Authors: Caro King
Some of the items were long dead, their stored magic used up, and those Jik tossed aside. There were also things that were useful, but only if you wanted to heat water, travel fast, see in the dark and so on. He was more pleased to find three staffs of varying sizes that had fire power left in them, some wands, and a few charms that could be turned to good use as weapons.
Seth had a knack of spotting live items too â after all, it was how he made his living â and once he had done with digging, he turned up, holding a battered old pack that he dropped at the back of the room, then got
working alongside Jik.
They were both ignoring the thing in the corner. Neither of them knew what it was and neither of them cared to find out. The four-foot-long item had been wrapped in several layers of thick cloth, but still shone bright enough to remove the need for a lamp. Jik had promised himself to have a look at it later. If he really had to. The steady, golden glow seeping through the cloth made his mud tingle uncomfortably. Seth hadn't given it so much as a glance, but he knew it was there all right.
âWell now! A faerie spindle!' Seth picked up a slender needle wrapped in an old handkerchief. âThis is a real find!'
He held it up for Jik to see. The gleam from its elegant shape, etched all over with intricate swirls, looked sharp enough to cut flesh. It was about as long as Seth's hand from his wrist to the tip of his finger and Jik didn't like it at all.
âNik mikik.'
âTrue, it hasn't got any magic in it as such, but it's not meant to have. It's a tool, not a device. A spindle is what you use to shape or move other things, things of power. So, unlike those devices full of magic, this will never die.'
Seth pointed the spindle at Jik, who backed off. For a moment he could have sworn he felt his inner fires twist, pulled towards the spindle.
âFaeries used to use spindles to weave moonlight, or
water into beautiful cloth to wear. Or fire. Fire made a lovely cloth.'
âIk!' snapped Jik.
âWell, true, but faeries were nasty things all round. Fierce and clever and very, very powerful. As powerful in their own way as the sorcerers. And it takes a lot for me to say that.'
Seth shook his head, his eyes fixed on Jik. âYou're interesting, I'll give you that.' A fierce grin split his face, lighting his green eyes. âBut you caused me grief not so long ago, in the Giant Wood. Do you remember? I do, mudrat. Time for revenge.'
Swiftly, Seth began to weave the spindle to and fro in a complicated pattern. Jik tried to dive into the safety of the earth, but suddenly his limbs felt like lumps of mud and he couldn't move them. A chill spread through him as his inner fires began to flicker, drawn out by the spindle. He felt heavy, crumbly almost. Lumpy. He could see a pattern of golds and reds forming about the spindle, a pool of flame hanging in the air, growing as fast as the fire inside him faded. A crack split across his middle scattering a shower of dry earth on the floor.
âVikikikik,' he said, recognising his enemy. Even his sight was dimming now. The pool of fire, the essence of his mudman life, seemed further away, its colours hidden by a creeping shadow that filled up the cups of his eyes as their flames dimmed to sparks. And then the sparks flickered and were gone and there was only darkness. Jik crashed backwards to the ground. He lay still.
Seth stopped twisting the spindle and reached out with his other hand to catch the cloth of fire as it fluttered down through the air like a dropped handkerchief. The square of colours bathed Seth's hand in golden light, turning the jewels of his many bracelets and rings into small fires of their own.
He walked slowly over to the remains of the mudman and kicked him. Crumbs of earth skittered over the floor. If it hadn't been for the crystals mixed into the mud, the useless body would have exploded back into the dust it really was.
âPerfect,' he said softly. And went to wait for Nin.
About the time Nin was waking up, Evil Kid was hanging on to the edge of the raft as it cast off on its journey through the Heart of Celidon. He shivered as the current took hold and the raft began to pick up speed, hurrying towards the blanket of Raw. He was feeling anxious, because even if there were stories about how people had crossed the Heart by travelling on the river, he wasn't convinced it was possible.
All anyone knew for certain was that the river hurtled through the mist-draped Heart until it reappeared on the other side. This meant that there had to be some last dregs of the Land left undissolved by the Raw, otherwise there would be nothing to channel the water through the Heart and it would have rushed into the mist only to fall helplessly through the Raw until the river itself was dissolved. It was not a nice thought, and generally speaking anyone wanting to get to the other side of the Heart preferred the long journey around the edge.
As their raft drew rapidly closer to the Heart, Evil Kid's sharp eyes spotted a difference in the thickness of
the Raw where it hung over the river. This difference hadn't been all that visible before because of the general, surrounding whiteness of everything â like picking out a white hole on a white background. Evil Kid frowned, puzzled.
And then understanding dawned. That difference in the thickness of the Raw had to be the reason why anyone travelling through the Heart this way might just make it out alive! The river's advantage had to be the sheer vigour created by its speed. As the water rushed swiftly through the Heart, the Raw could not settle on it, or anything it carried. And if the Raw couldn't settle on the river, and so couldn't take hold of any Fabulous who happened to be travelling on the river's back, then the icy mist couldn't dissolve that Fabulous away to nothing. Or in the case of the Quick, couldn't freeze it slowly to a horrible death. Evil Kid grinned, feeling a moment of triumph at having worked things out. It didn't last.
By now they were so close that the Raw towered over them, filling their world. The tiger-men yowled miserably. It dawned on Evil Kid that even travelling on the swiftly running river, they would still be surrounded by the Raw at its thickest and most terrifying. He wondered if he should swap back to Natural Bogeyman and do a superspeed runner, but it was too late. And he had to admit he was curious. The mudman had done this journey once, not by river of course, but on his own two feet, walking through the Heart. He never spoke about it, apart from hinting at some great horror that lay there,
concealed at the very heart of the Heart â¦
On second thoughts â¦
Evil Kid looked over his shoulder at the rapidly receding world. No, definitely too late!
He braced himself as the swiftly flowing water carried them across the threshold of the Heart and into a world of eerie white that arched over and around them so thickly it cut out all light and warmth and air. It wasn't dark though, not at all. The Raw had its own light, an ice-white glow that made Evil Kid's eyes ache if he stared into it too long.
The tiger-men fell silent. Everywhere, purple eyes peered warily at the mist that rose on all sides. One or two of them shifted about, their claws scratching on the wooden planks. The temperature plummeted and Evil Kid could see his breath misting the air around him. He could also see that his theory was right. Where the river rushed through, its sheer speed cut a kind of tunnel through the Raw keeping its hungry mists away from them.
Glancing back, Evil Kid could see nothing. He knew that the next raft would be following a minute or so behind theirs, but it was hidden from view by the curls of river vapour that rose from the hurrying surface of the water. They might as well be travelling through the Raw alone.
âWell, so far so good,' said Stanley, his voice sounding strangely dead on the icy air. He was examining the planks of the raft. âNot even touched!'
Overhead the Raw hung like a dank, icy blanket. Ahead, though not far, Evil Kid could see the river like dark metal cutting through shadowy banks of scarred grey rock.
Now, Stanley was examining the tiger-men. They were in a right state, shivering and whining like a bunch of sea-sick moggies.
âOy! If yer gonna chuck, try and do it over the side!' he yelled, forgetting for a moment that they were actually deadly killing machines. âWe'll be ankle-deep in cat puke at this rate!'
There was a chorus of hissing and snarling and many pairs of luminous and angry eyes switched in Stanley's direction, along with a frightening display of teeth.
Something grabbed Evil Kid's sleeve. It crunched, stiff with frost.
âWha's that?' Jibbit sounded nervous.
Evil Kid listened for a moment. âThe Voice of the Land,' he said in a whisper.
It rose all around them from the river, in sighing waves that chilled their hearts as much as the Raw chilled their skin. It sounded like someone in the throes of a grief so deep it could never be healed, and as the raft went on the sound grew and grew, filling the air with bitter, heart-wrenching sobs. The tiger-men were silent now, listening, their claws outstretched and ready to attack, their eyes wide with a kind of dark loathing born from fear.
âNo,' whispered Jibbit, ânot singing.
That
!' There was awe in his voice as he pointed ahead and up.
Something reared through the mist, looming over them. It swept up from the banks in a wall of sheer grey. And it must have been as tall as the Raw too because it rose up and up in a great rugged mass that went on until it had disappeared in the white clouds. And even then Evil Kid just knew that it was still going.
Jibbit gave a strange sigh of longing. âIs so
high
,' he whispered, his stony eyes wide and full of desire. âDoes it reach the sky? Is it â¦' He paused, searching his brain for the right word, a word that conveyed the feeling of great, wonderful, heaven-reaching height. âIs it a
cathedral
?'
âI dunno, do I?' said Stanley. Feeling the raft bob and twist beneath him, he switched his gaze back to the river. His eyes went glassy and he muttered something incomprehensible and probably rude.
âWha's that mean?'
âTrouble, I suspect!' Evil Kid watched curiously as Stanley lowered himself to his knees.
â'ANG ON FER YER LIVES!' the CO bellowed, then dropped flat on his face and grabbed whatever handholds he could find. And then, suddenly, the river threw them over the edge of the world into darkness.
Skerridge dropped Evil Kid shape like a shot. Natural Bogeyman was always best when it came to survival against the odds.
What got him most was the sound. It wasn't just the
inhuman screams of the tiger-men as they scrabbled to hold on, digging their claws into the wood of the raft, or each other if necessary, nor was it the rushing roar of tons of water as it fell through the emptiness, it was the fact that all this racket barely dented the silence that enveloped them.
They were falling through nothing. Absolute nothing. Here, even the Raw had gone, leaving a darkness so complete it made Skerridge's eyeballs pop. All they had was the sound of their falling, and yet that sound was a tiny scraping in a silence so huge that he felt it was eating into his brain, stifling even the noise made by his thoughts. It was as if everything, even the things inside his head, had gone away and he was an infinitesimally small bit of nothing hurtling through a nothing so vast he couldn't begin to understand it.
He could understand one thing though. This was the horror at the heart of the Heart. Here even the raw, unformed magic that the Land was made from had died, killed by the plague. And it had left ⦠emptiness.
Something cold shoved into his ear and whispered, âWha's it?'
And suddenly Skerridge's brain clicked back into gear and he realised that he was being drenched in freezing spray, that several tiger-men had their claws bedded in his legs, and that, actually, the racket was deafening.
He also realised that although, here at the heart of the Heart, the rocky walls of the ravine through which the river ran had been eaten away completely, the river
still
ran out the other side
, which must mean â¦
â'S a waterfall,' he yelled over the thundering, which was getting louder and louder. âThere's nuffin' âoldin' the river up âere, but furver down there mus' be more rock.'
By now, the sound was so loud it shook his bones and the wind rushing past his face was more water than air.
âBREEEAAVE IIINNN!!' he yelled, then he hauled in as much air as he could find and shut his eyes as the raft plunged deep into the whirlpool below.
For a few moments that seemed to last forever, everything was a turmoil of roaring, swirling water, and scrabbling bodies as those who were shaken loose tried to grab at those who were still hanging on. Under the waterfall, the raft was tossed and flung around by the force, sometimes upside down and sometimes spinning like a crazy top.
Next to him, Skerridge felt Stanley's arm jerk as his grip slipped. He opened his eyes and saw the goblin-Grimm's face, eyes wide with horror as the swirling water ripped him from the raft. On the other side of him, the gargoyle hooted as a sharp buck to the left shook him loose and tossed him free.