Read Mairelon the Magician Page 14


  She was tired of Juggling roles; she did not want to have to

  think about whether she was supposed to be pretending to be

  a Tiger or a horseboy or a magician's assistant. She was tired

  of silent, empty spaces and the strange sounds and smells of

  the woods. She wanted London, and she realized that that,

  more than fear of what Jack Stower's presence might mean,

  was her real reason for suggesting she should go back

  She was still pondering this revelation as she stood beside

  Mairelon and watched Hunch drive briskly off "Good," Mair-

  elon murmured- "If he keeps up that pace, hell be in London

  by tomorrow morning " He looked down at Kirn. "Don't just

  stand there, come along. We have a great deal to do, and we

  had better get to it."

  "I thought we were goin' to wait for Hunch to get back

  before we did anything," Kim said, all her homesickness

  swept away by a sudden wave of foreboding-

  "Whatever gave you that idea?" Mairelon said in a tone of

  mild astonishment. "If we don't do anything, St. Clair will

  have the platter by tomorrow evening, and ! can't have that.

  No, we're going to have a good meal and get a few things

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  ready and then have a good nap, so that we'll be wide awake

  to burgle Bramingham Place at two this morning."

  He turned and marched cheerfully toward the wagon, leav-

  ing Kim to stand staring after him openmouthed. She mut-

  tered a curse and plunged after him, already more than half

  resigned to the prospect. If Mairelon wanted to burgle Bra-

  mingham Place, burgle it he would, with or without her help.

  On the whole, she thought she would rather it be with, but

  she was not going to give up without an argument. Splutter-

  ing objections that she expected would be useless, she fol-

  lowed Mairelon into the wagon-

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  TWELVE

  'V-A^' T ramingham Place was an enormous, rambling

  ]S^~^ D house that seemed to spread out in all direc-

  f / tions Mairelon, lurking with Kim behind an

  overgrown topiary duck while they waited for the last tights

  inside to be put out, explained in a whisper that building new

  wings had been a tradition in the Bramingham family for two

  centuries, hence the erratic sprawl Kim wondered what they

  did with all the space From the took of it, the house was

  larger than the entire village of Ranton Hill, and that was

  without considering the stables and gatehouse

  The last of the windows went dark, and Maireion started

  forward with an exclamation of relief Kim grabbed at his

  sleeve "Give 'em time to fall asleep'" she hissed

  "It's all right, the library's at this end They're far enough

  away that they won't hear a thing," Mairelon whispered back

  "You did say Bramingham was keeping the Saltash Platter in

  the library?"

  "That's what he told the druid cove, but what if he was

  gammoning him?"

  "We won't know til we go find out, will we?" She could

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  hear the smile in his voice, though it was too dark to see it

  clearly "Shall we?"

  Kim sighed "How can you be so sure the library's at this

  end of the house?"

  Even in the darkness she could see him stiffen "I stayed

  with the Brammghams once, some years back," Mairelon said

  in a voice devoid of expression "Just before the Saltash Set

  was stolen I remember the visit . very well indeed "

  "Oh " Kim searched for something to say, without success

  She shrugged "All right, then, let's bite the ken But this is

  my lay, remember, don't go off on your own, or you'll muck

  up the whole thing "

  "After you," Mairelon murmured, bowing Kim shook her

  head, only half understanding, and slid through the night to-

  ward the house

  It was not, after all, much different from the jobs she had

  done so long ago in London The house was bigger by far,

  but that was all Mairelon pointed the way to a pair of long

  French doors near the room they wanted Kim reached for

  the bit of wire hidden in her sleeve and opened the lock with

  a few deft twists of her wrist They slipped inside, and Mair-

  elon closed the doors softly behind them

  They were in a spacious sitting room Kim could see the

  dim shapes of chairs and tiny tea tables scattered all around,

  deeper shades of darkness in the dark- Mairelon pointed to-

  ward a door in the opposite wall. Kim nodded and made a

  gesture which she hoped he would correctly interpret as a

  warning to be careful Then she began picking her way across

  the room.

  Three nerve-racking minutes later they reached the door It

  was locked, but the mechanism was no more of a challenge

  than the one on the French doors had been Kim had it open

  in a few seconds On the other side was a hallway, thickly

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  carpeted. Motioning Mairelon to keep to the center, Kirn

  stepped cautiously into the hall-

  The library was the second door on the left It was

  unlocked, and Kirn suppressed a snort of derision. That

  was gentry for you: they'd lock up half the doors and leave

  the rest wide open. They always picked the wrong half to

  lock, too. She pushed the door slowly inward, listening for

  creaking hinges- The door made no sound, and a moment

  later they were in the library with the door closed behind

  them.

  "Well done!" Mairelon breathed in her ear, and she jumped,

  "You were particularly quick with that last door."

  "Don't do that," she whispered back. "I was quick because it

  wasn't locked."

  "Not locked?" Mairelon paused, and she could almost hear

  him thinking.

  "Not locked," Kirn repeated firmly. "And this ain't no time

  to chat. Find that thing you're lookin' for and let's get out of

  here."

  "We'll never find it in the dark," Mairelon said. "A moment,

  please." He muttered a word-

  A ball of cold, silver light the size of Kirn's fist sprang into

  being just over Mairelon's head, casting threatening, sharp-

  edged shadows at) around. Kirn blinked, biting back a pro-

  test, and looked quickly about her. The library was a long

  room with bookcase-lined walls; its center was fall of large

  chairs covered with needlework in bright colors that the silver

  light bleached to bearable pastels. A small table stood beside

  each chair on thin, fragile legs. Heavy curtains of a dark

  crimson shut out the light from the windows, unlike those in

  the sitting room, these came only to the bottom of the win-

  dow, Below them, short bookcases alternated with glass

  boxes set on tegs- Kim stared, then realized that these must

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  be the "display cases" to which Henry Bramingham had re-

  ferred.

  Mairelon crossed to the windows and walked rapidly along

  them. He stopped a third of the way from the end and beck-

  oned, "Here it is!" he whispered, and the strange silver light

  made an exultant mask of his face.

  The Saltash Platter was a tray
nearly two feet long, heavily

  ornamented around the edge with the same pattern of fruits

  and flowers and vines Kim had seen on the bowl in Mairelon's

  wagon. At either end a rope of vines twisted away from the

  edge and then back again, forming a handle. The silver shone

  brilliantly in the cold light, even through the glass of the

  display case Kim looked at the case more closely. The top

  was hinged in back, and there was an unobtrusive gold lock at

  the front edge.

  Kim pulled out her wire and paused, remembering what

  had happened when she tried to poke through Mairelon's

  chest. Of course, it wasn't the lock that had been enchanted,

  but still - . . She frowned and tugged at the lid, testing the

  strength of the lock-

  It opened easily, cutting short Mairelon's impatient query,

  They looked at each other across the case, and Kim saw her

  own misgivings reflected in Mairelon's uneasy expression.

  "Magic?" she whispered.

  "Possibly," Mairelon said softly. The sharp shadows magni-

  fied his frown. "If it is, touching the platter will set it off- Be

  quiet for a moment while 1 check."

  He reached down, hands hovering just above the open

  case. The air grew heavy, and Kim held her breath, waiting

  for an explosion

  A soft crash sounded from the next room, and Mairelon

  jerked his hands away from the display case. He and Kim

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  froze, and in the silence heard a well-muffled thud from the

  hall

  "We better get out of here'" Kirn said, and started down the

  long room toward the door

  "Not that way; there's no time," Mairelon said, grabbing

  her arm He gestured, and the light that hovered over his

  head shrank to a pinpoint, then he went swiftly to the book-

  shelf along the nearest wall "Boccaccio, Boccaccio," he mur-

  mured "Where—arU"

  Kirn stared in astonishment as Mairelon reached out

  and tilted two books outward She heard a small click, and

  then the sound of someone fumbling at the library door made

  her glance fearfully over her shoulder The curtains were

  too short to hide behind Perhaps if she curled up in a chair,

  she would be overlooked, but what about Mairelon? She

  turned back and almost forgot her fear in complete amaze-

  ment

  "Inside, quicklyi" Mairelon said An entire section of the

  bookcase had swung outward, revealing a narrow, cupboard-

  like opening behind it Kirn pulled herself together and

  darted inside, Mairelon squeezed in after her, pulling the

  bookshelf to behind him The silver light winked out

  Cracking a ken with a real magician certainly had advan-

  tages, Kim thought to herself as she wnggled into a more

  comfortable position That book-achoo spelt was one she'd

  have to be sure to learn She felt Mairelon fumble at the wall

  and thought he was trying to latch the bookshelf in place

  Then he breathed a nearly soundless sigh, and with a soft

  scraping a small panel slid aside, giving them a thin slot

  above a row of books through which to view the room they

  had just quitted with such haste

  Someone was moving slowly among the chairs, carrying a

  small dark-lantern that was three-quarters shuttered The lan-

  tern beam swung toward them, and Kim wondered whether

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  the bearer had heard Mairelon tower the panel She heard a

  snort, and the contemptuous whisper "Mice!" and then the

  dark blob went on toward the display cases The figure raised

  the dark-lantern and bent forward to peer through the glass,

  and for a moment his face was visible Kim stiffened and sti-

  fled a gasp; it was Jack Stower again

  Mairelon put a warning hand on her shoulder. Angnly she

  shook it off. She wasn't such a flat as to make a noise that

  might reveal their presence, no matter how startled she was

  Frowning, she watched Stower work his way slowly up the

  row of display cases toward the one that held the Saltash

  Platter.

  Without warning, the library door swung wide A pool of

  flickering amber light spilled through it, and an irritated mas-

  culine voice said, "Stuggs? Is that you? Confound it, where is

  the man?"

  Jack Stower whirled, clutching his lantern, just as Jasper

  Marston, wearing a black and crimson brocade dressing

  gown and carrying a branch of candlesticks, strolled through

  the door "Stuggs?" Marston said again, and then he saw

  Jack

  The two men stood staring at each other for a long

  moment; then a slow, deep voice from the hallway broke

  the stunned silence "Right 'ere, gov'nor" An enormous

  figure loomed into view behind Marston Slower cursed He

  whirled and jerked the curtains from the nearest window

  aside, then yanked at the latch The window did not budge

  Marston, shaking himself free of his paralysis at last,

  started forward (none too rapidly, Kim noted with scorn),

  brandishing the candlesticks like a weapon "He's trying to

  steal the platter!" he cried "Stop him, Stuggs!"

  The figure in the hallway ran forward He was unusually

  fast on his feet for a big man, but he had too much distance

  to cover and there were too many obstacles in the way

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  Stower, after one terrified look backward, hurled his dark-

  lantern through the stubborn window, snatched up the fallen

  curtains to keep from being slashed by the fragments of glass

  and broken window slats, and scrambled out, tipping over the

  nearest display case in his hurry

  Stuggs lunged after the fleeing Stower and grabbed his feet

  as the rest of him disappeared out the window Kim heard a

  muffled howl of rage and fear, and Stower kicked backward

  Stuggs lost his balance and crashed into another display case,

  his fingers stilt locked around one of Jack's boots, while the

  last of Jack Stower vanished

  Jasper picked his way across the broken glass to the win-

  dow and squinted out it Kim could hear distant noises; it

  sounded as if the commotion had roused the household, and

  somewhere a dog had begun to bark Jasper did not seem

  aware of it He turned and frowned at Stuggs "He's gone!

  Why couldn't you hold him?"

  "'is bootlace broke," Stuggs said mildly "1 got to and it to

  you, gov'nor, you 'ad it right about that there bowl being

  valuable But you ought to ave told me there was other coves

  after it besides us."

  "This is the platter, not the bowl, you idiot," Jasper Mar-

  ston said "But 1 suppose I should thank you for reminding me

  what we came for" He left the window and went straight to

  the display case containing the platter He set the can-

  dlesticks down on the nearest table and beckoned to Stuggs

  "Come here and open the lock, hurry, before someone else

  gets here "

  As Kim had done, Stuggs tested the lid and made the same

  discovery "It ain't locked "

  "Not locked? That fellow we chased off must have opened

  it' We arrived just in time Give it to me "

>   "No'" a familiar voice said in dramatic tones from the

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  smashed window Kirn's eyes widened What was the head of

  the druid group doing at Bramingham Place?

  "What—" Marston turned his head and froze in mid-sen-

  tence

  Framed in the shattered glass and dangling splinters of

  the window were a man's head and shoulders The man's

  eyes gleamed from the openings of a black mask, and a dark

  high-crowned hat covered his hair His form was hidden

  beneath a driving cloak with several short capes, but the

  tone and timbre of his voice were unmistakable "You are

  too late to further defile the Sacred Dishi Bring it to me, at

  once'"

  Kim bit her lip to keep from laughing aloud She should

  have guessed that Jonathan Aberford would be after the plat-

  ter, the same as everyone else This was becoming altogether

  too much like a Dmry Lane comedy Mairelon seemed to

  think so, too; she could feel him shaking in silent amuse-

  ment She hoped they would both be able to control them-

  selves It wouldn't be funny at all if they were caught-

  "Now, look here—" Marston began

  Jonathan raised a hand, and Kim saw the glint of can-

  dlelight on metal Her amusement died instantly "Bring it to

  mei" Jonathan commanded

  "Put that down, you young chub," Stuggs said "Pistols ain't

  a thing to go waving around like that "

  "Bring me the dish!" Jonathan cned "I won't have any more