mother’s:
She took the rowboat – a little skiff her mother had bought with a few gold nuggets from a fisherman, who had a tragic accident with his nets the next day. They had only one boat, but Hazel’s mother seemed capable on occasion of reaching the island without any transportation. Hazel had learned not to ask about that.
Even in midsummer, chunks of ice swirled in Resurrection Bay. Seals glided by her boat, looking at Hazel hopefully, sniffing for fish scraps. In the middle of the bay, the glistening back of a whale raked the surface.
As always, the rocking of the boat made her stomach queasy. She stopped once to be sick over the side. The sun was finally going down over the mountains, turning the sky blood red.
She rowed towards the bay’s mouth. After several minutes, she turned and looked ahead. Right in front of her, out of the fog, the island materialized – an acre of pine trees, boulders and snow with a black sand beach.
If the island had a name, she didn’t know it. Once Hazel had made the mistake of asking the townsfolk, but they had stared at her like she was crazy.
‘Ain’t no island there,’ said one old fisherman, ‘or my boat would’ve run into it a thousand times.’
Hazel was about fifty yards from the shore when a raven landed on the boat’s stern. It was a greasy black bird almost as large as an eagle, with a jagged beak like an obsidian knife.
Its eyes glittered with intelligence, so Hazel wasn’t much surprised when it talked.
‘Tonight,’ it croaked. ‘The last night.’
Hazel let the oars rest. She tried to decide if the raven was warning her, or advising her, or making a promise.
‘Are you from my father?’ she asked.
The raven tilted its head. ‘The last night. Tonight.’
It pecked at the boat’s prow and flew towards the island.
That gave her enough strength to row on. The boat slid ashore, cracking through a fine layer of ice and black silt.
Over the months, Hazel and her mother had worn a path from the beach into the woods. She hiked inland, careful to stick to the trail. The island was full of dangers, both natural and magical. Bears rustled in the undergrowth. Glowing white spirits, vaguely human, drifted through the trees. Hazel didn’t know what they were, but she knew they were watching her, hoping she’d stray into their clutches.
At the centre of the island, two massive black boulders formed the entrance to a tunnel. Hazel made her way into the cavern she called the Heart of the Earth.
It was the only truly warm place Hazel had found since moving to Alaska. The air smelled of freshly turned soil. The sweet, moist heat made Hazel feel drowsy, but she fought to stay awake. She imagined that if she fell asleep here her body would sink into the earthen floor and turn to mulch.
The cave was as large as a church sanctuary, like the St Louis Cathedral back home on Jackson Square. The walls glowed with luminescent mosses – green, red and purple. The whole chamber thrummed with energy, an echoing
Gaia wanted to consume her identity, just as she’d overwhelmed Hazel’s mother. She wanted to consume every human, god and demigod that dared to walk across her surface.
Marie Levesque stood over the pit. In six months, her hair had turned as grey as lint. She’d lost weight. Her hands were gnarled from hard work. She wore snow boots and waders and a stained white shirt from the diner. She never would have been mistaken for a queen.
‘It’s too late.’ Her mother’s frail voice echoed through the cavern. Hazel realized with a shock that it was
‘Mother?’
Marie turned. Her eyes were open. She was awake and conscious. This should have made Hazel feel relieved, but it made her nervous. The Voice had never relinquished control while they were on the island.
‘What have I done?’ her mother asked helplessly. ‘Oh, Hazel, what did I do to you?’
She stared in horror at the thing in the pit.
For months they’d been coming here, four or five nights a week as the Voice required. Hazel had cried, she’d collapsed with exhaustion, she’d pleaded, she’d given in to despair. But the Voice that controlled her mother had urged her on relentlessly.
At first, her efforts had brought only scorn. The fissure in the earth had filled with gold and precious stones, bubbling in a thick soup of petroleum. It looked like a dragon’s treasure dumped in a tar pit. Then, slowly, a rock spire began to grow like a massive tulip bulb. It emerged so gradually, night after night, that Hazel had trouble judging its progress. Often she concentrated all night on raising it, until her mind and soul were exhausted, but she didn’t notice any difference. Yet the spire
Now Hazel could see how much she’d accomplished. The thing was two storeys high, a swirl of rocky tendrils jutting like a spear tip from the oily morass. Inside, something glowed with heat. Hazel couldn’t see it clearly, but she knew what was happening. A body was forming out of silver and gold, with oil for blood and raw diamonds for a heart. Hazel was resurrecting the son of Gaia. He was almost ready to wake.
Her mother fell to her knees and wept. ‘I’m sorry, Hazel. I’m so sorry.’ She looked helpless and alone, horribly sad. Hazel should have been furious.
But she couldn’t make herself feel angry.
Hazel knelt and put her arm round her mother. There was hardly anything left of her – just skin and bones and stained work clothes. Even in the warm cave, she was trembling.
‘What can we do?’ Hazel said. ‘Tell me how to stop it.’
Her mother shook her head. ‘She let me go. She knows it’s too late. There’s nothing we can do.’
‘She … the Voice?’ Hazel was afraid to get her hopes up, but if her mother was really freed then nothing else mattered. They could get out of here. They could run away, back to New Orleans. ‘Is she gone?’
Her mother glanced fearfully around the cave. ‘No, she’s here. There’s only one more thing she needs from me. For that, she needs my free will.’
Hazel didn’t like the sound of that.
‘Let’s get out of here,’ she urged. ‘That thing in the rock … it’s going to hatch.’
‘Soon,’ her mother agreed. She looked at Hazel so tenderly … Hazel couldn’t remember the last time she’d seen that kind of affection in her mother’s eyes. She felt a sob building in her chest.
‘Pluto warned me,’ her mother said. ‘He told me my wish was too dangerous.’
‘Your – your wish?’
‘All the wealth under the earth,’ she said. ‘He controlled it. I wanted it. I was so tired of being poor, Hazel. So tired. First I summoned him … just to see if I could. I never thought the old