Authors: Sam Gayton
âOf course!' laughed Greta. âYou're a
giant-slayer!
You saved me from Prince Xin,
and
from Ugor. Compared to you, those two are
colossal
!'
And she gave him an enormous slobbery kiss.
âEurgh!' he spluttered. âYuck!'
Greta froze. âYuk!' she cried. âOf course! We have to get you to Tumber, so you can fight Yuk! Don't worry, you won't have to do it on your own â you can teach the Tumberfolk about giant-slaying, and they'll help!'
Hercufleas blinked. What could he teach the Tumberfolk? All he'd done was bite someone's finger, then hide in a pig's nostril and cause a small explosion. And yet the thought made him puff with pride. He was a giant-slayer! A heroic giant-slayer!
âWe've got to leave right now,' Greta said. âWe'll have to go through the forests â my boat is back in Avalon. And so is my other clog. But we've got Artifax.' She looked at the great bird's tiny wings and sighed. âI wish Prince Xin had bred your wings a bit bigger â then we could fly over the trees instead of stumbling through them.' She turned to Hercufleas. âNo time to lose! Are you ready?'
It was all happening so fast. Greta was asking him to join her on another adventure. She wanted him to save her again. His destiny was unfolding, right in front of him. So why was he hesitating?
âShouldn't we go back to Avalon first?' he said. âWe have to explain what happened, orâ'
Greta scowled. âYou saw what Ugor tried to do. He'll be watching. If I so much as set foot on that island⦠And then there's Sticklerâ¦' Her face went dark with rage. âHe tried to have me killed.'
âMaybe he made a mistake, maybe it was an administrative errorâ¦' Hercufleas trailed off. He knew Greta was right. Stickler was just as villainous as Prince Xin and Ugor. He only cared about his business, his reputation and his gold. Greta knew his dark secret, and if they returned to Avalon, Stickler would try to get rid of her. And maybe Hercufleas too.
âThis isn't about Stickler any more,' Greta said, pulling him from his thoughts. âThis is about Tumber.' She pointed up at the last sliver of moon. âTomorrow, when the moon is new, Yuk will come to guzzle everyone I've ever known. Won't you help?'
Hercufleas hopped back and forth across her palm, trying to make the right choice. He could return to Avalon and bring Stickler to justice, or go to Tumber and rescue the people there from Yuk.
âI'll come with you, Greta,' he said at last. âBut first I have to go back to Happily Ever Afters.'
She stared at him. âButâ'
âI have to warn my fleamily,' said Hercufleas firmly. âThey might be in danger. What if Stickler tries to hurt them too?'
âButâ'
âI'm small. I can sneak back to Avalon without being spotted. I'll go straight to the owners of BestQuest, or Heroes for Hire, and tell them the truth.
âButâ'
âStop saying “but”! I have to do this. I don't have a choice.'
Greta scowled. âNeither do I.'
Her hand closed into a fist, squeezing him like the coils of a python.
âGreta! What are you doing? Let me go!'
He bit and kicked and tried to jump, but she only tightened her grip.
âRide, Artifax!' she called, leaping onto the bird's back. They hurtled forward into the trees and entered the land of Petrossia.
O
n they rode through the forest. It was just like an adventure in an Avalonian fairy tale: a brave hero, a noble steed, a fair maiden. Except the brave hero was the size of a raisin, the fair maiden was a scowling kidnapper and the noble steed was some sort of gigantic albino chicken.
It was not an adventure Hercufleas wanted to be a part of.
He had fought in Greta's grip, biting and struggling and yelling until he was exhausted. Eventually his rage cooled to a dull anger and his anger froze into icy terror. There was nothing he could do. Greta was taking him off to fight a giant that had crushed Avalon's strongest hero into little pieces.
What terrified Hercufleas even more than Yuk was what might be happening to his fleamily right now. They had no idea that their host was a greedy attempted-murderer who hired out villains as well as heroes.
He imagined Stickler taking his hat from his head and shaking it up and down on the porch, yelling, âI told you to keep your little hatchling under control! I gave you a formal warning!' He imagined Min, Pin and the others huddling together in the mist, shivering, hungry, homeless. He imagined Stickler deciding the fleamily needed to be silenced to protect his reputationâ¦
He had to make Greta let him go. Whatever it took.
He started off with lies.
âGreta, I think I've sprained my ankle.'
âGreta, I've just remembered â I left my sword back in Avalon!'
âGreta, I'm allergic to giants. They give me a rash.'
When lies didn't work, he tried threats.
âGreta, you have until the count of three to let me out, otherwise I'll bite you, suck out all your blood and leave you here like a shrivelled-up prune! One⦠Two⦠Two and a half⦠Two and almost very nearly threeâ¦'
He tried curses. (âI hope Yuk eats you right after he eats me!') He tried begging. (âPlease, please, please, please,
please
let me go.') Nothing worked.
After hours of stumbling between trees, Hercufleas felt Greta's fingers start to loosen their grip, until finally she let him go completely.
âI'm sorry,' she said curtly. âI shouldn't have snatched you like that. Come on, you can hop on my shoulder if you want.'
Hercufleas ignored her. He stood in her palm, stretching his stiff legs. Now it was his turn to scowl. âWhat makes you think I'm coming with you?' he said. âI'm hopping back to Avalon to save my fleamilyâ'
âYour fleamily will be fine,' Greta interrupted. âFor now. We can deal with Stickler later.'
âWhat if he gets rid of them, like he tried to get rid of you?'
âWhy would he? He needs them. They're his employfleas.'
âBut if he thinks that Iâ¦' Hercufleas couldn't bring himself to say
murdered.
âIf he realises that Prince Xin⦠If he finds out that was
meâ
'
âHe won't. Think about it. Ugor didn't even
see
you. And you didn't tell anyone where you were going, did you?'
Hercufleas shook his head. Greta had a point. âBut it still feels wrong to leave them,' he said.
Greta gave a huff and plonked him on Artifax's head. Then she slid onto the ground, plucked some brambleberries from a bush and fed them to the bird, one by one.
âAlso,' she added quietly while Artifax pecked, âif you
did
try and escape, I doubt you'd make it very far. You might be a good giant-slayer, but that won't help you in here.'
Hercufleas looked around. Trees in every direction. The whole place silent and somehow lifeless⦠He shook his jitters away. What was there to be scared of? It was just a wood.
Greta seemed to sense his thoughts. âWe're not in Avalon any more. This is Petrossia, and Petrossia doesn't have woods. It has
woodn'ts
instead.'
Artifax finished his meal, clucking with pleasure, and Greta stroked his neck before whispering, âKnow how the woodn't got its name, Hercufleas? Because you
wouldn't
want to go through it. Not if you had a choice.'
Hercufleas sighed. He didn't believe her. She was just trying to make him stay. âWhat should I be scared of then?' he asked. âIs the Bögenmann coming to get us?'
Greta shook her head. âNo, the Bögenmann lives miles away to the west,' she said. âHere it's mainly wolves and black bears and grizzly squirrels.'
Hercufleas chuckled. âGrizzly squirrels?'
âGive me a wolf or a black bear over a grizzly squirrel any day,' she said. âAt least they can't climb trees. Although you shouldn't ever climb trees in a woodn't. They're the most dangerous things of all.'
Greta's words made Hercufleas's insides cold and squirmy, as if he'd drunk slug blood. âTrees? What's dangerous about trees?'
âNothing.' Greta shrugged. âUnless you're in a woodn't. Here, they're big. And hungry.'
Hercufleas shivered.
Trees?
Hungry?
âThe woodn't is so thick,' Greta said, âsunlight gets blotted out before it reaches the floor. The trees that grow beneath the canopy have to find something other than sunbeams to feed on. Pine-needlers feed on birds. Bramble-strangle feeds on other trees. Rattlesnoaks are the worst. They camouflage themselves to look just like normal oaks, but their roots move, and each rattleroot has a snake's head at the end. A bite from one of them will paralyse you in seconds. Then they drag you towards the trunk, and the rattlesnoak gobbles you up.'
A branch creaked behind Hercufleas. He jumped up, hitting his head on a leaf, which made him scream, which made Greta laugh.
âIt's autumn now,' she said. âSo all the rattleroots will be settling down to hibernate. And right now they have seed pods on their branches that shake when anyone gets too close. Over there: listenâ¦'
Hercufleas strained his ears. Far to his left, above the rustle of the woodn't, he heard a harsh rattling, like a dozen maracas shaking, and then, far off, a wolf's howl. He trembled. Beneath his feet, so did Artifax.
âYou know a lot about this woodn't, Greta.'
âI have to. I'm a woodcutter.' She tapped the axe on her back and smiled sadly. âJust like my parents were.'
In the distance, the rattlesnoak shook again, and Greta's eyes got a faraway look in them.
âOnce,' she told him, âbefore the guzzlings, Papa crept up on a rattlesnoak and carved Mama's name into its trunk. Then he chopped off one of its roots, to prove he'd done it, and made her this axe.'
She showed Hercufleas the gnarled handle of her axe, which ended in the varnished head of a snake. It looked as if it was carved into the wood, but Hercufleas knew now that it wasn't.
A tree, with serpent roots.
âMama always used to tell me that story.' Greta fell quiet. âAre you hungry?'
Hercufleas realised suddenly that yes, he was. Hungry and scared.
âLion blood, if you have any?' he said, then seeing her glare, added, âCougar or panther blood will do.'
Greta held out her thumb. âDrink,' she said.
Hercufleas winced at the memory of Greta's bitter-tasting blood. He'd prefer to drink from Artifax, but that might be rude. So he nipped her and took a quick sip. Just like last time, it puckered his mouth and made him shudder as it slid down his throat â but then the aftertaste carried a hint of something sweet that hadn't been there before. It was hope. Greta believed in Hercufleas. She truly thought he was the one to save her town. Now there was no longer only bitterness inside her.
The woodn't grew lighter, and suddenly they found themselves in a clearing where all the trees were overturned or jagged stumps. In the starlight, the valley was a colour both black and emerald. The moon was a white sliver.
âDid⦠Did Yuk do this?' Hercufleas looked out across the jumble of broken trees and churned earth.
Greta shrugged. âMaybe. Don't worry though â he won't wake until the new moon. And we're almost through now. Tumber's beyond this valleyâ¦' She looked up, frowning. âDid you hear that?'
Hercufleas strained his ears, catching the snap of twigs, the dry rustle of dead leaves.
âThe wind?' he said hopefully.
Greta shook her head. âThere is no wind,' she said, turning round and edging Artifax into the clearing. âSomething's in the trees.'
âIs it wolves?' he whimpered, cowering up her sleeve. âA black bear? Or a grizzly squirrel?'
âQuiet,' she hissed, pulling on the reins. Artifax reared up. Suddenly Greta's axe was in her hands.