Obsidian Mirror

Obsidian Mirror Read Free

Book: Obsidian Mirror Read Free
Author: Catherine Fisher
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anymore. He’s a recluse.”
    The Head was busy, so Wharton said, “Recluse?”
    “He doesn’t leave home. Wintercombe Abbey.”
    “I know what recluse means.” Wharton felt hot. The boy was such an annoying little…But he kept his temper. “Since when?”
    “Since his wife died.” The words were hard and cold, and Wharton was chilled by Jake’s lack of the least sympathy. Something was very wrong here. He’d read about the famous Oberon Venn—polar explorer, mountaineer, archaeologist, the only man to have come back alive from the terrible ascent of the west face of Katra Simba. A heroic figure. Someone young men should look up to. But maybe not the best person to be suddenly landed with someone else’s child.
    “Your father knew him?”
    Jake was silent, as if he resented the question. “My father was his best friend.”
    Far off, a bell rang. Footsteps clattered down the corridor outside. The Head said, “He seems a man of few words. Here’s his answer.”
    He turned the screen so that Wharton and Jake could read it. It said:
    SEND HIM HERE. I’LL DEAL WITH THIS.
    Wharton felt as if an arctic wind had blown out of the screen. He almost stepped back.
    Jake didn’t flinch. “I’ll leave tomorrow. Thank you for all—”
    “You’ll leave when I say.” The Head clicked off the screen and looked at him over it. “Can’t you tell us what this is all about, Jake? You’re a promising student…maybe even the brightest boy in the place. Do you really want to rot in some English comp?”
    Jake set his face with the icy glitter Wharton loathed. “I told you. It’s not about the school. It’s about me.” He glared at the screen. “Me and him.”
    The Head leaned back in his chair. As if he could see it was hopeless, he shrugged slightly. “Have it your way. I’ll arrange a flight. Go and pack your things.”
    “They’ve been packed for days.”
    The Head glanced at Wharton. “And you can pack yours, George.”
    “Me? But…”
    “Someone has to take him home. Have a few days off for Christmas while you’re there.”
    “I can take myself,” Jake snapped.
    “And I have a ton of work to do, Headmaster. Theplay…”
    “Can wait. In loco parentis, I’m afraid.”
    They both stared at him, and the Head grinned his dark grin. “I don’t know which of you looks the most horrified. Bon voyage, gentlemen. And good luck, Mr. Wilde.”
    Outside in the corridor, Wharton blew out his cheeks and gazed desperately up toward the staff room. Then he looked at Jake and Jake looked at him.
    “Better do as he says,” he said, gruff.
    “I’m sorry.” The boy’s voice was still arrogant, but there was something new in it. “Sorry you’re dragged into this. But I have to go and get the truth out of Venn. To confront him with what I know.”
    “And what
do
you know?” Wharton was baffled now.
    The lunch bell rang. Jake Wilde turned and was jostled down the corridor as the boys poured along to the dining room in a noisy, hungry wave. In all the uproar Wharton almost missed his reply. The words were so quiet. So venomous. But for a moment, he was sure Jake had said,
“I know he murdered my father.”

2
    For this Abbey lies in deep countrie, a place of fey and wicked spirits, and the traveler there should be ware of the woods of that land, and the crossroads where the dead are buried…
    Chronicle of Wintercombe
    S ARAH SCREAMED.
    She was halfway out of the world; her hand and arm through in some other cold, empty place, when the darkness leaped on her and bit her with a sudden savage pain.
    She kicked and yelled. Not darkness. A lithe shape, a snow-white wolf with sapphire eyes; its teeth in her shoe, her heel, the agony unbearable. She fought, jerked the shoe off, tore away, and suddenly came free; the wolf snarled but she was already falling, falling out of the dark, arms wide, crash-landing abrupt and breathless on her back under a brilliant scarlet sky.
    Sore, she lay still.
    The ground was boggy.

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