Authors: Catherine Fisher
Listening now, she said, “There's no one else in here, is there?”
His head turned sharply. “Of course not. Why?”
“I can hear a voice.”
He sat up, both hands on the oyster rim.
She was sure now. Someone was speaking, very far off, very faint. Someone was talking in an endless one-sided conversation, his voice modulating up and down; she could make out questions and intonation, the drone of words, the hiss of esses. Almost she felt that the words were made up of letters that had melted, that were trickling and running down the shimmering chute of the ramp, arriving here hopelessly mixed and heaped, fused into fantastic sounds.
“It's nothing.” The King looked around nervously. “Forget it.”
Words picked themselves up, put themselves together. She recognized them:
theater
,
production
â¦
terrible nuisance really, Chloe
â¦
your mum
â¦
Eyes wide, she stared at him. Then she said, “It's my father!”
Vetch crouched at the water's edge and dipped a hand in. Drawing up some of the green weed, he examined it curiously.
“Well?”
“The forest will be able to cross this. Roots will snake out under it, then undergrowth will rise and drown and rise again on the matted remains. But it will take time.” He stood, looking at the white spiral ramp of the hill.
“It's Silbury, isn't it?” Rob hugged himself. “This is the downs, lost under all this woodland. These are real places Chloe knows.”
“The Unworld is always a real place. And when Darkhenge was made, the downs were forested.” Preoccupied, Vetch rummaged through the crane-skin bag; he tipped a pile of rubbish out of itânuts, berries, a candle, the ogham sticks, the tinderbox, a scatter of ribbons and knotted threads. Quickly he scooped them up and thrust them into his pockets; then, to Rob's surprise, tossed the bag on the water.
“What are you doing?”
The poet folded his arms. “We could swim.
âI have been both flesh and fish.'
But why get wet?” He glanced back, into the trees. “Besides, the goddess may be a wolf behind us, or a pike under the surface.” He knelt, and put his face close to the rippled water. Softly he said, “I can feel you, Clare. I can hear your heartbeat.”
Rob wasn't listening. He was watching the bag as it opened, unfolded, grew to a small skin boat, its thread a trailing rope.
Vetch grabbed it and hauled it in; dragging a straight branch from the woodland, he broke the twigs off to make a pole. Then he climbed in, and held out one hand to Rob.
Rob looked up at the caer, then grasped the poet's cool hand and stepped into the boat. It rocked, and he sat very quickly.
Vetch pushed off. Watching the misty surface warily, he poled them across the crystalline lake.
The King leaped out of the shell. He said nothing. Instead they both listened.
The voice came from unknowable distances. Chloe felt it echoing and whispering through the Spiral Castle as if the whole building was an enormous ear, twisted and fine boned, and she was trapped in a tiny space at its center. Her father's voice was huge. The words seemed too big, as if she had shrunk, or the world she had left was gigantic now, and she could never grow to be a normal size there ever again.
“Make it stop,” she muttered.
The King scowled under his mask. “I can't! I told you, the three have opened a hole, a place called Darkhenge.”
“What's that got to do with my father?” She turned on him. “He sounds upset. He sounds ⦠scared.”
He tapped the smooth shell, anxious. “Well, maybe he is. He must miss you.”
She stepped forward. “Let me see him.”
“I can't.”
“You mean you won't!”
“I can't, Chloe! I don't know how.”
She put her hands over her ears. “Then make it stop! I don't want to hear him if I can't answer!”
Vetch laughed his soft laugh. Kneeling at the entrance, he upended the crane-skin bag and seeds poured out of it: hazelnuts, acorns, conkers, berries, sloes. They cascaded down as if the bag was still huge; there were far more than it could possibly contain.
Crouched above him, Rob peered down the seashell spiral. “Now what?”
“We go down.”
The poet snapped the thread shut, slung the bag over his head and shoulder, and pushed it under his dark coat. He descended three steps, the seeds rolling and crushing under his feet. Looking up, his eyes were dark. “Be ready. They'll be expecting us.”
The King said nothing, and when Chloe looked at him he was standing by the tilted lintel of the doorway, and out in the corridor something was rattling. It was slithering and tinkling down the long spiral ramp, and as she took her hands down from her ears and ran over to him it seemed to grow in size, thundering until she felt a vast boulder would roar into the chamber, an avalanche of rock that would bury them both.
“What is it?” she screamed.
He grabbed her arm and pulled her back. “They're still following! They've crossed the water.”
With a final mighty rumble the object clattered into the room, rolled across the pearly floor and lay still, inches from Chloe's feet.
She stared down at it. It wasn't huge at all.
It was a tiny black seed.
Dan's just rung; he's in his mother's car out on the downs. No sign of Rob. John's hoarse with talking, but now Katie's here. She came running in out of the rain with that blue coat around her; it was just then that the monitors showed the blip.
A small round interruption in the brainwaves.
I went to the window. The trees outside were dripping on the sill, and I leaned my forehead against the cold glass.
Reflected behind me I saw Rosa in the corridor.
I don't know what goes on inside people's minds. I've always tried to know. But there are too many defenses, too many tangles.
Too many masks.
There shall be great darkness.
There shall be a shaking of the mountain.
“T
HE
B
ATTLE OF THE
T
REES
”
T
he King was terrified. He clung to her arm. “Stop them. They'll grow. The forest will grow,” he whispered. “Stop them, Chloe!”
How could she stop them?
Every seed was sprouting. And as she watched, an acorn split, sent a pale root splintering into the smooth shell, a shoot unkinking into the air. They grew rapidly, unbelievably. Saplings of every size and species shot up, snapping the chamber floor, cracking it into tilted slabs.
She pulled him back. “Trees can't hurt you!”
“They'll attack now. Our enemies.”
“
Your
enemies.” She had to shout over the shattering of walls and roof, of leaves unfurling. One of the swiftest trees had reached the roof; with an almighty shudder the smooth mother-of-pearl broke and collapsed. Shards fell, sharp as glass.
“We're finished,” he muttered. “There's no way out. You'll have to go with them.” He stepped back, away from her, hugging himself. “Go on, Chloe. Leave me here.”
She breathed out in frustration, then tucked a stray strand of hair behind her ear. “I'm not leaving you.”
His brown eyes stared in astonishment.
“No one,” she said firmly, “treats me like a little girl. Not anymore.”
“But we're trapped!”
“Rubbish!” She slid back between the thin trunks, twisting under branches. “None of this is real. It's not happening. This is the Unworld. We can change whatever we want to.”
He had hold of her arm. “I can't. But maybe you can.”
“Me?”
“Quick, Chloe! I can hear them.”
So could she. Seeds were splitting and cracking under their feet; the intruders were running down the spiral ramp, two shadows already huge and distorted along the pearly walls.
“Give me your mask,” she snapped.
“What?”
“Give it to me!” She went to snatch it; he stopped her. His hand was cold with damp and sweat. Shaking, he undid the birch mask and held it out; underneath was another, of holly leaves and red berries like one she'd once worn to a Christmas party.
“Right. Now get behind me.”
She slipped the mask on. It was warm; the beech bark scratched her cheeks and forehead, its sappy smell rich and cloying, and at once she felt as if she was looking out from the heart of one of the trees, as if bark was growing all over and around her, closing her in, a dryad, a creature of twigs and roots. She stepped into shadow, with a sudden conviction that if she kept still no one could find her. And if she didn't speak. Because a tree had no words.
Copying her, the King crouched deep in a holly sapling. She could barely make him out herself.
She took small, tense breaths.
The footsteps raced down the spiral tunnel. Shadows grew, then paused.
A hand came around the corner, a delicate hand, burned three times on the back.
Then she saw the man.
Vetch paused warily at the foot of the curled ramp. In the pearly light his face was paler than ever, the mark on his forehead clear. He reached out and held both arms wide against the walls, blocking Rob's way. “Wait. Something's wrong.”
Over his shoulder Rob saw a room of trees. They were so closely meshed they had split the walls and ceiling and were still growing. Branches creaked with tightening pressure; in places shafts of pale moonlight glimmered down from above. Showers of dust fell, light as eggshell, and then fragments of bone white chalk, and soil.
“The roof's going to collapse,” he breathed. Then, “Where are they?”
“They're in here,” Vetch murmured. “Both of them.”
He stepped into the room, circling. Then he reached out and touched the nearest tree with his scarred hand, fingering the bark, the dusty green lichen. He looked up. “Call her, Rob. Call her name.”
Inside the mask, Chloe took a sharp breath of astonishment.
Behind the man in the dark coat was a boy. His hair was filthy with mud and his face smeared with lichen. The expensive green top and jeans were snagged and ruined. But she knew who he was.
He turned away from her.
“Chloe! It's Rob! It's all right, we're here. He can't hurt you now, Chloe! We're here to take you back.”
She didn't move. She couldn't. She felt as if she had truly rooted, grown into the ground, become a dumb, rigid thing. Her eyes flickered to the King; she could only see the holly mask. Behind its eyeholes was a gleam, barely visible. She knew he was watching her. All she had to do was speak.
All she had to do was say one word.
“They've gone!” Rob's voice was an agony, but Vetch didn't move.
“Not so, Rob.” He slid the skin bag from his coat and dipped his hand in, bringing out a thin hazel wand; he began to move into the trees with it, touching each in turn.
“If she was in here she'd answer,” Rob snapped. But there was a terrible disbelief in him, because what if it was true, that she hated him, that he was the reason she might not want to go back? For a moment he saw her as she had been for three months, askew in the bed in the nursing home, and then swinging on the swing in the garden when she'd been four or five, small, cute, her hands chubby, her fingers tiny.
He couldn't bear it; he blundered after Vetch.
Into something soft.
As the poet's wand touched the tree, it was not a tree at all, but a girl in a brown dress, a dress that trailed on the floor. Her hair was long and she wore a birch mask of peeling bark; her fingernails were sharp and painted, her hands hennaed with patterns of leaf and shade. For a moment she was a creature out of some legend; then he knew it was Chloe, and a great sob of relief went through him.
But as he grabbed her, she jerked back.
“Chloe! It's Rob!”
“I know very well who it is.” Her voice was flat and scathing.
Shocked, he reached out.
“Don't touch me, Rob,” she snapped angrily. “I don't want you here. No one asked you to come.” She folded her arms as if barely containing her fury. “You always come and spoil
everything.
”
He couldn't believe this. It stunned him. She wasn't relieved, wasn't even pleased to see him. And yet it was just like her. Like Chloe. With a cold shock he realized that something Mac had once warned him of had come true, that over the months of her coma he had made a new Chloe in his mind, a softer, friendlier Chloe, with no tempers or scorn, a Chloe that had never existed, a Chloe that he preferred to the real one.
Confused, he said, “We've come to rescue you.”
“I don't want to be rescued.”
“Yes you do. You must!”
She glared at him through the mask, an alien creature, her eyes green.
Vetch glanced around; now he reached in and hauled the King out of the holly bush. The King pulled away, then smiled sourly, brushing down his velvet clothes. “Tell them, Chloe,” he said. “Tell them you're with me.”