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
It’s for your own good, Dale said. Part of the idea is
that telling you might make you scared. The other part
is that telling you might make you even more curious.
If you tell me, I promise I’ll stop being curious.
Dale shook his head. What makes you think you can
keep that promise?
I can’t possibly get more curious than I already am.
Not knowing anything is the hardest.
Well, fact of the matter is, I can’t give a very satisfying
answer to your question. Have I seen strange things,
frightening things, in my time here? You bet. Not just on
festival nights. Have I stolen a peek out the window on a
festival night? A time or two, sure. But I learned to quit
looking. People aren’t meant to have things like that in
their minds. Makes it hard to sleep. I don’t look anymore.
Neither does Lena, neither does your grandfather, neither
does your grandmother. And we’re adults.
What did you see?
How about we change the subject?
You’re killing me. I have to know!
Dale stopped and faced him. Seth, you only think you
want to know. It seems harmless to know, walking under a
clear blue sky on a fine morning with a friend. But what
about tonight, alone in your room, in the dark, when the
night outside is full of unnatural sounds? You might regret
me putting a face to what is wailing outside the window.
Seth swallowed. He looked up at Dale, eyes wide.
What kind of face?
Let’s leave it at this. To this day, when I’m out and
about after dark, I am sorry I looked. When you’re a few
years older, a day will come when your grandfather will give
you an opportunity to look out the window on a festival
night. If you start feeling inquisitive, postpone your curiosity
until that moment. If it were me, if I could go back, I’d
skip looking altogether.
Easy to say after you looked.
Not easy to say. I paid a heavy price to say it. Many
sleepless nights.
What can be so bad? I can imagine some scary things.
I thought the same thing. I failed to appreciate that
imagining and seeing are two very different things.
If you already looked, why not look again?
I don’t want to see anything else. I’d rather just guess
at the rest. Dale started walking again.
I still want to know, Seth said.
Smart people learn from their mistakes. But the real
sharp ones learn from the mistakes of others. Don’t pout;
you’re about to see something impressive. And it won’t
even give you nightmares.
What?
See where the road goes over that rise?
Yeah.
The surprise is on the far side.
You’re sure?
Positive.
It better not be another fairy, Seth said.
What’s the matter with fairies?
I’ve already seen about a billion of them and also they
turned me into a walrus.
It’s not a fairy.
It’s not like a waterfall or something? Seth asked
suspiciously.
No, you’ll like it.
Good, because you’re getting my hopes up. Is it dangerous?
It could be, but we should be safe.
Let’s hurry. Seth dashed up the rise. He glanced back
at Dale, who continued walking. Not a great sign. If the
surprise were dangerous, Dale would not want him running
ahead.
At the top of the rise Seth halted, staring down the
gentle slope on the far side. Not a hundred yards away, a
huge creature was wading through a hayfield wielding a
pair of gigantic scythes. The hulking figure slashed down
wide swaths of alfalfa at a relentless pace, both scythes hissing
and chiming without pause.
Dale joined Seth atop the rise. What is it? Seth
asked.
Our golem, Hugo. Come see.
Dale left the cart track and started across the field
toward the toiling goliath. What’s a golem? Seth asked,
trailing after him.
Watch. Dale raised his voice. Hugo, halt!
The scythes stopped cutting in mid-stroke.
Hugo, come!
The herculean mower turned and jogged toward them
with long, loping strides. Seth could feel the ground vibrate
as Hugo approached. Still clutching the scythes, the massive
golem came to a halt in front of Dale, looming over
him.
He’s made of dirt? Seth asked.
Soil, clay, and stone, Dale said. Granted the semblance
of life by a powerful enchanter. Hugo was donated
to the preserve a couple hundred years ago.
How tall is he?
Over nine feet when he stands up straight. Mostly he
slouches closer to eight.
Seth gawked at the behemoth. In form he looked more
apelike than human. Aside from his impressive height,
Hugo was broad, with thick limbs and disproportionately
large hands and feet. Tufts of grass and the occasional dandelion
sprouted from his earthen body. He had an oblong
head with a square jaw. Crude features resembled nose,
mouth, and ears. The eyes were a pair of vacant hollows
beneath a jutting brow.
Can he talk?
No. He tries to sing. Hugo, sing us a song!
The wide mouth began to open and close, and out
rumbled a series of gravelly roars, some long, some short,
none of them bearing much resemblance to music. Hugo
cocked his head back and forth, as if swaying to the
melody. Seth tried to stifle his laughter.
Hugo, stop singing.
The golem fell silent.
He isn’t very good, Seth said.
About as musical as a landslide.
Does it embarrass him?
He doesn’t think like we do. Doesn’t get happy or sad
or angry or bored. He’s like a robot. Hugo just obeys commands.
Can I tell him to do stuff?
If I order him to obey you, Dale said. Otherwise he
just listens to me, Lena, and your grandparents.
What else can he do?
He understands a lot. He performs all sorts of manual
labor. It would take quite a team to match all the work he
does around here. Hugo never sleeps. If you leave him with
a list of chores, he’ll labor through the night.
I want to tell him to do something.
Hugo, put down the scythes, said Dale.
The golem set the scythes on the ground.
Hugo, this is Seth. Hugo will obey Seth’s next command.
Now? asked Seth.
Say his name first, so he knows you’re addressing him.
Hugo, do a cartwheel.
Hugo held out his palms and shrugged.
He doesn’t know what you mean, Dale said. Can
you do a cartwheel?
Yeah.
Hugo, Seth is going to show you a cartwheel.
Seth put up his hands, lunged sideways, and did a cartwheel
with sloppy form. Hugo, Dale said, obey Seth’s
next command.
Hugo, do a cartwheel.
The golem raised his arms, lurched to one side, and
completed an awkward cartwheel. The ground trembled.
Pretty good for a first try, Seth said.
He duplicated yours. Hugo, when you do a cartwheel,
keep your body straighter and aligned on a single plane,
like a wheel turning. Hugo, do a cartwheel!
This time Hugo executed a nearly perfect cartwheel.
His hands left prints in the field. He learns fast, Seth
exclaimed.
Anything physical, leastways. Dale put his hands on
his hips. I’m sick of walking. What do you say we let Hugo
take us to our next stop?
Really?
If you’d rather walk we can always-
No way!
* * *
Kendra used a hacksaw to separate another pumpkin
from the vine. Further down the long trough of soil, Lena
was cutting a large red one. Nearly half the greenhouse was
devoted to pumpkins, big and small, white, yellow, orange,
red, and green.
They had arrived at the greenhouse by a faint trail
through the woods. Aside from the pumpkins and plants,
the glass structure contained a generator to power the
lights and the climate control.
We really have to cut three hundred? Kendra asked.
Just be glad you don’t have to load them, Lena said.
Who does?
It’s a surprise.
Are jack-o-lanterns really such a big deal?
Do they work? Quite well. Especially if we can convince
fairies to fill them.
With magic?
To dwell in them for the night, explained Lena.
Fairy lanterns have long been among the surest protections
from creatures with dubious intentions.
But I thought the house was already safe. Kendra
began sawing the stem of a tall orange pumpkin.
Redundancies in security are wise on festival nights.
Particularly on a Midsummer Eve after all the recent commotion.
How will we ever carve all of them before tonight?
Leave that to Dale. He could carve them all himself
with time to spare. Not always the most artful renderings,
but the man can mass produce. You carve only for fun; he
knows how to carve for need.
I’ve never liked pulling out the guts, said Kendra.
Really? Lena said. I love the slimy texture, getting
greasy up to my elbows. Like playing in the mud. We’ll
have delicious pies afterwards.
Is this white one too small?
Maybe save it for autumn.
Do you think the fairies will come?
Hard to say, Lena admitted. Some, for sure. Normally
we have no trouble filling as many lanterns as we
care to carve, but tonight might be an exception.
What if they don’t show up? Kendra asked.
We’ll be fine. Artificial lighting works, just not as well
as fairies. With the fairy lanterns, the commotion stays farther
from the house. In addition, Stan will be putting out
tribal masks, herbs, and other safeguards.
Is the night really so awful?
You’ll hear plenty of disturbing sounds.
Maybe we should have skipped the milk this morning.
Lena shook her head, not lifting her eyes from her
work. Some of the most insidious tricks employed tonight
will involve artifice and illusion. Without the milk you
could be even more susceptible. It would only broaden
their ability to mask their true appearance.
Kendra severed another pumpkin. Either way, I won’t
be looking.
I wish we could transplant some of your common
sense to your brother.
After all that’s happened, I’m sure he’ll behave
tonight.
The door to the greenhouse opened, and Dale poked
his head in. Kendra, come here, I want you to meet somebody.
Kendra walked to the door with Lena behind her. In
the doorway, Kendra paused and let out a small shriek. A
bulky creature with a simian build was marching toward
the greenhouse pulling a rickshaw-type contraption the size
of a wagon. What is it?
He’s Hugo, Seth crowed from inside the handcart.