Return to the Isle of the Lost Page 44
“It says here that only by mastering the Fruit of Venom can you counter its poison,” said Carlos, reading from the map. “Evie, don’t give in! Save yourself!”
Save myself, but from what? Evie thought, before everything went black and the poison overcame her.
When she opened her eyes, she was standing in a room not unlike her mother’s bedroom, on a podium in front of a Magic Mirror.
“Where am I?” she asked. “Where are my friends?”
She was alone. Then she realized—she was alone because they had abandoned her and she had no friends. Every insecure, jealous, and poisonous thought filled her mind.
She was standing before the legendary Magic Mirror, and it looked like it had before it was destroyed—whole and full of evil counsel.
“What’s this?” asked Evie.
She stared at the mirror. It showed her Mal and Maddy laughing at her, pointing and screeching, and mocking her.
Mal was never my friend, thought Evie. She was only pretending. The minute Mal returned to the island, she forgot about Evie.
The mirror showed another image: Mal, Jay, and Carlos leaving her alone at the Poisoned Lake. They had left the minute she’d climbed the tree. They were laughing at her, and they were going to leave her to that awful grunting creature. She was alone and she would always be alone.
Mal’s mother had exiled her and her mother to the Castle Across the Way. Evie had grown up with only spiderwebs for company. She’d never had friends until the three of them, but maybe she’d never had friends at all.
Maybe it was all a lie. No one liked her. Everyone was only pretending, and now that she knew the truth, she would destroy them all. She would make them hurt, she would make sure they never laughed like that again. She would show them what it meant to be alone, and abandoned, and friendless….
Friendless?
Yen Sid’s words echoed in her mind. Evie, remember that when you believe you are alone in the world, you are far from friendless.
Yen Sid had told her the total opposite of the poisonous thoughts that now filled her brain.
She stared at the mirror and the image of her friends deserting her. It wasn’t true. It couldn’t be true. Maddy had betrayed Mal, but Mal had never betrayed Evie. Carlos and Jay were like her brothers. The three of them would always be there for her.
“You’re wrong!” she cried to the mirror. “My friends are here! They’re waiting down there! Waiting for me!”
She stepped away from the mirror, holding the apple in her hand. “I’m not alone! I am far from friendless! I am surrounded by my friends, and I will return to them!”
The mirror shattered and Evie screamed. Suddenly she was on the ground, looking up at the faces of her friends.
“What happened?” she asked.
“You fell,” said Carlos. “All the way down, and we couldn’t wake you.”
“We thought you were going to go to sleep forever, or at least until we could get Doug to come and wake you up with true love’s kiss.” Mal smirked.
“You okay?” said Jay, helping her up.
Evie nodded, rubbing the sleep from her eyes and tossing back her hair. “I’m awake, at least!” she announced with considerable flair.
“Did you get it?” asked Mal. “The talisman?”
In answer, Evie showed them the golden apple, which was whole once more, but no longer shining. “It totally messed with my head, but I purged the poison from my body and mastered the talisman. Yen Sid was right, we’ve got to be careful with these things…they’re tricky.”
“What did it do?” asked Mal, curious.
Evie shook her head and placed the apple in her handbag. “Let’s just say I knew you guys wouldn’t leave me here alone.”
Mal rolled her eyes. “Well, one more minute and we might have,” she joked. “But then who’s going to make my Auradon Prep prom dress?”
“Hey, guys,” Jay interrupted. “Look at this.” He and Carlos were standing in front of a doorway carved into the tree trunk.
“That wasn’t here before,” said Carlos.
“And look—the lake is draining!” said Evie. The tiny islet began to shake.
“Now that Evie has the Fruit of Venom, this place is self-destructing!” said Mal.
“Do we open it?” said Jay.
“I don’t think we have a choice,” said Mal, looking around as the ground rumbled beneath them. It felt like the whole island was about to crumble.
“Let’s go, that thing is heading over here,” said Carlos, scanning anxiously for any sign of the snuffling beast.
“Open it!” yelled Mal.
Jay threw open the door, and a blazing light shone from the darkness. “It looks like a desert in here!” he told them, stepping inside. Evie and Carlos followed behind.
Mal waited by the entrance, her eyes on the lake, or what was left of it, ready to defend her friends from the mysterious creature in the tunnels.
But the monster never appeared, and so Mal followed her friends through the door in the tree.
The first thing Jay noticed when he stepped through the tree was how hot it was. He had been shivering in the damp cavern, but now he was almost sweating. Instead of a wet cave, he was standing on a golden desert plain.
Evie followed, but as she crossed the threshold, her knees turned to rubber and she stumbled. Jay caught her and helped her through. “Whoa. That poison must still be working.”
She nodded. “I’ll be fine in a minute.”
Carlos followed, blinking at the unexpected light, with Mal bringing up the rear. When they were all through, the door slammed with a bang and vanished. Carlos unrolled a new map. “This must be the Haunted Desert,” he said. “It says the Cobra’s Cave is somewhere in the Dunes of Sorrow.”
Jay looked around. There wasn’t much to see, just a whole lot of desert, and wave after wave of sand dunes. “This must be my territory. It looks a little like what my dad always told me about Agrabah. Although something tells me we won’t find any magic lamps, friendly genies, or flying carpets here.”
“Too bad. I’d take any of those over that weird pink thing we just avoided,” said Mal.
“Any chance the talisman is made of sand?” asked Evie as she scooped up a handful, letting the grains shift and fall between her fingers. “Since that’s all there is here.”