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"You're being funny again, aren't you?"
"So glad you noticed."
"So will you teach me?"
"I'm not a teacher. I'm a detective. I already have a career."
"Oh, right. It's just--I'd really like to learn, and you know it all."
"Your flattery is subtle."
"But it's okay; if you don't want to teach me, that's okay. I suppose I could always ask China."
Skulduggery looked at her. "China won't teach you. She won't teach you because there is nothing that she does that is not for her own gain. You mightn't see it at first, you might think she's actually being nice to you, but you can never trust her."
"Okay then."
"Okay. So we're agreed?"
91."We're agreed. No trusting China."
"Good. Glad we've got that sorted."
"So will you teach me magic?"
He sighed. "Dealing with you is going to be a trial, isn't it?"
"That's what my teachers at school say."
"This is going to be fun," Skulduggery said dryly. "I just know it."
Skulduggery dropped Stephanie off at Gordon's house, and half an hour later her mother's car splashed through huge puddles and Stephanie went outside to meet her. She managed to keep her mother's attention off the house, lest she notice that the front door was merely leaning against the door frame.
"Good morning," her mother said as Stephanie got into the car. "Everything okay?"
Stephanie nodded. "Yeah, everything's fine."
"You're looking a little bedraggled."
"Oh, thanks, Mum."
Her mother laughed as they drove back toward the gate. "Sorry. So tell me, how was your night?"
Stephanie hesitated, then shrugged. "Uneventful."
92.
Chapter Seven.
Serpine
Nefarian Serpine had a visitor. The Hollow Men bowed deeply as he strode through the corridors of his castle. They looked real from a distance, but up close they were nothing more than cheap imitations of life. Their papery skin was a mere expressionless sh.e.l.l, inflated from within by the foulest of gases. It was only their hands and feet that were solid and heavy--their feet clumped when they walked, and their hands weighed down their arms, so they stood with a perpetual stoop.
93.Their number increased the closer he got to the main hall. They were simple creatures, but they did what they were told, and they hadn't known what to make of the visitor. Serpine entered the main hall, the crowd of Hollow Men parted, and a man in a dark suit turned to him.
"Mr. Bliss," Serpine said politely. "I thought you were dead."
"I heard that too," Bliss responded. He was an elegant man of muscle and ma.s.s, as tall as Serpine, but whereas Serpine had black hair and glittering emerald-green eyes, Bliss was bald, with eyes of the palest blue. "In fact, it was a rumor I started. I thought it might make people leave me alone in my retirement."
"And has it?"
"Unfortunately, no."
Serpine motioned for the Hollow Men to leave them, and he led his guest into the drawing room.
"Can I get you a drink?" Serpine asked, heading to the liquor cabinet. "Or is it too early in the day?"
"I'm here on business," Bliss said. "Elder business."
Serpine turned, gave him a smile. "And how are the Elders?"
"Worried."
"When are they not?"
Serpine went to the armchair by the window, watched the sun as it struggled to rise, then 94.settled into the chair, crossed his legs, and waited for Bliss to continue. The last time they had been in the same room together, they had been trying to kill each other while a hurricane tore the place down around them. The very fact that Bliss remained standing right now told Serpine that he was thinking the same thing. Bliss was wary of him.
"The Elders called me in because, five days ago, two of their people went missing--Clement Gale and Alexander Slake."
"How very unfortunate, but I don't believe I've ever had the pleasure of meeting either of them."
"They were a.s.signed to .. . observe you, from time to time."
"Spies?"
"Not at all. Merely observers. The Elders thought it prudent to keep tabs on a few of Mevolent's followers, to make sure no one strayed from the terms of the Truce. You were always at the top of that list."
Serpine smiled. "And you think I had something to do with their disappearance? I'm a man of peace these days, not war. I seek only knowledge."
"You seek secrets."
"You make that sound so sinister, Mr. Bliss. As for the missing 'observers,' maybe they'll 95.turn up safe and well, and the Elders can apologize for dragging you out of your retirement."
"They turned up yesterday."
"Oh?"
"Dead."
"How terrible for them."
"Not a mark on their bodies. No indication at all as to how they died. Sound familiar?"
Serpine thought for a moment, then arched an eyebrow and held up his gloved right hand. "You think this did it? You think I killed those men? I haven't used this power in years. When I first learned it, I thought it was a wonderful thing, but now I look on it as a curse, and a reminder to me of my many mistakes and transgressions in my servitude to Mevolent. I don't mind telling you, Mr. Bliss, that I am deeply ashamed of what I have done with my life."
Bliss stood there and Serpine almost spoiled it all by laughing, but he managed to retain his look of mocking innocence.
"Thank you for your cooperation," Bliss said, turning to leave. "I shall be in touch if I need to ask you more questions."
Serpine waited until Bliss was at the door before speaking again.
"They must be scared."
96.Bliss stopped. "What makes you say that?"
"They sent you, didn't they? Why didn't they send the detective, I wonder?"
"Skulduggery Pleasant is busy with another investigation. "
"Is that so? Of maybe they thought I would be intimidated by you."
"They thought you'd listen to me. This Truce will hold only for as long as both sides want it to. The Elders want it to hold."
"That must be nice for them."
Mr. Bliss looked at him as if he was trying to read his thoughts. "Be careful, Nefarian. You might not like what's at the end of this road you 're on."
Serpine smiled. "You 're sure you won't join me for a drink?"
"I have a plane to catch."
"Going somewhere nice?"
"I have a meeting in London."
"I hope that goes well for you. We'll have a drink some other time, then."
"Perhaps."
Mr. Bliss inclined his head in a small bow, and left.
Chapter Eight.
Ghastly
97.Stephanie went to bed as soon as she got home, and woke at a few minutes past two in the afternoon. She padded to the bathroom and showered, her body aching as she stood under the spray. Her knees were sc.r.a.ped and cut from when she'd been dragged along the road. Her skin was mottled with deep bruises. Her neck was stiff.
She turned off the water and stepped out of the shower, dried herself off, and pulled on fresh jeans and a T-s.h.i.+rt. Barefoot, she took her old clothes downstairs and threw them 98.into the was.h.i.+ng machine, added the powder, and turned it on. It was only after she'd had something to eat that she allowed herself to think about the previous night.
Well, she said to herself, so that happened.
She tied her shoes and went out, the suns.h.i.+ne warm on her face. At the end of her road, she pa.s.sed the old pier and started toward Main Street. Normality. Kids playing football, riding bikes, and laughing; dogs running about, tails wagging; neighbors talking to neighbors and the world being as she'd always thought it was. No living skeletons. No magic. No men trying to kill her.
A crazy laugh escaped her lips when she reflected on how much her life had changed in the s.p.a.ce of a day. She had gone from being a perfectly ordinary girl in a perfectly ordinary world to being a target for water-soluble weirdos and a partner with a skeleton detective out to solve her uncle's murder.
Stephanie faltered. Her uncle's murder? Where had she got that from? Gordon had died of natural causes; the doctors had said so. She frowned. But these were doctors who lived in a world without walking, talking skeletons. But still, why a.s.sume he'd been murdered? What on Earth had made her think that?
99.There are items that cannot be taken, China had said, possessions that cannot be stolen. In the case of such an item, the owner must be dead before anyone else can take advantage of its powers.
Her attacker and whoever had sent him--they wanted something. They wanted something badly enough to kill her to get it. And if they wanted it that badly, would they really have waited for her uncle to die of natural causes before they went looking for it?
Stephanie felt cold. Gordon had been murdered. Someone had killed him, and no one was doing anything about it. No one was asking the questions, no one was trying to figure out who did it.
Except for Skulduggery.
She narrowed her eyes. He must have known Gordon was murdered. If he hadn't already suspected it when they first met, he must have worked it out in the library. China probably knew as well, but neither of them had told her. They didn't think she could handle it, maybe. Or maybe they didn't think it was any of her business. It had to do with their world, after all, not hers. But Gordon was still her uncle.
100.A car pulled up behind her. People stared. She looked back and saw the Bentley.
The driver's side was still badly buckled from where the car had rammed it, and the winds.h.i.+eld was cracked. Three of the windows were without gla.s.s, and the hood had a series of ugly dents running up its left side. The usual purr of the engine was replaced by a worrying rattle that cut out abruptly when the engine turned off. Skulduggery--in hat, scarf, and sungla.s.ses--went to get out, but the door wouldn't open.
"Oh boy," she muttered.
She watched him lean away from the door and raise his knee, and then he kicked it open and got out, adjusting his coat as he walked over.
"Good afternoon," he said brightly. "Wonderful weather we're having, isn't it?"
"People are staring," Stephanie whispered as he neared.
"Are they really? Oh, so they are. Good for them. So, are we ready to go?"
"That depends," she answered, speaking softly and keeping a smile on her face. "When were you going to tell me that my uncle was murdered?"
There was a slight hesitation. "Ah. You worked that out, then?"
101.
Stephanie turned down a narrow lane between two buildings, moving away from the prying eyes of Haggard's gossipmongers. Skulduggery hesitated a moment, then caught up to her, walking fast.