“What do you propose we do about that?” a squat, dull-faced dwarf in the front asked.
“Yes,” Lyra said sulkily. “It’s not like we can get out and walk.”
“That’s exactly what we should do,” Chisul said, moving to the side. “We need to beach this craft and get our bearings.”
They all stared out over the water. The boat was floating along easily in some kind of current. Across the water on either side they couldn’t see much-misty shapes maybe, more water definitely.
“That’s insane,” a barrel-chested hill dwarf who was peering over the side said. “We don’t know if there’s any land out there.”
“Besides,” Rose pointed out, “how are we supposed to steer this boat?”
Bradok might have got around to adding a rudder to Silas’s design, but there hadn’t been time. He suspected he knew why Silas had left off the rudder. He had trusted in Reorx. Without a rudder, there would be no way to take control of the ship. And it would have to go wherever it floated or drifted.
“She’s got a point,” Much said, narrowing his eyes at Bradok as though it were all his fault.
“Uh, guys,” Lyra said, pointing. “You might want to see this.”
Bradok edged to the front of the ship, where the railings were short enough to look over the side. Chisul, Rose, and Kellik all clambered up next to him to see. Bradok jumped up, catching hold of the side rail and pulling himself up to where he could swing his leg over the rail and perch there. In the dim glow of the lantern, he could spy black water about six feet below him, which disappeared in the darkness beyond the light.
“I don’t see-” Bradok began; then he gasped. Something had moved in the inky water. It was long and thick and seemed to have tentacles that trailed along after it. Bradok could see it clearly because its body gave off a bright yellow light.
The creature rolled over, a black eye gazing up at Bradok, before it dived and vanished.
“What was that?” he whispered, resisting the urge to flee to the back of the boat.
“You mean what are they?” Chisul echoed, awe in his voice.
Bradok turned and spotted dozens of the yellow creatures swimming up in front of them. They seemed to rise and dive in manic bursts of energy, flashing their lights as they went.
“Over there too,” Rose said.
Bradok craned his neck around and saw more of them swimming around off in the distance.
“This must be some kind of underground lake or ocean,” Rose offered. “It’s huge.”
“What do you think they eat?” Much asked.
Bradok wondered the same thing.
“Does anyone have a spear?” Chisul asked. “These things might be edible.”
Everyone nodded and scurried for suitable weapons.
Bradok stared over the side. The creature that had first swum close to appraise him seemed to have returned. Its body pulsed, slowly getting brighter then dimmer. In the changing light, Bradok could see paddlelike flippers attached to the front end of its body that waved up and down as it moved.
Then something else caught his eye.
From deep below he could see an answering glow that pulsed in time with the creature on the surface. As he watched the glow with widening eyes, it grew brighter and brighter and larger and larger until the pulsing thing was longer than the ship.
“Much,” he hissed. “Kellik.”
Suddenly the little creature went dark and plunged beneath the water. Bradok strained his eyes to follow it, but the dark water hid it as effectively as a slab of rock. As he stared, a burst of yellow light flashed up from the water. Bradok covered his eyes for a second, startled by the brightness. When he could see better, the light from below revealed a creature similar to the others only impossibly large. One of the monster’s fore-flippers broke the surface and swamped Bradok with its spray.
Like the small snakelike creature, the gargantuan version rolled over until Bradok was staring into its black, soulless eye. The unblinking eye was easily as big around as a pony keg.
“What is that … the mother of all these babies?” Kellik asked, clearly shaken.
“Or the daddy,” Much said, trying for humor.
A moment later, the eye disappeared and the massive creature vanished below the water. Bradok watched its body flash briefly as it streamed into the depths; then it was gone.
“New rule,” Rose said in a fearful voice. “No swimming.”
“Did you see the size of that thing?” Chisul asked. “This lake must be very huge indeed.”
“Aye,” Much said. “And deep.”
Bradok swung his leg over the side and dropped back into the bottom of the boat.
“We might as well get comfortable,” he said, sliding down into a sitting position. “This may be a long journey.”
After that first encounter with the huge yellow beast, there was only calm and stillness, punctuated by intermittent visits by the glowing creatures. By the third day on the lake, the tension combined with the strange tedium had taken its own toll on the group. An unnatural pall hovered over the survivors. No one spoke or sang or laughed.
“Something better happen soon, or I’m going to go mad,” Kellik whispered to Bradok as the two of them sat in the front, keeping watch.
“Well, at least we’re going the right way,” Rose said from nearby.
“How do you know that?” Bradok asked.
“Well, I’m an optimist. What choice do we have really?” Rose shrugged. “We might as well assume we’re headed in the right direction.”
Bradok chuckled, the sound seeming to echo unnaturally through the stillness.
“We could just as well be drifting in circles,” Chisul scoffed. “Sooner or later we’re going to have to try something other than just sitting here and rotting.”
“Like what?” Rose asked. “We can’t get off this boat, there’s nothing on board to paddle with, and even if there was, we have no idea which direction is best.”
“I don’t know if you’ve noticed,” Chisul said sarcastically, lowering his voice, “but the food’s running out, even with rationing. I guess we’ve got three or four more days’ worth, and then we’re going to start starving. I, for one, do not care to watch the children starve.”
Silence greeted his comment.
Bradok was worried about the food supply too, though he wasn’t going to admit it. They had about a dozen children with them. At some point they were going to have to try catching one of the glowing creatures and hope word didn’t get back to daddy.
“He’s right, you know. I think I hear your stomach rumbling from here,” Rose said, looking over at Bradok.
“That’s not me,” Bradok said, suddenly aware that he, too, heard something different than the eerie silence. As he strained to listen, he figured out what it was: a roaring noise, like rushing water.
Much grabbed his shoulder and pointed off into the darkness. At the very edge of visibility, a wall of rock emerged into view. In the center, right where the boat was headed, gaped an opening like an immense black maw.
“Everyone hold on to something!” Bradok cried out as he and Much leaped down to the bottom of the boat.
All the dwarves burst into action-some grabbing their possessions, others their loved ones-and clutching for something solid to hold on to.
Bradok had barely managed to grab onto one of the ship’s ribs and link arms with Rose when the ship pitched wildly, entering what seemed to be a dark tunnel. Suddenly they were being swept down and away from the lake at a tremendous speed.
A thunderous crash shook the boat, and they spun around. The dwarves on board were tossed about like rag dolls as the vessel pitched and rolled and rocked out of control.
Rose clung to Bradok’s arm, pressing her feet against one of the ribs of the ship to brace herself. Even as they careened through the black unknown, even as he wondered if he would live through that latest calamity, Bradok found himself distracted by the sweet smell of Rose’s hair.