âSix months' loss of privileges and stipend. You're ever so lucky, Mel,' said Ludo.
â
Lucky?
What does
un
lucky earn you around here?'
âNo, really you are. Apprentices have been thrown out for much less. It can only be because you're so talented. And the master likes you. I was here for six months before he even spoke to me. That's going to make Groot angry. He's bound to try and get back at you somehow.'
Ludo was right. The following morning, Mel was given a final warning by Dirk Tot. He was then put straight back to work scrubbing the studio floor. Groot, Bunt and Jurgis would periodically pass by, splashing fresh paint on parts he had already cleaned or kicking over his bucket. At lunch his food was sabotaged with a dead mouse and he left the refectory hungry. When he went to use the privy he found his precious drawings scattered around. This time they were smeared with something worse than gravy.
Mel ran straight to the dormitory, opened his secret cache and withdrew his bodkin. He crossed to Groot's sleeping place. He stood there, looking at the head apprentice's drawings pinned up around his bed. His fingers tightened on the dagger.
The door opened and Ludo walked up the empty dormitory towards him. âI thought I'd find you here. I saw what they'd done. Are you going to shred his drawings? I would.'
Mel hesitated. He tucked the bodkin into his doublet. âNo. It would just drag me down to his level.'
Ludo was quiet for a moment and then said, âLook, Mel, things will be different from now on. You'll see. You covered up for me when you got caught in the kitchen and you're the only one here, apart from Wren, who treats me like a human being. You're my best friend. I'll make it up to you.' He offered Mel his hand.
âAll right,' agreed Mel, touched by his friend's concern as they shook hands.
âBut there must be some way you could strike back at Groot. You could tell Dirk Tot what happened. He hates bullying.'
âNo, I can't do that.'
âWhy ever not?'
âThere's something you don't know about Dirk Tot. He's â '
The door opened again and Wren entered. âMel, I heard what happened in the refectory earlier. Here, I brought you some cheese. You must be starving.'
âThat's not the worst of it. They ⦠they destroyed his drawings,' said Ludo.
âJust wait till I'm serving again in the refectory. I'll give them a taste of their own medicine.'
âNo, Wren, they're not worth it. Thanks for the cheese.' Mel gratefully took the food. âLook, there're things I've got to tell you both. Important things. I wish there was somewhere private we could talk.'
âMaybe there is,' said Wren. âCome with me.'
They made their way to the grand entrance hall. In one of the galleries that surrounded it, halfway up, she approached a panel.
Wren looked about to make sure they were not being observed and then ran her hand around some moulding. There was a click and a small door, only half their
height, sprung open. âMind your heads and follow me.'
âWe're inside the great clock,' said Mel as he gazed around in astonishment.
The space glowed with the light penetrating the translucent glass of the huge clock face. Its hands and back-to-front numerals were clearly silhouetted against the daylight. All around them moved gears and pulleys, and a large, brass pendulum swung back and forth. Coiled springs contracted and expanded. Escapements and well-oiled ratchets rocked to and fro, and large counterweights hung suspended. The whole machine ticked and tocked with a loud but friendly voice. Racks of bells, in strict order of size, waited to announce the hours.
âHow did you know how to get in?' asked Ludo, touching the rows of brightly painted automated figures that paraded across the clock face each time the hour struck.
âMy father made this clock. And I designed and painted all the figures.' Wren ran her hand lovingly over the machinery.
â
You?
' said Ludo.
âI wasn't always a kitchen girl. I used to help my father in his workshop.'
Up close, Mel recognised several of the faces on the figures. A scrawny dragon bore the unmistakeable features of Adolfus Spute and a tiny, horned devil that of Mumchance. âTheir faces. They look like â '
âYes, they do. It was our way of poking fun at the Mysteries,' said Wren. âGreat, aren't they?'
âThey're
amazing
!' said Mel. âSo you can draw, too.'
âAlmost as well as you, I imagine. But girls aren't allowed to be apprentices so I just worked with my father until â¦.' She looked away. âLook, now that you know how to get in, why don't we meet here every evening, after work. It can be our secret place.'
â
Wonderful!
' said Ludo and Mel together.
âNow, we must all get back to our duties before someone misses us. Especially you, Mel. You can't afford another mistake. I'll see you both later.'
Supper had finished and the three friends were back inside the clock.
Mel took a deep breath and started to tell them of all
the things that had happened to him. He told them of his meeting with Dirk Tot in Kop and his encounter with Adolfus Spute in the fane, of their flight to Vlam and the meeting he had witnessed between Dirk Tot and the Fifth Mystery on the road. He recounted how he had seen Groot stealing the pigments from the storeroom and how his crime had been covered up â by Dirk Tot.
Suddenly, they were interrupted by a whirring noise.
âWhat's that?' said Ludo.
âThe clock. It's about to strike the hour,' said Wren. âWatch.'
The machinery around them came alive. The bells, struck by an army of small hammers, pealed loudly in the enclosed space. The figures began to spin and jerk their limbs, and the belt they were attached to began to move. The figures filed out of the small door at the right of the space and their shadows danced across the glass clock face. Then they returned through the left-hand door. Above their heads the stars and planets did the same.
Laughing loudly, the friends collapsed on to the floor as the performance ended.
âYou know, that's the first good laugh I've had since I arrived in Vlam,' said Mel.
âCome on, finish your story.' Wren was as eager to hear it as Ludo.
When the noise died away, Mel detailed his visit to the House of Mysteries, his escape from the High-Bailiff, his strange encounter with the coloured men and their journey through who-knows-where. His tale ended with Wren taking him through the secret passage back to the dormitory. The only thing he left out was the tiny box and its mysterious contents. If he told them about it he would have to admit he was a thief.
âThat's quite some story,' said Wren.
âWe had no idea,' said Ludo.
âBut I just don't understand any of it,' confessed Mel.
âWell,' said Ludo, âGroot's a thief. That's no surprise. He must be stealing the pigment to pay for his drinking and gambling. You've got something on him now, Mel. Something you can use against him.'
âAnd the coloured men,' said Wren. âThey must be fugitives from the mines on Kig. The pigment gets into
their skin and eventually it colours them completely. Not many ever escape. The pigments are toxic and it usually kills the miners after a while. It's called the Coloured Death.' Her voice trembled slightly. She could not help but think of her father.
âWhat I can't work out is why Dirk Tot should be working with the Fifth Mystery,' said Mel. âDo either of you have any idea?'
âNo,' said Wren, shrugging her shoulders. âHe always seems so dead set against them.'
âMe neither,' said Ludo.
âI bet we could find out if we explored the secret passages,' said Mel.
âThe
service
passages,' corrected Wren.
âBut what do you think about the strange journey that the coloured men took me on?' asked Mel.
âLet's start with the things we can find an answer for,' said Wren. âThen, perhaps, we'll find out a bit more about the other things.'
She produced the little key and three candles from the pocket of her pinafore. âI think we should start with Dirk Tot's study.'
âSecret passages? What are we waiting for?' said Ludo.
Opposite the clock, just across the gallery, was an entrance into the passages. After the door was closed, the busy sounds of the mansion were shut out, and they felt enclosed in their own parallel world. The air was very close and the yellow light from their candles cast shadows tall and grotesque on the wall.
âNow, keep it quiet. Remember, there are rooms with people just the other side of the panelling,' warned Wren. âI just hope we don't meet anyone while we're in here.'
âWhat, you mean like monsters or ghosts?' joked Ludo. â
Whooooo!
'
â
Shhhh!
' said Wren. âNo, silly. I hope we don't bump into any of the other servants. Now, come on.'
Mel and Ludo followed Wren but could not help casting the occasional uneasy look behind them as they threaded their way along in single file.
âDirk Tot's study is just up here,' whispered Wren. She carefully began to mount the uneven stairs, and then, halfway up, Ludo stumbled into Mel. The trio froze and held their breath. After a while, they continued
until they stood outside the study. Wren put her ear to the door. She turned to her friends and shook her head.
âThere's someone in there. We'll have to come back some other time,' she whispered as she led them back.
âWhere to now?' asked Mel.
Before she could answer, they heard the sound of footsteps. Wren pushed the two boys down a side passage. They blew out their candles and waited in blackness darker than any of them had ever known.
Please don't let us get caught
, thought Mel.
Not now. Please, please, please
.
Slowly, the footsteps faded. A few moments passed before Wren said, âI think it's safe to light our candles again.'
âLet's get out of here,' whispered Ludo.
âI thought you wanted to help us find out what's going on,' said Wren.
âIt's too risky.'
âWe're in here now,' said Mel. âWe might not get another chance for ages.'
âPlease. Let's go on for a bit longer,' said Wren, âor we're never going to find anything out.'
They both looked at Ludo.
âI suppose so. What's down there?' he asked, indicating a new direction.
âThat the way to the master's private studio,' said Wren.
âNo one's ever allowed in there,' said Ludo, ânot even Groot.'
âLet's just take a look,' said Mel, his excitement winning over caution.
âFine,' said Wren. âBut let me lead.
And keep quiet
.'
They set off towards the studio. Eventually, Wren signalled for them to halt. She put a finger to her lips and then pointed into the darkness ahead of them. A tiny sliver of light indicated where a door stood slightly ajar.
If I never get to see anything else in my life
,
I've got to see this
, thought Mel.
They crept up to the door. Then, Mel crouching, Wren standing and Ludo on tiptoe, each put one eye to the crack.
The master stood before a painting on a large easel that dominated a spacious, whitewashed room lit by gas brackets around the walls. From their hiding place, the watchers could not see what the canvas depicted. Mel took in the bright tapestries and a number of large, unframed paintings that leaned against the far wall. Several tables were stacked with tottering piles of books and artist's materials, and a huge, richly coloured rug covered most of the floor. In the far corner he saw a bulky cage in which several strange creatures chattered and swung to and fro. With surprise he realised that they were white monkeys like Albinus but coloured in different ways â one striped, one in harlequin quarters, one spotted and another patterned in rainbow hoops.
As they watched, the master raised his hand in front of the canvas and moved it in an elaborate gesture as if he were tracing a complicated design in the air. He moved closer to the canvas and â
The trio gasped. âHe's vanished!'
The friends were so astounded by what they had witnessed that they fell headlong through the door into the studio and landed in a heap. Their candles were extinguished in the fall. The patterned monkeys began screeching loudly and jumping around inside their cage, rattling the bars.
Wren picked herself up, rushed to the main door and looked out into the corridor. âAll clear.'
âQuiet,
please
be quiet,' pleaded Ludo with the monkeys.
âYou've a knack with animals,' said Wren as the shrieking died down. âI'm impressed.'
âIt's nothing, really, when you know how.' Ludo smiled to himself. âHey, Mel, the master must have liked what you did to Albinus so much that he's tried something similar on these guys.' A sketch of the newly green and white pet was pinned up next to the cage.
But Mel was studying the canvas. âCome here, you two. There's something you have to see.'
The canvas depicted a landscape in the unmistakeable, hyper-real style of Ambrosius Blenk. It was so finely painted it seemed to glow. An ethereal blue sky was studded with white clouds. In the foreground grew odd, alien trees with spiral trunks and ripe, speckled fruit hanging from their branches. A variety of brightly coloured, hybrid creatures grazed contentedly on the lush pasture that led down to a placid lake. On a small island, right in the centre of the lake, stood a head-shaped building that seemed to have crystallised out of the rock on which it stood. It had an expansive, thatched roof that resembled shaggy hair, peppered with random plants and the occasional stork's nest. Thick ivy grew around it like a beard. There were two great windows for eyes, above which projected shallow, sloping roofs like brows, and the entrance was in the form of a gaping mouth. A portcullis appeared like teeth, reinforcing the carefully crafted illusion. From the shore of the lake, a tongue-like bridge, built from red brick, spanned the waters and disappeared into the entrance. On the bridge, dressed exactly as they had seen him moments before, was the perfectly painted form of the master.
âIt's beautiful,' said Wren.
âIt's completely different from anything that he sends across for us to work on,' observed Ludo.
âYou don't understand,' said Mel. âA moment ago, the master was depicted here, in the foreground. Now look.'
The master had moved further along the bridge.
âHow did he do that?' said Ludo.
âI don't know. Look again.'
The master had gone.
âNow he's inside the building,' said Mel.
âWhat're you saying? That it's painted with some kind of vanishing paint?' suggested Ludo.
âNo. I'm saying that I think the master's somehow managed to get inside his picture.'
âHow can you get inside a painting? It's ridiculous.' Ludo prodded the surface of the picture. It was still wet but as solid as any other stretched canvas.
âYou saw the master vanish,' said Wren.
âYes! And remember I told you about the coloured men, the ones that kidnapped me? Well, before they put the sack back over my head, I had a moment to look
around. The landscape was different from this one but it feels the same. The way everything's perfect. It isn't like nature at all. Just before I was whisked out of the House of Mysteries I had my back to a painting. And when I was released, there was a painting there as well. I know it sounds crazy, but I think I was inside a picture with them.'
âWhich picture?' asked Wren. âThe one in the House of Mysteries or the one in the House of Spirits?'
âI don't know. Both of them perhaps. Or ⦠I just don't know,' said Mel, shaking his head.
âThat's impossible,' scoffed Ludo. âEven if you could get inside a picture â which you can't â how could you be inside two pictures at once? There must be a trapdoor here somewhere and the master used it when we weren't looking.'
âBut we
were
looking, Ludo,' said Wren. âWe never took our eyes off him.'
âYou're both talking rubbish. There's a trapdoor. I bet it's under the rug.' Ludo relit his candle from one of the gas lamps and began inspecting the floor. He crawled behind the easel.
âLook!' Wren and Mel gasped.
âLeave the candle there and come and look at this, Ludo,' said Wren.
With the picture illuminated from behind by the candlelight, the under-painting became discernable. All of the complicated brushwork that underlay the master's technique, that made his pictures seem so real, was revealed. But more than meticulous brushwork was visible. In the centre of the picture, and painted in some denser medium that rendered it opaque, was a circle within which other lines twisted and whirled, creating a knot-like design.
âWhat is it?' asked Ludo.
âI think it's a symbol. Like a Fa's diaglyph,' said Mel.
âWhat do you mean?' said Wren.
âIt's something that means more than itself. Maybe it's got something to do with the master vanishing.'
âBut he
didn't
â¦. Look, it's just a shape,' said Ludo. âIt can't actually
do
anything. It's just a paint stain.'
âThe painting wouldn't look like it does without the under-painting. So maybe this is a part of the illusion as well. You saw the master trace something in the air just
before he vanished. It could be this symbol.'
âCome on, Mel. Are you telling me that it's magic?'
âNo, it's
art
. Fa Theum says that's the only type of magic that exists in the real world.'
âBut art's about things we can see,' insisted Ludo.
âYou can no longer see the under-painting,' said Wren. âOr the skill or time it took to paint â but they're all locked up in there, too.'
âThat's different.'
âIs it? My guess is that this thing's an important part of the picture,' said Mel, as he took a sheet of paper and a pencil. âI'm going to make a copy. See what else you can find.'
Ludo shrugged and began sorting through the piles of books with Wren. âThere's a book full of drawings of animals here. I've seen some of these before in the master's pictures.'
âIt's his bestiary,' said Mel. âI'll have a look, as soon as I've finished this.'
Ludo wandered over to inspect the large paintings stacked against the wall. âThese must be the master's private collection,' he said as he sorted through them.
âWow! There're a couple here by Lucas Flink.'
âReally? They must be worth a fortune,' said Wren.
âWho's Lucas Fink?' asked Mel absently as he concentrated on his copy.
â
Flink
. Only the greatest master of fantastic paintings â along with our master, of course.'
âDoes he have apprentices too?' asked Mel.
âHe might have had once, but he's been dead two hundred years. That's odd. This canvas is still wet. How could the paint on something this old not be dry yet?'
â
Quiet!
' Wren crossed to the door and placed her ear against it. âQuick, someone's coming.'
Ludo snatched his candle from the floor and followed her to the service passage. â
Mel
, come on!'
Mel hastily finished his sketch and stole one last look at the canvas, which appeared normal again now with no trace of the hidden design. He joined the others and they closed the door to a crack just as Dirk Tot entered the studio. He looked suspiciously about the room. Then he approached the painting before withdrawing some phials of pigment from his reticule and arranging them with the master's other painting equipment. He
took another look around the room before leaving. They heard him turn the key in the lock after him.
âWherever there's a mystery, he turns up,' said Wren.
âWell, we've learned something this evening. If you know how, you can get inside a picture,' said Mel.
âNo, you
can't
.'
âLudo, what's it going to take before you accept what your eyes told you?' said Wren.
âIf you're so certain that you can get inside a picture, there's a way to find out for sure,' said Ludo. âWe can make one of our own.'
The next morning the master visited the apprentices in their studio as usual. Mel looked up from his scrubbing as he and his entourage strode by. They exchanged smiles and Mel detected a wave of jealous hostility from Groot and his sidekicks. Mel contrived to clean a patch near Ludo so that they could talk.
âHe looks OK,' said Mel in a low voice. âWherever he went hasn't done him any harm.'
âThat's because he hasn't been anywhere. Meet me in the clock after supper and I'll prove it to you. Watch
out.' Ludo made himself look busy as Groot scanned the studio, looking for Mel.
During one of his many visits to the courtyard to replenish his cleaning water, Mel noticed a door standing ajar. He looked about him, then approached it and entered. The door led, by way of a short covered passage, to the strangest garden he had ever seen. Along one side of the high-walled space were several beds of brightly coloured flowers. One contained only the primary colours, red, yellow and blue, and another the secondary colours, green, orange and purple. Yet another held an entire rainbow spectrum. Not only were there red, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo and violet plants, but between them many intermediate shades, so that the whole effect was of a rainbow laid out on the ground. Still another bed contained earthy, tertiary colours and one more was planted with unusual, achromatic plants: black, white and every shade of grey in between. As if all this was not strange enough, the opposite side of the garden contained the mirror image, except that the plants there were made of painted wood.
Some of the colours were as vivid as their natural counterparts, others less so. Kneeling there, tending these artificial plants, was Dirk Tot. Without looking up from what he was doing, he said, âSkiving off from your cleaning, Mel?'
âNo, I â¦.' He could not think of an excuse.
âIt's all right. Can't say I blame you. If I had my way you'd be doing something more useful than scrubbing floors. I know the master feels the same â but Groot's in charge of the apprentices and we won't interfere. Don't be downhearted, though. All apprentices start out with a few days of menial labour. It never lasts long.'
Mel knew Dirk Tot was mistaken in this. He would never be given anything useful to do while Groot was in charge.
Dirk Tot looked up. âThis is my Fugitive Garden. Fascinating, isn't it?'
âWhat's it all for?'
The giant rose to his feet and dusted some dirt from his knees with his good hand. âIt's a kind of on-going experiment. You see, all artists' colours are fugitive to some extent. That means that they fade when they're
exposed to daylight. Some are highly fugitive and fade rapidly while others are less so and hardly fade at all. Look here.' He pointed to some brown artificial flowers with his silver hand. âGenerally speaking, those that are painted with earth-like colours are the most permanent, and others â like those faded pinks over there â the least. I take a sample from every batch of pigment that we use in the studio and paint one of these wooden plants. The real plants, over there, are our control group, the ones I compare them to, so that I can gauge the extent of the fading. It's important to know how a painting will age. They'll be around a lot longer than you or I. Some pigments are more expensive than others, as you have already learnt to your cost, but the most precious is this one here.' He indicated a deep blue.
âThat's the household colour,' said Mel, fingering his own doublet.
âIt's called ultramarine. It's made from ground-up lapis lazuli, a semi-precious stone. The master likes that colour as it impresses his patrons, makes them aware of how rich and successful he's become. How much his pictures will cost them. It's good salesmanship.'
âHe must be very rich to have us all dressed like this.'
At that moment, a gust of wind blew open a gate at the far end of the enclosure. Mel caught a fleeting glimpse of another garden beyond. It was also planted with artificial flowers but they seemed to be much less faded than the majority of those in this. Dirk Tot was not aware of the open gate at first, as the undamaged side of his face was towards Mel, but the boy's expression must have betrayed his curiosity and the giant turned to look at what he found so interesting. Immediately, Dirk Tot dashed over and closed the gate.
He spoke gruffly. âShouldn't you be working? Run along. That floor isn't going to clean itself.'
Reluctantly, Mel left wondering why Dirk Tot did not want him to see the other garden.
After supper, Mel, Ludo and Wren gathered inside the clock. Ludo had smuggled some sheets of paper from the studio storeroom and had glued several together until they formed a sheet about as big as the master's painting. He had also brought a small pot of gesso and a paintbrush. They pinned the paper up on to the wall
and Mel carefully copied the knot-like design on to it from his sketch. The gesso rapidly dried and the white on white symbol was invisible.