Swivel cleared his throat and read aloud from the scroll the dwarf had presented. âTo Ambrosius Blenk, artist and master, greetings. Let it be known that I, Lucas Flink, artist and master, late of the city of Vlam in the land of Nem, Lord of the Mirrorscape and proprietor of “The Garden at the End of Days” do hereby challenge you to a duel â¦.'
The master almost choked. â
A duel!
What's the man talking about? He's my oldest and dearest friend. Go on, Swivel.'
â⦠The reason for this said duel being that Ambrosius Blenk has given shelter and succour to the enemies of our gracious friends the Fifth Mystery, whose faithful service and magnanimity we greatly respect. These felons include, but are not limited to, one Dirk Tot, steward and counterfeiter, and one Melkin Womper, apprentice and thief â¦.'
All eyes in the room fixed on Mel. He shifted uncomfortably from foot to foot.
â⦠Moreover, Ambrosius Blenk has also permitted his residence known as the Mansion, located in the city of Vlam, to be used for the preparation of and dissemination of substances injurious to the benefices of the aforementioned Mystery. Namely, counterfeit pigments of a most inferior quality. This duel to take place forthwith, with weapons to be mutually agreed.'
Mel laughed nervously. âIt's a joke, right? Lucas Flink's been dead for two hundred years.' He glanced at Ludo, who nodded.
âDead? Now there's an interesting concept, Womper. In fact, he's as alive and well as you and me here in the Mirrorscape. You see, great artists never really die. They live on forever in their work. “The Garden at the End of Days” is Lucas's retirement home, in a manner of speaking.'
âSo it's not a joke.'
âNo, Womper, it's no joke. Lucas would never make light of a thing like this. One thing's for certain though: he didn't write that overblown piffle of a challenge. Come on, Swivel, let's go and get to the bottom of this.'
âSir? If I may be so bold? A duel requires two seconds.'
âDon't you mean a second and a third?'
âTwo
seconds
, sir,' repeated the pedantic butler. âProtocol demands it.'
âAll right. One of you must come with us. Not you, Womper, there's a price on your head. Nor you, young lady, I think. Cleef, you'd better accompany us.'
â
Me?
A duel sounds dangerous. Please don't make me go.'
âThere's not going to be any duel; not if I've got anything to say about it. Come on, Cleef! The sooner we get this over with, the sooner we can get back to my mansion.'
âGo on, Ludo,' said Wren. âYou helped save Mel. You can do this.'
Dragging his heels, Ludo followed the master and Swivel out of Billet, certain the High-Bailiff would give him away.
âDo try and keep up, Cleef,' called the master as they marched down a shaded tree-lined avenue.
For a moment Ludo almost forgot his fear as he
gazed down on to a beautiful valley tightly enclosed by tall, coloured mountains and cliffs etched with terraces. Dozens of sparkling waterfalls cascaded into a circular lake below. The effect was of entire mountainsides embroidered with liquid, silver filigree. Everything in the composition led the eye to Lucas Flink's magnificent house. It stood alone on its own promontory that jutted out into the lake. The building was made of the purest crystal and took the form of a giant sea anemone. Its many spines flexed gracefully against each other in the breeze, softly chiming like bells. The sunlight that fell on this structure was multiplied by the prismatic walls, and rainbows sprang from them like flying buttresses down to the surface of the lake. Silver-scaled flying fish glided back and forth in their glow.
âEver the showman, old Lucas,' observed the master.
âIndeed, sir, most artfully contrived,' agreed the butler.
âAre those what I think they are?' asked Ludo, pointing upwards.
âCertainly. They're angels,' said the master as
a pair flew overhead. âAn artistic conceit, of course, but a nice touch.'
As they reached the crystal house, Lucas Flink emerged. With his long, grey beard, Ludo thought he looked like Ambrosius Blenk, although from his deeply lined face he was evidently somewhat older. He was dressed in a grey robe in the high fashion of two centuries ago. Ludo was sure he looked embarrassed. Accompanying him in his scarlet robes was a smirking Adolfus Spute and Mumchance. Ludo tried to make himself as inconspicuous as possible behind his companions.
âLucas, my old friend,' said the master, âwhat's all this nonsense about a duel?'
Mel and Wren sat cross-legged on the library floor.
âWhat did that challenge mean when it called you a thief?' asked Wren.
âDoes the Fifth Mystery ever need a reason for anything it says or does? They took your father without a reason.'
Wren's shoulders slumped. âYes, they did.'
âAnd now they've got mine as well. And my mother.'
â
What?
How do you know?'
Mel told her. âThat's why we've got to get back to Nem as soon as possible. I've got to rescue them. But right now something else is worrying me.'
âWhat's that?'
âI've been thinking. First the master's lands in his painting are wrecked to lure him into the Mirrorscape and then he's trapped here. With him out of the way, Dirk Tot is arrested, the mansion ransacked, and the artificial pigments that pose such a threat to the Mystery are seized. Everything the Fifth Mystery's been doing since is to prevent the master from returning to Nem.'
âYou think they're still trying?'
âYeah, I do. And another thing. The master's been in the Mirrorscape ages and he hasn't got sick. The mistress said that while he's in a part that's created by his own hand, he's protected.'
âAnd now, he's been lured outside. Into Lucas Flink's bit of the Mirrorscape â where he can get sick if he stays too long.'
They both said it at once: âIt's a trap!'
Mel and Wren crouched behind the trees at the end of the avenue and peered down into the valley. Below them Ambrosius Blenk spoke with Lucas Flink, while the High-Bailiff and Mumchance stood to one side. If there was a trap Mel could not see where it was coming from. Then they saw Adolfus Spute bend his tall frame and whisper something to Mumchance. The dwarf raised his silver whistle to his lips and blew a long, shrill blast.
For a moment everything was still. Then Mel and Wren saw the mirror-like surface of the lake begin to shimmer. The faint ripples grew bigger until waves began to lap on to the shore. Bubbles erupted from the surface and a shape, hung with dripping lake-weed, rose out of the roiling water â an enormous tortoise-like contraption on long spider legs billowing filthy black smoke from its funnels and polluting the unspoiled air. It stalked towards the shore.
âIt
is
a trap!' said Mel.
âIt's a machine like the ones that attacked Billet,' said Wren. âThey must have cobbled it together
from the leftovers of those we destroyed.'
From the space where the tortoise-monster's head had been, a watertight door squealed open and a gangplank emerged that thudded down on the shore. From the body of the machine ran a score of scarlet-clad men-at-arms of the Fifth Mystery. They surrounded the two old masters and Ludo and Swivel, crossbows aimed at their throats.
Wren got to her feet. âCome on. We've got to help them.'
Mel grabbed Wren's arm and pulled her back. âNo, there're too many of them. Let's stay hidden until we can work out what to do.'
âWhat's going on?' said a strange voice from behind them.
Alarmed, they turned and there, radiating light in the shaded avenue, stood a white-robed angel. From above them came the soft flutter of wings and a second blond-haired angel landed beside its companion, casting its own pool of light. âHere, let me see,' said the second angel.
Wren's mouth was hanging open. âI should be
used to the Mirrorscape by now, but
angels
. Are you
really
angels?'
âOf course we are. What did you think we were, shuttlecocks?' said the first.
âThere's our master,' said the second.
âLucas Flink?' said Wren.
âCertainly. But who are all those other people?'
âThat's
our
master, Ambrosius Blenk â and the funny-looking one's Swivel, his butler,' said Mel.
âAnd the boy's our friend, Ludo. The ones in red are from the Fifth Mystery,' added Wren. âAnd they've taken them all prisoner.'
âWhy?' asked the angels together.
âBecause â¦.' began Mel. âLook, it'd take too long to explain. The important thing is that we need to rescue them. Will you help?'
âWill it involve any ⦠you know â¦
devilry
?'
âI'm afraid it will,' said Mel.
âIn that case, I'm your angel. How about you, Farris?' asked the first angel.
âCount me in, Bathor,' answered the second. âI'm always up for a spot of devilry. It's so boring
flying around all day looking angelic.'
âBut what good can just four of us do?' said Wren.
âI've got a plan,' said Mel. Turning to Farris and Bathor, he asked, âTell me, how well can you two fly?'
Adolfus Spute and Mumchance had locked Ludo, Swivel and the two old masters in a room high in Lucas Flink's crystal house. The crystal was so pure it did not seem to have any walls. Or a ceiling. Or a floor. Ludo could feel the solidity of the building beneath his feet but his eyes told him he was standing in mid-air. It made him feel very queasy. The room had a panoramic view of the lake, and if he looked down he could see the men-at-arms milling about on the shore.
Ludo saw the High-Bailiff and Mumchance as they clumsily ascended what must be a staircase. They kept missing their footing and bumping into things.
Adolfus Spute's going to give me away
. Ludo looked around.
Where is there to hide in a crystal house?
â
Now
do you see that you've been misled?' said the master, attempting to convince his old friend that he had been the victim of a cruel deception.
Lucas Flink shook his head. âBut surely there's some mistake, Ambrosius. The Mysteries are a force for good.'
âYour view of them is over two hundred years old. Since your day they have become corrupt.'
âBut they say it's
you
who's become corrupt. The High-Bailiff assured me he had evidence that you'd been fabricating synthetic pigment in your household. Is this true?'
âYes, Lucas, it is. We've been making pigment that ordinary people can afford. Colour belongs to everyone, not just a few. In your time everyone could afford colour in their lives but now the price of the Mystery's Pleasures has become exorbitant.'
âPleasures?'
âSo Adolfus Spute forgot to tell you about those, did he? Well, Pleasures are â '
âPleasures are what make the world go round; my world, that is.' The High-Bailiff and Mumchance entered the room. âAnd this old fool and his half-faced servant have stolen more Pleasures than your feeble brain could possibly imagine.'
âHow dare you talk to me like that!' said Lucas Flink. âAnd in my own house.'
âNow I have your skeg-bellied friend here, you and your house have served their purpose.'
â
Now
do you believe me?' asked the master.
Ludo edged towards the farthest corner of the room.
âStay where you are, my little stool pigeon,' ordered the High-Bailiff. âTrying to fly the coup, were you? Wouldn't you like to stay and sing us another song, Birdie?'
Ludo suddenly felt hot. Beads of perspiration broke out on his brow. He looked about for somewhere to hide. Anywhere. And then he saw it. â
Look!
' he shouted.
Everyone turned. Out over the lake, two angels had begun an aerobatic display. Ludo looked down and saw that all of the Mystery men had seen this too and stood transfixed by the spectacle.
âYours?' asked the master, nodding towards the angels.
âMine,' confirmed Lucas Flink. âMisbehaving again.'
âIt's
fantastic
!' said Ludo, thankful for the distraction.
Mumchance blew his whistle and pointed to the lakeshore below, where the men-at-arms were jostling each other to get a view of the performance.
âFools,' said Adolfus Spute. âGawking when they should be plundering. Come with me, Mumchance. We'll soon put an end to these shenanigans.
Ooph!
' He had walked into an unseen wall. It took two more collisions before he succeeded in finding an exit.
Just then, the angels began an especially spectacular series of loops, whirls and arabesques that elicited gasps of wonder from their audience below.
âDo they often do this?' asked Ludo.
âIf ever they get the chance,' said Lucas Flink. âSometimes I wonder why I created them.'