The carriage driver struck a match with a sharp snap and the lantern sprang to life. A dark, foggy stretch of the city lay ahead. “You’ll excuse the delay, sir,” said the driver, to a man sitting beside him in a hooded cloak. “These narrow ways can be dangerous at this hour.”

The man in the cloak nodded. His hood obscured his face, but the restless movement of his head showed his unease. His hand gripped a sword at his belt.

Both men seemed to expect trouble. The horses stamped their feet and snorted. The reins jangled as the driver urged them onward.

The small boy watched the men closely from the seat behind, clutching his ragged coat against the cold. He felt confused and shaken. He couldn’t remember how he had gotten there, only that he had been afraid, and that the man in the cloak had saved him. Everything else was a blur.

The driver gestured to the boy. “I wouldn’t want him to be scared of the darkness,” he said, in a voice that betrayed his own fears. The lantern bobbed over their heads as the carriage approached a set of tall iron gates. “Is this the place, sir?” said the driver. “The school?”

The man in the cloak gave a muffled reply.

The driver slowed the horses. “I suppose he’s a runaway?” he said. He gestured toward the boy. “He doesn’t look like your typical troublemaker though, does he?”

“What business is that of yours?” said the man.

The driver looked nervous. “Forgive me, sir. I just meant, I thought that you looked like a lawman. I’m right, aren’t I? Did he run away from the place?”

The man in the cloak didn’t reply. He passed the driver some money, and then lifted the small child down from the seat. They walked together to the school gates.

The carriage drove away.

“It’s all right,” said the man in the cloak. “They’ll look after you here.”

The child didn’t reply.

The man in the cloak looked around suddenly at the tramp of approaching footsteps. They sounded like heavy boots. The man took the child’s arm and led him into the shadows beside the gate. A group of soldiers appeared from around the corner. They were wearing tall hats and long-tailed coats, and they had their swords drawn. They were searching for someone.

“Stay together,” said the leader of the group, waving his sword. “Search every possible corner.”

The boy felt a chill of fear.

“Stay low,” whispered the cloaked man. “And stay in the shadows.”

The child did as he was told, but his hands were shaking.

The men cast their lanterns over the dark street and the puddles shone like glass. The child and the man in the cloak crouched farther into the shadows. There was only a thin alcove to hide them from sight. It was too late to run. The men were coming closer.

“Who are we even chasing?” whispered one of the soldiers.

“Quiet there,” snapped the leader. “Stay alert.”

“But, sir,” chimed in another man as he peered into the alleyways. “How are we supposed to find someone, in a city full of people, if we don’t know what they look like?”

The leader seemed as if he was about to give a stern reply when the outline of a man appeared through the fog. All the soldiers turned in alarm.

The child stared at the new apparition, unsure of what to expect. He felt instinctively afraid—more afraid than he was of the soldiers. He struggled not to make a sound.

“Who goes there?” demanded the leader.

The outline loomed closer. It was clear that whoever was approaching wasn’t daunted by the challenge. “Do you not know your own prince?” said a harsh voice.

The lead soldier shrank back in obvious alarm. “P-prince Voss, Your Highness,” he stammered. “Please forgive me. We did not know that you had joined the search …”

Voss was already striding past the man. The prince was tall and strong, and wore a long dark coat with a large pistol on his belt. In his gloved hand he held a glittering sword. He glared around the street. “Have you seen anyone suspicious?” he said, in a deep, rasping tone.

“No, sir. No sign of disturbance.”

The prince stood frozen for a moment. The soldiers seemed too frightened to speak. “No sign,” muttered the prince. He picked up a loose cobble from the street, and clenched it in his grasp. There was a loud crack and the cobble fell as dust from his fingers.

The men looked at one another in horror.

“Traitors,” hissed Voss.

The nearest solider flinched. “I beg your pardon, Your Highness?”

“We are hunting traitors,” said Voss. He pointed to the man who had been asking questions about the search. “There is a child belonging to a house of traitors, guilty of keeping secrets from the crown—guilty of involvement in the ancient crime of magic.” He patted the dust from his hand, and glared at the men around him. “I need it found,” he hissed.

The child felt another shudder of fear.

The prince walked toward their hiding place, and the man in the cloak put his hand on his sword. But the prince moved on without pause. His footsteps faded.

The small boy’s eyes grew accustomed to the darkness. He could see the soldiers’ faces. They were visibly shaken, but that didn’t stop them whispering to one another.

“The prince is as mad as they say,” said one of the men.

“All the royals are,” muttered another.

“How did he crush a stone like that?”

“I heard he has a false hand.”

“Really?”

“I heard he chopped off the real one himself.”

Their leader seemed too shocked to reproach them. He placed his hand against a wall for support, and let out a deep breath. “Thank goodness he’s gone,” he said.

A soldier cleared his throat. “Did he mean what he said, sir?”

“About what?” said the leader.

“I mean, that the traitors used, well … magic.”

The soldiers looked uneasily at one another. The word magic seemed to make them even more nervous. The leader hesitated for a moment before he replied. “You should know better than to pay attention to things like that,” he said. “Every soldier in Penvellyn knows that magic is just a fairy tale. Swords and pistols are the only real power. Now, let’s finish this sweep.”

With his speech finished he drew himself up importantly, and led the men around the next corner of the street. Their voices faded into the night.

The cloaked man shook his head. “Fairy tales,” he muttered.

He helped the child up, and stood facing the school gateway. There was a heavy lock around the bars. The man took a strange-looking key from his pocket and turned the mechanism.

The gate opened with a dull clank, and they walked into the deserted courtyard of the school. The building was typical of the Penvellyn style. There were heavy stone pillars supporting the protruding upper floors. The windows rose into pointed arches. The child didn’t like the place. He shuddered as the man led him up the stone steps and hammered on the wooden door.

After a moment, they heard footsteps.

“What is it?” said a muffled voice.

“Legal business,” said the cloaked man.

“The law?” said the man on the other side of the door. He opened the lock hurriedly to reveal a worried-looking face, with a thin gray beard. “You’ll forgive me for asking, sir—but what business does the law have with us, at this time of night? We haven’t reported any crime.”

The cloaked man stepped inside, and the child followed. A dim light shone from a candleholder on a desk across the room. The tall ceiling disappeared in darkness.

“I need you to look after this child.”

The bearded man frowned. “This child?” he said. “He looks too young to begin proper schooling. Surely he would be better placed with a nanny?”

The small boy looked around nervously. There was a stuffed owl on a plinth in a recess beside the door and a large painting of a stern old man wearing a crown.

“Are you his father?” asked the bearded man.

The man in the cloak shook his head. “He doesn’t have any parents,” he said. “He was living as an urchin, out in the scrap heaps in the southern district. He has nothing.”

The bearded man made a disgusted face. “I’m afraid we don’t involve ourselves in matters of charity,” he said. “Oneiros School is a respectable institution, after all.”

The man in the cloak pulled out a purse from his belt and passed it over. “That will be enough to see him through the first years, I believe. I’ll bring the rest soon.”

“The rest?”

“For his complete schooling,” said the man in the cloak. “I want him to be looked after. And I don’t want you to make any reference to his former life, you understand?”

The bearded man was distracted for a moment by the contents of the purse. He took out a gold coin with a look of wonder. “This is … very generous,” he said.

“You understand my terms?”

“Oh yes, yes,” said the bearded man. “He’ll be well looked after. The best education. We don’t just teach mathematics and spelling here. Every subject a child needs in the modern world—navigation, sword fighting, amphor engineering, even the occasional horse-riding class. We can send you reports on his progress at whatever interval works best for you.”

“No,” said the man in the cloak. “I won’t be in communication with him again, I’m afraid, unless I find that there is some problem with the way he is being schooled.” He spoke the words softly, but there was a coldness to his voice that suggested he was used to being obeyed.

“Of course,” said the bearded man. He hurriedly took a large book from the desk, and began to talk about a receipt of payment, and special instructions for the child’s induction.

The small boy began to cry. He could see now that the man in the cloak was leaving him in this strange place, with this strange man.

“It’s all right,” said the man in the cloak. “You’ll be safe here.”

The bearded man looked up from his writing. He sneered at the child and shook his head. “We will soon teach him to toughen up, sir,” he said. “What name should I enter for him?”

The man in the cloak muttered something the child didn’t catch. It was obvious that he wasn’t happy with the school man. He whispered: “Do you remember your name?”

The boy shook his head and sniffed.

“Well, we’ll have to enter a name for him,” said the school man. “Perhaps a plain and simple choice. It makes the child humble.”

“What would you recommend?” said the cloaked man curtly.

“All things considered, I would recommend Bert. And we have a lack of family names beginning with ‘R.’ ” He snorted. “I suppose we could make him Bert Rumsey.”

“Fine,” said the man in the cloak. He stood up straight, and looked toward the door. “I’m afraid I have to leave on other business. Take good care of him.”

“Don’t,” said the small child. He caught hold of the man’s cloak.

The man looked down.

“It’s scary here,” said the boy.

The man in the cloak froze. His hood still obscured his face. He knelt and hugged the boy. “It won’t always be scary,” he said. “I promise.” He stood up quickly and strode toward the door, pulling his cloak tighter. The door opened and closed, and he was gone.