A Quill Ladder (17 page)

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Authors: Jennifer Ellis

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It

s okay. He

s my brother,

Abbey said to the librarian, who apparently was standing guard. The woman scrutinized her for a few seconds but then nodded and let her past.

At the top of the stairs, in the map room, two men stood over Mark, who was crouched in a ball with his head pressed against his knees. The men kept trying to hook their hands under his armpits to pull him to a standing position, but Mark fought them off.


He

s with me,

Abbey called.

I

m sorry. He has Asperger

s. He gets upset sometimes. He

s fine. I

ll just take him home.

She hoped this was true, that Mark was fine. That he had not somehow been shot and was lying there in a pool of blood.

The two men backed off immediately, and Abbey went to kneel beside Mark. He quieted down a bit, but continued to emit low moans while clutching his hands over his ears.


Mark, it

s Abbey. It

s okay. We should go home now,

she said with exaggerated enunciation. She knew she probably shouldn

t talk this way with him, but it was a very difficult habit to break.


He has some maps,

said one of the men. He was short, with reddish-blond hair, and had the air of a librarian.


What do you mean?

Abbey said, scanning the tables or Mark

s person for the maps. Was the man implying that Mark had been trying to steal some maps?

Can

t you just sign them back in? I

m sorry he

s been so disruptive. Usually he

s fine. I just need to get him home.


No. You don

t understand. He brought some maps. Photocopies of maps. Maps that have been missing for over a hundred years. He threw them over the bannister, along with some of our maps, which he better not have damaged. I need to know where he got them.


They

re my maps,

Mark said.

Abbey ground her teeth together. She had to get back to Caleb, who was downstairs with the two gunmen. Mark swayed from side to side in his crouched position, pulling at his ears.

He needs time to calm down. Maybe we could go downstairs and talk about it?

she said. Surely the two men downstairs wouldn

t open fire in front of a crowd.

The man cocked his head.

Fine. He has to come with us, though. I

m not leaving him up here in the map room alone. We have over three thousand extremely valuable maps.

The implication that Mark would do something to damage the maps bugged Abbey, but she nodded.

Fine. Mark, we

re going downstairs now to gather up your maps.


My maps,

said Mark.

They

re my maps.


Yes, they

re your maps,

Abbey repeated, putting gentle pressure on one of his arms in an upward motion.


Well, they may not be his maps. The government may have a claim to them,

the man announced.

Mark surged up as if to grab the man, and Abbey stifled a scream. But Mark only made a half-hearted lunge in the man

s direction.

They belong to me. They were a gift,

he said.


Let

s just go downstairs and collect your maps, and then we can all talk.

Abbey shot Mark a desperate look, hoping he could understand even the vaguest semblance of body language.

Mark shook his head violently.

Friends of the very bad man are down there.

The blond-haired man

s eyebrows pulled together.

What

s he talking about?


Nothing,

Abbey said.

Mark, let

s just go outside and calm down. Then we can figure this out.


My maps,

he said.


We

ll find them.

Mark lifted his satchel and the green folder off the table where he had been working and meekly fell into step behind Abbey. She noticed as she passed that one of the map drawers was slightly ajar, as if maps had just been removed from it. Drawer 309. A chill snaked down her spine.

She tried not to descend the open-concept industrial-style stairs in a crouch, like a spy. She needn

t have worried though. Sylvain, the two men, and Caleb were gone, and Max milled around at the bottom of the stairs.

A female librarian spotted them and scurried in their direction with a stack of maps.


These fell,

she announced.


Those ones are mine,

Mark declared, thrusting his finger at the smaller maps on top of the stack.


We need to know where you got those maps,

the blond man said.


Mark, can we just leave the maps? We have to find Caleb and Sylvain.

Mark wore a defiant expression and stood with both feet planted firmly in front of the librarian, his hand extended.

I want my maps.


We really have to go,

Abbey said.


If they

re his maps,

Max ventured,

don

t you have to give them back to him?

The blond man squinted at Max and collected the smaller stack of maps from the top of the pile.

I

d really like to run a photocopy of them if you don

t mind. Sorry; perhaps we got off on the wrong foot. My name is Kasey Miller. I

m a map historian. These are really important maps. I think they

re from a collection of maps drawn in the 1880s by Galen Francis Morrison. I have one of them in my private collection and I

ve seen reference to the others in some historical documents. They were thought to be destroyed in the Coventry Museum fire in 1986.

Francis. There was that name again. Abbey thrust a nervous glance at both Mark and Max. She had no idea what to do. Where was Caleb? And Sylvain?


What do the maps show?

Abbey asked.

Kasey drew his lips into a tight line and drew the maps to his chest in an almost fidgety manner.

I

m not sure. The belief was that you needed all four of the maps to figure that out. But three of them went missing almost right after they were completed. I would really appreciate it if you would let me make a copy of these. I

d be willing to show you my own map in exchange.


Mark, that seems like a reasonable suggestion,

Abbey said.

Why don

t you go with Mr. Miller here, and let him photocopy your maps, and I

ll just go look for Caleb and Sylvain? You can meet me here in the foyer in a few minutes.

Mark looked doubtful but nodded slowly. Kasey gestured to the checkout desk.

The photocopier is right there. You

re welcome to watch. I assure you I

ll handle your maps with the utmost care.

Abbey edged out the front doors, scanning the darkened and almost deserted streets for Caleb

s orange hoodie.

Max followed.

I

m sorry to intervene, and if you don

t need any help, just tell me to get lost, but

is everything okay? You look kind of upset.

Abbey looked Max up and down. He seemed genuinely concerned and friendly, and the notion of venturing out into the night alone in a strange city terrified her. She wished stranger danger could be boiled down to a simple equation. The square root of Max, the mostly unknown, over the cube root of the wholly unknown, times the risk of letting Caleb go alone, equaled what? Go with Max? Stay at the library?


I

m fine. Did you see which way my brother went?

Max pointed to the left, toward a narrow street that wound away from the library and into a dimly lit residential area. Because the houses were largely subterranean, the glow from the low-set windows barely illuminated the roadway.


I

m heading that way anyway. If I see him, do you want me to tell him that you

re looking for him? You

re also welcome to come with me. Only if you feel comfortable, of course. With the murder and all the tree vandalism, I

d hate to see you walking around on your own,

Max said.

Over Max

s shoulder, Abbey saw Ian, Frank, and Francis dart across the edge of the library courtyard and head up a street parallel to the one that Max had said Caleb had followed.

Max gave her a smile and a wave, and made as if to head off.


I

ll tag along with you for a bit,

Abbey said quickly. Stranger danger seemed to be becoming the norm in her life. At least there were a lot of strangers around at this point. Surely a lot of strangers were safer than a single stranger? And right now, she felt like by accompanying Max
she
might be protecting
him
, rather than the other way around.

Max nodded and started off down the dark street. Abbey followed, the retinal and opsin in her eyes struggling to recombine after the brightness of the library. The streetlights that had blinked on and off before seemed only to light to halfway now, like nightlights.


It

s too bad about the tree in front of your offices on Oltree,

Max said conversationally.


The tree?


I don

t know why anyone would want to cut down a tree like that.

Abbey made a noncommittal noise and experimented with walking in people

s yards to avoid setting off the streetlights, while Max chattered about Sinclair Systems

s third quarter earnings and new products.

She saw three men standing under a streetlight a block up and swerved deeper into the closest yard.

Max, do me a favor and stop talking, and come over here out of the light.

Max gave her the kind of smile one would offer a crazy person.

Do you mind explaining to me what

s going on?

he said in a half whisper as he approached.


I think those guys up there might be the tree vandals,

Abbey said.

We caught them on surveillance video outside our office.

She started to make her way through the yards, hugging the houses. Max stayed behind her, making noises about calling the police, but she pretended she didn

t hear him. She spotted Caleb, the hood of his orange hoodie glowing like a setting sun, standing behind a hedge half a block up. She found a similar hedge and motioned for Max to join her.

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