Dark Eden Read Online Free

Dark Eden
Book: Dark Eden Read Online Free
Author: Chris Beckett
Pages:
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it out to Gerry.
    ‘There are five six good dry caves up there,’ I told him, ‘with a bit of open ground in front of them so you could sit there and look out over forest. And a bit below them there’s a pool, ten twelve foot across, warm warm from spiketree roots.’
    Gerry glanced up where I was pointing and shrugged.
    ‘It would be a good place for Family to live,’ I told him. ‘Much better than where we live now. It’s got everything you need: a pool, caves. It’s handy for woollybucks. Blackglass too, I dare say, if you looked hard enough.’
    Gerry laughed.
    ‘You say weird weird things sometimes, John. What do you mean a good place for Family ? Family is a place!’
    ‘It’s a place, and it’s a bunch of people,’ I said. ‘The people could move, couldn’t they? Or some of them. The people and the place don’t have to be the same thing. Family could move and this would be just the place to move to.’
    ‘But we’ve got to stay by Circle!’ Gerry protested. ‘Otherwise Earth won’t be able to find us when they come back for us! Come on, John, you …’
    Then he broke off, and laughed like he’d realized I was joking, but I’d fooled him just for a moment.
    I wasn’t sure myself if it was a joke or not.
    ‘Let’s go out into the big forest,’ I said.
    Gerry shrugged. He’d do whatever I wanted. He was one of those that need other people to tell him what to do and what to be.
    ‘We were supposed to stay in Cold Path Valley,’ he pointed out.
    ‘Yes, but we’ll just go a little way.’

     
    It was pretty soon after we went through Neck and into Circle Valley forest that we met the leopard.
    We were in one of those openings you get in whitelantern forest, where an old group of trees has died and crumbled and no new ones have come up yet from Underworld. All around us were whitelanterns and spiketrees with flowers shining white and blue, with flutterbyes feeding on the lanterns, and starflowers growing beneath the trees. But right here, in this open space, there were only little tiny starflowers growing close to the ground, and Starry Swirl was plain to see high above us, with no branches and lanterns in the way.
    I was just kneeling down to get a drink from a stream when I saw it.
    ‘Look Gerry, there!’ I whispered, scrambling back up to my feet.
    ‘What?’
    A group of starflowers among the trees shone out for a moment and then faded again. And then the same thing happened among another lot of trees over to the left of the first lot, flowers appearing and fading. And then the same again, a bit further on.
    ‘Gela’s tits!’ Gerry says. ‘Quick! Get up a tree!’
    I didn’t move. Another lot of flowers appeared and disappeared. Meanwhile Starry Swirl shone down and flutterbyes fluttered and sparkled, and the trees went hmmph, hmmph, hmmph , and forest went hmmmmmmm , like always.
    More flowers lit up and disappeared, and this time we could see the dark shadow of the leopard itself, almost invisible behind those shiny, shimmery starflowers on its skin that slide back towards its tail as it goes forward, so they seem to stay in one place. It was circling round us, like leopards do, circling round and round: pure silent darkness, slipping behind the bright flowers that rippled across its skin.
    ‘We could make it to that whitelantern just there,’ Gerry whispered. ‘It couldn’t run that fast.’
    Both of us were watching that dark shadow moving through the trees, each of us slowly turning round and round so as to always be facing it. (We must have looked weird, standing there side by side and turning round together.) I glanced quickly at the tree Gerry was talking about and I saw he was right. We could easily make it, just so long as we didn’t trip up on something while we ran. Of course the leopard would stop circling as soon as it saw us make a move. It would stop circling and attack, but if we chose our moment right we could be over at the tree and pulling ourselves up into
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