Inexorable: Part Three by haannsolo
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Ryddle rushed up to the ghost Lupe, leaving the rather confused
Tyger on the front steps. "Phantom! You didn't tell us you'd be coming!"
His brother smiled and they hugged one another
with all the affection two often-parted siblings could hold. "I'm so glad to
see you again, Ryddle," said Phantom warmly. "How are you doing? Learned any
new game tricks?"
"No, but our owner mentioned something about
sending me to Neoschool!"
Phantom smiled. "That's wonderful. Actually,
he told me that he was planning to send you next month."
Ryddle was surprised beyond measure to feel annoyance
stirring under the delight he felt at seeing his brother again. Phantom always
knew everything about him. He had no news to give, and in a way that was almost
subconscious he knew he resented this. Why did his owner always tell Phantom
everything, and leave the eldest pet to relate all information to his brother
and sisters? Why did he always take him everywhere?
Immediately Ryddle was ashamed of his ungrateful
thoughts. His owner gave him everything he could want. Phantom was just older
than he was. It was his right to do a few things the others did not.
He swept away his dark feelings, making up for
them by happily telling Phantom everything that had happened lately. They stood
in the drive for nearly fifteen minutes, talking. Finally the Lupe lifted his
paw toward the house. "Why don't we talk more inside? It'll be warmer, and no
doubt Sylver will be wanting to know what's become of you."
This was true. Sylver was undeniably nosy. Ryddle
sighed a little and led the way inside, but even the thought of his nuisance
of a sister couldn't keep his spirits down for long. He danced into the kitchen,
sliding on the parquet. "Sylver! Sylver!" He caught sight of what looked like
a grey rag on one of the corner chairs and edited his cry. "Sylver! Flytta!
Look who's here!"
Both his sisters turned to obey his demand, first
in confusion and then with delight. Sylver fluttered over with a speed not usually
demonstrated by a plump Faerie Poogle. "Phantom! How dare you come so early?
You said in the letter -"
"I know." He cut her off grimly, tracing an engraved
flower on the tile with one foot. "I know what I said in the letter, and you
should probably ignore everything in it. Things are going badly. Our owner has
fallen out of Kass's favor and he's leaving Meridell, probably for good. When
he sells the house - which I'm sure he will, it's certainly worth a fair amount
- the new owners will surely kick you out."
Shocked silence greeted his words. In an attempt
to regain her composure, Sylver walked over to the counter. "Would you…like
something to eat, Phantom? You must be tired and hungry."
He shook his head. "No, Sylver. This is serious.
More so than you might know. In fact, I'm risking my neck coming to see you."
Ryddle felt his beak fall open, unable to say
anything, and his feathery hackles rise. It was uncannily like some nightmare
birthday surprise; nothing seemed real. When he managed to speak, the words
sounded distant, as unfamiliar as though they were coming from somebody else.
"Wha - what are you saying, Phantom? You can't be for real. What do you mean,
risking your neck?"
Phantom shook his head impatiently, and for the
first time Ryddle noticed the lines of worry etched on his face, and the hunted
look in his eyes. "You don't understand, Ryddle," he said sadly. "I'm afraid
everything is going to change for you. I'm sure you saw the signs, even if you
didn't read them. My letter was intercepted. Kass has turned against us, and
he's having everything I send checked. He might even have spies following me
now!" He took a deep breath, as if bracing himself for some terrible deed. "Sylver.
Ryddle. Flytta. You have to leave."
The house was enveloped in tense, frightened
silence. To Ryddle it felt like hours, but perhaps it was only seconds - he
should know, shouldn't he? The clock ticking was the one miniscule sound to
penetrate the cloud of tension, making it seem all the more potent - because
Sylver spoke. "I really hope this is all some wild prank of yours. And I don't
think it's very funny at all."
Phantom shook his head again, this time urgently.
He paused to look over his shoulder before saying, "No, Sylver. It's not a joke.
Quite on the contrary, your lives are in danger as well as mine. Now I can probably
worm my way out of it, considering all my connections. You, on the other hand,
have to go. Fast. I mean now."
Sylver opened her mouth to say something, then
shut it abruptly.
For once, she could think of nothing to say.
To Ryddle's surprise, Flytta was the one to voice
the more practical side of the matter. "Now, as in this instant? Where will
we be safe? What should we take?"
Phantom smiled wearily. "Thank you, Flytta. I
don't know how I'd have gotten the other two to see how bad your situation really
is. Well…" He paused, visibly wondering how to put his words. "I think it might
actually be best if you headed due south. There's always a chance Illusen might
offer you refuge, at least for a time. She certainly wouldn't just turn you
out to die, and it's quite likely that her kind influence spreads over that
entire area. As to what you should take…take only what you need. The bare necessities.
A bit of food, maybe.
"And right now. Yes. As in this instant."
Ryddle shook his head in total disbelief. It
wasn't a signal of negativity; merely a gesture of hopelessness, helplessness.
The trouble was, this nightmare was beginning to turn real. The word refuge
brought it all home to him. That's what we are, he realized. Refugees.
"I - guess I'll go up and see if there's anything I should take. Oh, and I have
to get Tyger."
"No," said Phantom sharply. "You can't bring
Tyger. There's no way he can make the trip. Better to leave him."
Ryddle opened his beak in protest. "I can't leave
him! What will happen to him? If Meridell's army doesn't kill him, Kass's probably
will."
Phantom shrugged. "I'm very sorry, Ryddle. Honestly
I am. But you can't endanger your lives for the sake of a petpet."
Ryddle whipped around and ran up the stairs,
biting back a million harsh retorts and trying to ignore the lost feeling that
was welling up inside of him. Looking around his room, he suddenly realized,
with a slight jolt, that there was nothing he particularly needed or even wanted
to take with him. Was it right that he should have all these things - and not
even want them? When there were Neopets starving for their owners' lack of care
or money?
He sighed. Either way, there wasn't much he could
do about it. Besides, if he didn't care about losing any of it, at least he
wouldn't have to carry it around with him. He flopped down on his bed, lay there
for a minute, and got up again with a bounce. Suddenly restless, he felt like
pacing his room; instead he made his way back down the staircase. If he had
to leave Tyger behind, at least he could take some food.
Sylver was sitting rigid and unmoving in the
kitchen. It unsettled Ryddle to see her like this. Usually she was always on
the go, up and bustling, encouraging anyone else in the vicinity to follow her
angelic example. From as early a time as he could remember, Sylver had been
the practical one, reacting well to crisis and everything roughly in that category.
But maybe under that competent façade, her very nature depended on her house,
her family, her security.
"Sylver?" he hazarded. "Is there any kind of
food we should take besides bread and all that?"
She looked over at him, eyes glazed with shock.
She certainly seemed to be taking this worse than Flytta. "Bread…yes, definitely,
it's in that cupboard over there. You might as well take some biscuits or something
while you're at it."
Ryddle nodded. It was fortunate to at least have
her help on that matter; she was the only one, as a general rule, who used the
kitchen, and she didn't take kindly to anyone else rummaging around. Ryddle
had no idea where anything was kept.
When he had gathered a few basics, Ryddle tied
them into a bundle, just as he had seen people doing in the pictures out of
the Neopian Times. Flytta appeared in the doorway, along with Phantom. "I think
we've got all the food we need," said Ryddle bleakly. Everything seemed to be
going very fast, and time seemed to be sliced into little precincts of alternating
industry and emptiness.
"Then go," Phantom advised. "Out the back. Head
south, travel quickly, and don't look back."
The Lupe saw them out of the door, and Ryddle
wondered how they could ever repay them for what he had done. Risking his life
to come warn them, defying Kass… Just how far would he have gone to save them,
Ryddle speculated? And now, instead of running with them, he was going back
to face the wrath of Kass and further protect them. That took a very special
spirit.
"Goodbye," said Ryddle blankly. "Will we ever
see you again?"
Phantom shrugged. "I don't know, Ryddle. I just
don't know. In any case, keep yourselves safe." And then, with a flick of his
ghost tail, he was gone.
There was nothing more to be said, but as they
trudged off into the now-dark forest, Ryddle couldn't truly credit that this
was the end of their life as it had been. At the same time he knew that it was.
Whatever happened, that carefree life they had enjoyed for so long would never
be theirs again.
To be continued...
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