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Fablehaven2-Rise of the Evening Star Page 33
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warm, predawn glow. A sizable raised platform of reddish
stone dominated the area, looking almost like an outdoor
stage. Stone stairs on one side of the platform granted easy
access.
Up the steps Warren charged, with Kendra at his heels.
Despite the ubiquitous wildflowers and weeds in the clearing,
the stone platform was untouched by vegetation. The smooth
surface was flecked with black and gold. At the center of the
spacious platform was a round socket, surrounded by multiple
circular grooves that radiated out concentrically to the
edge of the platform. About four feet separated each of the
dark, narrow grooves. From above, the grooves would look
like a target, with the socket at the center of the bull's-eye.
Warren placed the complicated end of the key into the
round socket. He had to twist the key back and forth, lining
up various protuberances with notches in the socket to gradually
work it in deeper. Once the tall key was approximately
a foot into the hole, it clicked home.
You sure you're up for this? Warren asked. There will
be no turning back once we go inside.
What do you mean? Kendra asked.
These sorts of places are designed so that unless you
make it to the end and claim your prize, you do not make it
out alive. The designers don't want explorers solving the
puzzle piece by piece. The traps guarding the way back will
be much less forgiving than the traps protecting the way forward.
Until we reach the artifact.
I'm coming, Kendra said.
Face reddening with exertion, Warren gripped the
handle of the key tightly and began turning it. The key
rotated 180 degrees and stopped.
The platform shuddered. It became apparent that the
circular grooves marked divisions between concentric rings
of stone when the outer ring fell away into darkness,
followed by the next, and the next, and the next. The massive
rings thundered as they struck the ground.
Warren pulled Kendra near him, standing atop the
innermost circle with the key. Though the other rings all
fell, the innermost never dropped. Peering down, Kendra
saw that the outermost ring had fallen the farthest, with
each ring thereafter plummeting a shorter distance, so that
all together they formed a conical stairway. From the outside
of the platform, it was at least a thirty-foot drop to the floor
of the chamber. From the center where Kendra and Warren
stood, the next ring was only four feet lower, the next four
feet lower again, and so forth down to the floor.
They just don't build entrances like they used to,
Warren said. He tugged on the key, and, with a musical ring
of steel, the portion of the key in the socket separated from
the rest of it. Now instead of ending in a complicated series
of protuberances and notches, the key ended in a slender,
double-edged spearhead. Would you look at that?
Can't be good, Kendra said.
Yeah, it probably turns into a weapon for a reason,
Warren said, looking down into the chamber. I don't see
any trouble yet.
I'm putting on the glove, Kendra said. She vanished.
Not bad, Warren said.
Kendra waved at him, reappearing as she moved. It
only works when I hold still.
Do you know what any of the potions do? Warren
asked.
I know a couple that would make us about eight or nine
inches tall, she said. And I know some are bottled-up emotions,
although I'm not sure which is which. Seth might
know a few others. We should have asked him.
Warren began climbing down from ring to ring. As a
last resort, you can always try a random potion, he said.
Hopefully it won't come to that.
The chamber was not much larger than the widest ring
of stone. The floor appeared to be a single slab of bedrock.
There was nothing in the chamber except a pair of doors at
opposite ends. One wall was covered in writings in various
languages, including a few repeated messages in English.
This accursed sanctum lies
outside the domain of Fablehaven.
Do not proceed.
Go in peace.
Kendra assumed the other messages restated the same thing
in their respective languages.
Why did they write it in English so many times?
Kendra asked.
I only see it in English once, Warren said.
Oh, fairy languages, she said.
They reached the bottom ring. Stay near me, Warren
instructed. Step only where I step. Be ready for anything.
He tapped the ground with the handle of the key before
stepping down. Kendra followed him.
Which door should we try? Kendra asked.
You pick, he said. It's a toss-up.
Kendra pointed at one of the doors. Warren led the way,
prodding the floor with the key like a blind man. The door
was of plain, heavy wood bound in iron, and appeared to be
in good repair. Warren probed the ground off to one side and
had Kendra stand there holding the ax. Standing still, she
disappeared. Holding the key like a spear, he pulled the door
open.
Nothing waited behind the door except a stairway curling
downward. Warren got out the dying flashlight. He tried
to tap the top stair with the handle of the key, but the
handle went right through it.
Kendra, look, Warren said. The handle of the key disappeared
through the first few steps. False stairs. Probably
masking a drop of hundreds of feet.
They crossed the room and repeated their cautious
actions at the other door. Again the door opened to a
stairway, and again the stairs were only an illusion. Warren
leaned out far, testing with the key, to check if perhaps only
the first few stairs were counterfeit, but nothing within reach
proved to be tangible.
Warren led the way around the perimeter of the room,
tapping the floor and the walls. They reached a place where
the key passed through the wall. Warren leaned through the
illusion, and Kendra heard him tapping with the key.
Here is the genuine stairway, he said. Kendra passed
through the insubstantial wall and saw a stone stairway
winding downward. White stones set in the walls emitted a
soft light.
You never know what might be a mirage in places like
this, Warren said. He poked one of the glowing stones with
the key. Ever seen a sunstone?
No, Kendra said.
So long as one stone sits under the sun, all the sister
stones share the light, he said. It's probably atop one of the
nearby hills.
As they descended the stairs, they found a few places
where illusionary steps disguised gaps in the stairway. Warren
helped Kendra leap across the empty places. Finally they
reached the bottom of the stairs and another door.
Again Warren had Kendra move over to one side as he
opened the door. Strange, he murmured, testing the
ground. Warren stepped through the doorway. Come on,
&nb
sp; Kendra.
She peeked through the doorway. The room was large
and circular, with a domed ceiling. White stones set in the
ceiling illuminated the scene. Deep, golden sand covered the
floor. On the far side of the room a door was painted on the
wall. On the left side of the room murals of three monsters
decorated the wall, with another three on the right side.
Kendra saw a blue woman with six arms and the body of a
serpent, a Minotaur, a huge Cyclops, a dark man who from
waist up looked human and from waist down had the body
and legs of a spider, an armored snakelike man wearing an
elaborate headdress, and a dwarf in a hooded cloak. All the
images, though a tad faded, had been rendered with supreme
skill.
Warren raised a hand for Kendra to halt. The key sank
into the sand in front of him. There are places where the
sand becomes treacherous, he said. Watch your step.
In order to avoid sinking in quicksand, they took a circuitous
path to the painted door on the far side of the room.
The painting depicted a door of solid iron with a keyhole
below the handle. Hesitantly, Warren touched the painting.
The image of the door rippled for an instant, and suddenly
the door became real, a mural no longer.
Warren whirled, key held high, and eyed the other
murals in the room. Nothing happened. Finally he turned
back to the door and tried the handle. The door was locked.
Notice anything all the creatures on the wall have in common?
Warren asked.
Kendra focused on comparing them. A key around their
necks, she said. The keys were not obvious. They were
small, and subtly drawn, but each painted being had one.
Any theories on how we get through the door? Warren
asked, obviously with an answer in mind.
You've got to be kidding, Kendra said.
Don't we both wish, he said. The old guys who
designed this place sure knew how to throw a party. He led
Kendra around the perimeter of the room, avoiding quicksand,
and scrutinized the depiction of each individual
creature.
The keys appear identical to me, he said after studying
the dwarf. I think the game is selecting which foe we
believe we can overcome.
I hate to be cruel, Kendra said, but I'm thinking the
dwarf.
I would choose him last of all, Warren said. He carries
no weapon, which leads me to believe he must be strong
in magic. And he looks the easiest at first glance, which
almost certainly means he is the most deadly.
Then who? Kendra asked. The Minotaur carried a
heavy mace. The Cyclops wielded a cudgel. The blue
woman held a sword in each hand. The hobgoblin, as
Warren had named the snakelike man, clutched a pair of
axes. And the half-spider man bore a javelin and a whip.
I suspect the Minotaur may be the lesser of these evils,
Warren said at length. I would no sooner choose the
woman than the dwarf, and a Cyclops is nearly as adroit as
he is strong. Of the others, the Minotaur carries the most
cumbersome weapon. His mace will limit his reach and
hamper his ability to avoid the tip of my spear.
You mean your key, Kendra said.
We'll use one key to get another.
Kendra regarded the Minotaur. Black fur, wide horns,
bulky musculature. He stood a full head taller than Warren.
You think you can take him? Kendra asked.
Warren was testing the sand and outlining the sinkholes.
I'll want you to stand still, he said. The Minotaur may
catch your scent-I want to keep him in doubt as to your
location. You'll keep the ax, and if I should lose the key, you
may be able to toss it to me. If I should fall, the Minotaur
will roam the room searching for you. If you keep still, you
may have one free swing at him.
But you think you can take him? Kendra repeated.
Warren looked at the image of the Minotaur and hefted
the key. Why not? I've made it through some tight scrapes
before. I would give a lot for a few of my regular weapons.
Maybe you could use the ax to help me mark all the quicksand?
They spent much longer than Kendra liked delineating
the areas of treacherous sand. She knew Vanessa and Errol
were on their trail. Once the sand had been marked, Warren
positioned Kendra so that the largest region of quicksand
was between her and the Minotaur. He approached the
mural.
You ready? Warren asked.
I guess, Kendra answered, squeezing the handle of her
invisible ax, her heart pounding.
Maybe I can get in a cheap shot right at the start, he
said, touching the image of the Minotaur and raising the
key, holding it ready to strike. The mural wavered for a
moment and then vanished. The sharp tip of the key clinked
against the wall, and the Minotaur appeared behind Warren.
Behind you! Kendra screamed.
Warren ducked and lunged to the side, narrowly avoiding
a blow that would have brained him. The Minotaur
swung the mace briskly. The weapon was big and heavy, but
the Minotaur was strong enough that it did not look very
cumbersome.
Warren faced the Minotaur, staying a few paces away,
key held ready. Why not just hand over the key? Warren
asked. The Minotaur snorted. From across the room, Kendra
could smell the beast, an odor like livestock.
The Minotaur charged, and Warren nimbly danced
away. Warren pulled back his arm as if to throw the key, and
the Minotaur raised his mace protectively. Feinting like he
was hurling the key, Warren leapt closer and used the long
reach of the key to scratch the Minotaur on the snout.
The Minotaur roared, chasing Warren around the room.
Warren ran from his pursuer, trying his best to lead the
Minotaur toward quicksand while keeping the beast away
from Kendra. Either the Minotaur understood what the lines
in the sand meant, or he instinctively knew where not to
step, because he skirted the quicksand just as effectively as
Warren.
Sniffing the air, the Minotaur turned toward Kendra.
Over here, you coward! Warren shouted, moving in closer
and brandishing the key. The Minotaur strode boldly toward
Warren, holding the mace off to one side, tempting Warren
by leaving his chest exposed.
After a few feints, Warren took the bait, driving the tip
of the key toward the Minotaur's chest. The Minotaur
grabbed the key just below the slender spearhead with his
free hand and wrenched it from Warren's grasp, yanking him
closer in the process, and swung the mace.
Warren saved himself by diving backwards and managing
to keep his feet. The blow had missed by inches. The
Minotaur quickly reversed his grip on the key and hurled it
like a javelin, burying the head in Warren's abdomen despite
his attempt to dodge it.
Roaring triumphantly, the Minotaur rushed at Warren,
who pulled out the key and stumbled away, the spearhead
 
; red with his own blood. Scrambling, spraying sand, Warren
managed to get a small area of quicksand between the
Minotaur and himself.
Kendra flung the flashlight and struck the Minotaur in
the back. The brute turned, but she was invisible again. The
Minotaur picked up the flashlight, sniffed it, and then
sniffed the air, moving toward Kendra.
Using the key like a crutch, Warren came around the
quicksand, approaching the Minotaur from behind. The
Minotaur whirled and gave chase. Warren skipped away,
ending up with his back to a broad expanse of quicksand.
Warren, quicksand! Kendra cried.
Too late, he stepped beyond the line in the sand, one leg
sinking to his thigh, the rest of him collapsing forward onto
the sturdier sand. The Minotaur dashed forward, mace held
high to issue the killing stroke. Quick as a mousetrap,
Warren thrust upward with the key, the razor tip of the
spearhead entering the Minotaur just below the sternum,
angled up to pierce his heart. The Minotaur stood still,
impaled, and snorted. The mace fell from his hairy hands,
landing heavily on the sand. Warren twisted the key and
shoved it in deeper, toppling the Minotaur backwards.
Panting, Warren withdrew his leg from the mushy sand.
Kendra ran to him. That was an amazing trick! she
shouted.
A desperate one, he said. All or nothing. His hand
covered the wound on his abdomen. He swatted at the damp
sand coating his leg. Probably wouldn't have worked,
except the Minotaur thought I was mortally wounded.
Course, he might have been right.
Is it bad? she asked.
It pierced me deep, but clean, he said. In straight, out
straight. Belly wounds are hard to read. Depends what got
punctured. Go fetch the key.
Kendra crouched beside the supine Minotaur, enjoying
the livestock smell even less up close. The key hung on a
fine gold chain. She pulled hard, and the chain snapped. I
have it, Kendra said.
Get the big one too, Warren said. The big key was still
lodged in the Minotaur's chest. Kendra had to brace a foot
against the beast to tug it free. Warren had taken off his
shirt. The blood stood out sharply against his white skin.
Kendra averted her eyes. He wadded up his shirt and pressed
it against the wound, which was a couple of inches to one
side of his belly button. Let's hope this stanches the bleeding,
he said. Can you cut me a length of rope?
Using the sharp spearhead of the bloody key, Kendra did