CHAPTER TWENTY-TWO

Gerald felt his heart hammering at his ribs. Permelia was the connection between Errol and Jandria? But how could that be? She never set foot in Ambrose’s jealously guarded lab.

He realised then that something was nudging him… a thought… a memory… something important…

“Um,” said Melissande. “So Permelia and the prime minister’s wife-you’re saying they’re still good friends?”

“Oh yes, indeed,” said Eudora. “They’re always exchanging letters. They even talk on the telephone, though the calls are so expensive.” Her expression dimmed a little. “Doubtless there are things only two presidents can discuss.”

Gerald felt the nudging, niggling thought sharpen into a jabbing realisation. Permelia.

“Oy!” Reg muttered. “What’s wrong?”

Ignoring Reg, he cleared his throat. “I’m sorry, Your Highness, excuse me, Your Highness.”

Melissande gave him her snootiest look. “What?”

“We should-ah-the jalopy, Your Highness. We should warm it up before you and the ladies get into it. Me and-um-him.” He jerked his thumb at Monk, who was staring at him as though he’d gone mad. “Um. Can we? Please?”

Melissande heaved a sigh. “I suppose so. If you must. But don’t take all day. We’ll be joining you shortly.”

“What the hell are you going on about, Gerald?” said Monk, once they’d escaped Eudora Telford’s bungalow. “The jalopy doesn’t need warming up.”

“I know,” he said. “But I had to talk to you about Permelia Wycliffe.”

“Ah,” said Monk. “Yeah. She and Errol must be in cahoots. Him passing his work to her so she can pass it on to Jandria through her good chum the prime minister’s wife. Could be he’s the one behind the faked gemstones, too, which means sorry, mate, he also lied to you about not being involved with the portal sabotage.”

“You think so?” he demanded. “So you detected Errol’s thaumic signature on those fake jewels, did you?”

Monk frowned. “Well, no, but-”

“But nothing. I’m telling you, Monk, Errol didn’t make them. And he’s not passing his work to Jandria through Permelia Wycliffe either.”

Still anchored to his shoulder, Reg rattled her tail feathers. “Gerald, what’s going on? What is this obsession with Errol Haythwaite’s innocence?”

“This isn’t about Errol,” he snapped. “It’s about the principle of protecting the unjustly accused.” He plucked Reg off his shoulder, set her down on the roof of the jalopy and stared into her worried eyes. “The Janitorial Department-Sir Alec- me — we’ve got an awful lot of power, Reg. You don’t know how much. You don’t know the kind of incants they’ve given me or what I’ve learned to do in the last six months.”

“Then tell me,” she said. “Secrets aren’t healthy, Gerald.”

He shook his head. “I can’t. There’s no time.”

“Not at the moment, no,” she agreed. “But when this is done you can make time. That is, if you want to.”

“Reg,” Monk said quietly. “Don’t nag him, all right?”

Her feathers flattened. “I see.” She sniffed. “I suppose you know all about it, do you?”

And now her feelings were hurt. Gerald laid his hands flat on either side of her and touched his chin lightly to the top of her head. “Don’t be angry,” he whispered. “I’m dangerous now. I have to be careful. I can’t ever let myself be too convinced that I’m right.” Stepping back, he looked at Monk. “Eudora Telford’s not the only one with a voice in her head… and right now mine’s screaming.”

“All right, mate, all right,” said Monk, glancing at the bungalow. “Calm down. What is it screaming?”

Calm down. It was good advice. His heart was still racing, his thoughts tumbled and jumbled. Just as Melissande predicted, the pieces of the jigsaw were falling into place.

“Last night,” he said slowly, “after I’d faked the laboratory explosion and Wycliffe’s was crawling with inspectors, Ambrose and Permelia turned up… and something odd happened. I didn’t pay much attention at the time, but now I realise how important it was. When I was explaining to Ambrose what had happened-”

“Ha,” said Reg, eyes bright with sardonic amusement. “When you were lying through your teeth, you mean.”

“Yes, all right, when I was lying through my teeth,” he said, impatient, “I told them Errol and I had been working in the lab all night without a break.”

Monk frowned at him. “So?”

“So when Permelia Wycliffe heard that she nearly swallowed her tongue. I’m telling you, Monk, she couldn’t believe her ears. Ambrose assumed it was because she didn’t think we were dedicated enough to work back late, but I think it was more than that.”

“You mean she knew it was a lie?” said Monk. “But how would she know? Unless-”

He nodded. “Exactly. Unless she’d already been to the lab that night, sometime between when Errol and I left and when we got back. Permelia has no business setting foot in the place. R amp;D’s out of bounds for her and her gels.”

Monk’s face screwed up in a sceptical frown. “You’re thinking she snuck in there and stole some of Errol’s blueprints while you were both in South Ott? But how could she? Errol used to ward his school pencil box so we couldn’t nick his eraser. There’s no way that woman could get past one of his anti-theft hexes.” He shook his head. “Sorry, Gerald, but I think you’re stretching the facts a bit thin.”

Maybe, but what choice did he have? “The blueprints that ended up in Jandria were copies,” he said. “So maybe whatever black market thaumaturgist Permelia found to make her the fake jewels put together a recording incant and a hex-breaker, too.”

Reg rattled her tail feathers. “That’s not a bad theory.”

“It’s not a bad theory if you believe Errol’s innocent,” Monk said slowly.

“And I do,” said Gerald. “In fact I know he is. Please Monk, you have to trust me. I was there. I saw his face. He begged me to-to-” He blew out a hard breath. “Take my word for it, Errol’s not involved.”

“All right,” said Monk. “I’ll take your word for it.”

“Great,” said Gerald, giddy with relief. “In that case, how do you feel about selling my theory to Sir Alec?”

“What?” said Monk. “ Me? After you told him what I said about the delerioso? Bloody hell, Gerald. Are you trying to get me sacked?”

He pulled an apologetic face. “Yeah. I know. Sorry. But he was going to bollocks you over that anyway. At least if you’ve got some good news on the investigation you might distract him. And someone’s got to take Eudora Telford in so they can interview her.”

“What, skip Uncle Ralph altogether, you mean?” Monk brightened. “Take her straight to your people? I could do that.”

“Yeah. Look, I’m sorry to dump this on you, Monk. It’s just that I don’t want the girls going back to Wycliffe’s alone. And anyway, I need to get into Errol’s office. If Permelia did pinch more of his work last night there might still be some thaumic signature traces I can read.”

“Good idea,” said Monk, and fished in his pocket. “Here-take these. I palmed them when I was ever-so-helpfully picking up Eudora’s spilled booty.”

Gerald grinned at the fake diamonds Monk gave him. “Thanks,” he said, slipping the imposters into his own pocket. “If the thaumic signatures match that’ll be one more nail in somebody’s coffin. Y’know, anyone’d think you were a genius or something.”

Reg cleared her throat ominously. “Just so you don’t think I’m not paying attention, the girls are perfectly capable of handling themselves in Wycliffe’s, or anywhere else you care to name.”

“Sorry,” he sighed. “Of course you are. I just-”

“I mean,” she said, “we pretty well solved this case for you, sunshine. Without Witches Inc. you’d still be staggering around the lab, wouldn’t you, blowing up prototype airships?”

“I didn’t blow up the Ambrose Mark VI!” he protested. “Errol got the etheretic intermix balance wrong.”

“Yes, well, you can throw all the syllables around that you like, sunshine,” said Reg, sniffing, “it doesn’t alter the fact that without our connection to that wet hen Eudora Telford-”

“Who’s coming out of her bungalow right now,” said Monk. “So put a sock in it. Gerald-”

“You take her to Sir Alec in the jalopy,” he said quickly. “We’ll get a taxi to Wycliffe’s. Tell Sir Alec I’ll call him as soon as I’ve got the proof of Permelia’s tampering so he can send in Dalby and his team.”

“Will do.”

He turned to Reg. “Quick, flap on over to Melissande. Make a big fuss of her.”

“What do you mean, make a big fuss of her?” said Reg. “I don’t go around making big fusses. That girl’s problem is she’s already too big for her britches-and I’m not just talking about her buttocks, either.”

He stared nose to beak at the wretched bird. “ What?”

“Don’t ask,” said Monk, resigned. “Really. Just don’t.”

“Reg, I need you to tell her what the plan is,” he hissed, as Melissande and Bibbie prepared to escort Eudora Telford down the pathway to her front gate. “Tell her she’s decided this business is so urgent that they’ve got to go over Sir Ralph’s head to his superior, Sir Alec.”

Reg sniffed. “Tell her yourself. I’m not your social secretary, sunshine.”

“How can I?” he demanded in an urgent undertone. “I’m just a factotum, aren’t I? Please, Reg. Hurry.”

“Blimey,” she said, and ruffled her feathers. “What would you do without me, that’s what I want to know.”

And she launched herself into air, towards Melissande.

“Good question,” said Monk, watching Reg land on Melissande, making enough fuss for three birds twice her size. “You ever think about that? About not having her around?”

Gerald felt a cold shiver run through him. “No. Not if I can help it. Now shut up and look obsequious. Their Royal Highnesses approach.”

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