Can you believe it?” Alex asked Aaron once the boat was weaving through the rocks and on the way.
Aaron shook his head. He sat at the stern, watching Ishibashi grow small as the white boat flew across the waves at top speed. When the scientist was gone from sight, Aaron dropped his head in his hands.
Alex stayed in the captain’s seat. He checked in with Charlie to see if there was anything more he could learn about the impending battle, but there was nothing new. “Has Florence returned?” he asked.
Charlie stood still a moment, then shook his head.
Alex frowned. “Okay. Thanks. You can go.”
The head mage mulled over the battle predicament. He felt lost without Florence, and hoped Artimé was dealing with the news all right. He sighed, feeling helpless, and glanced over his shoulder at Aaron.
“Are you okay?” Alex asked gently. “Do you want to talk about it?”
Aaron looked up. His face was wan. “I wish I’d asked Ishibashi what exactly this means.”
“Yes, me too,” said Alex. “I’m not so sure he knows. I think he’d have told you more if he knew specifics. But it’s all making sense now, isn’t it? The fact that they are so old, and still so strong. And Henry being secretive about his medicine, but so sure it would work to heal Karkinos. Henry did great keeping their secret, that’s for sure.” He recalled the time Henry had asked him the hypothetical question about whether he’d want to live forever. Now he knew where that conversation had stemmed from.
Aaron shook his head, still overwhelmed. “But what if I don’t want to be immortal?” The vastness of that prospect was something he couldn’t digest. “Does it mean that if someone were to hit me with three heart attack spells, I wouldn’t die? Or run me through with a sword? Or chop my head off? Even then?”
“I don’t know,” said Alex. “I doubt Ishibashi knows, either, unless they’ve tried killing each other to test it out. But somehow I doubt they’d do that.”
“What happens if I get a non-life-threatening injury?”
Alex smiled grimly. “I don’t know. I can punch you in the face if you’d like. See what happens.”
Aaron laughed. “I’ll think about it,” he said. He leaned his head back on the seat and ran his fingers through his hair. “Ugh,” he groaned. “This is so weird.”
They fell back into silence. As the day became night, Alex’s mind returned to the more urgent matter: the pending attack and the unsettling word that the Warbler escapee had used. “Obliteration.” What would they find when they reached home?
Alex urged the white boat to go faster, and he stayed near the controls late into the night as they sped past the Island of Graves.
Aaron dozed, and soon Alex was nodding off too. After a time he got up, arranged the seat into a bed, and lay down, knowing he needed rest. But his nightmares were filled with frightening attacks on Artimé, and they ended with him being stabbed through the heart when he was just out of reach of Ishibashi, who was holding magical seaweed. In the dream, as Alex died, he saw Artimé’s mansion and all of its vibrant color disappear before his eyes, leaving only a gray shack and a throng of angry, starving Unwanteds turning on each other, with enemies taking over the island.
? ? ? ?
The sun was bright overhead when Alex awoke. Aaron was shaking him.
“Hey!” said Aaron. “Wake up. You might want to slow down the boat. Pan’s been chasing us for the past few minutes.”
It took Alex a moment to process the strange request, but then he sat up and immediately commanded the boat to stop. He looked around, disoriented until he caught sight of the cylindrical island and Pan gliding up beside them in the water.
Pan swung her head to look at the boys as the waves splashed up against the side of the boat. “Have you any news?” she asked. “Why is Aaron with you? Has something happened to the scientists?”
Alex had forgotten his promise to stop on his way back. “I’m so glad you saw us,” he said. He explained what had happened with the escapee from Warbler and the coming attack, and told her that Aaron had returned with him to help fight.
Pan listened intently. Occasional angry bursts of smoke shot from her nostrils, making Alex and Aaron shrink back. She remained silent until Alex had finished speaking, then moved swiftly to the cylindrical island and climbed its wall halfway. She trained her gaze to the west. “I see no sign of movement yet,” she said. “So you will beat them to Artimé. Perhaps that gives you some comfort.”
“A little,” said Alex. “I don’t suppose you see Florence, Henry, and Spike returning by any chance, do you? I’m feeling nervous without Florence to lead us to battle.”
“I’m sorry—I don’t see them,” said Pan. She climbed back down the side of the island and glided over to the boat. “Perhaps now is a good time for me to return the great favor I owe you. What can I do to help?”
Frantic Preparations