The Mask of Destiny

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The Mask of Destiny Page 26

by Richard Newsome


  Gerald and his lawyer, Mr Prisk, sat in armchairs by the fireplace, going over a sheaf of papers on a low coffee table. A tray with a pitcher of iced lemon squash sat untouched on the table.

  Gerald looked up from the pad where he was doodling while listening to Mr Prisk. ‘Hey, guess what?’

  ‘What?’ Ruby said.

  ‘Did you know that cheap old relic is an anagram for Delphic Oracle?’

  ‘Is that right?’ Ruby said. She laid the joker on Sam’s lead. ‘My trick, dopey.’

  The housekeeper beamed with delight. ‘Oh, well played, Miss Ruby. The girls win again.’

  ‘Ha! Who would have thought that parlour games could be such fun,’ Ruby said. She gathered the cards together and cut the pack. ‘Another hand?’

  Mr Fry stood from the table and straightened his jacket. ‘I better not. I have an appointment in an hour and I best be getting ready.’

  ‘Dinner with Miss Turner again, Mr Fry?’ Ruby said. ‘That’s the third time this week, isn’t it?’

  Fry turned a russet red. ‘Miss Turner will be going down to Cheltenham next week to oversee Miss Gupta’s return to school. I am merely keeping her company while she is in London.’

  ‘Ignore her, Mr Fry,’ Gerald said. ‘She’s teasing. Have a great night.’ Before Fry could reach the door, Gerald spoke up again. ‘And Mr Fry?’

  The butler turned in the doorway to face him.

  ‘Yes, sir?’

  ‘Thanks again for what you did in France. There aren’t many people who’d risk arrest the way you did. I’d be locked up if it wasn’t for you.’

  Fry’s face grew wistful. ‘I know. I think about it every day.’ He closed the door behind him as he left.

  Mr Prisk pulled the papers together on the coffee table and signed the top one. ‘Now Gerald, you will need to come to court this Thursday, just for the formality of having the charges against you withdrawn. And I believe Inspector Jarvis will be asked to apologise for his, ahem, enthusiastic pursuit of you.’

  ‘I should hope so,’ Mrs Rutherford said. ‘Shooting at children, indeed.’

  ‘To be fair, that was one of the local Delphi police,’ Ruby said. ‘Like Nico said, some of the local police were a bit excitable.’

  ‘What will happen to Sir Mason now?’ Mrs Rutherford asked.

  ‘At the moment he’s in jail in Athens,’ Mr Prisk said, pouring himself a glass of squash. ‘The Greek authorities are trying to satisfy themselves that he’s alive. The records still show that he’s dead. And because he’s officially dead, he can’t access any of his money to hire lawyers. So he’ll be there for some time, even before he faces any of the hundred or so charges that will be laid against him.’

  ‘It’ll do him good to see what life’s like without great wads of cash,’ Ruby said.

  There was a light knock on the door and a housemaid announced that Inspector Parrott from the London Metropolitan Police had arrived.

  The inspector greeted them all warmly and handed a shoebox to Gerald.

  ‘What’s this?’ Gerald asked as he peered inside.

  ‘It’s the last of the material we recovered from Sir Mason’s rooms at the Rattigan Club,’ he said. ‘It appears to be the documents stolen from your house by Green’s associate.’

  Gerald flicked through a pile of newspaper clippings, envelopes, a dry cleaning ticket…and a letter, with ‘Delphi’ written at the top in Greek.

  ‘The letter from great aunt Geraldine,’ he said. He skimmed the contents and groaned. ‘It says Delphi is the key to the mystery. This could have saved us a lot of stuffing around.’

  Sam shrugged and took a chocolate-chip biscuit from a plate on the card table. ‘Never mind,’ he said. ‘It helped fill in the time.’

  ‘Have you heard from Constable Lethbridge?’ Ruby asked the inspector. ‘How is he?’

  ‘He’s running a pigeon hospital in Rome with his new girlfriend,’ Parrott said. ‘He seems to be very happy.’ The inspector fixed Gerald with a penetrating stare. ‘You three certainly led the police on a merry chase across Europe. I’m still curious exactly how you located Sir Mason Green. In a cave. In Greece.’

  Gerald glanced at Sam, who looked to Ruby, who closed the triangle with a look back to Gerald.

  ‘Um, we had help from a boy in Delphi,’ Gerald said, as innocently as he could. ‘He’d heard some rumours about an old man hiding in a cave. We found him and brought him out in an underground stream.’ He turned back to doodling on his notepad. ‘There’s not much else to tell.’

  ‘What about Charlotte Green?’ Parrott said. ‘The local police found her chemistry laboratory and the poison she used to murder Green’s double in the Old Bailey, but they haven’t been able to find a trace of her. It’s as if she’s disappeared in a puff of smoke.’

  ‘Um…’ Gerald said.

  There was a long silence, which ended with Mr Prisk and Mrs Rutherford both jumping to their feet. ‘Can’t keep you all day, inspector,’ Mr Prisk said, ushering him towards the door.

  ‘That’s right,’ chimed in Mrs Rutherford. ‘You’re a busy man, inspector. Let me show you out.’ There was a bustle of bodies in the doorway and finally Gerald, Ruby and Sam were alone.

  Gerald checked that the door was properly closed before collapsing back into his armchair.

  ‘Are you sure we did the right thing?’ Ruby asked. ‘Keeping the real city of Delphi a secret?’

  ‘Completely,’ Gerald said. ‘My ancestors gave up their lives to keep the Oracle’s secret safe. It’d be poor form for me to give it away now.’

  ‘It’s funny when you think about it,’ Sam said. ‘The mask actually protects itself. You can’t wear it outside the temple without turning into a human sandcastle. And if you do put it on inside the temple, you’re condemned to stay there for the rest of your life.’ He picked up another biscuit. ‘We could have spent the summer at the beach.’

  ‘I guess Marcus, Lucius and Gaius went that one step further to make sure it remained a secret,’ Ruby said.

  Gerald was putting the finishing touches to a drawing of Ruby. ‘Do you still think everything that happened was coincidence?’ he said.

  Ruby shuffled the playing cards and started laying them out, one by one, on the table. The first card she turned up was the joker. ‘I think there’s a perfectly logical explanation for everything.’

  ‘Really? How about my name being chiselled into a block of marble sixteen hundred years ago.’

  Ruby straightened in her chair. The next card she turned up was the ace of spades. ‘Just because I can’t explain it doesn’t mean there’s no explanation,’ she said.

  Sam let out a loud laugh, and flicked a rubber band at his sister. ‘I wonder how Nico is going,’ he said.

  Ruby flipped over the nine of diamonds. ‘I’m glad he didn’t see what happened to Charlotte in the temple.’ She shivered lightly. ‘It still gives me the creeps.’

  ‘Do you think Nico will try to find the real Delphi again?’ Sam said. ‘All that treasure would be tempting. Just one of those gold statues and his aunt wouldn’t need to take in lodgers anymore.’

  Gerald pulled a document from the pile of papers Mr Prisk had left on the coffee table. ‘I think Nico might be too busy to worry about buried treasure. The Archer Corporation’s tourism division has just invested in some holiday accommodation in Delphi.’

  Ruby smiled at Gerald. ‘Oh, really?’

  ‘Yes. We’ve found some local experts to run the place for us on an extended minimum loan repayment agreement.’

  ‘Just how extended?’

  ‘About a thousand years.’

  ‘You’ve bought Nico and his aunt a hotel, haven’t you!’ Ruby said.

  Gerald blushed. ‘It was the least I could do, after what we put Nico through,’ he said. ‘It’ll set them up and you just know that Nico will make the business a success. So much more satisfying to build your own fortune.’

  ‘More satisfying than what?’ Ruby asked.


  ‘Than inheriting it,’ Gerald said.

  There was a pause in the conversation. The afternoon sun streamed through the tall windows, filling the games room with lethargic warmth.

  Gerald looked up to find Ruby staring at him.

  ‘School starts on Monday,’ she said. ‘For Sam and me, anyway.’

  ‘Yeah,’ Gerald said. ‘I know.’

  ‘So what are you doing?’ Ruby asked. ‘Have your mum and dad decided?’

  ‘They’re talking about boarding school,’ Gerald said. ‘In some grim castle in Scotland, I think.’

  ‘It’d be nice if you were in London,’ Ruby said. She turned over the queen of hearts. ‘You know. Close by.’

  The room seemed to heat up a few degrees. Gerald’s stomach did a back flip.

  ‘Yeah,’ he said. ‘That’d be good.’

  There was an awkward silence

  Sam jumped out of his chair. ‘Oh for Pete’s sake, let’s go outside and do something. You two are making me nauseous.’

  He clipped Gerald over the back of the head and made for the stairs.

  ‘I’ll get you for that!’ Gerald called after him. He pulled Ruby out of her chair and they set off after Sam, diving down the staircase in a helter-skelter dash to the front entry. They skidded past Mrs Rutherford and pitched through the door into the sunshine.

  Summer may have been over.

  But there was still fun to be had.

  Dear Gerald,

  And so to the family legend. When I was a young woman, my father sat me down and told me a fantastical tale of ancient Greece. I had no reason to disbelieve him then, and you have no reason to disbelieve me now. You are the first and only person I have told this story to. But there are others who know of it. And that is the reason they are out to kill me. And you.

  The prize they are seeking is the one that we must protect. That is our purpose and our promise.

  The prize is in Delphi.

  It is the very secret of the Oracle herself.

  I will not bore you with the details of the Pythia: they are recounted in endless books. Get a library card and educate yourself, dear boy. But you need to know that you are her descendant—and that makes you special.

  I visited Delphi in my younger days, sailing down from Turkey. It was truly wondrous. I wasn’t looking for the Oracle’s secret—I knew it was hidden well enough. But I wanted to see the place, to feel its presence.

  We must protect this secret, Gerald. The future is for all of us to create—not for any one person to control.

  I have left a great trust to one so young, Gerald. Use this fortune to honour that trust. And to bring some happiness to others.

  And buy yourself some ice cream. I wish I’d eaten more of it.

  Wishing you eternal good fortune,

  Geraldine.

  PS. And for pity’s sake, tell Mr Fry that teaspoon collection I left him is extremely valuable—worth five million pounds to any decent collector. He’s such an old fluff, he’s probably sulking about getting a box of cutlery. I hope he doesn’t give you a hard time about it. xxx

  Acknowledgments

  A big thank you to:

  Dr Gilbert J. Price from the Centre for Microscopy and Microanalysis at the University of Queensland, for advice on the fossilisation of human skeletons; Jordan Brown in New York, whose unfailing good humour and patience have helped me chart new and sometimes bizarre territories; the many school teachers and librarians who have sipped coffee at the back of the room and allowed me to talk with their students about the wonderful world of writing; booksellers…I salute you; and Jane Pearson, whose vision I trust and whose skill, talent and patience are beyond measure.

  Table of Contents

  COVER PAGE

  TITLE PAGE

  COPYRIGHT PAGE

  DEDICATION

  CONTENTS

  PROLOGUE

  CHAPTER 1

  CHAPTER 2

  CHAPTER 3

  CHAPTER 4

  CHAPTER 5

  CHAPTER 6

  CHAPTER 7

  CHAPTER 8

  CHAPTER 9

  CHAPTER 10

  CHAPTER 11

  CHAPTER 12

  CHAPTER 13

  CHAPTER 14

  CHAPTER 15

  CHAPTER 16

  CHAPTER 17

  CHAPTER 18

  CHAPTER 19

  CHAPTER 20

  CHAPTER 21

  CHAPTER 22

  CHAPTER 23

  CHAPTER 24

  CHAPTER 25

  CHAPTER 26

  CHAPTER 27

  CHAPTER 28

  CHAPTER 29

  EPILOGUE

  ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

 

 

 


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