The Secret of Spellshadow Manor 5 by Bella Forrest (book series for 10 year olds .TXT) ๐
Read free book ยซThe Secret of Spellshadow Manor 5 by Bella Forrest (book series for 10 year olds .TXT) ๐ยป - read online or download for free at americanlibrarybooks.com
- Author: Bella Forrest
Read book online ยซThe Secret of Spellshadow Manor 5 by Bella Forrest (book series for 10 year olds .TXT) ๐ยป. Author - Bella Forrest
โIn the study of physics, and it has been many years since Iโve studied such ordinary sciences, vibration is often a good means of shattering glass,โ Lintz said, having walked around the glass globe for a tenth time.
Alex looked at the professor with excitement. โVibrations! Of course! If we put our powers to use on both sides of the glass, we might be able to shatter it.โ He thought back to his high school physics classes, the teacher explaining how it was possible for an opera singer to break a champagne glass with only their voice.
โShall we?โ Lintz grinned.
Alex nodded enthusiastically, approaching one side of the orb, while Lintz approached the opposite side. They stood, facing each other, and rested their palms on the cold glass. Taking a deep breath, Alex wove his anti-magic through the glass, letting it flow within the molecular structure of the orb. He felt his energy touch that of Lintzโs, and held his anti-magic back from it until the globe was alightโhalf gold and white, half black and silver.
โReady?โ Alex asked.
Lintz beamed. โLetโs science this thing into submission!โ
Alex vibrated the molecules within the glass, feeling the pressure build. It pushed harder and harder, the anti-magic expanding the very fabric of the orb until, with one triumphant crack of breaking glass, the globe shattered, water surging over the edge of the plinth like a waterfall, cascading to the floor. Now that it was drained, the golden letter lay in the center. Alex plucked it out, careful not to touch the jagged edges of the broken glass.
โGood job, Webber,โ said Lintz.
โGood job, Professor,โ he countered, with a small smile. There were undoubtedly more mini-challenges ahead; it wasnโt yet the time for patting each other on the back.
Clutching the letter tightly, Alex and Lintz carried on through the labyrinth, peering nervously around corners, in case there was anything unpleasant lurking in the tunnels beyond. As they walked, they kept their eyes peeled for whatever might come next. It turned out to be a riddle, etched on the wall.
โWhat comes once in a minute, twice in a moment, but never in a thousand years?โ Alex read aloud, his eyes glancing over the pattern of alphabet letters that had been pressed into the stone.
โEasy!โ cried Lintz. โThis one was around when I was a child!โ
Alex frowned. โYou know the answer?โ
โYes, itโs the letter โMโโget it?โ
โIโll have to remember that one.โ Even though he knew the professor must be right, Alex felt a shiver of trepidation as Lintz approached the board of alphabet letters and pressed down hard on the letter โM.โ As it was pushed inwards, the letter โYโ popped out of the board and fell to the ground. Alex picked it up.
As they carried on, Alexโs mind turned to Ellabell and Aamir. Were they collecting letters too? How far along were they in the labyrinth? He glanced over at Lintz and saw his own worry reflected back at him in the professorโs expression.
They hurried onwards, having to turn back a few times after taking the wrong fork in the road and coming to a dead end. The labyrinth had low visibility, lit only by the flicker of torches and the glow of some unknown substance lurking in the walls, and Alex and Lintz kept missing entrances in the stone that were shrouded by shadow.
Eventually, after a lot of missed turns, a burst of inspiration seared into his mindโthe forced image of a small statue with a tangle of vines above, camouflaging a letter hidden in the wall, zinging into his brain, vivid and unexpected. Knowing what it meant, he insisted they go back.
โItโs this way. I know it is,โ he promised.
โHow do you know?โ asked Lintz, his tone dubious.
Alex shrugged. โI canโt explain it. I just feel like we missed something.โ
Lintz said nothing else, seeming to go along with the plan, as Alex led the way. At a small statue, Alex paused, and looked up to find the intertwined curtain of dark green vines that he had seen in his mindโs eye. Delving into the thorny weeds, the barbed points scratching his forearms, he found what he was looking for, buried within the center. With a great heave, he tugged the letter free of the wall and removed it from the spiny bushel.
Lintz eyed him curiously. โHow did you know that was there?โ
โI justโฆ knew,โ he replied. To try and explain that Elias was somehow in his brain, without yet having confirmation of the fact, wasnโt a conversation he felt like having at that particular moment. It was still something he was trying to come to terms with.
In his hand, he held the letter โH,โ though it meant little to him. Together, they had the letters โP,โ โY,โ and โH,โ but he couldnโt picture the word they might make.
โAny idea what it means?โ Alex asked.
Lintz shook his head. โAfraid not, dear boy, though I have been wracking my brains a good long while. Iโm sure it will come to us, with a few more clues.โ
โLetโs hope so,โ said Alex, decidedly less optimistic.
With the three letters gathered, they headed back through the tunnels, treading carefully. Alex was still convinced there were going to be traps set around every corner, but so far, they had come across none. Much of the labyrinth looked the same, and so it came as quite a surprise when they abruptly found themselves at the end of it, arriving at a door with six blank squares on the wall beside it. Above the squares were the words โThe Goddess of Lost Souls.โ Sticking out of the wall beneath the squares was a demonic head, sculpted from pure silver, its savage mouth agape. It reminded Alex of a guardian to the gates of Hell, ready to snap its jaws at anyone unworthy. Wasnโt that what Hadrian had said? Only the truly worthy would be able to attain the prize. He could only pray heโd done
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