quickly . . . I think,â said Henry, remembering the sea turtle that Ishibashi had healed. âBut it wonât fully restore his strength immediately. Itâll keep him from dying. Whether or not heâll be able to resist the current is something weâll have to find out.â
âPan, can you go any faster?â asked Florence.
âPerhaps a bit,â said Pan.
Florence thought for a long moment. âHereâs what weâre going to do,â she said. âHenry, crawl out of your cocoon and give me your hand. Iâm going to pull you over here with me.â
âOkay,â said Henry, feeling a bit uncertain about jumping from one creature to another at this ridiculous speed. He began climbing out.
âPan,â Florence went on, âonce Henryâs over here, can you push yourself to your top speed? Then Spike can follow and meet us there.â
âYour idea is wise,â said Pan.
âI agree,â said Spike. âI will try to hurry so that I can explain to Karkinos what is happening. I can go faster when fully submerged, so perhaps I will keep up all right.â
âPerfect.â Florence held her hand out to Henry. He grabbed it tightly, closed his eyes, and jumped. Florence pulled him in front of her and he landed hard on the dragonâs back. âHave you got the medicine?â she asked.
He tapped his vest. âI have it.â
âHit it, Pan!â Florence shouted.
Pan wasted no time. She pulled ahead, and soon they were speeding faster than before.
Spike disappeared under the water, but an occasional splash behind them assured Henry and Florence that the whale was nearby.
Finally, as the sun rose, Henry and Florence could see the island not far off. Pan put forth an extra burst of speed.
âHenry,â said Florence, âgo straight to Karkinosâs mouth and give him the medicine. Iâll try to help from land and explain everything to the others. I hope I can find them. . . .â She trailed off, worried, and peered around the side of the dragon to see if she could find the telltale glint of bronze coming from Talonâs body. But he was not near the shore.
âListen,â Henry said as they approached the crab islandâs shore. âThe waterfall. Can you hear it?â
Florence stood up on the dragonâs back and looked beyond Karkinos. âI see it,â she said. âPan, do you feel the waters pulling you?â
âThe sea is not too strong for the one who rules it,â Pan said. She angled and pulled up alongside one of the twin reefs made by Karkinosâs claws.
Florence and Henry exchanged a worried look. Simber, Spike, and the squirrelicorns pulling the shipâs ropes couldnât stop their ship from tumbling over the waterfall at the edge of the world. How were the four of them supposed to save an entire island? They were dangerously close to disaster.
Florence reached down to help Henry stand so that as soon as Pan was close enough to the claw reef, he could jump off and run to Karkinosâs head with the medicine. âReady?â she asked.
Henry nodded. âReady!â he said. And when Pan slowed and unfurled her tail, Henry ran down the length of it, slipping a bit but catching himself, all the way to the reef. He jumped off the dragonâs tail when it grew too thin and sped up the claw to the mainland.
As he ran, he fumbled with his vest pocket, whispering the secret word that would unlock it. He pulled out the tin and held it tightly in his hand as he rounded the shell and came up to the crabâs enormous eyeballs, perched on their eyestalks. A thin, sickly film covered them.
Florence was not far behind. âTalon!â she shouted. âLhasa! Are you here?â There was no answer. âThey must be trying to secure the others to the island,â she said, worried. She walked to the edge of the wooded area and peered down a