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Moonlocket

Page 24

by Peter Bunzl


  Shoots of green growth sprouted from the hedgerows; Robert stuck out a hand and batted them from their path. A summer breeze tugged at his shirtsleeves, jangling the locket chain around his neck.

  Lily’s curls spread out across the sky, like blood-red ribbons. He held onto her tightly as she turned and rode them up the lane, and it felt almost as if they were flying home.

  A dictionary of curious words

  A glossary of words which may be uncommon to the reader

  Automaton: a self-operating mechanical device.

  Bazalgette: not a “what” but a “who”. Joseph Bazalgette was a civil engineer who devised London’s sewer network which helped stop the spread of cholera across the city. The London sewer network is seen as one of the modern industrial wonders of the world (though Lily and Robert might disagree after their ordeal).

  Chronometer: a timepiece which has been specially tested to meet a certain standard of precision. (“Cogs and chronometers!”)

  Costermonger: someone who sells goods – such as fruit and vegetables – from a cart in the street. You might well expect to see (and hear!) one or two costermongers milling around Brackenbridge.

  Escapologist: an escapologist is an entertainer of sorts, who escapes from a variety of different dangers, such as handcuffs and ropes – or in the case of the notorious Jack Door, the police!

  Howdah: a seat used for riding on the back of an elephant, either real or mechanical.

  Hybrid: someone who is part-mech, part-human.

  Mechanimal: a mechanical animal, such as Malkin.

  Oakum shed: oakum is a type of tarred material used mainly in shipbuilding. In Victorian prisons, the prisoners would be made to pick apart old tarred ropes to make this material…although Jack Door preferred to simply pick up the oakum for his daring escape.

  Peelers (or The Peelers): a “peeler” is a nickname for a policeman. It came from the name of the man who first introduced police officers (first in Ireland in 1817, and then in England in 1822) – Sir Robert Peel.

  Penny dreadful: exciting tales of famous criminals, detectives or supernatural mysteries, these magazines were published weekly and cost one penny (which gave them their name). They are not considered proper, but if you’re sneaky, you can hide one rolled up in your pocket for when your parents aren’t looking.

  Perpetual motion machine: a machine which will run for ever, without the need for an external source of energy.

  Working Lads’ Mission: a charitable organization who would take in boys and young men, educate them and help them find jobs, instead of leaving them to live on the streets. It was Tolly’s saving grace!

  Zeppelin: a type of airship. It has an oval-shaped “balloon”, beneath which is a rigid metal framework filled with bags of gas to keep the ship afloat. The passenger and crew area – or gondola – is usually situated under the main balloon, and can be quite roomy. (Unless you’re hitching a ride in the Ladybird, in which case it’s a little bit cosy.)

  Thanks to my agent Jo Williamson, and my editors Rebecca Hill and Becky Walker, for guiding me through the difficult second book with aplomb. To Kath Millichope, Sarah Cronin and Becca Stadtlander for the gorgeous cover, type, design and illustrations. To Sarah Stewart, Stephanie King and Anne Finnis for edits and advice on the last drafts. To publicity and marketing mavens Amy Dobson, Stevie Hopwood and Alesha Bonser; plus the entire Usborne team – you’ve been a joy to work with once again. To my mum, dad, family and Michael – for driving me crazy and keeping me sane through the final push to finish – I love you all to the moon and back.

  Originally I intended Jack to be a Dawkins, which is the real name of the Artful Dodger in Charles Dickens’s amazing Oliver Twist. Then on a whim – and a jackdaw pun – I changed it to Door, which is also a character name in Neil Gaiman’s brilliant Neverwhere. So thanks to those two fantastic writers for unknowingly providing me with half a name each; plus every other awesome author who’s inspired me over the years.

  Finally, I’d like to thank the stellar bloggers, librarians, teachers and many young readers who’ve told me how much they adored Cogheart, I hope you feel the same way about this one!

  Find out where Lily and Robert’s journey began in Cogheart

  Malkin pressed his forepaws against the flight-deck window and peered out. The silver airship was still following; gaining on them. The purr of its propellers and the whoosh of its knife-sharp hull cutting through the air sent a shiver of terror through his clockwork innards.

  The fox tore his eyes away and stared at his master. John’s ship, Dragonfly, was fast but she had nothing in the way of firepower. The silver airship, by contrast, bristled with weapons. Sharp metal spikes stuck out from her hull, making her look like some sort of militarized porcupine.

  Just then, Dragonfly’s rudder shifted, and she pitched as John twisted the wheel into a one-eighty turn to swoop back past her pursuers.

  The silver airship shrunk away, but within seconds she’d swung around to follow. She began closing in once more; her propellers chopping through the clouds, throwing dark shadows across their stern. When the two airships broke into a patch of blue, she fired.

  A harpoon slashed across the sky and thudded into Dragonfly’s hull, the point piercing her port side.

  Thud! Another harpoon speared into the stern.

  Malkin let out a bark of alarm as a stench of burning gas filled the flight deck, and the needles in the rows of instrument panels flickered into the red danger zones. Over the whine of their stalling engines, the crackle of straining steel cables could be heard. The silver airship had begun to pull them in.

  John locked Dragonfly’s wheel, and engaged her autopilot. He threw open the cockpit door and, with Malkin at his heels, dashed towards the engine room.

  Pistons pumped, and crankshafts turned at full power, while the cabin juddered and shook. In the centre of the floor, a metal egg-shaped pod sat among a tangle of pipes.

  John threw open its door. “No room for both of us,” he said. “You go, Malkin.”

  The fox gave a whimper of disapproval. “No. It should be you, John. Humans over mechanicals. It’s the law.”

  John shook his head. “I can’t leave my ship; I need to try and guide her down safely – and you’ve no opposable thumbs!” He gave a half-hearted laugh and withdrew a battered envelope from his pocket. Crouching down, he stuffed it into a leather pouch around Malkin’s neck. “This is for my Lily. See that she gets it.”

  “What’s in there?”

  John smiled. “Secrets. Tell her to keep them safe. She mustn’t tell anyone about them, not ever. Can you remember that?”

  “I think so.” Malkin prodded the pouch, sniffing at it with his nose.

  “Good,” John said. “Make for Brackenbridge, that’s where she’ll be. If I get out of this alive, I’ll come find her.”

  “Is there anything else?”

  “And tell her I love her.” John ruffled the mechanimal’s ears one last time. “It’s at least a day’s journey from here, have you enough clicks?”

  Malkin nodded.

  “Take your winder anyway.” John produced a tarnished key on a chain and hung it round the fox’s neck, next to the pouch. “Though heaven knows who’ll wind you if I’m not there.”

  “Thank you, John.” Malkin stepped into the escape pod and curled up on the seat. “By all that ticks, I hope to see you again.”

  “And I you, old friend.” John shut the door. With a clatter and hum the pod bay doors opened and in a jolt, the pod was free.

  As John watched it through the open hatch, shrinking away in the sky, an image of his daughter, Lily, flashed into his mind. If only he could see her one last time. Tell her the truth about the past. He should’ve done it long ago, but he’d not been brave enough. Now Malkin would have to take care of things. Everything was in the letter.

  Another harpoon smashed through Dragonfly’s hull, and whirring saw blades cut through the steel ribs, ripping cracks in the ship’s t
in chest. In a jagged screech, the cracks were wrenched into a doorway, and two silhouetted figures appeared. Their silver eyes glinted in the light. The thinner of the figures raised a stick with a skull handle, then John felt a blinding shaft of pain, and everything went black…

  Lily wrinkled her freckled nose as she trudged along at the back of the line of girls. With each step, her heart beat hard in her chest, and her green eyes flicked across the dog-eared pages of her beloved penny dreadful hidden inside her schoolbook.

  She was enjoying a particularly gory scene in Varney the Vampyre Versus The Air-Pirates, where Varney had captured the heroine in the disused attic of an Italian boarding school and was preparing to feast on her blood.

  Lily had her pencil poised to mark up the gruesomest passages of the magazine, so she could reread them later at her leisure. Another dubious volume, balanced on the crown of her head, wobbled with each step, but she didn’t let it distract her from Varney.

  “Heads up! Eyes straight!” With one copy of The Oxford Guide to Perfect Poise balanced on her head, Mrs McKracken, Lily’s middle-aged deportment teacher, led the gaggle of girls in a circle around the Great Hall, her flat feet slapping across the polished wooden floor. The Kraken, Lily called her – though never to her face, that would be far too risky.

  The Kraken was somewhat obsessed with posture. As for Lily, she barely gave it a second thought. In her opinion it was better to read books than balance them. That’s what they were designed for, after all. And if you wanted to wear something on your head there was a perfectly good item designed for that too: it was called a hat.

  Lily sneaked a brief glance at the other girls in her class. At the front of the line, Miss Lucretia Blackwell had her prim nose stuck in the air and three copies of Sensible Etiquette for the Best Occasions balanced on her perfectly coiffed hair.

  Second came Miss Alice Harvey, who had seven copies of Butterwick’s Guide to Better Manners balanced on her doughnut plait. With that monstrous hair-buncle, it was no surprise she never dropped a single copy.

  Miss Gemma Ruddle was next. She had four precarious copies of The Ladies’ Manual of Politeness balanced and would stop after each step and pretend to scratch her ear so she could adjust her leaning tower of literature.

  Lily had long ago noticed the other girls never read in posture class. It seemed thinking and walking simultaneously was too difficult for them. She doubted a single important thought ever floated through their minds. If Spring-Heeled Jack, or Varney the Vampyre, or the air-pirates, or any of the other blackguards who roamed England, ever caught any of those girls in a dark alley they’d be dead for sure. Dead before they’d practised their conversational French, dead before they’d politely discussed the weather, or asked “Tea or coffee?”; in short, dead before their perfectly poised bodies struck the cobbles. And what use was deportment to one dead? No use. No use whatsoever.

  “Stop,” the Kraken yelled and one by one the girls stopped in a neat line behind her. All except Lily who, having failed to notice her untied shoelaces, tripped, stepped on Gemma’s foot, and fell.

  “Ouch!” Gemma staggered forward, clutching at Alice to try and keep her balance, but in vain; her four copies of The Ladies’ Manual of Politeness slipped from her head.

  “Careful!” Alice cried, dropping seven copies of Butterwick’s Guide to Better Manners.

  Thud-thud-thud-thud-thud-thud… Thud.

  Lucretia wobbled from side to side, grasping at the top of her head, but she was too late. Three copies of Sensible Etiquette for the Best Occasions slipped from her brow and scattered at her feet in a crash of fluttering pages.

  “Why don’t you pay attention, you galumphing lump?” the Kraken shouted. “What’ve you got to say for yourself?”

  Lily gazed up from the sea of fallen books. Was the woman talking to her? “Sorry?” she tried.

  The Kraken huffed. “I said: WHAT-HAVE-YOU-GOTTO-SAY-FOR-YOURSELF? Oh, never mind.” She took The Oxford Guide to Perfect Poise from her head and threw it at Lily, who ducked as the heavy tome glanced past her ear.

  “You’ve been reading. You’re not allowed to read in my class—”

  “I thought—”

  “And no thinking either.” The Kraken folded her arms across her chest. She’d turned a most putrid shade of puce; it perfectly matched her purple dress. Perhaps it was her tight corsets that made her face flush so?

  The bell rang and the other girls scrabbled across the floor, grabbing their books and slamming them shut. They piled the volumes on the Kraken’s desk and lined up against the wall, waiting for the signal to leave.

  “You may go,” the Kraken said, waving them off with a hand, and the crocodile of young ladies filed out, whispering maliciously to one another. Lily dusted down her tights and stood to join them.

  “Not you, Miss Grantham. I want words with you.” The Kraken waddled towards her. “Why is it you think you can ignore my lessons in favour of these tall tales?” She plucked the schoolbook from Lily’s hands and examined the gory magazine hidden inside its pages, paying particular attention to the image of a bloody corpse with bat wings.

  “Where on earth did you get this balderdash?”

  “Papa sent it in his last care package, Miss. He knows I like the penny dreadfuls.”

  “Does he indeed?” The Kraken looked unimpressed.

  Lily continued. “He believes one should read a lot wider than deportment manuals if one plans to get an exceptional education. Don’t you agree?”

  The Kraken weighed the magazine in her hand. “No,” she said. “I don’t. Besides, this sort of bunkum is not approved of by the academy. It has no educational value.”

  “It teaches piracy and air combat.”

  “And what young lady needs to know that?” The Kraken took a deep breath. “No. I’m afraid, Miss Grantham, I have to confiscate it. And if you’ve any similar stories, you’d better hand them over right away.”

  Lily shrugged. “I don’t have a single other magazine of that kind.”

  “Nonsense. You’ve one there.”

  “I beg your pardon? Where?”

  “The one you’re hiding.”

  The Kraken craned her neck, trying to see what Lily had behind her back. Lily passed the magazine from her left hand to her right. “I don’t know what you mean.”

  “Give it to me.” The Kraken held out her shovel of a palm.

  “Fine.” Lily glowered, handing over Spring-Heeled Jack and the Blackguards.

  “There. That wasn’t so hard, was it?” The Kraken wedged both magazines under her sweaty armpit.

  “No, Ma’am.”

  “Good.” The Kraken handed Lily back her schoolbook. “Remember,” she said, wagging a single finger, “if you’ve any more of these dreadful things you can be sure I’ll find them. Now, run along, you don’t want to be late for your next lesson. And straighten your pinny, it’s wrinkled as an elephant’s ear.”

  “Yes, Ma’am. Good afternoon, Ma’am.” Lily brushed at her creased pinny with ink-stained fingers and gave the Kraken a curtsy, but when the woman returned to her desk, Lily stuck her tongue out at her broad retreating backside. Then, with as much poise as she could muster, she flounced to the door and hurried off down the passage.

  Miss Octavia Scrimshaw’s Finishing Academy for Young Ladies was a cluster of wind-blown red-brick buildings that stood in a wild corner of England. The school was proud to proclaim its elegant reputation in the society papers under a scrolled coat of arms, but the truth was its reputation, like the buildings themselves, had steadily crumbled over the years and now was badly in need of repair.

  Lily’s father had chosen to send her to the school after she’d frustrated a number of governesses. His main criterion: it was out of the way and no one there would ask questions about her. He’d even given her a false surname: Grantham – a combination of G for Grace (from her mother), and Hartman – their real surname. He never explained why, or what he was trying to hide her from, but since
the time of Mama’s death he’d become preoccupied with keeping Lily’s whereabouts a secret, even moving them from London to deep in the countryside. Lily suspected he was just a natural born worrier, though he still insisted she have the life of a normal well-bred Victorian young lady.

  The trouble was, Lily reflected, as she sneaked up the last set of stairs to the girls’ dormitory, she didn’t want the life of a well-bred Victorian young lady, she wanted the life of an air-pirate.

  Which was why, after her run-in with the Kraken, she decided to skip French conversation class and hide her remaining stash of penny dreadfuls before they were confiscated or worse, destroyed – like every other vaguely interesting or illicit thing in this institution.

  The dormitory door was locked, but she knew how to deal with that. She took a hairpin from her bun of red hair, straightened it in her teeth, and popped it in the keyhole. Then she wiggled the pin about, while turning the doorknob. It was a trick she’d practised many times, first learned from The Notorious Jack Door: Escapologist and Thief Extraordinaire – the book, not the man himself. Although she wouldn’t have minded having a few words with him about advanced lock-picking if they ever bumped into one another. Anyway, according to Jack, all you had to do was listen out for the—

  Click!

  There it was. Quietly, Lily pulled open the door and crept into the dormitory, her boots squeaking across the floorboards. Ticking radiators warmed the room, and Lily heard the voices of the other girls chanting French verbs in the downstairs classroom. A pale November sun hung above the opposite buildings, sneaking occasional beams of light in through the frost-covered windows to caress her face.

  Lily stopped beside her bed and pulled her penny dreadfuls from the drawer of her side table; she was about to push them under her mattress when she heard a faint muffled sobbing.

 

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