Read A Wrinkle in Time Quintet Online
Authors: Madeleine L’Engle
What the mammoth wanted of him he was not sure. But it was apparent that it meant him no harm, and that its overtures were friendly. Sandy began to stroke the shaggy head, then ran his fingers over the ivory tusks. This little beast had obviously been abused, so it was likely that it came from Tiglah’s tent. He was grateful for the company. Perhaps a mammoth, even a mangy mammoth,
would be helpful when night came, not so much helpful in the actual escape as in finding Noah’s tenthold.
“Now,” he said to the mammoth, fondling the fan-shaped ears, “if I only had a unicorn, then I could get out of here.” He stopped. Then: “Hey. I didn’t think of a unicorn before, because basically I still don’t believe in unicorns.”
Dennys, he remembered, had summoned a unicorn after Tiglah’s
father and brother had nearly killed him, dumping him into the garbage pit. It wasn’t easy for Dennys to believe in unicorns either, but when he had to, he did.
If Sandy could believe something as outrageous as that he and Dennys had actually landed in the pre-flood desert, and that they had become so close to Noah’s tenthold, especially Yalith, that they were like family, and if he could believe
that he was now petting a mammoth, why should it be hard to believe in a unicorn, even if it was what Dennys called a virtual unicorn? His mother believed in virtual particles, and his mother was a scientist who had won the Nobel Prize for discovering particles so small they were scarcely conceivable even with a wild leap of the imagination.
“What’ll I do?” he asked the mammoth, who responded
by cuddling closer to him.
If Sandy left the tent on his own, they would be lying in wait for him—Rofocale, if not Tiglah’s father and brother—and they would not hesitate to kill him. Even night would not provide enough cover, with the brilliance of the stars illuminating the oasis.
“The problem is,” he said to the Mammoth, “that I always have to see things to believe in them. But, after all,
I have seen unicorns, two of them. I have seen them, therefore I can believe in them.”
The mammoth reached with its trunk to touch, softly, the boy’s cheek. In his mind’s ear Sandy seemed to hear, “Some things have to be believed to be seen.”
“Unicorn!” he whispered, and the mammoth slipped its trunk into the palm of his hand. “Unicorn, please tend to life. Please tend to be.”
Against the darkness
of the tent came a starburst of light, and a unicorn stood, trembling, beside him.
“Oh, you
are
!” Sandy cried. “Oh, thank you!” He held out his hand. The unicorn came to him with silver steps, folded its delicate legs, and lay down, putting its head in Sandy’s lap, so that the light of the horn flowed over the scraggly little mammoth, who lifted its head gratefully. Sandy fondled the silvery
mane, soft as moonbeams. “Now what?” he asked the two disparate creatures.
The light of the horn glittered, but neither unicorn nor mammoth answered him.
“If I could fall asleep,” Sandy mused, “or stop believing in unicorns, then you would lose your tendency to life and go out, and take me with you, the way you took Dennys. The problem is that now I believe in you. And as long as I believe in
you, you’ll continue to be, won’t you?”
The unicorn nuzzled him, as affectionate as the mammoth.
“As long as I stay with you,” Sandy whispered, “I think I’m safe, because I’m absolutely certain that Tiglah couldn’t come near you, or her father or brother. But if they try to, and you go out of being, will you take the mammoth and me out of being with you? If we don’t take the mammoth, they’ll
hurt him again. So will you take us?”
It was a rather intimidating thought. He had asked Dennys how it had felt the two times he had gone out with the unicorn, and Dennys had answered that it hadn’t felt at all. But perhaps, Sandy thought, that might have been because Dennys had sunstroke and a high fever. Then he remembered Grandfather Lamech—or was it Japheth?—telling him that unicorns never
lost anybody.
He put one arm about the unicorn, the other about the mammoth, and waited. This was a far better plan than going with Tiglah, or trying to cross the desert alone.
“You see,” he said to the two creatures, who pressed confidingly against him. “When the time came for me to do something, I knew what to do, and I did it.”
He held unicorn and mammoth close.
* * *
The nephilim
gathered. Proud. Arrogant. Flickering in and out of their hosts as they spoke.
Rofocale the mosquito said, “I have put an illusion around the tent. It is on the edge of the desert at the farthest end of the oasis, but the illusion makes it look as though it is surrounded by flocks and groves.”
Eblis the dragon/lizard asked, “Are giant twins worth this much trouble?”
Rofocale answered, “I think
they know something we do not know. When I questioned the one that Tiglah caught for me, he gave evasive answers.”
Ugiel the cobra said, “There is danger in the air. The stars are drawing back. I am concerned for my baby.”
Naamah the vulture went “Kkk. We chose to be silent with El. We chose never to hear the Voice again, never to speak with the Presence.”
Ertrael the rat said, “We could ask
the seraphim.”
“Never,” said Estael the cockroach.
“But they still speak with El,” Ertrael said. “The stars still talk with them.”
“I do not care to listen to the stars,” Eisheth the crocodile pronounced.
“They might tell us,” said Rumjal the red ant, “whether or not we are in danger.”
“How can we be in danger?” Eblis asked. “We are immortal.”
“And the one we caught,” said Rofocale, “told
me that he is mortal. If he is to be believed.”
Naamah the vulture clacked his beak. “I smell that there will soon be much for us to eat.”
“How?” Rofocale demanded. “What is going to happen?”
Eblis the dragon/lizard asked, “Will someone tell me what Noah is building?”
“A good question,” said Rumael the slug.
Rofocale gave his screeching laugh. “A boat! That is what my Tiglah tells me. He
is building a boat!”
“A boat?” Eisheth the crocodile demanded. “Why on earth would he build a boat?”
Rugziel the worm asked, “Could the twin giants have told him something that we do not know?”
Rofocale said, “We need to get rid of the twin giants. Everything has been different since they came.”
“Noah reconciled with his father. Kkk,” said Naamah the vulture.
“And Lamech has died,” Estael
the cockroach agreed.
“My lovely Yalith prefers the young giants to me,” Eblis said. “They must have some strange power, to make her turn from me to such soft-skinned, wingless creatures.”
“And Noah is building a boat,” Rofocale added.
“And Matred weeps,” said Rumjal the red ant.
“We should find out,” Ugiel suggested, “whether or not they—the young giants—are truly mortal or not.”
Rofocale
screeched again. “Tiglah’s father and brother will find that out for us.”
* * *
Higgaion finally found the tent where Sandy was imprisoned, because the unicorn was there. Rofocale’s power of illusion had indeed made the tent seem to be in the middle of the oasis, had indeed altered Sandy’s scent. But the unicorn had come to the tent after the illusion was set. Higgaion sniffed. He smelled
silver, and he smelled light. He nudged Japheth excitedly.
Tentatively, Japheth pushed open the tent flap. Enough of the late-afternoon light came through the tent hole so that he could see Sandy and the unicorn, their heads together in affection. The abused mammoth was only a dark shadow under Sandy’s arm.
“Sand!”
Sandy opened his eyes. “Jay!”
The young man started to rush forward to embrace
him, then stopped short as though held by some invisible barrier. The unicorn’s light brightened.
Higgaion followed Japheth into the tent, sitting back on his haunches in surprise as he saw the mammoth who pressed closely against Sandy, blinking fearfully.
Sandy’s protective arm tightened. “It’s all right. Nobody’s going to hurt you.” Then: “Jay, how did you find me?”
“Are you all right?” Japheth
asked anxiously.
“Oh, I’m fine, but Tiglah’s father and brother want to kill me…”
“No.” Japheth touched his fingers to his tiny bow. “No, Sand.”
“And look what they’ve done to their mammoth,” Sandy said indignantly. “They’ve nearly starved him, and they’ve broken his tusks.”
“All right,” Japheth said hurriedly. “We’ll take him with us. But we’d better get out of here before they come back.”
“I think I’m safe as long as I’m with the unicorn,” Sandy said; “because they won’t be able to come near.”
Japheth smiled. “I can’t, either.” He stared at boy and unicorn. “Sand. Do you remember when I first met you and the Den in the desert, and we called unicorns, and the Den went out?”
“Of course I remember.”
“Can’t you go out with the unicorn now?”
Sandy sighed. “The problem is, Jay, that
I
believe
in the unicorn.”
The mangy mammoth suddenly pricked up its ears and started to whimper. Higgaion pushed himself up onto his feet, and Japheth swung around to see the tent flap open violently. Two small, chunky men came in, carrying spears. Tiglah’s father and brother.
“Auk! What have we here?” the older man demanded.
“A
unicorn
,” the younger man exclaimed. “And one of Noah’s sons.
Well, well.” He moved toward Sandy and the unicorn, then drew back with a sharp intake of breath. “You, young giant!” he shouted. “Come along! We want you.”
“Sorry,” Sandy said. “You can’t have me.” He looked at Japheth and the two men from Tiglah’s tent and wondered anew at how small they were. Tiglah’s father was made even shorter by his bowed legs. No wonder they had used the poisoned dart
on him. In a fair struggle, they would never have captured him.
Japheth’s pleasant features were distorted by anger. “You’ve done enough harm. Get out of here.”
The tent was so small that the three little men were close together, with Sandy, his arms still about unicorn and mammoth, near enough to draw back at the odor of the men from Tiglah’s tent.
“Auk’s nuts to you,” Tiglah’s brother said.
Japheth glanced swiftly at Sandy, then in a reflex so swift it hardly seemed motion, he drew one of the darts from his quiver and jabbed it into Sandy’s arm.
* * *
The two men from Tiglah’s tent shouted in surprise and anger. Tiglah’s father roared, “What happened?”
Where Sandy and the unicorn and mammoth had been there was only a pile of filthy skins.
Japheth replied calmly, “They went
out with the unicorn.”
Both men roared in frustration. “Call him back,” the bowlegged man said.
“Or we’ll kill you,” the younger man threatened.
“And what good will that do you?” Japheth demanded. “You’ll never get the Sand back without me.”
Tiglah’s brother snarled, deep in his throat, and lunged at Japheth with his spear, but Higgaion jumped between them, tripping the red-bearded man so
that he sprawled on the floor of the tent. He snarled up at his father, “Why didn’t you stop him?”
“Me? What could I do?”
“You let him go out with the unicorn, and our mammoth, too.”
Tiglah’s brother scrambled clumsily to his feet, hefting his spear. “Give us your father’s vineyards, then.”
“No,” Japheth said, and reached for his darts.
But the older man swooped on him with the spear, and
despite Japheth’s quick reflex, the spear cut across his ribs, and a trickle of blood slid down his side.
Higgaion lunged at the man, trumpeting in outrage.
But the two men with their spears were too much for Japheth and the mammoth. Japheth clutched his wounded side as the mammoth lunged again and was viciously kicked by Tiglah’s brother.
Suddenly a roar burst over them.
“Hungry!”
And the
manticore stuck his hideous face into the tent.
“Hungry!”
“Go away,” Tiglah’s father yelled.
In terror, Higgaion backed up, hitting the skins of the tent, which gave slightly. Japheth, trying to reach for the mammoth, saw that the skins were not pegged securely to the ground. Not many people bothered to set up their tents as well as Noah and Grandfather Lamech.
“Run, Hig, run!” Japheth commanded,
and Higgaion backed out of the tent.
“Hungry!”
The manticore’s ugly face was followed by his lion’s body and scorpion’s tail.
Japheth was the farthest of the three men from the tent flap. He reached for a dart and his tiny bow, and let a dart fly, to strike the manticore in the forehead.
“Hung—”
the manticore started, and fell, unconscious, on Tiglah’s father and brother.
Swiftly, Japheth
dropped to his knees and pushed out the opening in the rear of the tent through which Higgaion had left.
The mammoth was waiting outside, whimpering in terror but not willing to leave Japheth completely.
“Run!” Japheth shouted as he stood upright; and they ran. Ran without looking behind them. Onto the desert. And then the illusion that Rofocale had set was broken and Japheth knew exactly where
they were. They were at the far end of the oasis, the opposite end from Grandfather Lamech’s tenthold. He hardly realized that blood was streaming down his side as he hurried toward home.
* * *
Admael the camel, Adnachiel the giraffe, and Akatriel the owl left their posts and followed Japheth and the mammoth into the desert.
Japheth, running faster than he had ever run before, suddenly
felt dizzy. Everything paled. He slumped slowly onto the sand. Higgaion pushed his feet against rock to slow himself down.
Akatriel flew down to the sand beside the young man, and resumed his seraph form. “He has lost much blood. He is still bleeding.”
Adnachiel the giraffe bent his neck to look at Japheth’s wound, then lowered himself so that he could reach the torn skin with his tongue. Carefully,
thoroughly, he licked the wound.
Admael the camel galloped off.
Higgaion hunkered down beside Japheth and the giraffe, whimpering. Adnachiel continued to lick, cleaning the jagged cut the spear had made.