Little Orphan Anvil: The Complete Trilogy Joseph Beekman (feel good fiction books txt) đ
- Author: Joseph Beekman
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He stood up, groaning a bit and holding his backas if in some pain. Tabitha and Tinspar both remainedsilent and just nodded their heads in agreement.
âAre you going to be okay for this journey,Will?â Tinspar asked somewhat reluctantly. Will shothim another sour look. âI mean, you havenât been outin the wilds for many years if my memory serves mefine, and, wellâŠno offense, but you donât seem to begetting any younger.â
Will shook his head and went to gather his cloakand fishing rods.
âNow, nowâyou old bug of a soul, you,â hegrowled, turning around to face Tinspar. âNo offensetaken! I may have grown quite old in age since my lasttravels, but I have a bit of spirit left in these old bonesfor a few more fights!â
âOkay then!â Tinspar snapped back, a bit stunghimself from Willâs âbugâ comment. âLetâs just getsome sleep then and move out in the early dawn ofdaylight.â
Tabitha leapt up and grabbed her knapsack anddraped her cloak about her.
âNo, no; we slept alreadyâŠwaiting for you,â shesaid, looking at Tinspar. âBesides, Will said as soon asyou got here weâd make like aâaâumââ
âA bat out of a bell tower!â Will chimed in,completing her sentence. âYes, we need to get moving;thereâs no time to waste! The Land of Iron and Anvilmay already be in danger, and the sooner we move, thebetter our chances to save themâand quite possibly theentire realm from certain doom!â
Tinspar grabbed the other two knapsacks layingnearby, then moved towards the root tunnel.
âThen Iâm ready!â he said light-heartedly. âA bitsleepy, but you are right! We have already spent anumber of days as it is without moving against this madwitch; and I, for one, owe her many years payback forthis dreaded bug-like spell she stamped upon me!â
Will nodded. âYes my buâbrave-hearted soul,now your talkinâ!â He looked over to an iron cratewhere the big cat was sleeping. âTabitha, my dearâŠwake that cat up if you would, please.â
Tabitha moved towards the cat, but paused inmid-stride. âYou want to say good-bye to her?â sheasked softly over her shoulder.
âNo, my dear,â he said. âOlâ Stellaâs coming withus! She has been with me for many years now, since wehad reunited years ago. And though she is a bit old, shestill has a couple of cat scraps left in her, too!â
Tabitha woke Stella with a few whispers into herear, and the cat startled. Shaking sleep from her eyes,Stella bounded off the crate and moved over to Will.
âWow! I think she knows sheâs coming along!âTabitha said, clapping her hands.
Tinspar shouted from the root tunnel where heâdalready begun to descend: âAre you guys coming alongor sleeping! Letâs hurry it up before some crazy stormfalls upon us, and weâre really holed up in this stump!â
~ CHAPTER IX
~ The VALLEY of GLOOM
Traveling along a dark and shadowed stone paththat wove through a grim and cold valley of desolatehills, the five travelers made their way on foot at a quietand dreary pace. A wagon cart was being pulled alongby the hovering robot, Anvil; the cart creaked andgrinded as its iron wheels rolled over the stone path. Inthe lead of the traveling party were Will and Tinspar,while Tabitha and the cat, Stella, rode atop the wagoncart.
Tabitha was huddled within some blankets at theback end of the cart, staring at the path as it rolled byunder her dangling feet. Stella lay curled up under afew other blankets, sleeping and oblivious to the ricketyride.
They had passed beyond the stone trees whereWillâs dwelling was, and into the valley of gloom. Thevalley of gloom was what Will had described as: âtheonly route to travel if to find the lonely apparitionâorstrange spirit. She may be the sure-fire answer tostopping the threat of the witch, forever!â
Passing through the valley, Tabitha could onlywait and wonder when this lonely, strange spirit wouldappear to them.
She recalled what Will had said of this spirit:That this spirit was that of a long-dead sorceress thathad lived at one time in the Land of Iron and Anvil,procuring spells and ointments for the villagers; thatthis sorceress was also a rival to that of the witch-lady,for it was when the âmetallic magicâ of robots cameinto the life of the Iron and Anvil Land, that thesorceress quickly became shunned by the witch-lady foraccepting it as a new way of sorcery.
Not long after that the witch-lady had left theLand of Iron and Anvil, having felt forced to do sosince she would not accept the villagers beliefs of theirnewly discovered magic. And when she left, she hadalso left behind a poisoned ointment that was used in aspecial healing brew by the sorceress. The sorceress,having tested it out on her own self, first, had diedviolently; her spirit was said to have fled in a fit ofmadness far into the valley of gloom.
âNow,â as Will had stated, âwould be the ripe timeto find this lonely sorceressâs spirit and see if she willhelp us to destroy the witchâonce and for all!â
As Tabitha sat pondering this, she looked up andinto the great distance behind them. Her jaw droppedas she could see billowing black clouds that rolledabout among the backdrop of a blood-red sky. Oh no!she thought alarmingly.
âHey, WillâTinspar!â she hollered back over hershoulder. âUh, you should see this!â
They both stopped and turned around; Anvilhalted and rotated around to zoom his electric-red eyesback to Tabitha. Looking to Tabitha first, and then upinto the distance where she was gazing, Will andTinspar saw the black, mushroom-like clouds swirlinglike mammoth beasts haunting the sky for prey.
âOh, mercy me!â Will exclaimed with a suddenjolt of fear. âThe spell
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