Whatever it was, they never found out, for Evelyn was drowned out by the sudden crescendo of requests. Certainly the room was occupied much longer than usual and only after Meriyal had ordered them all to get to work did they grudgingly leave Mally.
“Look out,” Lita whispered. “She’s headed this way.”
Mally steeled herself for the tidal wave.
“Mally, dear, I can’t tell you how pleased I am!”
“You—you are?” stumbled Mally, amazed.
“Why yes.” Meriyal glanced over her shoulder at the servants’ retreating backs and bent over to whisper in Mally’s ear, “I might be swayed into decreasing certain—ah—duties if a basketful of black bonnets found their way to my quarters.” She winked and walked away while Lita doubled over laughing. At the doorway, Meriyal said in a ringing voice, “I’ll see you in the drawing room, Lita.”
“Doesn’t miss a beat,” Lita grinned. “Find me when you get back. I want to know everything.”
“It’s just some mushrooms,” said Mally, though she couldn’t keep from smiling.
“Just some mushrooms!” Lita gasped, clutching her chest in mocked shock. “Don’t let Archie hear you saying that.”
In the few seconds of solitude that followed, Mally scarfed down the last of her porridge in peace; then, picking her cloak up off the bench, she crossed the now deserted chamber to the door that led to the kitchen.
Archie, his sleeves rolled up to his elbows, was kneading a huge mass of dough. Bits of sticky dough and flour covered his front, but he seemed unperturbed by this. In fact, his face broke into a wide grin at the sight of Mally.
“Was wondering when you’d show,” he said.
“I got held up,” Mally explained, jutting a thumb at the door behind her. “They were all giving requests.”
“But mine come first,” he boomed, slapping a hand on the dough. His eyes seemed to sparkle with a youthful playfulness. Mally had a suspicion that he’d been itching to discuss today’s mushroom hunting ever since he awoke. “Hunter’s horn. I want to use them with the roasted lamb—really give a show. Our first mushrooms in so many years! It should be a spectacle! So,” he slapped his hands together and a cloud of flour flew into the air. “Do you know the area where you can hunt?”
“Yes, Nathan showed the grounds to me,” said Mally quickly.
“Good. If you can find them, I would love three basketfuls.”
Three, thought Mally. That’ll take some time.
“What baskets should I use?”
“These.” He bent down and extracted three wide baskets from a low shelf. “I can have them at any time before six, though the sooner the better.”
Mally savored the fact that she was mushroom hunting instead of cleaning windows as she crossed the grounds five minutes later. It was cold with the wind starting to blow, but once Mally had walked for twenty minutes up a steady slope to the first meadow, she was warmer.
After a good thirty minutes of carefully stepping through the thick grass, Mally whooped happily. Along the edge of the meadow was a long strip of about twenty hunter’s horns. Once she’d picked all the youngest in the patch, she was off again, slowly searching. Her fingers and cheeks were soon numb with cold. Mally tried to ignore the wind that had intensified to a howl. Suddenly she wasn’t so jubilant to be outside, away from the castle’s warm fires.
Even though she was cold, Mally thought she understood the hold these grounds had had on Queen Amara. Being a queen she must have always been inside the castle, constantly surrounded by ladies-in-waiting and always entertaining guests. Mally, for her part, had found that sleeping with two other women in a tiny room and not being able to walk down a corridor without weaving between four knights and two servants, made her cherish the solitude she had found in these grounds.
After three hours, Mally could no longer feel her fingers and her ears were ringing from the howling wind. Precariously balancing her baskets, Mally made her way back to the castle.
She stumbled slightly on the sharp slope, being careful not to tip a basket, and entered what the servants had dubbed ‘the maze.’ Perhaps Jack had gotten a little carried away, or the royal family liked the interwoven secretiveness of mazes, but a large section of the grounds on the west side of the castle was nothing but—well, a maze: hedges ten feet tall, four feet thick; walkways that connected and dead ended—it was just as confusing as the corridors in the castle. But there were (thankfully) landmarks. Benches, statues, birdbaths, and wind chimes were spread throughout the area and Mally used them to direct herself back to the kitchen.
She turned a corner and walked down a deserted walkway with a small white bench engraved with white rabbits at the end. She sighed in relief at being out of the violent wind. She patted her hair down ruefully, betting it was three times bushier than normal. Halfway down her path another walkway connected with it and as Mally passed the opening—she stopped.
Halfway down the joining passage stood two men. She nearly gasped. Molick. Sir Illius Molick. Captain of the knights. She had never seen him in person. The sight made her shiver. Blocky and square-jawed, he was a head shorter than the man he was facing. He was clearly angry, as evident from the way he was growling and glaring.
Mally had no idea who the other man was, but he was obviously wealthy. A pale sharp face with high cheekbones stood out clearly against the dark green of the hedge behind him. His hair was smooth and black but there were some gray streaks—though Mally thought he still looked young. He stood erect and poised and didn’t seem at all intimidated by the spitting Molick before him. Mally felt a rush of excitement at the thought that someone could look Molick in the eye without flinching.
Mally wished she could hear what they were saying, but the wind was too loud. Even the large hedges couldn’t stifle its howl. It did seem to her that they were arguing. Molick was jerking his hands about heatedly as he spoke, and the taller man’s frown deepened.
The taller man said something and moved his eyes to the end of the walkway to where Mally stood. Startled, she gave a hasty curtsy and hurried off, hoping she wouldn’t be reprimanded for her rudeness.
Back in the kitchen, Archie was beyond words. He gaped and mouthed like a fish out of water at the sight of the baskets, before finally collapsing in a chair. Rosa had to rush and fetch him a glass of brandy.
“Sweet Lenzar,” he whispered as a shaky hand lowered a now empty glass. “I must admit, I tried not to have my hopes up. Disappointments are so terribly jarring to the soul.”
Mally smiled as he carefully lifted a hunter’s horn as if he were handling blown glass.
“Perfect,” he whispered with reverence. “Perfect.” Then, blinking his eyes quickly, he seemed to remember he wasn’t alone and boomed, “Rosa, this calls for a toast! Bring up a flask of raspberry mead!”
“Right-o!” Rosa cried happily and she disappeared through the door where she had retrieved the brandy. In her absence, Archie continued to gaze contentedly at the mushroom in his hand. Three minutes later, Rosa came clattering back up the stairs and burst through the door, a large wooden flask in her hand. She pulled out the stopper and poured three glasses of shimmering rosy mead.
“To Mally!” Archie roared, lifting his glass in salute, “the best damn mushroom hunter in Lenzar!”
Mally flushed in pleasure as Rosa seconded the toast and Archie downed his goblet in one go.
Feeling much warmer and relaxed from her glasses of mead (Archie had insisted on refilling her glass), Mally walked down the second floor corridor, searching for Lita. At the end of the corridor, she found Lita and Christopher. The moment they spotted her, they flew upon her in a frenzy of questions. Mally happily told them about the mushrooms and Archie’s glowing reaction. At that, Lita roared with laughter.
“I wish I had seen Archie speechless,” said Christopher, grinning widely.
“’Cause it only happens on a full moon!” joked Lita.
“Mally.”
Mally, Lita,
and Christopher turned. Meriyal stood before them, her face so grim, Mally’s heart faltered.
“I need you to come with me.”
Silence settled over the small group and Mally, whose mouth was suddenly dry, followed Meriyal. Mally glanced over her shoulder to see Lita and Christopher staring after her. Lita’s face was as pale as oatmeal.
Meriyal didn’t speak to Mally as she steadily led her to the south wing. Her silence only unnerved Mally more and when she couldn’t take it any longer, she finally blurted, “Have I done something wrong?”
Meriyal seemed to flinch which startled Mally even more. Meriyal did not flinch.
“No,” she answered. “Sir Illius wishes to see you.”
Mally was so stunned that she mouthed like a catfish.
“Molick? Molick wishes to see—”
“Sir Illius. You must be careful to call him Sir Illius,” Meriyal insisted firmly, spinning around to stare at Mally.
Mally gulped and nodded.
Meriyal seemed satisfied and continued down the empty corridor.
“I am taking you to his sitting room. Remember what I said when you first came here? He enjoys believing he owns this castle. He’s very suspicious of strangers—he interviews all new servants.”
But Mally had been in the castle for a little over a week.
Meriyal seemed to know what she was thinking for she continued, “I only had to inform His Majesty of your desire for a position. Not Sir Illius … no matter what he thinks. He has only now learned of you.”
They were now on the fifth floor of the south wing, traveling down a wide corridor with giant statues of knights. There was only one door on the corridor—a thick one of deep mahogany at the very end. Meriyal suddenly stopped and turned to Mally.
“He also enjoys believing we are simpletons,” she said bluntly. “He’ll press you for information—you remember what I said about our secrets?”
Mally nodded—her mouth too dry to answer. It seemed like ages ago that she had been sharing raspberry mead with Archie and Rosa. All the warmth and comfort from that visit had long since departed.
“I’ll wait for you here.”
Meriyal looked pointedly at the door, waiting for Mally’s feet to finally move. Wishing Meriyal would suddenly say it was all a joke, Mally stepped before Sir Illius Molick’s study door and knocked. Her hand trembled. The knock was soft. But a hard, loud voice issued clearly through the wood.
“Enter.”
16 Revenge
Mally stepped into a large sitting room with an enormous claw-footed desk. Behind this desk sat square-jawed, gray-haired, Illius Molick.
Molick glowered at her, his dark eyes raking her form. He seemed to sit in his chair like a bullfrog, his large, muscled arms hunched forward menacingly.
“I have been informed of your presence in my castle.”
My castle? Meriyal hadn’t been exaggerating. Mally wondered if Molick was this bold around the king. Then again, perhaps he didn’t need to be. Mally didn’t have any doubt that this man could quite easily be controlling the country.
“Yes sir.”
Molick leaned back in his chair, his large, sausage-like fingers intertwined on his stomach.
“You are from Halspeare?” he demanded.
“Yes sir.”
Molick nodded and smiled. Mally tried not to grimace at the sight of it.
“Orphan?” he barked, making Mally jerk.
She nodded, trying to keep the heat from her cheeks. He must have questioned Meriyal.
“Which one?” he sneered.
“Corral and Chestnut, sir,” Mally answered promptly.
Instead of saying anything, Molick scribbled something down on a piece of paper.
Mally’s heart jumped into her throat. If Molick wrote to Corral and Chestnut, he would discover that there had never been a girl named Mally Biddle present there. Then what would she do? He would find out she had lied to get into the castle and where would that lead?
While Mally was silently reeling, Molick poured himself a large glass of brandy, as if taking his time to savor the effect his actions had had. He swirled the glass, eyeing Mally contentedly, like a swollen spider eyeing his next meal. At Mally’s continued silence, Molick’s eyes hardened. He leaned forward so swiftly that for a moment Mally’s frantic brain was sure he would leap over his desk and strike her.
“Are you aware of a barbarous rebel force in this city?” he asked.
Mally’s heart stopped and she hesitated before answering.
“I’ve only heard rumors, Sir Illius.”
Molick eyed her.
“And of course, you would not be lying. I do not like liars in my castle.”
“This is my first time in the city,” said Mally, her heart pounding so loudly that she was sure Molick would hear it. “I assure you, I know nothing about these rebels.” Then she added with a burst of inspiration, “And if I did, I would have nothing to do with them.”
Molick’s eyes narrowed and his ugly, wide mouth twitched into a grin.
“And the passages? Only rumors, as well?”
Mally stared at him. What was she supposed to say to that? Deny the fact that they existed? Of course he knew they existed! Why hadn’t Meriyal told her what to say? In her panic, she said what popped into her head.
“Forgive me, Sir Illius, but what use are the servants’ passages to the Captain of the Knights?”
For a full second, Mally was positive she would be hit. Molicks’ face colored like a blotchy beet. His jaws tightened so much his lips turned white. His narrowed eyes were no more than angry slits.
“You may leave,” he ordered in a low voice.
Mally nearly tripped in her haste to curtsy and run to the door simultaneously. Meriyal was upon her the moment she had closed his door.
“Well?” she breathed.
Mally shook her head, still numb and trembling.
“I didn’t tell him anything,” she whispered. She was out of breath—as if she had run a race.
“Good girl!” said Meriyal, but her face was taunt with tension. “Come, we need to clean out some fireplaces.”
By that evening, Mally was so exhausted and nervous that all she wanted was to curl up on her bed, but she and Lita had agreed to blow out the candles on the first floor as Mildred, who typically did that floor, had a nasty cough and needed the rest. So, at ten till eight, Mally and Lita left Gerda in their chamber and made their way to the first floor. Dinner was finished and by the time they had reached the great hall, it was deserted of knights.
But when Mally had reached the last step of the staircase, Lita halted and cursed under her breath.
“What is it?” asked Mally.
Lita was fumbling in her pockets.
“Did you get the tall snuffer?” she asked.
Mally pulled out the short, silver snuffer Mildred had passed to her at dinner.
“No,” she said. “I thought you were getting it.”
Lita cursed again.
“I’ll get it. Start extinguishing the ones you can get to. I’ll be right back.”
Mally watched her scurry back up the long staircase. Upon turning to the great hall, Mally’s first thought was that they wouldn’t need the tall snuffer as some candles were already blown out, leaving the huge room shadowy and cold. A banging and rattling from a dark corner drew her attention and upon inspection, she found an open window: the reason for the cold and lack of candlelight. The wind hadn’t stopped since she’d been out picking hunter’s horn. It must have intensified and forced the unlatched window open. Each time the wind whistled past, the window banged fiercely against the stone wall. Mally shut and latched it, rubbing her arms as she gazed out into the wild night.
A hand gripped her shoulder and jerked her around. Something hard hit the side of her face, making her stumble. She blinked as stars erupted before her eyes. She was hit again and fell against a tall candelabra—she felt a horrible searing in her shoulder. The candelabra sma
shed onto the floor and candlesticks cascaded on top of her. She tried to rise from the floor, still trying to steady her sight. It came back just in time to see a large booted foot fly through the air to smash into her side.
“Think you’re the same as us?” said a harsh voice somewhere above her. Even though her head was reeling with pain, Mally knew who it was.
“No, you think you’re better,” Bayard sneered, answering his own question. “I’ve been wanting to knock some proper respect into you.” He kicked her again. “You’re not worth the grime you wipe away,” he spat venomously.
“Who’s there?”
Mally was dazed with pain.
“Who’s … Mally! Are you all right?”
Mally groaned, her eyes squeezed shut. Nathan had joined them.
“Tripped,” Bayard explained pleasantly from somewhere above Mally. “Shouldn’t be so klutzy, should she? Could get hurt falling over things.” Bayard chuckled again and Mally heard his footsteps casually retreating.
“Bastard,” Nathan cursed under his breath and Mally moaned again. There was another inaudible curse above her and a frantic shuffling as Nathan crouched down beside her. Gently, he half pulled her into a sitting position.
Mally blinked her eyes and Nathan’s face swam into focus.
“You’re bleeding,” said Nathan tersely. “I’ll get you to Rosa—she’s closer.” He tried to lift Mally to her feet but Mally gasped and gripped her side.
“Easy! Easy! Come on now, lean on me. There you go.” Mally leaned heavily on Nathan as they slowly walked across the great hall to the kitchen. “You’ll be fine. We’ll have Rosa look you over. You’ll be all right, Mally. You’ll be all right.”
Mally’s eyesight was still blurred. Her side felt like it had been rammed, her cheek throbbed, and her shoulder stung. She was only half aware that they had reached the kitchen door, but the shriek that followed made fresh stars burst before her eyes.
“Mally! Oh—Nathan, what happened?”
Nathan helped her into a chair as he explained to Archie and Rosa what he thought had transpired. Mally was grateful. Her eyesight was finally returning and her head had stopped spinning—but the pain in her cheek, shoulder and side seemed to double.
The Tale of Mally Biddle Page 15