Golden Door Chapter 3 Separation, part 2 of 2

James found himself very near the beehive. He did not notice it at first because the bees had called it a day and gone to bed. James did not relish the idea of sleeping in the bee meadow, but he did not mind the flowers of that little meadow, and he liked being able to see the moon and the stars above. Under the trees just seemed too dark.

Besides, he told himself, his dad always said if he got lost, he should stay where he was until someone came to get him. “With my luck it will be Davey,” he said, and he settled down to get as comfortable as he could. He did not expect to sleep, because he could not seem to get his eyes or ears to close.

At that moment, David started rubbing his throat. It felt sore from calling out for his brothers and sister and he got tired of hearing no response. He had indeed doubled back, as Chris had imagined, but he went well off course. He began to think he might be getting too close to the field of grain and the giants when he heard a rustling of leaves off to one side. He hesitated, afraid of what it might be, and thought that it might be anything in this strange world; but at last he decided he had to take a chance.

“Chris? Beth? James?” He called half-heartedly, still not quite willing to commit himself. He heard the rustling again. “Beth?” He tried once more.

“Hey, Bert.” David heard the giant voice. “I found one.” David looked up. Rupert hovered over him with only two trees between them. David had imagined in the dark that the two giant legs were merely two more trees.

“Well get it.” Bert’s voice came from some distance.

“Grab it.” Knuckles sounded closer.

Rupert got to his knees and reached between the two trees as far as his arm could go, but David had already started running. He had walked for a while and rested. This was just the sort of motivation he needed to start running again.

“Can’t reach it.” He heard Rupert behind him.

“Get after it, you dolt,” Bert said, reasonably closer than before, and David started fleeing for his life. Out in the open, David would have been captured in about twenty seconds or maybe, given those three, it might have been two minutes at the most; but in the forest, the Giants could not go where the trees grew close together, so that involved going around a lot of places. As a result, they moved through the trees with even less speed than a motivated twelve-year-old, even one who tripped several times in the dark. Of course, David would have done much better if he had stopped screaming, “Giants!”

James heard the scream and he called out, for once using his loudest voice instead of his softest. “David, over here! David, I’m over here!” David turned. He recognized his brother’s voice, and never considered if it might be some monster imitating his brother. He only slowed when he recognized the dim figure in the moonlight. “Help me,” James said. He had gathered some rocks and he had an idea.

James started to throw the rocks at the bee tree. David helped, until he heard the buzzing and realized what he was doing. Then they heard the crashing through the woods from the direction David had come, and though David yelled, “No!” James threw a large stone hard enough to crack the entrance to the hive. That made the bees extremely mad, and they swarmed out. The boys ran.

James held tight to his brother’s sleeve. David nearly tore his own shirt when he realized they ran straight toward the giants and were about to be crushed underfoot. But by then, James let David pull him aside. They squirted behind some bushes and listened for a second. Sure enough, the angry bees and three Giants met in the middle. David pulled James further from the mayhem, and good thing because the language became vile and hands and stomping feet began to flail in every direction. The boys would have been crushed under one of Bert’s great sandaled feet if they had remained behind that bush.

“James, you have the sneakiest mind I know.” David whispered the compliment as they moved swiftly from the engagement. James merely smiled, glad that things worked out so well. Then they saw a light ahead, and both thought only that they needed to be quiet and careful.

Beth and Chris came from the other side when they saw the light. Both got excited by the prospect of not having to be stuck in the darkness of the woods all night, but wary of what might be making the light. It looked warm and comforting enough, but it did not appear to be firelight.

“What do you think it is?” Beth asked, even as the ground began to tremble.

“Earthquake,” Chris said flatly, as he fell to his hands and knees. For nearly five seconds, though it seemed more like five minutes, the earth shook with great violence. The children all heard trees give up the fight and fall to the ground with great crashing and crackling. Whole branches sheared off against other trees, boulders, and the earth. Fortunately, none fell near the children. James and David also saw a great burst of steam shoot up from the ground not far away, and not far, in fact, from the location of the stagnant pool. Then it ended, suddenly, and all four children breathed again. All four made up their minds to head toward the unwavering light no matter what might be there. It had not so much as blinked during that whole trembling episode.

When they arrived, James and David would have run to Beth and Chris who might also have run to the boys if not for the vision that rested between them. A woman, a real lady in a medieval dress, a queen no doubt, given her terrible, breathtaking beauty, hovered a foot or two above the ground like the banshees, but unlike the banshees, she looked purely angelic. The glow that came from her felt warm and welcoming, and without the least trace of ghost or wickedness about her. What is more, no one doubted that despite all appearances, this person seemed to be thoroughly human.

Avalon 5.9 Mythes Interruptes, part 5 of 6

The earthquake did not last long.  No one fell, and none of the horses were injured or panicked.  The people panicked a little when Alexis reported the message she sensed in the wind.

“There may be several small quakes before the big one.”

“Are you sure?” Lincoln asked.

Alexis nodded.  “We are on a fault line.”

Lockhart started shouting orders as Decker and Elder Stow rode in from the wings.

“Sukki in the middle.  Lincoln, keep her in the saddle.  Boston and Alexis out front.  Use what magic and elf sense you have.  Find us a path for hard riding.  Decker and Katie, protect the flanks, but don’t spread out.  Elder Stow, watch the rear and think of something.  Do your best.  Be prepared to stop and dismount when the ground shakes.  Go.”

Boston put her amulet away and started them at a trot.  She sensed elves up ahead, only a small way off track, but she figured they might know some elf paths that could take them out of the area much faster than she could lead them.  She mostly hoped they would not have to backtrack too much.  Even with her full concentration, she could not guarantee the route.

Boston felt something in the pit of her belly and Alexis turned to her and said, “Get down.”  Alexis turned her head and shouted.  “Get down.”

The ground started to rumble and shake.  This felt like a bigger shake than the last one.  Sukki held tight to her horse’s reins, and Lincoln yelled at her.  “Let go.  Let go.”  He had to yell it twice, and Sukki let go just in time.

A big, old and rotten tree gave up the struggle and came crashing down on the group.  Sukki jumped in one direction.  Her horse backed up in the other direction.  The tree trunk fell between them, and people gasped and shouted, but no one got hurt.

“We need to ride before the next one,” Lockhart yelled.

Lincoln held the horse, and Sukki got right up.  She looked inspired.

Boston led them toward the elves.  She sensed the elves knew of their predicament and were willing to help the travelers in any way they could.  Alexis stayed at her side, and as they came into a swampy area and slowed, she spoke.

“You’re sensing little ones ahead.  Will they help us?”

“I think so.  How did you know?”

“I was an elf, and not that long ago.”  Alexis smiled for Boston.  “You’re doing great.”

Boston returned the smile.  “I hope so,” she said, and focused on the trail.

After ten minutes, the ground began to shake again.  It was a bad one, but fortunately, they were in an open field with no trees to collapse on their heads.  The horses bucked and ran some.  The people fell to the ground and tried not to get trampled by the horses.  The sky itself appeared to shake.  Then it stopped, suddenly, and the travelers had to scramble to get to their horses.

“Go easy,” Boston instructed everyone.  “The horses are very jittery and nervous now.  Almost anything will spook them.”  And she started them moving at a gentle pace.  After a short way, Boston saw two elves and a dwarf of some sort, standing at the edge of a tree line.

“Opuker says the trail magic works best in the woods,” one of the elves shouted.  “It works on open ground, but only if you get distracted.”

“Like multiplication magic, like for the elf crackers,” Alexis said.  “It really only works, and works best when you are not looking.”

“Like the watched pot.”  Boston nodded.  Alexis was her teacher.  She could not help it.  Even if Boston fully understood travel magic and multiplication magic, Alexis still had to make a teacher-comment.  That could get annoying, but presently, Boston did not mind, and in fact, she paid little attention to the lesson being preoccupied with worry about the ground moving beneath her feet.

“So, what’s in it for me?” Opuker asked, expecting to bargain.  The second elf present carried a wooden staff, and he used it to hit the dwarf over the head.  The dwarf did not seem phased by the bonk, and everyone heard the hollow sound of his head, but he dutifully said, “Ow.  All right.  I was just getting to it.”

“Everybody down,” Alexis yelled.  “This may be the big one.”

No one argued.  The elves and the dwarf went invisible, and probably insubstantial, just in case.  Boston had not thought to do that, but then, she decided she needed to finish this journey with the others, at least human-like.  When they got home, she would have six or seven hundred years to do all the elf things she wanted and could imagine.

It hit.  It was bad, as bad as Alexis predicted.  The open field developed a small, collapsing chasm and several boulders pushed up from below in a couple of places.  Several trees in the woods ahead of them let go and crashed with great noise.  People screamed and yelled, but it was soon over.  The top of bear mountain exploded, and dust, smoke, and ash rose in a great cloud to waft over the whole countryside.

Elder Stow sat and pulled out his scanner.  He shouted to Lockhart.  “I got a screen up around us and the horses.  Wait, wait.”  He played with the controls.  “I can keep it up while we move, if we don’t move too fast.  It will let in normal atmosphere, and act like a filter for the ash and smoke.  It will also allow living organic matter and solid objects like earth and stone through so we won’t drag a bunch of weight with us.  We can try to move with it on, as I said, if we don’t move too fast.

Lockhart, Lincoln, Decker and Katie looked fine with that idea.  Sukki thought Elder Stow was the most brilliant Gott-Druk of all time.  Alexis and Boston did not pay attention.  They were too busy with the elves, trying to find Opuker.

###

The ship had not gone far to sea when the mountain blew.  The red fire lit up the afternoon, and the black cloud that followed appeared ominous.  Men panicked.  Althea grabbed her father’s hand and yelled at the steersman.

“Euphemus.  Turn toward the mountain.”  She yelled it several times, and Jason and Meleager both only glanced at Althea before they yelled the same thing.  Against his better judgment, Euphemus turned toward the mountain as the men tore down the sail.  The ship barely turned in time.  The water rose beneath the bow until the ship, like the proverbial cork on the water, rost a hundred feet in the air.  It slid down the other side, and several smaller waves followed.  By then, the black cloud obscured the coastline, and the leading edge caught the ship with the sail only part way down.  The ship spun in the water several times.  Then the cloud blotted out the sun.

“Below deck.  Below deck.” people yelled, and the crew crammed into the larder while still burning ash coated the upper deck and the whole outside of the ship with hot gray soot.  Soon enough, men had to brave it to put out several fires that broke out on the deck.  Most threw on whatever cloaks and blankets they could grab, but some were burned, several badly, and all the men became covered in smut and dust until they could hardly tell who was who.

“Make for the shore,” Jason yelled.

“Where is the shore?” Euphemus asked, as he and Heracles rigged up a steersman’s oar.

“Look for lights,” Peleus yelled, and several men echoed that phrase.  The port and starboard railings became filled with men trying desperately to pierce the cloud and glimpse something alight.

The seconds became the longest minute ever, before Asclepius shouted and pointed.  “Light.  Off the port side.”  No one else saw it, at first.  Some said his father Apollo helped him to see it, or at least they prayed that was the case.

Althea came up with a scarf around her face to filter the smoke and grit in the air.  She had tied one around her father’s face as well.

“It’s on the wrong side,” Iolaus pointed out, haveing finally come back up from below.  “It should be to starboard.”

“Maybe it is an island,” Heracles suggested.

“Maybe we got turned around,” Althea said, under her breath.  Men could see some light by then, and the ship headed for it, but it looked like torchlight.  Only a dozen on each side got down to row, so they drew slowly toward the light, in case it was another ship.