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Authors: Maile Meloy

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BOOK: The Apothecary
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I
got through the Friday at school by keeping my head down, and I stayed in study hall at noon because I couldn’t face the lunchroom. I would have loved to sit with Benjamin, but what if he didn’t want to sit with me? I couldn’t take the chance.

That night, my mother made a dinner of scrambled black-market eggs from the landlady. She had brought home, as a hand-me-down from Olivia Wolff ’s daughter, a warm flannel nightgown that was so long it touched the floor. It was old-fashioned and shapeless, but I was grateful—the apothecary’s honeysuckle and aspen might work, but the hot water bottles only lasted so long in a chilly bed.

On Saturday afternoon, Benjamin met me on the steps of St Beden’s with his satchel slung across his chest. I hoped my face didn’t show my relief that he’d actually turned up. On the walk to Hyde Park, we talked about school. He laughed when I said the secretary reminded me of a sheep, and I wished I’d been brave enough to sit with him at lunch. It was so easy to talk to him, especially when we were both walking and looking around at the London streets and I didn’t have to stare at him across a lunch tray.

In the park, Benjamin chose a table and set up the chessboard swiftly, giving me the white pieces and lining them up without having to think. I always had to think about where they went. I wished I’d let my dad give me some advice.

“I’m not very good at this,” I said.

“Terrific,” Benjamin said. “Then we’ll play for money.”

“Seriously, I’m not going to be a match for you.”

“Never mind,” Benjamin said. “I want you to watch the park bench over my left shoulder. There’s a man sitting there with a wooden leg.”

I looked up. A broad-shouldered man in a grey overcoat was seated facing away from us, reading a newspaper. Beneath the bench I could see two feet in black boots. They looked like ordinary feet. Maybe one was a little smaller than the other. “How can you tell?”

“I’ve been watching him,” Benjamin said. “Do you know the Russian boy at school, Sergei Shiskin?”

“He sits behind me in Latin,” I said. “He’s nice.”

“That’s his father, Leonid Shiskin, who works for the Soviet embassy. He comes here every weekend. Tell me when someone else sits down.”

The chess date suddenly seemed less like a date, and I felt myself deflate a little. “Is that why we’re here? I’m helping you
spy
on him?”

“We’re just playing chess. It’s your move.”

I slid a white pawn towards his king, and Benjamin pushed out the black pawn in front of his queen’s bishop.

I slid out my own bishop, and Benjamin frowned at it. “Are you sure about that?”

“What does it matter, if the game is just a cover?”

Benjamin sighed. “You have to make your cover convincing,” he said. He moved a knight out. “You have to
believe
in it. For example, Leonid Shiskin is an accountant for the embassy. He acts like an accountant and lives like an accountant.”

“Maybe because he
is
an accountant.”

“But he’s an accountant who passes secret messages to people in this park. By leaving part of his newspaper on that bench. It’s your move.”

I saw a chance at his king, and moved my queen out two spaces.

Benjamin shook his head.
“Janie.”

“I’m threatening checkmate!”

“No, you’re not.” He moved his knight so it blocked the checkmate and could take my queen
or
my bishop.

“Oh,” I said. I studied the board. “I told you I wasn’t any good.”

“When English people say that, they don’t
mean
it,” Benjamin said.

“Well, Americans do!”

“What’s Shiskin doing?”

I looked. “A man just sat down on his bench,” I said, and then I stared. “Oh, Benjamin, he took the newspaper!”

“What does he look like?”

“Plump. Nice coat. He has a black walking stick. How did you know that would happen?”

Benjamin peeked over his shoulder at the man, who moved lightly away, like a much smaller man, sauntering as if out for a Sunday stroll. He didn’t seem to need the walking stick, and swung it once in a circle. “I’ve never seen that man before,” Benjamin said.

“Do we follow him?”

Benjamin seemed unsure. “What’s Shiskin doing now?”

“Still reading the rest of his paper.”

Benjamin swept the chess pieces into his bag. “Let’s follow.”

We set out in the direction the man with the walking stick had gone, and I cast a glance back at Mr Shiskin, who looked up at me over his newspaper. I quickly turned around. Benjamin was ahead of me, and beyond him our target was waiting to cross a street.

We followed at a distance, down side streets to a handsome brick building with white trim, where the man went inside. A sign over the door said CONNAUGHT HOTEL. I thought the doorman gave us a suspicious look as we hesitated outside.

“Act rich,” Benjamin said. “Pretend we belong.” And he strode with a burst of apparent confidence and entitlement towards the hotel door.

I followed, having to take a few quick, not-so-confident steps to catch up to him. He nodded curtly to the doorman, who opened the door for us. I tried to think what Sarah Pennington would do: smile at the doorman? Flirt? Condescend? In my sudden shyness, I stared straight ahead, as if the doorman wasn’t there, which I knew wasn’t right at all.

There was a hush in the lobby. Plush carpet absorbed sound, the voices were muted and polite, and there were high notes of clinking glass from a bar somewhere. A carpeted staircase led up to the right of the dark, polished wood reception desk, and the man from the park bench was nowhere to be seen. Benjamin went to the desk.

“I’m meeting my uncle here,” he said. “He’s a bit fat, I’m always telling him, and uses this silly walking stick. Have you seen him?”

The long-nosed clerk at the desk gave Benjamin a level stare. “Many people use walking sticks,” he said. “May I ask your uncle’s name?”

“Oh, I just call him Uncle.”

There was a pause. “I’m sure you do. But that wouldn’t be what
we
call him, would it?”

“I suppose not.”

The clerk gave him a tight smile. “It’s not my place to determine which of our guests is more corpulent than others.”

“Well, I didn’t mean that—” Benjamin said.

“Good day, young man.”

“Oh!” a voice from behind me said. “It’s Jane from Cali
for
nia.”

I turned to see Sarah Pennington standing in the lobby. It was as if, by trying to imitate her rich girl’s entitlement, I had summoned her into being. She wore a blue raincoat the colour of her eyes, and she stood with an older version of herself, a blonde woman with a dove-grey hat perched on one side of her elegant head.

“This is my mother,” Sarah said. “Jane is a new student at St Beden’s.”

“How do you do?” Sarah’s mother said.

“It’s really Janie,” I stammered. “I’m fine. And—this is Benjamin.”

“I know Benjamin,” Sarah said, smiling at him and then meaningfully at me. “Quick work, Janie.”

“Sarah!” her mother said.

I was shocked, too. I could feel myself blushing up into the roots of my hair. And Benjamin wasn’t acting rich anymore, in the presence of actual rich people. He seemed very interested in the buckle on his satchel.

“Are you staying here?” I managed to ask.

“Oh, no, we were only shopping,” Sarah said. “And we stopped for tea.”

“Thank you, your excellency,” the clerk said behind us.

All four of us turned to see who was so grand. I noticed that Sarah and her mother turned more subtly than Benjamin and I did, and then my heart skipped. The man at the desk, who’d been called “your excellency,” was the one we’d been following! He nodded to us and walked in his effortless way to the front door, swinging his black walking stick.

“Do you know that man?” Benjamin asked Sarah’s mother, when the door had closed after him.

“I don’t,” Mrs Pennington said.

“What does it mean that the clerk called him ‘your excellency’?” I asked.

“I suppose he might be an earl or a viscount.”

It was the first time I had heard the word, and it sounded like “vye-count.” I know now that it’s a level of aristocracy above a baron and below an earl.

“Maybe he could marry Aunt Cecilia,” Sarah said.

Mrs Pennington pressed her lips together and it was her turn to blush, behind her face powder. “It’s time we went home,” she said. “Perhaps next time the two of you could join us for tea.”

“Aunt Cecilia’s an old maid,” Sarah said confidentially, in a way I knew was meant to torment her mother. “We’re
desperate
to find her a lonely viscount.”

“Sarah!” her mother said.

“Bye!” Sarah said, waving over her shoulder as she was hustled out the door.

Benjamin turned to the desk clerk. “Is that man who just left an earl or a viscount?”

“I thought he was your uncle,” the clerk said.

“He will be if he marries Aunt Cecilia,” Benjamin said. “And she’s a treat. Looks like Lana Turner.”

The desk clerk smirked and looked very interested in his paperwork.

“I bet he’s an exiled Russian prince,” Benjamin said.

“We protect the privacy of all our guests, titled or not. Now I’m afraid I must ask you children to leave.”

When I got home, my father looked up from a script he was reading. “Who won the great chess match?”

“Benjamin.”

“Well, you’ll take him next time.”

“I hope so. I’m going tomorrow.”

My parents glanced at each other. “Already?” my mother asked.

“For a rematch,” I said. “I have some pride.”

The truth was that Leonid Shiskin, of the Soviet embassy, went to the park on Sundays, too, and Benjamin wanted to watch him again.

“Huh,” my father said, closing his script to look carefully at me.

“Huh,” my mother echoed.

“Do we get to meet young Master Figment?” my father asked.

“Only if you stop calling him that,” I said. “And not tomorrow. I’m meeting him at the park.”

I was already planning the things I would write in my diary, but first I got the chessboard out. Benjamin’s spying might be crazy, but he was dashing and brave, a real Robin Hood, not a fake one. I thought some of his boldness must be rubbing off on me, and I wasn’t sure that was a bad thing.

“I’ll take that chess lesson now,” I said.

CHAPTER 7

The Message

W
hen we got to Hyde Park on Sunday, Mr Shiskin was already on his bench with his back to us, in his grey overcoat. Benjamin set up the chess pieces, giving me the white ones again, while I kept an eye on Mr Shiskin over his shoulder.

I moved my king’s pawn out, and Benjamin, as I knew he would, slid out the pawn in front of his bishop. I brought out my king’s knight, as my father had told me to, and was rewarded by one of Benjamin’s approving smiles.

“Very good!” he said. He brought out his queen’s pawn.

I brought out my queen’s pawn and Benjamin took it, and I took his pawn with my knight. Benjamin nodded with pleasure and moved his king’s knight out. I looked over his shoulder at Mr Shiskin. Another man was sitting next to him. I’d completely missed his arrival.

“Someone’s there!” I said. “A man.”

“What kind of man?”

“I can only see the back of his head. He’s wearing a hat.”

Benjamin watched my face, as if to read there what I was seeing. “What’s he doing?”

“Nothing. Just sitting there.” The newcomer, even from behind, seemed oddly familiar.

Benjamin glanced over his shoulder to look at the man, then put his head in his hands. “Oh,
no
,” he said.

Then I realised. I hadn’t recognised him, out of context. “It’s the apothecary!” I said. “It’s your father!”

Benjamin pretended to study the chessboard. “He’s going to muck it up,” he moaned. “Why’d he have to choose that bench? If he’s there, Shiskin can’t make his drop.”

“Maybe he
is
the drop.”

“He’s
not
the drop.”

But as I watched, Benjamin’s father took a section of the newspaper from the bench, without looking at Shiskin. I felt goose bumps rise on my arms. “Your father just picked up the newspaper,” I said.

BOOK: The Apothecary
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