I looked over at the other girl. She was sitting in the same dejected position she had been in at the holding cell â her knees drawn up to her chin with her head resting on them. She looked as though she'd given up already.
I hadn't, though. No way was I just going to meekly give up and go like a lamb to the slaughter. I paced around the cell looking for any way to escape. I tried the door and, of course, found it to be thoroughly locked and immovable. I looked up at the narrow window high above us and thought if I could somehow take a flying leap up to it, I might be able to â what, exactly? Turn myself into a snake and slither out through the narrow bars? Or a bird and fly out of the window? I rapped on the thick walls, only succeeding in scraping my knuckles. I lifted up the straw to look for a grate in the floor underneath, finding nothing but the tightly packed flagstones with not a chink between them.
It was as I was replacing the straw that the other girl spoke for the first time.
âI take for you.' Her voice was low, a little raspy, with a strong foreign intonation.
I started and turned around to find her looking at me, her green eyes quite unreadable. Weakly, I said, âWhat did you say?'
She shrugged and held out a hand, in which something small and green and heart-shaped glittered. I stared, unable to believe my eyes. I stammered, âWhâ what? How?'
âI see in your eyes you like this. So I take when they not watching,' she said, flashing a little smile.
It must have happened when I dropped the pencil, IÂ thought. She must have been very fast because I'd noticed nothing. Some thief, indeed! âThank you.'
âYou kind to me. I want to repay.'
I took the locket and slipped it in my pocket. I said, âYou're different. From before, I mean.'
She smiled. âI think if they think I am meek and scared, they not watch me too much.'
I smiled back. âGood plan. Pity you forgot about it in the police cell.'
She shrugged. âMake no difference. They come get me anyway. And I too hungry,' she said.
âYes,' I said, âbut if you hadn't done that â'
âI know. You not here,' she said, her green eyes shooting me a sharp glance. âI am sorry. This also why I want repay.'
I made up my mind and put out a hand. âI'm Selena. And you are?'
âI am called Olga,' she answered promptly, shaking my hand. âOlga of the family Ironheart.'
An unusual name â obviously foreign. I wanted to ask why the Mancers had taken her, but she forestalled me by saying, with a sideways glance, âYou hear of
garwaf
?'
âI don't underâ' I began, then gasped as I realised what she'd said. Her pronunciation was unfamiliar but I'd seen that word before in one of my mother's old books. I could see the actual line swimming in front of my eyes:
Garwaf: an old term for a werewolf.
âYou â you can't be . . .' I whispered.
It wasn't possible, it just wasn't. Werewolves and other shapeshifters had been extinct in the Faustine Empire for more than a hundred years since the defeat of the Grey Widow. They still existed in other countries, of course, especially Ruvenya, but even there I'd heard they weren't exactly thick on the ground. They lived isolated from ordinary people and kept to themselves except in rare circumstances. They had very few children. And they most certainly couldn't get visas to enter the empire. I could not even remember hearing any rumours of werewolves entering our lands within my lifetime.
All these thoughts flashed in my head as I stared at Olga Ironheart â at the sharp green eyes, the tangled black hair, the long nails and scrawny body, and remembered the flash of sharp white teeth when she'd smiled. I knew in an instant that the impossible had happened and that I was shut up in a Mancer cell with a werewolf â with a
hungry
werewolf.
She read my expression at once and said, sounding hurt, âYou mistake, Selena. Family Ironheart never eat people and never, ever hurt friend.'
âI'm sorry. I didn't mean, that is, I . . . it's just a shock,' I said lamely. âI never expected ever to meet â I mean, I know nothing really about your people. Only the little I've read in books. I thought your people weren't allowed to come here?'
She shrugged. âNot allowed does not mean not possible. They cannot guard whole border always.' She paused. âFamily Ironheart from Ruvenya, you see. But long, long, long ago my great, great, great grandmother, when she young, she come from here. She flee your country when great killing going on. My great, great, great grandfather â he find her in forest near border. She nearly dead, he nurse her until she well and then they marry. You see?'
âI do.' It must have been after the Grey Widow's rebellion, I thought, with a strange flutter of the heart. Oh, Olga Ironheart, you and I share more than you know! But I could not tell her â dared not tell her â that in my veins flowed the blood of the moon-sisters, who were outlaws like the
garwafs
, but in a worse situation, for werewolves had always existed in all kinds of places, while moon-sisters were indigenous to Ashbergia and had never settled elsewhere. And even though Olga had entered the country illegally, her government might help her if they found out where she was. But if the Mancers discovered the truth about me, nobody would help me. I'd be branded a traitor merely by virtue of my blood, and be made to disappear.
I said quietly, âAshberg's a dangerous place for someone like you. You were bound to get caught.'
She shrugged. âI did not think this would happen. I slip in unnoticed. And I have money. Plan to be careful. But my money, it all stolen in hotel and I am starving and take food from shop â and then am arrested. I think at first police not know truth about me. But somehow Mancers find out.'
âBut why did you come in the first place?'
âI am curious to see this country, home of my long-ago grandmother.'
Simple as that, yet utterly reckless, I thought. How could she think she'd pass unnoticed? But then she was Ruvenyan and werewolves were not outlawed there; she mustn't have fully realised what danger she was really in. âThe Mancers,' I said, âI'm sure they have ways of finding out if a shapeshifter is in the country illegally.'
She nodded. âI know this now. And I very careful but, well, once it is full moon and I go to hills and . . .' She broke off, looking a bit embarrassed, and I suddenly remembered hearing a wolf howling that moonlit night I'd planted the hazel tree. How strange if that had been Olga in her wolf-shape roaming the hills behind the city!
âOh my God!' I exclaimed, as another image burst in on me â something also from that night.
âWhat is it?' Olga said anxiously, as I feverishly fumbled for the locket in my pocket. Please, please let it be mine. If it was indeed mine, then there would be . . . With trembling fingers, I sprang open the catch of the locket and only just stopped myself from giving a cry of delight â for in it lay the hazel leaf. It looked just as fresh and green as the minute I had placed it in the locket, when I'd found it in my hair, after that vivid âdream' I'd had of dancing in the moonlight!
âOlga, we're saved! We're saved!' I said wildly. âOh, we're saved!'
She looked at me as though I were mad.
âIt's not what it seems,' I gabbled. âIt's from a magic tree which grants wishes . . .'
Olga's eyes widened. âWishes? Magic? You are witch?'
âIt's not like that. It's . . . Look, I'll explain later, it'll take too much time otherwise. Anyway, what matters is that the leaf can turn into something else â something we want.'
âWe want get out,' she said promptly. âSo you can wish for prison key, yes?'
âI suppose so,' I said hesitantly. âBut I'm not sure if â'
âYou try,' she said bossily. âYou ask for escape from here. Not to forget me, please.'
âOf course I won't.' I held the leaf and closed my eyes. Come on, dear hazel tree, I thought desperately. Please help me, just this last time, please. Make the leaf turn into a master key or a flying carpet or sticks of dynamite or anything that will get us out of here!
Nothing happened at first and then quite suddenly I felt the leaf give a little skip and become heavier. I opened my eyes and there in my hand was not a key
but a top
â one of those little toys you set spinning. It was shiny and green and new but there was no getting around it; it was a top and about as much use at opening locked doors and helping us out through barred windows as, well, a leaf.
The disappointment was crushing. I really had expected a miraculous escape. Instead I'd been given one of the hazel tree's little jokes, like the handkerchief it had given me that first time. Only this was much more serious, for metaphorically speaking I was in very hot water and I would be boiled alive come morning when the Mancers came to fetch us for the interrogation. I looked at Olga and, throwing the top on the straw, said, bleakly, âI am so sorry.'
Olga shot me a look. Then she picked up the top and stood looking at it, examining it closely. She said, âMaybe if you spin, wish comes true?'
I shrugged. âI doubt it, useless thing.'
But she set it spinning anyway. It spun better than any top I'd ever seen, flashing brightly so that your eye was drawn to it. At its fastest, it began to whistle so musically that it sounded like a tune. Then suddenly a flap on its side opened and out popped a little yellow toy bird on a spring. I held my breath, my palms prickling with excitement â but then the little bird popped back in, the flap closed, the whistling stopped, the top slowed down, down, down and then stopped completely.
Olga and I looked at each other. âSo that's no good either,' I said.
She shook her head. âMe, I do not know magic. It is you who is witch â'
âI am
not
a witch!' I said crossly. âI have no idea how to make magic work. It does just as it wants and I . . . Wait a moment.' I had been angrily scuffing my shoes at the place where the top had been spinning when my eye had been caught by something â a crack through which I could see a chink of light . . .
I scraped the bits of straw off the place to reveal the flagstones underneath. So far, so normal â but there, on top of one of the flagstones exactly where the sharp point of the top had spun, was a hole bored into the stone. It was about the size of a keyhole and there was light coming through it from beneath. I put my eye to it. I was looking down into a cell identical to this one. There was a man sitting on the straw, his head in his hands.
Behind me, Olga said, âWhat you see?'
I told her and she waved me away to have a look for herself. âWho is he?'
I shrugged. âA fellow prisoner. Can't see him properly.'
âHe wear nice clothes,' she said, looking through the peephole again. âHe not poor like me and you.'
âSo what? He's still in a Mancer prison. So he's in trouble just like us.'
âAh, wait â he turns now, I see his face. He is young man. Black hair. Grey eyes. He look very sad and very angry.'
âLet me see,' I said. I put my eye to the peephole and looked straight down into the startled grey gaze of Maximilian von Gildenstein.
If he was startled to see a disembodied eye suddenly staring at him through a hole in the ceiling, then I was utterly shocked by the sight of him. I felt as though I were dreaming. Why on earth was the son of one of the most important men in the empire â a member of the Mancer Council, at that â locked up in a Mancer prison? Surely they couldn't suspect him of anti-empire activities or being an illegal wizard! The whole thing was quite unbelievable. Surely Count Otto could not know what had happened, because what kind of father would deliver his only child into the clutches of the Mancers? And if the Mancers had done it behind his back, what could it mean? Then a shocking thought struck me â what if Count Otto himself had also been arrested?
My thoughts fled as Max called up anxiously, âWho's there? Please, who's there?'
âFriends. Oh, Max, are you all right?'
âNo,' he said, âI'm â' And then he broke off and said in quite a different tone, âHow the hell do you know my name?'
I swallowed, aware of Olga listening. I wanted to lie but somehow I couldn't. âI'm â I've met you. Once. You probably won't rememâ'
âOh no,' he said, interrupting me. âI know that voice. Of course I remember. It's you, Camille. Oh my God, I'd so hoped â'
âHoped what?' I said, and I could feel my heart thudding painfully for reasons I didn't quite understand. I clutched the locket in my pocket, thinking wildly that he must have picked it up the night of the ball and kept it with him. That's why it had been in the bowl.
He said, quietly, âI hoped they hadn't found you.'
I looked up at Olga. Her eyebrows were raised and I made a sign to her meaning, I'll explain later, and turned back to Max. I said, gently, âMax, why did they arrest you?'
He was silent for a moment, then said, âBetter you don't know. It's . . . too dangerous.'
âWas it anything to do with what happened that night with me and the Prince? Please tell me, yes or no?'
âNo,' he said, a little too quickly. But I let it pass for the moment. I said, âWas it . . . was it your
father
who had you arrested and brought here?'
âMy father? Oh no, no, he doesn't even know it's happened,' he said firmly, and this time it had the ring of truth.
âThen who â'
âI can't tell you,' he said. But I knew â he must have been arrested on the Prince's orders, no-one else would have had the authority.
âIf your father doesn't know,' I said, âthen you must get word to him.'
âHow?'
âThe warders â bribe them, threaten them, whatever you have to do.'
âIt won't work,' he said. A shadow crossed his face. âYou don't understand.'
âWhat I do understand,' I said crossly, âis that you're just sitting there waiting for the Mancers to . . . to do whatever they're going to do to you. You're giving in without a fight. I thought more of you than that.'
Colour rushed into his face. âAnd what about you, Mademoiselle St Clair, if that is in fact your real name? If I am not mistaken you too are stuck in a Mancer cell with no hope of escape.' His voice hardened. âOr are you so chirpy because you know that the people you work for will get you out?'
I was struck dumb. âWhat the devil is that supposed to mean?'
âFor God's sake! You appear out of nowhere, giving a name identical to that of a fictional spy. No-one knows anything about you, and when the border records are examined, no-one answering your description has entered the country from Champaine or anywhere else.'
âThey did that?'
âThey did indeed. Do you wonder that it's easy to make a case against you?'
âYou think I'm a spy,' I said blankly.
âI didn't say that.'
âDidn't you?'
âFor God's sake,' he said wearily. âDo you think I'd be talking to you right now if I really thought it? I'd never do anything that might endanger the empire.'
âAnd yet you're in a prison reserved for enemies of the empire,' I said.
He sighed. âYes. But then so are you.'
âNot for that reason. Whatever you might think, I've not been arrested as a spy, but for quite another reason.'
âWhat, then?'
âIf you can have secrets, then so can I,' I said tartly.
He smiled for the first time. It lit up his whole face with great warmth. â
Touché
.'
I took a deep breath and said, âI have to ask you â I lost . . . something the night of the ball â'
âYes. The locket,' he said steadily. âI found it after you'd gone. It intrigued me that such a fashionable young woman should wear a simple enamel heart. It made me think I had misjudged you.'
âYou didn't open it?' I said.
âYes.'
âIt's a memento,' I said hurriedly, replying to the questioning note in his voice. âA leaf from a tree on my mother's grave. She . . . died a few years ago. I miss her very much.'
My voice must have cracked a little as I spoke because he said, gently, âI am sorry, Camille. I did not mean to â'
âIt's all right,' I said awkwardly. âI . . . did you tell the Prince â about finding it, I mean?'
âNot him and not another living soul,' he said. âHe hadn't noticed you lost it. I thought . . . I thought the locket could be a clue. That it might help me find you â before
they
did.'
My palms were prickling, my heart racing, my veins singing with a strange sweetness I had never experienced before. I said weakly, âOh. I see.'
He sighed. âAnd now I've found you, but too late . . . Oh, Camille. We're in a pretty fair pickle the pair of us, aren't we?'
âYes,' I said quietly. âBut we're not alone.' I motioned Olga over. âMax, this is my friend Olga. She's from Ruvenya.' Let Olga tell him herself about the werewolf thing if she wanted, I thought.
She didn't. âHello, Max,' she said shyly, peering down.
âRuvenya, eh? I have visited your country. It is beautiful.' He paused. âI am pleased to meet you, Olga, even if it is in this place.'
âAnd I you,' said Olga. She added, hurriedly, âMax, my friend Selena she is a very brave person and she â'
âAh,' he said, interrupting. âSo that is her real name!
Come dance with me, Selena seen by moonlight
,' he quoted. It was a line from a well-known song. âSo not Camille, but Selena. And not Champaine but Ashberg, right?'
âRight, but never mind about all that for the moment,' I said impatiently. âWhat we should be thinking about is getting out of here.'
âIndeed,' he said wryly. âWhat are you proposing? That we walk through walls? Fly through the bars? Squeeze through the keyholes and swim out through the river?'
âThe river?' I echoed.
âYes. Part of this dungeon is built on the river. Below me somewhere there's an entrance to some steps that go down to the water. They sometimes bring in prisoners that way if they don't want anyone to see them.'
âHow do you know that?'
âBecause they brought me that way,' he said simply.
âWell then that's the way we'll go.'
He laughed. âReally! And how do you propose we get through the solid walls and the locked doors and all the rest? And it's not just a question of locks and keys, either.'
âWhat do you mean?' I said sharply.
âI heard my father speak of it once. All doors in Mancer prisons have a spell on them. That is why they do not need to employ as many guards as in an ordinary prison. You see, not only do you have to have the key, but you must have the words to unlock the doors. And even if you have both, it will do you no good â they only respond to a Mancer.'
âWell then, we'll have to get a Mancer to do it for us,' I said firmly.
âOh, Selena, why not ask for the moon too while you're about it?'
âGood idea, I might try that,' I said.
He laughed. âYou are quite the most unusual girl I have ever met.'
âYou can't have met many girls then, Maximilian von Gildenstein,' I retorted.
âI can assure you that â' he began, then in a different tone said, âI can hear someone coming, talk to you later.' He walked rapidly away to the other side of the cell, and I hurriedly covered up the hole in the flagstone with straw so the chink of light couldn't possibly be seen from below.
Olga said, with a sidelong glance at me, âHe is nice man.'
âYes,' I said quietly.
She looked a little severe. âBut you have not told me who this Max is and how you meet, and how it is that you say you are not witch but still you have magic leaf.'
âLook, it's rather a long story and we should be thinking of â'
âAll the family Ironheart like long story,' said Olga firmly, patting the straw next to her. âYou sit here, Selena, and you begin from beginning.'
So I sat next to her and I began from the beginning or, rather, from my mother's death. I told her just about everything except the secret my mother had told me about her moon-sister ancestry, for I was still afraid of voicing that to anyone. Olga listened without interrupting me, her great green eyes fixed on my face. When I finished with how I'd been arrested for stealing, she looked at me and said, âYou are not witch, you say, yet you can work magic.'
âCorrection,' I said. âI can't work magic, it works
me
. Big difference, Olga.'
She shook her head. âIn this country where only Mancers may know magic, people forget it come in many ways. It is not only in books and spells. No, the best magic â the very best â you do not choose it,
it choose you
. And it choose to grow in deep soil only â in fine, strong heart. And this is you, Selena.'
âWhat do you mean?' I said, startled.
âI am of the family Ironheart,' she said seriously, âand we are brought up to be strong. But I cannot endure such a thing as you suffer with those wicked ones.' Her eyes glowed. âLong since, I would have killed this Grizelda and her daughters, I would rip their throats out and leave them to the crows, I would cast out my father. But not you â you
give your word to your Mama, and this word you keep. Not because you are weak, but because you are strong. And this is why magic grow in you.'
âNo,' I said. âI had nothing to do with it. It was my mother, in a dream.'
âThis you tell me,' she said, âbut this also I believe: that in other hands this hazel twig, it stay a hazel twig; in yours, it work magic. You may not understand now why or how but magic choose you, that is certain. And that is how I know you get us out of here, like you tell Max.'
I squirmed. âOh, Olga, I was just speaking off the top of my . . .' I trailed off because she wasn't listening. She'd picked up the top again and was turning it over in her hands.
She said, âThis come to you for reason. It show Max was here.' She looked at me. âMaybe there is more, Selena?'
âMaybe,' I said slowly, her bright hope contagious. âLet's try another spin,' I said, and did so. The top bounced along merrily, spinning faster and faster till it started whistling and the mechanical bird came out. We watched it intently, hoping something would happen. But all it did was slow down and come to a stop. We pulled up the straw around where it had been spinning, in case it had deposited some useful item for escape, or even that it might have transformed some of the straw into gold with which to bribe the warders. But there was nothing. The straw stubbornly remained unchanged and all we found in it were some definitely non-magical fleas, which we promptly squashed.
âSo what we do now, Selena?' said Olga.
I shrugged despondently.
âMaybe when warder come, I kill him,' she said.
I sighed. âDon't be silly. You might be a werewolf, but he's at least twice your size and much stronger. And he's a Mancer, even if not of a very high rank. You'd probably be dead the instant you sprang at him. No, we've got to use our wits, not brute force.' I sighed. âAnd the top won't last, anyway.'
âWhat do you mean?'
âThe hazel-tree magic only lasts for a few hours. By morning it will be a leaf again â a dead leaf.'
âThen what good is this stupid toy?' said Olga fiercely, and she was about to snatch it out of my hands to throw it against the wall when all at once we heard voices just outside the cell, and then the heavy keys rattling in the keyhole. I only just had time to shove the top well out of sight, deep in my pocket, when the door crashed open.