by Garth Nix
‘Thanks,’ he said awkwardly. He wanted to say more, but didn’t know how.
‘See you,’ said Suzy. ‘Next time you come back, we’ll get some proper wings. No more of those rotten ascension ones.’
‘Definitely not,’ said Arthur. He turned to face Dame Primus, nodded quickly, and shut his eyes.
He didn’t see what she did, but there was an explosion of pain in his leg. He cried out and fell. The Lieutenant Keeper caught him with a swooping motion that carried them both into the Door.
Every step the Lieutenant Keeper took was agony for Arthur. The pain in his leg was terrible, and every jolt sent it out of his leg and up his side all the way to his head.
‘Steady,’ said the Lieutenant Keeper. ‘Not much farther.’
Arthur hardly heard him. He wasn’t sure if his eyes were open or not. All he could see were exploding blossoms of bright colours. All he could think about was his leg.
‘You are brave, sir,’ said the Lieutenant Keeper. ‘A slight jolt, and –’
Arthur blacked out. When he came to, he was lying on the landing at the bottom of the steps from his room. Doors were banging. There was shouting. He realised that he was screaming.
‘Shut up!’ calledMichaeli. He heard slow footsteps on the stairs, then very fast footsteps and a shout in a very different tone. ‘Dad! Eric!’
Arthur forced himself to stop screaming. It was surprisingly easy. Too easy, in fact, until Arthur’s pain-drenched mind realised it was because he wasn’t getting any air.
I’m having an asthma attack! The stupidWill has reversed everything the First Key did to me! I’ve got a broken leg and I’m having an asthma attack!
‘Help,’ Arthur croaked with what little air he had left. ‘Asthma . . .’
It was all too much. As Michaeli turned to dash back up the stairs to get his inhaler and Bob rushed up from his studio, Arthur blacked out again.
TWENTY-THREE
ARTHUR WOKE UP in the hospital. There was a drip in his arm and an oxygen mask on his face. He felt extremely sick and there was a constant dull ache in his leg. It also felt very odd, which was explained when Arthur raised his head and saw that it was wrapped up in some sort of plastic and carefully placed out of the covers.
‘Arthur?’
He looked across and saw his parents. Bob was asleep in a chair, almost snoring, his head rising an inch with every heavy breath. Emily was getting out of the other chair, putting down her folder of luminescent e-paper.
‘Mum . . .’
‘You’re going to be absolutely fine,’ Emily said. She came over and straightened his blankets and smoothed his hair back. ‘Not a bad asthma attack. But you have broken your leg. I don’t know how you did it. Jack – the surgeon who set it – said it looked like a parachute-jumping injury. But it will be okay too.’
‘Our house . . . the real estate agents . . .’
‘Don’t worry,’ soothed Arthur’s mum. ‘Everything’s messed up, with the Sleepy Plague and all. Someone just got things confused in the city records and thought the property tax wasn’t paid.We’ll sort it out. You just go back to sleep.’
‘I don’t feel sleepy,’ said Arthur.
‘How is the pain?’ asked Emily. ‘Shall I fetch your nurse?’
‘No, no . . . it’s not so bad,’ Arthur answered truthfully. He looked around again, taking in the normality of the white walls, the stainless steel fittings, the panel with its numerous buttons and gauges and connections for oxygen and everything else.
Then he saw the clock, only he couldn’t quite see its face.
‘What time is it?’
‘Just after five in the morning,’ said Emily. ‘You’ve been out since noon yesterday. The operation finished at seven last night, so you’ve done very well to sleep till now. That’s a good sign.’
She was hiding her concern with her ‘doctor’ manner, Arthur saw. He felt her hand shaking as she smoothed his hair again.
‘Five in the morning onWednesday,’ said Arthur.
‘Yes,’ Emily replied with a smile. ‘Michaeli and Eric were here, but I sent them home. And your friend Leaf dropped in.’
‘Leaf?’ asked Arthur quickly. ‘Is she okay?’
‘How did you know she was hurt?’ Emily sounded surprised. ‘She came in around the same time we did. We met her in the emergency room. Nasty cut, but straightforward. It’s hard to believe that people would try to rob a house during a quarantine emergency. But I guess I shouldn’t be surprised.’
‘Is Leaf still here, in the hospital?’
‘Yes, she is. Since her parents and brother are here for Q-observation, she’s gone in with them. And some sort of aunt with a peculiar name.’
‘Mango,’ said Arthur. He leaned back into his pillow, stretched his hands underneath, and immediately felt some things that shouldn’t have been there. The Atlas, a square of cardboard, and the small round-shaped object that Suzy had given him from Tom.
‘I might go to sleep now,’ he said to Emily, with a yawn. ‘You should go home.’
‘I might as well wait for the snore monster to wake up,’ said Emily. ‘But I’ve got some papers to look at. You just rest up.’
Arthur watched her go back to her chair and pick up her papers, their pale green glow lighting her face. When she started tapping on them with her smart stylus, he rolled over and touched whatever was under his pillow. But he didn’t pull the items out.
Instead he withdrew his hand. He knew without looking that whatever was under the pillow would take him farther away from the normal life he so wanted to lead. It was already five hours intoWednesday and Arthur was sure the Morrow Days wouldn’t leave him alone. That had been a foolish hope, one he was not going to cling to anymore. If he could survive the Pit and take on Grim Tuesday, then he could face any further challenge. He might not succeed, but it wouldn’t be for lack of trying.
Arthur reached back under the pillow and pulled all three things out. The Atlas was first. It seemed to be its usual self so Arthur put it back. Next came a small disc. Arthur surreptitiously checked it out in the light from the call button. It was bone – probably whalebone, he thought. One side was carved with lots of tiny stars, and the other had a ship on it. A Viking longship, with the sail up and oars out between a row of shields. The disc had a hole at the top, so it could be worn on a leather strap. Arthur looked at it for a long time, then put it back.
The last thing was, as Arthur had felt, a square of stiff cardboard. White cardboard, with gilt edges and several lines of elegant copperplate writing.
It said:
LADY WEDNESDAY
TRUSTEE OF THE ARCHITECT
AND DUCHESS OF THE BORDER SEA
HAS GREAT PLEASURE IN INVITING
ARTHUR PENHALIGON
TO A PARTICULAR LUNCHEON
OF SEVENTEEN REMOVES
TRANSPORT HAS BEEN ARRANGED
RSVP NOT REQUIRED
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
GARTH NIX was born on a Saturday in Melbourne, Australia, and got married on a Saturday, to his publisher wife, Anna. So Saturday is a good day. Garth used to write every Sunday afternoon because he had a number of day jobs over the years that nearly always started on aMonday, usually far too early. These jobs have included being a bookseller, an editor, a PR consultant and a literary agent. Tuesday has always been a lucky day for Garth, when he receives good news, like the telegram (a long time ago, in the days of telegrams) that told him he had sold his first short story, or just recently when he heard his novel Abhorsen had hit The New York Times bestseller list.
Wednesday can be a letdown after Tuesday, but it was important when Garth served as a part-time soldier in the Australian Army Reserve, because that was a training night. Thursday is now particularly memorable because Garth and Anna’s son, Thomas, was born on a Thursday afternoon. Friday is a very popular day for most people, but since Garth has become a full-time writer it has no longer marked the end of the work week. On any day, Garth may generally be fo
und near Coogee Beach in Sydney, where he and his family live.
‘Sabriel is a winner. A fantasy that reads like realism. Here is a world with the same solidity and four-dimensional authority as our own, created with invention, clarity and intelligence. I congratulate Garth Nix.’ PHILIP PULLMAN
‘Lots of magic, lots of battles, lots of very close calls and a hefty dollop of humour.’
THE OBSERVER
‘Nix brings his trilogy to a literally earth shattering conclusion. Action explodes from the very first pages . . . breathtaking, bittersweet and utterly unfor gettable.’ KIRKUS REVIEWS