The Whispering Trees Read online




  DEDICATION

  For Jack, Logan, and Colin—a book of monsters!

  CONTENTS

  Dedication

  Prologue

  Book One: Wexari

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Chapter Five

  Chapter Six

  Book Two: Imogen

  Chapter Seven

  Chapter Eight

  Chapter Nine

  Chapter Ten

  Chapter Eleven

  Chapter Twelve

  Chapter Thirteen

  Chapter Fourteen

  Chapter Fifteen

  Book Three: The Spider Beneath The Earth

  Chapter Sixteen

  Chapter Seventeen

  Chapter Eighteen

  Chapter Nineteen

  Chapter Twenty

  Chapter Twenty-One

  Chapter Twenty-Two

  Chapter Twenty-Three

  Chapter Twenty-Four

  Chapter Twenty-Five

  Epilogue

  Acknowledgments

  Back Ad

  About the Author

  Books by J. A. White

  Credits

  Copyright

  About the Publisher

  Safi shifted beneath her blankets, waiting, as she did each night, for her father to return home. If only she could fall asleep, there would be none of this anxious tossing and turning, no imagining the thousand injuries that might have befallen him during the Binding. Safi would simply close her eyes, and when she opened them again Papa would be sitting by her side.

  Like magic.

  Tonight he was even later than usual, however, and Safi was scared. Of course, Safi was scared of lots of things: thunder, fire, those insects with too many legs that waited until she fell asleep before crawling across her bedroom floor. But the thing that scared her most was losing Papa, so despite her fear of the dark Safi decided to walk to their neighbor’s hut to see if their son, another Binder, had come home yet.

  Besides, she thought, I need to tell Papa what I’ve seen.

  She was just sliding out of bed when she heard her father’s telltale footsteps, heavy and slow. With a gasp of surprise, Safi leaped back beneath the blankets and smoothed them. Papa entered the room and she opened her eyes groggily, as though he had just awoken her.

  “Papa?” Safi asked.

  Her father’s long white beard was matted with sweat and dirt. A vicious, crescent-shaped burn swelled across the dark skin of his chin.

  “You’re hurt,” Safi said, sitting up to touch his cheek.

  “It’s nothing,” said Papa.

  Safi supposed that was true. Papa’s entire body, especially his hands and arms, had already been marred by similar injuries. This latest burn was hardly the worst of them.

  “You need to go to sleep,” he said. “It’s late.”

  “I’ve been asleep.”

  Papa raised his eyebrows.

  “Well,” said Safi, “I have been in bed.”

  “Sleep, darling one. Sleep.”

  “Could I have a story first?”

  “I’m well past tired,” Papa said, but already he had pulled a stool to Safi’s bedside and taken a seat. “And I haven’t eaten yet.”

  Safi smiled. Truth be told, now that her father had returned she felt sleep tugging at her like a fishing line. But she sensed Papa’s need to tell her a story, how sharing this time with his only child might heal wounds beyond the reach of any poultice.

  Safi said, “Tell me how he came to be.”

  “Again? This is a dark tale, love.”

  “It’s a good story.”

  “It’s not a—”

  “I’m not scared.”

  And despite the many fears that dominated Safi’s life, it was true. In a story, the Forest Demon was just words, shackled to the tale as securely as any other character. In a story, he couldn’t hurt them.

  “Tell me,” Safi said.

  Papa stretched his arms into the air, the stool creaking beneath his weight, and began. The tiny room was enveloped in his sonorous voice.

  “In a castle on the edge of a cliff lived a princess who did not find joy the same ways as other children. She had no desire to play with the fine toys that surrounded her; only breaking them brought her the slightest satisfaction. The princess could not bear the laughter of her playmates; only their tears could make her smile. Nothing, it seemed, could fill the emptiness in her heart, and so her father, a good man but blind to his daughter’s true nature, held a competition: half his kingdom’s treasure for something that would bring the princess joy.”

  “You forgot about Rygoth,” said Safi. “She could control animals and was the only one who warned—”

  “It’s late,” Papa said, “and you know all about Rygoth. Besides, she comes back at the end.”

  “But it’s better when you tell it right.”

  Papa made a motion to stand. “It’s better when I tell it at all, no?”

  Safi nodded eagerly.

  “Now where was I?” Papa asked, easing back into his seat. “Ah—the competition. Word of it went out to every corner of the World, and from distant shores came inventors and toymakers, talespinners and gamesmiths, poets and architects, all eager to win the king’s prize. Each morning the princess sat in her throne and was presented with a dazzling array of treasures. There was a metallic child who could play every game ever invented but always let the princess win; a dollhouse with large windows through which the princess could watch the inhabitants talk and play, argue and grow old; and a loom that could weave the princess’s dreams into beautiful tapestries.

  “At each of these remarkable gifts the princess simply turned away, offering not a word. Forty days passed in such a manner. And then, on the forty-first day, a man came bearing a book wrapped in black leaves.”

  “Sordyr,” Safi whispered, and though she had promised not to be afraid, her voice trembled just a bit.

  “He promised the princess that this book could give her the power to do anything she wanted. The king’s adviser, a powerful wexari named Rygoth . . .”

  “Finally,” said Safi.

  “. . . pleaded with him not to let the princess keep the book. But the king, at last seeing true happiness in his daughter’s eyes, refused to listen.” Papa sighed. “Sordyr had not lied—the grimoire gave the princess the power to make all her dark wishes come to life. In a few short days the kingdom was nothing but ruins, and the princess was no more.”

  “Only Rygoth survived,” Safi said.

  “And tracked Sordyr to the island he had made his home, intent on stopping him from hurting anyone else.”

  “She should have killed—”

  “No,” said Papa. “Rygoth believed in the sanctity of all life, and no one should ever be faulted for that. Besides, it was Sordyr’s power that was the true danger, and so Rygoth created a beast called Niersook. Just a single bite from its fangs and Sordyr would be no different from any other man.”

  Safi closed her eyes. No one knew exactly what Niersook looked like, so every time Papa told this story she envisioned something different. Tonight Niersook was a giant centipede with horns on its feet.

  Her father continued. “Sordyr was more powerful than Rygoth had imagined, however. He held dominion over the plants and trees, and slayed Niersook with a hail of black thorns before it could get near him. A great battle commenced. Sordyr attacked Rygoth with strangling vines and monsters made of roots and branches, and Rygoth fought back with birds and beasts and the insects beneath the earth. The island shook. In the end, however, Rygoth was no match for Sordyr’s viciousness, and knowing that her life was coming to a close, she used all her
magic on one final spell, imprisoning Sordyr on the island where he could hurt no one.”

  “Except us,” Safi said.

  Papa nodded. “Except us.”

  He placed a kiss on Safi’s cheek, and she giggled at the touch of his scratchy beard.

  “Now go to bed,” he said, placing the stool in the corner of the room. “One of us needs to make breakfast tomorrow.”

  “I had a vision.”

  Papa froze. “What did you see?” he asked.

  “A girl journeying through the Thickety,” Safi said. “Tall with black hair. There’s a boy with her. They don’t know it yet, but they’re coming here.”

  Papa’s mouth twisted into a nervous grimace. He peeked out the window, checking for movement.

  “Did you tell anyone about this?” he whispered.

  “No! Of course not!”

  “These dreams—we can’t let him find out—”

  “I didn’t tell anyone. I promise.”

  Papa stroked his beard and considered her words. “Do you know who she is?” he asked.

  “I know some things,” Safi said. “She comes from a distant village just outside the Thickety. And she has great magic, yet carries no grimoire.”

  “Interesting,” said Papa. Tucking the covers beneath Safi’s body, he leaned forward and spoke softly into her ear. “Perhaps she is wexari. Perhaps she is coming to save us from him at long last.”

  Safi shook her head. “It’s not like that. I saw what happens after the girl gets here,” she said. “Destruction. Fire. Death. Not just here, but in the World itself.” Safi clasped her father’s hands. “This girl is not coming here to save us. She’s the one who’s going to destroy us all.”

  BOOK ONE

  WEXARI

  “Witches spread evil by instructing children in the ways of darkness.”

  —The Path

  Leaf 12, Vein 49

  Though she was only twelve years old, Kara Westfall had known many kinds of darkness. The smothering darkness of a potato sack as it knotted tightly over her head. Watery darkness so absolute she could lose herself in it. The darkness of temptation, blotting her mind with promises of power and revenge. All these darknesses, in their own specific ways, had left their imprint on her soul. They were all different. They were all the same.

  She had never known darkness like this before.

  After the branches closed behind them, Kara and Taff were set adrift on an ocean of starless night. All was silent save the muted sound of horse’s hooves against the soft surface of the Thickety.

  Kara clung tightly to Shadowdancer’s mane and closed her eyes, trusting the mare to guide them. She could do little else.

  “They tried to kill us,” Taff whispered in her ear. His breath was warm and came in quick, needy gasps; the air here was thin and strange. “Why didn’t Father stop them?”

  “That thing is not our father.”

  Kara felt his body tremble against her back.

  “Our father is gone,” she continued. “Grace used her Last Spell to change him. He is Timoth Clen now.”

  “The Timoth Clen? From the stories?”

  Growing up they had been taught the legends. The Mighty Clen. Vanquisher of witches. Creator of the One True Path.

  “Yes,” Kara said.

  “But that doesn’t make any sense.”

  “Magic doesn’t make any sense.”

  “Not that part. The part about Timoth Clen. Even if he was Father—even if he was anyone—he would never hurt us. He’s good!”

  “Maybe to some,” she acknowledged. “Not to witches.”

  Kara thought she heard a sound in the darkness but it was only Taff shifting into a better position on Shadowdancer’s back.

  “Is Father dead? Dead forever? Or just gone?”

  “I don’t know.”

  “You’ll bring him back.”

  “Taff.”

  “I’ve seen what you can do. You’re a witch. A good witch. You’ll cast a spell and fix this.”

  The hope in his voice was a dagger driven deep in her heart.

  “My spellbook is gone,” Kara said. “And even if I had it, I couldn’t use it. It’s not safe. You saw what happened to Grace.”

  “You’re different.”

  “Not different enough.”

  “But there has to be something we can—”

  “I’m not a witch anymore.”

  “But—”

  “Shh,” Kara said. “Let’s just ride for a while.”

  Taff linked his hands around her waist and rested his head between her shoulder blades. “I hate magic,” he murmured.

  They journeyed deeper into the darkness of the Thickety. Kara wondered if they would ever see the light of day again.

  When Taff began to snore, Kara smiled at her brother’s ability to fall asleep and stroked the back of his hand, the skin as soft as chicken feathers. Although she would wish the boy to safety if she could, Kara was grateful for his presence.

  The Thickety was no place to be alone.

  Looking to either side she tried to distinguish any kind of outline against the utter blackness. Some landmark, some hint of shape or form. Some . . . something. But in every direction stretched nothing but absolute darkness.

  If this were the other part of the Thickety, she thought, remembering her first visit, the webspinners might light a path to guide us. I could call them here, if I could still use magic. But she couldn’t, not anymore, and she felt its absence as keenly as a lost friend.

  A light mist began to fall, tingling her cheeks. At least she wasn’t cold. Though it was nearly winter in De’Noran, the temperature here was more like the sticky warmth of summer just after a thunderstorm. Sweat rolled down Kara’s forehead and matted her clothes to her back.

  The warmth, and Shadowdancer’s steady cadence, allowed her mind to drift to the events preceding their flight to the Thickety. Grace, dragged down into the impossible abyss of the grimoire. Lucas’s face growing smaller as his ship disappeared into the distance. Rocks and pebbles buzzing past her head, the savage hatred of the villagers she had saved.

  And over it all, words spoken in her mind with the timbre of rustling leaves: Your power cannot be bound in a book. You are not like the others, Kara Westfall.

  She awoke.

  For a single, terrifying moment she was certain that Taff had fallen from the horse. Then the fog of sleep dissipated and Kara felt his comforting weight against her back.

  This relief was short-lived, however, once she realized how difficult it was to breathe.

  Kara’s chest burned as she tried to suck stubborn air into her lungs, but she was limited to short, meager breaths, as though she were pulling air not from the outside world but the tiny opening of a reed whistle. Taff, who had been the picture of health since the Jabenhook rescued him from the brink of death, sounded even worse.

  “Taff,” Kara whispered, and even this tiny exhalation of air was difficult for her oxygen-deprived body. “Taff,” she repeated. “You need . . . Wake up.”

  “I’m hungry,” her brother muttered, still drowsy. But then he jolted upright in panic. “Can’t . . . breathe.”

  “Shh,” Kara said. “Shh. Don’t talk. Save.”

  Although she couldn’t see Taff nod in the darkness, Kara knew he understood. His heart, which had been pounding like a drum, settled into a less frantic rhythm.

  “Air,” Kara said. “Wrong.”

  On Kara’s first journey into the Thickety, the air had been fine—better than De’Noran, actually. But that was two hours south of here. Maybe the air is different in this part of the Thickety. Maybe it’s not meant for people. If that were the case, what should they do? She had no idea how many hours they had traveled. At the rate they were losing oxygen, turning back might be futile. Besides, even if she wanted to go back, she didn’t know which way to turn. The darkness devoured all sense of direction.

  She heard a sickly rumble and realized it was Shadowdancer’s heaving chest
, desperate for air. How far has she carried us like this? Kara thought, patting the mare’s flank, longing to speak reassuring words but unwilling to spare the oxygen. Instead she slid off Shadowdancer’s back to lighten her load.

  The moment Kara’s feet touched the surface, she knew that this section of the Thickety was even stranger than she thought.

  The ground was moving.

  This slow, steady motion had been easily masked when they were riding Shadowdancer, but there was no doubt about it now. Kara felt the ground and found that it was not dirt at all but something ridged and slippery and as smooth as skin. It tickled her fingertips as it passed, like a lily pad floating along a rolling stream.

  Impenetrable darkness. Moving ground. Mist.

  Kara remembered what Mother had taught her about certain Fringe weeds, and in her mind an impossible thought began to form—though surely she would have to reconsider the meaning of the word “impossible” in a forest capable of blotting out the sun.

  If we’re even in the forest at all.

  She pulled Taff off the horse, her chest aching with the effort.

  “Come,” she said. “Hold hands. Don’t . . . let go.” She guided him through the darkness, Shadowdancer close behind.

  “The ground,” Taff said. “Do you feel—”

  “Yes.”

  “What is this place?”

  Kara longed to explain, but there wasn’t enough time.

  “Trap,” she said.

  The ground pulled them in a certain direction—she couldn’t have even guessed which one—but Kara led Taff perpendicular to the moving surface. Each step was exhausting, like walking through water. No matter how deeply she inhaled, only a trickle of air wisped through her lips.

  But when their progress was impeded by a wall-like structure, Kara’s spirits lifted. I was right! she thought, and then chided herself for such overconfidence. They weren’t out of this yet.

  She put her ear to the wall’s slippery surface and heard the muffled patter of raindrops outside.

  “Help,” Kara told Taff. She took him by the hands and guided them over the fleshy wall. “Feel . . . gap. Dig . . . fingers into it.”

  Taff squeezed his sister’s hand to acknowledge that he understood.