The Shadowed Manse
Page 4
She glanced at his hand, and then back at the shades. Grimacing, she picked up her pace. “I’ll manage.”
It was a good thing the house was so close.
Arthur would have sworn that he’d actually seen this cottage before. But then, there were loads of little houses like it in travel brochures for European villages. Grandma Nelson was a travel agent; she kept old brochures stacked everywhere. That had to be why it seemed so familiar.
Together, they splashed across the knee-deep stream and trudged up onto the opposite bank.
“You know,” Morgan said, “I did ask you if you wanted to chat at lunch one day.”
At first he thought she was insane, trying to talk while they were fleeing the shades. But maybe it was better to talk than think about the demonic shadow men chasing him. Or maybe she was crazy enough to think that this was a good time to talk.
“Oh, I remember that,” he replied. “I said that I’d like to chat, but you didn’t say anything. After several minutes of you staring at your screen, I asked you if you liked Ms. Casey's class, and you shot me a look and never said anything else.”
“I meant chatting online, doofus. But when you didn't pull out a phone or a computer, I figured you were just dumb … or you weren’t interested.” She sighed. “I hate small talk, especially in person. Can’t do it. Messaging, on the other hand, is the perfect form of communication.
Arthur filed that one away in the Morgan-sure-is-strange folder. No one likes small talk, but who couldn’t do it? Especially with someone they consider a friend? On the other hand, this was the most he’d ever heard Morgan speak.
He glanced back at the shades and nervously kept talking. “Well, I can’t chat online anyway. I don't own a computer.”
She stopped. “Wait — you what?!”
He waved her on, and she started jogging forward again. “All I've got is a drug-dealer phone that's out of minutes … again. So I can’t really text, either.”
“A drug-dealer phone?”
“Yeah, that's what my cousin Derek calls it. You know, a cheap pay-as-you-go phone? You pick one up at Wal-Mart, and it already has minutes on it, and the number’s not attached to your name, so if you’re a criminal you can be anonymous and —”
“Yes, I know what the term means … it’s just … well, you’re not a drug dealer.”
“Obviously. Not everyone that uses one is.”
Morgan eyed him suspiciously.
“I live with my grandma,” he said, panting. It was hard to run and talk at the same time. “We don’t have a lot of money, and she's cheap. She thinks computers and mobile phones are a fad, that people will go back to typewriters and landlines.”
Morgan’s eyes went wide and her brow furrowed. “That’s — that’s —”
“Insane?”
“Criminally. How can she believe something that ridiculous?”
“Because she’s old-fashioned, and she wants to believe it.”
“Well, your technological status is unacceptable.”
“Um … okay … thanks.”
“When we get back, you're getting some of my hand-me-down tech. I’ve got an aging MacBook Air you can have.” Slowing for a few awkward, limping steps, she gasped for breath. “I upgraded to a Pro. And you can have this iPhone after I get the screen repaired.”
A MacBook and an iPhone?! Holy crap, that was generous. “Morgan … that's really super nice of you. Seriously. It’s awesome.”
“Nice has nothing to do with it — it just ain't right. And I’ve got four laptops. Besides, we’re friends. That’s what friends do, right?”
“Yeah.” Sure. Whatever. Actually … no, not really. Geez, Morgan was without a doubt the weirdest person he knew.
They reached the house. He looked back at the shades. They were already crossing the stream, and it wasn’t slowing them down at all.
Morgan heaved the door open and ducked inside.
Arthur was right behind her, but when he neared the doorway, a new shade leapt up out of the ground and reached for him. He tried to spin away, but the shade grasped his arm. Its touch — like ice and fire — burned through Arthur’s shirtsleeve and seared deep into his skin. He should have screamed, but he didn’t have the will for it. His emotions drained away … his mind went blank … the shade reached its other hand toward his throat … he couldn’t even make himself try to stop it.
Morgan grabbed him by his belt and yanked him toward the cottage. Her touch brought him back to his senses. He wrenched his arm away from the shade, and flung himself inside.
Morgan shouldered into the door. It closed with a thundering BOOM! — just as the dark form surged into the doorway. They clicked all five deadbolts into the locked position and stepped back.
Without even looking around at the inside of the house — if something jumped out and attacked him now, he’d just have to die — Arthur breathed a sigh of relief and clutched at his arm. A blister was already puckering where the shadow had touched him, though it didn’t hurt as much as he would’ve thought.
“If a burn doesn’t hurt at first, that means it’s bad, right? Because the nerves have been damaged …”
Morgan didn’t answer; she was staring into the cottage with a dumbfounded expression. “It — it was so small outside.”
Great, what now? Arthur spun around — oh! This was now officially the most ridiculous day ever. Shadow men … an angelic girl asking him to become the Multiversal Paladin … a cottage that appeared out of nowhere … and now … and now this. What had looked like a quaint cottage from the outside was actually an enormous mansion on the inside. It was easily four times the size of Aunt Carolyn’s house, and that was just based off what he could see. There was probably more to it, maybe much more. Strangely, the windows they had seen from outside weren’t visible from the inside; there were no windows at all.
“This … this just can’t be happening,” Morgan whispered. “It violates every law of physics.”
“Well, then it must be magic,” Arthur replied numbly.
Morgan shook her head. “There’s no such thing. There’s a logical explanation. There has to be.”
As Arthur looked around the room, a chill ran across his skin, triggered by a sense of déjà vu. This place seemed familiar, but in a hazy way, as if he'd dreamed about it many times … only it was too real to have been a dream. “You know, I think I've been here before. A long time ago.”
The main room had giant fireplaces as tall as a man to either side, with unlit firewood piled inside. Tapestries draped the stone walls. An enormous, multicolored rug covered the wood floor. High-backed chairs, ottomans, frumpy couches, and coffee tables were spread around the room. Dust coated the furniture; cobwebs were everywhere. A massive chandelier hung from the incredibly high ceiling, like a cloud of raindrops suspended in midair, reflecting the flames from the gas lanterns on the walls. Only about half of the lanterns were lit, which made the enormous room gloomy. Shadows seemed to lurk in every corner. Arthur's eyes darted around; he expected a shadow man to come out of one of the pools of darkness at any moment.
Staircases, one to each side, led to a loft above the back of the room. Centered beneath the loft was an arched set of double doors twelve feet across. A weird, white-glowing symbol with a round middle and three arms that curled off of it floated in front of the doorway.
“Check that out,” Arthur said, pointing at the foot-wide symbol. “Looks like a magic rune.”
“It’s shaped like a triskelion,” Morgan replied. “I’m sure there’s a logical explanation for why it’s — ugh, what is that?” Her eyes had drifted to the left. Arthur followed her gaze …
The giant head of a strange creature that looked like an emerald green insect with blazing yellow eyes and fur-covered antlers stuck out horrifically above the mantel over the right fireplace. That image triggered Arthur’s memory.
“I have been here before,” he said.
The shadow men screeched and beat against the door outs
ide. The hinges rattled — the deadbolts groaned — the timbers bulged and creaked.
“That door's not going to hold them for long,” Morgan said. “We've got to get out of here. Maybe there's a back door and we can slip away without —”
“No,” Arthur said with certainty. “We'll be safe here.”
“But the door,” Morgan argued.
“It'll hold. The house came here for me.”
The shrieks grew louder; the door quivered.
“What makes you say that?” Morgan asked. “And how do you know it’s safe?”
“I know this place,” he replied.
There was a picture he kept in a drawer at home. In it, his parents were standing together with him, no older than two or three, perched on his dad's shoulder. A huge smile was plastered on his face. He had always thought the insect head over them was a trick of the light, because the picture was blurry and the colors were off, with everything a bit too green. He had been certain it was a deer's head, nothing more.
Faint memories bubbled up, scenes that were little more than impressions: the giant fireplaces, the couches, the insect head on the wall, a shield embossed with a sunburst — the same one from the picture with his mother — a library packed with books, a room with toy guns and gleaming swords, a cat so big he could ride it, and a big wolf, too. He turned to the mantel on the right side. Sure enough, there was the shield, and a long, thin sword was mounted beneath it. Was there a room with toy weapons? Was there actually a cat and a wolf here that were so big someone could ride them?
“I was here when I was little, before I was old enough to start school,” he said, “when my mom was still alive … before my dad left me with my grandparents. I didn't remember it before, but I do now. I think … I think this is my home.”
A strong pulse thumped three times in his chest, like suddenly an extra heart was beating, a heart three times bigger than normal. The house began to vibrate and hum, as if the earth quaked beneath them. Bright colors swirled throughout the house. A wave of dizziness hit Arthur. He felt as if he were yanked upward, outward, sideward, and every-which-wayward — even into directions that he hadn't known existed until now.
Chapter Five
A Dark Gem Glitters
For a few moments, Arthur felt like he was riding an out-of-control tilt-a-whirl at the county fair — but the sensation stopped abruptly, and he stumbled into Morgan.
She shoved him away. “Get off me!”
“I didn’t mean to!”
“That’s twice you’ve run into me now. Do it again and —”
“And you’ll what?” Arthur snapped. He held up his arm. “Burn me? Cut me? You don’t scare me, Morgan. You’re the least of my problems.”
Morgan folded her arms and huffed.
Arthur groaned, and then muttered, “I’m sorry I stumbled into you.”
She made no reply.
“Morgan, this is when you’re supposed to tell me you’re sorry for shoving me.”
“But I’m not,” she countered.
“I only stumbled into you because I was dizzy. It was like everything was spinning and bouncing. Did you —”
“I felt it … and then I saw all these colors swirling around me … and then — and then you ran into me — again.”
“Yeah, and just before all that started, it was like I had a second heart pounding in my chest.”
She cocked an eyebrow. “Well, I didn’t feel that.”
Arthur held out his arms as if trying to balance himself and closed his eyes. He pursed his lips, took a few deep breaths, and said, “I can’t tell if we’re still moving.”
Morgan rolled her gray-blue eyes. “We can’t actually be moving. Houses don’t move, genius.”
“They aren’t normally bigger on the inside either, are they? Have you noticed the shades aren’t pounding on the door anymore?”
“Maybe they gave up.”
“Maybe we’ve traveled away from Earth,” he argued. “We’d have to open the door to find out.”
“Can’t do that,” she said. “The door stays closed until we figure out all this.”
“Maybe we teleported,” Arthur suggested. “You know, like in —”
Morgan slapped her hands against her ears. “Argh!”
Arthur thought she was about to throw a tantrum, like a four-year-old. But she composed herself, took deep breaths, and chanted something so softly he couldn’t understand the words. Whatever worked for —
Arthur doubled over as pain spiked through his shade-burned arm. He fought to control the sensation, trying to think of the rest of his body, instead of the burned place on his arm. But that didn’t do much good. The cuts from the glass door were starting to hurt more now; he was oozing blood on his arms, face, and back; and he still had a shard of plastic poking out from his chest. He was actually surprised that injury didn’t hurt more.
“You okay?” Morgan asked.
“I will be … I think. That shade burned me bad, and I was already messed up.”
“What happened to you before the shades found you? Because you didn’t get cut up from them — they would’ve burned you.” Her eyes narrowed; she pointed at his chest. “And what’s that poking out through your shirt?”
“Oh, that. It’s a device that fits over my heart. It got broken, and this plastic shard poked out. It doesn’t hurt as much as you’d think, but it is getting worse. I’m starting to hurt all over.”
“You’re running out of adrenaline.” She stepped forward and peered at the piece of plastic. “That’s gross.”
“Thanks.”
“Are you going to die?”
“I don’t think so … but I actually don’t know what the device does.”
“How can you not know what it does?”
“My doctor won’t tell me. He actually pretends not to have a clue it exists. And I don’t think my grandma knows, or else she’s in league with the doctor.”
“You’re joking, right?”
“Dead serious. It’s not like I haven’t tried to find out. No one will tell me anything.”
“Curious,” she responded. “Bet it has something to do with your genetic condition.”
“My — my genetic condition?”
“Well, you are a freak, after all.”
“What the heck is wrong with you?! I am not a freak.”
She smirked and nodded. “Yeah, you kinda are.”
Arthur turned red in the face, anger bubbling up inside of him. The pain started to fade a bit.
She held up her hands. “Geez, don’t be so sensitive about it. That’s …” She turned away. Was she blushing? Nah, couldn’t be. “That’s my favorite thing about you.”
“It — it is? But I’m not that different from anyone else …”
“Oh, come on. How many people have you seen with Native American skin, pure white hair, and gold eyes?”
“Not many,” he snapped. He was sensitive about his appearance. When he was younger, the other kids had teased him about it. Sometimes they still talked about it, only they whispered behind his back when they didn’t think he could hear. Everyone had stopped teasing him directly, except Derek, because his outbursts scared them.
“I was just thinking that whatever’s wrong with your heart is probably connected to your unusual appearance. Maybe something you inherited, you know?”
His anger subsided. “Oh. Well, you could have said so.”
“I did,” Morgan replied impatiently.
“My dad had white hair and gold eyes and the same skin as me. It’s a family trait.”
“But not your mom?”
“She was very pretty, pale skin, red hair. I didn’t take after her at all.”
“Did your dad have a plate over his chest?”
“I don’t know. He disappeared when I was four, not long after my mom died. All I know is what Grandpa Nelson told me — that the device keeps me alive, but that my heart is fine. Of course, now that it’s broken …”
“T
hat doesn’t make any sense,” Morgan replied.
Arthur shrugged. “He said he was going to tell me about it when I got older, but he died.”
“So how come you’re a mess?” Morgan asked. “And what broke the plate? I know the shadow men didn’t do that.”
“I … I crashed through a glass door — before the shadow men — it’s not really —”
“You were fighting with your cousin?”
“Derek. Yeah.”
“You do that a lot?”
“Yeah.”
“I guess it’s not surprising,” she said, “given how you act at school, being a jerk and all.”
“Hey!”
“Look, since we’re friends and we’re having to talk like … like …”
“Normal people?”
“Ugh, yes. Arthur, you should know that I just say things straight out.”
“I noticed.”
Her voice turned defensive. “Well, it’s … it’s just what I do, okay?”
“Okay,” he answered. He clearly wasn’t the only one who was touchy.
“Now, you also seem to actually know something about the shadows,” she said accusatively, “and you knew this house might be here. There’s something you’re not telling me.”
“Well, there was —”
Out of the corner of his eye, he spotted a purple glimmer. Above and to the left, floating right under the crystal chandelier.
“Did you see that?”
“See what?” Morgan asked.
“There it is again!”
The glimmer came from a strange, fist-sized gem so dark a purple that it was nearly black. As he pointed at it, the gem flickered several more times. Oddly, those flickers were the only light it gave off. Whatever the gem was made of, it didn't reflect light from the lanterns.
“What do you think that's about?” Arthur asked. “It wasn't flickering before, was it? I didn’t even notice it up there. I wonder why —”
“We've got a problem.” Morgan was glancing all around the room with fear etched onto her face. “Shadows!”
From the pools of darkness Arthur had already examined carefully, shadow men were now emerging — moving slowly — taking shape as they went.