“Yes, yes, yes. Where’s Anjali?”
“I don’t know. I think the monster, or maybe Benign Designs, kidnapped her.”
“No!” He hit his leg with his fist. It looked like it hurt. “I told her not to go there without me!”
“Where? Benign Designs?” I asked.
“She told me last night she thought they took the objects,” he said. “She thinks they replaced them with copies that only work for a few days. She wanted to go investigate. I told her to wait until I could come with her.”
“Oh!” That would explain why the comb stopped working suddenly. “I’ll bet she’s right!”
“Where is it? Where’s Benign Designs? I’m going to go rescue her,” said Jaya.
Marc glanced at her with that carelessly haughty look of his, as if he’d just remembered she was there. “You can’t—you’re only ten.”
I could have told him that was exactly the wrong thing to say. “She’s my sister! You can’t stop me.”
Marc turned and faced her this time. “Anjali would never forgive me if anything happened to you,” he said.
“She’s
“All right, Jaya,” I said. “Go get Anjali’s laptop. Bring it here. We’ll go through it and see if we can figure out where she went. It’ll be safer if we all go together.”
The three of us went to the coffee shop on Lexington and turned on the laptop.
“Here’s the address for Benign Designs, down on Twenty-third Street. I also found the address for the owner—somebody named Wallace Stone. He had it registered under a business name, but Anjali looked up his actual name on a state database.”
“Wallace Stone,” I said. “I’ve heard that name before.”
“Where?” asked Jaya.
I thought about it. “Something about the page that got fired for stealing stuff. I think they said he recommended her.”
“Great! So we’re on the right track, at least,” said Jaya.
“I guess the best thing to do is just to go down to Twenty-third Street and look for him,” Marc said.
“I don’t know—that’s probably what Anjali did, and she’s missing,” I said.
“Got any better ideas?”
“Shouldn’t we ask Doc for help? Or the other librarians, or Mr. Mauskopf ?”
“No! We don’t know who Doc will tell about it, and any one of the librarians could be involved with the thief. They all have access to the Grimm Collection. The fewer people we trust, the better.”
“You think the
“I don’t know who to trust,” said Marc.
“I think he’s right,” said Jaya. “Anjali disappeared because of the repository. I don’t trust anyone there— except you, of course, because you’re nice, and Marc, because he’s Anjali’s boyfriend.”
But the Twenty-third Street address was a dead end. There was no Benign Designs listed on any of the buzzers, and when we rang them anyway, nobody’d heard of the place—at least, that’s what they said.
“What do we do next?” I asked.
“We go see the owner—Wallace Stone,” said Jaya. “I got his address and phone number. It’s on Otters Alley, downtown. Let me see your ankle.”
“What?”
“The knot. I need to see your knot.”
“Oh.” I stuck out my foot.
“Other foot.”
I stuck out my other foot. She pushed up my jeans leg to look at the knot and nodded. “Good, it’s still there. Here, you make me one.” She pulled a ball of yarn out of her bag and snapped off a piece with her teeth.
“I don’t know how.”
“That’s okay, I’ll show you. First take both ends in your left hand and wrap the whole yarn—no, your left hand—no, that’s still your right hand—yes, that’s it—now wrap it clockwise—no,
This went on for a long time. I wondered whether tying knots would be easier if I had a sense of direction. The cold made my fingers extra clumsy, and people walking past us on Twenty-third Street gave us little amused glances.
“Do we have time for this?” asked Marc. “What are you doing, anyway?”
“Making a knot of protection,” said Jaya. “It’s very important. It keeps you safe from magic attacks. No, Elizabeth, the other way. You have it backward.”
Eventually I produced a lump that seemed to connect the two ends. “Now the rhyme—repeat after me,” said Jaya.
Jaya tugged at it dubiously. It slipped a little, but it didn’t come untied. “I hope so,” she said. “Your turn, Marc.”
“Jaya,” he said, “that yarn’s pink.”
“Oh. You’re right. Well, I didn’t bring any other color.” She snapped off a length with her teeth again, pulled his arm toward her, and began weaving the knot.
Marc crinkled his forehead, but he didn’t stop her. I guess Andre gave him plenty of practice indulging little siblings. “You better take Jaya home while I go downtown and deal with this Wallace Stone,” he told me.
“If you try, I’ll scream and say you kidnapped me,” Jaya said. “They’ll believe me too—I don’t look a thing like you. You have to take me with you.”
“Maybe we can find an ogre who’d like to eat her,” said Marc.
“Maybe that’s what Wallace Stone is,” I answered.
The building on Otters Alley was an old factory with huge windows and eight buzzers. Marc pressed the one that said
After a minute a crackly voice came out of the loudspeaker: “Who is it?”
Marc and I looked at each other in dismay. We’d forgotten to come up with a cover story. Before we could stop her, Jaya pushed her face forward and announced, “It’s Jaya Rao. I’m here to rescue my sister.”
Silence for a few seconds; then the door buzzed open. We took the clanking old elevator up to the seventh floor and rang the bell.
It only took me a second to recognize Wallace Stone: the repository patron, the man who had tried to take the box of acrobats on Fifth Avenue.
“Well, it’s you! Hello again,” he said. “Have you brought me back my package?”
“You!” I said.
“Where’s my sister?” said Jaya.
He turned to look at her. “My, my, my,” he said. “The other one—a matching pair.”
“Where is she? Where’s Anjali? Give her back!” Jaya filled the hallway.
“I wish I could, but I don’t have her.”