Chapter Thirteen



While Arthur told her his story, Ash’s rebels (as he’d come to think of them) had been busy accumulating all they’d salvaged from the deserted stores and then loading it into the waiting speedboat, which was now packed to the brim. As Ash, Donal and Arthur arrived at the window through which they’d entered, Arthur could see that the rebels had done a sterling job of fitting most, if not all, of their findings into the little vessel. It was painted white, though the sludge that covered it from years of use made it closer to a charcoal grey. Despite its apparent age, it seemed to be in reasonably good condition and the engine was ticking over smoothly as the rebels got ready to leave. A few of the kids had squeezed themselves into the boat along with the loot; a couple of them were even perched on top of the sacks full of clothes, batteries, torches and food.

The rest of the rebels – including Arthur’s rescuers – were seated on jet skis, two or three per model. The ski nearest the window had been left for Arthur, Ash and Donal, so they climbed out onto it. Donal got on in the steering position with Ash behind him and Arthur behind her. They clamped their arms around each other tightly then Ash gave a thumbs-up to Donal.

‘Ready!’ Donal called to Egg-head, who was already turned in the direction of the exit. He nodded, revved up his own ski, which had two young women as passengers, and sped off. The rest followed straight away and, as soon as they could, arranged themselves in a tactical formation with the speedboat in the centre, guarded on all sides by the jet skis. As on the journey to the shopping centre, Egg-head led them, swooping down narrow streets with grace and ease, always two steps of the route ahead of the rest.

Arthur gripped Ash tighter. She glanced over her shoulder and flashed him a reassuring smile. He smiled back, still not quite believing that he had found her. He had actually found her. In a city that was submerged and with its survivors captured or scattered he had managed to find the one person he really needed to. It was only sinking in now what a great and miraculous thing this had been. It was almost as if someone had guided him to her. But after a devastating and depressing couple of days, he really didn’t care how it had happened. Discovering that Ash was not only still alive but also free, and had a group of rebels following her, was just the boost Arthur needed. With her to help him, he suddenly felt that maybe, just maybe, they might have a chance against Loki. Although he still had to convince her that she could help.

He thought back to what he’d told her in the shopping centre. After he’d filled Ash and Donal in on everything she’d forgotten, his best friend hadn’t said anything for a few minutes. He had given her the hammer as evidence when it came up. She held it in her lap, feeling the heft of it, then she put it back on the table with a thunk. When he’d finished, Ash had pushed her chair back, the legs scratching against the tiled floor, and started pacing the empty café. She walked to the far wall and Arthur watched as she studied the menu blackboard hanging there. The lunch deals were still written on it in multi-coloured chalk, with little doodles of flowers and butterflies decorating the list. She rubbed a thumb across one butterfly, slicing it in two. Now it was just two C-shaped wings with no body to bind them together. Without warning, she rolled her hand into a fist, scrubbed a thick, straight line through the entire menu and turned back to Arthur and Donal. She brushed her hands clean as she strolled back towards them.

‘That’s a lot to take in,’ she said.

‘It is,’ Arthur nodded, observing her closely.

‘How do you expect me to react to all that?’

He shrugged his shoulders emphatically. ‘I dunno. I was hoping that you’d believe me.’

‘What do you think, Donal?’

He grimaced. ‘It’s a difficult one to buy,’ he said. ‘A bunch of kids defeating a Viking god of mischief and his all-powerful XXL snake? But then again, only a year ago no one would have believed in Loki or that all this,’ he waved an arm about the deserted centre, ‘could happen at all. We live in a different world now.’

‘True,’ Ash said, mulling over the prospect. ‘That’s very true.’ She reached the table again and looked Arthur square in the face.

‘OK, Arthur,’ said Ash. ‘My instinct says that I should trust you. And I think I do. But that doesn’t mean I believe your story.’

‘But the hammer–’

‘Is a nice find and we might have use for it–’

‘But–’

‘Let me finish. For days after the flooding, I was sure I was dreaming. I had completely convinced myself that I would wake up at any second to the smell of sizzling bacon. It took me a while to realise that it wasn’t a dream, that this was all really happening. What I’m trying to say is we all have different ways to deal with what the world is today. You can believe your fantasy but don’t expect me to do likewise. The time for daydreaming is over.’

Arthur opened his mouth to protest, but Ash shot him down.

‘That’s the best you’re going to get out of me at the moment,’ she said. ‘It’ll take a lot more than a nice little kid’s story to convince me. But right now, we should go back to HQ.’

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Despite the weight of the extra riders, the jet skis seemed to be as fast as ever as they glided through the waters that covered Dublin. Arthur supposed that the Wolfsguard made sure that their main mode of transport would be kept in good condition. The speedboat was also flying along and the couple of rebels perched on top of the salvage kept watch for any approaching enemies through pairs of binoculars. Even with that precaution, Arthur was worried that some guards would spot them. The sound of jet skis racing through the city was loud enough, but adding the angry roar of the speedboat to the mix seemed to be a recipe for disaster. Yet as they skimmed along the water, luck seemed to be with them. For the moment, at least.

Arthur had completely lost track of where he was shortly after leaving the shopping centre, but at one stage they were forced to pass through a wide open space, where there was no trace of any building or tree poking above the surface of the water. It was as if they were cutting across an open lake and he could see the flood receding over the horizon. When he looked down, all he could see was the darkness of deep water and his eyes couldn’t even pick out the bottom. Suddenly he realised where he must be.

‘Are we over the River Liffey?’ he shouted at Ash, raising his voice so she could hear him over the engines.

She nodded and he gazed with wonder at the water again just before they ducked back down some more side streets. The Liffey had overflowed into an even greater river than usual, flooding the streets and laneways around it, covering even the bridges. He realised that crossing it meant they were heading for the south side of the city.

Moments after that, one of the watchmen on top of the loot started waving frantically to slow down. The drivers obeyed and instantly they all heard the sound of engines behind them. Arthur realised that if they could hear the Wolfsguard then the Wolfsguard could probably hear the rebels’ engines in turn. With the expanse of water making any sound echo more than usual, it was nearly impossible to tell how far off the noise was, but he waited for the inevitable sound of them drawing closer. However, seconds later it faded away. Clearly the Wolfsguard hadn’t realised that the engines in the distance weren’t those of their colleagues and were heading off in a different direction, or they had already reached their location. Arthur breathed a sigh of relief as they moved off once more.

Soon after, the convoy started to slow down. They passed a few tree tops just above the surface of the flood; strands of moss and weeds clung to the gnarled branches. Arthur peeked past Ash’s shoulder at the construction looming out of the water ahead of them. Grey stone walls stretched off in both directions at right angles to each other. Beyond the walls, he could just about see the building itself. Like the perimeter walls, it was a stone structure, with an unusual rounded end and two storeys rising above the water. Tiny square windows punctuated every few feet along the surface of the building, with blackened iron bars criss-crossing them. The other end of the structure was attached to an equally tall square building, more traditional in design, with large Edwardian windows blocked up with bricks and a flagpole thrusting up out of the flood. Half an Irish tricolour hung there, shredded and hanging limp and soaked along the pole.

They idled down the width of the outer wall, past the lifeless flag and towards a clump of trees that matched the structure itself for height. There wasn’t much space between the trees and the wall and Arthur was sure that the speedboat wouldn’t fit. Yet somehow the driver manoeuvred it through the gap. It pulled at branches as it went past and they flicked back into place with a twanging sound. The trees were packed so tightly together here that they formed the perfect cover and hid the boat and the skis which followed it in from any prying eyes. As they approached a corner of the wall, Arthur noticed a pair of teenagers in swimsuits perched on top of the barricade. They threw lengths of rope to the riders when they were close enough. The riders looped one end around the steering panel while the other was securely knotted to a hook on the wall. Once all the vessels were moored – they bobbed softly between the walls and the cover of the trees – the passengers started disembarking.

Those on the speedboat went first: up a rope ladder slung over the edge of the perimeter wall and then along the top of some other wall leading to the main building. They were lithe and moved with confidence, as if they had done this many times. Every one of them went with sacks full of their takings slung over their shoulders. When all those on the boat had left, those on the nearest jet ski bounded across to it, picked up more of the loot and then followed up the ladder. This was repeated a few more times until the boat was unloaded. Finally, it was Arthur’s turn to alight. Donal pulled the jet ski as close as he could to the boat and nodded. Arthur scrambled across the gap and the boat tilted as he landed in it. He took a moment to regain his balance, then crossed to the ladder and scaled the wall. The pair who had tied off the vessels gave him a hand up. Meanwhile, Ash and Donal were making their own way up the ladder behind him.

When he reached the top of the ladder Arthur could see a wall running perpendicular to the one he was on. The last few riders in front of him had made their way across it to the rooftop of the building opposite. They disappeared one by one through a hole in the roof. Below Arthur was a courtyard, as full of water as the area around it. The walls enclosing the courtyard were incredibly thick: three feet at least. The construction of the place should keep any would-be invaders at bay, he thought, or at least keep them out long enough to give the rebels time to escape.

Arthur moved over the perpendicular wall, taking care as this one was narrower than the outer fortification. He reached the roof – it was sloped slightly but luckily the slates weren’t too slippery. Waiting for Ash and Donal to join him, he savoured the chance to take in the view from this height. The city was submerged in every direction, although a few of the taller buildings towered over the still water. The silence hanging over the place was so thick that he could almost touch it. Tendrils of smoke rose from buildings here and there. The one thing that caught his attention was a break in the clouds to the west. He could just make out a patch of the blue evening sky through the hole.

‘Look at that,’ he said to Ash as she and Donal joined him on the rooftop.

‘So what?’ Ash replied, as she glanced at the sky, uninterested. They strode straight past him over the slates. ‘This way.’

Ash led them to the hole in the roof. It had a domed perspex trapdoor raised beside it and it was so dim inside the building that Arthur couldn’t make out anything in there. Without warning, Ash leapt straight into the hole. Donal indicated to Arthur that he should follow. Arthur looked down into the hole and couldn’t see anything but darkness. Donal nodded at him reassuringly and finally Arthur stepped off the edge.

He was surprised when he fell less than four feet and landed on something soft and bouncy. He felt around him to discover that it was an old, musty mattress. Actually, not just one, but a pile of old, musty mattresses stacked six feet high. Ash was already standing on the floor, looking up at him. Arthur slid off the mattresses to stand by her. As he did, Donal made his entrance in a similar manner, then reached up and closed the perspex trapdoor with a resounding thud.

As his eyes adjusted to the gloom, Arthur could see that they were in a dank and stuffy attic, full of basic-looking beds, tables and more mattresses than he could count. Footsteps had shuffled through the dust on the floor, leading away from the stack he’d landed on and out through a door at the far end of the room. Without another word, Ash and Donal followed the trail and Arthur hurried after them.

Beyond the door was a narrow stone staircase leading downwards. Some of the small square windows he’d seen outside allowed a small amount of the gloomy daylight into the interior, but aside from that it was almost as shadowy as the attic had been. They continued straight down the steps, taking care not to slip on the slick treads. The corridor at the bottom of the stairwell was in near full darkness so Ash took Arthur’s hand and dragged him along. Her skin was warm and soft. Their footsteps resounded in the gloom and he could sense that the walls on either side were close by. Finally, they came to a wooden door, which Ash pushed open onto an even narrower corridor. A couple of candles burned in this passageway – and they were badly needed. The stone floor here was uneven, with plenty of fissures to trip one up. On the right-hand wall was a line of thick timber doors. Arthur didn’t have time to investigate as Ash stalked along at a brisk pace. They came to the last door and Ash turned to Arthur.

She had a wry, knowing smile.

‘Welcome,’ she said, ‘to our current headquarters.’ She swung the door open to reveal the room beyond.

It was just like those old prison movies Arthur’s grandfather had liked to watch; in fact it really reminded him of the one where the guys drove all those Mini Coopers. The room was vast and four storeys high. The brick walls were painted a dull shade of cream and the floor was covered with massive flagstones. The first and second floors had balconies running all the way around the edge of the expansive room, which were completely fenced in with iron railings. A steel staircase led from the centre of the ground floor up to the level of the second storey. A bridge cut across the steps at the first and second floors; these were also covered in iron caging and led to the respective balconies. The centre of the ceiling was a clear-glass skylight and, although parts of it were covered in some sort of mossy growth, presumably because of the damp, Arthur could see the filthy green clouds beyond. Arched iron girders held the glass in place, completing the menacing feel of the room. All along the walls on each level was a series of wooden doors, just like the ones he’d seen in the corridor, with little square hatches set at an adult’s eye-level. Small, boxy cells lay behind these doors. When Ash had opened the main door, a wave of heat whooshed out to meet him and he could feel the still, clammy hotness in the room. But most astonishing to Arthur were the inhabitants of the prison.

Close to a hundred people were milling around, moving from one cell to another, chatting or catching up with the returned rebels and cooing over the haul from the shopping centre. Most hadn’t reached adulthood yet, although a handful of men and women were scattered about. A group of teenage boys and girls in one cell raced out and appeared to take all the food. He could smell the homely scent of cooking emanating from that cell. A few preschool kids – most no taller than his hip – clattered along the steel-gridded second floor, across the bridge and down the steps. The noise of their running rang throughout the room, bouncing off the ancient stone walls. A small cluster of kids Arthur’s age were huddled in one corner, leaning back on fusty mattresses, reading. They barely looked up to acknowledge the others’ return. There were groups cleaning, napping, eating, laughing and living. And all of them, Arthur was pleasantly surprised to see, seemed happy and healthy.

‘What is this place?’ Arthur murmured, following Ash as she headed further into the room.

‘Kilmainham Gaol,’ she said. ‘Don’t tell me they don’t have this in the world you remember?’

They had and, though he’d never visited it, he’d read all about the building in history class. It had been a working prison for centuries and then, during the War of Independence, it had been used to house the Irish rebels. Now it was a museum recounting the history of the war and its famous prisoners. Quite a suitable place for these new rebels to hide, Arthur thought, and he told Ash as much.

‘I guess it is,’ she agreed. ‘We’ve been moving about a lot since this all started, collecting more refugees as we go. We stay somewhere until the Wolfsguard find us and then we move on. This place has lasted the longest. The thick walls have kept the water out. There’s no electricity but we have gas cookers and the skylights provide us with enough light during the day. We don’t use flashlights at night in here unless it’s really important. It’s the perfect hiding place, really.’

‘Why are there so few adults? I only see – what – six or seven grown-ups.’

‘I guess kids were better at hiding from the Wolfsguard. Or maybe easier to hide.’

‘But how did you get away from the Wolfsguard any time they found you before?’

She headed up the stairs at a brisk pace and Arthur followed quickly.

‘I told you: we’re able to hack into their computer system and radios, so we knew they were coming,’ she explained. ‘But I can tell you more about that tomorrow. I thought I’d show you your room and let you get some rest now.’

She led him up the stairs to the second floor and started crossing the bridge. Arthur stopped for a moment and looked out over the entire scene. When Ash saw him waiting, she went back to him.

‘It’s amazing,’ he uttered, full of awe.

‘What is?’ She followed his gaze, studying the happy faces sorting through the salvaged goods.

‘This. All of it. What you’ve done here.’ He looked her in the eye. ‘You saved all these people.’

She shook her head, her cheeks turning a deep red. ‘No,’ she said modestly. ‘It wasn’t just me.’

‘It was, Ash. You led them. You saved them.’

‘I didn’t save the ones that count, though.’ She grimaced as she said it, feeling instantly guilty. ‘That’s not what I mean. They all count. It’s just–’

‘I know.’ He laid a comforting hand on her shoulder. ‘Your family.’

‘And yours.’ She kept staring at the people below them, not saying a thing, before finally getting the courage to turn back to him.

‘We’ll save them, Ash.’

‘You really believe that, don’t you?’

‘I have to. Don’t you?’

Without another word, she walked off towards his cell.

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Loki’s throne was a thing of wonder. It was forged from solid gold. A life-sized wolf sculpture was carved out of the left-hand side. The narrowed eyes, lips drawn back in a snarl and sharp little lines incised along the back of its neck indicating its bristling hair gave the carving a sense of menace. A golden sea serpent was coiled on the other side, two fangs bared with a pear-shaped piece of emerald dripping off one point, like venom. Both beasts’ heads were at just the right height for armrests. The back was shaped like a tree, rotting and crumbling, with a woman standing next to it, draped in robes of gold. Her lips were turned up in a half-smile but the empty metal of her eyes gave her a cold and forbidding expression.

The softest cushions imaginable adorned the seat, with covers crafted from tightly woven silk and stuffed with down from the long-extinct dodo. The throne was tall, so a footrest was necessary to ensure that Loki’s legs didn’t dangle as he lounged back in the chair. Tonight’s ottoman consisted of a single cushion balanced on the back of a young boy on all fours.

The boy was squirming so Loki gave him a swift and vicious kick in his already tender ribs.

Max tumbled aside, tears in his eyes.

Loki surged to his feet and glared down at him.

‘What are you crying for? It’s an honour to serve me, isn’t it?’

Max whimpered that it was, nodding frantically to emphasise his agreement.

‘You have a choice. Be a good – and unmoving – little footstool. Or you go back to the cage. And I don’t think you like the cage very much, do you?’

Max shook his head and clambered back in position, holding the cushion in place until Loki was comfortable once more.

‘Much better,’ said the Father of Lies, returning to his thoughts.

He had been pondering the disturbance before Max had moved. He had first felt it a couple of days ago: the faintest of vibrations in the fabric of reality, rippling like a pebble dropped in a pond. Something wasn’t right. Someone was interfering.

Loki drummed his fingers on the golden wolf’s head and looked in the direction of Hel.

It couldn’t be, he thought. No. Not Arthur. Impossible. He had watched the boy disappear, watched reality change around him.

Yet a nagging doubt remained. The boy had proved exceptionally lucky in the past. Perhaps he’d been getting help all along. And if this was true, then there was the slimmest of chances that it was his presence Loki had sensed.

He shrugged mentally. Even if the boy was back, Loki wasn’t concerned. He had a back-up plan. He hadn’t come this far just to let that brat ruin everything once more.

He grinned.

But despite the smile, his throne had never felt so uncomfortable, as if it wasn’t meant for him.

He looked down at Max on hands and knees, making the perfect footrest.

Then, just for fun, Loki kicked him in the ribs once more.

Hard.