Chapter 17 Reunion
In her ignorance of the history of Faracadar, Elena was the
only person in all of Big House City to believe that Compost had genuinely decided
to become a reformed individual. Everyone else perceived him as a dangerous
enemy and he had certainly earned that reputation. Hadn’t he just laid siege to
Big House City for many weeks at Sissrath’s command, threatening the lives of
the royal family? Everyone but Elena had no doubt that he belonged in prison. They
did, however, allow him to take a bath, and afterward Elena cut his hair close
to his head. She provided him with a clean set of clothing, helped him trim his
nails, and convinced him to rub cocoa butter moisturizer on his ashy skin. After
his makeover, his own mother would not have recognized him. His captors feared
him less than they would have if he had the ability to use enchantment. Only some
of the Mountain People could use enchantment and Compost was not a person with
this ability.
Once she had helped Compost
improve his appearance and personal grooming, Elena introduced herself to the
royal cooks and kitchen staff and arranged to use the kitchen to prepare a
traditional Mexican meal as best as she could with the ingredients that she
could find at hand. She enlisted Guhblorin as her kitchen assistant and didn’t
complain when he taste-tested the ingredients (especially the chocolate).
While Elena kept busy transforming
Compost’s hygiene habits and establishing a makeshift taqueria in the
royal kitchen, Denzel, Maia, and Honeydew met with the great enchanter Cardamom
and Honeydew’s parents to sort through the information they had and to chart a
course of action. They wondered why Doshmisi had instructed them not to go to
the North Coast, but instead to meet her on Whale Island, when obviously
something serious was happening at the North Coast. The news that Sonjay had
joined forces with a Prophet of the Khoum caused much excitement among those
with an understanding of what that meant. But where had Sonjay locomotaported
from? Everyone was worried about Sissrath’s activities and whereabouts because they
knew how much damage he could do. After much discussion, Denzel concluded, “We
need more information, especially about Sissrath.”
“Only one person here in Big House
City has more information about Sissrath,” Maia said.
“We have to question him,”
Honeydew agreed.
“Your friend Elena should do it,”
High Chieftess Saffron suggested. “She has a rapport with him. I think he would
speak to her about Sissrath to prove to her that he seriously wishes to change,
whether he actually does or not, which, of course, is questionable.”
“She’s too busy cooking dinner for
him to interrogate him,” Denzel reminded them, unable to keep the irritation
out of his voice.
“She’s cooking dinner for all of
us,” Maia reminded him.
“I’ll go to the kitchen and invite
her to join our conversation,” Saffron offered.
Saffron proceeded down the back
stairs to the kitchen where she found Elena with her thick hair pulled back in
a ponytail and her hands covered in cornmeal. Guhblorin mashed avocados in a
large bowl while nibbling on a hot chili pepper, which had turned his ears
bright red. “Ay Caramba!” he exclaimed after each nibble of spicy chili pepper.
“It smells delicious in here,”
Saffron greeted Elena.
“I’m just getting started,” Elena responded
cheerfully, clearly in her element in the kitchen. “I love this.” Her eyes glowed
brightly.
“I’ve come to request that you
join us for a few minutes to discuss a delicate matter,” Saffron informed her.
Elena frowned as she brushed a
stray hair back from her forehead with the back of her hand and left a smudge
of cornmeal on her face. “Now?”
Saffron picked up a towel and
wiped the cornmeal smudge off Elena’s face. “Wash your hands and please come
with me. This won’t take long.”
Elena washed up, removed her
apron, and warned Guhblorin not to eat too many chilies, before following
Saffron up the stairs into the council chamber.
“What’s up?” she asked as she
approached the others gathered around the council table.
“Would you please help us?”
Cardamom asked.
“Me?” Elena replied as her eyes
grew wide. She wondered what they imagined she could do.
“Let me break it down for you,”
Cardamom continued. “We need to figure out what Sissrath is doing and why. He’s
extremely dangerous, extremely powerful, extremely clever, and perfectly
capable of destroying the whole land. As one of Sissrath’s most high-level
commanders, Compost has valuable knowledge about Sissrath’s activities. We need
him to share that knowledge with us.”
“He was one of Sissrath’s
commanders,” Elena corrected firmly. “Was. He gave all that up. He doesn’t work
for Sissrath anymore.”
“So he says,” Honeydew responded
skeptically.
“And so he means,” Elena insisted stubbornly.
“I believe that people can change. He’s trying to become a different person, a
better person.”
“You haven’t gone through
everything with him that we’ve gone through,” Maia explained.
“Last year he tried to kill us,”
Denzel said. “He commanded the Special Forces when they burned the Passage
Circle to the ground. You didn’t see what the Passage Circle looked like after
that attack, or what it looked like before they destroyed it. Compost put us in
the garbage labyrinth, remember? And he tried to starve this entire city to
death. Tell me one thing he has done to make me believe that he has changed.”
Elena gazed around the room at the
expectant faces of those gathered there. “Because I am new here, I don’t have
any preconceived notions about people in this place, no stereotypic perceptions
of what Mountain People are like or not like, or what geebachings are like or
not like. So I just see Guhblorin as he is, as he’s trying to be. Same with
Compost. I don’t know about Compost’s past, I see him for who he is now, who
he’s trying to be now. As an observer, it appears to me that Compost’s people
from the High Mountains have been mistreated and disrespected. Perhaps if he
and his people were treated better then he would have behaved differently.”
“It takes time to build trust,”
Saffron said. “And we don’t have the luxury of time for that in this moment. We
need information about Sissrath’s activities now. Please help us convince
Compost to tell us what he knows about Sissrath.”
Elena studied the others as she
considered Saffron’s request. “I would be willing to ask him politely for
information if you would be willing to invite him to sit down to dinner with us
tonight in the dining hall.”
“Invite him to dinner?! But he’s
my swollen enemy because of the crimes he has comittated,” Hyacinth pronounced sternly.
“Qué?” Elena asked.
“Daddy means that he can’t forgive
Compost that easily for the horrible things he has done, such as trying to kill
him,” Honeydew explained.
Elena crossed her arms. “Well,
everybody has a choice. We can either keep doing things the same way and keep
seeing things the same way, or we can open our minds to new possibilities. If
you keep doing things the same way then you’ll probably spend the rest of your
lives fighting. Mountain People. Big House City people. Fight, fight, fight. Battles.
Sieges. Burning down circles. What if you could agree to a compromise and the
Mountain People could agree to a compromise and you could make a peaceful place
for your children? Everyone will have to give up things they don’t want to give
up. That’s how compromise works.” Elena shrugged. “That’s my opinion. It’s your
land. Do what you want. But I think forgiveness will serve you better than revenge
and holding grudges. If you want me, you’ll find me in the kitchen.”
As Maia watched Elena leave the
council chamber, she felt a rush of affection for her friend. At the same time,
she knew that Elena had simplified things in her mind because she didn’t know
the history of Faracadar and she had never seen Sissrath, the leader of the so-called
dissatisfied people of the Mountain Downs, commander of the Special Forces,
Compost’s boss, and the most malevolent individual she had ever encountered.
She wanted to defend Elena’s position, but she could not believe that Compost had
transformed himself into a harmless player in the unfolding events. She knew
what he was capable of.
“Theoretically, she’s right, you
know,” Saffron said, with a sigh.
“Theoretically,” Hyacinth echoed.
“But not realistically. She has
this fantasy that we can make a truce with Sissrath, and we know he’s just not
a truce-making sort of guy,” Denzel reminded them. The previous year, Sissrath
had shot Denzel, his siblings, and all of their closest friends with poison
darts and they would have died if not for Sonjay calling the Staff of Shakabaz
to him and using it to save their lives just in the nick of time. After that,
Sissrath ran away. Denzel did not look forward to another encounter with the
powerful enchanter, who appeared devoid of any human attachments or affections.
“To get what we want, I think we
need to honor Elena’s request,” Saffron said.
“Guess who’s coming to dinner,”
Maia said to Denzel. It was a joke. Guess
Who’s Coming to Dinner? was the title of an old Sidney Poitier, Katherine
Hepburn, and Spencer Tracey movie about a white woman who fell in love with a
black man and brought him home to meet her parents. Denzel shook his head and
smiled weakly.
“I’ll send a message to Compost
that his presence is desired at dinner,” Cardamom said. The council meeting
dissolved and Saffron headed for the kitchen to inform Elena of their decision.
They reassembled at a long wooden table
in the dining room that evening. Hyacinth and Saffron dressed up for the
occasion and they appeared spectacularly royal in deep-purple velvet robes trimmed
with silver braid.
Eight ferocious-looking guards
escorted Compost from his cell to the royal dining room. He appeared in a mustard-yellow
suit with a black shirt; and the dramatic change in his appearance shocked the
others. His feet remained shackled, forcing him to shuffle to the table. After
Compost sat, a guard chained his left wrist to his chair, forged from heavy
metal, unlike the other dining room chairs, constructed from artfully carved
wood. When Elena emerged from the kitchen with Guhblorin to join the others,
she took one look at Compost, and glared sternly at everyone else seated around
the table. Guhblorin flapped his ears uncomfortably and hid behind Elena.
“What?” Denzel demanded. “What do
you have a problem with now?”
“You must treat a dinner guest
with respect. You don’t chain a dinner guest to his chair. I will not bring a
single tortilla out here until you release him,” Elena announced.
“Release him?” Hyacinth asked
incredulously.
“Release him?” Honeydew and Denzel
echoed.
“Unchain him,” Elena demanded.
Everyone looked around at everyone
else uncertainly before Saffron instructed the guards to release Compost from
his chains. The guards stepped forward and unlocked the chain at his wrist and
removed the manacles from his feet.
“And bring him a comfy chair like
ours,” Elena ordered. Honeydew reluctantly rose and fetched a carved wooden
chair with a cushioned seat from against the wall and brought it over to
Compost.
Compost thanked her politely.
Elena seated herself between
Compost and Guhblorin. “Tell them,” Elena said to Compost. “Before we eat, tell
them what they don’t read in the history books. Tell them what you told me.”
Compost replied, “I think they
know Elena. They just don’t want to know.”
“Don’t assume. Tell it,” Elena
demanded. “Explain why your people feel slighted and mistreated. Tell about the
long-ago time.”
“Yes, tell me about that,” Denzel
interjected. “I would like to hear about that.” He couldn’t imagine what type
of explanation Compost might have given to Elena, what stories he had
fabricated about the past.
“At one time,” Compost commenced
as he looked down self-consciously, “the Mountain People did not live in one
place. We wandered with the seasons and set up camp in small groups throughout
the land.” He glanced around at the others. “We didn’t believe that land
belonged to particular people. It belonged to all of us and we had enough of it
to share. But the other people saw things differently and didn’t like our
groups when we arrived for our seasonal encampments in their settlements. They
forced us into the mountains and contained us on barren land where we had
difficulty finding or producing food. Before that time, we had eaten no meat,
but soon our circumstances forced us to eat meat to survive. At least we
retained control of our own community in the mountains, even if we had been
banished from the rest of the land and ostracized. Since that time, my people
have continued to feel disenfranchised and discriminated against.”
“That’s a peculiar way to describe
the relocation,” Cardamom commented.
“Peculiar to you but that’s how my
people see it,” Compost snapped.
“Obviously there is more to say on
this subject, but let’s eat before everything gets cold,” Elena said, as she
gave a sign to the kitchen staff, who then brought in trays of food that
smelled delicious. Elena had cooked goose-chicken enchiladas with mole sauce as
well as bean-and-cheese enchiladas with a vegetarian mole sauce. She had made chili
relleno casserole, guacamole, shredded lettuce with tomatoes and cilantro,
Spanish rice, and three kinds of salsa. She had prepared pitchers of sweet horchata
(rice water) as well as strawberry juice. The conversation disintegrated into
yummy sounds and compliments to the chef.
When Hyacinth finally stopped
eating long enough to speak, and opened his mouth to say something, he did not
have a chance to utter a single mangled word because the doors to the dining
hall burst open and in strolled Sonjay with the others who had escaped the
Final Fortress, accompanied by an escort of more than a dozen hoverboarding
intuits and the colorful flash of Bayard Rustin’s feathers.
Everyone stared in amazement.
“Just in time for dinner, as
usual,” Maia declared. Then her gaze fell on the strange man with the
dreadlocks who had arrived with Sonjay. He looked sort of familiar to her, but
she couldn’t place where she might have seen him before. Bayard flew to her and
perched on her shoulder as he eyed the dinner table, searching for berries.
“Good thing we made so much food,”
Elena commented to Guhblorin quietly.
“Enough for everyone,” Guhblorin answered.
“You’ve been upstaged,” Compost said
to Elena. “Frankly, that one gets on my nerves.”
“Be good,” Elena warned him.
The intuits stepped down from
their hoverboards and dropped to the floor in exhaustion. The guards surrounded
Compost to ensure that he didn’t try to escape in the midst of the excitement,
but he didn’t seem inclined to go anywhere. He continued to shovel large
forkfuls of Elena’s goose-chicken in mole sauce into his mouth as he pointedly
ignored the new arrivals.
“Is that?” Denzel managed to
whisper, before he choked up, unable to go on. Denzel’s chest felt tight and he
feared saying another word because he thought he would start crying in front of
everyone.
“Our father,” Sonjay confirmed. “I
found him. Sissrath imprisoned him in the Final Fortress. I turned up at the
Final Fortress after the passage. I always knew our father was there.”
At the sight of Denzel and Maia,
Reggie’s face collapsed with emotion and his shoulders heaved. Large tears
rolled down his cheeks. Denzel raced over to Reggie, who, sobbing, seized him
in an enormous bear hug. Bayard leapt off her shoulder as Maia also ran to her
father, who embraced her as well. Maia burst into tears and Denzel, struggling
not to cry, clung to Reggie.
Compost continued to focus on his
dinner plate as he leaned close to Elena and said, “This is all very touching,
but what’s for dessert?”
Elena glared at him. “Listen,” she
said, “I have stuck my neck out for you to give you a chance to clean up your
act. Behave or I’ll have them chain your feet together again and laugh at you
when you fall on your face trying to walk.”
“OK, OK,” Compost said, attempting
to appease her. “I’m trying.”
“Try harder,” Elena told him. “The
suit looks good but the suit does not make the man.”
A great deal of hugging and
laughter ensued and then Denzel and Hyacinth began pulling chairs to the table
for the weary travelers. Crumpet smacked his younger brother Cardamom on the
back while Saffron greeted Buttercup. Reggie remained locked in a tearful
embrace with Maia. Sonjay asked Hyacinth if he would have some of his house
staff tend to the exhausted intuits, who had used every ounce of their strength
to fly Sonjay, Crumpet, Buttercup, and Reggie to Big House City. Amid the
bustle and laughter and excitement, no one had yet noticed Elena’s dinner
companion until Sonjay spoke up.
“Do I know you?” Sonjay remarked
to Compost. “You look familiar.”
“Compost,” Denzel replied. “He’s
friends with Elena now.”
“You’re joking!” Sonjay exclaimed.
“It’s a long story,” his brother
said.
“Is that a geebaching?” Crumpet
asked, pointing at Guhblorin.
“That’s a long story too,” Denzel
informed Crumpet. “He’s also friends with Elena.”
“Is she collecting dangerous
creatures?” Sonjay asked.
“Don’t be rude,” Elena admonished.
“We all have a lot of explaining
to do,” Cardamom noted. “We can do so while we continue with this tasty dinner
that Elena cooked for us.”
“I don’t suppose you cooked any
meat,” Crumpet speculated mournfully.
“As a matter of fact,” Elena
informed him with a grin, “you’ll find plenty of fat pieces of goose-chicken in
this tray of enchiladas con mole.”
“Woo-hoo!” Crumpet rejoiced.
“Now you’re talking, girlfriend,”
Buttercup added happily as she plopped her ample bottom into a chair and pulled
close to the table.
Interrupting one another and
speaking animatedly between mouthfuls, Sonjay and Crumpet shared what they knew
about the Corportons at the Final Fortress, Elena introduced the reformed
Compost (with a stern glance in his direction to remind him to behave) and
explained why a geebaching sat at her right hand, Honeydew and Denzel repeated
the information provided in Elena’s phone call with Doshmisi, and Hyacinth (in
his strange way of speaking and with help from his wife and daughter) described
the siege.
Cardamom showed Sonjay the
enchanted box he had made as a receptacle for the Staff of Shakabaz. After Sonjay
had reclaimed the Staff from Sissrath the previous year, he had left it with
Cardamom for safekeeping. The box, artfully decorated with seashells, measured
about the size of a loaf of bread. Cardamom demonstrated how he could open the
lid and lift the Staff out until it stood at its full height and weight, and
then how he could collapse the Staff back into the box.
Elena, who had never seen the splendid
Staff before, could not tear her eyes from it when Cardamom revealed it. The
polished, shiny, carved wooden branch bulged at the top, as thick around as the
upper arm of a muscular man, and it tapered down to a thickness of no more than
the wrist of a young girl at the bottom. Bristling red, yellow, blue, and green
feathers graced the top of the Staff, where wooden struts held them in place
within a weave of jute. Below the feathers, strings of small shells hung in a
cascade. The many faces of people and animals carved into the wood of the Staff
peeked out from wooden strands that entwined around the main branch like vines
or smaller branches. When removed from the enchanted box, the Staff stood more
than nine feet in height. “Muy bonita,”
Elena said softly, “beautiful.”
“And extremely powerful,” Compost
informed her.
As Cardamom returned the Staff to
its enchanted box, the others around the table fell silent. Into that silence,
Buttercup announced, “Reggie is a Prophet of the Khoum.”
“For real?” Honeydew asked, her
eyes growing wide with astonishment.
“How?” Cardamom demanded.
“As in the High Shaman of the
Khoum? With the Mystical Book?” Saffron asked.
“How totally fondue!” Hyacinth
exclaimed. The others promptly ignored him because fondue was a melted cheese
appetizer and no one had any idea what he really meant to say. Compost muttered
to Elena, “And this man is our high chief. It makes me want to holler.”
Reggie explained how he came by
the book and learned how to use it, Honeydew explained what the Prophet of the
Khoum was all about for those who didn’t know and, finally, Sonjay shared with
the others the prophecy about the destruction of Faracadar and the deal that
Sissrath had apparently made with the Corportons whereby they agreed to take
him out of Faracadar with them when they left.
“Does anyone know why the
Corportons came to Faracadar in the first place?” Sonjay asked. The question
hung in the air, begging a response. But none arrived.
Slowly, all eyes turned toward
Compost, who patted his belly contentedly between noisy sips of horchata.
The center of attention, Compost asked, “Could anyone else go for an espresso right
about now?” Elena kicked him under the table. He winced and shot her a
reproachful look.
Cardamom addressed Compost. “Your
new friend Elena believes that you have made a serious commitment to changing
your life. Perhaps you could demonstrate just how serious by sharing with us
any useful information you have about Sissrath’s intentions and the purpose of
the Corportons.”
Compost cast his gaze over the
others at the table.
“Now would be a good time to share
that information,” Sonjay said.
Compost turned to Elena and asked,
bitterly, “Do you hear that tone?”
“I hear it,” she replied. “But you
can’t tell me that you don’t deserve it after the nasty things you’ve done. Be
gracious. If you know something that would help us defeat this Sissrath
character, then please tell us,” Elena requested politely.
“I happen to be extremely
intelligent,” Compost said, raising his voice to make sure everyone heard him.
“And I find it insulting when people talk down to me as if I’m stupid.”
“A lot depends on how you use your
intelligence,” Guhblorin piped up. “I happen to be an extremely funny
geebaching, but if I use laughter to kill people, what good is my talent to me
or to anyone else? How do you use your intelligence?”
Compost studied Guhblorin in
surprise. Everyone else held their tongue. Compost leaned back in his chair and
crossed his arms. “You’ve already figured out most of what I know. The Prophet
of the Khoum has prophesied the destruction of Faracadar. When the Corportons
appeared at the Final Fortress, Sissrath negotiated an agreement with them. He
will help them on their mission here in Faracadar and in return they will take him
with them when they leave. Sissrath bound the agreement with deep enchantment.
We all know the strength of his diabolical skill at that.” Compost’s voice
dripped with irony.
Those gathered at the table had never
heard Compost speak about Sissrath with such dislike before. It shocked them.
“What about you?” Sonjay asked.
“Did Sissrath plan to leave you behind in this supposedly dying land?”
“No,” Compost answered, “he did
not. Or so he told me. He negotiated for me to leave with him. But honestly, I never
planned to go.”
“Why not?” Elena asked in
surprise. “I mean, if you believe the prophecy about the destruction.”
“I do believe it,” Compost said,
with uncharacteristic sadness. “But why would I want to go anywhere else? Would
you do it? I have a family and friends whom I left behind in the Mountain Downs.
If the land dies, I don’t wish to survive everyone and everything in my community.
I would just as soon perish with all the rest, here at home. I didn’t share these
thoughts with Sissrath. He doesn’t know that I did not plan to leave with him
when the time came. What joy would I have in a life so far from my home?”
The others contemplated Compost’s
words in silence until Saffron stated, softly, “I always thought you were
Sissrath’s man to the core.”
“You thought wrong,” Compost informed
her matter-of-factly. Then he sighed and put his fork down on his plate. “Have
you ever considered how things look from my point of view? What good am I? I
can’t throw enchantments. So I have to work for someone who can. Admit it: You would never trust me because I come from
the Mountain Downs. I have had only one path open to me to gain power. Only one
way for me to help my people have a say in the significant decisions of the
land. Those of us from the Mountain Downs do tire of being demonized by you.
You could give it a rest, you know.” Saffron and Hyacinth furrowed their brows
in thought and Maia wondered if they were reconsidering their treatment of the
Mountain People who lived in the Downs.
Compost continued, “I wonder if Sissrath
will live to regret leaving Faracadar. The Corportons come from a land fighting
for its survival. They need this stuff that they came here to take. I don’t
know what they call the stuff; but they need it desperately to save their own
land and they somehow figured out that we have it so they came to Faracadar to
get it. Sissrath has helped them to mine this substance at the North Coast.
When they have enough of it then they’ll go home and they’ll take Sissrath with
them. You and I and everyone else will remain behind to live out the prophecy,
which, as Reggie will tell you, foretells the destruction of the land but not
exactly how that will occur.”
“He has that right,” Reggie added.
“I can see the destruction but can’t see exactly how it will come about. I know
for sure, however, that a prophecy through the way of the Mystical Book never
lies, it always comes to pass.”
“Why did Sissrath order the siege
of Big House City?” Cardamom asked.
“It meant nothing,” Compost
replied. “Absolutely nothing. Sissrath wanted to distract you, the royals, and
everyone else in order to keep you out from under foot so that he could help
the Corportons at the North Coast without interference. But then the Four turned
up and started turning over rocks and asking questions.”
“So now what do we do?” Reggie
posed the question on everyone’s mind.
“We have to meet Dosh and Jasper
on Whale Island. They’ve been to the North Coast and they know more about all
this than any of us,” Sonjay replied immediately.
“We got separated during the
passage into the land,” Denzel told his father.
“I gathered as much from Sonjay,”
Reggie answered.
“But we need to get back
together,” Maia said. “Who will go to Whale Island?”
“I’ve come with you this far and I
refuse to leave you now,” Elena insisted firmly.
“What she said,” Guhblorin agreed.
“I have to see my daughter,”
Reggie said simply. “So I’m in.”
Sonjay placed his hand on the box
that contained the Staff of Shakabaz. “We could sure use you with us,
Cardamom.”
Cardamom nodded in Sonjay’s
direction and they understood from the nod that he had just agreed to go with
them. Then Cardamom said, “The high chief and chieftess should remain safely
within the walls of Big House City; at least until we have more information
about the situation.”
“Count me in,” Honeydew said. “I’ll
go.”
“Princess, I think the people need
you safely at home with your parents right now,” Cardamom told her gently.
Honeydew stamped her foot stubbornly. “No, no, no,” she complained in frustration.
Bisc stood and licked her hand comfortingly.
Buttercup spoke up. “How about
this? Crumpet and I will remain here at Big House City with the royals.” She
patted Honeydew’s arm sympathetically. “But when you’re ready to head for the
North Coast, send us a messenger and Crumpet and I will join you at the Passage
Circle to travel with you. At such time, the princess will accompany us.”
“I advise against that,” Cardamom noted.
“Saffron?” Hyacinth deferred to
his wife.
“We will all join you at the
Passage Circle,” Saffron said decidedly. “If the land is in such grave danger
then we have no reason to hide in the Big House.” Honeydew was not happy to be
left behind, but she agreed to that plan.
Elena rose from her seat abruptly
and went into the kitchen to fetch dessert, which was chocolate raspberry flan
and sweet pumpkin empanadas.
Between luscious mouthfuls, Sonjay
complimented Elena, “Girl, you seriously know how to throw down.”
“Absolutely,” Reggie agreed. “You put
your foot in it.”
“What does that mean?” Elena asked
Reggie.
Reggie laughed as he explained, “They
use that expression back home where I come from. It means that you cooked an
exceptional meal.”
“Bueno.
Gracias,” Elena said with a modest smile.
Hyacinth beckoned to the guards,
who came forward and surrounded Compost. “Time to return the prisoner to his
cell,” Hyacinth commanded.
“Wait,” Compost said as he held up
a hand to stay the guards. “I have one other thing to share with you. It may
help you against Sissrath.” Denzel’s eyebrows shot up in surprise and he
thought maybe Compost really had started to change.
“Speak,” Cardamom encouraged
Compost.
“Sissrath has a phobia about
cockroaches,” Compost announced.
“How can that help us?” Sonjay
asked impatiently.
“Hear him out,” Elena cautioned.
“You have no idea,” Compost
continued speaking, with a raspy chuckle. “He has tried to conquer this phobia
unsuccessfully. He has brought healers and enchanters to him and ordered them
to remove this fear from him. None could do it and he put them all to death one
by one because he thought to keep his weakness a secret. He doesn’t know that I
know about it. I am probably the only person alive who knows. When he sees a cockroach,
he chokes. He has trouble throwing an enchantment in the presence of a
cockroach. He can barely breathe. If you put a cockroach in his path then you
will have a chance of overpowering him.”
“Brilliant,” Crumpet declared. He
stretched out his arm, said an enchantment, and an army of cockroaches began to
drop from his sleeve and march across the floor.
“Ewww!” Elena exclaimed in disgust.
Many of the others swiftly echoed with “ewwws” of their own.
“Put those away,” Saffron
demanded. “I run a clean Big House here.”
“As you wish,” Crumpet said. He
made three large circles in the air with his left hand and stretched his
fingers out toward the cockroaches he had unleashed. They disappeared in a puff
of orange-brown smoke.
“That trick will come in quite
handy,” Compost told Crumpet. “Trust me on that.”
“We do trust you,” Elena replied.
“Don’t we?” she asked the others, who muttered and sidestepped the question.
“We must remember our manners, people,” Elena asserted.
“Gracias for the good information,
Compost. I will leave in the morning, but I hope to return to see you again, mí amigo.” She hugged Compost, who
patted her on the head affectionately.
“What’s up with them?” Sonjay
asked Denzel, as the guards led Compost away to lock him up.
“She likes him,” Denzel replied with
a shrug. “She talked him into taking a bath. Go figure.”
“So, is she your girlfriend yet?”
Sonjay teased.
“Shut up,” Denzel replied, while
secretly he admitted to himself that he had grown fond of Elena. She had more
substance to her than he had previously realized.
With the meal over, everyone
prepared to retire to their rooms. Reggie hugged each of his children in turn
and then burst into tears again. “I have imagined myself kissing you goodnight
so often. I have longed for the privilege of doing so. This simple thing. To do
it now feels like a miracle.”
Both residents and guests at the
Big House slept well in their comfortable beds that night. They dreamt of
chocolate flan and woke up refreshed and ready for whatever challenges they
would need to face in the coming days.
Sonjay, Maia, Denzel, Elena, Guhblorin,
Cardamom, and Reggie rode out on their tigers right after breakfast, and made
the Passage Circle by nightfall. After a joyful reunion with her drummer
friends, Maia stayed up half the night drumming on the beach. Early the next morning
the travelers rode over the first ocean bridge and onto the first of the islands.
Maia shared a tiger with Reggie, who held her and kept her from falling off
while she leaned back into her father’s arms with a contented smile on her face
as she caught up on the sleep she had lost the night before while drumming. The
travelers arrived by ferry at the dock on Whale Island in the late afternoon,
well before sunset, and Cardamom led the way to Clover’s house at the library. The
Goodacres’ grandmother (the mother of Alice, Martin, Bobby, and Debbie), Clover
the Griot, had served as keeper of the history and manager of the library for
many years.
The library compound consisted of
a central courtyard surrounded by cottages. The cottages housed the books and
other library holdings. Clover lived in one of the cottages, which she shared
with her assistant, Iris. Her grandchildren had visited her at her cottage the
year before. In the courtyard, the travelers dismounted from their tigers and hurried
to her door. They knocked and then entered, comfortable doing so in their
grandmother’s house.
When the travelers appeared in the
cottage, Jasper jumped up from where he sat on the couch studying maps and ran
to greet them. He grabbed Denzel first in an enthusiastic hug and thumped him
on the back. “Where did you land after the passage?” he asked.
“Long story,” Denzel replied. “I
missed you, man. I have so much to tell you.”
Jasper released Denzel and flung
his arms around Maia, then Sonjay, in turn. “I have a lot to tell you too,”
Jasper said. “Say, who are these guys? Whoa, is that a geebaching?”
“Why does everyone make such a big
deal about the geebaching?” Elena exploded. “Duh. Sí. Yes. He’s a geebaching. His name is Guhblorin. Don’t judge.”
Unfamiliar with Elena’s
straightforward style, Jasper threw a look of hurt and puzzlement in her
direction. He put his hands up, palms outward, in a gesture of defense while
Bayard squawked, “Latina firecracker, Latina firecracker.”
“Elena, chill,” Denzel said. “It’s
surprising and worrisome for people in Faracadar to see a geebaching. Aight? Geebachings
have a bad rep. Get over it.”
Elena scowled as she informed
Jasper, “He’s a reformed geebaching. He doesn’t make people laugh to death.”
“No, these days I just make them
laugh until they wet their pants,” Guhblorin interjected.
Elena whirled around and yanked
hard on his ear, “Enough out of you. Don’t make matters worse. And that wasn’t
even funny.”
Guhblorin yelped. “I must be
losing my touch,” he said contritely.
“Let me introduce you to our dad,
Reggie,” Sonjay said to Jasper. Then he turned to Reggie and explained, “Jasper
went everywhere with us last year as our guide.”
“You found your dad!” Jasper
exclaimed. “Fantastic.”
“Is my daughter here?” Reggie
asked anxiously.
“Your daughter,” Jasper echoed. “Wait
right here.” Jasper turned abruptly and hurried down the hallway to Clover’s bedroom,
calling as he went, “Dosh! Dosh! Come out here. You won’t believe this.”
Doshmisi emerged from the room with
a startled expression. Jasper took her hand and led her to where the others
waited. Of the four Goodacre children, she alone remembered her father well
enough from before he had disappeared to recognize him instantly when she saw
him again. They blinked at each other in astonishment in Clover’s bright living
room and then Doshmisi ran to Reggie and collapsed into his arms, crying and
laughing both at the same time. “Daddy. It’s really you. Oh Daddy.”
“I thought I would never see you
again, baby girl,” Reggie said. He looked over Doshmisi’s shoulder and his gaze
fell on each of his children, one at a time. “I thought I would never see any
of you again. I thought it impossible.”
“Yes, well, we changed all that,
didn’t we?” Sonjay stated with satisfaction. “Impossible happens.”
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