The Minions of Time

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Authors: Jerry B. Jenkins,Chris Fabry

Tags: #JUVENILE FICTION / Religious / Christian, #JUVENILE FICTION / Religious / Christian

BOOK: The Minions of Time
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The Wormling IV: The Minions of Time

Copyright © 2008 by Jerry B. Jenkins. All rights reserved.

Cover illustration copyright © 2007 by Tim Jessell. All rights reserved.

Designed by Ron Kaufmann

Edited by Lorie Popp

Published in association with the literary agency of Alive Communications, Inc., 7680 Goddard Street, Suite 200, Colorado Springs, CO 80920.

This novel is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the authors' imaginations or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, organizations, or persons living or dead is entirely coincidental and beyond the intent of either the authors or publisher.

Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

Jenkins, Jerry B.

The Wormling IV : minions of time. / Jerry B. Jenkins, Chris Fabry.

p. cm.

Summary: Having discovered that he is the King's Son, Owen contemplates his future with trepidation as he must fulfill his destiny to lead the battle with the Dragon, unite the worlds of the Highlands and the Lowlands, and marry a princess.

ISBN 978-1-4143-0158-7 (sc)

[1. Adventure and adventurers—Fiction. 2. Identity—Fiction. 3. Good and evil—Fiction. 4. Fantasy.] I. Fabry, Chris, date. II. Title. III. Wormling four.

IV. Title: Minions of time.

PZ7.J4138Wou 2008

[Fic]—dc22 2007030032

For Jeremy

“You are as young as your faith, as old as your doubt; as young as your self confidence, as old as your fear; as young as your hope, as old as your despair.”

General Douglas MacArthur

“To hope is to risk despair,

to try is to risk failure.

But risks must be taken because the greatest hazard in life is to risk nothing. . . .

Only a person who risks is free.”

William Arthur Ward

“It does not do to leave a live dragon out of your calculations, if you live near him.”

J. R. R. Tolkien

Table of Contents

1: Fear

2: Old Enemy

3: The Least of These

4: Whirlpool

5: On the Skiff

6: Belly of the Beast

7: Upset Stomach

8: On the Beach

9: King and Queen

10: Recruits

11: Gurgling

12: Watcher's Morning

13: On Shoulders

14: The Storm

15: A New Song

16: The Nestor

17: Rogers

18: Rockslide

19: Planting

20: Ghost Town

21: To the Death

22: Diamondhead

23: The Changeling

24: Inner Bees

25: The Conversation

26: Near the Castle

27: The Story

28: Surface Disturbance

29: Changing Direction

30: Underwater

31: Peril

32: News

33: Landing

34: Convincing Machree

35: Return to Yodom

36: The Plunge

37: The Plan

38: Still and Broken

39: Flight

40: The Report

41: Highland Find

42: Pursued

43: Confession

44: The Release

45: The Task

46: Deadly Mission

47: Words and Fire

48: Confrontation

49: Death of the Wormling

50: Poisoned

51: Nicodemus

52: Not Growing Weary

53: Inspectors

54: The Chamber

55: In Custody

56: Interrogation

57: Escape

58: Down the Hall

59: Her

60: Talking

61: Twin Identities

62: Search

63: The Meeting

64: Quite an Entrance

65: Mr. Page

66: On Its Way

67: Spellbound

68: Obliterated

Epilogue

About the Authors

The greatest fear of the human heart is not a monster under your bed or losing all your money or being left stranded in a foreign country or being eaten by snakes or drowning.

Do not misunderstand—those are all dreadful predicaments. But be sure of this: the greatest fear of the human heart runs much deeper than these. Our greatest fear concerns who we really are. In that search for truth about our souls, we are most afraid of discovering not that we are nothing but that there is something wonderful and glorious about us. Something regal and noble and majestic. Something amazing.

If we are nothing, if we simply crawled upon the shore of human existence and stretched our fins until fingers appeared, no expectation of goodness rests upon us. We can simply live as we please, make decisions based upon the wants of our stomachs or our minds. We live and we die with no purpose other than to satisfy our cravings.

However—and let us pause here to mention what a wonderful word
however
is—if we were instead placed here, our lives have purpose and meaning. We do not have to make that up, for it is given to us by the someone who placed us here.

By chance, we are nothing. By design, our lives connect to each other and to the one who made us.

It was to these thoughts that our hero, Owen Reeder, put his mind. Small Owen—of low estate, the son of a bookstore owner, once perusing pages daily—has been thrust into a search for royalty and found it in himself. In reading
The Book of the King
, Owen discovered that he had been chosen to be a Wormling, entrusted with not only the book but also a special worm named Mucker, who was the transport between the Highlands (earth) and the Lowlands—a place Owen did not even know existed.

It is above these Lowlands that Owen currently flies, locked in a cage borne by a winged beast who smells vile and seems to have unending stamina. Other flyers are far ahead, Owen's group taking up the rear of the prisoner train.

And it is in this cage that Owen ponders his own station: namely, that he is the King's Son, the very one he had been searching for since first he arrived.

To say this frightened him would be the same as saying that falling a thousand feet onto concrete would hurt. Owen was terrified. He couldn't comprehend all this. What would it mean for his family, his mission, his destiny?

The Book of the King
said the Son would lead forces to battle the Dragon. He would help unite the two worlds—the Highlands and Lowlands. But chief among Owen's concerns was that he was also prophesied to wed the princess Onora. He had never held a girl's hand, let alone kissed one—not that he hadn't thought about it.

Owen had learned that along with great fear comes a certain comfort. If all he had discovered was really true, he had a history. He had a family. Not just a father but also a mother who loved him. A sister who had been taken captive. And a bride waiting.

Not comforting was the prospect of the Dragon's talons sinking into his chest, not to mention the beast's thousands upon thousands of followers who would comprise a gigantic force against him.

Such is curious about despair: each time comfort seeped into Owen's soul, the thought of the enemy and the task soon overwhelmed him. He had seen the Dragon up close, but that was as the Wormling, a seeker, an ant scurrying from the footsteps of giants. Now Owen knew he was this beast's mortal enemy.

All this thinking was, of course, moot—pointless. Owen was high above the ground, smushed into the corner of a cage with people from the Castle on the Moor, including the king of the west. Most of these were servants trying in vain to keep their soiled garments from touching the king and queen. The people treated Owen as less than human, sneering and jeering at him for speaking to some unseen visitor. They thought he had been talking to himself, studying the underside of the great flying beast.

A child yelled, getting everyone's attention and pointing to water over the horizon, waves against the shore, and beyond that, an island.

Owen sat thinking of his friends Watcher and Humphrey. He'd told them to meet him in a secret place, and he imagined them waiting, pacing, wondering.

Owen suddenly sat up. The island looked familiar. There was more than one. Yes, it was true. The islands of Mirantha. He had been here before—he had met Mordecai, a man still on the island as far as Owen knew. He picked up a pebble and threw it as hard as he could at the flying animal, trying to get it to change direction and fly toward the island.

“What are you doing?” a young boy said. “He can't even feel that.”

Another prisoner yelled, “There's someone on that rock!”

They were flying along the path Owen and Watcher had taken to Erol's clan. Huge rock formations loomed, and as the creature passed close to them, a lone figure stood on a precipice eyeing them.

Erol!
Owen stood and shouted and waved.

“What do you think he's going to do?” an older woman said. “Rescue you? From down there? You're crazy.”

Owen kept yelling. As they drew nearer, several others from Erol's group climbed out on top of the rocks.

“Are these friends of yours?” a man wearing the king's coat of arms said.

“Very good friends,” Owen said.

“Then you might want to call off their archers. They're amassing on the ledge. If they bring this beast down, we'll all be killed.”

A dozen of Erol's men had bows drawn and at the ready. The beast seemed not to notice and flew straight for the rock.

“Erol! It's me! The Wormling! Lower your weapons! Don't shoot!”

But the leader raised an arm and dropped it. Arrows flew.

“Get down!” Coat of Arms yelled. “Everybody on the floor!”

The arrows overflew the cage, and some lodged in the animal's neck. One hit him in the mouth and stuck through a lip. The rest pierced his wings and passed through. The beast swerved toward the rocks, scattering Erol and his men.

“Hang on!” Coat of Arms hollered.

The cage smacked the top of a rock, sending people flying around inside. Owen grabbed the bars and held on as the flyer listed left, then right. Blood trickled from a wound in the animal's neck.

Erol gave the fire signal again.

“No!” Owen shouted, but arrows whistled through the air and pierced the leathery skin with a
pfft
.

The flyer dipped toward a large rock, and at the last second Owen grabbed the young boy who had alerted them and pulled him close as the cage crashed again. The group pitched like toys in a box, banging the front of the cage as the flyer recovered and haltingly changed direction.

“Erol!” Owen screamed. “Help us!”

The archers grew tiny in the distance as the beast continued. Owen could tell it was laboring, its breathing erratic. Blood coursed from the wounds.

As they slowly descended, Coat of Arms rose from the floor and hobbled to the front, inspecting the bars. He pulled, but they were too strong. “There's room enough for the young ones to crawl through,” he said.

“They'll die from the fall,” a woman shrieked.

“It's their only chance!”

Several rushed to the front, and Owen gasped. No one else saw what lay ahead of them, and he could only hope the flyer had enough energy left not to crash.

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