“I can’t—”
“Go!” Jane shouted.
He found another handhold and then, with his legs bicycling from the exertion, he had the last one and was across. Gerhard dropped onto his back on the second platform.
“You made it!” Jane said. “You’re there!” He crawled away from the edge and dragged himself up. “Thank you, Jane.” “What do you see?”
He walked in a slow circle around his platform. At last, he said, “Nothing.”
Nothing?” “I can see another wall and a platform with a door, but it is too far away, and there are no handholds.” Gerhard slumped to the ground. “But even if there were,” he said, “I can’t climb anymore.” “There must be handholds,” she said.
“Nope.”
This doesn’t make sense, Jane thought. Why is that platform there? Is this a joke? A trial by fire without fire—just a long, long drop…
Wait.
Jane dug the envelope out of her pocket. The writing glowed.
Three Spells Inside,
One for Fire, One for Escape,
And One to Make the Evil One Break.
One for fire, Jane thought, and she took out the papers. There was shiny writing on one of them. Just two words: Ignatio vate. That sounded familiar for some reason. Jane put the two blank sheets and the envelope away again, and she raised the Ignatio vate paper.
Gerhard called, “Jane, what are you doing?” She waited. Nothing happened. “Um…”
“What is that in your hand?” Grandma Diana said these words, Jane thought. She said them when she fought the Raven King in our living room. “I’m not sure,” she said. “It’s a spell, I think. It says, Ignatio vate—” Fire burst from the paper in tendrils that splashed along the walls and swirled like a river of fast-moving lava. The spell paper burned to ash, but the fire didn’t go away.
She saw the path.
A narrow glass walkway extended from the left side of the platform, zigzagging along the walls, all the way to the opposite door. Even in the swirling heat and light, Jane couldn’t see the bottom of the pit. It might go all the way to the center of the world and out the other side.
Curled in a fetal position, Gerhard yelled, “Jane, what are you doing?” “It’s okay,” she said.
The fire streaked over their heads, rushing to flow along the walls. Jane followed the path—turning when it turned, slowing at the narrow curls, and hopping over two brief gaps—all the way to the opposite platform and door. The fire went out.
“J-Jane…?” Gerhard said.
“Yes, Gerhard?”
“Good luck saving the world.”
“Thank you,” she said and opened the door.
Inside, a golden hall led to steep stairs and a final door at the top with white light coming out of the edges, as if there were a huge lamp on the other side. Thomas was two steps from the door.
“There you are,” he said.
Thomas was already there. No! Jane wanted to scream.
“You beat me,” she said.
“This is funny,” he said. “Only one of us is supposed to be here.” She reached the stairs and started up. “Why don’t we work together?” “Did you listen at all to what Gaius said? He only wants one savior.” The hall flickered black, as if Jane had blinked—but she hadn’t blinked.
“We’re both here,” Jane said.
“I can see that. I’m not blind.” He killed that girl, Jane thought, only three steps below Thomas now. “What do you want to do?” “What do I want?” Again the light sputtered, as if someone were playing with the blinds. But there were no windows. “What I want doesn’t matter,” Thomas said. “It’s what he wants that’s important.” “I think Gaius will—”
“Not Gaius, stupid. Gaius is a blind old cat with a farting dog that pretends to be a dragon. Gaius doesn’t matter, and anyway, he’ll be dead soon. I’m talking about him.” Jane felt cold. “You’ve seen the Raven King?” “Of course I have,” Thomas said. “And you know what? He doesn’t like you.” He kicked Jane hard in the chest, and she went tumbling and crashing and rolling down the stairs. Her left ankle twisted, and she banged her head at the bottom.
“Good-bye, Jane.”
Oh, no!
Thomas went up the stairs to the door and went inside. I’ve got to stop him, she thought, I have to—Before the door closed, Jane heard Gaius say, “We have our champion! Congratulations, Thomas!”
The hall and stairs bled like a painting in the rain. The light and colors smeared and then reformed: Jane was back in her bed at Castle Alsod. Finn stuck his head in the door and said, “Welcome back, Jane! How did it go?” “I’m okay.” As Jane stood, pain flared in her left ankle. “Ow!” “You don’t look okay. Sit back down, and tell me what happened.” “No. We have to stop him. We have to warn Gaius. Help me to the door please.” Finn let her lean on him on the way out. “What happened?” he asked. “You didn’t win…?” “No. I was at the end—I almost…but he stopped me.” In the firefly-lit hall, Finn said, “Jane, I’m sure Gaius sent you back here to rest for a reason.” “I can’t rest,” she said. “Didn’t you hear me? I have to stop him.” “Who?”
She steadied herself on Finn’s side. My ankle hurts too much when I walk, she thought. I have to catch my breath. “Thomas.” “He passed the trials?”
“Yes,” she said. “But I did too. So he kicked me down the stairs.” “What?”
“He knows the Raven King—I think Thomas is working for him.” Jane felt the muscles in Finn’s shoulders tense, and he said, “Climb onto my back.” She did, and Finn kicked open the door to the castle stairs. “Gaius and Thomas are at a ceremony with the animals—hold on…”
They’re at a place called the Soldier’s Forum,” Finn said. “It’s not far.” They burst out of the swamp and were soaring low over a wheat field that rippled like the ocean in the wind. On a distant hillside, Jane saw a mass of animals. The animals covered the grass like giant ants, and above the hill, the sky was clouded with birds. Something was already happening.
“Is that it?” she asked.
“Yes,” Finn said. He flapped his wings harder, and they jerked in quick spurts, like a car trying to switch to a higher gear. As they rushed nearer, Jane realized that it wasn’t just one hill; three hills formed a valley, and all three were completely packed with elephants, horses, dogs—and every animal imaginable—all in a tremendous, orderly gathering. They were listening to someone.
When Finn flew over the heads of the animals at the back, Jane heard shouts of “Hey, no pushing to the front!” and “Don’t block the view!” They cleared the summit of the hill. The valley below was even more jammed than the surrounding hills. And there, at the center of the valley, standing on the open grass, were Gaius, Thomas, and a flightless bird with an enormous head. The bird was maybe three feet tall, and as Finn dove closer, Jane realized that it was a dodo bird. They’re extinct, aren’t they? The dodo was offering Thomas a slender, armored chest plate that had been made to fit a girl like Jane.
Gaius’s voice echoed through the valley, as if he were using a microphone (he wasn’t) or the valley itself were designed to carry speeches (it was): “…has saved the life of the champions who have come before you, this armor will also protect you, Thomas. It protected Diana Starlight…” Thomas accepted the armor, and it grew and changed to fit his body.
“Stop!” Jane shouted.
Finn barreled closer and then swung into a spiraling dive. They landed at Gaius’s feet. A group of hippos and nearby hyenas started muttering, and soon the entire valley was talking.
Jane jumped off. “He is working for the Raven King!” Gaius said, “Jane—”
“Please, I’m not making this up! Don’t—”
“Stop!” Gaius raised his stick. “What are you doing here, Jane? And you, Finn? I’m very disappointed.” “I had to warn you,” Jane said. Thomas’s face was bright red. Was that embarrassment or anger? she wondered. “Thomas cheated. He only won because he kicked me
down the stairs.” Gaius asked, “Is that true, Thomas?”
Thomas said, “Of course not.”
Gaius sighed. “You’re lying. You did kick her. Why?” Thank you! Jane thought. Gaius gets it—he won’t let Thomas hurt anyone else.
Thomas seemed to shrink a little bit, and he stared at the ground as he said, “I’m sorry. You said only one of us could win.” “Did you tell Jane that you work for the Raven King?” Thomas swallowed. “I’m sorry. I don’t…”
“Did you?”
“Yes.”
The animal chatter grew louder, and Gaius said, “Quiet, please.” His voice carried; the talking stopped. “Why did you say that, Thomas?” “I wanted to scare her,” he said. “I shouldn’t have done that.” “No, you shouldn’t have. But you’re right. Only one of you can win. And it is you, Thomas.” “But he kicked me!” Jane said.
“You’re right, Jane. I don’t approve of that,” Gaius said. “But let me ask you this: If you won and then you found the Name of the World—as Thomas will do—what do you think the Raven King would do to stop you? Do you think he would kick you if he could?” “What? I don’t believe this! Thomas just said he works for the Raven—” “No. He said that he told you that he works for the Raven King to scare you. My dear, there are good and evil, and there is also fate. Thomas comes from a great family, just like you. We all have a destiny, Jane. This is not yours.” Thomas was still scowling at the ground, but she imagined that his eyes were laughing. “Take her back, Finn,” Gaius said. “Tomorrow, you’ll go home.” Jane squeezed her frustration and sadness into her fists. “What about all the other bobbins?” she said. “Was it their destiny to die? Was that fate?” Gaius closed both hands on his cane. The dodo backed into the crowd, and the birds scattered overhead.
Behind her, Finn said, “Come on, Jane.”
“Fine,” Jane said. Thomas met her gaze as she walked away. He looked like he wanted to punch her. “I don’t care,” she said. “I’ll leave.” Finn helped her onto his back, and they took off.
“At least you get to go home,” Finn said, and Jane burst into tears.
Back at the castle, Jane and Manali ate dinner in silence. The mechanical crabs served steaming, homemade pizzas—some with extra gooey cheese, others with pepperoni and sausage, and still others stacked with pineapple and anchovies—but the dining hall was subdued. Children were leaving. Every few minutes, Gaius came in and called someone’s name: “Erica?” or “Jason? It’s time to go.” The kids said good-bye quietly and then left. Animals escorted them through the swamp and back across the plains to the bobbin ruins and the elevator home.
It was over. They had arrived at Castle Alsod ready to make friends and pass the tests, and just like that, it was time to return to the real world. Soon maybe we’ll wonder whether this was even real, Jane thought. I’ll never see Manali again. Somehow Thomas or Gaius—someone—will defeat the Raven King, and everything will go back to normal. I’ll have to go to school again, and Mrs. Alterman will still be waiting for that overdue library book. I’ll still have to take spelling tests and—
“Jane?” Manali was watching her. “You should eat something, yeah?”
“I’m not hungry.”
“It was a bad fight with Gaius?”
“Yes,” Jane said. “In front of—everyone. Gaius picked Thomas. He didn’t believe me…or he didn’t care. Anyway, maybe he’s right. Thomas did beat me. I wasn’t strong enough.”
“He kicked you,” Manali said, then more quietly, “and he did the other thing too.”
She means he killed that African girl, Jane thought.
Gaius came in and called, “Phillipe? It’s time to go. Come with me, please.”
A boy at the other end of the hall followed Gaius into the entry hall. Kids said good-bye, and when the door shut, the room was quiet again. Any one of them could be next. No more Hotland or dragons or Castle Alsod; time to go.
At the end of dinner, Finn called Manali, and she said to Jane, “Maybe I’ll see you again, yeah? Stay yourself, Jane.”
“Okay.” Jane swallowed. “Bye.”
Manali left.
Soon the dining hall was empty except for Jane and a scattering of other kids. Back in Jane’s room, Finn said, “I can keep you company tonight if you want.”
“Thank you,” Jane said. “But do you know what the worst part is? I really thought I might be the one who’s supposed to save everyone. Gaius almost had me convinced.” She got into bed.
“It’s no big deal,” Finn said. “You’ll see.”
“You’re right,” Jane said, her stomach still jittery with emotion. “I guess I’m ready to go too.”
Later, with Finn settled on the carpet, Jane stared at the gray ceiling and thought about Thomas, Gaius, Grandma Diana, the Name of the World. I’m forgetting something important, she thought. Someone told me something…She was getting sleepy—too sleepy to think anymore. I’ll remember in the morning, Jane told herself. Now, it’s too late and…
A shadow was growing on the wall, like an ink spot. Jane stared, suddenly wide awake. Her heart pounded as the shape stretched—it was coming through a crack in the stone—and she opened her mouth, but her tongue was too dry to speak. The shadow grew larger and became humanoid, with deep black holes—like skull sockets—in its head and giant, amorphous hands. It was a stickman, a sansi, like the things that had come after them at her house when the Raven King fought Grandma Diana and—
Wait. Stop, she told herself. Slow down. Breathe.
Finn! Finn, wake up!” Jane whispered, but the dragon didn’t stir. “Finn!”
The sansi oozed across the wall, and now a second shadow started to squeeze through the crack. The first sansi reached for Jane. She jerked backward and fell off the bed onto Finn. Finn said, “Wh-what?” Then he saw the sansi and shouted, “Jane, come on! Now!” They scrambled out the door, and Finn said, “Get on my back!”
Finn ran down the steps, past one door, then stumbled to a halt: another sansi was rising—slowly, like a balloon—up toward them.
“Finn…!”
“Don’t let go!” Finn shouted, and he kicked open the door with the hands painted on it.
Inside, a three-story library—with walkways and ladders around each level—led to a room with a massive table surrounded by silver suits of armor. Down a corridor of black torches, they stopped: a dead end. A stained glass window filled the wall with pictures of bobbin knights, dragons, and a girl with curly hair.
“Right,” Finn said, turning about. “It’s too bad my fire breath won’t hurt these guys. I guess we have to go back…” Three sansi entered the corridor, blocking their path. “Or not. Ideas?”
The sansi moaned liked sick children.
“The window,” Jane said. “Can we go through the window?”
But the last time, Gaius was waiting on the other side, she thought. What if he’s still asleep? He may not even know he’s in danger.
The sansi crept closer, their hands reaching.
Finn backed up. “Right,” he said. “Cover your eyes, this may—”
The window exploded.
The blast of sharp glass knocked them onto the stone, closer to the sansi, and Jane shouted, “Finn, get up! We have to—oh, no!”
Thomas was outside the window, riding a leathery beast with the face of a diamondback snake and round insect wings. The winged snake flapped closer, and Thomas jumped inside through the broken window. There was fire behind him. Outside, the swamp was burning—flames crawled up the trees and spread across the water—and the sudden rush of smoke stung Jane’s eyes. Thomas was wearing the armor—Grandma Diana’s armor—that the dodo had given him.
Jane crawled backward. The sansi were close behind them, and now Finn groaned and tried to stand. His scales were streaked with blood and broken colored glass.
“Your dragon is hurt,” Thomas said. “That’s a shame. I’m going to kill him first…”
Jane raised her right hand and yelled, “Ign
atio vate!”
When nothing happened, Thomas laughed. “I’m sorry, was that—”
She took out the envelope—One for Escape—and found a second paper with new writing on it: Aven saat.
“Aven saat!” she yelled.
“—supposed to hurt me or—?”
A bolt of lightning snapped from the paper into Thomas’s chest plate in a white blast that kicked him into the wall. The second spell paper shriveled to dust in Jane’s hand.
“Up!” Jane said to Finn. A sansi reached for her. “Come on!”
Finn staggered to his feet.
Thomas shook his head as if he’d been tackled and said, “How did you…?”
Jane jumped onto Finn’s back, and as he ran to the window, she said, “You’re not too hurt to fly, are you?”
Finn shouted, “We’ll see!”
They cleared the jagged glass. When the flying snake hissed, Finn whipped it with his tail. The dragon beat his wings faster, and they were rising up, up—through the burning trees and over the swamp. Behind them, Castle Alsod was burning. The Purple Marsh—all of it—was on fire.
“We have to go back!” Jane said. “We have to help Gaius!”
“You can’t do anything for him,” Finn said. “We are lucky to be alive, and Gaius can protect himself.”
“Where are we going?” Jane asked. The fires had faded behind them, and they were flying in complete darkness.
“To the bobbin ruins,” Finn said. “It’s the only safe place.”
Jane said, “No, we have to—”
“You can’t,” Finn said again. “Without the Name of the World, you can’t stop them. If you go back now, you’ll be killed. I’m sorry.”
I can’t just leave Gaius, Jane thought. But there was nothing she could do.
They flew all day and night, and when they reached the ruins—still full of animals—Jane thought about Grandma Diana’s spells. There’s something else, Jane thought. Something I’m forgetting. Grandma Diana gave me…She remembered the purple stone. Grandma Diana told me to smash it or something, Jane thought, but I put it under my pillow. It’s probably still there.
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