Sing handed me the book. Like all of the others in the Forgotten Language, the text on it looked like crazy scribbles. Before he had died, Alcatraz the First—my ultimate ancestor—had used the Talent to break the language of his people so that nobody could read it.
Nobody except for someone with a pair of Translator’s Lenses. I put mine on and flipped to the first page, hoping it wasn’t another cookbook.
Observations on the Talents of the Smedry people, the title page read, and an explanation of what led up to their fall. As written by Fenilious K. Wandersnag, scribe to His Majesty Alcatraz Smedry.
I blinked, then read the words again.
“Guys?” I said, turning. “Guys!”
The group of soldiers hesitated, and Himalaya glanced toward me. I held the book up.
“I think we just found what we’ve been looking for.”
Chapter
17
Things are about to go very wrong.
Oh, didn’t you know that already? I should think that it would be obvious. We’re almost to the end of the book, and we just had a very encouraging victory. Everything looks good. So of course it’s all going to go wrong. You should pay better attention to plot archetypes.
I’d like to promise you that everything will turn out all right, but I think there’s something you should understand. This is the middle book of the series. And as everyone knows, the heroes always lose in the middle book. It makes the series more tense.
Sorry. But hey, at least my books have awesome endings, right?
I dismissed the soldiers, ordering them to return to their posts. Sing and Folsom joined me, looking at the book, even though they couldn’t read it. I figured my mother must have an Oculator with her to read the book—to her alone, the Lenses would be useless.
“You’re sure this is what we’re after?” Sing asked, turning the book over in his fingers.
“It’s a history of the fall of Incarna,” I said, “told by Alcatraz the First’s personal scribe.”
Sing whistled. “Wow. What are the chances?”
“Pretty good, I’d say,” Bastille said, rounding the corner and joining us. She still looked quite the worse for wear, but at least she was standing. I gave her what I hoped was an encouraging smile.
“Nice leer,” she said to me. “Anyway, this is the Royal Archives—”
“Not a—” Folsom began to say.
“—don’t interrupt,” Bastille snapped. She appeared to be in rare form—but then, having a piece of your soul cut out tends to do that to people.
“This is the Royal Archives,” Bastille continued. “A lot of these books have passed down through the Nalhallan royal line for centuries—and the collection has been added to by the Smedrys, the Knights of Crystallia, and the other noble lines who have joined with us.”
“Yes indeed,” Prince Rikers said, taking the book from Sing, looking it over. “People don’t just throw away books in the Forgotten Language. A lot of these have been archived here for years and years. They’re copies of copies.”
“You can copy these scribbles?” I asked with surprise.
“Scribes can be quite meticulous,” Sing said. “They’re almost as bad as Librarians.”
“Excuse me?” Himalaya huffed, walking up to us. She’d finished giving orders to the last couple of soldiers, who were arranging the books she’d just organized. The room looked kind of strange, with the back half of it still dominated by gargantuan piles of books, the front half filled with neatly organized stacks.
“Oh,” Sing said. “Um, I didn’t mean you, Himalaya. I meant Librarians who aren’t recovering.”
“I’m not either,” she said, folding her arms, adopting a very deliberate stance as she stood in her Hushlander skirt and blouse. “I meant what I said earlier. I intend to prove that you can be a Librarian without being evil. There has to be a way.”
“If you say so…” Sing said.
I still kind of agreed with Sing. Librarians were … well, Librarians. They’d oppressed me since my childhood. They were trying to conquer Mokia.
“I think you did wonderfully,” Folsom said to Himalaya. “Ten out of ten on a scale of pure, majestic effectiveness.”
Prince Rikers sniffed at that. “Excuse me,” he said, then handed me the Forgotten Language book and walked away.
“What was that about?” Himalaya asked.
“I think Folsom just reminded the prince that he was a book critic,” Bastille said.
Folsom sighed. “I don’t want to make people mad. I just … well, how can people get better if you don’t tell them what you honestly think?”
“I don’t think everyone wants to hear what you honestly think, Folsom,” Himalaya said, laying a hand on his arm.
“Maybe I could go talk to him,” Folsom said. “You know, explain myself.”
I didn’t think the prince would listen, but I didn’t say anything as Folsom walked after Rikers. Himalaya was watching after the determined critic with fondness.
“You’re in love with him, aren’t you?” I asked her.
Himalaya turned, blushing. Bastille immediately punched me in the arm.
“Ow!” I said. (My Talent never seemed to work when Bastille was doing the punching. Perhaps it thought I deserved the punishment.) “Why’d you do that?”
Bastille rolled her eyes. “You don’t need to be so blunt, Smedry.”
“You’re blunt all the time!” I complained. “Why’s it wrong when I do it?”
“Because you’re bad at it, that’s why. Now apologize for embarrassing the young woman.”
“It’s all right,” Himalaya said, still blushing. “But please don’t say such a thing. Folsom is just being kind to me because he knows I feel so lost in Free Kingdoms society. I don’t want to burden him with my silliness.”
“But he said—gak!”
“He said ‘Gak’?” Himalaya asked, confused. She obviously hadn’t seen Bastille step forcefully on my toe in the middle of my sentence.
“Excuse us,” Bastille said, smiling at Himalaya, then towing me away. Once we were at a safe distance, she pointed at my face and said, “Don’t get involved.”
“Why?” I demanded.
“Because they’ll work it out on their own, and they don’t need you messing things up.”
“But I talked to Folsom and he likes her too! I should tell her about it so they can stop acting like lovesick crocodiles.”
“Crocodiles?”
“What?” I said defensively. “Crocodiles fall in love. Baby crocodiles come from somewhere. Anyway, that’s beside the point. We should talk to those two and settle this misunderstanding so they can get on with things.”
Bastille rolled her eyes. “How can you be so clever sometimes, Smedry, but such an idiot other times?”
“That’s unfair, and you—” I stopped. “Wait, you think I’m clever?”
“I said you’re clever sometimes,” she snapped. “Unfortunately, you’re annoying all the time. If you mess this up, I’ll … I don’t know. I’ll cut off your thumbs and send them to the crocodiles as a wedding present.”
I crinkled my brow. “Wait. What?”
She just stalked away. I watched her go, smiling.
She thought I was clever.
I stood in a happy stupor for a few minutes. Finally I wandered back over to Sing and Himalaya.
“… think about it,” Himalaya was saying. “It’s not the Librarian part that’s a problem, it’s the evil part. I could start a self-help program. World-Dominating Cultists Anonymous or something like that.”