The Underland Chronicles: Books 1-5 Paperback Box Set Read online

Page 33


  The head judge turned to Gregor. "So, after the fight between the gnawers, Goldshard and Snare. What occurred next?"

  Gregor tried to regain his focus. "So, then, we heard a scratching in one of the tunnels, and we knew it was the Bane. But the tunnel was small; Ares couldn't fit into it. I had to leave him in the cone. I went down the tunnel; I was ready to kill it. Then when I found the Bane, it started crying and calling, 'Mama,' and I mean — you told me it was like this ten-foot rat! I guess you didn't know, or whatever, but I wasn't expecting the Bane to be a baby."

  Nerissa flew to her feet. "A baby!"

  "Yeah, it was a baby rat," Gregor said, surprised she was even following along.

  She stumbled down the steps and came reeling around the table, her skirt still twisted up in one hand while the other waved wildly. "Oh, Warrior! Oh, Warrior!" she cried frantically. As she lurched toward him, he was torn between trying to catch her and just getting out of the way. Right before she made it to the cube, he leaped off and grabbed her by the shoulders. The icy fingers of her free hand clutched the neck of his shirt.

  "Oh, you did not kill it, did you?" she said.

  "No, Nerissa, I didn't kill it," he said, totally baffled. "I couldn't."

  She heaved a huge, shuddering sigh and sank down to the ground at his feet, laughing in relief. "Oh...oh..." She patted his knee reassuringly. "Then we may all yet be saved."

  CHAPTER 26

  She sat on the floor rocking back and forth laughing, the very picture of madness.

  "Man, somebody needs to help this girl," thought Gregor.

  Vikus came up and crouched beside her on the floor. "Nerissa, perhaps you should rest longer. Are you feeling ill?"

  "Oh, no, I am well. We are all well!" giggled Nerissa. "The warrior has fulfilled the prophecy."

  "No, Nerissa, he did not succeed in killing the Bane," Vikus said gently.

  "Vikus," said Nerissa. "The baby lives. So lives the warrior's heart. The gnawers do not have their key to power." Vikus looked like a lightning bolt had hit him. He plunked down on the floor next to her. "This is what Sandwich meant?" he said. "We never considered it."

  "What?" said Gregor. He wasn't sure what was going on.

  "The baby in the prophecy was never your sister, Gregor. It was the Bane," said Vikus.

  "The Bane? Why would it kill my heart if the Bane died?" said Gregor.

  "Why did you not drain its light?" asked Vikus.

  "Because it's a baby. It's just wrong," said Gregor. "It's the most evil thing...I...I mean, if you can kill a baby, what can't you do?"

  "So says your heart. So says your most essential part," said Nerissa.

  Gregor took a few steps back and sat on the cube. Nerissa's meaning was slowly dawning on him.

  DIE the baby, die his heart, Die his most essential part.

  His most essential part was the part that had spared the Bane. If he had killed it, he would have never been the same. He would have lost himself forever.

  "You know," Vikus said to Nerissa, as if they were the only two in the room, "I am continually amazed by how badly we can interpret one of Sandwich's prophecies. Then the moment it is understood —"

  "The whole thing is as clear as water," agreed Nerissa.

  Vikus quoted a section from the prophecy:

  What could turn the warrior weak? What do burning gnawers seek?

  Just a barely speaking pup Who holds the land of Under up.

  "The gnawers have always sought the Bane...," said Vikus.

  "Who is just a barely speaking pup. Sandwich even went so far as to use the word 'pup.' The gnawers' own word for baby," said Nerissa.

  "And the Bane holds the land of Under up," nodded Vikus.

  "Because if Gregor had killed it...," continued Nerissa.

  "Total war," said Vikus. "Its death would have been enough to rally them. Taking that pup to Ripred was a stroke of genius, Gregor. Oh, they will not know how to parry that move."

  "Queen Nerissa, are we to continue this trial?" asked the head judge.

  Nerissa looked up, as if she was surprised at her surroundings. "Trial? For the warrior? Of course there will be no trial! He has saved the Underland." She got to her feet, using Vikus for support, and saw the other defendants staring at her. She gave them a small smile, but directed her next line to Ares. "And all who helped him are held in our highest regard."

  Ares ducked his head. Maybe it was a bow or maybe he couldn't look at her.

  "Will you dine with me, you four? You look half-starved," said Nerissa. It was kind of ironic coming from her, but a welcome invitation.

  Somewhat dazed by the recent turn of events, Gregor, Ares, Howard, and Andromeda straggled out of the courtroom after Nerissa. She led them to a small, private dining room. The table could seat no more than six. In one corner, water trickled in a fountain. Old tapestries hung on the walls. Gregor guessed the first Underlanders must have brought them from above, because they depicted scenes from the Overland, not this dark world. It was a calming place.

  "It's nice in here," said Gregor.

  "Yes," said Nerissa. "This is where I often take my meals."

  They all took seats. People brought in platters of elegant food. Large fish stuffed with grain and herbs, tiny vegetables arranged in geometric patterns, steaming braided bread studded with fruit, paper-thin piles of roast beef, and Ripred's favorite, that shrimp in cream sauce. Heaping plates were placed in front of each of them.

  "Do not suppose I always dine so sumptuously," said Nerissa. "This food was prepared for the coronation. Please, begin."

  Gregor lifted his bread, dipped it in the cream sauce, and took a big bite.

  For a while, they all concentrated on the food. Except Nerissa, who seemed to be mostly rearranging hers.

  "I am afraid I am a poor conversationalist," said Nerissa. "Even at my best. And at present, grief for my cousin's fate has robbed me of what little I might venture to say."

  "It is the same for all of us," Howard said sadly.

  "Yes, no one here has been spared," said Nerissa.

  It was true. The journey to the Labyrinth had given them all ample reason for grief. Gregor was glad that Nerissa acknowledged it and that they could continue in silence.

  After days of insufficient food, Gregor's stomach was soon heavy with the rich dishes before him. The others stopped eating as well. You would think they'd all be shoveling down seven or eight helpings, but it didn't work that way.

  Nerissa then sent the four of them down to the hospital. Andromeda and Howard hadn't received medical care or been allowed a bath, either.

  "When did you guys get back?" asked Gregor.

  "About twelve hours before you arrived. Andromeda was astonishing. She barely rested at all. When we landed, they took Mareth to the hospital, and locked us up. But I knew one of our guards. She whispered word of Mareth's recovery to us," said Howard.

  At the hospital, all four of them were immediately sent to bathe. Gregor realized he must be knocking people over with the rotten-egg smell. After several days, he didn't much notice it anymore. He sank into a tub and felt all his injuries object. The squid-sucker marks on his arm, the aching ribs, the bump on his head from Ripred, the various abrasions and bruises from the stoning, the rope burns around his wrists. Wincing, he scrubbed himself down. It was lucky that the bathwater was continually carried away by the current. It would have been the color of mud by the time he was through.

  The doctors treated his wounds. He spoke only when they asked him a direct question about an injury. When he finished, the others were waiting for him.

  "I suppose we should all get some rest," said Howard.

  "Is that safe?" asked Gregor.

  No one answered. Their status in Regalia was foggy. Nerissa had cleared them, but Gregor had a feeling plenty of people still thought they were guilty.

  "I have a large chamber that would accommodate us. It is reserved for my family at all times," said Howard. "At least we know we are
safe with one another."

  They all followed Howard back to his room. Gregor was glad he had offered. He didn't want to go back to the room he had always shared with Boots here.

  "Where's your family?" asked Gregor.

  "They returned to the Fount a few days after we left. I expect they are trying to travel here now, as I am...as I was on trial for treason," said Howard.

  Howard's family actually had several chambers reserved for them. It was like a small apartment of connecting rooms. But they all gathered to sleep in one that the kids shared. Howard and Gregor took beds next to each other. Ares and Andromeda huddled together in the space between them.

  "To sleep, then," said Howard.

  The bats dropped off almost instantly. Howard tossed and turned awhile, but then Gregor could hear his breathing slow down and become rhythmic. He lay in bed wishing sleep would carry him away. But it wouldn't come.

  What would happen now? He guessed he would be allowed to go home. Probably pretty soon. Then there would be his family to face. And life without Boots. It still wasn't quite real. It would be, when he was back in the apartment, looking at her bed, her toys, her cardboard box of books.

  Gregor thought of her clothes sitting in the museum. He didn't want to leave them here for people to poke through. He grabbed a torch off the wall and left Howard's room.

  A few guards saw him along the way, but no one tried to stop him. Nor did they greet him or say anything. He had the feeling they didn't know how they were supposed to treat him, so they left him alone.

  He found the museum on his own. There, by the door, was the little pile of Boots's clothes. He pressed her shirt against his nose and could smell that sweet combination of shampoo and peanut butter and baby that was his sister. For the first time, his eyes welled up with tears.

  "Gregor?" said a voice behind him.

  He stuffed the shirt in the pack and wiped his eyes as Vikus came into the museum.

  "Hey, Vikus," he said. "What's up?"

  "The council has just adjourned what I believe to be the first of many meetings addressing 'The Prophecy of Bane.' I am convinced Nerissa's interpretation is correct, but there is dissension. This is to be expected, as it is a new idea. But until it is decided, her word stands. As that could change, I think it best if you leave here as soon as possible."

  "Fine by me," said Gregor. "What about the others?"

  "I believe charges will not be reinstated against Andromeda and Howard. Your testimony of their innocence was quite convincing," said Vikus.

  "And Ares?" said Gregor.

  Vikus sighed. "He is at greater risk. But if he is to be charged again, I will get word to him so that he may flee. He can at least escape execution."

  Gregor nodded. That was about as much as he could hope for.

  "Is there anything you would like to take back with you?" Vikus asked, gesturing to the shelves.

  "I don't want anything but our stuff," said Gregor.

  "If not for yourself, perhaps for your parents," said Vikus. "How does your father...does he teach again?"

  "No, he's still too sick," said Gregor.

  "How so?" Vikus asked, frowning.

  Gregor choked out a list of his dad's symptoms. His father's health was just one more thing the Underland had stolen from them.

  Vikus tried to question him in more detail, but he couldn't take it. "You know, maybe I will take that clock," he said, pointing to the cuckoo clock he had seen when he was collecting batteries. He had said it to change the subject, but he knew someone who might like it.

  "I will have it wrapped for you," said Vikus.

  "Great, so I guess I'll see if Ares is up for flying yet, and like you said, get out of here," said Gregor. He scooped up his clothes and left the museum. Vikus could learn a thing or two from Nerissa. Sometimes people just didn't want to talk.

  He got all turned around on his way back to Howard's room. The route was unfamiliar, and the tears that had started back in the museum were streaming down his cheeks. Well, maybe it was better to break down here than in front of his parents. He turned left, then right, then backtracked. Where was he? Where was his sister? She had just been here, he had her clothes, he could feel her in his arms...Boots!

  He gave up and pressed his forehead into a stone wall, sobbing as he let the pain in. Images of her swarmed back into his mind. Boots on the sled...Boots showing him how she could hop on one foot...Boots's eyes, upside down, their foreheads pressed together....

  Two rows Tiny, tiny toes

  Boots ten ...wiggle my nose Whew!

  He could even hear her voice trying to do the silly bath rhyme Howard had coaxed her out of her tears with.

  Wiggle nose Nine, ten toes

  She couldn't get it right. The words were too complicated....

  Give them bath so ten toes goes.

  And then she gave a sneeze.

  Gregor looked up. That didn't make sense. He heard a second sneeze. Not in his head. In the palace. He started to run.

  Two rows Tiny, tiny toes

  Either he was completely losing it...

  Boots ten ...wiggle my nose Whew!

  ...or that sound was real! He flew down the halls, crashing into walls and a couple of guards who called for him to halt. He didn't.

  Wiggle nose Nine, ten toes

  Gregor ran into the room just in time for the last line.

  Give them bath so ten toes goes.

  She was sitting on the floor, surrounded by six big cockxoaches, rubbing her toes with both hands to show how she washed them. He stumbled across the room and grabbed her up in his arms and held on tight as a happy voice squeaked in his ear. "Hi, you!"

  CHAPTER 27

  "Hi, you," Gregor said, thinking he would never let go of her. "Oh, hi, you! Where've you been, little girl?"

  "I go swim, I go ride. Flutterfly," said Boots.

  "Okay, all right," laughed Gregor. "That sounds great." He'd have to ask the others what happened. "Hey, Temp," he said, turning to the roaches, and then he realized something was wrong. Before him stood six roaches with two perfect antennas each and six solid legs. Maybe he was finally learning to tell them apart, because he knew, anyway, that none of them was Temp.

  "Where's Temp?" he asked, and six pairs of antennas drooped.

  "We do not know, not we," said one of the roaches. "I be Pend, I be." Gregor turned in a full circle, just to be sure. It was the room where you could ride the platform down to the ground. Temp wasn't there. Neither were Luxa and Aurora. He tightened his grip on Boots.

  About this time, Vikus came hurrying into the room, followed by several guards. His face lit up when he saw Boots. "They have returned!" he said to Gregor.

  "Just Boots, Vikus. I'm sorry," Gregor said, and watched the color drain out of the old man's face.

  Vikus turned to the roaches. "Welcome, Pend. Many thanks for the return of the princess. Tell us, will you, tell us the fate of the others?"

  Pend tried to fill him in, but the roaches knew very little. A moth — that must have been Boots's flutterfly — had arrived in their land carrying Boots. It had been flying in the Dead Land when it had discovered the little girl and Temp hiding in the rocks. Temp was very weak and unable to travel farther. He begged the moth to take Boots back to the other crawlers. Since the moths and cockroaches were allies, the moth had agreed. When the crawlers sent a party back to rescue Temp, he was nowhere to be found.

  "Did they make any mention of my granddaughter?" asked Vikus. "Queen Luxa?"

  "Run you, Queen Luxa said, run you," said Pend. "Many gnawers, there were. Temp said no more."

  Vikus reached out and fumbled with Boots's hair. "Temp seepy," she said. "He shut eyes. I ride flutterfly." She looked around. "Where Temp?"

  "He's still sleeping, Boots," said Gregor. Sleeping like Tick was sleeping, probably.

  "Shh," Boots said, putting her finger to her lips.

  Someone had wakened Dulcet. When she tried to take Boots out of Gregor's arms, he r
esisted. "It is all right, Gregor. I will bathe her and bring her back directly," said Dulcet. Since it was Dulcet, he made his hands let go.

  He followed Vikus to the dining room, where they'd last eaten with Ripred, and they both took a seat. Gregor tried to piece it together in his head.

  "It seems," Vikus said at last, "they did not perish in the Tankard."

  "No," said Gregor. "But Twitchtip was sure there was water between us, and they didn't answer Ares."

  After a while, Dulcet came in with a clean and shiny Boots. Vikus sent for food. Gregor held her on his lap while she gobbled up enough dinner for ten toddlers.

  "Boots," said Gregor, "you know when we saw the big..." He didn't know what to call those things. "Serpents" wasn't a word she knew. "Those big dinosaurs."

  "I no like," said Boots. "I no like dinosaws."

  "Me, either," said Gregor. "But remember when we saw them. And they knocked us off the bat. And Luxa caught you and Temp. Where did you go?"

  "Oh, I swim. Too cold. I bump head," Boots said, rubbing the top of her head.

  Gregor separated her curls with his fingers. He could see little scrape marks on the delicate skin of her scalp. Where had she been? Not in the Tankard. "Was it a big pool, Boots?"

  "Baby pool," said Boots. "I bump head."

  Gregor suddenly remembered the tunnel Twitchtip had been guiding them to. The one half under water. If Luxa had dived for that tunnel and made it, the entrance soon would have been flooded with the waves churned up by the serpents. Maybe that was the water between them. At some point they all must have been floating in water, or Boots wouldn't have said she'd been swimming. How had they kept from drowning? Then he remembered the life jackets. Boots was not wearing hers when she came in, but she had had it on at the Tankard.

  He told his theory to Vikus. "Yes, something of that nature must have occurred. But then they would have been trapped in the Labyrinth," said Vikus. "Boots, did you see rats?"

  Boots put her hand to her nose. "Ow," she said. At first Gregor thought she had hurt her nose, but when she said, "Bandidge. No touch. I no touch it. Ow," he knew.