Soul Splinter (30 page)

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Authors: Abi Elphinstone

BOOK: Soul Splinter
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Moll’s pulse quickened. Alfie and Gryff might be able to stall the Shadowmasks, but without the power of the amulet the dark magic would win. Grabbing Siddy by the arm, she rushed to the cage, her ma’s letter clasped in her hand.

‘Help us, Ma,’ she whispered between the bars.

Something strange began to happen inside the cage. The feathers heaped on the ground started to quiver, as if brushed by a mysterious breath, then they floated upwards, shifting and twisting into unrecognisable shapes. Siddy’s jaw dropped and he clung to the bars, and together they watched as an eagle larger than anything they’d ever seen, with shining golden-brown feathers, took shape.

This
was the second amulet, her ma’s soul.

Behind the cage there was a tangle of wings and claws. Then the bird, five times the size of an ordinary golden eagle, spread its wings and struck out. The cage groaned and the bars crashed to the ground.

Moll rushed towards the bird, somehow knowing what to do. ‘Sid, get on! We won’t last if we stay here!’

They leapt up on to the bird and Gryff skirted the cage, his strides more agile than Moll had ever seen. He leapt on to the eagle’s back in front of Moll and the great bird dipped for a second, as if flexing its muscles after a long sleep. Then it launched itself off from the boulder, beating its wings towards the shore. Moll clung to the bird’s back, her legs tucked beneath her.

‘Come back!’ Darkebite screeched, still wielding the Soul Splinter.

Siddy tightened his grip round Moll’s waist as the eagle flew further and further across the lake. It swooped by Alfie, and Siddy stretched out a hand to yank him up on to the bird’s back. The eagle faltered for a second under the extra weight, but didn’t stop. It thrust its wings on, tearing through the creepers before flying on beneath the limestone stalactites.

Moll turned her head towards Alfie. ‘You – you healed Gryff?’

‘It was my tears,’ he panted. ‘I don’t understand how, but they made his whiskers grow back.’

Moll didn’t have time to reply because suddenly the roar of the falls filled their ears – and Devil’s Drop appeared, thundering down, a wall of furious water.

‘Hold on!’ Moll shouted.

‘Not through the middle of the falls again!’ Siddy moaned.

The eagle flung itself into the churn. Water hammered down, clamouring in their ears, and the bird dropped several metres. Moll’s stomach plunged and the water continued to beat down. Then the eagle burst free from Devil’s Drop and soared upwards, into the breaking dawn. An orange sun hung above the horizon, casting shards of light through scattered clouds, and the eagle thrust with its wings, up and up, until it was circling above the falls.

This
, Moll thought,
the fierce beating of wings and legs clamped hard round rippling feathers – this is what it means to fly
. And, in all her wildest dreams, Moll had never experienced anything so full of freedom. She gazed at the eagle’s body, the tips of its wingspan flecked with white, the hooked beak releasing sharp, high cries. Two large brown eyes scanned the sea and its tail feathers rippled in the wind. This was her ma, somehow, and she had come to their rescue just when they’d needed her. Moll bent forward and stroked the golden feathers.

Down below, spray misted out from the falls. Siddy narrowed his eyes. ‘Is – is that . . . ?’

Beyond Devil’s Drop was a small red rowing boat – the one from Little Hollows that Alfie had been waiting to take out – and, inside the boat, a man who built wagons and found secret coves.

‘Oak!’ Moll shouted, her heart flooding with relief.

Tucking in its giant wings, the eagle dived, and the children clung on. The wind whistled in their ears and their stomachs rose into their throats, then the eagle’s wingspan burst out and it swooped, level with the boat. Moll clutched at Oak’s arms as they passed and he grappled for her hands, but the eagle had to circle to stay in the air.

‘You’re all right,’ Moll gasped. ‘You’re OK!’

Oak smiled. ‘I’m OK, Moll. It was Willow. After she left you, she came to Little Hollows and lifted the Shadowmasks’ curse. She told me where to find you!’ Moll’s face dropped slightly as she noticed Oak’s ankle was still bound in bandages. ‘It’ll heal in time,’ he said.

‘We’ve got the amulet!’ Siddy yelled, stroking the eagle’s feathers.

‘This is my ma’s soul!’ Moll cried, her cheeks flushed with pride.

‘I’m so proud of you all!’ Oak shouted against the roar of the falls. ‘You did it!’ He glanced at Devil’s Drop. ‘Now what do we need to do?’

The answer was clear in Moll’s mind already. ‘Somehow I need to get the Shadowmasks to destroy their Soul Splinter. I think it’ll help close the thresholds for a while and keep their dark magic back while we search for the last amulet.’

The bird circled again, but it was losing height, struggling under the weight of its load.

‘There are too many of you on there!’ Oak cried.

Siddy raised a shaky hand. ‘I’ll come off.’

As the eagle swooped once again, Oak grabbed Siddy and pulled him down into the boat. But, as he did so, a dark shape surged out of Devil’s Drop.

Oak seized a quiver from the rowing boat and tossed it up to Moll. ‘Alfie said you’d be needing this when I bumped into him before Devil’s Drop.’

She caught it and slung it on to her back, then the eagle beat its wings harder and harder out to sea.

And, behind them, the Shadowmasks followed: Ashtongue, bent forward like a giant insect, riding between Darkebite’s leathery wings.

T
he eagle climbed higher into the sky and Moll felt its soft, warm feathers beneath her and the strength of the wildcat in front. Eyes streaming from the headwind, she turned back to Alfie. ‘Thank you. For coming after us and for healing Gryff.’

Alfie reached into his quiver for an arrow. ‘I’ll always come after you, Moll.’

She turned back to face the sun straight on. ‘And I’ll come after you – wherever you go and whatever the Shadowmasks might have in store for us.’ Gripping the eagle’s back with her legs, she reached for her own quiver.

‘What’s your plan?’ Alfie asked.

Moll set an arrow against the moonbeam, only just visible in the daylight. ‘To follow my gut.’

‘And what’s your gut saying now?’

Moll glanced back, the wind whistling in her ears. The Shadowmasks were gaining on them and Darkebite’s screech hung in the air.

‘Fight,’ she answered.

The eagle soared higher and the sun-flicked waves grew small below them, but Darkebite’s wings thrust on. Then the children pulled back on their bows and let their arrows fly. They hurtled through the air and Ashtongue ducked, but Darkebite raised the Soul Splinter in her hands and batted them away. She rose higher, climbing the air with her bat-like wings, the chin of her mask jutting out above them, as if thirsting for Moll and Gryff. And, before the children could reload and fire again, Ashtongue flicked his wrist.

A rope shot out from his sleeve, one end wrapping tight round Moll’s arm, the other curled about Ashtongue’s wrist. The eagle cried out and Moll felt her body being snatched upwards. In the nick of time, Alfie grabbed her by the shoulders and held her down. The eagle slowed, thrashing its wings against the strain from above, but the Shadowmasks drew closer as Ashtongue placed hand after hand on the rope, reeling himself in towards Moll.

And it was then that Moll realised what was really bound round her arm – not rope, but a snake. Her stomach lurched and she tried to wrench herself free, but the Shadowmasks loomed closer. Ashtongue’s fingers grasped the brown-scaled reptile.

Gryff leapt on the snake, slashing with his claws. It writhed and hissed, then the wildcat’s claws sliced through it and it split in two before tumbling from the sky. Moll yanked her arm in and Alfie raised an arrow to his bow. Darkebite had the Soul Splinter just metres from Moll, which left Ashtongue unprotected.

The eagle quickened its pace and Alfie released his arrow. It sailed through the air, a flash of wood, feather and moonsilver, then slammed into Ashtongue’s chest. The Shadowmask howled as the Oracle Spirit billowed out and snatched him from Darkebite’s back. Limbs scrabbling, Ashtongue fell through the air, his body crumbling into black dust as the Oracle Spirit brought it down.

‘No!’ Darkebite howled, reeling in the air. Her wings spread out either side of her, blocking out the sun, then she dived straight for Moll.

The eagle plummeted, wings tucked in like a bullet, and Gryff, Moll and Alfie clung on for their lives. Then the bird pulled up hard and swerved to the right. Moll grabbed another arrow and released it from her bow, but Darkebite ducked, then sped after them until both she and the eagle were side by side, speeding through the cloud-scattered sky.

‘You want to know the truth about your past, Alfie?’ Darkebite shrieked.

Alfie stiffened, but Moll reached for another arrow and set it to her bow. She fired again, but Darkebite flung it aside with the Soul Splinter. Then she threw back her head and laughed.

‘Why you’re broken inside? Why people treat you as if you don’t exist?’ Darkebite dipped her mask into the headwind and sped on through the sky beside the eagle. Then she looked at Alfie, eyes like coal burning behind her mask. ‘You
created
the Soul Splinter, Alfie. The very weapon you want to destroy.
You
made it.’

Moll’s body shook with hatred. ‘Don’t listen to her, Alfie! You’re part of our camp and you’ve got the old magic on your side! You rescued me from Skull! You helped find the amulet! You cured Gryff! And you’re real to every one of us!’

But Alfie was silent behind her and Moll could feel Gryff’s fur stiffening with dread.

Darkebite laughed. ‘We needed an innocent child’s tears,’ she sneered at Alfie. ‘Skull stole you from a farm and it was
your
tears that helped bind our shadows inside the Soul Splinter.’ Her dark wings beat on beside the eagle. ‘You’re a part of it, Alfie. A part of
us
.’ She turned her mask towards Moll. ‘So you see, if you destroy the Soul Splinter, then you destroy Alfie too.’

Moll shook her head, panic rising thick inside her. ‘You’re lying!’ She spun round to Alfie, but his face was white, his eyes fighting back tears.

Moll blinked at him and Gryff placed a paw on the boy’s foot. ‘It’s not true, Alfie. Don’t believe what she says. Your tears healed Gryff – remember that! You’re not like them!’

But the choice drummed inside her, as fast as her pounding heart. What if it
was
true? What if a part of Alfie belonged to the Shadowmasks? And what if destroying the Soul Splinter meant losing him? But doing nothing – letting the Soul Splinter exist – would allow the Shadowmasks’ evil to spread and the Bone Murmur would be broken . . . They would lose everything. She bit down on her lip. It
couldn’t
be true. She wouldn’t believe it. She couldn’t make that choice.

Darkebite raced along beside them, flying higher and higher until she was above the eagle again. Then she raised the Soul Splinter in both hands and uttered a rasping chant:

‘Below me now are the girl and the cat.

I soar above them, as fast as a bat.

Now the weapon is ready to poison them both,

To darken their souls. That’s the Shadowmasks’ oath.’

‘Don’t look up!’ Alfie shouted. ‘Don’t let her do it, Moll!’

The eagle cried out and, as Moll buried her head in Gryff’s fur, Alfie wrapped his arms round her. Darkebite smirked, then lashed out with her free arm, wrenching Alfie backwards.

Time skidded to a halt. Alfie tumbled from the eagle’s back and Moll flung herself at him, grabbing him by the wrists. He dangled in the air, hundreds of metres above the sea, and Moll groaned at his weight, desperate not to lose him. She hauled hard, but Darkebite was circling again, wielding the Soul Splinter like a staff. Gryff lashed out splayed claws towards it, forcing the Shadow Keeper back.

‘Let me go, Moll!’ Alfie gasped. ‘If your hands are on me, you’ve nothing to stop the Soul Splinter dripping inside you both.’

Moll winced under the strain. ‘I’m not losing you, Alfie.’ But her hands were sweating and the hold she had was starting to slip. She clutched him harder. ‘I won’t ever let you go.
You
were my impossible dream – to unlock the Oracle Spirit in my arrows. I wanted to make you real so that everyone could see you!’ She struggled against Alfie’s weight. ‘I won’t let you go!’

Alfie met her eyes, his jay feather fluttering against his neck, then he squeezed her hands tight. ‘You don’t have a choice, Moll.’

Darkebite swerved towards them and, as she raised the Soul Splinter at Moll, Alfie wrenched himself free from Moll’s grasp and leapt on to the Shadow Keeper’s back.

‘If I made it, I can break it!’ he shouted.

Darkebite reeled backwards at the weight of Alfie and, as he wrestled the Shadow Keeper for the shard of ice, Moll felt her world slide. It was just as her ma had said: ‘
He who made it will destroy it
.’ Only she hadn’t meant the Shadowmasks: she had meant Alfie.

‘No!’ Moll screamed. The eagle beat its wings towards Darkebite. ‘No, Alfie!’

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