Page 27 of Inkdeath


  ‘Quiet!’ thundered Fenoglio. ‘Shut up, for heaven’s sake!’

  It had no effect. Not the slightest. ‘Something’s happened to them! Admit it! Why was Mortimer alone?’ Once again she jabbed him in the chest. ‘I just know something’s happened to Meggie and Resa, something terrible … a giant has trodden on them, they’ve been impaled on spikes, they—’

  ‘Nothing of the kind!’ Fenoglio interrupted. ‘They’re with the Black Prince!’

  ‘The Black Prince?’ Her eyes became almost as large as her bespectacled companion’s. ‘Oh!’

  ‘Yes, and if something terrible happens to anyone here it’s going to be Mortimer. Which is why …’ said Fenoglio, grabbing her arm, not very gently, and dragging her to the door, ‘… I want to be left in peace, for heaven’s sake, so that I can think!’

  That really did shut her up. But not for long.

  ‘Something terrible?’ she asked.

  Rosenquartz took his hands away from his ears.

  ‘What do you mean? Who writes what happens here? You do, isn’t that so?’

  Oh, wonderful! Now her fat fingers were prodding at his sorest point!

  ‘No, definitely not!’ he told her sharply. ‘This story is now telling itself, and today Mortimer prevented it from taking a very unpleasant turn! But unfortunately that looks as if it will cost him his neck, in which case I can only advise you to take his wife and daughter and go back with them to where you came from, as fast as possible! Because you’ve obviously found a way, haven’t you?’

  With these words he opened the door, but Signora Loredan simply closed it again.

  ‘Cost him his neck? What do you mean?’ With a jerk, she freed her arm from his grasp. (Heavens above, the woman was as strong as a hippopotamus.)

  ‘I mean that, very regrettably, he’s likely to be hung or beheaded or quartered, or whatever else strikes the Adderhead as the right kind of execution for the man who’s his worst enemy!’

  ‘His worst enemy? Mortimer?’ She was frowning incredulously – as if Fenoglio were an old fool who didn’t know what he was talking about!

  ‘It was him. He made him into a robber.’

  That was Rosenquartz. The miserable traitor! He was pointing a glass finger at his master so mercilessly that Fenoglio felt like picking him up from his desk and breaking him in two at the waist.

  ‘It’s the songs,’ murmured Rosenquartz to their two visitors, as if he’d known them for a lifetime. ‘Obsessed by them, that’s what he is, and Meggie’s poor father has been caught up in his fine words like a fly in a spider’s web!’

  This was too much. Fenoglio marched towards Rosenquartz, but the bookworm woman barred his way.

  ‘Don’t you dare do anything to that poor defenceless glass man!’ She was glowering at him like a bulldog. Good God, what a fearsome female! ‘Mortimer, a robber? He’s the most peace-loving person I know.’

  ‘Oh, really?’ Fenoglio’s voice rose to such a pitch that Rosenquartz put his hands over his ridiculously tiny ears again. ‘Well, perhaps even the most peace-loving person gets to feel less so when he’s been shot and nearly killed, parted from his wife, and locked in a dungeon for weeks on end. And none of that was my work, whatever this lying glass man may say! Far from it. But for the words I wrote, I imagine Mortimer would be dead by now.’

  ‘Shot and nearly killed? Dungeon?’ Signora Loredan cast a helpless glance at her bespectacled companion.

  ‘This sounds like a long story, Elinor,’ he said in his quiet voice. ‘Maybe you should listen to it.’

  But before Fenoglio could say anything in response to that, Minerva put her head round the door. ‘Fenoglio,’ she said, glancing briefly at his visitors. ‘Despina won’t give me a moment’s peace. She’s worried about the Bluejay, she wants you to tell her how he’s going to save himself.’

  This was too much. Fenoglio sighed deeply and tried to ignore Rosenquartz’s snort of derision. He ought to take the glass man into the Wayless Wood and leave him there, that’s what he ought to do.

  ‘Send her to me,’ he said, although he hadn’t the faintest idea what to tell the little girl. What had become of the days when his head was brimming over with ideas? They were suffocated by all this misfortune, that was what had become of them!

  ‘The Bluejay? Didn’t the man with the silver nose call Mortimer that?’

  Oh, good heavens, he’d forgotten his visitors entirely for a moment.

  ‘Get out of here!’ he snarled. ‘Out of my room, out of my story! There are far too many visitors here already. Go away.’

  But the brazen woman sat down on the chair at his desk, folded her arms, and planted her feet on his floor as if planning to let them take root there. ‘No, I won’t. I want to hear the story,’ she said. ‘The whole story.’

  This was going from bad to worse. What an unlucky day – and it wasn’t over yet.

  ‘Inkweaver?’ Despina was standing in the doorway, her face tear-stained. When she saw the two strangers she instinctively stepped back, but Fenoglio went over and took her little hand.

  ‘Minerva says you want me to tell you about the Bluejay?’

  Despina nodded shyly, without taking her eyes off his visitors.

  ‘Well, that comes in handy.’ Fenoglio sat down on his bed and took her on his lap. ‘My two visitors here want to hear something about the Bluejay too. Suppose you and I tell them the whole story?’

  Despina nodded. ‘How he outwitted the Adderhead and brought the Fire-Dancer back from the dead?’ she whispered.

  ‘Exactly,’ said Fenoglio, ‘and then the two of us will discover how it goes on. We’ll just weave the rest of the song. After all, I’m the Inkweaver, right?’

  Despina nodded, looking at him so hopefully that his old heart felt heavy in his breast. A weaver who’s run out of threads, he thought. Or, no – the threads were there, they were all there – he just couldn’t weave them together any more.

  Signora Loredan was suddenly sitting perfectly still, looking at him as expectantly as Despina. The owl-faced man was staring at him too, as if he couldn’t wait to hear the words come from his lips. Only Rosenquartz turned his back on Fenoglio and went on stirring the ink again, as if to remind him how long it was since he had last used it.

  ‘Fenoglio!’ Despina’s hand caressed his wrinkled face. ‘Go on, tell me!’

  ‘Yes, go on!’ said the bookworm woman. Elinor Loredan. He still hadn’t asked how she came to be here. As if there weren’t enough questions in this story already. And the stammerer wasn’t going to be a particularly valuable addition to it either!

  Despina tugged at his sleeve. Where did all the hope in her reddened eyes come from? How had that hope survived Sootbird’s guile, and all the fear in the dark dungeon? Children, thought Fenoglio as he took Despina’s small hand firmly in his. If anyone could ever bring back the words, he supposed it would be the children.

  37

  Only a Magpie

  What was she, then, in the lean time,

  In the year’s meagre quarter?

  She was bird and enchanter, was mistress

  Of fire and water.

  Franz Werfel,

  Invocations 1918–1921

  The house where Fenoglio was lodging reminded Orpheus of places where he himself had lived not so long ago: a shabby building, crooked, leaning sideways, with mouldy walls and windows offering a view only of other dilapidated houses. The rain fell inside it too, because in this world windowpanes were only for the rich! Pitiful. How he hated hiding in the darkest corner of the back yard, where spiders crawled into his velvet sleeves and chicken droppings ruined his expensive boots. But what else could he do? Ever since Basta had killed a strolling player before her very eyes, Fenoglio’s landlady went for anyone loitering in her yard with a pitchfork. And Orpheus had to know. He had to know if Fenoglio was writing again. He just hoped that useless glass man would come back before he was up to his knees in mud!

  A thin chicken strutted by, and b
eside him Cerberus growled. Orpheus hastily held his muzzle shut. He’d been glad when Cerberus suddenly came scratching at his door, of course, but one question had immediately spoiled his pleasure – how did the dog come to be here? Was Fenoglio writing again after all? Had Dustfinger taken the book to the old man? None of it made any sense, but he had to know. Who but Fenoglio could have dreamt up the touching scene performed by the Bluejay outside the castle? How much everyone loved the bookbinder for it! Even though by now the Piper must have beaten him half to death, he had become godlike when he rode through the gates of that damn castle. The Bluejay as a noble sacrificial lamb. If that didn’t sound like Fenoglio he’d eat his hat!

  Naturally Orpheus had sent Oss with the glass man at first, but his bodyguard had let Fenoglio’s landlady catch him. There was no dark corner where that great hulk could lurk unseen, and Ironstone hadn’t even reached the stairs leading to Fenoglio’s room. A chicken had chased him through the mud and a cat had almost bitten his head off – you certainly couldn’t say that glass men made ideal spies, but their small size came in so handy! The same was true of fairies, of course, but they forgot the least little errand before they’d even flown out of the window – and after all, Fenoglio himself used his glass man as a spy, although he was lamentably unfit for the job.

  No, Ironstone was much better at it. However, unlike Fenoglio’s glass man he suffered from vertigo, which made it impossible for him to cross roof tops, and even on the ground he was so bad at finding his way that Orpheus found it better to put him down at the foot of Fenoglio’s stairs, if he wanted to be sure he wouldn’t get hopelessly lost.

  But where the devil was he now? Admittedly climbing those stairs was like scaling a mountain for a glass man, but all the same … There was a goat bleating noisily in the shed behind which Orpheus was standing – it had probably caught the dog’s scent – and some kind of liquid was seeping through the leather of his boots. Its smell was suspiciously appealing to Cerberus, who was snuffling around in the mud so greedily that Orpheus had to keep tugging him away from it.

  Ah, here came Ironstone at last! He jumped from step to step, nimble as a mouse. Fabulous. For a glass man, he was a tough little fellow. It was to be hoped that what he’d found out was worth the ruin of those expensive boots.

  Orpheus bent down to Cerberus’s collar and took off the chain, which for want of a dog leash he had ordered in Smiths’ Alley. Cerberus trotted over to the stairs and plucked the protesting glass man off the bottom step. Ironstone claimed that the dog’s slobber brought his glass skin out in a rash, but how else was he going to get through the mud with those thin legs of his? An old woman looked out of her window as the dog trotted back to Orpheus, but luckily it wasn’t Fenoglio’s landlady.

  ‘Well?’ Cerberus dropped the glass man into his outstretched hands. Ugh! Dog slobber really was disgusting.

  ‘He’s not writing. Not a line!’ Ironstone passed his sleeve over his moist face. ‘I told you so, master! He’s drunk himself silly. His fingers shake if he so much as sees a pen!’

  Orpheus looked up at Fenoglio’s room. Light showed underneath the door. Ironstone, who was slippery as an eel, always crawled through the broad crack underneath it.

  ‘Are you sure?’ He fastened the chain to Cerberus’s collar again.

  ‘Absolutely sure! And he doesn’t have the book either. He has visitors, though.’

  The old woman tipped a bucket of water out of her window. Always supposing it was water. Once again Cerberus was snuffling around with far too much interest.

  ‘Visitors? I don’t want to know about them. But whatever it looks like, I’m sure he’s writing again!’

  Orpheus looked up at the dilapidated houses. A candle burnt in every window. They were burning all over Ombra. For the Bluejay. Curse him! Curse them all: Fenoglio and Mortimer, his stupid daughter – and Dustfinger. He cursed the Fire-Dancer most of all. Dustfinger had betrayed him – stolen from him, Orpheus, whose heart had been given to him for so many years, who had read him home to his own story and snatched him away from Death! What was it they called him now? The Bluejay’s fiery shadow. A shadow! It served him right. He, Orpheus, would have made him more than a shadow in this story, but that was over and done with. He had declared war on them all. He was going to write them a story that was to his own liking – just as soon as he had the book back!

  A child came out of the house and ran barefoot over the muddy yard to disappear into one of the outbuildings. Time to get out of here. Orpheus mopped the dog slobber off Ironstone with a cloth, put him on his shoulder, and stole away before the child came out again. Away from this filth – not that it was much better in the streets.

  ‘Blank sheets, nothing but blank sheets, master!’ Ironstone whispered to him as they hurried back through the night to Orpheus’s house. ‘No more than a few sentences, and those were crossed out … that’s all, I swear! His glass man almost spotted me today, but I managed to hide in one of his master’s boots just in time. You can’t imagine how it stank in there!’

  Oh yes, he could. ‘I’ll have one of the maids soap you all over.’

  ‘No, no, better not. Last time the soapsuds left me belching for more than an hour, and my feet went white as milk!’

  ‘So? You think I’m letting a glass man who stinks of sweaty feet march all over my parchment?’

  A night watchman came towards them, swaying as he walked. Why were those fellows always drunk? Orpheus pressed a few copper coins into the man’s wrinkled hand, in case he was thinking of calling a patrol. Now that the Bluejay was a prisoner in the castle, troops of soldiers were out and about in Ombra night and day.

  ‘How about the book? Did you really search for it thoroughly?’

  Two boards in Butchers’ Alley sang the praises of fresh unicorn meat. Ridiculous. Where was anyone supposed to get that? Orpheus turned into Glaziers’ Alley, although Ironstone hated going that way.

  ‘Well, it wasn’t easy.’ Ironstone looked nervously at the notices advertising artificial limbs for broken glass men. ‘Like I told you, he has visitors, and with all those eyes to notice things, getting around his room was tricky! I even searched his clothes, all the same, and he nearly shut me up in his chest! But no luck. He doesn’t have the book, master, I swear he doesn’t!’

  ‘Death and the devil!’ Orpheus felt an almost irresistible urge to throw or break something. Ironstone knew these moods of his by now, and clung to his sleeve to be on the safe side.

  Who but the old man could have the book? Even if Dustfinger had given it to Mortimer, he certainly hadn’t taken it to his dungeon with him! No, Dustfinger himself must have kept it. Orpheus felt a burning sensation in his stomach, as bad as if one of Dustfinger’s martens were sitting there gnawing his guts. He was familiar with this pain, which always attacked him when something wasn’t going as he wanted. A stomach ulcer, that was it. For sure. So? he asked himself. Mind you don’t make it even worse, or do you want to have to go to one of the local quacks and have your blood let?

  Ironstone was crouching on his shoulder, silent and depressed, probably thinking about the soapy water ahead of him. However, Cerberus was sniffing every wall he padded past. No wonder dogs liked this world – it stank to high heaven. I’d change that too, thought Orpheus. And I’d write myself a better spy, one as tiny as a spider and definitely not made of glass. But you won’t be writing anything here any more, Orpheus, a voice whispered inside him, because you’ve lost the book!

  Cursing, he quickened his pace, hauling Cerberus impatiently along with him – only to tread in cat dirt. Mud, chicken droppings, cat dirt … his boots were ruined, and where was he going to get the silver for a new pair? His last attempt to write himself a chest of treasure on the gallows hill had been a dismal failure, producing coins as thin as silver foil.

  At last. There it was in all its glory. His house. The finest house in Ombra. His heartbeat always quickened when he saw the front steps shining in the darkness, white as alabast
er, and the coat of arms over the entrance that made even Orpheus himself believe he was of royal descent. No, up to now things really hadn’t gone badly for him here. He had to keep reminding himself of that when he felt like smashing glass men, or wishing a plague of boils on the neck of a certain skinny Arab boy. Not to mention ungrateful fire-eaters!

  Orpheus stopped suddenly. A bird was perching on the steps. It sat as if it intended to build a nest right there on the spot. It didn’t fly away even when Orpheus came closer, but just stared at him with its black button-eyes. Birds – he hated them. They left their droppings everywhere. And all that fluttering, those sharp beaks, those feathers full of mites and worm eggs …

  Orpheus undid the chain from Cerberus’s collar. ‘Go on, catch it!’

  Cerberus loved to chase birds, and now and then he even caught one. But this time he put his tail between his back legs and retreated as if a snake were wriggling there on the steps of Orpheus’s house. What the devil …?

  The bird jerked its head and hopped one step lower.

  Cerberus ducked, and the glass man clung uneasily to Orpheus’s collar. ‘It’s a magpie, master!’ he whispered in his ear. ‘They …’ His voice almost failed him. ‘They smash glass men and collect the coloured splinters for their nests! Please, master, chase it away!’

  The magpie jerked its head again and stared at him. This was a strange bird, decidedly strange.

  Orpheus bent and threw a stone at it. The magpie spread its wings and uttered a hoarse cry.

  ‘Oh, master, master, it’s going to smash me to pieces!’ wailed Ironstone, clinging to his ear. ‘Grey glass men are very rare!’

  This time the magpie’s cry sounded like laughter.

  ‘You still look as stupid as ever, Orpheus.’

  He knew the voice at once.

  The magpie stretched its neck. It coughed as if it were choking on grain pecked up too greedily. Then it spat out some seeds on the alabaster-white steps – one, two, three seeds – and began to grow.

  Cerberus cowered behind his legs, and Ironstone was trembling so pitifully that his limbs clattered like china in a picnic basket.

  But the magpie went on growing. Feathers became black clothes, grey hair pinned severely back, fingers hastily counting the seeds that the bird’s beak had spat out on to the steps. Mortola looked older than Orpheus remembered her, much older. Her shoulders were hunched, even when she stood up. Her fingers curled over like the claws of a bird, her face was gaunt under the high cheekbones, and her skin was the colour of