Read The Secret of Zanzibar Online
Authors: Frances Watts
As they neared the end of the bridge they peered across the broad square, which was dotted with streetlamps, to the palace entrance.
âTwo guards on the gate, otherwise deserted,' Alex said in a hushed tone. âNow comes the tricky bit. See those trees on the left? That's what we're aiming for.' He stepped off the bridge and, ducking into a crouch, took off across the square at a half-run.
Alice glanced anxiously at the guards, but they showed no sign of moving. She drew a deep breath then began
to run in an awkward crouch, her fur bristling with the anticipation of a shout of discovery â but there was no sound other than the soft pad of her feet on the smooth stones. She sprinted the last few metres and plunged into the shelter of the trees. As she flung herself, panting, onto a bed of pine needles beneath a towering tree, she was so relieved that she almost forgot about all the challenges that still lay ahead of them. That was, until she craned her head to look up at the wall. From this angle, it looked massive: solid and imposing, built of huge blocks of stone. But, she saw, as she turned her eyes to the pines, Alex was right: the middle branches of the nearest tree brushed the top of the wall. She and her brother had lots of experience climbing trees and they'd climbed higher and harder ones than this.
âPhew,' she said as she stood up, brushing the pine needles from her fur.
She placed a foot in her brother's cupped hands and reached for the lower branch. She hauled herself up to sit on it and waited while Alex, with a run-up and a flying leap, caught hold of the limb and scrambled up to sit alongside her.
He raised his eyebrows at her questioningly and she nodded. âOnwards and upwards,' she said, standing and reaching for the next branch.
With Alice in the lead they scaled the tree. The muscles in her arms strained with the effort of pulling herself up, but it also felt good to be doing something
as straightforward and ordinary as climbing a tree: not paragliding, not riding with rotten cabbages, just doing something she'd done almost daily in her normal life. Normal life? She could barely remember what that was â¦
All thoughts of normal life fled as she pulled herself up to the next branch and realised she was now level with the top of the wall. Balancing carefully, she crawled along the bough until she was able to step onto the broad stone fortification. She gazed at the palace, half expecting to see a light shining, a silvery face at a window, but all the windows on this side of the building were dark. Then she looked down and clutched at the rough stone for support.
âWhoa,' she whispered as her brother stepped off the branch to join her. âAlex, look how high up we are. We can't jump from here.'
Her brother considered the distance. âYeah, I suppose it'd be pretty dumb to break our legs.'
But an idea had struck Alice â and for once she had something to thank Sophia and Horace for. âRemember how we escaped from Sophia and Horace back in Shetlock that first time, when we were staying in the hotel near Shambles?'
âWe tied sheets together to make a rope and climbed out the window,' Alex recalled.
âI've got rope in my rucksack,' Alice said. âWe can tie it to the branch and climb down, and then we can use it to get back over the wall once we've rescued Tobias's son.'
âBrilliant, sis,' Alex said. âBut what if the guards see the rope while we're gone?'
Alice considered this. âYou did say they don't patrol the walls,' she reminded him. âAnyway, they won't discover that their prisoner is missing till tomorrow morning â and by then we'll be long gone, and the rope too.'
It was ironic, Alice thought as she clung onto the rope several minutes later, her arms aching with the effort of keeping it from spinning, her feet scrambling for traction against the stone. The last time she had done this she had been trying to get away from the Sourian spies; now her actions were bringing her closer to them.
âYou lead the way,' Alice said when she was standing on the grass beside her brother. The lawn felt soft and springy beneath her feet â not unlike a mattress, she thought â and she was tempted to lie down for a moment. But Alex had already set off towards the darkened palace, walking purposefully. Smothering a yawn, she hurried to catch up. âWhere are we going?'
âWe'll go in through the kitchen door and use the servants' stairs to get to the dungeon.'
In the old days, Alice knew, before the Sourians had taken over, the palace staff had moved around the building using their own sets of stairs and passages. The Sourians had declared these out of bounds, but Alex had spent night after night exploring them extensively when he and Alice had been working in the palace.
They skirted the flowerbeds in which they had passed many backbreaking hours under the watchful eye of Fiercely Jones, passed the potting shed in which the gardener could usually be found, then warily entered the courtyard at the rear of the palace.
âAll quiet,' Alex noted as they approached the back entrance to the kitchen. He eased open the door and they crept in.
It was a strange feeling standing in the dark kitchen where they had had their meals, seeing once more the stove where Cook had banged her pots and pans, not bothering to hide her dislike for the two Sourian orphans sitting at the table. But Alice had little time to reflect on how much had changed since then, as Alex was already opening a door on the far side of the hearth.
She'd been mistaken if she'd thought the kitchen was dark, Alice realised now as she entered the staircase and pulled the door shut behind her. In the kitchen, at least, there had been enough light to make out the shapes of furniture; now she was enclosed by total blackness. She couldn't see her brother in front of her; she couldn't see the walls or the floor. She could feel the chill of the stone and hear the light scuff of her brother's footsteps up ahead. She could hear her own breathing loud in her ears.
She moved forward cautiously, feeling her way with her feet until she'd found the first step. After she'd climbed a few, she discovered she was able to judge the
depth and distance of the steps quite accurately, only twice stubbing her toe on the unforgiving stone.
Alice was just about to ask how far
up
were they were going to climb â she'd always assumed the dungeons would be
down
â when Alex whispered over his shoulder, âTurn left here,' and she found herself standing in a passage that stretched away into darkness on either side, the blackness broken occasionally by a weak stream of moonlight trickling in through a chink in the wall.
âLeft again,' Alex said a few metres later, and they were on another staircase, going down this time.
Alice had known the palace was big â two hundred and forty-three rooms, she'd learned when studying the palace layout before their first mission to Gerander â but she hadn't really understood just how massive that was until now. They went down a seemingly endless series of staircases and along what seemed like miles of intersecting passages before Alex stopped at the head of a narrow set of steps.
âThis is it,' he said. âThe door at the bottom of these stairs takes us right into the dungeons.'
Alice's heart started to beat a little faster.
âThere's usually two guards posted at the entrance to the dungeons,' Alex explained, âbut with any luck we won't see them and they won't see us. It's a bit of a maze down there and this way takes us in a fair way from the entrance.'
He opened the door a crack and peered through, then opened it wider and stepped over the threshold, Alice close on his heels.
They were standing in another passageway, this one dimly lit with candles flickering along the walls at well-spaced intervals. The door was set in a long blank stone wall facing a row of heavy wooden doors with tiny barred windows.
âThey put him in the very last cell,' Alex muttered as he strode quickly down the passageway.
âWhat if he's not there any more?' said Alice as they passed cell after cell, all empty.
âIf he's not there any more we should be happy for him,' Alex said.
âExcept if he's somewhere worse.'
âI can't imagine worse,' her brother said grimly.
And as they crept down, down, down into the bowels of the palace in a descending spiral Alice could see what he meant.
Summer appeared not to have touched the dungeons. The cold and damp seeped into her very bones, and as Alice peeked into an empty cell she saw that it had no windows, no source of natural light. She imagined being locked in that confined space, unable to see the sun or sky, and found herself struggling for breath as she was assailed by an overwhelming feeling of claustrophobia. It felt like the low ceiling was pressing down on her head and the walls were closing in.
âWe're nearly there,' Alex said, as if sensing her distress.
They rounded a curve and Alice saw that up ahead the passageway ended abruptly at a small door remarkably like the one they had entered the dungeons through.
âWhere does that door go?' she asked, pointing.
Alex glanced at it and shrugged. âDunno. Must be another entrance to the servants' stairs.'
âI wish we'd â' Alice began, only to be cut off by her brother.
âThis is it.'
They had reached the last cell.
Alex took a candle from a niche in the wall and stood on tiptoe to look through the barred window.
âIs he there?' Alice breathed.
âYep.'
âLet me see.' Alice nudged him aside so that she too could see into the cell. In the dim glow of the candlelight she could just make out a skinny mouse with rumpled marmalade fur. He was lying on a bare cot, asleep.
âHey,' Alex called softly.
The skinny mouse slept on.
âHey,' Alex hissed, a little louder.
The skinny mouse started. âHuh?' He sat up and looked around wildly, then squinted at the door. âWho is it?'
âShhh,' said Alice. âKeep your voice down. We're here to rescue you.'
âYou are?' He leapt from the cot. âWho sent you?'
âNo one exactly,' Alex said. âWe just decided to.'
âSo my dad didn't send you then?'
âTobias? No. He, er â¦'
Alex and Alice exchanged desperate looks. It hardly seemed the appropriate time to explain that his father had betrayed his own friends and family.
âIt's complicated,' Alice said at last.
âBut you are from FIG, right?'
âYes,' said Alex in a firm voice. âMy name's Alex and this is my sister Alice.'
âNice to meet you,' said the skinny mouse. âI'm Tom. Er, do you think we should be getting a move on?'
âOf course,' said Alice, but as her eye moved to the lock on the door she had an awful sinking feeling.
âAlex, we don't have a key!' Alice whispered.
âWhat?' said Alex. âSpeak up, sis, I didn't hear you.'
âWell, what are you waiting for?' Tom gripped the bars of the tiny window and rattled them. âGet me out of here.'
âThe key, Alex,' Alice said through gritted teeth. âWe don't have one.'
âThe key?' Alex repeated, a look of dismay dawning on his face.
âYou don't have a key?' demanded Tom. âWhat kind of rescue is this?'
And then Alice heard a soft footfall behind her and the fur between her shoulder blades prickled with dread. They were not alone.
All her earlier fear and foreboding returned to her in a rush. She had known all along Sophia would be here, waiting, an inner voice reminded her. She had known all along that they would never outsmart Souris's most dangerous spy. She had known all along â and a sob rose in her chest as she thought it â that Sophia would, as she had promised, get them in the end.
With her heart in her mouth Alice spun around just as a familiar voice said, âLooking for this?'
As the double doors swung open and a guard swept into the room, Alistair began to tremble. He was still kneeling before the Queen, with his head bowed, and he expected at any moment to feel the cool steel blade at his neck. It would be quick, he hoped, swallowing over the lump in his throat, tears pricking his eyes.
âThe court minstrel is insisting on seeing you, ma'am.'
What?
Alistair spun around to see a harried-looking guard, his sword still in its scabbard.
The Queen seemed equally surprised. âCourt minstrel? What gibberish are you spouting now, Winklepicker? There's no minstrel at the palace. What would I want with another warbling fool around the place when I have you?'
âYour Majesty, I â'
âThere, there, Winklepicker,' said an amused voice, and a midnight blue mouse strolled into the room,
carrying a fiddle. Alistair could barely restrain himself from shouting with joy. It was Timmy the Winns!
Alistair darted a look at the Queen, expecting her to explode with rage at the intrusion. Instead, her mouth had creased in a wintry smile. Alistair remembered the first time he had seen Timmy the Winns, how the sight of the midnight blue mouse and his equally colourful companions had made him smile too.
âTo what do I owe this unexpected interruption?' Queen Eugenia asked.
Rather than answer, Timmy the Winns lifted the fiddle to his chin and, gazing straight at Queen Eugenia, began to play. He didn't sing the words, but Alistair recognised the haunting melody. It was the song of the Winns.
As the melancholy melody filled the room, Alistair felt a longing inside him to see the broad green river once more, to hear the gurgle of the water and the whisper of the wind through the reeds lining the banks.
A strange calm filled him and for a moment he forgot where he was, forgot that only seconds before he had expected to feel a sword pierce his skin, until to Alistair's astonishment, the Queen gasped in recognition.
âI know that song,' she said. âMy grandfather used to hum that to me when I was a little girl. Do you remember it, Timon?'
For the first time, Alistair heard the ancient mouse who stood behind the Queen's throne speak. âI remember,' he murmured.
Alistair raised his head slightly to look at the pair. Were the Queen's eyes actually glistening?
The Queen turned her teary eyes to Timon. âI haven't heard that tune since Grandfather died. He loved me, didn't he?'
âHe loved you very much, ma'am. And he bade me look after you and advise you, and so I have, to the best of my ability. Though Your Majesty does not take kindly to advice.'
As if words had reminded her who she was and where she was, Queen Eugenia turned back to Timmy the Winns and demanded, âWho are you? How do you know my grandfather's song?'
âIt's the song of the Winns, ma'am.'
âThe Winns?' The Queen gaped at the midnight blue mouse. âThat's preposterous. Why would my grandfather sing me a song about the Gerandan river? Unless â¦' She sat up straighter, her eyes glittering with excitement now. âIt's because he knew that one day it would be mine. That's it, isn't it? Sing me the song, Minstrel. I want to hear the words.'
Timmy put the fiddle to his chin and began to play and sing. When he came to the chorus he raised his voice so that the words rang out clearly:
Â
âWherever the Winns takes me, that's where I'll be,
For me and the Winns will always flow free.'
Â
The Queen's tears were flowing as freely as a river now and Winklepicker stepped forward to offer her a handkerchief.
âStop, Minstrel,' she commanded in an unsteady voice. âStop!' Then, sobbing violently, she lurched to her feet and rushed from the room, her old adviser close behind.
Timmy sprang forward and pulled Alistair up, but as Winklepicker rushed towards them Alistair reared back in alarm. To his surprise, Timmy didn't seem at all concerned.
âIt's under the throne,' he said to the guard in a low voice. âHelp me shift it.'
Timmy and the guard each took an arm and heaved the throne backwards to reveal a trapdoor.
âWill you be able to push it back into place by yourself?'
The guard nodded. âI've got it all figured out,' he said. âI'll pretend you overpowered me and went out the window.'
âAnd you got the uniform, like I asked?'
âReady and waiting.'
âGood fellow,' said Timmy approvingly. He clapped the guard on the shoulder, then bent to raise the trapdoor. The top of a ladder was just visible, but after the first few rungs there was only darkness.
The midnight blue mouse turned to Alistair. As he hastily untied Alistair's hands, he finally spoke to him. âAfter you, little brother.'
Alistair, fearful of the Queen's return, didn't hesitate. He dropped to the floor and felt with his feet for the first rung, then quickly began to descend the ladder. Seconds later the form of Timmy the Winns filled the opening of the trapdoor, blocking most of the light. When Timmy's head dropped below the level of the opening, the trapdoor slammed shut, plunging them into total darkness. A scraping sound above told them that Winklepicker was heaving the throne back into position.
Alistair tried to move quickly, but he almost lost his footing a few times â it was hard to judge the distance between the rungs in the dark â and he was forced to slow his pace.
âSorry,' came a whisper in the dark as Timmy the Winns stood on one of Alistair's hands.
All at once there was a distant cry of âHelp! Guards!' followed immediately by a clattering above their heads. Alistair's pulse started racing as he realised that Winklepicker had raised the alarm.
âOuch!' He couldn't stop the involuntary exclamation as one foot then the other abruptly hit stone. He was at the bottom of the ladder. Now what? He opened his mouth to ask but before he could he felt his uncle's hands on his shoulders.
âWe're in a tunnel that runs beneath the palace,' Timmy breathed in his ear. âKeep your left hand on the wall and walk as fast as you can. I'll be right in front of you.'
Alistair heard the gentle scuff of footsteps on stone as his uncle walked off. He put his left hand to the wall and took a tentative step forward. It was disconcerting, the absolute blackness. Not a chink of light illuminated the tunnel; there was nothing to tell him whether it was straight or curved. He reached out blindly with his right hand to see if he could touch the opposite wall or the roof above, but he couldn't. So it was a wide tunnel, then. He drew a deep breath and half ran after Timmy. The thought of being left alone there was terrifying.
The stone was cool and rough on his fingertips, and he stumbled often as his feet encountered unseen bumps and dips on the path. His head began to pound once more at the rush of blood brought on by sudden activity after the long hours lying on the cot in the cell.
âYou all right there, little brother?' Timmy's whisper sounded loud in the dark.
âYes,' said Alistair, not sure whether he meant it.
âNot much further.'
With no visibility either forward or back, he lost all sense of time and distance. He could hear nothing but the steady sound of Timmy's breathing ahead of him, though he could imagine the commotion above as the guards â and, worse, the Queen â discovered their escape. What if they uncovered Winklepicker's deception and swarmed into the tunnel? He shivered, both at the thought of a swarm of guards and at the frigid air; they must be deep underground.
âMmmph.' He recoiled as something smothered him, before realising that he had walked straight into Timmy's back.
Timmy grunted then said, âHinges must be rusty; probably hasn't been used for a long time, if ever. I'll need you to give me a hand.'
Alistair felt an arm around his shoulders guiding him forward until he was pressed against a small wooden door that stretched from waist height to just above his head.
âPush,' said Timmy.
Alistair pushed with all his strength. Eventually there was a slow creaking and the door opened a crack. He blinked in the light that filled the opening.
âAgain,' said his uncle, and together they threw their weight against the door, which moved reluctantly. When the opening was just wide enough for them to squeeze through, Timmy said, âThat'll do,' and wriggled through the gap.
Alistair clambered through the door behind Timmy the Winns to find himself in a hollow carved out between two gnarled roots of an enormous tree.
Timmy shut the door behind them, and when Alistair turned to look the weathered timber was almost indistinguishable against the tree roots.
He gazed around him. They were standing in a grove of trees halfway down the slope of a steep hill; at the top he could just see the towers of a palace partly obscured by a high stone wall. They had left the palace grounds, he
realised with the sense of a weight being lifted from his shoulders â but the shouts and cries drifting down from the turreted building reminded him that they were far from safe.
âIs that Grouch?' he asked in a low voice, gesturing to the city streets which were laid out in a neat grid below them.
âThat's right,' said his uncle, glancing at him. He frowned. âAre you sure you're all right?' He peered into Alistair's eyes. âYou don't look well.'
âI'm fine,' Alistair said, though his head still hurt and he was feeling hungry once again.
Timmy the Winns nodded. âOkay. We're going to head for a safe house on the edge of town. We can have a rest and something to eat there.'
A safe house in Grouch? Alistair looked at his uncle, who gave him a small smile.
âThere's a reason I've been able to travel around Souris for so long without being captured,' he said. âI have a lot of friends.' And he set off down the hill.
Near the bottom of the hill, just before they would step out from the cover of the trees, he stopped in front of a row of flowering bushes. As Alistair watched, puzzled, Timmy crouched down and rummaged among the bright red blooms. âAh, here we go. Good old Winklepicker.'
âWhat is it?' asked Alistair.
âA guard's uniform,' said Timmy, pulling a swathe of stiff fabric from the thicket of leaves. âThere should be a pair of boots too.'
Alistair dropped to his knees and stuck an arm into the bush. âHere's one,' he said, extracting a boot from a tangle of twigs and branches just as Timmy pulled a second boot free.
The midnight blue mouse quickly shrugged into the red coat and tugged on the boots.
âWe'd better get a move on; the guards will have realised that we're no longer in the palace by now. Try to look like my captive as we walk through the city.'
âDo you think anyone will really believe that a blue mouse can be a Queen's Guard?' Alistair asked doubtfully.
âBlue fur might be unusual, but at least it doesn't make me an enemy,' Timmy said, looking meaningfully at Alistair's own fur.
Alistair held his wrists together behind his back as if they were tied and they set off down the hill. They entered the city streets and marched past rows of buildings, all of a regular height and appearance. As with the other parts of Souris Alistair had seen, the capital city was neat and orderly and uniform. They received many curious looks, but the Sourians on the streets stepped aside politely to let them pass without comment. As they walked further and further from the palace, though, they encountered fewer and fewer other mice. Eventually the buildings became houses, and then the houses too grew fewer and fewer, until the street they were walking down was not so much a city street as a country lane, with the houses few and far
between. Fields of grain separated the houses now, and they entered a field in which the grain grew higher than their heads. Although Alistair could discern no path, Timmy seemed completely certain of his whereabouts as he led the way unerringly to the safe house, which, it turned out, was actually a barn.
The barn was empty and cavernous, with straw on the floor. Timmy walked straight to a pile of hay bales at the far end, and returned a minute later bearing a cloth-covered basket. He unpacked it, muttering to himself, âFreshly baked bread? Thank you very much.' He passed it to Alistair along with a knife that had been folded in a napkin. âCut us some slices, would you? Ah, and farmhouse cheese.' He sniffed the hunk of waxy yellow cheese appreciatively, then passed it, too, to Alistair. âAnd a couple of pears. Nice.' He cocked an eyebrow at his nephew, who was ravenous by now. âHungry? We'll have some cheese sandwiches for you in a jiffy.'
Alistair ate two sandwiches before he was able to voice the questions which had been crowding his mind.
âHow did you know about the tunnel?' he asked.
Timmy smiled mysteriously. âAh, you're not the only one to know a few secret paths, little brother,' he said, tapping the side of his blue nose. âThere's usually a way for the king or queen to flee the palace in times of trouble. I did my research before I came looking for you.'
âHow did you know I was at the palace?' Alistair wanted to know.
Timmy the Winns speared a slice of pear on the knife he was cutting it with and said, âA friend.' He offered the knife with the pear to Alistair. âWhat I don't know is how you got there.'
Alistair closed his eyes, remembering the splash of water in the fountain and the silky voice murmuring his name. âKeaters,' he said. âHe was waiting in Templeton.' Then his eyes snapped open. âWhat about Tibby Rose?' he said. âDid she and Granville complete the mission? Have you heard anything about our pamphlet? It was meant to be published â¦' He screwed up his face in thought, trying to count the days. âWhat day is it?'
âSaturday,' said Timmy.
âThen it should have come out today.'
Timmy shrugged. âI haven't heard anything.'
Alistair felt a pang of disappointment. âWhat could have happened?' he wondered aloud. âI'm sure Granville said it would be today.' He frowned. âSo where's Tibby now?'