Read The Slanted Worlds Page 8


  Maskelyne sat back in the chair. For a moment he seemed too exhausted to speak. He said, “It means they’ll come, Becky. They’ll need me.”

  Then to her surprise, he picked up the central disc and rapped it gently three times on the tabletop.

  Knock. Knock. Knock.

  “Oh hell and damnation!”

  Piers flung down the pen in irritation and jumped up. Whisking off his apron, he struggled into his dark tailcoat, buttoning it hurriedly over his scarlet waistcoat as he half ran down the corridor.

  The tiled hall was quiet. Wharton and Sarah were up with the mirror, probably.

  But who could have gotten through the locked gates and up the drive?

  He flitted across the hall, reached the front door, threw it open, and looked out.

  The steps were empty.

  Beyond them the overgrown drive was blurred with rain, the tall grass of the lawns rippled with broken tulips in the cold breeze.

  No one.

  Piers put his hands together, flexed them till the knuckles cracked, stepped back, and closed the door.

  Inside, he stared at its dark wood, thinking hard.

  Because he had definitely heard them.

  Three soft knocks.

  Gideon ducked under oak boughs, breathless. The very air kept changing. He was lost in the tilted, angled, colliding worlds of the Summerland.

  He stopped for breath, fighting down panic.

  Here was an empty piazza, a dry fountain at its center. The air shimmered with heat.

  He crouched down, wiping sweat from his face. He knew better than to trust his eyes, because only a few paces away, the sunlit square had a shadow slanting into it, rising at a bizarre angle to a glass skyscraper.

  A pigeon fluttered down; his whole body jumped.

  Any bird could be Shee.

  Any snake, any lizard, any cat.

  Any narrow face at a window could be Shee.

  In this Otherworld, the very stones and trees might be spying on him. And with a surge of panic he realized the bracelet would draw them. With his Shee-sharp sight he saw how it glowed on his wrist, heard how it sang. It pulsed with power, it smelled of pollen and honey, and the Shee would swarm to it like wasps.

  He had to get out!

  Taking a breath, he raced through the piazza into a meadow. Beyond it a blue ocean stretched, with tiny islands green as jewels. Crashing down the hill, he saw dryads twist into olive trees, a kraken dive into the waves. Gideon ran onto the beach, up the gangplank of a moored quinquereme, its slaves oiled with sweat, then leaped an oar and landed swaying in the sudden roar of a train corridor rattling through streets and factories. Grabbing the window rail, he edged down the aisle, unseen by passengers, opened a carriage door, and walked into a golden field of barley.

  Gritting his teeth, he waded through the waist-high crop.

  These were the secret ways of the Shee, their unseen paths through the world, barely glimpsed by mortals, except in certain, potent intersections—a fairy ring, a haunted room, a crossroads at twilight, notorious for generations as places of danger. He was deep in the Otherworld, and any moment the whole scene would reset as if someone had shaken the pieces of a kaleidoscope. It was a place of madness, and he knew every time he traveled in it, it contorted his very reason.

  He felt a tickle on his wrist and looked down. A tangle of white bindweed had slid around the bracelet. The green stem explored, curious.

  He shook it off quickly.

  Out! Where was out!

  In the center of the field, as if it had crash-landed from space and been half buried by the impact, tilted at a crazy angle, was a castle.

  He climbed through the ruined barbican and came to a great wooden gate. It was locked, but in it was a smaller postern, cut so tiny he had to kneel to open it.

  He squeezed his head and shoulders through.

  Instantly, as if they had been waiting for him, bees swarmed down.

  Gideon beat the buzzing things away, scrambled through, and ran. Through an orchard, ducking under apple trees, into a silent and deserted school where the classrooms slept in summer heat, out through a rabbit hutch, where three identical rabbits watched him with huge eyes.

  Then a corridor, stark, gray, one fluorescent light strip buzzing overhead. As he looked up the strip came apart, and became the swarm again, bright electric bees that clustered around him, stung him, so that he ducked and twisted with increasing panic, flung a door open, threw himself through.

  Venn grabbed him. “Down!”

  Gideon collapsed, gasping for breath. Venn gave one ferocious yell at the bright buzzing swarm. “Leave him! NOW!”

  His voice was savage with wrath.

  Instantly there was nothing there to shout at.

  Gideon slid to the grass and sat there, stunned. When he could look around, he saw a small glade of bluebells. Above, oak trees, just coming into tiny new leaf.

  He was at the edge of the Wood.

  He was back.

  “Listen,” he gasped. “Jake . . .”

  “Not here!” Venn hauled him up, then noticed the bracelet on his wrist. With a cry of joy, he slid it off and gripped it tight. Then he ran out of the Wood, up the path and through the small metal gate to the cloister, its threshold protected with an iron strip, its bars hung with charms.

  Gideon followed, limping and sore. Passing over the iron made him shiver, but he felt nothing of the peculiar jagged pain it seemed to give the Shee.

  “Venn, wait.”

  He was irritable with stings and scratches. Venn dragged him to a bench, flung him down, and stood over him. “Right. Tell me. Is Jake alive?”

  Sarah burst out through the cloister door, a glass of water in her hand. She pushed it into Gideon’s trembling fingers. “Take your time.”

  The cold water was blissful. He gulped it down so fast it almost choked him. Then, looking up, he saw Wharton was there, behind her, looking as if he had aged ten years.

  “Where’s Jake? Where is he?”

  “Don’t blame me.” Gideon put the glass down. “I tried to get him back, but he’s so . . . stubborn. And then the bars in the window . . .” He stopped, trying to get his thoughts together because the Summerland did that to you, shattered your mind, left you in pieces.

  Deliberately he said, “Jake is in a city where a war is happening. Metal is falling from the sky and smashing the houses. He said to give you this.”

  He put down the black velvet bag and out of it took the steel film canister.

  Sarah picked it up. “Film? Of what?”

  “And is Jake all right?” Wharton demanded.

  Gideon drank the last drop of water. “He’s fine. Except that he’s in a dungeon. And likely to be hanged.”

  9

  Jake has charm if he cares to use it. He can be most persuasive. His academic ability is not in doubt. He has spectacular confidence in his own judgment—which is often at fault.

  He seems to trust no one but himself. Frankly, I think he’d make a good politician.

  Or a spy.

  End of term confidential report; Compton’s School; G. Wharton

  London!

  I had never imagined a place so frantic. My soul thrilled to the motor cars, trains, horses and carriages! The thronged pavements of people—beggars, thieves, duchesses, bankers—all strolling among a bedlam of street vendors who cried every ware from violets to soap to ointment that would remedy hair loss for the modern gentleman.

  But when I finally walked under the ancient archway of Staple Inn, I found myself in a sudden haven of quiet; an old stone courtyard surrounding great trees, their leaves just budding in the spring sunshine.

  I was ushered into the offices of Messrs. Queenhythe and Carbury, Solicitors at Law, to find a very tall young man with a walrus mustache who intr
oduced himself as Marcus Queenhythe. I must have looked terribly tired from my bewildering journey, because he instantly poured me tea from a brown china pot.

  “And you walked all the way from Euston? My dear Miss Symmes . . .”

  “I had no idea which omnibus to take.” I drank the tea thirstily. “There were so many.”

  “Of course. Well, we will have a cab to your house. That is if you wish me to attend you.”

  “Oh please. I would so like it.”

  Your house.

  My heart beat with quiet pride. I sat up straight and tried to look like a woman of property. But I could not help but be aware that Mr. Queenhythe seemed unaccountably nervous. He stroked his mustache with inky fingers. “There is a little . . . that is . . . you may be a little disturbed by the . . . er, state of the property.”

  “In what way?” I tried to sound confident, but my heart sank, as if at some hidden dread.

  “It has been unoccupied for many years. And your late father was a noted eccentric. There are heaps of books and papers . . .”

  I was relieved. “Oh, papers. I can deal with those.”

  “And . . . um, machinery. There seems to be some sort of peculiar invention. In the study. Wiring and such. It fills the room.”

  I waved a hand. “It can be dismantled and sold. Shall we go now?” Because I was burning with impatience.

  He sent the clerk for the keys, and sat at the desk. He did not meet my eye. “I think . . . If I may be so bold as to advise you, Miss Symmes, perhaps a hotel would be better. Until . . .”

  “No hotel.” I rose, so he had to scramble up, startled. I kept my voice firm. “I intend to sleep in my own house. Mr. Queenhythe, may I ask what it is that you are not telling me?”

  I detected a certain panic in his voice. He stood, turning his back and arranging his cravat in the mirror. Finally he said, “In point of fact, Miss Symmes, though I consider them foolish, there are rumors about the house. We have found it impossible to keep a servant there. They all leave very quickly. They say . . .”

  His hand shook a little on the tie. “. . . that the house is haunted.”

  He watched me anxiously in the glass.

  I must admit to a certain cold shiver around the heart.

  But I drew myself up. “Ghosts, sir, do not trouble me.”

  However, when the cab arrived before the dilapidated frontage, I admit to being a little daunted. The house was a fine Georgian building in a grand square, but trees had been allowed to grow and overshadow it, and the shutters were closed and dark, like blind eyes. Ivy obscured the upstairs, and strange scorch marks starred from what must have been the study window. As I climbed the steps and waited for Mr. Queenhythe to undo the padlocks, I felt as if my mysterious father was still here, gazing down at me curiously from some attic. When I glanced up, the panes were dark.

  We entered the hall. A peculiar smell of charred metal seemed to hang there, even after so many years.

  “This was the drawing room. The dining room is in here. The morning room. And this was Mr. Symmes’s study, I believe.”

  He opened a door onto a room crowded with dark masses of sheeted furniture. I put a hand out and touched an armchair. My fingers came away covered with a film of brown dust. “Does no one clean?”

  “As I said, we have had problems. The last cleaner refused to return. She spoke of footsteps. Movements where no one was.”

  I opened the shutters. Pale daylight fell on my father’s desk, his chair, and revealed by it, suddenly, there in the corner, I saw her. A gangly awkward young woman, drably dressed, her face thin and pale, her glance startled. I moved, and so did she. And then I realized this was no ghost but myself, reflected, and I put a hand to my cheek in dismay, because for a moment I had seen myself as a stranger sees me, a lost girl, away from all the certainties and fixtures of my life.

  I recovered myself because Mr. Queenhythe was observing me, and stepping forward, removed the rest of the sheets.

  To reveal the mirror.

  It was tall and made of some curious glossy black glass.

  It reflected the room as a slanting, warped space, the walls distorted, the windows bulging outward. Coils of wiring led from it into the heaped and piled corners of the room. I picked one up, and it curled in my hand with a strange friction that made me drop it, quickly. Behind me, the mirror showed Mr. Queenhythe laying a pile of documents on the desk.

  “These are your father’s will, his diaries and letters. If you would care to sign here, and . . . just here, our business is concluded.”

  He wanted to be out of the place. I could sense his nervousness. I crossed the room and signed the papers with what I hoped was a defiant flourish. He put the keys down on the desk, gathered his effects, and hurried into the hall. I trailed after him.

  “If there is anything you need,” he said, his look suddenly intent and urgent. “Anything at all, Miss Symmes, please don’t hesitate to contact us. At any hour.”

  Rather unnerved, I put out my hand and he shook it.

  At that moment a soft sound startled us.

  Knock.

  Knock.

  Knock.

  It echoed through the empty hall and dusty stairwell.

  We looked at each other. “Now who can that be?” he said. He marched to the front door and flung it open.

  There was no one there.

  Mr. Queenhythe stepped out and looked up and down the street. The pavements were empty. But I thought I heard, as if from somewhere far, the giggle of children.

  “Some scoundrel playing tricks,” he said. “Well. I wish you the best of luck, Miss Symmes. The very best of luck.”

  It was only when I had closed the door on his hurried departure, and turned to face the dark stair and the silent house, that I allowed myself a secret smile.

  Ghosts were just what I needed.

  I was my father’s daughter, after all.

  Allenby took another pull at the cigarette and stared at Jake through the coil of blue smoke. “Let me get this straight. You want me to take you—a prisoner on remand—out of here, across the bomb craters of London, to a smashed-up house in a street that no longer exists?”

  Jake nodded.

  “You really have a nerve, Wilde.”

  Jake leaned back. “It’s the only way. If you want Alicia’s spy network, you have to take me to her house.”

  “Her house is in smithereens!”

  “Not all of it.” Jake leaned forward. “Come on. Your men must have been digging about in there. They’ve found it, haven’t they. You know they have. The mirror. The machine.”

  He made his voice as confident and enticing as he could, but in truth he felt sick and desperate. He had barely eaten for days—the muck they gave him was inedible—and his brain was weary and fuzzy from broken sleep, because at night the cells were crammed with drunks and infuriatingly noisy women. But at least they were keeping him here. There was no sign of the military. Allenby wanted the credit for this for himself.

  Allenby crunched the cigarette in the ashtray. The door opened; the sergeant came in with two mugs on a tray. As he set them down, he gave Jake a particularly filthy look.

  Jake grabbed the tea with both handcuffed hands and drank it gratefully. The hot sweetness was a glorious comfort.

  Allenby watched. His calm, alert face was hard to read.

  “What is this machine?”

  “I told you. Alicia used a very strange device. It won’t have been destroyed. It looks . . . appears . . . to be made of glass. Black glass.”

  A flicker. Hardly anything, in those steady eyes. But Jake was sure.

  He put the mug down. “You have found it.”

  After a moment Allenby said, “Let’s say we’ve recovered . . . something. Something we don’t understand. But . . .”

  “Take
me there. I’ll get it working for you.”

  Their eyes met across the table. It was a game of chess, Jake thought, with London the board and himself as one of the pawns, the smallest of pieces. But it had to work, because if Gideon failed him, he certainly wasn’t going to be stuck here for the rest of his life.

  Allenby sighed. Abruptly, he scraped the chair back and stood. “I must be a bloody fool,” he said.

  Sarah said, “You can’t do it, can you?”

  Piers, sitting on the floor among a pile of wiring as big as he was, looked at Venn.

  “It’s not that I can’t do it exactly,” he said warily. “I mean, given time, given a bit of leeway, I could. But to be honest, I’d rather work on that page you brought.”

  “Jake needs us now!” She scrambled up and walked angrily to the mirror, staring into its enigmatic curves.

  The mirror slanted her own gaze back at her. She knew Piers and Venn had been up all night re-aligning it. Once, they had tried to activate it. At four o’clock a shudder of noise and energy had rippled terrifyingly through the house, waking her and sending her racing out into the dark corridor and crashing into Wharton’s startled panic.

  “What the hell was that?” he’d yelled.

  Now he lay in an armchair dozing, his maroon dressing gown tied tight over a pair of ridiculous pajamas with little anchors all over them.

  She looked at the film canister. “Can we see this?”

  “I’ll have to find the old projector,” Piers said, not looking up.

  She frowned. Then she touched the bracelet. Gideon had told her about the Blitzed world. And Jake was there, locked up in some cell, fuming with restlessness and fear. She knew how that felt.

  “Where’s Gideon?”

  “Gone back to the Shee.” Wharton yawned. “Everything needs to seem normal. If Summer knew . . . Really, sometimes I fear for that poor boy’s sanity.”

  Venn had said nothing for ages. He watched Sarah, his glance sharp and cold.

  She said, “Listen to me. We can’t just work in the dark. We don’t have any more time to experiment and get things wrong over and over. If we make a mistake, we could miss him by years. We could be too late.” She turned to face him. “You know what to do, and you don’t have any choice about it. There’s only one man who can possibly help us now, and that man is Maskelyne.”