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
to mark the point where he had intersected the path.
Finding his way back would probably be no problem, but
better safe than sorry. If he took too long, Grandpa might
figure out he had disobeyed orders.
Rummaging in his cereal box, Seth withdrew a
compass. The animal track ran northeast. He had set off on
an easterly course, but the undergrowth had grown denser
as he progressed. A faint trail was a good excuse to veer
slightly off course. It would be much easier going than trying
to hack his way through shrubbery with a pocketknife.
He wished he owned a machete.
Seth followed the trail. The tall trees stood fairly close
together, diffusing the sunlight into a greenish glow laced
with shadows. Seth imagined that the forest would be black
as a cave after nightfall.
Something rustled in the bushes. He paused, removing
a small pair of plastic binoculars from his cereal box.
Scanning the area, he spotted nothing of interest.
He proceeded along the trail until an animal emerged
from the undergrowth onto the path not twenty feet ahead.
It was a round, bristly creature no taller than his knees. A
porcupine. The animal started down the path in his direction
with complete confidence. Seth froze. The porcupine
was close enough that he could discern the individual
quills, slender and sharp.
As the animal trundled toward him, Seth backed away.
Weren’t animals supposed to flee from humans? Maybe it
had rabies. Or maybe it just hadn’t see him. After all, he
was wearing a camouflage shirt.
Seth spread his arms wide, stomped a foot, and growled.
The porcupine looked up, twitched its nose, and then
turned from the path. Seth listened as it pushed through
foliage away from the trail.
He took a deep breath. He had been really scared for a
minute there. He could almost feel the quills pricking
through his jeans into his leg. It would be pretty hard to
conceal his excursion into the woods if he came home
looking like a pincushion.
Though he dreaded admitting it, he wished Kendra had
come. The porcupine probably would have made her
scream, and her fear would have increased his bravery. He
could have made fun of her instead of feeling frightened
himself. He had never seen a porcupine in the wild before.
He was surprised how exposed he felt staring at all those
pointy quills. What if he stepped on one in the undergrowth?
He looked around. He had come a long way. Of course,
finding his way back would be no trick. He just needed to
backtrack along the trail and then head west. But if he
turned for home now, he might never make it back this
way again.
Seth continued along the trail. Some of the trees had
moss and lichen growing on them. A few had ivy twisting
around their bases. The path forked. Checking his compass,
Seth saw that one path went northwest, the other due east.
Staying with his theme, Seth turned east.
There began to be more space between the trees, and
the shrubs grew closer to the ground. Soon he could see
much farther in all directions, and the forest became a little
brighter. To one side of the path, at the limit of his sight,
he noticed something abnormal. It looked like a large
square of ivy hidden among the trees. The whole point of
exploring the woods was to find strange things, so he left
the path and walked toward the ivy square.
The dense undergrowth came up to his shins, grasping
at his ankles with every step. As he tromped toward the
square, he realized it was a structure completely overgrown
with ivy. It appeared to be a big shed.
He stopped and looked more closely. The ivy was thick
enough that he could not tell what the shed was made of ——
he could see only leafy vines. He walked around the structure.
On the far side a door stood open. Seth almost cried
out when he peered inside.
The shed was actually a shack constructed around a
large tree stump. Beside the stump, dressed in crude rags,
sat a wiry old woman gnawing at a knot in a bristly rope.
Shriveled with age, she clutched the rope in bony hands
with knobby knuckles. Her long, white hair was matted
and had a sickly yellowish tint. One of her filmy eyes was
terribly bloodshot. She was missing teeth, and there was
blood on the knot she was chewing, apparently from her
gums. Her pale arms, bare almost to the shoulder, were thin
and wrinkled, with faint blue veins and a few purple scabs.
When the woman saw Seth, she dropped the rope
immediately, wiping pink saliva from the corners of her
meager lips. Supporting herself against the stump, she stood
up. He noticed her long feet, the color of ivory, peppered
with insect bites. Her gray toenails looked thick with
fungus.
Hail, young master, what brings you to my home? Her
voice was incongruently melodious and smooth.
For a moment, Seth could only stare. Even as bent and
crooked as she was, the woman was tall. She smelled bad.
You live out here? he finally said.
I do. Care to come inside?
Probably not. I’m just out for a walk.
The woman narrowed her eyes. Strange place for a boy
to walk alone.
I like exploring. My grandpa owns this land.
Owns it, you say?
Does he know you’re here? asked Seth.
Depends who he is.
Stan Sorenson.
She grinned. He knows.
The rope she had chewed lay on the dirt floor. It had
one other knot besides the one she had been gnawing.
Why were you biting the rope? Seth asked.
She eyed him suspiciously. I don’t care for knots.
Are you a hermit?
You could say that. Come inside and I will brew some
tea.
I better not.
She looked down at her hands. I must look frightful.
Let me show you something. She turned and crouched
behind the stump. A rat ventured a few steps out of a hole
in a corner of the shack. When she came back from behind
the stump, the rat hid.
The old woman sat with her back to the stump. She
held a little wooden puppet about nine inches high. It
looked primitive, made entirely of dark wood, with no
clothes or painted features. Just a basic human figure with
tiny gold hooks serving as joints. The puppet had a stick in
its back. The woman set a paddle on her lap. She began
making the puppet dance by bobbing the stick and tapping
the paddle. There was a musical regularity to the rhythm.
What is that thing? Seth asked.
A limberjack, she replied.
Where’s his ax?
Not a
lumberjack,
a
limberjack.
A clog doll. A jigger.
Dancing Dan. Shuffling Sam. I call him Mendigo. He
keeps me company. Come inside and I’ll let you give it a
try.
I better not, he said again. I don’t see how you could
live out here like this and not be crazy.
Sometimes good people grow weary of society. She
sounded a little annoyed. You happened upon me by accident?
Out exploring?
Actually, I’m selling candy bars for my soccer team. It’s
a good cause.
She stared at him.
I have my best luck in the rich neighborhoods.
She kept staring.
That was a joke. I’m kidding.
Her voice became stern. You are an impudent young
man.
And you live with a tree stump.
She gave him a measuring glare. Very well, my arrogant
young adventurer. Why not test your courage? Every
explorer deserves a chance to prove his mettle. The old
woman withdrew into the shack and crouched behind the
stump again. She returned to the doorway holding a crude,
narrow box made of splintered wood, wire, and long, jutting
nails.
What’s that?
Place your hand inside the box to prove your valor
and earn a reward.
I’d rather play with the creepy puppet.
Just reach inside and touch the back of the box. She
shook it, and it rattled a bit. The box was long enough that
he would have to reach in to his elbow in order to touch
the back.
Are you a witch?
A man with a brave tongue should support his words
with courageous actions.
This seems like something a witch would do.
Stand by your loose words, young man, or you may not
have a pleasant journey home.
Seth backed away, watching her closely. I better get
going. Have fun eating your rope.
She clucked her tongue. Such insolence. Her voice
remained soothing and calm, but now held a menacing
undertone. Why not step inside and have some tea?
Next time. Seth moved around the shack, not taking
his eyes from the ragged woman in the doorway. She made
no move to pursue him. Before he moved out of her sight,
the woman raised an arthritic hand with the middle fingers
crossed and the others bent awkwardly. Eyes half-shut, she
appeared to be murmuring something. Then she was out of
view.
On the far side of the shack, Seth plunged through the
tangled undergrowth back to the path, glancing over his
shoulder all the way. The woman was not chasing him. Just
looking back at the ivy-covered shack made him shiver.
The old hag looked so wretched and smelled so foul. There
was no way he was sticking his hand in her weird box.
After she had offered the challenge, all he could think
about was learning in school how shark teeth angled
inward so fish could swim in but not out. He imagined the
homemade box was probably full of nails or broken glass set
at cruel angles for a similar purpose.
Even though the woman was not following him, Seth
felt unsafe. Compass in hand, he hurried along the path
toward home. Without warning, something struck him on
the ear, barely hard enough to sting. A pebble the size of a
thimble dropped to the path at his feet.
Seth whirled. Somebody had thrown the little stone at
him, but he saw nobody. Could the old woman be stealthily
following him? She probably knew the woods really well.
Another small object bounced off the back of his neck.
It was not as hard or heavy as a stone. Turning, he saw
another acorn whistling toward him, and he ducked. The
acorns and the pebble had come at him from opposite sides
of the path. What was going on?
From above came the sound of wood splitting, and a
huge limb fell across the path behind him, a few leaves and
twigs swishing against him as it passed. If Seth had been
standing two or three yards back along the path, a branch
thicker than his leg would have clubbed him on the head.
One look at the heavy limb, and Seth took off down
the path at a full sprint. He seemed to hear rustling sounds