus felt them melt as they touched the top of his head. He took inventory. Toolbelt wrapped securely around waist. Check. Trusty screwdriver in toolbelt. Check. Safety goggles atop head. Check. World Jumper? Tucked into waistband of jeans. He’d have to find a more secure spot for it.
Angus loved snow, though he didn’t get much opportunity to play in it at home. It didn’t snow often in the Puget Sound area near Seattle and when it did the snow melted quickly. Angus shared a love of snow with his father. In the winter Mr. Clark frequently took Angus to the mountains. Father and son spent many happy hours together skiing the slopes. In fact, Angus liked skiing so much he had attempted to build a ski slope in the family backyard.
Angus’s yard boasted a glorious hill. It was not quite black diamond quality, but a blue square slope in a suburban community is nothing to scoff at. The problem was, as stated before, it didn’t often snow in the Puget Sound area. Rain was quite abundant in the winter however. And as any self-respecting boy knows, where there’s rain, there’s plenty of slippery stuff. That is, mud.
Mrs. Clark had told him she’d only be at the neighbor’s house for a half-hour or so. But his mother’s conversations tended to drag on as he knew from painful experience. He was sure she’d probably said, “Oh, but I really should go. Angus is all alone at home,” at least four times before she finally left. But it was okay because Angus was not home alone after all. In fact, quite a few of his best buddies from the neighborhood were with him. Together they had managed to create two respectable runs and one bunny slope before his mother returned from her “short” visit.
The guys were having a great time. They were mogul racing and ski jumping. There was a lively contest to see who could wipe out in most spectacular fashion. Billy Roberts had started a mudball war that Angus was winning when Mrs. Clark returned. The vein throbbing in his mother’s temple was Angus’s first indication he was in trouble. Shortly thereafter, angry neighborhood mothers arrived to retrieve their mud-caked sons from The Slopes at Clark House. Angus’s skis were held ransom by Mrs. Clark for the rest of that winter. Now, whenever Mr. Clark mows over the former moguls, he scalps the lawn.
The sky had turned a leaden gray and the snow was falling more quickly now. Angus shivered and hugged himself. He knew this cold fluffy stuff could turn deadly if he wasn’t dressed for it. He was still wearing his shirt and jeans from home. He had no hat, jacket, or gloves. The purple rhinestone sneakers he’d found in the pirate world were already caked with melting snow. He would need to find clothing or shelter soon. And, since there was nothing around him but snow and trees, it wasn’t going to be clothing.
He considered his survival options.
1. He could hunker down in the trees. They would provide some shelter from the coming storm but they wouldn’t keep him warm.
2. He could gather wood and try to start a fire. There were sure to be plenty of sticks and flammable detritus in the forest but, even if he could get the wet wood to catch fire, the falling snow would surely extinguish it.
3. He could explore the rocky foothills for a sheltered space where he could start a fire. The rocks would hold and magnify the fire’s heat but it would be a bit of a trudge through the snow to get there. Again, he might not manage to get the wood to catch fire.
4. He could curl up with a furry mammal and live off its body heat. If only Ivy were here! She could jump into something warm and cuddly and he could wear her like a coat.
Angus missed Ivy. In his home world, Ivy Calloway was the perfect student. She was good at everything and not afraid to let you know it. All the teachers loved her. Her assignments were always neat and handed in on time. She was the first one they called on; she always knew the answers, she never daydreamed in class, and she always had her pencils. You know, the perfect nightmare classmate for the student who gets lost in his own head, forgets project deadlines, and has terrible handwriting. A student like Angus. And wouldn’t it just figure that Ivy was in every one of his classes.
But the Ivy Calloway Angus had met in the pirate world was, if not the best friend any inventor-in-training could have, pretty near to it. Sure, she was every bit as sharp-tongued and know-it-all as the Ivy in Angus’s world, but she was also loyal, brave, funny, and smart. And she was a body jumper, which made her exceptionally awesome.
Ivy was a potions expert. Well, maybe expert was overstating it a bit. After all, she’d had an accident with one of her potions in much the same way that Angus had an accident with his invention. She had drunk one of her own potions and been somehow removed from her own body. She now jumped from animal body to animal body trying to find a way to get back to her human body. Now she and Angus were a team and hoped that, together, they could find a way back to their respective worlds and bodies.
“Iiiivyyy! Iiiivyyy!” Angus called again. He hoped she would be able to find him. He had left the pirate world a bit hastily. He didn�
��t know whether or not she’d be able to catch up with him.
Angus jumped up and down to get the blood moving in his feet. He shook his arms and flapped them back and forth across his body. He was going to freeze to death if he didn’t make a decision soon. He plodded through the wet snow toward the grove of trees. The boughs over his head intertwined, weaving their needles together like children holding hands. Angus was able to find broken sticks, small punky logs, and leaf and needle litter lightly dusted with snow. He gathered what he could in his pockets, stuffed twigs in his toolbelt, and grabbed as many logs as he could carry.
Just then he remembered something he had seen on one of those wilderness survival programs his dad was so fond of watching on Saturday afternoons. The survival guy had layered dry leaves and peat moss on the floor of his shelter to insulate against damp and cold. These trees were covered with moss. Why not try insulating himself?
He dropped the logs, pulled his trusty screwdriver from his toolbelt, and began scraping the moss off the trees. He removed one purple sneaker at a time and stuffed the moss inside. The sneakers had been too big and the moss helped them fit a bit snugger. His toes curled around the soft plant material. He tied the sneakers tightly and then pushed moss up his pant leg as far as he could reach.
He unzipped his jeans and crammed moss into them from the top. He tucked his shirt into the jeans, scraped more moss off another tree, and packed his shirt with it. He was absolutely rotund now but no longer felt so cold. After some deliberation he decided to head for the foothills. He thought he’d have a better chance of finding shelter among the rocks than in the damp forest. He picked up the logs again and set off across the plateau.
While Angus had been insulating himself, the wind had picked up. It blew the fine grains of snow hard against his face. They burned like fire as they struck him, and then his cheeks were numb. He bent his head low against the onslaught and kept going. He lost sensation in his ears and his fingers. He hugged the logs to his chest with his forearms and continued on, one laborious step after another through the heavy, wet snow.
His arms ached from the weight of the logs. His legs ached from struggling through the snow. His head ached from the cold. “One, two, three,” he began counting each step. He needed to focus on his forward progress and get his mind off his sore body. He kept counting until his foot nudged something hard at one thousand six hundred and twenty-five. He stopped walking and glanced up. He’d bumped into a small boulder, the beginning of the foothills.
In front of him were rocks of every size piled up the side of a large hill. He walked to a large boulder with a flat top and unloaded his logs. He wandered around the side of the hill looking for a rock overhang under which he might shelter and build a fire. Rock after snow-covered rock, boulder on top of boulder. He needed to find a place soon.
Puffy-full of moss and clumsy-numb with cold, Angus tripped over his own feet, landed hard on a boulder, and knocked the wind out of himself. He groaned and gasped for air.
And then he saw it.
An oblong opening about the size of the small bathroom window in his family’s house was carved into the side of the hill. He never would have found it if he hadn’t stumbled. It was hidden by the boulder on which he had fallen. He would have to scramble over the boulder into a crevice in the side of the hill and then sideways into the opening.
If Ivy had been with him, she would have warned him to wait a moment, think about what he was about to do, and consider whether or not it was safe. But Ivy wasn’t with him. Angus rolled across the boulder and scooted himself into the gap.
The opening was wide enough but low to the ground. He got down on his knees and crawled in expecting a small cavity perfect for hunkering down in or perhaps a narrow tunnel where he could stretch his legs. His mind raced considering where best to build his fire. But when he had passed through the gap into the dark recesses of the hill, he realized he could raise his head. He carefully lifted his hands over his head and stood. His fingers touched air. He slowly spread his hands outward to his waist.
He had expected to encounter a rock wall but he felt nothing. Arms stretched straight out, Angus slowly turned in a half-circle until he was facing the aperture. His body no longer blocked the opening and daylight pierced through the darkness. Sure that he could find the exit if need be, Angus backed away from the entry and completed his circle rotation. He rooted around in his toolbelt until his fingers located his pen flashlight. He had to use it sparingly. He didn’t know when he’d arrive at a world with batteries. He flicked it on.
Light glinted off the ceiling and walls. The ceiling of the cave, for it was indeed a cave that Angus had crawled into, rose gradually from the crevice he had entered to a high point of about twelve feet. The interior was illuminated with all the colors of the rainbow. Forgetting how cold he was for a moment, Angus tripped to a wall and brushed it with a finger. The entire cave was encrusted with beautiful crystals of every conceivable color: white, purple, blue, green, yellow, orange, red, and pink. He had never seen anything like this. And as a Junior Rock Hounder, he knew a lot about rocks.
Angus had been an early stone aficionado. From a young age he had gathered pebbles, stones, and other hard shiny objects in his pockets and shoes. Several times he had smuggled rocks home from a friend’s gravel driveway in his mother’s purse. He would lie in the grass, specimens scattered around him as he searched for them in identification guides. Occasionally, he forgot a few and they would be found a few days later, with clanging and smoke, by his father’s lawnmower. The appliance repairman had suggested the Junior Rock Hounders as a suitable outlet for Angus’s fascination the third time Angus’s mother called him after forgetting to check her son’s jean pockets on laundry day.
Angus fastened his safety goggles securely over his eyes, took a small chisel and hammer from his toolbelt, and carefully chipped away at the wall until he was able to extract several of the variously colored crystals. He examined them closely. They were cubes and octahedrons. He peered at the wall again and saw several that were colorless. He chipped a particularly large one from the wall, held it to his eye and peered through it. It was clear like glass.
He shone his penlight through the clear crystal. As he’d suspected, there was zero light scatter inside the crystal. He had discovered a cave full of fluorite. He flicked off the light to conserve his battery. The light from the cave’s opening reflected gently off the crystal-encrusted walls giving Angus the impression that he was surrounded by tiny night lights.
Angus gazed at the stones in his hand and looked up at the wall again. As a Junior Rock Hounder, he knew that fluorite was a fairly common mineral found in large deposits around the world. But he’d never heard of the existence of so many color veins in one small area. He pulled the sticks out of his pocket to make room for his collection of crystals. The sticks dropped to the floor. In his wonderment, Angus had forgotten completely about the fire he was planning to build.
He pushed the goggles to the top of his head, clumping his unruly hair into a messy pile. Angus dragged his fingers along the bumpy, glittering wall and slowly walked the perimeter of the chamber.
The dim light of the cave’s opening barely reached the farthest corners of the cave. Angus thought he noticed some hair, or perhaps fur, clinging to the cubic crystals at shoulder level. He clicked on the small flashlight again and gathered the fur in his hand. It was a brownish color with flecks of gold and red.
He shone the flashlight on the wall and saw clumps of the fur scratched off in a horizontal line. He followed the line along the wall and detected a collection of grass, leaves, and fur at the entrance of what appeared to be a narrow passageway at the rear of the cave.
Was it a trick of the light or did he see something move in there? He bent to get a closer look.
“Gus! GUS! GUSSSEEEE!” screeched in his ear and he was shoved from behind. His flashlight skittered to the hard cave floor as he lost his balance and fell to his knees.
Chapter Two: Extended Family
Angus quickly retrieved his flashlight from the floor before trying to remove the rapidly breathing thing that was clinging to his back. He couldn’t see it, but it was furry and warm and strong. He grabbed the paws that dug into his shoulders and pulled back on them as hard as he could to make them release him.
“OWWWWW!” The animal dropped away.
Angus spun around and caught sight of a small furry brown animal with a human face. It huddled on the cave floor, rocking back and forth, its lower lip quivering.
“Why did you do that?” it howled. “That hurt!”
Angus stared speechlessly at the creature.
“You should apologize!” insisted the animal. It waited for a moment and when no response came from the dumbstruck Angus, it yelled, “APOLOGIZE!”
“Ivy?” Angus asked tentatively. “Is that you?”
The animal’s eyes glistened with tears. It brushed them away quickly and glared at him. “Apologize.”
“I’m really sorry. I didn’t realize it was you. You startled me. But what kind of animal are you?” asked Angus.
The creature stood. It appeared to be a biped. It balanced well on two legs and its head was level with his waist. It gripped his hand with its paw and began skipping while dragging him toward the opening of the cave.
“We’ve got to hurry back,” it said. “Granny will be really mad if she knows we’re here.”
“Who’s Granny?” said Angus. “Ivy, where are we?”
“You’re silly!” giggled the little animal. “Where did you leave your skin? It’s really snowing now.”
“My skin?” asked Angus. “What are you talking about?”
“Your skin. It’s a long way back to the village. Did you leave it on the floor?” The furry creature let go of his hand and scurried along the cave wall. Not finding whatever it was searching for, it looked questioningly at him. “You didn’t leave it outside, did you?”
The Crystal Lair (Inventor-in-Training) Page 1