said. âFolks here need you.â
His Lordship felt heat behind his eyes. Fo fum! To be needed! Meenore, he thought, if I could reach you in time, Iâd leave. Forgive me for allowing myself to be wounded. Forgive me, Elodie, Nesspa. âIâll stay.â
CHAPTER TWENTY-THREE
E lodie awoke with no sense of how long sheâd been sleeping. The glowworms shone as brightly as ever. She sat up.
Her masteress had said IT would want her in an hour or two. Had that time come? Or passed, and the Replica had been found and she had slept through it? She hoped not, then felt ashamed. Of course she wanted it to be recovered, but she preferred to be there when IT proved ITs brilliance with her penetrating mind helping IT reach ITs conclusions.
Most of all, she hoped His Lordship had come back.
She left the Donkey Room. Before going to the great hall, she could still investigate the other guestsâ rooms.
Painted on the door next to the Donkey Room was a parrot with red-and-blue plumage. She eased the dooropen while trying to think of an excuse in case its tenant happened to be inside.
There was no one, and no need to tarry. Albin slept here. She recognized the room as his because her favorite thing lay atop the bed: his thick book of mansionersâ plays.
The cover was raised a little, and the pages didnât lie flat. He was always careless with his things. She went to the book, curious to see which play heâd marked. But when she opened it, she didnât even notice. The marker was a silver coin.
Lambs and calves! How did Albin come to have a silver, which would pay passage for all of them to and from the mainland many times over?
Did she have to mistrust him, too?
Since the room had been searched, she didnât have to replace the book exactly where it had been. Now she did comb the chamber but found nothing else of interest. Albinâs satchel held only a spare undershirt. His mountain staff leaned against the chest, which proved to be empty.
Back in the corridor, the Stoat Room came next, a bigger chamber with a double bed and a single: Master Uwald and Master Robbieâs quarters. Either the bees whoâd searched had turned everything topsy-turvy or Master Uwald, the just-so man, was slovenly. Rich apparel was heaped on the unmade big bed, the pile capped by asingle shoe, while its mate rested on the floor. Atop the chest, a backgammon game lay open. Within the chest: nothing.
By contrast, Master Robbieâs bed was neatly made. At the foot, carefully folded and stacked, were three spare undershirts and two spare tunics, everything new, the undershirts silk, the tunics soft linen. The tip of something leather protruded from under the pillow. Elodie went to it and discovered a long knife in a leather sheath.
She, like everyone else, carried a little knife in her purse, for ordinary tasks that might arise, like cutting thread or opening nuts. But why a long knife? For protection? For murder? An inheritance from his grandmother?
Might it have something to do with the Replica?
As she left the room, she wondered what the bees had made of the knife. The Elk Room was Master Tuomoâs. To Elodieâs surprise, a lute lay across the bed. She wouldnât have guessed angry Master Tuomo to be a musician. In the distance, a clappered bell rang. She stepped out into the empty corridor and heard voices.
âJohan, wait! Donât you march off! Youâd think Marya would trust me to fetch the child alone. Iâd trust . . .â
No time to return to her room, but at least they hadnât caught her in anyone elseâs. âHas the Replica been found?â she called.
Johan-bee came into sight first, then Ludda-bee.
âNo, notââ
âThat dragon hasnât discovered anything. Girl, I pity you for having to travel with the meddling, sneering monster.â
âIT wasnât meddlesome with me,â Elodie said mildly.
The three started back
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