Thursday, 4 April 2013

Beautiful Chaos - Chapter 22



Temporis Porta
Who is Ethan Carter Wate again, exactly?” Liv asked.
“My great-great-great-great-uncle. He fought in the Civil War, then deserted because he didn’t believe it was right.”
“I remember now. Dr. Ashcroft told me the story of Ethan and Genevieve and the locket.”
For a moment, I felt guilty that Liv was here instead of Lena. Ethan and Genevieve were more than a story to me and Lena. She would’ve felt the
weight of this moment.
Liv ran her hand along the wall. “And you think this could be part of the Underground Railroad?”
“You’d be surprised how many old houses in the South have a room like this.”
“If that’s true, then where does this tunnel go?” Now she was right next to me. I took an old lantern down from a nail that had been hammered
between the crumbling bricks of the wall. I turned the key, and the lantern filled with light.
“How can there still be oil in there? This thing has to be a hundred and fifty years old.”
A rickety wooden bench lined one of the walls. The remains of what looked like an army-issue canteen, some kind of canvas sack, and a wool
blanket were stacked neatly beneath it. They were all coated with a thick layer of dust.
“Come on. Let’s see where it leads.” I held the lantern out in front of me. All I could see was the twisting tunnel and an occasional patch of brick
built into the dirt.
“Waywards. You think you can go wherever you want.” She reached up with one hand and touched the ceiling over our heads. Brown dirt rained
down, and she ducked, coughing.
“Are you scared?” I nudged her with my shoulder.
Liv leaned back and yanked on the twisted loop of rope. The false door behind us closed with a sharp bang, and it was dark. “Are you?”
The tunnel dead-ended. I wouldn’t have seen the trapdoor over our heads if Liv hadn’t noticed a slice of light above us. The door hadn’t been
opened in a long time, because when we pushed our way up, whole shovelfuls of dirt caved into the tunnel—and all over us.
“Where are we? Can you see?” Liv called up from below. I couldn’t get a solid foothold in the side of the dirt wall, but I managed to haul myself
aboveground.
“We’re in a field on the other side of Route 9. I can see my house from here. I think this used to be my family’s field before they built the road.”
“So Wate’s Landing must have been a safe house. It would have been easy enough to sneak food into that tunnel right from the pantry.” Liv was
looking at me, but I could tell she was a thousand miles away.
“Then at night, when it was safe, you ended up out here.” I let myself fall back down to the ground, pulling the trapdoor back into place. “I wonder if
Ethan Carter Wate knew. If he was part of it.” After seeing him in the visions, it felt like something he would do.
“I wonder if Genevieve knew,” Liv said.
“How much do you know about Genevieve?”
“I read the files.” Of course she did.
“Maybe they did it together.”
“Maybe it had something to do with that.” Liv was looking past me.
“What?”
She pointed behind me. There were planks hammered into an awkward X. But the boards were rotting, and you could see a doorway behind
them.
“Ethan. Am I imagining—”
I shook my head. “No. I see it, too.”
It wasn’t a Mortal doorway. I recognized the symbols carved into the old wood, even if I couldn’t read them. Across from the trapdoor that led into
the Mortal world was a second doorway, which led into the Caster one.
“We’d better go,” Liv said.
“You mean go in there.” I set the lantern down on the ground.
Liv already had her red notebook out and was sketching, but she still sounded worried. “I mean go back to your house.” She sounded annoyed,
but I could tell she was as interested in what lay beyond the doorway as I was.
“You know you want to go in there.” Some things never changed.
The first board splintered, coming off in my hands as soon as I pulled it loose.
“What I want is for you to stay out of the Tunnels, before this somehow manages to get us both into trouble.”
The last of the boards fell away. In front of me was a carved wooden doorway that framed massive double doors. The bottom seemed to
disappear into the dirt floor. I bent down to take a closer look. There were actual roots connecting the doors to the earth. I ran my hands along the
length of them. They were rough and solid, but I didn’t recognize the wood.
“It’s ash. And rowan, I think,” Liv said. I could hear her scribbling in her notebook. “There isn’t a single ash or rowan tree within miles of Gatlin.
They’re supernatural trees. They protect creatures of Light.”
“Which means?”
“Which means these doors are probably from somewhere far away. And they could lead to somewhere equally far away.”
I nodded. “Where?”
She pressed her hand into a design along the carved lintel. “I haven’t a clue. Madrid. Prague. London. We have rowan trees in the U.K.” She
started copying the symbols from the doors onto a page.
I pulled on the handle with both hands. The iron latch groaned, but the doors didn’t open. “That’s not the question.”
“Oh, really?”
“The question is, what are we doing here? What are we supposed to see?” I pulled on the handle again. “And how do we get on the other side?”
“That’s three questions.” Liv studied the doors. “I think it’s like the lintel at Ravenwood. The carvings are a kind of access code to get inside.”
“Figure it out. We have to find a way in.”
“I’m afraid it may not be that easy. Wait. Is that a word up there?” She brushed the dust off the doorway. Some kind of inscription was carved into
the frame.
“If it’s a Caster doorway, I wouldn’t be surprised.” I rubbed the wood with my hand, and it splintered beneath my fingers. Whatever it was, it was
ancient.
“ ‘Temporis Porta.’ Time Door? What does that mean?” Liv asked.
“It means we don’t have time for this.” I leaned my forehead against the doors. I could feel a surge of heat and energy where the ancient wood
touched my face. It was vibrating.
“Ethan?”
“Shh.”
Come on. Open. I know there’s something I’m supposed to see.
I focused my mind on the doors in front of me, the way I had on the Arclight the last time we were trying to find our way through the Tunnels.
I’m the Wayward. I know I am. Show me the way.
I heard the distinct sound of wood beginning to crack and splinter.
The wood shook as if the doors were going to collapse.
Come on. Show me.
I stood back as they swung open, split by light. Dust fell from their seal as if this entrance hadn’t been opened in a thousand years.
“How did you do that?” Liv was staring at me.
“I don’t know, but it’s open. Let’s go.”
We stepped inside, and the dust and the light dissolved around us. Liv reached out her hand, and before I could take it, I disappeared—
I was standing alone in the center of a huge hall. It looked the way I imagined Europe, maybe England or France or Spain—somewhere old and
timeless. But I couldn’t be sure. The farthest the Tunnels had ever taken me was the Great Barrier. The room was as big as the inside of a ship, tall
and rectangular, made entirely of stone. I don’t think it was a church, but something like a church or a monastery—vast and holy and full of mystery.
Massive beams crossed the ceiling, surrounded by smaller wood squares. Inside each square was a gold rose, a circle with petals.
Caster circles?
That didn’t seem right.
Nothing about this place was familiar. Even the power in the air—buzzing, like a downed electrical wire—felt different.
There was an alcove across the room, with a small balcony. Five windows ran the length of the wall, stretching higher than the tallest houses in
Gatlin, framing the room with soft light that crept through the billows of sheer fabric hanging over them. Thick golden drapes hung at their sides, and
I couldn’t tell if the breeze blowing through the windows was a Caster or a Mortal one.
The walls were paneled and curved into low benches near the floor. I had seen pictures like these in my mom’s books. Monks and acolytes sat on
benches like this to pray.
Why was I here?
When I looked up again, the room was suddenly full of people. They were wedged onto the entire length of the bench, filling the space in front of
me, crowding and pushing from all sides. I couldn’t see their faces; half of them were cloaked. But all of them were buzzing with anticipation.
“What’s going on? What are we waiting for?”
No one answered. It was as if they couldn’t see me, which didn’t make sense. This wasn’t a dream. I was in a real place.
The crowd moved forward, murmuring, and I heard the banging of a gavel. “Silentium.”
Then I saw familiar faces, and I realized where I was. Where I had to be.
The Far Keep.
At the end of the hall, Marian was hooded and robed, her hands tied with a golden rope. She stood in the balcony above the room, next to the tall
man who showed up in the library archive. The Council Keeper, I heard people around me whisper. The albino Keeper was standing behind him.
He spoke in Latin, and I couldn’t understand him. But the people around me did, and they were going crazy. “Ulterioris Arcis Concilium, quod
nulli rei—sive homini, sive animali, sive Numini Atro, sive Numini Albo—nisi Rationi Rerum paret, Marianam ex Arce Occidentali Perfidiae
condemnat.”
The Council Keeper repeated the words in English, and I understood why the people around me were reacting this way. “The Council of the Far
Keep, which answers only to the Order of Things, to no man, creature, or power, Dark or Light, finds Marian of the Western Keep guilty of Treason.”
There was a piercing pain in my stomach, as if my whole body had been sliced with a giant blade.
“These are the Consequences of her inaction. The Consequences shall be paid. The Keeper, though Mortal, will return to the Dark Fire from
which all power comes.”
The Council Keeper removed Marian’s hood, and I could see her eyes, ringed with darkness. Her head was shaved, and she looked like a
prisoner of war. “The Order is broken. Until the New Order comes forth, the Old Law must be upheld, and the Consequences paid.”
“Marian! You can’t let them—” I tried to push through the crowd, but the more I tried, the faster people surged forward, and the farther away she
seemed.
Until I hit something, someone unmoving and unmovable. I looked up into the glassy stare of Lilian English.
Mrs. English? What is she doing here?
“Ethan?”
“Mrs. English. You have to help me. They have Marian Ashcroft. They’re going to hurt her, and it’s not her fault. She didn’t do anything!”
“What do you think of the judge now?”
“What?” She wasn’t making any sense.
“Your paper. It’s due on my desk tomorrow.”
“I know that. I’m not talking about my paper.” Didn’t she understand what was happening?
“I think you are.” Her voiced sounded different, unfamiliar.
“The judge is wrong. They’re all wrong.”
“Someone must be at fault. The Order is broken. If not Marian Ashcroft, then who is to blame?”
I didn’t have the answer. “I don’t know. My mom said—”
“Mothers lie,” Mrs. English said, her voice void of emotion. “To allow their children to live the great lie that is Mortal existence.”
I could feel my anger building. “Don’t talk about my mom. You don’t know her.”
“The Wheel of Fate. Your mother knows about that. The future is not predetermined. Only you can stop the Wheel from crushing Marian Ashcroft.
From crushing them all.”
Mrs. English disappeared, and the room was empty. There was a smooth rowan doorway in front of me, recessed into the wall as if it had always
been there. The Temporis Porta.
I reached for the handle. The second I touched it, I was on the other side again, standing in the Mortal tunnel, staring at Liv.
“Ethan! What happened?” She hugged me, and I felt a flicker of the connection that would always be between us.
“I’m fine, don’t worry.” I pulled back. Her smile faded, her cheeks turning bright pink as she realized what she had done. She swung her arms
behind her back, clutching them awkwardly, like she wished she could make them disappear.
“What did you see? Where did you go?”
“I’m not exactly sure, but I know it was the Far Keep. I recognized two of the Keepers who came to the library. But I think it was the future.”
“The future? How do you know?” The wheels were already spinning in Liv’s mind.
“It was Marian’s trial, which hasn’t happened yet.”
Liv was twisting the pencil tucked behind her ear. “Temporis Porta means ‘Time Door.’ It could be possible.”
“Are you sure?” After what I’d seen, I hoped it was more of a warning—some sort of possible future that wasn’t set in stone.
“There’s no way to know, but if the Temporis Porta is some kind of portal, which seems likely, then you could have been seeing something that
hasn’t happened yet. The actual future.” Liv started scribbling in her red notebook. I knew she wanted to remember every detail of this conversation.
“After what I saw, I hope you’re wrong.”
She stopped writing. “I suppose it wasn’t good, then?”
“No.” I stopped. “If that really was the future, we can’t let Marian go to that trial. Promise me. If they come again, you’ll help me keep her away from
the Council. I don’t think she knows—”
“I promise.” Her face was dark and her voice cracked, and I knew that she was trying not to cry.
“Let’s hope there’s some other explanation.” But even as I said it, I knew there wasn’t. And so did Liv.
We retraced our steps, through the dirt, the heat, and the darkness, until I couldn’t feel anything except the weight of my world collapsing.

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