Inkdeath
What should he fear who fears not death itself?
Friedrich Schiller,
The Robbers
Resa had flown away to Silvertongue in the Hall of a Thousand Windows. ‘The bird will never leave you again, Resa!’ Dustfinger had warned her, but she had put the seeds into her mouth all the same.
He had had great difficulty in dragging her out of the bedchamber before the Silver Prince came back. The despair in her face went to his heart. They had not found the White Book, and both of them knew what that meant: it wasn’t the Adderhead who would die, but the Bluejay – by the hand of the Piper, Thumbling, or the White Women coming for him because he hadn’t been able to pay the price Death demanded for his life.
Resa had flown to him so that Silvertongue would not be alone when he died. Or did she still hope for some miracle to save him? Perhaps. Dustfinger had not told her that Death was going to take him again too – and then her daughter.
‘If you don’t find the Book,’ Silvertongue had whispered to him before sending him away to lay the fiery trail for the Piper, ‘then at least let us try to save our daughters.’
Our daughters … Dustfinger knew where to find Brianna, but how was he to protect Meggie from the Piper, or the White Women themselves?
Of course the Piper’s men had tried to hold him fast once he’d led them to the Bluejay, but it was easy to escape them. They were still looking for him, but the darkness in the castle hid the Adderhead’s enemies as well as easing the pain in his eyes.
Orpheus seemed very sure that his black dog was enough to guard Brianna. Two torches burnt beside the cage where she sat, crouching like a captive bird. But there was no soldier on guard. The real guard lurked somewhere in the shadows, in a place that the torchlight didn’t reach.
How in the world had Orpheus managed to tame it?
‘Don’t forget, he read it out of a book,’ Silvertongue had said. ‘A book for children too, although I’m not sure that Fenoglio made the Night-Mare any less dangerous because of that. But it’s made of words, and I’m sure that Orpheus himself used words to make it obey him. Just a few rearranged words, a couple of slightly twisted sentences, and the terror in the night becomes an obedient dog.’
But Silvertongue, Dustfinger had thought, have you forgotten that everything in this world is made of words? He knew only that this Night-Mare was not less dangerous, but even more sinister, than those found in the Wayless Wood. It would not, like its fellows, be driven away by fairy dust and fire – it was woven of darker stuff. What a pity you didn’t ask the White Women its name, he said to himself as he slowly made his way towards the cages. Don’t the songs say that’s the only way to kill a Night-Mare? For that was what he had to do: destroy the creature so that Orpheus could not call it back. Forget the songs, Dustfinger, he told himself as he looked around. Write your own, just as the Bluejay must write his now.
At the sound of his whispering the torches flared up as if to welcome him, weary of the darkness surrounding them. And Brianna raised her head.
How beautiful she was, as lovely as her mother.
Dustfinger looked around again, waiting for the darkness to start moving. Where was it?
He heard a snuffling sound, felt cold breath, panting like a large dog’s. To his left the shadows grew and became blacker than black. His heart began to beat painfully fast. Ah. So the fear was still there, even though he so seldom felt it now.
Brianna got to her feet and stumbled away until her back was up against the bars. Behind her, a painted peacock spread its tail on the grey wall. ‘Go away!’ she whispered. ‘Please! It will eat you!’
Go away. A tempting idea. But he had once had two daughters, now he had only one … and he would keep her, not for ever but perhaps for a few years yet. Precious time. Time – whatever that was.
All was cold behind him, dreadfully cold. Dustfinger called up the flames and wrapped himself in their warmth, but the cold made the fire burn low and go out, leaving him alone with the shadow.
‘Please! Please go away!’ Brianna’s voice urged, and the love in it, that she usually hid so well, warmed him more than the fire ever could. He called on the flames again, more sternly this time, reminding them that he and they were brothers, inseparable. Hesitantly, they licked up from the ground, trembling as if a cold wind were blowing through them, but they burnt, and the Night-Mare retreated and stared at him.
Yes, what the songs said about him and his like was true. It must be true. The songs said Night-Mares were made entirely of the blackness of the soul, of evil that could not be forgotten or forgiven until they were snuffed out, consuming themselves and taking with them everything they had ever been.
The eyes transfixed him, red eyes in all that blackness, eyes both fierce and dull, lost in themselves, with no yesterday and no tomorrow, without light and warmth, caught in their own cold, the freezing entity of evil.
Dustfinger felt the fire around him like a warm fur. It almost burnt his skin, but it was his only protection against those dull eyes and the hungry mouth that opened, screaming so horribly that Brianna sank to her knees and put her hands over her ears.
The Night-Mare reached a black hand out to the fire. It hissed when he dipped it into the flames – and Dustfinger thought he recognized a face in all the blackness. A face he had never forgotten.
Was it possible? Had Orpheus seen it too, and so tamed his black dog by calling it by its forgotten name? Or had he given it that name himself, and brought back the man whom Silvertongue had sent to his death?’
Brianna was crying behind him. Dustfinger sensed her trembling through the bars, but he felt no fear now. He was just grateful. Grateful for this moment. Glad of this new encounter – which he hoped would be their last.
‘Well, look! Who have we here?’ he said softly, as Brianna’s weeping died down on the other side of the bars. ‘Do you remember yourself in all your darkness? Do you remember the knife, and the boy’s thin, unprotected back? Do you remember the sound my heart made when it broke?’
The Night-Mare stared at him, and Dustfinger stepped towards it, still surrounded by flames – flames burning hotter and hotter, nourished by all the pain and despair he was bringing back to mind.
‘Away with you, Basta!’ he said, speaking the name loud enough to pierce the heart of all the darkness. ‘Be gone for all eternity.’
The face showed more clearly – the narrow, foxy face that he had once feared so much – and Dustfinger made the flames bite into the cold, made them penetrate the blackness like swords, all of them writing Basta’s name, and the Night-Mare screamed again, its eyes suddenly full of memories. It screamed and screamed, while its shape ran like ink, melting into the shadows, dispersing like smoke. Only the cold was left, but the fire ate that too, and Dustfinger fell on his knees and felt the pain leaving him – pain that had outlasted death itself. He wished Farid were here with him. He wished it so much that, for a few moments, he forgot where he was.
‘Father?’ Brianna’s whisper reached him through the smoke.
Had she ever called him that before? Yes, long ago. But had he been the same man then?
The bars of the cage bent under the heat of his hands. He dared not touch Brianna because he felt the fire so strongly in them. Footsteps approached – heavy, rapid footsteps. The Night-Mare’s screams had brought them. But the darkness swallowed Dustfinger and Brianna up before the soldiers reached the cages, and they looked in vain for their black watchman.
74
The Other Side
She tore a page from the book and ripped it in half. Then a chapter.
Soon, there was nothing but scraps of words littered between her legs and all around her … What good were the words?
She said it audibly now, to the orange-lit room. ‘What good are the words?’
Markus Zusak,
The Book Thief
The Black Prince was still with Roxane. She was going to splint his injured leg so that he could walk on it. Walk to t
he Castle in the Lake. ‘We have time,’ Meggie had told him, although her heart was in a hurry. Mo would certainly need as long to bind this White Book as he had needed in the Castle of Night.
The Black Prince intended to set out with almost all his men to stand by the Bluejay. But without Elinor and without Meggie. ‘Your father made me promise that you and your mother would stay in a safe place,’ he had told her. ‘With your mother I wasn’t able to keep my promise, but at least I’ll keep it where you’re concerned. Didn’t you promise him the same thing?’
No, she had not. So she would go, even if it almost broke her heart to leave Doria behind. He still hadn’t woken up, but Darius would talk to him. And Elinor. And she would come back – wouldn’t she?
Farid was going with her. He would be able to call fire if the weather grew cold on their way, and she had stolen some dried meat and filled one of Battista’s leather bottles with water. How could the Black Prince think she would stay after she had seen those fiery words? How could he think she’d leave her father to die as if this were some other, quite different story?
‘Meggie, the Black Prince doesn’t know about the words,’ Fenoglio had pointed out. ‘And he has no idea what Orpheus is up to either!’ But Fenoglio did know, and all the same – just like the Prince – he didn’t want her to go. ‘Do you want what happened to your mother to happen to you too? No one knows where she is. No, you must stay. We’ll help your father in our own way. I’ll write day and night, I promise you. But what use is that if you don’t stay here to read what I’ve written?’
Stay here. Wait. No, she was sorry, but she was going to steal away in secret like Resa, and she wouldn’t get lost … she’d waited far too long already. If Fenoglio did indeed think of something – and he had certainly been able to write the giant here – then Darius could read it, and the children had Battista and Elinor, Roxane and Fenoglio to look after them. But Mo was alone, all alone. He needed her. He’d always needed her.
Elinor was snoring gently. Darius slept next to her, in between Minerva’s children. Meggie moved as quietly as the woven structure of the nest allowed, picking up her jacket, her shoes, and the rucksack that still reminded her of the other world.
‘Ready?’ Farid was standing in the round doorway of the nest. ‘It will soon be light.’
Meggie nodded – and turned as Farid stared past her, his eyes as wide as a child’s.
A White Woman was standing beside the sleepers. She looked at Meggie.
She had a pencil in her hand, a short, worn-out chalk pencil, and with a look of invitation she was offering Farid one of the candles that Elinor had brought from Ombra. Farid went towards her like a sleepwalker, and with a whisper lit the wick. The White Woman dipped her pencil into the flame and began to write on a sheet of paper. Meggie had been trying to write a good end to her father’s story on it after the giant took Fenoglio away. The White Woman wrote and wrote, while Minerva whispered her husband’s name in her sleep, while Elinor turned over on to her other side, while Despina put her arm around her brother and the wind blew through the wickerwork of the nest, almost putting out the candle. Then the White Woman straightened up, looked at Meggie once more, and disappeared as if the wind had blown her away.
Farid breathed a sigh of relief when she had gone, and pressed his face into Meggie’s hair. But Meggie gently moved him aside and bent over the paper on which the White Woman had written.
‘Can you read it?’ Farid whispered.
Meggie nodded.
‘Go to the Black Prince and tell him he can spare his leg,’ she said softly. ‘We’ll all stay here. The song of the Bluejay has been written.’
75
The Box
‘Okay,’ said the Lady, turning to Abby. ‘Tomorrow bring the book.’
‘Which one?’
‘There’s more than one book?’
Alan Armstrong,
Whittington
It wasn’t easy to make your hands work slowly when they loved what they were doing so much. Mo’s eyes stung in the bad light, his ankles were sore from the heavy chains, and yet in the strangest way he felt happy. It was as if he were binding not the Adderhead’s death, but time itself into a book – and with it all fears for the future, all the pain of the past … until there was nothing left but now, this moment when his hands caressed paper and leather.
‘I’ll bring fire to help you as soon as I’ve freed Brianna,’ Dustfinger had promised, before leaving him alone to go and act the part of a traitor once more. ‘And I’ll bring the White Book with me,’ he had added.
However, it was not Dustfinger but Resa who came. Mo’s heart had almost stopped when the swift flew through the doorway. One of the guards had aimed his crossbow at her, but she darted away from the arrow, and Mo had plucked a brown feather from his shoulder. They haven’t found the Book. That was his first thought as the swift settled on a beam above him. But whatever happened, he was glad she was there.
The Piper was leaning against a column, his eyes following every movement Mo made. Was he going to try doing without sleep for two whole weeks? Or did he think this book could be bound in a day?
Mo put down his knife and rubbed his tired eyes. The swift spread her wings as if she were waving to him, and Mo quickly bent his head so that the Piper’s attention wouldn’t be drawn to her. But he looked up again when the silver-nosed man uttered a curse.
Fire was licking from the walls.
It could mean only one thing: Brianna was free.
‘Why are you smiling like that, Bluejay?’ The Piper came up to him and drove his fist into Mo’s stomach, doubling him up. The swift above their heads cried out.
‘Do you think your fiery friend will come to make amends for betraying you?’ the silver-nosed man whispered. ‘Don’t rejoice too soon! This time I’m going to chop his head off. We’ll see if he can come back from the dead without that!’
The Bluejay would have liked to thrust the bookbinder’s knife into that heartless breast, but once again Mo, the bookbinder, sent him away. What are you waiting for? asked the Jay. The White Book? No one’s going to find it! Well then, Mo retorted, why should I fight any more? Without the Book I’m dead anyway, and so is my daughter.
Meggie. The bookbinder and the Bluejay were the same man only in sharing their fears for her.
The door opened, and a small, thin figure made its way into the fire-lit hall. Jacopo.
He came towards Mo, taking small steps. Did he want to tell the Bluejay about his mother? Or had his grandfather sent him to find out how Mo was getting on with binding the new Book?
Violante’s son stopped close to Mo, but he was looking at the Piper.
‘Will it soon be ready?’ he asked.
‘If you don’t keep him from his work,’ replied the silver-nosed man.
Jacopo put a hand under his tunic and brought out a book. He had wrapped it in a brightly-coloured cloth. ‘I want the Bluejay to cure this book for me. It’s my favourite.’
He opened it, and Mo forgot to breathe. Pages soaked in blood.
Jacopo was looking at him.
‘Your favourite book? There’s only one book the Bluejay’s supposed to bother with. So get out!’ The Piper poured himself a goblet of wine. ‘Go to the kitchen and tell them to send up more meat and wine.’
‘I only want him to take a look at it!’ Jacopo’s voice sounded as defiant as ever. ‘Grandfather said I could get him to do that. You can ask him if you like.’ He was passing Mo a short, worn pencil that could easily be hidden in the hand. That was better than the knife – much, much better.
The Piper put a piece of meat in his mouth and washed it down with wine. ‘You’re lying,’ he said. ‘Has your grandfather told you what I do to liars?’
‘No, what?’ Jacopo thrust his chin out just as his mother did and took a step towards the silver-nosed man.
The Piper wiped his greasy fingers on a snow-white napkin and smiled.
Mo clutched the pencil in his fing
ers and opened the White Book.
‘First I cut their tongues out,’ said the Piper.
Jacopo took another step towards him.
‘Oh yes?’
Heart.
Mo’s fingers shook as he traced each letter.
‘Yes. After all, it’s not easy to tell lies without a tongue. Although – wait, I did once know a mute beggar who told me shameless lies. He talked with his fingers.’
‘So?’
The Piper laughed. ‘So I cut them off, one by one.’
Keep looking up, Mo, or he’ll realize that you’re writing.
Spell.
Only one more word now. A single word.
The Piper glanced at him. He looked at the open book. Mo hid the pencil in his closed fist.
The swift spread her wings again. She wanted to help him. No, Resa! But the bird was already in the air, flying above the Piper’s head.
‘I saw that bird before!’ said Jacopo. ‘In my grandfather’s