Authors: V M Jones
Rich gawked at him, totally dumbfounded. Whatever had gone wrong? Here he'd come out with a real slice of vintage Karazan â one I could tell he'd felt real proud of, that we'd heard Kai and Hob use countless times â and if he'd said the worst swear word he knew, it couldn't have
had a more dramatic effect. âB-but â¦' he stammered.
âNay â you have said enough! Be gone â and take your companions with you!'
Well, we had nothing to lose. Looking as harmless as I possibly could, I stepped hesitantly forward. âExcuse me, sir,' I said apologetically, âwe ⦠we were wondering whether we could maybe have a quick word with Kai ⦠if he's not too busy, that is.'
I was looking up into his face as I spoke, and that's how I saw it: a flicker deep down in his eyes that had nothing to do with his next words. It was an expression I recognised instantly: sorrow, almost too deep to endure ⦠and pain too great to bear. But then he spoke, and his words were harsh and grating, carrying clearly to every corner of the room and beyond.
âI do not know of whom you speak. I have no son. I have never had a son. I have never had a child, or children.
âLeave now, and never return!'
âWell, so much for that,' said Rich rather shakily. We were standing in the entrance of an alley a few streets away, and Richard's were the first words spoken since we left the inn. âI'd have put money on him being Kai's father. I guess they must have sold the inn and moved away.'
âI'm not so sure,' said Jamie thoughtfully. âIt seems weird to me. Something about it just doesn't ⦠feel right.'
âI agree,' said Gen. The whole thing has a ⦠sort of sinister feeling. Nothing I can put my finger on â¦'
âHang on a moment,' I said slowly, replaying the scene in my mind. âWhat was it that guy said?
I have no son â¦'
âYeah, and he seemed pretty sure about it,' grumbled Rich, still smarting from the turn things had taken.
âI have no son,'
I repeated. âI didn't say I wanted to speak to his
son;
I said I wanted to speak to
Kai.
And he comes back with
I have no son
quick as a flash. He should have said, “Who's Kai?” or, “There be no one of that name here,” or something.'
âYou're right, Adam,' said Kenta. âIt's as if he
did
have a son, once, and it
was
Kai ⦠but now something's happened â¦' her soft voice trailed off into unhappy silence.
âAnd the way he went all weird when I said that about Zephyr,' muttered Rich, rather sheepishly. âI thought â¦'
âOf course you did,' said Gen. âAnyone would. Don't beat yourself up about it, Rich. It wasn't your fault the wheels fell off.'
âSo what do we do now?' asked Jamie glumly. âWe've got a missing cat, and a missing Hannah, and now Kai's disappeared and his dad's denying he ever existed ⦠and ⦠and I wish we'd never come!' His chin wobbled ominously.
âI'll tell you what we do now,' said Gen decisively. âWe pay our old friend Hob a visit. There's nothing strange or sinister about Hob. He's Kai's best friend: he'll know where he is.'
Finding Second Chances â Hob's father's junk shop â was easier said than done. We trudged around the streets for what seemed like hours, watching the light slowly fade, staying as much out of the way of other people as possible, and trying to ignore the cooking smells that wafted from every doorway we passed. It was getting steadily colder too â a hard, metallic chill that seemed to sink into the marrow of my bones.
Then suddenly, just when I thought we were totally lost, there it was: the familiar faded wooden sign above the door, and â to my huge relief â faint light still shining dimly through the thick panes of glass in the window. âWorking late,' said Rich with satisfaction. âLooks like our luck's about to change!'
âJust so long as his dad doesn't answer the door and say
Who's Hob?
'muttered Jamie.
Hob's dad was there. Peering through the glass, ready to make a run for it if necessary, we could make him out all too clearly: a bald, bespectacled man who reminded me with a pang of Q, perched on a tall stool with his nose deep in a pile of parchments. There was no sign of Hob.
Richard said a very rude word.
âHere we go again,' said Gen with a certain amount of relish. âMy turn this time.'
âHang on, Gen,' I said. Truth was, I wasn't keen to try out our acting talents again. It hadn't worked too well so far. âThere's a wooden door here in the wall. It might lead through to some kind of courtyard. What say we have a quick snoop around before we do anything rash? Who knows, maybe they live above the shop or something. Maybe Hob's round the back. It's worth a try.'
We edged the door open and slipped silently through. It felt good to be off the street, away from the hooded grey shadows I was beginning to imagine round every corner. Best of all, I was right. It was a courtyard â cobbled, with a rickety washing line at one end with a few drab garments hanging forlornly from it. âLate to leave the washing out,' Gen murmured disapprovingly ⦠and at that moment, right on cue, a door at the back of the building opened and out came Hob, a wicker basket dangling from his hand.
He looked taller than I remembered, but otherwise just the same â skinny and red-haired, with an up-turned nose and a jaunty air of self-confidence. Without so much as a glance at the doorway where we stood in a breathless huddle, he sauntered over to the washing line and started taking the clothes down, whistling between his teeth. We all exchanged a lightning glance of complete agreement.
âPssssst!
Hob!'
Hob squawked and dropped the basket, whipping round with a face suddenly whiter than the shirt he was holding. He saw us, and his eyes widened in disbelief. Grinning, I stepped forward, holding out a hand in greeting.
But to my horror Hob's mouth tightened and his eyes narrowed. Shaking his head slowly from side to side, he backed away towards the open door, both hands held out in front of him as if to ward away something evil.
Suddenly, he didn't look at all like the Hob we'd known. He looked way, way different. Adult ⦠suspicious ⦠and afraid.
âHob?' quavered Gen uncertainly. âIt's us â Kai's friends. Don't you remember us?'
âStay away from me! Haven't you done enough?'
Behind me, I heard Jamie give a stifled snuffle of dismay. And then suddenly I felt my confusion give way to anger. What was it with everyone? Why were they all treating us like we had some kind of terrible disease? And what was with all the mystery?
I stepped forward, scowling. âHang on one minute, Hob,' I said, my voice low, but with an edge to it that stopped him in his tracks. âRun away if you want. But first tell us where Kai is, and why his dad says he's never heard of him. What's going on â why is everyone being so weird?'
Hob hesitated, a look of uncertainty crossing his face. Then his expression hardened again. âYou ask that?' he spat. â
You?
When it be your fault? And now you come to the door like friends ⦠when a true friend would stay away! Kai helped you â he trusted you! And now â¦' suddenly his face contorted, and he made a strangled hiccupping sound.
Kenta was at his side in an instant. âPoor Hob,' she said softly, looking anxiously up into his face. âWe
are
your friends â we truly are. We don't know what's gone wrong â what's happened to change the way you feel â or what's
happened to Kai. And if you don't tell us, we can't help.'
She was speaking over the anguished, wrenching sound of his sobs. And then we were all around him, Kenta with a comforting arm round his shoulders, Gen offering him the handkerchief Nanny had insisted on us bringing, Rich patting his arm awkwardly. Me standing there like a spare part, all hands and feet. But: âAdam â
the gate!'
Hob's voice was low and urgent. Quickly I crossed the courtyard and closed it, first checking there was no one in the street.
Two minutes later we were all hunkered down on the stone step outside the back door, and Hob was his old self again. âFirst things first,' said Rich, taking charge. âWhere's Kai?'
Hob wiped his nose on his sleeve and sniffed, ignoring Gen's hanky. âKai â¦' he whispered, âKai ⦠is gone forever. He was ⦠taken, two sunsets after I gave you the parchment.'
âTaken where? Who by?' Gen's face was pale in the darkness.
âBy the Followers â the Faceless.' Hob's voice was almost inaudible.
âBecause ⦠of us?'
Hob nodded. âAye. There be nothing their eyes do not see â if eyes they have â or their senses cannot seek out. I have been fortunate. Yet if they saw us now â¦'
A shiver ran down my spine. Finally I understood: by talking to Hob, we were putting him in deadly danger. The girls knew it too â they searched the courtyard with wide, frightened eyes, as if a grey shadow might materialise from the very walls. Jamie gave a muffled whimper. Rich scowled. âOK then â tell us quick,' he demanded. âWhere is he? Where have they taken him? Will he still be â¦'
Alive.
The word hung, unspoken, in the air.
âAnd why did his dad â his pa â say he'd never heard of him? I don't understand â¦' said Jamie plaintively.
âIt is death to speak the names of those taken by the Faceless. It must be as if they have never lived at all. And does Kai live, you ask? There is no knowing. Maybe it is better that he does not. There be worse fates than death â where he has gone, any road.'
âWhere is that?' Kenta's question was the merest breath.
âWhere all be taken who are of â¦
interest
⦠to King Karazeel. Beyond the shroud ⦠to Shakesh.'
At his soft words a chill ran through me. Shakesh ⦠where had I heard that name before? Suddenly it came to me: Kai's voice, grim and low:
It would be the axe and entrails on the walls of Shakesh, children or no. That â or worse.
Or worse â¦
â
All
are taken?' Gen was asking. âYou mean â anyone who does anything wrong?'
âWrongdoers ⦠strangers ⦠those that speak forbidden names. Believers; the innocent. Any man or woman â aye, or child â who draws the Faceless to their trail. There be ways without number to fall under their shadow â and none I know of to emerge again.'
Hannah.
âWe know of someone' â I said hesitantly â âa young girl â a friend of ours. We believe she may have come here â dressed differently ⦠pale faced, like we â¦'
âOnce were,' Hob finished, with the faintest glimmer of a smile. âAye â you be learning, any road. Your friend â she too will be gone. Taken north to Marshall ⦠and beyond. Forget her. Do not speak her name again. She is lost forever.'
âWell, we're going to Shakesh to find them both,' Richard said angrily. âWe're going to prove you wrong, Hob. This
never speaking names
and
passing beyond the shroud
is rubbish. Who does this King Karazeel think he is? Where we come from, no one would dare carry on like that! We'd have him out on his backside in no time, king or no king!
Haven't you people heard of dem â dem â'
âDemocracy,' Jamie offered helpfully.
âAnd what's with this guy
Zephyr?'
Richard ranted on. âWho is he, and why did Kai's dad look like he'd swallowed a fishbone when I said his name? I'm sure glad I don't live in Arakesh â it'd drive me bananas!'
âYou spoke the name of Zephyr at the inn?' Hob stared at Rich in disbelief. Then he gave a snort of laughter. âRich, you are â were â a friend of Kai's, and of mine. Therefore, Friend, I say this to you: as you value your soul, do not breathe that name where any but the most trusted and true may hear it.'
âBut â
why?
Who
is
he? Is he so bad â¦'
âBad?' Hob's eyes shone in the darkness. â
Bad?
Nay ⦠not bad. Zephyr â' he said the name with awe bordering almost on reverence, his voice so low I had to lean forward to catch his words, feeling his warm breath on my cheek, âZephyr is the Lost Prince â the Prince of the Wind. Legend has it such a one was born to the fair Queen Zaronel half a hundred spans ago. You speak of overthrowing King Karazeel.' His voice was grim. âNone can accomplish that â none save the Lost Prince. There be whispers of a prophecy: a prophecy held true by those that believe all goodness is not gone forever. A prophecy that foretells, after two score spans and ten, Prince Zephyr will return again to claim his throne. On the day the warrior prince returns from exile, riding tall and proud upon a winged horse â on that day, the crown of Karazan will return to its rightful head.
âAnd now, my friend, do you see why none dare breathe the name of Zephyr where it may be overheard?'
The sound of a door banging somewhere inside the building made us all jump. Hob clambered to his feet. âI wish you good fortune, my friends â but above all, I wish you common sense and caution,' he whispered. âThe
common sense to forget those that are lost, lest you join them â and the caution to keep your mouths shut, or at the very least your voices low. Now, I bid you farewell. And I beg you, do not seek me out again.'
âBut Hob â we don't even know the way to Shakesh. I don't suppose you happen to have a map or something â¦' Gen said hopefully.
One look at Hob's face, and I knew we'd had all we were getting. And who could blame him?
I held out my hand. âHob â thank you. You have helped us more than we had any right to expect.' For a long moment our eyes locked in a smile. Then he clasped my wrist briefly, turned, and let himself quietly into the house, the door clicking shut behind him.
The courtyard seemed suddenly very empty. Then Jamie's voice spoke up out of the gloom, trembling slightly: âWe aren't really going to go to Shakesh, are we?'
âYou betcha,' said Rich.