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Authors: Jennifer Ellis

A Quill Ladder (45 page)

BOOK: A Quill Ladder
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Mark gingerly turned his key in the lock and edged the door open. He was in a small, low-ceilinged basement with the pungent smell of something that Mark couldn

t immediately put his finger on

it was like a vitamin or health food store, combined with a hospital.

He made his way across the room, passing large dusty worktables covered with small tin plates and ancient glass jars of all sizes, several mortars and pestles, and a very old set of scales. He paused for a few seconds at the scales. He had a strong suspicion about where he was now, and he made his way to the door at the top of the stairs where a very dim light glimmered through the crack. This door was a straight deadbolt, and Mark could open it from the basement.

He found himself at the back of Abbott

s Apothecary

the tiny pharmacy in Coventry Green, now closed for the night. Even though the pharmacy was mostly modern, it was housed in a heritage building, and Mark had always thought the name funny.

He closed the door behind him, but his key didn

t fit in the lock, so he had to leave it unlocked. It would look perhaps as if someone had broken in. He made his way down one of the darkened aisles. What if he couldn

t lock the glass door that led to the street either, and someone came along and robbed the apothecary? It would be his fault.

Once out on the street, he tried the glass door that led back into the pharmacy and was relieved to find that it was an automatic lock. The now-familiar pentagon was etched into its front plate.

Mark turned and hurried through the dark streets toward the bus stop. He did not like to be out after dark.

 

 

After he got off the bus, he made his way up the street that led to the Sinclair house. He noted that the lights in his own house were off, for once. Maybe the strangers who had been living there were finally gone. He decided to take a small detour; he wanted to get his Vertical Sketchmaster, which projected aerial photographs onto topographic maps. Perhaps ordering some aerial photographs of Coventry City and projecting them onto the dot map would help him see the pattern. And he could pick up his ten-point divider as well. The distances between the dots, and now the lengths of the tunnels, were too regular, and the divider would help with easy measurements.

The door to his house was unlocked, and Mark let himself in. It appeared as if someone had departed in the middle of making dinner. A large pastrami sub sat partially made on the counter, with a pile of lettuce and the mustard container next to it. Mark

s stomach nearly leapt out of his body in hunger. Nobody seemed to be home. Maybe nobody would mind if he ate the sandwich (it would just go to waste if it sat out on the counter much longer). Mark approached the sandwich gingerly, picked up a bread knife, and applied a thin layer of mustard to the bun. Then he added the lettuce and some pickles from the fridge for good measure and cut the sub in half.

He would just take half. That would be better.

He made his way down the hall to his room, eating the sandwich. He removed the Vertical Sketchmaster and ten-point divider from their spots on his shelf, then sat down on his bed to finish the last few bites of the sandwich. He had forgotten how soft his bed was compared to the guest bed he now occupied at the Sinclairs

. He was very tired from all the walking in tunnels, and the running, and the mental expenditure of trying to keep up with Sandy.

He would just close his eyes for a few seconds.

 

*****

 


What now?

said Abbey. They had returned home to find the house still empty and Farley almost insane with relief, which soon turned back into worry when he realized it was only Abbey and Caleb. They had tried calling their parents

cell phones again, with no luck. They had even reconsidered calling the police, but the whole tale had become so absurd that it seemed out of the question. Abbey oscillated between worry for her dad, Mrs. Forrester, Mark, Simon, and her mother.


Maybe it

s time to break into the file room,

Caleb said.


Mom won

t be happy about that.


As far as I can tell, we

ve pretty much been abandoned. I

d say the file room is fair play.


Fine,

Abbey said.

They trooped downstairs to the locked file room, where a few good kicks from Caleb brought down not just the door, but the entire door frame. Abbey screamed when it came loose and toppled into the room. Caleb

s face looked a bit pale under his freckles.


I guess there

s going to be no denying this now,

he said.


Maybe we can put it back together,

Abbey said.

They flipped the door and frame sideways and carried it out into the hallway. The room, a converted food storage closet with shelves on all three walls, was lined with banker

s boxes. Each box bore a label, such as

College

1986,
” “
Taxes

2002-2006,
” “
Family Photos 2001-2003,

and so on.


Where do we start?

Caleb scratched his head.

I dunno. None of them look particularly exciting.


What did you expect them to be labeled as

All the Secrets of the Stones Explained, or Family History of Witchcraft? I

m guessing that if Mom wanted to hide things, she would put them into innocuously labeled boxes.

Caleb pulled down a box on the top far left shelf labeled

Marian

s Stuff

1970-1980.


I guess we go through them all, starting on this side and working our way around.

They sorted through old files for hours, until Abbey

s eyes drooped and Caleb

s face bore a particularly foul expression. They looked at old pictures of their mother as a child and themselves through the years, sifted through uninteresting college files of their mother

s biology courses and their father

s engineering work, looked at pictures of the three of them as babies, and read their parents

very uninteresting tax returns. In a few of the early boxes, there were a lot of files containing the deeds to all the properties their grandmother had owned in Coventry. She had, according to their father, made her living by owning and renting out old houses. But nothing seemed to be of any value.

While they searched, Abbey filled Caleb in on the men in animal skins in his future, meeting Sylvain and Russell with the pickaxe and shovel, and the trip to the Madrona and docks where Selena had been so enraged with Sylvain. She also told him as much as she felt she should about the docks and moving his people to Simon

s future.

Just after one in the morning, after going through yet another box of old tax returns, Caleb rose and pulled at his hair.

Agghhh! I can

t do this anymore. There

s nothing here. Nothing.

He turned and kicked one of the banker

s boxes that Abbey had just removed from the shelf. Instead of the soft thud that Abbey expected, the loud clank of metal on metal echoed around the room.

Abbey removed the lid. Inside the box was a small metal lockbox. Whatever was inside the lockbox was also metal

it jangled and clunked against the side as Abbey lifted the lockbox, which bore a three-digit combination lock.

Caleb was already rifling through the papers that had lain beneath the lockbox. He withdrew three sets of paper-clipped cards like the ones that Ian had given them. He closed his eyes for a few seconds and then flipped through them.


They

re exactly the same as the cards from Ian,

he said.

They say the same things.

He hurriedly pulled out the remainder of the items in the box. Just underneath the cards was a piece of paper covered in small text. Caleb drew it in toward his face, then held it at a distance, his face contorted in concentration.

This is, like, totally weird. What language is this?

He passed the paper to Abbey. She looked at the words, trying to make them out. They looked like words she should know, like English, but the words were not in English. The characters were in the Latin alphabet, and some words, like

the,

seemed consistent, and the general shapes of a few other words seemed somehow recognizable, but other than that it seemed almost gibberish.


Is it, like, Spanish, or French, or what?

Caleb said.

Abbey shook her head.

I don

t know. I

m not great with languages, but there are no accents, and the fact that

the

appears in so many sentences is strange. We could enter it into Google Translate.

There was a stack of cream folders underneath the paper. The first, labeled

Midwest Dynasties,

was empty, as were the second, labeled

Maps,

and the third, labeled

Homes and Asylums.

Caleb tossed the empty file folders to the floor in frustration.

It

s just all so confusing. Time travel, multiple futures, witches, camels, maps, cryptic messages, strange languages

And all of the adults are playing their own game, and no one is telling us anything.

Abbey nodded. She knew exactly how Caleb felt. But it was a surprising relief to know that her twin felt the same way. There had been too many secrets between them, and she was relieved that they seemed to be on the same team again.


Maybe it would help if we start with what we
do
know,

she suggested.


That won

t take long, because it isn

t much,

Caleb said.


I don

t mean all this.

Abbey gestured at the paper and the lockbox.

What do we know about what everyone

s up to?


Still won

t take long,

Caleb said.

For starters, we

ve got Selena, Nate, and Damian

they

re definitely trouble. They

re looking for a wormhole to get to a parallel universe and seem willing to do whatever it takes to find it, including stealing maps and cutting off people

s fingers. Oh, and did I forget to mention, using the wormhole incorrectly could rip the world apart, but the good news is that nobody seems to know where it is.

Abbey cut in.

Also, don

t forget all Selena

s talk about Altys who can jump between parallel universes. And she made an interesting comment to Ian when she was talking about wormholes.

Right person, right place, right time.

It made it sound like it was harder to use a wormhole than it is to use the stones.


Let

s hope so, given the whole world-ripping-apart thing,

Caleb said.

Anyway, moving on, we

ve also got Dr. Ford, who may or may not be helping them, but is definitely suspect. Then there

s Jake, who claims he

s being blackmailed to work for them. Sylvain and Russell seem to be vigilantes and have some sort of mining operation going on in the forested future, and are not to be totally trusted either, but for whatever reason, Mom and Dad seem to trust Sylvain. And let

s see, who else? Oh yeah, Ian and the two Franks.

Caleb paused and threw his hands in the air in exasperation.

Yeah, I have no idea what they

re up to. They seem to be on our side, and want to stop Selena, but they could be working for themselves too.

BOOK: A Quill Ladder
8.72Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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