Twist of the Blade (15 page)

Read Twist of the Blade Online

Authors: Edward Willett

Tags: #Lake, #King Arthur, #Arthurian, #water, #cave, #Regina, #internet, #magic, #Excalibur, #legend, #series, #power, #inheritance, #quest, #Lady

BOOK: Twist of the Blade
6.67Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

When they got to the airport, Wally went straight to the Air Canada desk. He came back after a few minutes with a grin. “Done,” he said. “But I don’t have much time. We’d better hurry.”

They headed up the escalator to the second-floor security
check-in. The line stretched for what looked like a mile. Ariane kept Wally company in the line, and Wally kept checking the clock. “Come on, come on,” he muttered.

They were only two-thirds of the way to the screening area when they heard, over the public address system, “This is the final boarding call for Air Canada Jazz Flight 8437 to Calgary. All passengers, please make your way to Gate D.”

“That’s me,” Wally said to Ariane. “It’s going to be close.”

Ariane craned her head, trying to see past the very large gentleman (in all dimensions), in front of them. “Can’t they move any faster?”

They finally reached the screening area just as the PA said, “This is Air Canada Jazz paging passenger Walter Knight. Please make your way to Gate D immediately. Your plane is ready to depart.”

Ariane could go no farther. She ducked out of the line and stood to one side. “Hurry up, hurry up, hurry up,” she urged under her breath, watching Wally through the glass wall surrounding the screening area. The large man in front of Wally had been chosen for more detailed inspection. The guard patting him down seemed to take forever, but at last he was done. Wally, who had already emptied his pockets and placed his watch into the grey plastic bins provided, put his backpack on the X-ray conveyor belt. He stepped confidently through the metal detector, grabbed his stuff, gave her a final wave, and then dashed off.

He was gone.

She was on her own, and so was Wally. She hurried back toward the escalator. At the top was a coffee shop whose seating area overlooked the runways. She went to the windows and watched the Air Canada Jazz jet with Wally aboard pulling away from the jetway. She watched it taxi out, and a few minutes later heard the thunder of its engines and watched it lift into the sky.

He’s
on his way
, she thought.
And now it’s my turn.
She looked up at the low cloud covering the sky.

Perfect.

~~~

Rex Major sat in a comfortable chair on the balcony of his condo, high atop one of the towers that many city residents thought were a blight on the shore of Lake Ontario, enjoying the unseasonably warm November weather in the final hour before his driver would arrive to take him to the airport. From all accounts, it was freezing on the prairies. He hoped Ariane and Wally were enjoying it.

His phone buzzed. Major sighed, set aside the excellent Alsatian Gewürztraminer he’d been sipping, and removed the phone from his pocket.

He glanced at it. There were a couple of new messages. One was from the private investigator he had hired to keep an eye on Wally and Ariane. The agent had already told him the two were going north for the week, ostensibly so Wally could recover from his head injury. This message simply confirmed he had seen them depart and would be in touch again once he had confirmed their new location.

But that made the second message really leap out at Major. It was an automated message, generated by the thin skein of magic that overlay every installation of Excalibur software on the planet, magic he had instructed to let him know whenever anything about either Wally or Ariane showed up on a computer system.

Wally Knight, who his agent had just told him was safely en route to northern Saskatchewan for a week’s vacation at Emma Lake, had just boarded an airplane in Regina bound for Calgary, then Frankfurt....
and then Lyon, France. Where he himself would be landing in just a few hours. That had to mean that Ariane knew where the second shard of Excalibur was...or it
would
have meant that if not for the inexplicable fact that Ariane was not flying with Wally. The boy was on his own.

Unless....

Could Ariane have some other method of getting to France? A method that didn’t rely on airplanes? Had she found some way to use the Lady’s power to make the trip, even though he knew for certain she couldn’t move through salt water?

He supposed it was possible, but it seemed unlikely.
Maybe she sent Wally to get the shard himself
, Rex Major thought.
Maybe she thinks he can slip under my magical radar, since he has no magic of his own.

That thought was so enticing he hardly dared to credit it. But the fact that it might be true was enough to make him smile as he raised his glass of wine once more.
When you’re an unaccompanied minor
, he thought,
someone
really
ought to be there to meet you at the airport.
He raised his glass and took a full, satisfying mouthful
.

~~~

Standing on the sidewalk in front of the airport terminal in Regina, Ariane considered leaping into the clouds right where she stood: but there were too many people around, and she didn’t want anyone to see her suddenly disappear into thin air. Such an inexplicable occurrence would make the news for sure, and then their attempts to keep Merlin in the dark would have been for nothing.

But she didn’t have to go far to be out of sight. At one end of the terminal building, a brick wall hid a garbage collection area. Ariane walked briskly in that direction, glanced around to make sure no one was paying any attention to her and slipped around the corner of the wall. Positioned
safely behind a dumpster, she looked up at the grey sky.

“Here goes nothing,” she muttered, and as she had done just two days before, she sought the cloud-song.

It was easier here with no distracting bodies of water nearby. The clouds’ high, wild music sang clearly to her. They wanted her to come back to them, become one with them again. They seemed to reach for her as she reached for them.

An instant later, they had her.

Once again she felt her body expand, diffusing through the clouds. Once again she felt that urge to let consciousness slip away entirely, to join the clouds forever: but this time she was expecting it, and held her sense of self tightly together, centered on the hard, bright presence of the shard of Excalibur, the piece of grit around which she could layer the pearl of her mind.

East
, she thought.
Farther than before.

Much farther.

She raced away from Regina, flowing easily through the overcast sky that stretched clear to Winnipeg. But not far beyond the larger prairie city, as she neared northern Ontario, the clouds thinned and she began to struggle. Her path, at first straight as an arrow’s flight, now wavered, north, south; and then, suddenly, she ran out of clouds altogether.

It was like racing at full speed to the edge of a cliff, and pulling herself up just in time: almost as though she teetered on the verge of plunging out of the cloud and falling to the huge metropolis below her. She held herself still, feeling breathless even though she wasn’t technically breathing, and looked around her.

She suddenly realized, much to her surprise, that she recognized the city. To her vastly expanded, immaterial eyes it looked like an amazingly detailed model through which toy trains and cars wound their way, but one of those “model” buildings was in reality the gigantic skyscraper most people called the Sears Tower, although she’d heard somewhere it was called something else now. The city had to be Chicago, and that meant the enormous lake to the east was Lake Michigan, sparkling beneath a clear sky in late-afternoon sunshine. She’d come much farther south than she’d intended or expected.

But far, far in the east, she could just see a band of clouds. Too far for her to leap to, cloud to cloud....

...but then, she didn’t need to, did she? There was a whole lake below her.

She hadn’t tried
this
before, either, but she didn’t see why it shouldn’t be possible. She leaped from cloud to water, causing a brief shower on Chicago’s Navy Pier, but instead of materializing fully, she melted into the water and raced across the lake.

At the far side, she reached back up for the clouds, this time having no difficulty at all distinguishing their soprano song from the lake’s bass rumble, and a moment later was once more aloft, rushing east again through the much thicker clouds she found on the lake’s far shore.

But she still couldn’t follow a straight path. More and more she found herself travelling north until, as darkness descended, unbroken ice stretched away from her in every direction. Shortly after that, she could see nothing at all, and could only reach for the next cloud, and the next, always searching for those farther east and if possible, south.

Time seemed to have no meaning as she struggled from cloud to cloud, sidestepping, backtracking. Every leap seemed a little harder, every move a little slower. Even with the power of the shard, she began to wonder if she could truly make it all the way across the ocean. Maybe the shard’s power was limitless, but hers wasn’t. She still had to direct and use its magic, and it was becoming harder and harder to do so. Not only that, as her energy decreased, she also found it more and more difficult to resist the siren call of the clouds.
Rest
, they seemed to say.
Rest. Sleep. Let go of your sense of self....

If she gave in to that urge, let herself unravel into the clouds, what would happen to the shard? Would it spring back into existence and drop like a stone into the ocean below?

Except, she suddenly realized, there
wasn’t
ocean below. She was over land.

More important, she was over fresh water. She couldn’t see it, had no idea what it was, but that didn’t matter: with the last of her failing strength she plunged into it, aiming for a spot close to the shore, deep enough for her to materialize in, but not so deep her heavy backpack would immediately pull her under.

Cold water suddenly announced itself against her skin, her magic now so weak it couldn’t ward off the chill. She found soft mud beneath her feet and raised her head out of the water, spluttering.

Low overcast cloud blotted out the sky. A glow over the black bulk of a hill spoke of a nearby town or city, but there was no other sign of human life. Ariane moved to step out of the pond, but the mud gripped her feet and brought her splashing down face first. Spluttering again, crawling on her hands and knees, she scrambled onto the shore into tall, prickly grass, and lay there on her stomach, head turned to one side, gasping. For the moment, she was too weary to even attempt to order the water off her body.

And then she heard the nearby sound of heavy breathing.

Her own breath halted. Holding it, she listened.

Something moved closer.
He must have seen me pop out of the water
, Ariane thought.
What will he think?

And if he doesn’t speak English, I can’t even explain myself. I can barely say, “Comment allez-vous?”

She rose up on her hands, rolled over, and sat up. “Who’s there?” she whispered.

More heavy breathing. A shuffling in the grass. And then...

“Moooo!”

Ariane jumped, and then burst out laughing. The cow mooed again and lurched away from her, clearly worried by the sudden appearance of a crazy person in its pasture. Still chuckling, Ariane summoned just enough power to wish herself dry, and then stood up, swaying a little. Her eyes should have accustomed to the darkness as soon as she materialized, since she had travelled through the night, but she hadn’t really been using her eyes had she? Instead, her pupils seemed to still be set to Saskatchewan daylight aperture, which made her surroundings even darker. But slowly they began to adjust, the glow in the sky enough to reveal the landscape around her. The body of water was small, little more than a pond; she was probably on a farm, since she’d been greeted by a cow. She couldn’t see a house anywhere, but that might be because of the trees that grew thickly along three sides of the pool and climbed the hill behind her toward the city sky-glow.

She was at the end of the pool where there were fewer trees, and where, she realized now, there were
several
cows, most of them kneeling, presumably asleep. It looked as if there was a lower hill in that direction, and one that wasn’t covered in forest, so she headed up it to reconnoiter.

Once at the top, she found herself looking down on a cozy farm. A single-storey thatched-roof house, covered with white plaster through which showed thick wooden beams, stood at the edge of a cobblestoned courtyard surrounded by half a dozen outbuildings. A light on a high pole illumi
nated the scene, but the farmhouse windows were dark.

Now what?
Ariane thought, staring at it.

She needed to get to Lyon, but she had time. She’d done a lot of back-and-forthing to find her route, but she knew she’d still traversed the Atlantic faster than any airliner could, and of course Wally wasn’t even flying straight to Lyon: he was going to Frankfurt and then changing planes. She’d made the journey in one evening; he wouldn’t be in Lyon until afternoon.

I’ll camp out by the trees
, Ariane thought.
I can be gone at first light, before the farmer even knows I’m here.

Other books

Styx's Storm by Leigh, Lora
The White Tree by Edward W. Robertson
Stewart's Story by Ruth Madison
Eve Vaughn by Rebellion
The Thief of Venice by Jane Langton
The Living Sword by Pemry Janes