Authors: Jane Yolen
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When magic is
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No longer worn.
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“When morning comes
               Â
The killer dawn
               Â
When spells are done
               Â
And magic gone.
“So stand upon my sacred ground
For what you hold's not what you've found,
And to this glamour you'll be bound
When morning finally comes.”
“That kind of glamour,” Scott added.
“I still don't get it.” In the moonlight Callie's face was creased with doubt.
“Magic. Enchantment. Putting a glamour on something or someone means to change it by magic, alter it in some subtle way so it's no longer what it once was. At least that's what Gringras says it means. What Alabas says about it, I can't tell you.”
Callie put her hands on her hips. “I'm fourteen, you know. In high school. Don't condescend to me.” Suddenly she hated him, wondered what she was doing out at night, here, with a stranger. Suddenly worried that all the things her parents had been guarding her against might come true, here, by the mountain. With a guy who wasn't exactly the sixteen he seemed to be.
“I mean, I can't tell you because I don't actually know. And Alabas doesn't talk much. When he does, it's often in some old language the two of them speak together,” he said. “I only know a few of the wordsâ
teind
and
byre
and⦔
“
Breeks
and
gyre?
” She remembered the curse that Alabas had called down on the manager's head. “Is it magic? Some of it sounds like my Scottish grandmother talking.” She suddenly remembered something Alison had said. “And some comes from an old folk song.”
He shrugged. “Beats me.
Breeks
means pants and
gyre
a kind of ⦠of turning thing.” For a moment, his hand looked like it was stirring some sort of batter. “Like a whirlwind.”
“Pants and a whirlwind? Now that
really
doesn't make any sense.” But she smiled to take away the sting of what she was saying.
He didn't smile back. Instead he turned, and in an attitude of listening, stared across the street toward Mt. Holyoke, the small mountain in the center of the range.
Callie imitated him, but she couldn't hear anything. So she took off her helmet, holding it by the strap, and tried again.
Silence.
No wind. No road sounds. No birds. No flute. The unnaturalness of it made her shiver. Again, she thought of her parents.
Wanting to get Scott talking again, if only to cut through the eerie quiet, she said, “So you think the reason I didn't see this stuffâthis trail of Halloween sweets and hats and wings and allâwas that it had a glamour on it? An enchantment?”
The moonlight cast his hair in silver, yet still he looked no more than sixteen years old.
“Right.”
“So the police wouldn't have seen anything either.”
He nodded, leaning forward as if paying attention to something else, something beyond her ken.
“Scott, look at me.”
He didn't move, only leaned even further into whatever it was that had caught his attention.
“Please.” She hated the whine in her voice. Controlled it. Spoke again, this time without the whine, but in a whisper. “Please.”
Slowly he turned back.
“What are you doing?”
“Listening to the flute.”
“But it's gone.”
“No, it's not. Not entirely.”
Once again she listened hard, heard nothing. “Yes it⦔
He picked up her hand and put it on the strings of his guitar. She could feel them vibrate under her palm. The vibration traveled along the top of her skin, all the way up her arm, along her neck, and curled up and into her ear.
It was as if a layer of that dreadful silence had been peeled away. As if she'd been asleep before and was now suddenly totally awake.
The flute was singing. Only this time she heard it plain, without its glamour, without its sensuous beckoning. Now the tune was a darker, more sinister sound, the kind of music thatâin a movieâwould have warned that the monster was near. For a moment she hesitated, shivering. Then she pointed to the sign that said
SKINNER STATE PARK
.
“That way.” Toward the road that wound around the volcanic rock, and to the Summit House, the big white building that perched like an eagle's nest at the very top.
“Don't be scared,” Scott said, but his voice trembled a bit.
“I'm not scared,” Callie lied.
She put on the helmet and Scott got back on the motorcycle. Jamming down with his foot to start the bike, he held out a hand to Callie. She climbed up behind him again and they headed on to the winding road. There they climbed steadily beneath overlaced branches of maple, oak, and pine, black against the moon-lightened sky.
All the way up, Callie was thinking:
This is wrong. This is a bad idea. Mom and Dad are right.
Her head kept sending her warnings:
Turn around. Go home.
But they kept on going, because it was, after all, the only thing they could do. The only way they could find Gringras. And Nicky. And the children. And all the answers.
Every now and then, when she lost the thread of the flute song, Callie put her hand over her shoulder and touched the strings of Scott's guitar. Each time the music would travel up her arm, across her shoulder, up her neck, and into her ear, calling to that other music.
Ahead, always ahead.
The flute and its master were up at the top. And where Gringras was, Callie knew the children would be, too.
What she didn't know was whether any of them were still alive.
Tormalas had looked up quizzically and Gringras shrugged, sheathing his sword. Then offering his left hand, Gringras spoke, his voice calm though his stomach was roiling. “Welcome back to the land of the living, Brother.”
Tormalas said nothing but took in the entire scene: the pyre, the crowd, Alabas, his brother's so-recently sheathed sword. He remembered having dinner with Gringras and then nothing more. Tormalas had been trained since childhood to be a master politician, a nimble thinker. Gringras could see him putting it all together.
“I assume it has been three days,” Tormalas said, taking the proffered hand.
Gringras nodded and pulled Tormalas to his feet. He was half a head taller than the younger prince.
“Father does not suspect you?”
Gringras shook his head, shrugged.
“He always had a blind spot where you were concerned.” Tormalas stated this as fact. There was no blame in his voice.
“He passed me over.” They could have been talking about a dinner menu or a planned ball.
Alabas cleared his throat, but they ignored him.
For a long moment, Tormalas considered his younger brother with a kind of seasoned affection before saying, “Then you are not the heir, which means it is treason you committed.”
Gringras grinned defiantly. “It would not have been if it had worked.”
Tormalas chuckled. “
That
is debatable, Gringras. And that kind of thinking is why I am to be king, not you.”
Gringras laughed. “Neither me nor you, Brother. Father has chosen Wynn now.”
Momentarily disconcerted, Tormalas was silent. Then he put his right hand on Gringras' shoulder and, bending a little, stared into his eyes, searching them. “I can find precedence to overturn that decision. Wynn will do my bidding. He always has. But you, Gringrasâyou I can no longer trust. I may have to see you hang.”
“Well, if you see me hang,” Gringras replied, “it will be through just one eye.”
Before Tormalas could ask him what he meant, or Alabas could stop him, Gringras lashed out, intending merely to black his brother's eye. It was one last defiant act, one salve to his wounded pride. But, as luck would have it, Tormalasâwho was well trained in the warrior's artâducked to one side. Instead of hitting him in the eye, Gringras punched Tormalas square in the temple. His signet ring, sorcerously forged and full of powerful magicks, connected with the soft spot on Tormalas' skull.
Already weakened from three days near death, and suddenly suffering a savage and unexpected blow that was both physical and magical, Tormalas collapsed backwards. He fell off the pyre and hit the ground thirty feet below.
This time he was, in fact, stone-dead. Both dead and, as the magic willed it, stone as well.
The higher they went, the louder the flute got. On a final turn, Callie saw the park gates ahead of them with the empty parking lot looking like a dark cave.
“How could they have gotten this far without cars?” Callie asked. But her heart answered her.
Magic. Black and wicked.
And suddenly, it wasn't just that her mom and dad were right, but that Granny Kirkpatrick was right, too.
I should have paid more attention to her stories,
Callie thought.
Scott eased the bike into the darkness, turning off the lights and the engine. “Stay close,” he said unnecessarily, holding out his hand.
Callie took it like a lifeline. His hand was cold in hers.
She pointed ahead of them. “That's where Summit House is. We've had picnics there. It used to be⦔ How could she say it used to be an old hotel, where the famous opera singer Jenny Lind had stayed? What did it matter what it was then? The question wasâ
What is it now?
Callie knew there was a trail that went from the parking lot, passing along several rock cliffs that overlooked the Connecticut River and the whole Valley. It opened into a terrace called Titan's Piazza. Nicky used to call it Titan's Pizza, which always made Mars laugh. She gulped, thinking of them both, her little brother, her older brother. How often she'd complained about being the middle child. The midden child, she'd called it, when she discovered that
midden
meant “a garbage dump.” She'd give anything to be in the middle, the meat in the family sandwich, to have both of them here and safe right now. Sudden tears sprang into her eyes. Knuckling them away with one hand, she followed after Scott.
“Do you thinkâ¦?” she began, and couldn't finish the sentence.
“Don't think,” he whispered. “And don't talk.”
She shut her lips together tight and stumbled after him.
Now she could hear the flute again, full and clear, and below it, a kind of muffled sound. It took her a moment to realize it was the sound of children whimpering.
She didn't take in that they were unhappy, cold, tired, scared. What Callie heard was that they were alive.
Alive!
Letting go of Scott's hand, she plunged ahead, up onto the cliff's edge where the Summit House stood, white in the moonlight.
*Â Â Â *Â Â Â *
GRINGRAS SAT ON THE PORCH
railing playing his flute. When he saw Callie, he took the flute from his lips, and smiled. It was a smile that seemed compounded of sadness and delight.
“The little reporter,” he cried out as if genuinely happy to see her. “Who saw the rats dance to my piping. Look, Alabas, we have an extra. Do you think my father will give me credit against my next teind?”
Standing with his back to a door, Alabas didn't bother to answer. He looked bored, or tired, or both.
Callie took a deep breath, rehearsing what she needed to say before actually saying it. “Peter Piper,” she cried at last, “I've come to take the children home.”
If she had expected shock, horror, annoyance, magic, she got none of them. Gringras simply threw his head back and laughed. It was not a wicked laugh, which made it all the harder to bear.
“I
mean
it,” Callie shouted.
Gringras stopped laughing. “I'm sure you do, my little reporter, but I have no choice. Really. Gold or silver or souls, you see. And the manager of the concert stole all my gold and silver, so I amâas you say in this centuryâstuck. But no one will be hurt. I promise.”
Callie stared into the gloom behind him and could see nothing but darkness. Yet she could hear voices, sad little voices. Sad little lost voices.
“Nicky!” she cried.
The only answer she got was a wave of sound, like weeping, but no one came forward out of the darkness.
“Nicky,” she cried again.
Then Alabas leaped over the side of the porch, his face the color of old porcelain in the moonlight. Shaking his head, he came over and put his hand on her arm. “You'll like it in Faerie,” he said. “It's always the weekend, never school. There's laughter and music, dancing and wine and⦔
“I'm not old enough for wine,” Callie said, trying to look over his shoulder to the weeping blackness behind Gringras. All the while she thought,
Faerie? We're going to Faerie?
She tried to remember what Granny Kirkpatrick said about them. “The People of Peace,” she called them. “Though they are hardly that.”
Just then Scott stepped into the clearing.
“Ah.” Gringras shifted around so that both his feet dangled over the side of the railing. He held the flute loosely in his right hand. “Scott, come to find the truth after all these years?”
“What have you done with the children?” Scott asked.
“What have you done with your adolescence?” Gringras shot back.
Scott was strangely silent at that and Callie couldn't think why.