We need the sea.
I raise my arm to throw the Opal overboard, its gills struggling against me, but freeze when an urgent voice coils through the roots of my mind, like fog.
Keep this hidden, Little-Bones. I cannot return, there is grave danger. Seek the scattered Storm-Opals of Sea, Sky and Land, before an enemy finds them and uses them to wield dark power. Take them to the golden crown before all Trianukka turns to ice, trapping the whales beneath a frozen sea. Remember the old song? The song will make a map. Keep your brother close by your side, and know you’re never alone. I will find you when I can. Da.
A ragged breathing makes my skin shiver, as though spiders are tiptoeing along my spine. As I turn my head towards the noise, my ship begins to shift – until her deck is slick with blood and her flanks are studded with huge, fire-spitting guns.
A face blurs into focus. The eyes dark and full of rage, the brows heavy and black, the thin lips pulled into a sneer.
The face belongs to the murderous-false captain; the man in a red cloak and boots with brass buckles, the navigator who stole our ship. The one who took Grandma away.
Stag.
Even in the dream-world my muscles squirm to run from him.
A stooped man in a cloak of purple lightning appears by Stag’s side. Stag whispers in his ear. Then the two of them raise their arms slowly to point at the Opal in my hand.
I close my fingers around the jewel and tuck it close to my heart. My bones feel scalded. I wish their greed-filled eyes never touched the Opal.
There’s a flurry of movement and when I look up Stag’s pointing a gun out towards the plank. My eyes follow his to a bundle of rags huddled there.
Grandma.
Before I can move, or shout, or anything, fire explodes from the gun and the grey world is streaked with splashes of red. The sky blinks, and the edges of the dream wobble like air above a flame, and then my hand’s empty. And the loss makes me stagger. The Opal spins away and suddenly it’s in Grandma’s eye socket. But she’s falling, crashing into the sea, wrenching out my heart as hers drowns.
Mouse!
The pull to her is oar-strong but when I strain to reach her, hands hold me back.
I’m hollow. Cold and numb. I’m too small. My voice is trapped under layers of ice. I’m frighted. I can’t get to Grandma. She’s gone.
The hands loosen and I’m sprawling on the deck. I run, painful slow, then pitch fast off the plank, diving through the sea, stretching my fingers into the blackness. She should be here. Where is she? Grandma!
For the first time ever, the sea is a dead place where naught lives. A crust of ice shuts out the light from above.
Do you remember, when the sea, lay, still, in wait for me? drifts a voice.
Don’t you remember?
I thrash, reaching for the surface. The dream pinches my brain. I struggle in the grip of the dream-sea, fighting the water, clawing until my muscles scream . . . then finally rising up, up, up, through ice that thickens with every thump of my heart.
My spirit thuds into my body and I jolt awake, gasping, neck stiff and sore.
I’m slumped over a creature’s back, and my legs are hanging in thin air. As I scrabble to clutch onto something solid, my fingertips scrape a scaly hide – and the memory of where I am seeps through me.
The young terrodyl streaks through a sky fat with snow. Fastestfastestfastest, gabbles his beast-chatter. Fastest beast of all! I dig my knees into his bristles to keep from falling off. My little brother Sparrow’s arms are wrapped round my waist and his head’s pressed against my back. Hunched behind him is Crow, the ship-wrecker boy who I still ent heart-certain we can trust, though he helped me rescue Sparrow from Castle Whalesbane.
I remember flying all day; over a sea, a forest and a smog-shrouded city. Then I must’ve dozed off. Now the sun’s barrelling for the horizon again.
Dream fragments are still thudding around my head like trapped moonsprites. The Sea-Opal! I quickly pat down my pockets, whistling in relief when I feel the bump of the gem through the cloth. But my dream-dance has left me drained and hollow. I remember for the thousandth time that Grandma’s dead, and it’s the same sharp, sick pang, followed up with guilt that I ent told my brother yet – and I don’t know how.
‘Finally, the rat awakes!’ calls Crow. ‘Any clue where we are?’ He snorts loudly and then spits into the air.
I twist round to reply, and wince as the bandage on my face pulls at the wound that slashes down my right cheekbone to the corner of my mouth. ‘I don’t know,’ I shout, as a fresh wave of pain sears through me. ‘Happens the world’s a flaming bigger place than even a Sea-Tribe girl could’ve guessed!’
‘Ain’t it just,’ Crow bellows.
The terrodyl thrashes his head from side to side. Where go where go now? he rasps.
I tell the beast what I’ve been telling him since we took flight. All I know is we have to fly as far and fast as we can from Castle Whalesbane. My tongue wraps itself around the raw, earthy words, tasting the wildness of my beast-chatter.
Castle my nest home. Not bad place!
I suck in a deep breath. Stag was controlling your nest-mates and sending them after us. And the mystiks there wanted to hurt my brother!
Where go? chatters the terrodyl. The fearsome-foul stink of his breath hits me right in the face.
I bite back a wave of impatience. Hang on. I need to think. I chew my cheek, trying to rid my brain of the last dream-tangles. The beast is right to ask – we need to head for somewhere, cos we can’t just fly forever. But we can’t go back to my ship either, cos it’s just as dangerous as the castle.
Seek the scattered Storm-Opals of Sea, Sky and Land . . . remember the old song?
Da’s message floats into my mind again. When my brother sang the old song, his notes stirred the message into a magyk map that showed me the three Storm-Opals. Now one is safe in my pocket, and I wish I could check the map again, but now it’s in Stag’s grimesome clutches. I just have to hope he won’t unlock the magic of the Opals himself. All I know is there’s an Opal waiting somewhere in the realm of Sky . . . could we reach it, somehow?
‘I need to pee,’ snuffles Sparrow, breaking into my thoughts.
‘Gods, what I wouldn’t give to stretch my legs!’ grumbles Crow.
‘Pipe down, would you?’ I shout. ‘I’m trying to think.’
‘Should we make a plan?’ calls Crow. ‘You don’t have to do all the thinking by yourself, you know. Are you telling this thing where to fly?’
I hunker closer to the terrodyl’s skin, against the wind. Should I tell Crow about the Opals?
Before I can gift him a reply he tuts and I feel angry spikes throbbing from him. ‘You still don’t trust me, do you?’
This boy’s even more impatient than me. ‘Course, I just—’
‘Whatever!’ he snaps. ‘Just keep us away from your ship, for the time being.’ Then he yawns. ‘Anyway, now you’re awake I’d say it’s my turn to catch a few winks.’ He falls silent, and soon enough his breathing’s sleepy-soft.