Название: The Gold Thief
Автор: Justin Fisher
Издательство: HarperCollins
Жанр: Детская проза
isbn: 9780008124564
isbn:
“Your friends, sir, the jossers,” he breathed. “They’re awake and I think they would appreciate your company.”
The rest of the Glimmerman’s mirrors had now been covered up with intricately decorated tapestries, giving the whole dimly lit scene the feeling of being inside a giant Persian rug. Had either of the two jossers the eyes to notice, they would have seen that the patterns in the tapestries were moving, in hypnotic calm-inducing rhythms of colours and shapes.
“Trig-ono-metry, is it, dear?” nodded Abi patiently.
“Yeah, there’s probably loads of stuff you lot don’t know about, like pistachio ice-cream, do you have pistachio ice-cream?!”
“Oh, I think so, dear, yes, I think we’ve got plenty of pistachio ice-cream.” Which was when Abigail turned to Ned and Lucy. “Poor lad, his mind is completely frazzled, haven’t seen a josser this bad since, well, you, Master Ned.”
Her words seemed to have no effect on Archie at all and as soon as he spotted Ned he broke into a manic, over-enthusiastic smile.
“Hello, Ned! I knew you were a wizard. You’re all wizards here, aren’t you? You know, we always knew you were a bit different, brilliant but different. Imagine that, our friend Ned, a wizard.”
“You all right, Arch?”
“All right? Couldn’t be better! Everyone’s been so nice and, and the food’s amazing. Is it magic too?”
“Arch, this is Lucy, she’s a good friend of mine.”
At this point Archie was smiling so much that it looked as though it might actually hurt.
“Hello, Lucy! Are you a wizard?”
Lucy was about to laugh when Ned kicked her ankle. Despite his amusing condition, he was still Ned’s friend.
“Err, no, Arch. I’d probably be more of a witch than anything else, or at least something like that.”
Whilst the two of them spoke, an increasingly concerned Ned turned to Abigail. “Are they going to be all right?” he asked.
“Course they are, dear. Seen this lots of times. The Tinker’s sent over a de-rememberer. I think you should do the honours, Ned, they’re your pals after all.”
She handed him a long thin silver device that looked a lot like a flute, which of course it wasn’t.
“Me?! Can’t Tinks do it?”
“He’s in a bit of a state, love, what with all the trouble we’ve been having. Besides, it’s you they need to forget.”
Ned swallowed. Of course it was. The less they remembered of Ned, the safer they would be back amongst the jossers. By now there was probably a squad of pinstripes doing the exact same thing to Gummy’s parents. He looked at the Tinker’s device. He’d never actually used one before; on its side was a series of numbers from one to ten.
“How does it work?”
“Well, dear, you blow through it, and they fall asleep for just a little while, and when they wake up they’ve forgotten you, and anything that happened with you. Like, say, encountering a bargeist and the Circus of Marvels. A ten’s a total wipe. They’d never even recognise you, not never. After that it gets a bit muddy. If you set it to seven, say, they’d probably only forget you for a year, maybe longer. Just till everything quietens down.”
“But they’re … they’re my friends.”
Abigail put her arm round his shoulders.
“Yes, dear, I know they are, and you need to love them right now, enough to keep ’em safe.”
Archie was still prattling on manically and Gummy was looking more and more like a goldfish by the minute. They were the two best things about his life as a josser. And now, like his mum and dad, he was going to lose them, if only for a year or so. What if they found a new Ned? New Ned or not, though, there were more important things at stake.
“A real friend would want them safe forever,” he said. “Maybe I should just set it to ten and be done with it?”
Ned clicked the dial. He did love them enough to keep them safe, but far too much, he realised, to let them go forever.
“Seven will have to do.” He gently pulled Lucy to one side and got down on his knees in front of Archie. “Arch?”
“Yes, my wizard friend?” answered Archie proudly.
“Arch, I’m going to say goodbye now. This machine is going to make you forget me, but I’m never going to forget you. When all this is over, I’ll come and find you and we’ll start over, OK?”
“Whatever you say, wizard. I think you’re magic!” saluted his excitable friend.
“I think you’re magic too,” said Ned sadly, and blew very softly through the de-rememberer.
Archie closed his eyes and began to snore.
Heart heavy, Ned turned to his other friend and made ready to say goodbye.