Read Arthur Quinn and the World Serpent Online
Authors: Alan Early
Tags: #Action & Adventure, #Fiction, #Viking, #Loki, #Dublin, #World Serpent, #Arthur Quinn, #Viking Mythology, #Jormungand, #Children's Fiction
âHow did you manage to fill it in so neatly and so quickly?' Joe asked, astonished.
âWe didn't,' said Deirdre.
âThen how â¦?'
âThis is how it was. This is how it always was. Even during the cave-in.'
âWhat do you mean “during the cave-in”?' asked Joe.
Ruairà and Deirdre looked at each other glumly.
Eventually Deirdre continued. âI'm guessing no one explained the true nature of the cave-in?'
Joe shook his head, intrigued.
âBoth of us were here that day â and about ten other engineers and excavators. We were starting a small dig on the mound, just some tests. Suddenly the ground started shaking. We could feel it underneath us, rocks falling away. We could even hear them crashing down below the surface.'
âWe have some experienced excavators here,' Ruairà added. âThey all said the same thing: that it felt like a cave-in.'
âSo we ran to safety,' said Deirdre. âAfter a few minutes the shaking and crashing stopped. We waited a few more hours before venturing closer again. And this is what we found: the mound just as you see it now.'
âI don't understand. If there was a cave-in then all the rock from the surface should have fallen through. This mound shouldn't be level.'
âExactly,' agreed RuairÃ. âBut what's even more confusing is that when we did another geothermal it showed that it's completely solid the whole way down â as if there had been no cave-in.'
âThen it's faulty mapping.'
âIt's not faulty. We've tested it elsewhere. And we've used different machines on the mound. All of them came up with the same result.'
âSolid. No sign of any cave-in,' Deirdre said. âSo what do we do now?'
âIf it's solid,' said Joe, âthere's only one thing we can do. We start drilling again.'
Although he didn't want to admit it, Arthur was pleasantly surprised by Belmont School. The building itself was at least three times as large as his school back in Kerry and it was so new you could almost smell the paint. Ash explained that it had just opened that year; in previous years, during the construction work, they'd had to take classes in a variety of prefabs still situated behind the fancy new building.
As Ash had promised, Arthur found himself liking Miss Keegan. The young teacher seemed genuinely excited to have a new pupil â âAnother mind to mould,' as she'd joked â and she let him sit next to Ash and Will in class. She wasn't even annoyed when they'd wandered in almost fifteen minutes late thanks to the weird time skip and Will's lazy stroll from the bus stop.
âYou're late,' she'd said.
âNo, we're not,' said Will.
She laughed to herself as if what he'd said made perfect sense. âOf course you're not.'
Miss Keegan had strawberry blonde hair that fell in curls over her slender shoulders and she was wearing a floral dress that was probably too light for the icy October air outside. But she seemed not to mind as she strolled across the playground during break.
The day passed blissfully quickly. The most interesting part was when Miss Keegan taught them about what the upcoming elections would mean to the country. âI like my pupils to keep up with current affairs,' she'd explained to Arthur. She called that part of the class her News-Watch. He had no problem catching up with the class and Miss Keegan even agreed not to give them any homework (a suggestion from Will on account of them having a new class member). Before he knew it, Arthur was walking home with Ash and Max. He waved goodbye to them as he went into his new house. He'd just shut the door when the bell rang, so he opened it again.
Max was waiting outside with his football offered up to Arthur. Ash stood at the end of the drive, smiling to herself.
âFancy a game?' Max asked hopefully.
âWell â¦' Arthur said doubtfully. Max's face dropped in disappointment. âAs long as you promise to go easy on me,' Arthur finished, taking the ball from him and running to the open grassy area in front of the houses.
When Joe arrived home a few hours later, he was even more pleased than Max to see Arthur out playing. He pulled into the drive, left his work gear on the passenger seat and ran to join in.
That night, as Joe and Arthur slept peacefully in one house and the Barry family slept in another, mist swirled around the green. By morning the mist would have left a fine frost on the grass, but now only a tall, stooped figure stood there. Dressed all in black, the dark man watched Arthur's house, counting the minutes and biding his time. He could wait. He'd waited longer than a millennium already: what were a few more days?
Arthur and Max's kick-around quickly became something of a tradition. Every day after school, Max ran straight to the green, dropping his backpack en route, and kicked the ball he carried everywhere to Arthur. At first Arthur begrudgingly joined in, but by Friday evening he found himself looking forward to the game. Ash was usually their sole spectator and sometime referee, but on Friday she was joined on the sidelines by Will.
Midway through the game, just as Max had scored his second goal, Will had come striding around the corner into the estate.
âHey man!' he saluted Arthur as Max and Ash ran to meet him. Arthur picked up the ball that Max had let roll away and joined them at the side. Over the past few days, Arthur had grown to like Max and Ash more and more. He found he had lots in common with Ash: they were both interested in art, they liked the same bands (âStinkPuppy is easily the best band in the world!' Ash had enthused, going over her iTunes library) and they shared the same sense of humour (neither were averse to gags about bodily functions and both adored a certain British sitcom where the lead character was a man in women's clothing). But while Arthur had hit it off with Ash, he just wanted to hit Will. Will was everything Arthur wasn't: boastful and confident to the verge of cockiness, he had no problem speaking out in a group or being the centre of attention. He even spoke in a slightly accented twang, as if he wanted to be a character on American TV, which he probably did. He usually addressed Arthur as âman' or âdude' and sometimes even used âArtie', which drove Arthur crazy.
âPlaying some footie there, Artie?'
âArthur. And yes, I am.' He hoped Will would pick up on the irritation in his voice but he doubted it. Arthur found that Will was always too wrapped up in his own life to really notice others.
âWill you play with us, Will?' asked Max, excited.
âI'm sure Will is far too busy to be â' Arthur started.
âIt's not really my game, football,' Will interrupted, completely ignoring Arthur. âI'm more of a basketball man, myself. Nothing like shooting some hoops.'
If this had been a cartoon instead of real life, a light bulb would have lit up over Arthur's head right then.
âBasketball?' Arthur said. âReally? I play some basketball too.' He didn't add that he was more than a little good, having won All-Munster medals three times in his old school.
âCool. We should shoot some â'
âHow about tomorrow? It
is
the weekend.'
âThat sounds good, man.'
Ash could sense the tension oozing from Arthur. âWe have an old basketball ring in the garage. You can use that. But for now, why don't you get back to the game? It's getting late and Max is getting tired.'
âI am not,' protested Max with a yawn.
Arthur was already running off with the ball. As he ran, Will shouted, âSee you tomorrow, man!'
âLooking forward to it.
Man!
' replied Arthur, relishing the thought of putting a dent in Will's cockiness.
The game ended with Max winning 5â1. Arthur had been distracted. He had only one thing on his mind â beating Will the following day.
The mid-morning October sun was uncommonly warm as Arthur crossed the estate to the Barrys' house on Saturday, dribbling his basketball as he went. Joe had had to go into work again, despite working all through the week. âI still have a lot to catch up on,' he'd explained on his way out a couple of hours previously.
Ash opened the front door on Arthur's first knock. She pulled the door towards her by hooking the handle with her elbows. Her hands were covered in orange gunk.
âPumpkin carving,' she clarified and led him inside. Mrs Barry â whom Arthur hadn't met yet â was out shopping, while Mr Barry was taking it easy in front of the widescreen TV in the living room. He looked like an overweight, middle-aged version of Max and he grunted a âhello' to Arthur as he passed.
In the kitchen, Stace was sitting at the breakfast table, glued to a laptop and updating her Facebook status. Bright orange pumpkin filling and seeds covered the other half of the table, where Max, in an apron, was kneeling on a chair carving a ghoulish face into his own pumpkin. He bit his bottom lip in deep concentration. Ash's pumpkin was looking good; Arthur recognised it straight away as being based on Edvard Munch's
The Scream
painting. They'd studied it in class in Kerry a few weeks ago.
âStace thinks she's too cool now for pumpkin carving,' Ash said, âso this one's yours.' She offered Arthur the last uncarved vegetable and a small carving knife. âGo wild.'
Max helped Arthur hollow out the pumpkin with his bare hands â âIt's my favourite bit,' he'd said, orange slime dripping between his fingers. For the next couple of hours, they couldn't have been happier, carving monstrous faces into the pumpkins. Arthur was just appraising his work â an evil smiling face he half remembered from a dream â when the doorbell rang. Max ran to answer it and shouted back, âWill's here!'
And so the game begins, thought Arthur, as he started to clean up.
They wheeled the basketball ring out of the garage in no time and stood it in the empty driveway. Arthur was impressed: though rusty, missing the net and clearly underused, it was regulation height with a spring-loaded ring and NBA players from a few years ago printed on the backboard.
Ash and Max sat on a low wall to watch and Arthur passed the ball to Will. âYou're up,' he said.
Will passed it back. âI'll go easy on you.'
âNo need,' Arthur said tersely. He passed it back with a little more force than necessary.
Both his mother and father had played basketball in their younger years. In fact, they'd met outside the court after practice one night. Joe came out of the men's changing room, Arthur's mother left the ladies' and it was love at first sight. Arthur also had a special place in his heart for the game and had even managed to nab Most Valuable Player three years running in the Under-14 Munster League. He really didn't want Will to âgo easy on him'. He wanted to beat him, but he also wanted a challenge.
âAll right. I won't go easy on you,' said Will. He launched the ball artfully over his head. It sailed smoothly through the ring. âAs the French say,
deux points
.'
The ball bounded into Arthur's hands. He turned straight around and flicked the ball back into the net. âThat'll be
deux points
for me, too.'
And that's how the game continued. Arthur and Will matched each other point for point, basket for basket the whole way through. If Arthur managed to score a three-pointer, Will followed shortly with his own. They'd decided on ten minutes a side and when half-time came the score was thirty-two apiece. They took a two-minute break, leaning against the wall with Ash and Max.
âPumpkins, eh?' said Will, nodding to the three carved pumpkins Max had set up in the porch. âI love the ghoul. And the smiling one is all right, I guess.
The Scream
is great. Edvard Munch, I take it?' Ash nodded, blushing. âI love his work. It's just all so â'
âRight,' Arthur broke in, heading back out onto the temporary court, âgame on.'
The second half continued in much the same way. It was clear to both players and spectators that Arthur and Will were almost equally matched in basketball terms. With less than a minute left in the game, the pressure was on for either boy to come out victorious. Ego-driven, Will made his first mistake.
The ball was in Arthur's possession. He ran to the three-point position and turned to the basket. Before he could even set up the shot, Will blocked him, slapping the ball out of his grip and knocking into him with the force. Arthur fell to the ground, toppling backwards out onto the road. His phone dropped out of his pocket and smashed open.
âFoul!' he cried defiantly, leaping to his feet.
âAre you all right?' asked Ash in concern. She picked up the pieces of his dead phone. âYour phone's seen better days.'
âI don't care. I'm fine. Foul.'
âSorry, man. Didn't mean it,' said Will, retrieving the ball and handing it to Arthur. âTake your free shot.'
Arthur accepted the ball and took his shot. The ball swooped right into the basket. He was now one point in the lead with twenty seconds left.
The game quickly resumed. Before Arthur was aware of what was happening, Will had taken possession of the ball. He ran at the ring, jumped straight up into the air underneath it and slam dunked the ball into the basket. He even managed to touch the edge of the spring-loaded ring with his fingertips as he fell back to earth.
Arthur stood aghast as Ash's mobile-phone stopwatch beeped, signalling the end of the game.
âIs that it?' asked Will. He'd landed on his backside after the momentous score and was getting to his feet. âWho won? I wasn't keeping score.'
âYou did,' said Arthur. He sat on the wall, suddenly interested in his shoelaces.
âI did?'
âYeah, 56â55. You won.'
Will walked over and passed the ball to Max, who ran out and attempted his own slam dunk. Will put out his hand. âGood game.'
Arthur, still looking down, said, âYeah. Good game.'
Will held his hand there for a moment longer. When Arthur didn't accept it, he shoved it in his pocket. âWell, I'll be off. See you on Monday.'
âSee you Monday, Will,' said Ash. When he'd gone, she turned to Arthur. âWhy didn't you shake his hand? That was so rude!'
Arthur looked up at her. He saw the disappointment in her face and then felt it inside himself. He was wrong and he knew it. But he couldn't bring himself to admit to it out loud.
âI don't know why people like him so much,' he said. âI'm going home.'
As Arthur walked back to his house, he could barely hear Max and the sound of the basketball thumping against the backboard over the guilty thoughts in his own head.