Read The Beginning Online

Authors: Jenna Elizabeth Johnson

Tags: #Fiction, #Fantasy, #Magic, #Dragons, #Adventure, #Young Adult

The Beginning (9 page)

The creature grinned, moving cautiously towards the three beasts tied to the oldest creek willow up ahead. The semequin, a very fine animal with a generous amount of unicorn blood flowing in his veins, detected the approaching stranger immediately.

Yes
, the creature thought,
you would notice me wouldn’t you?
The stranger released a low, animal-like chuckle. The horses immediately became agitated, stepping uneasily, snorting loudly as they tossed their heads and rolled their eyes. They pulled at the ropes that held them, but the children had secured them well.

“Do not worry noble ones,” the spy hissed quietly, “it is not you that I am after.”

The creature withdrew its unfamiliar arm from Phrym’s neck and gazed northward across the white sands and gleaming waters.

Not now, and not tonight, but later. It is too soon, and he’ll not approve of a mistake
. The being slinked back into the shifting sands of the dunes and began to make its way towards the eastern woods, its low, odd laughter becoming caught and scattered by the wind.

-
Chapter Five
-

Full Moons and Fierce Monsters

 

“I don’t even know why you agreed to do this, we don’t have to prove anything!” a hissy voice said.

“I already told you.
You
don’t have to do
anything
Ellysian, so stop whining!” replied a second, harsher voice.

“Well!” exclaimed the girl that sounded very much like Ellysian. “I just think you’re an idiot to let that Nesnan talk you into this, Eydeth. You’re supposed to be smarter than her.”

Jahrra couldn’t hear the response that Eydeth gave, but she knew it must have been a nasty one. She smiled at the dream she was having; Eydeth and Ellysian bent on fighting with each other because she had
finally
tricked them into accepting a dare from her.

The warm breeze rustled the reeds overhead and Jahrra jerked awake.
Oh no!
she thought in a panic, blinking her eyes dazedly against the brilliance of the deep blue sky above.
What time is it?!
Until that moment, she had completely forgotten where she was and why she was there. Scede snorted next to her and rolled over onto his side. He too must have been disturbed by the voices coming from the boardwalk.

“Gieaun, stop talking in your–” he began groggily, but Jahrra quickly clasped a hand over his mouth, muffling any other words he might have been trying to say.

“Shhh!” she hissed as quietly as she could.

Gieaun began to stir next to them, and Jahrra quickly used her free arm to motion to her friend to keep quiet.

Scede pried Jahrra’s hand off his mouth and worded silently, “What is it?”

Jahrra returned the silent gesture. “They’re here!”

Gieaun’s and Scede’s eyes widened and their mouths fell open.

“What time is it?” Gieaun asked, just below a whisper.

Jahrra looked up along with Scede. “I would say a few hours from sunset.”

“We slept that long?!” Gieaun whispered in disbelief.

“I guess so. At least we don’t have to worry about being tired tonight,” Scede remarked.

Ellysian’s voice cut through the silence once again, “Why don’t you just do what you had planned? No one will know the difference.” Her tone was a growl and she sounded more annoyed than ever.

“I already told you, I can’t do that!” Eydeth snapped back. “Too many of our classmates are here! The word will get back to that stupid Nesnan and then how will I look?”

Jahrra wondered exactly what Eydeth had been planning, but she didn’t have to wonder about it much longer.

“So what!” Ellysian whined. “Let them tell her you didn’t wait until the full moon came out. Just tell her they lied, she isn’t here, so what proof could she have? It would be your word against hers, and besides, there aren’t
that
many people here!”

Ellysian sounded quite determined to convince her brother to back out of the dare. After hearing this, Jahrra turned chartreuse.

“That little coward!” she fumed as loudly as she dared. “I should’ve shown up with the rest of our classmates and let you guys go on with the prank. Then he’d have no choice but to follow through!”

Gieaun shook her head. “No, he would have wondered where we were. Besides, it’s better this way.”

“Oh, how’s that?” Jahrra asked, suddenly in a bad mood.

“We have a much clearer view from here. Isn’t that better than watching from the shore? And besides,” she added, “you can’t very well paddle to shore now, can you?”

Jahrra furrowed her brow, but nodded. “I guess you’re right.”

Gieaun crossed her arms and shook her head slowly. “I’m always right.”

Scede and Jahrra suppressed a laugh.

“Now what?” Jahrra sighed, shedding some of her irritation. “The moon won’t even rise until after sunset, and it won’t be directly overhead for hours.”

“I dunno,” Scede said, shrugging his shoulders. “We’ll just have to wait and see what they do I guess.”

And so they waited, listening to the crowd gathering on the shore and catching glimpses of their movements from between the gently shifting reeds.

“We made camp back up the road, just in case the monster decides to climb out of the lake tonight!” one of Eydeth’s friends shouted from the far end of the boardwalk.

“I already told you! There isn’t going to be a lake monster!!!” Eydeth screamed, sounding even more agitated than before.

Jahrra, Gieaun and Scede sniggered. The banter between the twins and their classmates carried on for quite some time, and before they knew it the sun was setting and the sky was changing from golden orange to violet and indigo. They pulled out their blankets and jackets and hunkered down, grateful it was late spring and not winter.

“Too bad we can’t light a fire,” Gieaun complained, shivering slightly.

“Don’t worry,” Scede added. “When we’re done scaring the pants off the twins and their friends, we can return to the horses and light a fire there.”

The hours between the time of sunset and the time the full moon reached the crest of the sky crawled by very slowly. Gieaun, Scede and Jahrra listened attentively to the sounds of ghost stories being recited around a great campfire somewhere beyond the shore. Every now and then, the group would let out a scream or a gasp that was loud enough to carry to the minuscule island.

“Too bad we can’t be over there,” Jahrra grumbled.

“Too bad they wouldn’t let us be over there,” Gieaun corrected.

Another hour passed, and when the moon finally reached the center of the sky, the three friends heard a large group approaching the shore.

“So it begins,” Jahrra said darkly, throwing down her blanket and creeping closer to the edge of the island to get a better look.

A group of about twenty of their classmates had clambered around a small rowboat. Even though the moonlight made the lake almost as bright as day, a few of them held torches that flickered off the black, rippling water, looking like several angry, yellow eyes.

“All you have to do is paddle out to the middle and then back,” someone said with a wavering voice, “then we can tell that Nesnan that her lake monster is as imaginary as the hag of the Black Swamp.”

The comment, made by Eydeth’s friend Criyd, caused a healthy amount of amusement that made its way around the crowd in the form of light laughter. Jahrra glowered as the great, hulking boy helped his friend into the boat. She was certain he had been the goblin who’d taunted her at the Fall Festival in Lensterans.

“I think if I just stay on shore that would be fine,” Eydeth said rather nervously, casting his hand over the murky water as if he were sprinkling seeds over a field. “We can see from here if the thing surfaces.”

“You aren’t afraid, are you Eydeth!” someone commented. “Ha! What if Jahrra found out? You would be a laughing stock!”

A light titter passed over the crowd and Jahrra imagined Eydeth giving his sister a rather knowing glare.

“Alright, fine!” he growled. “I’ll paddle out to the middle, it just seems like a waste of time is all.”

Eydeth dragged the small oar through the black lake surface, the splashing of the water the only sound on this bright night.

“Scede, go get the horn,” Jahrra breathed nervously. “Gieaun, you and I will pull the rope.”

Jahrra and Gieaun jumped up and quietly crawled over to where the rope was tied down, grabbing it firmly. Scede went and pulled the horn out of his bag and then walked over next to the girls, crouching down once he reached them.

“When he is aligned with that lone willow there,” Jahrra pointed off to a single tree on the distant shore, bathed in silver moonlight, “when he gets there, Gieaun and I will pull the rope, and then you’ll blow the horn three times. Is everyone ready?”

Gieaun and Scede nodded vigorously, and Jahrra could feel her hands shaking from the suspense. It seemed to take Eydeth ages to get to the middle of the lake, but just before he reached the willow tree, he stopped paddling.

“What! He’s stopping?!” Jahrra gritted her teeth in frustration, her knuckles turning white from her harsh grip on the rope.

“Is this good enough for you all?!” Eydeth shouted from his boat to the shore, shattering the silence that surrounded them all. “If there was such a thing as a lake monster, it should’ve eaten me by now, right?”

While Eydeth waited for a reply, his boat slowly floated towards the middle of the lake and right in line with the willow tree.

“NOW!” Jahrra rasped to Gieaun, her hands barely able to grasp the rope.

With a heaving tug, the two girls lifted the great, soggy head slowly out of the water. Eydeth sat with his arms crossed, waiting for his friends to wave him in. He was oblivious to the huge, sinister reptilian beast that was rising up out of the water just behind him.

Just as Eydeth turned to see what was causing the strange slurping and dripping noise, Jahrra gave Scede the signal to blow on the horn. All three of them had a perfect view of the scene, and they couldn’t have planned it better. There was Eydeth, half turned around, the giant looming neck of their very convincing monster towering just behind him, complete with sunken eyes and a gaping mouth full of long, pointed teeth.

Scede’s timing with the horn was flawless, and as the monster’s bellows blended with the screams of the children from the shore, Eydeth himself let out a very high-pitched, blood-curdling screech that overshadowed them all. He forgot he was in a boat in the middle of a lake, so when he stood up to flee, he lost his balance and fell.

The pompous boy plunged screaming into the lake, and Jahrra and Gieaun had to work extra hard not to burst out laughing. They loosened their grip on the rope and the monster crashed down onto the now empty boat. Scede let out one more blast of the horn as their lake serpent descended, causing Eydeth to swallow a mouthful of foul water as he swam with all of his might towards the shore.

Both Gieaun and Jahrra let go of the rope and fell to the ground with Scede, all three paralyzed in fits of laughter. They could still hear the frantic screams of all the onlookers and a terrified burst every now and then from the petrified, splashing Eydeth. Once he finally reached the shore a few minutes later, the hysterical voices of their classmates became even more frenzied.

“Eydeth! Eydeth!” Ellysian screeched, sounding close to tears. “Are you alright?!”

“What was that thing!?” It was Eydeth’s voice that answered, but several decibels higher than normal.

“THE LAKE MONSTER!!!” several people wheezed in horror.

“Let’s get out of here!” Criyd insisted. “Let’s move the camp much further down the road! Did you see the size of that thing?! What if it comes after us?”

Jahrra, Gieaun and Scede wiped away the tears from their eyes as they listened to the terrified crowd scuffling off into the dark. After several minutes, the silence over the lake returned, and the three friends collected their breath.

“I can’t believe we pulled that off!” Scede said, smiling more broadly than ever.

“The horn was perfect, Scede! And did you see the look on Eydeth’s face? It went so pale that I’d swear it was actually transparent. I’m so glad it’s a full moon!” Jahrra couldn’t tell if she was laughing or crying.

“Our monster looked wonderful!” Gieaun added, grinning broadly.

The three triumphant friends waited for several more minutes to make sure the coast was clear before heading to the willow grove where their horses awaited.

“I can’t wait until we go back to school!” Jahrra shouted over the pounding waves as they walked between the dunes and the ocean. “But it will be hard to act surprised when we hear about what happened to Eydeth.”

Scede shot Jahrra a rakish look and she just flung her head back and laughed, her heart as light as the sand drifting off the dunes.

It was an odd sight, seeing this stretch of beach in the moonlight, but Jahrra enjoyed it. The sound of the roiling ocean made it seem like it was not nighttime at all, and the eerie, silvery light of the full moon on the churning water and rolling dunes made it feel like a strange dream. Finally, the three of them reached the small stand of trees by the tiny creek. Phrym, Bhun and Aimhe all looked up, suddenly roused from their sleep at the sound of their masters, and all three horses let out a whinny of recognition.

“We’re back! Did you miss us?” Jahrra skipped up to Phrym and rubbed his nose affectionately. She gave him a big hug around his long neck, trying to share some of her joy from their recent triumph. “I have some good news, boy. I think we’ll be able to enjoy Lake Ossar in peace once again.”

Phrym nickered quietly and lipped her hair, not understanding what Jahrra had said but sensing her good mood.

“Let’s find some wood and make a fire,” Scede suggested, eyeing the thick brush surrounding them.

“Good idea! I’m freezing!” Gieaun agreed happily.

They gathered enough firewood to last the night then started a small fire. For the rest of the evening they spent their time laughing over the success of their brilliant plot and how well it had gone, all three of them far too overjoyed to sleep.

Other books

Tropic of Capricorn by Henry Miller
The Heart of Henry Quantum by Pepper Harding
The Gale of the World by Henry Williamson
The Interrogative Mood by Padgett Powell
Every Last Promise by Kristin Halbrook
Die Run Hide by P. M. Kavanaugh
Shore Lights by Barbara Bretton
WindSeeker by Charlotte Boyett-Compo