Since walking the beach doesnât immediately put us into that dense forest, I feel relieved and a childish bit of hope of finding a fishing path leading from the ocean.
Walking along the rocky beach goes much slower with two injured in our group. Bay hobbles along as best he can, trying to look as though every step doesnât hurt. Though Minnle is able to move on his own, we can all tell by the way he clutches his side that he needs care. But I know Minnle. If we suggest he stay behind while we look for help, heâll just get angry. Besides, weâve all heard tales of Wilds. To be left behind, injured and alone, is as good as burying someone.
We have to stay together. We have to keep moving.
After moving a sadly short distance, the sun climbs higher and higher in the sky, making those with spare pieces of clothing fashion head-covers and dip them in the water to keep cool. As I dip a sleeve into the salty water, Iris startles me when she shouts, âI donât believe it!â
I turn toward the forest with my hands ready, preparing myself to flee into the ocean. As I do I see that Iris is not pointing at something in the forest, but out at the rocks in the ocean.
Itâs William.
Smiling and uncontrollably shouting in delightful surprise, Iris and I race out into the rocky shallows. William is floating toward shore, one arm holding onto the shattered remains of our mast, the other with his quarterstaff hooked in his armpit. Waves push and topple him about as he fights for control in the current.
âBurin,â William says with a relieved smile when Iris and I swim out to help him. âGood. Youâre okay.â
âWeâre okay? What about you?â I ask, half laughing with relief and shock that the manâs alive and seemingly unharmed. His eyes even lack the contours of exhaustion the other members of the group all have. âHow are you even here?â
William half shrugs, still with an iron grip on the mast. âI pulled through.â
We reach shallow enough water for the three of us to walk and William slowly pulls his arm from around the mast.
âWere you out there all night? How did you live through that?â Iris asks.
âJust kept swimming,â William says nonchalantly as he stands up and leans against his quarterstaff, sighing with satisfaction.
âI see you kept your stick,â I say with a smile.
âYeah. I kept something else too. Didnât mean to, though.â William reaches down to the drifting remains of the mast, his lifesaver, and tugs at a tangled piece of rope. He unties some of the knots and reveals a green cloth. âI figured it would come in handy when we met Meng.â
William unfurls our flag, Henderinâs flag. I bite my lip. âThe flag of Meng.â
âOr at least it will be, once he sees it,â Iris notes. âAnd once he lets us start our colony here.â
âOne thing at a time,â William says. âWho else is here?â
I tell William about those who survived and those who did not as we walk onto the shore toward the others. Cautiously, fearful she might hurt him, Mally runs up and hugs William. âI canât believe youâre alive,â she says.
âWell, believe it,â William says, doing his best to smile as he casts a worried glance at our two injured members. âHow are you two feeling?â
âOh, you know me, canât complain,â Bay says, wobbling on his crutch.
Minnle gives William one of those âdonât askâ glares. It makes William look all the more concerned.
âWeâre looking for a better harbor,â I say. âSomeplace Meng might have used when he came here. Did you see anything?â
William shakes his head.
âWell, guess weâll just have to keep looking then,â I say. I laugh awkwardly as I remember my moistened sleeve rag, wrapping it around my head. âI still canât believe youâre alive, William. I mean, I hoped you would be but you went overboard miles offshore.â
This story has been taken without authorization. Report any sightings.
William shrugs and starts walking in the direction we need to go, using his quarterstaff as a walking stick. âI wouldnât be a member of this group if I couldnât do the impossible, Burin,â he says. âThatâs why weâre finding Meng, right?â William shows the group the flag. They all smile as he takes a stray bit of rope and ties it around his quarterstaff, waving it like a flagpole.
âTrue, true.â I look back to the group, smiling as I indicate for us to follow William further down the shore.
We walk down the beach, feeling in much better moods now that our numbers are at a level I had assumed would survive. William volunteers to run ahead as a scout. All of us are relieved he volunteers for this, given our two injured members make our trek slow-going. Still, all are concerned that William needs rest.
When I see him running back toward us as fast as he can after rounding a rock ledge, I know itâs either tragedy or excitement that awaits.
ââ¦.it itâs here! I found it!â William shouts as he stops in front of us. âAround the corner. Youâre not going to believe this.â A smile fills Williamâs face from ear to ear.
âWhat? Is it Meng?â I ask.
âClose enough. Youâll just have to see. Come on.â
Like kids heading to a festival, we all pick up the pace to round the rock ledge of the beach. Even Bay is able to move faster and when we turn the corner we all gasp.
Itâs more like a chute than a bay, jagged rocks and loud breakers on all sides with a slim passage down the middle not five feet across. The wind seems to blow even faster here, despite the land having a moon-shaped semblance of a harbor. In such a churning, bubbling bay Iâd be hesitant to even step foot in, we all are shocked to see a boat tied up on the rocky sand.
No one says a word until we stop right next to it. I can hardly believe it till I put the flat of my palm against the sun-charred planks. A thick, black surface of boat tar covers the thick hull of the twenty-five-foot vessel. A single mast lays on top of the craft, hooked in a loop and ready to be raised if needed. I can only assume the sail is inside the tiny cabin.
âLook at this,â Iris says, pointing at the stern. I look where sheâs indicating and see a thin pole of bamboo sticking out. Many more line the craft at random locations, all leading to a rope near the steering arm. âIt looks like itâs removable.â Iris pulls at the bamboo.
âDonât touch that,â William says, smacking Iris on the hand. âThat thing holds it together. Look, see how the planks line up. This has to be Mengâs ship. Thereâs not a single nail holding it together.â
Mally and Horal climb on top of the boat and fiddle with the rigging, Mally sticking her head inside the little cabin. âWhy would Meng make a collapsible boat?â
William shrugs. âIâm sure he had a reason. Heâs Meng.â
I tap my fist against the hull, feeling the sturdiness of the small craft, and say, âHe sure is.â
We came to this island in a ship twice as big, the finest we could get in all of the best shipyards. The rocks of Wilds destroyed it while we were barely in sight of the shore. Yet here Meng had what looked like a homemade toy boat and sailed it through the breakers with barely a nick.
âAt least weâve got a way out now,â Bay says.
âWhat? Steal Mengâs boat?â Iris asks.
âWhy not? He lives here, itâs not like heâs going to be using it.â
We all stare at the little ship in awe. The thought of piloting it makes us even giddier. âLetâs just find Meng first, okay?â I suggest.
The others, excited as much as since we first boarded the Henderin, agree.
âSo we definitely know this is where Meng made port. Can anyone see a path or anything?â I ask.
We search the edge of the forest, no one venturing too much past the ferns and shells lining the trees. It takes awhile, long minutes of hoping spent as we search. After only a short while we start thinking the island weather has washed away all traces of Mengâs presence, till I see something a few yards into the thicket: a snapped limb.
One of the trees, a massive palm with strange branches covered in thick leaves, sits at a sharp angle near the boat. On the lower side of its trunk, I spot a little branch that had barely grown before it was snapped off. The break has barely the semblance of human touch, so I call out for the rest of my group to inspect it.
Everyone nods, congratulating me on the discovery and eager to see where this path leads.
âHold on, hold on,â I say as we get ready to chart a path through the woods. âWe donât know where this leads. It could be toward Mengâs home but it could be just a hunting path or something. We should scout out some more and see if there are any other signs that Mengâs been here.â
William shakes his head and nudges himself around me. âDonât bother. Mengâs in there and weâre going to find him,â he says as he steps lightly through the underbrush and into the thick, wild trees.
Smiling, the group follows William, and I have no choice but to do the same. Still, I sense that eerie quiet I felt earlier. And I canât help the feeling that something knows weâre here. I reach up to the biggest tree I can find and snap off a stout, straight limb. Pulling out my knife, I begin whittling away the tip, shaping a spear. If only Iâd not lost my woodworking tools to the sea I could make a far superior weapon.
The others make their own spears as we walk into the forest, following Mengâs path.
Itâs at this moment that I take a slow step forward and suddenly realize that the sandy soil is rushing up to meet me. A muffled sense of pain shoots through my face as I land flat on the ground.
Iâm in a wash of numbness, my skin feeling packed with mucus and my muscles evaporated into utterly useless sacks of puss. I want to vomit. I want to stand.
I want to sleep.
Around me I hear muffled shouts and cries of anguish. Something is going on around and above me. All I can see is the gray blur of my eyes at ground level. All I can feel is the revolting sensations running up and down my spine.
My head⦠spin⦠fall⦠feel⦠poison â poison!
Iâve been poisoned!