âThat is the most amazing thing I've ever seen,' Ruby said. She wiped a clear patch in the window where her breath had fogged it up. âIt's like we're stepping back in time.'
Mr Fry guided the helicopter in a broad sweep around the top of the castle. They gazed down on a corkscrew of narrow laneways that wound their way up from the city gates to the top of the mount. The place appeared to be deserted.
âI'll have to put down on the mainland,' Mr Fry's voice sounded through the intercom. âToo windy to risk the causeway.'
Minutes later, Gerald, Sam and Ruby were standing on French soil, at the start of a narrow ribbon of elevated roadway that stretched into the bayâthe only way onto the island. Ruby wrapped her arms across her chest, bracing herself against the chill of the sea breeze.
âI'll secure the chopper,' Mr Fry said. âI understand there's a hotel on the island. I suggest you go ahead and book some rooms there. I'll follow shortly.'
Gerald pulled his backpack onto his shoulders as Mr Fry started the process of tying down the chopper's rotor blades. âYou should go back to London,' Gerald said. âRight away. Tell them I ordered you to fly around in circles to put the police off our track while we took a train to Scotland, or something.'
Mr Fry paused in his efforts. He looked at the Archer corporate logo on the side of the helicopterâan archer at full draw set against a blazing sun. âYoung sir,' he said. âYour great aunt may have thought me worth little more than a set of teaspoons, or so it would seem from her will, but in your hour of need, the name of Fryâ
St John
Fryâwill not be doubted. I shall stay the course.'
Fry stood tall, his broad-chested physique silhouetted against the lights of the island. Waves slapped against the side of the causeway and the wind whipped across the marshland behind them.
âWow,' said Sam. âWay to go, St John.'
The waves sent plumes of spray across the roadway as Gerald, Sam and Ruby made their way to the island. Water reached high on either side as they neared the castle gates. Gerald shifted his pack on his shoulders and stared up at the sheer stone walls that loomed over them.
âI thought Beaconsfield looked creepy at night,' he said. âBut this is something else.'
They ascended a ramp towards the fortified entryway, past a huge French flag snapping in the wind. Gerald suddenly realised they were in France and a jolt of excitement shot through him. They were on the hunt again. And despite everythingâthe accusation of murder, the escape from Londonâhe found himself alive with the prospect of fresh adventure.
He glanced at his watch. âAlmost midnight,' he said. âThere'd better be a room at this hotel.'
They passed through the city gatesâtwo enormous wooden portals that looked like they'd stood sentinel over the castle for centuriesâand under a portcullis, its rusted spikes pointing to the ground. A cobbled laneway wound ahead of them. It was so narrow people leaning from the high windows on either side of the street could have shaken each other by the hand. A line of street lamps, like orbs of yellow mist suspended in the air, lit the way. Finally, they saw a shingle hanging above a doorway: âHôtel de St Michel'. Light filtered out through glass panels in the door.
Gerald pushed his way inside. A bell above the door tinkled.
A dark wooden counter filled the tiny reception area. From behind it, a man stirred. He peered at Gerald over the top of his newspaper with an eye wary of late night arrivals.
â
Oui
?'
âUh,
bonjour, monsieur
,' Ruby said.
â
Bonsoir, mademoiselle
,' the man replied. His eyes darted from Ruby to Gerald to Sam.
âOh yeah,' Ruby stammered. âEvening. Um,
avezvous une chambre pour la nuit
?'
âYou want a room?' the man said. âJust the three of you?'
âWe've got a, um, guardian,' Gerald said. âHe's just coming.'
âHe had to lock up the helicopter,' Sam said.
The man's eyebrows shot up. âHelicopter?' he said. âYou came here in a helicopter?'
Ruby flashed Sam a furious look. âNo, of course not. How would we ever get a helicopter?' she said.
The man rubbed a hand down his chin. âI thought I heard something. Just before.'
âNo, noâjust my brother's idea of a joke,' Ruby said. She leaned over the top of the counter and whispered to the man, â
Mon frère est un imbécile
.'
The man studied Sam through his glasses then gave a nod. âEvidently,' he said.
âHey!' Sam said. âI understood that.'
The man ran his finger down a ledger on the desk in front of him. âI have a room available,' he said. âBut it is not cheap.'
Gerald pulled out his black American Express card. âThat's not a problem,' he said.
The man eyed the card narrowly. âFrom young runaways arriving late at night in helicopters, I accept cash only.'
Gerald returned the stare then peeled off a handful of fifty-euro notes. âI hope this will cover breakfast too,' he said.
The man thumbed through the wad of cash, his eyes lighting up. âFor this monsieur, I will lay the eggs myself.'
Sam looked like he was about to vomit.
The man gave them a large brass key and Gerald led the way up the narrow staircase to the fifth floor. By the time he jiggled the key into the lock and stumbled into the tiny room, he didn't know which was feeling heavier: his legs or his eyelids.
âWhat about Mr Fry?' Ruby yawned, plopping down on the bed by the window. âShould we have got him a room as well?'
âHe's big enough to look after himself,' Sam said. He flopped onto another bed.
âDo you think that guy downstairs suspected anything?' Gerald said. He collapsed onto a couch and kicked off his shoes.
âThe way he was eyeing off your cash, the last thing he's going to do is report you to the police,' Ruby said. âBy breakfast, he'll be your best friend.'
Gerald bit into his croissant and had the uncomfortable feeling that Ruby's prediction from the night before was coming true. The old man from the hotel reception had topped up Gerald's hot chocolate twice already and was hovering, ready to oblige, at the merest hint that Gerald needed something.
âI wish he'd go away,' Gerald said to Sam over the table in the crowded dining room. âHe's creeping me out.'
âHe's probably hoping for an enormous tip.'
âYeah? Well, here's a tip. Don't overcharge for broom cupboards and call them hotel rooms. And which one of you was snoring? Sounded like someone attacking a tin roof with a chainsaw.'
âThat'd be Ruby,' Sam said. âShe'd wake the dead.'
Ruby snapped shut a guidebook that she'd picked up from reception on the way through to breakfast. âYou may get a chance to test that theory if you don't be quiet. Now, if you two have finished, maybe we should concentrate on finding the casket and getting the police off Gerald's back. Okay?'
Gerald and Sam mumbled agreement.
âAccording to this book, the castle is actually an abbey, an ancient church. It was built over a thousand years ago. The battlements have kept invaders out for centuries.'
âSo the casket could be hidden anywhere inside the town or the abbey?' Sam said. âTerrific. Shouldn't take us more than a zillion years to find it.'
âDon't be a clot,' Ruby said. âGerald, what was the name of the third son? The one who smuggled the ruby casket out of Rome?'
âIt was Lucius Antonius, wasn't it? Quintus was the father. Gaius took the diamond casket to England and Marcus took the emerald one to India.'
âAnd when was that?'
âAbout 400AD, Professor McElderry reckoned.'
âWhat's that got to do with anything?' Sam said.
âWell, if this abbey and all its spires and walls only started construction around 1000AD, what was here when Lucius popped by on his little holiday six hundred years earlier?'
Sam blinked at his sister. âA bare rock?'
âTop of the class, Poindexter. I bet Lucius hid the casket in a cave and then this lot was built on top of it.'
âSo how do we find it under a jillion tonnes of stonework?' Sam asked.
Ruby pointed to the backpack at Gerald's feet and clicked her fingers.
âWhat did your last slave die from?' Gerald said as he kicked the pack across to Ruby.
âInsolence,' Ruby said. She pulled out Gerald's sketch.
âThis shows the island from the bay side,' she said. âSee? The road back to the mainland is behind it.'
Sam chewed on a bread roll. âSo? Gerald drew that when he was in one of his bizarre trances. It could mean anything. Or nothing.'
âMaybe,' Ruby said. âBut Gerald's trances always seem to point somewhere useful. I say we head out to the other side of the island and look at this exact view.'
âHow do we get out there?' Gerald said. âWe'd need a boat.'
âYou can walk.' The words sliced through their conversation like a razor. âSome more hot chocolate, monsieur?' The man from the reception hovered at Gerald's elbow, a milk-stained pot in his hand.
âUm, thanks,' Gerald said. âThat'd be great.'
Steam fingers curled up the flow of chocolate as it poured into Gerald's mug.
âThe tide is out so you can walk into the bay,' the man said, refilling Sam and Ruby's mugs in turn. âBut take care. When the tide turns, it comes in at the speed of a galloping horse. And there is quicksand.' His voice dropped. âIt clutches at your legs like the devil himself has reached up to steal your soul and leave your bones to the gulls. People have been caught. And drowned.'
Ruby smirked. âQuite the tourist trap then,' she whispered to Gerald.
âI don't get it,' said Sam. âLast night there were waves crashing against the walls. You couldn't walk anywhere. We saw them from the chopper.'
He let out a sharp yelp and grabbed at his shin.
Ruby forced a laugh. âMy brother and his jokes.'
â
Très drôle
,' the man said, without a flicker of a smile. âMonsieur will find that the tides here are about the largest in the world. At low tide you can walk halfway across the bay, if you are game.' He checked the clock on the wall. âYou have two or three hours before the water comes in again.'
The man drifted back to the kitchen.
Sam shot his sister a filthy glare. âWhat'd you kick me for?'
âYou don't think three kids turning up after midnight is suspicious enough that you have to go on about the helicopter as well?' Ruby said.
âSpeaking of which, I wonder where Mr Fry is,' Gerald said.
âSleeping in if he's got any sense,' Sam said, rubbing his shin. âWe better get moving if we're going to beat that tide.'
As they walked out through the reception, the old man bobbed up from behind the counter. âWill you be staying another night?' he asked, one hand resting on the till, a look of hopeful greed on his face. âI can have the room serviced straightaway.'
Gerald glanced at the others. âI'm not sure,' he said.
âYour friend. Yourâ¦' the man paused, âyour guardian. He asked me to tell you he had to check on the car. He'll be back later.'
âCar?' Sam said. âWe don't have aâ' Sam caught sight of his sister's coiled right leg just in time to check himself.
âHe is not friendly, your guardian,' the man said. âNot one for conversation.'
âNo, I guess not,' Gerald said.
âAnd the breakfast? It was to your liking?'
âIt was okay.'
The man's eyes darted down to his hand by the till, then back to Gerald.
âIt was good? Yes?'
The telephone rang. Gerald put his hands in his pocketsâand left them there. âWe might see you later,' Gerald said to the man, and opened the door to the narrow laneway.
Ruby was the last one onto the street. As the door swung closed, she caught a glimpse of the man speaking on the phone. He had a sour look on his face.
âMaybe you should have tipped him,' Ruby said.
The first of the day's tourists were making their way up to the abbey. A monk in a flowing blue habit gave Gerald, Ruby and Sam a cheery
bonjour
as he walked by.
âFor some hot chocolate and a stale lump of bread?'
Gerald said.
âMy French is pretty rustyâbut when he answered that phone call, I think I heard him say something like:
recompense
.'
âSo?'
âI think it means reward.'
Gerald looked through the glass of the hotel door. The old man was still on the phone, staring right back at him.