Part 7 (1/2)

Sword Quest Nancy Yi Fan 71430K 2022-07-22

”He was furious. 'We put so much hope in you, Fleydur,' he said. 'You have disappointed me.' He told me that this would be my last day at home. 'Do you care so much for others, and place them before your own tribe? Singing, for all the world, like a beggar! It's beneath you. Go, then. Go to your starving friends and throw your dignity to the winds. You are not my son anymore. I only have Forlath. Leave!'

”I was disowned and exiled from my home. My love for my family clashed with my love for music and my love for others. I-I don't know why they would think that singing was lowly...These ages are truly dark. Yet the power of music never changes. It”-Fleydur's eyes shone-”is mighty. Swords and even words can disturb or hurt, but music's strength is to heal. To bring life, hope, and joy.”

Fleydur turned away. ”I think we come to this world to have a happy life. Treasure and social rank-these are just external things. You can't take them with you to your grave. Those decadent clan customs that place value on material things above all else can imprison our minds. I'm glad that I was able to break away from them and drift all around the earth, singing to everybird.”

Ewingerale listened with sympathy.

”I don't regret my decision...” Fleydur murmured. He carefully wrapped the red gemstone in a linen cloth and placed it inside his knapsack. ”But...I miss my family. I truly do...”

”With Wind-voice and Stormac gone, you are the closest I have to a family, Winger.” He stood up, shuddering. ”Crossing a whole ocean! The very thought makes me feel seasick already. Golden eagles aren't built for salt.w.a.ter; ospreys are.” He winked at Winger. ”Who would have thought that a woodp.e.c.k.e.r would attempt such a thing too? But”-Fleydur chuckled-”I guess it's high time for the world to turn upside down. We should get going if we're to reach the seaside before the sun sets.”

Both birds cautiously made their way out of the hollow log. Ewingerale flew up and looked back one last time to see if maybe, just maybe, Wind-voice and Stormac might appear.

”Fleydur!” he screamed. ”Quick, archaeopteryxes! They're still searching for us!”

n.o.bility could be embodied in one s.h.i.+ning act.-FROM THE O OLD S SCRIPTURE

10.

A NEW T TURN.

There they were: Two young birds in a castle, staring at each other, pale eyes into black, an archaeopteryx and an unidentifiable bird, one reclining upon a whalebone perch and the other crouched on the floor, one waiting and the other resting.

”No,” Wind-voice replied at last. Maldeor's batlike wing somehow reminded him of Yin Soul. ”I will not help you.”

The spark in the white bird's eyes clouded Maldeor's vision so that a s.h.i.+mmering image of the dove Irene surfaced from his memory. Why didn't I notice that before? Why didn't I notice that before? thought Maldeor. A foul taste rose in his beak. thought Maldeor. A foul taste rose in his beak.

Then a soldier hurried in, holding a clump of bloodied black feathers, and saluted. Maldeor did not look up.

Wind-voice swallowed his gasp-the feathers had that familiar purple gloss. They were Stormac's.

”Good. Go join your friend in Sky Land.” Ignoring the soldier, the Ancient Wing jumped from his throne and struck Wind-voice's neck with his left wing. His claws sank into flesh.

I won't cry in front of Maldeor, Wind-voice thought, throbbing with pain. Wind-voice thought, throbbing with pain.

”Your eyes will rot,” Maldeor's grip tightened. ”The dark magic of my wing will rot them. You cursed crossbreed and your lot, always wrecking my plans.” He thrust Wind-voice at his soldiers. ”You're too lowly for me to kill. But don't worry. You'll still die in agony.”

All the while, Ozzan, the blacksmith toucan, watched through a swollen, blue-lidded eye. He felt that the white bird was quite brave to stand up to Maldeor. He himself had been tortured in all manners imaginable. They beat him, they hung him upside down by his feet, and they poured chili pepper oil onto his face. Last night a sleeping draught had been forced on him. He had tried to clamp his beak closed, but in the end the potion had trickled down his throat and he had slept. Unknowingly, he must have murmured in his sleep about Kauria, about Pepheroh, and about the sword. He knew this because later, when he had woken, Maldeor had jeered in his face and thanked him in his sarcastic gracious manner for what he had revealed. What if Maldeor really captured the sword!

Somehow, Ozzan's heavy heart felt lighter as he watched Wind-voice.

That evening, as the rain stopped and the sky turned red, Wind-voice was marched out to a log and chained to it. More soldiers came, dragging the faltering toucan. Wind-voice's vision had worsened. He could barely make out the bird's closed eyes and a bleeding whip mark that had nearly cut his face in half. The toucan did not struggle in the least as he was tied next to Wind-voice along the log; he simply laid his huge beak to one side. Maldeor watched, motionless, as his soldiers lifted the log and plopped it into the river.

Neither prisoner spoke as the log drifted slowly. Very soon their feathers were wet all the way through. However, at the moment the archaeopteryxes were out of sight, the blacksmith grew animated and started to gnaw at Wind-voice's rusty chains. Whenever the log bobbed and turned, one of them held his breath as he was submerged in the water, but the toucan did not bother to stop his work.

”Why are you trying to free me and not yourself?” Wind-voice gasped to the blur of black and yellow.

”You must be free. You must.”

Rocks began to appear, jutting out of the river and slicing the water like knives. Every time their log hit one, they spun in treacherous circles. Then the current picked up speed, and Wind-voice felt as if the water had washed away all his thoughts. There was a roar in the distance, the sound not of a battle, as he thought at first, but of a waterfall.

”Free yourself while there is time!” Wind-voice cried.

The toucan shook his head. ”Don't worry about me. It doesn't matter anymore. Maldeor seeks the sword, the one from my homeland, Kauria...” His eyes clouded with shame. He rasped on: ”I told things, under torture and the effects of a sleeping potion. I don't know how much I spoke.... But you-I can feel it, looking in your eyes-you can still stop him.”

The rus.h.i.+ng sound came nearer, nearer.

”No! A few seconds more, a few seconds more...” Ozzan's beak had worn away a tiny slash in the dull iron, but the link still held firm. In his desperation he spat out the chain and rammed at it with the tip of his beak.

The log shot forward. A rush of air gushed all around them. Below came the terrible roar.

”Stop Maldeor!” Ozzan croaked. Using the last ounce of his life strength, he reared his powerful old neck back and brought his beak down on the chains that bound Wind-voice just as he used to beat iron on his anvil. Only this time he was not forging metal but forging hope.

Ewingerale pulled the dark hood of his vest over his bright red head.

”They haven't noticed us yet,” Fleydur said grimly. He pulled off his bells, m.u.f.fled them quickly in a wad of moss, and put them into his knapsack. Together the eagle and the woodp.e.c.k.e.r put distance behind them as they skirted the desert and bore on toward the lands of the Forests Battalion.

The dry, stony land slowly turned green, and they glimpsed a river in the distance. As they crossed the river, the ground gave away to a shaded valley waving with bracken. A rocky hill rose in the distance. Fleydur soared higher into the air and called for Ewingerale to cling to his back. A tailwind carrying the sounds of rattling yelps told them that they had been spotted by the archaeopteryxes, but Fleydur didn't seem the least bit worried.

When he was above the rocky hill, he snagged a thermal updraft and, spreading his wings so that all of the primary feathers at his wing tips were separated, spiraled high into the sky. The archaeopteryxes below, yammering away, flapped furiously in pursuit, but their crooked wings could not catch the wind as well as Fleydur's did, and their tails were heavy. They were not built for long, soaring flights. Fleydur grinned as arrows and spears shot at them by the archaeopteryxes fell harmlessly back to earth. Ewingerale was struck silent by the beauty of the vastness, high in the crystal cloudless sky, where their only companion, apart from each other, was the sun.

More powerful winds that existed only at high alt.i.tudes carried them along, and, selecting a quick gust that bore them briskly seaward, they flew onward, chasing the sun. The great golden ball flushed red in anger at this pursuit and sank faster.

As evening bore on, Ewingerale and Fleydur saw a slice of something glittering along the horizon. Above them, the sky bled through banners of stratoc.u.mulus clouds. All of a sudden they soared over a fringe of pale white beach that clung to a sh.o.r.e, and then the sea welled up, worried and wrinkled, beneath them. The two shadows that they cast onto its surface were pounded to pieces by the waves.

When the sun finally drowned in the ocean, the stars flickered to life.

It would take five days and nights of continuous flying before they reached the other sh.o.r.e. When they arrived, they would be surprised at the sight of the White Cap Mountains.

When they arrived, they would be surprised that the Waterthorn tribe was waiting for them.

When they arrived, they would be even more surprised at what the robins had to say.