Eoin and Freya hadn't realised that Father Tim's
volcano was so close to the sea, and almost as soon as they started following
the passage they could see daylight in the distance. As they got closer they
could see they were looking at a wide expanse of blue, and the fresh tangy air
that swept up the lava tube was unlike anything they had felt before. The tube
ended on a windswept beach of black sand and the three of them looked out over
the sea for the first time. Freya instinctively hated it but Willow, once again
in Freya's arms, giggled and spread her arms out wide into the breeze.
"Freya, do you remember when we were Willow's
age?" asked Eoin suddenly.
Freya thought for a moment but shook her head.
"No, not really. I remember things we did, you know, last year or
whatever, but I don't remember how old I was."
"What about Willow? Do you remember when she
was a baby?"
Freya frowned. "She's never been a baby. She's
always been this big."
Eoin nodded. "That's what I remember. That's
odd, isn't it?"
"I... yes, I suppose so. Eoin, let's just find
Mum and Dad. I don't want to think about this any more. Look, there are the
seastacks."
Off to the left the beach ended in a jumble of
boulders and broken down cliffs. A headland jutting out into the sea had once
been a row of arches, but the arches had collapsed to leave a series of
pillars, towering proudly out of the rolling waves like the fingers of a giant
underwater hand.
"That's where we need to go," said Freya.
"We need to find Father Tim's daughter."
"Freya," protested Eoin, "I just
think we need to talk about..."
"Listen! No, listen, Eoin! I can hear it
again."
It was hard to hear over the sound of the waves
surging up the beach, but from far up the passage came the same screeching
noise they had come to dread.
"The Ice!" said Eoin, and the three of
them hurried along the beach towards the seastacks.
A few moments later, a figure appeared in the
passage. From the front, it looked exactly like Eoin, except it was pale blue
and translucent. It stopped for a moment and looked at the sea. It looked at
the distant figures hurrying towards the boulders. Then it started striding
across the beach after them.
The black sand was dry and powdery and Eoin's and
Freya's feet kept sinking into it. At the water's edge the sand was wet and
much firmer, but Freya refused to walk any closer to the sea. As they got close
to the stacks Freya saw with despair that the beach stopped under the mass of
boulders.
"We've got to go in the water to get
round," said Eoin.
Freya shook her head. "I can't, Eoin. I can't
go in the water."
"We could try climbing," said Eoin
doubtfully, looking at the cliffs which towered up above them, but there was
nothing to hold on to. The Ice-Eoin was still back down the beach but was
marching steadily towards them. It would only take it a couple of minutes to
catch up. "We're going to have to swim," he said. "It's the only
way round."
"I can't!" cried Freya, her eyes wild.
"Don't you understand? I can't touch the water!"
They looked up again at the cliff. Standing beneath
it, it looked as tall as the volcano.
"We can't go round," said Freya.
"And we can't go over. We'll have to go through."
Eoin frowned. "What do you mean?"
"Through, Eoin. You can do it."
Eoin turned to look at the solid rock in front of
him. Tentatively, he reached out a hand and placed it on the rock. It felt soft
and yielding. He gave it a push but nothing happened.
"Quickly, Eoin!" cried Freya, hugging
Willow tighter. "It's getting closer."
There was a small crack in the rock. Eoin put both
his hands into the crack and tried to widen it a little. To his surprise, the
rocks parted like curtains, revealing dark emptiness behind.
"That's it!" cried Freya, and she ducked
under his outstretched arms and into the darkness. Eoin stepped through and let
go of the rock curtains, which slammed together behind him, closing the
entrance.
He found himself in darkness. He could just about
make out Freya's outline, just as he had been able to in the lava tubes.
"Freya, we need light," he said.
"I haven't got one," said Freya.
"If I can open the rocks, then you can make
fire," said Eoin.
Freya passed Willow across to him, then thought
about how she might possibly make fire. No sooner had she thought it than her
right hand burst into flames. She looked at it, mesmerised. It didn't hurt at
all; on the contrary, it felt warm and comfortable, and it lit up the cave they
were in.
"The sea caves!" exclaimed Eoin. They
were in a series of huge interconnected caverns. Arches and pillars of all
shapes and sizes reared up over their heads. Faint shafts of daylight trickled
down in places through holes in the caverns' ceilings. Many of the caverns were
flooded, and they could see the entrance where the sea poured in, wide enough
to row a boat straight into the sea caves. There was enough dry ground for
Freya to walk around clear of the water and they ventured further into the
caverns, Freya holding her flaming hand in front of them.
"Put that light out!" called a deep
rasping voice from the shadows.
"Who's there?" called Eoin.
"Put it out!" said the voice again.
Freya clenched her fist. She wasn't sure how to put
the fire out, but as soon as she thought about it the flames died away and her
right hand looked no different to her left. The two of them, with Willow
peeking curiously around, ventured forwards warily. As their eyes grew
accustomed to the half-light, they made out a figure, a very large figure
sitting on a rock, half in half out of the water.
"Freya, she's a mermaid, look!" Eoin
said.
"She's a very big mermaid," said Freya.
"And I thought all mermaids were supposed to be young."
The mermaid didn't seem to have heard them. She sat
listlessly on her rock, staring vacantly at the water.
"She must be Father Tim's daughter,"
whispered Eoin. "We're supposed to ask her for help. Hello, there,"
he called out. "We're Eoin and Freya. Father Tim sent us."
The mermaid made no move to show she had heard.
"Hello?" said Eoin again. "Can you
hear me?"
The mermaid looked up at him, and Eoin suddenly
felt as though the breath had been drawn out of his body. He felt cold and
alone, and felt that things were very wrong and couldn't be put right. He heard
Freya gasp beside him and knew she felt the same. Willow began to cry.
"What is this?" said Freya. "What's
happening, Eoin?"
Eoin shook his head. "I don't know. We've got
to get out of here. We've got to get to..." All of a sudden, he couldn't
remember where he had to get to. He looked round the cave, but now he had no
idea where he was.
There was a little girl crying in his arms. A little
girl he'd never seen before. He put her down on the ground.
"Who are you?" said a voice beside him.
He turned, and a girl with fiery red hair was standing next to him looking at
him in confusion. "Where are we? What have you done to me?"
Eoin shook his head. "My name's... my
name's..." But he couldn't remember.
"Come into the water," called a deep
rasping voice, and they both took a step forwards.
"Don't move, don't look at her, just stay
there!" cried a voice they'd never heard before and a figure with black
hair and a purple dress rushed up to them, grabbed the little girl that was
standing sobbing at their feet and ran off.
"Who was that?" said Eoin to the girl
with red hair.
"Who was who?"
"That person that grabbed the, um..."
What had they grabbed? Something important.
"Come into the water," said the voice
again, and they took another step forwards.
"Don't move, don't move, don't move!"
cried a voice and a figure with black hair and a purple dress rushed up to
them, grabbed them each by the hand and pulled them away from the water, away
from the mermaid, and half-dragged them through cavern after cavern until
they felt daylight on their faces and suddenly they were in bright sunshine,
gasping for breath and looking around in confusion.
They were standing on a ledge about half-way up a
cliff, like a natural balcony overlooking a small bay between two
headlands.
Eoin and Freya felt like they were waking up from a
bad dream. "Freya!" said Eoin. "Freya, I forgot who you were! I
forgot who I was!"
"That's Nullie," gasped their rescuer.
She was a girl, about their own age and height, with long black hair in
hundreds of tiny plaits. She wore a heavy glove on the hand holding Freya and
was struggling to breath normally. "She takes everything. She takes light,
hope, even your memories. Lucky I turned up just in time, before she did any
permanent damage. A few minutes later and you would have forgotten how to
breathe."
"Thank you," panted Freya, her eyes on
the heavy glove the girl was holding her hand with. "You didn't get burnt.
How did you know?"
The girl smiled. "Oh, is that why? I found the
glove lying around this morning and thought I might put it on for the day. And
before you say it, yes, that was extremely lucky."
"Who are you?" asked Eoin.
"Serena," said the girl. "Short for
Serendipity. Know what that means?"
Eoin and Freya shook their heads.
"It means good luck," said Serena.
"I am good luck. You two look like you could do with some good luck. What
were you doing in Nullie's cave?"
"Father Tim sent us," said Eoin. "He
told us to find his daughter in the sea caves."
"Father Tim? You mean Dad? Well, by amazing
good luck, you have found his daughter." She smiled again and did a little
bow.
"You're his daughter?" said Freya in
surprise. "But... you don't look like him." Serena's skin was much
darker than Father Tim's.
"I look like my mum," she explained, and
winked. "Luckily for me."
"Willow!" exclaimed Eoin suddenly.
"Where's Willow?"
Serena stopped smiling and looked round in
confusion. "The little girl? I brought her out first and put her down
here," she said. "I thought she'd still be here. It's not like she
can walk off anywhere."
Eoin and Freya looked at each other and groaned.
"She floats," said Eoin. "In air."
"Oops," said Serena. "Sorry. Didn't
know. Well, she's not down in the water, so she must have gone up the
cliff."
They all turned to look up the cliff. There was
nothing to be seen above them, but Freya suddenly gasped and pointed to the
headland on the other side of the bay. Willow was standing at the top.
"Oh, no," cried Freya. "No, no, no,
no, no. Willow! Willow!"
But Willow was too far away to hear her. Instead,
she looked like she was chatting to someone else. Someone pale blue and
translucent, who looked remarkably like Eoin.
As they watched, Ice-Eoin held out his hand. Willow
took it, and the two of them walked away from the edge of cliff and out of
sight.
6 comments:
Wind should help the ice and serena should help fire and earth to defeat the ice and get back there sister.
I think that in chapter 7 they follow ice Woin and Willow
Ice eoin could use willows powers to make a tornado which is inside of and eoin and Freya can't fight back incase they hurt willow.
Ice Eoin takes Willow to a replica of Freya's and Eoin's house, but made out of solid ice.
Normal Eoin and Freya get taken to an safe hideout with Serena. The hideout has thick spongy walls that sucks up the moisture around the hideout, just under a hillside.
Serena made the spongy outside for protection from 'Water'.
Ice Eoin makes an secret trail that only 'Water' can sense, and guides water to the ice hut.
Normal Eoin and Freya go out with Serena to look for Willow. But cleverly Eoin can feel the trail because he is Earth.
But they have to tackle various of cliffs and rivers to retrieve Willow.
Ice-Eoin takes Williow to an igloo and when she's inside it Ice-Eoin says some strange words and some snow closes them into the igloo with no way out of there.
Father Tim's daughter might tell them which powers were which. Serena could give them good luck and ask her how she was good luck and father Tim didn't have any powers.
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