The Perilous Journey

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Authors: Trenton Lee Stewart
Tags: Humor, Science-Fiction, adventure, Fantasy, Mystery, Young Adult, Children
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surprise to find her chest of drawers utterly empty; and under different circumstances one of the children would have made a point of checking, just to see. But right now, no one was in the mood to tease Constance about her disorderliness or anything else.
    The window shade was drawn; the door was locked. They spoke in hushed tones, and every so often one of them checked the hallway for unwanted listeners. The secrecy of their discussion — and the anxiety and urgency that attended it — lent a strange feeling of familiarity to the scene, for only a year had passed since the Mysterious Benedict Society had held meetings just like this at the Institute. In the middle of their circle lay the sealed envelope. Reynie had put off opening it but hadn’t said why.
    “He didn’t tell you anything more?” Reynie asked Constance, who evidently knew as little about Mr. Benedict’s trip as the others.
    “Don’t you think I’d have said so if he had?” Constance snapped. “I’ve spent the whole morning crying, Reynie — ever since that stupid bird showed up. If I could think of some important fact, you know I’d tell you.”
    “I know,” Reynie said gently. He was used to Constance and had a better way with her than the others did. “Now please don’t be upset, but can you tell me how the pigeon got here?”
    Constance sniffled and swiped at her eyes. “There was a knock at the door, and when one of the guards went to open it, that box was on the doorstep. He didn’t see who left it, but one of the upstairs guards was watching through a window. She said it was a man in a suit. He was carrying a briefcase.”
    “I knew it,” said Kate, curling her lip, and in a tone that implied considerable loathing she said, “A Ten Man.”
    The others looked at her.
    “A what?” Sticky asked.
    “This was something I was going to tell you about. Do you remember Mr. Curtain’s Recruiters?”
    Constance stared at Kate. “Do I
remember
them?” she said, her face darkening. “Hmm, let me think, Kate. Oh, wait! You mean like the men who tried to kidnap me — the ones who shot wires out of their watches, shocked the wits out of me, and stuffed me into a bag?”
    “Exactly,” Kate said. “Those guys. Well, they’re still working for Mr. Curtain, only they aren’t called Recruiters anymore. Milligan and the other agents call them Ten Men.”
    “Because they’re heartless?” asked Reynie, thinking of
The Wizard of Oz.
    “Not Tin Men, Reynie.
Ten
Men. It’s true they’re heartless, though, and they’ve gotten even more dangerous. The agents call them Ten Men because they have ten different ways of hurting you.”
    “Not just the shockwatches?” Sticky asked, cringing as if he didn’t really want to know.
    “Apparently they’ve expanded their wardrobe,” Kate said.
    Reynie was rubbing his chin. “If a Ten Man delivered the pigeon,” he mused, “then another Ten Man could be waiting at its roost. Mr. Curtain wouldn’t have to be there himself. They could just call him when the reply came. That means Mr. Curtain could be anywhere in the world — and wherever
he
is, that’s where Mr. Benedict and Number Two are.”
    “I have a feeling you’re going somewhere with this,” Kate said.
    “Not just me,” Reynie said. “All of us.”
    “We’re going somewhere?” Sticky asked, confused.
    “Okay, Reynie, why haven’t we opened the envelope yet?” Constance said. “Why have you been stalling?”
    “Because I think we need to be resolved,” Reynie said, taking the envelope and staring at it intently. “Whatever Mr. Benedict has written in here could put us on his trail.” He looked up. “And I think we should follow it.”
    “You mean actually go on the trip?” Sticky said, his eyes widening.
    “By ourselves?” Kate said. She considered for perhaps half a second. “Okay, I’m in.”
    Constance looked faintly hopeful. “You think we could actually find them?”
    “It’s worth a shot,” Reynie

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