The Redcap leapt back with a curse. It shook its fist at her, and ran off into the depths of the maze. Since it wasn't going the way she planned, she kept the Salamanders from chasing it.
When it was gone, they fawned around her like affectionate cats, rubbing up against her and butting their heads into her hands. The Fire creature regarded them with amusement.
'Under other circumstances,' it said, 'I would say that you have a remarkable way with animals. I am glad that you have won their loyalty.'
'So am I,' she replied fervently. 'Should I keep them with us?'
'Definitely. I have no idea what might lie ahead of us, except that I cannot imagine that there will
She just nodded. She doubted very much that the next obstacle they encountered would be so obliging as to run away.
Reggie didn't sleep very much—but then, he hadn't expected to. And he had flown and fought on less rest than he'd gotten last night. He had gone over his plan so many times it was engraved in his mind—
Not that he really expected to find the Robinsons following
She
It was very hard, though, to have to rise, breakfast as usual—and wait. Wait, because if he went down at any time before, say, noon—no one would let him in. Certainly Eleanor was not permitted to answer the door. She hadn't before, when he'd called, and that was probably to keep her from being recognized by a visitor, or from blurting out a plea for help. If he arrived too early, no one would be awake, and he could hardly pound on the door and bellow at them to let him in. Not unless he
No, above all, he didn't want anyone to know what he was up to until it was too late to do anything about it.
The Robinsons had left about three—so they would not be receiving visitors until noon at the earliest. So he would have to wait.
Except—if he was going to go into a confrontation with an Earth Master, his simple barricades were not going to suffice.
So after breakfast, with a feeling of fear that would have paralyzed him had he not been eaten alive with worry for Eleanor, he took a certain back staircase that his mother was not even aware existed, up to a room on the same floor as the servants' quarters. Except that this room connected with no other chamber in the house, and the door to the staircase was carved with sigils that would allow only an Elemental Master to see it.
It took a terrible effort for him to take each step upwards—because each step brought him nearer to the moment when he must give up his defenses and accept the power back into his hands—and with that power, open himself to attack. He was sweating by the time he reached the landing.
It was his father's old workroom, a corner room with tall windows on two sides, lined with books and cabinets for supplies on the other two, and with a floor of white marble inlaid with a magic circle in silver. And Lady Virginia was already there.
She was dressed for the occasion, in a loose, sky-blue robe of silk, with her ice-white hair in a single plait down her back. Curiously enough, this made her look younger, rather than older.
'I thought you might turn up,' she said, as he closed the door to the staircase behind him. 'So I didn't put up the wards yet.'
He shivered, involuntarily. 'If you had any idea how frightened I am—' Then he steeled himself, before the panic could rise up and choke him. 'But I don't have a choice, do I?'
'Not if Alison Robinson is a Master—and all of the preliminary work I have done tells me she is,' Lady Virginia replied grimly. 'I believe—though I am not yet sure—that