Pirate Wars
Page 28
“In our care.”
The thoughts in Jolly’s head were swirling like a swarm of mosquitos. She suspected that she was forgetting things—things she should ask now, for this might be her last opportunity to do it. But she could think of only one more question. It sounded like an accusation. “Why didn’t you help me in the Crustal Breach?”
“But we did.”
“As well as we could.”
“We sent the lantern fish.”
Jolly nodded slowly. “The Maelstrom swallowed them.”
“Yes, that is sad.”
“But when everything looked so bad, why didn’t you get me out of there?” Jolly asked. “Just like before.”
“We were not able to do that.”
“Not so close to the Maelstrom.”
“Not as long as he was alive.”
“He would have sucked up our strength and become even stronger.”
“And even if we had been able to, why should we have gotten you out of there?”
All Jolly’s limbs hurt, and the dizziness simply would not go away. Slowly she walked up to one of the spinners. “Why?” she repeated. “Because I almost died. That’s why.”
“But then who would have destroyed the Maelstrom?” asked one of the old ones disarmingly.
Jolly lowered her voice. “I didn’t destroy him. That was Munk. It was his idea and also his magic.”
“He would not have done it if you had not been with him. You brought him to reason.”
“It was all part of your fate.”
“You were the trigger.”
“Who is more important?” asked one spinner. “The gun or the cannoneer who lights the fuse?”
“The saber or the soldier who wields it?”
“The soldier or the general who leads him into battle?”
Everything was revolving around Jolly, even the words of the old women: They seemed to assume vague shapes, a whirl of syllables and letters that lulled her and made her sleepy.
“We thank you, Jolly.”
“You are exhausted and must rest now.”
She nodded numbly. “I would like to do that with my friends.”
“Farewell, Jolly. You have done more than you believe.”
“So much more.”
She was about to contradict, when she felt herself again seized by an invisible suction. Something snatched her from the ground, away from the spinners, until the three women were only pale dots in the distance, the blurry, mysterious source of the yarn. It occurred to Jolly that yarn was another word for story. And had not this story also had its source in the works of the spinners? They had created the polliwogs, also Aina, and thus in a way the Maelstrom itself. It seemed to Jolly that she’d stumbled on the trace of an even greater truth. But as so often happens when you notice that you’re very close to something important, it escapes you before you can grasp it. And so Jolly too forgot her observation and didn’t give it a second thought.
Once more the water became a narrow tunnel around her, through which she rushed away, and for the first time she understood that it was the magic veins themselves through which she moved. Straight through the yarn to one of its ends.
Griffin and Munk spoke not a word as the exhausted ray carried them back to Aelenium.
They’d spent hours circling over the sea, first where the Maelstrom had been, then in ever-larger circles. At some point Munk had observed that they were moving in the form of a spiral, or a vortex, as if the Maelstrom still held them in his power. These words made Griffin so uncomfortable that he had the ray fly in arbitrary zigzags for the remainder of their search and was slightly relieved not to feel any uncanny suction drawing them back into their old spiral course.
It was all for nothing. They hadn’t found Jolly. It had grown dark quickly, but they’d continued to search anyway, while the moon transformed the sea into a landscape of gray peaks and deep black shadow valleys.
They would probably have flown on until the next day and even afterwards, but soon it had become clear to them that the exhausted ray wouldn’t carry them much longer. It had spent many hours in the tumult of the battle and had scarcely any time to rest before Griffin had flown to the Maelstrom. But now it had finally reached the end of its strength.
“It will crash if we don’t turn around,” Griffin said, and Munk wordlessly agreed with him. They would not find Jolly.
Now, quite a while later, they were approaching the fog ring. At first sight it looked as if nothing had changed—if there hadn’t been the innumerable floating bits of wreckage. Sometimes they caught sight of corpses in the water and girded themselves for a picture of horrors that might await them on the other side of the fog.
When the mist thinned, it was worse than their worst expectations. The sight of the devastated coral cliffs was dreadful, a white-gray landscape of ruin, which reminded Griffin of the fissured lava flows on the flanks of the volcanoes rising on some Caribbean islands. But the most terrible thing was that nowhere in this wasteland did he see any people. He’d expected that they would be strolling through the ruins singly or in groups, searching for survivors or things that were still useful. But the cliffs were empty, completely desolate.
Only when they came closer did he see in the moonlight that the upper third of the city had remained unharmed. There stood undamaged houses, towers, and palaces; streets and squares were spanned by filigreed bridges, as they’d been before; and the glowing points flickering at many places revealed themselves to be campfires around which numerous people crowded.
Munk said nothing the whole time, and when Griffin spoke to him, only a few disconnected words came from him in answer. Munk had probably hoped the destruction of the Maelstrom might have kept the worst from Aelenium, but now he was painfully undeceived.
Yet they had—for all the horror, all the pain—reason enough to be grateful that the city still lay in its anchor place and that there were people who could build again what the war and the waves had destroyed.
The ray drifted, reeling slightly, over the roofs of the undamaged quarter and, in a last effort, soared up to the shelter.
Two people stood on the ledge that ran around the opening. One was the Ghost Trader. His wide, bulging mantle covered the other figure. Both appeared to be facing the new arrivals, but the ray was too exhausted to slow so close to its goal or even to hover in place. Completely worn out, it sank down into the opening and landed on the ground of the ray hall with a bump.
Stall boys hurried forward from several sides to take care of the animal. Griffin and Munk helped each other out of their belts before the men reached them. Both were just as exhausted as the ray, and Griffin’s wounds were throbbing painfully, as if they’d become infected. He hadn’t lost much blood, but his shirt was sticking crustily to the wounds, and they were sore and stung as he made the difficult effort to stay on his feet.
Munk saw him stumble and tried to hold him, but then the two of them fell and remained sitting wearily on the ground. Griffin buried his face in his hands.
“Griffin, my boy.” The voice of the Ghost Trader penetrated the fog of self-reproach and grief that had settled around Griffin. “I’m glad you’re here with us again.”
Griffin took his hands down and looked at the one-eyed man. The two parrots sat on his shoulders with heads tilted. Numbly he wondered why the Trader was smiling.
A hand was placed on Griffin’s shoulder. It belonged to Munk.
Slowly, as in a dream, Griffin turned his head. And now Munk was also smiling. What the devil—
“Griffin,” said the Trader as he stepped aside. “Look who’s here.”
Behind him the figure who’d been standing on the ledge with him came into view.
Griffin burst into tears.
Jolly dropped down next to him and kissed him.
The New World
Two days later the sea horses returned.
Jolly was standing on a balcony with Griffin and looking out over the devastated cliffs down to t
he water. The Caribbean sun burned down out of the clear sky and turned the crests of the waves below to flames. In the middle of the glittering and glistening the hippocampi were recognizable as dots, which first individually and then in a mighty herd broke through the fog wall and approached the arm of the sea star where their stalls had once been. The first ones had reached the shore and were already assembled in front of the opening in the arm that had formerly marked the gates.
“So d’Artois was right,” said Griffin. “He was sure they’d find their way back.”
Jolly had difficulty taking her eyes off the majestic sight of the hippocampus herds. She smiled sideways at Griffin. “Why aren’t you already on your way?” she asked, laughing. “You can hardly wait any longer.”
“I only want to see if Matador is there.”
“He’s sure to be.”
“Yes…I hope.” With that he turned around, gave her a quick grin over his shoulder, and disappeared into the interior of the palace. Considering that his torso was bandaged beneath his clothing, he moved quite agilely.
Jolly looked after him. His few dozen blond braids whirled behind him like a comet’s tail. She’d told him how glad she was to be with him again more than once since her return. But somehow that couldn’t even begin to express how much she really felt for him.
Sighing softly, she turned to the water again. Some of the foremost sea horses had been caught at the shore. A few saddles that had been found in workshops in the upper quarter were hastily fastened onto their backs. Now the first riders were sallying out to bring some order to the chaotic herd of hippocampi. More and more kept pushing through the fog. The animals hadn’t separated from one another during the last few days. Presumably they’d dived way down, so they’d escaped harm from the tidal wave.
“Jolly?” Soledad’s voice came from the interior of the building. She sounded concerned. “What’s going on? Griffin just ran past here as though a thousand kobalins were after him.”
Jolly went inside. Soledad was lying in her bed in her room, her left arm and right shoulder bandaged, and looking as if she wanted to shred the covers in her impatience. A deep frown of worry creased her forehead.
“God!” she groaned. “I’ve had enough of lying around here while—”
Jolly silenced her with a soothing gesture and sat down on the edge of the bed. In the last few days she and Griffin had spent a lot of time with the princess. The three had recounted their experiences, shared their excitement and astonishment, and noted how good it was for them to talk over everything, almost as if that turned the events into a mad adventure story that somebody or other made up. Munk looked in occasionally too, but he would soon withdraw into the library again, where the Ghost Trader was doing his best to initiate Munk into the secrets of Forefather’s book room. Munk had asked to be allowed to remain in Aelenium to dedicate his time to the books. Soledad commented that maybe he was just trying to dodge helping to clear up the destroyed parts of the city, but Jolly knew better: Munk had been fascinated by books and old knowledge before, and even Forefather’s death and the end of the Maelstrom hadn’t changed that. The possibilities for study in Aelenium’s library were unlimited.
The polliwogs avoided speaking about their journey to the bottom of the sea. The time would come when they’d be able to tell about it. Now, however, the memories of what they’d experienced were still too fresh.
“So,” said Soledad seriously, after Jolly had settled down beside her, “what happened? I hope you aren’t so dumb as to fight with Griffin when the two of you are just back—”
Jolly took Soledad’s hand and smilingly shook her head. “Don’t worry. Not everybody shows how very much they like someone else by quarreling from morning till night.”
“If you’re referring to that little business between Walker and me this morning, let it be said that people can like each other even if they…well, have a difference of opinion once in a while.”
“Buenaventure said that you two were growling at each other like two street curs scuffling over a bone.”
“He should know, after all.” Soledad smiled. “Anyway, that wasn’t a quarrel. But lying around in bed doing nothing drives me crazy—and poor Walker probably catches that now and then. Nevertheless, as for you and Griffin—”
“Everything is just wonderful, don’t you worry.” Jolly told her of the return of the sea horses, and the princess’s face brightened.
“Thank God. The people here have lost enough. It’s good that they at least have the hippocampi left.”
Jolly was about to reply when her gaze fell on the balcony through the open door. The sky was darkened by an echelon of flying rays diving steeply in front of the balustrade. At the same time a distant cry came up from below.
“What’s going on now?” Jolly jumped up and ran outside.
“Well?” Soledad called impatiently before Jolly got outside. “Can you see anything?”
“Just a minute, I—oh, no!”
A moment later Jolly stormed past the bed to the door, the same way Griffin had before. And almost as fast.
Soledad raised herself with an effort. “Could someone just tell me what’s going—”
Jolly stopped, one hand trembling on the door handle. Her face had turned ashy. “It’s the whale. His body just popped up out of the ocean.”
She didn’t catch up with Griffin on the way down, and when she got to the water she saw him standing in the front row and pushed her way through to him. His face was gray and tense.
She followed his gaze out to the body of the giant whale. Half a stone’s throw from shore, the body of the whale curved over the waves like an island that had just raised itself from the flood. Several rays and their riders were circling in the sky, and a sea horse rider had left the hippocampus herd and was hurrying over to Jasconius.
The whale was floating on his side. From here they could see one of his eyes, which looked dully at the sky. For a moment Jolly believed there was life in it, movement, but then she realized that it was only the reflection of the rays in the gigantic black pupil.
She put her arms around Griffin and felt how tense his body was. At first he didn’t react at all, but after a few moments he returned her embrace.
“I am so sorry,” Jolly whispered.
“I knew he was dead,” he said, his voice thick. Then he gently detached himself from her and called over to one of the sea horse riders. The first time his voice threatened to break with grief, but at the second try the rider heard him and came over. After some hesitation, the man climbed out of the saddle onto the embankment and handed the animal over to Griffin.
Jolly looked after him as he rode over to the dead whale. Paying no attention to his bandaged wounds, he slid out of the saddle into the water. A little clumsily, hindered by the tight bandage, he clambered out of the waves onto the whale’s body.
The crowd gathered on shore didn’t utter a sound. All were staring in fascination at the boy who, first on all fours, then slightly bent, moved over the massive cadaver.
Jolly jumped from the shore onto the waves. She strode over the water, reached the whale, and climbed up the smooth skin until she’d overtaken Griffin.
He was crouching beside Jasconius’s eye. His face was all wet, and she couldn’t tell if he was crying. Wordlessly she knelt beside him, took his hand, and held it during the time he needed to take leave of Jasconius. No one disturbed him, neither the men on the bank nor the ray riders, who at last turned and flew up to the refuge again.
“He was my friend, you know?” said Griffin softly after a while, not taking his gaze from the great dark eye.
“I know,” she said, swallowing. “And he certainly knew it too.”
Griffin nodded slowly. “He saved my life. And all the others’ in the city. Without him the kobalins wouldn’t…” He broke off and dropped his head.
Jolly weighed putting her arm around his shoulder and pulling him to her, but then she let it be. He’d come to her if he neede
d her. But this was his moment. His and Jasconius’s.
A sea horse was reined in not far from the whale. Captain d’Artois had his arm in a sling. He looked over at Griffin sympathetically. “No one here will forget him,” he said, so softly that it was barely audible over the murmuring surf around the dead whale, almost as if he was afraid of startling the boy in his grief.
Griffin lifted his head. The water on his face had dried, but his eyes were still red. “Jasconius was very old. And very lonely until Ebenezer came to him.” He was silent for a moment, then he said, “He knew what he was sacrificing himself for. Ebenezer showed him that there were humans who were different.”
Suddenly there came the sound of splashing and paddling from the half-open mouth of the whale, then a string of frantic gasps. Griffin started and then slid excitedly down the curve of the whale’s skull to the corner of his mouth.
Jolly followed him when she saw how his face brightened.
“Ebenezer!” he cried, and then he slid halfway over the opening and grabbed into the recess. “Ebenezer! Thank God…!”
Jolly slid next to him and seized the other arm of the older man, who was lifted, coughing and panting, out of the whale’s throat. Together they pulled him up between the gigantic teeth. D’Artois had difficulty keeping his sea horse quiet; it appeared to be just as excited as its rider.
Ebenezer stared at them dumbfounded, then Griffin fell on his neck with a joyous cry. The monk laughed. “Gently, gently, boy!” He returned the hug warmly and heartily, though feebly.
Griffin let go of him reluctantly. “We thought you were dead….”
“I was behind the door,” Ebenezer gasped out. “And then I was…swamped, when I noticed that we were moving upward…. I saw the dead boy and the…the remains of the jellyfish…and then I swam up into the light….”
Griffin embraced him again, so hard that the monk wheezed. But then his eyes fell on the lifeless eye of the whale and his face darkened again.
Helpless, Jolly looked to d’Artois. With a gentle motion he indicated that it was best to do nothing, simply to sit there and wait.