‘What Gift? What are you talking about?’
‘This is part of a greater explanation, which I have been waiting to give you. Suffice it to say that each of our kind is different in his or her own way. Your Gifts appear to be of the sun and air. I think your brother’s are of night and darkness. I have learned that much about the two of you in the short time you have been with me.’
They turned onto Parkhill Street and hurried toward Watchward Lane. Grandma X was moving very fast for an old lady, and Jaide had to jog to keep up.
‘My Gifts? Our kind?’ asked Jaide. ‘What do you —’
She was interrupted by Kleo, who ran up from behind them carrying a long-tailed rat that, while still alive, hung limply in the cat’s mouth, Kleo’s teeth firmly fastened in a fold of fur behind the rat’s head. The rat’s eyes were only partly milky, the white cloud swirling around like milk going down a drain.
‘Good work, Kleo!’ exclaimed Grandma X. ‘Very good work indeed! That’s exactly what we need.’
As they hurried up the drive to Grandma X’s house, Jaide saw that the blue door was completely visible now, as was the sign. Now it simply said: Keep Out!
High above, the moon-and-star weathervane was pointing fixedly to the northwest – toward the iron bridge. Jaide hesitated on the steps, remembering the efforts she and Jack had made to escape, and the certainty with which she had decided that Grandma X was a witch who was out to get them. But that certainty was completely gone now, and in its place was the knowledge that Jack was in terrible danger . . . and Jaide felt that it was all her fault.
They ran straight into the drawing room. Grandma X took down a bell jar and held it upside down so Kleo could deposit the rat inside. Then she slapped on the lid before the rodent could escape.
‘Now. Let’s find out what this thing knows. Jaide, give me your hand.’
Jaide let herself be gripped tightly by her grandma’s strong fingers. She could feel the impression of the stone set in the ring. It was smooth and oval, and weirdly cold.
Grandma X placed her left palm against the bell jar. Instantly the cloudiness in the rat’s eyes stopped swirling and settled into a band across the middle. The rat thrashed around, as if it had been struck, then its head went up as if caught in an invisible noose. It squeaked piteously, and slowly and reluctantly turned to press one pink ear against the side of the glass, against Grandma X’s hand.
As it did so, something very strange shot into Jaide’s arm, into her mind. It was the rat’s thoughts, tiny and petty and focused on smells and tastes and food and its kind.
Jaide gasped.
+Don’t distract me,++ said Grandma X. Her mouth didn’t move – the words came directly into Jaide’s mind. ++I need some of your strength to do this in daylight, and you need to see what we’re dealing with. Be calm and let me do the work for you.++
Jaide nodded through her disorientation. The rat’s thoughts rose up to overwhelm her; within them, she was surprised to find the thoughts of other creatures, too, tinier appetites that tasted of dirt and decay and family. She squirmed, thinking of insects. Was this what it was like to be a cockroach or a fly? And if so, what were such experiences doing in the mind of a rat?
Grandma X probed deeper. Something dark lurked in the rat’s thoughts. She seized upon it and pursued it deeper still. Jaide felt as though they were following a lightless tunnel down into the heart of the earth, where creatures lived that had never seen the light of the sun, or the moon, or the stars. It was like being at the bottom of the ocean. And still they went deeper, following a tendril of darkness that never seemed to end.
Down, down, they went, silently, stealthily, hands clasped tightly as they searched for Jack.
+Help me,++ Grandma X said into Jaide’s mind. ++You’re his twin. You know him best of all. Conjure him in your thoughts so we can find him, together.++
Jaide struggled to comply with the request. She felt as though the blackness was sucking out her very life, like an oil slick creeping across a shore. Jack was a fading memory that took some reviving. He was four minutes younger than her, and looked more like their father than like their mother, with brown eyes, darker skin and black hair. And although he could be annoying sometimes, Jaide didn’t know what she would do if he never came back.
+That’s it,++ Grandma X communicated. ++That’s good. I can feel him now. We’re getting close. Hold on!++
JACK PAUSED, PANTING, AT A Y intersection. The pipe he was following split into two, and he couldn’t tell which looked lighter to his eyes. Left or right? Behind him the whispering of the ants grew louder. He had to choose quickly.
+Come back, troubletwister!++
The voice was faint, but not as faint as it should have been, given the distance he’d come. Jack had a horrible vision of the ants moving together, the bloated, speaking rat riding on their backs like a boat on a wave . . . following him wherever he went.
He went right. The decision was random. He had been running for ages and had seen no increase or decrease in light, whichever way he went. Just the same grey view everywhere and still no visible light source. He had begun to think he wasn’t seeing by light at all – but how was that possible? How could anyone see, except by light?
The pipe he had chosen was starting to get damp and cold, and he could smell the salty odour of the sea, combined with the far less pleasant stench of rotting seaweed. That was encouraging, for if the pipe ended at the beach, it would be a short walk from there to the police station. He had already decided that that was where he should go. The school was infested with rats, and Grandma X’s house wasn’t safe. He hoped Jaide would come to the same conclusion and meet him there. Even though the police wouldn’t believe him about the rats and the ants and everything, they would at least call his mother.
Jaide would be freaking out, Jack thought, if she hadn’t been caught, too. He really, really hoped she hadn’t been captured . . . because if she was free, there was a chance she could get help. Though he wasn’t really sure what kind of help you could get for the trouble he was in . . .
Jack bit his lip in frustration as the pipe ended in a mossy iron grille that wouldn’t budge no matter how he pushed and tugged at it. He could hear water dripping further down the pipe, but he had no choice but to turn back.
+Why are you running, troubletwister?++
Jack stopped in sudden fright. That voice wasn’t from the rat. It was closer, and different. He looked wildly around, but all he could see were the crumbling walls of the pipe.
Then he realised that he wasn’t actually hearing it. The voice was inside his head.
‘Who are you?’ he shouted. ‘What do you want with me?’
+We have many names, troubletwister,++ came the answering whisper. ++Just as you have, Jackaran Kresimir Shield.++
‘How do you know —’ Jack started to say, but he stopped. Maybe if he didn’t talk to it, the voice would go away.
I have to get out of these tunnels, thought Jack. I have to get away!
+We have been waiting for you, Jackaran Kresimir Shield. Soon we will meet, oh, yessss. . .++
Jack shuddered and ran faster. If the ants hadn’t reached the Y intersection, he might be able to take the other tunnel. It had to lead to safety!
+Come to us, Jackaran Kresimir Shield. Be with us. Be one of us!++
Jack stopped. While the voice was inside his head, he’d heard something else with his ears. A nasty shuffling sound from the tunnel ahead of him, a sound that was rapidly getting louder.
Then he saw what was making the noise. A long, low, lumpy shape, kind of like a really big, undulating worm. It rose and fell as it moved along the tunnel – and then it split into two at the Y intersection and continued to slither up the two different tunnels.
Jack had passed a tiny alcove in the sewer wall several paces back. Now, almost
without thought, he raced there and folded himself into it. He felt every ragged line of the old bricks as he tried to press himself further back. Then he tried to keep absolutely still, not even breathing, as the thing came closer and closer.
It was like a giant worm, only it was made up of rats and cockroaches and red ants and other nameless insects, all with white eyes and all stuck together, crawling and writhing like a single creature. The sound it made as it moved was a ghastly mixture of every rat and insect noise ever made, combined with the slithering of its strange flesh upon the tunnel.
As its head passed him, something heavy and dark pressed against Jack’s mind. He felt it in his thoughts, a presence even worse than the physical presence of the creature. It threatened to overwhelm him, to suck his mind away and combine him with what it had already gathered. But at the same time it offered peace, a certainty that if he did give in, it would take away his fear, just as it would take away every other emotion, along with all his memories, everything that was him. If he let it in, he would disappear forever.
+We see you, Jackaran Kresimir Shield!++ said the voice in his head. ++We see you!++
The worm’s head turned to Jack and reared above him, all its component rats and insects swirling and wriggling to create a vast but toothless maw.
‘No!’ Jack screamed. He ducked and dived forward as the clumsy worm-mouth struck into the alcove where he’d been. Before it could pull back, he jumped onto it, kicking and flailing, smashing his way through rats, ants, and cockroaches, which flew in all directions.
The worm temporarily collapsed as Jack rampaged along it, desperate to reach the intersection. But even as he smashed his way through its component parts, he felt its tendrils clutching at his mind, sapping his will, making him slower and more stupid, so that every step he took got more difficult, and the worm was beginning to re-form around him. It was like fighting through quicksand and—
I’m not going to make it, Jack thought, sharp panic fighting back against the relentless pull of the creature’s mind.