Wednesday, April 22, 2015
Chapter One
The Little Boy
Never in your wildest dreams
would you think it a good thing to be
swallowed whole by a big bad wolf. That
is, until you met Gavin. But he is an
unusual boy, as you will soon find out; one with a dizzy imagination and crazy
powers and secrets no ordinary person would think to have. This includes a fascination for exploring
inside the bellies of ogres and gargoyles and other scary creatures such as big
bad wolves—which is exactly where this story begins. Unbelievable to you, perhaps, but quite
believable to me.
It was inside the belly of a
big, bad, hairy wolf that Gavin was roaming about, searching by flashlight for
something important the beast had swallowed.
Something other than himself.
“Um…are you okay down there?”
someone squeaked in a loud whisper from outside. It was the frightened voice of a younger boy.
“Of course I’m okay!” came a
sure answer. The response rose from the
throat of the sleeping wolf, yet the wolf’s mouth didn’t move to form any
words.
Gavin spoke again from deep
inside a full belly that smelled of dead fish and rotten apples. “I still don’t see a truck in here—not
one. Are you sure he ate it?”
“Oh, oh yes, I’m sure; I
watched him swallow it whole! That big
bad wolf told me he was going to eat me
next, just like he ate my toy truck! I
really do want it back; it was a gift from my Grandpapa.”
“Well, I don’t see it. There’s a lot of other stuff down here—a
soggy baseball, an empty turtle shell, some crocodile teeth, a perfectly good
rabbit’s foot, and a dead frog. Would
you rather have one of those?”
“Oh, no, no, no! I really want my truck, please.”
A minute didn’t pass before
the sound of success burped up from the wolf’s belly. “Ah-ha!
I’ve found it!”
With big eyes, the hopeful
little boy watched a large blob work its way through the sleeping beast, slowly
maneuvering from tummy to throat. The
moving blob caused the wolf’s hairy back to arch and its neck to swell three
times normal size. Long, skinny fingers
reached out from the mouth, taking hold of a wet snout. Gavin wriggled and pulled and climbed until
at last his lanky body emerged—a young but tall figure with dark brown eyes and
a messy mop of curls on his head to match.
It took a moment for the
little boy to snap out of a reasonable case of shock, but soon enough his wide
eyes dropped from Gavin’s triumphant grin to the clunky, red fire engine held
out in offer.
“My fire truck! Oh, oh thank you!” The boy ran to reclaim his precious
gift. “I could never have faced my
Grandpapa had I lost it. He’d be so
angry with me.”
Gavin shrugged casually. “It was nothing really.”
“Oh, oh no!” said the boy, “It
was something! You were so brave to let
that wolf swallow you whole! And how
clever to knock him in the head with the heel of your boot on the way
down. He may have eaten me if
you’d not come along!”
“And what fun it would’ve been
had you been eaten!”
Gavin smiled cheerily, but the
little boy failed to share the same expression.
“Oh, oh no, no, no! I don’t want to be eaten! No, no, never ever!”
“And why not?”
“Well…..because it might
hurt!” the boy exclaimed. His round
cheeks turned red as he admitted in a small voice, “And I’m afraid of the
dark.”
“If that’s the case, maybe you
should keep a flashlight in your pocket.
Then dumb, old wolves couldn’t frighten you and chase you up really high
walls.” Each boy glanced over his
shoulder at a tall, white, stone barrier covered in ivy and blue blossoms. It stretched out of sight in either
direction.
“I hadn’t thought of that
before,” the little boy said, skewing his eyebrows.
Gavin presented an open palm
where a small flashlight suddenly appeared.
“For me?”
“For you.”
“Oh, oh thank you!” The child repaid his giver with a tight hug
around the waist. He stepped away
quickly enough, wearing a look of puzzlement on his face. “You’ve been so very kind to me, and I don’t
even know who you are?”
The older boy lifted a pointed
chin and jerked his head in a proud manner before announcing, “I am Gavin, the
key keeper.”
His admirer’s face brightened. The youngster was highly intrigued. “Oh, oh, a key keeper! And how many keys do you keep?”
“Just one.”
“That’s all?”
“That’s all I need.”
The child considered this,
unsure what to ask next. He decided to
let every question in his head tumble out of his mouth at once. “Is it a big key? Can I see it?
Does it open everything or just one thing? Will it open a treasure chest? Or a hidden safe? Or a prison cell? Or is it meant for a door to a secret room?”
The key keeper reached into
his shirt to fish out the item in question.
“Yes you may see it.” A bronze
skeleton key appeared, pinched between two fingers. The polished surface shimmered over detailed
engravings. He answered the last
question asked. “And, yes, you might say
it opens a door…of sorts.”
The boy went to touch the key,
but Gavin held it out of reach.
“Oh, oh, does it unlock an
important door?”
Gavin nodded assuredly, making
his dark curls bounce.
“Oh, oh please, may I watch
you open it?”
The key keeper took a moment
to think while the smaller boy wordlessly begged with his adorable eyes for the
privilege to see the decorative key in use.
Gavin slipped it back beneath his shirt where it hung safely from a
braided chain. He was never without that
key around his neck—both night and day.
“I suppose you could come
along and help search for the right door.”
“Oh, oh thank you! Thank you!
I won’t be a bother, oh, oh, I promise!”
Within a blink, everything
about their surroundings changed. The
sleeping wolf, the forest, the ivy-laden wall—it all vanished, giving way to a
never-ending hall of facing doors. As
Gavin stepped between the closed doors, his follower kept very near. There was no ceiling to look up at and no
floor to tap a shoe against, yet the two were able to walk with ease down the
peculiar corridor of shut-off entries and exits.
Sounds and fragrances as well
as whiffs of sweetness strong enough to taste emanated from the doors. Each was unique in appearance and color. Each hid secrets on the inside.
A glossy white door with a
brass ball knob appeared to swell and shrink repeatedly as if breathing in
air. Singing, soft and womanly,
penetrated the painted wood. The little
boy stepped closer. His ear perked to
hear a lullaby.
“The stars can’t put on a sparkly show,
The fullest moon can’t reflect a glow,
The hottest sun cannot burn, you know,
Bright enough to outshine my dear child.”
He stepped away easily enough,
not enticed by a mother’s song of admiration.
The next entry that appealed
to the boy was a high, wooden set of double doors. They were encased in arched framing. Polished, bronze handles reached out from the
center in swirled figure eights. Behind
these doors a stringed orchestra erupted into glorious music-making. Gavin looked sideways and watched the child
creep close, behaving as if tempted to steal a peek at the auditorium
inside. But the curious listener backed
away without trying the handles. He
glanced back at Gavin.
“Which door will your key
unlock? I really want to know!”
The question was answered with
another question. “Which door do you
wish it to unlock?”
The little boy ran his eyes up
both sides of the corridor, unable to decide.
He continued forward, just a couple steps in front of his guide.
They passed weathered wooden
barriers from which talking, laughing, singing, and persistent begging called
to them. They passed freshly-painted
doors where smells of burning apple wood, homemade pastries, and frying fish
compelled a good sniff. There were doors
that thumped, doors that cried, and doors that resonated with eerie clatter. These, the lad stepped quickly past. It was a plain, rectangular, mahogany slab of
wood that made him stop in his tracks. A
simple thumb-press handle glimmered for attention on the right-hand side.
“This looks exactly like
Grandpapa’s….” the boy trailed off, wondering.
He stepped up and placed a hand against the dull surface. His ear followed. It was nearly silent on the other side except
for the sound of an old man’s snores.
“I think it is Grandpapa!”
There was no hesitation in his
next move. With a familiar squeeze on
the knob and a light push against the wood, the door opened inward. The little boy took a step toward his Grandfather’s
amplified snoring…..and disappeared. He
had not even thought to ask Gavin to use his special key.
“And that’s that!” The key keeper smirked triumphantly. He clapped his hands once and swiveled on the
balls of his feet. With his chore accomplished,
he set out for home.
Now, you may be wondering what
kind of gruesome chore it is to make a seemingly nice little boy disappear, but
I guarantee there is no sordid mischief at play here. There are things you must understand about a
key keeper. The first is that he is an honorable
and noble character. Were it not so, the
heads of parliament in Dreamland would come together to judge and ultimately
dismiss him from his calling. Such a
thing would be highly disgraceful for a key keeper! So you see, Gavin is exactly the opposite of
sordid or shady in his dealings with stray dreamers.
And, oh yes, that little boy was indeed dreaming. Where else but in dreams could you be swallowed whole by a big bad hairy wolf and find it ticklish fun?
And, oh yes, that little boy was indeed dreaming. Where else but in dreams could you be swallowed whole by a big bad hairy wolf and find it ticklish fun?
Copyright 2015 Richelle E. Goodrich
Chapter Two
Swashbucklin' Pirates
The wall that surrounds Dreamland
is of unknown measure. Some find it small enough to barely fit a
cozy village in its circle. Others
insist a great and marvelous city exists within its boundaries, including avenues
of skyscrapers surrounded by miles of two-story neighborhoods. Once, I actually sailed the ocean inside
these guarded walls. You may say
impossible, but not so.
I say “not so” because I know
a secret. Lend me your ear and I will
share it with you. But first, promise to
keep the secret, for this wondrous truth must be carefully kept.
Dreamland is an actual
place; it really exists!
Oh yes, yes, it truly
does! And the astonishing thing is how
this magical world has endured forever in a realm only visible to
dreamers. Hence the name, perhaps.
Bring your ear closer and I
will share a better secret. This too
must be protected.
Reality in Dreamland is
whatever you want it to be.
The details of this enchanted
world are formed in the eye of the beholder.
In other words, when you step through the gates of this marvelous land,
whatever you wish for becomes so. If
your desire is to experience life on acres of farmland, that is exactly what
you will find. If you prefer a bustling city,
such a reality will appear. If you yearn
to sail the world’s oceans within a gated border, it will be as you wish. And that is the big secret Gavin, the key
keeper, protects.
It is his job to prevent
wandering dreamers from trespassing the gates of Dreamland. For if they were to scale the wall, or tunnel
beneath it, or find some way across its borders, the likelihood is great they
would never choose to leave such a paradise.
That fact is understandable, of course.
If you could have anything you wished for—anything imaginable—would you
so easily turn away from it? Would you
abandon your dreams to wake up again?
It might help to see the truth
in action before deciding. And what
better way than to visit the magical land in question?
The hall of doors where we
last left Gavin happens to end where a dark forest begins. Or possibly the hallway begins where the
forest ends; I’m not quite certain.
Either way, the trees in that timbered area are so congested with leafy
tops that barely a shard of sunlight slips through. Within the woods are hiding places that
shield and shelter the most ferocious of monsters. But their introduction will be saved for
another time.
Having his duties handled for
the present moment, Gavin made his way through the forest toward the outside
wall enclosing Dreamland. He seemed undaunted
by a thick growth of ivy that nearly concealed the wall from view.
Though it appeared to be a
dead end, his footsteps moved forward with confident strides, taking him right
up to the wall. Slipping a hand beneath
his shirt, he retrieved his key and held it in front of him like a warding
symbol—as far as the attached chain would allow. As if fearful, or perhaps respectful of the
power trapped within the key, the ivy and its blue blooms peeled away, opening a
narrow area before the stone wall. The
exposed gates glimmered as if sprinkled with pixie dust, reflecting all
available light off a dimpled texture.
Depressed in the stone at
shoulder height was a square groove about the size of a hand. An indentation appeared like a mold in the
center of it. Gavin brought up his
bronze key, behaving as if he had performed the same move a million times, and
placed it over the indentation. A
perfect match! The walls began to
tremble, and he stepped back, slipping the key beneath his shirt once again.
The gates parted by only a
fraction and then closed behind the key keeper as soon as he stepped
inside. What his eyes took in was a
wondrous view of home; a world shaped to his own personal liking.
The ground looked like black
crumbs—moist, rich dirt that mashed under every footstep. The soil quickly disappeared beneath plant
life that crowded the landscape beyond.
In every direction a wall of rainforest blocked off any decent view of
the horizon. Trees towered like giants,
joined together by drooping swags of moss.
Vines as thick in circumference as plumber’s pipe entangled every sturdy
tree branch. The underbrush stood
unusually high as well, extending up to Gavin’s waist, some ferns stretching to
brush their feathered fronds against his shoulders.
The air smelled of fresh rain,
but it was perceptible by feel as well; a heaviness put pressure on the muscles
and sinuses. Jungle sounds chattered in
abundance. This way—a conversation of
twittering birds. That way—a panther’s roar
receiving a return growl. From high
above fell the laughter of primates. And
in surround sound, leaves rustled, disturbed by creatures that slithered,
crawled, and skittered in the shadows.
Gavin stepped forward to be
swallowed up by this animated jungle.
It seemed not long enough to
hold one’s breath before he appeared on the other end, emerging from a curtain of
greenery onto a sandy stretch of beachfront.
The bluest crystal ocean greeted him mere strides away, but Gavin’s
focus was not on the clear waters. It
was lifted, peering into a black sky full of twinkling lights.
Stars—or rather, diamonds.
He squinted in the darkness to
be sure of his sight. A frown indented
each corner of his mouth when he felt certain his assumption was correct. Pirates were sailing overhead, flying a black
flag with skull and crossbones. The
thieves were en route to steal the stars and pilfer a fortune in diamonds.
“Bly me!” he grumbled to
himself.
His dark eyes lowered,
glancing over ocean waters. Another ship
floated not too far distant in the bay.
Gavin walked across the short stretch of beachfront and waded knee-high into
warm waters. His arms rose in the
moonlight, waving back and forth as he cried aloud, hoping to hail the
ship. Miraculously, his ruckus gained
someone’s attention and a rowboat was sent for him. Two unshaven scalawags manned the oars, both
with a great many missing teeth. They
wore tri-corner caps as shabby as their matching rags. Reaching the young key keeper, they helped
him into their boat and then rowed back to a triple-mast sailing ship
designated The Witchery.
Gavin was greeted aboard by a
Captain Jimbo Harvey, one of the fiercest pirates known to unlawfully regulate
affairs on Dreamland waters. A stubborn
old rogue, he refused to acknowledge Dreamland as a free nation and claimed the
entire area under his rule, calling it “the scum of Ankergnat” to suit his
brigand taste.
A crooked smile glinted of
gold behind his coarse whiskers. His
face was masked by a thick, graying beard.
His build was medium stock though rock-solid. On his head sat the widest brim of any hat
ever made, and on his shoulder was perched a lime-green parrot. This bird possessed the ability to command
the crew nearly as well as Captain Harvey himself.
“Ahoy thar, Matey. And what sorta hornswagglin’ ideas might ye
be havin’ in the middle o’ the night?
I’ll ne’er believe ye be up to much else but dev’lish mischief.”
“Then you believe wrong, sir,”
Gavin informed the captain, “because I’m here to put a stop to the devilish
mischief of others currently underway.”
Narrowing his gaze
suspiciously, the captain asked, “And whose mischief be ye aimin’ on
interferein’ with?”
“That of dishonorable
pirates!”
The green parrot raised its
feathers and squawked.
Jimbo Harvey backed up,
cautious and wary. His fingers curled
around the hilt of a sword fastened to a thick belt that secured his
britches. “Ye be a dern fool then,
lad. A daft sprog to think o’
challengin’ me surrounded by me own men.
We be nuthin’ but honorable gents here, content to lay low o’ Jack
mischief.”
There was a hushed murmur of
agreement to their innocence, tainted by a few wicked chuckles. Gavin realized he had been misunderstood.
“Oh, no, no, no, I’m not
talking about you, Captain Harvey. The
shameful pirates I’m referring to are the ones plundering the stars above your
heads as we speak.”
Gavin’s pointing finger rose
straight up, along with every eye on the ship.
Lo and behold they found the key keeper to be right! A pirate ship was indeed sailing through
black clouds, netting and collecting twinkling diamonds right out of the night.
“Shiver me timbers! Those scurvy dogs be pluckin’ jewels from me
rooftop! How’d them thar villains get by
with ne’er a notice?” The captain
scanned his crew for a man who would look him square in the eye. No one dared to meet his critical gaze.
He flailed his arms, frustrated,
while the parrot on his shoulder copied the gesture with flitting wings.
“Raise them sheets to the
wind! Arm yer stations and prepare for a
hearty swashbucklin’! We’ve a rival
Jolly Roger in our midst! I swear on the
grave of me dear ol’ mum we be sinkin’ that swaggy and sendin’ every last
lily-livered crook to an eternal rest in Davy Jones’ locker! Tally ho wi’ a vengeance!”
“Aye! Arrrg!” the men shouted, riled by their
captain’s speech.
The deck swayed as The
Witchery’s forward lifted, bowsprit
pointing skyward. All sails roped to
masts filled with air and expanded. The
rudder was last to leave the sea. They
climbed into the sky on a straight course for rival pirates who remained
unaware of their nearing, too busy netting and collecting sparkling
jewels.
The Witchery fell silent.
Every grimy member of the crew waited, keen and anxious, as they drifted
closer to the vessel Captain Harvey planned to sink.
Gavin patted his thighs. At each side, a sword in sheath appeared out
of thin air. He clutched either hilt,
ready.
It was the rival pirates who
broke the tranquility of the night.
They sounded the alarm, and
immediately Captain Harvey gave the order to fire canons. The enemy ship was shot full of holes but
remained hovering above the clouds.
Again came an order to fire a second round. Additional ruptures opened up the bottom decks
of the targeted pirate ship. By this
time it was on its way around to face off with The
Witchery.
Gavin glanced at the name painted in black, fancy lettering across the
stern of the damaged vessel. It read The
Red Dagger.
He gasped. This was a nightmare ship! A cursed, unsinkable, haunted craft! A legend Gavin had heard mention of in many
captivating bedtime stories featuring the notorious pirate of greater cunning
and fiercer prowess and superior swordsmanship than any other infamous
buccaneer! The captain of this nefarious
ship was none other than…….the charcoal-haired Drake Blackmont!
Gavin drew both swords and
steadied himself. This would be a worthy
fight for the key keeper—a challenge he truly longed for—if fate paired him off
with the most aggressive swordsman ever spoken of in pirate lore.
“Aye.” He licked his lips and grinned at the
thought.
There was a blur of motion on
either vessel as deckhands rushed to and fro responding to captain’s battle
orders. Canons fired repeatedly from The
Witchery, and yet The
Red Dagger pulled up alongside its
attacker, communicating a suicidal wish, daring the enemy to gut its belly
hollow. All eyes turned upward, men
ducking and cowering from instinct when it rained on Captain Harvey’s men. Captain Blackmont had ordered an ambush.
Drake’s crew swung from high
ropes, falling on The Witchery and those sorry souls aboard. Their faces were painted red and black,
marked like demons. One glance proved
petrifying, causing even the bravest warrior to hesitate. Many of Jimbo’s men were run through,
paralyzed by initial shock before managing to lift their own swords. But a war cry hit the air and rallied their
resolve.
A rabble sword fight engulfed
the only ship not ablaze.
Gavin swung his dual blades right
and left, exchanging blows using both hands equally well. Every painted figure that came his way met
the same fate—cast aside in a motionless heap upon the bloody deck. He fought his way through the crowd, cutting
down the enemy, exerting his force with precise, effective moves. But his eye kept focused on the ultimate
prize……the captain of The Red Dagger.
Drake Blackmont fought on the
raised stern, defending his heightened pedestal with a rapier in hand and a
case of bold, grinning arrogance.
Gavin paused when he found it
his turn to contend with the notorious pirate.
He stole a moment to gaze in awe at a legend come to life. Drake paused likewise, swelling with pride at
the look of obvious admiration from another soon-to-be victim of his unerring
blade.
Gavin raised an eyebrow. Drake raised one also.
“Aye, lad, yer a young
one. If survival be yer wish today, turn
tail now and run. Run away, and I shan’t
be forced to cut you down in yer youth.”
Setting one foot behind for
balance, Gavin gripped tight to his weapons and declared courageously, “I will
not run from you.”
The legendary captain crooked
his head. “Then yer a fool. An ignorant, misfortunate fool. For I am invincible, laddy. I’ve walked through fire, carved my way from
the guts of dragons, sunk every ship rash enough to give me battle, destroyed
whole armies, and cut down countless warriors who believed falsely that a mob
had the power to crush me. I’ve no fear
of death, lad. Though time and time
again he tries, the Grimm Reaper cannot grasp me. Death is cursed for my sake, ne’er to have my
soul. And so, I’ve no fear of anything.”
“You don’t have to be afraid
to be defeated, Captain Blackmont.”
“Aye, is that right,
laddy?” A pirate smirk conveyed
acceptance to a duel. “Then we shall
test yer theory.”
As if generously evening the
odds, Drake Blackmont placed one hand behind his back. He jumped down from the heightened deck and
met Gavin on level ground. The two
circled once, weapons pointed and ready, eyes glued on one another. The captain advanced first. His moves were swifter than anticipated, but
Gavin managed to cross his swords and parry the drive downward between his
feet. His pulse pounded in his ears,
thumping like deep, base drums.
Thank goodness for quick
reflexes.
Captain Blackmont grinned and
struck again, whizzing his blade a fraction of an inch past the boy’s ear. Had he wanted it, Drake could have held a
severed ear in the palm of his hand.
Gavin retreated quickly, unnerved by his awareness of what could have—should have—happened. His rival gave him no time to consider his
luck, but advanced in succession, aiming high, then low, playing with his young
challenger. The expert swordsman punctured
a shoulder, then a knee, and finally pierced an ear. Every prick bled droplets of red.
Winded and overwhelmed, Gavin
distanced himself from such malicious toying.
His opponent allowed him a moment’s rest.
“I gave you a chance to run,”
Drake smirked darkly. “You should’ve
skedaddled.”
Gavin straightened his posture
and tossed one sword aside, holding the other before him like a shield. Perhaps concentrating on a single weapon
would prove a better strategy. He drew
air in and out, working to steady his breathing. Managing a forced smile, he taunted, “I’m
just getting started. I didn’t want to
hurt your feelings right off, old man.”
The captain laughed aloud,
amused by the boy’s boldness. Though
minor scuffles continued to take place around them, the two had drawn a
crowd. Only Drake seemed aware of the fact.
He attacked without a hint of
warning—a thrust aimed at a thigh. Gavin
parried the blow, scuttling backwards to avoid a strike. As Drake recovered, he easily deflected a
desperate jab meant for his heart. Then
the captain lunged forward again, swift as metallic lightning. Gavin parried, retreating. It was nothing but a dance for Captain
Blackmont and an exercise in self-defense for the boy.
After barely holding off a
sequence of fancy brandishing, Gavin found himself on his back looking up at
the pointed end of a rapier. He had
tripped over a coil of rope while avoiding his opponent’s blade. It had happened faster than his mind could
register.
“Avast! Leave the boy be!” It was Captain Harvey running to his aide,
but there was no need for anyone’s interference.
Beneath Gavin’s shirt an amber
glow sparked, growing bright enough to catch the attention of onlookers. Its radiance reached into the darkness.
“It’s my key,” Gavin
said. “I have to go; someone’s near the
gates.”
Drake withdrew his sword and
slipped it into the sheath at his side.
“Aye! Get along, key keeper. I’m sure we’ll meet up again.”
Gavin jumped to his feet. And so did every other character on board who
had been lying motionless as if struck dead by a rival sword. The Red
Dagger was no longer ablaze, but appeared
whole and solid as if it had never suffered one blast from a canon.
Strange? Not really.
For that is another secret Gavin keeps.
Aye, ya see, me hearties, in Dreamland all lads and lasses and e’en sly
ol’ buccaneers ne’er, e’er taste the sting o’ death. In proper words…
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