Keeping Holiday (16 page)

Read Keeping Holiday Online

Authors: Starr Meade

Tags: #ebook, #book

Winter Wasteland

D
ylan woke, startled. Had morning already come? Had he slept through his chance to speak to the stars about the Founder? As his drowsy mind cleared, a gentle breeze touched Dylan’s arm with the unmistakable feel of outside air in the deepest night. It even smelled late. Reassured, Dylan realized that he had only thought day was dawning because the sky shone so brightly. The light came, however, not from a soon-to-rise sun, or from a full moon, but from countless stars, all of them nearer than Dylan had ever known stars to be and all of them very bright. “Clare,” he whispered, in the same tone you would use in a church service when you really must say something, but it would be irreverent to speak right out loud. “Wake up. The stars are out.”

Clare woke immediately and sat up. Then both children rose to their feet and stared at the stars. Millions of them twinkled and glittered, more than they had ever seen on even the clearest night. The smallest stars appeared as tiny specks in the distant sky, but many others were so near that they appeared the size of marbles, and others still were close enough to seem the size of Dylan’s hand. As he stood looking up, Dylan noticed a kind of a buzzing noise. He didn’t remember hearing it earlier. But now—a strong, steady, solemn hum rang out. Dylan took his eyes from the stars long enough to quickly glance around the mountaintop. He could see nothing that would make such a sound. It must have been coming from the stars themselves.

As before, with the bells, Dylan found himself wondering what was the proper way to begin a conversation with a star. “Oh, stars,” he began. He felt the old-fashioned sounding “Oh” was necessary, like when a character in a book addresses someone great and noble. “Oh, stars, please speak to us. We need your help.” He sounded little, lonely, and unimportant. Would the stars even speak to him? Why should they? He remembered the bell’s words: “I don’t know that they’d be willing to speak with you.”

For a long moment, it seemed that Dylan’s words had traveled out to space and gotten lost. No answer came back. There was no sound except the star noise. Finally, the star that must have been the closest, since it was the brightest and appeared the largest, began to shimmer and to twinkle more brightly.
It really must be answering,
Dylan thought with excitement, although he heard nothing. Then he realized that the sound of his words and sounds from the stars would need time to travel the distance between them. He waited a little longer and finally heard the voice of the twinkling star. The only way Dylan could describe the star’s voice later was by saying, “It sounded like a whispered roar. And the star was a lady. I’m sure of it.”

Although the star’s voice sounded as though it came from far, far away, it spoke distinctly. “We have one purpose,” the star said slowly and with great gravity. “One grand, glorious purpose. If we can meet your need as we fulfill our purpose, we will gladly give you aid. But know this—nothing will ever deter us from doing what we were designed to do. We have done it for centuries, for millennia, yet we never finish and we never tire. We have occupied these same places in the sky, night after night, day after day, always doing the same work. We know no change. Yet we never grow weary. We feel only delight in this most solemn, most joyful task we have received.” The words stopped, and Dylan realized that the shimmering of the star had also stopped, a moment or two before.

“What is that task?” Dylan asked and waited as his words found their way up to the stars.

Seconds before the large, bright star began to shimmer in reply, another little star grew brighter and more twinkly. Soon, Dylan heard a tiny, tinkling voice say, “He’s not very loud, is he? Do you think that’s the loudest he can talk?” and, then, without waiting for an answer, “Well, but he is so very, very little.”

The largest star’s words drowned out the rest of the small star’s comments. “We announce to
everyone that the Founder . . .” The star paused and Dylan’s heart beat faster. The star’s voice grew even more solemn, and at the same time a tremor of joy ran through it. “That the Founder—is. We announce to every person on earth—for where is the place where stars are never seen?—to them all, we announce that the Founder
is
and that he is marvelous. He does remarkable things, amazing things. Look at us, the stars, and know that the Founder is altogether wonderful. Nothing, no one, is so excellent as he.”

Dylan felt wrapped in a warm blanket of deep, calm, solemn joy. He was growing accustomed to this sensation—it seemed to follow whenever anyone spoke of the Founder. He felt no need to say anything else, but then Clare whispered, “Can I ask something?”

He nodded, and Clare called out, “Oh star, why do we see so many star decorations in our Holiday vacations?”

The same long pause ensued, while the large star, and the little one near it, both began to shimmer at almost the same moment. The smaller voice reached Dylan and Clare first. They heard it say, “Oh, look! There’s another one! Look how teeny they are!”

The larger voice replied to Clare’s question. “When the Founder first came to rescue the citizens of the ancient town from their oppressive rulers, he gave one of us stars a task—a grave task, a glad task, a most serious and important task. One of us announced his coming to certain men who had been watching for him. And then, when the men went in search of him, that one showed them where to look.”

Excitement seized Dylan as an idea came into his head. He did not even wait for the star to finish speaking completely when he burst out, “Do you think one of you could do that for us? We do so want to find the Founder! Our time’s half gone already and it doesn’t seem like we’re any closer to finding him than when we first came.”

Dylan paced impatiently as he waited for his words to travel the distance. He stopped when both stars, big and small, but again, the smaller one first, began their prespeaking shimmer. “Isn’t that cute?” squealed the smaller voice. “He wants one of us to go with him.”

“That was one task, one time, for one star,” the larger star responded. “Our task now is simply to announce that the Founder is. He has other, surer ways of bringing people to himself and of making known just what he is like. Those things are not our task. We do
our
task, and ours only. It is enough for us, and it is enough to fill all our long years with richness.”

Dylan felt a little cloud of disappointment blow in and settle on the excitement he had felt, dampening it. The sky itself seemed to share his feelings. As the cousins had talked with the stars, the night breeze had grown stronger by degrees, bringing in clouds. Only a few clouds at first, but now more and more blew across the stars, blocking first some, then many, from sight. Dylan could not see the smaller star shimmer in preparation of speaking, but he soon heard it say, “Aww. Poor little thing. Do you think he’ll find the Founder?”

The deepening cloud cover muted much of the large star’s answer, but Dylan knew the answer by heart. “——don’t find—— Founder, —— finds you;—— Founder—— Finder, too.” Then the growing cloud cover broke just long enough for the large star to send down one final message. By the time the words reached Dylan, the star was no longer visible at all. Very few stars remained visible, peeping through the growing blanket of thick cloud. The words themselves, however, arrived as crystal clear as ever. “In the morning, go down the mountain and travel north. Head for the winter.”

Going back down the mountain proved to be much easier than going up had been. At times, both Dylan and Clare found their legs a little shaky, since their muscles were still complaining about yesterday’s hard climb. In a few places on the downward path, where the ground sloped steeply and the surface under their feet felt treacherous, Dylan and Clare sat down and inched their way along. For the most part, though, they had little trouble descending. When they reached the single tree that had shaded Mr. Smith’s refreshment stand, no trace of him or of his stand remained.

“Too bad,” Clare joked. “
Now
we’re going down instead of up. Now he would have let us have some refreshments.”

“You know he never meant to give us anything,” Dylan replied. “He just wanted to keep us from going up the mountain.” Then Dylan added, under his breath, “I don’t see why it’s so important to him to keep us from the real Holiday.”

“That’s okay,” Clare answered, not hearing Dylan’s last comment. “We don’t need refreshments anyway. It’s so much cooler today. Where were these clouds yesterday, when we were going up?” The clouds that had rolled in last night, ending the children’s conversation with the stars, had remained and thickened into a blanket, blotting out the sun completely.

“Cooler
is
better,” Dylan agreed, “but the stars said to go north when we get to the bottom. If these clouds don’t clear out a little bit, I’m not sure I’m going to know which way north is. I can’t see the sun.”

As it turned out, however, Dylan did not need the sun to help him choose the direction to take—a good thing, since the overcast sky had done nothing but darken as the children descended. Any question of which way to go melted away as soon as they could read the sign at the foot of the mountain. It said, “ROAD NORTH TO WINTERLAND MANUFACTURING, INC. ¼ MILE.” It pointed back down the road, the way they had come from the candlemaker’s shop.

Obediently, Clare headed down the road in the direction the sign indicated. Dylan stopped, though. He eyed the sign suspiciously and said, “That wasn’t here yesterday.” Stepping off the path, first on this side, then the other, he searched the area with his eyes, as though he hoped to see the one who had put up the sign. He saw no one. Shaking his head, he followed Clare.

The cousins traveled the quarter mile in no time, and found themselves at another sign, posted where a second smaller path branched off the one that led to Holiday Village. This sign said, “NORTH.” Then, underneath that, the children read, “WINTERLAND MANUFACTURING, INC.” and under that, in smaller print, “TINSEL AND FRESH ICICLES FOR SALE.”

Without discussion, Dylan and Clare turned toward the north and continued walking. Immediately, a sharp gust of wind hit them head on, bringing a hint of winter frost. “Oooh,” Clare laughed, pretending to shiver, “just like that. We turn the corner toward Winterland and get a winter blast of wind.” A second gust followed the first, and a third came up after that. The separate blasts of chill wind came more and more quickly and finally turned into one constant gale from the north. Clare made no jokes now. She walked with her arms folded tightly across her chest for warmth. “Brr,” she said. “I wish I had my jacket.”

Other books

Alexandra Singer by Tea at the Grand Tazi
3 SUM by Quig Shelby
Sanctuary Line by Jane Urquhart
Secrets in the Shadows by Jenna Black
Butcher Bird by Richard Kadrey
Before She Dies by Steven F. Havill
End Game by James Luceno