Authors: Brandon Mull,Brandon Dorman
Tags: #Science Fiction, #Fiction, #Juvenile Fiction, #General, #American, #Magic, #Fantasy, #Fantasy fiction, #Children: Young Adult (Gr. 7-9), #Action & Adventure, #Fantasy & Magic, #& Magic, #Ages 9-12 Fiction, #Children's Books, #Fairies, #Brothers and sisters, #Family, #Siblings, #Good and evil, #Family - Siblings, #Multigenerational, #Grandparents, #Family - Multigenerational, #Connecticut, #Authors, #Grandparent and child
Kendra pulled the bottle of milk from her pocket and
handed it to Seth. Save some for Grandma and Grandpa.
But I can see-
An earsplitting roar shook the room. A creature who
could only have been Bahumat emerged from the alcove.
The loathsome demon stood three times as tall as a man
and had the head of a dragon crowned by three horns. The
demon walked upright, possessing three arms, three legs,
and three tails. Oily black scales bristling with barbed
spikes covered its grotesque body. Malevolent eyes gleamed
with wicked intelligence.
To one side of Bahumat floated the spectral woman
Kendra had seen outside her window on Midsummer Eve.
Her ebony wrappings flowed unnaturally, as if she were
underwater. The unearthly apparition made Kendra think
of a negative photograph.
At the other side of Bahumat stood Muriel, now clad
in a gown as black as midnight. She leered at the fairies
and glanced confidently at the towering demon.
No imps remained in the room. A crowd of shining
fairies faced these final opponents.
Bahumat crouched. Inky darkness gathered around
him. The demon sprang forward with a roar like a thousand
cannons firing together. A black wall of shadow flowed
from Bahumat like a wave of tar. Total darkness engulfed
the room. Kendra felt like she had been struck blind. Even
with her hands over her ears, the prolonged bellowing of
the demon was practically deafening.
There seemed to be no substance to the shadow
Bahumat had emitted. It was just darkness. Where were the
fairies? Where was their light?
The ground rumbled, and a sound like an avalanche
overpowered the demon’s roar. Suddenly daylight flooded
the room. Looking up, Kendra beheld a blue sky. The
slanted rays of the rising sun fell into the basement. The
entire church had been hurled aside!
Descending from above, and charging from all directions,
fairies swarmed Bahumat. The demon slashed a fairy
with one of its tails, raked another with an impossibly
quick swipe of its claws. Jaws snapping, the creature swallowed
a yellow fairy whole. Many fairies were falling.
While the majority attacked, other fairies laid hands on the
injured, curing most of them rapidly.
Muriel stood in a theatrical pose chanting spidery
words. A pair of fairies near her turned to glass and
shattered. She extended a contorted hand, and another
fairy turned to ash and disintegrated in a gray cloud.
Long streamers of ebony fabric flowed from the spectral
woman, entangling nearby fairies. The ensnared fairies
began to lose their luster and wither. The silver fairy
appeared, slicing through the fabric with her ax of fire.
Other fairies joined her, using gleaming swords to sever the
black material.
The fairies swirling around Bahumat now held ropes.
They looked like the ropes that had crisscrossed the front
of the alcove, except now they appeared to be woven out
of gold. Bahumat kept roaring and swinging and biting, but
the ropes were beginning to tangle him up. Knots were
forming in them. The draconic creature was slowing down.
His great jaws clamped shut, tearing off the gauzy wing of
a fairy with markings like a ladybug.
The spectral woman turned and drifted away, her ethereal
wrappings no longer quite as flowing. The fairies
ignored her departure. A pair of fairies had taken hold of
Muriel, and they flung her at Bahumat. Soon she was
bound to the demon by flaxen cords. She screeched as her
body shriveled with age and her gown turned to rags.
Three fairies alighted atop the demon’s head. They
each grabbed a horn and tore it out. The demon wailed.
Dozens of fairies seized the ropes binding the demon and
hurled Bahumat back into the alcove. Busily the fairies
began threading knotted ropes back and forth over the
entrance.
Kendra turned. The blue, furry fairy gestured toward
the orangutan, and the shackles binding it to the wall fell
apart. Another gesture and a burst of light changed the
orangutan into Grandpa Sorenson.
The albino fairy pulled the convulsing catfish from the
aquarium and changed her back into Lena. Where’s my
Grandma? Kendra cried.
The red-haired fairy who had freed Seth approached
the aquarium. She lifted out a small, putrid slug that had
been clinging to the side above the water and changed it
back into Grandma.
Grandma Sorenson massaged her temples. And I
thought my mind was muddy as a chicken, she muttered.
Grandpa hurried over and embraced her.
Do you need milk? Kendra asked, holding out the
bottle to her grandfather.
He shook his head. We have not slept, and so the veil
has not yet covered our eyes.
A group of fairies gathered near the alcove, extending
their arms, palms downward. Soil, clay, and stone began
flowing together and piling up until Hugo was reborn. The
golem stretched and let out a groan to rival the roars of the
banished demon.
The fairies busily healed one another, mending wings
and closing wounds. One circle of fairies spread their arms,
and fragments of glass skittered together, took the form of a
pair of fairies, and came back to life. Several other fairies
joined hands and started humming. Particles of ash swirled
loosely in their midst, but refused to coalesce. The fairies
released one another, and the ash dissipated. Some fairies,
it seemed, were beyond rescue.
Several fairies took hold of Hugo and lifted him out of
the basement. Others did the same for Grandpa, Grandma,
Lena, Seth, and Kendra. Airborne again, Kendra had a
view of the destroyed church. The wreckage spread across
the clearing for a couple hundred yards. The Forgotten
Chapel had not simply been flung aside-it had been
obliterated.
The fairies set them down a good distance from the
wreckage and the basement. All except Lena. Two fairies
were carrying her away. The former naiad was having harsh
words with them in a foreign tongue, struggling in their
grasp.
Kendra touched Grandpa Sorenson’s arm and nodded
toward the commotion.
Nothing to be done about it, he sighed as the fairies
hauled Lena away. He had an arm around Grandma, holding
her close.
Hey! Kendra shouted. Bring Lena back here! The
fairies holding Lena paid her no heed, passing out of sight
into the woods.
The remainder of the fairies assembled above the basement,
floating in an enormous ring. They had more than
tripled their numbers with all the imps they had reclaimed.
Kendra had seen many fairies fall during the battle, but
most had been revived and healed by the magic of their
comrades.
The radiant fairies raised their arms together and
started singing. The music sounded impromptu, full of
hundreds of interweaving melodies with almost no harmonies.
As they sang, the ground in the clearing began to
undulate. The wreckage from the church slid across the
field, clattering into the open basement. The ground began
to quake. The walls of the basement crumbled. The surrounding
area folded in and swallowed it up. The field
heaved like a stormy sea.
As the undulations subsided, the basement had been
replaced by a low hill. The fairy choir became more shrill.
Wildflowers and fruit trees began sprouting throughout the
clearing and on the hill, coming to full bloom in a matter
of seconds. Flowers blossomed all over Hugo, who offered
no reaction. When the singing finally ceased, a cheery hill
covered by a fragrant array of brilliant blossoms and mature
fruit trees had replaced the Forgotten Chapel.
They made Hugo look all fruity, Seth complained.
The legion of fairies glided toward them, scooped them
up, and carried them on a breakneck flight for home.
Kendra relished being part of the mercurial procession,
overjoyed at the fortunate ending to the terrible night.
Seth whooped the whole way, as if he were riding the
coolest roller coaster on the planet.
Finally the fairies deposited them in the yard, where
Dale stood waiting. Now I’ve seen everything, he said as
Grandpa and Grandma Sorenson were set down beside
him.
The fairy with short blue hair and silver wings stood
before Kendra. Thank you, Kendra said. You did wonderfully.
We can never repay you.
The silver fairy gave a single nod, eyes glittering.
As if responding to a signal, the fairies crowded Kendra,
each in turn giving her a quick kiss. As each kiss was
bestowed, the fairy reverted to her former size amid dazzling
sparks and darted away. The rapid succession of kisses
brought overpowering sensations. Again Kendra smelled
the earthy aromas of the Fairy Queen-rich soil and young
blossoms. She tasted honey and fruit and berries, all sweet
beyond comparison. She heard the music of rainfall, the cry
of the wind, and the roar of the sea. She felt as if the
warmth of the sun were embracing her, flowing through
her. The fairies kissed her eyes, her cheeks, her ears, her
brow.
When the last of more than three hundred fairies kissed
her, Kendra stumbled backwards and sat down hard on the
grass. She felt no pain. In fact, she was mildly surprised that
she did not float away, she felt so light and drowsy.
Grandpa and Dale helped Kendra to her feet. I would
wager that this young lady has quite a story to tell,
Grandpa said. And I would also wager that now is not the
time. Hugo, attend to your labors.
Dale was helping Kendra to the house. She felt
euphoric and distant. She was glad her family was safe. But
she felt so inexplicably blissful, and the troubles of the
evening seemed so remote, that she began to wonder
whether it had all been a surreal dream.
Grandpa was holding hands with Grandma. I’m sorry
it took so long to get you back, he said softly.
I can guess at the reasons, she said. We need to talk
about you eating my eggs.
They weren’t your eggs, Grandpa protested. They
were the eggs of the hen your mind was inhabiting.
I’m glad you can be so detached.
There may still be a couple in the fridge.
Kendra stumbled on her way up the porch steps.
Grandpa and Dale helped her onto the porch and into the
house. The furniture was back! Nearly all of it had been
restored, with some alterations. A couch had been reconstructed
as a chair. Some lampshades were made of different
material. Jewels had been added to a picture frame.
Could the brownies have worked so fast? Her eyes were
drooping. Grandpa was holding Grandma’s hand, whispering