Authors: Jake Halpern
"As I suspected," said Clink. "You get one key and that's it. Each party that enters this chamber only gets one keyâone chance to open the second gate."
No one spoke for a minute or so.
"I have an idea," said Alfonso finally. "Clink, you're saying that the leaf key disintegrates. Well, if anyone used a leaf key recently, there's got to be a traceâyou know, a bit of leaf left in the keyhole."
"I didn't see anything like that," replied Clink. "The keyholes were clean."
"Maybe I can look a little closer. Hand me that candle," said Alfonso.
Hill gave the candle to his nephew and everyone backed away from Alfonso as he focused carefully on the flame. The flame danced and flickered and Alfonso became lost in the complexity of its movements. He slipped into hypnogogia and walked toward the wall of doors and began examining each door's keyhole. He approached each keyhole with his eyes wide open. Then he squinted his eyes, effectively zooming in, as if his eyes were two telephoto lenses, until the faintest of dust particles appeared as big as beach balls. Finally, at the twelfth door from the left, he found something. In the flickering light of the candle, he saw a microscopic wafer with an intricate pattern of veins on it.
He didn't recognize what it was at first but then it hit himâhe was staring at a particle from a leaf. Alfonso straightened up, relaxed his focus, and sensed the familiar spinning that always meant he was returning to normal.
"Well?" Hill asked anxiously. "Did you find anything?"
"Twelfth door from the left," said Alfonso confidently. "Someone used a leaf key in that lock."
"I hope you're right," said Clink. "Otherwise, this place'll become our tomb." He laughed nervously. His breezy confidence was gone. Clink took a deep breath, carefully inserted the key into the keyhole, and turned it. It crinkled and disintegrated immediately. Seconds later, they heard the most beautiful sound in the world. It was a grinding noise. The entire wall of doors descended into the floor.
The group stumbled out of the darkness and onto a wide, broad ledge made of the same marble as the doors. One by one they fanned out across the ledge and gazed out at the view in front of them.
"Oh my heavens," said Hill in amazement. "Have you ever seen anything like this?"
"T
HE OL' MINERS
in Somnos'll never believe me when I tell 'em about this," Misty said in a hushed voice. "They'll say I made it up."
"
Incredible,
" whispered Clink.
Just beyond the marble ledge gaped a vast chasm. Across this chasm hung a thin layer of clouds, and far beneath, lava from the earth's core had formed into a vast river. The light from the river of lava was uncomfortable to look atâjust like the sunâand after a few seconds they turned their attention to the ceiling. In complete contrast to the furnace below, the ceiling, which looked to be almost a mile above them, was covered with a thick, dark blue ice, the kind that forms only after many years of below-freezing conditions.
"What kinda magic is this?" asked Misty. She looked worried. "Why are there clouds underground?"
Clink took a few steps forward, nodded, and turned to Misty. "What you are witnessing here, my superstitious, backwoods cousin, is nature at its strangest and most incredible," explained Clink with a professorial air. He obviously had recovered from his tongue-tied state. "The cloud layer is the equilibrium between the two extremes, where the rising heat from the lava interacts with the cold air coming off the ceiling. Cold air falls, and hot air rises. That cloud is where the two meet. Pay attention, dearest Misty, and you'll emerge from these subterranean depths an educated woman. Better late than never, I say."
"Don't get too uppity," grumbled Misty. "I remember when ya tried to rob the mayor's house and ya locked yerself inside a closet by accident. Did yer book learnin' help ya then?"
"Hey," said Resuza. "What's that shiny stuff farther along the walls? Is that..."
They all followed her gaze. Misty cackled and rubbed her hands together. "I know the good stuff when ah see it! That's gold! Hah! I thought it was just the stuffa fairy tales. 'The way t' Jasber is covered wit' gold.' Well, I guess they was right."
Alfonso looked at the walls carefully. Thick lines of something bright and yellow zigzagged in between the rock like cracks in a broken window. It was an enormous vein of gold, equal to the richest mines of Siberia and South Africa. Combined with the cloud layer, the glistening of the gold-veined walls gave the area an otherworldly feel, as if Alfonso and the others had stepped into another dimension or planet.
"I'm sure it's mighty impressive," said Bilblox matter-of-factly. "But I get the sense we don't have any roads to walk on, like on the other side. Gold and clouds won't help us get anywhere. What's the plan, ladies and gents?"
"We don't need roads," said a voice from above. "We've got something much better." They looked up. It was Hill. He was standing on what appeared to be the upper level of the marble ledge, which was accessed by a tiny set of stairs just below where he stood.
"What's up there?" Alfonso shouted.
"You're not going to believe this," Hill replied with a grin.
***
When they arrived on the upper level, Hill was standing next to a row of twenty large chests, four feet long by three feet wide. Several of the chests were empty. Scattered across the floor were strips of cloth, tied together to form a strange-looking rope that gleamed blue, and rough-hewn beams of wood. Presumably the items on the floor came from these chests. Hill examined an elaborate pictograph chiseled on the inside of one chest.
"What are these things?" asked Alfonso. He was the first to reach Hill.
Hill wore an excited, schoolboyish smile.
"Alfonso, this is
quite
interesting." Hill gleamed. "These pictographs clearly explain how to build a glider. Or at least, the Jasberian equivalent of a glider."
"What?"
"At long last, I've found Dormians interested in modern technology!" exclaimed Hill. "Maybe it'll be easier now to convince the Grand Vizier that Somnos needs an air force."
"And what exactly are we supposed to do with these gliders?" Resuza asked. "We're not outside, and we don't have a motor to take us in the right direction."
"True enough," said Hill. "Still, they're here for a reason."
Clink walked to the edge of the upper level. He stared at the ice on the ceiling, then at the cloud layer, and then at the lava below. After thinking about this for a while, he turned back around, but as he did so, he noticed something unusual in the wall behind them. Very near the ceiling of the fault a perfectly round vent jutted out from the wall. The entire structure was constructed of a smooth material, perhaps marble, and it looked to be about a hundred feet in diameter. Clink watched the vent until a small icicle hanging from the ceilingânot far from the ventâbroke away and began to fall. Yet instead of falling straight down, it flew toward the vent and then disappeared inside.
"
Aha!
" exclaimed Clink. He jabbed a finger toward the vent. "That's how they do it."
"That's how they do what?" asked Misty.
"That vent above us is drawing in air," explained Clink. "Thus it creates a current that can pull the gliders toward it. It must be a very strong pull. Lookâthe vent is actually pulling in large icicles."
They watched another icicle fall from the ceiling, veer toward the vent, and disappear inside.
"Why does that help us?" Resuza asked. "Even if there is a current going into that vent, it doesn't matter. It's going in the wrong direction. We want to go the other way, away from here."
"True enough," replied Clink. "But I bet there's a separate current going in the direction we want to go. And I'll wager all the gold in this fault that there's one of those vents on the other end by Jasber." He walked to the edge of the platform. "Does anyone have something they don't need, like a piece of cloth?"
Alfonso searched through his pack and handed over a cloth sack from Somnos that contained their used tea grounds and other bits of trash.
"That will do splendidly," said Clink. "Now pay close attention. There should be two currentsâan upper one and a lower one." Clink took the sack from Alfonso and tore it into two pieces. He then took one piece and threw it high into the air. Almost immediately, it was sucked upward into the vent. "That's the upper jet stream and it appears to be bringing air toward the Hub." Clink then took the second piece of cloth and hurled it into the chasm below. They watched as it fell toward the cloud layer. Just as it was about to pass through the clouds, an unseen force gripped it, and it sped away from them, just above the cloud layer.
"That's the lower current!" declared Clink exuberantly. "And it's blowing toward Jasber. All we need to do is assemble these gliders, drop them toward the clouds, and let the wind do the rest!"
"Ridic'lous," proclaimed Misty. "You'll never get me step-pin' one foot in that pile-a wood on the floor, no matter how well ya hammer it together."
Hill shook his head in amazement. "I'm trying to think of some other explanation, but I can't," he said.
"Why don't we put the gliders together and then we'll make a decision," said Bilblox.
As it turned out, the gliders proved remarkably easy to assemble. The frames were made of sturdy wooden beams that lashed together with the aid of the gleaming blue rope joints. The wings of the aircraft were made of a soft cloth that looked and felt like silk but was so resilient that it could not be punctured, even with the sharpened tip of a sword. Each glider contained three seats. The forwardmost seat was for the pilot, who apparently was meant to steer the glider with just two levers. Each lever was connected to rope that pulled on flaps attached to the wings and fin of the plane. A crude parachute at the rear of the glider could be used to slow down its momentum, and a set of wooden wheels screwed onto the underside of the vehicle. Amazingly enough, that was it. It took them four hours to assemble the first glider and only two more to assemble the second one.
"Well done," proclaimed Hill as he looked at the completed gliders, which sat wing to wing on the main marble ledge. "And now..." His voice trailed away.
They walked to the edge of the platform and looked down into the fault. Below them hung the layer of clouds. They were conscious of a slight wind pushing the clouds forward, but it didn't seem nearly strong enough to support the gliders.
"Don't worry," said Clink. "All we have to do is board the glider, push off, and fall toward the clouds. The wind will do the rest."
"That's what ya think, do ya?" said Misty glumly. "I don't mind danger, but fallin' into a field-a lava with only the hope of havin' some wind is plumb crazy." She turned in desperation to Resuza. "This cousin-a mine, he ain't right in the head, ya see? He's fulla crazy idears, and people in Somnos don't pay him no mind. 'N' we're trustin' our lives to 'im!"
Hill broke the silence that followed Misty's outburst. "I don't see any other option," he replied. He said he would pilot the first glider, with Bilblox and Resuza riding in back as passengers. Kõrgu would sit next to Bilblox. Alfonso, the only other person besides Bilblox with experience in planes, would pilot the second glider. Clink and Misty would ride with him.
"As far as I can tell, flying these gliders ought to be easy," said Hill confidently. "One lever will turn you left or right and the other will bring you up or down. It all seems pretty straightforward. I believe these gliders are meant to be flown by inexperienced pilots."
Alfonso nodded, but felt none of Hill's confidence.
They rolled the two gliders to the far end of the platform, which extended out into the fault. This part of the platform was made of well-polished wood that still shone even after centuries of disuse, and it slanted down toward the fault below. Hill boarded the glider first, followed by Bilblox, Kõrgu, and Resuza. As Hill nodded off to sleep, Alfonso gave their glider a soft push and it slipped easily off the platform and into the air. The aircraft dropped like a lead weight. Kõrgu barked mournfully. Seconds later, the current just above the cloud layer grabbed the glider and pushed it forward just as easily as it had whisked away the sack that Clink had thrown. The glider flew steadily and safely just above the cloud layer until it became only a blip in the distance.
Alfonso looked at Clink and Misty.
"It works!" Clink exulted. "Let's goâwe have to keep them in sight." They ran to their glider and maneuvered it into position. Misty gave it a good push, and the aircraft began its slide down the smooth wooden launching pad.
"I love you, Misty," whispered Clink with a choked sob. "You're a fine cousin. You've always been the most supportive of all my family."
"I still say ya ain't as clever as ya think y're, but I reckon I am fond of ya," said Misty. "Now we best nod on off t'sleep, so we can focus better and not get all riled up." Her eyes promptly shut, as did Clink's. Their bodies relaxed ever so slightly as the glider fell into the fault.
Just as it neared the cloud layer, the current grabbed the glider and sent it skimming along the surface of the clouds. The wind roared in their ears, but otherwise, the journey seemed remarkably peaceful. Alfonso tentatively pulled on the pilot's gears. Hill was right; one gear moved the plane left and right and the other moved it up and down. Luckily, Alfonso had room to experiment, since the fault was about a mile wide. Alfonso only hoped it didn't get much narrower.
Up ahead, Hill's sleeping-self was showing off. His glider banked upward. The glider's momentum carried it up for several hundred feet before it began to falter. Then, just as the glider was about to plummet down, the upper current blowing in the opposite direction grabbed the glider and began whisking it back toward the Hub. Hill's glider rapidly approached Alfonso's until Hill threw his glider into a steep descent and smoothly returned them to their original course. Although spectacular, these aerial acrobatics did not sit well with Bilblox. From his vantage point, Alfonso could see a red-faced Bilblox shouting at Hill. It woke up the former air force pilot, and from then on, Hill steered the glider without incident.