Read The Girl of Ink & Stars Online
Authors: Kiran Millwood Hargrave
CHAPTER
FOUR
B
ang!
I sat up, heart beating hard. Pablo's room was full of flames, but I could feel no heat.
Bang!
I looked out of the low window. The air sang with sparks, flung like a handful of rubies against the night.
Bang!
It was Lupe's birthday fireworks. I could smell them â smoky and sharp, tingling my nostrils.
Sulphur
, Lupe had told me.
It's what makes them explode!
I lay back down. The fireworks were over in another three bangs, painting the room blue and gold. As the last one fizzed away I heard whispers, low and urgent, filtering beneath the closed door.
My heart leapt as I heard the
tap-tap
of Da's walking stick, and then the rumble of his low voice.
âYou're sure she's asleep? With all that racket?'
I squeezed my eyes shut. Whatever Da was about to tell Masha, he did not want me to hear, which meant that it was probably something I desperately
did
want to hear. I heard the door creak open a fraction, then close again.
âFast asleep. I gave her something to help.'
âThank you, Masha. Does she know about Cata?' asked Da.
I clenched the sheet at the mention of her name.
âYes⦠I wanted to wait for you but Pablo told her.'
Da let out a long breath and there was a low mumble that may have been Pablo apologizing.
âShe's all right,' said Masha soothingly. âWhere have you been?'
âI tried to send word butâ¦'
Masha waited. I waited, too.
Da cleared his throat. âSeñora Feliz told me Isa had been taken home safely, so I joined a search party.'
âWhat about the curfew?'
âThe Governor's not looking â we had to do something.'
âHe didn't even cancel his daughter's birthday fireworks!' raged Pablo. âWhat kind of person does that?'
Masha made a shushing sound. âWhere did you go?' she asked Da.
âTo the orchard. We weren't allowed into the forestâ'
âWhy not?' interrupted Pablo. âIf I had just killed someone, I know where I'd goâ'
âHush!' Masha scolded, but Pablo pressed on, his voice
all edges.
âAdori doesn't care about Cata, does he?'
âPablo!' Masha's voice was fearful. It was dangerous to accuse the Governor of doing wrong. People who did so found their livestock vanished then appeared in the Governor's fields, or found their drinking wells sullied with mud.
âThe boy's right,' said Da. âAdori's not doing anything. And I agree that whoever did this is likely to have crossed through to the Forgotten Territories.'
âAre there any clues?' Masha asked.
I crept out of bed and closer to the door as Da lowered his voice. âThey found marks around the body. Looked like claw marks to me, but there're no dogs big enough. Deep gouges, thick as my thumb. Maybe the murderer scraped the ground to cover his tracks.'
I couldn't listen any longer. I threw the door open.
Da and Masha were sitting together at the kitchen table, with Pablo standing by the window. Da stumbled to his feet, his bad leg collapsing slightly. He was dusty all over, with shadows under bloodshot eyes and red ink stains on his shirt. But he was here. He was safe.
I ran to him. âWho did it, Da? Why isn't the Governor looking for whoâ' I forced myself to say the words, âFor who killed Cata?'
The three of them were looking at me with the same expression, as if they understood something I didn't.
My cheeks grew hot. âSomeone needs to do something!'
âEnough, child!'
I flinched and swallowed my questions. Da never shouted.
âLet's go,' he said curtly.
We crept the few metres home in a deep silence that was nothing to do with the curfew.
I carried Pep into my room and listened to Da tidying up. When he came in I pretended to be asleep, but he can always tell.
âI'm sorry for shouting, Isa. I shouldn't have. I justâ' He sighed heavily. âI'm tired. And sad, for Cata. Does that make sense?'
I made a small noise in my throat.
âI thought maybe I could say sorry with a story?' he said.
Pep mewled grumpily as I rolled over to face Da. âWhy won't you tell me what happened?'
âHow about Arinta?'
It was my favourite tale â the myth of the saviour of Joya â and even though Lupe teased me for being too old for bedtime stories I loved hearing it. But I wasn't done being annoyed. I rolled back over and Pep hissed.
âAll right.' Da sighed. âI'll let you get to sleep.'
Before he could stand up I put my hand out behind me. âI suppose a story wouldn't hurt.'
He sat back down, and when he spoke I could hear the smile in his voice.
âArinta was a very brave girl. She lived at the centre of Joya a thousand years ago, when it was free from the earth and sailed the ocean like a living ship. There was no
forested border, no Forgotten Territories, and songbirds sang in every tree.
âBut one day, a fire demon that bubbled beneath the seabed noticed the beautiful floating island and wanted it for himself. His name was Yote. He was the length of a river and as hot as the sun. He built a column of rock to climb through, and caught Joya, attaching it to the seabed. The people of Joya were afraid. They knew he was going to claim the island for the Fire Realm and they would have to leave their home.
âArinta was sad. She loved Joya, with its forests and sea and songbirds. So that night, she stole her father's sword and crept out of the house to where Yote was rumbling the earth, readying himself to swallow Joya. She journeyed underground through a waterfall, drenching herself in the water to protect herself against the flames, and walked until she arrived at Yote's lair. She called out. Yote heard her, but did not stop rumbling.
âArinta did not give up. She attacked the rock walls with her sword to set the sea on him. Yote became afraid. He could defeat rivers, but the sea would swallow him up. He agreed not to take the island if she stopped. They swore to these terms and she left the sword embedded in the rock so he knew she was keeping her promise.'
Da hesitated. âI think we should stop there.'
âBut you always say you have to finish stories, even if they don't have happy endings,' I said, even though I had heard it so many times I could say the words along with him.
He spoke fast, the words blurring into each other.
âBut while Yote was a lazy demon, he was also a proud one. He did not want the islanders to know a girl had outwitted him, but he could not destroy the island, for oaths bound demons for a thousand years. Instead he sent his fire dogs after Arinta and they chased her through the tunnels until she got lost.
âArinta's father searched and searched the tunnels, but she was never seen again. Some say she became the river itself, others that she is still down there, her spirit making sure Yote keeps his promise. Either way, Arinta looks after Joya, her sacrifice a gift more powerful than any fire demon.'
CHAPTER
FIVE
â
M
orning, little one.' Da's voice was soft. âI'm sorry to wake you. How are you feeling?'
I couldn't speak it aloud, the twist of worry that was knotted through my body. âFine.'
I sat up as Pep jumped off the bed.
âI'm going door to door today with a few of the others,' Da said. âAsking if anyone saw anything.'
âWhat about the curfew?'
âSomething has to be done. Don't worry,' he said hurriedly, smoothing out my frown. âWe didn't get caught yesterday, did we? And if you have any problems just call for Masha out of the window. Keep the door locked.'
I felt a stab of fear at the thought of being left, but Da was right. Cata deserved justice, and as long as Pep and Miss La were here I wouldn't be alone.
Before he set out, I bathed his leg and wrapped it tightly. The old scar ran jaggedly from his knee to his ankle, like a
red vein. When he'd jumped aboard the ship in Ãygpt, he didn't even know where it was heading.
For all we knew, we would sail over the edge of the horizon and never be seen again
, he explained, pointing to the oldest maps. Horrible beasts populated the eastern coast: gigantic fish with claws and scales striped like tigers, one-eyed elephants with fangs and tusks sharp as glass, creatures that to the cartographers of old were less terrifying than the unknown.
I had always found this strange â preferring monsters to not knowing â but now I understood. The murderer was out there, nameless and faceless. That was more unsettling than if the killer had been revealed to have four heads and teeth as long as knives. As Da left, I hugged him a bit tighter than normal.
âYou'll be safe, Isa,' he said. âBolt the door.'
Da's study was full of treasures from his travels, but it was not the telescope from Europa nor the astronomy charts from Chine that fascinated me. It was what hung on the wall above his desk.
Ma's map of Joya. Made before the Banishment, before the Governor arrived, even before Da's family settled here from Afrik. Made when the island still floated. Da said that if Arinta were real â and of course I knew she was real â she'd have lived on a Joya that looked much like the one on Ma's map. Pep leapt on to my lap and settled down as I
gazed up at it.
The fabric, a pale brown worn thin with age and use, was fraying at the edges. The map was basic at best, and focused on odd details. Gromera was shown as the tiny settlement it must once have been. The Marisma, the swamp, was stitched in blue thread with the forest circling it. A blue star marked Arintan, the waterfall through which Arinta was said to have descended to meet Yote.
There were six villages, dotted irregularly around the coast; Carment was the one furthest north. The very centre of the map was blank but when held up to the light it seemed faintly lined, like the veins of a leaf.
I wondered what the rest of Joya looked like now. Overgrown, maybe? And what about the people the Governor had banished when he arrived, and those from the other villages? The rest of Joya might be completely empty, for all we knew.
I scratched Pep behind the ears, then pulled a sheet of paper towards me from the pile of used pieces Da kept for me. Da had been teaching me cartography since Gabo died. It was an obvious attempt to distract me, but I had grown to love it. I dipped a quill into the blue inkwell â I didn't even glance at the red â and began to draw what the Forgotten Territories looked like in my head.
My legs had gone numb before Pep finally stirred, jumping off my lap and stretching. I flexed my fist, examining the half-finished map. The scaling of the forest was wrong, but I was happy with the detail of the river bends.
Pep mewled. It was past his feeding time. Dusk was falling outside. I frowned. There was something to do with dusk I had to remember . . .
My stomach jolted.
Lupe!
I didn't think twice about breaking my promise to Da.
The market square felt just as eerie as it had the day before, like a village taken by spirits. Ravens chattered and fought on the roofs.
Across the deserted stalls I saw Lupe, sitting on the barrel, long legs trailing from beneath a pink taffeta gown. She looked as if she was on her way to a ball.
Lupe waved. She didn't seem scared.
I scuffed my way to the barrel.
âI was worried you'd forgotten!' said Lupe. âGood idea to arrange this, right? Did you see the fireworks?'
I nodded. She sprang off the barrel and spun around. âIt's so quiet. Isn't it strange?'
âEverything's strange.'
âIt's about to get stranger,' said Lupe, stopping suddenly mid-spin. âGuess what?'
âWhat?'
âWe're going on a trip!' said Lupe, flinging her arms out.
âWhat do you mean?'
âI
mean
,' said Lupe, obviously deflated by my tone, âPapa and Mama and I, we're going on a trip. To Afrik.'
Afrik? I tried to make the words sink in. The Governor was leaving? âWhen?'
âSoon!' said Lupe happily. âBut you can't tell anyone. Papa said it was a secret.'
âOnly a trip? You're coming back?'
She nodded, more curls slipping loose from her bun. âPapa would have said if not, wouldn't he?'
Would he? âHow are you going?'
Lupe grinned, pleased to have shocked me. âOn that.'
She pointed to the Governor's creaking ship in the harbour below, but I couldn't drag my eyes from my friend's face. She felt like a stranger.
I knew Lupe lived differently to others, knew this made her selfish sometimes. But she was also kind, and normally the silly things she said didn't make me want to walk away and wish I had never known her.
âWhat's wrong with you?' asked Lupe. âI thought you'd be excited for meâ'
âWhat's wrong with
you
?' I hissed. âHow can you act like this, with Cata gone?'
âGone where?'
âYou don't know?' I said, my temper running through me like needles. âWhy there's no one around, why there's a curfew?'
âPapa doesn't tell me things likeâ'
âDid
Papa
forget to mention the detail? Too horrible for his darling daughter to hear?'
âWhy are you being so mean?' Lupe asked, her lip
wobbling.
âCata's dead!' I shouted, sending ravens spiralling. âBecause you sent her to the orchard, and someone killed her!'
The words, spoken out loud, were as shocking to me as they were to Lupe. Her face went almost as pale as her mother's.
âI didn't knowâ'
âNo, Lupe, you choose not to know! You don't care about anything, anyone, outside your life. You don't understand about your father, about Cata, about
anything
â'
âI do care. I want to know! Tell me â no one tells me anything!'
We had never argued before and Lupe's eyes were bright, but I didn't care. I felt threaded through with rage, as though if I could keep talking, keep hurting Lupe, I would hurt less myself.
âBecause of you sending her to get you dragon fruit, Cata was in the orchard the same night as someone bad. Because of you, she's dead and she's not coming back. And because of your father, we won't find who did it. He's too busy sorting out your fireworks to do anything. He won't send a search party through the forest, which is where everyone says the murderer wentâ'
âThâthe forest?' stuttered Lupe. âWhy won't he? Why won't he go?'
âBecause he's a coward, and rotten right through. Because everyone in your family is rotten and ever since he
came here everything is rotten.'
Lupe was crying now, holding her stomach as if I had punched her. My nails stung crescents into my palms. I felt powerful, anger pushing out the fear.
âMy Ma died because of you coming here, and Gabo. Your
papa
stopped us crossing the forest to get medicine. And now Cata's dead too, and you're just running away. You're all running away to Afrik and leaving us with your mess. Well, good.'
âIsa, Iâ' Lupe was holding her arms out to me but I kicked dust at her skirt.
âGo! Nobody wants you here.'
Lupe looked at me, face scrunched up, tears thick on her cheeks. And then she was tripping over her gangly legs, sprinting away towards her house.
I kicked the barrel, hard. My toe bent back and I gasped, collapsing in the dirt. The anger left as quickly as it had come, leaving a hollowness. What had I done? I hugged my knees, wishing I could take it back, all of it. Lupe hadn't known, hadn't realizedâ¦
âIsabella?' It was Pablo, his hand outstretched. âAre you all right?'
I squeezed my eyes shut until I was sure I was not going to cry, then took his hand. He pulled me up so strongly I lifted off the ground.
âSorry,' he said, then looked down the alley where Lupe had run. âWasn't that the Governor's daughter?'
âLupe.' I sniffed. âWe're friends from school.'
âFriends?' Pablo arched his eyebrows. âDidn't seem like it.'
I rubbed my aching toe. âI said some thingsâ¦'
âI heard. Did she say they were going somewhere?'
âTo Afrik, on the Governor's boat. Iâ' I stopped abruptly, remembering Lupe had asked me not to tell. But I had said worse things. âI should apologize.'
âDon't,' said Pablo. âLet her calm down. You should get home.'
I let him propel me across the square, and as we turned up our street I noticed a livid bruise on his forearm.
âWhat happened?'
He looked down and shrugged. âOne of the horses kicked me. They're in a strange mood these past couple of days. The goats too â when I left they were all bunched up against the gate.'
âWhy?'
He shrugged again. âDon't tell my ma, she'll be on about omens and the like.'
It was the longest conversation we'd had in years, but as we fell into step on the slope, I realized how easy it was to be silent with him too, like the years and Gabo's death had momentarily spun in on themselves and we were walking back, the three of us, after a day by the sea. I wanted to say this but Pablo's face was set.
About halfway up he said, âWe should go quicker, it's almost dark.'
The sun was falling. Ravens crouched on every roof.
Their numbers seemed to have increased since the murder, as if they were multiplying, filling the absence of people on Gromera's streets. I kept my head down. The dust glowed orange and then faded to a deep navy by the time we reached my green door.
Pablo knocked and it opened a crack. Da's worried face peeked through, and then he threw the door wide. âWhere were you?'
âSorry, Da. Iâ'
âNo note? Do you realize how worried I've been?'
âHe's leaving,' Pablo broke in. âThe Governor. He's going to take that ship and leave us in this mess.'
âMight be better if he went,' Da said.
Pablo shook his head. âHe can't get off so easily. We have to teach him a lessonâ'
âNot now, Pablo.' Da glanced pointedly at me.
âYou're coming with me?' Pablo persisted.
âNo.'
âI'll be all right on my ownâ' I began.
âEnough, Isabella.'
I glared back, and Pablo disappeared without another word, leaving a stony silence in his wake.