Read The Girl of Ink & Stars Online
Authors: Kiran Millwood Hargrave
Ana hissed and stepped between them, clenched around her staff.
âStay there, Lupe,' said the Governor.
Lupe was nudged roughly back to the ground beside me. She started shaking again, and I passed Miss La to her.
âDon't let them see you're afraid,' I whispered. She held
the chicken tightly to her chest.
Marquez dropped his head, defeated. âSir, I would have gladlyâ'
âIt is not your place, Marquez.'
âIt is not your place to call yourself
Governor
.' Ana put mocking emphasis on the last word as she stalked up to him. âI know why you came. You had a chance to redeem yourself, and you failed.'
She kicked his legs out from under him and he went down hard. Ana clicked her tongue and his hands were tied tightly behind him.
âThen I will pay,' said Adori, struggling to his knees. âBut let my daughter and companions go.'
Ana chuckled joylessly. âI will do better than that. I will take them with us when we leave.'
âYou are leaving? Why?'
The tension between them was taut as a storm cloud.
âYou know why,' Ana spat. âBecause there is a deeper darkness here, a darkness we cannot defeat. I care more for my people's safety than for revenge. That is the true mark of a leader.'
The Banished clicked their tongues, like a ripple of applause.
âWhat deeper darkness?' Marquez said, raising an eyebrow.
Ana fixed her eyes on the man and strode towards him. âOne that will shake that smirk off your face and swallow the ground from under your feet. Yote is coming.'
He snorted. âThat old wives' tale? That superstition?'
âIs it superstition that drove the animals into the sea? Is it superstition that murdered one of ours? If I'm not much mistaken,' snapped Doce's mother, âthat superstition is what brought your
Governor
here in the first place.'
She faced the Governor again. âNow we must get moving.' She whistled and the men were hauled to their feet.
Doce led us to them. Lupe hugged her father tightly as soon as Ana's back was turned.
âWe don't have time for this now,' said Adori, shrugging off Lupe's arms. âYou must be brave, Lupe.'
He turned his exhausted gaze on me. âI believe you have something of my daughter's?'
The locket. I took it off and Lupe held out her hand. âHow did you know Isabella had it?'
âIsabella?' The Governor looked at me long and hard. âOf course.'
The secret lifted off my shoulders, but I tensed, waiting for some punishment for deceiving him. It did not come. He seemed unable to focus on anything but his daughter.
âPut the locket on, Lupe. Don't give it away again. It is a part of our history. A piece of our story.'
CHAPTER
FIFTEEN
I
wrapped Miss La in the Governor's cloak to stop her thrashing, and we settled into formation, prisoners at the centre of the long procession. Ana seemed to know the way, and from the stars I could tell we were heading south through the Marisma, directly towards Gromera.
I tried not to think of the half-finished map in my satchel, the half-seen island being left behind, and forced myself to focus on each step taking me closer to Da. Whatever welcome met us in Gromera, I would find a way to get him out of the Dédalo.
In the darkness it was hard to tell how many Banished there were. Fifty at least, with cloth bags and vine nets of possessions lashed to their backs. All believing Yote was real, believing there was a ship in Gromera's harbour, ready to take them away. How would they react to a border thick with guards, the ship burnt in the harbour? The Governor's men had not told them, and though I was not sure whose
side I was on I did not want to draw attention by telling them myself.
Lupe did not speak, whereas usually I could not get her to shut up. She was carrying herself rigidly, eyes fixed on her father's broad back. I put my free arm around her.
âWhy does he not speak to me?' she said, her voice barely a whisper. âIâ¦' She sniffed and squeezed her eyes shut. âI thought things might have changed.'
I did not have an answer.
The night was hauntingly clear. The stars revealed their places in constellations and the moon's pull felt physical on my short hair. Something was happening to the very air we walked through. It was tense, alive and threatening, the island in the grip of forces shifting imperceptibly beneath my feet.
All night the wind chased us, the mud sucking like fingers. In the dark it was difficult to tell the unsafe, boglike mud from water, or the water from land, but I took care to watch for the slight ripples or softening that meant we were on dangerous ground.
My feet began to ache. I thought of Pablo, out there in the black forests with the wolves Doce called Tibicenas. I thought of Cata. Miss La cocked her head up at me and pecked at my chin.
As the hours passed and our pace slowed, my thoughts became oddly detached. My stomach hurt and snatches of Da's stories and Ma's face and Gabo's sing-song voice danced across my senses, disorientating and magnetic.
âAre you all right?' Doce asked, as I almost stumbled over a root.
âMmm.' I didn't trust myself to speak.
âHere.' Doce passed Lupe and me something. âIt's dandelion root. It will help to wake you up.'
It was tough to chew and tasted bitter, but after a while I felt the tiredness lift, the world come back into sharper focus. I blinked in the pale morning light and realized we were walking alongside a dried riverbed.
I fumbled in the satchel for the map. It was battered and torn, creased as my tunic, but still legible. On this side of the island, the river could only be the Arintara. Ahead stretched the last of the swamp.
Once we skirted it, we would reach Arintan, and soon after that I would be home. And Daâ
âOuch!' I'd walked straight into the man in front. He shushed me urgently.
Adori turned to Doce. âWhat's happening?'
The Banished girl had frozen, the muscles in her legs tensed as if ready to run. âDon't you hear that?'
I listened, rubbing my shin. I could hear nothing except the black trees rustling, but the other Banished were as tense as Doce, scanning the trees to our right. Slow as a whisper, the adult Banished slid forward, forming a line facing the forest, weapons drawn. Miss La woke with a loud squawk and began scrabbling frantically at the cloak.
I clenched her firmly under my arm, feeling the dandelion root sending sparks through my blood, the energy
turning to fear with every passing moment. All was still for several long seconds, then came a noise unlike anything I had ever heard before.
Loud and rumbling, lined with a hard, metallic edge that set my teeth chattering. A roar. It flew towards us, flooding through the trees.
My skin prickled, a thin acidity filling my throat. Somewhere inside me, something was weakening, coming apart. I wanted to run, but couldn't.
Beside me, Lupe was clutching her stomach. âIt's them!' she moaned. âDo you feel them?'
âThey drive you out of yourself,' said Doce. âThe Tibicenas.'
âBut they're not real,' said the Governor. His tied hands trembled. âThey can't be.'
âYou know about them, Papa?'
But he did not answer Lupe's question. Doce spun around, raised her blade and cut the vine tying the Governor's hands. âRun. Take them. Cross the swamp, straight through, it'll be quicker. Follow the river, and run.'
The Governor took Doce's arm in a vice-like grip, his fingers sinking into her skin. âI will stay.'
Ana was suddenly beside us. She wrenched his hand off Doce's arm. âDon't touch my daughter!'
âI'm telling her I will stay and fight with you.'
âPapa?' said Lupe, uncertainly.
Ana arched her eyebrow.
âIt's my island too,' he hissed. âWhether you like it or not,
I will defend it.'
They regarded each other like two dogs circling before a fight. Then Ana took a blade from her belt and handed it to him.
Another howl rent the air. I cringed, insides churning.
âHow will we know how to get home, Papa?' cried Lupe.
âI know the way,' I said, slipping my hand into hers.
âRun! That's an order!'
Behind us, Adori sliced Marquez and the other prisoners free. I expected them to run, but instead they accepted more swords from Ana and joined the line of Banished facing the forest. Some of the younger Banished were already fleeing.
The noise came a third time through the dawn light. My stomach twisted again. âWe can stay, we could help!'
âPapa, I don't want to go without you,' Lupe pleaded. âPlease come with us, Papaâ'
But Adori only swept her into a tight embrace, and said fiercely, âGo, run fast, Lupe. And remember the locket.'
Lupe's face was wretched. âYou said not to open it untilâ'
Adori took the ring of keys from his belt and pressed them into her hand. âYou have to go now.'
He nodded at me. His hands had stopped trembling. âTake care of her, Isabella.'
He pushed us away just as another roar cut through the trees, followed by a collective yell from the Banished. I spun around to see them lifting their weapons like a thicket, Adori and Ana at the front, side by side as something monstrous broke through the treeline.
High as a horse, covered in black, matted fur. It moved on paws thick as tree trunks, flicking its terrible, deep-red eyes left and right.
It was no wolf. It could only be a demon dog. A Tibicena.
It landed a few metres from the line of Banished with a sound like a thunderclap. Its claws scraped the ground, leaving deep gouges in the dust. More howling came from the trees behind. More were coming.
The Governor, Ana and Marquez stood together. The other Governor's men were bunched around them, blades drawn.
My churning insides brought white points of pain to my eyes. The beast's presence seemed to be pushing my insides out and away, as if my body were water being whipped up by a storm. No wonder the animals had fled to the sea, if this is what they'd experienced. I felt like a songbird caught in the sharp gaze of a raven, tiny against the darkness closing in.
Lupe was tugging on my hand, screaming for us to run. Heart wrenching in my breathless chest, I turned away just as the creature lifted its massive paw.
I did not see it fall.
CHAPTER
SIXTEEN
W
e ran across the swamp, hands clasped, and I remembered the last time we had run together, through the fields to school. I could feel Miss La shaking. Soon we reached an area that was more water than land, trees lacing through the swamp and vines hanging down, dangling into the Marisma like snakes.
âWe have to swim,' I said, tying the cloak into a sling around my back with the chicken pressed against my neck. We launched ourselves into the thick water, churning our legs.
I felt myself sink, Gabo's boots filling with water and slipping from my feet. I kicked hard, unable to find ground or to float in the liquid mud. I splashed upwards and felt Miss La flapping angrily.
âSorry,' I spluttered, grasping a vine and manoeuvring her up higher, out of the water. I lashed myself to the vine
and shouted for Lupe to do the same. Other shapes were around us, other children fleeing.
I wrapped my fingers around another vine a few inches in front, levering my foot against a root to gain purchase in the sucking black. We pushed ourselves forward, reaching for a vine an arm's length ahead. Together we repeated the movement, finding something like a rhythm.
Time seemed to compress and lengthen with my body. I could hear only Miss La's worried clucks and the laboured sloshing of our movements, see only the black water and looping vines. It was as if we'd fallen below the earth, where stars could not shine and all around us was the underworld. I tried not to think of the scene we had left behind, wondered where the other fleeing Banished had disappeared to.
Eventually the vines thinned. Our feet scraped along mud thick enough to walk on without being sucked under. We were nearing the opposite bank. This thought propelled me forward and soon I was pulling myself up, hands raw from the fibrous thorns of the vines. Beside me Lupe was picking them from her sopping skirt. She looked dazed.
âThe swamp will buy us time,' I said. âCome on.'
But with the next step, the ground dropped away. We tripped and skidded down a dip, bowl-like and pitted with fallen, rotting fruit that turned to pulp beneath my feet. The smell was overpoweringly strong and sweet.
My heart raced as I lifted my foot. Something had
wedged itself between my big and second toe.
âWhat â what is it?' Lupe's eyes were wide as plates again. I pulled it out and Lupe cried out.
A bone, small and still lined with gristle. We had found the Tibicenas' feeding pit.
I swallowed back vomit as the rot filled my nostrils. Lupe was already scrambling ahead, but I was rooted in the putrid earth.
Don't panic
, I told myself.
Go
.
Clambering on all fours up the other side of the pit, through the decomposing flesh, through jawbones and femurs, I held my breath until I stood once more on the damp ground.
Lupe had stopped a few metres ahead, and through the trees we saw a slow, rippling shine. A silver thread leading home.
âThe Arintara,' I said.
We paddled in the trickle to clean the dried blood from our feet, and I let Miss La out to run in circles in the shallows. Lupe took my hand.
âI'm sorry,' she croaked. âFor leaving you behind just then.'
I squeezed back. âIt's not your fault.'
âYou don't think I'm rotten?'
âNo,' I said firmly. âYou're brave. You came into the Forgotten Territories when no one else would. Not me, not my da, notâ'
âNot my father.' She took a deep, shaking breath.
âMy fatherâ¦'
I thought again of the matted paws, the bones in the feeding pit, then gently unfurled Lupe's clenched hand. The set of keys was embedded into her palm and I peeled them out, sliding a needle-thin key off the ring.
Lupe looked from the key to me, and back again.
âHe never let anyone touch them, not even Mama. Why would he give them to me?'
I gave the needle key to Lupe.
âPapa said not to open the locket until he died.'
I took her hand.
She stared down at the key as though she had never seen anything like it before.
âHe's dead, isn't he?'
I nodded. Lupe nodded too, slowly, as if she was trying force the fact into her brain. Her face was oddly blank.
Lupe took off the locket and slotted the key into the lock. There was a faint click, and it sprang open. Out came a surprising amount of water, and then a sodden piece of paper, folded into a square that fitted neatly inside.
Lupe was about to unfold it but I touched her hand lightly to tell her to be careful. The water would have made the paper fragile. Lupe passed it to me, her own hands shaking. I peeled it open. It had been folded many times, and the paper was so thin I felt sure it would rip.
Eventually, I spread the letter out on Lupe's lap. The ink had bled slightly around the edges but the words were clear. I read the first lines before I could help it.
My daughter,
If you are reading this, then I am no longer with you. I wrote this so that you could know all the things I could not bring myself to tell you when living
I caught myself, and turned to look at Lupe. Her mouth was pressed into a thin line, and her eyes were so sad I looked away again, fiddling with the remaining keys.
Minutes passed. Everything seemed quiet and still, except Lupe's light breathing and the slight twitch in her gangly leg. I waited as she turned the paper over to read the other side. After another minute or so, she let out a long sigh, her body going slack.
Then she carefully folded the paper, picked up the locket and put the letter back inside. She closed it and threw it with all her might into the river.
âWhat are you doing?'
âI don't want it.' Tears were dripping from her chin. I reached out to comfort her, but she moved away.
âWhat⦠what did it say?'
âThat my father is everything the Banished said he was.' Her voice was strangely dispassionate. âAnd worse.'
âLupe, I'm so sorry he died . . .'
She looked at me. Her face was not sad any more, but angry.
âI'm not.'
I did not know what I was about to say, but just then we heard a sloshing sound, something disturbing the water
upstream. I didn't feel the pain in my stomach that I'd felt when a Tibicena had approached, but still I grabbed Miss La and we left the riverbank, ducking behind the treeline. I gripped Lupe tightly as a large shape came into view.
It took me a moment to realize. Then I was up and running again, sending the hen spiralling.