Authors: Darragh Martin
She took another look over her shoulder and OisÃn felt a chill at her next words.
âThe Book of Magic is one of the most powerful books of the Tuatha Dé Danann. There are quite a few people here who might want to use it, even those who seem close to you, but you mustn't let them.'
âIf the Book is so powerful, why am I its Keeper?'
The Keeper of Books looked at him for a moment and smiled.
âThere's only one name on the Book of Magic. And it isn't your brother and it isn't a Quint or even the Captain of
Eachtra.
'
OisÃn gave a little smile back, but he wasn't sure that he felt all that much better. He felt strange without the Book, like walking to school without a bag on your shoulders. He had been used to carrying a weight and now it was gone. The strangest thing was that OisÃn missed the weight.
âYou'll come back,' the Keeper said, as if reading his mind. âNow, you'll have to take the stairs back down. Do you want to take some thread to remember the way?'
âI think I'll be OK,' OisÃn said, worried about what would happen to the Keeper's cardigan if she unravelled it further. âWon't you be here, though?'
âSometimes, of course,' the Keeper said. âBut you must come even if I'm not. Just make yourself at home. I have lots of nettle tea.'
OisÃn thanked her and walked down the many stairs to the bottom of the library. The ground floor was a bit of a shock, like stepping on to a busy city street after being down a side alley. He squinted at the light streaming in and bumped into an older Wren carrying a stack of books. The books dropped to the ground and one immediately started to hiss.
OisÃn stooped to help pick up the dark books and started when he saw who they belonged to.
âTypical,' Stephen muttered under his breath, making sure not to look at his brother.
âWhat are you doing?' OisÃn asked, surveying the stack of dark books.
Stephen pulled them to his chest defensively.
âNone of your business, Dirtface.'
OisÃn spoke before his brother had a chance to turn. âIt's not my fault that you're jealous.'
âJealous!' Stephen scoffed. âLook, Birdbrain, let me get this clear: I don't want to play with your little book or be part of your stupid magic club.' He pulled at the wren pendant around him, though it was bound with a magic he couldn't shake. âI'm here because my little sister is missing. Because
someone
couldn't keep his hands off a stupid book.'
OisÃn could feel a gap widening between him and Stephen, a chasm that he wasn't sure they could ever bridge.
âYou wish it was me that was taken instead of Sorcha. You wish the MorrÃgan took me instead.'
Stephen met his gaze, but he didn't say anything, just stalked back off into the bookshelves. OisÃn thought it was just as well he didn't have the Book of Magic with him, because he could easily have turned Stephen into a toad there and then without a single regret.
Chapter 11
The Raven's Secret
A
NTIMONY curled into her hammock and wished that it was already midnight. When she looked at her watch, though, it was paying attention to the clockwork of the universe rather than her desires. 10.55 p.m.
Somehow time had a way of slowing down just when it should be getting faster. Antimony didn't know if she could wait another hour. CluaiscÃn had been clear, though. He could only meet her after midnight.
Antimony held her mug of firecocoa and let it warm her. It was the good kind, where small chillies danced around the warm chocolate liquid and exploded like fireworks when you had a sip. Graciela Gambaro, who was in the hammock below Antimony, had brought some with her from Guatemala. Antimony could tell she wanted to be friends, but Antimony had put her off. Before the fire, Antimony had had no problem making friends. Before the fire, a lot of things had been different. Antimony rested her mug against her lip and breathed in the warmth. Graciela was playing with Medb Gaultney, bewitching their ponytails so that they could talk. Antimony turned over and faced the wall. They'd been on board
Eachtra
for a week now and she still didn't feel settled. She told herself that she didn't need friends. Especially when all they did was play with ponytails and worry about spots.
Are they supposed to be blue?' Nuala Nugent asked. Caoimhe was healing her acne.
âThey're like beauty spots now,' Caoimhe said in a tone Antimony had heard many times before. Nuala's friend Noreen Moriarty giggled.
âBut why are they getting bigger?'
Antimony heard Caoimhe flick through her book and mutter a guilty-sounding âOops.'
After hearing Nuala complain about her skin for an eternity (or four minutes according to her watch), Antimony jumped out of her hammock and went for a walk. Maybe she'd work on her Air Magic.
Eachtra
couldn't make it through the snowy mountain range without a lot of Air Magic. Mrs Fitzfeather had shown them which Magical Inventions helped defrost the windows and keep the horses warm. Another druid had helped them to calculate the magical mathematics necessary to enable
Eachtra
to fold in and out like an accordion so it could fit through the narrow gaps between mountains. Angus Ãg was teaching them how to transform into birds so that they could fly ahead and scout. So far Antimony hadn't managed to plot the shape of a magical cupboard or sprout a single feather. If she wasn't careful, she'd have to make her own way to Cnoc na gCnámh.
Antimony looked out a porthole at the dark clouds. Maybe it didn't matter. Soon they'd be at the lake and using their Water Magic. That was one of the best things about voyaging on
Eachtra
, her father had said, exploring the different types of magic in the right environment. Antimony could remember how excited she had been to hear about his time as a Wren. He had made her promise that she'd work hard at all the different types of magic, even though they both knew she'd be waiting for the final week when she could show off her Fire Magic. That promise had been before the fire, though. Everything was different now. Now all that mattered was getting hold of the Book of Magic.
Antimony reached the supply room. It was just a dusty old room full of crates and sacks of food, but it was where the younger Wrens liked to hang out. Dimitri Moran and Pádraig Price had made a table out of stacked crates and several Wrens were playing ping-potato across it. Antimony found a crate in the corner. It was pretty noisy so nobody paid much attention to her. Orion Jones gave her a small smile as he played his flute. He was trying to be friendly, maybe because he was the only other new Wren who was black, but Antimony just picked up her book. Orion turned back to Billy Lewis, the Australian boy who was trying to invent a guitar that flew into your hands.
Antimony flicked through her copy of
No Fuss over Feathers: Bird Flight in Thirteen Steps
. Maybe if she could turn into a raven that would be handy. Then she might not need CluaiscÃn to do all her spying. Not that she could really get rid of him. He'd always worked for her mother. It was nice to have something to connect her to her past life, however small.
Every day that
Eachtra
moved north, Antimony felt herself pulled further and further from her past. That morning, she couldn't remember whether the curtains in her old room had been red or orange. She wasn't sure if her father used to have two or three sugar cubes in his firecocoa. Soon her parents' faces would be like clouds, shifting in and out of focus, hard to pin down exactly.
âCareful!' she shouted as a magic football rocketed above her head.
âSorry,' Dimitri Moran said, heading the ball back to his group of friends. Before the fire, Antimony might have joined in. Now, though â¦
âWatch out, would you?'
This time it was Stephen, shouting at Rachel Humphreys because she'd sent a potato in his direction. He flung it back (he was a much better throw than any of them) and returned to his stack of dark books. Antimony caught his eye from the other side of the room. She looked away quickly, picking up her book as if bird-transformation was suddenly fascinating. Her insides squirmed, the way they always did when she thought of Sorcha. She hadn't known what would happen when she burnt the
béal tine
. It was what her parents would have done. Except maybe it wasn't, a small voice in her head said. Maybe getting the Book of Magic wasn't what her parents would want her to do at all.
Stephen was still looking at her. He was suspicious. His little brother had no idea what was going on but Stephen always saw her in the library, as they both watched OisÃn visiting the Book of Magic.
Antimony felt safer with the Book locked up in the library, biding its time until Lughnasa. She didn't want OisÃn to bond too much with it. He was in the other corner now, helping Tom befriend the magic mice that lived in the supply room. Antimony could tell he missed the Book, though, could see that he was calculating the hours until he could go back to the library. She'd be
helping
him by taking it. She wouldn't think of Sorcha or Stephen then.
âTwelve o'clock. The time is twelve o'clock.'
Antimony looked down, surprised to see the little green dragon on her watch puffing out twelve circles of smoke. Midnight had crept up on her as soon as she'd stopped waiting for it. She bolted up and headed for the door, knocking over Billy Lewis's air-guitar, which seemed much happier to be on the ground anyway.
Antimony hurried up the sock-ladder to the deserted deck where CluaiscÃn was waiting for her, fluttering his feathers nervously.
âWell,' Antimony said, slipping into Raven. Her mother had always told her not to apologise to ravens.
âNot well, Miss Antimony, CluaiscÃn is not well at all!
Eachtra
is no space for ravens, not nice for ravens at all! Poor CluaiscÃn working so hard and not a bit of food.'
Antimony rolled her eyes. He was so predictable sometimes. She fished in her pouch and pulled out a jar of iridescent beetles that Graciela's twin brother Gael had traded her.
âLook what I got for you,' she said in what she hoped was a kind voice. âBright beetles all the way from Guatemala.'
âI hope they're not poisonous.'
âI had to swap two fire stones to get these!'
CluaiscÃn seemed to decide not to protest further and gulped down a couple of beetles. He shook out his beak, feeling fuller if nothing else.
âWell,' Antimony said, impatient to get started. âWhat have you found out?'
âSssssh, Miss Antimony, not so loud!'
CluaiscÃn looked over his shoulder skittishly as if he expected somebody to emerge from the shadows.
Antimony had never seen him look so nervous.
âBad times, Miss Antimony, bad times. Miss Antimony should never have burned the
béal tine.
'
âDon't tell me what to do,' Antimony snapped, hoping she sounded like her mother.
âBad deep magic. No good will come of it.'
âIt's too late to change it now. Did you just come here to tell me off or do you actually have some news?'
CluaiscÃn checked over his shoulder yet again before he spoke. When he did, his voice was as small as it could be.
âShe's here.'
âThere's nobody here.'
âNo.
She
's here. On
Eachtra.
'
âWho?'
CluaiscÃn gave a nervous flutter of his wings, shifting his feet uncomfortably.
âThe MorrÃgan.'
Antimony felt a nip in the air, was suddenly aware of every sound as the ship moved through the mountains.
âThere's no way the MorrÃgan could be here,' Antimony said, thinking of all the druids present.
âShe is. In disguise.'
Antimony felt another shiver, as if just talking about the MorrÃgan made the air grow cooler.
âShe wants the Book?' Antimony asked.
CluaiscÃn nodded.
âThere's something else, isn't there?'
CluaiscÃn shifted his weight on his feet, torn between fear and loyalty.
âSomebody here is helping her?' Antimony guessed.
CluaiscÃn nodded.
âA druid? A Wren? A Quint?'
CluaiscÃn looked behind him again.
âCluascÃn, there's nobody there. You've got to tell me. Who's helping the MorrÃgan? Who's she disguised as? CluaiscÃn?'
âVery bad times, Miss Antimony, very bad times.'
âCluaiscÃn, tell me what you know!'
CluaiscÃn looked like he was about to say something when they heard footsteps. CluaiscÃn disappeared into the air in seconds. Antimony turned around sharply, searching in her pouch for her slingshot.
âCaoimhe!' she said as the figure walked into the moonlight. âWhat are you doing here?'
âI could ask you the same question,' Caoimhe said calmly. âRachel said you ran out in a rush. I thought I'd make sure you were OK.'
âYou don't need to spy on me.'
âWho were you talking to?'
âNone of your business.'
Antimony glared at her supposed sister, at that moment hating her as much as she'd ever hated anybody. She was about to storm off when another figure appeared: Cassandra Quicksilver, her pale face rather flushed.
âGirls, what are you doing out so late?' she said, looking over her shoulder.
Antimony was about to ask her the same question when Caoimhe stepped on her toe.
âWe're just stargazing,' Caoimhe said quickly.
âOh, me too,' Cassandra said, although she had to reach in her bag to pull out her telescope
croÃacht
. âIt is a beautiful night for it,' she continued, strolling over to the railing and turning her telescope up to the stars. âI just wish they weren't so sad.'
âYou can read the stars?' Caoimhe asked.
âIt isn't exact, of course. But I can get a reading.'
âAnd something's strange tonight?' Antimony asked.
Cassandra turned to face Antimony. In the moonlight, her pale skin was very striking.
âOf course, it could be nothing,' Cassandra said, pulling her scarf around her and looking back at the stars. âCome on, let's get back inside before Mrs Fitzfeather catches you and something truly tragic happens.'
She attempted a little laugh but there was no hiding it. Cassandra Quicksilver was definitely worried about something. Or, Antimony thought with a shudder as they walked back, she wanted them to think she was worried.
Later that night, CluaiscÃn still couldn't get to sleep. He'd fly far off in the morning, he told himself. Staying loyal to Antimony's mother was one thing, but the girl was pushing it. To think what he'd almost told her! He'd be off in the morning, somewhere nice and hot. Preferably where he could get more of those nice bright beetles.
âCluaiscÃn.'
CluaiscÃn froze as he heard somebody creeping into his hiding place at the back of
Eachtra
. It was a voice he couldn't forget, one like a knife wrapped in velvet.
âI hope you're not trying to hide from me?'
âOf course not,' CluaiscÃn said, starting to feel very nervous.
âI don't like my little birdies to fly too far away.'
Her green eyes were the only thing that CluaiscÃn could see in the dark. He'd never got used to how cold they were, as if just looking into them could banish all happiness.
âOf course not, O Great One,' he flustered.
He felt a sharp fingernail tap at his side, inches from his heart.
âYou haven't been telling secrets, have you?'
âNo, no, no!' CluaiscÃn said, keenly aware of the sharp nail pressed at his side. âThe Great Queen knows that all ravens serve only her, serve always her!'
âBut sometimes they get hungry, don't they?'
Her voice was soft but CluaiscÃn could hear the steel behind it.
âCluaiscÃn said nothing, CluaiscÃn knows nothing!'
âThe Ogoni girl, she wants the Book, doesn't she?'
CluascÃn felt the nail digging harder into his side. He gasped for breath.
âCome on, CluaiscÃn, you don't want to keep any secrets from me. She's planning to take the Book, isn't she?'
CluaiscÃn gave the smallest of nods. He tried not to think of Antimony's mother, of the promise he'd made.
âPlease, O Great One,' he said as he felt the nail pressing into his feathers. âCluaiscÃn will go away!'
The MorrÃgan gave a little laugh, somehow light and terribly heavy at the same time.
âThat's exactly what you're going to do.'
CluaiscÃn gasped as the sharp fingernail stabbed expertly into his side. The last thing he saw before he crumpled to the ground was a pair of green eyes, glittering terribly in triumph.