Iâm in the middle of a flock of noisy pigeons.â
A single door broke the right-hand wall, and it alone had a lock.
âWhat room is this?â
âItâs a storage area.â
âWhen the Replica was stolen before, did that high brunka keep it in the same place as you do?â
âNo. Then it was on a table in the middle of the great hall. I was just a brunkle, a lamb like you. No one gave a thought to theft. It had never happened.â
Another right and they reached a series of doors on either side of the corridor.
The high brunka said, âThese chambers hold just relics and curiosities.â
More hiding places for the Replica.
Ahead, a man and a woman sat side by side on stools. The woman kicked the man in the shins. âGet up, Johan, lazy lump.â Her sharp voice seemed to strike the rock walls and bounce down the corridor.
The man stood awkwardly, without complaining. His cloak, which had been draped over his stool, slid to the ground. Grunting, he picked it up and held it bunched in his arms. Upright, he rocked back and forth on his heels, a tall, stout, ruddy-faced young man whose left cheek bulged with what was probably a toothache remedy.
Elodie expected the high brunka to tell the woman she shouldnât be kicking people, but she just said, âWhy are you guarding, Ludda?â
Ludda-bee rose in one fluid motion for all she was middle-aged, and her cloak remained on the stool. âDeeter begged a few more minutes of sleep. Now breakfast needs starting, and where is he?â She turned to Elodie. âEveryone imposes on my good nature.â
Elodie bobbed a curtsy. Do not show your penetrating mind, she thought. Do not show you think this woman has no good nature.
Wicked enough to steal the Replica?
Ludda-bee was thin with a fat face and small featuresâsmall mouth, small nose, and small eyesâcrowded together in the middle of a big, round face, like a raisin roll in whichall the raisins had collected in one spot. Her smile would have to be small, too, hemmed in as it was by lots of cheek. Yes, it was small, and the smile did nothing to banish her peevish expression. âIâm Ludda-bee.â
The cook, Elodie remembered, had been there when the high brunka returned to Master Robbie without the Replica.
Ludda-bee continued. âAnd this shy, hulking thing is my friend Johan-bee, Johan-of-the-privy, as we bees call him.â
They were friends? Elodie looked at his faceâlarge nose, thin lips, that bulging cheek, owlish round eyes, expression blank. He doesnât consider her a friend, she concluded.
âTwo nights in a row of guarding, Johan,â the high brunka said. âThank you.â
His face relaxed. âYouâre welcome.â The second word sounded like welka , likely because he found it hard to close his lips on the m .
Ludda-bee seemed to resent the compliment. âIf you can call it guarding. He left me thrice to visit the garderobe, and was, as ever, slow to return.â
Elodie blushed.
âItâs my stomach, Ludda.â
It couldnât matter for the theft that Ludda-bee was horrible and that Johan-bee didnât like her. But it might matterthat Johan-bee deserted his post sometimes.
âWhen someone tells me her name, young mistress, I always tell her mine, unless Iâm a rude lout.â
âPardon!â She dropped another curtsy while hoping Ludda-bee would turn out to be the thief. âIâm Elodie.â
âCome, lamb.â The high brunka took her hand again. âI promised you a gift. You may have a painted rainbow.â
Elodie expected to go into the room closest to the bees, which they had been guarding. But instead they turned right into an intersection after that door and entered a short corridor.
A few steps took them to a door on which words were painted in neat blue letters: Hart Room. Below the words, for those who hadnât learned to read, a