Read The Firebird Mystery Online
Authors: Darrell Pitt
Tags: #Juvenile fiction, #Juvenile science fiction, #Mysteries and detectives
A steamcar roared along the street. It screeched to a halt, smoke spewing from the chimney. General Churchill leaned out, a cigar clenched between his teeth.
âMr Doyle and his team!' Churchill said, astonished. âWhat a pleasure! Have you found the bomb?'
âWe need to get to Cleopatra's Needle!' the detective said. âImmediately!'
They piled into the steamcar and headed toward the Thames.
âWill we get there in time?' Jack asked.
âLucy will have given herself time to escape,' Mr Doyle said. âBut she would only need an hour.'
They swung right onto the Victoria Embankment. Churchill increased the speed of the vehicle. All around them the city lay still, the moon bathing it in silver light. The Thames flowed to their left as they zoomed past it.
General Churchill applied the brakes and they climbed out.
âThere!' Jack pointed. âOver there!'
A truck sat in the shadow of the obelisk. It appeared altogether unremarkable. They hurried to the rear and Mr Doyle threw the tarp aside.
âThis is it,' he said.
The bomb sat in the centre. Mr Doyle climbed in and examined a panel on the top. âThis is a timer,' he said. âWe have fifteen minutes until detonation.'
Churchill produced a piece of paper. âI have instructions copied straight from Mr Bell. As long as we follow them, we should be able to disarm the weapon.' He swallowed. âI hope.'
âThen let's not waste valuable seconds.' Mr Doyle turned to Jack and Scarlet. âFind a place to sit by the river. It looks rather lovely right now.'
Jack opened his mouth to argue, then clamped it shut. He and Scarlet left them to their work and crossed to the river. It was a clear night. Jack remembered looking up at the sky from Sunnyside and not being able to see the stars. Tonight it seemed the whole arm of the galaxy blanketed the city.
I don't want to die
, Jack thought.
I miss my parents and I love them, but I'm not ready to join them. Not yet. There's too much here. There's Mr Doyle and Scarlet, and a whole world of adventure. I'm not ready to go.
But if he was about to die, there was something that needed saying. While there was still time.
He took a deep breath.
âScarlet,' he said.
âYes?'
âThere's something I need to tell you.'
âYes?'
âI haven't known you for very long.'
Her eyes gazed into his. A cut ran along one side of her face. Her other eye was closing up. Her forehead was bruised. Her red hair went in every direction of the compass. Her clothing was soiled and waterlogged. Her collar was ripped. Her bustier was torn.
He thought she had never looked more lovely.
Jack swallowed. âI just want to say I...'
The tarpaulin on the truck fell back. They turned to see Mr Doyle and General Churchill crossing the cobblestones to them.
âIs itâ¦?' Jack began.
âIt's done,' Mr Doyle said. âWe've defused it.'
âWe're safe!' Scarlet cried.
âWe're safe.' General Churchill turned to Mr Doyle. âAnd London is safe. And England is safe. Thanks to you and your team.'
âAll in a day's work,' Ignatius Doyle said.
âOh.' Jack laughed as the tension ran away from his body. âI wouldn't say that.'
CHAPTER THIRTYâTWO
The next day turned out to be the busiest of Jack's short life. After the bomb was removed by the armed forces, Mr Doyle, Jack and Scarlet endured several hours of questioning by MI5. Then the heads of several other organisations took turns quizzing them. Even the local police asked a few questions to close their files.
Scarlet went to visit her father, but returned to Bee Street several hours later. She met with Jack and Mr Doyle in the library.
This was Jack's first visit to the library. He looked about it with interest. It was as eccentric as every other room in the apartment. The walls were lined with bookshelves, but there was not a single volume on any of them. Instead, the shelves were filled with jars and bottles of various sizes and emblazoned with disturbing labels such as âToenail Clippings' and âHair samples'.
The only books to be found sat about in neat stacks on the floor. As far as Jack could determine, they had been sorted according to colour rather than subject or author. Books on evolution mingled with volumes about glassblowing. Romance novels rubbed shoulders with the history of the Samoan Islands.
A cage filled with white mice sat on the desk. They gallivanted about on a miniature Ferris wheel as Jack and Scarlet settled into seats opposite the detective.
âWe would seem to have reached an interesting crossroad.' Mr Doyle inclined his head towards Jack. âScarlet has asked to remain with us.'
âRemain?'
âIn a role similar to yourself,' Mr Doyle said. âAs my assistant.'
Jack stared at Scarlet. The girl seemed remarkably pleased with herself.
âI spoke to Father,' she told Jack. âHe was not overly enthusiastic about it at first.'
âI'm sure he wasn't.'
âBut I pressed upon him the importance of women's rights and that I must make my own way. He acquiesced to my request.' She clapped her hands together. âSo, with Mr Doyle's permission, I will take up residence in the guest bedroom and begin my duties.'
âIt may not be that simple.' Mr Doyle peered at both of them. âThere's an issue I must raise.'
âWhat is it?' Jack asked.
âIt's about the role of assistant.' Mr Doyle appeared embarrassed. âYou see, I did not realise the dangers involved. Perhaps I was foolish. Well, they say there's no fool like an old fool.'
âYou're not old, Mr Doyle,' Scarlet said.
âAnd you're definitely not a fool,' Jack said.
The detective shot them a sad smile. âThat's very kind of you both. But the truth is that you're young people with your lives ahead of you. I think it might be better if other employment were found.'
âNo!' Jack said. âMr Doyle! No! You can't send us away.'
âBut...'
âYou cannot,' Scarlet said. âMr Doyle, you need us and we need you.'
âBut this is dangerous work. I deal with unpleasant things. Violent people.'
âLife is full of unpleasant things,' Jack said. âAnd violent people. We know that.'
âWe appreciate your concern, Mr Doyle,' Scarlet said. âBut we cannot hide from the unpleasantness of life. No-one can.'
âBut if anything were to happen to you...' His eyes glistened.
âThen we must be trained,' Scarlet said. âKnowledge is power.'
âTrained?' Mr Doyle stroked his chin. âThat's an interesting idea.'
âWe could be trained in everything you know.'
âIt would be very difficult.'
âWe can learn,' Jack said.
Mr Doyle sniffed. âIt's a lot of learning. Martial arts, the science of detection, biology, bee keepingâ¦'
âWe're ready,' Jack said.
âAstronomy, physicsâ¦'
âWhen do we start?' Scarlet asked.
Mr Doyle took a deep breath. âThis may be a long and difficult challenge for you both, but eventually you would be ready.'
âWe would be detectives,' Jack said. âAll three of us.'
âStill, I worry,' Mr Doyle said. âThere are so many unknowns in life.'
âThere are,' Scarlet agreed. âBut you know what Emmeline Pankhurst says?' She flashed them a cheeky grin. âTrust in God. She will provide.'
âThere is one other matter,' Mr Doyle said to Jack after Scarlet had left the room. He rummaged about in the desk and produced some pages. âThere is a legal issue which must be finalised if I am to be your guardian.'
âMy guardian?' Jack interrupted.
âWell yes,' Mr Doyle frowned. âI thought Mr Daniels would have explained that to you. If you stay here, it means you will become my ward.'
âYou mean, like family?'
Mr Doyle nodded. âLike family. But I understand if you don't want it.'
âNo,' Jack said. âI want it. I want it very much indeed.'
The detective smiled, handed Jack the pages and a pen, and the deal was done. Jack returned to his bedroom feeling as if he were walking on air. A week ago he was an orphan with no future ahead of him. Now he was Mr Doyle's ward and he was going to become a detective. And Scarlet too.
Imagine that
, he thought.
A girl detective.
He was so excited it took him all of five minutes to notice his wall had changed. The sketch of the dog jumping over a stream had been replaced with a painting of people singing around a piano.
âMr Doyle,' he muttered, shaking his head.
âJack?'
Scarlet stood in the doorway.
âI'm sorry to interrupt you,' she said.
âThat's all right.' He pointed up at the picture and explained Mr Doyle's tests of observation.
She frowned. âThat explains the tin of salmon I found on my dressing table.'
âIt'll happen a lot.'
âThere's something I wanted to ask you,' Scarlet said. âI haven't had a chance until now.'
âWhat is it?'
âBack at the Thames, when Mr Doyle and the general were disarming the bomb,' Scarlet said. âThere was something you were going to say.'
âOh.' Jack felt his face turning red. âIt was nothing.'
âAre you sure?'
Some things were best left a mystery. âI'm sure.'
She smiled, but Jack thought there may have been a tinge of disappointment in the expression.
By the time Mr Bell arrived at Bee Street some hours later, Gloria Scott had prepared cake and biscuits for the group. She placed the food on the sitting-room table as they settled around it. She poured hot water into the pot, steam flowing from the kettle. As she settled down with a pen and paper to write up the case, Jack noticed a bicycle with cow horns for handles jammed between two piles of books.
Would he ever get used to this place?
âWhat will happen to the bombs now?' Gloria asked.
âSecreted away,' Mr Doyle explained. âThe government has placed them in storage until we reach a point where we can deal with atomic powerâif that day ever comes.'
âAnd the lab in Switzerland?' Jack asked.
âAlready destroyed,' Mr Bell said, pushing back his copper-coloured hair. âApparently the Swiss were so fearful of the technology in the lab, they decided it was safer to blow it all to kingdom come.'
âThat's a terrible waste,' Jack said. âBut at least the other labs still exist.'
âThey were only used for minor research projects. The real technology was in Switzerland. With it gone, the Phoenix Society is finished.'
âWhat about the other members, Father?' Scarlet inquired.
âThe Phoenix Society was very good at keeping its membership a secret. The few people I knew in the organisation have gone into hiding. Like rats deserting a sinking ship.'
âAnd you, Mr Bell?' Jack asked. âAre you, well, the policeâ¦?'
The man smiled. âTechnically, I broke no laws. It is not a crime to belong to a secret society. Or to invent things. And I have cooperated with the authorities. I will not be spending time “at Her Majesty's pleasure”.' He looked embarrassed. âActually, I've been offered a research role in China.'
âChina?' Scarlet said.
âIt seems I will be assisting in the construction of the Peking Metrotower,' Mr Bell said. âIt will be the largest ever built.'
âA worthy achievement,' Mr Doyle said.
âWhat of the men we found on that island?' Mr Bell asked. âThose poor unfortunates whom the Nazis experimented on?'
âThey are being cared for. It seems the procedure is not permanent. Their rehabilitation will take time, but they will recover.'
âAnd what of Lucy Harker?' Gloria asked, making notes. âWhat has happened to her?'
A silence fell among the group.
âWhat indeed?' Mr Doyle looked troubled. âShe's a sick and evil woman. She got away, even though a net had been thrown up around London to apprehend her. The assets of her father's empire have been seized by the government, but undoubtedly she had a fortune stowed away. We don't know where she is.'
âWe'll catch her,' Jack said. âThere's always tomorrow.'
âThere's always tomorrow,' Mr Doyle agreed, smiling. âI believe she will be caught. One day.'
âProbably by us,' Scarlet said.
âI like your confidence, my dear.'
Jack felt something brush against his leg. He looked down and leapt up in shock.
âMr Doyle! There's a...a...'
Jack wasn't sure what it was. The creature was shaped like a helmet, covered in lengthy quills, and had a long snout and stumpy legs. Mr Doyle glanced down at it.
âThat's just Isaac Newton,' he said. âNot the original one. No, he's been dead a long time. It's an echidna. A native of Australia.'
âGood heavens,' Scarlet said. âWhat's he doing here?'
âHe's just another member of the family. You'll see him around.'
âSpeaking of family,' Mr Bell said, âI think this requires a toast.' He held up his cup. âTo family.'
âTo family,' they chorused.
âAnd to Leonardo da Vinci,' Jack added. âThe greatest inventor who ever lived.'
Mr Bell produced a wrapped package. âI almost forgot,' he said. âA gift in appreciation for your services.'
Mr Doyle removed the paper. âThat's lovely,' he said. It was the picture of
The Battle of Anghiari
with the firebird in the sky. âI will hang it with pride next to the missing Rembrandt and the unknown Vermeer.'
As they sipped their tea, Mr Doyle said, âI do still consider Leonardo da Vinci the greatest of all artists. He did, after all, paint the
Mona Lisa
.'