Read The Earth Dwellers Online
Authors: David Estes
“Thank the Heart of the Mountain,” my mother murmurs into my hair.
“You’re still clean, Mother,” I say. Not a question, an observation. When I last saw her she had barely gone through withdrawal from the drugs—ice powder—leaving her system.
“Wilde helped me until she had to leave,” she says, pulling away from me to look at my face. It’s weird to see her eyes so clear, so aware. Strange and amazing.
“And after she left?”
“I helped myself,” she says, which makes me gather her up in my arms once more, out of pride.
“I knew you could do it. I always knew.”
“We’re a family again, right?” Jolie asks from just below my armpit.
“We never stopped being one, Joles,” I say. “Not for one second.”
~~~
Wilde didn’t tell my mother anything before she left, only that it was an emergency. I don’t want to tell her either. How can I when, for the first time in so long, she’s happy, truly happy? Still sad about losing Father and Wes, but coping, on her own, without the fog of drugs to blind her to reality. Like the rest of us—coping.
But I know I have to, because she’ll find out soon enough anyway, and I’d rather she hears it from me.
“The Glassies are going to attack us,” I say through the swirling steam from my cup of tea.
Mother’s eyebrows narrow, followed by Jolie’s. They look so much alike, their expressions so similar, I almost want to laugh. I would under any other circumstances.
“Why would they do that?” Jolie says. “We haven’t done anything to them.”
I shake my head, marveling at how my twelve-year-old sister, having gone through so much in her short life—abducted, nearly enslaved by a corrupt admiral, nearly killed by a deranged king—is able to maintain such a childlike innocence. The world would be a better place if the rest of us weren’t so jaded by life and experience.
“I don’t know,” I say. “Maybe they’re scared because we’re different than them. Maybe they’re just bad people.”
“Like King Goff?” she says.
“Yah, maybe just like King Goff.”
“He’s dead, you know,” Jolie says, so matter-of-factly it’s like she’s telling me it snowed today, or she bought bread at the bakery.
“I didn’t know that,” I say, unsurprised. There was no way the consortium would find the king innocent, considering all the evidence stacked against him. “When?”
“Three days past,” my mother says, interjecting. “They did it publicly.”
“I wanted to go, but Mother wouldn’t let me.” Maybe my sister’s innocence isn’t quite intact after all.
“Mother was right. Death isn’t something that should be watched, like a competition.”
Jolie shrugs. “Well, I’m still glad he’s dead.”
I have nothing to say to that because I am too.
~~~
I’m nervous. Despite all I’ve been through—from minor things, like facing pub fights with drunken men wielding shards of broken bottles, to major things, like fighting through hordes of soldiers and black-robed Riders—speaking to a bunch of irate and confused ice country leaders scares me more than anything.
For one, they’re men and women, many of them twice my age. And three quarters of them aren’t from my part of town, the Brown District. There are four leaders from each District, White, Blue, Brown, and Black. Yo is huddled up with the other three from the Brown District, probably setting the record straight, telling them what I told him earlier, trying to get them all on the same page. The representatives from the White and Blue Districts are sitting together, speaking to each other more with their hands than with their mouths, as if the grandness of each arm gesture determines the weight and strength of the words attached to it.
Lines are already being drawn, even in this supposedly “equal” tribunal.
The Black District reps are sitting alone. Well, only three of the four have shown up and they don’t seem interested in anything but whatever card game they’re playing—Boulders ’n Avalanches probably. They only turn their attention away from the game to spit wads of tobacco on the dirt floor of the large council room.
I fight back the desire to grab Buff’s arm and jump off the raised platform we’re sitting on.
Buff seems to recognize my discomfort. “Don’t worry, you’ll do just fine,” he says.
“Whaddya mean,
I’ll
do just fine? You’re in this as much as I am.”
Buff’s chuckle is his response. He knows when the time comes, I’ll do the talking.
I’m tempted to start the meeting without the last Black District member, but just as I’m mustering the courage to stand, the door swings open and a wiry form fills the entrance. When the man steps into the lantern light, I gasp, my breath sticking in my lungs.
I want to laugh or cry or shout or all three, but I can’t do anything as I’m still holding my breath, because…
…because the last Black District rep is Abe, my old friend, as responsible for me being alive as anyone else on this planet. And behind him, filling the entirety of the doorway, is his brother, Hightower, as big and tough as a Yag, but with a heart as bright and shiny as the bags of gold that the two of them stole from the palace when the whole world was being sliced to ribbons by a million swords.
“Hey, Dazzy,” Abe says. “I heard you’ve got somethin’ big to tell the consortium.”
Chapter Seven
Adele
T
here are fierce red marks where my metal belt dug into my belly and hips. The gashes sting like hell, but I’ll take them any day compared to having razor-sharp teeth embedded in my skin. My belt probably saved my life. Well, that and Skye, who threw her own life to the winds of fate and attacked the Killer just before it mauled me to death.
She saved my life. Why? The question zips around my head, but I can’t seem to latch onto it to really focus.
Killers. A strangely appropriate name for the enormous beasts that attacked us. Their carcasses lie nearby, dark shadows on the sand. More than once Siena has had to shoot her arrows at the Cotees who’ve been skulking close by, drawn by the scent of blood and hoping for an easy and satisfying meal. Cotees and Killers: I’m thinking about them like they’re normal things that people think about, when really they’re as foreign as the sparkling—actually sparkling—stars filling the clear, dark night sky, their beauty dwarfed only by the unbelievably surreal moon looking down like a pale fluorescent eye.
I sit back to back with Tristan, who’s got nasty claw marks bleeding down his naked chest, his shredded shirt being torn into strips by Wilde, who’s tending to his wounds. Miraculously, she’s mostly unscathed, having only had the wind knocked out of her before Tristan saved her from the Killer.
Siena’s working on her sister, who took a pair of nasty claw scrapes, one to her cheek and the other to her shoulder.
“We got lucky. Searin’ lucky,” Siena says.
“I don’t believe in luck,” I say, not unkindly.
“Neither do I,” Skye says, and then, as if realizing she’s just agreed with me, clamps her mouth shut and focuses back on her shoulder, which Siena has just wrapped tightly with some kind of animal skin.
“Thank you,” I say to Skye. “You saved my life.”
She mumbles something I can’t make out. “What was that?” I say.
Siena grins. “She said ‘Thank you’ back. Don’t make her say it again, she might not survive it.”
I can’t help but to grin back. What the hell am I doing? Where the hell are we? It’s like Tristan and I are trapped in this strange world of burning suns and fierce sword-swinging, arrow-shooting women, fighting for our lives against creatures that see us only as their dinner.
“Welcome to fire country,” Siena says, dabbing at the blood on Skye’s cheek.
“What is fire country?” Tristan asks dumbly, stealing the question right off my lips.
Skye laughs. “As if you don’t know.” She says it like she doesn’t believe us, but there’s less certainty in her voice than before.
“It’s everything around you,” Wilde says. “Fire country extends to the great forests in the east, to the cliffs and the waters in the south—where the Killers live in packs—and to the north, to the edge of ice country.”
“What’s ice country?” I ask.
“Where the Icers live,” Siena says, as if that answers everything. “Like my sister’s boyfriend, Dazz.”
“He’s not my boyfriend,” Skye says, cringing when her sister dabs her scrape too hard.
“Lover then,” Siena says, hiding a smile. I smirk at their banter—the same banter that gave me the opportunity to escape the first time. Now escaping’s the last thing on my mind. Not when there could be more Killers—or worse—roaming the desert. Not when there are oceans of sand surrounding us, as far as the eye can see, and I don’t have the slightest clue what direction we came from.
“And to the west?” Tristan says.
“What about the west?” Siena says.
“Wilde told us how far fire country goes in every direction but the west.”
“Anyone who’s gone west has never returned,” Wilde says. “As far as we can tell, fire country goes on forever to the west.”
~~~
Evidently, we’re going to march straight on through the night. They don’t bind our hands this time. Or blindfold us. Skye starts to object, but Wilde silences her with a hand. “We’re beyond all that,” she says.
Skye looks like she wants to say something, but bites her lip instead. Her message is delivered when she points the tip of her blade in my direction.
If I try to run, she’ll kill me.
I guess saving each other’s lives didn’t change anything. It just goes to show that enemies can be temporary friends in a life or death situation. Then everything goes back to normal.
Siena, however, seems to have softened somewhat. She walks easily next to me, swinging her arms, her bow bouncing against her back. I cast a final glance back at the shadowy forms of the dead Killers, just to make sure they’re still dead.
Wilde leads; Skye watches from behind.
Tristan falls in beside me. “You okay?” I say.
He gives me a wry grin. “Yeah, you?”
“Never been better,” I say.
“Perhaps a holiday at the Sandy Oasis would’ve been a better choice,” he says casually.
“There’s sand here,” I point out.
“But no cold drinks.”
My mouth seems to go even dryer. “Thanks for reminding me.”
“What’s the Sandy Oasis?” Siena asks.
Surprised, I look at her. “It’s a place where sun dwellers go on vacation.”
“What’s vacation?” she says, her head tilted to the side like a child.
“Uhh,” I say.
“It’s taking a break from life to just relax,” Tristan explains.
“But then who will do all the work?” This time it’s Skye who asks the question. Evidently our conversation has captured even her attention.
“The other people,” Tristan says, sighing. “I suspect the world we come from is very different than yours. Some people work harder than others.”
Siena’s head bobs in understanding. “That ain’t different. We got shankers, too. People who just live off the work of others. One of my good friends, Veeva, her guy’s the shankiest shanker ’round. I ain’t never seen him so much as lift a finger to help out. He’s always on—what did you call it?—vaycayshun?”
“Yeah, something like that,” I say, suddenly feeling very weary, like my legs can’t go another step. We’re climbing a large dune, one step at a time, our feet sinking into the soft sand. “How far is New Wildetown?” I ask.
“’Bout a day’s hike in the opposite direction,” Skye says. “Why? Are you gettin’ tired, Glassy?”
“No. And I’m not a Glassy.” I’m barely able to make my voice sound strong, when inside of me my heart’s settled into the pit of my stomach. A day’s hike?
“I thought that’s where we were going?” Tristan says.
“We hafta stop somewhere else first,” Siena says.
“Don’t worry, weak little Glassy, we’re almost there,” Skye says.
I take a deep breath, hold it, fight off the urge to turn around and punch her. After all, she did save my life. I can be civil.
As we near the top of the mountainous dune, Wilde slows her pace, lowers to a crouch, peeks over. She looks back. “The Glass City sleeps,” she says.
We crowd around her, in a cluster, staying low. Sneak a quick look over the sandy peak.
My heart rises from my gut to my throat, trapping my breath in my lungs.
For the sight before me is beyond spectacular, beyond unexpected, beyond real.
A city, domed by glass, filled with metal and stone and glass structures: buildings.
A Glass City. The Glassies. The Earth Dwellers.
The fourth Realm.
Chapter Eight