The Secrets of Drearcliff Grange School (19 page)

BOOK: The Secrets of Drearcliff Grange School
10.71Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

Amy would be the last Grey.

Besides anything else, Mother would not open her purse for a whole new kit after only a term and a bit. Other girls wheedled parents or guardians. Ariels even spent their own money. Identical brown-paper parcels from Dosson, Chapell & Co. piled up at the Post Office in town until fetched by a frost-whiskered Joxer and a snowshod Dauntless. Bert Bates, the postman, wouldn’t hop out to Drearcliff in this weather. He’d lost a leg at sea and didn’t want to risk his whalebone falsie on the grim road to Drearcliff.

Viola went almost completely Black. Other Houses were speckled to various degrees, except Goneril. Rhode-Eeling insisted on traditional Grey and said she’d drop anyone in Black from competitive play. Frecks and Kali received brown-paper parcels, but didn’t immediately don dark plumage. They said they wanted the choice. Amy tried not to show disapproval. After all, what did it matter, really?

Kali crimped her new black boater to look like a fedora, but was wise enough in the ways of Drearcliff not to risk a Uniform Infraction by wearing it outside the cell. Few wanted to scrub the Heel in a blizzard.

The first whip to go Black was – no surprises! – Henry Buller.

Buller became Rayne’s bodyguard, always ten paces behind the skipping machine, ready to twist arms or slap faces. At first she was busy, enforcing respect for the Queen Ant… then, folk got the message and stopped chucking snowballs or chanting insults at Rayne.

The way Rayne wore her boater reminded Amy of Napoleon’s sideways hat.

She remembered what Keele had said about Boney. Was Rayne Amy’s own bogeyman, a dark doppelgänger sent to persecute or test or destroy? Rayne was an uncanny creature, but she didn’t come from the Purple. According to the note on the dust jacket of
Formis
, Professor Rayne lived in Oxford and lectured at Shrewsbury College.

Gryce wasn’t seen much these days. Mansfield, the first House Captain in Black, acted as if she had suddenly been made Head Girl, though there was no system for contesting the position. Even in Viola, the Black tide didn’t wash over all. Vanity Crawford remained all-the-way Grey, and kept one or two acolytes. But the Revolution continued.

Handsome Helena cut a dash in black, and was as a consequence admired. She set a style among Sixths – somehow acceptable within the uniform code – for sheer black silk stockings with fine grey seam-stripes. Girls gave up baggy, scratchy grey wool socks for black hose, not caring about the cold.

At Break and before Prep, the Black Skirts skipped together.

In defiance of tradition, girls from all Houses and forms fell in step. A negotiation was effected with Wicked Wyke, acting for the Headmistress. Skippers were allowed use of the Gymnasium. It was a powerful recruiting tool. The Gym was draughty, but indoors. Rayne might share the freeze tolerance of the flightless midge or the alpine cockroach and be hardy enough to endure the Arctic climes of the Quad and beyond, but most who followed her in fashion and exercise were not so blessed. The winter options of hibernation or migration were denied too.

Passing the Gym after lessons, Amy heard regular clapping over that blessed chant. ‘Send reinforcements, we’re going to advance.’ Advance where? Not to any dance Amy could think of. The skipping
was
a form of close-order drill. Chinese fighting monks were less disciplined than Rayne’s Black Skirts. The building shook. The massed jumping sounded like the
crump
of heavy guns on the Western Front.

Amy remembered skipping as
fun
. Years ago, she had skipped with the best of them… until she felt herself coming unstuck with each leap. She gave it up lest she betray her secret. Mother would not have been pleased. Besides, she started getting
light moments
about the time most girls grew out of skipping. For the Black Skirts, skipping was a calling, not a pleasure. It most certainly wasn’t a game.

Making sure no one else was around, Amy let herself lose weight and scaled the wall of the Gym alongside the the tall, ice-rimed windows. She found handholds in the brickwork. Peeping in from above a window, she saw the
corps de skip
hard at it. Mansfield and Buller called the rhyme, but Rayne was mainspring of the clockwork parade, dead centre of a square formation. All around, Black Skirts followed her lead. No Greys in sight.

That absent-yet-focused expression was on all their faces. Amy had to rub ice away with her sleeve to get a better look and pick out individuals. The traitor Inchfawn… shut out in Desdemona, but finding a place among the automata. Rintoul, Rayne’s first acolyte, now just another ant. Garland, defected along with Buller. Phair, the not-lookalike. Gould, of the hairy cheeks and stubby claws. ‘Even’ Keele, who’d talked so much sense. She-With-No-Mercy Aire. Thicke, Brydges, St Anne, Gallaudet, so many others.

Swots were skipping. Sloths were skipping. Rolled-stocking flappers were skipping! Hockey hooligans were skipping! Firsts bobbed up and down, higher so they’d fit in. Sixths were skipping like Firsts! Fearsome whips – practically grown women, exemplars to the school – jumped to a tempo set by a new bug Third. It was stranger, almost, than the Purple. Wrong in a way which gave Amy the collywobbles.

This was the Reign of Rayne.

Floating and an upset tummy were a bad mix, so Amy tried to get herself under control. She settled back on the path. She gulped a little, but did not heave. She had spots before her eyes and a copper taste on her tongue. She blew her nose and blood smeared her hankie. She inhaled cold air and the shock settled her.

She kept her head down and hurried on, anywhere but into the Gym.

IX: The Runnel and the Flute

O
N THE FIRST
Saturday of February, Amy was woken by icy little touches on her face. It was snowing again, and a couple of windowpanes had blown in. Frecks slept on, undisturbed by snow on her counterpane, but Kali and Light Fingers were swiftly stung awake. Amy shook Frecks to make her aware of the situation.

‘Not this guff again,’ said Frecks. ‘We might as well build igloos.’

After breakfast, the Moth Club barricaded their cell against the elements. Kali had scrounged plasticine oddments from the Art Room, pressed into a large, multi-coloured ball. Amy used some of the oily, pliable stuff to fix cardboard squares into the empty spaces in the window, then layered more of it over the hard, cracked putty to forestall further damage. Finally, she squashed thick plasticine ropes into the cracks around the frame to minimise draughty rattling. Every time Amy touched glass, it was like brushing black ice – she was afraid she’d leave raw skin behind.

For once, the Sixths – on the highest floor of Old House – had the worst of it. The weight of new-fallen snow strained the roof and opened fissures in the ceilings of their cells. Joxer went up on the roof – the site of Kentish Glory’s debut! – with a spade and tried to shift dune-like humps off the weak spots, but snow fell faster than the old retainer could shovel. De Vere, apparently, was terrified that Captain Freezing, who stood fully eighteen feet tall by now, was going to appear on the roof and crash into her cell.

In the afternoon, Pelham – the Desdemona House Captain – put out a call for volunteers to help Joxer. When only Palgraive stuck up her hand, a press-gang tore through Old House, conscripting everyone who didn’t duck out of sight fast enough. Amy and Kali, snug in their newly secured cell, were the first victims. Inchfawn whined that she was expected in her skipping circle, but waving a black hat cut no ice with Pelham and she was on the work party… along with Honor ‘Stretch’ Devlin of the Fourth and Winifred ‘Beauty’ Rose of the Fifth. Palgraive fetched them all shovels.

The girls tended to clang spades together too often and get in Joxer’s way, but made the best of the Sisyphean chore.

Devlin was tall for a Fourth. She was also an Unusual. As Stretch shovelled snow with no loss of her natural jollity, Amy wondered if she had nerves wired in reverse so she perceived icy blasts as gentle breezes. Then, she noticed Devlin’s arms were extended, lengths of wrist showing between her sleeves and her gloves. She got her nickname from her Ability.

The girl must have bones like India rubber. Useful for fetching down balls caught in high branches or fishing out rings stuck in plugholes. By making her arms longer, she could shovel better. Light Fingers’ Ability would have been the most use on the snowy roof, but she’d cleverly stepped into a wardrobe when the press-gang hit the Third corridor. Catching Amy looking, Devlin twisted her head round further than she ought to have been able to and wiggled her eyebrows cheekily. She was alarming, but refreshingly natural about it.

By nightfall, the conscripts had done what they could to shift the drift. Even Drearcliff whips couldn’t expect anyone to stick to a job like that after dark. Digger Downs’ lesson on Great Mutinies of Imperial History, much admired in the Whips’ Hut, was that native peoples could be mistreated only so much before they beheaded the missionaries and fired the garrison. Drearcliff girls might put up with more than the average Zulu or sepoy, but there was a tipping point… and whips were trained to stow the cat just before the cry of insurrection rang out across the playing fields.

The shovel party was called in and Keele served hot chocolate and crumpets in her cell. Keele wore her new black uniform.

‘I’ve read that book,’ said Devlin, joshing. ‘
A Fashionable Woman
, by Nathalie Dresst.’

Amy, still not comfortable with Black Skirts, couldn’t see that Keele had changed, apart from her clothes. But… part of the Sixth’s new kit was an ant badge like the one Rayne wore. Thinking about it, she realised she’d seen more of them lately. Many girls who took the black uniform option sported these tiny lapel brooches. The ants reminded her of the maggot inside Palgraive’s brain. Were these metal insects the real invaders and the hosts who sported them their slaves?

Inchfawn, emboldened in black, thanked Keele for the warming treats. She was rewarded with the sort of fond hair-tousling you might give a puppy. Outside the Moth Club, few were aware of the exact nature of Inchfawn’s perfidy but word got round that she was – like Shrimp or Snitcher – not to be trusted. But Kali’s abduction was last term’s hot news, fading in memory. The Black Skirts were the big story this year. Rayne was rising… and Gryce falling.

Kali and Amy sat in a corner of Keele’s cell with Beauty Rose. She got her nickname for obvious reasons too. Almost supernaturally lovely, Rose had fair fluffy ringlets, cornflower-blue eyes, a blush in pale cheeks and appealing, dainty features. The official School stunner was always in demand in the Art Room as a model for sketches and watercolours. She was also a tragic case, much pitied in poems by those with literary inclinations – works which would embarrass their authors in a few years’ time. Born without a larynx, Rose was mute. When she had to, she communicated with elegant, wrist-flicking gestures. It seemed cruel to put such a delicate flower on the work party and Amy feared she’d shrivel when exposed to the elements… but she proved hardy and deft.

Still, Beauty was easier to look at than to know. She sipped her cocoa and licked her chocolate moustache like a cat.

Light Fingers and Amy had talked about girls who were on the fringes of Unusual… cultivating Talents to such a degree that they might be classed as Abilities or possessed of physical qualities that came close to being Attributes. Rose was one of those.

Amy and Kali both tried to start ‘conversations’ with the Fifth.

She smiled sweetly and made gestures. She wasn’t like Palgraive, who sat vacantly while the maggot took a rest from pulling the wires, but she was hard to follow.

Nevertheless, Amy had a sense that Rose appreciated the kindly effort.

She recalled that sympathy after supper, when she and Kali saw Rose again. Bundled into a grown-up’s greatcoat, Beauty was being walked out of the Quad by the Reverend Mr Bainter. Sure-footed while working on the roof, Beauty now dragged like an invalid. As she was pulled past Mauve Mary’s shrine, a purplish glow illuminated the pair…

Amy thought she might be about to see the ghost… but this was just a random shaft of violet light.

What she did see was Beauty’s face. Her big eyes were bigger and her pretty mouth was open in an O. If she’d had a larynx, she’d have been screaming.

Then she was dragged out of the light.

‘Something’s up,’ Amy told Kali.

‘I’ll say,’ said Kali. ‘Ponce’s filthy paws are all over Beauty’s bod. If he tried them holds on a beerhouse moll, he’d get a slap across the puss.’

‘We have to follow them.’

‘In this climate? It ain’t gonna be no picnic in the park.’

The snowfall had stopped before sunset, but the thermometer plunged even further. Their breath was white mist. Amy and Kali went through the walkway and came out the other side. Bainter and Rose were a way ahead, struggling through driven snow. They were off the path and headed towards the woods.

Knowing they could pick up the trail, the girls went back to their cell and changed. Amy hoped to enlist Frecks and Light Fingers, but they weren’t home. There was a Black Skirt after-supper skipping rally in the gym, and the rest of the dorm had gone to watch. Light Fingers, at least, would be inclined to smuggle in snowballs to throw at the skippers.

Amy and Kali changed into their uniforms.

Kali’s Moth Club name was Oleander Hawk, after a dramatic arrowhead-shaped species found in Kafiristan. Light Fingers had run up a brown-and-white mask to mimic its wings. Kali wore it with a dark-green trenchcoat and her hair coiled up inside her black faux fedora. She had also assembled a bandolier of implements – a multi-bladed penknife, a sharpened throwing star, several handy tools and her cigarette lighter. So far, Kali had only dressed up in their cell to see how the Oleander Hawk outfit looked. It was judged suitably fearsome.

Kali said she’d like to add a tommy gun to her bandolier, and made a hose-directing gesture and pow-pow-pow noise as if spraying wrongdoers with hot lead. Even allowing for the difficulty of obtaining firearms in England, toting guns wasn’t quite the thing. Of course, the Moth Club would be set against desperate characters unlikely to be handicapped by such scruples – so perhaps a
small
tommy gun might be allowed, eventually. The Thompson company must make a ladies’ model.

Other books

Stud for Hire by Sabrina York
Star Dancer by Morgan Llywelyn
Fringe Benefits by Sandy James
Children of Earth and Sky by Guy Gavriel Kay
His Convenient Mistress by Cathy Williams
Yellow Ribbons by Willows, Caitlyn
Shadow Silence by Yasmine Galenorn
We Float Upon a Painted Sea by Christopher Connor