Another blur, a whirlwind too swift to follow. Credit to him, Baztuk was fast; I glimpsed him lowering his head, lashing out with his horns—and then the whirlwind had engulfed him. When it ceased, so had Baztuk. He was nowhere to be seen. The raven landed awkwardly on the ground, green blood oozing from one wing.

  Inside its orb, the scarab beetle skittered about. “Well done!” I called, trying to make my voice a little less high and piping. “I don’t know who you are, but how about getting me …”

  My voice trailed away. Thanks to the orb, I could see the newcomers only on the first plane, where up until now they’d worn their raven guise. Perhaps they realized this, because suddenly, for a split second, they displayed their true selves to me on the first plane. It was only a flash, but it was all I needed. I knew who they were.

  Trapped in the orb, the beetle gave a strangled gulp.

  “Oh,” I said. “Hello.”

  “Hello, Bartimaeus,” Faquarl said.

  25

  “And Jabor, too” I added. “How nice of you both to come.”

  “We thought you might be feeling lonely, Bartimaeus.” The nearest raven, the one with the bleeding wing, gave a shimmy and took on the semblance of the cook. His arm was badly gashed.

  “No, no, I’ve had plenty of attention.”

  “So I see.” The cook walked forward to inspect my orb. “Dear me, you are in a tight spot.”

  I chortled unconvincingly. “Witticisms aside, old friend, perhaps you could see your way to helping me out of here. I can feel the tickle of the barriers pressing in.”

  The cook stroked one of his chins. “A difficult problem. But I do have a solution.”

  “Good!”

  “You could become a flea, or some other form of skin mite. That would give you another precious few minutes of life before your essence is destroyed.”

  “Thank you, yes, that is a useful suggestion.” I was gasping a little here. The orb was drawing very near. “Or perhaps you could disable the orb in some way and set me free. Imagine my gratitude.…”

  The cook raised a finger. “Another thought occurs to me. You could tell us where you have secreted the Amulet of Samarkand. If you speak rapidly, we might then have time to destroy the orb before you perish.”

  “Reverse that sequence and you could have yourselves a deal.”

  The cook sighed heavily. “I don’t think you’re in a position to—” He broke off at the sound of a distant wailing noise; at the same time a familiar reverberation ran across the room.

  “A portal’s about to open,” I said, hastily. “The far wall.”

  Faquarl looked at the other raven, still sitting on its pillar, examining its claws. “Jabor, if you would be so kind …?” The raven stepped forward into space and became a tall, jackal-headed man with bright-red skin. He strode across the room and took up position against the far wall, one leg forward, one leg back, both his hands outstretched.

  The cook turned back to me. “Now, Bartimaeus—”

  My cuticle was beginning to singe. “Let’s cut to the chase,” I said. “We both know that if I tell you the location, you’ll leave me to die. We also know that, with that being so, I’ll obviously give you false information just to spite you. So anything I say from in here will be worthless. That means you’ve got to let me out.”

  Faquarl tapped the edge of my pillar irritably. “Annoying, but I see your point.”

  “And that wailing sound is sure to be an alarm,” I went on. “The magicians who put me here mentioned something about legions of horlas and utukku. I doubt even Jabor can swallow them all. So perhaps we could continue this discussion a little later?”

  “Agreed.” Faquarl put his face close to the orb, which was now scarcely more than tangerine size. “You will never escape the Tower without us, Bartimaeus, so do not try any tricks just yet. I must warn you that I had two orders in coming here. The first was to learn the location of the Amulet. If that is impossible, the second is to destroy you. I needn’t tell you which will give me greater pleasure.”

  His face withdrew. At that moment the oval seam appeared in the back wall and broadened into the portal arch. From the blackness several figures began to emerge: pale-faced horlas,1 holding tridents and silver nets in their stick-thin arms. Once beyond the portal, the protective Shields around their bodies would become invulnerable; while passing through, however, the Shields were weak and their essences momentarily exposed. Jabor took full advantage of this, firing off three rapid Detonations in quick succession. Bright green explosions engulfed the archway. Twittering piteously, the horlas crumpled to the ground, still half in and half out of the portal. But behind came another troop, stepping with fastidious care over the bodies of their fellows. Jabor fired again.

  Faquarl, meanwhile, had not been idle. From a pocket in his coat he drew forth a ring of iron, about the size of a bracelet, soldered to the end of a long metal rod. I viewed the ring warily.2

  “And what do you expect me to do with that?” I asked.

  “Leap through it, of course. Imagine you’re a trained dog in a circus. Not hard for you, I’m sure, Bartimaeus; you’ve tried most jobs in your time.” Holding one end cautiously between finger and thumb, Faquarl positioned the rod so that the iron ring made contact with the surface of the orb. With a violent fizzing, the lines of the barrier diverged and arced around the edge of the ring, leaving the gap within it free.

  “Lovelace has specially strengthened the ring to enhance the magical resistance of the iron,” Faquarl went on. “But it won’t last forever, so I suggest you jump fast.” He was right. Already, the edges of the ring were bubbling and melting under the power of the orb. As a beetle, I didn’t have room to maneuver, so I summoned up my remaining energy and became a fly once more. Without further ado, I did a quick circuit of the orb to build up speed and, in a flash, shot through the molten ring to freedom.

  “Marvelous,” Faquarl said. “If only we’d had a drumroll accompaniment.”

  The fly landed on the floor and became a very irritable falcon.

  “It was dramatic enough for me, I assure you,” I said. “And now?”

  Faquarl tossed the remains of the ring to the floor. “Yes, we’d better go.” A silver-headed trident shot through the air and clattered between us across the flagstones. Up by the portal, now half choked with horla corpses, Jabor was steadily retreating. A new wave of guards, uttuku mainly, advanced behind a strong collective Shield, which repelled Jabor’s steadily weakening Detonations and spun them away around the room. At last a horla won free of the portal and, with his armor fully formed, came creeping round the edge of the Shield. Jabor fired at him; the blast hit the horla in his spindly chest and was completely absorbed. The horla gave a wintry smile and darted forward, spinning his net like a bola.

  Faquarl became a raven and took off effortfully, one wing laboring through the air. My falcon followed him, up toward the hole. A net passed just under me; a trident buried its prongs in the wall.

  “Jabor!” Faquarl shouted. “We’re leaving!”

  I snatched a look below: Jabor was grappling with the horla, his strength seemingly undiminished. But countless more kept coming. I concentrated my efforts on reaching the hole. Faquarl had already vanished within it; I ducked down my beak and plunged in too. Behind me, a colossal explosion rocked the room and I heard the savage fury of the jackal’s cry.

  In the narrow, pitch-black tunnel, Faquarl’s voice sounded muffled and strange. “We’re nearly out. Being a raven would be most appropriate from now on.”

  “Why?”

  “There are dozens of the things out there. We can mingle with the flock and gain time while we make for the walls.”

  Loath as I was to follow Faquarl’s advice about anything, I had no idea what we were up against outside. Escape from the Tower was the priority. Escape from him could come later. So I concentrated and shifted form.

  “Have you changed?”

  “Yep. It’s not a guise I’ve
tried before, but it doesn’t seem too difficult.”

  “Any sign of Jabor behind us?”

  “No.”

  “He’ll be along. Right, the opening to the outside is just ahead of me. There’s a Concealment on the exit hole, so they shouldn’t have spotted it yet. Fly out fast and go straight down. You’ll see a kitchen yard where the ravens congregate to gather scraps; I’ll meet you there. Above all, don’t be conspicuous.”

  A scrabbling in the tunnel ahead, then a sudden burst of light. Faquarl was gone, revealing the outline of the exit, covered with a mesh of concealing threads. I hopped forward until my beak hit the barrier, pressed against it and pushed my head through into the cold November air.

  Without pause, I pushed off from the hole and began to glide toward the courtyard below.

  As I descended, a brief glance around confirmed how far I was from safety: the distant rooftops of London were barely visible behind a series of rounded towers and curtain walls. Guards walked upon them, and search spheres moved randomly through the sky. The alarm had already been raised. From some eyrie high above, a siren was wailing, and not far off, within this innermost courtyard, battalions of police were running toward an unseen point.

  I landed in a little side yard, cut off from the general panic by two outbuildings that projected from the body of the main tower. The cobbles of the yard were covered in greasy scraps of bread and bacon rind, and by a hungry, cawing flock of ravens.

  One of the ravens sidled over. “You idiot, Bartimaeus.”

  “What’s up?”

  “Your beak’s bright blue. Change it.”

  Well, it was my first time as a raven. And I’d had to alter in the dark. What did he expect? But it wasn’t the time or place to argue. I changed the beak.

  “They’ll see through the disguise anyway,” I snapped. “There must be a thousand sentries of one sort or another out there.”

  “True, but all we need’s a little time. They don’t know we’re ravens yet, and if we’re in a flock, it’ll take them a few extra seconds to pick us out and check. All we need now is for the flock to fly….”

  One moment a hundred ravens were snapping innocently at cold bacon rind, at peace with themselves and the world. The next, Faquarl revealed his true self to them on the first plane: he only did so for a fraction of a second, but the glimpse was enough. Four ravens dropped dead on the instant, several others lost their breakfast, and the rest took off from the courtyard in a panic-stricken mob, cawing and clawing at the air. Faquarl and I were in the heart of the flock, flapping as hard as we could, wheeling and diving when the others did so, desperately trying not to be left behind.

  Up high and over the flat roof of the great keep, where a huge flag fluttered and human sentries stood gazing out across the waters of the Thames; then down low and sweeping across the gray courtyard on the other side. Around twenty permanent workaday pentacles had been painted in the center of the parade ground, and as I flashed past, I caught a glimpse of a formidable company of spirits appearing within them, summoned at that moment by a troop of gray-uniformed magicians. The spirits were minor ones, glorified imps for the most part,3 but en masse they would present problems. I hoped the flock of ravens would not land here.

  But the birds displayed no desire to halt; fear still carried them onward in a whirling course across the fortifications of the Tower. Several times they seemed to be heading for an outer wall; on each occasion they banked and turned back. Once I was tempted to make a break for it alone, but was discouraged by the appearance on the battlements of an odd blue-black sentry with four spider-like legs. I didn’t like its look, and was too weary after my captivity and forced changes of form to risk its unknown power.

  At last, we came to yet another courtyard, surrounded on three sides by castle buildings and on the other by a steep bank of green grass rising up to a high wall. The ravens alighted on the bank and began to mill about, pecking at the ground aimlessly.

  Faquarl hopped over to me, one wing hanging away from his breast. It was still bleeding.

  “These birds are never going to leave the grounds,” I said. “They get fed here.”

  The raven nodded. “They’ve got us as far as they can, but it’ll do. This is an outer wall. Over that and we’re away.”

  “Then let’s go.”

  “In a minute. I need to rest. And perhaps Jabor—”

  “Jabor’s dead.”

  “You know him better than that, Bartimaeus.” Faquarl pecked at his wounded wing, pulling a feather away from the clotting blood. “Just give me a moment. That utukku! I wouldn’t have guessed he had it in him.”

  “Imps coming,” I hissed. A battalion had scurried through an arch into the far corner of the yard and were fanning out to begin a meticulous survey of every brick and stone. We were still concealed within the flock of ravens, but not for long.

  Faquarl spat another feather onto the grass, where it briefly changed into a writhing strip of jelly before melting away. “Very well. Up, over, and out. Don’t stop for anything.”

  I gestured politely with a wing. “After you.”

  “No, no, Bartimaeus—after you.” The raven flexed one large, clawed foot. “I shall be right behind you all the time, so please be original and don’t try to escape.”

  “You have a horrid, suspicious mind.” The imps were creeping nearer, sniffing the ground like dogs. I took off and shot up toward the battlements at speed. As I drew level with them, I perceived a sentry patroling the walkway. It was a small foliot, with a battered bronze horn strapped to the side of his head. Unfortunately, he perceived me too. Before I could react, he had swiveled his lips to the mouthpiece of the horn and blown a short, sharp blast, which instantly triggered a wave of answering signals from along the wall, high and low, loud and soft, away into the distance. That did it: our cover was well and truly blown. I weaved at the sentry, talons grasping; he gave a squeak, lost his balance and tumbled backward over the edge of the wall. I shot across the battlements, over a steep bank of tumbled black rocks and earth, and away from the Tower into the city.

  No time to lose, no time to look back. I flapped onward, fast as I could. Beneath me passed a broad gray thoroughfare, heavy with traffic, then a block of flat-roofed garages, a narrow street, a slab of shingle, a curve of the Thames, a wharf and steelyard, another street.… Hey! This wasn’t too bad—with my customary panache, I was getting away! The Tower of London must already be a mile back. Pretty soon, I could …

  I looked up and blinked in shock. What was this? The Tower of London loomed ahead of me. Groups of flying figures were massing over the central keep. I was flying back toward it! Something had gone seriously wrong with my directions. In great perplexity I did a U-turn round a chimney and shot off again in the opposite direction. Faquarl’s voice sounded behind me.

  “Bartimaeus, stop!”

  “Didn’t you see them?” I yelled back over my wing. “They’ll be on us in moments!” I redoubled my speed, ignoring Faquarl’s urgent calls. Rooftops flashed below me, then the mucky expanse of the Thames, which I crossed in record time, then—

  The Tower of London, just as before. The flying figures were now shooting out in all directions, each group following a search sphere. One lot was heading my way. Every instinct told me to turn tail and flee, but I was too confused. I alighted upon a rooftop. A few moments later, Faquarl appeared beside me, panting and swearing fit to burst.

  “You fool! Now we’re back where we started!”

  A penny dropped. “You mean—”

  “The first Tower you saw was a mirror illusion. We should have gone straight through it.4 Lovelace warned me of it—and you wouldn’t wait to listen! Curse my injured wing and curse you, Bartimaeus!”

  The battalion of flying djinn was crossing the outer walls. Barely a street’s distance separated us. Faquarl hunched dismally behind a chimney. “We’ll never out-fly them.”

  Inspiration came. “Then we won’t fly. We passed some traffic ligh
ts back there.”

  “So what?” Faquarl’s normal urbanity was wearing a little thin.

  “So we hitch a ride.” Keeping the building between me and the searchers, I swooped off the roof and down to an intersection, where a line of cars was halted up at a red light. I landed on the pavement, near the back of the queue, with Faquarl close on my heels.

  “Right,” I said. “Time to change.”

  “What to?”

  “Something with strong claws. Hurry up, the lights are turning green.” Before Faquarl could object, I hopped off the pavement and under the nearest car, trying to ignore the repellent stench of oil and petrol fumes and the sickening vibrations that intensified as the unseen driver revved the engine. With no regret, I bade farewell to the raven and took on the form of a stygian implet, which is little more than a series of barbs on a tangle of muscle. Barbs and prongs shot out and embedded themselves in the filthy metal of the undercarriage, securing me fast as the car began to inch forward and away. I had hoped Faquarl would be too slow to follow, but no such luck: another implet was right beside me, grimly hanging on between the wheels and keeping his eyes fixed on me the whole time.

  We didn’t talk much during the journey. The engine was too loud. Besides, stygian implets go in for teeth, not tongues.

  An endless time later, the car drew to a halt. Its driver got out and moved away. Silence. With a groan, I loosened my various intricate holds and dropped heavily to the tarmac, groggy with motion sickness and the smell of technology.5 Faquarl was no better off. Without speaking, we became a pair of elderly, slightly manky cats, which hobbled out from under the car and away across a stretch of lawn toward a thick clump of bushes. Once there, we finally relaxed into our preferred forms.