Read Blue Hills Online

Authors: Steve Shilstone

Blue Hills (6 page)

BOOK: Blue Hills
12.44Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads
Chapter Twenty-Two

Kar Shifts and I Spout Nonsense

“They want us in the river,” I eagerly explained. “They're telling us all about the pudding. We must … perform.”

Three times I had sent the words ‘We must perform' from brain to lips. Twice had my lips and tongue so such conspired to garble the message before relenting at last to the pitiful spectacle of my ever-expanding agitated urgency.

“Shall we read tatters of straw? Shall we reside in mounds of sticky bark?” I asked more calmly, fully expecting my question to break through the nonsense on the third try. “Shall we tell ‘em about the … the freeze and the … stiff silence … and the witch and … and … why we're here?”

“We'll do better than that, Bek. Get ready to hop on,” said Kar. She shimmered to shift.

She fogged into orange mist and emerged red Dragon, matching neatly her color to that of the snaves. I hopped onto her neck and clung. She lifted to swoop on membraned wings all above and around the tiers of benches in the cavernous bowl. The snaves registered delight. I saw ‘em grinning and waving their tentacles. I heard ‘em murmuring in approval. Kar tilted and dropped us in a glide to land in the center of the circular platform stage.

“Behold, you snaves of Annek! I, the first and only jrabe jroon, Karro of Thorns, Rakara, Queen Jebb of the Acrotwist Clowns, bring to you the great privilege and opportunity to hear Bekka, the Chronicler of the Boad, All Fidd and Leee Combined! She, who is keeper and collector of all Gwer drollek stories, will explain to you our quest.”

Kar lowered her head, and I slid to the stage, true and properly introduced. I felt it so such. Not a sliver timid, I stood there in silver blue light under the gazes of surrounding multitudes of snaves. Truth, I was a new Bekka, fair bold, not shy. Confident to my core, I opened my arms and shouted out my message.

“Weeds are not eyebrow replacements,” I began, and to my surprise, the snaves cheered and applauded, slapping tentacles on the benches.

They knew what I meant. They knew. I wouldn't have to repeat myself so such three times. My brain sent words to convey the message of our quest to find the lavender witch, the Babba Ja Harick. Weeds and eyebrows may have sounded from my lips, but understanding slithered in the writhings of the snaves.

“Socks can't be trusted in avalanche weather,” I continued. “Never mix hutter blankets with buckletar before noon. Drink tea only while standing in the river. Jars are cleanest at sunsink. Lemony doorknobs … And so on … And so forth … And so fifth.”

I spewed the nonsense, and the snaves cheered and cheered. I told ‘em about the frozen stiff silence and the waterwizards and the beeketbird hanging motionless in the air above my hut's roof and about all the other bendo dreen frozen and the Chalky Grays and about Kar's silly bird shape with its ridiculous blue plume and about the silent motionless Falls of Horn and the loss of magic and how I was there to try and bring it back. I ended my speech of gibberish with a question.

“Striped pantaloons?” I asked simply.

The snaves fell silent. Kar hisspered at me from her Dragon mouth, “What was that? What was that? What did you ask ‘em?”

“Striped Pantaloons?” I whispered. “Can you guide us to the witch?”

The snaves slithered a strange parade, each tier of ‘em moving in opposition to the tiers below and above. In the brightness of the silver blue light, it was dizzying to watch ‘em, hoops of red circling this way, that way, this way, that way, up, up, up.

“Settle!” roared Kar, shooting yellow flames from her nostrils. “Snaves! We need guidance! Where is the Babba Ja Harick?”

The snaves stopped circling and began laughing. They roared and roared with laughter, swaying bulbous heads, slapping tentacles on benches. And as their laughter soared, the floor of the stage beneath me and Kar sagged, melted, disappeared. I fell laughing. Kar fell laughing. Whump. We landed on a slick slide, and down we went, helpless with laughter, flailing wild with speeding glee.

Chapter Twenty-Three

What Happened?

I blinked and looked down at my sopping wet clothes. My hands rested on a carpet of pale blue grass. I raised my head and stared out over the lake to the heights of the Charborr Forest. The low sun of morning stretched my shadow on the Blue Hill. Same Blue Hill? What? Where? Kar? Where was Kar? I whipped my head around, casting a flight of droplets from the soaked tendrils of my coppery hair. Kar crouched halfway up the slope, hugging her knees, staring at me. A red Dragon no more, she was bendo dreen Kar.

“Kar? Am I … saying what I'm thinking?” I asked.

“I don't know, Bek. What are you thinking?” she solemnly replied.

“That's it. That's good. The right answer. The right … answer,” I said, much relieved. “It's so such … annoying to … have to … have to push the same … idea … three times to get it out … once. What's it like to be Queen of the Acrotwist Clowns?”

“What? Why ask that? Don't you want to know what happened, why we're here again?” responded Kar.

“First, so said … first, what's it like to be … Queen? Second, yes … second, what happened?” I insisted, fuddlement full well in control of my mind.

“All right, Bek. You settle and dry off. I'll tell you first about being Queen Jebb,” said Kar, still hugging her knees, still staring at me. “I get to throw the first pie at every pie fight. I am first in line to be cleaned in the Sudser after every pie fight. So said, truth, I am first in line for everything unless I want to be second or third or last. I make the Clock watch schedule. I test all new slapshoes and award ‘em to contest winners. I never have to do the dishes. I choose what cake what day for what meal. If I say “Stop!” or “Go!” every Acrotwist Clown in hearing must obey, stop or go. Such … like that.”

She paused, still hugging her knees, still staring at me. The expression in her eyes wasn't one of worry. It was more like as one of wary. Such was so.

“Now I'll tell you what happened,” she resumed. “We slid down a so such sort of a funnel which led to a long tunnel slide like as described in the Gwer drollek story of the Weather Woes. Both of us were limp with laughter. I was red Dragon, remember, and tried to fly, but my muscles were too tickled to work. And then I gave up. I didn't care. It was fun to laugh down the slide. You laughed, too, until we hit the lake. Just over there. Deep under. Below. The slide tunnel spilled us into the bottom of the lake. You floated limp. Such was so. Your eyes rolled back in your head. Your smile was blissful. I shook you hard and noticed that I was still Dragon when I saw my red taloned claws. I shifted to Rakara, wrapped you in my mantle, and brought you up over there. I swam you to the shore, shifted to bendo dreen, and laid you down where you are sitting. You have had another so such ‘swim'. I suppose you remember nothing.”

“I remember falling through the … the … the stage and beginning to … to ... laugh ... and ... slide. After that … nothing,” I said.

“Well, you seem alert now and not talking so such oddly as before with the snaves. Such might be good. And now we're both bendo dreen. That's more a comfort, isn't it? You are Bekka, in spite of all oddness. What do you say we should do now, stuck as we are back here again?” asked Kar, renewing her faith in me and replacing her fate into my hands.

I looked at Jo Bree safely tucked under my belt. Flush yellow pink.

“Remember Jo Bree's … gong … no … song. It told us … the tiers of snaves must be mimed … no … climbed. It said A, then E, then I, O, and U. We … met the snaves of … Annek.

Annek might be … A. There are more Blue Hills beyond this … one. Tiers of ‘em. Let's march over this one and up … the next.”

Kar nodded and shrugged like we do. I did the same, and got to my feet. Kar came near and handed to me a pulpy, pale blue globe.

“What's this?” I asked.

“I found ‘em growing on luminous vines at the bottom of the lake. They're good. Taste,” she answered.

I nibbled. Sweeter than cappmelons drenched in Clover honey.

“I named ‘em moonplums,” Kar said proudly.

“Mmmmm, good,” I responded to the taste and the name.

Chapter Twenty-Four

To The Smokey Blue Hill

We climbed to the top of the hill and looked for any sign at all of the entrance down to the stairs which led to the cavern theater where we'd encountered the snaves of Annek. Not a hint of a clue was there to be seen. The hill was blanketed smoothly with pale blue grass. We stood for a goodly span of time on the summit riding the slow back and forth movement of the hill. The hill beyond the one we rode moved away to the left as we went to the right, and away to the right as we went to the left. So and such the constant serenity of the soothing motion bound the both of us uncommonly still so as like in a spell of enchantment.

“Bek?” droned Kar.

“Hmmm?” I buzzed in a blur.

We, a pair of bendo dreen statues, lapsed into a lengthy silence. Not a stiff menacing silence, but a cool drowsing silence. The sun marched hard and steady across the sky. My shirt, jacket, pantaloons, stockings and highboots moved from drenched to dry.

“Bek?” droned Kar.

“Hmmm?” I buzzed from deepest blur.

“Bek!” snapped Kar, startling me alert.

“What?” I responded.

“We've wasted an entire day standing on this hill!” she said with a good measure of alarm.

I shook my head. I even slapped my own cheeks. It was so such difficult to completely escape the blissful torpor we had been lulled into by the gently moving hills. But escape it I did with a final slap.

“Kar, yes … Kar … the next … Blue Hill … That one with the … the … blanket of … of …smoky … yes … smoky blue grass. The second tier. Let's … go,” I managed to say.

Hand in hand, we clumped down the hill, keeping our eyes lowered to watch the carpet of pale blue grass. We did so such in order to avoid being mesmerized by the motion of the hills. The slope leveled. I lifted my head and calculated the distance to the smoky Blue Hill. Not so such far, but between us and it stretched a low standing dark blue hedge.

“Look,” I informed Kar, “a boundary hedge. A boundary … hedge … for true. Oh! Two of ‘em!”

There were two. The one closest to us moved with the hill we rode. The barely higher one just beyond moved in opposition with the smoky Blue Hill. We were about to cross the boundary between the first tier of Blue Hills and the second.

“I'll fly us over,” said Kar.

“I would rather … hop,” I said.

“Why?” asked Kar, giving me the wary look.

“I … don't … don't know,” I explained, grinning like a lackwit.

“It's too much for you. You can't jump that …,” Kar argued until she was cut off by me suddenly breaking into a sprint and speeding for all I was worth and a mound of thorns more for the low moving hedges. I cleared ‘em both with a tremendous leap of joy, and mid-flight I looked down between the hedges at a fracture filled with blue shifting sand. I landed whump on smoky blue grass. I grinned madly back at Kar, who gaped at me. She shimmered to cloud with green wings, one of her favorite shapes, and floated serenely over the hedges. She swirled and emerged as the jrabe Rakara, hanging upside down in the air.

“Ye be an oddment, Bek,” she said, blinking her sightless milky white eyes.

“I … know. There was … blue sand in the fracture … blue sand,” I said, so such haunted by something hiding among the wisps of fog in my mind. “Kar … please be … Kar. I need you … to … to be … Kar.”

Rakara whirled her dark green mantle and spun to sit next to me on the smoky blue grass as Kar, my bendo dreen Karro of Thorns.

“Why?” she asked.

“Be … cause,” I answered dimly. “Dark.”

By this time, dusk had crept all around us. I pointed to the top of the smoky Blue Hill. I was waiting for night. Kar shrugged like we do.

Chapter Twenty-Five

Waiting

“What are we waiting for, Bek?”

“A raft … no … a shaft … of silver blue … night … no … light.”

“I supposed so such. Bek?”

“Yes?”

“I wonder …”

“What? What do … you … you … blunder … no … wonder?”

“There! Like that. Why do you stumble in speech like…”

“The witch? So said. I … know. Such has become … so. I do … know. I fly … no … I try … yes … to fill … spill the … the words quicker, but I … can't. And it's getting … nurse … verse … curse … worse!”

“Settle, Bek. It can't be a bad thing, I'm thinking. Such. Every time since we started, when you swim, something strange happens, and you lose the memory of it. Truth. I may be known throughout the hedge as a cracked melon, but true as true, I believe that your strangeness has something important to do with finding the Babba Ja Harick and returning with her to Fidd and Leee Combined, thereby melting the stiff silence and restoring magic.”

“Good … speech.”

“I've had a lot of practice. It's another duty I perform as Queen Jebb of the Acrotwist Clowns. The one difference is that you didn't smash a pie in my face when I finished.”

“If I had bun … one … I would.”

“We should have a pie fight when this is all over and done. I'll fly you to Fan Wa's Island, and we'll have a trampoline pie fight. Those are the best.”

“Kar?”

“Yes?”

“Whenever we … adventure … together, it's the … the … toast … no … roast … no … most … yoss, that's it! … fun.”

“You said ‘yoss' instead of ‘yes'.”

“I know. So … said. Blue … Stew … True! Kar, on my adventure through … through … time … I missed …. I missed … your … your…”

“Insane lackwittedness?”

“No.”

“Wonderful shiftiness?”

“No.”

“What then?”

“Your ... you!”

“Well then, make a vow. Never more adventure without me.”

“I … vow.”

“When do you think the top of the hill will open?”

“When … it … does.”

“There's clarity. I'm shifting to Dragon and flying to the lake to get more moonplums. I'll be right back. Don't do anything without me.”

Before I could reply, the black silhouette of Kar in the night bulged, produced wings and flew off. I looked up at the star-spattered sky. Why did I sound more and more like the witch herself? I didn't know. I was me inside, but I spoke so such like as the witch. Why did I know that a shaft of silver blue light would erupt from a sudden opening on top of the hill and leap for the stars? I was certain of that. I just knew. I sat relaxed, riding the pleasant back and then forth of the hills. Kar returned, flapping noisily near me, sprinkling me with droplets of lake water. She melted from great black form of Dragon down to humble black form of bendo dreen.

“Here, Bek. Nice and ripe.”

“Banks … Cranks … Thanks … Oh! Lime! Time! Hurry!”

BOOK: Blue Hills
12.44Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Song for Sophia by Moriah Denslea
The Devil Finds Work by James Baldwin
Hero by Cheryl Brooks
The Demolition Mission by Franklin W. Dixon
Fatal Identity by Joanne Fluke
Dangerous Depths by Kathy Brandt
Spice and Secrets by Suleikha Snyder