It
really didn’t feel like he fell for very long.
Almost before he could register what had happened the wind and the noise
stopped. He was falling through midair,
plummeting fast.
This is going to hurt, he
thought, praying he wouldn’t break anything.
He landed hard on his back, the impact driving all the air from his
lungs. He lay still for a moment, hoping
that soon he’d be able to breathe, almost afraid to move anything. When he didn’t experience any shooting pain,
he sat up cautiously.
“Felix,”
he choked out between gasps for air.
“Right
here,” the other boy grunted, off to Toodles’s right, pulling himself to his
hands and knees.
Where are we? Toodles
shook his head and looked around. They’d
fallen into some kind of hill country, dotted with clumps of trees. He blinked and shook his head again. No, it all still looked the same. He rubbed his eyes. Maybe he’d hit his head when he landed.
“Felix,
is everything blue?”
Felix
pushed his hair out of his eyes and sighed.
“Yeah.”
“Oh.” Everything, grass, leaves, the bark on the
trees, were different shades of blue.
Even the sky seemed a bluer blue than the skies of Neverland and
Earth.
“Why…”
Toodles started.
“Shh,”
Felix said softly, holding up a hand to stop him. “Hear that?”
Toodles
listened and soon picked up the sound Felix meant. Leaves rusting and some kind of shrieking
animal cry. It sounded like they were
fighting.
“What
do you think those are?” He glanced down
at the crossbow in his hand, nodding
satisfaction when he saw it hadn’t been damaged in the fall.
“I
don’t know.” Felix stood and shouldered his club. “Let’s go see. It might help us figure out where we are.”
Toodles
scrambled to his feet, snatching up the arrows that had fallen from his quiver.
The
boys made for the sound as quickly as they could while staying quiet enough to
hopefully keep the creatures from hearing them. When they got to the top of a nearby hill they
saw the source of the racket.
“Monkeys!”
Toodles exclaimed, staring down at them.
“Monkeys with wings.”
More
than half a dozen of the creatures hopped and flapped around something near a
group of trees. One screeched in pain
and three of them fluttered back. That
gave Toodles a view of their prey. A
girl stood in the midst of them, franticly trying to beat the monkeys back with
a tree branch. But with so many, it
didn’t look like she would be able to hold them off long.
“She
needs help,” Toodles said, fitting an arrow to his crossbow and starting down
the hill.
Once
they reached the bottom, Toodles raised his crossbow.
“Careful
what you hit,” Felix cautioned.
As
tightly packed as the creatures were, Toodles felt certain he could hit one,
even with all of their movement.
He
fired an arrow at the largest monkey.
The creature jumped, reaching for the tree branch so the arrow struck
its leg instead of its back. It
screeched and redoubled its attack on the girl.
Toodles fired another arrow, catching another monkey’s wing. By this time, Felix was close enough to bash them with his club.
That
was when the monkeys started to realize they were being attacked from another
quarter. Toodles put another arrow in
the monkey with the injured wing, killing it.
Some of the monkeys flapped up into the trees while some of the bolder
ones turned to face the new threat.
Toodles
shot at the monkey coming towards him, but in his haste, the arrow went
wide. The creature zoomed over his head,
grabbing his hood. Toodles shouted and
tried to beat it off with his unloaded crossbow. The monkey jerked hard on his hood, snapping
his neck back and pulling him to the ground.
With
their initial fear of the newcomers abated, and, seeing that they still had
superior numbers, the monkeys in the trees swooped down, attempting to
overwhelm Felix and the girl.
Toodles
grabbed an arrow out of his quiver with his left hand and jabbed it behind
him. The first time he missed, but the
second he stabbed the creature’s arm. It
snarled and leaned over him, baring its teeth.
Toodles brought his cross bow up over his head and slammed it down on
the monkey’s back. It yelped and
loosened its hold on him. Toodles kicked
it off and started fitting the arrow in his hand to the string of his bow. The monkey skipped off to the side and hopped
into the air, one wing flapping oddly.
When
it didn’t turn to face him again, Toodles shifted his attention to the
rest. Most of them were taking to the
trees again, while the few brave, or stupid, ones kept the humans busy. Toodles fired two shots up at the monkeys,
killing one and wounding another. One of
the remaining creatures gave an undulating cry and they all began to take wing,
flying away this time.
The
girl clubbed one of the slower ones with her tree branch and turned as if to
strike another, nearly hitting Felix instead.
He brought his club up instinctively and the branch broke when the two
collided. She gave a little yelp of
surprise, her eyes still wide with fear.
“Easy,”
Felix said, holding up his free hand.
“It’s all right.”
She
dropped what was left of her branch and the two stood, panting for a
moment.
Toodles
looked the girl up and down. She looked
around Felix’s age- maybe eighteen-and was around a head shorted than the other
boy. She had dark hair, brown eyes and
Toodles guessed she was reasonably pretty.
With the dirt smudging her face and the blood dripping from a busted
lower lip, as well as two scratches under the corner of her right eyes, it was
hard to tell. She was dressed in a
fashion similar to what most of the Lost Boys came in since the mid- 2000’s. Blue jeans, a bright red shirt and a plaid
button down shirt over it. She carried a
blue drawstring bag slung over her back.
“Thank
you,” she said, taking a step back and wiping the blood off her chin with the
back of her hand. “Those things have
been after me for days.”
“Do
you live here?” Toodles asked, starting to pick up the arrows that were
scattered over the ground.
“No,”
she said. “ I just got here a few days
ago. A tornado picked me up and dropped
me here.”
Toodles
noticed she had a slight twang to her speech, similar to the way Felix spoke
but not quite the same.
“So
you don’t know where we are then?” Felix asked.
The
girl opened her mouth to answer but Toodles cut her off. “I know where we are,” he said. “Flying monkeys, tornados, it can only be one
place- Oz.”
Felix
flashed him a questioning glance but the girl nodded. “That’s what I figured too,” she said.
“Were
you from back in the real world? Earth I
mean?” Toodles asked.
She
studied him with a puzzled expression for a few seconds, then nodded. “Yes. Where are you from?”
“Earth
originally.” Toodles now had all his
arrows and went to stand by Felix. “Both
of us. But we’ve been living in
Neverland.”
“No
way,” she said. “That’s not…I mean its…”
She paused. “Actually I guess if Oz is
real then Neverland has every right to be too.
Wow. You’re not… Lost Boys, are
you?”
“We
are,” Toodles said. She wasn’t the first
to be surprised. Ever since Disney made Peter Pan in the 1950’s, boys had been
coming with misconceptions. “I’ve been
told the movie was different than the way things really are.”
“Obviously,”
she said, looking mainly at Felix.
“I’m
Toodles.” He held out his hand.
“Natalie,”
she said, shaking it. It was the way men
shook hands, which struck Toodles as odd at first, but she was wearing trousers
too, so maybe things were different now.
Mike had said something about women trying to liberate themselves. He decided it didn’t really matter.
“Pleased
to meet you, Natalie.” Toodles gestured
to the other boy standing behind him.
“This is Felix.”
The
two exchanged nods of acknowledgement.
She
looked down at Toodles. “You know, I
half expected you to say his name was Slightly.”
Toodles
giggled. “That’s a funny name. Why?”
She
blushed a little. “It’s just, in the
movie, and I think in the book too, there was a Toodles and then the tall
blonde one was Slightly. Or the tallest
one anyway. They were all about
eight.” She tried to look at Felix, but
couldn’t meet his eyes. “I’m sorry, I
don’t know why I said that. Long couple
of days I guess.”
Toodles
took up the conversation again before Felix could reply. “The newer guys do usually say something
about expecting us to be younger. Pan
doesn’t take little boys though. They
wouldn’t be as much fun. I’m the
youngest, and I’m twelve.”
“What
year was it when you left?” he asked.
“2011,”
she said.
“I’m
from 1906,” Toodles said, grinning.
“Really?”
“Mm-hmm.”
He nodded. “That’s nothing. George, he’s the only original Lost Boy still
in Neverland, is around 300 years old.
Felix is the next oldest after him.
He’s from 186…2?” He looked at
Felix.
“’64,”
the other boy muttered.
Natalie
blinked twice, then nodded. “How did you
guys get here?”
“We
fell through a portal,” Toodles said.
“One just opened up under our
feet.”
“Can
you fly back?” she asked.
Toodles
shook his head. “The pixie flowers died
a long time ago.”
“And
of course, no ruby slippers.” She sighed.
“Looks like we’re stuck here.”
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