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Authors: Catherine Fisher

BOOK: Darkwater
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twenty-five

“T
om!” His brother grabbed, sank.

Tom kicked at the hound, hard in its chest. The growl simmered in its throat.

“It's hurting me!”

“I know! Wait!”

“Here!” Sarah was there; she dragged a broken gorse branch in one hand and a heavy stick in the other. She threw the stick; he grabbed it before it sank and thwacked the bog furiously. Mud and water flew up; algae spattered everything.

“Get out!” he yelled. “Go on! Go on!”

The hound opened its teeth and barked.

With a gasp of relief Simon fell backward; Sarah grabbed him, pulling him up.

“Get him away!” Tom yelled. He backed cautiously. All around in the fog the slinking shapes circled, their paws deep in the evil-smelling murk. For a moment as Sarah and Simon splashed into darkness he thought the whole pack would rush at him, their small red eyes blinking like coals. He gripped the stick, planted his feet firmly.

“So come on,” he breathed.

At once, far off, a low whistle echoed.

The pack melted.

In seconds the fog was empty.

After a while, he turned and struggled on. The ground grew more solid; the legs of his trousers stuck to him in the sudden bitter cold.

“Where are you?” he called.

“Over here.”

In the shelter of a stone wall Sarah had Simon's sleeve rolled up and was mopping the bite with something. Blood ran freely down his wrist. They all stared at it, fascinated. “What's happening to me?” Simon whispered.

Tom shook his head. “Can you stop it?”

“I can tie it up.” Sarah's wet fingers worked fast. “That's about all.” She grinned at Simon. “Does it sting?”

“It's throbbing like mad,” he said gloomily.

Tom laughed. “Welcome to the human race. But let's go. Before those creatures come back.”

The fog confused them. There were no stars to see by, and the moor seemed endless on each side; they struggled on for almost an hour until Tom knew they were lost. They should have reached the main road a long time ago.

“In this light we won't see it till we get right up to it,” Sarah gasped. “There'll be no traffic.”

And no ride either, Tom thought, but he said nothing.

Pausing for breath in the lee of a thorn bush, he listened.

Over the blackness of the moor came a new sound. A whine, high, almost unhearable. Machinery.

“Listen!”

They kept still, Simon crouched breathless on his heels.

“What is it?”

“It's over that way.” Tom looked into the fog.

“What if that's the wrong way?” Simon muttered.

“It's as good as any other.” In the darkness Tom wiped water off his watch and held it close to his eyes. “Nine forty.” He went and tugged his brother gently
to his feet. “Come on. We'll get there.”

“I've got a pain in my side, I'm cold, wet, and scared.” Simon rubbed his face ruefully. “If this is being alive, you can keep it.”

“Oh, I don't know.” Sarah pushed ahead of him grimly. “It seems pretty good to me.”

The sound was coming from a fluorescent light fixed under the rickety forecourt of a garage. In the foggy air the light crackled and hummed. A radio was playing in the office somewhere; as they crept down the lane toward it, a car passed them, going slow. “Quick!” Tom turned the corner into the forecourt.

The car had pulled up for gas.

“Right,” Tom said. “You'd better go. Ask for a lift to Bodmin. Then we'll come.”

“Brilliant!” She was sarcastic, but she stepped out.

The car door swung open.

Scrab got out.

Instantly Sarah flattened herself behind one of the gas pumps.

The round-shouldered man looked impatient. He pulled the gas pump out, muttering irritably; they could see his overalls under the greasy coat. As the gas went in he glanced around, small eyes watchful. In the shadows, not a yard from him, Sarah didn't move.

“He'll see her,” Simon breathed.

It seemed an age before Scrab propped the pump back. His breath smoked in the foggy air as he searched his pockets for money. Then he crossed the forecourt slowly, opened the shop door, and went in.

Sarah ran back. “We could steal the car,” she whispered.

Tom stared at her. “I can't drive. Can you?”

“No. But . . .”

“What about him?” Simon said.

A truck driver was coming out. A young man, with a cheeseburger in a box. The smell of it was torture. They caught him at his cab.

“Any chance of a ride?” Sarah said quickly.

He stared at her. “Both of you? Where you heading?”

“Bodmin station.”

“Bit out of my way.” He opened the cab door. Tom glanced back anxiously at the lit garage shop. Scrab was reluctantly counting coins out of a leather purse.

“Not eloping, are you?” The driver grinned.

Sarah fixed him with a desperate stare. “Look, it's really important. I
have
to get the last train! We'll miss it otherwise. Oh, please! It is New Year.”

He climbed up, put the box on the dashboard, and looked down at them. Then he said, “Get in.”

They tore around and scrambled up into the cabin. On the radio Big Ben struck ten.

Scrab came out.

Tom slammed the door; the caretaker looked up, instantly alert. For a second their eyes met in the driving mirror.

Then the truck roared away.

The driver ate the cheeseburger with one hand, the cab loud with country and western music. It was warm and muggy; Tom almost relaxed until the driver swallowed his last mouthful and said, “Bloody maniac.”

“Who?”

“Him, behind us. In the Beetle.”

Scrab's car had caught up fast. Now it careered across the lane from hedge to hedge, tooting, flashing its lights.

“Maybe I'd better pull over.”

“No!” Sarah said quickly. “Please! I'll miss the train.”

The driver wiped his mouth and threw down the tissue. “Seems to me, ma'am,” he drawled, his voice suddenly mock-American, “that there varmint's after yous.”

They glanced at each other. “Sort of.”

“Lookee here, are you all . . .”

“We're not running away.” Sarah turned to him. “I'm going home. He's some . . . nutcase. I can't explain. He wants to try and stop me, and I'm really scared.”

She did it well, Tom thought. The driver almost swelled to John Wayne before their eyes. He changed gear noisily. “Okay, pardners. You want him lost. I'll lose him.”

Hedges loomed, black in the headlights. Shadows flickered across the lane. They roared along, the load in the back crashing, taking bends crazily. When they reached the main road across the moor it was deserted; they squealed onto it on two wheels, and then the driver slammed his foot down.

“Come on, punk!” he yelled. “Make my day!” And then, suddenly:
“Yee-har!”

They hit ninety on the straightaway. At every bend Tom closed his eyes and prayed, but Simon leaned out of the window and whooped and yelled. “We're losing him! He's miles back!”

The Beetle was tiny in the darkness. The dashboard clock said 10:10.

“What time's this here train, ma'am?”

“Ten thirty,” Sarah shouted.

“No problemo!”

They sped around the roundabout, the driver singing “Clementine” at the top of his voice. He already wore a red neckerchief and checked shirt; now he fished a cowboy's hat from under his seat and crammed it on.

“We'll get you to the fort, ma'am, before them pesky redskins shoot us down. Nobody stops a Wells Fargo coach!”

Sarah giggled.

Tom felt sick.

In Bodmin the doors of the pubs were open; the streets busy with people. The truck had to slow. A red light stopped them. Sweating, Tom stared at the mirror. Far back, the Beetle came around a corner.

The lights changed. They roared down the street, right, left, down the lanes, wildly into the station entrance. Flinging the door wide Tom tumbled out, Sarah grabbed her bag and planted a kiss on the driver's forehead. “Happy New Year, pardner.”

Then they were running.

The ticket office was shut, but the roaring as they ran by it told them a train was coming, the London express, by the noise. It thundered through, filling the night with vibrations and oil-stink, and as they flung themselves down the last stairs it pulled up alongside and braked, sleek and dark in a cloud of frosty steam.

“Yee-har!” Simon whooped.

Sarah raced along the platform. “You've been brilliant,” she yelled, turning. “I'll write!”

The engine screeched to a deafening halt. Doors opened. She grabbed the nearest handle, yanked it around.

A passenger stepped out. A tall man, in a long black coat. He stood on the frosty platform and smiled ruefully at her.

“I'm sorry, Sarah,” he said.

twenty-six

S
crab drove them home.

For most of the way no one spoke. Azrael lounged in the back with Tom and Simon; Sarah sat in front, grimly clutching her backpack. Sickening disappointment numbed them; they were cold and nauseated with it. The only sound was the car's low purr, and Scrab sucking his teeth or whistling through them cheerfully. Stone walls gleamed in the headlights. A few drops of rain pattered on the side windows.

Finally, Azrael stirred. “Well. I did warn you. You could never have escaped from me.”

“It was worth a try!”

He shrugged, unhappy. “Even after all this time, Sarah, you still don't trust me.” He sounded depressed. “I find that very hurtful. Have I ever hurt you? Do you really believe that I'm some creature of evil, that I seek anybody's destruction?”

“Only mine.”

Azrael sighed. He rubbed his face with one open palm. “I'm not evil, Sarah. Evil is stealthy. It whispers and insinuates. It uses fear, turns soul against soul. All I want to do is finish my Great Work. To make gold from dross.”

“Whatever it costs?”

He sat back morosely. “It costs everything.”

“I did what you asked, Azrael. I made up for all the
Trevelyans, their oppressions, their greed. I spent a hundred years on it.”

“There is still one Trevelyan you haven't atoned for.”

She glared at him, twisting around. “Who?”

“Yourself. And you've forgotten this.” He took a piece of paper out of his pocket and held it up. She saw her red signature again, firm and clear. Tom and Simon stared at it curiously. Then Azrael folded it and put it away. “People always find it so difficult at the end,” he said sadly.

The car purred up the long drive to Darkwater in silence. They climbed out, stiff and cold, the gravel crunching frostily. Simon held his torn wrist as if it ached. Tom stood by Sarah. No one spoke.

They climbed the steps to the porch and the gargoyles leered down at them, small drips from the lips of one splashing Scrab's head so that he swore. Azrael took his bunch of keys and unlocked the door, and as they went in he flicked the lights on in the marble hall. One of the clocks in the house chimed gently. It was eleven forty-five.

“This way,” Azrael murmured. To their surprise he didn't climb the stairs to the library but crossed instead to the small door of the cubbyhole under the landing, half hidden by the vast dark growth of the Christmas tree.

“There?” Sarah sounded disgusted.

Azrael shrugged, opening it. “Here. The door is always where you least expect it.”

A faint red glow lit the tiny space. Behind hung-up coats and mildewed suitcases, they saw a small metal staircase, spiraling down. Sarah flung her backpack under the Christmas tree and drew herself up. Then she held out her hand firmly.

“Good-bye Tom. Thanks for all your help.”

He didn't shake it.

“No. I'm coming.” He glanced at Azrael. “I want to see.”

The alchemist hesitated. Then he shrugged elegantly. “If you wish. Scrab, stay at the back, there's a good fellow.”

He picked up a lantern from a corner and lit it with a small silver lighter. Then he led them down.

At first their feet clattered on the iron stairs, but at some point in the dimness of the descent the steps became stone and the walls, rock. Tom ran his hand down; the surface was wet and warm, with dripping green lichens sprouting through the cracks. It got hotter. He undid his coat, already sweating.

The glow increased. Below him was a redness, and Azrael's faint candle was lost in it, a fiery heat scorching up at them.

“Listen to that!” Simon said in his ear.

The underworld river roared. Far below them it thundered through deep chasms in the rock, and Sarah heard it too, gripping her hands tightly together, not turning her head. Come on, she thought acidly. What use was a hundred years of life if it didn't prepare you for death? She wouldn't tremble or beg. She'd take it, like she'd taken the five cuts all that endless, impossible time ago. And for a moment she remembered the swish of the cane, the fine strands of hair unpinning from Mrs. Hubbard's glossy bun. Maybe pride was good for something after all.

Azrael came to the bottom of the steps and put the lantern down. Turning, he helped her around the last corner. She stared.

The caverns were enormous. One out of another they
led deep into steamy distance, and flooding them all was a vast lake of simmering black water, the vapors that rose from its surface condensing on the invisible roof, dripping and plopping from rock to rock like an eternal rain. It was unbearably hot. Half glimpsed in the steam were fissured tunnels and arches, seamed with crystal and quartz. And far away in the depths of the earth the chasm thundered, the fall of the water deafening, as if it plummeted down circle after circle, weir after weir, into a bottomless pit.

On the shingle was a small boat, painted black, with two oars.

Azrael gave Scrab a nod; the little man spat on his hands, then crunched over and pushed the boat afloat. He clambered in, awkward. “Come on then. 'Aven't got all day.”

Azrael looked at Sarah. He held out his hand.

She went to take it.

“Wait!”
Tom's voice echoed. A thousand drips fell. He grabbed her. “Wait.”

“Tom, it's . . .”

“No.” He turned to Azrael. “Listen. You want a soul, you can have one. I'll go.”

“You?” Azrael smiled and shook his head. “I'm sorry, Tom, I can't allow that.”

“He doesn't mean him. He means me.”

Simon shouldered between them. He was wet and bedraggled. The dirty handkerchief around his wrist was crusted with dried blood. His clothes were as cheap and scruffy and mud-splattered as Tom's. They had never, Sarah realized, been so alike.

“This is the bargain,” he said quickly. “You take me, and you leave Sarah. I want that.”

“Well, I don't!” Sarah snapped hotly.

“You must!” Simon pulled her away from Azrael's hand. “Please. I don't want to stay. Maybe it's a journey I should have made years ago.” He turned to Tom. “Don't you think?”

Tom was appalled. Every part of him wanted to cry out
no
. And yet something had changed. He and Simon. Somehow they had swapped places, become each other. He reached out gently and took his brother's hand. Then he hugged him close. Over his shoulder he said, “Yes.”

Azrael was watching carefully. “Sarah?” he murmured.

She couldn't speak. It took her a long time to say “I can't.”

Tom stepped back. “You have to. We're doing it for you.”

“I can't take Simon away from you.”

“It's not that,” Tom said, exasperated. “You still won't give in, will you? You're still Miss Sarah Trevelyan, far above the rest of us, last of the proud, terrible Trevelyans. Please, Sarah. End it all. Let it go.”

She stared at them both, her eyes faintly wet. Then at Azrael. “Would you agree?”

He folded his arms, his face tense with excitement. “I would. But you must accept it. You have to say yes. You have to throw away your pride.”

The Darkwater roared. Steam rose. In the boat Scrab fidgeted tetchily. “For Gawd's sake get yerselves sorted out! Some of us 'ave a life to live.”

“Yes.”

The word was so quiet they barely heard it.

She said it again, firmer, looking at Tom and Simon.

“Thank you. Yes.”

Azrael smiled joyfully. “At last! Sarah, I am so delighted!” He kissed her quickly, climbed into the swaying boat, and sat down, taking out a small box from his pocket, a snuffbox that she recognized as her grandfather's. Azrael opened it, looking pleased, and rather shy.

“The Great Work,” he said, “is completed.”

A small circle of gold glinted inside.

“You did it!” she gasped.


We
did it. Despite all the mistakes of the past, all the pride of the Trevelyans, the cruelty, the selfishness. After all the fear, finally, we have something to show.” He took the gold out carefully and held it out to Scrab, whose greedy fingers closed on it quickly. He bit it, nodded, and shoved it in his pocket with a grin of satisfaction.

“Right. Let's be 'aving yer.”

Simon glanced at Tom, climbed down into the boat, and sat. Scrab took the oars, grinding one against the shingle. Slowly, the boat turned.

“Yes, but what happens to me?” Sarah said suddenly.

Azrael sat back. “From the last stroke of midnight, our bargain is dissolved.”

“Will I turn into dust or something?”

He looked at her, darkly amused. “You'll grow up, Sarah. What exactly do you think I am?”

“I don't know,” she said quietly. “I don't think I'll ever know.”

The boat was fading, lost in the mist.

“One day you will,” Azrael's voice said faintly. “But good-bye. For now.”

“See you,” Tom whispered. Simon waved, a shadow, then a grayness, then nothing at all. Only the slop of oars came back, a ripple of water.

And the echo of his own voice.

“See you,” it said.

For a long time they stood there, the empty water lapping at their feet.

Outside, on the steps of Darkwater, they came out into the cold and counted the chimes from the church. After the twelfth there was a faint burst of cheering. A rocket went up from a boat in the harbor. Fireworks began, popping and whistling and cracking into colored showers.

“Feel any different?” he asked.

She shrugged. “No. You?”

“Empty.”

She nodded, looking out at the stars. “Will you come to this school, Tom?”

“I'll try. I owe Simon that.”

“You'll get in,” she said drily. “I'll make sure.”

He shrugged. “Maybe it doesn't matter. I've learned what I needed to. But what will you do?”

She was silent a moment. Finally she said, “You can tell me where Emmeline's grave is. And then, I'll go to college.”

“I'd have thought you'd have done that already.”

She was rubbing her eyes. A tiny lash came off and lay on the edge of her finger; she stared at it in delight.

“Never been old enough,” she said.

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