Dorna and Kite took easy chairs. Willa sat on the floor in the lotus position and Jeren stretched out on the couch. Kendi positioned himself on his spear.
'You are one weird Aussie,' Jeren said. 'Aren’t you afraid you’ll slip and that thing’ll get you in the balls?'
'No,' Kendi said shortly, suddenly annoyed at Jeren. 'You better be quiet. It’s easier to get there without a lot of noise.'
Jeren shrugged and lapsed into silence as Kendi closed his eyes.
A few moments later, the five of them were standing on the flat, featureless plain that marked neutral territory in the Dream. Kendi was the last to arrive, since he had to leave his cave and walk to the edge of the Outback before he could join the others, who had already learned to transport themselves. Whispers hissed around them.
'Who’s It?' Willa asked. In the Dream, Kendi noticed, she seemed taller, more sure of herself.
'My mother and your mother were hanging out the clothes,' Kite chanted, pointing to each person at each word. 'My mother socked your mother in the nose. What color was the blood?' His finger landed on Jeren.
'Green,' Jeren said. 'Like snot.'
'G-R-E-E-N and you are
He spread his arms wide. The ground rumbled and the air swirled. Green shoots speared up from the ground, thickened, and widened into solid, leafy walls. New-mown grass sprouted beneath Kendi’s bare feet. The air coalesced into fluffy clouds and bright sunlight. In a few moments the group was standing in the center of a garden maze. White marble statues gleamed above granite benches, and a fountain sprayed cool water high into the air.
'There are lots of entrances to the center,' Kite announced, and Kendi counted eight. 'It isn’t a real maze- there are also lots of pathways and openings.'
'Lots of places to hide, in other words,' Dorna said. 'Let’s go.'
Kite plucked a blindfold out of thin air and tied it around his eyes. Kendi marveled at the other boy’s control. So far conjuring objects had proven difficult for him, though he was becoming adept at molding landscapes. Kite started counting.
'Why the fuck are we standing here?' Jeren said. 'Run!'
They scattered. Kendi dodged into the twisting hedge-lined paths until he was alone. Whispers murmured sibilants all around him. He could sense other people moving about in the maze like a swimmer senses ripples in a pond, but it was hard to figure out exactly where they were. He closed his eyes and tried to sense who was where. Jeren was off that way. Willa was two pathways over. Dorna was …was …Kendi furrowed his forehead in concentration. He had a hard time fixing on her. And where was-
Kite barreled around the corner. Kendi felt him coming and his eyes popped open. With a whoop and a yell, Kite pounced. Kendi dodged and fled, trying to remember which way home base was. Kite stayed right behind him. Kendi concentrated as he ran. He needed an obstacle, something to slow Kite down. The earth rumbled, and a boulder burst out of the ground between the two of them, blocking the pathway. The smell of damp earth filled the air. Kendi continued to run down the leafy corridor. An opening to home base was just ahead of him.
'Oh, no you don’t,' Kite said from the other side of the rock. Tendrils of plants and vines shot inward from the two hedges, weaving themselves into a thick barrier just ahead of Kendi, who screeched to a halt. Kite started to clamber over the boulder, but it was too smooth for good purchase and he slid back to the ground. Kendi tried to push through the vegetation. It was too thick. He needed something to cut through it, or a way to go over it.
Kendi felt Kite’s mind pressing on his own. The boulder started to crack. Kendi wanted the rock to exist, big and solid, while Kite wanted it to crumble into rubble. Whichever one of them could force his own perception on the other would win. They were on Kite’s turf, which gave him an advantage, but Kendi’s Silence was strong. Dozens of cracks raced over the boulder’s surface, and Kendi could feel it weakening. Kendi narrowed his eyes. He wanted a solid boulder. He wanted the cracks to disappear. They would disappear
'Home free!' yelled Jeren from the center of the maze.
'Dammit!' Kite said from the other side.
'Mom, Kite’s swearing,' Kendi yelled back in a child’s singsong. 'Can’t catch me!'
There was a
'Home free!' Willa shouted from the center.
'Gotcha!' Kite said behind him in glee. 'You’re
'Yeah, yeah,' Kendi grumbled. 'At least I get to dictate territory.'
Kite grinned and the maze vanished, leaving the flat plain behind. Jeren and Willa stood next to each other, Dorna off to one side.
'Round two,' Kendi said, and without further explanation he spread his arms wide and called for the Outback. Scrubby plants sprouted from nothing. Sandy soil and piles of rock sprang into being, and the sky rippled and shifted into a pure, hot blue.
'Shit,' Jeren said, wiping his brow. 'It’s fucking hot!'
'What a mouth,' Dorna observed dryly.
'Hey, Sis, you take me as I am.'
'I’m not a-oh, never mind.'
'Home base is this pile of rocks,' Kendi said. 'And watch out for drop bears.'
'Drop bears?' Willa said.
'According to legend, they hide in the tops of trees,' Kendi told her with an absolutely straight face. 'Especially around the billabongs. When you pass underneath them, they drop on you. They aren’t very big by themselves, but if ten or eleven land on you all at once, it gets pretty nasty. Smelly, too.'
'You liar,' Jeren said.
'Can’t lie in the Dream,' Kendi replied.
'Right,' Dorna said. 'Of course, that ‘according to legend’ bit sort of lets you off the hook, doesn’t it?'
With an injured air, Kendi covered his eyes and started counting. Around him, he felt the ripples in the Dream as the others scattered. This time he kept a mental eye on Dorna.
'Thirty-eight, thirty-nine, forty.'
Kendi felt Dorna retreat quite a ways and dodge into the brush around a small billabong. Then he lost her. Puzzled, he tried to find her again.
'Seventy-two, seventy-three, seventy-four.'
Where had she gone? Kendi gnawed his lip. Maybe she had the ability to hide herself in the Dream just as Kendi had a talent for finding people. Or maybe she-
There! She was right there. Right at the edge of the Outback.
'Ninety-eight, ninety-nine, one hundred!'
Kendi made a beeline for Dorna’s hiding place. He skirted a clump of scree, then flung himself around a boulder, knowing full well she was on the other side.
'Gotcha!' he shouted, and lunged.
'What the hell?' sputtered the man on the other side.
Kendi leaped back as if he’d been bitten. It was a man, blond, dressed in overalls with a tool belt. Kendi had never seen him before, hadn’t sensed him either.
'Who are you?' Kendi demanded. 'What are you doing on my turf?'
'Your turf?' the man said. 'Kid, you better have a look.'
That was when Kendi noticed he had crossed some kind of boundary. The Outback was directly behind him, but at the moment he was actually standing in some kind of workshop or garage.