Doorways (A Book of Vampires, Werewolves & Black Magic) (The Doorways Trilogy - Book One) (18 page)

BOOK: Doorways (A Book of Vampires, Werewolves & Black Magic) (The Doorways Trilogy - Book One)
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Chapter 30

 

Anna opened her eyes just enough so she could see through her eyelashes. Above her sat her uncle, swaying back and forth in an ancient looking rocking chair. He was mumbling to himself and his eyes were closed.

Realising that this was her chance of escape, Anna pulled the blanket about her shoulders and stood up. Her uncle Fandel moved, and she froze. She watched as he pulled a snot ridden hanky from his pocket and patted his lips with it.

Deciding to take a rest in the rocker isn’t the only mistake you’ve made recent
ly uncle
, Anna thought to herself, pushing her forefinger into her mouth and hooking out the yellow spiked tablet she had been holding in the back of her throat. Her uncle had been away far too long, and in his absence; the effect of those pills had begun to wear off. She wasn’t full of life and energy, but she had become well enough to realise she was in great danger and had to get away from him. Far away.

So, seizing her chance, Anna tiptoed backwards up the cobbled street and away from her uncle as he sat and whispered to himself in the rocker. Tossing the remains of the tablet into the gutter, she held the blanket about her shoulders and fled into the backstreets of Thud.

 

They reached the outskirts of the prison walls just before sunrise. William
sniffed out a disused lunar bear cave and led the others inside. The cave still smelt of the creature, and the bony carcasses of its kill lay scattered around the inside of the cave. Although it didn’t smell great it was warm, but more essential – it was dark.

Relieving themselves of their
supplies, they didn’t waste any time in finding themselves a comfortable area of ground to lie on. They had walked all night in the freezing cold, and each of them ached from head to toe.

Zach
pulled the collar of his coat about his chin and blew onto his hands. Neanna wrapped herself in her cloak, and using her hands as a pillow, closed her eyes. William sat half propped against the far wall of the cave, and Zach could see his eyes glowing red like two break-lights.

‘You never did tell me how your Grand
dad ended up in that prison,’ Zach whispered into the dark.

‘On the day that we fled the Splinter, in his haste he placed the key to the box in his trouser pocket. It wasn’t until several days had passed that he discovered it there amongst some old coins and pieces of string.’

‘Did he get accused of stealing it?’ Zach asked, his eyes closed and fingers laced behind his head.

‘No, not as far as we know. On realising his mistake, my Grand
dad left the Howling Forests for the Splinter at once. But since his last visit to the tower, Throat had taken up residency. We heard that as my Granddad neared the walls of the Splinter, he was intercepted by the Radan that now patrolled its walls and they arrested him.’

‘Arrested him for what?’ Zach asked. ‘You can’t just be arrested. You have to break some kinda law first.’

‘He was accused of undertaking reconnaissance and was found guilty of being a spy.’

‘Did you go to the trial?’ Zach asked.

‘What trial?’ William said. ‘There wasn’t any trial. Now that Throat is in charge justice is swift in Endra. He was found guilty on the spot and taken to the prison of eternal despair, where he will spend the rest of his life.’

‘Not if we have anything to do with it!’ Zach said.

‘What do you mean?’

‘Ah
, c’mon William-the-wolf-Weaver!’ Zach teased. ‘Don’t give up now. We’ll get your Granddad out of that prison. You just need to show a little bit of back bone.’

In the darkness William grinned at his friends fighting talk. ‘Ye
ah, your right,’ he barked, ‘what was I thinking of?’

They lay without speaking for a moment, and then Zach said:

‘I know I keep asking the question, but you always seem to avoid answering it.’

‘What question is that?’ William said, sleep beginning to take him.

‘How comes you saw me in that box?’

William made no reply. Zach waited for it, but all he could hear was the sound of William snoring.

Then Zach felt something beside him. Turning, he realised that Neanna had just
blinked
across the cave to be next to him.

‘I didn’t know you could
do that in your sleep,’ he said, nervous as he felt her resting against him.

‘I
wasn’t asleep,’ she whispered, snuggling-up close to him. ‘I’m too cold to sleep.’

At first Zach didn’t do anything. He didn’t know what to do. If he didn’t find Neanna so attractive it wouldn’t have been so bad – but he did and she was and he felt a kind of weird feeling in his stomach and his heart raced. Drawing a deep breath, he snuck his
arm around her shoulders, and pulled her close. Zach half expected Neanna to shove him away, but instead, she nestled her head against his chest.

‘I know the answer to your question
Zach,’ she said.

‘How comes?’ Zach asked.

‘When William and I spent those long nights racing across the desert in search of your doorway, I asked him why it was so important that we found you.’

‘What did he say?’

‘He said that when he looked into that box he saw Throat striding out of the wastelands, and with him he brought a shadow of death and destruction. Then he said he saw you.’

‘And what did I bring with me?’
Zach asked.

‘He said you brought hope,’ Neanna whispered, snuggling up closer to him and drifting into sleep.
Zach lay awake with Neanna resting in his arms. With everything that he had been told, seen and done – he found it impossible to sleep. But it was more than that which kept him awake – it was Neanna. At sixteen he’d messed about with a few girls but nothing serious. But Neanna was different – he felt something for her. He wasn’t sure what – but he found it hard not to look at her when she was close by, to brush past her made his skin almost seem to tingle and to be holding her now, was almost suffocating. Closing his eyes, and praying that she was asleep, he kissed her gently on the side of her face. Stroking her hair, Zach slowing drifted into sleep. 

 

After Fandel had explained the importance of the missing girl, the rotting Delf grabbed hold of an oversized bag. Covering his nose and mouth with his hanky, he watched as she shuffled about her squalid shack and gathered wall charts, star charts and astrological charts into the bag that had been fashioned from the stomach of a Bloat.

The Delf plucked potions, murky coloured concoctions and bubbling brews from the cluttered shelves that lined her dwelling and rammed these into the bag which was now bursting at the seams.

As she worked, the Delf began to chuckle.

‘What’s so funny?’ Fandel asked her.

‘This!’

‘What?’ Fandel snapped, his patience wearing thin like a sheet of melting ice.

‘That you came back to me.’

‘Not out of choice. I was told to bring the girl to you!’

‘But you didn’t bring her did you?’ the Delf said, turning to look at him with her yellow eyes. ‘You lost her, but instead of searching for her you came to me.’

Fandel gagged at the sight of the maggots that dribbled from her nostrils.

‘You need me,’ she grinned. ‘You need me and don’t forget it my dear Fandel.’

The Delf gathered the last of her items
, and brushing past Fandel, she went to the door of her shack. Grabbing a large leash and collar from a hook, she stepped outside. Fandel followed her to find that the sun was just rising above the derelict streets of Thud.

The Delf hobbled beneath the twisted branches of the granite tree as she dragged her bag by her feet. She huffed and puffed, and the sounds of her continuous farting and belching made Fandel feel nauseous.

‘Where are you going?’ Fandel asked, watching her disappear behind the trunk of the tree.

‘Questions, questions!’ she tutted. ‘Be patient will you!’

Curious as to what she was up to, Fandel followed her, and found her huge backside sticking up out of a hole that disappeared between the knotted roots of the tree. Fandel watched as she struggled with something that lurked deep within the hole.

‘Come to mummy,’ she said, coaxing something from beneath the ground.  ‘C’mon Max,’ she cooed.

‘Who’s Max?’ Fandel asked.

Crawling back out of the hole
, she looked at Fandel and said, ‘he’s my pet dog. He doesn’t like being disturbed halfway through his hibernation. It makes him irritable and grumpy.’

‘Perhaps we should leave him then?’ Fandel said. ‘We don’t have time to waste while you look for your pet poodle.’

‘I know what will bring him to the surface,’ the Delf said, as she screwed up her face and sneezed a gooey lump of snotty-maggots into her hands. She then knelt before the hole with her hands cupped and whispered.

‘Max. Look what mummy has for you!’ Glancing back over her shoulder
, she grinned at Fandel and said, ‘he can’t resist these!’

The earth beneath Fandel’s feet began to shudder and a deep howling sound came from the hole. He watched as a giant snout shot from the darkness. It opened and a great big slobbering tongue began to lap up the maggots from the Delf’s hands.

Fandel’s stomach somersaulted at the sight.

‘You are disgusting,’ he told the Delf.

Looking over her shoulder at him, the Delf said, ‘you love it.’ Grinning she winked at Fandel.

The tongue licked her fingers clean as she got up and moved away from the roots of the tree. Earth and mud began to crumble away from the edges of the hole as the snout forced its way out of the ground to reveal a huge head. This was followed by two massive three toed paws, and then the rest of the Delf’s pet scrambled from beneath the roots of the granite tree.

It was about the size of a full grown lion. Its head was similar to that of a grizzly bear and was framed with a black shaggy-looking mane. The beast’s snout was long and pointed, and its mouth was rammed with rows of vicious looking teeth. The Delf went to it and lost her hands in its wild mane. In a show of affection, she nuzzled her face against the animal and it licked the side of her head with its long, grey, drooling tongue.

‘Mummy’s sorry to have woken her baby,’ the Delf cooed. ‘But we have work to do.’ Pointing in the direction of Fandel, she continued. ‘That silly man over there has gone and lost a naughty girl and now we’ve got to find her.’

Max turned to look at Fandel as if he had understood every word that she had said. He glared at Fandel, rolling back his fleshy lips and snarling.

‘There, there,’ the Delf hushed. ‘Take no notice of the nasty man.’

Clutching her bag under one arm, she hoisted herself onto the creature’s back and tied the collar and leash she had brought from her shack around its neck.

‘C’mon,’ she urged Fandel.

‘What? You expect me to ride that thing with you?’ Fandel asked.

‘Do you want to find this girl or not?’

‘Yes, but…’

‘It’s up to you Fandel Black,’ she spat. ‘You can either stand there quaking in your boots or go and tell Throat that you’ve lost the girl.’

Fandel cringed at the thought of returning to Throat and having to explain what had happened. So he tip-toed towards the animal. When he was within touching distance of its dark brown fur, Max snapped his head round to look at Fandel. A rumbling sound came from deep within his throat as he howled and gnashed his teeth.

‘It’s going to bite me!’ Fandel said.

‘No he’s not!’ The Delf smirked. ‘He’s just being friendly.’

‘If that’s him being friendly, I’d hate to see him when he takes a dislike to someone.’

‘With any luck you will!’ The Delf dribbled.

Fandel climbed onto Max and sat just behind the Delf. Her stench was so overpowering that Fandel could taste it.

‘Take hold of me,’ she cackled.

‘No, you’re alright,’ Fandel grimaced. ‘I think I can manage.’

‘It’s up to you!’ she laughed, digging her sandals into Max’s flanks, encouring the animal to race away from beneath the granite tree.

Lurching backwards and
fearing that he would be thrown clear, Fandel leant forward and threw his arms around the Delf’s waist.

Chapter 31

 

Anna staggered out of the town of
Thud. The sun hung in the sky and its heat was blistering. Although she was burning up, she held the blanket she had been wrapped in above her head to shade herself.  Anna’s mouth burnt with thirst and was sore from the spiky tablets.

Peering from beneath the blanket, she tried to get her bearings and figure out where she was. As she had lain in her uncle’s arms pretending to be unconscious, she had been aware that he had taken her through some kind of doorway, but why and to where she didn’t know. This didn’t look like
Cornwall in the middle of December. For starters, she hadn’t been aware that the west coast of England had a desert running through the middle of it and more curious, she had never known such heat during the winter. All of her senses were telling her that she was no longer in England.

But where am I now?
Anna wondered. Her uncle hadn’t flown her to another part of the world and he hadn’t driven her anywhere as their journey had lasted mere moments. Although Anna’s head was a hive of buzzing thoughts, her thirst was her priority and she knew that she had to get water soon or she would be in trouble.

Anna hobbled forward, not because she was in pain, but because the baked earth beneath her was burning hot and scorched the soles of her feet.  For what seemed like hours
, she limped further across the desert, her lips cracked and broken and her tongue feeling like a sheet of glass-paper in her mouth.

 

Max carried the Delf and Fandel through the empty streets of Thud, its long snout darting from road to pavement as it sought out Anna’s scent.

‘Where did you last see her?’ The Delf asked.

‘I’m not sure. This place looks different by daylight,’ Fandel replied, his eyes swivelling in their sockets. He glanced up side-streets and alleyways as he sought out any shop, building or landmark that seemed familiar to him.

‘Look, the more time we waste the more distance she puts between us,’ the Delf reminded him as if he didn’t already realise this.

Then, in the distance he saw the rocking chair where he had rested the night before.

‘That chair over there!’ he said. ‘That’s where I rested and my niece disappeared!’

The Delf dug her sandals into the beast’s sides and steered it towards the rocker. Max sniffed the air, and then licked the pavement with his dribbling tongue. The creature picked-up on something and walked away from the chair, its snout passing to and fro over the street like a vacuum cleaner.  It headed towards the gutter where it came to a sudden halt.

Max licked something small and yellow which was covered in spikes. He yelped and awaited the Delf’s approval as he turned his head holding the tablet between his teeth. The Delf reached forward and took it from between Max’ jaws. She held it up to the light and grinned.

‘So your niece spat the tablet away!’ she croaked and a sea of maggots wriggled between the gaps in her teeth. ‘How cunning!’

Fandel’s eyes narrowed as he looked at the pill and learnt how he had been cheated.

‘She couldn’t have gotten far,’ the Delf said, yanking on Max’s leash. ‘Find the girl for mummy. There’s a good boy. Find the naughty girl for mummy.’

Max reared-
up on his hind legs and howled, his stumpy tail swishing from side to side. Then with a deep snarl and brandishing his razor-sharp teeth, he bounded through the streets of Thud led by the scent that Anna had left trailing behind her.

 

Just as Anna stepped from the streets of Thud and into the desert, Warden reached the caverns deep within the Snowstorm Mountains. With flakes of snow covering his long beard and freezing the top of his head, he looked just like a Yeti. Wasp buzzed around his ankles, pleased with himself that he had led his master to the Noxas who hid deep within the mountainous region.

The caverns were quiet and still, and Warden, like his guide sniffed the air. He howled, causing a shower of powdery snow to fall from the icicles hanging high above him. The inside of the cavern looked like an enormous cathedral sculpted from ice.

On hearing his call, the other Noxas bounded from their caves and entered the main chamber. Some crouched on all fours above Warden on icy ledges. Others came forward and patted him on his wide back.

‘It’s good to see you again,’ a giant of a man said, clasping hold of Warden’s hairy hand and pumping it up and down.

Warden recognised the smell of his friend at once and said, ‘it’s good to be home Wozel.’

‘Where’s the boy?’ Wozel asked, bending down to pat
Wasp on the head.

Before Warden had a chance to explain what had happened, a female stepped from amongst the throng of Noxas that had gathered.

‘Where’s our son?’ she asked.

Hearing his wife’s voice, Warden rushed forward and held her in his muscular arms.

‘My beautiful Willow,’ he whispered into the thick golden hair that hung in neat woven braids from her head and face.

She kissed Warden’s cheek and held him close.

‘Where’s William?’ she asked again.

Letting go of his wife, he spoke to the Noxas that had gathered around him. ‘My son has found
Zach Black.’

Hearing this news
, the other Noxas howled and barked as they punched the air in approval.

‘What does this human look like? Is he a great warrior?’ asked a voice from high above them.

At once they all bowed their heads in reverence, as their high priest Wilberforce stepped out onto a snow covered ledge high up in the roof of the cavern. He was tall as the other Noxas, but slender – frailer looking. Lengths of silver hair hung from his head and face, and covered his hands like silk-gloves.

Keeping
his head bowed low, Warden said, ‘no my gracious Wilberforce. He is just a boy really.’

‘A boy?’ Wilberforce said. ‘And what is this boy like?’

‘Scared, I think,’ was Warden’s honest reply.

‘Scared?’ howled Wozel. ‘How is a scared little boy going to save Endra?’

The Noxas began to grumble and the cavern soon echoed with their murmurs of confusion and concern.

‘Hush!’ barked Wilberforce from above. ‘Let Warden finish, after all he has met this
Zach Black.’

All of the Noxas turned to face Warden
, and although he couldn’t see them, he knew they were looking at him.

‘When I say scared, I think he has no idea of his true importance. But I believe he is special,’ Warden explained to them.

‘Special?’ Wilberforce contemplated, stroking his silver beard. ‘In what way is this boy special?’

‘He came into this world carrying the weapons of a peacekeeper.’

Hearing this, the Noxas began to whisper amongst themselves.

‘But the peacekeepers are extinct. Wiped out by Throat,’
Willow said, moving closer to her husband and placing a slender hair-covered hand over his.

‘I’ve heard rumours that some still hideout in the town of
Tux,’ said Wozel.

‘Rumours or not,’ Wilberforce barked. ‘If what Warden says is true about this boy then there is at least one.’

‘But what good is one against Throat’s armies?’ Willow asked.

‘The peacekeepers were natural leaders,’ Wilberforce reminded them. ‘People trusted in them and followed them…’

‘To their deaths,’ Wozel interjected.

‘Into battle,’ Wilberforce corrected him. ‘They fought Throat’s demonic forces until their own kind were on the cusp of extinction. Wasn’t it right that the people of Endra fought along side them? Was it just the peacekeepers charge to protect Endra?’

Wozel hung his head as Wilberforce chastised him.

‘But if the peacekeepers along with the rest of Endra couldn’t defeat Throat before, what makes you think we can beat him now?’
Willow asked.

‘I’m not sure about anything,’ Wilberforce howled. ‘But one thing I am certain of is that we can’t hide in these caves for the rest of our lives, waiting for the desert to take us. We can’t let our friends the Slath spend the rest of eternity trapped somewhere between life and death. If what the Weaver’s son say’s about this
Zach Black is true then we must be ready to stand alongside him, shoulder to shoulder and do battle with Throat.’

‘But our number is too small!’ shouted another of the Noxas from the crowd.

‘We are less than two hundred!’ roared another.

‘Then we shall call on the rest of our kind,’ Wilberforce roared. ‘The ones that have gone through the doorways into Earth and have not returned.’

‘Maybe they haven’t returned because they’re already dead,’ shouted Wozel.

‘But thousands have crossed over in our history,’ Warden pointed out. ‘None of
us
have ever been through a doorway to Earth. We wouldn’t even know where to begin!’

Bounding from the icy ledge, Wilberforce landed in front of Warden
, sending up a shower of snow with his huge hands and feet. His robes fluttered about him, and his cloak rippled like a clean sheet being thrown over a bed.

‘There is one of our kind in Earth who will be able to help us. He has been there for many years, living amongst the humans,’ he told Warden. ‘He has become somewhat of a chief to the Noxas and the Slath that live in secret there. He heads a secret society called the League of Doorways!’

‘The League of Doorways?’ Warden growled. ‘What is this League of Doorways? It sounds like something a fool would make himself chief of.’

‘Now, now,’ Wilberforce tutted. ‘Is that anyway to speak of a long lost friend?

‘What long lost friend?’ Warden asked.

‘Wally Willabee
, of course. Do you not remember him?’ Wilberforce asked with a smile.

Numb, Warden stood and recalled his friend as they had raced as cubs amongst the trees of the Howling Forests playing a game of Blast. He remembered making Wally promise that he wouldn’t ever mess with the inferno berries again. Then, his heart sank as he recalled the gut wrenching sadness he had felt when learning that his friend had reneged on his promise, experimented with the berries and blown himself up.

‘But Wally died years ago,’ Warden insisted.

‘Did he?’ Wilberforce said.

‘Everyone heard the explosion!’

‘Why are you so sure it was the sound of an explosion? Could it perhaps have been the sound of something else that they heard?’

‘Like what?’ Warden asked.

‘Might it have been the sound of Wally’s doorway slamming shut?’ Wilberforce smiled.

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