“Oh? And where’s Bastille?”
“She ran off on me,” I said. “To be with the other knights.”
Grandpa Smedry snorted. “To go on trial, you mean.”
“An unfair trial,” I spat. “She didn’t break her sword—it was my fault.”
“Hum, yes,” Grandpa Smedry said. “If only there were someone willing to speak on her behalf.”
“Wait,” I said. “I can do that?”
“What did I tell you about being a Smedry, lad?”
“That we could marry people,” I said, “and arrest people, and…” And that we could demand a right to testify in legal cases.
I stood up, shocked. “I’ve been an idiot!”
“I prefer the term ‘nigglenut,’” Grandpa Smedry said. “Though that’s probably because I just made it up and feel a certain paternal sense toward it.” He smiled, winking.
“Is there still time?” I asked. “Before her trial, I mean?”
“It’s been going on all afternoon,” Grandpa Smedry said, pulling out an hourglass. “And they’re probably almost ready to render judgment. Getting there in time will be tricky. Limping Lowrys, if only we could teleport there via use of a magical glass box sitting in the basement of this very castle!”
He paused. “Oh, wait, we can!” He leaped to his feet. “Let’s go! We’re late!”
Chapter
10
There’s a dreadful form of torture in the Hushlands, devised by the Librarians. Though this is supposed to be a book for all ages, I feel that it’s time to confront this disturbing and cruel practice. Somebody has to be brave enough to shine a light on it.
That’s right. It’s time to talk about after-school specials.
After-school specials are a type of television programming that the Librarians put on right when children get home from school. The specials are usually about some kid who is struggling with a nonsensical problem like bullying, peer pressure, or gerbil snorting. We see the kid’s life, his struggles, his problems—and then the show provides a nice, simple solution to tie everything up by the end.
The point of these programs, of course, is to be so blatantly awful and painful to watch that the children wish they were back in school. That way, when they have to get up the next morning and do long division, they’ll think: Well, at least I’m not at home watching that terrible after-school special.
I include this explanation here for all of you in the Free Kingdoms so that you’ll understand what I’m about to say. It’s very important for you to understand that I don’t want this book to sound like an after-school special.
I let my fame go to my head. The point of this book isn’t to show how that’s bad, it’s to show the truth about me as a person. To show what I’m capable of. That first day in Nalhalla, I think, says a lot about who I am.
I don’t even like hooberstackers.
Deep within the innards of Keep Smedry, we approached a room with six guards standing out front. They saluted Grandpa Smedry; he responded by wiggling his fingers at them. (He’s like that sometimes.)
Inside, we discovered a group of people in black robes who were polishing a large metal box.
“That’s quite the box,” I said.
“Isn’t it though?” Grandpa Smedry said, smiling.
“Shouldn’t we be summoning a dragon or something to take us to Crystallia?”
“This will be faster,” Grandpa Smedry said, waving over one of the people in robes. (Black robes are the Free Kingdoms’ equivalent of a white lab coat. Black makes way more sense—this way, when the scientists blow themselves up, at least the robes have a chance of being salvageable.)
“Lord Smedry,” the woman said. “We’ve applied for a swap time with Crystallia. Everything will be ready for you in about five minutes.”
“Excellent, excellent!” Grandpa Smedry said. Then his face fell.
“What?” I asked, alarmed.
“Well, it’s just that … we’re early. I’m not sure what to think about that. You must be having a bad influence on me, my boy!”
“Sorry,” I said. It was hard to contain my anxiety. Why hadn’t I thought of going to help Bastille? Would I arrive in time to make a difference? If a train left Nalhalla traveling at 3.14 miles an hour and a train left Bermuda at 45 MHz, what time does the soup have pancakes?
“Grandfather,” I said as we waited. “I saw my mother today.”
“Folsom mentioned that. You showed great initiative in following her.”
“She’s got to be up to something.”
“Of course she is, lad. Problem is, what?”
“You think it might be related to the treaty?”
Grandpa Smedry shook his head. “Maybe. Shasta’s a tricky one. I don’t see her working with the Wardens of the Standard on one of their projects unless it helps her own goals. Whatever those are.”
That seemed to trouble him. I turned back to the robed men and women. They were focused on large chunks of glass that were affixed to the corners of the metal box.
“What is that thing?” I asked.
“Hum? Oh. Transporter’s Glass, lad! Or, well, that’s Transporter’s Glass at the corners of the box. When the right time arrives—the one we’ve scheduled with the engineers at a similar box up in Crystallia—both groups will shine brightsand on those bits of glass. Then the box will be swapped with the one over in Crystallia.”
“Swapped?” I said. “You mean we’ll get teleported there?”
“Indeed! Fascinating technology. Your father helped develop it, you know.”
“He did?”
“Well, he was the first to discover what the sand did,” Grandpa Smedry said. “We’d known that the sand had Oculatory distortions; we didn’t know what it did. Your father spent a number of years researching it and discovered that this new sand could teleport things. But it only worked if two sets of Transporter’s Glass were exposed to brightsand at the same time, and if they were transporting two items that were exactly the same size.”
Brightsand. It was the fuel of silimatic technology. When you expose other sands to brightsand’s glowing light, they do interesting things. Some, for instance, start to float. Others grow very heavy.
I could see enormous canisters in the corners of the room, likely filled with brightsand. The sides of the containers could be pulled back, letting the light shine on the Transporter’s Glass.
“So,” I said. “You had to send ahead to Crystallia and tell them what time we were coming so that they could activate their Transporter’s Glass at the same time.”
“Precisely!”
“What if someone else activated their brightsand at exactly the same time that we do? Could we get teleported there by accident?”
“I suppose,” Grandpa Smedry said. “But they’d have to be sending a box exactly the same size as this one. Don’t worry, lad. It would be virtually impossible for that kind of error to happen!”
Virtually impossible. The moment you read that, you probably assumed that the error would—of course—happen by the end of this book. You assumed this because you’ve read far too many novels. You make it very difficult for us writers to spring proper surprises on you because—
LOOK OVER THERE!
See, didn’t work, did it?
“All right,” one of the black-robed people said. “Step into the box and we’ll begin!”
Still a little worried about a disaster that was “virtually” impossible, I followed Grandpa Smedry into the box. It felt a little like stepping into a large elevator. The doors shut, then immediately opened again.