Read Charlie Bone and the Castle of Mirrors Online

Authors: Jenny Nimmo

Tags: #Juvenile Fiction, #School & Education, #Fantasy & Magic, #Action & Adventure, #General

Charlie Bone and the Castle of Mirrors (4 page)

BOOK: Charlie Bone and the Castle of Mirrors
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As long as he keeps out of my way I don't care what he is." Gabriel swallowed the rest of his Choclix and wiped his fingers on his sleeve. "By the way I've decided to take piano with Mr. Ebony I can't give it up, and he's quite good, actually"

"I'd go to Miss Chrystal if I were you," Charlie advised Gabriel. "Mr. Ebony isn't — isn't what he seems. I think he's dangerous."

The others looked at him questioningly but Charlie couldn't explain his feeling.

After snack time, Charlie took his trumpet to Mr. Paltry's room. The elderly teacher was having a quiet cup of coffee. "I can't give you a lesson now,” he said irritably "Put your trumpet on the shelf and leave me in peace."

"Yes, sir." Charlie placed his trumpet on the shelf with five others, hoping it wouldn't get lost or stolen again. "Excuse me, sir, but do you know where Manfred Bloor's office is?"

"I don't know every single room in the building, do I?" Mr. Paltry fluttered a freckled hand. "Now, shoo."

Children were advised to leave their capes indoors on sunny days. Believe it or not, it was colder inside the dark academy than it was outside. Leaving his cape in the coatroom, Charlie went into the garden and asked as many people as he could if they knew the whereabouts of Manfred's office. Nobody knew Charlie ran indoors again. As he put on his blue cape, he slipped his fingers into his pocket. The three pages had vanished.

"No!" yelled Charlie, just as Gabriel walked in.

"What's up?" asked Gabriel.

Charlie told him, and for the next fifteen minutes Gabriel helped Charlie search the coatroom, but the three pages were nowhere to be found. Fidelio appeared and joined in the hunt. They looked in empty classrooms and even went down to the cafeteria. And then the horn sounded for dinner.

"Someone's determined to get me into trouble," moaned Charlie. "I'm losing everything, my trumpet, my lines . . .. What's going on?"

"Come and eat," said Fidelio. "Food helps the brain."

"Huh!" Charlie grunted.

The three boys made their way to the long, cavernous dining hall and took their places at the end of the music table.

The academy's staff sat at a table on a raised platform at the end of the room, and Charlie noticed that Manfred was sitting next to his father. So he was now officially a member of the staff.
At least he won't be doing his homework with as,
thought Charlie.

Dinner was almost over when Dr. Bloor stood up and clapped his hands. There was instant silence. The big man walked to the front of the platform and surveyed the lines of children below him. He was an impressive figure in his black cape, his shoulders wide, his gray hair neatly cropped, and his mustache as straight as a ruler. His eyes were almost hidden beneath thick folds of flesh, and it was difficult to tell what color they were. Now they looked black, yet Charlie knew they were gray

It was some time before the headmaster spoke. The children looked up at him expectantly At last he said,
"A
word to those of the new children who are endowed. You know who you are, so I shall not mention you by name. You will do your homework in the King's room. Someone will show you the way Do you understand?"

Charlie heard three thin voices utter the words, "Yes, sir." He couldn't tell where they had come from, but they certainly didn't belong to anyone at the music table.

Dr. Bloor suddenly shouted, "DISPERSE!"

Children sprang into action like clockwork. Benches squeaked on the tiled floor, plates were collected into piles, glasses clinked, cutlery clanged, and then everyone made for the doors. As Charlie climbed up to the first floor, he was joined by Gabriel and Billy Emma Tolly was ahead of him, and Tancred and Lysander could just be seen flying up another flight to the second floor.

Emma waited for Charlie to catch up with her. "I found these on the floor of our coatroom," she said, holding out three crumpled sheets of paper. "I heard you were looking for them."

"My lines," cried Charlie, grabbing the paper. "Thanks, Em. But how did they get in the art coatroom?"

"Haven't a clue," said Emma.

Charlie shoved the pages into his bag. The sound of heavy footsteps behind him made him look back, and he saw Dorcas Loom trudging slowly up the stairs. She was a plump girl with fair curly hair and a healthy complexion. Dorcas was a fervent admirer of Char lie 's great-aunt Venetia, and with her endowment, she could make clothes that had a deadly magic.

"What are you staring at?" she said sullenly

"A
cat may look at a queen," replied Charlie.

Dorcas gave a "Ha" of disgust, then continued to plod up the stairs.

Charlie and his friends stepped into the strange, circular King's room, with its round table and curving, book-lined walls.

Manfred was standing at the far side of the table, staring straight at the doors. Charlie's heart lurched, and then disappointment washed over him in a sickening wave as he saw a hunched figure sitting beside Manfred. It was Asa Pike, Manfred's devoted slave, the boy who could become a beast at dusk. He should have left school. Why was he still here? There were also three new children in the room. Joshua Tilpin was one of them.

"Come on, come on," ordered Manfred impatiently "Stop crowding in the door. I have an important announcement to make."

Charlie pulled himself together and walked around the table until he came to a place beside Tancred. From here, he could see the Red King's portrait: an old painting of a musty figure in a red cape and a slim gold crown. Gabriel, Billy and Emma followed Charlie, while Dorcas stomped in and closed the door with her foot.

"Show some respect for my father's house!" barked Manfred.

Dorcas scowled, but didn't dare to look Manfred in the eye. "Someone's sitting in my seat," she muttered.

"Don't be stupid, Dorc," said Manfred.

Asa snickered. “ ‘Dork.’ That's good."

Manfred ignored him. "Just sit anywhere, girl, and hurry up about it."

If Dorcas had wanted to sit on Manfred's other side, she was out of luck. Squeezed in between Manfred and Joshua Tilpin were two extraordinary-looking girls. They both had very shiny black hair, cut just below the ears, long bangs, and complexions that were so pale and smooth, they looked like porcelain.

Twins, obviously,
thought Charlie.
If they're real.
For the girls' faces were so blank, and their bodies so still, they could have been dolls.

Dorcas shuffled around the table and put her books next to Joshua's. He gave her one of his beaming crooked-teeth smiles, and Dorcas actually smiled back.

"Now that we're all here," said Manfred, glancing at Dorcas, "I want to explain a few things. First of all, you probably didn't expect to see me again. Well, you're stuck with me." No one made a sound except Asa, who snorted. "I'm now a teaching assistant," Manfred went on importantly "My job description is to supervise your homework, monitor your progress, supervise during exams, and help with any personal or work-related problems." He paused to take a breath, and Charlie wondered who on earth would want to ask the ex-head boy for help.

"Now; for introductions." Manfred named everyone at the table until he came to the inscrutable girls beside him. “And these are the twins Inez and Idith Branko."

As soon as their names were mentioned, the twins bent their heads and stared at the books in front of them. With alarming speed, the books flew across the table. One pile landed in Charlie's lap and the other in Tancred's.

"Oh, no!" Tancred grunted. "Telekinesis." The sleeves of his cape ballooned out, his blond hair crackled, and a draft sent a shiver through the loose sheets of paper lying on the table.

"I see that your summer vacation didn't improve your self-control, Tancred," said Manfred in a mocking tone.

Tancred and Charlie stood up and handed the twins' books back across the table. The girls didn't say a word and their laces remained completely blank.

Charlie couldn't resist remarking, "It's polite to say thank you."

Idith and Inez remained silent, but one of them, who knows which, shot him a very nasty look.

"Try and be pleasant to the new girls, Bone," said Manfred. "The twins are related to Zelda Dobinski, who has left us. Apparently she is a mathematical genius, so she's off to a university at a very early age. Unfortunately Asa here is the opposite of a genius. He's still with us because he failed all his exams."

Frowning with embarrassment, Asa hunched even farther down in his seat, and Charlie felt a rare twinge of sympathy for him. To be ridiculed by someone he admired must have been very painful.

"Last, but not least, we have Joshua Tilpin," Manfred announced.

On hearing his name, Joshua leaped up and bowed. Anyone would have thought he was a prince. And yet he looked a mess. His green cape was covered in dust, there were leaves and grass in his hair, and a cobweb hung from one of his ears.

"Sit down, Joshua," said Manfred. "You're not a pop star."

Joshua beamed at him, and to everyone's amazement, Manfred smiled back. Getting a smile out of Manfred was like getting water out of a stone.

What next?
thought Charlie. He was just about to start his homework when Manfred said, "Charlie Bone, you didn't bring me your lines."

"Oh, sorry Manfred. I've got them here." Charlie fumbled in his bag.

"I asked you to bring them to my office."

"But . . . I don't know where it is," Charlie confessed.

Manfred sighed. He looked at the ceiling and declared, "I am behind words . . . on the way to music . . . beneath a wing . . . and before trumpets, masks, and brushes." He paused for effect and brought his gaze back to Charlie. "Do I make myself clear?"

In any other circumstance, Charlie would have said, "Clear as mud," but as the situation was already pretty grim, he decided to say "Yes, Manfred."

"Good. Then bring your lines to my office before bedtime, or it's detention for you."

DETENTION FOR CHARLIE

Charlie was lucky to have a friend like Lysander Sage. Lysander always finished his homework early and today as soon as his work was done, he applied himself to Manfred's riddle.

As Charlie was leaving the King's room, Lysander grabbed his arm. "I think I know where Manfred's office is," he whispered. "Let's go and find our dorms and I'll explain."

Billy Raven had crept up on them. "Can I come with you?" he asked Charlie.

"Billy Raven, I want a word with you." Manfred stood outside the King's room, looking at the three boys.

Billy gave a resigned shrug and walked back to Manfred.

"Poor kid," Lysander said under his breath. He began to explain how he had interpreted Manfred's riddle.

"I started at the end," he said, "Trumpets, masks, and brushes' must refer to the signs above our coat-rooms. So Manfred's office is ‘before' you get to them. If it's ‘on the way to music,’ then it must be somewhere down that long passageway to the Music Tower, and that's ‘beneath’ the west ‘wing' — get it?"

"Mm," said Charlie. "But what about the words, ‘behind words'?" he said.

"Words are in books," said Lysander. "I figure if you can find a bookcase in that passageway Manfred's office will be behind it. Bookcases are often used as doors to secret rooms."

"Wow! You've got it, Sander. I did see a bookcase down there. Brilliant! Thanks!"

"You're welcome. Hope it works."

They had reached the first dormitories and began to scan the lists of names tacked to each door. Lysander found that he was still sharing with Tancred, and to Charlie's relief he saw his own name on a list with Fidelio's. Billy's name was at the bottom.

Fidelio was already unpacking his bag. He'd saved a bed beside his for Charlie. The dormitory was almost exactly the same as last year's. Six narrow beds arranged on either side of a long bleak room, with a single dim lightbulb hanging in the center.

Charlie quickly shoved all his possessions in a bedside dresser and hung his cape on a hook. "I'm going to try and find Manfred's office," he told Fidelio. "Can you cover for me if the matron comes in?"

"I'll say you're in the bathroom," said Fidelio. "Good luck."

Charlie was halfway down the hallway when he met an excited Billy Raven coming the other way

"I'm being adopted. Manfred just told me."

"That's great!" cried Charlie.

The small boy touched his white hair. "I wonder why they want me. I mean, they could have chosen any boy Someone nicer-looking, someone different."

"Who are they?" asked Charlie, suddenly concerned for Billy

"They're called de Grey Mr. and Mrs. de Grey They're a bit older than I expected, actually Manfred showed me a photo. But he says they're nice and very kind. And they've got a lovely house. I'll have my own room with everything I could want, even a TV he says. Imagine, my own TV."

Charlie would have liked to see the de Greys' photo. He might have been able to learn a little more about them if he'd heard their voices. "Did Manfred give you the photo?" he asked.

Billy shook his head.

"Well, it's great news, Billy."

Charlie was about to continue on when Billy suddenly asked, "Did you bring your wand to school with you?"

"Yes, I —" Charlie stopped. "Why do you want to know?"

"I just thought, you know, it would be good if you had it with you — to protect you, kind of thing. Do you keep it in your bedside dresser?"

"No." Charlie kept his precious wand under his mattress, but he wasn't going to tell Billy He'd said enough already.

"No. It'd be too long for the dresser," said Billy. "Under the mattress, then?"

Charlie felt uncomfortable. Was Billy still spying for the Bloors? "I've got to run, Billy" he said quickly "Got to get my lines to Manfred's office. See you later."

Charlie hurried on. All the activity in the school had shifted to the dormitories, and the great flag-stoned hall echoed with Charlie's solitary footsteps. For the second time that day he opened the ancient door leading to the Music Tower. He stepped into the dark passageway and surveyed the rough stone walls. Halfway down, on his right, he saw a small recess. Charlie crept along in the gloom, until he came to a narrow set of shelves crammed with drab, serious-looking books.

"Hmmm. Are you a door, then?" Charlie pushed one side of the bookcase, then the other. Nothing moved. Perhaps it wasn't a door at all. One by one, Charlie began to remove the books, searching for a knob or a handle to open the supposed door. But there was nothing.

"What are you doing?"

Charlie almost jumped out of his skin. A figure in a purple cape came gliding toward him. "Why are you here?" asked Tantalus Ebony.

"I was looking for Manfred's office," stammered Charlie.

"I see." Mr. Ebony gave Charlie a look of such overwhelming hatred, Charlie had to step back, dizzy with shock. A suffocating brew of smells filled his nostrils: stale air, candle wax, rotting things, mildew, and soot.

"You do well to be afraid, Bone," said the teacher coldly "You're a troublesome little devil, aren't you?"

Before Charlie could reply the man's features seemed to dissolve, and an array of completely different expressions crossed his pale face. For a fraction of a second, Charlie felt that from behind the changing masks, someone gazed out at him with infinite tenderness. He was sure that he had imagined this, however, when the look of haughty indifference returned to the teacher's face.

"You wanted the office." Mr. Ebony pressed a knot in the wood at the top of the bookcase. Immediately it swung aside, revealing the dim interior of" a small office.

"Thank you." Nervously Charlie stepped inside.

"I'll leave you to it, then. Toodle-oo." The extraordinary teacher's voice changed completely He waved his long fingers and rushed away humming a slightly familiar tune.

Charlie looked around the room. It was very tidy A photograph of a younger-looking Dr. Bloor with a small boy and a dark-haired woman hung above the mantelpiece. Manfred and his parents. Beneath the window, there was a desk and an adjustable leather chair that faced the courtyard beyond. Charlie stepped up to the desk and put his lines on a stack of papers. He was about to turn away when something caught his eye. A small print of a horse lay beside the papers. Charlie picked it up. There were other pictures beneath, prints of horses' skeletons.

At this point, Charlie should have left the room, but he had noticed a packet of photographs at the end of the desk. Charlie was not the sort of boy to hold back when he saw something interesting. And he was always interested in photographs. As he carefully lifted the packet, he failed to hear the soft
swish
behind him.

The photos were disappointing. There were only two people in them: a man and a woman. They were both middle-aged and rather ordinary The man had thinning hair and wore glasses; the woman's face was round, her hair short and straight, and her teeth very long. In all the photographs, she was smiling. No, not smiling, Charlie decided. It seemed rather that she was holding something invisible between her teeth.

In most of the photographs, the couple sat side by side on a sofa, but there were two taken in a garden and two more in a kitchen. Charlie was scrutinizing the empty-looking kitchen when he suddenly heard the woman speak.

Smile, Usher. We want to put the boy at ease.

I don't like children.
The man's tone was light, his voice slightly nasal.
Never have.

It won't be
for long.

How long?

Until he does what they want You'll have
to use your talent —
you know — to stop him from getting out.

Talent?
said the man in a whiny voice.
What use . . .

Charlie heard footsteps. He quickly put the photos back into the packet and placed it back down at the end of the desk. But when he went to the door, he found that it was stuck. There was no handle, no keyhole, no latch. He was caught.

Charlie banged on the door "Hi! Anyone there? It's me, Charlie Bone."

There was no answer.

Charlie banged again. "Hi, Mr. Ebony sir Are you there? Manfred?"

Charlie continued to knock and call for several minutes, and then he gave up.

It began to get dark. Charlie sat in the chair and thought about the photographs. All at once, it came to him. They were Billy Raven's new parents. Billy had always longed to have nice, kind parents and a real home How could Charlie tell him the truth?

As he sat in the gloom, wrestling with his dilemma, the lights across the courtyard went out one by one until Charlie was left in complete darkness. He made his way around the room, fumbling for a light switch. There didn't seem to be one. He pushed at the door. He knocked and called but no one came. The cathedral clock struck nine. Charlie sat on the floor and dozed.

A sound from the courtyard woke him up.
Clop! Clop! Clop!
Charlie shook his sleepy head. Hooves. There was a horse in the courtyard. Charlie stood up. I le could just make out the window's pale rectangle of light, but it was impossible to see anything in the yard beyond.

The cathedral clock struck ten and the hoofbeats faded. Charlie was about to shout again when the door swung open and a fierce light beamed in his face.

"What the heck are you doing here?"

Charlie recognized Dr. Bloor's deep voice. "I came to give Manfred some lines, sir, and then the door closed."

"How did you get in?"

"Mr. Ebony let me in, sir."

"Did he, now?"

"Yes, sir." Charlie wished Dr. Bloor would shine the flashlight away from his eyes.

"Well, it's detention for you, Charlie Bone. You'll stay in school an extra night. Now get back to your dormitory"

Dr. Bloor hauled Charlie out of the room and gave him a push down the passageway Charlie had almost reached his dormitory when the matron loomed around a corner and grabbed his shoulder.

"Ouch!" cried Charlie. "If you were going to give me detention, don't bother. I've already got it."

Charlie could hear Lucretia Yewbeam grinding her teeth. "Be quiet, until you're spoken to. Where have you been?"

"Stuck in Manfred's office," said Charlie with a sigh. "He asked me to give him my lines."

"Lines? On the first day of the semester? You're hopeless. I can't believe we're related."

"Nor I," Charlie mumbled.

"What did you say?"

"I said, forgive me for being related to you."

"Get to bed," growled Charlie's great-aunt Lucretia.

The next morning, on their way down to breakfast, Charlie told Fidelio everything that had happened the night before. His friend listened attentively until Charlie began to talk about the photographs.

"So you've been listening again," Fidelio said wryly

"I couldn't help myself" Charlie admitted. "They were a nasty pair, Fido. But how can I tell Billy?"

"Let's just hope you're wrong, and those people weren't the de Greys."

The two boys walked into the cafeteria and took their places at the music table.

"Interesting about the horses," Fidelio said as he buttered a piece of toast.

Billy Raven looked up from his cornflakes. "Did you say horses?"

“Tell you later, Billy" said Charlie. "By the way I've got detention this weekend, so I'll be keeping you company."

"My new parents are coming to fetch me on Saturday" said Billy

"So soon?"

"I'll have my own home!" Billy bounced up and down in his seat. "Yippee!"

Charlie grinned. He didn't want to dash Billy's hopes, but he was sure that real adoptions didn't happen this way How did the Bloors get away with it? They kept children hidden from their relatives, they moved orphans around without their having any say in the matter, they even made fathers disappear.

"Charlie!" Fidelio nudged him. "If you don't want your breakfast, I'll eat it."

Charlie spooned cornflakes into his mouth as quickly as he could. "I suppose you don't feel like getting detention with me?" he asked.

Fidelio looked embarrassed. "Sorry Can't. I've promised to play in my brother's band on Saturday morning."

"At least I might get a look at Billy Raven's parents. That should be interesting," said Charlie.

During the first break, Charlie saw Emma and Olivia running around the field.

"Hey you two!" cried Charlie, as he panted beside the girls. "Are you, er . . . occupied on Saturday?"

"Bookstore!" said Emma. "It's Auntie Julia's busy day"

"Have you got detention again, Charlie?" asked Olivia, slowing her pace.

"Yep. So, are you busy?"

Olivia stopped running and Emma drew up beside her.

"Well?" asked Charlie, taking a deep breath.

"Actually," said Olivia solemnly "Saturday is probably going to be the most important day in my whole life."

"Definitely" agreed Emma.

"I'm auditioning for a movie. It's a really big movie. There are at least three huge stars in it, and I'm going to be Tom Winston's daughter, or at least I think I will be."

"Tom Winston?" Charlie asked.

"Don't tell me you've never heard of Tom Winston," said Olivia, frowning. "He's a HUGE star!"

"Oh. OK. Well, good luck," said Charlie. "Hey you might be famous, Livvy!"

"Bound to be," said loyal Emma.

"Might be," said Olivia with a confident smile.

"So, will you talk to us when you're famous?" asked Charlie.

"What do you think?" Olivia's smile grew wider.

The hunting horn blared and Charlie never got to answer Olivia, because the two girls tore off and reached the garden door long before him. Charlie decided they must have been in training during vacation.

BOOK: Charlie Bone and the Castle of Mirrors
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