Authors: Alexander Key
“I certainly hope not,” she said uneasily. “But it's upsetting to think they might have. We're going to be awfully, awfully hungry when we reach the lakeâand I just love fish. But I don't believe I could bear to eat one if it came screaming out of the water. I'd simply rather starve.”
Brick had already made up his mind that, before he allowed any starving to be done, he would secretly kill a deer and bring in the meat without telling what it was. But before he could do that he realized he would have to destroy the creature that had been following them. Its presence frightened the deer, so that he almost never saw them except at a distance, running. He'd given up wondering why the thing continued to shadow them. So far it had stayed well out of sight, but he could still feel its presence, and several times by watching carefully he'd caught the vague movement of it through the trees at their rear. He was sure by now that it was spotted.
The thought of the thing was chilling enough, but of equal concern was the knowledge that their food was going to run out long before they reached the lake. Charlie Pill seemed to realize it too, for the thin boy did his best to walk faster. He kept it up till they camped that night, and he managed to hold a steady pace all through the third morning. But at noon he collapsed.
“Why don't the rest of you guys go on ahead and start catching fish?” he pleaded. “That's the smart thing to do. I'll follow soon's I can. You can have a ton of fish all cooked and ready to eat by the time I get there.”
“Nothing doing,” Brick told him. “We're sticking together. It's not safe to be alone.”
Nurse Jackson agreed with him, and before going on, she made Charlie rest for two hours while they searched the immediate area for wild greens and mushrooms. When they made camp that evening she cooked the rice that she had been saving, then added the wild things to make it go farther.
By careful rationing, the rice lasted until the evening of the fifth day. Brick was hungry when he rolled in his blanket that night, but they'd all been hungry for several days, and a few more hours of it didn't seem to matter. The fish camp, surely, couldn't be more than a mile or two away, and they were bound to reach it some time in the morning.
A sudden slash of rain drove them up at dawn. They packed hurriedly and took to the trail without bothering to make tea.
“We'll have a real breakfast in a little while,” Nurse Jackson promised confidently. “We're almost there, and there's bound to be plenty of cornmeal and stuff for cooking fish. And, gang,” she added, “keep those blankets over your heads. I don't want anybody catching pneumonia. There'll probably be a stack of dry blankets at the camp.”
In spite of hunger that was beginning to gnaw, and thin overworked muscles that ached so badly that it took courage to keep wobbly legs moving, they turned it into a game and laughed at the rain and made up silly songs and chanted them as they trudged along. Noon came, and still there was no sign of the new camp. They huddled for a while under a tree, resting, then set out again, slower now and chanting only occasionally. By midafternoon they were silent.
But somehow they stumbled on, urged by Nurse Jackson, who kept repeating with a cheerfulness Brick knew she couldn't feel, “Just a little farther, gang. We're almost there.”
Then Charlie Pill began to chant feebly, “
We're almost there.⦠We're almost there
.⦔ How Charlie Pill did it and kept going, Brick didn't know, but he added his voice to Charlie's, and soon everyone was chanting, “
We're almost there! We're almost there!
”
And suddenly they were there.
First there was a shout from Diz Dobie ahead. Then he cried, “I see the fence! And there's the thatched roof!”
But when they came through the dripping trees and stood beside him, no one could say anything.
There was the fence, and they could see the roof at the corner of it. But there was no house, and no lake. The thatched roof covered only an open shed no larger than the turpentine still. In front of it, where a lake had been, there was only a broad empty area of sand and mud, with the shallow stream winding through the middle of it. The stream flowed down through a recently washed-out break in an ancient earthen dam covered with trees.
Brick felt as if the end of the world had come.
9
SINGING IN THE SKY
If anyone spoke a word while they dragged themselves up to the gate and entered the place, Brick was not aware of it. The shelter was almost a duplicate of the one over the turpentine still, except that it had a fireplace on one side instead of the ovenlike apparatus for heating resin. A picnic table and a few benches occupied the center of a stone floor. The tall fence surrounding a small apple orchard enclosed two sides of the structure, but hardly gave a feeling of security against the unknown dangers of the night.
As for food, it was obvious that none had been left here. Some fishing poles for catching it lay across the beams overhead, and various utensils for cooking and eating it filled a low cupboard to the left of the chimney, but that was all. Brick could hear water running from what seemed to be a spring out back, but he was too tired to investigate it. What they needed now was a fire.
He removed the arrow from his crossbow, then tossed it and his soaked blanket on the table and crouched by the fireplace. The last visitors here had left wood and kindling arranged inside, ready for the lighter, and in less than a minute he had a roaring blaze going. As it sent out its drying warmth, everyone huddled before it. At the moment, they were too miserable for speech, and too exhausted and disappointed for further thought or action. They wanted only to rest.
Brick glanced at Lily Rose, who had known all along that they shouldn't have left the bunkhouse. “Thanks for not saying âI told you so!'” he mumbled. “Golly, I sure goofed when I got the idea for coming here. We should have stayed where we were.”
Her peaked face broke into a sudden smile. “Oh, this isn't so bad,” she managed to say. “It's ever so much better than Belleview, andâand anyhow, look what we did! If we can come this far, we can go the rest of the way.”
Nurse Jackson hugged her. “That's the spirit, honey. And we'll make out. Don't any of you ever think we won't. I've been sitting here trying to remember something about a plant I saw out there where the lake used to be. It's just now come back to me. Brick, Diz, let's go out yonder and dig for our supper.”
She took the adze and a basket from the gear on the converted wheelchair, and led them through the gate and over into the soft ground where the lake had been. Here grew hundreds of long-stemmed plants with leaves like huge arrowheads. When they tugged on the now-wilted leaves and dug down with the adze, they found large tubers that resembled potatoes.
“Duck potatoes!” Nurse Jackson said happily. “We'll really feast tonight!”
And feast they did. Maybe it was because he was so hungry, but those duck potatoes, boiled over the fire and with no seasoning but their natural sweetness, seemed to Brick the best things he'd ever tasted. The others enjoyed them just as much, and Charlie Pill said, “Boy o' boy, I'd walk twenty miles for a taste of these!”
“You just did,” Nurse Jackson chuckled. Everyone laughed, and she added, “Believe me, gang, that's a real miracle. When I think how crippled all of you were two weeks ago ⦔
It was almost dark now. Brick piled more wood on the fire to help dry out their blankets, then looked speculatively at a wooden disc on one of the posts. It was just like the disc at the turpentine still. He went over and turned it, and was rewarded by a flood of soft light from above.
Nurse Jackson blinked at it and shook her head. “Will you tell me how they get power 'way out here at the end of nowhere, without a line or anything?”
Brick nodded wearily. “I think it's the thatch. Itâit soaks up power from the sun and stores it in those straws.”
“But, Brick, that seems almost too advancedâ”
“Not for these people.”
“These people,” said Princess, “are absolutely unspeakably advanced, and I can prove it. Real early this morning, before the rain got us up, IâI saw something.⦠IâI didn't tell you about it because it was soâso utterly shattering and breathtaking that ⦠that I wanted to think about it first.⦔ Her pale head was nodding, and it was becoming hard for her to speak. She managed to add, “But I'll have to ⦠tell you about it in the morning.⦠Right now I'm ⦠just ⦠too ⦠tired.⦔ Her head fell forward, and she was suddenly sound asleep.
Brick was so exhausted himself that he had little recollection afterward of curling up in a barely dry blanket, for consciousness ceased the moment his head touched the floor. After five nights in the outdoors on the hard ground, the smooth stone surface felt almost comfortable.
Something awoke him abruptly at dawn.
For a minute or two after he opened his eyes he lay still, listening, wondering what could have disturbed him. The fire in the fireplace had gone out, and a red glow was spreading from the eastern horizon. In the west a giant moon was setting. The color shocked him, for it was actually more pink than gold. He was aware of the soft splash of water from the spring, and an assortment of peepings and tick-tockingsâmainly crickets and frogs, he knew nowâmingled with the sleepy twitterings of birds that were only half awake. But none of these had disturbed him. He'd heard something else. What could it have been?
All at once it came to him. He'd heard singing.
Brick sat up.
Singing?
Yes, and it had come from overhead.
He flipped his blanket aside and moved quickly in his bare feet to the edge of the shelter and glanced up. There was nothing in the rapidly reddening sky but a lone bird flapping over the empty lake, and the great pink moon riding the darkness in the other direction. He could see it better now, and he studied it curiously. A few nights ago he had briefly glimpsed it in the mist, but he hadn't been able to tell much about it. Singing in the skyâand a pink moon. Princess ought to love that.
While he changed from his dry pajamas to his not-so-dry clothing, he began to wonder if the singing had actually been overhead, or if he'd merely heard it in his mind. Maybe he'd been tuning in while he slept, and had not realized it. But no, he'd heard it with his earsâand it had come from the sky.
Frowning, he got kindling from the pile of wood behind the chimney and started a fire in the fireplace. Still puzzling over the riddle, he went out to get water from the spring, but he'd hardly taken three steps from the shelter when there was a sudden movement beyond the fence, and pandemonium broke loose. It was like that night back at the bunkhouse when all the fiends of darkness had begun to shriek together. Only here it was worse, for the fiends were closer, and there were no walls to muffle the sound of them.
Abruptly everyone in the shelter was awake and calling out in alarm. Brick glimpsed a flock of birds as big as chickens fanning out into the weed-grown orchard at his rear, but his attention went to the creature beyond the fence that had frightened them.
Before he could get a clear view of it, Nurse Jackson had appeared beside him, her sturdy form draped in a blanket. “Guineas!” she burst out happily. “Real live guineas! Didn't dream they were hereâbut that means we'll have eggs for breakfast.” She sighed. “They do make a horrid racket, don't they? Such wild things, and they seem to have gone wild here. Papa used to raise 'em when I was a kid, and I should have realized they were what you heard that night.⦠Brick, what are you staring at?”
He pointed silently through the fence. She turned and gasped. The thing that had frightened the birds was standing in the open not a hundred feet away, a dead guinea clenched in its mouth. By comparison, the big bird seemed no larger than a quail. The thing was the spotted creature that had followed them here, and it was huge.
She shook her head. “Oh, lordy,” she breathed. “Thatâthat looks like a dogâbut it
can't
be. It's too big!”
“It's the thing I saw outside the door that night,” he whispered. “It followed us here.”
“
Followed
us?” she said, aghast. “Why in heaven's name didn't you tell me?”
He shrugged. “You had enough to worry about. Andâand I didn't want to scare the others. What kind of dog has spots like that?”
“A Great Dane. That's what it looks likeâonly it has to be the biggest great Dane on earth!”
At that moment Princess rushed over, whispering, “What is it? What is it?” Then, when she saw it, “Oh! What an utterly wonderful, beautiful dog! I wonder if he'd let me pet him?”
“Don't you dare go outside that gate!” Nurse Jackson ordered. “Great day in the morning, I'd as soon pet a tiger!”
The monster had been standing motionless, staring back at them. Now it turned abruptly and bounded away into the trees.
For the first time Princess glanced in the other direction and saw the moon. It was just touching the treetops, and it seemed larger and more pink than ever. He expected Princess to clap her hands and to squeal in delight at the sight of it, but she didn't. It was Nurse Jackson who squealed, and it was a sound of astonishment and awe. Princess said quietly, “I
thought
it was pink when I saw it yesterday morning, then the mist covered it, and I wasn't sure. IâI've got something to tell everybodyâbut maybe I'd better wait till after breakfast. It's just too utterly, utterlyâthere's simply no word for itâto face on an empty stomach. 'Specially at this hour.”
When they finally sat down at the picnic table, it was to the most satisfying breakfast they'd had since leaving Belleview. Not only did their search through the overgrown orchard produce all the guinea eggs they could eat that day, but a panful of ripe raspberries as well. If the eggs were plain boiled and without seasoning, no one seemed to mind it in the least, nor did they mind plain raspberries with nothing on them. At the moment everything was wonderful.