Summerland. Michael Chabon
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“Breathe!” he heard Jennifer T. call.
He kept his eyes open, too: and connected. There was a burst of white flame, a whoomp shot through with a crackle, and a sweet, unpleasant smell like burnt cheese. Another head came spinning at him, and he swung, and there was another sharp blazing whoomp. He fought off three more of the head-bombs, swinging wild and hard, and then, it seemed, there was a power failure in Ethan’s head somewhere.
RED AND BLACK. Blood and sky. Jennifer T. was looking down at him, with the heavy sky spread out behind her, a nasty cut on her cheek. Then a gamy, butcher-shop smell: Cutbelly. And finally, something jabbing at his cheek: Cutbelly, again, poking him and poking him with one of his sharp little fingers.
“Wake up, piglet!”
Ethan lay on his back, in the doomed green grass of the Summerlands.
“I’m awake,” he declared, sitting up.
“Come,” Cutbelly said. “The Rade has carried away the Boar Tooth mob. They have felled all the trees on either side of the gall. We have only a short while to leap through or be forced to find another route back. That could take a while. Come! Failed or not, we must get out of here.”
Failed. The word resounded in his mind. He had struck out, swinging. Some kind of marvellous opportunity had been granted to him, and before he could even begin to understand what was happening to him, he had blown his chance. He could already taste the regret of the lost moment, how it would haunt him for the rest of his life.
“Will they—are they all dead?” he said. “What about Cinquefoil?”
“I’m all right,” said a gruff voice behind him. “You get back to the Middling now. No telling what Coyote’s up to there.”
Ethan rolled over and saw the little chief crouching on the ground beside him. He was filthy, and his hair dripped pale streaks down his grimy cheeks. The coat of rough mail he wore over his buckskin had been slashed through and through. It hung in tinkling strips from his shoulders. His tan leggings sagged, his feathered cap sat askew, its savage green feather snapped in two. And his quiver of arrows was empty.
“I’m in yer debt,” the ferisher said, sounding unhappy about it. “Nice work with that stick o’ yers.”
“You were amazing.”
“I weren’t nothing. I done nothing. I saved nothing and no one and all was lost.”
“Did he get your… your family?”
“Those in the mob what aren’t my sister or my brother are my child, my mother, or my aunt,” he said. His voice broke with sorrow. “ And all o’them ta be changed. Twisted inta the things ya saw, them skrikers.”
“Greylings, too,” the werefox pointed out, in a morose tone. That must be the name of those horrible little grey children whose bodies littered the field.
“And greylings.” Cinquefoil shuddered. “And then sent back, no doubt, ta take their revenge on the chief that failed ta keep ’em whole.”
There was that word again: failed.
“I wish I could have done more,” Ethan said. “We were too late.”
“There weren’t nothing ya coulda done. Coyote and the Rade, they grown stronger and swifter in the last one thousand years, as we have grown scattereder and few.”
“Did he get them all? Everyone?”
“I don’t know, but I fear it’s so. Go, g’wan back. I mean to take off after them a ways, see if some got left behind.”
“We’ll come with you,” said Jennifer T. “We’ll help you find them if they’re there.”
But the ferisher shook his head.
“Go,” he said. “Ya heard Cutbelly. There ain’t much time.”
So they said goodbye to the little chief, and he turned and wandered through the charred ruin of the Birchwood off into the green fields beyond. Ethan could see that the fields were rutted with deep muddy tracks, as if some kind of heavy vehicles had passed that way. The farther away he got, the faster his pace became, and he was soon lost to view in the dim green haze of the Summerlands.
“Come on,” Cutbelly said. They turned back towards the ordinary forest of firs and pines through which they had come. Ethan followed after Jennifer T., who followed the scurrying shadowtail. They had not been walking long when Ethan became aware of a low, steady rustling in the trees around them.
“What’s that noise?” Jennifer T. said.
Cutbelly’s earlier warning, about the shadows’ not being shadows, had made little sense to Ethan at the time. Now he understood. The thick shadows that filled the woods with the half-night of an eclipse had detached themselves from the trees and hollows. They were following him and Jennifer T. and Cutbelly. They fluttered in great gauzy sheets, now drifting like a piece of rubbish caught by the wind, now flapping steadily with great vulture wingbeats. They passed through the limbs and trunks of trees, some weird cross between fishnet and smoke. And though Cutbelly was leading them as fast as his short legs could go, scurrying back to the world where such things were not, the false shadows were gaining on them.
They ran for home, so fast that snowdust began to drift and swirl around them in glittering white gusts. Cold burned the inside of Ethan’s nose. The air in his ears tinkled like ice. Ethan saw Jennifer T. trip over a root, and go flying forwards. He stopped and reached down to grab her hand. As he did so he heard a soft flutter of drapery, a curtain parting, and looked up to see one of the false shadows settle down over him and Jennifer T. Burning cold, a smell like rust on a cold iron skillet. Ethan reached up to fight it off and saw that he was still holding his stick. It caught on something inside the shadow, something at once springy and hard, and when he yanked it out there was a sickening wet sound. The shadow faded at once and was gone. Jennifer T. was back on her feet by now. She grabbed Ethan by the elbow and pulled him along the path they had been following. There was no sign of Cutbelly ahead, and Ethan looked back and saw, to his horror, that one of the false shadows had taken, lazily, to the sky. From its shifting silk depths there protruded the white tip of a bushy red tail.
There was silence, and Ethan thought, They got him. Then there was the rumble of an engine in the near distance.
“Harley,” said Jennifer T. “Big one.”
They were standing at the edge of the Clam Island Highway. They were home. The motorcycle roared downhill and then pulled onto the line for the Bellingham ferry.
“How’d we get here?” Jennifer T. said.