Septimus Heap 3 - Physik (13 page)

BOOK: Septimus Heap 3 - Physik
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Gringe felt a little overawed by the Palace; he could not quite believe that Silas Heap actually lived there. He eyed the line of fragile-looking gold chairs with little red velvet seats that Hildegarde had waved him over to and decided they looked troublesome, so he scuttled off to the darkest corner of the hall, where he had spied a comfortable-looking armchair. The armchair was almost hidden in the shadows and sitting on it, unseen by Gringe, was the Ancient ghost of Godric, ex-doorkeeper, slumbering peacefully.

“No!” Hildegarde's voice rang out sharply. “Not that seat, Mr. Gringe!”

Gringe, who had been about to sit down, jumped up as though something had bitten him.

“There's someone sitting on that one,” explained Hildegarde.

Gringe, who had never seen a ghost in his entire life and had no intention of starting now, shook his head sadly. It was true what they said; they were all bonkers up at the Palace. That was, of course, why it suited Silas Heap so well.

Gringe was relieved when Silas arrived with Maxie trailing behind him. Silas was a little flustered; he had been glad of an excuse to get away. He had left Marcia searching the Palace for Septimus, who appeared to have skipped an exam, much to Silas's admiration. At last his son was settling down and acting like a normal boy.

Gringe jumped up like a terrier after a rabbit. “Where is he?” he demanded.

“Not you as well,” said Silas. “I've just told Marcia, I don't know. Anyway, it's perfectly normal. Personally, I don't blame the boy for missing the odd exam.”

“What exam?” asked Gringe, taken aback.

"Well, it's not one I remember doing, that's for sure. Can't be that important.

Anyway, what do you want him for? Has he been playing chicken on the drawbridge? That's boys for you." Silas chuckled indulgently, remembering the times when he and a gang of friends would run up the drawbridge as it was being raised and see who could jump at the very last moment and not fall in the Moat.

“Chickens?” asked Gringe, who was getting the usual disconnected feeling of living on a different planet from Silas Heap. “ 'As Simon been pestering chickens now? Not that I'm surprised, mind. He'll cause trouble wherever he goes, that boy will.”

Now it was Silas's turn to be taken aback. “Simon?” he asked. “Chickens?”

Gringe was not to be put off. “Look 'ere, Heap. I just want to know where your Simon is.”

“Well, wouldn't we all?” snapped Silas.

“Yeah. My Rupert would be after him, that's for sure. He's very attached to 'is little sister, is Rupert, and now she's run off again with that good-for-nothin'—”

“Run off with Simon?” asked Silas, who was beginning to share Gringe's opinion of his eldest son as a good-for-nothing. “How?”

“I dunno how. If I knew how I would've stopped her.”

“Well, I'm sorry, Gringe,” said Silas, who was tired of being blamed for Simon's misdeeds, “but I don't know where Simon is. And I'm sorry that your Lucy is still mixed up with him. She's a nice girl.”

“Yeah, she is,” said Gringe, the wind taken out of his sails. Gringe and Silas stood awkwardly in the Palace Hall for a moment. Then Gringe said, "Well, I'll be gettin'

along then. Make sure you keep an eye on your Jenna, if that Simon's around."

“Jenna...” said Silas. “That's funny, I haven't seen her this morning...”

“No? Well, I'd go look for 'er if I was you. I'll be off then. See you later for a game, if you like. I can lend you a set of Counters.”

“I have my own set now, Gringe. No thanks to you,” said Silas, sniffing. And then, remembering Sarah's instructions, he said, "Look, why don't you come up here?

Make a change."

“Me? Up at the Palace twice in one day? Well, well.” Gringe chuckled. “Thank you, Silas.”

Silas walked Gringe to the Palace door. “See you later then,” said Gringe. And then after a moment's thought: “We don't have no chickens on the drawbridge. Not even one.”

“No. Of course you don't,” said Silas, soothingly. He waved Gringe good-bye; then he and Maxie set off in search of Jenna.

Silas had as little luck finding Jenna as Marcia was having. Marcia strode down the Long Walk with Alther in tow. She threw open each door in turn, yelling,

“Septimus? Jenna! ” and then slammed the door with a crash, until Alther felt he could stand it no longer.

“There's something going on here, Marcia,” he told her.

“Too right, Alther. Septimus? Jenna?” Crash!

“It's odd that Jenna is not around either.”

“Quite. Very odd. Septimus? Jenna?” Crash!

“Well, Marcia, I'll be off for a while. There's someone I want to talk to about it.”

“Talking is not going to do any good, Alther. I had enough talking this morning from that wretched Hermetic Scribe to last me a lifetime—and it's all a load of rubbish. I have to find Septimus now. Septimus? Jenna?” Crash!

Alther left Marcia to her doors and flew off along the Long Walk. When he got to the end, he floated through to the turret on the east end of the Palace; then he wound himself around the spiral stairs and stood for a quiet moment on the top-floor landing, gathering his thoughts. Alther looked a little nervous. He brushed down his robe, which of course made no difference to its appearance at all, and tugged at his beard. Then he took a deep breath and, in an unusually respectful manner for Alther, he walked slowly through the wall into the Queen's Room.

The Queen jumped up.

“Please excuse me, Your Majesty,” said Alther, rather formally, bowing his head slightly.

“I might do, Alther, I suppose,” replied the Queen with a half smile. "If you tell me what it is that brings you here. And for goodness' sake don't call me Your Majesty.

Just Cerys will do. I am only a Spirit like yourself. No more majesty for me, Alther."

She sighed.

“I am wondering if you have seen your daughter this morning, Cerys?” asked Alther.

The Queen smiled fondly. “Yes, I have indeed,” she replied.

“Ah. So she went to Zelda's, did she?”

“So you know about the Queen's Way too, Alther? It is no longer the secret it was.”

“Your secret is safe with me. Did Jenna take the young ExtraOrdinary Apprentice with her by any chance?”

“He was with her. A nice-looking boy. How much you know, as ever. I always was in awe of you. You seemed to understand ... well, everything.”

“So she did take Septimus with her? Well, that explains it. Thank you, Cerys. I shall go tell Marcia to stop driving everyone mad.”

“Dear, dear Marcia,” mused the Queen. “She saved my Jenna, you know.”

“I know,” said Alther. They were both silent for a moment, remembering the day when they both entered ghosthood, until Alther shook himself out of his reverie. “I'll be off then. Thank you.”

Alther turned to go and then said, “You know, Cerys, you should get out more. It's not good for you being stuck in this turret all the time. And you could think about Appearing to young Jenna. I know it's a big decision but...”

“I shall Appear when the Time is Right, Alther,” the Queen said, a little severely. “It is important for a Princess to discover things for herself and to prove herself worthy of becoming Queen—just as I had to. Meanwhile, I stay here to guard the Queen's Way from harm, as my mother did for me. And as Jenna will do for her own daughter.”

“Goodness, Cerys. That's a little way off, I hope.”

“I hope so too. But one must be eternally vigilant. Good-bye. Until we meet again...”

The Queen drifted back to her chair by the ever-burning fire, and Alther knew that the audience was over. He floated through the wall with a vague feeling of dissatisfaction—but it was only later that Alther realized that the Queen had not given a straight answer to any of his questions.

Alther went to find Marcia to tell her to stop slamming doors because Jenna had taken Septimus to see Aunt Z,elda. He found her arguing with Sir Hereward outside Jenna's room.

“If you don't stand aside, Sir Hereward,” Marcia was telling the ghost angrily, “I shall be forced to Pass Through, make no mistake about it.”

The old knight shook his head regretfully. “I do apologize, Your ExtraOrdinariness, but the Princess specifically instructed me not to let anyone into her room. Which, unfortunately, includes yourself. I only wish it were otherwise, but...”

“Oh, do stop dithering, Sir Hereward. I need to speak to her urgently. Now stand aside!”

“Oof!” Sir Hereward gasped as the sharp point of Marcia's purple python shoe poked through his armor-plated instep.

“Marcia!” said Alther sharply. “Marcia, there is no need for that. No need at all. Sir H does a very good job. Jenna is not in her room, she has taken Septimus to see Aunt Zelda.”

“What?” Marcia stopped, her foot still firmly placed in Sir Hereward's. The knight pulled his foot away; then he drew his sword, placed it across the door and gave Marcia a withering look.

Marcia stepped back from the ghost. "But—but why on earth has she taken Septimus to see Aunt Zelda? Alther, this is terrible. Septimus must not leave my side today, he is in grave danger. And as for Jenna, you know as well as I do that she should stay in the Castle. Anything could happen to them traveling all that way across the Marshes.

What are they thinking of?"

Alther glanced at Sir Hereward, unsure if he should say anything in the presence of the old knight, but the ghost was diplomatically staring at his feet. Sir Hereward knew when to blend into the background. All the same, Alther took Marcia by the elbow and led her away from the old ghost. As they walked up the corridor, Alther noticed to his dismay that Marcia was trembling.

As soon as he was sure they were out of earshot, Alther said, “Um, they haven't gone across the Marshes, Marcia. There is another Way.” Alther felt awkward. The Queen's Way was a secret kept by the Queens and their descendants. Many years ago, when he himself was ExtraOrdinary Wizard, Alther had stumbled across the Queen's Way at Keeper's Cottage when he had been looking for Aunt Zelda's predecessor, Betty Crackle. Betty had left the Way open, and Alther had, to his shock, found himself in the Queen's Room in the company of Queen Matilda, Cerys's fearsome grandmother. He had soon made his way back to Keeper's Cottage, but not before Queen Matilda had extracted a terrible promise from him never to divulge the secret of the Way.

“Well, going through the Port is no better, Alther.”

“It's not through the Port, Marcia. It is much quicker—and safer—than that.”

Marcia knew her old tutor well enough to tell when he was keeping something from her. “You know something, don't you?” she asked. "You know something and you're not telling."

Alther nodded. “I am sorry, Marcia, I swore I would never tell. It is a secret of the Queens.”

“It's obviously not a secret from Septimus,” Marcia said.

“No. Well, Septimus seems to be different,” said Alther.

“That's the trouble, Alther,” replied Marcia, her voice rising in what sounded to Alther suspiciously like a panic. “He is different. He's different enough to have written me a note five, hundred years ago.”

17

Palace Ghosts

With great relief, Sir Hereward had watched Marcia and Alther set off down the wide corridor, take a right turn at the end and disappear from sight.

Behind the doors of Jenna's bedroom, another, altogether more unpleasant ghost took her ear from the door, a smile playing across her thin lips. So the troublesome young Princess had run off to the Marram Marshes with the Apprentice, had she? And not done what she had promised by the sound of it.

She would pay for this, and the Apprentice need not think he had gotten away with anything either.

Quickly the ghost of Queen Etheldredda crossed the floor to a small roughly made box where Jenna kept all her treasures. The ghost perused the box and then Caused the lid to silently open. Poking a long and bony finger through Jenna's possessions, Etheldredda found what she was looking for and then did something that no ghost should be able to do—she picked up the object, a small silver ball inscribed with the letters I.P.—and placed it in her pocket. Then, with a knowing smile, the ghost of Queen Etheldredda walked through the door and Passed Through the much put-upon Sir Hereward.

The ghost of Queen Cerys gave every appearance of dozing in her fireside chair, so when the ghost of Queen Etheldredda sidled in and headed straight for the potion cupboard, she was most surprised to suddenly find her way barred by a very determined descendant.

“You may not pass,” Cerys told Etheldredda coldly.

“Don't be ridiculous, child. I have every right to walk the Queen's Way. And I intend to do so. Stand aside.”

“I will not.”

“You will!” The angry Etheldredda pushed her way through. Cerys, who gasped—not only from the shock of being Passed Through, but also from the surprisingly solid feeling of Etheldredda—recovered just in time to Cause the potion cupboard door to jam shut.

“Two may play at that game,” snapped Etheldredda, Causing the door to reopen.

“But only one may win,” replied Cerys, Causing the door to close.

“Indeed, child. I am glad you see sense.” Etheldredda Caused the door to open.

“I intend to protect my daughter. You shall not stop me,” Cerys declared angrily, and Caused the door again to slam shut. Then, before Etheldredda could retaliate, Cerys began to spin. Faster and faster she turned, like a whirlwind, revolving the air in the turret with her until, despite herself, Etheldredda was caught up in the currents and whirled around the small circular room like an autumn leaf caught up in a windy corner.

“Go!” yelled Cerys. With that, Queen Etheldredda was hurled from the room, out of the turret and across the lawns toward the river, where she landed in the middle of one of Billy Pot's careful arrangements of dragon droppings. Angrily, she picked herself out of the mess and haughtily floated toward the riverbank, where the ghostly Royal Barge awaited her.

Head held high and without a backward glance, Queen Etheldredda walked up the gangplank. As she took her place upon the dais, the ghostly barge began to move.

Silently it glided away from the Palace gardens and headed for the middle of the river, where it drifted downstream, Passing Through a blockade of boats, which for some reason seemed to be on fire. Queen Etheldredda tutted to herself at the lawlessness of the Castle and comforted herself that it would not be so for much longer. She would see to that.

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