Thursdays with the Crown (20 page)

Read Thursdays with the Crown Online

Authors: Jessica Day George

“You're welcome to try,” Rolf said.

“Maybe later,” Pogue said.

“Now for the missing piece of the Eye,” Celie announced. She turned. It felt as though she was going to keep turning and she nearly fell.

“Celie!” Queen Celina cried.

“Bran!” the king roared. “Where are you?”

“I've got you,” Pogue said, scooping her up.

“The plague,” Celie said weakly, and tried to squirm out of his arms.

“For every blessed thing there is being a cure,” Pogue reminded her, quoting Lulath with a half smile. “I've already touched Rolf, anyway.”

Celie laughed, then coughed. Pogue carried her through the collection of tapestries, maps, cushions, and other bric-a-brac bearing images of griffins that had been neatly arranged on the long tables. At the far end, above the fireplace, the Eye had been placed in its niche, making the missing part all the more obvious. Pogue shifted Celie in his arms so that she was sitting up, and Celie very carefully matched up the piece of dull and dirty stone with its clean and shining other half.

The Castle shivered.

After a long pause, as though even the Castle was holding its breath, the two parts of the Eye melted together. The dirty side was made clean and new, and every stone of the Castle seemed to sit up, and sparkled, just briefly, before settling back into place.

The silence was broken by Lulath letting out a cheer.

“O huzzah! Is not it the wonder?” he cried.

Celie burst out laughing, helpless.

“Is it done? Is it over?” Lilah demanded. “That seemed too easy.”

“I'd say yes,” King Glower said. “It's over, I mean, not that it was too easy. Nothing so far has been easy.

“Let's get Celie and Rolf upstairs,” he added.

“Right here is just fine,” Rolf said.

Now that her hands were empty, Celie realized how itchy her blisters were. Her eyes were getting even blurrier, and her head felt foggy. She rested her head on Pogue's shoulder.

“How did those riders make it to Sleyne before, without knowing they were sick?” Rolf asked as Pogue put Celie down beside him on a bench. The queen came to fuss over them, pushing back Celie's hair and looking into both their eyes. She turned her head and called an order to the maids, but Celie didn't catch what her mother had asked for. Her hearing seemed to be going in and out. Rufus curled up at her feet and put his head on her lap. She put trembling hands on his head.

“They probably didn't get a bucket of poisonous water dumped on their heads,” Pogue said drily.

“I need to know what's happened, but I'm almost too terrified to ask,” Queen Celina said. “And where on earth is Bran?”

“Coming, coming,” Bran called, running into the room with an armload of books and bottles.

Celie slumped against Rolf and closed her eyes.

“Bran, what do you need?” Pogue said.

Bran began issuing instructions to Pogue and their mother, who Celie had almost forgotten had magical skill. She let herself drift, holding a prayer in her heart that Bran could cure them, and quickly. She could feel Rufus's head shivering under her hands.

“Cel,” Rolf said, interrupting her as she started to fall asleep. “Hey Cel? What should we do after we get better?”

Celie couldn't answer him. She couldn't understand how he was still talking. It took all her strength just to sit.

“Your Highness,” Ethan said humbly to Rolf. “Can we not get the other eggs?”

“Oh, I'd nearly forgotten them,” Rolf said. “Yes, we shall do that!”

“What eggs?” King Glower said. “Who are you again?”

“Your Majesty,” Ethan said, and his voice faded in and out as though he were bowing. “I was an assistant to the Arkower, the last Arkish wizard. I helped him … attempt to … train griffins. I have gathered three eggs and hidden them in the Tomb of the Builder, so that we could collect them later.”

“Griffin eggs?” King Glower sounded amazed. “You found
three
griffin eggs? And three actual griffins will hatch from them?”

“To add to the ones you've brought with you?” Queen Celina said with amusement. “Where will we put them all?”

“We now have two griffin stables,” King Glower said. “Wait … how did I know that?”

“It's the crown,” Rolf said. “I wore it for a few minutes, and I could
feel
the Castle.”

Celie felt a flutter of jealousy but was too sick to indulge it.

“You're the griffin trainer,” Lilah whispered to her, sitting down at her side. “And don't you forget it. I need your help with Juliet, as soon as you feel better.”

“Thank you,” Celie whispered back, and felt tears sting her blurry eyes.

They sat in silence, and Celie started to drift off again.

“All right, Cel, here we go,” Bran said a moment later. “Drink this.”

She tried to open her eyes, and realized that she couldn't. Lilah and Pogue were holding her up, and she could hear Queen Celina saying something to Rolf, but Rolf wasn't answering.

A cold metal cup touched her lower lip and she managed to open her mouth enough for Bran to tilt some of the potion down her throat. She heard Lulath talking expansively about Lorcan to her father. Heard her mother urging Rolf to drink. She had to make the muscles of her throat work by sheer force of will.

The cup was taken away and Lilah pulled her over so
that she was resting against her sister's shoulder. Rufus stirred in her lap, and she felt something wet drip onto her foot.

“Will you just
drink
, you little monster,” Bran said in exasperation.

“And all who are touching the Celie and the Rolf will be drinking this the last,” Lulath said. “Our lovely queen, I am seeing your beautiful poor hands!”

“Do you feel better yet?” Lilah whispered.

Celie tried to blink, but her eyes felt gummy. Bran took hold of her chin and rubbed something that felt and smelled like mud on her eyelids, then washed it away with a wet cloth. When he was done, she opened her eyes and her vision started to clear.

“Daddy?”

“What is it, Celia-delia?” King Glower almost tripped over Rufus trying to get to her.

“I'm starving,” she said, marveling at the sudden feeling of hunger replacing the aches and pains of the plague. “Can you ask the Castle to bring me a custard from the kitchens?”

“Ask it yourself,” the king said fondly. “You're still its favorite.”

Chapter 20

“Sir Pogue, would you hand me that blanket?” Rolf called.

“Please stop calling me that,” Pogue begged.

“But you are being now Sir Pogue!” Lulath cried. “What honor! What excitement!”

Celie grabbed one of the folded blankets and threw it at Rolf. It unfolded in the air and landed with a soft whump on the egg he was wrapping. Rolf grinned at her and shook out the blanket, tucking it carefully around the egg.

“Can we hurry, please?” Lilah said. She looked around nervously. “I really hate this place.”

Celie had to agree. The Glorious Arkower — Hatheland — whatever you wanted to call it, was no place that anyone would want to be. Not anymore.

The fire had died out, though smoke still choked the air. Most of the trees were gone, and the blackened waste
extended all the way to the foot of the Arkower's mountain. Where the Castle ruins had been was just a black plain, with no sign that anything had ever been there. Away in the distance, toward the city where Ethan had been born, the trees started up again, screening the city from their view. Rolf had asked Ethan if he wanted to go back there, or even find a way to send a message, but Ethan had declined.

“To whom would I send a message?” Ethan had asked. “I have no one, and nowhere to go.”

“You have the Castle,” King Glower had said firmly. “This is your home now.”

He had made Ethan a ward of the court, which the queen explained to the stunned young man meant that he could live in the Castle and take lessons with Master Humphries like Celie and Rolf. That was just after Pogue had been knighted for his “services to the Castle and the Glower family,” which Rolf had cheerfully translated as “saving everyone's lives repeatedly even after being hit on the head.”

Once Celie and Rolf and Rufus had recovered from the plague — which took four days of treatments, while they suffered from fever, chills, and a ravenous appetite that Rolf swore was really just the effect of the lack of decent food in Hatheland — and the queen and Pogue had been treated for mild cases of it, they had wanted to return immediately for the eggs. But King Glower had insisted that they wait. They had told their story to the king and queen and
Bran, and then to the rest of the court. They had bathed and changed and eaten and slept, and been commended for their valor separately and in a group.

Then, after a week, the king said that they had waited long enough. The wizards would have let their guard down, the fire would not still be burning. Celie by then was nearly wild with nerves, and so were the others. They didn't want any of the eggs to hatch alone inside the tomb. They wanted them to hatch safely inside one of the new hatching towers, where the grown griffins could watch over them.

“And a few of us could maybe, just maybe, have a chance of bonding with them,” Rolf had put in.

It had taken a little time to convince the king and queen that they did not need to take the entire army with them, and to negotiate down to just Bran, four soldiers, and King Glower and Queen Celina. Then there had been the problem of how to get there. They could tell the Castle to send them — or so they thought — but how would they get back?

“We'll have to take a piece of the Castle with us,” Celie had pointed out. “It's probably easiest if it's a bit that already sticks out, but without a lot of stairs to climb.”

That ruled out any of the towers, and it was Rolf who pointed out that the piece of the Castle that jutted out the farthest was in fact the griffin stable where Celie had found the piece of the Eye. So they had all gathered there and huddled around the king, who clenched his fists and
screwed his eyes shut, muttering under his breath to the Castle.

The twist in the back of Celie's head came, there was a rumble, and the smell of smoke wafted through the open door. Turning, they saw that the door no longer opened onto the rear courtyard, but onto a barren, burned plain.

And now here they were at the Tomb of the Builder, carefully loading the eggs onto canvas stretchers, wrapping them in blankets, and getting ready to take them back to Sleyne. They had, of course, taken their parents on a hushed tour of the tomb first, while the soldiers waited outside and fidgeted, grabbing their sword hilts every time the wind gusted.

Rolf wrapped the last egg and signaled to Pogue. Together they lifted a stretcher with an egg on it and carefully maneuvered out of the tomb. Lulath and Bran took up another, and Ethan and King Glower himself got the third. Once they were all outside the tomb, those not carrying eggs surrounded the stretchers, looking anxiously for any sign of the wizards.

But there was no sign of them. There was no sign of anything alive.

They couldn't even find Wizard Bratsch's hut. There were so many identical charred lumps that had been boulders or trees that it had taken them much longer than they'd thought to locate the tomb, let alone find the small, makeshift house.

Lord and Lady Griffin had come with them, Lord Griffin proudly wearing the gold collar that had belonged to the Builder's griffin, but they had refused to let Rufus join the party and Celie had agreed with them. Lorcan and Juliet were likewise deemed too young, and so they had stayed with Rufus in his exercise tower, where he was showing them how to destroy a leather ball. Once they reached the Glorious Arkower, the adult griffins would not leave the stable anyway, and were standing just inside the door when Celie and the others got back with the eggs.

Lord Griffin inspected the eggs thoroughly, yanking aside the blanket wrappings with his beak and sniffing and eyeing each one in turn. Once he was satisfied, they all shuffled inside. King Glower was just getting ready to ask the Castle to take them home when a pair of wild griffins arrived.

Lord Griffin went out to them at once, while Lady Griffin and the rest of them hovered in the doorway. The wild griffins and Lord Griffin all clacked and squawked and rustled their wings. Then the wild griffins turned and flew away.

“Come back! Come with us,” Celie called, but they just kept going. Lord Griffin gently butted her back into the stable. “They should come with us,” she said, pointing to the floor.

But the king of the griffins squawked what was undoubtedly a no. He looked expectantly at King Glower and carked, and the king shrugged at Celie and began to exhort the Castle to take them home.

A twist and a whoosh and they were back in Sleyne.

Rolf immediately commandeered the soldiers with them to help take the largest of the eggs (which he was making no secret of wanting to bond with) up to one of the hatching towers. Bran and the king saw to the other two, and griffins came flooding out of the other stable to look at the eggs and make excited sounds. It all made Celie feel rather muzzy and tired, so she retreated to her rooms to see Rufus.

He had taken all the treats and toys and put them in one corner of the play tower, which he was now defending. Celie promptly pulled him away and let Juliet and Lorcan get some of the treats, threatening Rufus with his toy enemy, Flat Squirrel, when he wouldn't share.

Lilah soon joined them, and Juliet careened into her “mother's” lap with great delight. They played with the griffins for a little while, and then Lilah coughed and looked at Celie thoughtfully.

“You know, Celie,” Lilah said. “I don't want to sound greedy …”

“You don't want to sound greedy, but …?” Celie raised her eyebrows.

Other books

Hunted by Christine Kersey
Bridge to Haven by Francine Rivers
The Angel Tree by Lucinda Riley
Fly Me to the Moon by Alyson Noel
To Wear His Ring by Diana Palmer
The Second Lie by Tara Taylor Quinn
The Weight of Gravity by Pickard, Frank
Ex-Purgatory: A Novel by Clines, Peter
Tiny Beautiful Things by Cheryl Strayed