Darwen Arkwright and the School of Shadows

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Darwen Arkwright and the School of Shadows Page 11

by A. J. Hartley


  Alex stepped toward the portal that led back to the Great Apparatus. But before she could go through, Darwen interrupted her.

  “Did you look at that one, Rich?” he asked, indicating the fractured statue of the girl in the process of hanging a picture frame in midair. One of her marble arms and half her face had been smashed off, but the picture frame itself was apparently intact, as were the controls that studded one edge of the frame. It was set a little apart from the others, but it was clearly a portal. “I noticed it before but didn’t look at it closely. Kind of small, but it seems to be still in one piece, right, Rich?”

  “I thought we were going home?” said Alex.

  “But we’re looking for clues and, you know, allies,” said Darwen. “Maybe we should try this one.”

  “Are you forgetting the great white stink beasts that just threatened to flatten us if we so much as put a foot in their locus again?” asked Alex.

  “No,” Darwen returned, feeling flustered. “I just don’t think that everyone we find will want to electrocute us. Some of them will know what Greyling is, what he’s capable of. They’ll join us.”

  “You sure about that, man?” asked Alex. “Because we have no idea what’s on the other side of that portal. None at all. It could be worse. We can’t just go into random loci blind, Darwen. We need to go back, talk to the Guardians or Weazen or someone and choose places where we think we’ll make some real progress. Picking portals at random is . . .”

  “What?” Darwen demanded angrily. “Stupid?”

  “I was gonna say risky,” said Alex. “Dangerous, even.”

  “Which means stupid,” said Darwen.

  “No, it doesn’t,” said Alex, not backing down. “But whatever. You’re just mad because we’re not getting anywhere and you feel like it’s your fault.”

  “And maybe saving Silbrica is starting to look a little dangerous to you so you’d rather go home,” said Darwen, giving her a hard look.

  Alex put her hands on her hips and glared at him.

  “Excuse me?” she said. “You sayin’ I’m a coward or something, Darwen Arkwright? Because I will slap you upside the head, so help me Jesus.”

  “He’s not saying that,” Rich inserted, turning from the broken statue and looking anxiously at him. “Right, Darwen? You’re not.”

  Darwen took a breath and closed his eyes for a moment. Even through his irritation he guessed that she was right. He was annoyed by their lack of progress and was taking it out on her.

  “No,” he said at last. “I’m not saying that.”

  “Well, all right then,” said Alex, relaxing a little.

  “It’s late,” said Eileen wearily. “I think Alex is right. We should go home for tonight.”

  Darwen bit his lip but said nothing, trying not to show how much his failure hurt.

  “Okay,” said Rich. “We can come back tomorrow. Yeah, Darwen?”

  “Yeah,” said Darwen, very quietly.

  Darwen barely spoke again for the remainder of the journey back to the Great Apparatus and up the chute to his bedroom. He was still avoiding Alex’s eyes when they rode the elevator down with Eileen.

  “See you at school,” said Rich, trying to make up for the fact that no one else was talking.

  Darwen just nodded.

  Chapter Thirteen

  Plans and Specters

  “What do flies wear on their feet?” said Darwen.

  “I don’t know,” said Alex and Rich together.

  “Shoos,” said Darwen.

  It was the end of the school day and the three of them were sitting at a desk piled with exercise books in their homeroom. The tensions of the previous day were forgotten, but Darwen had found something else to worry about.

  “What?” said Alex. “Flies wear shoes? I don’t get it.”

  “Not shoes,” said Darwen, wafting the air vaguely, “shoos.”

  “Oh,” said Alex. “Now I get it. But it’s not funny.”

  “She’s right, man,” said Rich. “That’s bad. What else do you have?”

  “I’d tell you the story about the broken pencil—” Darwen began, but Rich cut him off.

  “But it had no point?”

  “Right,” said Darwen.

  “That’s just sad,” said Alex. “I thought English people were famous for their sense of humor.”

  Darwen sat down and put his head in his hands. “Guess I can’t be a comedian in the talent show,” he said.

  “Wait,” said Alex, “that’s what this was? You were testing out material you were thinking of doing in public? Yeah . . . no. Never tell jokes again. Ever.”

  “So what am I going to do?” Darwen pleaded, his eyes flicking across a wall collage featuring all the students in the class. Somehow they all seemed to be brandishing trophies or holding up awards. “I’ve been so busy thinking about how to save Mr. Peregrine and find allies for the Guardians that I haven’t given any thought to the stupid talent show. Not that it would have made any difference.”

  “Trust me, though, Darwen,” said Rich. “What flies wear on their feet is not the answer.”

  “See,” said Alex, “even if the jokes were funny, you have no presence. You’ve got to have presence to be a comedian.”

  “What is she talking about?” Darwen asked Rich.

  “No idea,” said Rich.

  “Stage presence,” said Alex. “You’ve got to own the room. Check this out.”

  And she began to sing.

  Except that sing didn’t begin to do it justice. She didn’t just sing. She transformed into an entirely different person, a beaming superstar who sashayed around the room, looking them right in the face as she belted each word.

  When Alex was done, she turned back into her usual self and said simply, “See?”

  And the annoying thing was that Darwen did see. Alex was a performer. He wasn’t. It really was that simple.

  Rich looked positively unnerved by the whole display. “She’s pretty good,” he conceded as she went off to the bathroom. “I thought it was all just, you know, Alex, but she has actual talent.”

  “Good thing to have for a talent show,” Darwen agreed, his head in his hands. “What’s everyone else doing?”

  “Jennifer Taylor-Berry is doing baton twirling,” said Rich.

  “What?” asked Darwen. Baton twirling wasn’t big in Lancashire.

  “You know,” said Rich. “You have one of these little chrome poles and you spin it around and throw it in the air and what have you. Sort of cheerleader–marching band stuff. Kind of pointless, but difficult, and therefore impressive.”

  “I heard Naia’s Greek folk songs,” said Darwen. “I didn’t understand a word, but she’s really good too. Melissa Young does gymnastics and Genevieve Reddock has been playing the bassoon since she was three. I don’t even know what a bassoon is.”

  “Kind of a weird-looking oboe thing,” said Rich.

  “Well, good for her,” said Darwen. “I can’t even play the kazoo.”

  “I was in a jug band when I was eight,” said Rich. “You have these big old jugs and you blow into them. Can sound pretty good if you know what you’re doing.”

  “And did you?”

  “Nah,” said Rich. “We were terrible. Sounded like a room full of kids farting. Not what the Hillside elite want to sit through.”

  “We can’t be the only people with no recognizable ability at anything,” said Darwen. “What’s Barry Fails doing?”

  “Turns out Usually can get out of knots,” said Rich. “You tie him up and he escapes.”

  “Really?”

  “Yeah, he’s like Houdini except that he just breaks the rope. There’s no real skill involved, of course. But he’s really strong, and it’s kind of amazing to watch.”

  “Great,” said Darwen. “Just
great. We have saved the school—twice—but compared to Usually—Usually!—we’re going to look like gift-less idiots.”

  That was when they heard the first scream.

  “Alex!” said Rich, getting up so fast he turned his chair over. They blundered to the door, tore it open, and stepped out into the hallway, turning in the direction of the girls’ bathroom.

  That was as far as they got.

  They saw Alex standing quite still, her back to them. A few yards ahead of her was a girl. Or something like a girl. She was no more than a pale and shimmering form, the hallway beyond her visible through her body. Her feet drifted three inches above the floor, and at first Darwen thought the ghost—if that was what it was—was motionless, but then he realized it was turning very slowly to face Alex. Its countenance was a silvery blur and he could not see where it was looking, or if it could see anything at all, but he felt in his gut that it was aware of them, if dimly.

  The apparition completed its slow rotation to face them and stopped, its head angled slightly to one side as if thinking. Then it raised its right hand slowly till the extended index finger was level with the specter’s shoulder.

  It was pointing directly at Darwen.

  Darwen felt his skin crawl, and a chill ran through him as if his veins were pumping ice through his whole body. He took an involuntary step backward and felt Rich do the same. Alex, by contrast, seemed transfixed, immobile as a rabbit mesmerized by a snake. It wasn’t until the ghost drifted suddenly forward that she leapt hurriedly aside with a cry of panic. The figure moved quickly, its legs quite still, but its hair seemed to stream behind it like tendrils of pale smoke.

  It slid through the air toward Darwen, and as it came close, he backed up further, till he was against the wall with nowhere to go, his eyes locked on the silvery phantom as it surged toward him. Its mouth was moving, as if it was speaking, but no sound emerged, or nothing that Darwen could hear over his own cry of horror. In seconds it was almost upon him, almost close enough to touch him with that one extended hand . . .

  And then, quite suddenly, it was gone.

  It didn’t merely vanish so much as fade quickly, breaking upon him like cloud, so that for a moment there was a pearly white afterimage, which then melted into nothing at all. Darwen stood there, breathless, his heart racing.

  “What on earth is going on out here, Mr. Arkwright?” said Miss Harvey, rounding the corner. “I could hear you shouting on the other side of the building. Come on—out with it! You look like you’ve seen a ghost.”

  • • •

  Eileen picked them up at school, and they bombarded her with accounts of the Hillside specter, but she was at a loss to explain it. At length she suggested they try to forget the ghost and focus on their plans for the evening: searching for allies and clues to Mr. Peregrine’s whereabouts in Silbrica.

  “Forget about the phantom that attacked us?” mused Alex with a little shudder. “That might take a little doing, but we’ll give it a shot.”

  “Good,” said Eileen. “For all we know the ghost has nothing to do with what we are doing. We need to stay focused. Yes?”

  “Yes,” said Darwen.

  They waited till the sun went down and—after Eileen had confirmed that Aunt Honoria wouldn’t be home for at least two hours—climbed through the oven door and down to the Great Apparatus.

  They made their way to Moth’s forest—Rich had mended the portal on their last visit—and found the dellfeys working on their wings with tiny hammers, still repairing the damage the scrobblers had left in their wake.

  “We need to start talking to people in Silbrica . . .” Darwen explained to Moth a few minutes after greeting the dellfey.

  “Or creatures,” added Alex, who was surveying the oil-spattered damage to the trees. The dellfey had obviously been busy cleaning the place up, but there was still a lot to do, much of it too big for Moth’s friends to complete alone.

  “Or creatures,” Darwen agreed, “who might join us in a fight against Greyling before he can take over both our worlds.”

  “We were trying to decide if this portal here is safe,” added Alex, showing Moth the notebook she’d been carrying with her ever since they visited Mr. Peregrine’s house. “It’s small, so we figured that while not many creatures could use it . . .”

  “You might know,” Darwen completed for her, smiling at the dellfey.

  Moth smiled back, proud to be considered helpful, but her face fell when she looked at the book. “I do not know these markings,” she said.

  “They’re numbers,” said Rich, “Like the ones in the address you gave us.”

  “The portal looks like a statue of a human child, a girl, holding a picture frame about this size,” said Darwen, gesturing with his hands.

  “Oh yes!” said Moth, delighted. “This is a very good place to go. It is where the zingers live.”

  “Zingers?” said Alex, sounding skeptical. “Are they comedians?”

  Moth gave her a baffled look. “They are friends of the dellfey,” she said, “and will be your friends as well.”

  “Good enough for me,” said Darwen.

  “Mr. Peregrine liked them,” Moth added. “I think they have something of his that you might find helpful.”

  “What is it?” asked Rich. “A weapon of some kind?”

  Moth looked affronted. “It is his whistle,” she said seriously.

  “His what now?” asked Alex.

  “His whistle,” said Moth, as if this was obvious.

  “And what does that do?” Darwen coaxed.

  The dellfey shrugged minutely. “Nothing,” she said, “but I think he liked it.”

  “Right,” said Darwen. “Great. Thanks.”

  • • •

  It took three portals to reach the fractured colonnade in the gardens of the Silbrican mansion, but though the journey went without difficulty, they were tense and jumpy. In one locus dominated by curiously square-sided rock formations, Alex shrieked as something like a giant green crab scuttled by. The crab took off at high speed the moment it realized they were there, and they burst out laughing, partly with relief, partly because it kept bumping into things in its rush to get away.

  They passed through the final portal and reached the half-broken statue of the girl with the picture frame without seeing another living thing.

  “Not sure I can fit through that,” said Rich, eyeing the portal.

  “Sure you can,” said Alex. “It’s about the same size as Darwen’s oven door, right, Darwen?”

  “I guess,” said Darwen, remembering the way the snorkies had tumbled through the portal into his bedroom, “but why would the scrobblers leave this one intact?”

  “You’re worried because the last one took us to the land of the killer ice elephants,” said Alex wisely. “Maybe they just ignored it ’cause it was little. Come on, man; time’s a wastin’.”

  Darwen said nothing. Instead he approached the statue, placed one hand on the lower edge of the empty marble picture frame, put the other on the statue’s broken left arm and—trying not to look at the unnervingly blank look on the broken face—boosted himself through.

  For a moment he saw leaves, but then he was through them and falling through nothingness.

  Chapter Fourteen

  Zingers

  Darwen landed awkwardly on the silver bark of a massive tree limb. He threw his arms around the smooth branch, its bark cool to the touch and concrete-hard, and stared wildly down. He was in a cloudless blue sky. The ground was too far below to be visible. Darwen hugged the branch for dear life, only remembering a moment later to call back up to the portal he had fallen through with a desperate “Watch it!”

  Too late. Rich came crashing through the leafy canopy and hurtled toward him. Darwen rolled a fraction but didn’t want to lose his purchase on the branch, so Rich still hit him
hard, knocking the wind out of him. As he gasped for air, he saw Eileen and Alex tumbling out of the portal above him.

  Somehow they managed the descent with more grace than either he or Rich, and they landed on the branch as if they had been on some kind of amusement park ride, startled but grinning.

  “Where are we?” asked Alex brightly.

  “In a tree,” muttered Rich, rather less enthusiastic.

  “Well, duh,” said Alex. “But what’s the locus like?”

  Darwen had no clue—he’d been trying so hard to keep his eyes fixed on the branch that he hadn’t gotten the chance to take a good look around. Feeling the entire tree sway fractionally, he hugged it all the tighter and said nothing. Alex, who had landed on a limb a little higher than the one Rich and Darwen were clinging to, leaned out and peered down through the leaves.

  “Wow,” she said, pleased. “We’re really high. What do you think, Eileen? A hundred feet? Two hundred?”

  “Something like that,” said Eileen. “I can barely see the ground!”

  “Thanks,” said Rich, whose normally ruddy complexion had turned the color of sour milk. “What kind of place is this? No wonder the scrobblers didn’t bother to shut it down. Step through a portal and fall out of a tree? It’s a death trap. Why didn’t Moth warn us?”

  “Because she can fly,” said Darwen. “It probably never occurred to her.”

  “Smells nice,” Alex remarked. “Guess there are no stinking furry elephants up here.”

  “In the tree,” said Rich dryly. “Not big tree climbers, elephants. You’re right about the smell, though. Pretty nice.”

  But it was more than nice. The tree hung with a powerful scent, sweet and fragrant, so that Darwen was suddenly reminded of shopping for his mother’s Christmas present at the perfume counter of a department store back in England.

  “No wonder,” said Rich. “Check out those blooms.”

  He was gazing to where a flower hung inches above Darwen’s head. It was the size of a soccer ball, bulb-like in the center but with huge open petals around the edges, which, as he looked, shifted from white to pink, and finally to a deep crimson, before cycling back to white again. As the colors changed, the aroma became so strong that Darwen began to feel himself losing focus.

 

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