Beyond the Deepwoods (4 page)

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Authors: Paul Stewart,Chris Riddell

Tags: #Ages 10 & Up

BOOK: Beyond the Deepwoods
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Back in the woodtroll cabin, Spelda thought otherwise. ‘Oh those sky pirates!’ she grumbled. ‘Tuntum should never have taken you to meet them in the first place. Now they'll be back for you, as sure as my name's Spelda Snatchwood.’

‘But the sky pirate I saw didn't seem bothered whether I joined the crew, or not,’ said Twig.

‘That's what they pretend,’ said Spelda. ‘But look what happened to Hobblebark and Hogwort. Seized from their beds they were, and never seen again. Oh, Twig, I couldn't bear it if that happened to you. It would break my heart.’

Outside, the wind howled through the dense Deepwoods. As darkness fell, the air was filled with the sounds of the wakening night creatures. Fromps coughed and spat, quarms squealed, while the great banderbear beat its monstrous hairy chest and yodelled to its mate. Far away in the distance Twig could just make out the familiar rhythmical pounding of the slaughterers, still hard at work.

‘What am I to do, then?’ Twig asked softly.

Spelda sniffed. ‘In the short term, you're to go and
stay with Cousin Snetterbark,’ she said. ‘We've already sent message, and he's expecting you. Just until things blow over,’ she added. ‘Sky willing, you'll be safe there.’

‘And
after
,’ said Twig. ‘I can come home again then, can I?’

‘Yes,’ said Spelda slowly. Twig knew at once that there was more to come.

‘But?’ he said.

Spelda trembled and hugged the boy's head to her chest. ‘Oh, Twig, my beautiful boy,’ she sobbed. ‘There is something else I must tell you.’

Twig pulled away and looked up at her troubled face. There were tears rolling down his own cheeks now. ‘What is it, Mother-Mine?’ he asked nervously.

‘Oh, Gloamglozer!’ Spelda cursed. ‘This isn't easy.’ She looked at the boy tearfully. ‘Although I have loved you as my own since the day you arrived, you are not my son, Twig. Nor is Tuntum your father.’

Twig stared in silent disbelief. ‘Then, who am I?’ he said.

Spelda shrugged. ‘We found you,’ she said. ‘A little bundle, all wrapped up in a shawl, at the foot of our tree.’


Found
me,’ Twig whispered.

Spelda nodded, leaned forwards and touched the cloth knotted at Twig's neck. Twig flinched.

‘My comfort cloth?’ he said. ‘The shawl?’

Spelda sighed. ‘The very same,’ she said. ‘The shawl we found you wrapped in. The shawl you won't be parted from, even now.’

Twig stroked the fabric with trembling fingers. He heard Spelda sniff.

‘Oh, Twig,’ she said. ‘Although we are not your parents, Tuntum and I have loved you like our very own. Tuntum asked me to say … goodbye for him. He said…’ She stopped, overwhelmed with sadness. ‘He said to tell you that … that, whatever happens, you must never forget … he loves you.’

Now that the words were said, Spelda abandoned herself to her grief completely. She wailed with misery, and uncontrolled sobbing racked her entire body.

Twig knelt across and wrapped his arms right round his mother's back. ‘So I am to leave at once,’ he said.

‘It's for the best,’ Spelda said. ‘But you will return, Twig. Won't you?’ she added uncertainly. ‘Believe me, my beautiful boy, I didn't ever want to have to tell you the end of the tale, but…’

‘Don't cry,’ said Twig. ‘This
isn't
the end of the tale.’

Spelda looked up and sniffed. ‘You're right,’ she said, and smiled bravely. ‘It's more of a beginning, isn't it? Yes, that's what it is, Twig. A new start.’

· CHAPTER TWO ·
T
HE
H
OVER
W
ORM

T
he sounds of the Deepwoods echoed loudly all round as Twig walked along the path through the trees. He shivered, tightened his scarf and pulled up the collar of his leather jacket.

He hadn't wanted to leave that evening at all. It was dark and cold. But Spelda had been insistent. ‘There's no time like the present,’ she'd said several times as she got together the bits and pieces that Twig would need for his journey: a leather bottle, a rope, a small bag of food and – most precious of all – his naming knife. Twig had finally come of age.

‘Anyway, you know what they say,’ she added, as she reached up and tied two wooden charms around her son's neck. ‘Depart by night, arrive by day.’

Twig knew Spelda had been putting on a brave face. ‘But be careful,’ she insisted. ‘It's dark out there and I
know what you're like, forever dreaming and dawdling and wondering what's round the next corner.’

‘Yes, mother,’ said Twig.

‘And don't “yes, mother” me,’ said Spelda. ‘This is important. Remember, stick to the path if you want to steer clear of the fearsome gloamglozer. We woodtrolls
always
stick to the path.’

‘But I'm not a woodtroll,’ mumbled Twig, tears stinging his eyes.

‘You're my little boy,’ said Spelda, hugging him tightly. ‘Stick to the path. Woodtrolls know best. Now, be off with you, and give my love to Cousin Snetterbark. You'll be back before you know it. Everything will be back to normal. You'll see…’

Spelda couldn't finish. The tears were coming thick and fast. Twig turned and set off down the shadowy path into the gloom.

Normal! he thought.
Normal!
I don't want things to be normal. Normal is trockbladder games. Normal is felling trees. Normal is always being left out, never belonging. And why should it be any different at Cousin Snetterbark's?

Being pressganged into crewing a sky ship suddenly seemed more appealing than ever. The sky pirates roamed the skies above the Deepwoods. Surely their airborne adventures must be better than anything down here on the forest floor.

A desperate howl of pain echoed through the trees. For a second, the Deepwoods were still. The next second the night sounds returned, louder than before, as if each and every creature was rejoicing that
it
was not the one who had fallen prey to some hungry predator.

As he walked on, Twig began putting names to the creatures he could hear out there in the treacherous Deepwoods, away from the path. It helped to calm his pounding heart. There were squealing quarms and coughing fromps in the trees above his head. Neither of them could harm a woodtroll – at least, not fatally. Away to his right, he heard the chattering screech of a razorflit, about to dive. The next instant, the air was filled with the scream of its victim: a woodrat, perhaps, or a leafgobbler.

Some way further on, with the dark path still stretching out in front of him, the forest opened up. Twig stopped and stared at the silver moonlight that snaked along the trunks and branches, and gleamed on the waxy leaves. This was the first time he had been out in
the forest after dark, and it was beautiful – more beautiful than he had ever imagined.

With his eyes gazing up at the silvery leaves, Twig took a step forward, away from the shadowy path. The moonlight bathed him in its cold glow and made his skin shine like metal. His billowing breath gleamed, snow-bright.

‘In-
cred
-ible,’ said Twig, and took a couple of steps more.

Below his feet, the glittering frost cracked and crunched. Icicles hung down from a weeping-willoak, and the beads of liquid on a dewdrop tree had frosted and frozen, and glistened now like pearls. A wispy sapling with fronds like hair swayed in the icy breeze.

‘A-
mazing
,’ said Twig, as he wandered on. Now left. Now right. Now round a corner. Now over a slope. It was all so mysterious, all so new.

He stopped by a bank of quivering plants with tall spiky leaves and budded stems, all glinting in the moonlight. All at once, the buds began to pop open. One by one. Until the bank was covered with massive round flowers – with petals like shavings of ice – that turned their heads to the moon, and glowed with its brilliance.

Twig smiled to himself and turned away. ‘Just a
weeny
bit further…’ he said.

A tumblebush tumbled past him and disappeared into the shadows. Moonbells and tinkleberries jingled and jangled in the gathering wind.

Then Twig heard another noise. He spun round. A small, sleek, furry brown creature with a corkscrew tail scurried across the forest floor, squeaking with terror. The screech of a woodowl sliced through the air.

Twig's heart began to race. He looked round him wildly. There were eyes in the shadows. Yellow eyes. Green eyes. Red eyes. And all of them staring at him. ‘Oh, no,’ he moaned. ‘What have I
done
?’

Twig knew what he had done. ‘Never stray from the path,’ Spelda had said. Yet that was
precisely
what he had done. Entranced by the silvery beauty of the Deepwoods, he had strayed from the safety of the path.

Twig groaned. ‘I can't do anything right! Stupid! Stupid! Stupid!’ he shouted at himself, as he stumbled this way and that, desperately trying to find his way back to the path. ‘
STU
—’

All at once he heard something; a sound which silenced his voice and froze him to the spot. It was the wheezing pant of a halitoad – a huge and dangerous reptile, with breath so foul it could stun its victim at twenty paces. At ten paces the stench was lethal. A single evil-smelling belch had been enough to kill Hoddergruff's uncle.

What could he do? Where could he go? Twig had never been away from the Deepwoods paths on his own before. He started this way, stopped, ran the other way, and stopped again. The sound of the wheezing halitoad seemed to be all round him. He darted into the shadows of some dark undergrowth and crouched down behind the trunk of a tall and lumpy tree.

The halitoad came closer. Its rasping breath grew louder. Twig's palms were wet and his mouth was dry; he couldn't swallow. The fromps and the quarms fell
silent, and in the awful stillness Twig's heart beat like a drum. Surely the halitoad must be able to hear it. Perhaps it had gone. Twig peered cautiously round the trunk of the tree.

MISTAKE!
his brain screamed, as he found himself staring into two yellow slit-eyes glinting back at him from the darkness. A long coiled tongue flicked in and out, tasting the air. Suddenly, the halitoad inflated like a bullfrog. It was about to blast its jet of venomous breath. Twig closed his eyes, held his nose and clamped his mouth shut. He heard a fizzing hiss.

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