She was still holding his hand.
“Do I know your name?” said Danny.
“Yllka,” she said. “That’s my public name. But the secret name my mother and father gave me, when they realized I must be some kind of gatemage, was Hermia.”
Danny understood at once the classical reference to Hermes—the generic name for Greek Family gatemages. “So they thought you would be a gatemage like me? Despite the law?”
“Why do you think they brought me the books to read? I had all the signs—good with languages, a bratty trickster, no outself, no clant-raising ability, no affinities at all, yet very smart. I might have been drekka, but my parents hoped for more.”
Danny shook his head. “All these years, everyone pretending that they hate the thought of having a gatemage, promising to kill the first one to show up—”
“My Family have been trying for years to persuade the others—not yours, of course—that the drowthers have become so powerful that the weak mageries that are within our reach are not enough to protect us. Where is the stonemage who can take apart an atomic bomb without touching it? Where is the Tempester who can blow a missile off its course? Where is the Sandfather or Claymaster who can swallow up a tank? And as for stopping a bullet or bending its course—there is no magery to deal with that. Not unless we can pass through a Great Gate once again and make ourselves strong. Instead of fighting each other, we must be preparing to protect ourselves against the drowthers.”
“It sounds almost noble,” said Danny.
“It isn’t,” said Hermia. “They miss being gods. They know that nobody will worship any of us in our present condition, let alone pay us tribute or obey us or regard us as anything but psychics or magicians—charlatans, yes?”
“And you thought I was making a Great Gate?”
“For your Orphan friends. That’s who my Family fears most in this world—the Orphans. They’ve tried, you know. Gatemages have been born to them before this.”
“They told me,” said Danny. “The Gate Thief gets them. Which is why I would not have made a Great Gate today if I’d had the slightest clue that that was what I was doing.”
“Well, it was pretty feeble, anyway,” said Hermia. “It only went up a mile. You don’t actually think there are any planets that close to the surface of the Earth, do you?” She smiled.
Danny laughed a little, but a new question came to mind. “How would I create a Great Gate anyway? I don’t know where Westil is.”
She shrugged. “We’ve never had to,” said Hermia. “Make a gate that’s large enough, and twist it so it shoots out beyond your conscious control, and … it ends up on Westil. Then twist it all the way back, and you have created a Great Gate. Public, powerful. Not only healing but enhancing. Strong men and women made stronger—like Herakles and Goliath. We couldn’t make such drowthers into mages, but we could take them through the Great Gate—”
“Take them to Olympus,” murmured Danny.
“And then bring them back many times stronger than they were.”
“I should make one just for Hal,” said Danny, thinking aloud.
“But that’s why you need me there,” said Hermia. “To lock the other end of it the moment it reaches Westil. Otherwise, who knows what kind of person or beast would come down from Westil?”
Danny remembered something he had read in Leslie’s King James Bible. “ ‘And the great dragon was cast out,’ ” Danny recited from memory. “ ‘That old serpent, called the Devil, and Satan, which deceiveth the whole world: he was cast out into the earth, and his angels were cast out with him.’ ”
“Is that the Bible?” asked Hermia.
“It just seemed appropriate,” said Danny.
“Only that’s not referring to Westilians,” said Hermia.
“Who else, then? And why not us?”
“There were plenty of wars on Westil over the millennia that the Great Gates were open. But nobody in their right mind would cast their enemies out of Westil and send them to Mittlegard through a Great Gate. That would be like healing all their wounds and replacing their spears with artillery and their chariots with jet fighters. You lock them out of the Great Gates that you control and go back and forth yourself.”
“So if I had opened a Great Gate before I knew how to lock it…”
“Great Gates are made up of hundreds of small gates woven together,” said Hermia. “Like rope. But all the gates lead to Westil. You make them here but then as you twist them you’re almost throwing the ends of them out into the universe, like casting a rope up to someone waiting on a cliff. There’s no way you can do that while thinking of whether the gates are locked or not. So it doesn’t really matter if you know how to lock them, as long as you have someone with you who does.”
“And you’re offering your services,” said Danny.
“It’s not really an offer,” said Hermia. “It’s more like … a desperate plea. I have no safe place in the world now. When you make the Great Gate, I need you to take me through it. Where in Mittlegard can I hide from the Family of Zeus?”
“I’ve done okay hiding from the Family of Odin.”
“Zeus isn’t one-eyed,” said Hermia with a grin. “And I’m not a true Hermes who can always stay one step ahead of him. When I’m caught, there’s no escape for me, unless you’ve made gates for me.”
“So we’re allies,” said Danny.
“You don’t need me as much as I need you,” said Hermia. “But I really can help you. Please don’t shut me out of your gates, Danny North.”
21
GREAT GATE
They gathered at the high school gym, because the rope was already there. It was night, and the building was dark, but for this work they needed no more light than the green of the glowing exit signs over the crash doors.
It made Danny sad to come back here, for he knew there would be no returning here to this school. Nobody but Hal Sargent actually knew that Danny had anything to do with the weird behavior of the rope; Danny might have gotten away with it and stayed in school, especially now that he knew how to lock a gate or return it to his own satchel.
But tonight Danny was going to try to make a Great Gate. Since he had already proven that he had the power to start one, there was little doubt that he would succeed. After all, solitary Orphan gatemages had made Great Gates before. No, the likeliest outcome was the same one the other gatemages had had: The making of a Great Gate, and then the loss of the mage’s entire outself to the Gate Thief.
If that happened—when that happened—there was no way Danny could continue in Buena Vista. Without gates to connect him to Veevee and the Silvermans, Danny would be entirely alone. Without the power of a gatemage to go anywhere at any time, he would be at the mercy of clowns like Lieder and Massey; he would have nothing to offer his friends. He would truly be what his Family so long had thought him: drekka. He would have to make his way in the drowther world, but it only made sense to do it close to home, in Yellow Springs. He would simply have to live with being the Weird Running Kid, make straight A’s, keep his head down, and get to college.
They had already worked it out in the meeting he assembled in the Silvermans’ living room. Veevee, Stone, the Silvermans, and Hermia—once Stone was convinced that she was on the level, and persuaded the others—they had charted the possibilities.
“If the Gate Thief strips you,” said Marion, “we will go to the North Family, tell them all that you did, and that you have lost your outself. Maybe they’ll let you alone, then, knowing that you’re no longer a mage of any kind.”
“Not likely,” said Danny.
“But your only chance,” said Stone, “if you no longer have the ability to gate away from anyone trying to kill you. Hermia and Veevee will be just as vulnerable—without your gates, they’ll have nowhere to go and no way to get there.”
“I don’t see why we have to do this at all,” said Leslie. “Why not just let Danny live his life? The power he has right now can open Mittlega
rd to the Orphans. If Hermia is right and he has a vast store of gates inside him, why not link all the major cities of the world with big public gates and let the drowthers move everywhere freely?”
“The Families would still hunt him down and kill him,” said Marion sadly. “And then his gates would slowly fade, like the ghosts left behind when clants are stranded.”
“I hate it,” said Leslie. “Why not wait, at least? Why does it have to be now?”
“Every day that we wait is a day in which one of the Family spies might spot him or Hermia.”
“If the Gate Thief is just going to take him—”
“Mom,” said Danny—which silenced Leslie immediately, though it filled her eyes with tears. “All the other gatemages who tried a Great Gate were alone. No other gatemage with them. I have Hermia and Veevee. There’s a chance they can keep the gate locked against the Gate Thief.”
“Or something,” said Hermia. “Since we don’t know what the Gate Thief actually does.”
Veevee shook her head. “I agree with Leslie. I think that this girl and I will make no difference at all—we’ll just have a clearer view of how Danny gets stripped.”
“Even that will move our knowledge forward,” said Stone. “We can write it down, we can spread it among the Orphans. Maybe we’ll learn something that will let us do better on the next attempt.”
“This is all moot,” said Danny. “I’m doing it. I’m doing it tonight. Either there’ll be a Great Gate or there won’t. Not only that, you’ll all be there.”
“Getting bossy, isn’t he?” said Veevee.
“Because if I make a Great Gate, it might last for a few seconds. I want all of you to go through it as quickly as you can. Get to Westil and then, if you can, come back instantly.”
“What’s the point of that?” asked Leslie. “What if we get stranded there? We won’t know anyone, they’ll probably kill us the moment they notice we’re there. The Gate Thief might be the ruler of the whole world there, for all we know.”
“But we’ll be the first mages to pass through a Great Gate in fourteen centuries,” said Stone. “We’ll be more powerful than anybody.”
“What does that mean to me?” asked Leslie. “I’ll be the world’s most powerful cow?”
“She’s got a point,” said Veevee. “Maybe she shouldn’t go.”
“But Marion has to, and Leslie won’t stay behind alone if he goes,” said Stone.
“That’s right,” said Leslie.
“And Marion’s a Cobblefriend,” Stone went on. “After passing through the gate, he’ll be the strongest stonemage in the world.”
“We don’t know that,” said Marion. “I’ll be much stronger in the things that I can already do. But none of the literature suggests that a Great Gate can turn a Cobblefriend into a Stonefather. The Great Gates make a difference in degree, not in kind.”
“We’ll try it,” said Danny. “If you think we should, Stone, I’ll go get Ced and bring him along. He’s a windmage, and you say he’s got a lot of ability. Maybe a Galebreath. If we bring him through the Great Gate, then whichever side he ends up on, he can protect the others. None of the Families will have a windmage to match him, once he’s gone through a Great Gate, and the same will likely be true in Westil, if he gets stuck there.”
“You can ask him,” said Marion. “Nobody should go if they don’t want to run the risk of being stuck in Westil. Think of everything that’s happened in Mittlegard since 632 A.D. All of modern technology, for one thing. Immunization against plagues. Medicine. If they don’t have gates, they can’t heal people easily. Flush toilets. The Copernican model of the solar system. Microscopes. Telescopes. There’s no reason to think they have any of that stuff.”
“Or they might have better stuff,” said Danny. “For all we know, the Gate Thief isn’t a person at all. What if it’s a machine that sucks the power right out of any mage? We don’t know anything.”
“And it’s time we did,” said Marion. “Leslie’s and my kids are grown. If we’re stranded there, we’ll miss them, but they don’t need us.”
“Why are we having this conversation?” said Hermia. “The gates will probably be sucked out of Danny before anybody can go anywhere.”
“Greeks are so cheerful,” said Veevee.
“For what it’s worth,” said Hermia, “we’re not really Greek. We were never Greek. We’re Pelasgians. We were the gods of the Illyrians, the Albanians, the Danae. When the Dorians and Ionians came, we wiped out their Families and they worshiped us. But we’re not Greek.”
“Thanks for the history lesson,” said Leslie.
“I think it’s fascinating,” said Danny.
“Oh my, Danny’s in love,” said Veevee. “Danny and Hermia, sitting in a tree—”
“Give it a rest, Veevee,” said Stone. “Everybody’s a little crazy tonight. But Hermia’s right. The most likely outcome is that the Gate Thief will swallow all of Danny’s gates before anybody makes it to Westil, let alone back again. And there we’ll all be in Buena Vista, Virginia, which isn’t exactly a metropolis, without any gates to get us home. Somebody’s going to have to rent us a car so we can drive to the airport in Roanoke and get the hell away from there. With Danny, whatever kind of shape he’s in.”
“I’ll do it,” said Veevee. “Danny can make me a nice gate between the airport and this rope in the gym—”
“Why do we have to do it there?” asked Leslie. “Surely there are other ropes hanging from gymnasium ceilings that aren’t a stone’s throw from the North fortress.”
“That’s the one that worked today,” said Hermia. “Danny proved he can make a Great Gate, and he did it there.”
“If we can make a Great Gate,” said Danny, “then maybe we can break down this system of miserable, hate-filled, paranoid, inbred Families.”
“And replace them with miserable, lonely Orphans,” said Marion. “Sorry to be cynical, but I’m not optimistic about our ability to do any better. Whoever has the power will become the gods of legend—capricious, cruel, tyrannical.”
“And yet you’re going to go through the gate?” asked Veevee.
“It’s going to be made, isn’t it?” asked Marion. “If it’s going to happen, I want it to be us that go through it first. Maybe we can make it less awful for the world than it might otherwise be.”
“I think we’re done here,” said Danny. “I’ve got some gates to make. From here to Parry McCluer High School, so when the time is right you can all just step through. From there to the Roanoke airport so Veevee can rent a car. It’ll take her about an hour to get it up I-81 to B.V. Meanwhile I’ll go get Ced, if he’ll come. Stone, maybe you should come with me.”
“And me,” said Hermia. “I’m staying with you.” She turned to Veevee. “And no more jokes about being in love. You and I are both nothing without him, and you know it.”
“I do,” said Veevee, chastened before her fierceness.
“If you’re lying to us,” said Stone to Hermia, “and you’re setting him up to get killed, I swear I’ll kill you with my bare hands.”
“I’m glad you’re so loyal,” said Hermia without batting an eye. “But I am no liar and no spy.”
“Good, that’s settled then,” said Danny. “Since I’m the idiot who set this all in motion by playing around with the rope-climb in a high school gym, I apologize right now for everything that goes wrong with this. With any luck, I’m the only one who gets zapped in the outself, and everything else goes on like normal for the rest of you. But if terrible things happen, please remember that I meant well, and that I did my best. That’s what I promise you. I’ll do my best to try to fight off the Gate Thief and get this thing done right. It’s up to you to make the most of it, if you can.”
Leslie burst into tears. Danny walked over and put his arm around her shoulder.
“Oh, don’t bother with her,” said Veevee. “Comforting her is Marion’s job. We have work to do. Move it, Gate Boy.”
Everyone
laughed, even Leslie. Danny stood up and made a public gate from the Silverman living room to a space near the bleachers in the Parry McCluer gym. Then he took Hermia’s hand and stepped through it. Veevee took Stone by the hand and followed them.
* * *
CED CAME WITHOUT argument—he knew the chance of a lifetime when he saw it, even with the risk of getting stranded on Westil. Veevee rented a big SUV and made it to the high school without getting lost. Danny pulled in all the little gates that had propelled so many students a mile up into the air, so the area was clear.
“All right, Hermia,” said Danny. “Close all the public gates I just made. I don’t want any students to stumble their way to Yellow Springs or Roanoke tomorrow.”
“Don’t worry,” said Ced. “The Gate Thief will probably eat them all before morning.”
Nobody laughed.
“Sorry,” said Ced. “Thought I’d brighten the mood.”
“Oh, you did,” said Stone. “Now everybody hopes you’ll make it to Westil and stay there.” That did get a few chuckles.
Danny looked at Hermia and Veevee. “Are you ready?”
“We’ll be vigilant,” said Hermia. “And if there’s anything we can do to help you, we’ll do it.”
“The main thing is to tell everybody the moment the Great Gate is complete, so they can go through it. Tell them where to enter. Make it so this isn’t wasted, if it’s possible at all.”
“I think I should go with them,” said Veevee.
“Absolutely not,” said Stone. “You need to be with Danny, not distracted by zipping through a gate.”
“What if the Gate Thief locks the Great Gate and I’m the only one who can open it?”
“Open it from this side,” said Hermia. “Our job is to stay with Danny.”
Veevee sighed. “I know,” she said.
“She just doesn’t want to lose her loving husband,” said Stone cheerfully.
“Leslie gets to go with Marion,” Veevee pointed out.
The Lost Gate Page 34