Authors: Brandon Mull,Brandon Dorman
Tags: #Science Fiction, #Fiction, #Juvenile Fiction, #General, #American, #Magic, #Fantasy, #Fantasy fiction, #Children: Young Adult (Gr. 7-9), #Action & Adventure, #Fantasy & Magic, #& Magic, #Ages 9-12 Fiction, #Children's Books, #Fairies, #Brothers and sisters, #Family, #Siblings, #Good and evil, #Family - Siblings, #Multigenerational, #Grandparents, #Family - Multigenerational, #Connecticut, #Authors, #Grandparent and child
hot chocolate. Lena left the room as Grandpa took a
seat behind his desk.
I am impressed how quickly you solved my puzzle, he
said, taking a sip from his mug.
You
wanted
us to drink the milk? Kendra said.
Assuming you were the right kind of people. Frankly, I
don’t know you that well. I hoped that the kind of person
who would take the trouble to solve my little puzzle would
be the kind of person who could handle the notion of a
preserve full of magical creatures. Fablehaven would be too
much to swallow for most people.
Fablehaven? Seth repeated.
The name the founders gave this preserve centuries
ago. A refuge for mystical creatures, a stewardship passed
down from caretaker to caretaker over the years.
Kendra tried the hot chocolate. It was superb! The flavor
made her think of the rosebud chocolates.
What do you have besides fairies? Seth asked.
Many beings, great and small. Which is the true reason
the woods are off-limits. There are creatures out there
much more perilous than venomous snakes or wild apes.
Only certain orders of magical life forms are generally permitted
in the yard. Fairies, pixies, and such. Grandpa took
another sip from his mug. You like the hot chocolate?
It’s wonderful, Kendra said.
Made from the same milk you sampled in the garden
today. Same milk the fairies drink. Just about the only food
they’ll eat. When mortals drink it, their eyes are opened to
an unseen world. But the effects wear off after a day. Lena
will prepare you a cup every morning so you can stop stealing
from the fairies.
Where does it come from? Kendra asked.
We make it special in the barn. We have some dangerous
creatures in there, too, so it’s still off-limits.
Why’s everything off-limits? Seth complained. I’ve
been a long way into those woods four times and I’ve
always been fine.
Four times? Grandpa said.
All before the warning, Seth amended hastily.
Yes, well, your eyes were not yet opened to what truly
surrounded you. And you were fortunate. Even when you
were blind to the enchanted creatures populating the forest,
there are many places you could have ventured into
from which you would not have returned. Of course, now
that you can see them, the creatures here can interact with
you much more readily, so the danger is much greater.
No offense, Grandpa, but is this really the truth?
Kendra asked. You’ve told us so many versions of why the
woods are forbidden.
You saw the fairies, he said.
Kendra leaned forward. Maybe the milk made us hallucinate.
Maybe they were holograms. Maybe you just keep
telling us whatever you think we’ll believe.
I understand your concern, Grandpa said. I wanted
to protect you from the truth about Fablehaven unless you
sought it out for yourselves. It is not the kind of information
I wanted to thrust upon you. That is the truth. What
I’m telling you now is the truth. You’ll have ample opportunity
to confirm my words.
So the animals we saw at the pond were actually other
creatures, like how the butterflies were fairies, Kendra
clarified.
Most assuredly. The pond can be a hazardous place.
Return there now, and you would find friendly naiads beckoning
you near the water in order to pull you under and
drown you.
That’s so cruel! Kendra said.
Depends on your perspective, Grandpa said, spreading
his hands. To them, your life is so ridiculously short
that to kill you is seen as absurd and funny. No more tragic
than squashing a moth. Besides, they have a right to punish
trespassers. The island at the center of the pond is a shrine
to the Fairy Queen. No mortal is permitted to tread there.
I know of a groundskeeper who broke that rule. The
moment he set foot on the sacred island, he transformed
into a cloud of dandelion fluff, clothes and all. He scattered
on the breeze and was never seen again.
Why would he go there? Kendra asked.
The Fairy Queen is widely considered the most powerful
figure in all fairydom. The groundskeeper had a desperate
need and went to plead for her assistance.
Apparently she was not impressed.
In other words, he had no respect for what was off-limits,
Kendra said, giving Seth a meaningful look.
Precisely, Grandpa agreed.
The queen of the fairies lives on that little island?
Seth asked.
No. It is merely a shrine meant to honor her. Similar
shrines abound on my property, and all can be dangerous.
If the pond is dangerous, why does it have a boathouse?
Kendra asked.
A previous caretaker of this preserve had a fascination
with naiads.
The dandelion guy? Seth asked.
A different guy, Grandpa said. It’s a long story. Ask
Lena about it sometime; I believe she knows the tale.
Kendra shifted in the oversized chair. Why do you live
in such a scary place?
Grandpa folded his arms on the desk. It’s only
frightening if you go where you don’t belong. This entire
sanctuary is consecrated ground, governed by laws that
cannot be broken by the creatures who dwell here. Only on
this hallowed soil could mortals interact with these beings
with any measure of safety. As long as mortals remain
within their boundaries, they are protected by the founding
covenants of this preserve.
Covenants? Seth asked.
Agreements. Specifically, a treaty ratified by all the
orders of whimsical life forms who dwell here that affords a
measure of security for mortal caretakers. In a world where
mortal man has become the dominant force, most creatures
of enchantment have fled to refuges like this one.
What are the covenants? Kendra asked.
The specific details are complex, with many limitations
and exceptions. Speaking broadly, they are based on
the law of the harvest, the law of retribution. If you do not
bother the creatures, they will not bother you. That is what
affords you so much protection when you are unable to see
them. You can’t interact with them, so they generally
behave likewise.
But now we can see them, Seth said.
Which is why you must use caution. The fundamental
premises of the law are mischief for mischief, magic for
magic, violence for violence. They will not initiate trouble
unless you break the rules. You have to open the door. If
you harass them, you open the door for them to harass you.
Hurt them, they can hurt you. Use magic on them, they
will use magic on you.
Use magic? Seth said eagerly.
Mortals were never meant to use magic, Grandpa
said. We are nonmagical beings. But I have learned a few
practical principles that help me manage things. Nothing
you would find very remarkable.
Can you turn Kendra into a toad?
No. But there are beings out there who could. And I
would not be able to change her back. Which is why I need
to finish this thought: Breaking the rules can include trespassing
where you are not allowed. There are geographic
boundaries set where certain creatures are allowed and certain
creatures, including mortals, are not permitted. The
boundaries function as a way to contain the darker creatures
without causing an uproar. If you go where you do not
belong, you could open the door to vicious retribution from
powerful enemies.
So only good creatures can enter the yard, Kendra
said.
Grandpa became very serious. None of these creatures
are good. Not the way we think of good. None are safe.
Much of morality is peculiar to mortality. The best creatures
here are merely not evil.
The fairies aren’t safe? Seth asked.
They aren’t out to harm anyone, or I wouldn’t allow
them in the yard. I suppose they are capable of good deeds,
but they would not normally do them for what we would
consider the right reasons. Take brownies, for instance.
Brownies don’t fix things to help people. They fix things
because they enjoy fixing things.
Do the fairies talk? Kendra asked.
Not much to humans. They have a language all their
own, although they rarely speak to each other, except to
trade insults. Most never condescend to use human speech.
They consider everything beneath them. Fairies are vain,
selfish creatures. You may have noticed I drained all the
fountains and the birdbaths outside. When they are full,
the fairies assemble to stare at their reflections all day.
Is Kendra a fairy? Seth asked.
Grandpa bit his lip and stared at the floor, obviously
trying to choke back a laugh. We had a mirror outside
once and they flocked around it, Kendra said, studiously
ignoring both the comment and the reaction. I wondered
what the heck was going on.
Grandpa regained his composure. Exactly the sort of
display I was trying to avoid by draining the birdbaths.
Fairies are remarkably conceited. Outside of a sanctuary
like this one, they won’t even let a mortal glimpse them.
Since they consider looking at themselves the ultimate
delight, they deny the pleasure to others. Most of the
nymphs have the same mentality.
Why don’t they care here? Kendra asked.
They still care. But they can’t hide when you drink
their milk, so they have reluctantly grown accustomed to
mortals seeing them. I have to laugh sometimes. The fairies
pretend not to care what mortals think about them, but try
giving one a compliment. She’ll blush, and the others will
crowd in for their turn. You would think they’d be embarrassed.
I think they’re pretty, Seth said.
They’re gorgeous! Grandpa agreed. And they can be
useful. They handle most of my gardening. But good? Safe?
Not so much.
Kendra swallowed the last of her hot chocolate. So if
we don’t go into the woods or the barn, and don’t bother
the fairies, we’ll be fine?
Yes. This house and the yard around it is the most protected
location in Fablehaven. Only the gentlest creatures
are allowed here. Of course, there are a few nights a year
when all the creatures run amuck, and one of those is coming
up. But I’ll tell you more about it when the time
comes.
Seth scooted forward in his chair. I want to hear about
the evil creatures. What’s out there?
For the sake of your ability to sleep at night, I’m going
to keep that to myself.
I met that weird old lady. Was she really something
else?
Grandpa gripped the edge of the desk. That encounter
is a frightening example of why the woods are forbidden. It
could have been disastrous. You ventured toward a very