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Authors: Tone Almhjell

BOOK: Thornghost
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C
HAPTER
T
WENTY
-
ONE

I
n the old avalanche tunnel, the flashlight still lay on the ground, extinguished. Secret stepped over it. Though they had both crossed back over the threshold to the troll tunnels, the entrance still remained open. It seemed touching the rune once was enough to see through its magic for good.

“How did you find the doorway,” Niklas said. “The rune can't have been visible in the dark.”

“When I returned, the troll had already dragged you off. His smell was concealed, but yours wasn't. So I sniffed around until I found your cheese-sandwich fingerprints high up on the wall. Whiskers work as well as fingers, it seems.”

“You never thought I had left? Gone home to Summerhill with my tail between my legs?”

“You're too stubborn for that,” Secret said. “Besides,
the boat was still there. I knew you wouldn't swim across the lake.”

She was right about that. “But did you get to the spring? Did you find the source of the taint?”

Secret's ruff twitched. “I think so. Like I said, we have a problem. I'm not sure your plan is going to work.”

“Why not?”

“Because it's not something you can lift out of the water.”

They continued on into the avalanche. Without his flashlight, Niklas had to rely on his hands and Secret's curt instructions to find the way. “Crooked root at left shin. Three steps, then wobbly stone.”

“You really know your way around this tunnel.” Niklas fumbled at the wall.

“This was our den,” Secret said. “I was born here. When my mother was shot, I hid here. Every time there is a snowstorm, I shelter here. So yes. I know it.” She padded on in silence for a while, then added, “I was starving already, before the storm last spring. I wouldn't have survived without the meat you gave me.”

Niklas was stunned. His plan had seemed so far-fetched back then: Give the lynx food, save her life. Make her like him, like Rufus loved Lin. Yet somehow, it had worked. “Then it was worth the scolding Grandma Alma gave me. She still hasn't forgotten, you know. Sometimes she makes me cabbage and potatoes and claims it's what I like to eat for dinner.”

Secret wheezed at the back of her throat. “Cabbage and potatoes. Your grandmother is a hard woman.”

• • •

I
t began as a faint murmur, but as they pressed deeper into the mountain, the sound of water grew to a steady rush. The air in the tunnel changed, too. Niklas wondered at first if his nose had been damaged by the troll stench, because to him, it smelled like flowers. But then he bumped against the wall and felt something sinewy and sharp scratch his shoulder.

“Is this . . . ?” His fingertips struck a silky, cool object that gave off a sweet scent. Suddenly it flashed under his fingers, and for a bright second, the tunnel became visible. Sure enough, the object was a pale, perfect rose. “It is! How can a rose grow here in the darkness? And why does it flash?”

“I don't know,” Secret said. “But it gets worse.”

The tunnel widened to a cave. It wasn't very big, but after the cramped corridor, it seemed like a ballroom. It was decked out like one, too. All the walls were overgrown with thorny branches that wove into a dense tapestry, tied with fresh shoots and dotted with white roses. Now and again the thorns twinkled.


This
was your den? What are you, lynx royalty?”

“It didn't look like this back then,” Secret said. “It was just a cave with a spring in it.”

The water spilled out through an opening halfway up
the cave wall, gathered briefly in a small pool, and escaped on the other side, hurrying under the mountain to become the Summerchild. The opening looked like another grand doorway. It was taller than Niklas, pointed like an archway, and lined with more shrub.

“The roses weren't here before, then?”

“No.” A little below the threshold and just to the side, a half-moon ledge stuck out of the wall. Secret jumped onto it. The ledge could barely hold all of her, but from the comfortable way she tucked her tail in and settled down, Niklas guessed it was a favorite spot from when she was little. “And neither was the doorway. It was just a crack in the rock, nice to drink from.” She sniffed the green skin of a vine. “Last spring I did notice a small twig poking out, but it looked old and dead. I guessed it was just a piece of the avalanche that had drifted here with the water. I never thought it could be alive.”

Niklas pushed at a branch. This one was thicker than his thigh. “You think the roses cause the taint?”

“The roses or the doorway. Or both. They have this strange
smell . . 
.”

Niklas couldn't smell anything other than pretty flowers, but he trusted Secret's nose. “Well, you're right. This isn't something we can simply lift out of the water.”

He climbed up to examine the archway. “Maybe we can follow the shrub back to its roots. If we sever them, the rest of the plant should wither.”

The rosebush delved into the mountain as far as he could see between the vines that trailed down from the roof. The flashing light traveled along the tunnel like a slowly beating pulse.

“With the shrub shoring it up, it won't cave,” Niklas said. Thorns stuck out from every branch, some small and vicious, some as big as knives. But with a bit of care, he thought it would be possible to find a path between them. He nodded encouragement at Secret, the way he would nod at Lin if they were lost. “Come on. Let's see if we can find the roots.”

He climbed up into the opening. The beginnings of the Summerchild flowed toward him along the stone floor, no more than a streamlet of shallow eddies. At least there were no thorns in the water.

Behind him, Secret gave a low whine. She lingered in the opening, front paws planted in the water where it slipped out through the archway, while her back paws still remained on the half-moon ledge. Her ears turned down and out, one tufted and perfect, the other torn and limp. “Cub,” she said. “I feel so strange.”

Without her calm dignity and hunter crouch, she looked much smaller. A wild animal out of her depth, so different from the brave Secret who watched his back and rescued him from trolls. Niklas swallowed. He hadn't thought of this until now, which made him the world's biggest idiot. The trolls wouldn't be the only magic to go away if they
got rid of the taint. “Wait,” he said. “If we stop this . . . you'll go back to . . .”

Secret shook her head. “I'll be the lynx of these woods again. You'll be the boy of the farm. And we'll both go back to our ways.”

Of course, Niklas's way was being alone all the time. He glanced around at the roses, tried a smile. “Maybe we don't have to get rid of them now. After all, we already took care of Rafsa and her brood.”

Secret hadn't taken her eyes off him. “But not the nightmare.”

Niklas nodded. She was right. He knew that, even if the cold filled his stomach again. He covered up the chill as best he could. “You know what? It won't happen like that.” He took two steps back toward her, pulled a sinewy branch out of her way. “Because we know each other a little by now. For instance, I've learned that if you turn very quiet, something is wrong. And that if you squint and look away, you're pleased.”

She looked away, squinting. “And I've learned that if your smile turns wide instead of lopsided, you're lying.”

Niklas laughed. “See? So what if you can't speak? Lin and Rufus are friends, and he never said a word in his life. I promise you, when the taint is gone, you and I are going to raid Mr. Molyk's apple orchard together.”

“Hard to raid anything when you don't know how to sneak.” With a shiver, Secret jumped into the tunnel.
When she slipped past the branch he held for her, she nudged his hand with her nose. “But maybe you'll learn that, too.”

Apart from knocking him to the ground at Oak Bridge, it was the first time she had touched him. Her nose felt scratchy and warm, and it melted every bit of cold away.

• • •

N
iklas yearned to see the sky. As the Summerchild dwindled to a trickle under their feet, the passage narrowed, and the thorns closed in on them from every direction.

A darker kind of vine wove through the rosy branches, snaking in and out like barbed wire in a flower wreath. These vines didn't flash and they didn't bear flowers. They had a shriveled appearance, as if they were sick. But their thorns, brown and curved like claws, were sharp enough.

Niklas used his satchel to push aside a tangle of vines, hoping to find the roots. Instead he found a weave of branches that barred their way. Some of them were of the withered kind, but most carried rosebuds.

“Do you think this is the end of the tunnel?” Niklas tested the weave with the tip of his boot. It yielded only a little, and he couldn't see through to the other side. The sound of water had disappeared completely.

Secret had also been very quiet since the cave. She just lifted her lips to taste the air, then shook her head. The breeze blowing through the bony strands of rosebush
seemed fresh enough. But whether the passage continued or not, Niklas and Secret couldn't go on.

Suddenly the silence broke.

“Who is there?”

Niklas whipped around. The voice came from nowhere and everywhere, and it had a strange double pitch. Secret crouched low, ready to attack, but she circled as if she couldn't find her target.

“Who is it?”

One of the rose branches stirred. It coiled free of the wall, creeping along Niklas's leg, scratching his pants with its thorns. Another lifted toward Secret.

“Who?”

With a snarl Secret batted at the vines, striking them aside. But others took their place immediately. Niklas cried out as one of them sank a thorn into his arm, deep enough to draw blood.

All around them, the rosebuds sprang open, spreading their petals like focusing lenses.

“Not her.”

“Not the trespasser.”

“Not the burned one
.

It wasn't a double-pitched voice, Niklas realized, but two voices, one thunderous and very old-sounding, the other whispering sweet. They had been speaking as one, but now they spoke to each other.

“It's a child,”
said the whispering voice.

“Yes,”
the other voice boomed.
“A child and his cat, come to brave the crossing.”

A long hiss swept through the tunnel, and the dense weave pulled aside to reveal two thick branches that barred the way in a great cross. One was thick and gnarled, but the bark still bore fresh green thorns and pale flowers; the other branch was choked with dark vine and looked brown and leathery.

“He has not been invited.”
The shriveled branch didn't move, but Niklas still felt that the whispering voice controlled it somehow. “
He does not have a key.”

“He has a key,”
the thunderous voice replied. “
A forgotten one. A late one.”

“But it does not belong to him.”
Niklas didn't like the whispering voice. There was a nasty undertone to its too-sweet murmurs.

“No, it belonged to someone else, someone . . .”
The old voice sounded confused, as if it struggled to remember. And after a pause:
“But he has a right to it.”

“The boy is just as weak,”
said the nasty voice.
“Taste him again and see.”

“Yes,”
agreed the booming voice.
“Taste him.”

The tendril pricked Niklas's arm a second time. The thorn drank the blood drop, and soon after, the nearest rose gained a red smudge on its white petals.

“Fear.”
The shriveled branch creaked. “
Fear in this one,
gray as old bones, heavy as a cage. He tries to cover it with bravery, but it eats at his core. He is not worthy.”

All the roses opened very wide.

“Are you scared, boy?”
As the old voice asked the question, the thorny vine prodded Niklas, as if to underline that an answer was required. He had an uncomfortable feeling he was being tested. “No,” he said. His chest felt so tight, he had to squeeze the words out. “I'm not.”

Secret said nothing, but her tail lashed.

“You seem to think it's a bad thing to be scared, when in fact there is so very much of which to be afraid.”
The old voice sounded disappointed.
“You might not have been chosen, if there was choosing to do. But there is not, now. Well, you can run and you can steal and you can lie through your teeth. Perhaps there is still . . .”

The dark vines snared tighter. The thorns on the nasty branch grew longer, like the troll claws.
“You forget the rule. No Twistroses will pass!”

Around them, many thorns followed suit, flexing and growing. Dark webbing appeared in the bark like veins, and the tendrils snared around Niklas's legs and arms, pulling tight. He clenched his teeth and tried to wrestle loose, but the tendrils were too strong.

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