It was a peculiar exchange, but peculiar things will happen in this new world of motorcars.
The afternoon was weepy and gray, but the car was cozy. I held my hand out the window. There’s a peculiar pleasure in having just a bit of oneself grow cold, while the rest is snug beneath a lap rug.
I sank into the cream leather. “The motorcar makes me feel I am truly a Dresden figurine,” I said.
“Dresden?” said Rose.
“Something precious and fragile,” said Eldric. “Something that ought to be treated with utmost care.”
“Briony’s not fragile,” said Rose. “She always says how strong she is.”
“That’s rather embarrassing, Rose!”
“She’s right,” said Eldric. “That’s what you’re forever saying.”
“Still more embarrassing,” I said. “Don’t you think it’s true?”
We bumped along a rough road, through heather and peat and gorse. The moor rose in lavender folds, dotted with a few arthritic firs.
“In certain ways, perhaps,” said Eldric. But then he got quiet and didn’t finish his thought.
“In what ways?”
“In Amazon of the Swampsea ways,” said Eldric, but I had the feeling I’d just pulled him back from a faraway place and that that was not at all what he’d meant to say.
Now the earth rose around us, cutting off our view of the moor. Banks to either side dripped with rusty mosses and yellow ferns and mushrooms, brown and rugged, like leather. Autumn had taken hold. Just a bit more than a week until Halloween, which was when Eldric would learn I’m a witch.
I watched him adjust the turning wheel. If Michelangelo had lived in this age of motorcars, I knew just how he’d sculpt Eldric’s hand. The long, fidgety fingers, the energy that might, at any moment, turn the wheel into a crown.
We splatted through soggy leaves, then hissed onto pebbles to climb a long rise of moor.
I imagined what those fingers would do on Halloween, when I revealed my true self. They’d go very still while he absorbed the information. And then what? Would he want me to give him back the things he’d made?
I touched the gray-pearl wolfgirl that hung against my chest. If he did want things back, it would be too late. I’d have vanished.
But I couldn’t bear to have him find out that way. What if I were to tell him?
What if?
We pulled over at an untidy pile of boulders. The almostrain had given over to almost-sun. Eldric spread a blanket on the sunward side of the boulders, which were flushed and warm.
Rose turned away, even though the blanket suggested picnics, and Rose was very fond of picnics. She looked down the spill of moor, at the wind tearing through the scrub, at a bundle of ponies tumbling by.
Eldric produced the picnic basket; we set out our supper. A thermos of tea; cold chicken; buns with raspberry jam and cream; and biscuits.
“Look, Rose,” I said. “Buns and biscuits—shop-bought biscuits!”
But Rose did not appear to have heard. She stood smiling, not her anxious-monkey smile, but a real-girl smile. She did have her own thoughts—nice thoughts. Of course she did.
Pearl was a picnic genius. The picnic was the very essence of picnic-ness. She’d given us a quilt, worn and faded to just what a picnic blanket should be. The buns were wrapped in a blue-and-white cloth, and if I were a girl in a story, I’d have exclaimed, Look, they’re still warm!
Which they were.
“I suppose it’s time to get it over with,” I said. “While Rose isn’t listening.”
“About last night?” Eldric didn’t pretend not to know what I meant.
“I’m so mortified. Asking you those nosy-parkerium questions, and . . . and singing!”
“But I’m glad you did!” said Eldric. “You have a—a dazzling voice! I should never have heard it otherwise.”
I shook my head. “I used to sing well enough, but I grew out of it.”
“You haven’t,” said Eldric. “I’m telling you, you haven’t.”
“Perhaps I can only sing when I’m tipsy.” I smiled to show I didn’t mean it. “And then, on the stairs—oh, I’m so sorry.”
“Too bad about that terrific memory,” said Eldric. “I’d rather hoped you’d forget.”
“I wish I had,” I said. “And this horrid thought keeps coming to me. What if I’m no better than Cecil? What if when I get to drinking, I go about kissing people?”
“You’re not at all like Cecil,” said Eldric.
“What’s the difference?”
“Well,” said Eldric, but he paused, and again, I had the feeling he’d drifted far away.
“Well?”
“I’d never invite Cecil on a picnic,” said Eldric.
“I thought for a moment you were going to be serious,” I said.
“Not even for a moment.”
“I did feel dreadfully unwell,” I said. “Just as you’d predicted.”
“I’ve been under the weather myself,” said Eldric, “in just that way. But I think that members of the Fraternitus, young and high spirited as we are, sometimes need to do such things, just to learn not to do them again.”
“I’ve no intention of doing that again.”
“Not ever drinking?” said Eldric.
“Not like that, at least.”
“A toast at your wedding, perhaps?” said Eldric.
“I shall never get married,” I said. “But I do like champagne.”
Funny how I’d started off feeling so comfortable with Eldric last spring, but that now prickly little pauses kept growing between us. It’s dead opposite to my experience with other people. I usually start out feeling uncomfortable and have to ratchet up the tart-and-amusing side of Briony. But as I begin to despise them, it grows more and more easy, and witticisms fall from my lips like toads.
“Look!” Rose pointed down the bluff. “It’s a horse.”
It was awkward because of Blackberry Night. Blackberry Night ruined everything.
“Oh,” said Eldric, his voice so devoid of inflection that I looked up. He stood beside Rose, looking along her pointing finger, shielding his eyes against the sunset.
“I can tell who it is from that particular shade of green,” said Rose. “I have an eye for color.”
My mouth turned sour. “The horse is green?”
“I can tell that’s a joke,” said Rose.
I joined them, knowing what I’d see. A horse and rider, thundering across the moor. The horse wasn’t green, but I was—turning green, that is. A taste-memory from last night rose beneath my tongue, all sick and eel and grit. I swallowed hard.
The wind strained through the peacock feather in her hat, tugged at her riding habit of hunter’s green.
“She rides rather well,” I said.
“Yes,” said Eldric.
“She appears to be heading our way.”
“Yes,” said Eldric.
“Do we have enough chocolate biscuits?” said Rose.
“Let’s eat them all up,” said Eldric. “Now!”
Leanne was now urging the horse up the bluff, now slowing, now slipping from the saddle, turning toward us, smiling with those overripe teeth.
“What a surprise,” said Eldric.
Leanne was pink and glowing and robust, looking indecently healthy. “I thought you might come back here.”
Back here. Eldric and Leanne had been here before.
Rose flung herself on the blanket and reached for the packet of biscuits.
“What’s the rule, Rose?” I said.
“Sweets are for after.” Rose set it down. “But I prefer to ask a question now. A person must always keep a secret, mustn’t she?”
Come back here.
“Indeed she must,” I said. I’d thought this place so fresh and new, but they’d been here before. It was all worn out.
“Even if she doesn’t prefer to?”
“Even then,” I said.
“I hope you don’t mind my joining you,” said Leanne. I minded. After all, she’d tried to kill me. A girl in a novel would say it was hard to believe, but it wasn’t.
“I don’t agree,” said Eldric. “Some secrets are wrong and ought to be told.”