Read Artifacts Online

Authors: Pete Catalano

Tags: #children's, #fantasy, #fairy tales, #action and adventure, #hidden treasure, #magic

Artifacts (11 page)

“Did you see him whip that snake?” I said to Korie.

Korie laughed. “Oh my gosh. I didn’t know what to do when the other one wanted a snake to carry along, too. I felt so bad.”

Crunch ran past us and up to the Grumpkins. As they looked straight ahead down the path, he chattered away.

“We should’ve given him Crunch to play with,” I said. “That would have taken his mind off of the snake.”

Chapter Fourteen

 

 

After being in the forest for what seemed like forever, we finally followed the Grumpkins into another clearing. I shaded my eyes against the bright sun, spying a run-down, four-story, ramshackle Victorian house in the distance. Judging the gap between where we stood and the house, it couldn’t have been more than a football field away.

“What is that?” I asked Skylights, who had stepped up next to me.

“A ghost,” Skylights said. I could hear the frustration in his voice.

“You mean it’s not really there?” I asked.

“Oh, it’s there,” he assured me. “It’s the place Hook and Butkus and the others are hiding all the things the teams have brought them over the past couple of days.”

“How do you know that?” Korie asked.

“We followed Smee and Durkin here,” Skylights said. “They were arguing and fussing back and forth so much they never noticed us. We saw them unload a truckload filled with boxes into the house and then leave as quickly as they arrived.”

“So, whatever this artifact is, it should be in that house?” Tank asked.

“Yes,” Skylights said. “There’s just no way on earth to get inside to look.”

“Why’s that?”

Skylights never took his eyes off the house. “Give it time, Jax, See how it taunts us.”

The Grumpkins moved to either side of Skylights, and Crunch was still right beside them. The moment Crunch saw the house he took off running.

As he lumbered across the grass, I could feel the ground rumble, tremors rippling and racing through the earth. When Crunch had run about twenty yards, the ground between the house and us
exploded
.

Large, gnarled, twisted branches of a thick, heavy vine covered with razor-sharp thorns ripped through the earth in all directions, spiraling into the sky. The thickets were so massive and invasive they choked the life out of everything around them.

“Blackthorn,” Grifter said, stepping from the woods behind Korie. “It’s a gift Hook brought to help keep us, and anyone else, out.”

“It’s just as I imagined from the stories my mom read to me when I was little,” Korie said. “But even then, it didn’t seem nearly so … evil.”

The branches knitted into an impenetrable wall. Dark and foreboding, it rose thirty feet into the air and raced over one hundred feet across the ground. There was no way in save a small, five-foot wide opening just to the right of center.

“The house is a ghost,” Skylights said. “The Blackthorn disappears long enough to allow a peek, then comes roaring back.”

Walking straight toward the Blackthorn, I was mesmerized. Stopping at the base, I tilted my head back to see how high it was and immediately got that feeling I was falling off the top.

“You can’t climb it and you can’t go through it,” Skylights said, walking up behind me. “We’ve been trying since the moment we arrived.”

I ran my hand across the long, sharp thorns and the stark, black, twisted skeleton formed by its branches.

This is truly the most deadly thing I’ve ever seen
, I thought.

“Those thorns will rip and tear your flesh if they have the opportunity.”

“Seriously?” I asked. “You’re talking about the Blackthorn like it’s alive.”


It is
,” Skylights said emphatically. “Go ahead. Touch it again.”

Reaching out for the thorns, the branches bowed out to meet my hand and the thorns slowly turned toward it.

“Crapola!” I yelled, jumping back and shoving my hand in my pocket.

“If you’re going to battle pirates,” a familiar voice said, walking up behind us, “you’re going to need words a lot more awesome than that.”

I didn’t even have to turn around. “Mouth, I knew they wanted to give you back, but I didn’t think we’d see you this soon.”

“I’m ready to lead this battle with my new friends,” Mouth said, putting his arm around Skylights, who quickly shrugged it off.

“Lead the battle?” I asked.

“Sure,” Mouth said. “I’ll tell Tank and the Grumpkins what to do from the safety of my command center in one of the tree houses. Our victory will be famous all over the world.”

I tried to hide my smile. “You’re a legend in your own mind,” I said. Then I turned back toward the Blackthorn. “How does the wall appear out of nowhere to protect the house?”

“It’s not a wall,” Skylights said. “It’s a maze, with more than one entrance and choices along the way. The walls are high so you can’t see the way out. We almost lost poor Grifter a few times. As hard as we try, we weren’t able to get through the first few layers.”

“So why do you want to get in there so badly?” I asked. “What is the artifact?”

Skylights looked at the others and then nodded. “A remnant of a time when all the great stories were written which has become a threat to the very foundation of Fairy Tale Land … ”


There’s a land!
” Crunch cried, hearing those two words put together for the first time.

“Let me start from the beginning,” Skylights said. “While seizing a ship and plundering it for every last bit of treasure, Captain James Bartholomew Hook stumbled upon a man, hiding amongst the crew, who had originally hired the ship to take him to Neverland.”

My head was swirling. “Say, ‘Let me start from the beginning,’ again.”

Skylights laughed. “It’ll get easier. I promise.”

“Who was the man?” Korie asked.

“His name was J. M. Barrie,” Skylights said.

I shot a look at Korie. “The guy who wrote
Peter Pan
?”

Skylights smiled as Grifter and Touch snickered behind him. “The man who spent time with us and Peter in Neverland and later wrote about his experiences.”

“This is the craziest thing I’ve ever heard,” Mouth said, “and I’ve told some doozies.”

“It does get stranger,” Skylights said. “Barrie was on his way to talk to Peter about an artifact which could supposedly change the course of fairy tales forever.”

“How could it change them?” I asked.

“It can rewrite them,” Skylights said.

“Why does everybody think the artifact is here?” Korie asked.

“We’ve been looking for it for the better part of the last century … ”

“Century?” Mouth asked.

“Some of us are a great deal older than we look, Mouth,” Skylights said and then continued. “Years ago, we had thought we found it. After much searching and inquiry, we traced it to a Lost Boy named Slightly who stumbled on it in the forest during one of his searches for treasure. We believe it was taken in one of the raids Hook or even Blackbeard before him had made and was lost over the years.”

“What did he say when you asked him?” Crunch asked.

“Slightly is much like Mouth in that his memories are based on pure fabrications.”

Tank cracked up. “He knows you pretty well, Mouth.”

“So you kept looking?” Korie asked.

Skylights nodded. “We kept looking.”

“By the time we realized Slightly did have the artifact, he had left Neverland,” Grifter said.

“The only thing he left behind was a box of
treasures
. Baubles, trinkets, and shiny pieces of broken
things
that weren’t worth much, except they meant the world to him,” Touch continued. “There was also a note from Wendy, thanking him for the gift he had so kindly given her when she left and saying she would use it to make no less than wondrous things.”

“Wendy was given the artifact?” I asked.

“Yes,” Skylights said. “And she brought it back with her to London. Over the years, her children and grandchildren arrived here at various times and we believe one of them brought it with them to North Carolina. We still aren’t sure what it is or where to look for it.”

“So that’s why Hook’s here?” Korie asked.

“Yes.” Skylights nodded. “When he found out about the artifact, he became obsessed with it and launched a very elaborate mission to retrieve it.”

“So he recruited Butt-Kiss?” I asked.

“The villains of Fairy Tale Land needed the most ruthless and the strongest for this journey,” Skylights said. “They’ve also been given special gifts, like the Blackthorn, to try to secure their success. The only weakness those two share are the allies they keep closest to them.”

“Smee and Jerkin,” Tank said.

“Smee and Durkin,” Skylights confirmed.

“Why are you and the other Lost Boys here?” Korie asked.

Skylights smiled shyly. “We’ve had some success with Hook in the past, so the others thought we would be the best choice to stop him before he was able to retrieve the artifact.”

“Why did you wait so long to come here after they arrived?” Mouth asked. “They had a
waaaaay
longer head start.”

“We didn’t know Hook was gone from Neverland,” Skylights said. “Until it was nearly too late.”

I laughed. “He and Smee must have been surprised to see you show up in the cafeteria.”

“Butkus and Durkin, as well,” Touch said. “Grifter even brought a very special clock which tick-tocked loud enough for Hook to believe we had brought the crocodile with us.”

“We’ve been to every garbage dump and flea market
slash
junkyard we could find,” Mouth complained. “Why didn’t Hook just say, ‘This is what I’m looking for, go and get it?’”

“Hook doesn’t know what it is, either,” Skylights said. “As the items are recovered and brought to him they are dragged back out to this house to be looked over and sorted through.”

“How do you know Hook still doesn’t know what it is?” I asked.

“Smee gave it away when he stopped by our table the other day. He didn’t say anything about the artifact directly, but he asked very Smee-like questions. What were we looking for and if we didn’t know what we were looking for, would we know it when we saw it?”

Touch laughed. “We told him we had no idea what he was talking about.”

“He then asked that if we were looking for something and had an idea of what it was, would we know where to look?”

“I’m getting a headache just listening to Smee’s part of the conversation,” Korie said.

“And what did you tell him?” Tank asked.

“We told him that we had been here looking for an artifact. But we had it on good authority that Butkus had found it months ago and was keeping it hidden,” Skylights said. “We told him the only chance for him to get that answer would be through Durkin.”

I cracked up. “Jerkin doesn’t know anything about anything.”

Skylights smiled. “That’s the beauty of it. It gave them a chance to drive a wedge deep into their partnership and give us more time to find our way in through the maze.”

“Do we know what it is we’re looking for?” Korie asked.

“Do we know what it does?” Crunch asked.

“Do we know what fairy tale it’s from?” Tank asked.

Skylights shook his head. “We don’t know anything about it except that …”

“It can change the course of fairy tales forever.” I finished his sentence.

Chapter Fifteen

 

 

Mouth had this weird scrunched up look on his face like he just bit into a lemon. “So, J.M. Barrie really went to Neverland on a vacation and wrote about his trip. An artifact from some fairy tale was given as a present to Wendy, who gave it to her ancestors, who brought it here. So then Hook comes to town, gets middle schoolers to hunt down artifacts which he hides in that house which is protected by a spell from some powerful sorceress.”

Skylights shrugged. “Exactly.”

“Back to the maze,” I said.

“Great opportunity is usually disguised as unsolvable problems,” Korie said. “There are often secrets and patterns to mazes. We just need to get this maze to tell us its secret.”

“Oh, so now you’re the maze expert?” Mouth whined. “Or maybe I should say
mexpert
?”

“Ignore him,” Tank said. “How do we do that?”

“The only way is from the inside.” She sighed. “Go in the various entrances and hopefully make the right choices as we’re walking through. We should come out in or near the middle.”

“I hate
near
the middle,” Crunch said. “With my luck, I’ll always be over just one row too far. Close enough to see you guys, but not close enough to get there. You’ll watch as something hunts me down and eats me since you won’t be able to get there in time to save me.”

Mouth cracked up. “Yeah, but we’ll get there in plenty of time to see it get about half the way through. That’s
a lot
of eating, no matter how massive the monster is.”

“Okay, enough about the mystery monsters eating Crunch,” I said.

“Time for me to outline our strategy.” Mouth turned and headed back to the forest. “I’ll be up in my tree house. Once you’ve made it through the maze and to the house let me know.”

I grabbed him by the back of the shirt. “Not so fast. You can lead this battle from the other side of the maze while you and Crunch try to find an entrance. Tank can go with you.”

“How about we send one of the Grumpkins with them,” Tank said. “I’d like to stay close to you and Korie. If Mouth and I were together, he’d say something stupid which would probably lead to me missing some really big clues on how to get through this maze.”

“Good idea.” I pointed to the first Grumpkin. “Can you go with Crunch and Mouth?”

He nodded and pushed Mouth ahead of him while allowing Crunch to walk alongside.

The other Grumpkin’s face fell, thinking he was being left behind.

I motioned toward him and finally got his attention. From the expression on his face and the heavy sigh, he looked like Eeyore from
Winnie the Pooh
. “Go with Grifter and Touch and find the entrance on the left side of the maze.”

The Grumpkin’s face lit up. Before I could finish, he grabbed Grifter and Touch up in his arms and ran the length of the maze, quickly turning the corner.

“Grumpkins are
fast!
” I said as they disappeared. “Now, Korie.”

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