The League of Seven (38 page)

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Authors: Alan Gratz

BOOK: The League of Seven
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Archie looked down again, but clouds obstructed his view of the ground.
I'm higher than the clouds,
Archie thought, and then he did feel a twinge of fear creep in.

“Archie doesn't need to worry about falling anyway,” Fergus said. “He just hit the ground and bounced back up last time.”

“From only half this height,” Hachi reminded him. “And he's not totally invulnerable. We don't know what his limits are, but there's no reason to test them until we have to.”

Archie shifted his grip on the rope, trying not to think about his fall from the
Hesperus
, trying not to think about how he was seemingly impossible to kill. Trying not to think about the crack in his arm.

The crack that showed he wasn't entirely human.

The crack that showed he was made of stone.

“Let's just get on with it,” Archie said.

“Just a little farther, and then we wait for nightfall,” Hachi said.

They were working their way sideways around the broad, gently curved side of the enormous helium balloon on the rope-like rigging that covered it like a giant net. Archie thought of the stuff as “rope-like” because it wasn't really rope—not like the twine rope he knew. It was made of something gray and shiny, like metal, but it stretched and hung like a fiber rope. The gray lines, just like the strange canvas-like material that held the helium trapped inside it, had been invented by Wayland Smith and Daedalus of the Roman League of Seven hundreds of years ago, and the world had yet to rediscover the secrets of their construction.

Fergus ran a hand along the glossy veneer of the canvas. “I can't get over this stuff,” he said through the speaking tube. “Helium is so small it escapes from almost anything. Anything light enough to float, that is. But not this. It's been hanging up here in the clouds for almost two millennia.”

“They had to make sure it wasn't going to fall,” Archie said.

“Which you're both going to do if you don't focus,” Hachi told them. “Next section. Go.”

The ropes-that-weren't-ropes formed a grid of squares on the canvas-that-wasn't-canvas, like the latitude and longitude lines on a globe. They were just tall enough for Hachi and Fergus to stand in a grid square on the bottom rope and hold on to the top rope with their hands, but Archie was younger and shorter than both of them. Where they could crab-walk across, he had to lunge.

Fergus shuffled his way across the grid square to the next, his kilt flapping wildly in the freezing, howling wind. He'd at least had the sense to put on long underwear underneath it, even though the baggy red longjohns looked silly with his blue tartan kilt.

At last he was across, and it was Archie's turn.

“You can do this,” he heard Hachi say.

Archie focused on the rope at the other side of the grid, took a deep breath of the fresh oxygen pumped into his mask, and dove for it. The wind caught his big coat like a sail and spun him, and he fell. He clawed out blindly with his hands and felt only canvas.
Zip!
He was sliding down again, falling, soon to be dangling from his safety line again—or worse—when at last his hand felt rope and he snatched at it.
Oof.
He slammed into the canvas as he stopped his own fall and hung there, panting, as he got his breath back.

“Better. Next grid,” Hachi said, already moving along. “Don't forget to re-attach your safety line.”

Archie closed his eyes and put his head against the canvas balloon. What was it his mother always said?
No rest for the weary.

That they were here at all—three kids on a top secret, super dangerous mission for the Septemberist Society—was incredible by the looks of it. What kind of adults would throw children into the fire box like so many lumps of coal? And what kind of parents would let them?

But Hachi, the thirteen-year-old Seminole girl, had no parents to ask, and she had been on her own ever since their deaths. Fergus, the fourteen-year-old tinker, was on his own too. He had left his family's farm in North Carolina to apprentice with Thomas Edison, but had run away when he learned his boss was insane.

It was Archie's parents who had said no.

“He's too young,” his mother had said.

“He's not ready,” his father had said.

But then it had been pointed out to them that even though he was just twelve, Archie had the strength of a hundred men. Or so it seemed. And Archie couldn't get sick, couldn't be hurt, and couldn't die.

At least, nothing had killed him yet. And by all rights, he should have died at least sixteen times already. That he knew of.

And then there was the fact that this mission was all about where he had really come from. How he had come to be this way. In the end, his parents had to let him go.

Not that they were really his parents.

Archie jumped and almost missed the next rope. It took Hachi and Fergus both hauling him back up to keep him from falling again.

“Focus,”
Hachi told him.

“I'm trying,”
Archie said.

“No you're not,” Hachi said. “Your mind is somewhere else. I can see it in your eyes. Stop thinking about how you're not real and focus on where you are and what you're doing. You know what happens when you lose focus.”

Archie's face burned hot under his mask again. None of them needed any reminder about what happened when Archie lost his head.

Hachi stared at him until he met her eyes. She was hard and demanding, but she also knew what it was to be so angry it consumed you. So angry it ate you up and swallowed you whole, and you let it because deep down you
wanted
it to.

Archie nodded. “I'm okay. I'll be okay.”

Hachi gave a curt nod back. “Tell us the nursery rhyme again while we climb.”

Archie sagged. He'd repeated the rhyme a thousand times in the past two days as they'd tried to climb the balloon, but he knew what she was doing. She was trying to get him to say it like a mantra, to focus on the here and now.

“Twinkle, twinkle, little star. How I wonder what you are,” he said, falling into the sing-song of the rhyme. “Up above the world so high, like a diamond in the sky.”

Most nursery rhymes, it turned out, were codes. Riddles that, when unlocked, held the secrets to navigating the complicated puzzle traps previous Leagues had used to imprison the Mangleborn—the giant, unkillable, primordial monsters that woke from their slumber to destroy the world every time humankind discovered electricity. Sometimes too the puzzle traps were used to hide powerful artifacts, like this lantern.

Archie focused on the next jump, and made it. Not gracefully, but he made it.

“Well, ‘up above the world so high, like a diamond in the sky' can't be anything but Cahokia In The Clouds,” Fergus said.

Cahokia In The Clouds. A city built underneath a giant, kite-shaped helium balloon tethered at the edge of Illini territory by people who had no idea why the balloon was there to begin with. If only they really understood … But that was the job of the Septemberist Society: to keep the true horrors of the world hidden and buried. Or, in this case, hidden and floating.

The nursery rhyme clearly meant the kite-shaped balloon above Cahokia In The Clouds, and the twinkling star had to be the lantern they were after.

Lóngd
ē
ng
. The Dragon Lantern. An artifact from the Mu civilization, which existed long before Atlantis fell and Rome rose from its ashes. Archie had no idea what the lantern was, or what it did. All Philomena Moffett had told him was that it held the answer to the secret of how he became whatever he was. That was enough to send him to the top of Cahokia In The Clouds to get it.

How I wonder what you are …
Archie thought.

“You're losing focus again,” Hachi told him.

Archie shook himself and nodded.

“Tell us the next part,” she said.

Archie was the one who had all the nursery rhymes memorized. His Septemberist parents had made a point of drilling him on them as a boy.

“When the blazing sun is gone, when he nothing shines upon, then you show your little light, twinkle, twinkle, all the night,” Archie sang.

This was where they had gone wrong for the past two days. Or so they now thought. Both times, they had attempted to scale the rope net during daylight. And why not? It was hard enough when you could actually see where you were going. But there were traps—dangerous traps—and they hadn't yet been able to find a way around them. Not by day. So they'd gone back to the rhyme.
When the blazing sun is gone, when he nothing shines upon, then you show your little light, twinkle, twinkle, all the night.
Now it seemed obvious: they were supposed to wait until dark.

Archie made one last leap, slipping and falling off the rope at his feet. He caught it as he fell and pulled himself up with a few choice comments into his oxygen mask. He heard Fergus snicker through his earpiece.

“Okay. This is where the traps start,” Hachi said. Above them and to the right, Archie saw the ropes they had tried to climb. The ropes that had come loose as soon as their weight was on them, and sent them spilling off the balloon. Traps set to keep the curious out. If not for their safety lines, they would all be dead.

All but Archie.

“And … it's just about nightfall,” Hachi said.

Hachi had timed it perfectly. Hachi, their war chief. It was still too light to see the stars, but the first of them would appear in minutes. In the meantime, Fergus, their tech wizard, lit the oil lamps he had mounted on the shoulder straps of their backpacks.

“Try not to get the lamps near your oxygen masks,” Fergus said. “That would be bad.”

“Bad how?” Archie asked.

“Boom bad,” Fergus said.

“Good to know,” Archie said.

The last of the red-orange sunshine drained away beneath the clouds, and their skyworld became the blue-black of night. There was a metaphor for Archie's new life in that, he thought. Waiting for the light to go away so he could work in the dark. But Hachi had told him to focus, so he put it away.

“All right,” Archie said. “The ‘blazing sun is gone.' Now what?”

They shined their lamps around, trying to see anything different about the rope maze around them, but it all looked the same.

“Wait a minute,” Fergus said. He reached up and turned off his shoulder lamp.

“What are you doing?” Hachi said.

“Oh, brass! You've got to see this,” Fergus said. “Switch off your lamps.”

“Turn them off? But how are we supposed to see?” Archie asked.

Archie and Hachi did it anyway, and gasped. All around them, the rope net glowed like the tail end of a firefly.

“Phospholuminescence!” Fergus said. “Blinking brilliant! All day it absorbs the sun's light, and then it glows all night. We don't need lanterns at all!”

“But we still don't know which way to go,” Hachi said.

For the past two days, they had made guesses. Bad ones, with painful results. But interpreting the second verse correctly had borne fruit, so Archie recited the third.

“Then the traveler in the dark, thanks you for your tiny spark. He could not see which way to go, if you did not twinkle so.”

“So we follow the twinkling star?” Fergus asked.

They all looked to the sky. It was
filled
with twinkling stars.

“They're
all
twinkling,” Archie said miserably.

“Not that one,” Hachi said.

Archie and Fergus followed her finger to where it was pointing. Below them, almost at the edge of the balloon's curve, was a single, small white light.

A tiny spark!

“Let's try something,” Hachi said. “We've gone up from here, and we've gone sideways, but we've never gone down.”

With practiced ease, Hachi released the catch on her safety line and rappelled down one place in the rope grid. As she landed on the rope below, the light beneath them went out.

“It's gone!” Archie said.

“Nae, it's not. It's just moved,” Fergus said. “Look.”

He was right. Among all the twinkling stars, there was only one that didn't twinkle—a tiny pin-prick of light at the far edge of the balloon, directly to the right of Hachi. She slid across her grid with the grace of a tightrope walker, her brown dress flapping underneath her fur coat, and stepped into the next one. The light stayed on, but shifted one grid farther away.

“The traveler in the dark thanks you for your tiny spark,”
Archie said aloud.
“He could not see which way to go, if you did not twinkle so.
We need the stars to twinkle so we can follow the one that doesn't!”

“Come on,” Hachi told them. “I'll stay one square ahead.”

Archie and Fergus followed her, and Hachi waited for them to catch up each time she moved ahead. Right again, then up, up, and up, then left, then up again, and slowly they made their way through the maze toward the top.

“What's the rest of it?” Hachi asked.

“The rest of what?”

“The rest of the nursery rhyme.”

“Oh,” Archie said, focusing on his feet. “Let's see. Um, ‘In the dark blue sky you keep, and often through my curtains peep, for you never shut your eye, ‘till the sun is in the sky.' Then the rest of it is kind of the same. ‘As your bright and tiny spark lights the traveler in the dark, though I know not what you are, twinkle, twinkle, little star.' Then the last stanzas are the first one over again.”

“You never shut your eye ‘till the sun is in the sky. So we've got until sun-up to get there. No problem,” Fergus said.

“We've got until sun-up to get there
and back again,”
Hachi reminded him.

“Oh. Aye. Moving right along then.”

“Twinkle, twinkle, little star,” Archie said. “Why do they twinkle?”

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