The Drowned Tomb (The Changeling Series Book 2) (3 page)

BOOK: The Drowned Tomb (The Changeling Series Book 2)
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There wasn’t much effective learning to be had from cutlery.

Robin had been enjoying the lazy lesson-free days of summer as best he could, and had been studiously ignoring the lengthy list of reading material his aunt had thoughtfully provided. Feeling slightly guilty for lying to Mr Drover, he made a mental note to at least make a
start
on the reading material Aunt Irene had given him tonight. Later would be better, when it was cool enough to think.

The two boys left the gardens for into the blessed cool shade of the house proper. It took a few moments for their eyes to adjust to the gloom within, so it was that they didn’t immediately see the small figure of Karya before them.

The young girl was sitting at a writing desk along one wall of the hallway, scribbling furiously on a telephone pad. Her wild mass of brown hair was pinned up haphazardly above her head with about a hundred clips, but this was the only concession she made to the sweltering heat. She still wore her large shaggy coat of animal skins. Robin had rarely seen her without it since their first meeting last year.

“Hello you two,” she said without looking up. “Finished baking your brains, have you?”

“Good morning to you too,” Robin said, wandering across the marble floor and over to her nook, trailing Henry behind him. “It
is
summer you know, Karya. Most normal people spend it outside mucking about. We haven’t seen you since breakfast.”

“Yeah,” Henry said scowling. Henry didn’t consider Karya to be normal in even the slightest way. “You’ve not been outdoors all week. You’re always lurking in the shadows, reading and writing. It’s unnatural.”

They hadn’t discussed it much, but Robin privately suspected that Henry was having trouble adjusting to this newest member of the Erlking family. Karya was a girl for a start, which made her in Henry’s mind instantly distrustful, and she was bookish and sharp tongued. She had helped to save Henry’s life from an inconvenient kidnapping, however, so he had decided gracefully not to kick up a fuss when Robin invited her to stay with them.

Robin was bookish too, but that didn’t seem to bother Henry.

Karya had seemingly taken to living at Erlking well. As far as Robin was concerned, she seemed to fit in well in a house full of misfits.

“Unnatural? Reading and writing is unnatural now?” the young girl said testily, flicking her eyes up at the boys. Henry’s misgivings were mutual as far as she was concerned. As far as the Scion’s strange human friend was concerned, Karya clearly found him a constant, low-level irritation. “I’m sure
you
think it’s far more productive to go kicking a rubber ball around on the grass pointlessly for hours on end. Or prattling on endlessly. But
some
of
us
have actual work to do.”

“What
are
you doing, seeing as you brought it up?” Robin asked curiously, looking over her shoulder. The pad on the desk before her was covered in indecipherable glyphs, symbols and calculations. “Henry has got a point you know; you’ve been hanging around the library for days. We’ve barely seen you.”

“I happen to find the library restful and a good place to work. It’s the one place I can almost guarantee not to run into
certain
loud and annoying distractions.” She peered at Henry pointedly. “As for what I’m doing, Scion, it’s the same thing I’ve been doing for two weeks now, while
some people
have been wasting time sunbathing and whatever else you two do. I’m trying to translate something for your aunt.”

“For Aunt Irene? Robin frowned, looking down at the girl’s scribbling covering the tabletop. “How come she’s got
you
working as her assistant then?”

“Because the thing that I’m translating, or
trying
to
translate at least, is not one of the nine languages she can read write and speak herself,” Karya said. She frowned down at her own notes. “It’s
much
too old.”

“So why would
you
know it then?” Henry folded his arms. “You must be what, eleven years old?” Henry was a year older than Robin and didn’t like having his seniority challenged by someone younger and shorter than him.

Karya gave him a withering look. “I don’t know the language, but I
do
know a more modern version of it. I’m backtracking, piecing together this protean tongue from fragments of later-developed languages.” She huffed. “But it’s not easy. It’s as difficult as it would be for a human like you trying to understand monkey screeches.”

Robin found himself unsurprised that Karya might have a talent for ancient languages. She was a bundle of closely-guarded secrets.

To be perfectly honest, he knew precious little about the strange girl who had erupted into his life the previous year. Karya was neither one of the Fae, like Robin, nor Panthea, like most of the Netherworlde’s free inhabitants. It wasn’t entirely clear
what
she was, but as she had never broached the subject, Robin had thought it would be terribly rude to ask outright.

“What is it she’s got you translating for her though?” Robin wanted to know.

Karya wagged a finger at him. “Now that would be your guardian’s business, not yours,” she said mysteriously.

The two boys stared at her blankly and expectantly for a few silent moments, until finally she rolled her eyes and relented. “Although to be honest, I’m not being peevish or secretive, I honestly don’t know what it is,” she admitted. “She just gave me a copy of the text which she had written out herself from the original source, and asked if I could shed any light on it. I have no idea where it’s from or what it’s in regard to.” She sighed. “It could be a letter she owns, an old prophecy maybe, a piece of poetry, a ransom note. It could be an ancient shopping list for all I know.” She scratched at her temple with the blunt end of the pencil, looking irritated with herself. “I figured, seeing as I’m staying here for the time being, I may as well try and make myself useful. I’m not making much progress anyway. Two weeks’ work and I’ve only got two words so far.” She held up her scribbling for their benefit. “This symbol here…” she pointed out “ … the wiggly line with the sharp diagonal across the top of it, I think is meant to be the letter H … or maybe S,” she added uncertainly. “Which, when coupled with the rest of these letters makes
this
word
here
either ‘Shade’ or ‘Hades’.” She pointed to another collection of symbols. “And this here is almost certainly the symbol for the word ‘Dark’, but not the dark of a closed cupboard or a grave or anything like that. More a big, roomy dark, like space or the night sky. You can tell that by the little lines radiating out, see?” She frowned deeper. “Although it could also be taken to mean ‘shadow’.”

Robin and Henry didn’t see at all, but they nodded encouragingly nonetheless.

“So … Dark Hades then,” Henry said thoughtfully. “Or Shady shadows? Sounds cheerful. Whatever it is she’s got you working on, I don’t think it’s an old love letter.”

Karya sucked the end of her pencil. “I think, I think it’s a
name …
it has all the hallmarks of a protean pronoun, but it’s too early to say really. Still…” She looked up brightly. “It’s better than kicking a rubber ball around like some kind of dog doing tricks.”

“Oi! There’s a lot of skill involved,” Henry muttered mutinously, rising to the challenge. “I can keepie-upie to two hundred and fifty on a good day.”

“That must come in incredibly useful,” Karya replied dryly. “I can decline a noun.” She blinked at him. “I find my skills more
practical
.”

“I can decline a noun too,” Robin said, trying to lighten the atmosphere. “Noun? No thanks, I’m fine for nouns.”

Karya and Henry ignored him, neither breaking their defiant stare.

“I can swim ten lengths without needing a break,” the dark haired boy said challengingly.

“Very impressive. I can play seven different instruments,” Karya replied coolly. “But I don’t feel the urge to shout about it.”

“I can eat my own body weight in ham and not feel sick.”

“I can track a deer through a trackless bog.”

“I can belch all the way to T in the alphabet.”

“I can tear a hole between two worlds and jump between them.”

Henry paused, mouth half open. Karya raised her eyebrows expectantly. Henry shut his mouth and shrugged amiably.

“Fair enough,” he conceded. Karya smirked a little, shuffling her papers.

“If you two have
quite
finished,” Robin sighed. “I wondered if you wanted to take a break, Karya, and come with us. Henry and I are going to the kitchen to annoy Hestia. She might feed us to make us go away.”

“I am afraid
that
shall have to wait. For now,” a cool voice said from behind them. Robin whirled, feeling his face turn crimson with embarrassment.

His elderly Aunt Irene, a slender, dignified spire of a woman, was standing at the top of the great stairs. She looked mildly amused. But only
very
mildly.

“Your presence is required, my nephew, down by the lake,” she said.

“The lake?” Robin asked, surprised, as Aunt Irene descended the staircase in a stately manner and a swish of softly rustling silks. “But … I thought the lake was beyond Erlking’s boundaries?”

Erlking, he knew, came with certain boons and bonuses. Robin, and anyone else, was safe from intentional harm within its limits.

His aunt nodded. “Yes, it is. That is quite correct. I am glad to see your memory is intact. But you will be quite safe at this time. There is someone waiting to meet you there now. Your faun was supposed to give you the message almost half an hour ago.” She glanced around at the three of them gathered in the hall. “I assume, from your presence here, that this did not happen.”

Robin, Henry, and Karya all exchanged blank looks. None of them had seen Woad, Erlking’s blue-skinned resident faun, all morning.

“Evidently, he was waylaid by his own impulses,” Aunt Irene continued. “I have noticed his vendetta against the indigenous squirrel population of Erlking’s grounds has reached new and bloody heights of late.”

The three children exchanged glances once again. Woad hated squirrels.

“No matter. If you set off now, you can still be at the lake in good time,” his aunt said. It was a firm command, artfully phrased as a light observation, which was her usual manner.

“Let’s go then,” said Henry brightly, rubbing his hands together and clearly happy at the thought of finally getting a dip in the cool water after all, but Irene shook her head.

“Just
Robin
if you please,” she said firmly. “Henry and Karya, the two of you remain here. I daresay you will manage to annoy my housekeeper perfectly adequately without my nephew’s help.”

Robin and Henry managed to look sheepish. Karya indicated her notes sprawled before her on the tabletop. “I don’t really have time to entertain Henry,” the girl said loftily. “I haven’t made much more progress on this I’m afraid. I have a name … I think, or several variations of one, and I’m close to confirming whether the writer is male or female … I think female … but that’s all.” She looked apologetic. “It’s such a rare dialect. I’ve been working on it solidly.”

“Excellent work,” Irene said, coming around the two boys to stand at Karya’s shoulder. She raised her half-moon spectacles from where they rested on a chain around her neck and peered down at the paper. “It may be a long and arduous task that I have set you, Karya, but I cannot stress how imperative it is that this be translated correctly, even if it takes both of us months on end.” She seemed to have almost forgotten that Robin and Henry were there.

“Umm, Aunt Irene?” Robin said. He was loath to distract the imperious woman from her engrossment with Karya’s scribblings.

“Yes, Robin?” his aunt replied without looking around, a tiny frown line on her forehead as she roamed over the young girl’s findings.

“It’s just … you didn’t say…
who
exactly am I going to be meeting at the lake?”

Irene glanced back at him, her pale blue eyes filled with what looked like cool amusement. “Why, your new tutor of course. Now run along.”

 

A NEW ENGAGEMENT

 

Robin’s curiosity was almost overwhelming by the time he had crossed the long sloping meadow behind Erlking’s hill, the grass wavering in the heat haze. He made his way under the cool foliage of the woods, tramping along the dusty path which led down to the lake. A new tutor, he thought, warily.

Passing out of the long, winding tree-lined path, he headed back out into the baking heat and bright sun. The lake was laid out before him, a bright glittering disc under the blue sky, enclosed on all sides by the dense forest. Two odd and weathered stone totem poles lay at the end of the path just before the shingle, marking the boundaries of Erlking’s reach. Henry hadn’t been exaggerating about the lake. It was large and beautiful. Here in high summer, the expanse of water shimmered in its own mirage-light. A secluded oasis in the lush green woods. Off, in the middle of the green-blue water, there jutted the irregular hump of a small mossy island, shaded in thick trees. Robin knew that there was some kind of ruin out there nestled in the overgrowth, a ‘folly’. Henry had told him all about it. Just another of Erlking’s many oddities. Grey-black stones poking through bare branches like a jumble of broken mossy teeth. It was utterly hidden, lost behind a veil of bushy trees. The island itself seemed misty and bluish in the haze.

The lake looked sparkling and cold. It made Robin want to kick his trainers off and step out into the inviting water, cooling his blood in the baking heat. Only the slight worry about drowning horribly stopped him.

Robin halted in his tracks, his feet crunching in the gravel at the lake’s lapping edge. A tall slender woman was standing out on the water’s surface like some pale vision from King Arthur’s legends.

The woman was some distance from the shore, standing perfectly still like a pale ghost, halfway between him and the island with its creeper-covered ruins. She was wrapped in a long silvery blue dress which curled and twined around her sinuously, a ceaseless ripple of movement which shone in the sunlight. Her skin was milky-pale and her long hair was so fair it seemed almost translucent, floating around her shoulders.

They stared at one another for a moment, the distant woman and Robin, regarding each other wordlessly across the glittering expanse. It was, Robin felt, a surreal moment.

As he stared, disbelieving, she began to walk towards him, her movements slow, fluid and graceful, stepping languidly as though the lake were composed of smooth solid glass rather than liquid water.

Robin, unsure of what to do in such a situation, did nothing. He waited, feeling rather awkward and self-conscious as the ethereal woman made her slow and steady way toward him. Her eyes, which were a very calm deep green, never left his for an instant. His seraphinite mana stone beat against his chest beneath his t-shirt, like a deep second heartbeat. Whoever this lady was, besides being the single most beautiful woman he had ever laid eyes on, she was powerful, and her mana flowed before her in waves, echoing in the stone on his chest. Her energy pushed towards him like an invisible fog bank rolling off the lake.

As she finally reached the shore before him, Robin glanced down at her feet, which were bare and just visible beneath her shimmering dress, and saw that each time she placed a foot on the water’s surface, frost and ice gathered and appeared beneath her. She wasn’t walking on the surface of the water at all; she was somehow turning the water beneath her into tiny icebergs and using them like stepping stones. They melted away behind her as soon as she lifted her foot from them.

When she was standing right before him he looked up, realising just how very
tall
she was. She was taller that Aunt Irene even.

“You are the Scion of the Arcania,” she said softly.

“Um … yes,” Robin replied haltingly. “I’m Robin.”

Her sleepy eyes, which were peering into his own as though she were trying to read the inside of the back of his head, seemed to focus at the sound of his voice, and she looked him up and down slowly, a thoughtful look on her tranquil face. It was as though she had been looking at someone or something else before he had spoken, and the sound of his voice has snapped her out of a daydream. She seemed to see him properly for the first time.

“Robin,” she muttered, as though testing the shape of the word in her mouth. “Hmm.”

A tiny frown line appeared in her pale forehead. Even her eyelashes looked almost transparent. She seemed to be weighing him up.

“Such a small boy … for the Scion of the Arcania.” She did not sound particularly impressed. Her voice was not much more than a murmur. “Such a humble vessel for such a force. A splintered force, granted … but nonetheless…” She blinked at him once or twice, trailing off. Robin had no idea what to say. He felt rather grubby from the heat, his hair stuck to his forehead with sweat. There were grass stains on the front of his t-shirt where he had been lying on his stomach in the rose garden. As far as first impressions go, he had to admit, this wasn’t the best he could have presented. He wished Aunt Irene had given him more notice, and he made a mental note to have stern words with Woad later when he got his hands on the little blue creature.

“Like a storm hiding in a seashell … held to the ear … faint whispers…” the woman pondered aloud, speaking almost to herself. “Why hide your light under this child’s bushel, eldest? What crude camouflage is this?” She shrugged. “But mine is not to question why. Who, after all, can fathom the thoughts of the Fae? Minds like corkscrews, one and all.”

She flicked her soft green eyes to Robin’s mana stone on its cord around his neck. “Seraphinite?” she said, her eyes widening slightly. “Spirit stone. And whose was this, and who’s will it be? How
interesting
your kind are.” She smiled for the first time at him, and Robin was surprised to find she looked quite friendly for a moment. It felt like the first time she was actually paying attention to him. “Hiding like nested dolls, one in another … in another. Your ways do … amuse.”

Her eyes drifted from the mana stone, which Robin wasn’t quite sure how she had seen, hidden as it was under his t-shirt, and her smile became slightly lopsided.

“I am Madame Calypso,” she said. “You … are extremely
late
.”

Robin stammered. “I know … I’m sorry. I only just found out I was supposed to be here. My friend Woad was supposed to tell me, that is, my aunt gave him a message but—”

“Hush,” she said, rather matter-of-factly. “I’m bored already.”

Robin hushed.

“We shall start again,” she said. “And take things from there. I am Madame Calypso. I am no more human that you are, little Fae, and I am here because I owe your guardian a debt. The Lady Irene recently assisted me in … leaving my last engagement. She has contacted me to request my assistance in the matter of your … education.”

“Aunt Irene said you were going to be my new tutor. Is that right?” Robin asked.

Madame Calypso nodded drowsily. “Apparently. I have never tutored before, so we will have to see how that goes, I suppose. I am Panthea,” she said. “A Nymph. We are living in interesting times, Scion of the Arcania. Time was, not too long ago, when I would have regarded your kind, the Fae, as a lower class of being. Many Panthea do. Like wild animals, good only for menial labour, or…” She looked thoughtful. “ … sport. But that was before I met your guardian. She opened my eyes to the truth. To the lies of Lady Eris.” She looked away from him for a moment. “The dark Empress of the Netherworlde has something of a talent for sowing discord between peoples. Especially between the Fae and the Panthea. When I think back now…” Her already misty eyes clouded further. “ … I am ashamed of what I once thought of your people.”

She looked at Robin. “I owe your race an apology. All the Panthea do.” She glanced around the water and the trees. “But how does one apologise for genocide?” she said breezily. “I suppose
this
, agreeing to this position, aiding a known insurgent and wanted outlaw like your guardian, makes me one also. A traitor to the Netherworlde. A rebel. I will be on the Peacekeepers hunted list now.” She seemed to consider this a moment. “How curious. To be an outlaw. Life takes such unexpected directions. Like white water streams. Coils and turns…”

Robin couldn’t help but smirk at the thought of his elderly Aunt Irene as a dangerous outlaw. But this strange, distracted woman was correct in her way. Irene, and all those at Erlking, lived in defiance of Eris and her rule. They were Panthea, all of them, Irene, Phorbas, Hestia, Woad. And all had committed the ultimate crime. Aiding not only one of the Fae, but the most wanted of all the Fae, Robin himself.

“An unwise choice for me … perhaps. I hope I don’t regret it. It is done, however. For better or worse.” Madame Calypso sighed lightly, blinking at him with her deep calm eyes. “Your guardian called for me, and I answered. I honour my debts. It is perhaps the only honour I have retained. I have come to Erlking, the place of the Fae, perhaps the
last
place. I cannot go back now. My home in the Netherworlde…” She trailed off, looking troubled for a moment. Robin could guess what she was thinking. Whatever life she had left behind in the Netherworlde, by coming here, it was effectively over.

“I hope you are worth it, Scion,” she said to him, very directly. She glanced at the water’s edge, where her feet still stood floating in a bed of ice crystals. “Time to set foot on human soil, I suppose. For the first time.” She sighed a little.

Madame Calypso stepped forward out of the water delicately, placing her bare feet on the stones of the shore.

“What a curious sensation,” the nymph said absently, wiggling her delicate toes in the sand between the pebbles. “Well then, Scion of the Arcania,” she said, looking up at him and pursing her lips. “Show me what you know.”

Robin, a little taken aback, stammered at the strange, beautiful woman. “Know? Um … about what?”

“Your
skills
,” she said, peering at him as though he was stupid. She raised her eyebrows expectantly. “Come now. Don’t be shy. I hear Phorbas the goat-man tutored you in the Tower of Air. Or rather, someone did, at any rate. I wish to assess your aptitude.”

“Oh, ok,” Robin glanced around, at a loss. “Ah, here we go. Um, how about this?”

He raised a hand between them and, focussing his mana through his stone, concentrated and silently cast Featherbreath down into the stones before him. On the beach, a large white shingle rose from the ground, levitating and rotating slowly in silence between them, a large flat stone suspended weightless in the air.

Madame Calypso peered at the stone thoughtfully. “A basic Featherbreath?” She sounded rather disappointed.

Robin couldn’t help but smirk to himself. When he had first started learning the Tower of Air, he had found air magic quite difficult. A lot had happened since that first lesson, however, not least of which was coming into direct contact with the Air Shard of the Arcania. Strange things had happened during his … communion … with the Shard. Since then, he had honed his skills somewhat.

“I haven’t finished yet,” he said.

He closed his eyes and made a few mental calculations. Taking a deep breath, he focused and cast, throwing his energy and the full force of his mana into the ground at his feet.

A deafening roar rose all along the lakeshore. As far as they could both see in either direction along the water’s edge, every single stone, rock and pebble which made up the rough beach had risen into the air, floating at shoulder height. Madame Calypso’s eyes widened as she turned to follow the wave of rising, possessed stones. They hung suspended, countless in number and lifting themselves in a great rolling undulation all along the lake until the flow of motion disappeared behind the island. The stones on the distant far shore followed suit, lifting up in a great surge which rippled back to them along the other bank in full circle.

Soon, the entire beach of broken stones along the perimeter of Erlking’s lake was held suspended. Each and every small stone, pebble and chip of mica rotating and spinning in its own tiny Featherbreath. Numberless and hanging in mid-air like the slow majestic spinning rings of Saturn around the bowl of the water itself. Amidst this spectacle, Robin stood, his arm still outstretched, a look of deep concentration on his face. His fingers shook slightly.

“Impressive,” she granted, looking around and pursing her lips.

Robin closed his hand into a fist and moved his arm slightly to the left. All around the lake, every single one of the countless floating stones rushed to the left by a foot, making the landscape spin. An asteroid belt of swirling stone chips spun and caught the sun in glittering flashes. Then they stopped and hovered weightlessly again.

“You are casting Featherbreath on
every
one
of these stones?” his new tutor asked. “That would mean calculating the weight of each one individually, casting to every separate point … the concentration and discipline involved alone … How many stones must there be?”

Robin felt around with his mana, letting the invisible energy slide over the lakeside like a breath of wind. “Erm … eight hundred thousand, seven hundred and fourteen … no wait …
thirteen
. I just dropped one by accident about a third of a mile around the shore.”

She put her head on one side. “Such a vast store of mana. Perhaps you really
are
the Scion after all.” She sounded a little impressed.

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