The Black North (28 page)

Read The Black North Online

Authors: Nigel McDowell

BOOK: The Black North
5.36Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

‘Two caverns were revealed when we started our work!' the small bird on the shoulder of the Faceless had to shout. ‘Two chambers, one beneath the other! So it made perfect sense to sculpt the Hollow Mountain into something more impressive, something more beautiful! This lower cavern will be a military base and the upper shall be my seat of command!'

The river threaded on, carrying Oona into the midst of everything, commands flying –

‘Fast over here with that gunpowder, lads!'

‘Need more ballast for this, boys! Keep it moving, keep it steady!'

‘Gimme a hand with this, quick! Right men – all hands to this and
lift
!'

And the results: rifles and pistols stacked, knives bound in leather and packed, cannons rolled, ammunition stockpiled … all the blunt and unforgiving instruments of battle being formed.

‘As I think you'll agree,' said the Faceless, ‘we have more than adequate resources to defeat any Cause that might seek to oppose us.'

Oona couldn't disagree. She felt a single tear trace a cold track down her cheek. She thought:
war
. Everywhere she looked the word screamed its promise.

Another sound: bone-quivering and world-shuddering and, to Oona at least, heartbreaking. She heard the Changeling say, in a tone trying for softness, ‘Now what are they doing to those Giants? Why can't they just leave the poor creatures alone?'

Oona saw a large group of Invaders clustered close to the wall of the cavern, and above them, and taller than any twenty of the Invaders if they'd stood on each other's shoulders: the male Giants of the Hollow Mountain. A dozen, all bald and brute-ugly and huddled tight together and bound around the ankles with iron and leather. But not much like the women Oona'd seen – these men looked more like infants overgrown, skin all bloated and in places blackened, naked but for rags knotted loose around their waists. And they were weeping. They were, Oona knew, the source of the terrible roaring. She heard words from the cluster of gathered Invaders, teasing –

‘You think you're powerful just cos you're big, do you?'

‘Think we're scared of you?'

‘Big helpless babies, that's all you are!'

More roars. And roars of laughter too from the mob as the Giants tried for escape, attempting to scale the wall but with large, blunt, cumbersome fingers – no relief, no way free. And the Invaders continued to revel, prodding the male Giants with torches and crude brands, singeing skin so that the whole place shook with a Giant anguish.

Then the Faceless Invader added his own roar to the cavern –

‘Cease this at once! Get away from those creatures!'

As though scalded the rabble fell back, most dropping their fire and trying to distance themselves. Surprise, some shame, but Oona noticed some keeping close their conviction. The leaders who'd led the humiliation, who didn't see a bit of harm in it – they refused to be cowed.

The boat that had brought Oona and the Faceless at last reached rock. Invaders were swift in their stumbling forwards to help – a rope thrown and caught, slipped through an iron ring fixed into one of the largest rocks and the Faceless left the boat in one long stride. To Oona's eyes he appeared to grow taller as he stalked up the slope towards the group of Invaders. Without forewarning he stopped and struck one of the soldiers, knocking them backwards – a blow with as much ease in it as Oona had seen in Loftborough. The soldier didn't get up. And that crimson-eyed bird spoke with an anger Oona would've attributed to a creature much larger: ‘So you bully and torment these creatures as though you were back in the playground? Do you not remember that this was their mountain before it was our own? We should show them respect!'

Alone in the boat Oona made small moves, testing the ropes that held her, squirming free of the sack that enclosed her bottom half, seeing how possible escape might be. But one Invader on the shore saw and aimed his gun like he was going to shoot. She stopped.

‘That's a good girl,' said the Invader. He tried a sarcastic smile. ‘And if you think you're going to be going anywhere without my say-so, then you're a bigger fool than you look.'

So Oona stayed, silently cursing, raging. She listened –

‘A report please, Corporal,' said the Faceless, and an Invader stumbled forwards, a branch of fire still snarling in his hand. ‘Tell me: how goes the interrogation?'

‘Sir,' said the Corporal, hardly knowing where to look, not sure whether to direct speech to the Faceless face or the bird on its shoulder. ‘Sir, we've been trying to get them to tell us about how to reach the Burren, but they ain't talking. And we've looked through all their scrappy books but we can hardly read the writing in half of them, let alone understand any of it!' He looked to the fire in his hand, cleared his throat. ‘So we thought more forceful methods were needed to get them answering.'

‘
Forceful
?' said the Faceless. He took the torch from the Invader's hands and closed one large hand over the flames to snuff them. ‘Or
barbaric
? We do not want to lower ourselves to the levels of the others who live on this Isle, do we?'

‘No sir,' said the Corporal.

The Faceless took a step towards the Giants and their whimpering rose once more and they pressed themselves closer to the wall, to one another's comfort, fingers fumbling at toothless mouths.

‘We have been patient with you,' said the Changeling. ‘We have treated you, I believe, with the utmost of respect. However, now my patience has been worn to its thinnest. I am going to ask you questions, and you are going to answer. Do we understand each other?'

But the Giants their had ready words, a way of talking that sounded to Oona like the oldest rhetoric, querulous: ‘What right do you have to come here and disturb our quiet contemplation inside the Hollow Mountain? You being a creature born of broken earth and wicked magic. A being plucked like a weed by that creature on your shoulder, who you have bent to your will, that speaks for you? You, who has no soul but only a bitter will! You, who has known no love nor affection but only hate! You have come and you have broken! You have destroyed and opened these sacred caverns to the whims of a cruel world! What right do you have to commit such a crime? What authority do you have over us?'

The Giants had all spoken more bravely than Oona would've reckoned. And like their wives: spoke so closely together that it sounded almost like rough song. The Giants went on: ‘You serve the creature that came across the sea! That King who is not Kingly, not meek nor mild! Oh King of un-Kingliness! No righter of wrongs! No doer of nobler deeds! No writer of wondrous –'

‘Quiet!' shouted the Changeling. ‘Cease this lamenting, I've had enough of it!'

The bird abandoned the Faceless Invader's shoulder to circle, then return. And as in Loftborough – it had become something larger, darker, eyes both blistering.

‘Answer me this now,' it said. ‘The place a dozen miles North from here, the place the river flows towards and you barbarians call the Burren: how do I locate it, and how do we enter?'

The Giant's reply, in delicate harmony: ‘Why do you wish to know the way into a place of such safety, of such healing? Why would you seek such solitude as it provides, that place of oldest North magic, where contemplation is prized and –'

‘I said
enough
!' shouted the bird, and everything shook, everything stopped. All work within the Hollow Mountain ceased, every eye and all attention drawn to this confrontation. But Oona knew – no matter how much questioning, how much demand or threat, these Giants wouldn't tell. Wouldn't, maybe couldn't: perhaps the answers were so buried so deep they wouldn't rise, couldn't be spoken. And some other had the very same thought –

‘Maybe they don't even know, sir,' said one of the Invaders. ‘They're that old, maybe they can't remember?'

‘How dare you!' cried the Giants, and Oona saw them begin to rise. ‘We know all stories and tales and ways of this Isle! All legend that we have recorded and you now see fit to burn! Have we not sat in the dark within this mountain for generations, turning over all mysteries, poring over all notions large and small? Have we not –?'

‘
Enough
,' said the Faceless one, interrupting once more. The Giants shrank. A pause, and the darkest colour seeped into the bird's feather, into its voice: ‘Whether you wish to remember or not, I will have the information I need. Perhaps barbaric methods are indeed necessary.' The Changeling turned crimson eyes on Oona, and said, ‘It is time to test the truth of legend: we shall see now how powerful and persuasive this Nightmare Stone can be.'

69

‘I'll bring her,' said the Invader who'd been keeping keen watch on Oona, and he was as careless and as rough as he could manage in retrieving: by the hair or arm or wherever, dragging. But Oona refused to make any sound or scream, didn't want to satisfy him. He dropped her by the Faceless Invader's feet.

‘Untie her,' said the Changeling.

Some hesitation, but the same Invader yanked the knife from his belt. He gave Oona a long look as though he could do what he liked with the blade, with her. A jerk of his hand and he'd cut her bonds. Oona rose, watching the Faceless take the Loam Stone from its tunic: it was utterly devoid of light. But at the appearance of the Stone the Giants began to shiver and a low and wordless moan rose in their flabby throats.

The Changeling told Oona, ‘Your task is simple, Oona Kavanagh: you are going to use this Stone to extract the truth I need from these Giants. And you are then going to tell me that information. Do you understand?'

Oona didn't offer answer. She didn't want to touch the Stone. In truth was afraid of the thing and what new disgrace it might show. So she cleared her throat to say, ‘I can't use it like that.'

‘Silly girl,' said the bird. ‘How can you know, if you haven't yet tried?' The Faceless offered the Stone.

And all Oona had seen and wished she could unsee squirmed to the surface of her mind as the shred of light squirmed wild within the Loam Stone. She shut her eyes, but no solace. No choice, she knew: the Stone was her possession whether she wished it or not.

So Oona opened her eyes, and stepped forwards to reclaim it.

Instantly: as though their separation had been a trauma and it had so many things it was anxious to share, the Stone showed Oona too much. Images all swift as light glancing on grey water –

Cold fire –

Shattered sea –

Broken moon –

Echoes –

Screaming –

Clawing shadow –

Dust –

Everywhere and everyone dust –

Isle ending –

And as with the landlady in Loftborough, Oona locked eyes with the Invader who'd taken her from the boat and was shown nightmares: he was powerless and cowering in a forest with Blackened trees, tangled boughs bearing flame but burning with a chill, soundless fire …

Oona forced herself to withdraw. And she saw the Invader anew: whether he held rifle or blade or both, he was terrified. Was doing what he was doing because he was scared of what would happen if he didn't.

Oona looked quick to another Invader and (strange – somehow not a surprise) she saw the same nightmare in his mind: Black forest writhing with the same white flame. And fast, Stone growing hotter in her hands, she focused on another Invader, and then the next, and next, and another. And all were harbouring the same nightmare, all besotted by an identical fear.

‘Ask them now!' cried the Changeling, and Oona was forced to return fully. She looked up, eyes drawn to the crimson gaze of the bird. What nightmares waited there, Oona wondered? But no matter how long she looked, she saw nothing. Their crimson held no more than surface: no truth, no nightmare. And to Oona this was more terrifying than anything.

‘Ask them!' the bird shrieked, wings extending, trembling.

Oona shifted her feet and faced the Giants. She took a breath, then looked –

Such nightmares were seething in the Giants! So many that she couldn't discern any single thing, their worst imaginings engulfing her like sudden tide, collective fear, worry, remorse and mystification rushing. The only thing Oona did know: all their nightmares were of destruction and ending and plague and withering. All, she realised, were symptoms of the same: the destruction of their cherished Isle.

‘Well?'

The voice of the bird came from far off, could almost have been ignored, but the grip that enclosed Oona's arm couldn't.

‘What did you see?' the Changeling asked. ‘Did they show you the Burren? Did they tell how to enter it? How to tear through the old magic that surrounds the place?'

Oona didn't know what the Burren looked like, but she did know one thing. Unexpected, simple – how she was going to escape.

‘I did see something like that,' said (lied) Oona. ‘I need to try again though. Their thoughts are all over the place, nothing clear enough for me to see.'

Slowly, he released her.

‘Very well,' said the Faceless. ‘Look only once more. And this time, you will find the truth I need. Or we may have to revert to the use of those methods more appropriate to the barbaric kind of this Isle.'

Oona felt the shuffle and smile of the surrounding Invaders – she didn't doubt their willingness, the eager and terrified torturer slumbering in all.

So Oona looked once more –

Again the same press and onslaught of Giant nightmares: rising fire and ocean, earth cracking open as it had already done at the Divide, dust and echoes and suffocating quiet … but this time Oona had decided not just to watch, but to dream. If I could dream fire in Loftborough, she thought, and command that, then maybe I can do more? She knew what the Giants feared, so knew what darker things would inflame. The Stone boiled in her hand, sending fierce encouragement everywhere, power trickling into limb and head and frantic heart, and Oona gave the Giants fire: wavering sheets like she'd seen in Innislone. And then water: as Merrigutt had told, the sea sent storming over land when the King's City had first risen. And then earth: land rising and walking, so much tearing that the ground was a mire of dark places to fall. And then the worst truth: the Hollow Mountain itself, the dark eating in, the end of knowledge as books were torn and burned. And this last was the spark that started everything –

Other books

Back Roads by Tawni O'Dell
The Postmistress by Sarah Blake
Conceived in Liberty by Howard Fast
Red Jungle by Kent Harrington
Capture by Annabelle Jacobs