The Graveyard Book

He pulled open the door to the mausoleum. “And be careful. Don’t trip or anything.”

 

 

“Where are you going?” asked Scarlett.

 

“This is my home,” said Bod. “I’m going to protect it.”

 

Scarlett squeezed the LED keyring, and went down on her hands and knees. The space behind the coffin was tight, but she went though the hole into the hill and pulled the coffin back as best she could. In the dim LED light she could see stone steps. She stood upright, and, hand on the wall, walked down three steps, then stopped and sat, hoping that Bod knew what he was doing, and she waited.

 

Bod said, “Where are they now?”

 

His father said, “One fellow’s up by the Egyptian Walk, looking for you. His friend’s waiting down by the alley wall. Three others are on their way over, climbing up the alley wall on all the big bins.”

 

“I wish Silas was here. He’d make short work of them. Or Miss Lupescu.”

 

“You don’t need them,” said Mr. Owens encouragingly.

 

“Where’s Mum?”

 

“Down by the alley wall.”

 

“Tell her I’ve hidden Scarlett in the back of the Frobisher’s place. Ask her to keep an eye on her if anything happens to me.”

 

Bod ran through the darkened graveyard. The only way into the northwest part of the graveyard was through the Egyptian Walk. And to get there he would have to go past the little man with the black silk rope. A man who was looking for him, and who wanted him dead…

 

He was Nobody Owens, he told himself. He was a part of the graveyard. He would be fine.

 

He nearly missed the little man—the Jack called Ketch—as he hurried into the Egyptian Walk. The man was almost part of the shadows.

 

Bod breathed in, Faded as deeply as he could Fade, and moved past the man like dust blown on an evening breeze.

 

He walked down the green-hung length of the Egyptian Walk, and then, with an effort of will, he became as obvious as he could, and kicked at a pebble.

 

He saw the shadow by the arch detach itself and come after him, almost as silent as the dead.

 

Bod pushed through the trailing ivy that blocked the Walk and into the northwest corner of the graveyard. He would have to time this just right, he knew. Too fast and the man would lose him, yet if he moved too slowly a black silk rope would wrap itself around his neck, taking his breath with it and all his tomorrows.

 

He pushed noisily through the tangle of ivy, disturbing one of the graveyard’s many foxes, which sprinted off into the undergrowth. It was a jungle here, of fallen headstones and headless statues, of trees and holly bushes, of slippery piles of half-rotted fallen leaves, but it was a jungle that Bod had explored since he had been old enough to walk and to wander.

 

Now he was hurrying carefully, stepping from root-tangle of ivy to stone to earth, confident that this was his graveyard. He could feel the graveyard itself trying to hide him, to protect him, to make him vanish, and he fought it, worked to be seen.

 

He saw Nehemiah Trot, and hesitated.

 

“Hola, young Bod!” called the poet. “I hear that excitement is the master of the hour, that you fling yourself through these dominions like a comet across the firmament. What’s the word, good Bod?”

 

“Stand there,” said Bod. “Just where you are. Look back the way I came. Tell me when he comes close.”

 

Bod skirted the ivy-covered Carstairs grave, and then he stood, panting as if out of breath, with his back to his pursuer.

 

And he waited. It was only for a few seconds, but it felt like a small forever.

 

(“He’s here, lad,” said Nehemiah Trot. “About twenty paces behind you.”)

 

The Jack called Ketch saw the boy in front of him. He pulled his black silk cord tight between his hands. It had been stretched around many necks, over the years, and had been the end of every one of the people it had embraced. It was very soft and very strong and invisible to X-rays.

 

Ketch’s mustache moved, but nothing else. He had his prey in his sight, and did not want to startle it. He began to advance, silent as a shadow.

 

The boy straightened up.

 

Jack Ketch darted forward, his polished black shoes almost soundless on the leaf-mold.

 

(“He comes, lad!” called Nehemiah Trot.)

 

The boy turned around, and Jack Ketch made a leap towards him—

 

And Mr. Ketch felt the world tumbling away beneath him. He grabbed at the world with one gloved hand, but tumbled down and down into the old grave, all of twenty feet, before crash-landing on Mr. Carstairs’s coffin, splintering the coffin-lid and his ankle at the same time.

 

“That’s one,” said Bod, calmly, although he felt anything but calm.

 

“Elegantly accomplished,” said Nehemiah Trot. “I shall compose an Ode. Would you like to stay and listen?”

 

“No time,” said Bod. “Where are the other men?”

 

Euphemia Horsfall said, “Three of them are on the southwestern path, heading up the hill.”

 

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