Authors: Heather W. Petty
“Don't lose it,” my mom had warned one day when I showed her my trick.
“Is it worth money?” I'd asked.
She'd smiled. “This coin is worth more than money. It's a token. It means you belong.”
“To what?”
“To me, and to where I belong.”
That had sounded like a riddle to me, so I narrowed my eyes. “Where do you belong?”
I remembered that she looked around our house then. If I'd been older, maybe I'd have known what her look meant, because she didn't answer, except to say, “When you're where you belong, it's like magic. That and a turn of luck, and you'll find your way through anything at all.”
“It's like magic,” I whispered. My fingers drifted over the plaque, tracing the branches up to the top. It looked even more out of place in the rare bright sun. I splayed my hand across the design, so that each of my fingers slid along a branch, and for no real reason, I pushed against it.
The top half of the plaque tilted forward. I thought at first
it was a trick of my mind, or I'd imagined it, because when I pulled my hand back, and pushed at the top, it didn't budge. But with my whole hand on the tree, I was able to tip the plate forward until it clicked. After the click, when I removed my hand, the plate stayed tilted, but I could hear the soft clicks of a timer, as it ever so slowly righted itself.
“What's that noise?” Sadie said, coming around full circle to where I stood.
“It's like magic,” I said splaying my fingers to tip the plate again.
“Oh!” Sadie's wide eyes were the brightest amber. “What do you think it does?”
I shrugged. “You try it, and I'll run around to the other plaque. See if it moves or something.”
At the four-leaf-clover plate, I tried to tip it as well, but it didn't budge. And then the clicking timer stopped and I scowled.
“Anything?” Sadie called.
I looked around to make sure we weren't being watched. “Try again,” I called. Then whispered, “When you're where you belong,” as Sadie tipped the tree plaque, “it's like magic.” I grasped the four-leaf-clover plate. “That, and a turn of luck.”
I twisted to the left. Sure enough, it rotated and slid back, revealing a small compartment beneath. I held my breath as I leaned down to look and found a bunch of papers inside. I glanced around again, my breathing coming faster. I pulled the papers free, and the plaque slid closed, leaving me holding a picture and two envelopes. I heard some footsteps behind
me, and turned my back to the planter right as the globular woman who carried all her bags through the park strolled by. She stared hard at the ground, not even acknowledging my presence, but her steps were slow, and I didn't want to look at what I'd taken from the compartment until I was alone. So, I stuffed everything into my bag and called, “Nothing!” to Sadie.
She ran around and pulled and pushed at the four-leaf-Âclover plaque, but it didn't budge for her. She scowled. “It should spin in circles at least. I mean, if it's not gonna reveal buried treasure or some kind of Victorian animatronic wonder.”
“Fresh out of automatons, London is.”
Sadie shook her head. “Now what foreign atrocity will I tell my mama about on our Sunday call?”
“I heard something about a swamp of prose today.”
She smiled. “A deep dark swamp. And here I thought you never did listen to me.”
I tried to act shocked and hurt, but Sadie glanced at her watch and gasped for real. “Late!” she cried, and then ran a few steps backward on the path before stopping to ask, “You coming?”
I looked back at the planter, searching for an excuse. “You go first. I have one more thing to check out.”
Sadie grinned. “Delinquent.”
I returned her smile. “Teacher's pet.”
She winked and took off running for the bus stop, calling back. “Twenty-four hours, Moriarty, and I'll be coming for some answers about all this.”
I waited a good two minutes after she was out of sight before daring to pull the papers from my bag. I sat on the next bench I saw and spread them across the weathered wooden slats. The picture was of some old church. On the back was written an address in Sussex, Piddinghoe Village, which sounded like someplace no one ever goes. Down at the bottom in microprint were the two words that I'd practically been hit over the head with lately, “Sorte Juntos.”
“Scorpio” was scrawled across the first envelope, and inside was what had to be a fake ID. My mother's younger, smiling face was glued to it, but her name was Ginny Wilkes, and it showed her wrong birthdayâa birthday, I noted, that would make her a Scorpio. The second envelope was filled with cash. I didn't pull it out to count it properly, but I thumbed through more than £200 before closing it up again.
It didn't take me long to work out what I'd found. It was her getaway. Everything but the picture fit. My mother had stowed away cash and a new identity in case she ever needed to escape. Which led me to wonder, from what did she need to escape?
Chapter 16
I wandered around the park so long, I didn't make it back to school until everyone was going to their final afternoon class. I started for the library, determined to do a quick search for “Sorte Juntos,” but the warning bell let me know I was too late. I rushed into drama just as the final bell rang and sank into one of the theater seats toward the back. I took a deep breath and closed my eyes as the cast filed onto the stage.
Before I could open them again, Lock's voice intruded from the darkness behind me. “You didn't go to class, Miss Moriarty.” He jumped over the back of the row of seats and plopped into the one next to me. “You've been skiving off, and now you're caught.”
I tried my best to smile at him. “By you?”
“Yes, by me.”
“And how do you know this, Mr. Holmes?” I leaned close. “Where's your proof?”
“I sat outside your chemistry class and you never came out.” He was awfully cute when he was smug. Irritating, but cute.
“How do you know I didn't just leave class early?”
So, it was more on the irritating side when he leaned in and smelled my hair. “You've been in the park!”
“You can
smell
the park on me?”
“No, your hair tells me you took a bus. Your shoes tell me you were at the park, most likely after ten forty-five this morning.”
I looked down, and there were grass stains along the white part of my trainers and little bits of grass stuck to the canvas. “Or maybe out on the football field.”
“No, unfortunately for you, our school's grounds staff mows the field after seven each night. The sprinklers come on at dawn, washing those pesky leavings into the thatch. But the parkâ”
“You are now going to tell me that you know the grounds schedule for Regent's Park?”
He reached down and pulled a leaf off the bottom of my shoe and held it up. “This says you were down at the canal.”
I very much failed to restrain my grin.
“You were at the crime scene. Without me.”
Lock was also cute when he scowled.
“It had nothing to do with the case,” I lied. But then I didn't know what to say next. So we sat in silence for a bit. Lily Patel was back at school, I noticed. I probably should've noticed before then, but I'd had quite a bit to keep track of. John Watson sat cross-legged, leaning against the far stage wall and watching her play her part, an open script in his lap. When she saw him looking, she turned away quickly and walked from the stage.
I slid my fingers along Sherlock's and then pushed them down between. “I'll most likely be gone tomorrow, too. I have to go down to Sussex.”
“What's in Sussex?”
“I don't know yet.” A truth, and then the lie, “But it really has nothing to do with our case.”
Lock didn't say anything, leaving a nice gorge of silence for me to throw myself into. As one does.
“You want to gâ?”
“Yes,” he interrupted.
I sighed, partly at my own idiocy, partly at his. At any rate, I removed my hand from his. “I will need to go off by myself once we're there.”
“I'll be busy taking clippings anyway.”
“Clippings?”
“Of the different vegetation to be found down there.”
“You want to study the vegetation of Sussex.”
“It's on my list.”
“Plants. Plants are on your list.”
“The regional botany of England and Wales. How else will I know where you've run off to? I don't suppose we'll be going to Wales on the weekend?”
I rolled my eyes, and Sherlock grinned and steepled his fingers together as he fell into his thoughts.
x x x
I retouched my makeup before dinner that night, to keep the worst of my bruises from my brothers, though I didn't for a minute believe it fooled them. I hadn't seen much of my
father since I'd caught him out on the patio. He hadn't done as much as look in my direction when we were in the same room, which was for the best, as I couldn't keep my eyes off him when he was near. I also couldn't seem to control my rage enough to keep it off my face. After watching Dad stuff three bites of potato into his mouth and practically swallow without chewing, all I could think was how disgusting he was and how I couldn't believe my mother could stand to be near him all those years. And while I watched Dad, Michael had been watching me. He reached his hand under the table to hold mine, distracting me enough to look away. Unfortunately, my rage-filled gaze fell on Freddie, who shrank back before I could offer an apologetic look.
Dad grunted something and left the table before the rest of us, which made me think I was free of him for the evening, but after everything was cleaned up and put away, I walked into the hall and found him leaning against the banister, flask in hand. It was enough to make me decide to sleep in the park that night.
I made a face and tried to rush past him up the stairs, but he reached out and grabbed my arm. I shook him off and glared. “Don't.”
He shifted his weight and stared at the wood of the banister, like it was why he was there in the first place. “You were in the park today.”
I silently cursed the entire lineage of that DC.
“Yes or no?”
“Yes.” I practically yelled the word, which made Dad look
at me before he remembered himself. With his gaze firmly fixated on the front door, he said, “You said I was with you.”
I nodded, not that he could see.
“Why would you do that?” When I didn't answer, he barked, “Why?!”
I shrugged, tried to regulate my breathing and force a calm, but that didn't seem to make my tone any lighter. “Well, he was asking questions that were none of his business, wasn't he?”
Dad finally managed a longish glance in my direction. “Yeah, well.” He rubbed the back of his neck and took a drink from his flask. “You'll say the same again if someone asks.” He punctuated this order with a single nod, then stomped to his bedroom and slammed the door.
I looked at my arm where he had grabbed it, brushed my fingers over the skin as if I could clean him off me. That his DNA was part of my makeup made me want to retch until I was purged of him altogether.
True to form, Lock had found his way into my bedroom again, still not ready to leave me in this place without a sentry. He seemed to know my thoughts the very moment I stepped into my room. Or maybe it was always his plan to jump up from my bed and surround me with his arms. In any case, he whispered in my ear, “Make an excuse, any excuse, and let me take you from here.”
He knew I couldn't, knew why. I'd said it too many times to say it again, and still he responded to my excuse. “We'll bring them with us. Eat Mrs. Hudson's sandwiches and watch movies on Mycroft's tablet until they're all asleep.”
I smiled and turned my face into the soft cotton of his T-shirt. “And when he unleashes all the Queen's men to find us?”
Lock shrugged. “We are our own army, you and I. None can stand before us.”
After I'd clicked out my light, and before I'd given up on sleeping alone and crawled from my bed to curl up with Lock on the floor, I grabbed my phone off the nightstand and quickly typed “Sorte Juntos” into Google Translate. The words were Portuguese, meaning “lucky together,” almost meaninglessâor might have been on another night.
For the first time since I'd asked him, I felt glad that Lock would be with me in Sussex. I wasn't sure what I'd find there, but I knew somehow Lock would make it seem manageableâÂor at least survivable.
x x x
I spent most of the night thinking of all the reasons why leaving for a whole day was a truly horrific idea, but there was no way around it. The travel time alone was almost six hours round-trip. I only justified it by reminding myself that the boys would be in school most of the day, and Dad at work, but there were too many contingenciesâtoo many ways this ended badlyâfor me to let it go. By midnight, I was in the bathroom texting Sadie and asking for her promise to check in on the boys after school, just in case Lock and I didn't make it home on time. She was, predictably, still up reading, and texted right back assuring me she'd even bring over a snack, as she'd been baking againâher way of dealing with homesickness.
Calls home are a special form of torture,
she typed.
I miss my family too much.
About today,
I sent back, but then I didn't know what to say.
After a few seconds my phone vibrated.
Me too,
she typed.
We need more days like today.
I slept fitfully and gave up at four a.m. to sneak down the stairs. Only one more thing for me to deal withâmy father's short sword. If we had the time, I would've waited for him to go to work, but we had to be out of the house before any of them woke up or risk having to explain why I wasn't in uniform, why I was leaving earlier than usual, and any assortment of questions that might come with every tick away from my normal schedule.
Dad was snoring so loudly, the stairs were vibrating with the noise. The soft sound of his door clicking open didn't even break his rhythm. A bottle of bourbon with maybe a tablespoon of liquid left was tipped over on his nightstand, a visual clue to the mystery of his deep, deep slumber. I was able to slide the closet open a few inches at a time until I could reach for the sword, where it was still wrapped in a sweater next to my mother's tattered box of things. I had it in my hand and was out the door of his room in seconds, his snores droning on while I rewrapped it in a towel.
The number of people in the park that early shocked me. I should've known it'd be popular with runners and dog walkers, but I'd never come face-to-face with the crowds until that morning. I made my way directly to the bandstand and then toward the lake, slipping inside the curtain of willow branches
at the water's edge. There weren't any people thereâno one on the water. But still I waited until even the few lingering shadows in the area seemed to have moved away. Removing the sword from the towel was the worst part.
I spent a good five minutes wiping down every surface and scratching the fibers of the towel into every crevice, and then I checked again for early morning park people. I thought I saw a shadow by a tree around the bend from me, but then it didn't move, and I knew it had to be my imagination. Even if it wasn't, it was too far away to see me, much less understand what I was about to do.
After one last swipe of the towel, I threw the sword as far out into the lake as I could without leaving the cover of the branches. It sank immediately, without even a trail of bubbles to show where it had gone in. And then it was done. My father was disarmed, of a sort. Not that he wasn't a trained policeman, capable of killing in a myriad of ways, and I didn't know whether he even knew how to find the Blue-Haired Girl or not, but the sword was part of his ritual, and perhaps its absence would be enough to at least give me a day. So with that chore done and the boys looked after with the promise of American baked goods, there was nothing to do but collect Lock and head for the station.
Even though the train to Brighton didn't leave until 8:37, it was still before seven when I left the house again, this time dragging an eerily quiet, barely coherent Sherlock behind me. Once I got him some coffee, he perked up, but he wasn't very talkative as we took our bus to the London Victoria line. I
thought we should buy all-day passes, just in case we needed to turn around quickly or stay late. But when I asked Lock about it, he merely mumbled his assent. Finally, when we were standing on the platform, waiting for our train, I decided enough was enough.
“What?” was his only response to nearly a full minute under my direct scrutiny.
“You're quiet today.”
“Thinking.”
“About?”
He studied my face before he answered. “How difficult it can sometimes be to keep a promise.”
“And which promise it that?”
Another unreasonably long pause. “I once promised a girl that she was the one mystery I would never solve.”
I stared across the gap and up to the tiny panes of windows near the ceiling. “That doesn't seem all that difficult.”
“I agree. It shouldn't be. And yet . . .”
Someone jostled me closer to Sherlock, and I turned, moving into him without lifting my eyes. “It could be . . . ,” I started, but my throat suddenly felt unbearably dry, and my words wouldn't come.
Lock leaned his face down toward mine so he could speak softly in my ear. “I have made an observation of a different sort.”
“And that is?”
He shifted his weight from one foot to the other, and his cheek pressed gently to mine. “When a person cares for
another, he wants to know everything about her all at once.”
I grinned. “Where's the fun in that?”
I kissed his cheek and he kissed mine back, and just when I had hold of his lapels and was leaning up so that our lips brushed, the train pulled into the station, bringing with it a gust of wind that blew my hair around our faces. “I'm sure she will tell you everything just as soon as she is able,” I said against his lips. I didn't think he heard me over the noise of the train, but something changed in his eyes.
His lips moved slowly against mine, playfully, teasing a kiss that never quite landed. The platform was a frenzy of movement and noise all around us, and I could only see him, only feel his gentle exhale against my lips. And then he kissed me, but it was the way he held me that made me feel the change in him. His arms completely surrounded me, pulling me in tight. One hand pushed up into my hair to hold me close even after his lips pulled free of mine. He rested his forehead to my temple and kissed my cheek before releasing me slowlyâlike he didn't want to, like he might pull me back in at any second.
Lock seemed more his old self once we found our seats on the train. He pointed across me to a woman seated on the aisle just two seats ahead of us reading a book. “She is a hairdresser. Tell me when you see it.”