Authors: Diana Wynne Jones
“I asked him,” said Everard, “and he denied it. He offered to give me his oath that he had not killed either of them.”
“Well, there you are,” said Alex. “Could Towerwood have killed your father himself? As far as I can see he does not object to murdering men with his own hands.”
“You mean poor Hugo Arbard? I wish I could think that Towerwood had the opportunity, Alex, but he was with me all the timeâpurposely, I begin to think. And I cannot see that even he would kill his own son.”
“Then could Bertram have killed your father because his father made him, and then Robert killed Bertram? I know he killed his uncle, and I remember he said it was the law.”
Everard was pulling his hands through his hair and, as his hands were full of straw, it made him look wild and even mad. The straw was the same color as his hair, so that he was looking like a white gollywog by this time. “Robert denied killing either of them,” he protested. “If I believe him in one case, why not in the other? It was different when he killed Aubrey of Gairne. He was Robert's uncle, not his foster brother, whichâbut you Outside do not seem to see the bond there is between foster brothers, so what can I say? My feeling is that it was Bertram killed my father and afterward himself. Robert, I think, simply took away the dagger so that Bertram should be spared at least a suicide's fateâwhich is bad enough, when I come to think of it. They are buried at a crossroads with a stake through their heart.”
As Everard said this, he looked at Alex, so pale that his yellow black eye stood out again as it had done the day before. Alex no longer wished he had his clasp-knife. He thanked heaven that it had chanced to find a gap in the grating.
“Everard,” he said, “take that straw out of your hair and talk of something else, for goodness' sake. I am very sorry I began the subject.”
“I am not sorry you began it,” Everard answered, but he began to comb his hair with his fingers. “You have helped me see somewhat of the truth. Perhaps we had better talk of other things. Let us build more castles in the air.”
Alex began talking of horses and then about school. Everard tried to attend to him, but it never lasted for long. All that day he was returning to his father's death, or to the things to do with it. If Alex would not let him talk about it directly, he disguised it as a castle in the air.
“Here is a good castle,” he would say, rolling over and making a heap of straw to stand for the castle. “I will pass an edict about traitors to make their end less severe. It is enough, surely, that they are dead, without doing as we do and chopping them into pieces. Men do not need a piece of a man fastened to the town gate or a post on the village green to deter them fromâ”
“You are making me feel sick,” Alex answered.
So Everard would go off on a new tack. “I will pass other edicts, many of them, but they will do no good unless the Prince is bound by them too. If I had stayed in Falleyfell, as I had ordered everyone else, then I would not be here. It was meant to be such a clever edict, Alex, since it was supposed to make people show respect for my father by keeping at home, but it was really meant to let us know who was aiding Robert. People were too clever for us, though. Half Gairne went to Robert's camp at Perland, but they all had urgent business there. It was only I who was caught.”
Alex said: “Would you have been caught if you had your own soldiers with you? How did you come to have Towerwood's men? That must have made it easy for him.”
Everard blushed. “I was an arrant fool. My men were so astonished when I ordered them to put you in the library, that I was afraid they would not obey when I asked them to break the edict. And I knew that Towerwood's men had a name for secrecy.”
“So you asked Towerwood for them?” said Alex. “That was plumb daft, Everard. And what made you have me put in the library? Was it that picture?”
Everard, still blushing, went to rub more straw in his hair and then thought better of it. “I thought it would keep you angry,” he admitted. “And I hoped you would find the library more interesting than a dungeon. Surely you did if this dungeon is any guide?”
“Yes, I did. You have some fine things there.”
They talked of the library for a little, until Everard thought of another castle in the air. “Endwait,” he said. “I must search out some deserving man and give the land to him. Robert does not need it. Towerwood had no claim to it at all. I am sure he only disputed it with Robert to make my father come here to be killed. The walled garden makes a very good place for a killing. Iâ”
“Does it really belong to Robert?” Alex interrupted. “Because
he
ought to give it to the deserving person if it does.”
“No,” said Everard. “It is very obscure, his claim. Endwait shall be forfeit to the sovereign, I here proclaim. Now, here is another castleâ”
Alex groaned. This went on for hours, until the sun moved away from the grating and left them in cold twilight. No one brought any more food. Alex began to
realize
that what had come that morning was to be their day's ration. He saw that they really would starve on that amount. Last night's food, it seemed, was just an extra, to show them what to expect. At length Alex became so hungry that he helped Everard build castles in the air. It was better than thinking of tomorrow's crust. The two of them passed upwards of a hundred imaginary laws and governed the Principality in the strictest justice. Everard came to his hundred-and-twentieth edict.
“This concerns the trial of anyone accused,” he said. “They must be brought to trial as soon as possibleâas I should have brought Robert to trialâwithin the week. I shall appoint a justiceâgood heavens, Alex! This means I must try
you.
Did you not claim the coronet the day of my father's funeral?”
“No, I did not,” said Alex.
“Yes, you did. And you blacked my eye in support of your claim.”
Alex realized they would be fighting again in a minute. He did his best to explain that his island did not seem to be the same as Everard'sâand he plainly puzzled Everard exceedingly. Everard shook his head.
“I believe youâpartly because I cannot understand you. My castle is not ruined, and if yours is, then they are not the same, but how can this be?”
“I have no idea. I was as puzzled as you were. People around us see your people sometimes and call them ghosts.”
“But we are not. How can a ghost starveâand I
am
starving, are not you?”
Alex, in order not to think of starving, was brought to something he knew he should have come to before. “I know you are not ghosts, and I know your island is different and I apologize for fighting you about it. I did not know it was your father's funeral. That makes it all the worse. The truth is I was angry with some other people I know and I took it out on you.”
Everard laughed. “You too? I would have been more polite to you if I had not been so angry with Robert. He came to the funeral, you see, wearing the Gairne orange in place of black, and tried to plead his cause. And I was so angry at his lack of respect that I ordered him off and sent Darron and March to take him prisoner. I never dreamed he would cross the bay by daylight. We never do. And once in the open, he easily outrode them. And I was ready to do murder, I was so angry when it was found he had gone. So I am sorry too.”
Alex held out his hand to Everard. Everard had just taken it, when the chains on the door began to rattle. This time it was the whole door and not the hatch which was being opened. Everard hung onto Alex's hand with both his.
“And I said you should wait till your dying day for my apology! Pray God I am no prophet!”
Pistol
L
uckily, Everard was not a prophet. It was Harry and Susannah on the other side of the door, but it had taken them some time to get there, and some time to get over the shock of their arrest.
“Turn this way,” said Lord Darron. “I have business at Endwait which will admit of no delay. We must have some talk over your case later, when my business is done.”
Harry wondered if he dared refuse. He had thoughts of presenting his pistol at Lord Darron's steel helmet and demanding their freedom. Lord Darron, however, had taken Susannah's bridle, and Harry was afraid she might be hurt if he became violent. He shrugged his shoulders and thought that this was anyhow one way to see the valley. If they were clever, they might learn something of Alex. He decided that it would be best to seem very meek and harmless. That way, they might avoid being locked up too.
To his alarm, Susannah was looking anything but meek. She was red with anger and mortification and actually crying a little. When Harry made no attempt to use his pistol, she turned and made violent pointings at it. Harry shook his head and, as they came out into the valley, Susannah was crying great shaking sobs of rage.
“My dear young lady,” said Lord Darron, blinking down at her, “you must not cry. I assure you I will not harm you.”
Susannah was so angry at being misunderstood that her sobs changed almost into screams. She had her whip lifted up to hit this impossible false St. George.
“Susannah!” said Harry.
Lord Darron smiled. Susannah could not bear that nervous smiling face in the middle of all that warlike armor. She slashed at it. Lord Darron took the whip as it came down and gently pulled it away. Susannah, who was a very good horsewoman, nearly fell, simply from anger. Harry wished he could pretend he had nothing to do with her.
“Now, now,” said Lord Darron. “You are beside yourself, my dear. Pray pull yourself together and ride faster. I am in a hurry. I have to find the Prince.”
“The Prince!” exclaimed Harry as they crackled along past the first houses of the village. “Prince Everard, is that?”
“That is he,” said Lord Darron, “and I hope I am not too late.”
The lines of bare orchard trees seemed to spin round Harry at this. “I hope so too, sir. We are looking for the Prince as well.”
“And I do not think he is on your side,” Susannah said. “What are you going to do? I think you are a very wickedâ”
“Do be quiet!” Harry snapped. Susannah stopped at once, she was so unused to Harry talking to her so angrily. Harry managed to get his horse out ahead of Lord Darron's and stand across his roadâat least, it was a street here, in the middle of Endwait village. People in the houses opened doors and peered from windows at the sight of my Lord Darron stopped in the road with his sword drawn, facing a young Outsider who was threatening him with the strangest of weapons and all unarmed otherwise.
“Put your sword away, sir,” said Harry. “If I pull this trigger, you will be dead before you can move. I am not lying. Now, will you please explain what you said just now of the Prince.”
“Willingly,” said Lord Darron. “I do not require your threats, my lord. I learned some while back from a dying soldier of Towerwood'sâwho astonished me, I admit, by confessing to have a bad conscienceâthat Prince Everard is confined in a dungeon here at Endwait. Now may we ride on? You can see how people are staring.”
“Let them,” said Harry. “Did this soldier mention Alex Hornby?”
“Yes,” said Lord Darron. “He is with the Prince. Most unwise, I would have thought it, if the Prince is mad.”
“From what we heard,” said Susannah, who was not able to keep out of a conversation for long, “I would say the Prince is no madder than I am.” She realized from Lord Darron's face that he was carefully not saying that this might not be very sane. She would have stamped her foot if it had not been in her stirrup.
What Lord Darron actually said was very polite. “I too have had my doubts about the Prince's madness. I am not one of those who ever feared much for the poor boy's reason, and therefore I am going to see. But when I said I hoped I was not too late, I had in mind the fact that Prince Everard's father was killed here in Endwait, a mere fortnight ago. There seems something more than a coincidence here, does there not?”
“There
is
more,” said Harry. “I think we had better ride on, sir. Will you give me your word not to attempt to lock us up?”
“I cannot do that,” said Lord Darron, not defiantly, but with a blink and an apologetic smile, “until I find how things stand. Will you agree to an armed truce, my lord? I promise not to lock you up at least until the Prince is found. Please move from the road. We shall be the talk of the Principality as it is, and I had hoped to be secret.”