Excelsior 14
Chapter Fourteen
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We didnât find out about the meteor until the following Thursday, which was October 20th, and by then the weather had changed: it had been unseasonably warm right through September and as far as mid-October, but on October 15th the temperature dropped and it started to feel like autumn. It wasnât quite cold enough to start lighting the fires yet, but coal scuttles appeared in the bedrooms and I started to think about ordering some winter clothing.
Iâd allowed Wolfie to talk me into making my second attempt on navigating the secret passages naked and without a light, and Iâd even agreed to start from the ice house, provided that he came with me. And so straight after breakfast on the Saturday morning we went down to the cellar and opened the panel the led to the foot of the original stairs. As I had hoped, there was a keyhole here that opened the door to the ice house tunnel, and that at least saved us from having to go down through the secret room.
We closed the panel behind us, left the skewer in the keyhole on the tunnel side so that we could find it by touch when we came back, and then walked down the tunnel to the ice house, and I was thinking that it was quite cold in here even fully dressed. Still, I suppose neither of us wanted to back out â at least, Wolfie didnât say anything, and so neither did I. So we kept going until we reached the ice-house. We locked the outside door from the inside, got undressed and left everything on the ice-house floor except for the key and the box of lucifers that Wolfie had brought with him. Then we stepped into the passage and pulled the door closed behind us. Wolfie blew out the lucifer heâd struck to allow me to close the door, leaving us in complete darkness.
âHave you decided this is a bad idea yet?â I asked him.
âI decided that when I realised how cold it was. Still, I suppose thatâs what an ice-house is for â perhaps itâll get warmer once we get back to the house.â
âThen letâs get on with it,â I said, and took a couple of steps into the tunnel.
âWait! I think it would be a good idea if we stayed in contact â just in case, you understand.â
And he took hold of my hand. I didnât think that was strictly necessary, but on the other hand I liked holding hands with Wolfie, so I didnât raise any objection.
âSo what do you make of the French boy?â he asked me.
âI donât know, really. Brainy, certainly â I didnât understand a quarter of what he told us about the armour. Quiet, too, but I suppose youâd expect that, considering that heâs just lost his father. Thatâs about it, really.â
âDonât you think heâs good-looking?â
âWell, yes, I suppose so. I wouldnât have thought heâd be interested in joining in with our games, though.â
âI wasnât thinking of asking him to do that. I thought I might ask him if heâd like to spend some time with me one evening. Just me.â
I stopped moving. âWolfgang-Christian, you can stop that right now!â I said. âStop trying to wind me up â it isnât going to work!â
âIâm not trying to wind you up. Iâm serious â after all, heâs clearly nearer our class than a stable-lad would be, and Iâd feel far better about cuddling him than a stable-lad.â
âYou only chose to tell me that here because you knew that if I could see your face youâd never be able to stop yourself from cracking up,â I accused.
âNo, not really⊠well, all right, perhaps thatâs true. But I am sort of serious â not about cuddling him, obviously: even if he likes boys, he probably wouldnât be in the mood right now. But I thought it might help him settle in a bit â after all, heâs a German speaker, which limits his options socially to you and me, and youâre usually a lot busier than I am. But I wanted to ask you first if you think itâs a good idea â and, joking aside, I didnât want you to think I was doing stuff behind your back.â
âI think itâs a great idea,â I said, starting to walk once more. âIâve already told him he can speak to either of us if he needs someone to talk to, and youâre probably right about you having more free time than me. So, yes, I think you should suggest it to him. And if he does end up wanting a cuddle, go right ahead. I promise not to hit you too hard afterwards!â
I was glad Wolfie had come up with the idea, because Iâd hardly spoken to Tim in the past couple of days and I thought it would be a good thing if he had someone to talk to â after all, itâs hard enough to move to a new country at any time, even if you havenât just become an orphan.
âHereâs the alcove with the lever,â I reported a couple of minutes later. âI think it was about halfway between the cellar and the ice-house, so weâre getting there.â
âLetâs speed up a bit,â said Wolfie. âIâm freezing.â
So I walked a bit faster for the next hundred paces or so, but then I slowed down again because I didnât want to walk at full speed into a wall and I wasnât sure how much further we still had to go. If Iâd thought about it sooner I would have counted the steps so far, but it was a bit late for that now.
It wasnât getting any warmer, either â in fact by now I was actually shivering, and I decided that, whether we managed to get out of the system without using the lucifers or not, there was no way that I was going to do this again until next Easter at the very earliest.
Finally â by which time Iâd been flinching away from an anticipated end wall for several seconds â my outstretched hand, which Iâd been keeping in contact with the left-hand wall, encountered empty air.
âHereâs where the tunnel divides,â I said, finding the wall again and following the left-hand tunnel. This soon came to an end, and a bit of feeling around led me to the skewer. The door opened, leading us to the bottom of the stairs.
It was surprising how much easier and less scary this was with a companion than it had been on my own. It was still pitch dark, there were still cobwebs in places â those damned spiders seemed to rebuild almost as soon as weâd cleaned up â and I still wasnât completely sure of where I was a couple of times. But having someone to talk to and to hold on to made this experience far less of an ordeal. Eventually we found our way up to the attic, and this time I managed to open the panel without any difficulty. We stepped out into the attic.
âMission accomplished,â I said. âAgreed?â
âWell, obviously the original bet was that you had to do it on your own,â Wolfie began.
âIt was your idea to come with me!â I protested.
âYou could have always said no. But⊠no, I think it would be a bit unfair to claim that this doesnât count. So, yes, as far as Iâm concerned the debt is paid.â