The Traitor's Blade Kevin Sands (large screen ebook reader txt) đ
- Author: Kevin Sands
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âWho gave you permission to take these horses?â the man said.
I didnât recognize him; he hadnât been here the previous times weâd visited the stables. But none of the grooms had challenged us before. Was it because he hadnât seen us come from the palace? Or had something else gone wrong at Whitehall?
âLord Ashcombe said we could use them,â I explained.
âIs that so? And I suppose King Charles tucks you into bed each night?â
My blood grew hot, and I made to retort before Tom put a calming hand on my arm. I clamped my mouth shut.
âThatâs right,â the groom said. âNow clear out of my yard.â
Tom led me away before I said anything I might regret. âItâs not worth the trouble,â he said.
âWe didnât do anything wrong,â I said hotly, but Tom was right. We had much more important things to worry about.
Sally joined us, puzzled. âWhat was all that about?â
âSomeone self-important, throwing his weight around,â I said, and not quietly.
Firmly, Tom pushed me farther from the stalls. âDid you find Lords Walsingham and Ashcombe?â
âWalsinghamâs at Guildhall,â Sally said. Guildhall was the seat of Londonâs government, where the offices for the Lord Mayor and the magistrates were. âAnd Lord Ashcombe left with His Majesty.â
âTheyâre gone?â I said, not sure if I should be relieved or dismayed.
âJust after you two went to Saint Paulâs. Why? Whatâs happened?â
âThe kingâs still in danger.â
I told her about meeting the Templars and pulled the new letter from beneath my waistcoat. The seal was broken; Iâd scanned the letter before hurrying back to Tom. Now I handed it over for them to read.
So the final act is played,
The final truth decrypted,
Still your master dies betrayedâ
for every scene was scripted.
âââThe final act,âââ Sally read, âand final truth. And⊠âyour master dies betrayedâ?â
âDo they mean Lord Walsingham?â Tom said.
âI think theyâre talking about His Majesty,â I said. âI may be apprenticed to the spymaster, but our ultimate master is the king. And thatâs who these plots are against.â
It was the only thing that made sense. Poisoning the party wouldnât have killed Lord Walsingham; he was never going. And then there was the second line of the riddle.
Still your master dies betrayed.
In other words: Everything weâd done to protect the king was still going to fail. I shook my head. The spymaster had been right; this wasnât over.
Sally studied the diagram on the paper. âWhatâs this, then?â
Underneath the riddle was a long and winding arrow, corners jagged as it turned this way and that. The arrow started beside a sketch of a horse. It continued, bending its way past a crown, until it reached an X. Beside the X was a tree, with a tiny arrow pointing to where the trunk grew from the ground.
The big arrow then continued past it, changing directions again, until it ended at a giant circle, inked three times around. Beside the circle was the drawing of a scroll, rolled up and tied with ribbon.
âLooks like a treasure map,â Tom said.
I thought so, too. But I doubted the end held any treasure. âA path to follow, maybe?â
âTo the king?â Sally suggested. âThatâs what the crown could mean.â
There was logic in that. I followed the arrow. âIf up is north, then maybe it means⊠the king rides from Whitehall? If thatâs what this horse is? He goes southwest⊠and that is the direction of Hampton Court. So is this arrow supposed to be the road?â
âDoes the road bend like that?â
I didnât think so.
âIf it is the kingâs route,â Tom said, âwhy does it go past the crown? Thereâs an X over here, by the tree, but thereâs nothing where the crown is.â
âMaybe thatâs supposed to indicate the king is going that way, not that heâs there.â Though that didnât seem right to me.
âI donât understand how anyoneâs supposed to follow all these twists and turns anyway,â Tom said. âThis looks like a path through a maze. But without the maze.â
A maze? I thought.
My mind began to race.
A maze, Master Benedict said, and nodded.
That was it.
CHAPTER
43
âYOUâVE DONE IT.â I GRABBED Tomâs arm and shook him. âYouâve done it again.â
âNaturally,â he said proudly. âEr⊠what did I do?â
âThis diagram. It is for a maze.â
âWhich one?â Sally said.
âThe same one weâve been complaining about since we got here.â I reached under my apothecary sash and pulled out the map that Dobson, the old servant, had given us. âItâs Whitehall. The arrow is a path through the palace.â
âLook,â I said. âOver here, on the right side, is where we are now. The stables. And look at the letterâthereâs a drawing of a horse. If you follow the arrowâŠâ I traced a route along the map. âRemember what Dobson said? The numbers on the map show whoâs lodged where. Number 1 belongs to the kingâand thatâs where the crown is.â
Tom peered at it. âIt does look like that.â
âIt is. In factâcome on.â I rushed over to where a torch was burning in a sconce on the wall. Carefully, I laid the page with the arrow on top of the map. Then I held the whole thing up to the flame.
The light shone a soft orange through the pages. Held this way, the ink was visible on both of them.
And the arrow traced a route through the palace exactly.
âThatâs it,â Sally said, amazed. âThe horse is right on the stables⊠the crown is on the kingâs rooms.â
âSo we follow it, then?â Tom said.
âWe do,â I said. âAnd see what we find.â
It was a long and convoluted route. I had a mind to simply run to where the tree was marked, but I thought there might be something to see along the way. So we hurried, as fast as we dared, while still keeping our eyes peeled.
We started where the arrow started, back at the stables. When the groom spotted us again, he stormed toward us, fists clenched. We got out of there
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