Authors: Toby Forward
Many oak trees are entrances to the Deep World. Roffles carve away at the openings and burrow down, finding the tunnels that connect the Deep World to Up Top. The entrance to a roffle hole in an oak tree is always sideways, never straight down. Otherwise, a boy could step into a hollow oak tree and fall through. And no boyâand few girlsâcan ever pass a hollow tree without seeing if they can get inside.
Megatolly the peddler had oak trees where he stored his goods. He used to ask people which part of the oak was the tree. This is known as Megatolly's Question and has never been answered.
with Vengeabil in the storeroom. A bit of a College joke, old, scruffy, bad-tempered, he had a reputation for being absentminded, but no one ever wondered how anyone so forgetful could lay his hand immediately on any item you wanted from his crowded, higgledy-piggledy stores. Nor did they ever wonder how he could make such strong magic against them when they cheeked him. They treated him with a cheerful contempt, encouraged by Frosty and Duddle, who always laughed when they spoke of him and called him Old Vegetables.
“He's safe enough out of the way down there,” the professor used to say. Duddle sometimes said it was time for a new person to take over the stores, that Vengeabil probably had a load of old junk down there and it should be made more efficient. Recently, Smedge had started to say that it needed to be cleared out, that Old Vegetables wasn't up to the job anymore. Perhaps he should
be made an assistant in the sheds where the maintenance workers lived and worked. It would be a big demotion, but the College had to move with the times.
“I wonder,” Frosty had begun to say, “if we ought to take Vengeabil out of the stores and put him in the sheds. It would be easier for him. He needs a rest, and the stores would work better with someone else in charge.” Frosty was very good at forgetting that someone else had suggested something. He liked to think it was his own idea, when, in truth, he never really had any ideas of his own at all. He took the shape of the last person who sat on him.
But Vengeabil knew what they said. Vengeabil knew more than most people thought.
“Sam,” he said to Tamrin.
They walked past the first part of the stores, where all the uniforms and everyday things were piled high, down the corridor and around a corner. There was a heavy velvet curtain across the passageway. Anyone who tried to look behind it would see only a wall, but when Vengeabil pushed it to one side, it revealed a further passageway, wide and clean and fresh and light. It was sealed with a hiding spell, a very powerful one. Tamrin followed him, letting the curtain fall behind her.
Many doors led off from this passage. They took one on the left, letting themselves into a big kitchen. There were baskets of fruit and fresh vegetables, bowls of flowers, and racks of bottles and jars. A scent of fresh bread floated from the oven, and Vengeabil took out a large crusty loaf and laid it on a metal rack to cool.
Tamrin helped herself to a glass of fresh lemonade from a jug on a marble slab.
“What about him?” she said.
“You tell me.”
“All right,” she said. “It's him.”
“Does he know?”
“No. No idea at all.”
Vengeabil cut a slice of cheese and chewed thoughtfully. He sprinkled crumbly fragments onto the floor, and seven honey-colored mice scampered from nowhere, snatched them up, and scampered back. Vengeabil smiled after them.
“He's not safe here. He'll have to get out soon,” he said. “Before Frastfil realizes.”
Tamrin finished her drink and wiped her mouth with her sleeve.
“Where will he go?”
“It doesn't really matter,” said Vengeabil. “He'll just have to keep going until it starts to make sense to him.”
“When will that be?”
Vengeabil pulled a small cupboard away from the wall and opened the door to a pantry.
“What kind of wood?” he said. “It must be right.” He sorted through a pile of lengths of timber, rough-hewn and dusty. “Willow?” He handed one to Tamrin.
“I'm not sure. Give me something else.”
He found an elm branch and one of ash. Closing the door and
pushing the little cupboard back, he watched Tamrin as she tried each stave in turn.
“Willow has strong meaning for him,” she said. “But it's not him. Someone else. I think the ash.”
“Take your time.”
Tamrin banged the elm branch on the red tiled floor. It rang like a deep bell, warm and confident. She did the same with the ash. It boomed like a fretful sea hurling itself with anger and pain against the rocks. Doubt and concentration carved themselves on her face.
“This one.”
She handed him the ash.
Vengeabil took it sadly.
“You are right,” he said. “Help me to do it.”
It took them four hours, more. When they were done, the ragged branch of ash was smooth and almost straight. The bark shone. The end curved a little. It was as tall as Tamrin.
“You can't go,” said Vengeabil.
“I know,” she said. “I hate this place.”
“You never knew what it was like here before.”
This was an old conversation between them. One they would have many times again.
“Why do things get bad?” she asked.
“So they can get better again. Give it to him when I tell you it's time.”
swimming fast and free. Starback slipped among them, invisible in such a number. He threaded his way through their strings and swam with them. Fishes and dragonflies, triangles and boxes, birds and butterflies and banners. He wasn't the only dragon, but he was the only one not anchored to the ground with a cord.
Axestone had arranged a festival of flying and the whole village was there, holding tight to their kites and yelling with pleasure.
Through it all, Axestone wove a finding spell, using the air magic to discover a way to follow Sam. Starback found the wizard's kite and breathed smoke on it. He felt the jolt that Axestone felt through the twisted cord. The wizard had felt the magic clench and fasten. It was an easy trick for Starback. Axestone's magic was very like Flaxfield's.
Starback smiled a dragon smile and set off to find Sandage.
Soon they would all be traveling toward each other. Away from Sam.
in the corridor leading from the dining hall. He grinned and gave Sam a soft punch on the shoulder.
“Ready for Duddle?” he said.
“I'm not allowed back in class,” said Sam.
Tim whistled.
“That's not fair. Why not?”
“Dr. Duddle said he won't teach me.”
Tim made a face. Little copies of Duddle poured out of his mouth and fell to the floor, their arms flailing helplessly as they fell. They made a little popping noise when they landed and disintegrated. Sam laughed.
“Complain to Frosty,” said Tim.
“Shh.”
“What?”
“It's all right,” said Sam, in a loud voice. “I don't mind.”
“Old Frosty will make Duddle take you back. He's a bit of an old fool, but ⦔
Sam blew a little puff of air toward Tim, who, to his surprise, found himself singing the College song.
“Good,” said Frastfil, drawing up behind him. “Well done, Tom. Teaching Cartouche our song.”
“I thought he ought to know it, sir,” said Tim, giving Sam a grateful look. “And I'm Tim.”
“Of course you are. I'm going to have to take him away from you, I'm afraid,” said Frosty. “We're on our way to the library. Off you go to your lessons, Tom. Follow me,” he beckoned to Sam and set off down the long corridor.
“No one ever uses the library anymore,” said Tim.
Sam shrugged.
“I've got to work there till Duddle will take me back,” he said.
“I'll come up later,” said Tim.
“Thanks.”
“Come along, boy,” Frosty's voice echoed back to him. Sam trotted off, curious to see what a library looked like.
The library was upstairs. Sam found Professor Frastfil rattling the door handle and frowning.
“It seems to be locked,” he said. “I don't know why. It shouldn't be. There's nothing in there.”
“Are there lots of valuable books?” asked Sam, putting his hand to the door.
“Oh, yes. Yes indeed. The library is one of the treasures of the College. A very precious place.”
“Don't you have a key?”
“I used it. Look.”
The key was in the keyhole.
Sam could feel that the door had a locking spell. The key was useless.
“Is there something else locking it?” he asked.
“Ah. Very good. Well done. Yes.”
Frosty jingled the coins in his trouser pocket.
“It must have a spell on it,” he said. “Let me see. Um, yes. I know.”
Frastfil mumbled some words and waved his hand over the lock. He rattled the handle again. The door was locked as tight as ever. Sam moved a discreet hand over the hinge, then drew a line with his finger toward the handle. The door swung open, nearly taking Frastfil with it, head over kneecap.
“Got it!” He grinned at Sam. “See? That's what magic can do for you. Take that lesson to heart and use your time here to learn.”
“Yes, sir.”
Frastfil looked around.
“There's a librarian,” he said. “Somewhere ⦔
He stepped through the door. Sam followed. The boy's eyes lifted and fell, looked left to right. He gasped. Bookshelves soared up as far as he could see, thirty, forty floors of them. Far more than the building could possibly hold. Yet the room was small, circular,
only fifteen paces from side to side. An iron staircase led up to the next floor, and an iron gallery ran around the edge of the room, allowing access to the books on that level, then another staircase, another gallery, and another, and another, and another, until Sam lost count.
“Yes?”
Vengeabil stepped out from behind a bookcase. He held a book in one hand, his finger marking the page he was on. He scowled at them both.
“Oh, VegetaâI mean, Vengeabil,” said Frastfil. “You're here?”
“As you can see.”
“Yes, of course you are. I'm looking for the librarian. You know, the old man, I can't seem to remember his name.”
“Jackbones.”
“That's it. Jackbones. Of course. Is he here?”
“You gave him the sack,” said Vengeabil.
“Did I? Why did I do that?”
“I expect you had your reasons. I look after the library now,” said Vengeabil. “What can I do for you?”
“Do you? The library? As well as the stores? Oh, well. Who appointed you?”
“I did.”
Frastfil jingled the coins louder than ever.
“Oh dear,” he said. “Can you do that?”
“Do you want to use the library?”
“This boy here does.”
“Then it's a good thing someone's looking after it, isn't it?”
Frastfil jiggled from one foot to the other. He felt around in his pocket and produced a sheet of paper, which he handed to Vengeabil.
“Dr. Duddle has given this boy some work to do, to catch up. Please can you make sure he finds the right books and gets on with it?”
“I know just what to do,” said Vengeabil. “Thank you for calling in, Professor. Good-bye.”
Frastfil was out of the library before he quite knew how it had happened. The door shut behind him. He put his hand to it, to give Sam a last warning to work hard, but when he tried, the door was locked again. He frowned, jingled his change, and walked away, beaming.
Sam waited for Vengeabil to tell him what to do.
“What do you want to do?” the man asked.
“Professor Frastfil gave you the work I've been assigned,” said Sam.
“Oh, yes. So he did.”
Vengeabil tore the paper into little pieces and threw them into a wicker basket.
“So,” he said. “What do you want to do?”
“I don't know.”
“Well, I'll just leave you alone until you do know,” said Vengeabil. Then he went back to wherever it was he had appeared from. Sam moved over to see. There was a desk with a rubber stamp
and an ink pad on it. Behind that, to one side of a bookcase, was a small door that Vengeabil must have disappeared through. He turned and faced the library again.
For just a moment he was frightened, afraid that he would be in trouble for not doing the work he had been given; then, looking at the library, he forgot all about the fear and just smiled.
He wanted to look at a book, but he wanted to take his time. He didn't want to choose the wrong one. He closed his eyes, raised his arm, pointed his finger, and moved the arm from one side to the other and back again. When he was satisfied, he stopped, opened his eyes, peered along the line of his finger, and found a book. It was small, green with gold letters, and sat at about the level of his head when he stood up. He kept his eyes on it, crossed the floor, and put his hand out to take it from the shelf.
It wasn't a book. Nothing was. The whole shelf was made of wood, carved and painted to look like books. Sam stroked his fingers over it to the end of the shelf. The next bookcase along had real books on it. The shelves above and below his book were wooden carvings as well. Putting his hand on the book, he felt that the section was a door. He pushed, and used a small unlocking spell. The door moved, opening smoothly, silently. He stepped through into a small, square room with a low ceiling; the walls, like the other part of the library, were all books on shelves. An iron hoop suspended from the ceiling lit the room with six candles. There was a table with two chairs, a ladder to reach the high shelves, and two armchairs, not close to each other. A candle
burned on the table next to an inkwell, a pile of paper, and a tray of pens.
Sam left the room and closed the door. He went and sat on the iron stair.