Isle of Winds (The Changeling Series Book 1) (28 page)

BOOK: Isle of Winds (The Changeling Series Book 1)
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Robin lifted himself higher into the air, the wind roaring about him.

Mr Strife struggled to his feet, his face filled with shock and fury, his lip bloodied.

“Filthy fae scum!” he screamed. “Human world half-breed! How dare you raise your hand to me?!”


Silence,
” Robin said firmly.

He blinked at Mr Strife. With Featherbreath, he effortlessly lifted the ghoulish man into the air, none too gently. Strife howled and struggled, his long limbs thrashing out uselessly. He rose higher, where Robin, his mana stone blazing on his chest like flickering lightning, held him fast.


I could end this now,
” Robin said. “
You have harmed my family and friends. You invaded my home. You have kidnapped, lied and deceived. You have hounded, pursued and poisoned. With no more than a single thought, I could pull the air from your lungs and watch you drown on nothing.

Strife stared at Robin, his usually slicked and oiled appearance in disarray, his eyes bulging from his face in fear and loathing.


But I will not,
” Robin said. “
Because I am not you, Mr Strife.

Robin lowered his horned head, seeking out the other grim brother.

Moros, cowering in the rubble below like a frozen rat, stared up at him fearfully. There was no glee or enjoyment in his wicked face now.


You,
” Robin demanded. “
Give me the gorgon’s eyes.

Moros reached in to his jacket, staring in disbelief at Robin, the fury of the fae incarnate. He took out the vial containing the gorgon’s eyes and held up it in his shaking hand. His face darkened with resentment.

“Filthy fae-child,” he spat, his high voice quivering. “You presume to give orders to Moros? You think I am afraid of your horns? I carved my belt buckle from the horn of one of your people. You are nothing! I will never give you what you ask!”

He threw the vial to the floor, his face full of defiant spite. Robin merely reached out a hand and caught it with a Featherbreath. The vial flew upward through the air where it landed in his hand effortlessly.


Go back to your mistress,
” Robin said. “
Tell her how you have failed here. That, I imagine, will be a fitting punishment.

Robin breathed deeply, drawing on the power of the Arcania. He sent out his mana in a vast wave of air, lifting rocks and rubble from all over the temple. They hung in the air around him, deadly missiles, dozens of them suspended throughout the chamber, a silent hovering threat.

Mr Moros crawled over to Mr Strife. Both of them looked around the chamber, at the hail of suspended fury above. They stared up at the centre of the silent maelstrom, at the boy regarding them. The world’s last changeling looked down like the spirit of judgement. The Scion of the Arcania.

“When next we meet, Robin Fellows,” Strife said shakily, his brother trying desperately to pull him toward the doorway, “you will not find me so unprepared. I promise you that!”

Robin replied by letting one of the large masonry blocks fall from mid-air. It crashed into the floor at their feet, shattering into pieces and smashing the flagstones.


You speak empty threats to the Arcania itself. I am the Puck. The next stone will not miss.

Moros and Strife picked themselves up of the floor and fled the chamber without another word. Their footfalls echoed on the rocks as they made good their escape to the city outside.

When he was sure they were truly gone, Robin closed his eyes and slowly lowered himself and all of the rocks gently back to the floor.

“Robin?”

His eyes snapped open. Amidst the rubble, Henry was sitting up. The manacle around his ankle was still attached, but it had been freed from its moorings when Strife hit the dais.

“Bloody hell!” he said after a moment, his voice dry and papery. “What in the world happened to you?”

Robin stared. In the corner of his mind, his heart leapt. Henry was okay. He wasn’t in a coma or any of the other things he had feared when he had first seen him. The Puck, the part which held the reins at the moment, merely regarded the human boy distantly with detached interest.


Are you injured?
” he asked.

Henry shook his head, looking dazed. “Feel as though I’ve gone six rounds with a heavyweight, but I reckon I’ll live.

“Where are we, Rob? I feel like I’ve been asleep forever. There was a fight at the house, then Phorbas grabbed me. It was all so confused…” He glanced back up at his friend. “Robin, hate to be rude pointing this out and all, but you’ve got bloody great big horns!”


We are in the Netherworlde,
” Robin told him. He half-walked, half-floated over to Woad, who was groaning on the floor as he slowly regained consciousness. Boulders moved obediently out of his way as he went, clearing his path. “
I will explain everything later. There are things we need to do first.

Woad sat up as Robin approached. “What happened, Pinky?” he asked in a groggy, wheezy voice. He looked up at Robin and blinked. “Wow, something big, I’d say! Are you possessed? Where’s the skrikers gone?”

Robin shook his head. “
I am myself, Woad. Only … more so. The skrikers, and the servants of Eris, are gone. Are you injured?

Woad looked embarrassed. “Nah. No one gets knocked out better than me. Where are the bad guys again?”


They left,
” Robin said simply as Woad got up. Robin turned away and walked to Karya.

Woad watched him go, then turned to Henry, who was stumbling through the chamber, dazed and limping.

“Henryboy!” the faun cried jubilantly. “You haven’t even been a little bit killed!”

“Woad. Sight for sore eyes you are, you insane blue nutter. Where’s Phorbas?” Henry asked. “And why is Robin like that? What the bloody hell is going on here anyway?”

“That’s a lot of questions,” Woad said, looking around at the devastation of the air shrine. “Long story, explain later. We have to help boss though.”

“Boss?” Henry asked clearly confused. They joined Robin, who had knelt on the floor beside Karya’s body. Henry looked down. “Who’s the girl?” he asked.

“What did I just say about questions?” Woad said impatiently. “Pinky, is she…”


She is not dead, not yet,
” Robin replied.

He placed the palm of his hand over Karya’s white lips. Her skin was waxy pale and clammy. Robin closed his eyes. The Whitewind cantrip rushed out of his palm. He felt for the poison with his mind, wrapped his mana around it, and pulled his hand away.

Henry and Woad watched as a plume of black and purple smoke erupted from Karya’s mouth, thick and viscous. It dissipated instantly and harmlessly in a small gust conjured up by Robin.

The three boys, human, fae and panthea, crowded round the girl, peering down. Her eyelids fluttered, and then with a great hacking cough she opened her eyes. Woad, with overwhelming relief, helped her into a sitting position.

“What…?” She looked around, blinking rapidly, squinting in the gloom. “Where is this? Ugh … I feel like a skriker chewed me up and spat me out.”

“Boss, you’re okay!” Woad grinned. “I knew you would be. I carried you, you know. You’re really heavy for a girl.”

“This is the human boy?” Karya asked Woad blearily, peering at Henry. “Oh good … and the satyr?”

Woad shook his head. “He was evil,” he explained.


The satyr was not evil; he was not himself. It was Moros all along,
” Robin said. “
Phorbas, the real one, is trapped within his knife. All will be explained, but later.

Karya looked at him impatiently. “I want a full report here. What do you mean? What’s been…” She trailed off, finally looking at Robin properly.

“Scion…” she whispered. “Just as in my vision…”


We must hurry,
” Robin said to the three of them. For the first time since being hit with the shard, he felt a flicker of uncertainty. “
I don’t fully understand what has happened, but I don’t think this…
” He held up his pale hands, staring at them as though he hadn’t seen them before. Eddies of wind flickered between his fingers. “
… I don’t think this will last.

“Our ship crashed, remember,” Woad said. “It won’t fly without wings, Pinky.”

Robin peered up from his hands, his emerald eyes glittering at Woad.


Oh, it will fly for me.

* * *

Henry remembered nothing of his journey to the Isle of Winds. So his first real experience of the Netherworlde, the place he and Robin had schemed all winter to get to, did not ultimately disappoint.

Emerging from the temple and making their way through the abandoned city to find themselves on a flying mountain wreathed in an eternal golden cloud was one thing. Watching his best friend stalk down the mountainside looking like a young pagan god, and seeing him reassembling the shattered pieces of the blasted Auroracraft in a controlled whirlwind of wood and feathers was quite another.

Neither Woad nor the strange girl seemed to have the slightest compunction about climbing aboard the broken boat. Robin stood silently at the prow, looking like the most disturbing figurehead Henry had ever seen. He climbed aboard also, albeit gingerly. Robin lifted the splintered wingless craft into the sky and they soared away from the mountain. Henry leaned over the broken side of the boat, peering at the impossible sight of the floating island.

“So, this mountain, it just kind of floats above the ocean, then? Just like that?” he asked weakly as they passed into the vast golden cloud, the magnificent vision of the Isle of Winds disappearing into the mist.

“Yup, that’s right,” said Woad. He was sitting at Karya’s feet in the bottom of the boat, happily grinning while she absently scratched behind his ears. Karya herself had barely spoken since they had left the air shrine. She was still weak and pale, and she watched Robin’s back thoughtfully as he steered their craft through the air.

“That must be a pretty difficult piece of magic to pull off,” Henry said, as they passed out of the far side of the cloud and into the clear ocean air beyond. “To float a whole mountain like that.”


Not really,
” Robin’s strange wind-borne voice came back. “
No more difficult than floating a squirrel.

His friend may have undergone a strange and powerful transformation, but Henry knew him well enough to know that Robin was smirking.

* * *

None of them spoke much as they made their way under the night sky. Robin barely acknowledged his friends around him. He needed all his concentration to keep them flying, and the Puck, this odd other self, wasn’t very interested in them. Robin still felt like a passenger in his own body. He was just along for the ride, not driving … but maybe helping with the directions and choosing the radio stations. He smiled to himself.

The others slept as the ocean flew swiftly by below.

* * *

As dawn broke, the cliffs came into sight. Robin was feeling weaker, burning through his resources and with every passing moment he felt closer to collapse.

“Take us in down there, Robin,” Karya said, appearing at his shoulder and pointing down to a sandy inlet of beach with a rough circle of stones standing half hidden in the mist. “It’s the Janus station we saw, remember? If you can get us there, I can get us all back to Erlking.”

Robin nodded, moulding the air around them and swooping the suspended Auroracraft gracefully out of the sky.

“Are you okay?” Karya asked. “You’re looking a little less … well … spooky than you did before.”


I’ll be fine,
” he replied. “
Just let me get us there.

The Auroracraft made a reasonably graceful landing in the soft white sand. It ground to a halt not far from the circle of weathered stones marking the Janus station.

Robin gratefully dispelled the Featherbreath once they had clambered out of the boat. The Auroracraft, released from the cantrip, collapsed into a pile of clattering and useless lumber. The greatest creation of the fae’s most celebrated inventor, destined to become nothing more than anonymous driftwood.

Robin’s eyes blurred, and a wave of dizziness stole over him. Karya grabbed his arm, steadying him as best she could.

“What’s wrong with Superboy?” Henry asked, his face worried. “Rob, your horns, they’re kind of fading away.”

“The power is leaving him,” Karya explained, as Henry shouldered Robin’s weight from the other side. Together they carried him with difficulty through the loose sand toward the stones in the cliff’s shadow.

Woad had scampered on ahead and was running from rock to rock, slapping the stones and bringing the Janus station into operation.

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