Furnaces of Forge (The Land's Tale) (7 page)

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Authors: Alan Skinner

Tags: #novel, #Childrens, #12+, #Muddlemarsh, #Fantasy, #Muddles

BOOK: Furnaces of Forge (The Land's Tale)
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They needed their good spirits to take them through the next hour of the day. Within a hundred metres of the bridge, the road stopped. Their map showed the way the adventurers had gone a few months before but it didn’t indicate that there was no track to follow. They had simply chosen the easiest way over rock and scrub, the river on one side and the mountains on the other. With the bikes, it was much harder. Touch and Cres were forced to dismount and push. It was tiring work but not tiring enough to dent their good spirits.

They reached the point on the map where they had to turn north away from the river. Large rocks and trees presented a formidable barrier as the land began to rise upwards into the High Mountains. Touch stared at the terrain around them, his forehead creased in thought.

‘It can’t be far. We should be able to see the entrance of the tunnel from here. But I can’t see any sign that anyone has gone this way. We might have over shot it. Maybe we should go back,’ he said.

Cres rested her bike against a tree and looked over Touch’s shoulder. ‘If you think so,’ she said, peering at the map. ‘Where do you think we are then?’

‘Well, I’m pretty sure were here, in the right plac. We passed all these landmarks and this should be near the entrance.

‘If you think we should be in the right place, then let’s assume we are. It’s very rocky here. It would be hard to leave much of a trail. I trust you,’ Cres said.

Touch looked at his friend for a moment, then smiled. ‘Good enough for me, Cres. Let’s have a look up this way, then.’

It took some time to get both bikes past the barrier of rocks and trees. Twice they had to leave one bike, push and carry the other together, and then go back for the first bike. Yet, beyond the rocks and trees, the ground levelled slightly and they came upon a small clearing. At the rear of the clearing, the mountain rose steeply, a wall of sheer stone. And in the face of the cliff was a yawning black hole.

The moment they saw the entrance, the realisation of what they were about to attempt hit them. What had been a plan became a task. What had been a hope became a possibility. It took several seconds to sink in and neither needed to speak of it.

‘Why don’t we have a bite to eat and then go in? I’d rather eat in the sun than in the dark,’ Cres suggested.

‘Good idea. I’m hungry, anyway,’ Touch agreed. ‘The others said it took them nearly a day to walk through the tunnel. We should do it in half that time, even if it is slow-going in places.’

‘Copper didn’t exaggerate,’ said Cres. ‘Big, isn’t it?’

And so it was.

Yet, although the tunnel was high, it wasn’t wide enough to allow them to ride side by side, so after lunch, they once again travelled with Touch in front. The tunnel inclined gently into the mountain. The floor was bumpy but level, and the ovals of light cast by the electric lanterns on their bikes allowed them to make steady progress at first. But then the tunnel began to narrow until the handlebars of their bikes almost scraped the walls.

Touch slowed. The lanterns were now illuminating the ceiling, whereas earlier there had been only a dark space above them. His concern increased when he felt the roof of the tunnel touch his hair. He bent over the handlebars, considering the position they were in. If it became too low or narrow for the bikes, it would be a long and tiring retreat backwards, as there wasn’t enough room either side to dismount.

Touch’s sense of unease was heightened by an odd feeling. The deeper they rode into the tunnel, the more it tugged at him. The feeling was like a presence, a being that rode behind him and held him tightly around the chest. It plucked at his attention and prevented him from concentrating.

Behind him, Cres was experiencing the same sensation. She forced herself to focus on Touch’s back. The tightness of the tunnel was more obvious from her vantage point. She could see how close the walls and ceiling were to Touch. As the light of his lantern faded into the gloom ahead, she couldn’t fight the thought that they were being sucked into the mountain, drawn into its dark heart. ‘It’s not a tunnel,’ she thought. ‘It’s a funnel.’

Still they pressed on. After several minutes, Touch realised that the tunnel had stopped shrinking. Despite the pain in his shoulders from hunching over the handlebars, he took heart that the tunnel was no longer closing in on them and pedalled harder.

The bike jolted and Touch was lifted off the seat. He expected to feel his head hit the ceiling and was surprised when back on to the bike seat unharmed. The ceiling and walls had disappeared from the pool of light cast by his lantern. He heard Cres’s bike rattle and then brake behind him.

‘I expected . . .’ she said. She didn’t need to finish.

‘So did I,’ said Touch. He took a torch from his pack and got off his bike, shining the light around.

They were standing in a tunnel as wide and as high as the one they had first entered – and it ran both left and right. Puzzled, Touch shone the torch back the way they had come. In the wall of the tunnel was an opening to a much smaller passage from which they had just emerged. The floor of the smaller passage was a couple of centimetres higher than the one they were now in.

Touch thought for a moment. ‘You know, Cres, I think somewhere we left the main tunnel and ended up in that one. It’s like a branch or a siding, like we have in Forge to allow one tram to get past another.’

‘Whatever, Touch. I’m just glad we’re out. I was getting really worried,’ admitted Cres.

‘Worried? Nah, I knew we’d be OK,’ Touch said with as much swagger as he could muster.

‘Touch,’ said Cres hesitantly, ‘have you . . . felt anything while we’ve been in here? Something around you and in you at the same time?’

‘Do you feel it, too?’ Touch replied. ‘Like something tugging at you and poking your stomach from the inside?’

‘Yeah . . . It was getting pretty intense back there,’ Cres said.

‘It was probably just because of the tunnel. You know, anxiety.’

Cres was dubious. ‘But it started before the tunnel got smaller. And I still feel it.’

‘Yeah. So do I,’ Touch admitted quietly. Then his voice brightened. ‘Come on, let’s keep going. It can’t be that far now.’

On they went, on and on, through the long, dark tunnel. And with every push of the pedal, they rode on with something they could neither see nor explain inside them.

Chapter 4

Unexpected Help

 

W
hile Touch and Cres were racing across Bourne Bridge, Crimson was crossing one of the seven small bridges that arched across the Meddle in the centre of Home. From all directions came other Muddles, who joined her for the walk to the coffee trees. Some joked, some chatted and some yawned, but all knew exactly where they were headed and all were happy to be going there. Crimson listened to the sound of the Muddles and laughed.


 

‘Left or right?’ Touch asked. He shone his torch down the passage to the left and then down the passage to the right. They looked exactly the same. ‘Well?’ he said when Cres didn’t answer.

She thought for a moment. ‘Why don’t we check the map?’ she suggested.

‘Yes, good idea. Didn’t think of that,’ said Touch. ‘Here. Hold the torch.’

Touch took the map from his pocket and studied it under the light.

‘We go right. Here.’ Touch pointed on the map. ‘To the left is something called “Amelia’s Cave” and to the right, a bit further on, it says, “Cave of Blue Fire”.’

‘Amelia,’ mused Cres. ‘Wasn’t that the woman who set the fires? I don’t think I want to go to her cave.’ She shuddered. ‘Actually, didn’t Amelia die in the cave where the blue fire rock is? Ugh. It’s a bit creepy now that I think about it, going to the place where she died.’

‘Well, yeah, a bit creepy – but only a bit,’ said Touch, hoping he sounded braver than he felt.

‘You don’t suppose that the strange feeling we’ve had could be, you know . . . a ghost?’ Cres asked.

‘No, of course not. That’s ridiculous!’ Touch declared, then added, ‘But I wish you hadn’t mentioned it.’

‘OK, to the right, then. But don’t get too far ahead of me, Touch.’

The tunnel to right was similar to the one they had just travelled with one important difference. It began to feel hotter. They cycled slowly and cautiously, but both Touch and Cres could feel the perspiration on their faces and under their jackets.

It was faint at first, little more than a shapeless flicker of light. Touch blinked and it was gone. He cycled on a few more metres, and stopped, sure that he had seen something again. He peered past the light from the lantern, but all that lay beyond the yellow pool was darkness. He flicked the switch and turned off the lantern on his bike, calling to Cres, to do the same. An instant later, her light went out.

For the first time since entering the mountain they were in total darkness. The black enveloped them completely. At the far end of the tunnel, though, Touch saw that the darkness was broken by a faint, blue mist of light, a glow so slight and delicate that he was half afraid to talk in case he frightened it away.

He kept his voice low and as natural as possible, but he could feel the excitement rising inside him. ‘See it, Cres? There! The light!’

‘Do you think that’s it, Touch? Do you think we’re there?’

Touch was sure. The light wasn’t going to go away. It was there, waiting for them. ‘I’m sure! Come on, Cres!’ he yelled.

They were at the source sooner than they expected. The faint blue mist grew into a pool of watery blue light that spilled from an opening in the left wall of the tunnel. They could feel the heat radiating from within. Just short of the opening they stopped and looked at each other. Cres’s heartbeat quickened and she was sure Touch must be able to hear it.

‘OK?’ asked Touch. Cres nodded and followed him through the entrance.

They found themselves in an enormous cave. The light was more dense than it had looked from the tunnel, a deeper blue, but it was an unwelcoming, eerie light that came from the blue fire burning in the middle of the cavern.

The prize they had been seeking rested in the centre of the cavern: a huge stone that burned the very ground around it. Small flames encircled the stone like a narrow moat. For hundreds, perhaps thousands of years, it had burned here, stripping away the dirt and ordinary rock around it, leaving more and more of the stone exposed. The rock of blue fire was freeing itself from its prison in the Land.

Touch and Cres stared, transfixed by the sight. They were so astonished that at first they didn’t even feel the heat that issued from the burning stone. They gradually became aware that the stone radiated more than heat.

‘Cres, do you feel something? I mean, besides the heat?’

‘Yeah. It’s . . . unfriendly. As if it just doesn’t like us,’ Cres replied. ‘I’m glad we brought the masks and leather gloves.’

Touch nodded, not taking his eyes from the fiery rock. He took his watch from his pocket. ‘It’ll be dark outside now. It took longer to get here than I thought. We should eat, check the tools and get some sleep. We’ll start on the rock in the morning,’ he suggested.

That night, they kept close to the wall, as far away from the heat as possible. The wagon with the tools was unloaded: picks, a shovel, a long crowbar with a spike at one end, leather aprons, extra overalls, thick leather gloves, long-handled cast-iron tongs and welding masks.

There was little talk while they ate. Their ride through the tunnel had been harder than they’d realised and their muscles were sore and their bodies tired. It was much too warm in the cave to get into their sleeping bags, so they spread them out and slept on top of them. Very soon, their eyes closed and they fell into a deep but troubled slumber. Dreams of endless black tunnels and angry sprites of blue fire tormented them, even in the refuge of sleep.


 

Calamity turned in three small circles on her little bed, making sure she found the softest spot. Satisfied, she dropped into a curled ball, her head resting on her forelegs. She raised her eyes and watched Crimson get into her own bed, fluff her pillow and pull the blanket up to her chin.

‘Good night,’ Calamity barked softly.

Crimson turned out the light. ‘Good night, Calamity,’ she said and quickly fell into a deep, dreamless sleep.


 

Touch and Cres woke early. Cres opened her eyes. Her vision was filled with a blurred blue mist. Her morning eyes cleared and the burning stone came into focus. Despite the heat, she shivered.

‘Kinda spooky first thing in the morning, isn’t it?’ she heard Touch say. ‘Well, at least I think it’s morning. Hard to tell in here.’

‘You could check your watch,’ said Cres.

‘I did. It isn’t the same. Just cos your watch says six hours before noon doesn’t make it morning.’ Touch smiled at her. ‘The sun makes it morning.’

‘How long do you think it will take us to get some of the stone?’ Cres asked.

‘Dunno, really,’ said Touch. ‘Not long, I hope. If we can break some off and leave within a couple of hours, we could be back in Forge by morning, if we ride straight through the night.’

‘That’d be good. Don’t fancy spending another night here. Gave me spooky dreams.’

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