might be in there. But I couldnât understand them.â
âWe have to get Simon back,â said Jinx.
They both looked at the bottle on the workbench.
âSophie said she might find the answer in the Eldritch Tome,â said Elfwyn.
âSheâs been trying to find an answer there for over a year,â said Jinx. âShe needs to show it to Malthus. I bet between them they can figure it out. But she wonât let himââ
âI think maybe sheâs already figured something out and doesnât like it,â said Elfwyn. âWhoâs Malthus?â
Jinx told her. Then he told her everything that had been going on with the clearings and the war.
âYou know what I think?â said Elfwyn. âI thinkReven might be trying to conquer the Urwald first , and then Keyland.â
Jinx hadnât thought of that. âWhâI donât see why.â
âBecause conquering the Urwald might be easier.â
âThatâs what he thinks,â said Jinx.
âTell me what itâs like in Samara,â said Elfwyn.
So Jinx told her about his adventures in the Temple, and about Crocodile Bottom, and how heâd taught himself KnIP and broken Sophie out of prison. It had been a pretty exciting time; he hardly had to exaggerate at all.
Unfortunately the result was that Elfwyn decided she wanted to go to Samara.
âBut I just told you how dangerous it is!â said Jinx. âAnd you donât speak Samaran.â
âIâm learning,â said Elfwyn, hurt.
ââAquiferâ isnât going to help you much if you get attacked by thugs or kidnapped by the preceptors.â
âI donât see why that would happen. Theyâre looking for you, not for me.â
Jinx tried to think of something to distract her from this crazy idea. âWeâre going to have to go and strengthen the ward around the portal,â he said. âWeâd better do that tomorrow.â
To anybody who didnât know the portal was there, it looked like just another bit of Urwaldâtall trees risingfrom a tangle of undergrowth and fallen branches. But to Jinx, who had made the portal a year ago, the stark stone hall of the Samaran prison was clearly visible among the trees. A Samaran guard stood staring blankly out at the Urwald. What the guard actually saw, Jinx was almost certain, was the gray prison wall.
A wolf was curled up on the forest floor, right inside the ward. Its paw rested on a pair of gold-rimmed spectacles.
âHi Malthus,â said Jinx. âUm, this is Elfwyn.â
The wolf and the red-caped girl looked at each other.
Malthus stood up, stretched, and kept stretching, sliding into a shape that stood on its hind legs. He put on his spectacles.
âMalthus is the werewolf Iâve told you about,â said Jinx.
âNothing bad, I hope,â said Malthus. âAnd you must be the girl that I have been told a great deal about. Iâll ask you no questions.â
âUm, thank you,â said Elfwyn.
âWhat are you doing here?â said Jinx. âHave you been guarding the portal?â
âSomebody ought to,â said Malthus. âUnfortunately Iâve been unable to awaken much interest in the task among the werewolves. They donât understand the seriousness of the situation. Nor, I fear, do you.â
âElfwyn thinks the Bonemaster has gotten through to Samara.â
âCorrect,â said Malthus.
Jinx felt a sinking sensation in his stomach. âIs he there now?â
âThat I do not know,â said Malthus. âIâm not able to get here as often as I like, nor stay as long as Iâd wish. Other responsibilities intervene. There are new cubs.â
âUm, yours?â said Jinx.
âYes. Six of them. I have a picture.â Malthus flipped open his ever-present notebook and held up a pencil sketch of what looked to Jinx like a heap of bald
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