Protagonist Bound (37 page)

Read Protagonist Bound Online

Authors: Geanna Culbertson

BOOK: Protagonist Bound
8.62Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

It was a fairly impressive, intimidating setting. Nonetheless, my attention was captured by something far more intriguing. In the center of the ceiling was a chandelier. This was no ordinary chandelier, though. It looked to be constructed of cerulean glass bottles, and emanated a sapphire blue light that was both beautiful and inexplicably troubling.

The glow was strong and bright—illuminating the whole room with shades of indigo. Although despite the power of its luminescence, it appeared soft somehow. Like instead of pulsating with light as the sun did, the chandelier’s glow was more an amalgamation of a thousand delicate threads of blue energy that happened to be conjoined together by a single base.

My subconscious form was yanked away from the entrancing image as the girl in the cloak kept moving.

I guess if you’re not the main character in your dreams, you don’t really have a say in where you get to spend your time whilst inside them. Bummer.

The girl driving my vision led us to an adjacent room. It was smaller in size, but almost identical to the previous one—aside from not having one of those weird chandeliers, that is.

This new space also had two things that the other did not. On the left side of the entry archway there was a silver statue of a knight holding a black sword. And on the right there was a shining stone statue of a dragon, approximately thirty to forty feet in length.

I watched as the mysterious girl grabbed the black sword out of the knight’s hand and proceeded to walk over to the dragon.

What, is she going to try and slay it or something? Uh, news flash, honey, I think it’s already dead.

Contrary to my expectations, the cloaked girl went on to do the most peculiar thing. She shoved the sword into the dragon’s mouth and turned it clockwise. I heard a clicking sound somewhere in the distance. Then, across the room a bookshelf abruptly made a wheezing sound and swung itself off the wall and to the side—revealing a passageway.

What the what?!

I definitely did not want to go wherever that ominous entrance led. Unfortunately, what I wanted was never a relevant factor in my dreams, so my metaphysical self was, of course, inevitably forced to go through it.

The girl and I travelled down a dusty staircase. As we descended, my already fuzzy dream began to blur even further. Colors began to blend around me and the light was dimming more and more with each step forward. I would be waking up soon . . .

By this point my escort and I had gone through another door, I supposed, because I now found myself standing in an even creepier place than before. It had the musk of a war bunker and a cold, uncomfortable interior design that would’ve served as an appropriate setting for a cult meeting or a fight club.

This room was packed with people of various dress. The girl in the cloak pushed her way past them in order to reach a group gathered at the front. I squinted to see the hazy image more clearly, but to no avail. By the time she joined her friends or whatever, she had been reduced to a big, purple blob in my eyes.

The audio of the dream was not much better. Cloaked girl was having some sort of heated conversation with one of the group members but, hard as I focused, I only caught the end traces of what they were saying.

“So they believed it?” the black-haired boy she was talking to asked.

“Completely,” cloaked girl replied. “No one suspects there was a switch, and our allies have already taken her original one.”

“It’s not enough that she doesn’t know. This one’s different than the others. The boss insists that the threat has to be neutralized completely.”

Cloaked girl nodded. “I understand. And I already have a plan underway. It will require a few more days to be seen through, but shall allow for a quiet, and unforeseeable elimination.”

“It had better,” the boy responded. “And by the way, I am still waiting for you to bring me the items you were supposed to acquire in your last assignment; I’ll be needing them soon and can’t afford a delay.”

“I know, and I have them, but I have to wait a bit before taking them off the grounds. The school is already in a panic since their disappearance, so for now I have to play it carefully. Trust me though; I will deliver on that task shortly, just as I will take great pleasure in delivering on this new one. I promise you, Arian, by week’s end you will have your treasures and the girl will be but a memory.”

Their words were inaudible after that. They, like the room itself, were transforming into an indiscernible blur as the dream grew foggier and foggier. Nearly everything had become a part of this big, murky mess by then. That is, except one thing. On the far back wall of the room there was a map of Book. And on it, there were all of these colorful Xs . . .

If metaphysical dream forms could feel nauseous, mine definitely did. Although I was asleep, my subconscious instantly registered that it had seen those Xs before.

I tried to get closer to them, to the map, but suddenly it was like I was being yanked in the other direction. I struggled to resist, but couldn’t. Even more disconcertingly, as I was being dragged away I noticed that one of the Xs had actually lifted itself off the map. It was a black one—the
only
black one—and as I was being pulled away it started to pursue me. Fast.

It was now the only thing left in my dream that was not completely blurred over. Meanwhile, my heart pounding loudly in my chest was the only sound to be heard as it approached. Well, that and the sound of a bird chirping for some reason.

I shut my eyes hard to try and escape. Thankfully, it actually worked. When I opened them again, I was back in our suite.

Immediately I noticed that a little yellow bird was perched on my pillow singing the soft song that had apparently woken me from the confines of my nightmare. The tiny thing blinked at me with curiosity and I patted him on the head. He chirped happily in response and then soared back through our open balcony doors, his job completed.

“I thought I was going to have to wake you myself.”

I turned to see SJ sitting on her bed putting on her shoes. She met my gaze in the darkness. “What were you dreaming about?” she asked coolly.

I shrugged. “Oh, you know, typical princess stuff—rainbows, princes, glitter.”

“Uh-huh”

I broke eye contact and glanced over at Blue’s bed. She was still snoring loudly and there was a plump finch sitting on her forehead.

“Should we—” I started to ask, but SJ smiled and held up a finger, signaling me to wait. A moment later the rotund finch opened his brown beak and sang an off-key, surprisingly baritone note.

Blue’s eyes snapped open and she growled and swatted angrily at the bird as he flew back outside. SJ and I laughed as quietly as we could while Blue proceeded to stomp into the bathroom. She was clearly not a 2:00 a.m. type of gal.

A couple of minutes later we were ready. Blue had her knife in its sheath. I’d shoved my wand into my boot for lighter travel. And SJ, with a bag over her shoulder, had begun to walk to the edge of our balcony.

When she reached the railing she cleared her throat and started to sing very quietly. It was a soft, hypnotic lullaby that almost put me back to sleep. But after a few beats, some very alert owls flew over to answer the call (looking so attentive you’d think they’d have just responded to the trumpet sound of a military reveille). SJ—the ever-impressive animal charmer—proceeded to give them their orders. Then without question the owls flew back into the night as we made our way to the door.

Swiftly we exited the room, made our way down the six flights of stairs, and stopped behind the shadow of a pillar when we reached the foyer—sandwiching ourselves within the small gap between it, the wall, and one of the window’s flowing magenta drapes.

SJ had instructed the five owls to be individually positioned on trees outside the windows surrounding the school. They were to be our lookouts—monitoring the main hallways that led from here to the Treasure Archives.

We were all well aware that different guards passed through the halls every nine minutes like clockwork, but we couldn’t risk the chance that one might’ve been running slightly late or a bit early. Thus, the nocturnal birds were a necessary precaution. And as it happened, they did not mind, let alone hesitate, to take the opportunity to assist SJ.

Geez, it must be really nice to have animals want to jump through hoops like that for you just because you can sing. I wish I could get a piece of that action; I’d never have to make my bed again.

Silence and shadows everywhere around us, we waited in our hiding place. Soon enough the sound of clanking metal began to echo off the floor tiles as one of the guards went by. A few seconds later came a discernible “Hoot, hoot” as the owl outside let us know that the adjacent corridor was clear. We emerged from behind the pillar and scurried forward.

The three of us travelled that way for the remainder of our trek across the school—concealing ourselves each time we came to another corner and waiting for the owls’ reassuring calls before continuing on our way.

Eventually we came to the grand hall intersection containing the Treasure Archives. The area felt more spooky than usual and the three of us exchanged looks before we hesitantly approached the cases. Moonlight was streaming through the windows, illuminating the whole area and reflecting off the many trinkets displayed there.

Blue cracked her knuckles confidently and stepped forward to set our plan in motion.

We only had nine minutes to get in and get out before the next guard came by, so she and I immediately removed a set of bobby pins from our pockets. SJ, meanwhile, retrieved two things from her bag. The first was the small portable potion she’d shown us earlier. The second was the slingshot Jason had made her.

Oh, so this is what that was for.

SJ had said the portable potion would need to impact on something in order to deploy the enchantment condensed inside it. So, I supposed a slingshot was the optimum way to fire such a thing while allowing for accurate aim of its distribution.

“It will last five minutes,” she whispered to us, breaking the thick silence. “So we must move quickly.”

Blue and I readied ourselves as SJ loaded the fragile object into her slingshot. After a brief exhale, she released it and the portable potion shot across the room. It made a direct hit against the school crest engraved at the top of the center case.

Upon impact, a large cloud of cobalt smoke was released and began spreading over the area where the cases stood. However, the cloud didn’t stop there; it kept growing. It speedily made its way toward us and consumed our group and then the entire, massive room within its hazy entity.

“SJ,” Blue coughed as lightly as she could. “What’s going on?”

“I must have made the dosage too strong,” she whispered back. “But do not worry; it should not make much of a difference. For the next five minutes or so we will just not be able to—”

SJ went silent then. Not from shock or anything dramatic like that. It was what she was trying to tell us. You see, the potion she had brewed for this occasion was a
silence
potion.

When SJ had first started concocting the potion we needed to escape from Lady Agnue’s, my interest had been peaked. Accordingly, I thought I might peruse her special potions book to see if there were any other recipes inside that could’ve been useful to our mission. With the trip to Adelaide being so fresh in my mind, I immediately took notice of the page detailing the potion from
The Little Mermaid
—the one that the infamous sea witch had used to steal the sea princess’s voice in exchange for turning her human.

I was confused at first because I thought that dark magic was responsible for this enchantment. But then SJ explained to me that (had I been paying attention in class last month) I would’ve known that the sea witch actually used a potion to silence the former little mermaid and then a separate magic spell to enact the whole flipper-leg swap bit.

The recipe for this vilified mutism potion was detailed in SJ’s book. And—given the priceless nature of the objects in the Archives, and the tiny green lights just inside the cases that signified the presence of some sort of security system—I’d requested that my talented friend make us a batch of the stuff in order to silence the impending wrath of their alarms.

Evidently though, it seemed she had made the concoction too powerful and now it wasn’t just the Archives’ alarms that were incapable of making any noise, it was us and everything else in the room too.

Still, SJ was right. It didn’t matter much. Not being able to talk for five minutes really couldn’t interfere with our mission in any substantial way. Right?

Wrong.

When the smoke cleared, Blue and I continued with our next step of the plan. The two of us approached the Archives and got to work on the cases’ locks.

As much as boys our age naturally tended to irritate me, having alliances with some at least meant the opportunity to learn from them on occasion. During our schools’ past field trips and social visits, Jason and Mark had shown me and Blue some of the things they’d been taught at Lord Channing’s that we never would have learned at Lady Agnue’s.

Over the years, these skills had included: crossbow shooting, plant identification, hog wrestling, lock-picking, and whistling.

Who knew ladies weren’t supposed to whistle? Lady Agnue did apparently. When asked about the pastime, she had referred to it as the song of construction workers and suspicious characters. Ergo, the practice had been forbidden from our school grounds since Day One.

Back to the present though, the relevant skill to our current situation was lock-picking. Each case in the Archives had two locks, so Blue and I each took one on and diligently worked to disengage it. After a couple minutes we were successful.

At first we were a bit reluctant to open the case—still nervous that the alarm might be too strong for SJ’s potion to completely silence. It was only after Blue tried to yell as loudly as possible that we realized we really couldn’t make any noise at all, and thus felt secure enough to proceed.

Other books

Ruth by Elizabeth Gaskell
Wood's Wreck by Steven Becker
Lost But Not Forgotten by Roz Denny Fox
No Love for the Wicked by Powell, Megan
Savage Rage by Brent Pilkey
Sacrifice by Sharon Bolton
On Distant Shores by Sarah Sundin
Live for Me by Erin McCarthy
Cheryl: My Story by Cheryl Cole
That Filthy Book by Natalie Dae, Lily Harlem