Nancy Fan Yi

Sword Quest


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      Sword Quest

      Nancy Yi Fan

      Ilustrations

      by

      Jo-Anne Rioux

      

      TO ALL WHO WANT TO BE MASTERS OF FATE

      Table of Contents

       Cover Page

       Title Page

       Dedication

       5 SOON, SOON

       6 BEWILDERED

       7 SECRETS REVEALED

       8 SCATTERED TO THE WINDS

       9 A BRIGHT TALE OF DARKNESS

       10 A NEW TURN

       11 THE GREEN GEM AND THE PUPLE GEM

       12 THE LAST DEAL

       13 TREASURE CAVE

       14 BROTHER FOREVER

       15 THE BATTLE OF THE ICE PALACE

       16 CROSSING SWORDS

       17 HEROK

       18 EXCERPT FROM EWINGERALE’S DIARY

       Epilogue THE FIRST BRIGHT MOON FESTIVAL

       MAJOR CHARACTERS

       ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

       Also by Nancy Yi Fan:

       Copyright

       About the Publisher

       Maps

       This is a special sword, a sword that can change the world.

      FROM THE OLD SCRIPTURE

       PROLOGUE A SWORD IS MADE

      Rosy clouds of dawn floated over the Island of Paradise. King Pepheroh of Kauria crouched among the fronds of the tallest palm tree, his linen robe and tail feathers whipping in the breeze. The old phoenix meditated on the Great Spirit with his eyes half open, hoping to hear his will, but his mind was distracted by the troubling news his messengers had been bringing him for many months.

      Between the earth and the sky, birds were struggling. Once they had freely shared trees and nest space, seeds, roots and berries, but, somehow, arguments had arisen. That led to cheating, then to stealing, and then to pecking and scratching. As time rolled steadily on, the most powerful winged creatures, feuding with one another, had turned to weapons. Four-winged dinosaurs and archaeopteryxes swooped down, killing and destroying. War spread across the ptero-world like a hurricane so that now nearly all lived in fear, distrust and uncertainty. Pepheroh’s magical kingdom was one of the last peaceful lands remaining.

      “Help us, Great Spirit,” Pepheroh cried. “Send us a sign.”

      A sound came drifting on the wind, so faint that Pepheroh at first thought it was only his own hope whispering in his ear. But then he heard it again.

      Make a sword, the Great Spirit told him. Somebird has to guide the world into order again. Make a sword, and he will come to wield it.

      Can a sword truly be used to bring peace to the world? Pepheroh wondered as he clutched his garments around him. “How can I forge such a powerful sword?”

      When the sword is nearly finished, I shall make it magical. But beware, the Great Spirit warned. Guard the sword until a worthy bird comes to claim it on the day of the fifth full moon three years from now. If an evil bird wields it, it will bring more disaster to the world.

      “Yes, Great Spirit,” Pepheroh promised.

      After the blacksmiths and metalworkers all over Kauria heard the old king’s proclamation, they came to present their service and skills.

      A month passed. Pepheroh was visiting the forge at dusk. Will this sword be a blessing or a curse? he thought anxiously as his eyes followed every stroke of the hammer.

      Suddenly, Pepheroh saw a flash of light beaming down from the sky. He realised that it was the tear of the Great Spirit, who was saddened at the warring world. The glistening drop fell on to the earth and shattered into eight gemstones, the largest bearing all the colours of the rainbow, and each of the others glistening with one of its colours.

      As the biggest tear-gem of the Great Spirit streaked through the forge’s open window and fell on to the hilt of the sacred sword, all the blacksmiths stopped, amazed. The sword was finished! Pepheroh touched the perfect blade with a claw. “I shall save you for the hero,” he vowed.

      Seasons passed. In a holy chamber, the sword lay in a crystal case, waiting for its master to come.

      Not