Jinx Read online




  Dedication

  To Jennifer Schwabach

  because it’s her kind of story

  Contents

  Dedication

  1. Jinx

  2. The Wizard’s House

  3. Strange Feet

  4. Werewolves

  5. The Forbidden Room

  6. A Journey in the Snow

  7. The Bonemaster

  8. The Spell with Something Wrong about It

  9. Tied Up in a Sack

  10. Knowledge Is Power

  11. Matters of Life and Death

  12. A Quarrel

  13. The Truce of the Path

  14. Three Spells Too Many

  15. Unexpected Meetings

  16. Curses

  17. The Canyon of Bones

  18. Bonesocket

  19. The Insistent Door

  20. The Bonemaster’s Secret

  21. Among the Bones

  22. Things Seen from Above

  23. Widdershins

  24. Reven’s Curse

  About the Author

  Credits

  Copyright

  About the Publisher

  1

  Jinx

  In the Urwald you grow up fast or not at all. By the time Jinx was six he had learned to live quietly and carefully, squeezed into the spaces left by other people, even though the hut he lived in with his stepparents actually belonged to him. He had inherited it after his father died of werewolves and his mother was carried off by elves.

  But then a spark from a passing firebird ignited the hut, and within a few minutes it had gone. The people in the clearing built another to replace it, and this new hut was not his. His stepparents, Bergthold and Cottawilda, felt this keenly. Besides, the harvest had been bad that autumn, and the winter would be a hungry one.

  This was the sort of situation that made people in the clearing cast a calculating eye upon their surplus children.

  And Jinx was definitely surplus, especially since Bergthold and Cottawilda had a new baby girl of their own. He worked as hard as he could to make up for the crime of existing, and he tried not to eat too much. He only took a single bite of his toad porridge every night before offering the rest to the baby. Nevertheless, his stepparents agreed between them that Jinx was too much trouble and expense to raise.

  So late one autumn afternoon Bergthold told Jinx to put on his coat, and together they left the clearing where they lived and plunged into the Urwald. They followed the path where it twisted between great trees as big around as cottages. Then Bergthold stepped off the path.

  Jinx stopped.

  “What are you waiting for?” Bergthold roared. “Come on!”

  “‘N-never stray from the path,’” said Jinx. This was a rule every child in the Urwald was taught as soon as it could walk.

  “We’re straying from it now!” Bergthold grabbed Jinx by the front of his coat, cuffed both his ears, and hauled him from the path.

  Jinx struggled in his stepfather’s grip. Leaving the path was wrong. The path and the clearings of the Urwald belonged, just barely, to people. Everything else belonged to the trees. Anyone who ventured off the path was doomed.

  Bergthold hit Jinx again, gave him a hard shove, and marched him into the forest.

  Jinx walked, his ears burning. He made his way through the deep twilight of the Urwald, and every now and then Bergthold gave him a little shove to the left or the right around a great glowering tree, and Jinx thought that Bergthold was making sure that Jinx wouldn’t be able to find the path again.

  “Stop here!”

  Jinx stopped instantly, not wanting to get hit again. He wondered if Bergthold was going to kill him.

  “Sit down, and stay right here, and don’t move until nightfall, or you’ll wish you had never been born.”

  Jinx already wished he had never been born. But he sat down in the moss, where his stepfather pointed. He could feel the Urwald’s disapproval seeping up through the ground.

  “Good. And good-bye.” Bergthold turned to go. Then he stopped, looking around him. He started off in one direction, then stopped, came back, and started off in another direction. Then he came back again.

  He gave Jinx a rather furtive look. “Do you, er, happen to remember which way we came?”

  “No,” said Jinx.

  “Ah,” said Bergthold. He nodded, as though he was just thinking about things.

  He’s lost, Jinx thought. We’re both lost.

  “I think I know which way the path is, though,” Jinx hazarded.

  “Ah! Well, don’t just sit there like a lump on the ground—lead on, boy!”

  Jinx scrambled to his feet and started walking. He really had no idea where the path was. But at least moving, with Bergthold behind him, felt safer than sitting still, alone, under the Urwald’s menacing shadows. And probably being watched by hungry creatures in the trees.

  Rounding a great gnarled knot of a tree trunk, Jinx ran smack into a creature and yelped.

  “Calm down, boy, I won’t eat you,” said the creature.

  Since this was by no means a given in the Urwald, Jinx did calm down. The creature was a man, tall and thin, with twisty hair, yellow eyes, and a pointed beard. He was dressed in a long purple robe. His feet were bare and knotty, and he carried a basket—he had been harvesting mistletoe.

  Jinx had never met a wizard. He had always heard they had long white beards, not short pointy brown ones. But magic poured off the man, ripples of magic as strong as the pulses of life that seeped from the trees all around them.

  “Just walking in the woods with my boy, sir,” said Jinx’s stepfather, too hastily and without any greeting at all.

  You didn’t tell people your business in the Urwald, and the wizard’s nose twitched at the bad smell of the lie. “Pretty late for straying off the path,” he said.

  “Gotta teach the boy to find his way in the woods.”

  The wizard’s nose twitched more. You didn’t learn to find your way in these woods—you stayed out of them. “Some people abandon their children in the woods,” said the wizard. “If they find it too much trouble to feed them.”

  “Not their own children!” said Bergthold. “Stepchildren, maybe, now I’ve heard of that.”

  The wizard looked at Bergthold through a dark cloud of disapproval. “If you marry the mother, you accept the children.”

  “I didn’t marry the mother,” said Bergthold, aggrieved. “She died years ago. I married the woman who was married to the man who had married the mother. The boy’s got a curse on him—everyone who takes him dies.”

  “Actually, that seems like a fairly normal death rate for the Urwald.” The wizard looked at Jinx so hard that Jinx wanted to hide. “I happen to have need of a boy. I’ll take him.”

  “Buy him, you mean,” said Bergthold.

  “Curse and all?”

  “He’s worth more with the curse!”

  “Everyone who takes him dies?”

  “You could probably use that,” said Bergthold. “You know, against your enemies.”

  The wizard sighed. “Very well. I will pay one silver penny.”

  “A silver penny? A measly silver penny for a boy like this?” Bergthold drew himself up. “A boy with a valuable curse? You insult me, sir!”

  A dangerous glitter flickered across the wizard’s face, and Jinx shot his stepfather a nervous glance. Bergthold was frightened and angry, as he usually was, but the fear was ripply with greed.

  “A silver penny is a lot for a boy with a curse on him,” said the wizard.

  Somewhere behind them there was a crunching sound, as of a fallen stick breaking under a very large foot. Jinx peered anxiously into the terrifying gloom. His stepfather was too wrought up to notice.

  “A boy like this is worth three si
lver pennies at least!” said Bergthold.

  This was rather a surprise to Jinx, who was regularly told by both Bergthold and Cottawilda that he wasn’t worth a rotten cabbage leaf.

  “He’s a hard worker, too! Especially if you beat him,” said Bergthold. “And you hardly have to feed him at all.”

  “Well, I can see you haven’t been,” said the wizard. “One penny’s my final offer.”

  There were more crunching sounds, sticks snapping, and the hollow scrabble of clawed feet on the forest earth. Jinx looked this way and that but couldn’t see anything moving. He looked back at the two men and wished he could trust either one of them.

  “Two silver pennies then,” said Bergthold.

  “One silver penny,” said the wizard, sounding suddenly indifferent to the whole thing. “You had best take it quickly.”

  “Never!”

  “Come here, boy,” the wizard commanded.

  Several things happened at once. Jinx took a nervous step toward the wizard. From the forest behind him, heavy, ragged breathing joined the sound of clawed feet, and Jinx was overwhelmed by a smell like rotting meat. Jinx whirled around and saw trolls—they must be trolls, they were so big and tusky—crashing through the trees, bearing down on him and his stepfather. The wizard reached out and grabbed Jinx. A pale green cloud of calm surrounded the wizard all through what happened next, and it was because Jinx could see this cloud that he stood perfectly still, even though his legs wanted to run.

  With a roar of triumph one of the trolls seized Bergthold around the waist and hoisted him to his shoulder. The other trolls howled with glee and danced about. A troll’s claw swung right past Jinx’s nose—he felt the breeze and smelled the rancid breath. Bergthold screamed and reached his arms toward Jinx, beseeching. Jinx shrank back against the wizard. The wizard didn’t move. Jinx expected to feel the trolls’ claws grabbing him at any second.

  But the trolls didn’t seem to see Jinx.

  The party of trolls thumped out of the clearing. Jinx had a last sight of his stepfather, head bumping down against a troll’s back, screaming and red faced—Bergthold’s hat fell off and rolled away. Jinx broke away from the wizard and ran to pick it up.

  Jinx stood with the hat in his hand and looked at the claw marks in the moss at his feet. Then he looked between the trees where the trolls and his stepfather had disappeared. The Urwald had swallowed up Bergthold as if he were no more huge and terrifying than a rabbit. The smell of rotting meat still hung in the air.

  And then Jinx had the thought that to the forest, Bergthold was nothing, or just a very small thing. He didn’t matter at all in the great green sea of life that was the Urwald.

  It was as if the idea had come from the trees themselves. Well, maybe Bergthold was nothing to them. They’d never been hit by him.

  “What’s your name, boy?” said the wizard gently.

  “Jinx.”

  “And mine is Simon,” said the wizard. “So that was your stepfather, was it?”

  Jinx nodded.

  “Had he brought you into the woods to abandon you?”

  “Yes,” said Jinx. “Our house was mine, but it burned down. And there’s a new baby.”

  Jinx didn’t expect sympathy, never having had any before. But he was a little surprised by Simon’s reaction—the news that Jinx was being abandoned made the wizard smile. There was a little blue glow of satisfaction with the smile.

  Jinx was relieved that wizards’ feelings were as easy to see as other people’s. He had learned to watch people very closely, and to listen carefully. He assumed that everyone did this and that everyone could see what he saw.

  “I don’t expect you’ll miss him very much,” said the wizard.

  Jinx shook his head no. He wouldn’t. Bergthold was mostly a red cloud of anger that led to beatings. But now what?

  “Do you come from one of the clearings?” Simon asked.

  Didn’t everybody? Jinx nodded.

  “What’s it called?”

  “Called?”

  “Doesn’t your clearing have a name?”

  “I don’t know.” Other clearings had names. Jinx had never heard his own clearing called anything.

  “Could you find your clearing again?”

  Jinx shook his head no.

  “Excellent,” said Simon.

  He reached out a long, thin hand to Jinx. Jinx had never even seen a wizard before, and now a wizard was sticking a hand at him.

  “Do you want to come with me?” said Simon.

  It had started to snow. Night was drawing in, and Jinx heard stealthy rustlings like suppressed laughter in the forest all around him. The wizard had saved Jinx from the trolls. But had he also called the trolls?

  “Why didn’t the trolls take me?” said Jinx.

  “They didn’t see you.”

  “Was that magic?”

  “Of course. Shall we go?”

  Jinx knew he couldn’t survive alone in the Urwald once night fell. But wizards—wizards were dangerous.

  “Are you the Bonemaster?” Jinx asked. The Bonemaster was the only wizard Jinx had ever heard of by name. Everyone in Jinx’s clearing was terrified of the Bonemaster, though no one had ever seen him.

  “No. I am not the Bonemaster. I am just Simon Magus.”

  “The Bonemaster sucks out people’s souls with a straw,” said Jinx. “Do you?”

  “I have some bad habits,” said Simon. “But that is not one of them.”

  “Do you eat people?” said Jinx.

  “Certainly not.”

  “Do you kill people?”

  “Very seldom. And never small boys.”

  The wizard’s thoughts were green and blue, and they slid around each other, shifty and secretive. But they weren’t red and angry, and that was something. And the Urwald loomed, ready to swallow Jinx as easily as it had his stepfather.

  “It’s nearly dark. Are you coming?” Simon held out his hand again.

  Jinx made his choice and took it.

  2

  The Wizard’s House

  And that was how Jinx came to live with a possibly evil wizard and twenty-seven cats in a huge stone house that stood alone in its own clearing, protected by invisible wards that kept monsters out but let some very strange visitors in.

  Just how strange, Jinx found out that first night, after he and Simon had finished a very satisfactory dinner of bread, cheese, pickles, jam, apple cider, and pumpkin pie.

  They were sitting at the kitchen table on top of the big stone stove, which filled half the kitchen and was just pleasantly warm underfoot. Onions, dried apples, and pumpkin hung from the rafters overhead. There were cats everywhere, lying on barrels and shelves—there was one curled around the water pump.

  “No more pie for now, boy—you’ll make yourself sick,” said Simon.

  “What are you going to do with me?” Jinx asked. He believed that the wizard probably didn’t eat people, since his house was full of much better things to eat. But he figured Simon must be planning to use him for something … probably something evil.

  “Right now? Send you to bed. Tomorrow, put you to work,” said Simon.

  But there was a part of Simon that seemed to hide from what he’d just said, as if it wasn’t the whole truth.

  “Are you going to send me to kill your enemies?” said Jinx.

  “No, I think I’ll spare my enemies that terrible fate.”

  Jinx was annoyed at being laughed at. “Anyone who takes me in dies.”

  “I expect they do eventually,” said Simon. “But I doubt you hasten the process. You really think if I sent you to the Bonemaster, he’d drop dead?”

  The Bonemaster was a formidable enemy to have. Jinx was relieved to hear he wouldn’t be expected to deal with him. Still … “I do have a curse on me, though.”

  “You don’t have a curse on you. Put that nonsense out of your head.”

  “Why aren’t you afraid of the Bonemaster?” said Jinx.

  “How do you
know I’m not?”

  “I can see it,” said Jinx, surprised at this question about something so obvious. Everyone’s thoughts glowed green fear whenever the Bonemaster’s name was mentioned. It was the same bottle-shaped blob of terror for everyone, as if the fear of the Bonemaster had come to all of them in exactly the same way, as exactly the same thought. Which was odd, because usually different people had different-colored thoughts.

  “You should be afraid of the Bonemaster,” said Simon. “Whatever happens, don’t ever go near him.”

  There came a banging at the door.

  Simon muttered a swear word and went to open it. Jinx trailed along behind him.

  Outside, the night was purple. A tornado of snow blasted past and left behind a woman standing beside a butter churn, grinning.

  “Dame Glammer. Welcome,” said Simon.

  “Dame” was a title for a witch, just like “Magus” meant a wizard. Jinx stared. The witch stared back. Her small, sharp eyes seemed to be laughing at Jinx. Her face had a lot of nose to it. Her hair was a wild nest of gray pinned on top of her head anyhow with two long knitting needles. She unwrapped herself from several wet cloaks and piled them into Jinx’s arms.

  “This little chipmunk looks good enough to eat, Simon! Where’d you get him from? Is he your very own?”

  A wizard and now a witch—worse and worse. Jinx glanced at the door. Outside was the Urwald, the snow, and the trolls. Inside, two magicians.

  “His name’s Jinx,” said Simon.

  “How darling! It’s an awful night for traveling, Simon, even with the butter churn.”

  “I suppose you’d better stay, then,” said Simon, with a brown puff of annoyance that didn’t come into his voice. “Sit down, have some cider. Jinx, come and help me make up the spare rooms.”

  Jinx followed Simon up the ladder to the loft to get blankets and sheets. “Never go through that door, Jinx,” said Simon, pointing to the far end of the loft. “It’s a straight drop to the ground.”

  They made up a bed for Dame Glammer at the bottom of the north tower. Then they went up the spiral staircase, with cats weaving around between Jinx’s legs trying to trip him up. Simon dropped the armload of blankets on the bed.

  “I suggest you make that bed and get in it,” said Simon. “Good night, Jinx.”