Gates & Gambles
Underland and the Forehidden Kingdom, Chapter 10
Underland and the Forehidden Kingdom is a serialised, young adult, fantasy novel about an overconfident bookworm who finds himself in a parallel world where words are weapons, ideologies form fortresses, and intelligence without integrity may just cost you everything. If you’re new here, you can start from the beginning or check out the index.
RECAP: After escaping from the Narrow Strait, the Millionth and Fifth are forced to change their route to the Eastern Monument and pass through the Moonlamp Stronghold of Midnah-Dogu and the realm of Helel ibn Shakar, a Morningstar.
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Ten days later, the Millionth and Fifth trudged onto a dusty plateau speckled with mini tropical forests and hanging gardens that drooped over the edges of hills and boulders. Dawit hung back several paces behind Shem and Avana. They were walking as far apart as their formation would allow. The rest of the troop were spaced out intermittently behind them.
The first hint of the Stronghold was a line of dazzling white rock spanning the horizon. They were still a good two and a half miles from the outer walls; nevertheless, the full weight of their scale cast a shadow of trepidation over the Millionth and Fifth.
Slowing his stride, Dawit fell back beside Keon.
“Listen, there’s a few things you should know before we go in,” he said. “To get into the Stronghold, we have to pass through the Golden Gate. It’s a whole walled city on its own. Beyond that, Midnah-Dogu stretches for miles.”
Keon listened intently, taking mental notes.
“Everything inside the Gate is designed to keep you from leaving. So, don’t buy anything. Not even food.”
Keon scoffed, “How can I? I don’t have any money.”
“Knowledge and information are Underland’s currency. If someone offers you something; mangoes, jewellery, even a banana—don’t take it. It’ll seem like they’re giving you a gift, but they’ll want something in return. All they have to do is ask questions.”
“So, what; don’t answer any questions?”
“Don’t give away anything personal. Not even your name.”
“Why? What’ll they do with it?”
“They’ll sell it,” said Kai, coming up on the other side. “Probably to the Mysts.”
“Are you serious?!”
“They run a market here in the city,” said Dawit, nodding in the direction of the approaching walls. “The Bedesten.”
“What do they sell there?”
“Information mostly, but if the rumours are true—Mirrors.”
By the time they neared the walls, they’d turned their shawls inside out to hide the Torchbearer seals on their backs. Hoods hanging low, they kept their chins close to the chest; eyes peeking out beneath fraying hems.
Keon was having a hard time seeing where he was going. Several times he almost tripped on slabs of rock jutting out of the ground. All he could make out was the pale, sand-like dust of the plateau.
After one last trip, Shem grabbed the scruff of his neck and tugged on the tip of the hood.
“Eyes up mate. We’re almost there.”
As he raised his chin, Keon’s gaze roamed across the looming, three-tiered marvel of Midnah-Dogu. Hundreds of marble statues lined the walls, each brandishing long javelins; their heads wreathed in carved turbans. Were they there just to intimidate travellers or ward people off? He could have sworn some of them were moving, but that was ridiculous.
The gleaming inner, outer and lower walls were separated by terraces; the hewn white marble holding back escarpments in the land. The lower wall crowned the edges of a moat that spanned the width of the Stronghold; broken by bridges every two-hundred metres.
Sapphire bricks lined the tips of the battlements and cut through the white walls in seven bands. Intermittently spaced rectangular towers fortified the inner wall. Halfway between each tower, smaller rounded ones held up the outer wall.
“This place looks beautiful…”
“Don’t be deceived,” said Avana, “It’s nothing but a white-washed tomb.”
Before he could question her sudden concern for his safety, she took off in a brisk stride. A tap on the back caught his attention. Jonas was signing in the direction of the walls.
“We’re about to pass through the Gate,” said Zahara.
White marble steps marched up a ramp leading onto the main bridge. The bridge stood across from the entrance to the Golden Gate; a gold paved courtyard guarded by two colossal flanking towers. A triad of golden doors were embedded in the main wall, each capped by a latticed arch.
The flanking towers seemed to swell around them as they crossed the bridge into the courtyard. Billowing red banners, embroidered with gold, fell down their sides from top to bottom; buffeted by the breeze funnelling through the courtyard.
The central twin doors were flung wide in welcome, beyond which, Keon could just about make out the golden paths of dusty streets winding between white, flat-roofed buildings.
Two great, pearlescent effigies stood either side of the open doors. They were women, hooded with veils that clung tight to their foreheads, the sides cascading down their cheeks like drapes that met below the midriff. Chiselled across their chests, beneath the opening of the hoods, were the scales of armoured breastplates. In opposing hands, they brandished lengthy, gleaming glaives. As the Millionth and Fifth drew near, their alabaster heads creaked to look at them, the glaives suddenly crossing to bar their path. Keon could’ve leapt out his skin.
“What business brings you to Midnah-Dogu, travellers?”
Their carved features were alluring; the marble seeming to melt and warp as they moved. They spoke in cursive tones, thickened with a lacquered accent. One would be forgiven for forgetting they were made of stone.
Dawit stepped forward, shoulders squared.
“Curiosity. We’ve heard tales of the Golden Gate. Wanna see if her treasures are real.”
Their porcelain faces shone with smiles that would warm the heart of any man.
“Almuluk bids you welcome. The hospitality of the Golden Gate is without rival in these lands. We would be honoured for you to dine with us.”
Dawit forced a smile and nodded, his eyes not leaving theirs.
“Thank-you.”
The stone sentinels bowed, yielding. The glaives slowly creaked apart, opening the way.
Dawit chanced a glance at Shem who dipped his head in approval. His cheeks puffed in exasperated relief.
The group passed through the open doors into a long, vaulted corridor. Geometric, arabesque patterns adorned the walls on all sides, rising to curve across an arched ceiling.
“That didn’t seem too hard,” whispered Keon.
“Getting in isn’t the problem. It’s getting out the other side,” said Dawit.
“What were those things anyway?”
“Mynds,” said Zahara, stifling a snicker at his shock, “All Mynds aren’t hideous, just like all ideas aren’t bad ideas.”
“So, what’s the big idea?” he said, signalling back with his head, “Get it? The big…”
Everybody got it, just nobody thought it was funny. Except, maybe Dawit; but he was trying to hide it.
“It’s less an idea than a persuasive lie,” said Avana, turning to look at him, “That Midnah-Dogu is a paradise.”
“I take it you don’t like this place much,” said Keon.
“I’m not overly fond of Moonlamps.”
The rush and heat of would-be sunlight hit Keon’s forehead as they exited the archway, forcing him to pull down on his hood. As his eyes adjusted, the bustling streets and white walls of the Golden Gate melted into view. The scent of grilled meat and fresh bread danced across the air. Perfumes and spices of every imagination jostled for a place in his nostrils. Market stools lined the edges of dusty streets, decorated with hundreds of tiny, twinkling mirrors, clinking together on strands of twine.
He couldn’t hide the smile breaking out across his face.
“Now this is more like it!”
Hustle, bustle and busyness abounded, with people skittering left and right like worker ants. Some of them observed the new arrivals with scepticism, others with curiosity. In their travels, they had barely seen any sign of life in Underland, but Midnah-Dogu was practically bursting at the seams. Young and old. Male and female. Multiple hues of sun-soaked brown.
“We should split up,” said Shem, “We’ll draw less attention that way.”
Dawit nodded.
“Meet on the other side of the gate. Keon, Kai; you come with me. Zahara, you go with Jonas.”
Shem and Avana shot Dawit a look as he grinned with mischief.
“And you two,” he said, index finger ping-ponging between them, “Sort it out, yeah?”
Avana grimaced as Shem shuffled awkwardly in the dust beside her. He blinked, eyeing the crowded streets for a possible path through the walled city.
“Come on,” he grunted.
“You’re not with me, we’re just going the same way,” she muttered, pushing past him.
Keon snickered to himself as he, Dawit and Kai wound their way through the dusty avenues.
“What’s so funny?” asked Dawit.
Keon shook his head in gleeful silence.
“Nothin’”
This was impossible. There was food everywhere, and not just any food. There was lahmacun. Shish. Doner. Kumpir. Falafel. Kofte. Naan bread. Pitta bread. Crisp bread. Flat bread. Keon shook his head in a vain attempt to fight off the fragrances. Their light lunch wasn’t helping. They hadn’t foraged since the afternoon before. How’d they expect him notto eat anything, especially when people were giving it away for free?
He held up his hands to shield himself, apologising profusely to a motherly old lady who was offering him pomegranates. He didn’t even like pomegranates, but right now they may as well have been edible gold.
A tall young guy with the longest beard he’d ever seen offered him some kind of overcoat. He didn’t know what the man was saying but he seemed concerned he wasn’t wearing the right clothing for the arid heat. At least, that’s what Keon assumed based on how he kept gesturing to the sky and tugging at his shawl. Goodness, it smelt good too. And the quality. Was that satin? It felt amazing!
He was suddenly jostled out of his euphoria by Dawit tugging on his arm, gesturing for them to move on. They had to practically drag him away.
Overcrowded market stools soon gave way to an open square of immaculately cut grass. Keon breathed in the freedom of the silky, smooth air that seemed to permeate all Underland. They were walking down a path of cream marble lining the perimeter of the square. Daylight twinkled between overhanging palm trees as they passed, light dancing across the surface of a fruit he didn’t recognise. At the centre of the square, children frolicked around a ringed pool of crystalline blue. Its waters were fed by a pearlescent, marble fountain in the middle, set aside like an island. The fountain itself was shaped as an open book atop a stool, the waters trickling down its gold lined centre into the pool.
“What’s that?” Keon asked, nodding in its direction.
Dawit gave it little more than a passing glance, making a beeline for the opposite end of the courtyard.
“That’s the Kalimat Mithali. Their Codex.”
“They only have the one?”
“Moonlamps draw everything from a single, unified Codex. Their legends say the Kalimat Mithali was a collection of the King’s decrees as recorded by his scribe; the Intermediary. They say that long ago, the King gave the completed work to the Intermediary who passed it on to his people. Moonlamps have travelled to Strongholds like this ever since to record its words in their Codices.”
“You ever read it?”
“Why would I?”
“I mean, if it belonged to the King, wouldn’t you wanna read it?”
“It doesn’t.”
“But, how do you know?...”
“Because bro!” Dawit wheeled round, realising he should probably lower his voice, “Because it came from Helel ibn Shakar…not the King!”
He turned and took off, leaving behind a somewhat sceptical Keon.
Something about this place was setting Dawit on edge. All of them in fact. Except maybe Shem. He didn’t get it. The people seemed oddly every day, save for their dress. Multihued kaftans with golden embroidery. Not the kind of thing you would expect to wear to a dusty market. Everyone dressed like royalty, from the humble man selling purple yams to the old sage, sat on his stool smoking a long pipe; his features practically swallowed by facial hair. Even the kids wore elaborately decorated skull caps (if they were boys) and hoods (if they were girls); probably to save their fancier clothes from the dust, judging by the golden-brown stains lining the bottoms of formally white robes.
As his eyes roamed the square, his gaze fell upon a wall on the far-left side. It was featureless save for an arch breaking its surface like an open mouth, its long throat falling into a deep void.
“Yeah, you don’t wanna go that way bro,” said Kai, startling him out of his preoccupied stupor.
“What is it?”
“That’s the Bedesten. The Mirror Market.”
They’d been walking awhile when Dawit’s pace began slowing to a crawl. He was getting clumsy, stumbling over every little pebble on the street. Keon drew alongside him.
“You alright, Dawit?”
He seemed out of breath, tugging at the edge of his hood; what’s more, his forehead was sparkling with beads of perspiration. Seeing Keon’s concern, he wiped his head with the back of his bracer.
“Must be the heat,” he said, which was odd because a cool breeze had been blowing for the last twenty minutes.
As time went on, Dawit’s uncertain stride diminished to a muddled shuffle. His movements grew more laboured and uncoordinated.
“Quit messing about bro,” said Kai impatiently, but Dawit could barely focus on his face.
By the time they rounded the next corner, he was breathing heavily, leaning on a market stool for support. The mirrors tinkled as he almost lost his balance and Keon rushed to steady him.
“Dawit?”
“I’m fine…I’m fi—”
He lost his grip and hit the ground hard, blowing a cloud of golden dust into the air.
“Dawit!”
Kai skidded to Dawit’s side and tilted his head back to stop him choking on his tongue. He flicked his eyelids open with his thumbs. His eyes were rolling back, fighting to snap shut. He was running a furious fever, competing with the arid heat. The crowds quickly amassed like seagulls to seed.
“Does anyone have any water?!” Keon cried.
“NO!...No!” Kai held up a hand to a young man offering a copper-coloured jug, his wide-eyed expression telling Keon to can it.
“He’s tired, man! He’s just…he’s really tired!” Kai called over his shoulder, without a shred of conviction. He yanked Keon by the hood, “What are you, stupid? Don’t ask for anything!”
“The hell’s wrong with him?” hissed Keon.
Kai turned his head to the side, watching beads of sweat trickle down his neck.
“He’s been stricken.”
“What? What’s that mean?”
“It means he’s sick!”
He took a strip of fabric from his pouch, poured some of his canteen over it, squeezed it out and began dabbing Dawit’s forehead.
“Back home, you get sick; it’s from bacteria, yeah? Or a virus.”
Keon nodded.
“Well here, it’s your mindset,” he said, pointing to his temple, “Hope deferred makes the heart sick and a crushed spirit dries the bones.”
Keon had no idea what that meant, but nodded all the same.
The beads of sweat seemed to form faster than Kai could wipe them. He shook his head, reticent.
“It’s no good,” he muttered, gently rapping Dawit’s cheeks. “Bro? Bro! Talk to me. I can’t help you if I dunno what’s wrong with you.”
“I…I can’t…I tried…I’m sorry…”
Kai’s honey-brown complexion seemed to desaturate as the colour bled from his face and his back tensed.
“What is it?” asked Keon.
“It’s doubt. He’s been stricken with doubt,” he said, “We need to get him away from the crowds. Now!”
“Why?”
Kai slid out his Codex and peeled off a strip; eyes fixed on Dawit’s wriggling form. He folded furiously, forging a long bow, from which he tore off a length and twisted it into an arrow. Several of the people dispersed in alarm as though the very act were taboo.
“If we’re not careful, he’s gonna attract something worse.”
“Like what?”
“Stop stopping and get your Codex! I need a blank page from the Appendix.”
Keon scrambled to swing his satchel round, fumbling with the clip. He slid the book out, hesitant. He hadn’t gone near the Appendix since that day.
“Isn’t this risky?” said Keon, eyeing the crowds.
“Doesn’t matter now.”
He popped the pencil out of its pouch and flicked to the back of the book.
“What you’re gonna do is write ‘blue’, attach it to the arrow and set it alight,” said Kai.
“What?”
“Just do it!”
Keon tore out the page, wrote ‘blue’ and poked the arrow through both ends of the paper, attaching it to the shaft. Grabbing the flint and steel kit, he crouched down and began striking sparks over the paper. It caught quickly. As the flames spluttered to life, blue smoke began billowing from the page. He lifted the arrow up to eye-level, his features bathed by the blue glow.
“Whoa…”
“Quick! Give it to me and grab him!” said Kai.
Keon passed Kai the arrow, skidded to Dawit’s side and struggled to sling his gigantic arm across his shoulders.
Kai aimed up, bent the bow and loosed.
Shem and Avana were walking at a distance that made little sense for two people travelling together. Locals randomly passed between them, making them move quickly to re-establish eye contact. Whenever their eyes met, hostilities resumed. This cycle repeated for ten straight minutes until Shem decided to break it.
“Alright,” he said, arms flapping in resignation. “This is ridiculous.”
Avana slowed to a stop, bolting her arms across her chest.
“I agree.”
“Why were we even fighting?”
“Because you’re an idiot.”
“You what?!”
“I don’t like to repeat myself…”
“Really? ‘Cause you do nothin’ but repeat the same crap, day-in-day-out. It does my head in.”
“Which shouldn’t be hard, given how little’s in there…”
“Listen, yeah…”
Shem took her by the arm. He probably intended to be gentle, but wasn’t quite gentle enough. Avana spun his arm off and shoved him in the chest with the other hand. He flew back two metres, knocked over a stray basket and landed in a giant sack of paprika.
Avana cupped both hands over her mouth as plumes of orange-red powder mushroomed into the air around him, breaking into a high-pitched cackle moments later. She doubled over, struggling to soothe her aching stomach muscles as the powder settled, blanketing Shem in a thick layer of spice.
He sniffed a chuckle, dusting off his powdery, orange arms. As he moved to pick himself up, all mirth melted away. Avana traced the path of his stare up into the sky—and to the trail of blue smoke arcing across it.
It seems that these kids should have studied "“I must not fear. Fear is the mind-killer. Fear is the little-death that brings total obliteration. I will face my fear. I will permit it to pass over me and through me. And when it has gone past I will turn the inner eye to see its path. Where the fear has gone there will be nothing. Only I will remain.” They all seem to be falling to fear and hatred.