CHAPTER TWELVE
âWhat are you going to do with
that?'
Xavier looked up at the pointed snout of the fish.
âWave it ... threatening ... to spook ye. Never come back,' the old man stammered.
âDo you think it's working?'
âNot yet.' His face creased. âSoon maybe.'
Xavier swerved his head around the fish and jumped to his feet. The man stumbled back, holding the fish out like a sword. âDon't come near ... intruders ... trespassers. What do you want?' He squinted. âAre you real?' He leapt forward and pinched Xavier's arm.
âOuch!' Xavier rubbed at his sleeve. âA little bruised but, yes, we're real.'
âI'm Isabella and this is Xavier. We didn't know anyone was here. We needed to hide from the men who were after us.'
The man calmed a little. âMen?' He sniffed. âHaven't seen any for a while, eh, Snowy?' He turned to the bear again. âNot lately. Thought they gave up. Thought everyone did. Alone. All alone...'
He again fell into incoherent mumbling.
Isabella stepped closer. âWho are you?'
âI ask the questions!' The old man thrust the fish in her direction, but it slipped from his hands. Isabella ducked just in time. It slammed against the wall and slid to the floor.
âOoops. Sorry. Slippery ... tasty, but slippery. Apologies.' He wrung his hands.
âGo on then,' Xavier said. âAsk your questions.'
He opened his mouth, then closed it. âGot none.' He flopped into a red, freying armchair and laughed quietly â until he sprang upright.
âFish. I'll cook fish.' He raced over, picked up the flung fish and brushed it off. âTasty. You watch.
Mmm mmm.
Best ever.'
He tore clumps of pages out of the ripped book and twisted them into long strips. Isabella went to stop him but Xavier held her back. He wedged the strips between pieces of wood, and the fire was soon filling the stove.
Laying the fish between two pieces of steel mesh, he tied the corners with wire and placed it on the flames. He sat in his lounge chair, a proud grin across his grizzled face. âTasty. You'll see.' He tore some more pages and twisted them into strips.
Isabella snatched her arm away from Xavier. âYou can't burn books.'
âCan,' the man replied. âJust did.'
âBut it's not right. They're ... books.'
âThey burn well. No other use for 'em.'
âYou could read them. Learn from them.'
The man burst into a throaty laugh that shook his body. âToo late for that. Wrote lots of 'em. No good. Might as well burn 'em.' He shook his head.'
âYou're an author?' Xavier asked.
âNo, I'm...' He grabbed the handle of the wire mesh and held the fish in the air. âCan't remember...' He shrugged, flipped the fish and put it back on the fire. âI warned 'em. About the water. No-one listened.'
âYou wrote about the floods?' Isabella asked.
âYes, yes, yes. Books, articles. Lots of us did. All scientists.' His bushy eyebrows sailed up his forehead. âThat was me. A scientist. Ha! Ask Snowy. He'll tell ye. Told them what they needed to do. Didn't listen. Said it couldn't happen. Ha!'
His body slumped; his eyebrows and voice lowered. âA few listened, not enough.' He picked up a book. âIf no-one listens,
no point talking.'
âYou knew the floods would happen?' Isabella asked.
He nodded. âWe had proof.'
âAnd the government knew?'
âThey asked me to...' He clicked his fingers, searching for the word. âWrite! To
write
a report. Told 'em there's more water today than at any other time in human history. Told 'em the city wasn't prepared, needed to rebuild the barriers. They seemed convinced, then said no! Just like that.' He frowned. âOne year later, floods hit. My plan needed ten months. Sad waste.'
He leapt from his chair again. âFish's ready.' He took it off the fire, removed the upper wire mesh and held it out to Xavier. âTry that.'
Xavier gingerly tore off a piece and nibbled a small corner. âIt's good.' He threw the rest into his mouth.
âHuh!' The old man again broke into laughter and held the fish out to Isabella. âMiss?'
âThank you.' It was smoky and tender. âWho are you?'
âI'm...' The old man stopped. âSnowy?' He looked to the bear, stroking his beard. âDon't know. Huh! Forgotten.' He threw some fish into his mouth. âNot all bad ... The fish are bigger, juicier. Never ate 'em before all this.'
âHow did you know about the floods?' Isabella asked.
âStudied the ... the ... what do you call wind and rain and clouds?'
âThe weather?' Xavier suggested.
âYes, the weather, that's it. Studied it for years. Found the book and the astrolabe. Proved it all.'
âThe astro-what?' Xavier asked.
âAstro
labe.'
He pointed to a globe made of multiple layers of metal rings with intricate markings on each one. âTrend estimation, finite differences, partial differential equations, weather patterns, cycles of stars and planets, Babylonians, Aristotle. Fascinating.'
Xavier raised a sceptical eyebrow at Isabella. âYeah, fascinating.'
âIt's all written here.' He pulled a tattered book from a nearby shelf. It had a faded red cover with frayed threads. âHighly prized. Very rare. Certainly not for burning.'
Isabella took the book and carefully turned the fragile pages. They were filled with drawings of moons and stars, ancient astronomy equipment, graphs and charts with scribbled notations.
âLe Previsioni,'
she read.
âMeans “Predictions”. Written a thousand years ago.' The old man tweaked the bear's cheek. âCaused a stir, eh, Snowy?'
âYou knew the floods would happen because of a metal ball and a thousand-year-old book?' Xavier asked.
âOld things can be good.' He drifted into mumbles and half-laughter.
âSo you predict things like Nostradamus did?' Xavier asked.
âYes, but I'm better looking than him.' He laughed and slapped his knee.
âCan you give us a prediction now?'
His head fell forward and he became serious. âYou'll laugh like they all did.'
âWe won't,' Isabella said. âWe promise.'
The old man sighed. âThe Skelene is coming.'
âThe Skelene?' Isabella asked.
âA sea monster.'
Xavier laughed. Isabella gave him a death stare.
âTold you you'd laugh. People laugh when they're scared.'
âI'm not scared, it's just a little ... impossible.'
âThey said the floods were impossible. Look at us now.' He jumped up and scurried between two rows of shelves. âMany have seen 'em. Many believe.'
âWhat's he doing?' Xavier asked.
âShhh,'
Isabella whispered.
âOuch.' There was a clunk of falling books.
âAre you okay?' Isabella asked.
âYes. Fine. I...' His voice fell away before he reappeared with a large leather-bound book. He sat on his chair and opened it with a groan. âIn Norse legend, the Skelene rose from the deep.' He flicked through the pages, searching. âFloating quietly on the waves. Sneaky thing. Sailors thought it was an island, but when a ship came close the Skelene pulled it under, ate everyone on board. Here!' He pointed at an illustration of an oval-headed beast with bulging eyes wrapping its many tentacles around the hull of a ship.
âReally?' Xavier sat back in his chair and crossed his arms.
âIt's all in here.'
Isabella read the title:
âA Natural History of Norway
by Erik Pontoppidan, Bishop of Bergen, 1752.'
The old man turned through pages of sea creatures resembling serpents, giant finned dragons and colossal squid. âZiphius, Pristis, Physeter, Architeuthis...'
âAnd these are...?' Xavier asked.
âSea monsters,' he answered, as if he were asking for one sugar in his cup of tea.
âOf course.' Xavier shook his head.
âBased on sailors' stories.'
âThe ones who weren't eaten,' Xavier reminded him.
Isabella poked her elbow firmly into Xavier's side.
âHey!'
âThey usually stay away from the mainland but, with rising seas and flooding, they're moving. Drawn by currents.' His voice softened and he hugged Snowy. âPunishment for what we let happen.'
Xavier stared at him. âSea monsters? Alive and well in Grimsdon?'
âNever used to be.' He shook his head. âEverything's changed.'
âYou don't think you just need to get out more? Take in some fresh air and get a bit of sun?'
Isabella leant forward on her chair and kicked Xavier in the shins.
âThey created whirlpools, called Skagarag. Dragged ships to the bottom of the the ocean.'
Isabella read from the book: âEven the most experienced sailors feared the Skelene. Often, descriptions of the beast were sketchy, partly because of its size but also because the sailors who had seen her were so traumatised by the experience that they often lost the power of speech or simply fell into a crazed delirium from which they never recovered.'
âAnd you believe this because it's in a dusty, old book?' Xavier asked.
âAnd because of the fish.'
âThe fish told you?'
âNo,' the old man laughed. âFish didn't tell me. I can't talk
fish.
That would be crazy.'
Xavier shook his head and looked to Isabella. âYeah, crazy.'
âLast few months, fish've been leaving.'
âMaybe they're off on their summer holiday,' Xavier offered.
The old man leant forward and whispered,
âThey're scared.'
Xavier whispered back.
âOf what?'
âThe Skelene, o' course.'
âYou're basing your theories on a bunch of fish who have brains the size of a pea.'
âFish've been around for five hundred million years. Humans much less. Look at the mess we've made.'
âWhy are you here?' Isabella asked.
âFloods.'
âI mean, why are you still here? Why didn't you get out when the rescuers came?'
âIt's peaceful. No phones. No traffic or bad televsion. I...' He turned away, picked up his bear and shuffled to the window in his slippers. âYou can leave now.'
âI'm sorry, I didn't mean to ... Can we come back?' Isabella asked. âWe have a friend who I know would love to meet you.'
Xavier shot her a wide-eyed look.
The old man remained at the window, staring, not answering. He held Snowy to his cheek. They began to leave when Isabella snuck one last peek and noticed he held a photo in one hand. It was of a woman holding a small, laughing girl. Isabella took the apples from her pocket and held them out. âI'm sorry we broke into your home.'
The man quickly shoved the photo into his pocket. He turned and froze. His wrinkled face creased even further, as if he had no idea what he was looking at.
âPlease take them.' Isabella held the fruit out further. âMy friend Griffin grows them.'
The man reached out. His gloves were blackened and worn through at the fingertips. He took the apples as if they were rare jewels.
âThey're delicious. Try one.'
He put it slowly to his lips and took a bite. His face softened. A small laugh escaped from his mouth.
âWe'll go now.' They turned to leave.
âYou can come back,' he said. âCan you bring more of these?'
Isabella nodded. âAs many as you like.'
Xavier made sure they were out of the old man's hearing before he spoke. âAre you crazy? Why do you want to come back?'
âGriffin would love to see the astrolabe.' She paused. âAnd I want to know more about how the floods happened.'
âDoes it matter?'
âIt might. That's what I plan to find out.'
CHAPTER THIRTEEN
âWe're here!' Xavier jumped through the window.
The twins leapt up from the lounge where they'd snuggled under a blanket with Fly. âWhat did you bring back?'
Xavier held out his hands as Isabella climbed in behind him. âNothing.'
âNothing? You've been gone for hours!' Griffin lay
The Wizard of Oz
on the table.
âWe met someone.' Xavier sat at the table and took an apple from the bowl.
âYou met someone?' Griffin asked Isabella. âWhere?'
âAt the State Library.'
âAn adult.' Xavier took another bite.
âWho was he?'
Xavier screwed up his face. âNot sure. Interesting guy to talk to.'
âYou
talked
to him?' Griffin asked. âWhat if he was a murderer? What if he had a weapon?'
âHe did. He tried to attack us with a fish.'
âA fish?' Raffy asked.
âThat's silly.' Bea laughed.
âAnd a bit smelly.' Xavier sniffed. âAnd what if he was an interesting man who cooked us great-tasting fish and knows a whole lot about what happened three years ago?'
âWhat was his name?' Griffin asked.
âHe couldn't remember,' Isabella said. âBut he had an astrolabe.'
âAn astrolabe? A real one?'
âWhat's an astrolabe?' Raffy asked.
âIt's like an ancient computer used to predict the position of the sun and planets andâ'
âAnd the floods,' Xavier added. âAlong with some kind of ancient book.'
âWhat book?' Griffin asked.
âThe Predictions,'
Isabella said.
Griffin sank back into his seat. âSo it really exists?'
Fly held up her notepad:
What is it?
âA book written by a philosopher called Galeotto over a thousand years ago. The Church and government accused him of challenging their authority and ordered the book to be destroyed. One man's whole life's work wiped out, just because he suggested the world worked differently than we thought. They say he went mad after that. Philosophers for centuries have suspected secret copies existed.'
âIt seems at least one does.' Isabella smiled.
âSo maybe it was good we spoke to this murderous madman after all?' Xavier finished his apple and slapped Griffin on the back.
âHe still could be a murderer.' Griffin's eyebrows knotted. âHe's just a much more interesting potential murderer now.'
âHe said he was asked to write a report for the government, but they didn't like what he had to say, so they ignored him.' Isabella's voice softened. âHe said if they'd listened to him, they could have prevented the floods.'
An uneasy quiet seeped into the room.
âBut he also spoke to a stuffed bear,' Xavier leant in, âso I wouldn't rush into believing everything he says. Now, I think there's just enough daylight left for a flying lesson â who's interested?'
âI am!' Raffy sprang off his chair.
âLooks like it's you, young man.'
âCan I come, too?' Bea pleaded.
âDon't see why not.'
âMaybe that's not a greatâ' Griffin's words were trampled by the sounds of the twins racing to the rooftop. Fly closed her book with a scowl aimed at Xavier and went after them.
âThey'll be safe, Griffman.' Xavier winked at him. âTrust me, I know what I'm doing.'
Griffin's eyes drilled into Xavier's back as he leapt up the stairs. âHe's reckless, Isabella, and that's going to get us in trouble one day.'
âI know he's a bit mouthy.' She looked over her shoulder to make sure the kids were gone. âBut he helped fight off men who tried to kidnap us.'
âKidnap you? When? Are you okay?'
She nodded. âIt was just a bit of a shock seeing three adults in one day. One had a card saying he was a government agent for a National Resettlement Program.'
âResettled out of Grimsdon?'
âI think so.' Isabella paused. âWhat if the government could have stopped the floods like the old man said? We'd still be in school; you'd be brilliant and topping every class; we'd still go to the movies and the library and Mrs. Gray's bakery...' Her voice cracked. âIt's getting more dangerous here. Sneaker waves, kidnapping agents, food is harder to find â and then there's Sneddon and his men. Do you think it's time to go home?'
âThis is home.'
âFor how much longer?'
Griffin wanted to hug her, to do something to take away how sad she looked. He wanted to tell her it would be all right, that he'd protect her. That at least they had each other. As he began to lift his arms towards her, she stood up.
âWe better go upstairs or Raffy will stay in that flying machine all night.'
Griffin quickly tucked his hands into his pockets and followed her upstairs.