Alcatraz (71 page)

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Authors: Brandon Sanderson

BOOK: Alcatraz
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‘But the Librarians tried to kill them!’
I exclaimed.
‘What about the assassination attempt?’

As a side note, I hate assassination.
It looks way too much like a dirty word.
Either that or the name of a country populated entirely by two donkeys.

Grandpa just shrugged.
‘Bureaucrats, lad!
They can be denser than your uncle Kaz’s bean soup.’

‘Hey!’
Kaz said.
‘I like that soup!’

‘I do too,’ Grandpa said.
‘Makes wonderful glue.’

‘We need to do something,’ Kaz said.

‘I’m
trying
to,’ Grandpa said.
‘You should hear the speeches I’m giving!’

‘Talk,’ Kaz said.
‘Tuki Tuki is close to falling, Pop!
If the capital falls, the kingdom will fall with it.’

‘What about the knights?’
I said.
‘Bastille, didn’t you say most of the Knights of Crystallia are still here, in the city?
Why aren’t they on the battlefield?’

‘The Crystin can’t be used for that kind of purpose, lad,’ Grandpa said, shaking his head.
‘They’re forbidden from taking sides in political conflicts.’

‘But this isn’t a political conflict!’
I said.
‘This is against the
Librarians
.
They infiltrated the Crystin; they corrupted the Mindstone!
If they win, they’ll undoubtedly disband the knights anyway!’

Bastille grimaced.
‘You see why I’m on edge?
We
know
all of this, but our oaths forbid us from taking part unless we’re defending a Smedry or one of the kings.’

‘Well, one of the kings is in danger,’ I said.
‘Kaz just said so!’

‘King Talakimallo isn’t in the palace at Tuki Tuki,’ Grandpa said, shaking his head.
‘The knights got him away to a safe location soon after the palace came under siege The queen is leading the defense.’

‘The queen of Mokia .
.
.’
I said.
‘Bastille, isn’t that .
.
.’

‘My sister,’ she said, nodding.
‘Angola Dartmoor.’

‘The knights won’t protect her?’
I asked.

‘She’s not heir to a line,’ Bastille said, shaking her head.
‘They probably left one guard to protect her, but maybe not.
The knights in the area probably all went with the king or with the heir, Princess Kamali.’

‘Tuki Tuki is a
hugely
important tactical position,’ Kaz said.
‘We can’t lose it!’

‘The knights
want
to help, but we can’t,’ Bastille complained.
‘It’s forbidden.
Besides, most of us have to be here in Nalhalla City to defend the Council of Kings and the Smedrys.’

‘Though the Council no longer trusts the Crystin like they once did,’ Grandpa added, shaking his head.
‘And they forbid the knights’ entrance to most important meetings.’

‘So we just end up
sitting around
,’ Bastille said, frustratedly knocking her head back against the backrest of her chair, ‘going through endless training sessions and throwing the occasional grenade at someone who deserves it.’
She eyed me.

‘Baking Browns, what a mess!’
Grandpa said.
‘Maybe we need some snacks.
I work better with a good broccoli yogurt pop to chew on.’

‘First,’ I said ‘
ew
.
Grandpa, that’s almost crapaflapnasti.
Second .
.
.’
I hesitated for a moment, an idea occurring to me.
‘You’re saying the knights have to protect important people.’

Bastille gave me one of her trademarked ‘Well, duh, Alcatraz, you idiot’™ looks.
I ignored it.

‘And the Mokian palace is besieged, about to fall?’
I continued.

‘That’s what it looked like to me,’ Kaz said.

‘So what if we sent someone really important off to Mokia?’
I asked.
‘The knights would have to follow, right?
And if we had that someone take up residence in the Mokian palace, then the knights would
have
to defend the place, right?’

At that moment, something incredible happened.
Something amazing, something incredible, something unbelievable.

Bastille smiled.

It was a deep, knowing smile.
An eager smile.
Almost a
wicked
smile.
Like the smile on a jack-o’-lantern carved by a psychopathic kitten.
(Oh, wait.
All
kittens are psychopathic.
If you’ve forgotten, read book one again.
In fact, read book one again either way.
Someone told me once that it was really funny.
What?
You believed me in the foreword when I told you not to read them?
What, you think you can trust
me
?)

Bastille’s smile shocked me, pleased me, and made me nervous at the same time.
‘I think,’ she said, ‘that is just about the
most brilliant
thing you’ve ever said, Alcatraz.’

Granted, the statement didn’t have much competition for the title.

‘It’s certainly bold,’ Grandpa said.
‘Smedry-like for certain!’

‘Who would we send?’
Kaz said, growing eager.
‘Could you go, Pop?
They’d be
certain
to send knights to defend you.’

Grandpa hesitated, then shook his head.
‘If I did that, I’d leave the king without an ally on the Council of Kings.
He needs my vote.’

‘But we’d need a direct heir,’ Kaz said.
‘I could go – I
will
go – but I’ve never been important enough to warrant more than a single knight.
I’m not the direct heir.
We could send Attica.’

‘He’s gone,’ Bastille said.
‘Fled the city.
It’s what we were talking about when you arrived.’

Grandpa nodded.
‘We’d need to put someone in danger who is so valuable the knights
have
to respond.
But this person also has to be
uncompromisingly
stoopid.
It’s idiocy on a grand scale to send oneself directly to a palace on the brink of destruction, surrounded by Librarians, in a doomed kingdom!
Why, they’d have to be stoopid on a colossal degree.
Of the likes previously unseen to all of humankind!’

And suddenly, for some reason, all eyes in the room turned toward me.

π

O
kay, so maybe I exaggerated that last conversation just a little bit.
Grandpa
might
have actually said something along the lines of ‘We’d need someone really, really brave.’
I felt that it’s all right to make this swap, however, since bravery and stoopidity are practically one and the same.

Actually, there’s a mathematical formula for it: STU ≥ BVE.
That reads, quite simply, ‘A person’s stoopidity is greater than or equal to their bravery.’
Simple, eh?

Oh, you want proof?
You actually expect me to
justify
my ridiculous assertions?
Well, all right.
Just this once.

Look at it this way.
If a man stumbled accidentally into a trap set by a group of Librarian agents, we’d think him stoopid.
Right?
However, if he charges valiantly into that same trap knowing it’s there, he’d be called
brave
.
Think about that for a moment.
Which sounds dumber?
Accidentally falling into the trap or
choosing
to fall into it?

There are plenty of ways to be stoopid that don’t involve being brave.
However, bravery is – by definition – always stoopid.
Therefore, your stoopidity is
at least
equal to your level of bravery.
Probably greater.

After all, reading that ridiculous explanation probably made you feel dumber just by association.
(Reading this book sure is brave of you.)

I burst into the small meeting chamber.
The monarchs sat in thrones arranged in a half circle, listening to one of their members – in this case, a woman in an ancient-looking suit of bamboo armor – stand before them and argue her point.
The walls depicted murals of beautiful mountain scenes, and a little indoor stream gurgled its way along the far wall.

All of the monarchs turned toward me, eyes aghast at being interrupted.

‘Ah, young Smedry!’
said one of them, a regal-looking man with a square red beard and a set of kingly robes to match it.
Brig Dartmoor, Bastille’s father, was king of Nalhalla and generally considered foremost among the monarchs.
He stood up from his chair.
‘How .
.
.
unusual to see you.’

The others looked panicked.
I realized that the
last
time I’d barged in on them like this, I’d come to warn them about a Librarian plot and had ended up nearly getting them all assassinated.
(The non-donkey kind.)

I took a deep breath.
‘I can’t take it any longer!’
I exclaimed.
‘I hate being cooped up in this city!
I need a vacation!’

The monarchs glanced at one another, relaxing slightly.
I hadn’t come to warn them of impending disaster; this was just the usual Smedry drama.

‘Well, that’s fine, I guess .
.
.’
King Dartmoor said.
Anyone else would probably have demanded to know why this ‘vacation’ was so important as to interrupt the Council of Kings.
But Dartmoor was quite accustomed to handling Smedrys.
I was only just beginning to understand what a reputation for oddness my family had – and this was compared with everyone around them, who lived in a city filled with castles, dragons that climbed on walls, grenades that look like teddy bears, and the occasional talking dinosaur in a vest.
Being odd compared with all of them took
quite
a bit of effort.
(My family is a bunch of overachievers when it comes to freakish behavior.)

‘Perhaps you’d like to visit the countryside,’ said one of the kings.
‘The firelizard trees are in bloom.’

‘I hear the lightning caverns are electrifying this time of year,’ another added.

‘You could always try skydiving off the Worldspire,’ said the woman in the Asian-style bamboo armor.
‘Drop through the Bottomless Chasm for a few hours?
It’s rather relaxing, with a waterfall on all sides, falling through the air.’

‘Wow,’ I said, losing a bit of my momentum.
‘Those
do
sound interesting.
Maybe I—’ Bastille elbowed me from behind at that point, making me exclaim a surprised ‘Gak!’

‘Protect your straw!’
one of the monarchs cried, taking off his large straw hat.
He looked around urgently.
‘Oh, false alarm.’

I cleared my throat, glancing over my shoulder.
Bastille and Grandpa Smedry had entered the room after me but had left the door open so that the knights guarding outside could hear what I was saying.
Bastille’s stern mother, Draulin, stood with folded arms, eyeing us suspiciously.
She obviously expected some kind of shenanigan.

Very clever of her.

‘No!’
I declared to the kings.
‘None of that will do.
They’re not exciting enough.’
I held up my finger.
‘I’m going to Tuki Tuki.
I hear that the royal mud baths there are
extremely
intense.’

‘Wait,’ King Dartmoor said.
‘You think
skydiving
through a
bottomless pit
in the ocean isn’t exciting enough, so instead you want to go visit the Mokian palace spa?’

‘Er, yes,’ I said.
‘I have a fondness for mud baths.
Exfoliating my homeopathic algotherapy and all that.’

The monarchs glanced at one another.

‘But,’ one of them said, ‘the palace is
kind of
besieged right now, and—’

‘I will not be dissuaded!’
I exclaimed with forced bravado.
‘I am a Smedry, and we do ridiculous, unexpected, eccentric things like this all the time!
Ha-ha!’

‘Oh dear,’ Grandpa Smedry said in an exaggerated voice.
‘He really does seem determined.
My poor grandson will be killed because of his awesome, Smedry-like impulsiveness.
If only there were a group of people dedicated to protecting him!’

With that, we turned and dashed away from the chamber, leaving the kings and knights dumbfounded.
Bastille, Grandpa, and I entered the main palace hallway, which was lined with frames containing rare and exotic types of glass.
They glowed faintly to my eyes, as I was still wearing my Oculator’s Lenses.

‘Do you think they’ll buy it?’
I asked.

‘Wait,’ Bastille said, frowning.
‘Buy it?
Did you try to sell them something?’

‘Er, no.
It’s a figure of speech.’

‘The figure giving a speech?’
Bastille said.
‘If you’re
that
interested in her figure, you should be ashamed.
Queen Kamiko is a married woman and
as least
forty years older than you are!’

I sighed.
‘Do you think,’ I rephrased, ‘they’ll believe the act?
It seemed a little exaggerated to me.’

‘Exaggerated?’
Bastille said.
‘What part?’

‘The part about me going to Mokia – into a war zone – just to take a vacation.
It’s kind of ridiculous.’

‘Sounds like a Smedry activity to me,’ Bastille grumbled.

‘They’ll buy it, lad,’ Grandpa said, jogging along beside us.
‘The knights in particular tend to be very .
.
.
literal people.
They’ll assume the worst, and that worst – in this case – is that you are going to blunder off into a war zone because you feel that your pores are clogged.
I don’t think we’ll have any trouble getting them to—’

A clanking sound came from behind us.
I glanced over my shoulder.

No fewer than
fifty
Knights of Crystallia were rushing down the hallway in our direction.

‘Gak!’
I cried.

‘Alcatraz, would you stop saying—’ Bastille looked over her shoulder.
‘GAK!’

‘Scribbling Scalzis!’
Grandpa exclaimed, noticing the fleet of knights charging in our direction.
Most wore full plate, the silvery metal clanking as their amored feet hit the floor.
It sounded like someone had opened a closet filled with pots and then dumped them all onto the ground at once.

We redoubled our efforts, running in front of the storm of knights with all we had.
But they were faster.
They had Warrior’s Lenses, not to mention Crystin enhancements.
They’d catch us for sure.

‘Alcatraz, lad,’ Grandpa Smedry said in a confiding tone as we ran down the wide hallway.
‘I believe I may have discovered a slight flaw in your clever plan.’

‘You think?’

‘I knew this would happen!’
Bastille said from my other side.
‘I’m such an
idiot
.
Alcatraz, if they can catch you before you leave, they can take you into protective care for your own good!’

‘Protective care?’
I asked.

‘Usually involves a locked door,’ Grandpa said.
‘Padded cell.
Bread and water.
Oh, and a jail.
Can’t forget that.’

‘They’ll throw us in
jail
?’
I exclaimed.

‘Hmm, yes,’ Grandpa Smedry said.
‘The knights are bodyguards, lad.
They have the right to determine when someone under their charge is going to be put into too much danger.
They only have power to do it while we’re inside Nalhalla.’
He smiled.
‘They rarely invoke the privilege.
We must
really
have them worried!
Good job, lad!
You should feel proud.’

This is a very exciting scene, isn’t it?
You’re not too tired, are you?
From all that exciting running?

Wait, you’re
not running
?
Why am I doing all the work?
Don’t you realize that you’re supposed to be acting out these scenes as I describe them?
Don’t you know how to read books?
I mean honestly, what are the Librarians teaching people these days?

Let me explain it to you.
Everyone always talks about the magic of books being able to take you to other places, to let you see exotic worlds, to make you experience new and interesting things.
Well, do you think words alone can do this?
Of course not!

If you’ve ever thought that books are boring, it’s because you don’t know how to read them correctly.
From now on, when you read a book, I want you to scream the words of the novel out loud while reading them, then do exactly what the characters are doing in the story.

Trust me, it will make books
way
more exciting.
Even dictionaries.
Particularly
dictionaries.
So go ahead and try it out with this next part of this book.
If you do it right, you’ll win the bonus prize.

‘Come on!’
I yelled, ducking into a side room.
I figured that the knights would have trouble following through smaller chambers, since there were so many of them.
The room was filled with furniture, however, and I was forced to leap up on top of a couch and hurl myself behind it.

‘What do we do?’
Bastille asked, looking over her shoulder.
The knights were rushing into the room behind us.

‘I’m not sure!’
I said, picking my nose.

We burst out of the room into a hallway, where I hopped up and down on one foot three times, then punched myself (softly) in the forehead.
After that, we pranced down the hallway flapping our arms like chickens.
Then we twirled around, smacking our brother if he happened to be near.
Then we stuck our feet in our mouths before dumping pudding on our heads while singing ‘Hambo the Great’ in Dutch.

Now see, didn’t I
tell
you it would be more exciting this way?
You should act out all books you read.
(And by the way, the bonus prize is getting to smack your brother and blame it on me.)

‘Why are we doing this?’
Bastille cried.

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