03 The Mislaid Magician

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03 The Mislaid Magician Page 11

by Patricia C. Wrede


  At first, Drina was distinctly hostile. Edward had to explain to her that he had been kidnapped whilst protecting his Aunt Georgy before Drina grasped he was a fellow prisoner. Once she did so, however, she was prompt about ordering him to escape and fetch help immediately. The first stage of this plan pleased Edward enormously, as a leg up into the soot of the chimney was exactly what suited him.

  Unfortunately, escape was not so simple. Although he was able to climb up high enough to elude any groping arm Mr. Scarlet cared to extend, Edward could not go very far without the risk of wedging himself into a flue that would neither let him advance nor retreat. Drina exhorted him mightily, but there was no help for it. He could hide, but he could not flee.

  Edward would not be Edward, however, if some exploration had not taken place. Whilst discovering that he did not indeed have the entire run of every flue, Edward succeeded in climbing far enough to overhear a discussion from one of the rooms downstairs.

  "Pretty work, Captain Crimson," a deep voice said, loudly enough to capture Edward's complete attention. I believe he thought the presence of a captain implied the possibility of pirates. "You were supposed to steal the lady, not tell her fortune."

  In hope of hearing more clearly, Edward wriggled into a perilously narrow spot. From there, he was certain he recognized the voice of Mr. Scarlet. "You were supposed to deliver your message and be on your way. I don't need advice from you."

  "I can't leave empty-handed, Scarlet. You haven't given me your reply."

  Scarlet sounded cross to Edward. "If I'm not nippy enough to suit him, tell his nibs to send more money. All this racing from one end of the world to the other takes time, and the faster I travel, the poorer it leaves me."

  The deep voice laughed an unpleasant laugh. "I don't think you'd really care to send him that message."

  "I don't think I really care what you tell him. If he doesn't like the way I work, he can find someone else."

  "Brave talk. Now, in all seriousness, how shall I explain your delay to the old boy?"

  Scarlet sounded angry. "What delay? The moment you gave me his orders, I carried them out."

  The deep voice was patient. "You didn't. You only frightened her. Leaving that aside, you kept me waiting here for two days before I could give you the message. He's going to ask me where you were."

  "I was making arrangements. Places like this don't just spring up like mushrooms, you know."

  The sarcastic voice sounded surprised when Edward heard him speak again. "What the devil was that?"

  Mr. Scarlet sounded brisk. "That's a finding spell, you gudgeon. Someone with the goods is headed this way. Either he's right on top of us, or he's powerful enough to turn us to stone from a mile away. Best not be around when he gets here."

  "I was supposed to bring the chit back with me," the deep voice protested.

  "You just look to yourself—you have your work cut out for you." This time Mr. Scarlet sounded sarcastic. "Who do you think the finding spell is for, anyway? You? I'm the one who stuck his neck out."

  "You'll get it stretched one day."

  "That's why I'm off out of here. Come along or it will be you for the jump."

  From the sound of things, Edward judged Mr. Scarlet and the man with the deep voice left together. Edward extricated himself from that particular bit of flue but heard nothing more.

  I gather that Edward's exploration of the system of chimneys fully occupied the rest of his time, for if anything, he seemed to feel our arrival cut his adventure short. Edward believes that but for our interruption, he might yet have found a way out. For me, our arrival came not a moment too soon. Given that my eldest son ran the additional risk of getting stuck up a chimney to be smoked like a kipper, I'm even happier we arrived when we did.

  Now for Drina's story, much of which I have discounted on the grounds that it is all too easy for a youngster to exaggerate matters to earn attention. She views her family as the most important and influential in the world, with the possible exception (a grudging concession made to Arthur's persistence) of Lord Wellington. And King George, of course.

  What happened to Drina:

  Drina refuses to explain how she fell into the hands of the man she calls Mr. Scarlet. She seems embarrassed, as if she considers it to be her fault. I assure her that whatever happened, it is the fault of Mr. Scarlet and no one else, but this does not sway her. She writes that she found herself in the room where she met Edward, with no recollection of an arrival, let alone a journey. There must be more to tell than that, but that is where Drina begins.

  Drina woke to find herself a prisoner in a strange room, in a strange house, in a strange town. I dread to contemplate what I would feel finding myself in such circumstances even now. At her age, I am convinced I would have wept myself into a spasm.

  Drina, I judge, is made of stern stuff. She viewed her situation with aplomb. Her opinion of Mr. Scarlet is low. It was formed during their first encounter.

  Mr. Scarlet performed a spell. He didn't tell Drina what it was supposed to do. Drina felt no different after than she did before. Mr. Scarlet performed a second spell, still to no effect, and then a third. Drina still felt no different, but Mr. Scarlet informed Drina that she was under an enchantment. If she dared speak to anyone of her family, they—specifically her mother and older sister—would be harmed. Silence was her duty.

  If Drina dared to attempt escape, her mother would be murdered, her older sister sold into the stews. If Drina were recaptured, Mr. Scarlet promised her that by then she would be nothing more than a helpless orphan; thus he would deal with her as he saw fit, perhaps even unto selling Drina into the stews herself.

  Monstrous as the stews are, shameful as the very idea of their existence must be to any decent man or woman, I find men like Mr. Scarlet more monstrous still. That he made threats of that nature to anyone—most of all to a child— brands him an unspeakable coward as well as a villain of deepest dye. How can the likes of Mr. Scarlet run free in the streets?

  Reardon comes from Stroud. Even if her last relation there is gone, there remains a web of mutual acquaintance. I rely on Reardon to be our eyes and ears in the hunt for Mr. Scarlet. A creature like that deserves the fullest punishment.

  Upon consideration, however, I will grant that Mr. Scarlet seems to have confined his villainy to bullying threats. Judging from Drina's account, and judging from the condition of her clothing, as well as of her person, Drina was in his hands no more than one or two days. She seems to have come to no physical harm whatsoever at his hands.

  Indeed, Mr. Scarlet—or possibly an accomplice—went to sufficient trouble to prepare her regular meals. Mr. Scarlet delivered those meals on a tray, using each visit as a chance to confirm that Drina was secure in her cell and that she had sufficient drinking water as well as a change of chamber pot.

  Mr. Scarlet was vigilant. The only meal Drina missed was luncheon on the day of Edward's arrival. There was no tray that afternoon. (I presume the cur was too busy threatening Georgy and abducting Edward.)

  Fortunately, Thomas and I scared Scarlet off before he could harm either Edward or Drina.

  Drina appears to consider herself to have been an involuntary houseguest, rather than a prisoner. I think she is now enjoying herself very much. The chance to be a figure of mystery plays a part in her enjoyment, but I suspect there is something more basic at work. From her deportment, I judge her to be almost painfully well brought up. Here at Skeynes, she has the opportunity to be a child among children. She enjoys being with the twins, who are of an age with her, so greatly that I am sure it is a novelty to her. She mothers our babies at every opportunity, showing little skill but great enthusiasm for the art. Where she comes from we are sure to learn in time. When we do, I am convinced we will find she is the baby of the family, lectured sternly as often as she is indulged.

  I shall persist in my efforts to win Drina's confidence. Be sure that I will share every detail I discover.

  Love,

&n
bsp; Kate

  P.S. Your letter of the 21st has just arrived. Thomas is beside himself with questions. I am relieved and delighted that you and James are safely out of Haliwar Tower. Take great care. —K.

  P.P.S. Georgy is composing a letter of apology to you and James. She (belatedly but sincerely) regrets exposing your children to risk. From the amount of time she devotes to this missive, I fear it will be extremely long. It may even be in verse. I thought you should be warned. —K.

  23 April 1828

  Skeynes

  (Enchanted by my own hand, T. S.)

  Dear James and Cecelia,

  I'll be brief, for I do not wish to delay Kate's letter. I add a line merely to ask a question. I address this letter to you both in the hope that if you cannot read my handwriting, James, Cecy (inured as she is to her father's penmanship) can decipher it.

  Given your late experiences at Haliwar Tower, you may have made observations not included in your correspondence. How does a compass behave in the vicinity? Any marked differences between the way it behaves inside the tower itself? Did you smell anything (other than smoke) during the incident? What was the weather like? Did you note any change in wind direction? Any alteration in the appearance of the river itself? A change in flow or the color and turbidity of the water?

  That seems to be more than a single question. I apologize and speed this missive on its way.

  Thomas

  26 April 1828

  The Eagle's Nest, Stockton

  Dearest Kate,

  The only thing more tiresome than Georgy's usual self-centeredness is Georgy in a penitent mood. You were quite right to warn me; her letter of apology ran to five pages, two of which were so tearstained as to be unreadable. Most unfortunately, the sections in verse were not among the illegible bits. (I wish I knew where she got the notion that sentiments expressed in poetry are somehow more sincere than sentiments said plainly or briefly.)

  Forgive me if I sound unfeeling. I would be kinder, were I less certain that Georgy is greatly enjoying her orgy of remorse, and delighting in such an excellent excuse to wallow in overblown prose. What else can one make of comparing herself to a "faded blossom, trampled by the feet of guilt, awaiting the restoring rain of forgiveness"? It is just the sort of playacting she has always enjoyed. I have not dared to show the letter to James. I do not think he would be at all patient with it. (Please thank Thomas for franking it for her; it would have been the outside of enough to have had to pay the shillings for the extra sheets, especially the illegible ones.) I shall convey appropriately sympathetic reassurances to her under separate cover as soon as I have leisure to do so.

  For a great deal has been happening here. We have— no, I must tell it in order, or I will surely leave out something important.

  Two days after our removal from Haliwar, James and I rode over (ostensibly to see how they were going on). Mr. Webb had departed on his business trip, as scheduled, so only his sister was in residence, and she has been forced to move to a bedchamber in one of the wings. The central tower is presently an uncomfortable place to inhabit, though I think it will not take above a week to return the interior to order, provided they have no difficulty in replacing so many windows all at once.

  Before we came within sight of the tower, James and I paused behind a little rise so that I could do the spells that allow one to sense ley lines. I wanted to see if that magical eruption had any lingering effects on that ley line I mentioned earlier. And something had affected it, Kate, for when we passed it on the way into Haliwar, the ley line did not feel as strong as it had the first time I detected it.

  As we passed through the gates onto the grounds immediately around Haliwar, I got another surprise. The entire area was awash in magic—not strongly, only a little tingle, like the feel of a storm coming on or the hint of scent that lingers after Georgy leaves a room. It was very disturbing. Unfortunately, I could not tell anything more without making some actual tests, which I was unable to do because the place was full of workmen.

  We did not stay long; there really was no point. Adella was quite useless as a source of information. All she could do was wring her hands and wish that her brother were there. She did make a halfhearted attempt to persuade us to return, but I think she must have done so only because her brother extracted some promise from her before he left, for it was plain that she was hoping we would decline. Her relief when we did was palpable.

  We had a pleasant ride back to Stockton, and the following morning, James left early to ride to Goosepool, in search of the farmhouse that was missing a foreign visitor. He returned late in the day, jubilant. After three false starts, he had found the very place, and while the farmer's wife had been disinclined to talk much of the incident, he thought she might be more forthcoming with another female. So he had told her that we might wish to rent the room on behalf of some mythical person but that I would have to look it over first, then made arrangements for us to ride out again at some convenient time in the next day or two.

  The weather prohibited so long a ride on Thursday, but Friday—yesterday—we went. Even on a hired hack, the ride was enjoyable. The woman was waiting, and showed us to a small room at the back of the house. James took himself off almost immediately, leaving me to attempt to draw my hostess into conversation.

  It was considerably more difficult than you might think. At first, she limited herself strictly to remarks about the room, while I looked over the meager furnishings—a plain bed with a chest at the foot. I said things like, "You must have had many lodgers," and, "Will there be any difficulty getting to Darlington from here?" and she replied, "Happen I have," or, "Happen there may."

  I was about to give up and rejoin James, when there came a rumbling and a noise resembling all of the horses at the Derby thundering past at once. At first, I thought it was another magical eruption, but it was plain that my hostess heard it, too. "Good heavens," I said when the noise at last began to fade, "what was that?"

  My hostess gestured at the window and said something about "tha great noisy smelly gowk" that I did not at first comprehend. When I looked out of the window, however, I saw a string of coal wagons barely a quarter mile distant, disappearing in the direction of Stockton. "Oh, the railway," I said. "I had no notion you were so close to the line."

  That was enough to set her off. The railway was, evidently, a sore point with her, as it cut up the grazing land and frightened the sheep. She was especially cross because the builders had revised the planned route of the railway just before it was actually built. The new route moved the rails some way north of the original plan, and had the surveyors changed just a few more miles of railway, the "great noisy smelly" trains would have passed well north of the house. The revisions, however, end just before Goosepool; from Goosepool east to Stockton, the railway follows the trail mapped out by the original surveyors.

  "Dear me," I said when she ran down at last. "That is most unfortunate. Did the noise much disturb your last tenant?"

  "Oh, aye; every time the wagons passed, he ran out to scowl at them," the woman said. "That's when he wasn't off mucking with the circle."

  "Circle?"

  "Aye. The Dancing Weans, they're called. Nine great rocks in a circle, as old as old. Haunted, they are. He should no have been mucking about there."

  "Very likely," I said. "Where is this stone circle?"

  She looked at me suspiciously.

  "My father is an antiquarian," I said with perfect truth. "He is interested in such things. If it is not too far, I thought my husband and I might ride past it so I could send Papa a description."

  She sniffed, but obliged with the directions—half a mile east, atop a small hill overlooking the railway line. We then chatted amicably about the idiosyncrasies of male persons, which led with very little prompting to my obtaining the whole story of her missing tenant, such as it was.

  Herr Magus Schellen—for it was indeed he who had rented the room—stayed only for three days before his disappearance. On
the first day, he walked the railway line toward Darlington. On the second, he walked toward Stockton, and returned in a state of high excitement (or so I infer) to ask a great many questions about the Dancing Weans. On the third day, he took a large bag to the stone circle with him and stayed most of the day. On the fourth morning, he left for the circle, carrying his bag as before, and was not seen again. The bag vanished also, and that night, all of his belongings disappeared from the room.

  "T' neighbor says 'twas a haunt took him," my informant said with another sniff. "And there's no sayin' it wasn't, the way he was on about the Dancing Weans, and all. But I say, whoever heard of a haunt coming back for a man's pipe and smallclothes?"

  "It does seem unlikely," I agreed. James returned at that point, and the woman immediately returned to her initial reticence. As it was plain we would learn no more, we took our leave.

  As we mounted our horses, I told James of the stone circle and my intention of investigating on the return ride. He was reluctant at first but soon saw the wisdom of making a casual-seeming stop on our way back to Stockton, rather than making a special trip out to look at it later.

  So we turned our horses toward the railway line, so as to get within sight of it and then ride parallel to it until we saw the stone circle. (It is surprisingly easy to miss seeing a railway line that is running through a series of flatish country fields, if there is no train passing at the moment. Where there are cuts through the hills, or where the land has been raised to level the line, it is much easier.) As we rode, I told James what I had learned.

  "Interesting," James said when I finished. "I wonder why the railway route was changed... and who selected the new path."

  "Perhaps you should ask Lord Wellington," I said.

  "I don't think Wellington knows anything about it," James replied. "The original plans had to be approved by Parliament, but once that was done, the corporation wouldn't have had to inform them of anything but really major changes."

  "Somebody must have known," I said. "Besides all the local people, I mean."

 

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