The Magick of Merlin: 6

Two days later, the internet was teeming with references to the spectacular “new find”. Val and I had concocted a whole story for it. It was found among boxes of junk in some deceased person’s attic, if you didn’t know, and came to light during the preparations for an estate sale. Some discerning soul recognised its unique qualities, sent it for further analysis, and here we are. One priceless artefact bursting forth upon an astonished world.

And if you think no one would believe such a tale, just consider how many times some old master has been dug up out of somebody’s boxes of junk, having vanished out of all knowledge generations before. These things happen.

Also, people believe what they want to believe, and some people really want to believe in Merlin.

Hurrah for tech, too, for the photos of the Wand (only slightly touched up, ahem) made the thing look even more spectacular than it did in the flesh.

But we soon ran into a problem.

‘We can’t hold the auction online,’ Val said.

‘Why not? It’s perfect. We remain totally anonymous, and we barely have to deal with anyone. We just collect the information, cancel it, and move on.’

Val, hunched over her laptop doing who-knew-what, looked up at me at that. ‘Ves. You’ve encountered the internet before?’

‘Yes…?’

‘And you still think everyone’s going to give us their real names and contact details?’

I blinked. ‘Um?’

‘I could call that charmingly naïve,’ she muttered, returning to her screen. ‘Were I feeling generous.’

I coughed. ‘Surely there are obligations to do so, with a legal and above-board auction—’

Internet,’ said Val, thundering away at something on her keyboard. ‘If we can remain anonymous, so can everyone else. And they will. Especially anybody shady enough to have already stolen one major artefact, and in case you’d forgotten that’s exactly who we are hoping to find.’

‘But—’

‘Besides, any collector worth their salt will be suspicious of hoaxes exactly like this one. It’s not like it hasn’t been tried before, albeit with different goals. They’ll want to see the Wand. Satisfy themselves that it’s legitimate. Without that, the serious collectors aren’t going to show up.’

‘Isn’t that a bigger problem?’ I said, slightly appalled. ‘I mean, they can’t satisfy themselves as to its legitimacy when it… isn’t.’

‘I know, but Orlando’s work is virtually perfect. If you didn’t know it was a fake, tell me you wouldn’t be convinced. Go on.’

‘Well, I—’

‘You would. Because it is an artefact of great power. That’s its secret. The only things it isn’t are antiquated and belonging to Merlin. Well, it will pass for the former because the materials they used are ancient, even if the craftsmanship is fresh. And as for the latter, if someone’s got a way to prove beyond doubt that an item belonged to someone who lived many hundreds of years ago — if he ever lived at all — I’d love to hear about it.’

‘It’s actually Indira’s work,’ I said.

‘No,’ she said, looking sharply up. ‘Surely not.’

‘With Orlando’s guidance, no doubt, but yes. She made it.’

Val looked at me for a long moment, then returned to her typing. ‘We probably aren’t paying her enough.’

‘So we need to hold a real auction?’ I said, backtracking a bit. ‘In a real place?’

‘Probably.’

‘Isn’t that risky? Won’t the collectors be angry if they show up expecting to bid, and the auction’s cancelled?’

‘Ves complaining about risks,’ Val muttered. ‘That’s a first.’

‘I’m not totally devoid of a sense of responsibility.’

Val snorted.

‘I’m surprised Jay hasn’t been saying the same things,’ I persevered.

‘He might have, if it wasn’t for the fact that our plan was far riskier. As the best of two risky options—’

‘Did we announce yet that there’s going to be an auction?’

‘Not yet. That’s tomorrow.’

‘Okay. Why does it have to change hands?’

‘Dear Ves, if you could please get around to making sense? I am rather busy this morning.’

‘I might be about to override Jay’s brilliant plan.’

‘You mean the same way he overrode yours? Revenge is sweet.’

‘Especially when it’s also practical. Can’t we just have an exhibition?’

‘We…’ Val sat, blinking. ‘Actually, we could.’

‘It gets better.’ I admit to some feelings of smugness.

One eyebrow went up. ‘Better? Or worse?’

‘We’re trying to lure a thief,’ I said, letting that pass. ‘How about we put it on display somewhere — strictly limited time, showing it off to the world before it vanishes into some private collection, etc — and then we put a tracker on it.’

Val said nothing.

‘You know, like the ones we have on Jay’s stuff.’

‘I know what a tracker is.’

‘Right. Well, anyone so desperate to own Merlin’s grimoire as to steal it would probably want to make off with this, too. No?’

‘Maybe.’

‘And if they didn’t just try to buy the grimoire — and they didn’t, Mr. Elvyng said no one ever approached him with an offer — maybe that means they don’t have that kind of money. In which case, an auction would be no good anyway.’

‘You’re just in love with the idea of master thieves pulling off spectacular artefact heists.’

‘I… might be.’

‘Mm. And what were the chances of your having become just such a thief, if the Society hadn’t recruited you?’

‘I believe you are casting aspersions upon my morals.’

‘Grave ones.’

‘I resent that.’

‘So it isn’t true?’

I thought it over. ‘It would’ve been that or a great detective.’

‘Two sides of the same coin.’

‘So we’re doing it?’

‘What? The latest new and brilliant plan?’

‘Exhibition! Come on!’

‘I’m not sure I’m loving this pick-and-mix, trial-and-error approach to planning. Can we please stick with this one now?’

‘We’re going with it,’ I promised.

‘You still have to get it past Jay,’ Val said.

‘Right.’

‘And Milady,’ she added as an afterthought.

To my surprise, and secret satisfaction, Jay took the overthrow of his plan with grace.

Actually, more than that. Enthusiasm.

‘That actually works far better,’ he said. ‘I couldn’t quite work out how to handle the auction structure without making a mess.’

‘It was a better plan than my other idea,’ I allowed, generous in victory.

‘Milady will be happier with it, too. She frowned a lot when I told her about mine.’

‘Frowned? Jay, she’s a disembodied voice.’

‘I know, but sometimes you can hear the frown.’

‘I’ll tell her,’ I promised.

‘You do that. I’ll go find an exhibition venue.’

‘Not too close to Home,’ I warned. ‘We don’t want anyone making any connection with us.’

‘Right.’ He stood up, and retrieved his jacket. ‘I’d better tell Indira to build a tracker into the Wand. Sticking one on isn’t going to cut it. Any thief worth their salt would be ready for that.’

‘Good point.’ I saluted.

‘What’s that for?’

‘I’m saluting your practical turn of mind.’

‘Literally saluting? I feel honoured.’

I bowed.

‘Let’s not overdo it.’

‘Right.’

‘It is a clever scheme,’ said Milady a little later, after I’d presented myself at the door of her tower-top room and awaited admittance. She’d been busy. I’d had to wait nearly half an hour. ‘I trust all proper precautions will be taken?’

‘Er, no doubt,’ I said.

‘Such as?’ Milady prompted.

‘Um, we’ll hold the exhibition well away from Home.’

‘Yes, that would be wise.’

‘And…’ I stopped, empty of ideas.

‘Trust Indira’s tracker, rather than lying in wait for the thieves ourselves?’ said Milady.

I was silent with dismay.

‘Ves?’

‘How did you know?’ I said in a small voice.

‘I have known you for a considerable period.’

‘And you still employ me!’

‘I have great faith in your abilities, but that does not mean that I wish for you to needlessly endanger yourself in the pursuit of this grimoire.’

‘Yes, ma’am.’

‘Or Jay, or Valerie, or Indira either.’

‘Yes, ma’am.’ I almost saluted again, but thought better of it.

‘Have you considered the probable consequences of failure?’

‘You mean nobody steals the Wand?’

‘That is one possibility.’

‘If that doesn’t happen, well, we’ll still have attracted the notice of a lot of people who are interested in putative Merlin artefacts. We can investigate anyone who shows a particular preoccupation with it.’

‘Good. What else?’

‘Um.’ I thought. ‘If someone does steal it but the tracker doesn’t work?’

‘Also a possibility.’

‘I have faith in Indira’s craftsmanship.’

‘So do I, but if we are dealing with an experienced thief — and we hope that we are — it is very possible they will be prepared for such things. It is not an unusual way of protecting artefacts of great value.’

‘We’ll have to be quick. Get after them the moment it’s gone. All we need is a lead.’

‘So you’ll watch it day and night?’

‘Yes…’

‘And who among my Society is to be involved in apprehending these thieves?’

‘Are we apprehending them? We only want to know where they take the Wand. Presumably it will be the same place they took the grimoire.’

‘And if it isn’t?’

‘Um.’

‘If, for example, the Wand is taken by someone else altogether, with no connection to the theft of the grimoire?’

I thought rapidly. ‘That could happen, but it would be a huge coincidence. Too big, surely? How many obsessed Merlin collectors with inadequate moral fibre can there be?’

‘There might be those whose interest is not in its provenance but in its value,’ Milady pursued.

‘Grab it and flog it? That’s true.’

Milady relented. ‘There have been no such thefts reported in some time, however, so I should think it unlikely.’

‘Right!’

‘It is a good scheme, Ves, but it is also a long shot. I hope you have other avenues of investigation in progress?’

‘There’s Sally.’

‘Very well, tell me about Sally.’

I hesitated, struck by sudden doubt. Milady did know about Val’s adventures in the bookish black market? What if she didn’t, and took exception to Val’s underworld connections?

But I banished the thought. Valerie would never try to deceive Milady upon such a point. Nor would she succeed. Milady, somehow, knew everything that happened at Home.

So I told her all about Sally, and her shock at such a theft’s having occurred without her knowledge.

Milady seemed more interested in that fact than I had been. ‘That is curious,’ said she. ‘It suggests, does it not, that perhaps we are not dealing with a team of career thieves? Surely those are precisely the kinds of people Sally would deal with. Or at least have some awareness of.’

‘You mean maybe there was no heist?’

‘Not as we have imagined it. I think perhaps a previous notion might prove correct: the thief and the new owner of the grimoire are the same person. Sally heard of no sale because there was no sale.’

‘Then that person must be formidable indeed. The security at that manor is top-notch, and to get past the charms on the case — to take on the Elvyngs —’ I remembered what Val had said, when we’d first entreated her help. I rather fear we’re dealing with a considerable power.

‘Going back to what I said about reasonable precautions,’ said Milady.

‘Yes. We’ll be careful.’

‘I shall send Rob with you.’

‘Scary Rob. Yes, please.’

Our business complete, I bowed myself out and began my noisy clattering back down the stairs. I was halfway down when I felt a strong tug upon my heart. A strong, urgent tug, with a shade of panic to it.

Addie.

This new familiar-bond of ours had produced all kinds of effects I hadn’t anticipated. I was in tune with Adeline’s feelings and well-being in ways I had never been before; not all the time, but I received odd pulses of awareness at intervals, some of them rather strong.

I hadn’t felt anything like this from her before.

Throwing dignity to the winds, I thundered down the rest of the stairs, and took off for Addie’s glade at a dead run.

The Magick of Merlin: 5

I was later comforted to recall that I still had an appointment with “the best fence in the industry.” Hey, you never know how things are going to turn out. If Sally had fenced the stolen grimoire, or knew who had, we could have answers right away. We wouldn’t need Jay’s fake auction. I left for the meeting with high hopes.

And Sally turned out to be nothing like I expected.

I mean, really. You talk of a legendary dealer in stolen magickal artefacts, I picture somebody shady-looking, possibly rather greasy. Someone used to a life of skulking in the shadows, evading the law. Someone who in some way looks the part.

I arrived — alone — at the location Val gave me for the meeting, dressed in my best meeting-master-criminals ensemble. That being a dark-coloured dress, smart but not too smart, and power heels. I didn’t bother changing the powder-blue colour of my hair. The best fence in the business had to have a strong stomach. She couldn’t be easily perturbed by little things like eccentric hair choices.

Sally had agreed to meet me at a tiny coffee shop in a remote town I’ve agreed to leave nameless. Partly because it isn’t far from Home, the location of which is not for public consumption; partly because it isn’t far from Sally’s base of operations either. The meeting was set for ten in the morning, and when I arrived, the shop was duly deserted. Only one other patron was in evidence when I walked in: a stout man parked in a far corner, laptop open, headphones on, a tall latte set at his elbow.

Probably not Sally, I decided, and sat down with my mocha on the other side of the room, right by the window. We were hurtling towards September, and the weather was beginning to reflect that: the morning was overcast and drizzling with rain, and I watched a procession of miserable-looking people in drenched t-shirts pass by.

Sally turned out to have one characteristic one might expect of a master criminal: stealth. Intent as I was upon the people out on the cobbled street, I still didn’t notice anybody turn in at the door to the coffee shop, and make her way over to my table. I merely became aware, all of a sudden, that I was no longer alone.

I slowly turned my head.

My new table-mate was Yllanfalen. That shocked me more than it ought; after all, just because they’re improbably beautiful doesn’t mean they can’t be morally compromised, does it? Sally was about my mother’s age, at least in appearance, but not one iota less gorgeous for it. Her silver hair was upswept, and secured with jewelled combs; she wore the wrinkles around her mouth and eyes with superb grace; and the smile she directed at me might be called devastating.

I was intrigued to notice that she had totally eschewed the smart-but-not-too-smart look that I’d chosen, opting instead for a dazzling peacock-blue dress and the most stunning black velvet coat.

Okay, nothing about Sally suggested she had any interest in skulking. Far from trying to pass unnoticed, she positively invited attention.

‘Sally?’ I said, realising belatedly that I had no idea of her surname.

She inclined her head, and sipped delicately at the coffee I hadn’t seen her purchase. Espresso. Strong, black and uncompromising.

‘You are Valerie’s friend?’ she said, in one of those melodious Yllanfalen voices.

I tell you, these people make you feel like such a crow. I cleared my throat. ‘That’s me. Thank you for agreeing to meet with me.’

She nodded, subjecting me to a casual scrutiny that didn’t fool me for a second. Her seemingly idle gaze swept over me and missed nothing. ‘And how may I help you, Ms. Vesper?’

I tried not to glance theatrically around the coffee shop to check for anyone listening in, then stagily lower my voice to talk to my companion. Honestly, nothing says “we are up to no good” more obviously than that. But it is so hard to help it when you’re up to your eyeballs in nefarious deeds.

Emulating her effortless poise instead, I said: ‘We are attempting to track down an item that went missing four years ago. It’s of some importance that it is retrieved.’

‘And when you retrieve it?’ she said. ‘What then will you do?’

‘We aren’t particularly interested in how the, er, transferral of ownership was effected, or by whose hand,’ I said, conscious that she might have friends and contacts to protect. ‘The item must return into the possession of its original owner. That’s all we want.’

‘Are you the original owner?’

I shook my head.

‘Then what is in it for you?’ She looked me over again. ‘You are not an investigator of crimes, I think?’

‘I work with Valerie,’ I said. ‘I’m not usually for hire in such cases, this is true. But the owner of this missing thing made us an offer we couldn’t refuse.’

There was a pause. I imagined her weighing up the option of pumping me for further information, which I very much hoped she wouldn’t. I could not tell her about the argent; what might not such a person demand, if she understood its existence?

‘The Society’s goals are ever enigmatic,’ she murmured, sipping coffee.

‘Not really. We rescue endangered magickal things. If we have to bend a few rules to do it, we will.’

Something like amusement sparked in her limpid green eyes. ‘And you have no such questions to put to me?’

‘I could ask you why you agreed to this meeting,’ I conceded. ‘And I could express all manner of curiosity as to your business. But all I really want to know is: were you involved in finding a new home for a certain priceless grimoire, about four years ago?’

‘Grimoires often come up,’ she said, setting down her empty cup. ‘Some more valuable than others. A priceless one, however? I take it you do not exaggerate.’

‘Only a little. It has been sold in living memory, so someone has put a price on it.’ When I named the price in question, her eyebrows lifted. Just a fraction.

‘I know of only a few spell-books that could command such a price,’ she said.

My curiosity fired up at once. A few? What were the others? Where were the others?

But I controlled myself. Stick to the mission, Ves. Get the job done. ‘Have any of them changed hands in the last few years?’

‘Not to my knowledge.’

My heart sank. ‘Nothing linked to a rather famous chap known as Merlin?’ I tried.

The eyebrows went up again. ‘That one, was it?’ She pursed her lips, an expression of — strangely — displeasure crossing her serene face. Then she said, very softly, ‘I did not know it had been stolen.’

The fact that so major a theft had occurred outside of her range of influence evidently irritated her.

‘Something like that would normally reach your ears, would it?’ I said.

She inclined her head. ‘So much so that—’ She stopped, and after a pause, went on. ‘You are certain that it was stolen, are you?’

‘Its owners have asserted that it was.’

‘No private sale? With these old families, there can be embarrassment about straitened circumstances. Perhaps they might rather term it stolen, than admit it was sold for cash?’

‘You might be right,’ I allowed, not choosing to go into the question of the Elvyngs’ wealth. ‘But if so, why would they contract us to find it again? Why not let it quietly be forgotten?’ And they offered a truly princely reward, too. That the Elvyngs might be strapped for cash must be unthinkable.

Her brow contracted into a frown. She said nothing, appearing abstracted. I suppose she was questioning how such a spectacular theft could have been conducted without her ever hearing of it.

That she was genuinely nonplussed was beyond question. I’d completely stymied her.

‘I have nothing to tell you,’ she said abruptly. ‘And that ought not be possible.’

I didn’t know what to say, so I drained the dregs of my mocha and waited.

‘I will make enquiries,’ she decided. The dark frown hadn’t lifted from her brow. ‘If I hear of anything relevant to you, I shall inform Valerie.’

She gave me scant opportunity to respond to this, for in another moment she was gone, whisking out of the coffee shop with the straight-backed, bristling posture of a seriously displeased woman.

Did she imagine someone had been deliberately hiding things from her? I had no idea what her operation might be like.

Clearly, though, someone was in for a bad afternoon.

‘Well,’ I said aloud, and looked about me. The meeting hadn’t gone as I was hoping, but perhaps it had not been a total loss either. If anybody could find out some titbit of information about that theft, it must be someone with connections like Sally’s.

In the meantime, we had a pretend auction to launch.

‘Indira,’ I said late that evening. ‘You’re a genius. I hope your brother tells you that every day.’

Jay’s insanely talented sister ducked her head, unable to hide her pleased smile, but unwilling to show it off either. ‘Thank you,’ she muttered.

Honestly, the girl is amazing. She must be twentyish, but seems much younger — partly due to that persistent shyness, and a tendency to try to be invisible. But young as she is (or looks), there’s no end to her brilliancies. Someday she’s going to be a magickal legend.

On this occasion, she had thrilled me by bringing our new “Merlin’s Wand” to the first-floor common room, where Jay and I were holed up for the evening. There are two particularly excellent arm-chairs in there, positioned on either side of a long window. They’re plushy and huge and one of them is mine. The other is Jay’s. We often sit up there in the evenings, watching the sun sink over the verdant grounds at Home, and drinking more chocolate than is good for us.

Indira has obviously figured us out by now. I spotted her slip into the room, and thread her way unerringly through the various clusters of chairs and coffee-tables, some of them occupied, on her way to our corner. She hadn’t even checked to make sure we were there before she headed our way.

‘It’s perfect,’ Jay said, excellent big brother that he is. He had it in his hands as he spoke, and I swear I could believe that exquisite thing had once belonged to someone extraordinarily powerful. Amber and bone. Rich, deep gold, and aged ivory-white. She’d crafted these materials into a Wand of remarkable beauty: slender, tapering, coiled and embossed, mounted into a gold filigree handle. Magick radiated from it, together with a palpable sense of antiquity. How had she contrived that?

No wonder she’d been recruited straight into Orlando’s secret lab.

‘I want to keep it,’ I said. ‘Can I keep it?’

Jay rolled his eyes at me.

‘Um, maybe after the auction’s finished,’ said Indira.

I sat up. ‘Really. Really? I could?’

She blinked, alarmed. ‘Um — maybe if Milady says…?’

Right. Milady’s call. I sank back down again. ‘Well, you’ve outdone yourself, and I applaud you. We shouldn’t have too much trouble passing off this beauty as Merlin-ware.’

Jay snorted with laughter. ‘Merlin-ware? Watch out for her, Indira. She’ll have you crafting up an entire line of Merlin-themed paraphernalia in no time.’

‘The Society’s always in need of more funding,’ I said. ‘You can’t tell me Indira-designed Merlin-ware wouldn’t fly off the shelves.’

‘Someone’s been spending too much time in the Elvyng Emporium,’ Jay muttered.

‘I maintain that they’re onto something with that place.’

Indira bent over our glass-topped coffee table, and made an imperious gesture in the direction of the velvet-lined box she’d brought the Wand in. Jay, to my fascination, obediently put the pretty thing back.

‘You’re taking it away?’ I said. ‘Already?’

‘Valerie needs it,’ she said. ‘It’s got to be photographed and filmed.’

Right, for the fake provenance records Val would be industriously spreading around online. ‘Pics for the rumour mill!’ I said. ‘I love my job.’

Jay exchanged a look with Indira. I could not flatter myself that it was a look of shared admiration for me. ‘I get results,’ I said defensively.

‘Are we forgetting that this particular mad plan was my concoction?’ said Jay.

‘You’re right.’ I picked up my empty chocolate cup and toasted Jay with it. ‘Here’s to my unholy influence rubbing off on you.’

Indira, surprisingly, grinned.

The Magick of Merlin: 4

I mentally banged my face against the steering wheel. Expressions of implicit and unshakeable confidence are a lot nicer when you’ve got something to work with. Otherwise, it’s the high road to disappointing your friends.

‘What would Nancy Drew do,’ I muttered.

Jay shook his head. ‘No good. Being fictional, Nancy Drew always had a convenient lead.’

‘How do you know?’

‘I may have read some of them.’

‘Uh huh?’

‘Or a lot of them.’

I grinned. ‘I knew there was a reason why I liked you.’

‘Hopefully there are one or two more.’

‘We can discuss that some other time.’

‘I look forward to it.’

‘All right, what would Poirot do? He didn’t need leads. He just needed to think.’

Jay made a show of consulting the watch he didn’t wear. ‘Right. Some people work best under pressure, so I’m giving you five minutes to think.’

‘Five?!’

‘You’ve already wasted three seconds.’

I gulped. ‘Thinking.’

And I did. For real.

‘Time’s up,’ said Jay, what seemed like thirty seconds later. ‘What have you got?’

‘Motive.’

‘More specifically?’

‘Why would somebody steal this particular grimoire?’

‘For one thing, it’s incredibly valuable.’

‘That’s one possible reason. In which case, we’re looking for a way someone might manage to sell a unique, priceless and recognisable grimoire for a fabulous sum without attracting notice.’

‘For another thing, it’s famous.’

‘Right. It might be because of its purported author, in which case we’re looking for someone with a Merlin obsession strong enough to consider it worth the manifold obstacles and risks involved with stealing it. I didn’t think to ask Mr. Elvyng if anyone had ever offered to buy the book from him. I’ll do that.’

‘There’s also hatred of the Elvyngs as a possible motive,’ said Jay. ‘So, spite.’

‘I think we covered that one, though. If there’s anyone out there with that level of a grudge against the family, they’ve been so quiet about it that we’ve no idea where to look for them.’

Jay nodded. ‘Last option is the contents. Is there a charm in there someone would just about kill to get their hands on?’

‘Possible, but tricky. For one thing, nothing either of the Elvyngs have said suggests they publicised the contents at all; indeed, they’ve had the strongest of motives not to. So who could even know what was in it?’

‘They didn’t always own it. Who had it thirty years ago?’

‘Possible line of enquiry, but low priority. Thirty years is a long time. Why wait so long to steal it? Anyway, if it’s someone who was familiar with it thirty years ago, they know the contents already. Why would they need the grimoire now?’

‘So you’re thinking it’s most likely either the money or the cachet.’

‘Yes. It’s time to go consult with our favourite book-sleuth. I want to know about any known fences of rare and illegal spell-books.’

‘You think Val would know?’ Jay sounded shocked. Adorably so.

‘Picture this. A woman — indeed, a Society — absolutely dedicated to rescuing beleaguered magickal paraphernalia wherever it may be found. And a world full of people eager to get their sticky hands on valuable artefacts, by means legal or otherwise. How many irreplaceable tomes end up changing hands on the black market, do you think? And how many would end up disappearing forever into the dubious care of unsuitable people, if somebody didn’t intercept them?’

‘Giddy gods,’ said Jay. ‘Val’s a library superhero.’

‘You should definitely tell her that.’

‘No. She’ll raise her brows at me.’

‘You’re scared of Val?’

‘No!’ said Jay, and coughed. ‘Er. Aren’t you?’

‘Not in the least.’

‘I knew you for a brave woman, but that beats everything.’

I didn’t kick him, because I was driving, but he had a narrow escape.

Upon sharing my flashes of brilliance with Val, I found myself regarded — keenly — in a fashion I might term “surprised and impressed in equal measure”.

‘That’s actually a great idea,’ said she, patently astounded. What, was it so unlikely I’d come up with a good idea?

I swallowed my sense of injury. ‘About the fence?’

If there was an eye-roll going on in response, I opted not to notice it. ‘No. What do you think I’ve been scouring the dark web for, all this time? I’ve got an appointment set up for you already. Best fence in the business. Been working in the industry for twenty years.’

I chose not to contest Val’s terming of black-market book trade as an “industry”. ‘And you just… made an appointment?’

‘She’s a friend.’

‘Of course.’

Val closed the heavy old book she’d had spread open on her desk when we came in. ‘No, I meant about the collectors. Lots of treasures vanish into private collections, and they don’t always go through a fence, either. An occasional enterprising soul has been known to hire people especially for the purpose of acquiring some special piece, with or without the consent of a given artefact’s present owner. And Merlin’s just the type to attract that kind of crazy.’

‘Question is,’ I mused, ‘if I were Merlin-obsessed and determined to possess his personal grimoire — or something said to be so — well, I can imagine I might be able to trace the sale of said grimoire into the Elvyngs’ possession a few decades back. And I might guess that they wouldn’t part with it again, not for mere cash. Supposing I’d resigned myself to a more questionable transfer of ownership, then, how would I go about hiring a team to steal it?’

‘And without bringing the police straight down on my head,’ added Jay.

‘I’m not aware of a convenient yet somehow top-secret forum for thief hire, if that’s what you’re driving at,’ said Val.

‘I actually mean it literally. I’m not speculating. I want practical advice.’

‘Ves?’ said Jay. ‘Don’t say it.’

I said it. ‘Forget scouring four-year-old records for traces of a spectacular book heist no one seems to know anything about. I want to hire a thief.’

Val stared at me. ‘To steal what?’

‘Something rare and Merlin-related, obviously.’

‘Ves. From where?’ That was Jay again, not quite expressing such deep-seated confidence in me as he had earlier.

‘From here. Obviously.’

‘Obviously.’

‘I don’t know if you knew, but we happen to have a priceless piece of Merlin memorabilia right here at the Society.’

‘We do?’ A flat stare from Val.

I nodded enthusiastically. ‘His very own Wand, made from ancient amber and bone—’

‘Ves. We have no such thing.’

‘As far as the world is shortly going to be concerned, we do. It’s in Ornelle’s care and we’ve done our best to keep it a secret all this time because obviously it’s precious, but some thoughtless person with a blabbing mouth will set all our care at nought, and broadcast its existence far and wide.’

Jay’s face had gone into his long-suffering look.

‘And whenever someone investigates they’ll find a neat trail all over the magickal web pertaining to just such a Wand, indubitably the property of Merlin.’

‘They will?’ said Val. ‘How’s that to come about?’

‘I’m sure you’ll find a way.’ I smiled seraphically.

Val’s eyes narrowed. ‘Then what?’

‘Then I pose as a Merlin-crazed collector of near inexhaustible means, whose attempts to purchase the Wand have been brutally rebuffed. That greedy Society has to pay. They’ve no right to keep Merlin’s Wand for themselves. It will serve them right to lose it!’

Silence.

‘What?’ I said. ‘Jay! I asked you how we were going to be different from all those failed investigators. This is how.’

‘By getting yourself arrested for instigating a robbery?’

‘That won’t happen.’

How not?’

‘Because we’ll be careful.’

‘We?’

‘Come on! How can I be expected to pull this off without the help of my improbably musical sidekick?’

‘You know you’re not exactly popular with Ornelle already, right?’

‘Right. She hates me anyway, nothing to lose.’

‘There’s still one problem here,’ said Jay.

‘Just the one?’ said Val.

‘How are we going to hire this legendary and as-yet unidentified thief team?’

‘I’m guessing… word of mouth,’ I said.

‘What?’

‘Rumour! No one just hangs out an ad for grand larceny—’

‘You think?’

‘—but if we were to let it be known, quietly, in certain circles, that we’re in the market, word might get around.’

Which certain circles?’

Poor Jay. I did exasperate him so. ‘We do have an appointment with a notable fence?’

‘Two Society employees have an appointment with a notable fence.’

‘Not quite true,’ said Val. ‘I only told Sally I’d be sending a friend over. I didn’t say what friend, or why.’

For all his supposed wariness of Val, Jay didn’t pull any punches when he saw a problem. ‘Do you think she’s likely to believe you’d collude with said friend to commit a robbery against your own employer?’

‘Why not?’ said Val. ‘People with shaky morals rarely have any difficulty believing in other people’s.’

‘So many years stuck at your desk,’ I said. ‘Slaving away for the Society. Long hours, low pay. You deserve the handsome fee you’re going to get for helping me get hold of this Wand.’

Val smiled. ‘Right. And the prospect of a job with inside help might be quite attractive to a professional thief, no?’

‘Oh?’ said Jay. ‘Why aren’t you just stealing the thing yourself, then, and selling it directly to the-collector-who-most-certainly-isn’t-Ves-in-disguise?’

‘First-time thief,’ said Val promptly. ‘I have qualms. Also mobility issues. No daring getaway in the nick of time for me.

‘She’s sold you on this idea, hasn’t she?’

‘There was one true thing Ves said in all this nonsense. I do spend a god-awful amount of time at my desk. Wouldn’t you fancy a change?’

Jay groaned. ‘You’re both getting arrested.’

‘Ye of little faith,’ said I. ‘If you’ll excuse me, I have an identity to prep.’

‘I realise I’m making myself Mr. Unpopular here,’ said Jay. ‘Again. But you’re overcomplicating this.’

‘Please don’t rain on my parade,’ I said.

‘If you want a parade, throw a birthday party,’ Jay said brutally. ‘This is an important mission for the future of magick.’

‘And you’ve a better idea?’ I said.

‘Actually, I do.’

‘Oh.’

‘We aren’t looking for whoever extracted the grimoire, are we? We’re looking for whoever ended up with it afterwards.’

‘What if they’re the same person?’ I said.

‘They might be. Might not. Point is, we aren’t actually the police. We’re here to retrieve the grimoire, not to punish the burglars. There has to be an easier way to cut straight to whoever has the grimoire now, not whoever took it out of William Elvyng’s house four years ago.’

‘And that way is what?’

‘If I might borrow the clever part of your plan—’

‘Jay.’ I gave him a wounded look. ‘All of it was clever.’

Jay ignored that. ‘Hold an auction.’

‘I’m not following.’

‘A Wand has recently come to light, purported to have belonged to Merlin himself. It’s in the hands of a private citizen at this time, and said (anonymous) person would like to flog it for the highest possible return. Supposing we establish convincing credentials for the thing, that ought to bring the collectors out in force, no? And nobody runs the risk of arrest.’

I felt a little deflated. It was a much better plan. ‘Can I still dress up?’

‘As whom?’

‘I could be the private citizen flogging the shiny thing.’

‘Which part of “anonymous” isn’t getting through?’

I sighed. ‘Party pooper.’

‘I do foresee a problem,’ said Val. ‘We don’t actually have a Wand that once belonged to Merlin. Forgive me if I’m wrong, but there are probably a few laws regarding deliberate fraud?’

‘We aren’tgoing to sell anything,’ said Jay. ‘We could have a kind of silent auction. Let people register to bid, and then at the last minute cancel it.’

‘Cancel it why?’

‘Our anonymous seller has had a fit of capriciousness and changed her mind.’

‘Still smells strongly of fraud.’

Jay stared both of us down. ‘Two minutes ago you were happy to hire a team of professional thieves to steal an equally fake artefact. Now you complain about a little misdirection?’

‘We’re disappointed about the grand larceny,’ I said. ‘It’s only natural.’

Jay rolled his eyes. ‘Right. If we’re agreed, I’m going to talk to Indira about manufacturing a certain fake but convincing Wand of Merlin.’

Jay exited stage left without another word.

Val busied herself shuffling papers.

‘I suppose he’s right,’ I said forlornly.

Val grunted. ‘I liked our plan better.’

‘Me too.’

The Magick of Merlin: 3

‘I see what you are thinking,’ said Mr. Elvyng, looking at me. ‘I realise what the obvious solution must appear to be. But I beg you to believe it impossible. What motive might either I or my daughter have, for faking the theft of our own grimoire?’

A good question. I wanted to ask about insurance money; Crystobel had mentioned that there had been an insurance valuation made of the grimoire, which suggested a policy also. But the Elvyngs were rolling in wealth. Everything about them proclaimed as much. Why go to such lengths for even more?

‘We made no claim upon the insurance policy,’ continued Mr. Elvyng, and I began to feel unnerved. Were my thoughts written so clearly upon my face? Or was he actually reading my mind?

‘Thank you for clearing that up,’ I said crisply. ‘One has to consider all the possibilities, of course.’

‘Of course.’

All right, so if they hadn’t even tried to claim the insurance then it wasn’t a scam. But why hadn’t they? Purely because it might look suspicious?

Well, they had no need of the money, and obviously hadn’t purchased the grimoire as an investment. But then why have an insurance policy at all?

‘Mr. Elvyng,’ said Jay. ‘Do you have any idea who might have taken the grimoire? Was there anyone who had shown signs of excessive interest in it, or who might have a grudge against your family?’

Mr. Elvyng was shaking his head. ‘You must understand, a family in our position will always have its detractors. There are those who envy our prosperity, or who disagree with our values, and who are quick to say so. But I am not aware of anyone with any serious grudge. As for interest in the grimoire… again, such an acquisition must attract interest, but we have never widely publicised our possession of it. I doubt that many people even knew that we had it.’

‘And what about within your own household?’ I said. ‘Who had access to this house four years ago?’

Mr. Elvyng gave a sigh. ‘Yes, I understand the direction of your thoughts. I have had the same ideas, but I have of necessity dismissed them.’

Charming naivety, or just wishful thinking? ‘I believe it must be considered our first line of investigation,’ I said gently. ‘Someone knew when you and your daughter would be away from home. Someone has managed to get past the charms placed upon the case, arguing a familiarity with the enchantments. And someone has got hold of a key, either one of the original two or an excellent copy. It must have been someone who had access to you or your daughter — more likely both of you — and opportunity enough to purloin your keys.’

‘Perhaps also someone who could move about this house without exciting comment,’ added Jay. ‘Someone whose presence here would not be questioned. No one broke in, did they?’

‘The police found no signs of forced entry,’ agreed Mr. Elvyng. He looked diminished suddenly; tired? Or weighed down with regret?

‘Who was here four years ago?’ I prompted. ‘Had they been with you for very long?’ I had a feeling Mr. Elvyng had a good idea who might have taken the grimoire, and he didn’t like it.

‘I cannot fault your logic, Ms. Vesper,’ said he. ‘The problem is, there was no one else with access to this house, four years ago.’

My mouth opened in surprise. I had not seen that coming. ‘No one?’ I echoed dumbly. ‘But what about that nice butler who admitted us?’

‘My health has deteriorated in the past two years, enough that Crystobel has persuaded me to add to my staff here. Mr. Baker and his associates save me a deal of effort and they are trusted employees, but they are all of recent hire. I had no need of such, four years ago.’

‘Cleaners?’ said Jay. ‘Gardeners?’

Mr. Elvyng’s faint, crooked smile appeared again. ‘Accomplished by magickal means, Mr. Patel. Then, and now.’

The Elvyngs had so much magick to throw around as to keep this entire manor — and its grounds — in perfect order without a single human employee? Giddy gods. What a glittering magickal heritage and a supply of raw argent couldn’t do.

I cleared my throat. ‘Er — and what about friends? Family members?’ I hesitated to ask the question; no one wanted to consider that their nearest and dearest might have betrayed them.

‘I have a sister,’ said Mr. Elvyng. ‘Her name is Anna Mason. She lives in America with her husband and children, and does not often come back. At the time of the theft, neither she nor her family had been near this house for at least a year.’

‘Forgive me,’ I said, ‘but you are certain of that?’

‘Yes. We have hired other investigators in the past few years. One of them conducted an exhaustive investigation into every connection of ours, and their traceable movements at the time. Anna was at home in Washington, together with Crystobel’s uncle and cousins. My own cousin — Jessica — was in London. None of my friends or Crystobel’s — few enough as they are — were seen anywhere near here that week, and I believe alibis were established for them all. So you see, it proved a fruitless line of enquiry.’

I exchanged a look of consternation with Jay. Everything Mr. Elvyng had said suggested a culprit known to the family, intimate with them; and yet, by this account, that was impossible.

What next, then? Could it really be the case that someone totally unconnected with the Elvyngs had pulled off such a seamless crime?

If so, we were dealing with — as Val had put it — a considerable power.

Mr. Elvyng did not conduct us himself to the grimoire’s annex. Considering his obvious ill health, I had not expected it of him. It was the butler (or whatever he was), Mr. Baker, who extracted us from William Elvyng’s fireside, and took us to the library. We left the Elvyng patriarch with a great many thanks (on both sides), and an invitation (from him) to call anytime we found ourselves with further questions.

The library at William Elvyng’s manor was (dare I say it) slightly disappointing. I suppose I had got carried away with my imaginings, considering the illustrious nature of the erstwhile star of the Elvyngs’ book collection. I’d expected a library to rival that of the Society. Instead, we were conducted into a handsome enough room, with a full complement of mahogany bookshelves, glass cases, polished desks and silken reading-chairs, but the actual quantity of books was rather modest. Probably they kept a great deal of their collection at the Academy, either for the daily use of the students, or in that cellar repository Jay had once talked of. These were just Mr. Elvyng’s own books.

I took note of the environs as we walked among those immaculate shelves. Only one door lead into the room, and that opened onto a panelled corridor connecting the library to the drawing-room and whatever lay beyond. We were on the first floor, one level removed from the ground; I made a note to ask, later, about the staircases.

A second door occupied space on the far wall, but that led into the grimoire’s annex. There was, as Mr. Elvyng had said, no other door there; certainly no way to get straight into that room from the outside. Whoever had taken the grimoire must have gone through a few other rooms at least, in order to reach this one. But then, I’d been working on the assumption that there must have been someone else in this sprawling pile of a manor at the time of the theft, even if Mr. Elvyng was away. But if that wasn’t true, the thief had enjoyed the luxury of waltzing through an empty house on their way to steal the grimoire; there hadn’t been anyone here to challenge them. All they had to do, then, was get in and out, without leaving any obvious signs that they had done so. Once inside, they would have had totally free rein.

Which made it strange that they hadn’t taken the opportunity to empty the house of valuables while they had been inside. But the police report had clearly stated that nothing else was reported missing.

The annex proved to be tiny. It had space enough only for the sizeable glass case, set upon a sturdy and ornate carved-oak pedestal, within which the grimoire had once been housed. Besides that, there was nothing; only polished wood panelling and the window Mr. Elvyng had mentioned, which I saw at once was too small for anyone to fit through, unless they had done so by magickal means. But again, why would anybody need to do that, if the house was empty? They could come through one of the doors, and wander up the stairs at their leisure. Provided they managed to switch off or disable the house alarms, which such a manor would certainly have. 

Jay, having prowled optimistically around the compact annex as though he might trip over something noteworthy, leaned over the grimoire’s case until his nose almost touched the glass. ‘Was all this built just for the grimoire, Mr. Baker?’ he said. ‘That you know of?’

‘I’m afraid I couldn’t say,’ said Mr. Baker, who had taken up a discreet post just inside the door, and stood waiting with hands folded. ‘It was before my time.’

Jay nodded. Whatever he was doing with his face two inches from the glass, I hoped he was uncovering something useful about the charms upon it.

‘This must have been,’ I said, patting the corner of the great glass box. ‘It looks sized for a specific book.’ There was an indentation in the velvet-covered interior, a perfect little nook in which a certain priceless grimoire could nestle. ‘Maybe the whole annex, too. It has the appearance of a converted airing cupboard.’

‘I was thinking the same thing,’ said Jay. ‘I wonder who built it?’

‘And when? Was it done around the same time the grimoire was purchased, or more recently?’

Whoever had constructed the annex might never have known what it was intended to house. But then again, they might have — or made some guesses about it, later. Or perhaps whoever had stolen the grimoire had been able to consult with the builders, and gained some information from them, as to the location and security of the room. I made a note to enquire with Mr. Elvyng shortly as to the date of the annex’s construction. If it had been thirty years ago, perhaps it was of no relevance now.

Jay and I left William Elvyng’s manor feeling discouraged.

‘I can see why multiple unnamed investigators abandoned the case,’ I said despondently as we got into my car. ‘There are no leads here at all.’

Jay shook his head, and sat staring sightlessly through the glass as I backed up and turned around.

‘You didn’t detect anything interesting about the glass case?’ I prompted.

‘Nothing. Whatever charms used to be on it are long gone.’

I sighed. ‘So someone outside the Elvyngs’ circle somehow managed to get into the house, past the alarms, and through the impenetrable enchantments on the glass case, which they somehow unlocked; proceeded to extract the grimoire, and then left again without leaving any trace behind?’

Jay said, ‘Apparently.’

‘Fingerprints?’ It was a faint hope.

Swiftly dashed. ‘Police report says no.’

‘Footprints?’

‘Nothing.’

‘Jay. We’re actually going to fail at this, aren’t we?’

‘No.’

‘The police and three different investigators came up with nothing. What have we got that’s going to make us different?’

Jay began ticking things off on his fingers. ‘The finest, if untried, magickal sleuth in England, and her improbably musical sidekick.’

My eyebrows went up. ‘That’s us?’

‘Resources of an unusual nature, presided over by the best librarian and book-sleuth in England.’

‘Val and the magickal dark web.’ I nodded. Fair.

‘Breathtakingly high stakes.’

‘You mean the inevitable and total decline of magick in all of Britain if we don’t find Crystobel’s crummy grimoire?’

‘Motivating, no?’

I muttered something incomprehensible, even to me.

‘Exactly when did it go from the most exciting book in the world to a “crummy grimoire”, by the way?’ said Jay.

‘About halfway through our fruitless meeting with the obliging William Elvyng.’

‘I wouldn’t say it was fruitless. We have discovered several ways not to investigate this crime.’

‘That would be more helpful if either of us could think of a single way to investigate this crime.’

‘You’re the great detective,’ said Jay, tapping out some unrecognisable melody on the dashboard of my car. ‘You can do this.’

‘You believe in me.’

‘I do.’

‘Thanks.’

‘Anytime.’

The Magick of Merlin: 2

William Elvyng lived less than fifteen miles from the city of York, which was the home of his emporium and his academy.

Naturally, he had an entire stately home all to himself.

‘Don’t ask about his wife,’ I said, as Jay and I drove up the driveway towards the house. The damned thing was huge — not so enormous as our House, of course, but crazily oversized for just one man. He had one of those elegant eighteenth-century piles, with a gorgeous symmetrical façade, formal gardens, stucco, a lake; everything.

‘Why not?’

‘She died, eleven years ago. According to the papers, William Elvyng never recovered.’

‘Do you know everything about these people?’

‘If I didn’t before, I do now.’

Jay, still in his not-quite-a-suit, looked sharp. He’d done something to his hair, too, some kind of windswept-but-orderly style that rather suited him.

I felt a moment’s envy; not over William Elvyng and his wonderful house, but the fortunate few towards whom Jay had directed his charm earlier in the day. I’d never seen him so well turned out.

I pulled up and parked just outside the handsome columned portico. I kid you not; as I got out of the car and smoothed my cream cotton dress, an actual butler appeared at the door to welcome us.

He even bowed. ‘Miss Vesper and Mr. Patel?’ he said.

‘That’s us.’ I walked over, smilingly intent upon not turning my heel on the gravel driveway. The Elvyngs’ butler was on the younger side, fortyish perhaps, with elegantly greying hair immaculately arranged, and a perfect dark suit, not too expensive.

‘Is that William?’ hissed Jay in my ear.

I shook my head. I’d seen pictures enough of Crystobel’s father, and this wasn’t him. ‘Butler, I think,’ I breathed.

Jay gave a tiny, almost inaudible snort.

Well, indeed.

I liked Mr. Butler, though, however incongruous his existence seemed in this day and age. He ushered us into the house as though we were honoured guests arriving for a garden party, and immediately promised to bring refreshments to the drawing-room. ‘Mr. Elvyng is expecting you,’ he said, and conducted us thither at once. He discreetly withdrew as soon as we were fairly through the door, presumably to fetch the aforementioned refreshments.

The interior of the manor matched its beautiful exterior, of course, in that it was perfectly maintained, and sumptuously decorated. The Elvyngs hadn’t made a museum of the place, and filled it exclusively with period-appropriate antiques. Instead, they’d had a top-notch interior designer in. That fortunate soul had created a look obviously inspired by fashionable décor of the seventeen-hundreds, but with a modern update. The house was plush, luxurious and gorgeously coloured and I entered William Elvyng’s drawing-room with a strong feeling that I could really make myself at home in his house.

My questing eye also detected more than one magickal trinket of interest and (no doubt) high value, artfully poised upon shelves and console tables. How the other half live, right?

William Elvyng was ensconced in an elegant, brocade armchair near the fire when we came in (an actual fire, despite the late summer heat beyond the walls of the manor). He rose upon seeing us, and came forward with outstretched hand and affable expressions of welcome. I admit to being agreeably surprised, though I don’t know why. Had I expected a repellent personality to go with all this wealth and ease?

‘So good of you to lend us your skills,’ said Mr. Elvyng. ‘Crystobel and I have always felt the greatest respect for the Society’s work.’

Crystobel’s father had an air of frailty about him, which perhaps explained the fire. He was rather older than I’d expected, considering Crystobel was only a few years off my own age. His pictures in the media I now realised were inaccurate, on the flattering side; he was well into his seventies and not in good health. His paper-white face, softened as it was with smiles, still had a pinched look about it, and his shoulders stooped. Someone had carefully arranged his thinning white hair to disguise an encroaching baldness.

‘It’s our pleasure,’ I was saying smoothly, and with perfect truth. Everything about the mission appealed to me, from the sleuthing to the visiting notable people in their spectacular houses. Did I have a taste for splendour? Apparently. Was that somewhat inconvenient considering my profession and prospects? Rather.

I resolutely turned my eyes away from a beautiful gilded clock enthroned upon the mantel, and fixed them instead upon Mr. Elvyng.

‘Is it all right if we ask you some questions about the grimoire?’ Jay said. ‘And the theft?’

‘Certainly, certainly,’ said Mr. Elvyng, gesturing us to take seats. He restored himself to the embrace of his own armchair with some care, and sat there looking as though a crane might be required to haul him out of it again. I felt rather touched that he had gone to the trouble of rising to greet us at all.

I installed myself upon the matched brocade sofa, conscious of a desire to move with an elegance to match the house, and folded my hands primly in my lap. ‘The police reports were lacking,’ I began. ‘Can you tell us what happened on the day of the theft?’

Mr. Elvyng’s lips twisted at my mention of the police. Clearly they had fallen some way short of impressing him. ‘The problem was, Crystobel gave them too much information,’ he said.

‘Too much?’ I repeated.

He nodded. ‘She should never have mentioned Merlin’s name. The officer who came to the house, well, he visibly stopped listening from that moment. Thought it some kind of publicity stunt, I believe. As though we need any more of that.’

I made a sympathetic noise.

‘I kept the grimoire here, under my eye,’ Mr. Elvyng continued. ‘Perhaps that was foolish of me, but you understand — an irreplaceable item — I couldn’t entrust it to one of the public buildings, with people going in and out all the time. And I couldn’t be comfortable with it lying in a vault somewhere, either. I wanted it where I could personally see to its safety.

‘Well, perhaps I could have prevented its theft — had I been here. But once or twice every year I pay an official visit to the Academy in York. It’s expected. I go there to talk to the teachers, meet a few of the students, permit my photograph to be taken. That kind of thing. That year, when I returned, the grimoire was gone.’

‘How soon did you discover it missing?’ I said.

‘Within a day or two of my return. It is — was — my regular habit to go into the room where it was kept, and look at it. Read a few pages. You understand, perhaps.’

‘Absolutely,’ I murmured, and I did. If I owned something that spectacular, I’d have a hard time leaving it alone.

So would Val.

‘Well, I did so, perhaps, the day after I arrived home, and that’s when I knew it was gone.’

‘Where was it kept?’ said Jay.

‘You will be shown, shortly,’ said Mr. Elvyng. ‘But I kept it in its own annex off the library here at the house. The room has no access to the outdoors, and only one, small window, which is kept secure. I had a glass case created for it. It had every charm we could muster between us for its security, as I’m sure you can imagine. The thing is unbreakable, and kept locked at all times.’

‘Was it broken?’ said Jay.

Mr. Elvyng shook his head. ‘Perfectly intact. The lock as well.’

‘So someone had a key.’

‘It appears so. Before you ask, there are two known keys in existence: one in my possession, and one in my daughter’s. Both keys were accounted for at the time. Mine was with me at the Academy — I always carry it about with me — and Crystobel was travelling in France that week, her key with her.’

‘So either someone managed to make a copy,’ I mused, ‘or the lock was opened by some other method.’

‘Magickal, do you mean?’ said Mr. Elvyng. ‘It is not impossible, but nearly so. Believe me when I say the charms laid upon the case, lock included, were immensely powerful.’

I had no trouble believing him on that point. ‘Was the lock made from argent, by any chance?’ I asked, struck by a sudden insight.

His smile was faint. ‘Very insightful, Ms. Vesper. The lock itself is made from commoner materials, but some of the mechanisms were worked from argent.’

‘The keys, as well?’

Mr. Elvyng nodded.

The argent workings would be amplifying the effects of any charms laid upon them, which meant that the lock behind which Merlin’s Grimoire had been kept was probably the most secure in the whole of England, if not beyond.

Interesting.

‘Is there any way those charms could have been changed?’ Jay said.

‘If they were, they were changed back again before I discovered the theft,’ said Mr. Elvyng. ‘I noticed nothing amiss with the case.’

I wondered if the thoughts wandering through my own mind reflected Jay’s at all. If Mr. Elvyng was right, and the case was so impregnable, what did that suggest? Either someone had managed to copy one of the two known keys without their owners knowing it, and that would be difficult indeed, if both of them were made from pure argent. Who but the Elvyngs have a supply of magickal silver lying about?

The alternative must be that the case showed no signs of being broken into because it hadn’t been. Could it be possible that the apparent suspicions of the police had some truth to them after all? By Mr. Elvyng’s account, the only people who could so neatly have made off with the grimoire were either himself or his daughter. If this was the tale they had told to the police, no wonder they hadn’t been taken seriously.

The Magick of Merlin: 1

I could tell you just how much the Elvyng family, in the person of William Elvyng (Crystobel’s father), had paid for Merlin’s Grimoire back in the eighties. I could also tell you how much the spell-book had been valued at, about eight years ago.

Believe me, you don’t want to know.

You’d spit chips. Like I did.

How do people get so wealthy?’ I complained to Val, as I sat one morning in the library at Home, perusing the Elvyngs’ photos and documents pertaining to the impossible spell-book.

‘The argent operation can’t hurt,’ she said, without looking up from her laptop. ‘And you’ve seen the prices at the Emporium.’

Right. If you happen to be the only family in the country with a secret supply of the most important magickal substance known to man, and therefore sole rights to stock a shop with souped-up magickal artefacts, you would be rolling in it.

History had rather favoured the Elvyngs.

I sighed.

Val looked up, and directed at me the Quizzical Brow. ‘Suffering some envy?’

‘Aren’t you?’

Val shrugged. ‘What would you even do with that kind of wealth, if you had it?’

‘Well, I…’ I had to pause, and think about it. I could live in my own personal castle, with a swarm of servants to wait upon me hand and foot. I could have a private plane, and go anywhere I liked. I could eat every day at the finest, Michelin-starred restaurants in the country.

None of which sounded much like me.

‘I’d become the Society’s secret benefactor,’ I decided. ‘Oodles of funding, every year, and nobody would know where it came from.’

‘Like Ancestria Magicka.’

I grimaced. ‘Right.’

‘It’s too bad you’ve just told me, then, isn’t it? Cover blown.’

I sniffed. ‘You would never give away my secrets.’

‘Not without handsome compensation, anyway.’ Val missed the wounded look I sent her, having returned her attention to her laptop. Presumably she was still deep in the magickal dark web, scouring the online world for any mention of lucrative book heists, or the sale of improbably expensive grimoires.

I went back to Crystobel’s documents. I’d already lingered a long time over her photos of the grimoire itself, torn between wonder and horror. The book was old, and by that I mean old. Hand-stitched bindings, scrubby leather covers, crumbling pages — the works.

So far, so convincing.

I may have been a little disappointed at how ugly it was. I was definitely disappointed by its poor condition. Didn’t people know to take care of priceless artefacts?

My mind drifted back to the book-box that had stolen Jay’s heart, back when we’d (unwisely) paid a visit to the Elvyng Emporium. The box was enchanted; slowly, gradually, anything placed in it would be restored to a better condition, some of the deleterious effects of time reversed. I had no doubt the Elvyngs would have kept Merlin’s Grimoire in just such a box, which suggested it had reached them in a still worse state.

Merlin would’ve been crushed.

If there ever was a Merlin.

On this point, I remained profoundly sceptical. Merlin was a myth. Besides, while his purported grimoire was scarily old, it still wasn’t old enough. As near as anyone can determine, a hypothetical real Merlin would have lived something like fifteen hundred years ago, and possibly rather more; surely no book, however magickal, could have survived in legible condition for so long?

But all this might be immaterial. Crystobel had said, I am less concerned with the precise identity of the book’s author than I am with the contents. Whoever had written it, the grimoire contained charms and enchantments the likes of which most of us would kill for. That’s why the Elvyngs wanted it back — at almost any price.

‘Surely,’ I said aloud, struck by a sudden thought, ‘they’d have copies of every page.’

Val looked up, frowning. ‘What?’

‘Of the grimoire. The Elvyngs, I mean. Why do they need it back so badly? They wouldn’t be so careless as to keep only one source of such important magicks. They would have records. Photos. Transcriptions.’

‘No doubt, but now they also have competition. Potentially, someone else could be using all that secret magick.’ She blinked sightlessly at me. ‘That’s a good point, Ves.’

‘What point did I make?’

‘Whoever stole the book. Did they just want to own it because it’s valuable, or did they want to use it?’

‘Both?’ I ventured.

‘Maybe. Maybe not. Anyone suddenly coming out with copies of magicks only the Elvyng family have been able to produce would attract a certain attention, no?’

‘If it were known. The thieves could be out there, working marvels in secret.’

‘So they could. The question remains: was it the book itself that was wanted, or was it something in the book that was important? A charm or something, that the Elvyngs wouldn’t share?’

‘Good questions all, Val, but I don’t see how they can be answered until we find the thieves.’

She sighed, and her mind came back from wherever it had gone. ‘Probably not. Still, it’s something else to search for. Accounts of unusual feats performed by unlikely parties.’

The laptop once again swallowed her attention whole.

I stared, a little hopelessly, at my pile of papers. I’d covered the desk in them. I had not only Crystobel’s documents, but sheaves of print-outs I’d squirreled up from all over the internet. Every mention I could find of the Elvyng family’s doings for the past several years (lots of attending-of-events and sightings-at-magickal-libraries, plus the various accomplishments of the individual family members, and the doings of their prestigious academy). Val had been hoping for reports of bad blood between them and someone else — another family, or organisation. Something.

No luck. They were perfect. Everyone loved them.

I had also struck out on the subject of Merlin’s Grimoire in the media, in that there was almost no mention of such a thing. Ever. All I’d been able to dig up was scant reference to the auction at which William Elvyng had purchased the book, and the account consisted of exactly three lines: a minimal description of the book, its purported provenance, and to whom it had been sold.

It hadn’t mentioned who had sold it, and when I had called the auction house to find out, they’d claimed they no longer had access to those records.

Considering we were at a distance of some decades from that sale, that was probably even true.

There had been no reports on the theft. The Elvyngs had kept that one very quiet. Why?

I heard the heavy clunk of one of the library’s ancient brass doorknobs turning, and the door to the main reading-room swung open.

Jay stood upon the threshold, eyes wide.

‘Hi,’ I said, beaming.

Jay stared at me like I was some kind of apparition.

‘What?’ I said.

‘How did I get here?’

‘You… were expecting to end up somewhere else?’

Jay released the door, and composed himself. ‘Actually, yes,’ he said, ambling in. ‘I’ve just left my room.’

So he’d expected to find the usual panelled passageway beyond, and instead had been neatly whisked straight downstairs. ‘House thinks you should visit us,’ I suggested. ‘I was thinking the same thing!’

It struck me that he was looking unusually smart. His beloved leather jacket was nowhere in sight; instead he wore a pair of neatly-pressed navy trousers and a matching jacket, with a white shirt underneath. Not a suit, but a far cry from jeans and leather.

‘Been somewhere interesting?’ I said, having looked him thoroughly up and down.

‘Police station.’

What?’

He grinned. ‘I went voluntarily.’

‘Jay, you’re the last person I’d suspect of getting yourself arrested, ever. For any reason.’

‘I can’t decide whether you say that as a good thing.’

‘I mean, I know I’m a rebel but I’m not that bad—’

‘What did you get?’ Val, impatient with our nonsense, firmly interrupted. Indeed, she directed her if-you-don’t-mind look at Jay, the kind that sets new recruits all a-quiver.

Even Jay, a little, for he snapped to attention. ‘Right. I wasn’t getting anywhere trying to talk to them on the phone, so I went in person. Looking respectable.’ For some reason, he appeared to be directing that last comment at me, for he frowned in my general direction. ‘After some fast talking and a deal of flirting—’

‘Flirting?’ I blurted.

‘Having taken a leaf or two out of the Book of Vesper—’

Me? I’d never flirt my way into classified information.’

I got the raised eyebrows look from Jay and Val.

‘Fine,’ I sighed. ‘Did it work?’

By way of answer, Jay pulled a notebook from a pocket and flipped through it. ‘I did manage to blag my way into a look at the case file for the grimoire theft. I think. The Elvyngs weren’t too open about which book it was or why it was important; the incident report listed it merely as “a valuable book”, taken from the home of William Elvyng. Or, reported missing. Apparently there were no leads.’

‘None? Not one?’

‘No signs of forced entry, nothing else taken, no traces of any strangers in the house that day. I got the impression whoever responded to the call might have thought the Elvyngs were wasting their time.’

‘You mean they might have made a false report of theft?’

‘Which seems unlikely, before you get carried away with the idea,’ Jay cautioned. ‘Why would they do that? Insurance fraud? They have more money than they can spend already. It’s more likely that, finding themselves stymied, the police were only too happy to declare it hokum and set the case aside.’

‘And the Elvyngs let it go?’ I stared. ‘That’s spectacularly unlikely.’

Jay restored the notebook to his pocket. ‘They didn’t chase the police about it, at any rate.’

‘They hired a private detective,’ I said. ‘They must have.’

‘You mean, besides us?’

‘Definitely. It’s been four years. We need to find out who that was, and whether they discovered anything.’

‘Agreed.’ Jay leaned against the nearest desk, hands in his pockets. ‘What have you two dug up?’

‘While you were charming paperwork out of the police? Not much,’ I said. ‘The theft wasn’t picked up by the media, as there’s no mention of it, and the book wasn’t much talked about before, either. It seems to have been kept a deep, dark secret. And as far as I can tell, the Elvyngs have no enemies.’

Jay looked at Val.

‘Don’t look at me with the eyes of hope,’ she said. ‘So far I’m turning up nothing.’

‘No four-year-old shady auctions purporting to be selling off the most remarkable spell-book in the world?’

‘Not a one. Nor any chatter about thrilling heists pulled off against the most powerful magickal family in England.’

I gave a disappointed sigh, and laid my cheek upon my desk. ‘Reality is so disheartening.’

‘But there was a thrilling heist,’ Jay said encouragingly. ‘And it’s the best kind.’

‘The incredibly secret, no-one-could-possibly-track-us-down kind?’

‘Exactly. Challenge accepted?’

I sat up again. ‘Challenge accepted.’ I withdrew my phone, and dialled the number I had wrung out of Crystobel. I hadn’t yet had occasion to call her since she’d given us our unusual mission. I felt a curious flicker of anticipation — nerves? — upon doing so now.

She answered quickly. ‘Miss Vesper?’

‘Ves,’ I said. ‘Hi, Crystobel.’ After the obligatory exchange of pleasantries, I said: ‘Listen, we’re going to need an invitation to your dad’s house.’

‘My father? Why?’

‘We’d like a look at the place the grimoire used to be stored, and I’d really like to ask Mr. Elvyng a few questions about it.’

‘I can arrange that,’ she said.

‘Great. Also, do you happen to know if anyone else was ever contracted to go after the grimoire?’

‘Oh, yes. We went through three agencies at least. Father would have all the reports, I’m sure.’

‘Three? And nobody found anything?’

‘Nobody found enough, certainly.’

‘I’m touched by your faith in us.’

‘It’s desperation, Miss Vesper. If the regular investigators have failed us, I am forced to look elsewhere.’

‘So we’re the wild card?’

‘Something like that, yes.’

Alchemy and Argent: 20

‘Nancy Drew,’ I breathed. ‘I’ve read every single title there ever was.’

‘So?’ said Jay.

‘Every Sherlock Holmes. Agatha Christie. All of them.’

‘Reading detective stories doesn’t make you a detective, Ves.’

‘No. But it can make you want to be a detective, and suddenly I do.’

‘Wish granted.’

‘Cordelia Vesper, Book Detective.’

‘You already have a job, had you forgotten?’

I ignored this.

‘Merlin’s Grimoire,’ said Val. Upon our return Home, we’d gone first to Milady’s tower, second to breakfast, and had then, inevitably, rattled down to the library. Jay had voted for a few hours’ sleep first. Lightweight.

‘Isn’t it exciting?’ I beamed.

Val looked monumentally unimpressed. ‘It sounds like a fool’s errand.’

‘No!’

‘Like Ms. Elvyng has no intention of parting with her hard-won and priceless argent, but instead of being so rude as to say so, she’s sent us on a goose chase.’

‘She has all that proof of the book’s existence,’ I objected, gesturing at the laptop sitting on the corner of her enormous desk. Crystobel had been prompt in sending everything over. Val’s email was bristling with scanned paperwork.

‘Could be faked.’

‘That would be a lot of effort to go to just to avoid having to say no,’ I said. ‘Besides, when did she have time to prepare it? We only spoke to her a few hours ago.’

‘Maybe she set up this whole thing. Maybe she knew you’d be on her tail, and prepared a red herring especially.’

‘Val. Much as I respect a sound conspiracy theory, that’s usually my province. Your job is good sense.’

Val’s gaze flicked to Jay, then back to me. ‘Do you have any idea how many impossible books I’ve gone hunting for?’

‘Um. A few?’ I hazarded.

‘Quite a few. Books that somebody swore had existed, at one time or another. Books that could change everything, if only we could get a look at their contents. None of them ever worked out, Ves.’

And I saw the problem. Val had hoped, over and over again, and been disappointed. Some irrepressible part of her was hoping again; hoping that this incredible tome might be the one that was real. That it might have survived the destructive passage of centuries. That we might be able to reclaim it.

She didn’t want to hope, because she didn’t want the disappointment.

‘How about this,’ I said. ‘We’ll hope for the impossible things. You can go on being the Voice of Reason, or even the Voice of Crazy Conspiracy Theories. I’ll step aside. I don’t mind.’

‘We might need a bit of help, though,’ Jay said. ‘That’s why we’re here.’

That won him a scowl. ‘Right, ask the library lady, because she knows everything about all books known to man or beast. If I knew about this one, don’t you think I would have moved heaven and earth to get it already?’

‘Three weeks ago, we knew of no source of raw argent,’ Jay said. ‘Three months ago, we didn’t even know argent existed.’

‘What’s your point?’

‘Nothing’s impossible.’

Val grunted.

‘We get to read it, Val,’ I said. ‘Imagine.’

‘I am imagining.’ Sourly said.

‘I promise to find it,’ I said solemnly. ‘And if I don’t, you can have my crystal chest and all of its contents.’

‘Including the regenerating tea cup?’ said Val.

‘Yes.’

‘And the endless chocolate pot?’

I swallowed. ‘Yes.’

Her eyes narrowed. ‘Lies.’

‘Truth. We need that argent, and I want a look at that book.’

She heaved a great sigh — and then set aside her objections in the twinkling of an eye. ‘Right,’ she said. ‘Jay, you’re on police duty. Get in touch. See if you can get them to send over any police reports they have on the theft. Pull Milady’s influence if you have to.’

‘But why would—’ began Jay.

Val glared.

‘Right.’ He shot up from his chair, and left.

‘Ves, media duty. News reports. Gossip pages. Obscure treatises upon the arcane. We’ll need every reference to Merlin’s Grimoire that’s ever been made, especially any that intersect with mentions of the Elvyng family. Plus, if you find any mention of bad blood between the Elvyngs and any other family or group, highlight that too.’

‘Yes, ma’am.’ I got up from my chair. ‘And what are you going to do?’

‘Me? I’m going to deep dive into the magickal dark web.’ Val stretched, cracked her knuckles, and opened up her laptop. ‘Somebody had the gumption and the know-how to steal from the Elvyngs, and get away with it. I rather fear we’re dealing with a considerable power.’

Alchemy and Argent: 19

It took us ten minutes to trudge our way through to a road, by the end of which time I had mud up to my knees and I couldn’t feel my toes. ‘Isn’t it meant to be summer?’ I groused, trying in vain to shake the cold, sludgy grime out of my sandals.

Jay made no answer. He glanced up and down the road, which was a beautiful construct of white stone. The tree-cover having thinned somewhat, it shone silver under the moon. ‘I think this way,’ he said, picking a direction at what looked to me like random.

Being Jay, though, he was perfectly right. Soon enough, the walls of a town appeared on the horizon, with clustered houses behind it. Built from the same white stone as the road, the town looked a creation of pure magick, like it had coalesced out of moonlight itself, and would vanish with the rising of the sun.

Hell, this was fairyland. For all I knew, that’s exactly what it was.

‘Hoping that’s Everynden,’ I said.

‘The maps showed no other towns in the vicinity of that henge,’ said Jay. ‘Though being two hundred years out of date, who knows.’

‘And the mines are where in relation to the town?’

‘Somewhere around here,’ said Jay, and fell over.

I ran to his side. ‘Jay! Curse it, we should have something sensible out here, like lights.’

No answer. I searched the darkened ground for his prone form, and found nothing but empty air.

‘Jay?’

He hadn’t fallen over. He had disappeared.

‘Jay!’ I yelled. ‘This is a bad habit of yours!’

‘Sorry,’ he said from behind me, and I leapt a foot or so in the air.

‘And to think I used to like the night-time,’ I said plaintively. ‘Where did you go?’

All I could see of him was a tall, shadowed figure with threads of moonlight in his hair — and a glowing nugget of argent in the hand he held up. ‘Remember Torvaston’s tower?’

‘It was only the other week.’

‘And how the snuffbox worked?’

‘Like a passport to his majesty’s bedchamber.’

‘I don’t know if that’s a passive property of this argent stuff, or only a popular use for it, but thanks to this burny nugget of argent I appear to have found the mines.’ He held out a hand, which I tentatively took.

One step, two, and… three steps. Four. It took five or six before I realised we’d travelled from the grasslands outside Everynden into somewhere else. An underground somewhere, if the sudden, crisp chill in the air and the dampness against my bare arms was anything to go by.

‘I wonder if her queenship knew it would do that,’ I said.

‘Conspiracy theory says yes,’ said Jay.  

‘Top marks!’

Down below, even the moonlight failed us. We were entombed in the kind of utter darkness that blind, screaming panics are made of, and I engaged in a touch of unseemly haste as I summoned a little light-wisp to save us. White radiance flared. I sent the wisp floating high, and took a moment to collect myself as I looked around.

If you’ve ever visited natural cave formations, you’ll have some idea of what we saw. It wasn’t one of those vast, echoing kinds, the sort it would take half an hour to cross. Just a little one, with walls of mottled stone smoothed by endless years and the soft trickle of running water seeping in from somewhere above.

Here and there, deep holes had been hacked into the stone. Whatever had been removed from these jagged channels had left the faintest, silvery gleam behind, and my heart leapt.

‘Look,’ I said, trotting over to the nearest of these, and gingerly laying my hand against that silver tracery. It didn’t burn me, not the way the pure argent had, but I felt a sharp thrumming, as of lingering potential. Memory? Magick? The argent may be gone, but it had left something of itself behind. Something Mary Werewode had learned to capitalise upon.

Jay began a circuit of the cave, the soft sounds of his footsteps drifting back to me. ‘I don’t see any new argent, er, growing, or whatever it does,’ he reported.

‘This can’t be the entire mine, though,’ I answered. ‘Surely just a small part of it? And what about the moonlight?’

‘I see I have guests,’ said a new voice, and I once again jumped half out of my skin.

I whirled about, but saw no one. ‘Who’s there?’

‘Can you not guess?’ It was a woman’s voice, pitched a little low, and perfectly composed. My eyes narrowed. I’d heard it before, and recently too.

‘Ms. Elvyng?’ I ventured.

She laughed, and came at last into view, traversing some hidden bend in the tunnels we had yet to discover. ‘Sharp,’ she said, smiling at me. ‘Somehow I knew the two of you would be troublesome.’

I looked around for Jay, and found him drawing nearer to me. Unease prickled, and I despised the gut-dropping sense of uncertainty that briefly robbed me of all the sharp wits she had just praised. This we had not anticipated. What would she do? Was the argent a secret worth killing for?

She stopped a few feet before us, amusement still curving her lips and brightening her eyes. ‘You look white,’ she said to me. ‘And braced for combat,’ she added, looking then at Jay. ‘Come now, you can hardly imagine I would harm you, and I hope you won’t be so rude as to offer violence to me. The Society has better manners, no?’

‘We are trespassing,’ I pointed out.

‘Yes, and I’d be inclined to escort you out. Only I cannot imagine how you could possibly have contrived to enter here without the queen’s permission.’

‘She didn’t precisely give permission,’ I admitted. ‘But that’s because she didn’t tell us about this place. She did give us a… clue, however.’

Jay held up the nugget of argent. ‘Which, as it turns out, was also an entry ticket.’

Crystobel Elvyng nodded. ‘You know, the Society has a reputation for persistence. Wit. Expertise. To a degree frequently decried as highly inconvenient, and I find I now understand what they mean. It isn’t precisely ideal that you’ve nosed your way into this particular secret.’

‘We have good reason,’ I said quickly.

‘Which is what, exactly? I am afraid this partnership is not open to new members at this time.’

‘Partnership?’

‘The Yllanfalen own the mines. We own the secret of dredging new argent from within them. It is an arrangement which suits us both.’

‘We have zero designs on your secrets.’ It cost me to say that, for this was a secret I badly wanted to be let into. Who wouldn’t? But the goal was not the process; it was the product we wanted.

‘Just on the argent,’ I added.

Crystobel Elvyng raised one elegant brow. ‘I don’t precisely follow.’

‘If you have a supply of raw argent, we’re buying,’ Jay said.

‘Well,’ I amended. ‘Most probably the Court at Mandridore will do most of the buying.’

Crystobel Elvyng looked from me to Jay and back again, no longer amused. A frown of mild puzzlement creased her brow. I noticed she wore heavy, protective gloves, and a collection of stoppered glass vials hung from a belt around her waist. She’d been working down here? ‘Why don’t you tell me exactly what it is you’re trying to do?’

A little later, we sat at our ease in an adjacent chamber, surrounded by glimmering chunks of the mysterious argent we’d spent so many weeks searching for. A break in the otherwise uninterrupted stone of the cavernous ceiling permitted a few stray beams of moonlight to filter down, and in the channel below, pale moonsilver formed in the rock walls.

I sat upon a low, smooth stone, Jay beside me, watching as Crystobel went through a range of incomprehensible motions involving the contents of those same vials. ‘To be truthful,’ she was saying. ‘I don’t precisely know how or why it works. None of us do, at this distance of time, for Mary stopped speaking to us long ago. I only know a certain range of motions that must be gone through, and conditions that must be maintained, in order to keep this process going. These,’ she said, looking severely at me, ‘we will not be sharing.’

‘That’s fine,’ I said, though it wasn’t. My scholar’s heart, ever avaricious for secrets, ached for more information, and I knew Val would be spitting chips. ‘But can you supply the project?’

‘I can make no concrete promises. As you may be able to tell, the argent does not form quickly, nor in great quantities.’

‘I don’t know that we need masses of it,’ I said. ‘That’s a question for Orlando.’

She didn’t ask who Orlando was. Doubtless she knew him by reputation already. ‘When I came to see you,’ she said, glancing briefly at us, ‘I had expected the Society would be open with me about its reasons for pursuing information about Cicily — and, as I suspected, my argent.’

‘Fair,’ I allowed.

‘It’s a sensitive project,’ said Jay, when I said nothing else. ‘We, um, haven’t always known who we can trust with the full details.’

‘There are those who would gladly co-opt the whole thing for their own gain,’ I added, thinking very much of Fenella Beaumont as I spoke. She’d said as much, last time we had seen her. Ancestria Magicka will be the ones to restore magick to Britain.

‘And you thought we might be just such a type?’ said Crystobel.

‘No. But we didn’t know that you were not. And you know, we were hoping the most prominent magickal family in England might not be keeping the most important secret in magick all to themselves.’

She inclined her head, and stoppered the last of her vials. I’d strained my eyes trying to get a glimpse of their contents, but besides vague impressions of colour and an occasional glimmer of magick, I’d discerned nothing of use. ‘I suppose my behaviour has been similarly suspicious towards you,’ she allowed. ‘Or I might have attempted a negotiation before. As it was, I could have no better idea of your motives than you had of mine.’

‘The Society could be a collection of soulless, money-grubbing thieves,’ I agreed.

‘Some might say that it is,’ said Jay.

True. Some might, indeed.

‘But you say not?’ said Crystobel.

‘Emphatically not. We’re the good guys.’

Crystobel gave a small smile. ‘Well, then,’ said she, stripping off her gloves. ‘I believe I will have two conditions.’

I straightened, sensing a challenge. Conditions. That boded either excitingly or appallingly, depending on what kind of a woman Crystobel Elvyng really was. ‘Oh?’

‘It is impossible to do otherwise than support this particular of the Society’s aims, and as such my family will supply your argentine needs — within reason — free of cost. If the following conditions are met.’

Free? I sat up even straighter. That either meant Crystobel was a woman of extraordinary generosity — in which case, I felt even guiltier for distrusting her so much before — or, she had one hell of a set of conditions for us.

‘One,’ she said. ‘The Society will not publicise any part of this process. Indeed, I prefer that the world at large continues in utter ignorance that it even exists.’

An obvious enough request, and not too unreasonable. It would be better if such a secret wasn’t left in the hands of a single family; that was hardly fair. But it wasn’t our business to interfere in a private pact between the Elvyngs and the Yllanfalen. Besides, if (when?) we succeeded with our goal, these traces of argent would no longer be half so necessary. There’d be more than magick enough in Britain, for everything good and marvellous anyone might wish to do.

‘Two,’ she went on. ‘I want Merlin’s grimoire.’

‘What?’ I blurted.

She just looked at me.

‘Merlin,’ I repeated. ‘Merlin’s grimoire.’

‘A reasonable trade, I think?’

‘But,’ I said, and stopped, my brain reeling. ‘But—’

‘There never was a Merlin,’ said Jay. ‘And therefore, there can be no Merlin’s grimoire.’

‘That is a debatable point.’

Jay and I, mutually thunderstruck, stared at Crystobel.

Jay recovered first. ‘It’s an impossible task.’

‘Can’t we just pay for the argent?’ I pleaded. Even if it cost half the earth — which it would — that would be a more achievable price to pay than an impossible artefact.

‘Money I can get,’ said Crystobel. ‘I do not especially need more.’

I got a grip. ‘You must realise how crazy this sounds,’ I said, and I wondered at myself, for was I not usually the one enthusiastically promoting the craziest of ideas? ‘If you can offer us some proof that this artefact exists—’

‘I know it exists,’ said Crystobel calmly. ‘My family used to own it.’

‘Um,’ I said.

‘Used to?’ prompted Jay.

‘It was stolen from us. Four years ago. The police were never able to recover it.’ She smiled when I opened my mouth to speak, and added, ‘Yes, I can offer proof. There is a purchase receipt, my father’s property, listing its acquisition at a private auction. I also possess some photographs of the piece, and copies of one or two pages, plus an official valuation of the book for insurance purposes.’

I’d run out of objections that ran along the lines of but that’s impossible. ‘Merlin,’ I croaked. ‘Cannot be.’

Crystobel shrugged one shoulder. ‘Truthfully, I am less concerned with the precise identity of the book’s author than I am with the contents. Whether or not it was penned by the real Merlin, or merely someone using the name, it is priceless and irreplaceable. Its contents are responsible for many of the magicks and wonders upon which our family depends, and I must have it back.’

‘We aren’t detectives,’ said Jay bluntly. ‘If the police couldn’t get it back for you, why do you imagine we can?’

‘Are you not?’ was all Crystobel said. The pointed look she cast around the cave illustrated her thinking clearly enough: official detectives we might not be, but we had demonstrated a talent for digging up secrets. Even ancient ones.

I admit to feeling a flicker of excitement begin to unfurl. ‘Listen,’ I said. ‘I give you fair warning. If we find this grimoire, we are going to read it.’

‘There’s no stopping her,’ Jay agreed. ‘I know. I’ve tried.’

Crystobel grinned. ‘If you get me my book back, you’re welcome to read it. And I’ll give you all the argent you need.’

That settled it. I love her.

Alchemy and Argent: 18

‘When you say “soon”, do you mean “before Crystobel Elvyng could conceivably do anything else to impede us”?’ I said.

‘Precisely. If the Elvyngs possess such knowledge yet have not chosen to make it public, we can always employ the defence of ignorance. But not if we engage in the kind of delay that might lead to intentions becoming known, and measures taken to prevent unauthorised explorations or inconvenient discoveries.’

‘The mines don’t belong to them, after all,’ I said. ‘Presumably they are still the property of the Yllanfalen.’

‘Whether they might have an agreement with Aylligranir, or are operating independently and without the queen’s knowledge, might prove an interesting point,’ agreed Milady. ‘But not yet a relevant one.’

‘Speaking of Aylligranir,’ I said. ‘Did they send the moonsilver that they promised?’

‘It arrived,’ said Milady. ‘I am not sure what her majesty intended by it.’

‘Why is that?’

‘In itself, it is insignificant. The sample is only an inch wide, and unworked.’

‘Unworked.’ I drummed my fingers on the arm of my chair, thinking. ‘Unworked. How much moonsilver, or argent, is left in the world, would you think?’

‘All of it, surely,’ said Jay. ‘It cannot be destroyed, that we know of.’

‘Yes — and the examples of it that we’ve seen or heard of have all been finished articles, or in other words, very much worked. How much unworked argent is likely to be left, hundreds of years after all the known mines ran empty?’

‘Not… much,’ said Jay.

‘Exactly. So how does Aylligranir have even a small piece of the raw stuff?’

‘Either they have a stash of the raw metal put by, and have somehow managed to preserve it into the twenty-first century,’ said Jay. ‘Or…’

‘Or they have a source,’ I finished. ‘Like the mines. We gave her majesty a fairly comprehensive account of our purpose in seeking argent, Milady. I thought at the time that she was peculiarly uninterested and unhelpful, but perhaps I was wrong. Perhaps this unworked piece is a hint.’

‘Why a hint?’ said Jay. ‘Why not just say, oh, we happen to have a renewable source of exactly what you’re looking for, why don’t I send you a catalogue?’

I shrugged. ‘Is that what you would have done, in her shoes? Not everyone can be trusted, even those employed by the Society. We could have been anybody, with any motive. A likely story is proof of nothing.’ I thought of Miranda as I spoke, and Ancestria Magicka. Her majesty of Aylligranir probably wasn’t unwise to work around the subject, considering the extraordinary value — and power — of the substance in question.

‘Take the argent with you,’ said Milady, wisely skipping over the question entirely. I swear, one of these days I will drive myself mad with my wacky theories. ‘House, if you would?’

The wall rippled. Something unspeakable oozed out of it and dribbled towards the floor, followed by a nugget of something pale silver and gleaming.

‘I feel like House isn’t a huge fan of summer,’ I murmured.

‘It is maintenance season,’ said Milady. ‘We’ve had builders in all week.’

‘That would suck,’ I agreed. Like a trip to a particularly aggressive beautician: unpleasant as a process, but the results would be worth it. Hopefully.

Val had scooped up the argent, and sat examining it, having cleaned the physical expression of House’s displeasure off it with a tissue. ‘It feels interesting,’ she said, and passed it to me. ‘I never saw it in its raw state before.’

The moment it touched my palm, I yelped, and dropped it. ‘Ouch,’ I hissed, shaking my hand to dislodge the pain. ‘It burns, but like… ice.’ The stuff had left a silvery, moon-coloured burn-mark on my skin, rather attractive if one forgot the pain that came with it. Which I wasn’t.

Val stared at me, and held up her own hands. Both were unmarked. ‘Sparking again, Ves?’

‘I don’t think so…’ I stared balefully at the innocuous lump, lying there on the carpet all innocent-looking. ‘Jay, you carry it.’

‘Thanks,’ he said dryly, but when he bent to pick it up, he emerged unscathed. The argent lay in his palm, meek and harmless.

‘I can’t tell if it passionately loves me or violently hates me,’ I muttered.

Jay looked at me. ‘Like the lyre.’

‘The lyre is something else again.’ I rose from my chair. ‘We’d best get going. It’s getting late.’

‘One thing,’ said Jay, following suit. ‘We had enough trouble getting into Aylligranir before. How are we going to reach Everynden?’

‘This is a problem I would be delighted to solve for you,’ said Milady. ‘Had I the means.’

In other words: good luck.

‘Right,’ said Jay, heading for the door. ‘Back later, then.’ He stopped. ‘Wait. Val, can I raid the maps?’

‘Don’t leave them out of order.’

‘Wouldn’t dream of it.’

‘So,’ I said, shortly afterwards. ‘How do you even do this? Can you only travel to henges you’ve been to, or that you know the location of?’

For some reason, Jay laughed. ‘Sometimes I wish that was true, but no. It’s quite possible to end up in a henge that probably hasn’t been visited in living memory, and is marked on zero maps.’

I raised a brow in his general direction. ‘And you know that how?’

He coughed. ‘Let’s say I’ve had a mishap or two in my time.’

We were down in the cellar, stationed in the centre of House’s private henge, waiting while the Winds of the Ways curled their way up out of nothing. ‘So you… what?’ I prompted. ‘Aim? Cross your fingers and hope for the best?’

‘Something like that. If I know roughly where a henge is stationed, I can shoot for it. Doesn’t always work out as intended.’ His eyes had a faraway look, focused on whatever mysterious, arcane processes went on when Jay took to the Ways. ‘The most recent map Val’s got of Aylligranir is a couple of hundred years old, but henges and towns don’t move about much, so it should be good enough. We’re going back to the same henge we used before, that’ll get us back to the entrance. Then there’s a henge marked inside of Aylligranir, pretty close to Everynden.’

‘Still doesn’t get us past the border,’ I pointed out. Even I knew that Waymastery didn’t work into the Yllanfalen kingdoms. They’d blocked passage from outside henges long ago, whenever it was they decided they’d had about enough of the outside worlds.

‘One problem at a time.’

No time for more, as the Winds reached howling potency and swept us away. I kept my face down, clinging to Jay, as we soared in a rush through a thousand miles — might as well have been — and came down in a cool, moonlit glade somewhere in the Dales.

Back, then, through the hills, a whole new landscape at this hour, scarcely recognisable as the same countryside we had trekked through only a day or two ago. The moon, nearing full, bathed everything in a pale, soothing glamour, and cast stark shadows behind every bush and tree. I breathed the cool air, savouring the balmy night winds, though we were still clammy with perspiration by the time we arrived back at the hillside that divided us from Aylligranir. No sunbathing today, nor moonbathing either. I felt a sense of suppressed urgency, as though time raced against us; if we did not find a way to Everynden now, today, this instant, some window of opportunity would close, some door slam in our faces, and it would all be over.

‘Now what?’ I said, pacing through the bone-dry grass. I eyed the darkened slope balefully, as though it had personally arrayed itself in our way.

‘So,’ said Jay, and to my puzzlement he sat down in the grass, cross-legged, and facing the emphatically closed door into Aylligranir. ‘I told you my mother petitioned the Yllanfalen on my behalf, right?’

Giddy gods. For weeks I’d wished for storytime-with-Jay, to little avail, and now he wanted to get chatty? ‘Yes,’ I said dubiously. ‘I recall.’

‘Some of the kingdoms granted an audience, even if they didn’t grant her request. And one time, she told me an interesting story.’

‘The queen?’

‘My mother. While she was there, she saw someone appear, apparently out of thin air, upon a wave of faerie music. Nobody would tell her how it was done. She thought the Yllanfalen had developed a way of transportation via music itself, but I think it might have been a bit different from that.’

‘I hate to rush you, but could we skip to the relevant bit?’

‘This is the relevant bit. I think that person was a Waymaster, using a sunk henge my mother couldn’t see.’

‘Uh huh. And the music?’

‘Exactly. Was the music incidental, or was it an intrinsic part of the process?’

‘Still not really seeing your point.’

‘The henges inside the Yllanfalen kingdoms are only blocked to outsiders. Right? They have to be functional for the kingdom’s own citizens, supposing they have Waymasters left to use them. So how is that accomplished? What twist of magick is required by Yllanfalen Waymasters to use those henges?’

‘Musical?’ I said, light dawning.

‘Probably? Virtually everything they do involves music in some form or another. So, if we can find a way to blend Waymastery magick with Yllanfalen music-magick, maybe we can jump from here to the henge near Everynden.’

I released the hillside from my baleful scrutiny, and turned it upon Jay instead. ‘And you didn’t mention this two days ago because of why?’ We’d spent hours failing to get in, and Jay had left me to figure out a way inside. While he napped.

‘Did you know there’s a book about the ethics and legalities of Waymastery? It’s this thick.’ Jay made a space about three inches wide with his fingers. ‘One does not force one’s way into blocked henges, especially if they’re inside closed fae enclaves. It isn’t a thing to be done lightly.’

‘So why now, Mr. Play-by-the-rules?’

‘Well,’ said Jay. ‘If Milady thinks this is worth a gamble, so do I.’

‘I’ll get you your Team Rulebreaker cap and badge tomorrow,’ I promised.

‘And I shall wear them proudly, at least for the thirty seconds or so before the Ministry shows up to arrest me.’ He rose from his seat upon the grass, and advanced upon me. Considering enough of him was in shadow that I couldn’t see his face, I found this somewhat intimidating.

I stepped back. ‘So, um, what’s my role in this delightfully crazy venture? You’re the Waymaster, and the Yllanfalen musical talent.’

‘And you’re the one with the third ingredient that seems to be important in this context, that being moonsilver.’

‘You’ve got the moonsilver. Or, I hope you do.’

Jay opened his palm. The nugget of raw argent glimmered there, like a bubble of moonlight. ‘I meant your pipes.’

‘Those are skysilver pipes, thank you. Can we please get our fanciful fae terminology right?’

‘Whatever. Most of the Yllanfalen we met in your mother’s kingdom had a set of pipes, whether moonsilver or not. Coincidence? And you’ve got a headful of Yllanfalen pop songs, to boot.’

‘So you want me to play while you…’ I waved a hand vaguely. ‘Do whirly things?’

‘Please.’ He was still advancing.

I stepped back again. ‘Jay, what are you doing.’

‘I can’t spirit you away out of thin air.’

‘I thought that was exactly what you were going to do.’

‘I do need to hang onto you. And since your hands are going to be busy, I guess you get a hug.’

‘Oh.’ I stopped retreating. ‘Um, okay…’ I tried not to feel weird as Jay’s arm slid around my waist, and took a firm grip of my hip. In fairness, his thoughts were obviously far from the facts of physical me, for he was already calling up his whirly magicks; arcane winds stirred my hair.

I took out my pipes, and hesitated. What exactly was I meant to do? I wasn’t a musical magician, not like the Yllanfalen. Or Jay. Any potency my modest musical efforts possessed came from the pipes, not from me. Surely that couldn’t be enough, or any one of the incredibly few Waymasters left in Britain who happened to be in possession of a priceless set of ancient skysilver pipes could pop in and out whenever they liked…

Well, okay. This almost unthinkably rare confluence of circumstances did not constitute a grave security problem, now did it? No such person existed. Just me and Jay, Team Improbable.

I played. Not the lullaby. Was it one o’clock still, or two? Three? Fatigue plagued me but little yet, probably the effects of excitement and adrenalin. I felt it, though, weighing upon my limbs, slowing my thoughts. It wouldn’t take much to convince my brain — and Jay’s — that now would be a great time to fall asleep for eight hours or so. I skipped over the sprite-song, too, not wanting to attract Flow’s notice at this time.

‘Jay,’ I said, breaking off playing. ‘We’re breaking and entering!’

‘Keep playing,’ he muttered.

I played a bit more. ‘What, this isn’t the jail-worthy kind so it’s okay?’

‘Something like that. Keep playing.

Something was happening. Winds swirled, ice-cold and smelling, incongruously, of wet earth. My feet came off the floor, and suddenly I was grateful for Jay’s grip on me, for I felt untethered otherwise, like I might have flown away into the ether, never to be seen again.

‘Nearly—’ Jay gasped.

A bell tolled somewhere, a mournful sound that sent a chill down my half-frozen spine.

Then the half-frozen feeling spread to my feet, for suddenly I was up to my ankles in sodden mud, and the shadowed hillside was gone.

‘I think,’ said Jay, looking down at his own begrimed feet. ‘I think we did it.’

I looked around, to no real effect. Tree-cover loomed over our heads, too night-darkened to determine details, and too thick to permit much more than an occasional beam of moonlight to filter down. I discerned the vague outline of a craggy block of stone somewhere near my left knee; a section of a henge?

‘And that,’ said Jay, releasing me and taking an experimental step, ‘has to be absolutely the only time we ever do that.’

I snorted. ‘Uh huh.’

‘I’m serious. What we just did was not okay. We broke one fixed magickal law and contravened a slew of ethical agreements.’

I patted his shoulder. ‘Milady won’t let us go to prison.’

‘I think you rely a bit too much on Milady’s influence.’

‘It’s been working for me for ten years. Right, which way?’

‘How should I know?’ said Jay.

Oh, boy.

Alchemy and Argent: 17

I didn’t bother texting Val this time. I called her. If that meant dragging her out of the library and whichever book she was absorbed in, so be it.

‘Yes?’ she said, after three rings. The word had a dangerous edge to it.

‘Valentine Argentein,’ I said.

‘Ves! You found him?’

‘Val, you are not going to believe this.’

While Jay nipped back into the academy to return the painting — my having reluctantly let it go — I rushed through an only slightly garbled account of everything we had just experienced.

‘Slow down,’ said Val more than once, and I tried, but my heart was galloping and my fingers were zapping with magick and I was fit to burst with excitement.

‘She’s a painting,’ Val said at one point. ‘A painting? She, Cicily Werewode, is a painting? Ves, have you gone off your rocker?’

And later, ‘You pretended to be Mary Werewode and she bought it? Has she gone off her rocker?’

At length we got around to: ‘Valentine Argentein is a gods-damned place. That makes so much sense you have no idea.’

‘It… does?’

‘It was driving me crazy, this supposed author that vanished into thin air. But I was wrong to interpret the name as the author, not the title. The book has the air of a personal journal about it, that’s the thing. It’s hand-written, and so is what now turns out to be the title, but I previously interpreted as the name of the writer. As a work it’s informally arranged, only loosely coherent, and pretty impenetrable. And I now have no earthly idea who penned it, but maybe that doesn’t matter. The only problem is…’ I heard a rustling of papers, and otherwise silence for a while. ‘I don’t think there’s any real mention of Valentine Argentein in the book, excepting the title. So if the book isn’t really about this place Argentein, what’s it for?’

‘What else is in it, besides that one bit about magycke silver or whatever it was?’

‘A whole lot of confused ramblings. I wonder…’ Silence, and more rustling.

I ventured upon a tentative point of my own. ‘Is this maybe what the Lorekeeper was talking about? Some kind of code?’

‘Could be. Could be. It doesn’t make a lot of sense as it is, certainly, and it’s hard to imagine why anyone would bother writing down such gibberish if it doesn’t mean anything.’

‘Get Cicily’s journal back from the cryptographers. There’s nothing to find there.’

‘And give ‘em this. Right. Begs the question, though: where’s this mysterious source of Mary Werewode’s work?’

‘I got the impression it’s in Argentein.’

‘She didn’t give you any clues as to where that is?’

‘Not really. She’s a faded excuse for a person, kept blanking on us. And while I’d love to take the portrait with us and keep pumping her for information, we can’t exactly abscond with it.’

‘No,’ Val sighed. ‘I suppose you can’t.’

Her dejection echoed my own. ‘I have two ideas.’

‘Tell me.’

‘One, she seemed to think she could talk to Mary Werewode, who of course must have died long before she was born. Unless she didn’t. We think there must be a chatty portrait of Mary somewhere about, and Cicily must have got hold of it.’

‘Right. Where’s the portrait?’

‘No clue.’

‘Excellent. Idea number two?’

I hesitated. ‘I’m speculating,’ I cautioned.

‘What else is new.’

‘Fair. Look, Cicily mentioned her grandfather. She thought she might be talking to him, too.’

‘Her grandfather, the Yllanfalen?’

‘Right. The one that came from Everynden, where the Moonsilver Mines were.’

A pause. ‘You think Argentein might refer to those mines?’

‘Total guess,’ I said. ‘But yes. Yes, I do.’

‘But they were emptied by Cicily’s time, no?’

‘Exactly.’

‘Not following.’

‘Cicily mentioned the “source”, with a weird emphasis, like it should mean something to Mary. Well, the mines were the age-old source of moonsilver, or argent. What better place to put your secret moonsilver lab than an abandoned mineshaft that was once bristling with the stuff? Maybe there are traces of it still there. Maybe there’s an atmosphere, a memory — something. I don’t know, I may be talking rubbish, but it…’

‘Makes a weird kind of sense,’ Val finished. ‘I’ve another thought.’

‘Hit me with it.’

‘What if…’ she hesitated. ‘We have no idea what process they might have gone through to produce their argent, right? Except that Crystobel thinks it wasn’t alchemy.’

‘Right.’

‘Nothing in Cicily’s journal. Nothing in any of Mary’s letters that might hint at it, even allowing for deliberate obfuscation and bizarre code. In other words, we have no evidence that such a process exists.

It was my turn to say, ‘Not following.’

‘Maybe it doesn’t exist. Crystobel told the truth. You can’t manufacture argent.’

‘But Cicily said—’

‘Cicily didn’t deny the existence of a source of argent. That doesn’t mean it has anything to do with alchemy.’

‘She— I did ask her if she’d discovered the secret of argent, or if her son had, and she said no. That there was no need, because it was Mary’s own work…’

‘But she never said there was an alchemical secret?’

‘She… no, she didn’t.’

‘Maybe because there wasn’t. Whatever they did, it wasn’t alchemy, or not in the way we’ve been thinking. They weren’t reciting mumbo-jumbo over blocks of silver, or immersing them in chemical solutions. They weren’t waving magick wands over them or drowning them in charms. They weren’t transmuting anything, in short.’ Val was talking faster and faster, working herself up to one of her genius crescendos. ‘Ves, what if you’re right?’

‘I like being right,’ I said — doubtfully, being still far behind wherever Val’s scintillating intellect had taken her. ‘What am I right about this time?’

‘The mines. Maybe they weren’t transmuting some base substance into argent. Maybe they found a way to — to restart the mines.’

‘Restart the—’ I stopped, because she was right. I’d spoken just a moment ago about a lingering atmosphere, or a memory. Entrenched magick. An entire network of mineshafts bristling with argent must have held an entire ocean of magick, so to speak, before we’d finally chipped away the last block. But what of the rock that remained? What if it could be… encouraged? Enchanted?

‘Moon-bathing,’ I said, apropos of nothing. ‘The portrait activated under moonlight, with a bit of magickal fizz to help it along.’

‘Okay. Maybe Mary’s moon-bathing wasn’t about restoring her own youth. Maybe she was talking about the mines.’

‘We need to go there.’

‘At night.’

‘Right.’

‘Ves, one thing though.’ More rustling. ‘The Elvyngs. If they know about this, then anything you find down there is likely to be under their control.’

‘Got it.’

‘You realise what that means?’

‘Opposition.’

‘To say the least. They won’t welcome anyone’s snooping. It’s a literally priceless secret.’

I paused, and thought. My instinct was, as always, to barrel in and look around and figure out the details once we got there. But Val had a point. Jay would be dead set against such foolhardiness, and for once I knew he’d be right without having to be talked into it. So then, what? How to proceed?

‘I think it’s time to pass the buck,’ I decided.

‘Mm. Get back here. I’ll see if I can rouse Milady.’

‘Milady sleeps?’ The idea, for some reason, astonished me. Maybe because one doesn’t picture a disembodied voice having physical needs like the rest of us.

‘Who knows?’ Upon which enlightening comment, Val hung up the phone.

An hour later (or so) saw us huddled in Milady’s tower, us being me, Jay and Val. At that elevation, the air was stiflingly hot, even past midnight. Insufficient windows had a lot to do with that, and since its principal occupant must be impervious to either heat or cold, nobody bothered with incidental practicalities like trying to keep it at a habitable temperature. I sat wilting in the chair House had politely set for me (the thing bulged out of the wall in a gloriously grotesque display, if House ever gets tired of hosting the Society I think it has a career in horror films). Fanning oneself with one’s own hand really doesn’t achieve much, but you probably knew that.

Val looked as cool as ever, reclining at her ease in her poison-green chair. I was somewhat relieved to notice beads of sweat upon Jay’s brow, and an appearance one might (if one were as ruthless as Val) term reminiscent of a “wrung-out dishcloth”. In the face of Val’s effortless cool, it was nice not to be the only person dripping all over the place.

Anyway.

Milady had heard our three-way report calmly, and fallen into one of her thoughtful silences. I’d had ample time to scrutinise both of my companions, plus the floor, the ceiling, the walls and the rose-damask upholstery of House’s choice of chair (stylish, House, can I keep it?) before Milady finally spoke.

‘Delicate,’ she mused. ‘I do not think I have encountered so thorny a problem in some time.’

‘See?’ I said, feeling vindicated. ‘The way forward is by no means clear.’

‘Oh, I believe it is,’ said Milady.

All right, then.

‘There can be no doubt that the mines must be investigated, if there is the smallest possibility that they might be able to furnish us with what we need. The modulator must be our priority.’

‘Agreed,’ I said, and Jay nodded.

‘As a second point of some importance. Have any of you uncovered any concrete evidence that the Elvyng family is aware of Cicily’s secret, and that they continue to exploit it?’

I had to think about that for a moment. So twisty and turny had been our path to this discovery, I’d forgotten what evidence we’d found — and which of our theories had been based wholly on speculation. ‘There’s Cicily’s last will and testament,’ I offered. ‘When she “died”, she certainly left all of her papers, including presumably any books, to her Elvyng son. And he probably inherited her enchanted portrait, too.’

‘But,’ said Jay, ‘that may no longer be relevant. If Crystobel Elvyng was right, and Cicily had nothing to do with the argent in the end, then her personal papers aren’t relevant now.’

‘True.’

‘And Mary Werewode may have left no books either,’ said Val. ‘Cicily’s behaviour strongly suggests she communicated with her ancestress directly, or near enough. We previously assumed there must have been extant books or letters only because we were not yet aware of the painting issue.’

‘The paintings are interesting,’ said Milady. ‘Jay, what do you know of those?’

Jay’s knowledge had already been offered up as part of our report. He’d betrayed some small discomfort during that part of our narration, which I put down to a degree of guilt over having snooped through prohibited books. But at Milady’s words, he cast a sideways glance at me, and shifted in his chair. ‘I don’t know what you mean,’ he said, transparent as glass. ‘I’ve already told you everything.’

‘Come, Jay. This is important.’

Jay gave a tiny sigh. ‘They teach it, at the academy. Only the theory, naturally there are no practicals. But they regard it as a functional art.’

‘You didn’t mention that before,’ I said.

Hence the sideways glance — guilt at keeping secrets from me. He did it again. ‘We were bound to the deepest secrecy,’ he said. ‘Such classes would certainly be closed down, if the Ministry got wind of them.’

‘So you didn’t stealth through the secret archives for forbidden books?’ I felt obscurely disappointed.

Jay coughed. ‘Well… I did that, too.’

‘My hero.’ I beamed.

‘To be fair, every self-respecting Academy student did. I suspect the professors knew, too. A ruthless zeal for knowledge is kind of a prerequisite for attendance.’

‘Makes one wonder about the other paintings at the academy, doesn’t it?’ said Val, wisely cutting in on this rambling sideline.

‘Rather,’ I agreed. ‘I wonder if they have Mary’s.’

‘Returning to the question of evidence,’ said Milady. ‘Do you know them to possess any images of Mary Werewode?’

‘No,’ I said.

‘Anything else that might offer proof of their knowledge of her work?’

‘No,’ I said, but I was looking at Jay. So was Val. He was the only one of us who had any depth of knowledge about the academy, after all.

‘Don’t look at me,’ he said, holding up his hands. ‘I attended the academy, but that gives me zero special knowledge of the family, or any of their private doings.’

‘Crystobel Elvyng’s visit here is suggestive of some special interest in the subject of the argent,’ I said. ‘But that is not proof of prior knowledge, either. We know of no absolute reason why Cicily might have hidden something so important from her family-by-marriage, nor any absolute reason why she might have shared it. So in short, I don’t think we have anything concrete.’

‘In that case,’ said Milady, ‘I believe we will take a small gamble.’

‘Small?’ I echoed. ‘

‘If you are not too tired, I believe an excursion to the mines cannot be undertaken too soon.’

Excitement flared in my eager little heart, and I sat up, my heat-related sufferings forgotten. I hadn’t truly expected Milady to give us the go-ahead to explore the mines. She had to navigate some delicate political waters, after all, and making an enemy of the Elvyng family could do the Society no good.

But she really, really wanted that modulator.

So did I.