As they wheeled her through the doors that led to the operating rooms, Nieve continued to put up a struggle, but only for show. What she really wanted to do was laugh. Or cry. Well, she wasn’t going to start that. She was so happy to see Frances that a surge of renewed determination and hope took hold of her.
Her only moment of alarm came when they veered down the hallway that led away from the operating rooms and wheeled her into a room that was more like an office, with crammed bookshelves and stacks of files and paper piled everywhere, including the floor. Frances locked the door and the other orderly began undoing the straps. While doing so, the mask slipped down over her chin and Nieve saw that it was Sarah, Twisden’s intended. With a stab of fright, it now occurred to her that Frances herself may have been overtaken, that things weren’t as great as she thought.
But her alarm lasted only as long as it took for Frances, pulling down her own mask, to say, “Nope, they haven’t brainwashed me, Nievy. Same old unwashed brain.” She hurried over and helped to unfasten the straps. “My gosh it’s good to see you! We thought we’d lost you, too.”
As Nieve sat up, Frances enfolded her in her arms. She knew she was safe.
Sarah, standing to one side, gazed at her approvingly. “You know, you really do look like your mother.”
This was the sort of thing adults loved to say, whether there was the merest trace of resemblance or not. Nieve returned the gaze less approvingly. “I’m not the only one who looks like my mother.”
“The Impress, yes, that must have been terrible. Look, Nieve, it’s not what you might think, believe me. I’m not marrying that creep Twisden. I’m . . . well, you’ll see. We don’t have the time now, it’s not going to take her long to catch on.”
“Things are tight,” agreed Frances. “We’ll have to save the chinwag for later, but where’s Lias? And did you, I mean . . . ?” She braced herself for the answer. “Malcolm?”
“I’ve seen him!” Nieve filled them in quickly, if sketchily, about Bone House and Lias and Dr. Morys and what she’d witnessed in the ballroom. She couldn’t bring herself to tell them that Elixibyss was preserving people, Malcolm included, only to kill them off later. Nieve’s job, no less!
“Right,” Frances said, sounding both relieved and worried. “We know about that process, everyone zonked out. It’s a sort of hypnosis they’ve discovered that sends you into a deep sleep. Must be how they caught Dr. Morys. Not like that other thing they do . . . the serum, the shots.” She shuddered. “At least Malcolm’s not a footstool.”
“Is that what she planned to do to me?”
“You were slated to receive a lighter hit of the serum, same stuff they sneak into the food here, just enough to dumb you down some. We intercepted the order. You’re trouble, Nieve. She needs you, but she also needs to control you.”
“But why? I don’t get it.”
“Because you can do things she can’t.” Frances paused and gave her a quizzical look. “I don’t think you realize how . . . interesting you are Nievy. Take those plants you’re growing in your back pockets, for example.”
“What!” Nieve glanced down and spied a green shoot, a vine with a tiny leaf, twisting around her waist. She hopped down off the gurney and craned her neck around to look at her backside. “Crumb! What is it?”
“Runners!” said Sarah.
“Beans?”
“No, no. Shoes, buskins really, but very special ones. This is perfect.” Sarah clasped her hands together, delighted.
“I don’t–” Nieve started to say, mystified, until she remembered the useless, tattered shoes Gran had given her. She hadn’t given them a thought since stuffing them into her back pockets. But . . . they’d sprouted?
“Okay, Sarah.” Frances was equally mystified. “You’ve got ten seconds to fill us in.”
“In a word, Nieve, they’ll make you run very fast. That’s what I understand; I’ve never seen a real pair before, only illustrations. They’re extremely old.”
“I already run fast.”
“These will help you run faster.”
“Faster than a horse?”
“Faster than . . . anything. Let’s have a look at them. And then we’ll tell you what you have to do. This makes it so much easier.”
Nieve doubted that, nothing had been easy so far, but overwhelmed with curiosity, she tugged the forgotten shoes out of her back pockets. It was amazing how they had changed. The brown crackly-dry leaves that had been tumbling apart, now adhered together, overlapping like pliant scales, soft as the softest leather and a brilliant green. They even smelled new, like a morning in early spring, verdant and fresh. As she held them up, surely the wildest pair of shoes she’d ever seen (“Rad!”said Frances), she couldn’t help but wonder if her bright stowaway, the daylight, was somehow involved in this transformation.
“Put’em on,” urged Frances. “If you can figure out how.”
No problem there. Nieve pulled off her old runners, then eased the new ones on as one would a pair of socks. They extended to mid-calf and fit beautifully. Once they were on, vines thin as laces wound up and around of their own accord, fastening the shoes securely and comfortably.
“You shouldn’t have any difficulty now,” Sarah said. “As long as you steer clear of wafts and the like.”
“Wafts?” Nieve was admiring the shoes. They were extremely cool (“Très dash,” said Frances) and would be fantastic with her new green shirt. (Not that she was into that sort of thing.)
“They take the form of ordinary people, but they’re definitely not that.”
This got her attention. “They’re here in the hospital?”
“Listen, Nieve,” said Frances, suddenly more serious. “We need your help, that must be pretty obvious. I wouldn’t ask if there was any other way, and I sure hope your Gran’ll forgive me. There’s a group of people here, medical people mostly, who’re fighting this craziness that’s taking over. I stumbled into a couple of them, lucked out when I went running off like a maniac, or I might be a gurney myself right now. And I’m so sorry for abandoning you like that . . . but, I know you understand.”
“Of course,” Nieve nodded. “You were looking for Malcolm. Me too.”
Frances gestured toward the stacks of paper on the floor and spilling off the shelves. “We’ve discovered something. There’s an antidote. Dr. Manning, remember him, he used to live in town, he invented the serum that those sickos Wormius and Ashe have been producing and distributing from their nasty little drugstore. But he also invented an antidote. Or anyway a formula for one.”
“Which we think is hidden at Ferrets,” added Sarah.
“You could find him and ask him for it, couldn’t you?” Nieve could see all too clearly where this was going.
“No one knows what happened to him. He disappeared when Ferrets, or rather Woodlands, was sold to Mortimer Twisden. Some say he disappeared before it was sold.”
Both Frances and Sarah were staring at her intently. She knew there was no point in asking why me? because they’d only tell her that she was different . . . and interesting . . . and that she had abilities. All she had was a pair of leafy shoes with an untested reputation for speed. Plus a tiny light that was presently illuminating her armpit.
“What happens when I don’t show up in the waiting room?”
“Originally, we were going to wheel you back to Elixibyss, with you pretending to be drugged and compliant. We have word that she’s headed to Ferrets to deal with Twisden, something’s come up, but we’re not sure what. If you were to go with her, you’d be able to search for the antidote. She’d think you too doped-up to need watching. Mind, it’s pretty risky. She might just decide to vanish and take you with her.”
Nieve made a face. She wanted to ride in the silver car again about as much as she wanted to continue chumming around with the Impress. “I don’t think it’s at Ferrets, this formula or whatever. Someone’s already searched the place. Don’t you remember the furniture and stuff scattered around outside?”
“You’re right,” Sarah said. “Twisden turned the place upside-down and still didn’t find it. He told me he was looking for a diamond brooch to give me that had belonged to his wife. Poor Molly.” She shook her head sadly. “He never found the formula, but I’m pretty sure it’s still in that house, somewhere.”
“I’d drive you there myself,” said Frances. “But some jerk stripped the car, picked it clean. No cars anywhere, the streets are deserted because everyone’s freaking out, huddled in their closets at home biting their nails. Taxis won’t even answer calls anymore.”
“Let me get this straight,” Nieve sighed heavily, more exasperated than anything. So much for feeling safe! “You want me to run through the city and back to town, which is what, fifty miles away, all by myself, in the dark, with . . . who know’s what roaming around out there?”
“You’ll be moving too fast for whatever’s out there, Nieve.” Sarah touched her shoulder. “Believe me.”
Nieve wanted to believe her, but Sarah hadn’t exactly earned her trust yet. Poor Molly indeed!
“We’ll distract her,” said Frances. “One of our doctors will go out with a complementary bucket of headache pills and tell her there’ve been some unexpected complications with your treatment. We’ll make sure you have enough time one way or another, don’t worry. I’ll keep an eye out for Lias, too. He’ll be looking for you.”
Nieve gazed down at her shoes, thinking it over. Was this scheme as crackbrained as it sounded? Ferrets was close to her home, after all, and there wasn’t a place she’d rather be right now. She ached to see her parents, and Gran, and Mr. Mustard Seed, and Artichoke. What if they needed her help, too?
While considering this, she watched, intrigued, as a ripple of motion passed through the leaves on her shoes, making them flutter and tremble. Clothed in these living shoes, her feet felt wonderfully light, really, and tingly, restless, itching to move it. Yes, yes, she wanted to go home more than anything. In fact, she couldn’t wait to go. She began to bounce up and down like a sprinter preparing to take off.
“All right,” she said. “I’m out of here.”