The Nexus Ring (12 page)

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Authors: Maureen Bush

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BOOK: The Nexus Ring
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I stared at her, all four feet and forty-four pounds of her.
Yeah, right
, I thought. And then I looked in her eyes. She had this look I’d never seen before, of such determination. “Smack the first one that comes near us,” I ­said.

She nodded, and we stood back to back, waiting and ­listening.

I could hear them both, Aleena panting lightly, the troll breathing in raspy gasps. They stepped closer to us, one from below, one from the side. Then another step. Maddy tightened her grip on the ­club.

The troll roared and charged at us. Maddy swung the club and he ducked. Aleena moved in from the side, and Maddy turned back and forth, swinging the club at both of ­them.

The rumblings deepened into solid thuds I could feel in my feet and up my legs. I could smell rock dust as the pounding moved around the face of the mountain. And there was the giant, looming over us. He must have been twice as tall as my dad, solid as a column of stone. His skin was grey and creased like
the mountain, and his face was still as a rock, watching
­us.

When he saw the troll and Aleena, his face scrunched up like he was smelling something disgusting. He bellowed, in a voice that shook the mountain, “Who brings vermin to my castle?”

I stood frozen with fear, like a troll turned to stone. Maddy nudged me and I shook myself. I held out the ring in the palm of my hand. The giant’s eyes widened when he recognized ­it.

The troll stepped closer, behind me, only held off by Maddy and her club. He spoke in a wheedling voice, “It’s
my
ring. If you give it to me, I won’t hurt you.” He held out his hand, meaty and grasping. When I didn’t react, he seemed to puff himself up to look larger and enormously ­threatening.

Then Aleena spoke, her voice soft and gentle. “Don’t trust that evil troll. Give me the ring and I’ll take you to your parents.” She held out a delicate hand. ”You can trust me,” she said. But I knew I couldn’t.

I turned to look up at the giant, expecting him to ask too. He just stood there, rock solid. “Why should I give you the ring?” I ­asked.

He stared down at me, a huge block. I shut my eyes so I didn’t have to see him. Then I heard him speak, in a deep rumble. “I will keep it safe.”

“That’s it?” I asked, angry at being surrounded by three monsters. “‘I will keep it safe’? No threats, no magic, no persuasions?”

“You must decide,” he ­replied.

I turned to Maddy, guarding me with the club. “Maddy, what should I do?”

Before she could answer, the troll bellowed, “Not her!
You
must decide!” He raised his arms towards the mountainside and a huge rock floated down. It stopped, hovering, above Maddy’s head. “If she speaks, I will drop the rock!”

The giant frowned and stepped forward, then stepped back again as the rock shifted above Maddy. She stood rigid, not even breathing, eyes staring up at the ­rock.

I could feel my whole body shaking. I felt sick, but I took a deep breath, trying to listen ­inside.

Then Aleena spoke. “Josh, give me –”

“Silence!” roared the ­giant.

The sound was so loud it hurt my ears. Everyone became silent and stared at the ring nestled in my hand. Even though the otter-people had told me to give the ring to the giant, it seemed impossible that I could trust this block of rock. But a sureness was growing deep inside of ­me.

I whipped my arm back, and threw the ring up to the ­giant.

The troll yelled, “no!” and launched himself up the mountain, arms reaching to catch the ring as it fell. Maddy jumped to the side, away from the rock plummeting to the ground where she’d been standing. Aleena followed the troll, grabbing for the ring, the troll, anything. The ring spun high into the air, then curved down, too soon, down towards the troll’s grasping ­fingers.

At the last moment the giant reached out and closed his great hand over it. The troll and Aleena both cried out, “No!”

The troll stood above us, looking from Maddy and me to the giant, his face dark red with anger. He opened his mouth to speak, but no sound came out. He raised his fist and bellowed as he launched himself at ­us.

The giant thudded down the mountainside and spoke, his voice like thunder. “Troll, be gone.”

The troll slowed but kept coming. The giant reached out with his enormous arm and plucked the troll from the path. The giant held the troll up to his face and whispered a rumbling, “Be gone, troll, or I will hold you up until the clouds leave and the sun shines on you.”

He dropped the wriggling troll below us, and Gronvald slunk into the woods, curses and threats drifting back to us. “I’ll get it back. It’s my ring. I’ll teach you to mess with me.”

Aleena stood gazing at us with a look of fury and loss all mixed together, then turned and glided down the ­mountain.

Now, it was just Maddy, the giant and ­me.

The giant was enormous. His face was craggy, with deep, shadowed furrows. His hair and eyes and clothes were as grey as Castle Mountain. His hands were huge, and looked like they’d been roughly chiseled from stone. And yet they were gentle hands. I studied him, and decided I’d draw him with a hard ­medium-­grey pencil, sharpened so I could get all the angles, but in a softer colour than Aleena or the ­troll.

The giant peered at the ring. “Nexus ring,” he said. “Yours?” and he looked at me. His voice was deep and rumbly, and he spoke slowly, as if he needed a long time to think before ­speaking.

Maddy cleared her throat. “It…it’s mine. But I don’t want it. I want you to keep it safe.”

“I am Keeper. I will keep it safe,” replied the ­giant.

“What’s your name?” I ­asked.

“I am Keeper,” he said, in his slow, deep ­voice.

“But what is your name?” I said. “What do people call you?”

“People call me ‘Aaah! A giant!’ Then they run away.”

“Josh,” Maddy ­interrupted.

“Just a minute, Maddy,” I ­said.

“Maybe he doesn’t have another name.” She turned to the giant. “May we call you Keeper?”

“I would be honoured,” he replied, bowing his head. Then he asked, “How did you get the ring?”

“It’s a long story,” I ­said.

I must have sounded tired, because Keeper answered, “Come to my castle, and tell me your story. I like stories.”

His castle? No way. “Uh,” I said, “we need to get home.”

Keeper leaned down to me, trying to concentrate, I think, but it was unnerving having him so close. I swallowed. “The ­otter-­p…” my voice cracked and I had to repeat myself. “The ­otter-­people said you could help us get home. We don’t know how to cross the veil back to our world.”

The giant smiled. “You returned the nexus ring. I will help you. First we must go to my castle. So you will know the ring will be safe.”

“Is it very far?” asked ­Maddy.

Keeper peered down at her and nodded. “You are tired. I will carry you.”

He patted his shoulder, then leaned down near me. When I realized he wanted me to sit on his shoulder, my stomach slid into my feet. I stared up at Keeper, shocked. His face lit up in a huge rocky grin and he nodded. I gulped, then scrambled onto his right shoulder. Then he reached for ­Maddy.

“Are you sure?” she asked me, looking ­wary.

I did a quick sketch on my leg, of Maddy and the giant and me, and it was light and funny and safe. I nodded to Maddy. “Come on up.” And then I didn’t feel safe at all, as Keeper bent down to pick up Maddy. I grabbed his head to hang on to. He settled Maddy on his left shoulder, and started walking, his footsteps reverberating up the ­mountain.

It was like I’d imagine riding an elephant to be, high and swaying, and very scary. But soon I forgot how I was moving, as my eyes widened at all the things I’d never seen before: the forest from high in the trees, eye to eye with birds in their nests. When the trees opened up, I had an incredible view across the valley. Quietly I sketched across my pant ­leg.

Maddy swayed with Keeper’s walk, one hand clasping his hand and the other in his hair to steady herself. She looked nervous, but excited too. We grinned at each ­other.

Keeper walked out of the trees at the base of a cliff. Castle Mountain rose straight above us. I almost fell off when Keeper swept his arm across the face of the ­mountain.

“My castle,” he ­announced.

Maddy gaped. “How do you get into it?”

“Watch,” he said, and a slow grin spread across his face. He climbed a series of rock steps, then followed a ledge along the face of the cliff. Lucky Maddy was against the cliff wall. I was on the outside edge. I hoped she didn’t notice me clinging to Keeper’s head. I couldn’t look ­down.

With a jerk, Keeper stopped and bent over. I slid off his shoulder in a ­weak-­kneed stagger. Maddy wobbled beside me. We were facing a deep crack in the mountain. “I can not carry you here. It is too narrow.”

Inside the crack were rock steps so big no human would recognize them. We started climbing, Keeper boosting us up the steps we couldn’t scramble over. Soon Maddy and I were sweaty and filthy. We kept climbing, struggling up the giant steps, trying to stay ahead of Keeper’s enormous hands pushing us ­up.

And then we were through, behind the face of Castle ­Mountain.

Chapter ­Eleven

Keeper

K
eeper swung us back onto his
shoulders
and kept walking, on a path winding up to the peak of Castle Mountain. When we reached the top we sat together, perched on the crest of the ­mountain.

We could see forever, down to the Bow River winding through meadows and across to the mountains ringing the valley. Dark clouds gathered around Storm Mountain, and wind pulled at our hair. Above us, an eagle ­soared.

Keeper reached into one of his deep pockets. “Are you hungry?” he ­asked.

Yes! Even more than sketching, I wanted to eat!

He held out two buns. In our hands, they were as big as loaves of bread. As we tore open the bread, he chuckled and the sound reverberated like an actor’s voice on a stage. “I have more buns. Eat. Eat!”

After we’d each devoured a loaf, Keeper said, “Now, tell me how you have the ring.”

And so we told him. He listened carefully. When we were done he sat back and sighed. “That is a good story. I will keep the ring safe.” He looked at Maddy. “Maddy liked it?”

“I did,” said Maddy, a little mournfully. “But not any more.”

“I have rings. You may choose one. Does Josh want a ring too?”

I shook my head. “No, thanks. I don’t need a ring. I just want to get home.”

Keeper nodded. “Come. I will show you where I will keep the nexus ring, and Maddy can choose a new one.”

We climbed down from the peak, along ledges and giant steps, into a cave. It was cool and dark and very deep. I couldn’t see to the end of it, even with Keeper’s ­torch.

Through the dimness, I could see shelves carved into the walls, a bed piled with blankets, a huge wooden table with chairs of various sizes, and a big stone fireplace. It was hard to see details in the dim light; I longed to stay and explore. But Keeper led us deep into the cave, where he set his shoulder against a slab of rock and began pushing. The rock screeched as it slid across the floor of the cave. Keeper reached into a hollow underneath, and pulled out a worn grey ­bundle.

“Come see rings, little Maddy.” Keeper opened the ragged cloth across one huge hand, revealing a dozen rings. “What do you like?”

Maddy looked carefully at them all. She tried on rings sparkling with jewels, but finally chose a small silver band engraved with a pattern of interlocking lines. “I like this. Is it safe?”

“This is a safe ring for Maddy. Elves made it.” He wrapped the cloth into a tight bundle and placed it back in the hollow. “After I take you home, I will put the nexus ring here.” Then he set his shoulder to the slab again, and slowly pushed it back into ­place.

“Will the ring be safe?” I ­asked.

“I am Keeper. It will be safe. Trolls do not like me.”

“They might trick you again,” Maddy ­said.

“They will not trick me again. Now, is it time to go home?”

“Yes,” said Maddy. “I want to go home.”

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