Mischief saw the sequence of thoughts crossing her face. The doubt that she was even awake, and then the fear that indeed she was.
“This is all Providence, I swear,” he said to her. “You’re here because you can light the light. You and only you.”
She did her best to put the fear out of her head and to concentrate on what John Mischief had just said. In a curious way it made sense that she was here because she
This must be what John Mischief meant by Providence.
“So, lady?” Mischief said. “What is your decision?”
“If I’m not dreaming this, then perhaps it is Providence.”
“So you’ll go?”
“Yes, I’ll go,” Candy said simply.
Mischief smiled again, only this time, they
“Good luck,” Mischief whispered. “We’ll see you again when you come down.”
And without offering any further instruction, he and his brothers darted off through the grass, bent double to keep out of Shape’s sight until they were clear of her.
Candy’s heart was thumping so hard she could hear her pulse in her head. Ten, fifteen seconds passed. She listened. The grass hissed all around her. Strangely enough, she’d never felt so alive in her life.
Another half minute went by. She was tempted to chance another peep above the surface of the swaying grass, to see whether Mendelson Shape was limping in her direction, but she was afraid to do so in case he was almost upon her.
Then, to her infinite relief, she heard eight voices all yelling at the same time:
Candy waited a heartbeat, then she chanced a look.
Shape, it seemed, had indeed been looking in her direction, and had she raised her head a second earlier would have seen her. But now he was swinging around, following the sound of the brothers’ voices.
At that moment, Mischief leaped up out of the grass and began racing away from the lighthouse, diverting Shape’s attention.
Shape threw open his arms, his huge, iron-taloned claws spread as wide as five-fingered fans.
“
His voice was as ugly as his anatomy: a guttural din that made Candy’s stomach churn.
As he spoke, the configuration of crosses on his back shifted, rising up like featherless, metallic wings. He reached over his shoulders and grabbed two of the blades, pulling them out of the scabbards in his leathery flesh. Then he started through the grass toward his prey.
Candy knew she could not afford to delay. The brothers were chancing their lives so that she could attempt to reach the lighthouse unseen. She had to go
Candy didn’t watch the pursuit a moment longer. Instead, she set her eyes on the lighthouse and she began to
As she raced through the grass, she became aware that the great rain cloud that had first caught her eye was now directly above the lighthouse, hovering like a golden curtain over the drama below.
By the time the thought had passed through her head, she had reached the threshold of the lighthouse. She chanced a quick look over her shoulder at Mischief and his pursuer.
Much to her horror she saw that her brief period of protection was over. Shape had given up chasing the brothers—realizing perhaps that the pursuit was just a diversion—and he had now turned his attention back toward the lighthouse.
His eyes fixed upon Candy, and he let out a bloodcurdling cry at the sight of her. He spread his arms wide, and with swords in hand, he began to move toward her.
He didn’t run; he simply strode through the grass with terrible confidence in his uneven step, as if to say:
She turned away from the sight of his approach and pushed on the broken door. The hinges creaked, and there were a few moments of resistance, when she feared that fallen timbers on the other side might have blocked it. Then, with a deep grating sound, the door opened and Candy slipped inside.
Though there were plenty of holes in the walls, and the sun came through in solid shafts, it was still far chillier inside than it was out. The cold air stank of rotting wood. Large fungi had prospered in the damp murk, and the boards beneath her feet were slick with mildew. She slipped twice before she had even reached the bottom of the stairs.
The prospect before her looked dangerous. No doubt once upon a time the spiral wooden stairs had been perfectly safe to climb, but that was decades ago. Now all but a few of the railings had collapsed, and the structure which had supported the staircase had been devoured by woodworm and rot, so that it seemed the stairs themselves had virtually nothing to depend on for their solidity.
She peered through one of the holes in the wall, just to confirm what she already knew: Mendelson Shape was still advancing toward the lighthouse.
Unlikely as a safe ascent seemed, there was no way back now. Shape would be at the front door in just a few seconds. She had no choice but to try the stairs. She put her hand on the shaky bannister and began her cautious ascent.
Outside in the long grass, the John brothers watched the silhouetted form of the lady Quackenbush as she started up the stairs.
“She’s something special, that one,” Drowze murmured.
“What makes you say that?” Moot remarked.
“Look at her!” Drowze said. “Not many creatures of this wretched Hereafter would be so brave.”
“She’s half mad,” said Serpent, “that’s why. I saw it in her eyes, right from the beginning. She’s a little bit crazy.”
“So we send a crazy girl to do our handiwork for us?” Pluckitt said. “That’s not very heroic.”
“Will you just shut your
“You told us to shut our cake-holes,” Sallow reminded him airily. “We’re just obeying instructions.”
“Well, I think she’s got a touch of magic about her,” Mischief said, ignoring Sallow’s riposte. He went to his belt and unsheathed the little knife that hung there. “And we have to protect her.”
“You’re not…” Moot began.
“…intending to attack…” Pluckitt continued.
“…Mendelson Shape?” Slop went on.
“Not with
“Well—” said Mischief. “Unless somebody has a better idea?”