Guardians of Ga'Hoole 02 - The Journey
his feathers, while he tumbled over and under a roll of air.
“Look at me bounce off this cloud!” And then for the tenth time that day, Twilight sang his “I Am More Beautiful Than a Cloud” song.
What is as fleecy as a cloud,
As majestic and shimmering as the breaking dawn,
As gorgeous as the sun is strong?
Why, it’s ME!
Twilight, the Great Gray,
Tiger of the sky—
Light of the Night,
Most beautiful,
An avian delight.
I beam—
I gleam—
I’m a livin’ flying dream.
Watch me roll off this cloud and pop on back.
This is flying,
I ain’t no hack.
“But,” Mrs. Plithiver said with a hiss that sizzled, “you ain’t, as you say, ‘rolling off clouds’!” Because, as Mrs. Plithiver could sense, the clouds were too high that day, and Twilight was flying too low to reach them as he admired himself in the Mirror Lakes. In actuality, Twilight was flying off the reflections of clouds that quivered on the glasslike surface of the lake. And that, Mrs. Plithiver concluded, was the heart of the problem with all the owls. They were mistaking the world of image and reflection for the real world. The Mirror Lakes had transfixed them. And in their transfixed state they had forgotten all they had fought for and fought against. Had they once spoken of the Great Ga’Hoole Tree or its noble owls since they had arrived at this cursed place? Had they ever mentioned St. Aggie’s and its terrors? Had Soren even once thought of his dear family except the first time he caught his reflection in the lake? And what about Eglantine? Did he ever think of her and what might have happened to his poor sister?
This was a very strange place. It was not just the MirrorLakes and the thick soft moss and the perfect tree hollows and the plentiful game. Suddenly, Mrs. Plithiver realized that in the rest of the kingdoms they had flown through it was becoming early winter, but here it was still summer, full summer. She could smell it. The leaves were still green, the grasses supple, the earth warm. But it was poisonous! They had to get out of here. This place was as dangerous as St. Aggie’s.
“Come here this instant! All of you!” It was the closest a hissing snake ever got to a snarl.
Soren jerked his head up from admiring his beak in the surface of the pond. He rather liked the smudge on it. He thought it added “character” to his face, as Gylfie said.
“Mrs. P., what in Glaux’s name?”
“I’ll Glaux you!” she hissed.
Soren nearly fainted. He never had heard Mrs. P. swear, and at him, no less. It was like venom curling out into the air. The other owls alighted next to Soren.
“Hey,” Twilight said, “did you catch that curled wingie I just did?”
“Racdrops on your curled wingie.”
Now a deep hush fell upon the owls. Had Mrs. Plithiver lost her mind? Racdrops. She had actually said racdrops!
“What’s wrong, Mrs. P.?” Soren asked in a trembling voice.
“What’s wrong? Look at me. Stop looking at yourselves in the lake this instant. I’ll tell you what’s wrong. You are a disgrace to your families.”
“I have no family if you’ll recall, Mrs. P.” Twilight yawned.
“Worse then! You are a disgrace to your species. The Great Gray Owls.”
This really took Twilight aback. “My species?”
“Yes, indeed. All of you are, for that matter. You have all grown fat, lazy, and vain, the lot of you. Why…why,” Mrs. Plithiver stammered.
Soren felt something really bad was coming.
“You’re no better than a bunch of wet poopers!” With that, there was a raucous outburst from a branch overhanging where they stood at the lake’s edge, on which a dozen or more seagulls had alighted. The harsh gull laughter ricocheted off the lake and the reflections of the owls on its surface quivered and then seemed to shatter.
“We’re getting out of here NOW!” Mrs. Plithiver said in a near roar for a snake.
“What about crows? It’s not dark yet.”
“Tough!” she spat.
“Are you going to sacrifice us to crows?” Gylfie said in a very small voice.
“You’re sacrificing yourself right here on the shores ofthis lake.” And something sharper than the fiercest gaze of eyes bore into Gylfie’s gizzard. Indeed, all the owls felt their gizzards twist and lurch.
“Get ready to fly! And Twilight—”
“Yes, ma’am.”
“I’ll fly point with you.”
“Yes, ma’am.” The Great Gray stooped down so that Mrs. Plithiver could slither onto his broad shoulders.
Of all the
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