A more subtle, yet no less profound, difference was one he noticed only as he walked along: the altered soundscape. His first thought was that something had gone wrong with his hearing. Not deafness-he could hear the occasional dog barking, the whinny of a horse, the rusty groan of the iron gate as he pushed it open, the voice of a street merchant calling attention to his wares a little farther along-all that and more he could hear without difficulty. But the city seemed subdued, as if an occluding veil had been drawn across the world.
Kit’s promenade very soon proved extremely taxing of his mind and senses. The continual noticing and cataloguing of innumerable diversities was exhausting and, unused to the rigours of such mental labour, Kit soon wearied of his ramble and made his way back to Sir Henry’s mansion.
Approaching the house from the road, and still a short distance away, Kit saw both Cosimo and Sir Henry emerge from the main gate and step out into the street, searching both ways. Cosimo saw him first and hurried to meet him.
“Where have you been?”
“Nowhere,” Kit replied. “Just out for a walk.”
“Did you speak to anyone?” he challenged.
“No,” replied Kit, somewhat defensively. “Not a word to anyone. I don’t think anyone even noticed me.”
“Well, get inside.”
“Why? What did I do wrong?”
“I’ll explain inside. Come along.”
Feeling like a naughty schoolboy, Kit followed the two men back into the house; his coat was taken from him by a servant, and he was hustled into Sir Henry’s book-lined study. “I don’t suppose you have any idea of the havoc you might have caused?”
“No, but-” Kit began, then changed tack. “Look, why am I even here? You two have your big powwow and don’t include me. Fine. Whatever. I just want to find Mina and go home.”
“You’re here because we need you. I need you.”
“Yeah? I don’t see why. So far, everything you’ve done could have been done without me.” He shoved his hands in his pockets, adding, “Nobody tells me anything.”
“I am sorry,” Cosimo said, softening his tone. “Yes, of course, you’re right.”
“We should not have kept you in the dark,” Sir Henry volunteered. “See here, young Christopher. You have a gift-a rare and special ability. However, as with all such endowments comes great responsibility. There are dangers as well as benefits, and you must be made aware of them before the gift can best serve you. You must be educated.”
“Sounds good to me,” replied Kit. “I’m all for it.”
“We begin here and now.” His great-grandfather turned back to the table heaped with piles of books and scrolls of parchment. “Have a look at this.”
Kit stepped to the table as his great-grandfather spread an elaborate diagram of what looked like a tree lying on its side-albeit a very stubby, short-trunked specimen with a mass of spindly, curling, tendril-like branches in unruly profusion. Some of the major limbs of this unusual tree were labelled in a neat cursive hand. A quill pen and ink pot lay nearby, and Sir Henry’s fingers were stained.
“What am I looking at?” wondered Kit. “Is this the map?”
“Oh, no,” said Cosimo. “This is merely an attempt to chart the possible routes your Wilhelmina might have travelled. As you can see”-he waved a hand across the diagram-“we have narrowed our search considerably.”
Kit regarded the tangled confusion of branching and intersecting lines. “What did it look like before?”
“It has taken considerable effort to get this far. I doubt we can reduce it much further,” continued Cosimo. “The point is, we’ll have to search each of these pathways to find your friend.”
“All of them?” said Kit.
“Every last one of them-until we find her, that is.” Observing Kit’s stricken face, he added, “Cheer up, old son. You never know-we might find her on the first try. The thing to remember is that, complex though the whole might be, each single path leads only to one particular place.”
Kit looked doubtfully at the impressively complicated chart.
“Not to worry,” Sir Henry chimed in. “This is just the opportunity we needed to spur us to the exploration of several pathways we have been meaning to trace-not to mention one or two basic theories that need testing and verifying.”
“Happy to help,” replied Kit. He stared at the diagram, trying to make sense of it. “So, where do we start?”
“Right…” Cosimo’s forefinger hovered over the parchment, then stabbed sharply down. “Here!” He ran his finger along a main limb off the central trunk; from this three smaller branches diverged, and each of these split again, and yet again.
“This one is called the Oxford Ley,” Sir Henry informed him.
“It runs right down the middle of the High Street,” confirmed Cosimo. “It’s a fairly static ley, as these things go, but responsive with the right manipulation.”
Kit turned this over in his head for a moment. “Okay, but why not go back to Stane Way? That’s where Mina and I parted company, as you already pointed out. Why not start from there?”
“I investigated Stane Way, as you will recall, and failed to find her.”
“And, since the young woman did not arrive with you at your destination,” explained Sir Henry, “we must assume that she has gone somewhere else. It is this somewhere else that we are doing our utmost to locate.”
“And Oxford,” Cosimo continued, “is where I keep my copy of the map. We must collect it and take it with us on our search. As it happens, we can leave from there too.” He paused, studied the diagram for a moment, then looked up. “Have you ever been to Oxford?”
“Not lately.”
“Splendid place,” offered Sir Henry. “You will like it immensely.”
Returning to the chart, Kit said, “This is the same map the Burley Men want, right? What’s so important about it? Buried treasure?”
“So to speak,” replied Cosimo. “The map was made by a man named Arthur Flinders-Petrie. It is in the form of numerous tattooed symbols-”
“Whoa there,” interrupted Kit. “By tattooed you mean…?”
“Exactly. Flinders-Petrie had the map indelibly inscribed onto his torso so it could never be lost nor separated from him. Upon his death, in order to preserve the map, his skin was made into parchment.”
“A skin map,” breathed Kit. “Priceless.”
“Indeed, sir! We suspect it is far more valuable than any monetary figure could describe,” put in Sir Henry. “Among the Questors, there are various theories, of course-some hold with one, and some another.”
“Wait-not so fast,” objected Kit. “These questors you both keep talking about-who are they?”
“Ah! Yes, the Questors. I suppose they are best described as a loose confederation of colleagues, all of whom belong to the Zetetic Society.”
“You have a society?”
“For obvious reasons, it is an extremely secretive organization,” Cosimo told him. “Very small and informal.”
“How small?” Kit wanted to know.
“Seven or eight-perhaps. Maybe nine at a stretch.”
“You don’t know?”
“Things happen,” replied Cosimo. “People die.”
“Of course.”
“The important thing is that we are all of us united in the quest.”
“The quest to find the Skin Map.”
“That is the chief goal of our glorious enterprise, young sir,” confirmed Sir Henry, his tone taking on a note of pride, “to find and reunite the pieces of the Flinders-Petrie map so that we may learn what it was that he discovered. To this end we are pledged to aid one another and share all knowledge and resources in furthering the quest.”
“You will be inducted into the society in due course,” put in Cosimo, “and we will introduce you to the other members then.”
“Okay, so about these theories,” said Kit, returning to the original question. “What did old Flinders discover?”
r /> “Your grandsire and I believe he may have discovered the secret of the universe-or something even more significant and momentous.”
What, thought Kit, could be more significant than the secret of the universe? Before he could voice this question, Cosimo said, “We really won’t know until we have found all the pieces of the map-”
“It’s in pieces?” Kit shook his head. “This just gets better and better.”
“Unfortunately,” said Sir Henry, “we possess only one fragment.”
“And that’s where you come in,” Cosimo continued. “Finding the pieces is an arduous, not to mention dangerous, enterprise. It is a young man’s game, and I am no longer a young man. Not to put too fine a point on it, I am getting old and may not live to see the end of this quest. What little knowledge and expertise I have been able to acquire over my many years in the chase, I would like to pass along to someone who can carry on the work.”
“You skipped a couple generations, great-grandpapa,” Kit pointed out. “Why didn’t you hand over the reins to your own son?”
“I would truly have liked that,” Cosimo said gently, and to Kit’s surprise the old man’s eyes misted. “Nothing would have pleased me more, believe me. But you have to understand that when I made my first leap, it was pure chance and accident. It took me years to understand what had happened to me and find out how to get back home. By the time I was able to return, my son had grown up, lived a full life, and died an old man. In due course, I approached your father-”
“Dad? You can’t be serious!”
“But John had inherited neither the knack nor the inclination. He refused to see me again after our first meeting. I suspect I am the reason your family moved from Manchester.”
Kit nodded, trying to comprehend all he was being told. “So, tell me, what does this map look like?”
Before he could reply, there was a knock on the door and a liveried servant entered to say that the carriage was ready and waiting. “Hold that thought,” replied Cosimo, rolling up the diagram. “We can talk on the way.”
CHAPTER 11
In Which Efforts Are Made and Actions Taken
The journey in Sir Henry’s coach was, Kit considered, enjoyable if not exactly comfortable. Gentle autumn sunlight poured down like honey, suffusing the genteel English landscape with a fine amber glow. The fields and small towns rolled slowly by, unfolding one after another in stately progression at the regular steady clip-clop pace of the two chestnut mares. Sir Henry himself, in his smart black hat with the silver buckle, black leather gloves, and silver-topped ebony walking stick, was the very picture of gentlemanly style and grace. Occasionally, they met or passed other travellers: farmers with donkey carts, traders with pack mules, a hay wain pulled by heavy horses; more often, they encountered foot traffic: country folk carrying baskets of produce or pulling fully laden handcarts; more rarely, they saw riders.
The only drawback in travelling this way was the road, which was more in the way of an endless series of potholes joined by ruts than a seamless ribbon of pavement. At intervals there were streams to be forded or rocky steeps to be negotiated. The latter required the passengers to alight while Sir Henry’s young driver expertly led the team and coach over the rough terrain. The jouncing, bouncing jolt and sway of the carriage took some getting used to, but once mastered became oddly soothing.
What his two companions were telling him, however, was anything but soothing. Kit tried to keep his mind on what they said, but it was proving a struggle. Most of what they told him he simply could not comprehend, and the small portion he did understand sounded too fantastic to credit-even by his own increasingly relaxed standards-and he could not help feeling that Sir Henry and Cosimo had parted company with the solid ground of reality and were now floating high over fantasyland.
Then again, why quibble? Why strain at a gnat, his father used to say, when you’ve already swallowed a gnu-hooves, tail, horns, and moo?
“See here now, Kit,” his great-grandfather was saying. “Pay attention; this is important. When you travel to another world, the best policy is to interfere with the locals as little as possible and only when strictly necessary. Why, you ask? Because every interaction changes things in unexpected ways. Small, insignificant changes may be absorbed without undue strain, but large changes result in wholesale alterations in the universe, and we don’t want that.”
“I don’t know anyone who does,” replied Kit. “But, hold on a second-what about the other night? You know-when you woke up the baker and prevented the fire? Isn’t that just the sort of interference you’re talking about?”
“Precisely!” exclaimed Sir Henry. “It would be best to refrain from that sort of thing.”
“Excuse me?” protested Kit. “If interference is forbidden, then how do you explain tampering with something as significant as the Great Fire of London?”
“Our actions,” his great-grandfather replied, adopting a superior tone, “were taken only after a long and serious consultation. We discussed it for several years and arrived at the conclusion that it would serve no one’s interest to allow all the suffering and upheaval of that disaster if it could be prevented.”
“Not even in the rebuilding of the city in stone?” wondered Kit. That was the one thing historians always pointed to when discussing the Great Fire: a new world-class city arising phoenix-like from the ashes.
Cosimo nodded. “We considered that, too, of course. But how many human lives would you trade for a stone building or two? Anyway, nothing emerged from the fire that would not have come about by other, less destructive, means. The fire merely lent speed and urgency to a process already begun. In short, there was no reason for all those thousands of innocent townsfolk to suffer and, as is most always the case with any disaster, it is those who can least afford to lose who lose the most.”
“Not to mention the enormous obstacle on the road to enlightened learning,” added Lord Castlemain.
“Sir?” wondered Kit.
“Saint Paul’s cathedral, of course,” replied Sir Henry, as if this should be self-evident.
“It is where London’s booksellers stored their wares,” explained Cosimo. “All the books on medicine, science, mathematics, history -everything lost. The fire would set learning back a hundred years, and at a time when reading was just beginning to catch on, as it were.”
This sounded reasonable. “So, until you can be sure you know the effects of what you’re changing, the best course is not to interfere too much.”
“Some change is unavoidable,” Cosimo allowed. “Merely by your presence, you alter the present reality of the world you are visiting. But just remember that every change, however small, has consequences. If the universe is altered enough, the effects can ripple through the entire Omniverse.”
“The what? Omniverse?” Kit shook his head. “Where do you get these words?”
“Omniverse,” repeated his great-grandfather. “Put simply, it is everything that exists. It is this universe and who knows how many others-because there may well be more than one.”
“That has yet to be proven,” said Sir Henry. “Though it does seem much the likeliest explanation.”
“Think of it as the grand total of all that is, was, or will ever be,” Cosimo told him. “It is the Great Universe which may contain an unquantifiable number of smaller universes-like seeds packed in a pomegranate.”
“Why do we need so many?” wondered Kit.
“I don’t know,” confessed Cosimo. “But we seem to have them all the same-each in its own dimension, separated from the others by the thinnest of skins.”
Kit thought for a moment, then said, “I understand about travelling to other worlds and how they aren’t in the same time zone, so to speak. But, if you already know where the ley lines are and where they go, why do you need the map?”
“You’re not thinking big enough,” Cosimo chided. “How best to describe it?” He put his chin in his hands and looked out the window a moment, musing.
“I know!” he said suddenly. “You’re familiar with the London Underground train system, yes?”
“My home away from home,” remarked Kit.
“How many different lines make up the Underground system?”
“I don’t know-a dozen, maybe.”
“And how many stops?” inquired Cosimo. “In total, how many stations would you say there are?”
Kit shrugged. “A few hundred, I suppose-give or take.”
“Indeed,” affirmed Cosimo. “Now the lines on the London Underground are on different levels-some higher, some lower, and some very low-and they crisscross through the earth in three dimensions, linking up at various points along the way.”
“The connecting stations,” added Kit. “So you can change lines.”
“Yes, but not every line connects with every other-they merely connect wherever they will and there is no guessing where those connections might be. It is an ingenious system, but also very complicated. People can easily become confused when they use it, not so?”
“It has been known to happen,” granted Kit, who, as a regular victim of tube travel, knew the feeling only too well.
“The best way to avoid this confusion is to use a map-that rather clever schematic drawing with all its colours and crossing lines.” Cosimo’s gaze grew keen. “Now then, what if you attempted to travel from Whitechapel to Uxbridge without that little map? What if there was no helpful diagram posted above the door of the coach, no signs on the platforms, nothing to show where you were or where you were going. You’d be quite lost, would you not? You could not tell where the line went or how many stations the train might pass along the way, or whether those stations linked up to other trains on other lines, or how many other lines there might be, where those lines crossed, or where they led. So, here you are, riding the train without a clue where it’s going-how, I ask you, do you navigate your way out of that?”
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