Читать книгу Child of the Cloud - Cameron Stelzer - Страница 12
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Eagle’s Pass
The greyhounds skidded to a halt, sending a shower of gravel raining down after Ruby. Chatterbeak tucked in his wings and dropped from the sky like a bullet.
Ruby’s body was light and she spread her arms wide to slow her fall. Above her, the freefalling parrot and his petrified passengers were moving at a blistering pace.
For one heart-stopping moment, Whisker thought they would all end up as smears on the rock. But as the ground rushed towards them, Chatterbeak stretched out his claws and plucked Ruby’s body from the air. The moment he had her in his talons, he spread out his wings and fanned his tail feathers wide, attempting to halt his rapid descent.
It wasn’t enough.
Still moving at a tremendous pace, Chatterbeak flapped his wings frantically, trying to gain altitude. In the moment before impact, he propelled his body forward, skimming low over the surface of the rock. There was a loud SCREECH of metal as Ruby’s scissor swords scraped over the rock.
Chatterbeak rose into the air. The screeching ceased.
The next thing Whisker knew, he was surrounded by the deep blue water of the river and the rocky shore was far behind him. Feeling safe at last, he let out a sigh of relief.
Horace let out a sigh of relief and a bad smell.
‘Poooheee!’ Chatterbeak squawked, swooping towards a patch of sand on the opposite bank. ‘I pulled off the aerobatic impossible and look at my reward!’
‘Sorry, Chatterbeak,’ Horace apologised. ‘I get gas when I’m about to die.’
Chatterbeak lowered Ruby onto the soft sand and perched himself on a nearby rock. Eager to escape the lingering smell, Whisker clambered off Chatterbeak and rushed over to his injured friend.
Ruby was sitting in the sand next to her longbow, breathing easily and calmly massaging her left ankle. She wore her trademark crimson eyepatch over her right eye, but her pirate bandanna was gone. The cherry-red hood of her newly-acquired snow coat hung low over her head, its striking colour perfectly harmonised by the two scarlet scissor swords dangling from her belt. She threw back her hood and looked up at Whisker as he approached.
‘Hi there, apprentice,’ she said casually, as if their cliff top ordeal had never happened. ‘Thanks for dropping in on me.’
‘Sure,’ Whisker said, sitting down beside her. He was never quite sure what to say around her and it didn’t help that he was still trembling, while she looked as cool as a cucumber in an ice bath. He hoped his embarrassing habit of blushing in her presence was a thing of the past.
‘How’s your ankle?’ he asked.
‘Oh, it’s fine,’ she said dismissing the injury lightly. ‘A little swollen, that’s all – but with half a day’s rest I’ll be running rings around those dogs.’ She gave Whisker a cheeky wink.
Whisker wondered how Ruby could be taking things so well. Despite some discomfort in her ankle, she appeared to be her usual self – confident and energetic, without the slightest trace of fear in her emerald green eye.
‘Doesn’t anything scare you?’ he asked.
‘Oh, yeah,’ she said, ‘heaps of things – falling off cliffs; being eaten by dogs – stuff like that.’ She shrugged. ‘But there’s no use worrying about them now, is there?’
‘I guess not,’ he said, staring across the wide expanse of water, ‘but, Ruby –’
‘I know,’ she cut in, ‘you want me to stop gallivanting around the countryside on my own.’
Whisker sighed. ‘Was it that obvious?’
Ruby gave him one of her cryptic smiles. ‘Don’t worry. Without Pete and his book of rules, someone has to keep us on the straight and narrow.’ She gestured to Chatterbeak and Horace, calming down with a game of Pull My Feather. ‘I somehow doubt those two are up to the task.’
‘So you’re saying I’m the boring one,’ Whisker muttered.
‘No,’ Ruby said, stabbing the end of the longbow in the sand. ‘I never said that. You’re more like the … the leader.’
‘The leader?’ Whisker said shocked. ‘But I’m just a –’
‘And before you give me that I’m-just-an-apprentice spiel,’ Ruby said, speaking over the top of him, ‘think about this. We’re not on the ocean anymore and there is no Apple Pie. Out here, rank means nothing and survival means everything. And when it comes to survival, you’re the right rat for the job.’
Whisker resisted. ‘But what if I’m not ready to be the leader? With Anna’s life at stake, surely someone with more experience should be leading the rescue.’
‘It’s not about experience,’ Ruby said flatly. ‘It’s about who you are. Listen, do you think I chose to be the tomboy with the temper? Or Horace the clumsy little clown? No. We were born that way. And the same applies to you, too. When you first joined the crew, the Captain didn’t make you peel potatoes or polish his shoes like most apprentices. He gave you important responsibilities. Was it because he felt sorry for you? No. It was because you had potential. You weren’t born to be a deckhand, Whisker – you were born to be a leader.’
She went back to massaging her ankle.
‘So that’s it?’ Whisker said. ‘You say I’m the leader, and just like that I’m the leader.’
Ruby nodded. ‘Smart lad.’
‘But don’t we have to vote on it?’ Whisker argued.
‘Why bother?’ Ruby said with a shrug. ‘Everyone knows I always get my way.’
Whisker threw his paws in the air. ‘Hooray for democracy …’
‘Look,’ Ruby said, ‘if it makes you feel any better, we all have our roles to play. I infuriate the bad guys, you come up with the plans, Chatterbeak flies us out of trouble and Horace keeps everyone entertained. I’d say we’re a perfect team.’
‘Alright,’ Whisker conceded, aware that any further protests would be in vain. ‘But as the leader, I want all of us out of here, pronto.’ He pointed to the distant cliff top to where a dozen dogs were pacing back and forth. ‘The Highland Hounds will find a path down here sooner or later and I doubt a few rapids will stand in their way.’
Ruby picked up the massive yew-wood longbow and rose unsteadily to her feet. Balancing on one foot, she drew back the silk string, aiming the empty bow in the direction of the dogs. She released the string with a loud TWANG, almost toppling over.
Whisker wondered if her injury was far more serious than she was admitting.
‘This old beauty has twice the range of my Pirate Cup bow,’ she mused, grinning through her pain. ‘Those mutts are lucky the arrows were locked in the archery cupboard.’
‘Yet another reason for requiring my skeleton key,’ Horace said, walking over to them.
‘We’ll discuss that later,’ Whisker said, anxious to depart. ‘Now if everyone’s had their toilet stop, we need to get a move on.’
‘Aye, aye, Capt’n Whisker,’ Horace said saluting him with his hook. ‘All aboard the parrot express. Next stop Hawk’s View and the beautiful Lake Azure.’
Whisker sighed deeply. Captain Whisker. That will definitely take some getting used to …
Laden with three rats, four scissor swords and a longbow, Chatterbeak rose high into the air, leaving the seclusion of the river behind. He flew west over the cliffs, squawking like a crazed cockatoo and drawing the attention of the watching dogs. As soon as his colourful plumage was out of sight behind a line of oak trees, he turned north, rejoining the river at the next bend.
Flying low over the water to avoid any further detection, the companions followed the winding course of the Hawk River towards the mountains. Huge canyon walls rose above them, growing higher as the plains turned to foothills.
From time to time they glimpsed a narrow track dipping down into the canyon before it rose sharply and disappeared from sight behind the cliff tops. From a map Whisker had seen in Pete’s cabin, he recognised the track as Eagle’s Pass, the sole route north from Oakbridge to the alpine village of Hawk’s View.
The treacherous path was seldom travelled by foot, and journeys rarely took place outside the warmer summer months. Although the path appeared deserted, Whisker noticed deep footprints in several muddy sections of the track, signalling heavy traffic in recent days.
Strange for this time of year, he mused.
As the morning wore on, the temperature dropped and an icy wind began howling through the canyon. The companions snuggled into their winter coats and tightened their scarves to ward off the chill. High above them, the snowy peaks of the mountains filled the space between the cliff tops and the sky. The blanket of clouds had finally dispersed and a vivid stretch of blue now adorned the heavens.
After travelling constantly for many hours, the companions stopped to give Chatterbeak a much-needed break. For a tropical parrot, he was handling the frigid temperatures surprisingly well and seemed to have formed a strong bond with Horace. The smallest rat of the team had been carried in Chatterbeak’s claws while the others rode above. Whisker guessed their growing friendship was largely attributed to the bag of nuts Horace had acquired from the school canteen, and which he had generously fed to Chatterbeak as they flew.
No one wandered far during the break. Although Ruby wouldn’t admit it, her ankle hadn’t improved since her fall and she was forced to use the longbow as a walking stick. She had barely hobbled three paces to the water’s edge for a drink before Whisker had to grab her coat to stop her from falling in.
When the travellers finally resumed their journey, fluffy white cumulus clouds dotted the sky above them, growing larger as the day wore on.
Moving higher into the mountains, they glided over a solitary swing bridge which forded the river at its narrowest point. Struck by the strange colour variations in the foot planks, Whisker took out his spyglass for a closer look. The weathered grey tones of the original oak palings were interspersed by the warm cream colours of newer pine planks – roughly cut and fastened with thick ropes. Whisker suspected that a rushed repair job had recently been undertaken on damaged and weakened sections of the bridge.
Further north, the cliffs surrounding the river turned to rocky slopes and the slopes transformed into gentle banks covered with alpine grass and Edelweiss flowers. The woolly white petals of the late-season blooms dotted the surrounding hills like patches of snow.
As the countryside opened up, so did the river. It grew wider and shallower as it neared its point of origin, the majestic snow-fed Lake Azure at the base of Cloud Mountain.
Rounding a bend in the river, Whisker caught his first glimpse of the brilliant blue lake, sparkling like a sapphire in the mid-afternoon sunshine. In the same breathtaking moment, he saw the summit of the mountain rising high above the clouds like a terrifying white fang.
Beauty and terror forged as one, he thought, staring up at the snow-capped peak.
Cloud Mountain was taller and wider than he could have ever imagined. Sprawling conifer forests covered its lower slopes, extending upwards from the northern shores of the lake to the mighty ice glacier. Partly obscured by a band of cloud, the glacier snaked up the mountainside, disappearing into a steep cleft of rock known as the chimney. A stream of melted ice and snow ran from the face of the glacier to the shore of the lake far below.
Even half-shrouded in clouds, the mountain was a truly imposing sight. It towered above the landscape like a giant, making the surrounding peaks look like snowy foothills. Whisker came to the sudden realisation that locating his sister in such a vast wilderness would be far more challenging than he had first anticipated.
His thoughts were broken by a violent jolting motion. In front of him, Cloud Mountain appeared to be tipping onto its side. Beneath him, Chatterbeak was diving hard to his left, rapidly losing altitude.
‘Skraww, skraww,’ the parrot burst out. ‘Hold on tight! We’ve got company!’
Whisker dug his paws into Chatterbeak’s feathers, trying to steady himself. Behind him, Ruby threw her arms around his waist, struggling to remain seated.
‘This is certainly a cosy way to crash land!’ she gasped.
‘I’ve got you,’ Whisker said, wrapping his tail around her coat. ‘Now don’t let go!’