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Authors: Elizabeth Haydon

The Tree of Water (26 page)

BOOK: The Tree of Water
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“Or she may win. You never know. If she does, that may be our chance to talk to the Sea King.” Ven looked anxiously over at the line of wild hippocampi, which, while more calm, were still bucking and biting at each other and their riders. “As my father used to say, let's just keep a good thought, shall we?”

Char and Coreon nodded, then looked at each other doubtfully.

A blast of the shell-horn shattered the thrum of the audience. A clear, commanding voice echoed through the Deep.

“And they're off!”

 

27

The Second-to-the-Last Race

The floating flags dropped on both sides of the throne platform.

The hippocampi reared and bucked, a few of them spinning around in circles, to the loud amusement of the crowd.

The riders kicked and urged the beasts forward, all except for Amariel, who patted the fat blue-green hippocampus and gave him a nudge.

Then, after a moment of chaos, the hippocampi started down the track.

Immediately a pair of orange and red steeds, including the one with the sunflower mane, dashed into the lead, creating a huge wake behind them. The others followed in hot pursuit, dashing down the track, snapping at each other.

Except for the blue-green one, who puffed slowly behind them.

A yellow and gray sea mare, ridden by the merrow with the pig-like snout, suddenly veered away from the pack toward the crowd. She stopped in the middle of the track in an outside lane in front of a small patch of kelp. She made a quick bob for the seaweed, throwing her rider off. The pig-nosed merrow flipped twice in the drift and floated down to the ocean floor on his back, while the hippocampus calmly munched away.

The remainder of the hippocampi rounded the first turn, all except Amariel's, who was lagging almost half a length behind them. Ven could see the merrow urging her steed to speed up, but he just kept getting slower and slower until finally he stopped in the middle of the racetrack.

Then relieved himself on the ocean floor.

The crowd roared with laughter.

“Come on, ya fat thing,” Char muttered. “You know, Amariel and I don't always get along the best, but she
is
my friend. I hate to hear them laughing at her.”

“Amariel doesn't care what the crowd thinks,” Ven said, though he wasn't certain he was right. The merrow's face was set in a determined expression. She kept urging the plodding hippocampus along, even though the rest of the pack was halfway around the track ahead of her. “We shouldn't feel sorry for her, or tease her. We'll just cheer for her while she's riding and support her when she's done.”

“Right.” Char closed his eyes and concentrated on his thrum. “Come on, Amariel! Smoke 'em!”

“Yeah!” Coreon shouted. “Go! Go! Go!”

The boys continued cheering even as the pathetic pack of merrows and sea horses came around the home turn. Amariel still had not made it halfway around the track as the red hippocampus streaked across the finish line, followed by the rest. The winning rider did a flip in the sea, letting loose a stream of bubbles from his backside as he did.

The crowd broke into cheers and hooting laughter.

“Aw,
man.
” Char put his hands on his head.

Ven said nothing. He was watching Amariel.

The chubby blue-green horse had bobbed its way to the halfway point of the racetrack in front of the throne stand and was slowing down more at each bob. Finally it plodded to a halt.

The Sea King and Queen stared down at Amariel.

The merrow dismounted clumsily, woozy from her bumpy ride. She bowed deeply.

“Your Majesty,” she said to the queen, “may I have the honor of presenting you with a gift—a
human
gift?”

The Epona had been staring at her. Her face lit up and she smiled broadly.

“A human gift?” Her thrum was excited and childlike.

“Yes.” The merrow removed the ring the octopus had given her from her hair and looked at it for a moment. “The jewel inside it is very much like your hair, Your Majesty—both white and clear at the same time, depending on the light.”

As she spoke, the sunwater around the throne stand dimmed a little. Ven could see the clouds above the surface growing thicker, as if it were getting ready to rain.

“Lemme see! Lemme see!” the queen squealed.

The Sea King coughed. “Some decorum, if you please.”

“What does that mean?” the queen asked.

“Calm down, and act a little more regal.”

“Oh. All right.” The Sea Queen stretched out her palm.

Amariel placed the ring in her hand. The Epona held it up to the dimming sunwater.

“Ooo! Ooo!” she squealed. “It's
pretty!
What is it?”

Amariel shrugged.

“I don't know. But there is a human here who might be able to tell you.” She pointed across the Festival grounds to where Ven, Char, and Coreon were standing.

“Ahhh,” Ven murmured. “Brilliant. Coreon, I think she may have gotten you your royal audience after all.”

“Great,” said Char. “Now I get to pretend I know somethin' about jewelry?”

The Sea King gestured from across the Festival grounds. The lines of fish that were swimming in place demarking the racetrack made an opening.

“Let's go,” said Ven.

They swam through the break in the fish line while the Festival crowd stared at them in silence, though their thrum was deafening. When they finally arrived at the foot of the throne where Amariel was floating, the Sea Queen pointed at Char.

“Come up here beside me,
human
,” she said sweetly.

“He's close enough,” said the king. “What can you tell her about this gift?”

“Er, it's called a ring,” said Char, rubbing his neck uncomfortably. “Humans wear them on their fingers to show, uh, that they are important and, well, wealthy.”

The Sea King snorted. He held up his hand.

A large ring with a red stone was on the first finger.

“Would you care to tell us something we don't know?” His thrum did not sound amused.

“A ring like that is often given by a human man to a human woman as a promise of marriage,” Ven said quickly.

The Epona's eyes opened wide. She turned to the Sea King and smiled a glittering smile.

The Sea King coughed.

“I just think it's pretty,” said Amariel.

Ven nudged Coreon.

“Your Majesty, I bring you a message from the Cormorant of the eastern coral reef,” Coreon said nervously.

The Sea King looked relieved.

“What is it? Thrum unto me.”

Coreon stepped forward, and the king put his enormous hand on Coreon's forehead. They both closed their eyes. After a few moments, the king removed his hand.

“This is disturbing indeed,” he said. “Damage to the reef, murder of its residents—and the possibility of war with the humans in the Gated City.”

“War with humans?” the queen shrieked. “No!”

“Calm down and stare at your ring.” The king exhaled, his gills flapping deeply.

“The Cormorant says he needs your guidance, Your Majesty,” Coreon continued. “Today is Threshold. He only gave me until today to get your answer. He will attack tomorrow.”

“Not if he listens to my direction,” said the Sea King. “There is no need to invade the Gated City. I will command him to seal the tunnel in such a way that it would have to be entirely re-dug to be reopened. It is folly for him to attack the Gated City for many reasons. The least of those reasons is that when those who live in the sea, as the Lirin-mer do, fight on land, they are more likely to be slaughtered themselves than to kill those they seek to destroy. But you are right about the life cycles of humans being vastly shorter than our own. Those who came on the
Athenry
are long dead. If even one of their descendants is an innocent captive, then it is worth allowing the city to stand rather than taking that innocent life.”

Ven, Char, and the queen all sighed in relief.

“Well, that was a brazen gesture, little one,” the Sea Queen said to the merrow.

Amariel beamed. “Thank you, Your Majesty.”

“What does your name mean?”

Ven was surprised at the question. It seemed odd, given how many times he had been warned about names in the sea. But the merrow shot him a glance of understanding, and he realized that the Sea Queen had not asked for her name, but for its meaning.

“It means
Star of the Sea
, Your Majesty,” Amariel said proudly.

“Ah. Well, then, in return for the ring, I will give you a prophecy. There's an old riddle about a captive like that,” the Epona queen said. “It goes like this.” Her eyes grew glassy and her face went slack as she spoke the words.

“Wanderer, out of place in the drift,

This riddle is to you a gift.

Free the captive who stays by choice

Sing a hymn without your voice

Find the souls forgotten by Time

Believe the view is worth the climb.

Follow the path without using your eyes

Five gifts the price to spare one who dies

Until the stars shine in the depths of the sea

Home again you will never be.”

“What does that mean, Your Majesty?” Ven asked eagerly.

The Sea Queen shrugged. “I don't know. I wasn't paying attention during riddle lessons.”

“Then you will send your command to the Cormorant?” Coreon asked the king.

The Sea King nodded. “As soon as the Derby is over, and the Grand Trophy presented, I will send a sunshadow message back to him,” he said. “But what I want to know is why a human and a—a—”

“Nain,” Ven said.

“Ah. Why a human and a Nain are in the sea, traveling in the company of a Lirin-mer and a merrow. It seems rather odd.”

“We came to see the Summer Festival,” said Ven. “Amariel has been telling me about it since we met. One day she hopes to win the Grand Trophy.”

“Not on this hippocampus, of course,” said the merrow.

“Good thinking there,” said the king.

“And if you will allow me, I should like to tell Vandemere, the king of Serendair—and
only
King Vandemere—about the wisdom and beauty that exists beneath the waves. He has asked me to document the hidden magic of the world—and I think it is important that he know that those who rule in the Deep are as respectful of human life as humans should be of, well—”

“Mer-life?” the king suggested.

“Yes, if that's what it's called.”

The Sea King's eyes twinkled darkly in the sunwater that dimmed a little as he smiled.

“You may tell King Vandemere—but only the king—what you have seen here. Since you have just trusted me with his name.”

 

28

A Coming Storm

Ven smiled, but felt his stomach drop at the same time.
When am I going to learn to be more careful with names?
he thought to himself.

The Sea King chuckled.

“Probably never,” he said, reading Ven's thrum. “It's not in your culture to guard them, the way it is in the sea. But I suspect it is a lesson that would serve you well on land, also.”

“No doubt,” Ven agreed. “Might I ask you another question, Your Majesty?”

The king looked out over the racetrack. The hippocampus reeve and his men were rounding up the wild hippocampi and taking them off to the kelp pens in preparation for the running of the Derby. “Thrum quickly, Nain. The race is about to start. And then I must attend to the Cormorant's message.”

“I will,” Ven said. “Do you know if Frothta, the Tree of Water, is still alive, and if so, where it may be?”

The Sea King shook his head.

“I have always been told that it is a myth,” he said. “And if the sea had a real king, instead of just one for the duration of a festival, perhaps he would know the answer. But I do not. I do know, however, where you could find the answer.”

“Where?”

The expression on the king's face grew solemn.

“The only beings that know anything about Old Magic, those things that are from the Before-Time, are the ones that were alive during those days, or their descendants,” he said. “That means if you want to know what happened to Frothta, you need to find a dragon to ask.”

“How did I know you were gonna say that?” Char asked. He looked pleadingly at Ven.

Amariel turned and looked at him also. Ven felt like the water around him was suddenly in danger of freezing.

“Is there no one else who might know, Your Majesty?”

The king shrugged.

“Dragons really are the ones to ask about ancient magic from the Before-Time, because they are the only ones still left from that time. Well, there are others, like the Mythlin, but they are even harder to find.”

Ven avoided both Char's and Amariel's threatening glances.

“And—do you know where a dragon might be, Your Majesty?”

The Sea King inhaled, his gills moving stiffly.

“I do. And I suggest you stay far from that place. You would need to leave the Sunlit Realm to find him, anyway, because he lives at the edge of Twilight.”

Ven looked at the merrow, whose face was stony.

“What does that mean, sire?”

The Sea King waved his hand in the sunwater. A hazy picture appeared, a map of the ocean, with layers of depth marked on it.

“All natural sea life exists here, at depths that do not go below one hundred fathoms, in the Sunlit Realm,” he said. “It is only above one hundred fathoms that the light can naturally reach, where plants can grow. The beast that you seek lives here, in the place known as the Twilight Realm. It is a place of mystery and almost total darkness. The creatures that live there often carry their own lights in order to find their way about in the dark. An evil place, to be certain, but not as evil as that which lies even deeper.”

BOOK: The Tree of Water
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