“Hungry. Thirsty.”
She kicked a dead numpty—they look like giant stones when they die, great heaps of mud and grey matter—“Can you drink one of these?”
I sneered. “No.” Numpty blood is swampy and brackish, definitely nonpotable. Which is probably why someone sent them after me.
“I’ll take you to McDonald’s,” she said.
“Take me to school.”
Fiona bought me three Big Macs, and I swallowed the first one in two bites—it came right back up. She pulled the car over to let me heave at the side of the road. “You’re a wreck, Basil. I’m taking you home.”
“It’s September, take me to school.”
“It’s October, I’m taking you home to rest.”
“It’s October? Take me to school, Fiona. Now.” I wiped my mouth on my shirt. I was still in my tennis whites—the numpties had nabbed me outside the club; my clothes were stained in every way imaginable and newly vomited on.
Fiona shook her head. “School doesn’t matter now, boyo. We’re in the middle of a war.”
“We’re always in the middle of a war. Take me back to Watford—I’ll be damned if Penelope Bunce finishes our last year at the top of the class.”
“Baz, everything is different now. You’ve been kidnapped. And held for ransom.”
I leaned on her car. “Is that why the numpties didn’t kill me? Because you paid the ransom?”
“Fuck no, Pitches have never paid ransoms, and we’re not starting now.”
“I’m the only living heir!”
“That’s just what your father said. He wanted to pay up. I told him I knew my sister had scraped bottom when she married a Grimm, but I wasn’t letting him have any more of our pride. No offence, Basil.” She handed me another Big Mac—“Try again. Slower.”
I took a bite. “Why’d they kidnap me?” I asked through three layers of bun and two all-beef patties.
“They said they wanted money. Then they wanted wands.”
“What would numpties want with wands?”
“They wouldn’t! The question is who hired them. Or who won them over … I don’t know how you get a numpty to do your bidding; maybe you just bring them hot water bottles. They kept calling us from your mobile, until it died. Your dad thinks they took you, and then tried to figure out later what to do with you. But it all smells like the Mage to me. It’s not enough that he’s laid us low; he wants everything that’s ever made us powerful.”
“You think the Mage had me kidnapped? The headmaster of my school?”
“I think the Mage is capable of anything,” she said. “Don’t you?”
I did think so. But Fiona blames everything on the Mage. So it’s hard to take her seriously, even after she’s just murdered someone to save your life.
Mostly, at that moment, I was thinking about lying down.
“Oh,” Fiona said. “Here.” She fished my wand—polished ivory with a leather hilt—out of her giant handbag and stuck it in my shorts pocket. I pulled it out. “So,” she said. “Obviously, you are not going back to that school, right into that bastard’s clutches.”
“I am so.”
“Basilton.” Full name, all three syllables.
“He’s not going to bother me at school,” I argued, “not with everyone watching.”
“Baz, we have to get serious. He’s attacked our family again, directly.”
“I am serious. I’m more valuable as a spy than a soldier, anyway—that’s what the Families have always said.”
“That’s what we said when you were a child. You’re a man now.”
“I’m a student,” I said. “What do you think my mother would say if she knew you were pulling me out of school?”
Fiona huffed and shook her head. We were still standing at the side of the road. She opened the car door for me. “Get in, you manipulative cur.”
“Only if you take me back to Watford.”
“I’m taking you home first. Your father and Daphne want to see you.”
“And then to Watford.”
She pulled me towards the car. “Jesus. Yes. If you still want to go.”