Dillian! thought Howard. It had never occurred to him that it might be a lady’s name. Perhaps there was more than one Dillian, he thought, and it was a name like Hilary or Vivian that did for both men and women. As he thought it, he looked around to see the glass door of the porch swing and click shut.
A voice spoke. It was a sweet, laughing lady’s voice, and none of them could see where it was coming from. “Why, it’s Maisie!” it said. “Who are your friends, Maisie?”
Miss Potter, still with her head around the great front door, called back, “I’ve brought Quentin Sykes’s dear little children, Dillian, and the student who baby-sits them. May we come in?”
“With pleasure, dear,” said the sweet voice, almost chuckling. “Come on in.”
Miss Potter pushed open the massive door, and they all trooped through it. They stood blinking. The castle was a palace inside. They were in a vast room, where light blazed from crystal chandeliers onto an acre of shiny floor made of different woods put together in patterns. The light gleamed off the gilding of elegant little armchairs and winked in the drops of a small fountain near the stairs. There were banks of flowers around the fountain and here and there in the rest of the space, as if there were going to be a concert there or a visit from the queen. Golden statues held more lights at the foot of the stairs, which swept around the far side of the room in a grand curve. Everyone tiptoed forward into the gleaming, scented space, quite awed. There was a proud, smug look to Miss Potter as she whispered, “Dillian’s home is charming, isn’t it?”
Fifi pulled herself together enough to say, “Cozy little place—” and stopped as she saw Dillian coming down the stairs.
Dillian was wearing a shiny white ball gown, which she held up gracefully as she came, to show her little high-heeled silver shoes. Fifi and Howard stared, thinking of fairytale princesses, and Awful thought of Miss Great Britain. Dillian had long golden hair, and her face was beautiful. When she reached the bottom of the stairs and came gracefully toward them, they saw she was even more beautiful than they had thought. She gave them a wonderful smile.
“Maisie! How kind of you to bring them!” she said.
Miss Potter turned a dull red. It was very clear she adored Dillian and would have done a great deal more for her than steal two thousand words. “I—er—I was afraid you might be annoyed, dear,” she said.
“Not in the least,” said Dillian. “Come and sit down, all of you, and we’ll have some tea.” She turned and led the way gracefully to the gilded chairs near the fountain, where she sat down in a billow of lovely skirt. She bent and rang a little golden bell that stood on the curb of the fountain. As they followed her, slithering a little on the shiny floor and quite astonished, a footman came from behind the stairs somewhere and bowed to Dillian. Their heads all turned to him. He wore a red velvet coat and a white wig and stockings. “Tea, please, Joseph,” Dillian said to him. “Or would you prefer a milk shake?” she asked Awful.
Awful turned her stare from the footman back to Dillian. “No, thanks.”
“Bring one in case anyway, Joseph,” Dillian said to the footman. “Do sit down, everyone.”
Miss Potter fussily pulled gilded chairs about to make a group around Dillian, and they all rather gingerly sat in them. Once they were sitting, they found that the banks of flowers around the fountain hid most of the huge room. They seemed to be in a small space full of scents and gentle drip-drip-dripping from the fountain. It all was so elegant that Fifi tried to hide her striped leg warmers under her chair. Howard could not think what to do with his slashed bag of books. Finally, he hid it and its tape under his chair, and then there seemed nowhere to put his feet. He felt as if he had more leg than the Goon.
“You must bring your father with you next time you come,” Dillian said to Howard. “I do so admire his books. But it’s just as great an honor having his children here—or do you get very tired of having such a famous father?”
As far as Howard knew, having Quentin for a father was just ordinary life. “I—um—get used to it,” he said.
“Of course,” Dillian said with great sympathy. “You don’t want to be known just for being the son of Quentin Sykes, do you? You want to be yourself.”
Howard felt his ears turning red. He hated people talking to him like this. “I … suppose so,” he said.
“So what are you going to do when you grow up?” Dillian persisted.
Howard began to feel the way you do when someone tickles the bottom of your feet. He had to change the subject or scream. “Design spaceships,” he said. “But we really came to ask for my father’s two thousand words back.” At this, Miss Potter turned and gave him a shocked look. He felt rude. “Er—please,” he said.
“Of course, dear,” said Dillian. “Spaceships! How interesting! But I suppose you do come under Venturus.”
“It’s urgent,” Howard pressed on. His ears seemed to get hotter with every word. “You see, Archer got angry when he didn’t get the words and sent the Goon around. And my father’s refused to do another lot. So we need the ones you’ve got.”
He stopped. Dillian’s face had gone blank, as if she had not understood a word he was saying. It looked as if there had been a mistake. Perhaps she was not the Dillian Mr. Mountjoy had talked about. Howard’s stomach, and even his ears, went quite cold at the thought. Meanwhile, the footman was coming back, gently wheeling a little golden trolley with a tall silver teapot on its top shelf and silver plates of sandwiches on its lower one. Dillian turned to him. “Put it in the middle, Joseph, where people can help themselves.”
“You are the Dillian who farms law and order, aren’t you?” Howard said.
A slight, proud smile flitted across Dillian’s lovely mouth. She gave a very small nod. “Not in front of the servants, dear,” she murmured. “Maisie, pass the sandwiches around.”
The footman picked up the teapot and poured cups of tea like a high priest performing a ceremony. He carried a cup to each of them as if the cup were the Holy Grail and then followed the grail up with two more grails, one with sugar and one with cream. Miss Potter, at the same time, held a plate of sandwiches toward each of them, in an offhand sort of way, to show she was used to it, and made conversation. “Quentin Sykes’s books are so sympathetic to women,” she said, thrusting the silver plate at Fifi.
The footman presented Fifi with a grail of tea at the same moment. Fifi got utterly confused and tried to pick a sandwich up with the sugar tongs. She went as red as Howard’s ears and could not speak for the next twenty minutes. Awful, however, was quite composed. When Miss Potter waved the sandwiches at her, Awful waved them grandly away. And when the footman bent solemnly down and held out a tall pink grail of milk shake to her, Awful waved that away, too. This puzzled Howard. Awful had been the one who wanted tea at Miss Potter’s house, and she loved milk shakes. And the sandwiches were delicious, small and tasty and without crusts, the kind that Awful usually thought the height of luxury.
It puzzled Dillian as well. As the footman reverently put the milk shake back on the trolley, she said to Howard, “Doesn’t your little brother want anything to eat or drink at all?”
Howard’s ears went hot again. Awful looked smug. She loved being mistaken for a boy. “No, I don’t,” she said firmly, before Howard could explain. Dillian nodded to the footman, and he went away. “Good,” said Awful. “Can Howard talk to you now?”
Dillian turned to Howard. “Yes. Perhaps he should. So it’s Archer who’s getting two thousand words every three months from your father?”
Howard nodded. “Didn’t he tell you? He’s your brother, isn’t he?”
The blank look came back to Dillian’s face. Howard realized it meant she was angry. “Archer never tells me anything. We haven’t spoken for years,” she said. “What can Archer be doing with all those pages of writing? Do you know?”
“No,” said Howard. This irritated Dillian. She stared down into her teacup, tapping her little silver foot crossly on the shiny floor. Howard grabbed four of the tiny sandwiches to encourage himself. The tapping of Dillian’s foot and the tinkling of the fountain were the only sounds between the scented banks of flowers, and it seemed very rude to interrupt. “Why did you want the words?” he said.
“To see what was going on, of course,” Dillian said. “I knew one of us was up to something, so I asked dear Maisie to get me a sample.” Miss Potter gave a pleased and saintly smile. Dillian flung her golden hair back angrily. “But I’m still none the wiser,” she said, “except that I know it’s Archer now. Archer!” she said, flinging her hair again. “I’d thought it was Erskine or Shine—they’re both horrible—and Torquil thought it was Hathaway trying to get back into things, but we never dreamed it was Archer. How wrong we were! Archer was always far too ambitious!”
Howard swallowed the four sandwiches. Even together they were not a big mouthful. “What’s Archer trying to do?”
“Stop the rest of us,” Dillian said, with her face blank and angry, “so that he can have everything for himself. We’ve not been able to move outside this town for the last thirteen years. We’re all very angry about it. It’s taken us all this time to discover that your father’s words must be doing it. Now the question is: how? Your father must do something special when he writes them. Has he told you what?”
“I don’t think he knows,” said Howard. “He says he just writes drivel—”
“Well, it certainly isn’t in his best vein,” Dillian said wryly. “If the stuff I’ve got about old ladies rioting is a fair sample, then it’s idiotic. I can’t see how Archer can use it for anything.”
She tapped with her foot again. Scented silence fell, with the fountain drip-dripping like part of the silence. Miss Potter, who was obviously annoyed at being left out of the talk, held out a plate of sandwiches. Dillian waved them gracefully away. Miss Potter, determined to take part, held out a plate of cakes as small as the sandwiches. Dillian waved those away, too. So did Fifi and Awful. Howard took two. “I can’t imagine dear Mr. Sykes writing any kind of drivel,” Miss Potter said. And when that only made more silence, she said, “How odd, Dillian, dear! I never knew you had any family.”
This made Dillian give a comic little shrug. “There are seven of us,” she said.
“I do envy you, dear!” said Miss Potter. “Large families are such fun!”
“It’s not fun,” Dillian said coldly. “We don’t get on at all. Torquil’s the only one I can bear to talk to. Archer speaks only to Erskine, and Hathaway and Venturus don’t speak to any of us, or to each other either. As for Shine—words fail, Maisie!”
All this while Awful had been staring fixedly at Dillian. Now she said, “Where do you come in the family? Eldest?”
“No, dear,” said Dillian. “I come between Shine and Hathaway, almost in the middle.”
Howard took three more cakes. They were delicious, but they seemed to melt down to nothing when he ate them. “But you all share running the town,” he said. “How do you arrange that if you don’t talk to one another?”
Dillian waved that away, rather as she had waved away the cakes. “The farming was arranged at the beginning, when we first came. We each took the things the others didn’t want.” Her lovely mouth pouted rather. “Of course, it went in order of age, and I got saddled with boring police business and so on. But—” The pout vanished in a smile and a chuckle. “But Erskine got drains and sewers, and serve him right! It wasn’t supposed to be for good, you see, dear. We were going to expand and move on. Then Archer did whatever he did, and we seem to be stuck here. Now suppose you tell me a little bit more about this arrangement your father has with Archer.” She leaned forward and smiled at Howard.
Howard smiled dreamily back. The food and the scent of the flowers and the dripping of the fountain were making him feel peaceful and sleepy, and it struck him that Dillian was rather nice. But before he could get around to answering, Awful interrupted. She had still not taken her eyes off Dillian. “How old are you?” she demanded.
Dillian gave an annoyed little laugh. “Now that would be telling, dear.”
Miss Potter was clearly glad to have another chance to express her dislike for Awful. “You should never, never ask a lady her age,” she said reprovingly. “Dear Dillian is ageless. She’s the eternal feminine.”
“Don’t be sickening,” Awful retorted. “I bet she’s seventy at least.”
Dillian’s face went blank and annoyed. Miss Potter was horrified. And Fifi at last recovered enough to mutter, “You shut up, Awful!”
Awful stood up. “I’m going to be bad,” she announced. “I may scream. I can feel it coming on.”
“Oh, Lord!” said Fifi. “Howard, we’d better go.”
Howard stood up, too. He knew Fifi was right. He dragged his bag out from under his gilded chair, which promptly fell over into the nearest bank of flowers. Dillian turned her blank look at him, and he felt as badly behaved as Awful. “Sorry!” he muttered. He picked the chair up and tried to straighten the bent flowers.
“We can’t go yet!” Awful insisted loudly. “We haven’t got Dad’s words. She’s trying to make us forget so she can keep them!”
“Awful!” Fifi said sternly. Her face was as pink as the geraniums arranged behind her.
“Don’t worry, dear,” Dillian said kindly. “Children do get tired and cross. And you know, I nearly did forget it was those words you came about. I was enjoying our talk so much. I’ll send for them at once.” She bent and rang the little golden bell again. After a moment the footman came through among the flowers again. This time he was carrying a folded sheaf of papers, in both hands, as if they were Magna Carta and might fall to pieces unless they were handled very gently indeed. Unlike the papers the Goon had produced, these were crisp and white and new. The footman handed them to Dillian, who passed them to Howard with a smile. “There, dear. Do just check to see they’re the right ones.”
Howard felt ashamed of being distrustful, but he did unfold the papers and glance over them. The typing seemed to be Quentin’s. He recognized the way half the capital letters soared into the air, so that their tops were cut off. He had no way of knowing quite what his father had written, but near the beginning, his eye caught: “and if Corn Street were to fill with old ladies, clubbing policemen with handbags and umbrellas.” He folded the paper up again. “This looks all right,” he said. “Thanks very much. And thanks for the tea.”
“You’re welcome, dear,” Dillian said, smiling radiantly.
Howard stowed the papers carefully in his blazer pocket and held out his hand for Awful in the way that meant she was to come along at once. Fifi stood up and held out her hand, too. Awful shuffled over to them. “I don’t want to stay in this old hole anyway,” she said rudely.
“I shall smack you!” Fifi whispered. She and Howard dragged Awful out from among the flowers. Awful let her feet trail and made them tow her across the shiny floor. Howard looked back in embarrassment and saw Miss Potter had taken another cake and settled back smugly in her chair, to show she was staying on. But Dillian gathered her ball dress up and came gracefully to the front door with them. It made Howard sweat with embarrassment at the way Awful was behaving. He dragged Awful through the mighty wooden door, and through the porch, and then down the driveway, knowing Dillian was waving and smiling behind them, and promised himself he would hit Awful as soon as they were in the road.
But Awful escaped just outside the gate because Howard’s hand was so slippery with sweat by then, and Fifi let go of her, too, in order to sigh heavily. “Oh!” Fifi said. “I’d give my ears to look like Dillian! Wasn’t she glamorous!”
Howard laughed. As they turned and walked downhill, he was distracted from his annoyance with Awful, and even from sweet thoughts of getting rid of the Goon in half an hour, by the sheer contrast between Fifi and Dillian. He looked at Fifi’s peaky little face and frizzy light brown hair and laughed again. “You couldn’t look like her. She’s twice your size for a start.”
“I’ve always wanted to be that tall,” Fifi said yearningly.
“Stupids!” Awful called out. She was lurking a safe distance behind Howard. “She’s an evil enchantress. And she dyes her hair.”
“A lot of people dye their hair,” Fifi said over her shoulder. “Do come on. There’s no such thing as enchantresses.”
“Yes, there is!” Awful said indignantly, still hanging behind. “Why do you think I didn’t have any tea? Bubbling things are going on inside me, I’m so hungry. But I was right. You and Howard just sat there getting enchanted, and I didn’t.”
Fifi raised her eyebrows at Howard and sighed. “Come on!” she called back. “Before your mum gets home!”
“Not until Howard makes sure we’ve really got Dad’s words,” Awful called. And she dug her hands into her pockets and stood still.
Howard’s hand went irritably to check the pocket where he had put the papers. It felt limp and flat. He plunged his hand inside. Apart from half an old pencil and a rubber band, that pocket was empty. Unable to believe it, he felt in his other pockets. Then, frantically, he searched his trouser pockets, too. There were no papers in any of them. “I don’t believe it!” he said.
“Maybe you put it in your schoolbag,” Fifi suggested.
Howard knelt and turned his bag out on the pavement on the spot, halfway down Pleasant Hill Road. He sorted through everything and shook out all the books. Awful came up and watched, keeping safely on the other side of Fifi. When Howard had found a note about history homework but absolutely nothing else that was typed, she said, “Now do you believe me?”
“They dropped out,” Fifi said firmly. “Let’s go back and look. Look carefully, both of you.”
They went back uphill. Fifi scanned the hedges; Howard looked in the gutter. Awful sauntered behind, still with her hands in her pockets, looking superior. And she seemed to be right. There was nothing that looked remotely like paper all the way to the top of the hill or anywhere on the downward slope beyond. Here Howard suddenly noticed that the house he was searching beside was numbered 104.
“We’ve come too far,” he said to Fifi. “Let’s go and look in her driveway. And if it’s not there, I’m going to knock on her door and ask her.”
They went back up the slope. And before long they found themselves going downhill again. They stopped beside a gate labeled 18.
“This is ridiculous!” said Fifi. “Go back and check the numbers.”
Back uphill they trudged again. Awful planted a hand on each gate and called out its number as they went. “Twenty-four. Twenty-six. Thirty. Thirty-two—Howard! It’s gone!” Even Awful had not expected this. She looked thoroughly depressed. They stood in a huddle, dumbfounded. There was no number 28 now or any room for one between 26 and 30.
“We’re on the wrong side of the road,” Fifi said at last.
So they crossed the road and looked there. But on that side all house numbers were odd ones, and there was no number 28 between 27 and 29 there either.
At that point Fifi at last admitted that Awful might be right. “The—the old hag!” she said angrily. “Let’s go home anyway. It’s late.”
“Before I die of hunger,” Awful said pathetically. “Do you believe me now, Howard?”
Howard nodded dismally. He felt thoroughly depressed, almost too miserable, as they trudged home, to be angry at the way Dillian had cheated them. He had hoped to get rid of the Goon and put everything right, and nothing had happened at all. On top of the rest he felt as hungry as if he had had nothing to eat at all. “No wonder Miss Potter’s so thin,” he said to Fifi. Fifi nodded. He thought she was trying not to cry.
When they got to the bottom of Shotwick Hill, Howard borrowed some money from Fifi and bought Awful a doughnut in the shopping center. He thought she deserved it. She had done valiantly.
The result was that when they finally trudged down the passage to the back door of 10 Upper Park Street, Awful was the only one looking at all happy. In the kitchen Quentin and the Goon were sitting facing each other across a pile of peanut butter sandwiches. They did not look happy either. Both their faces turned toward the door.
“Tea is now officially supper,” Quentin said. “Where were you?”
The Goon jerked his face at Quentin. “First time I’ve seen him worried,” he said.
Awful’s face lit up at the sight of the sandwiches. She dived on them. The Goon picked the plate up before her dive was finished and held it high in the air. Quentin shouted through the resulting screams, “Not a mouthful until I find out where you’ve all been!”
“It’s all my fault, Mr. Sykes!” Fifi shouted back. She flopped into a chair, still trying not to cry. The Goon put the plate down again. Awful stopped yelling in order to eat sandwiches as if they were her first meal that week. Howard ate the few he managed to snatch before Awful started. Fifi drank a large mug of tea and explained.
“Shouldn’t have anything to do with Dillian,” the Goon observed. “Bag of tricks. Smiles and steals your trousers.”
“Well, we know what’s happened to the words now,” Quentin said to the Goon. “You can go get them from Dillian.”
“Can’t,” said the Goon. “Told you. Need my trousers.”
Quentin smothered an exasperated sigh. “You mean,” he said calmly and carefully, “that you still intend to sit over me trying to make me write some more?” The Goon nodded, grinning his widest. “That does it!” Quentin slammed his hand down on the table, so that the empty plate bounced, and sprang to his feet. “Take me to Archer this instant!” he said. “I demand to see him.”
The Goon considered. “Take you tomorrow,” he said.
“Why not now?” Quentin shouted, losing his calm completely.
“Can’t,” said the Goon. “Bank not open.”
“What on earth,” roared Quentin, “has that got to do with—” Wincing at the noise, Catriona came in as he roared. She was tired. She sank into the chair Fifi hurried to get out for her, spilling music and the evening paper onto the table as she sank, and shut her eyes. Everyone became quiet and considerate. Quentin picked up the paper and began to read it. The Goon, to Howard’s amusement, tiptoed to the kettle and made the cup of coffee Catriona always needed. He brought it to her with a humble, sheepish grin. Catriona knew it was the Goon. She said, with her eyes still shut, “Quentin—”
“I know, I know,” Quentin said. “I’m seeing Archer tomorrow, it seems.” He looked at the Goon to confirm it.
The Goon nodded and plucked the newspaper out of Quentin’s hands. He took it across to Howard, grinning and pointing to a place on the front page, where it said, “YOUTHS INVADE TOWN HALL.” “Mountjoy held his tongue,” he said to Howard. “Thought he would.”
Howard had barely time to wonder if he was pleased or not to be called a “youth” and lumped in with the Goon when Quentin reached out and plucked the newspaper back. “My worldly goods are yours,” he said quietly, out of consideration for Catriona, “but only after I’ve read them first, my good Goon. When do we see Archer?”
“Hold hard,” said Fifi. “I want to see Archer, too. After tonight I’ve a bone to pick.”
“So do I,” said Awful.
“And me,” said Howard. “And we’re at school all the time the bank’s open.”
The Goon was surprised. “Don’t even give you a break for lunch these days?” he asked wonderingly.
“Of course they do!” Awful said scornfully. “And you’re not to go without us.”
“Meet us, twelve-thirty, outside the High Street bank?” the Goon suggested.
Catriona suddenly opened her eyes. “Are you talking about tomorrow?” she said. “Howard, don’t forget I’m coming to your school tomorrow afternoon to hear your school orchestra. Have you done your violin practice?”
Howard had forgotten, of course, both things. He felt really annoyed. He always forgot school orchestra if he could, because Mr. Caldwick, who ran it, had a bleating voice that made him want to scream like Awful after ten minutes. And he had forgotten Mum was coming to hear it because it was so embarrassing to have your own mother coming to school as an official. Orchestra always started just before afternoon school, too; that meant he was going to have to be in two places at once if he wanted to see Archer. Archer was the one he was determined not to miss, but he could not tell Mum that. He supposed he had better do his violin practice so she would think he was doing what she said.
While Howard was thinking this, Catriona told Awful to do her practice, too. Awful’s mouth opened. The Goon promptly put his fingers in his ears.
“Oh, don’t yell. Do it,” Howard said wearily. To everyone’s surprise, Awful obeyed him and went off to the piano in the front room as good as gold. Just as well, Howard thought, as he went upstairs, or he might have been the one screaming. When he had the violin under his chin and the alarm set, he found it necessary to design a really complicated spaceship, full of unnecessary but soothing twiddles. Dillian had made a fool of him, the house was still full of the Goon, and he had a feeling that tomorrow was going to be a more than usually trying day.