call had come in long after the doomed flight took off. A moment later Mark’s voice was heard.

“I… It’s me,” he said.

Courtney was hit with two huge waves of conflicting emotion. Mark was alive. She would have screamed with joy and relief, if not for the tone of his voice. Courtney knew Mark better than most anyone on the territory. She only needed to hear those few words to know that he was hurting. She feared she knew the reason why.

Mark was crying. Courtney could hear him sniffle, then let out a soft, pained whimper. “They’re gone,” he said.

Courtney’s knees went weak. Those two simple words confirmed it. The plane that went down over the dark ocean was carrying Mr. and Mrs. Dimond. Courtney started to cry. Mark’s parents were dead. If not for the accident at Andy’s uncle’s shop, Mark and Andy would have been on that plane too. She wanted to be with Mark to hold him and tell him how everything was okay, though she knew it wasn’t. She wanted to know where he was. Probably at the airport, or the police station, or somewhere. Where did people go when they heard that their family was lost at sea and wouldn’t be coming back? Who tells you those things? She hated herself for not leaving her phone on the night before.

Courtney knew what she had to do. She would find Mark and bring him back to her house. She wasn’t sure what other relatives he had, but she knew that none of them lived in town. He was an only child. Until things could be sorted out, she wanted Mark to stay with them. Maybe even after they were sorted out. They would be his new family. Courtney had no doubt that her parents would take him in. After all, he’d saved their daughter’s life!

All of these thoughts and plans flashed through Courtney’s head in the few seconds after she heard the words that his parents were gone. It may have been a defense mechanism to keep back the pain, but that was Courtney. She was ready to take positive action and provide solutions. What she heard next, though, knocked those thoughts right out of her head.

“Come to the flume,” Mark said. Click. He hung up. End of message.

Courtney stared at the phone. Had she heard right? “Did you get him?” Mr. Chetwynde asked. Courtney whipped around to see both her parents arriving at her door.

“Uhhh…” was all Courtney managed to squeak out. Her brain had maxed out. She couldn’t process the information fast enough.

“Did you get Mark?” Mrs. Chetwynde asked. “Are his parents okay?”

Courtney knew she had to get a grip. She closed her eyes, took a breath, and said to herself, One thing at a time. She exhaled and said softly, “He left a message. His parents were on the plane.”

“Oh, no!” Mrs. Chetwynde cried.

Mr. Chetwynde hugged his wife. Courtney joined them. Her father put his arm around his little girl, and the three stood there, giving one another support and comfort in this sad and shocking moment. It was the kind of support and comfort Courtney knew Mark would never have again with his own family. Courtney stayed in her parents’ arms, not wanting the moment to end, because she knew what she had to do next. She feared there was more to this than a tragic accident. For whatever reason, Mark had gone to the flume. She didn’t dare speculate as to why. All she could do was hope he was okay. Anything beyond that was too frightening to think about.

(CONTINUED)

Courtney skipped school. The day before, going to school was one of the most important things in her life. It symbolized her return to being normal and healthy. Now, after what happened, school dropped off the list of important things to do. She didn’t want to hear the kids talking about the accident. She didn’t want to answer questions about whether or not she had talked to Mark. She didn’t want to put on a stoic face and pretend there wasn’t more going on than anyone knew. Because there was. Courtney had to go to the flume.

She grabbed her backpack and left at the regular time to catch the bus. Her parents wanted her to stay home, but she said she’d rather go. She didn’t say where. After hugging her parents good-bye, maybe a little tighter than normal, she left for the bus stop… and walked right past it.

The Sherwood house wasn’t a far walk through Courtney’s suburban neighborhood in Stony Brook. She had been there several times. It was a giant abandoned mansion that had once belonged to a guy who made his fortune raising poultry. He died years ago, and it had been empty ever since while his heirs argued over what to do with the land. Courtney’s dad said it would be in court for years because nobody was giving in. The property was too valuable. Courtney had no idea what the issues were. She didn’t care. The kids told stories about how the Sherwood house was haunted by the ghost of the chicken guy, who could be heard clucking at midnight. Courtney had told that story herself more than once. But now, she knew the truth about the house, and it was far more amazing than the appearance of a clucking ghost.

In its basement was a flume to the territories. When she and Mark became Bobby’s acolytes, they saw it being created. In this basement they jumped into the flume and traveled to Cloral and then Eelong. It was where the Traveler named Seegen died. It was where they saw Saint Dane for the first time, when his long gray hair exploded in flames, leaving him bald and scarred. It was where the demon dropped off the dirty bag that held Gunny’s hand, to lure Bobby to Eelong. Now there was going to be another chapter added to the story of the Sherwood house. Mark had gone there after hearing of the death of his parents. Courtney needed to know why.

The estate was surrounded by a high stone wall. The front gates were locked tight with a padlock. That never stopped Mark and Courtney. Along the side of the property a tree grew close enough to the wall that a quick climb got you on top. Courtney went right for the tree, glanced around to make sure nobody was watching, then climbed like a squirrel. Though Courtney was still stiff and sore, climbing wasn’t a problem. Getting down on the other side was. There was no tree there. She had to jump. She knew that was going to hurt. Worse, she wasn’t sure how her damaged leg would hold up in a jarring fall. Once on top of the wall, she couldn’t waste time. If somebody saw her up there, they’d call the police for sure. Courtney quickly threw her legs over the side, and while putting all her weight on her arms, lowered herself down until she was stretched out to her full body length, with only her fingertips holding on to the top of the wall. It was still a four-foot drop to the ground.

Her newly healed left arm felt like it was on fire. Still, she didn’t drop right away. What if the impact was too hard? Her left leg would shatter. She made the snap decision that she had to land on her right leg. But landing on one foot from that high wasn’t so smart either. If she landed wrong, she could do just as much damage. She might even blow out her knee. In those few seconds Courtney wished she had thought this part through a little better. It was too late, she was losing her grip. She took a breath and slipped off. She dropped the few feet and landed on her right foot, bending her knee and trying to absorb as much of the impact as possible. She hit and fell, landing on her right side. Courtney had heard the term “bone jarring” but it never meant much to her, until then. Her bones had been jarred. She lay there on the patchy grass, breathing hard, doing a mental checklist of body parts. Though the painful burn was intense, nothing seemed to be damaged. Everything moved. She waited for the agony to pass, and after a minute she was able to sit up. As much as the fall hurt, the only real damage was to her lower lip. She had bitten it. She’d live. And walk.

Courtney pulled herself to her feet and took a few tentative steps. So far, so good. The hard part was still to come. Courtney knew the Sherwood house very well. She had been in almost every room. It wasn’t as if she had been exploring, though. She and Mark had taken a very quick tour of the house, on the run, while being chased by a vicious pair of rampaging quig-dogs. The quigs hadn’t shown themselves since then, but Courtney wasn’t taking any chances. She was armed with two canisters of pepper spray, one in each pocket of her jacket, like a gun-slinger with a six-shooter on each hip. She knew there was no way she could outrun one of those beasties in her condition. If they were going to attack, she would stand her ground and unload on them with the burning spray.

With one hand on each canister, Courtney walked tentatively to the house. It was a spooky old mansion, even in daylight. Since it was late fall, the yard was gray and bleak, with dead leaves blowing everywhere. It was easy to see why the place had a reputation for being haunted. She climbed the stairs up to the porch and went right for the front door. It was never locked. She figured the people who took care of the place thought the lock on the front gate was enough to keep out intruders. Fools.

Courtney’s heart raced. She feared that a quig-dog might attack, but she was also anxious about what she would find at the flume. She hoped it would be Mark. She pushed the door open and peered into the big, empty foyer.

“Here, doggie doggie doggie,” she called.

All she heard back was the lonely echo of her own voice. Her confidence rose. Quigs weren’t subtle. If they

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