The Custodian of Marvels (14 page)

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Authors: Rod Duncan

Tags: #Steampunk, #Gas-Lit Empire, #alt-future, #Elizabeth Barnabus, #patent power, #Fantasy

BOOK: The Custodian of Marvels
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Geography may have forced London’s clocks to trail behind ICN2. But in the shift to and from Daylight Saving Time, the Kingdom chose to be twenty-four hours ahead (4am on the second Saturday in March and October respectively.)
In securing its exemption, the Kingdom burdened itself with perpetual confusion in international dealings. Visitors, not knowing the history, may find these irregularities perverse. But the Kingdom’s stance is a matter of considerable local pride.
It would be a serious faux pas to ask why the clocks in the Kingdom are running slow. For Londoners it is quite the other way about.

 

Reaching the end of the section, I closed the pamphlet. The grievance it mentioned was a powerful force in the politics of the Kingdom. I thought again about what Professor Ferdinand had told me, wondering what Fabulo would do with that knowledge. I looked down and saw that he’d been staring at me.

“Well?” he asked.

“It’s curious.”

“Curious indeed.”

“But I thought you were bringing us here to show how we could… you know.”

“Break in,” he said, voicing the words I still felt too afraid to say. His voice had grown more serious now, and mercifully quieter.

“Are you saying the clock running fast is important?”

“It’s more than important,” he said. “That nine minutes and twenty-one seconds is a crack that we’re going to climb through. Right into the heart of that mighty fortress. And then we’re going to help ourselves from the treasure house.”

CHAPTER 14

October 1st

 

To hide an elephant is easy. Simply put it where they are not looking.

The Bullet-Catcher’s Handbook

 

I woke to the sense of shaking and opened my eyes to see Tinker leaning over me. He was gripping my shoulders. A lantern rested on the floor. It hadn’t been there when I went to sleep. I was about to say something, but he put his fingers over my mouth. Then I heard shouting in the street outside.

I was out of bed in one movement. The boy turned the other way as I pulled on clothes over the chemise in which I’d been sleeping. Fabulo was nowhere to be seen. I could hear fists pounding on a door in the street below. Heavy footsteps.

“Open it or I break it down!”

I grabbed stockings, shoes and shawl. Tinker turned the wick down and the lantern went out. I stepped to the side of the window, pulled the thin curtain an inch and looked down to the street.

A troop of red coats were moving house to house. A man in a nightshirt was rolling on the ground, legs in the open drain, hands holding his face. A woman knelt next to him, wailing. Further down, I could see a carriage standing waiting, its horses pawing the ground where they stood.

I felt a tug on my sleeve. Tinker was pulling me in the direction of the door. He jabbed a finger towards the ceiling. I thought of the skylight on the landing above. I was about to follow him there when an even louder banging made me freeze. Footsteps sounded in the hall below. Soldiers were in the building, trying to get into one of the ground floor rooms. Wherever Fabulo had gone, he had left his travelling pack on the other bed. My haversack lay open on the floor.

Breaking free from Tinker’s grip, I heaped my loose clothes into it. Tinker saw what I was doing and went to grab his own meagre possessions. I shook my head and pointed to Fabulo’s bag. If we were the object of the search, we couldn’t leave the clothes of a young woman and dwarf for them to find.

Bolts were being snapped back below. Booted feet crashed. I ran up the stairs towards the top landing, hoping the noise of our escape would be swallowed by the violence of their entry.

The roof angled low across the top landing. Low enough for me to push at the skylight. I had escaped across rooftops before. This time all we needed was to get out quietly and hide on the slates. But the skylight would not lift. I tried again, pressing harder. The frame bent and creaked, but the wood seemed to have swollen, anchoring it closed.

Doors slammed. I could feel the vibration of each act of violence through the rickety banister rail.

“Let us in or we force it!”

A door opened below. There was a scuffle. A man cried out in pain. There were but two rooms on the ground floor. In seconds the soldiers would be climbing the stairs where they’d find our room empty. But the lamp would still be hot if they thought to feel it. And the beds.

Tinker grabbed my wrist and pulled, as if trying to get me away from the top of the stairs.

Booted feet were climbing the stairs. I heaved at the skylight again, increasing the upward force. The frame shifted suddenly with an ear splitting shriek. A crack arced across the pane of glass above my head.

I froze. The footsteps had stopped. In the sudden silence I could hear the beating of my own heart. Tinker heaved on my arm again. This time I stepped after him along the small landing towards a single door at the end.

Everything in the building seemed to be holding its breath, but I could hear the raid continuing outside. There were shouts of impotent rage from the denizens of St John’s. A door was kicked in further down the street. Dogs barked. Quieter but much closer a step creaked on the flight immediately below us. We were backed up against a door and they were coming.

Then, all in the same moment, two things happened. I felt the movement of the air on the back of my neck as if something had shifted behind me. And the cracked glass detached itself from the skylight and fell. Half of it shattered on the landing. The other half crashed on the stairs. Out of instinct, I pressed back away from the destruction, expecting a door behind me, finding only air. I started to fall into the darkness, but was caught by unseen hands. Then the door was closing after me. I could hear the soldiers hammering up the stairs.

“After them!”

Glass crunched under their boots on the landing. There were two men, I judged. They swore as they clambered up through the empty skylight. Whatever they said after that was in whispers. But I could hear their feet on the slates of the roof above my head as they made their way up the slope. Only when I was sure they had set out along the apex of the roof did I turn to look at my rescuers.

But the room in which I found myself was without windows. The darkness was complete.

“Thank you,” I whispered.

A match flared in the air in front of me, and then a candle was lit, illuminating Fabulo’s face. There were others behind him, but the light wasn’t enough for me to see them clearly. I was about to ask for an explanation, but the dwarf shook his head, putting a finger to his mouth. Then, gesturing for me to follow, he began to pick his way across the attic room, which I now realised was only partially boarded.

Ducking under a roof beam, I followed him along a narrow path of floorboards, themselves resting on joists that looked too thin to take our weight. I was aware of Tinker just behind me. And behind him followed the others, whoever they were.

Questions tumbled in my mind. But, before any of them could take form, I found myself facing the end wall of the attic, at the bottom of which a small hole had been knocked through. It was only three bricks across and low enough that even Fabulo had to get down on hands and knees to pass.

I hesitated and Tinker slipped through ahead of me, negotiating the hole with the confidence of one who had made the same journey many times before. I followed, clambering through to what must have been the attic of the next house in the row. As I got to my feet, the others were crawling through after me. The last one pulled the floorboards we’d crawled over through after him, as if it was a drawbridge being raised. Then they were filling the hole with bricks. It was all done with a quiet efficiency that spoke of practice. Finally a sheet of wood was placed over the remade wall, to stop light escaping through the cracks, I guessed.

Tinker took my hand and led me to where Fabulo was lighting lanterns from the candle.

“What is happening?” I hissed.

“Men-at-arms,” he said. “Searching the rookery for something.”

“For what?”

“No way to tell.”

“You said we were safe here!”

“And so we are.”

“But… what is this place? And…”

“It’s a refuge.”

“And who are these people?”

Instead of answering he gestured for me to turn around. I did so, seeing their faces in the light for the first time. There were three of them – two young women and a giant of a man with a forked beard. I blinked as recognition hit me.

“You might remember them,” said Fabulo. “They were your comrades in the travelling show.”

“Ellie, Lara and Yan,” I said, reciting their names.

“Good,” said the dwarf. “No need for introductions.”

“What – are – they – doing – here?”

“The same as you.”

All three of them looked at their feet, shamefaced, as well they might be. The last time we were together they’d been storming my boat, hellbent on burning me from my home.

“I would have told you sooner,” said Fabulo. “But…” He shrugged.

“But we needed to make sure which side you were on!” growled Yan, his long beard quivering as he spoke.

He stepped towards me and I saw the unevenness of his stride, a slight drag of his left foot along the floorboards.

“We’ve been through this already,” said Fabulo. “What went before is over.”

“Might be over for you, little man. But it wasn’t you got shot.”

“You were attacking her boat, Yan. Remember that. She had a right to defend herself.”

“No warning shot,” he grumbled.

“It was night time,” I said. “No light to see you by. I didn’t know who was coming for me. I didn’t know how many.”

“What if you
had
known?”

“Does it hurt?” I asked.

“Yes.”

Fabulo was trying to catch my eye. He shook his head as if to warn me off the subject. Since the giant and I seemed to both be part of his plan, I could understand his desire to soothe our meeting.

“I knew a trick rider once,” I said. “She was part of the circus where I grew up. One day she fell off her horse and broke her collarbone. It healed in a month. But she said it still hurt at night. Then one day – it was two years later – she was washing and found the lump in her shoulder where the bone had healed. And that was when she realised she’d forgotten all about it. The pain had stopped. That’s what she said.”

Yan nodded. “Night time it does hurt worse.”

“What’s it been?” I asked. “Not yet a year?”

“Then do you think it will stop?” he asked.

“I hope so. I think so. But even if I knew it’d hurt you for the rest of your life, I’d still have shot you.”

He flinched as if I’d slapped him. “You would?”

“What choice did you give me? I’m sorry. But people who break into the homes of others in the middle of the night – they do tend to get shot at.”

I waited for his reaction, knowing it could go either way. If good, there’d be one problem less to think about. If bad, it’d be better to see things for what they were than to let the wound be hidden.

Fabulo stood next to me, tensed as if ready to leap forwards and get between us, though nothing could have stopped the big man if he charged.

Everyone seemed frozen. Then Yan’s shoulders dropped. I allowed myself to breathe again. Lara stepped up and took his arm. Then Ellie was at his other side. Together they guided him to an upturned tea chest on which he sat.

“She’s right,” said Lara. “I’d have done the same.”

“You would?”

“We all would,” said Ellie.

“I know that,” he said, after a pause. “Thing is, I could blame her before. But now she’s here, I can only blame myself. Truth is, I liked it better the other way.”

Fabulo puffed out his cheeks, firing me a glance that suggested the stress of our meeting was costing him. “Glad we’ve got that out of the way,” he said.

“So this is it?” I asked. “Or do you have more surprises hidden away in a cupboard somewhere?”

“This is it.”

“In which case, please tell me how you plan to do it. If the International Patent Court has a treasure house, it must be the best protected in the world. You must have found a weakness – something no one else has seen. Otherwise you wouldn’t be thinking of it. But if there is a weakness, you would have broken in already. So you must still be missing something or someone. I want to know what or who that is!”

Everyone was looking at me. I had the sudden feeling that I’d missed something obvious.

“That’s too many questions all at once,” said Fabulo. “And definitely too many for this time of night. But I’ll give you one answer now. You’re right – I didn’t do it before, ‘coz I was missing someone.”

“Who?”

“You,” he said. “I was waiting for you. You’ve been gone somewhere I couldn’t reach. But to judge by what I’ve just seen, I think you’re really back.”

CHAPTER 15

October 1st

 

All luck is illusion. Few illusions are luck.

The Bullet-Catcher’s Handbook

 

On the morning after the raid, I woke gently to find my senses alive in a way they hadn’t been since before I set out to kill the duke. It wasn’t that I’d been unaware of my surroundings. Every detail of the journey was clear in my memory. But my feelings had been in some other place and without them all sensation seemed dull.

I opened my eyes and saw a thread of cochineal silk snagged by a splinter in the rough bed frame. I’d noted it on the previous day, though with little interest. Now I marvelled at the intensity of its colour.

I sat up and looked at the room afresh. Motes of dust drifted in bars of light that entered around the edges of the ill-fitting curtain. Lara and Ellie were still sleeping, lying top to toe in the other bed. After the soldiers had left, Fabulo sent us downstairs together. He and Yan were sharing the hidden attic.

I swung my feet to the floor. The bed frame creaked, a single low note that seemed almost musical.

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