Read The Boy with the Hidden Name Online
Authors: Skylar Dorset
Etherington and then we go to the goblins.”
He seems to be much calmer now that we have a plan,
a direction. I think he was feeling rudderless without the
prophecy, and it was making him panicked. I think of how
panic- inducing it must be for someone like Will, who lives in
a world where he’s used to thinking he knows what’s going to
happen and suddenly he’s lost that. It must be, in a way, like
suddenly losing a sense, suddenly going blind or deaf.
“How are we getting to the goblins?” Kelsey asks.
“We’re going to take the subway, of course,” Will says
matter- of- factly.
“The subway is a mess,” Kelsey says.
“It’s true,” I agree. “The lines were all backed up. We were
going to take it to go find you.”
“It’ll work for us,” Will assures us confidently.
Park Street is crowded during rush hour on the best of
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days, but it’s worse today, balanced on the edge of a full-
fledged riot. You can taste panic in the air.
“Everyone’s trying to get out of the city before it falls,” Will remarks, walking through the gates on the heels of a commuter. “As if that’s going to do any good.”
“Wait,” I say, confused. “Aren’t these…humans?” I hope no
one is eavesdropping.
“Well, yes. But an odd, sudden storm just rolled in and
church bells are falling out of towers,” Will points out. “It
doesn’t matter what you are— you’re getting away from here.”
“The Red Line trains will be running, right?” Aunt True
asks. “The human ones?”
“They should be. The human trains will run longer than
our trains will,” Will responds. “The goblins will fall back, but the trains will run as well as they can for as long as they can.”
We go down to the Red Line platforms, reaching the plat-
form in the middle, which is so packed you can barely move.
Will walks without apology, pushing through the crowd, and
I try to keep him in my sight and make sure everyone else is
still with us too.
We come out, finally, on the far side, near the fire exit
stairway.
A train sounds its horn, rolling up to the station toward us
on my left. At the same time, another train comes roaring in
from the tunnel on my right, going in the opposite direction.
The bells chime then. An awful jingle- jangling sound
that makes me feel queasy. My hands clench into fists
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automatically, and I back away from the fire exit stairway,
where the sound seems to be coming from.
The trains to our left and our right have their doors open.
“Selkie,” Will says slowly. He stands still, his eyes on the
fire exit stairway, watching, waiting, tense. “The goblins live
in the subway tunnels. Get into a tunnel, ask for the Erlking,
and use my name.”
“Wait, what?” I say, looking at him, confused. “Why are
you telling me this?”
“Get on the train,” he tells me.
I glance behind me. My aunts have already gotten on the
train, although Aunt Virtue is standing with her hand on the
door to keep it open. I look back at Will.
“Selkie,” Kelsey says to me, and I look at her.
She is staring up at the fire exit stairway. Where a faerie has
appeared, glowing palely in the dim T station.
The faerie is a Seelie. For a moment, looking up, I think
it might be my mother. It isn’t, but it could be; that’s how
strongly the Seelies resemble each other. Although I didn’t
think that when I was in Tir na nOg. Did they all look alike
then? Or is it just that they all look alike now?
In my moment of confusion, all hell breaks loose. It feels
like an earthquake shakes the station, the cement trembling
under our feet, fine vibrations that increase to tremors. The
regular commuters all look around in confusion that quickly
tips over into fear then rises to a crescendo of panic.
And then the floor literally begins rolling underneath us.
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“Go!” Will shouts, and I dart toward the waiting T, except
that the pavement cracks right in front of me, rising in an
impossibly high jagged cliff.
I try to scramble up over it, and I’m almost to the top when
I hear someone say my name. It must be the Seelie, saying it
with intent, because I cry out with the pain of it, and some-
one yanks hard on the hood of my sweatshirt, pulling me
back through the crowd of people, and I scream in panic and
wheel around to claw at whoever’s holding me.
I collide with the being that grabbed me. Who turns out
to be Will. He tumbles backward and into the open T door
opposite my aunts. He manages to get hold of me and pull
me in after him, and then the doors slide closed. The lights
of the T flicker off and then back on.
And then Kelsey says, “Where the hell are we?”
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T he train looks like the living room of some kind of
fancy hunting lodge, with comfy chairs positioned in
cozy little reading nooks around an enormous central fire-
place. I am with Will and Kelsey and Safford. My aunts, who
were the first people on the other T, the T we were all sup-
posed to get on, were stuck there when the platform cracked
between us.
“My aunts,” I say and reach for the closed doors, although I
don’t know what I’m going to do. How do you open subway
car doors once they’ve closed?
And then the subway swings into motion, taking us away
from the station. Away from the Seelie and the weird earth-
quake, but away from my aunts too.
I whirl back to Will. “No. Will. Take me back. I have to go
back. I have to get them.”
Will is massaging his face where I collided with him. “We
can’t go back.”
“
We
have
to
go
back, Will!
” I scream at him. “We can’t just leave them! There was a Seelie!”
“They’re on their own subway train. They’ll be on their way
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now. And anyway,
you’re
what they want, and you’re here.
That makes your aunts safer than they would be with you.”
“Will— ” I start and then truly register the surroundings
of the train around us. “Wait a second. Where are we? What
happened? We’re not even in
Boston
anymore.”
“We are. We’re just on an Otherworld train.”
“The Otherworld trains go to the Seelie Court! They’re evil!”
Will shakes his head. “Only the Green Line is evil. The Red
Line should take us to the Erlking.”
“It can’t,” I tell him. “It can’t take us anywhere without my
aunts and my father. We have to go back. This train has to
stop, right now.”
And then it does.
It screeches to a violent halt. The chairs skid forward, crash-
ing against the wall. We all lose our balance, tumbling to
the floor. The awful squealing of the wheels against the track
ends, and the silence that descends is deafening.
After a moment, I say hesitantly, “Did I do that with the
power of my mind?”
“No,” Will bites out as he gets back to his feet. “You didn’t.
I told you the Seelies were after you, didn’t I? We have to get
off this train.” Will is studying the doors.
“In the middle of a tunnel?” Kelsey asks.
“And go back for my aunts?” I say.
“No,” Will snaps. “We can’t go back for your aunts. Don’t
you get it? We’re being
hunted
. The Seelies stopped this train.
So we have to get out into the tunnels.”
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“And what are we going to do once we’re there?” I demand
hotly. “We have to go somewhere, we might as well go— ”
“We’ll go to the goblins.” Will cuts me off brusquely and
tries ineffectively to pry the doors open. “This is all
so
much easier to do when you’ve got a traveler with you,” he comments, and then, “Don’t tell Benedict I said that.”
“Aren’t you a wizard?” I ask. “Just magic it open.”
“Sorry, I was busy learning important spells like disguising
silver boughs to smuggle into prison for you and casting a
protective enchantment over an entire city. I didn’t bother to
memorize the spell for
opening
subway
train
doors
.”
“You don’t know the spell to
open
things
?” I say in disbelief.
And then the doors slide open.
I look at Will, who looks back at me, and then we both
turn our heads.
Safford is replacing the emergency door release handle.
“What?” he says at our looks. “Didn’t you want to open
the door?”
“Magic trains have emergency door release handles,”
says Kelsey.
“Safety first,” says Will, and then, “Thanks, Safford.” He
leaps out the open doorway into the dark tunnel behind then
turns back to the rest of us. “Come on.”
There is a moment when I stand at the edge, hesitating.
I look at Kelsey and Safford, who are depending on me to
keep them safe. I think of my aunts and my father. I don’t
know how I’m supposed to be keeping all of these people
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safe. And I haven’t even started to think about Ben, who is
somewhere dangerous, undoubtedly getting himself into yet
another situation where he will need my rescue.
I don’t know what to do, but I believe Will that we are sit-
ting ducks on this train. Better to keep moving.
I jump down after him.
Kelsey and Safford follow.
Will starts walking, and we trail behind him, for lack of
anything better to do, I guess.
“Tell me how being in the subway tunnel is going to help
us get to the goblins.”
“Well, the goblins live in the subway tunnels. We were
going to get there the civilized way on the train, but this will work just as well.”
“The goblins,” Kelsey repeats in a processing tone of voice,
as if she is taking careful notes for when she writes up her
memoir of this experience, “live in the subway tunnels.”
“Yes,” Will answers crisply, as if Kelsey should have figured
out much earlier in her life that goblins lived in the Boston
subway. “Did you never wonder why your subway system is
so excruciatingly incapable of functioning correctly?”
“I wondered that all the time,” retorts Kelsey. “I never
thought it was because of goblins.”
“They sabotage the tracks,” Will explains.
“Do they hate us?” I ask.
“No, they’re just mischievous and frequently bored,”
Will replies.
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“Can’t they get hobbies?” grumbles Kelsey, and I don’t
blame her, because the malfunctioning subway
is
annoying.
“Brody didn’t live in the subway tunnels,” I say.
“How do you know where Brody lives?” counters Will, and
he has a point.
“So the goblins will help us get to Ben,” I begin.
“And we can use them to check up on your aunts and your
father. The goblins have the run of Boston,” Will says.
“The goblins,” says Kelsey, in that same thoughtful tone of
voice, “have the
run
of
Boston
.”
Will rolls his eyes as if Kelsey has just revealed she doesn’t
know the alphabet.
The tunnel is very quiet. I expect there to be the rumble
of subway trains from other places, but there is nothing but
silence all around us. I listen harder, for the chiming of bells, for Seelies to rush up on us. I imagine, as I listen harder, that what I can hear is scuffling.
“Are there rats in the tunnels?” I ask suddenly.
“Of course there are,” Will answers. “What kind of ridicu-
lous question is that?”
I draw to a stop. “Ben told me there weren’t any rats in
the tunnels.”
“Then he lied,” Will answers, sounding unconcerned. “He’s
a faerie, Selkie, it’s what he
does
. Anyway, what do you have against rats?”
I start moving again, but going very slowly, disgruntled over
the revelation of Ben’s lie. “That’s right, you love rats,” I recall.
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“You love
rats
?” says Kelsey.
“I love all creatures,” Will announces primly.
“All of a sudden you’re Doctor Dolittle?” remarks Kelsey.
“This is the most inane conversation,” Will complains. And
then, suddenly, “Shh.” He stops walking, holding his hand
up. He stands there for a second, listening.
“Do you hear anything?” Kelsey breathes behind me.
“No,” I whisper back.
But it is clear that Will hears something. He turns in a
circle, looking all around us, through the dimly lit gloom of
the tunnel.
And then I hear it too: bells. The chiming jingle bells of the