SEVEN

BEZEAL

AFTER SEVERAL GRAVITY-DEFYING LEAPS, ARCHER LANDED at the castle gate. The Bavandan guards admitted him right away.

“Her Ladyship is in the dome,” one said.

After walking up a ten-story stone spiral staircase, Archer and Razz found themselves in a spectacular enclosed botanical garden. It was hot and humid, the glass dome above making it feel like a tropical jungle.

“Up here!” came a voice like wind chimes brushed by a breeze.

Archer saw a flash of bright red dancing among the shrubs and bushes high on a hill. He and Razz followed a winding path through the greenery with bees, dragonflies, and all manner of flying insects buzzing about. Archer turned the corner and almost ran directly into Lady Kasia.

“My . . .” She exhaled deeply. “But you do know how to make an entrance.”

Archer bowed. “I am so sorry, your Ladyship,” he said. “I should have been more observant.”

Lady Kasia held out her slender right arm and shook the Dreamtreader’s hand exactly once. A wide, ornamental fan spread between her delicate white fingers.

Razz landed on Archer’s shoulder and tugged at his earlobe. Archer cleared his throat. “Lady Kasia,” he said, “I wonder if you might have time for a few questions.”

“For you,” she said, “I have quite a bit of time. Join me for tea, won’t you?” She snapped the fingers of her left hand. A small round table covered in a pristine white cloth appeared, along with a rose-colored tea set.

Razz squeezed Archer’s earlobe even tighter. “Ow,” he said. “Cut that out.”

“What was that?” Lady Kasia asked, her expression darkening.

“Nothing,” he said. “I didn’t say that to you. It’s my friend here.”

“Oh, how sweet,” Lady Kasia cooed. “Will she be joining us for tea?”

“No, thank you,” Razz squealed. She leaped up into the air, spun in a tight twin-tail-circle, and vanished.

“She’s not much into tea,” Archer said. “And honestly, I’m on an urgent errand to repair the new breaches, so I really can’t—”

“Stay for long,” Lady Kasia said, completing his sentence. “I understand, but even a Dreamtreader needs refreshment now and again.” She held out a chair for Archer and, with a twirl of her red sundress, sat on her own. “What questions do you have for me, lad Archer?”

Archer figured getting to the point swiftly would be in everyone’s best interests. “I’m wondering about my Dreamtreading associates. Have you seen them recently?”

“Mesmeera and Duncan?” she replied thoughtfully. “Not in two moons. Why?”

Archer hadn’t planned out an answer. “Well . . . honestly, we’ve been out of touch, and I’d like to find them.”

“Dreamtreaders out of touch with each other?” she asked, pursing her very red lips. “That does not sound good. As I said, I haven’t seen them recently, but when they were last here, they seemed very serious. Not at all as jovial as they usually are.”

“How do you mean?”

“Well,” she said. “Duncan didn’t smile once, not even when I tugged on his curly red beard. And he seemed fidgety, like he had ants in his pants, so to speak.”

Archer cleared his throat. “And Mesmeera?”

“She was more tense than Duncan,” she said. “In fact, she didn’t even seem interested in my closet this time.”

Archer sat up straighter in his chair. Duncan was the most fun-loving being Archer had ever met. And Mesmeera? Dreamtreading was a job for her, but clothes were her passion. To hear that she passed up a free pass to explore Lady Kasia’s famous wardrobe? That was profoundly out of character for her.

“Is there anything else you can tell me?” Archer asked.

“Sadly, no,” Lady Kasia replied, sipping at her tea.

Archer started to get up. “Thank you for the information,” he said. “The news worries me, but it feels important. I wish I could stay longer—”

“But you haven’t even touched your tea.”

“It’s really kind of you but—”

“Well, there is one eensy weensy bit of news,” she said. “Something that might be worth your lingering.”

Archer found himself sitting again. He looked up at her expectantly. She said nothing. Kasia was beautiful. Beautiful in a way that Kara Windchil could never touch. None of the glamour girls of Dresden High School could ever aspire to this level of beauty. Lady Kasia of Bavanda had the beauty of dreams. Mysterious, intriguing, and perfect. It was the kind of beauty reserved for royalty and the imagination.

But Archer knew better. Lady Kasia was an illusion. Someone, somewhere on earth had dreamt her into being. And Lady Kasia was dangerous. Pale skin, dark hair and brows, luminous blue eyes, and red lips. Very dangerous. Especially to a Dreamtreader. Kasia had been known to charm Dreamtreaders into letting their guard down so she could accomplish her personal agendas.

“Your tea,” she said, sipping at her own.

Archer picked up his cup and sniffed the warm tea vapors. It smelled fine. In fact, it smelled fantastic. The Dreamtreader wouldn’t have put it past Kasia to try to trick him into consuming gort or any other poison. But, beside the slight greenish tint, the tea was clear. Still, his knee bounced under the table, an involuntary trembling, as he sipped.

Peach, a hint of raspberry, and something that had an odd bite. He swallowed and hoped he didn’t look as nervous as he felt.

“There now,” she said. “You see? Refreshing.”

Archer nodded, relieved that he wasn’t blacking out or choking. “The other . . . bit of news?” he prompted.

She smirked and set down her teacup. “Oh, that,” she said with a sigh. “All business today, are we? Well, I suppose it cannot be helped. You Dreamtreaders are rather narrowly focused.”

“The news?”

“Yes, yes,” she said, flicking out her fan again. But this time, the motion was anything but delicate and feminine. It was as if Lady Kasia were shooing away a wasp. Her expression changed. The fan vanished, and she leaned forward, elbows upon the table. “Well, you might just find this very much of interest, being what you are,” she said. “Aside from you, there are only two other Dreamtreaders at a time, yes?”

Archer nodded. “Never more than three of us at one time,” he said. “Master Gabriel always says three is the perfect number.” Archer paused, thinking. “Or was it in the Creeds?”

“That is what I thought,” Lady Kasia said, glancing left and right conspiratorially before continuing. “But there are rumors of others . . . others who can do what you can do.”

The hair on the back of Archer’s neck prickled. “Others?”

“There is a maiden,” she said. “I have not seen her myself, but my guards have. She moves furtively from place to place. She travels alone in a cloak of gray most times, but always hooded and veiled. Others say she wears all white and dances among the clouds. A certain tradesman told me she dwelt in Garnet Province for a time, studying and asking questions.”

“Garnet?” Archer echoed. “The libraries?”

Kasia nodded. “And the Sages,” she said. “So many secrets.”

“But not the Inner Sanctum,” Archer said. “They wouldn’t admit . . . a stranger.”

“I should hope not. But one wonders about Bezeal.”

“Bezeal? What does he have to do with it?”

“Who can say? But he was rumored to be in Garnet at the same time as the veiled maiden. He would sell his grandmother’s soul for the right price, and he has sway with the Sages.”

Archer mentally filed these things away, especially concerning Bezeal. Archer would need to see about that soon. “You mentioned others?”

“Only rumors,” she said. “But since you ask . . . there has been word of an old magician and his apprentice, but they are not of the Dream. They have been seen doing wonders in the mountains of Kurdan. The strangest tales always come from Kurdan. That is, alas, all I know.”

“If you hear anything else,” Archer said as he stood, “you’ll send word?”

“I may,” she said. “Or I may summon you to my garden once more. I often find it so very lonesome.”

“Have you considered a pine coon?” Archer asked. “They’re cute and very resourceful. I have to go now. Many kingdoms to visit, breaches to weave up—Dreamtreading duties, you understand.”

“I understand very well, lad Archer,” she said. “Pine coon, indeed.”

97814003236_0036_003.jpg

By the time Old Jack sounded its ninth bell, Archer had closed up forty-two breaches: a new personal record for one night, though Razz had helped. Together, they had also visited nineteen of the twenty-one kingdoms in Archer’s district. Aside from Lady Kasia’s news, Archer had learned precious little about Duncan and Mesmeera. The sum total of information was this: the last time anyone had seen them was two moons ago, two weeks in Dream time; when they had last been seen, they had seemed humorless and pensive; and no one knew where they had gone.

As Archer surfed across the Dreamscape, he wondered aloud, “What could possibly be keeping those two out of the Dream?”

“I’m frightened for them,” Razz buzzed from her perch on his shoulder. “They are so kind and friendly.”

“And powerful. What about their breaches?” Archer continued. “Who’s weaving them if they haven’t been? I need to tell Gabriel.”

“Are you going to return soon, then? It’s getting late.”

Archer gazed up at the distant facade of Old Jack. For him, it read just after tenth toll. He’d heard it only moments before. “No,” he said. “I have a little cushion of time left.”

“A very little cushion.”

“Yes, yes,” he said. “I remember the last time. But there’s one more stop on our journey tonight.”

“Where?”

“Kurdan,” he said. “I need to talk to Bezeal.”

“Bezeal?” Razz chirruped, huge eyes blinking. “That low-down, no good, swindling, cheat-faced—”

“Temper, temper, Razz. You’re just angry because he got the better of you dealing for that crate of walnut shells.”

“G-got the better of me?” she spluttered. “He practically ripped my heart out! Six golds for walnut shells? I never should have agreed to that!”

“Then why did you?”

Razz avoided his glance. “They were pretty.”

“See there? You may have paid a little extra, but you got quality goods.”

“I know,” she said. “I keep telling myself that, but, Archer, you can’t trust Bezeal. Even when he speaks smoothly and kindly, he’s up to no good.”

“Especially when he speaks smoothly and kindly.”

97814003236_0036_003.jpg

The Dream region known as Kurdan was a peculiar and forbidding land. The mountains were unlike any other ranges Archer had seen. They were like a tempestuous sea that had been turned to stone. Each peak and valley wore its trees and vegetation like a disguise, covering up more numerous nooks and crannies than one could explore in a lifetime. More characteristic of Kurdan than any other detail was its peculiar soil. It was a fine soil, not sand, but soft like peat moss, and it was dark red, the color of a sunset the night before a hurricane . . . the color of an overripe strawberry . . .

The color of clotting blood.

The soil began and ended at Kurdan’s boundaries with a distinct line between it and its neighboring realms: Varta, Wightsdown, and Celosia. It could not have been a cleaner line if it had been drawn on a map. Things are weird like that in the Dream, Archer reminded himself as he surfed over the border. The Dreamtreader dismissed the longboard and took to the foothills with great leaping strides. If he was to find Bezeal before Old Jack struck his Personal Midnight, Archer would have to go to the famous marketplace of Kurdan City.

The market was more empty than usual, after peak hours in the Dream. Most of the shops, stands, and stalls were closed up for the night. That didn’t mean Bezeal wouldn’t still be there. The real wheelers and dealers would all still be very busy.

Archer steered toward into the Avenue of Precious Metals, rounded past the Vault of Gemstones, and entered the Reliquary, home of very rare inventions and keepsakes. He found two tall men talking in whispers near a broken-out window. Men? Archer thought. They might be men. In the Dream, one never knew.

Archer strode up to them and deepened his voice to address them. “I seek Bezeal.”

“Do you?” one of the tall beings said. He turned, revealing a feline face with reptilian eyes. He bumped the brim of his wide hat with the iron hook that replaced his hand. “Then you are in a hurry to lose your shirt.”

“He’s fresh meat, ain’t he?” the other man replied. His face was just a bag of mottled flesh pocked with little black vacuums where his eyes, nose, and mouth should have been. There was something familiar about this being. What it could possibly be, Archer had no earthly idea. With his thatch of spiky yellow hair, he looked like a scarecrow come to life. Last time Archer checked, he didn’t know any talking scarecrows. Well, except for the one in The Wizard of Oz.

The scarecrow being shifted his stance, haughtily placing a paw-like hand on the hilt of a small axe holstered at his side. “Bet’ee won’t even have skin on his bones when ole Bezeal’s done with him.”

Archer took a deep breath. He’d been working on holding his temper. But Razz was under no such illusions. She leaped off Archer’s shoulder, spun two tight circles in front of the men.

“Listen here, ya know-nothing goobers!” she squeaked, shaking her paw like a shaming finger. “When a Dreamtreader asks you for information, ya speak up, and no guff!”

“Dreamtreader, is it?” Snake Eye asked. “And I’m a great pink dragon!”

“Heh, heh, yeah, prove it,” Scarecrow mocked. There it is again, Archer thought. There was something in this being’s mannerisms that struck him as familiar. The arrogant stance, the tone, maybe? He still wasn’t sure.

Razz put a paw up to her open mouth. “Uh-oh,” she said before vanishing, the purplish smoke making Scarecrow cough.

“Gentlemen,” Archer said. “You might want to look down.”

The reptilian eyes became shrewd slits as if he might be trying to process what sort of misdirection Archer was playing.

“No, really,” Archer said. “You asked for proof that I am a Dreamtreader. Look down.”

Scarecrow looked down first. “Sheejey!” he gasped. “Look!”

Snake Eyes at last lowered his eyes. He grabbed Scarecrow in a desperate embrace. And well he might have. The ground was gone. A chasm had opened beneath them and fell to jagged shards of stone far below.

“That . . . that’s not real!” Snake Eyes hissed.

Archer nodded, and the two men fell. They fell, kicking and scrabbling and screaming. Archer stopped them after about fifty feet and then brought them back to a hover at eye level. It was a ridiculous strain, holding those two up by force of will. A greater drain on his mental resources even than flying. Archer just hoped they didn’t see him sweating. “Proof enough?”

They nodded furiously.

Archer said, “Now, about Bezeal?”

Both men pointed urgently toward a dark corner where a dim red light burned.

“Thank you, gentlemen,” Archer said, and he turned to walk away.

“Wait!” Snake Eyes exclaimed.

“What eebout . . . uh . . . well . . . us?” Scarecrow mumbled.

“Oh, oh . . . sorry,” Archer said. He waved his hand, and the ground was there as it had always been.

As he neared the far end of the market, he found himself yawning. “Going to have to watch that,” he muttered. The chasm had been impressive, but it had taken its toll. Archer was close to exhaustion. Exhaustion that might lead to sleep. And falling asleep in the Dream meant a disaster worse than not getting answers from Bezeal. Far worse.

Archer made his way toward the red light but stepped aside so that a small group of cloaked beings could pass. Any one of them might have been Bezeal, but Archer had an inexplicable feeling that the renowned merchant still lurked ahead.

He did.

“A Dreamtreader is here,” came a voice from the stand where the red light burned. “Good fortune draws near. Come. Have no fear.”

Archer blinked the sleep out of his eyes and mustered all his remaining will. He needed his mind sharp for this.

“Long time no see, Bezeal,” Archer said. “And, uh . . . still, no see. Where are you?”

“Look again for my kind,” the voice said. “Seek and you will find unless, of course, you are most willingly blind.”

Archer did look again, and a layer of shadow seemed to unfurl itself into a short, hooded figure with gleaming yellow sparks for eyes. His small, four-fingered hands were sea green and worked deftly to wrap a small mechanical device in a tawny cloth. A wide, wide smile of brilliant, broad white teeth appeared for just a moment.

“I need some information, Bezeal,” Archer said.

Bezeal’s smile vanished. Only his gleaming eyes remained. “To hear that you are in grave need is music to the ears of greed. Tell me, tell me, so that I might feed.”

Mistake number one, Archer thought. “What can you tell me about Duncan and Mesmeera? They seem to have disappeared.”

Bezeal put the bundled device into a small chest. “To search for the Dreamtreaders twain will lead thee in time to pain . . . and in the end, all in vain.”

The game had begun. “I have brought you something,” Archer said. He turned over his right hand, and in his palm sat a small brownish block.

“Is that . . . chocolate?” Bezeal asked.

Ha! Archer thought. He’d thrown Bezeal off. He hadn’t spoken a rhyming triplet. “It is chocolate,” Archer said. “And it’s yours if you’ll tell me what I want to know.”

Bezeal’s eyes flashed white. “Chocolate, chocolate,” he muttered, “glorious and real, sneaky play on Bezeal, but . . . we have . . . a deal.”

Archer handed over the chocolate. A green hand took it, and the chocolate disappeared into Bezeal’s hood.

“Ohhhh, oh yes!” Bezeal said. “Better even than I dared to guess. Creamy and sweet, I do confess.”

“There now,” Archer said. “Tell me about Duncan and Mesmeera.”

“Where they’ve gone now I cannot say, but they departed two moons ago at the break of day, in search of a relic rare and fey. This antiquity, it lingers in a dangerous place, and the Dreamtreaders twain have given chase. But alas, they are gone without a trace.”

“What is the relic you speak of? Where did Mesmeera and Duncan go to find it?”

“It is a puzzle box of clever make. That is what they sought to take, leaving only mystery in their wake. To find them and it, seek the rotten core, the home of evil out on the moor. Knock not once but twice on the Lurker’s door.”

“The Lurker,” Archer whispered, hoping he’d misheard. But Bezeal nodded. “This just keeps getting better.” Duncan had once told him about the wandering madman out on the moors in the province called Archaia. No one seemed to know how the Lurker got there, but he wasn’t like other beings in the Dream. He wasn’t awed or cowed by Dreamtreading power. He had such power himself, but he used it to dark ends.

What was so special about the relic that Duncan and Mesmeera would risk tangling with the Lurker? Archer felt certain that Bezeal knew. But getting him to reveal what he knew would require more . . .

Wait, what would it require? Archer shook his head. He’d nearly drifted off. More drained than I thought. Still, he needed a bargaining chip. A chocolate bargaining chip. He breathed deeply, concentrated, and opened his palm once more. The block of chocolate was small and probably hollow, but it was the best he could do for now.

“Here,” he said. “Will you take this in exchange for telling me why Duncan and Mesmeera went after this . . . this relic . . . thing?”

Bezeal snatched away the chocolate. “No,” he said. “I cannot tell why they sought this thing. But for this, a new deal I’ll sing. You find the relic for me to bring.”

“You want me to get the relic?” Archer blurted. “You want me to go out on the moors of Archaia, knock on the Lurker’s door, and ask for it . . . just so that you can have it? You’re crazier than I thought.”

Bezeal’s eyes flashed red once and the gleaming Cheshire grin appeared again. “Find the relic, find your friends, and something more. When I have it, I’ll tell you something you cannot ignore. I know the secret to cast down . . . the Nightmare Lord.”

“Cast down?” Archer echoed. “You mean, as in defeat?”

Bezeal nodded.

“You mean gone . . . forever?”

Bezeal nodded again.

Archer’s heart hammered against his rib cage. If I could be the one to destroy the Nightmare Lord, I could help so many people. I could change things. He didn’t give words to the next thought, but he felt in his heart that doing such a mighty deed would somehow make his mother proud.

“I can’t find the relic,” Archer said, “if I don’t know more about it.”

“A puzzle box of silver, ornately engraved, with levers and switches for those who are brave. Take it and who knows whose lives you’ll save?”

The deep-toned bell of Old Jack tolled once. Bezeal looked up suddenly, and Archer didn’t know why the little merchant would hear—

The bell tolled again, ringing out before the lingering sound of the first vanished. The few stragglers still in the marketplace began to scatter. The bell struck four more times.

No, Archer thought. Not now. Ring again. Ring again.

But it didn’t ring again. This was not his personal time. It was Dream realm time, and it was the stroke of six: Sixtolls, the height of the Nightmare Lord’s power and a time of utter anarchy in the Dream.

Deep, mournful howls sounded in the distance. “No, not now,” Archer growled. “I’ve got more questions. Too many.” Archer knew he’d run out of time, but even if he hadn’t, he’d definitely run out of bargaining chips.

“I’ve got to go,” Archer said. “I’ve got to go now.”

“Wait, wait! First, you must seal . . . the deal . . . with Bezeal.” He reached out his strange, pale green hand.

“You’d better not be messing with me on this,” Archer said. “Or so help me, Bezeal, I’ll use every bit of my Dreamtreader power to make sure you never make another deal.”

The teeth appeared. Archer shook hands and felt a sharp prick on his palm. When he yanked his hand away, there was a smear of blood. No, there were two smears. One bright red. The other . . . putrid yellow. Bezeal’s blood.

“A bargain in blood must never fail. Even when the Lurker begins to wail, I hope for your sake your will won’t quail.”

Archer furiously wiped his hand on his pants leg and sprinted from the market. With the howls growing louder and more furious, Archer called up his longboard and let the waves of Intrusion propel him swiftly back to his anchor.