Chapter 7

ONE MOUSE AND ONE HUNDRED MONSTER CATS

Jack_icon.tif 

King Edward and Jack stood at the entrance of a secret passageway at the back of the war chamber. “Few know of these passages,” the king said. “They run through the entire palace and were built as an escape route for the royal family. We will use them to take you to the World Portal.” Without another word, the king grabbed a lantern from the wall and walked in.

“Your Majesty, how did you know I was going to the World Portal?” Jack asked as they walked through the cramped passageway.

“I have been working with Andreal and Miel,” the king said. “But if we are under attack, someone must have betrayed us. As far as I know, only myself, Andreal, and Miel knew the plan to sneak you to the portal.” The king shook his head sadly. “If I had to guess, I would say it was Andreal. I have never fully trusted that giant, yet Elion assured me he was true. And who am I to argue with a Sephari?” The ceiling was so low that the king had to hunch as he walked.

“What do you mean—sneak us in?” Jack asked. “You are the king. Couldn’t you have just invited us?”

“I could have,” King Edward agreed, “but then the world would have known exactly where you were and how you were leaving. We wanted it to be kept secret, though I suppose our planning was for nothing if Andreal was working against us all along.”

Jack and the king had arrived at a dead end. The king reached up and pushed on a stone above his head. As the stone disappeared, the wall slid aside to reveal a thin metal slide that dropped into darkness. “This has always been my favorite part!” The king chuckled as he sat down and shoved off.

Jack quickly sat and pushed off behind him. The ride was spectacular! The slide twisted and turned, then dropped suddenly only to twist again. By the time he reached the bottom, he was grinning from ear to ear.

The king was already standing, and when Jack arrived, his smile quickly faded. The muted sounds of battle could be heard on the other side of the thick walls.

“If the fighting has come this far into the palace, we haven’t much time,” the king said. “And I am afraid I cannot take you any farther, my dear boy.” He knelt and lifted a small steel grate from the floor.

“You will need to go the rest of the way on your own. We are only one level above the chamber that holds the World Portal. You will crawl past two metal grates, and when you reach the third, you will be directly above the portal. From there all you need do is remove the grate and drop to the chamber below. The Author willing, Mrs. Dumphry and the others will be waiting!”

“You can’t come with me?” Jack pleaded.

“It has been many years since I could fit through a tunnel this small.” The king chuckled. “No, I’m afraid I cannot go any farther. But I will join the battle elsewhere and try to buy you and your friends as much time as I can.”

An explosion sounded from the other side of the wall. A few small stones fell and dust streamed down. “We haven’t much time,” the king said. “And though I am enjoying our conversation immensely, I am afraid you must go now.”

Jack lowered himself into the tunnel. It was so small he would have to wriggle through on his belly. He met the king’s eyes one last time. “Thank you, Your Majesty.”

“No, my dear boy, it is I who must thank you. The Awakened stand with you, Jack Staples. And though you carry the weight of the world on your shoulders, we will carry you on ours! Now,” he said in a commanding voice, “it is time for you to go. Good-bye, young man. If the Author wills it, we will meet again.”

Jack took the king’s hand and shook it firmly, then dropped to his belly and began shimmying through the tunnel. “Remember,” the king called from behind him, “you must pass the first two metal grates, and when you come to the third, you’ll have arrived at the World Portal.”

Jack’s mind turned somersaults as he squirmed through the tunnel. He’d just met the king of England! As he arrived at the first grate, he heard voices in the cavern below. When he peered through, he saw a young man with red hair sitting on the ground, leaning heavily against the wall.

“I told you to get up!” A black-haired youth appeared, kicking the red-haired boy in the ribs. “Lord Korah commanded us to stand ready. If you feel like this command is too much for you, I would be happy to let him know!”

The first boy leaped out of Jack’s view. “All right, all right,” he said. “No need for that. I was only joking!” Jack didn’t wait to see more. Whoever these boys were, he had no desire to meet them.

A minute later Jack came to the second grate and his breath caught. At least one hundred Oriax were packed into the small room. The beasts were eerily silent, standing perfectly still; every Oriax had its eyes trained on a brick wall.

Whatever was happening, Jack wanted to be as far away from this chamber as possible. He hadn’t wanted to think about what would happen if he arrived at the third chamber and none of his friends were there. Would he leave without them? Would he even know how?

Arthur_icon.tif 

Arthur Greaves was scared witless. He stood in a small chamber surrounded by thirty-five Oriax. He was trapped as sure as a fly in honey. Without Jack’s Atherial Cloak, he’d have become Oriax food long ago.

When Jack fled the courtyard an hour earlier, Arthur had tried to follow. His best friend had disappeared through a ruined door in the side of the palace, but Arthur needed to sneak around a number of Oriax first. By the time he entered the palace, Jack was gone, though Arthur had found his leather satchel lying among the rubble. He’d been astounded to find the Atherial Cloak inside. Arthur decided to wear the cloak until he could return it, but he hadn’t been able to find Jack. Instead, he’d managed to find a large number of Oriax.

Skulking through the endless corridors, Arthur had quickly become lost. When he happened upon a large stairwell, he remembered Mrs. Dumphry saying something about the World Portal being below the dungeons. If I keep going down, he thought, I’ll have to find them eventually.

After descending thirty-five flights of stairs, Arthur was regretting his decision very much. At the bottom, he’d been shocked to find ten Oriax sitting quietly in a small chamber, staring at a brick wall. He quickly began the endless climb back to the top. But before he’d gone five steps, eighteen more Oriax appeared on the stairs above. They walked, slithered, hopped, and crawled in absolute silence and entered the small chamber to sit beside the others and stare at the brick wall.

It was an eerie situation, and Arthur could see no chance of escape. He stood with his back flat against the wall and tried not to breathe. He knew the cloak didn’t render him totally invisible and was afraid to move a muscle. If the Oriax hadn’t been staring so intently at the wall, he was sure at least one of the beasts would have seen him by now.

No! His heart sank yet again. Another thirty Oriax descended the stairs, pushing their way into the chamber. Arthur quickly realized there wasn’t enough space for all of the beasts. When even more Oriax appeared in the stairwell, he dropped to his belly and rolled beneath the haunches of one of the beasts just before it bumped into him.

Back in Ballylesson, Arthur had once seen two cats playing with a mouse. The cats had faced each other and let the mouse run back and forth between them. Each time the poor rodent tried to escape, one of the cats would swat it toward the other, which would chomp down on the mouse’s tail and toss it high into the air. The poor mouse would land, then frantically try to scurry away, but the other cat would swat it aside once again. The poor thing never had a chance.

Arthur lay flat on his back, staring up at an Oriax with the body of a bear and the head and shoulders of a horse. He couldn’t get the image of the mouse out of his mind. The horrid cats had tossed the poor thing between them for twenty minutes before growing tired of the game. And then, seeming almost bored, one cat had snapped the head off the mouse and left the rest to the second cat.

Arthur wanted to scream as even more Oriax entered the chamber. What are they doing here? And that’s when he heard it. Something else was descending the stairs. A low scraping echoed from the stairwell, and as the noise grew, every Oriax turned its head in anticipation. The beasts began shoving against one another to clear a path to the back of the chamber as Arthur shimmied beneath them.

All Arthur could see were two silvery, clawed feet that looked to be a mixture of human and animal. The creature stepped into the chamber and inhaled deeply, then began walking toward the back wall. Just as it was about to pass Arthur, it stopped and inhaled again.

“There is something … wrong here,” it purred. “A Light Eyes is here; I can smell it.”

Every Oriax began to snarl in agitation.

“Show yourself, Light Eyes,” the creature hissed.

Arthur froze. No! He hadn’t thought it possible to be any more afraid, but he’d been wrong. It can smell me! The thought paralyzed him.

“Rise. Rise and face me.” The Oriax snarls grew louder.

Arthur didn’t move. He squeezed his eyes shut and tried desperately to summon lightning, but nothing happened.

“RISE!” The creature raged and the torches dimmed slightly.

And Arthur stood. There was nothing else he could think to do. He shoved his way between two Oriax and stood shoulder to shoulder with the beasts. Ever so slowly, he opened the Atherial Cloak and pulled back the hood. The Oriax went crazy, snapping jaws, growling, howling, and hissing. But they did not attack.

The creature seemed curious as it looked at Arthur. “I have heard of you, Lightning Dancer.” It purred as it made a half bow and gave a flourish of its silvery cloak. “I am pleased to meet you. You are a friend to the Children of Prophecy, are you not?”

Lightning Dancer? It knows me! Arthur hadn’t thought the dark servants knew anything about him, but this creature knew something Arthur had only just learned.

Where there should have been eyes, the creature had large, oval mirrors, and its ears were pointed at the bottom. Its skin was pure silver, and its face had a feline quality.

“What …” Arthur gulped. “What are you going to do to me?”

The creature smiled as it began to contort, folding inward. “First,” it said, “I will become you.”

Arthur gasped. He was now standing before the mirror image of himself! The creature that looked like Arthur smiled and spoke in Arthur’s own voice. “I am a Grendall, of course. And I will do what I do best. I will draw close to your friends, and I will kill them one by one.” The Grendall licked its lips.

Arthur tried to step back, but an Oriax with the head of a hyena and the body of a walrus snapped at him.

“As for what we will do with you,” the Grendall said, “that is not my decision. I must consult the master.”

Arthur shuddered. The creature still looked like him, except that its eyes had once again become large mirrors. They didn’t reflect the chamber, but showed another place. After a moment, a man with jet-black hair and wearing a black-and-silver cloak appeared in the creature’s mirrored eyes. Although Arthur didn’t understand it, he guessed the eyes acted as some sort of two-way mirror.

“Are you in place?”

“Yes, Master Korah.” The Grendall spoke in its purring voice. “We await your signal.”

“We leave now. Kill anyone who tries to enter the chamber.”

“Yes, master,” the Grendall hissed. “As you can see, I have captured the Lightning Dancer. What would you have me do with him?”

“We have no use for the fat one.” Korah sounded bored. “You can kill him now.”

“It will be as you command.” The mirrors in the other Arthur’s eyes faded.

“It has been far too long since I have consumed a Light Eyes.” The Grendall smacked its lips in anticipation. “And I am hungry.”