This is a work of fiction. All incidents and dialogue, and all characters with the exception of some well-known historical and public figures, are products of the author’s imagination and are not to be construed as real. Where real-life historical or public figures appear, the situations, incidents, and dialogues concerning those persons are fictional and are not intended to depict actual events or to change the fictional nature of the work. In all other respects, any resemblance to persons living or dead is entirely coincidental.
Text copyright © 2017 by Jacob Sager Weinstein
Cover art copyright © 2017 by Petur Antonsson
Photograph credits: Eric Nathan/Alamy (this page); The Print Collector/Alamy (this page); Tupungato/Shutterstock (this page); Tim Whitby/London GVs/Alamy (this page); Jack Wojnarowski/Shutterstock (this page)
All rights reserved. Published in the United States by Random House Children’s Books, a division of Penguin Random House LLC, New York.
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Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Names: Sager Weinstein, Jacob, author.
Title: Hyacinth and the secrets beneath / by Jacob Sager Weinstein.
Description: First edition. | New York : Random House, [2017] |
Summary: “When Hyacinth mixes hot and cold water in a sink in London with disastrous results, she learns that the city was built on magical rivers that are now London’s sewers—and somehow her family is connected to the magic”—Provided by publisher.
Identifiers: LCCN 2016012240 | ISBN 978-0-399-55317-2 (hardcover) | ISBN 978-0-399-55319-6 (hardcover library binding) | ISBN 978-0-399-55320-2 (ebook)
Subjects: | CYAC: Magic—Fiction. | Secrets—Fiction. | Underground areas—Fiction. | London (England)—Fiction. | England—Fiction.
Classification: LCC PZ7.1.S245 Hy 2017 | DDC [Fic]—dc23
Ebook ISBN 9780399553202
Random House Children’s Books supports the First Amendment and celebrates the right to read.
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Contents
Cover
Title Page
Copyright
Dedication
Part One
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
Part Two
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
Chapter 30
Chapter 31
Part Three
Chapter 32
Chapter 33
Chapter 34
Chapter 35
Chapter 36
Chapter 37
Chapter 38
Chapter 39
Author’s Note
Acknowledgments
In 1848, London smelled awful. I’m not sure why this surprised anybody. If I had been around then and somebody had said, “Hyacinth, if every toilet in town flows directly into the river Thames, will the city smell like a rose garden in a chocolate factory?” I’m pretty sure I would have said, “Um, no.”
But apparently it was a big surprise to the Victorians. They called it the Great Stink, and at first, all the members of Parliament ignored it. Then the stink reached the Parliament building, and when everybody finished running gagging out of the building, they figured maybe they should do something about it.
They dug up half the city and built a massive underground sewer. They spent huge amounts of money, and they ripped up the road and tore down houses, but they did it in the name of good health and breathable air. It was just a big engineering project, and it had absolutely nothing to do with a terrifying magical power that could destroy London and possibly the whole planet if it got into the wrong hands.
At least, that’s what the history books told me. But you know what?
History is a big fat liar.
And you know who else is a liar? My mom.
Okay, that’s not fair. It’s only lying if you’re clued in enough to know you’re not telling the truth. I honestly think Mom believes everything she says, even if it completely contradicts something she said thirty seconds before.
Consider the following Mom Monologue, which I heard as our black cab pulled away from London Heathrow Airport:
“Now, honey, I know you’re scared about moving to a new country, and maybe you’re a little angry at me, but you’re going to fall in love with London, I just know. It’s a wonderful big city full of exciting things. It’ll be totally different from what you’re used to, and that will help you grow! Also, Aunt Polly’s flat is in Hampstead, which is the part of London where she and I and all your aunts grew up, and it’s just beautiful. There are sheep wandering through fields, and springs welling up between the trees. It’ll be like you never left Grandma’s farm back in Illinois, and that will help you feel right at home!”
You see what I mean? I counted four contradictory statements in about ten seconds. You would think that one of them, at least, would turn out to be right, but Mom has a rare knack for missing the truth on all sides.
And when we finally got to Hampstead, I realized she’d done it again. It wasn’t bustling and exciting, but it wasn’t full of sheep and springs, either. It was just an ordinary neighborhood with some trees and some buses. Aunt Polly’s building was on a busy four-lane road, and I’m pretty sure any sheep that tried to wander across it would have ended up as lamb chops. So maybe things had changed since my mom was a little girl…except the buildings looked like they were at least a hundred years old, which means that my mom couldn’t have grown up among open fields unless she was much, much older than she looked.
Still, I was excited about seeing Aunt Polly. A long time before I was born, my mom and her eight sisters had left England and moved to a little town in Illinois, where my grandmother had bought a farm. I had grown up surrounded by family, and since Aunt Polly had moved back to London last year, I’d missed her terribly. Spending time with her was the only part of this whole crazy move that I expected to actually enjoy.
Mom let us into the building with the key Aunt Polly had mailed her, and we lugged our bags up two flights of steps. Then we had to lug them up another flight. “I thought Aunt Polly’s flat was on the second floor,” I said.
“Oh, here in England, they call…No, I should say, here in England, we call the first floor the ground floor. So when we say ‘the first floor,’ that’s actually the second floor, and when we say ‘the second floor,’ that’s actually the third floor.”
Great, I thought. It’s not just Mom. The whole country is lying to me.
Mom unlocked Aunt Polly’s door and swung it open. “Hello, Polly! We’re here,” she called. There was no answer.
I spotted a note on a nearby table and read it out loud:
“Dear Cleo and Hyacinth,
“So sorry I can’t be there to meet you. One of my companies in Tokyo is on th
e verge of collapsing, and I’ve had to fly over there to fix it. I’ll be back in a month or two. Until then, please make yourselves at home.
“Love, (Aunt) Polly.”
That was strange, because when it came to being organized, Aunt Polly was kind of the anti-Mom. Even when she had a million different things going on at once (which was usually), Aunt Polly never missed a single detail. Flying off at the last minute was totally unlike her.
It looked like it was going to be just me and Mom for most of the summer. Whoopee.
“That’s disappointing,” Mom said. “I was really hoping Polly would be around to help me sort out my life. But I was worried we’d be too dependent on her, so I’m glad we have some time to ourselves. I’m sure she’ll be back soon, unless she takes a long time to fix her company, which she might, so it will probably be ages. Oh, did I tell you Grandma gave me a present to give you when we arrived? I’ve got it here somewhere.”
I had kind of tuned Mom out, like I usually did when she started on one of her monologues, but that last bit caught my attention. Despite everything, I felt a little tingle of excitement. Grandma always gave the best presents.
I waited impatiently while Mom opened up her suitcase and sorted through all the junk she had packed. Finally, she emerged victorious and handed me a gift-wrapped package.
I ripped open the wrapping and found a book inside: A History of the Sewers of London.
Huh. Well, I guess it kind of made sense. Grandma knew I liked history. She knew I was good at plumbing and stuff like that. She knew I was moving to London. I wasn’t sure I’d put all those facts together in quite the same way she had, but she’d never given me a bad present, so I was willing to give her the benefit of the doubt.
I opened it up and found she had written something on the front page:
My dearest Hyacinth:
I write this with heavy heart, for you and your mother are heading into terrible danger you cannot possibly anticipate. I wish I could guide you through it, but you must face it on your own. All I can do is tell you this: your aunts and I have done what we can to prepare you. Remember, my child. As long as you remember, I will always be with you.
With eternal love,
Grandma
Wait, WHAT??? If Grandma knew about real danger, why wouldn’t she do something about it? And how had she and my aunts prepared me? They had told me a million random stories, and they had taught me a million random skills, but if I was heading towards terrible danger, knowing how to milk a cow or fix a harpsichord wasn’t going to do me much good.
I showed the note to Mom and said, “What does that mean?”
Mom shrugged. “I think she meant what she said, sweetie. She just wants you to have fun in London.”
Puzzled, I looked back down at the page. Grandma’s note now said something completely different:
Dear Hyacinth:
Have fun in London!
Love,
Grandma
The first few weeks, the only danger I encountered was the danger of Mom driving me crazy. She tried to show me around, but she kept getting lost, and when we did find a place, whatever she had to tell me was wrong. We spent two hours wandering around the Tower of London, looking for the live lions Mom insisted were kept there, before she finally believed the guards who kept telling her she was thinking of the London Zoo.
Also—and I know it sounds like a small thing, but it drove me crazy—the faucets in Aunt Polly’s flat made no sense. Back home, each sink had one faucet, so that the hot and cold water mixed together and came out at just the right temperature. For some reason, every sink in Aunt Polly’s flat had one faucet for hot water and another one for cold, so you either burned your skin or froze it.
“You’re supposed to put in the plug and then mix the hot and cold water in the sink, sweetie,” Mom said when I complained.
“But then gunk from the last person who washed their hands gets in the water.”
“It’s like Grandma always said,” Mom told me. “When your home is in a new place, you have to learn how to wash your face.”
I had managed to be patient with Mom the whole time we were in London, but as silly as I knew it was, this was the last straw. I lost it. “Okay, first of all, this is not my home. Second, Grandma never said anything remotely like that. Third, it doesn’t even make sense. And fourth, I’m not five years old. Putting something in rhyme is not going to make me believe it.”
“It’s not supposed to make you believe it, sweetie. It’s supposed to help you remember it.”
“Mom, that’s not the point. Focus.”
Mom took my hand. “I know it’s hard for you. But wherever we’re together, it’s home.”
“I’m glad you’re holding my hand, Mom. Feel how chapped it is? That’s because of the faucets.”
If I just could have gotten some time with somebody other than Mom, it wouldn’t have been so bad. But apparently summer vacation starts later in England, because all the kids my age were still in school. Mom told me I should just hang out near a school and start up conversations with kids as they left, but I’m not exactly the walk-up-to-a-stranger-and-start-talking type.
So the only other person I ended up seeing regularly was our elderly downstairs neighbor. She never introduced herself to me—she just looked at me suspiciously when I passed her in the stairwell. Once, we got some of her mail by accident, and I saw from the address that her name was Lady Roslyn Hill-Haverstock, which seemed impressive. It was a little less impressive when I went downstairs to slip it through her mail slot and she yanked the door open to glare at me and I could smell the alcohol on her breath.
“Have you been stealing my post?” she said.
My grandmother taught me to always be polite to my elders, even when they’re drunk and paranoid, so I smiled sweetly and said, “Have a lovely day.” She slammed the door on me.
But I must have made a good impression on her, because after that, she was friendlier. She’d stop by and ask if there was anything we needed, and occasionally when Mom and I went out, I’d open our front door and find her there, as if she was just about to knock. (Or as if she was eavesdropping, but I couldn’t imagine anybody dying to hear our conversations, unless they were doing some kind of secret documentary on Crazy Things Moms Say.)
Having Lady Roslyn around made the building seem a little less lonely, but I wished it weren’t the closest I had come to making a friend since we had moved. Mostly, I sat around our flat, reading and rereading A History of the Sewers of London. Maybe the letters would rearrange themselves and I’d learn something about the terrible danger I was in, but they were in the same order every time. I started to think I had just imagined Grandma’s warning. It must just have been the stress of the move.
I will give Mom credit for one thing: although she never made much sense on a minute-by-minute basis, things did have a way of working out in the end. One night, she tried to make macaroni and cheese for dinner, but she accidentally flipped over to another recipe halfway through, and she ended up making macaroni and cheese pancakes. I was not going to eat those. I sent her out to the grocery store but then decided I’d better go with her, to make sure she bought something sensible. Then she managed to get us lost, plus it turned out that instead of her wallet, she had filled her purse with pancakes.
All of which should have been a disaster, except that we ended up in a huge park called Hampstead Heath, which really was full of those rolling hills and leafy trees she had promised me. And it turns out that when it’s summer in London, the sun stays up forever, which meant that as late as it was, we could sit on a hill and watch the sun set, eating the pancakes she had conveniently brought along. And you know what? Macaroni and cheese pancakes are really good. It ended up being the best night we’d had since we moved.
After a few weeks, things settled into a pattern. I still missed home—no matter what Mom said, I was not going to fall in love with London. But at least I was learning to tolerate it.
And maybe Mom was learning to listen to me, because one morning, when she had gone out shopping, a plumber showed up to replace our faucet. It was a pretty simple process. He took out the old faucets, connected the hot and cold water pipes with one long pipe, and put a new faucet on it. Voilà. Done. Easy.
When he had gone, I stood in front of the bathroom sink, turned on the hot and cold taps, took a deep breath, and put my hands in the water.
I stood there, my mouth open, unable to believe what I was feeling. It was true that hot and cold water were both coming out of one faucet. But somehow they stayed completely separate. One side of the stream was way too hot, and the other side was way too cold. British engineering had achieved the impossible: it was chapping my hands in two different ways at the same time.
If I had known what the day had in store for me, I would have stood there all morning, no matter how uncomfortable it was. But I didn’t know, so I jerked my hands back.
At that moment, the phone rang. It was Dad.
“Hi, my love,” he said.
“Hi, Dad! I’m so glad you called. Mom’s driving me—” I stopped, because he had taken the kind of deep breath he only takes when he’s about to make a big announcement.
For just a moment, my imagination ran wild. He was going to tell me I could come live with him, and we’d both move back to Illinois, and my mom could stay in London! No, even better—he and Mom had realized they made a huge mistake, and they were getting back together, and we were all moving home!
Hyacinth and the Secrets Beneath Page 1