Chapter Thirty He Is Younger than You Are

Thirty

He Is Younger Than You Are

The gryphons were holding some sort of council: Prince Keshvād and Gulya were listening intently to three of the commanders, who were speaking in turn, arguing courteously but firmly.

Lyra saw the witches move. They were turning towards her, and Tilda and Sala Riikola were coming. Some of the others set off back towards where the fallen witches lay, no doubt to deal with their remains with honor.

The two witches came to sit next to Lyra, looking at Malcolm curiously. Tilda was curious about Lyra too, and their eyes met with a flash of mutual recognition.

“He’s watching something,” said Tilda, meaning Malcolm.

Lyra remembered that Tilda had spent time with him and Pan in the gryphons’ palace. She didn’t seem concerned about him, Lyra thought: simply respectful. Asta stirred, but didn’t wake.

“You’re Tilda Vasara,” said Lyra.

“And you are Lyra Silvertongue.”

“You took my daemon with you,” Lyra said. “Why?”

“He asked me to.”

“Where is he now?”

“A day’s flight away, no more.”

“Was he safe when you left him?”

“Alive, yes. Safe, no. He has been in danger ever since he left you. So have you.”

“What is he doing?”

“Spying.”

“Spying—for what? What’s he looking for? Didn’t he tell you anything?”

Sala Riikola was surprised to hear any short-life woman speak to a witch-queen quite so fiercely as Lyra was doing.

Tilda was calm in response. “There’s a village on the hill just above the research station.

We stopped there. We could see from the hill that the station buildings had been smashed up, windows broken, a wall or two knocked down, that sort of damage.

Not destroyed completely. In fact, it seemed as if someone had already begun to repair it.

The rubble was laid out neatly—bricks placed in tidy heaps, lengths of timber set together.

Pan wanted to search properly, but he was going to wait till nightfall.

We saw no one there except a couple of village people working on their land, but people had been and gone from the research station, because there were tracks of their wheels. ”

“Pan didn’t want to go on to the red building?”

“Not then, but he talked about it. He said he’d go there with you.”

“We’d have to go separately…That was the rule. To keep out people who couldn’t separate from their daemons, I suppose. But why, I don’t know.”

“I know nothing about that. He said you and he would go there together. I guessed he knew what he was talking about.”

“Yes…”

She fell quiet. Both of them looked at Malcolm, who was sleeping peacefully.

“You know,” said Tilda, “this man is younger than you are.”

Lyra looked at her. “I don’t understand,” she said.

“I said exactly what I mean. You are older, he is younger.”

“I still don’t understand. And I thought time didn’t matter for witches as it does for us.”

“A witch can be four hundred years old, but still seventeen. And I have seen human children seven years of age who seem to have lived through centuries. Numbers have little to do with it. This man is younger than you are. I can see this, and you can’t, so I tell you, and if you listen, you’ll know. ”

Lyra looked down at the sleeping Malcolm again. The sun gilded his face and his hair.

“He told me you cured a wound he had,” she said.

“That’s right. Someone shot him in the leg. I had some bloodmoss, so I made a decoction and cleaned the wound.”

“Who shot him?”

“I don’t know. What will you do at Tashbulak?”

“Find Pan, first, and then go to the red building. After that…” She shrugged, and looked at Malcolm.

“Will he come with you?”

“I hope so,” said Lyra carefully.

“Did you come all this way alone?”

Lyra had to think. “Well, until Seleukeia I was alone. But there I found a guide, a man called Abdel Ionides. He was very helpful on the next part of the journey. But he…I don’t know where he is now. He just left me unexpectedly.”

“I’ve heard of that man. Did he steal anything from you?”

“No. He was honest in that way, at least. I came to trust him completely, and I really thought he was truthful, in spite of…in spite of everything he said and did, really. He pretended to be a sort of vagabond, a rogue, but he’d been a professor of mathematics and he knew a lot about all kinds of unexpected things. ”

“When did he leave?”

“On the night when Malcolm and Gulya killed the sorcerer. He just went off in a boat that belonged to the Magisterium. Actually, now I think of him, he never claimed to be honest, except in a sort of ironic way, for mischief. I was very sorry to see him go.”

Tilda nodded. “Stay with him,” she said, looking at Malcolm. “Remember what I said about him.”

“I’ll remember. Even though I don’t understand it.”

“He is courageous and clever and honest and faithful. But he is younger than you.”

Tilda leaned across to kiss Lyra, and she and Sala left without another word.

Lyra sat still, a little dizzy with the witch’s words because they rang true. Was the witch warning her about something? Or was it just nonsense?

It troubled her, and she pulled her rucksack to herself and hugged it, as if for warmth. Asta yawned and stretched and sat up to look at Malcolm, who was still asleep.

“Lazy,” she said. “Lyra, can we look at your cards? The Myriorama?”

“Of course.”

Lyra opened the rucksack and felt inside. There was the little box, but her fingers also met the smooth surface of the lodestone resonator, and she brought that out first.

“That too. I want to know how it works,” said Asta.

“I think it must be something to do with entanglement. The particles of this one are connected with the ones in the stone that Malcolm’s got, and they respond when—”

“It’s responding now.”

“What?”

“There are words on it. But Malcolm’s asleep! They can’t be from him.”

“It can’t be…”

But Asta was right. As it lay in Lyra’s palm, the flat surface of the resonator was revealing, letter by letter, words that seemed to float into focus from deep inside the stone. Once she had read them, they disappeared to make room for more, as if it knew what her eyes were looking at.

Dear Miss Silver!

Yes, it is I, your “sorcier particulier,” Abdel Ionides, also known as Professor Rashid Xenakis, and more briefly as Master Parathanasius.

When we waited for you and Mr. Malcolm on the beach under the mountain I took advantage of his absence to borrow from his rucksack the stone that is in my hand as I write these words.

I am aware that you will be feeling certain “misgivings” about my actions, and possibly even a little mistrust in consequence. Let me clarify for you and Mr. Malcolm the reasons behind what Dr. Pervani and I did when we left with the Magisterium vessel.

Dr. Pervani has been acting a “double role,” very dangerous, I assure you, in seeming to act for the Magisterium while secretly working as an agent for the group known sometimes as the “men from the mountains.” Both sides, she assures me, are despicable.

She would like to see the destruction of both.

Everything she has done has been done with that purpose in mind.

Before the Magisterium vessel arrived so unexpectedly, we had every intention of continuing with you on your journey to the red building in the desert.

Dr. Pervani is convinced, as you are, that the secret of the “Rusakov field” is to be found there.

Myself, I am, as you know, a skeptic about many things, but I trust her reasoning about this.

The red building is of central importance.

When the vessel came into view on that stormy sea we had no more than a few seconds to decide what to do.

That was the point at which I borrowed the lodestone.

Dr. Pervani intended to continue her pretense to be on their side, and I went with her, claiming that I would throw all the resources of my intelligence and experience into the struggle alongside her.

Fortunately I was able to convince her colleagues of my “bona fides.”

Now we are bound for Karamakan, as you are.

When we arrive there we expect to find the Tashbulak station in the hands of an enemy both to the Magisterium and to you, and an enemy also to the “men from the mountains.” This enemy is very insidious, very deadly, and unless we can think strategically it will be the death of us all.

These are complex currents. I shall write before long and tell you exactly what we discover, and we can formulate a “plan of action” together.

Please respond to me, my dear Miss Silver, Queen Tatiana. I hope with all the heart of a vagabond that you are safe, and that you will find your beloved daemon, if you have not done so already.

Abdel Ionides

Asta sat and read it with her, and then they looked at each other without a word. Lyra blew out her cheeks.

“Well,” she managed to say.

“You trust him?”

“Yes. Well, no. Of course not. He’s a thief and a liar and God knows what else. But…Yes, I trust him. Naturally. He helped me such a lot…” She ran her fingers through her hair. It felt stiff and dirty, but that was too bad.

“Who are you talking about?” said Malcolm.

Lyra turned to look as he sat up carefully, blinking at the light, shading his eyes with his hand. “Can you see all right now?” she asked him. “Has your spangled thing gone?”

Asta butted his chin softly, and he stroked her back. “Yes. It’s gone, it’s clear. It just leaves me feeling a bit washed-out. What are you looking at?”

She showed him the lodestone. He screwed up his eyes to look at it, puzzled at first, and then realized what had happened.

“You mean this isn’t mine? It’s yours? Then who…” He took it from her, read it fully, and laughed. “ ‘Took advantage of his absence’…Very good. He doesn’t say anything about who he’s traveling with. They must have crossed the Caspian by now.”

“Who d’you think this other enemy is?”

“I think he’s loquacious enough to tell us if he has the chance. Are you going to reply?”

“Of course. As soon as I find my pencil.”

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