Playing with Fire (Skulduggery Pleasant, Book 2)
mislaid."
    "Mislaid?"
    "Forgotten."
    Tanith smiled. "When this is over, we'll run through it again. You'll get it, don't worry. How're the parents?"
    Valkyrie shrugged. "Parents are fine."
    "Have you been going to school much?"
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    "Ah, Skulduggery makes me go whenever we're not in the middle of a crisis. But that's the great thing about having the reflection-- I don't have to deal with all that."
    Tanith pulled on her helmet, then flipped the visor up to give Valkyrie a strange look. "I wouldn't get too dependent on that reflection, if I were you. You may absorb all its memories so it feels like you're going to school, but you're not. You're on the outside, looking in at an important part of your own life." She swung her leg over the bike and settled into the saddle. "You're thirteen, Val. You should be spending time with people your own age."
    Valkyrie raised an eyebrow as she pulled the spare helmet down over her head. "People my own age don't fight monsters, Tanith. If they did, I'd be hanging out with them a lot more."
    The first time Valkyrie had ridden on Tanith's bike, she had started off holding the sides of Tanith's coat, but as they picked up speed her hands had got closer and closer together, until finally her arms were wrapped tightly around Tanith's waist. Once she'd got over her initial fear-- that they were roaring along open roads and one bad turn would flip them to a painful and skin-
    97
    shredding demise-- she'd started to enjoy the sensation. Now she loved traveling by bike. It was fun.
    Tanith swerved through traffic and took bends at an alarming speed, and Valkyrie started to laugh beneath her helmet.
    The ride got decidedly bounder as the bike turned off the road and took a trail. It was only Tanith's superior reflexes that saved them from hitting one of the trees that blurred past.
    They burst from the tree line and shot up a small hill, leaving the ground for a few seconds and landing smoothly on a narrow road, then zipped over a humpbacked bridge. Moments later they were passing through the massive gate that led to Gordon Edgley's house.
    Valkyrie still thought of it as her uncle's house. The fact that she had inherited it changed absolutely nothing.
    Tanith braked and let the back wheel skid sideways a little, throwing up a small shower of pebbles. She cut off the engine and leaned the bike onto its kickstand. They got off and removed their helmets.
    "Enjoy that?" Tanith said with a little grin.
    Valkyrie grinned back, her eyes bright. "I keep telling Skulduggery he should get a bike."
    98
    "What does he say?"
    "He says people who wear leathers, like you, should ride motorbikes. People who wear exquisite suits, like him, should drive Bentleys."
    "He has a point." Tanith looked up at the house. "So are we going to go in?"
    Valkyrie laughed, took the key from her pocket, and opened the front door. "I still find it hard to believe you're a fan."
    They walked in. The hall was grand, with Gothic paintings on the walls. They passed through into the living room.
    "Your uncle was the best writer ever," Tanith said. "Why wouldn't I be a fan?"
    "You just, I don't know, you don't really strike me as being the type. It's like when your friend thinks that your dad is the coolest guy in the world, y'know? It just seems a little silly."
    "Well, there was nothing silly about your uncle's writing. Did I tell you that one of his short stories was based on something that happened to me?"
    "You told me. Many times."
    "I never met him, but he must have heard about it somehow. Maybe Skulduggery heard it, and he told Gordon."
    99
    Tanith stood in the center of the living room, gazing around with a slightly wistful look on her face. "And this is where Gordon lived. This is where he wrote his masterpiece. You're a lucky girl, Val. What was it like, having an uncle like Gordon Edgley?"
    "We're not getting into this conversation," Valkyrie said. "Not again." She went to the bookshelf, took down a book bound in black, and

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