The Apprentices by Mailie Meloy




  The Apprentices

  G. P. PUTNAM’S SONS

  An imprint of Penguin Young Readers Group.

  Published by The Penguin Group.

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  Copyright © 2013 by Maile Meloy. Illustrations © 2013 by Ian Schoenherr.

  All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced, scanned or distributed in any printed or electronic form without permission in writing from the publisher, G. P. Putnam’s Sons,

  an imprint of Penguin Young Readers Group, 345 Hudson Street, New York, NY 10014.

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  Published simultaneously in Canada.

  Design by Ryan Thomann.

  The art was done in ink and acrylic paint on Strathmore Aquarius II paper.

  Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

  Meloy, Maile. The apprentices / Maile Meloy; [illustrated by Ian Schoenherr].

  pages cm

  Summary: “Two years after parting, Benjamin and Janie reunite via

  magical communication to prevent a global catastrophe”—Provided by publisher.

  [1. Alchemy—Fiction. 2. Magic—Fiction. 3. Adventure and adventurers—Fiction. 4. Voyages and travels—Fiction. 5. Southeast Asia—History—1945—Fiction.] I. Schoenherr, Ian, illustrator. II. Title.

  PZ7.M516354App 2013 [Fic]—dc23 2012048715

  ISBN: 978-1-101-59922-8

  For Gwendolyn, Scarlett, and Sawyer

  Table of Contents

  Part One: Separation

  Chapter 1: Grayson Academy

  Chapter 2: The Test

  Chapter 3: Exile

  Chapter 4: Dishwashing

  Chapter 5: A Reprieve

  Chapter 6: Success

  Chapter 7: The Headmaster

  Chapter 8: Code-breaking

  Chapter 9: An Invitation

  Chapter 10: Contact

  Part Two: Opposition

  Chapter 11: Field Medics

  Chapter 12: Homecoming

  Chapter 13: First Do No Harm

  Chapter 14: YES or NO

  Chapter 15: The Mickey Finn

  Chapter 16: The Cat

  Chapter 17: The Kiss

  Chapter 18: Sidetracked

  Chapter 19: The Message

  Chapter 20: Theft

  Part Three: Conjunction

  Chapter 21: The United States

  Chapter 22: The Notebook

  Chapter 23: Winter Wonderland

  Chapter 24: The Game of Murder

  Chapter 25: Breaking and Entering

  Chapter 26: A Confession

  Chapter 27: Kidnapped

  Chapter 28: Transport

  Part Four: Transmutation

  Chapter 29: Flight

  Chapter 30: Alistiar Beane

  Chapter 31: The Sea Eagle

  Chapter 32: Copley Square

  Chapter 33: Nature Red in Tooth and Claw

  Chapter 34: Splintered

  Chapter 35: A Dream

  Part Five: Precipitation

  Chapter 36: John Frum, He Must Come

  Chapter 37: Funny Business

  Chapter 38: The Gap

  Chapter 39: Floating

  Chapter 40: Sprung

  Chapter 41: Escape

  Chapter 42: Bird People

  Chapter 43: The Mine

  Chapter 44: The Swamp

  Chapter 45: Babysitting

  Chapter 46: A Squall

  Chapter 47: Underground

  Chapter 48: A Sail

  Part Six: Corrosion

  Chapter 49: At Sea

  Chapter 50: The Materia Medica

  Chapter 51: Underwater

  Chapter 52: Alkahest

  Chapter 53: Camouflage

  Chapter 54: Aloha ‘Oe

  Chapter 55: Another Ghost

  Chapter 56: The Miller’s Daughter

  Part Seven: Germination

  Chapter 57: The Confrontation

  Chapter 58: The Count

  Chapter 59: Unintended Consequences

  Chapter 60: Danby

  Chapter 61: Arrival

  Chapter 62: Fugitive

  Chapter 63: The Apothecary

  Chapter 64: The Envoy

  Chapter 65: A Midsummer Night’s Dream

  Epilogue: Cargo

  PART ONE

  Separation

  1. the action or state of being moved apart

  2. the process of sorting and then extracting a specified substance for use or rejection

  CHAPTER 1

  Grayson Academy

  The space between the stone library of Grayson Academy and the red brick science building created a ferocious wind tunnel, in any decent wind. Janie Scott ducked her head and leaned forward into the blast, on her way to dinner with her roommate’s parents in the town of Grayson, across the street from the school. It was November of 1954, and a cold autumn in New Hampshire. Janie wore a warm wool peacoat, but the wind cut through her clothes. It made its way under and over the wraps of her scarf. It found the vulnerable gap between the peacoat’s sleeve and her glove, where her wrist lay bare.

  She had found the coat in her closet in London, when she was still at St. Beden’s School, and it had a strange combination of smells: seawater, smoked meat, and something sweet that Janie couldn’t identify. A girl from school named Sarah Pennington had said the coat belonged to her. But then she had taken one sniff, raised her eyebrows, and said that Janie could keep it.

  Sarah Pennington also said that Janie and a boy named Benjamin Burrows had borrowed a necklace from her, with a little gold heart pendant. Sarah said they had melted the necklace down, and were supposed to bring it back whole, as some kind of science experiment. Janie had no memory of borrowing anything from Sarah, but it seemed doubtful that she could bring a melted necklace back. Three weeks of her life had been erased from her mind, and she had lost so many important facts and experiences that she wouldn’t have listed the coat or the necklace among the ones that mattered.

  But Benjamin Burrows—that name had nagged at her. Sarah Pennington said he had sandy-colored hair, and was stubborn and defiant. Janie had concentrated, feeling the memory like something deep underwater, so deep it was lost in darkness. Before she went to sleep each night, she willed the memory to come up to the surface. After months of struggle, she thought she knew the shape of Benjam
in and the sound of his voice. She couldn’t remember exact conversations, but she had a sense of him. Fragments started to come back, things he had said. She began to remember a flight over water. A plunge into bitter cold. The fear that Benjamin was dead.

  Then a parcel arrived at her parents’ London flat, wrapped in brown paper: a diary in Janie’s own handwriting, with a note from Benjamin saying that he thought it was safe for her to read it now. The diary entries explained what she had lost, and some of her memories came back flooding and whole. Some came in scraps and wisps that vanished when she tried to focus on them.

  Now she was sixteen, and had recovered most of her memories—or thought she had. It was hard to know.

  She had been on a journey by boat to Nova Zembla, an island off the northwestern coast of Russia, with Benjamin Burrows and his father. Benjamin’s father wasn’t an ordinary apothecary who sold medicine. He was trying to make the world safe from nuclear war. He had a book called the Pharmacopoeia with hundreds of years of secrets in it: alchemical secrets, elixirs made from plants, and ways of altering matter and transforming the human body.

  Using the Pharmacopoeia, Janie and Benjamin and their friend Pip had become invisible—actually invisible—as they tried to rescue the apothecary from his enemies. They had become birds: Benjamin a skylark, Pip a swallow, and Janie an American robin. They had found the apothecary’s colleagues: a beautiful Chinese chemist named Jin Lo and an exiled Hungarian count named Vilmos Hadik de Galántha. Together, they had stopped a Soviet nuclear test that would have killed or sickened the people who lived in Nova Zembla, and the reindeer and fish that kept them alive.

  Janie’s trusted Latin teacher, Mr. Danby, had turned out to be a Soviet spy. He had taken Janie prisoner in Nova Zembla, with the help of an East German agent they knew only as the Scar. Benjamin had become a bird again to try to rescue her. But it was dangerous, too soon for his body to repeat the transformation, and he couldn’t keep his shape. She had watched him plunge sickeningly from the sky into the Barents Sea. A man in a kayak rescued them both from the freezing water and took them back to Benjamin’s father.

  In the meantime, not surprisingly, Janie had fallen in love with Benjamin.

  But then something happened that she couldn’t quite forgive: Benjamin and his father had erased her memory with a glass of drugged champagne. The apothecary said that Janie was only fourteen and had to stay with her parents, in school. So, fine: Benjamin and his father got to be mysterious, magical peacekeepers, while Janie had to memorize French verbs and eat institutional English food. Was this a fair arrangement?

  No, it was not. Not according to Janie. She had received exactly three letters from Benjamin after the diary, all with blurred postmarks from locations that she couldn’t make out. The letters didn’t say anything about where he was or what he was doing.

  In London, Janie’s parents had been working as writers on a television program about Robin Hood. They had moved there from Los Angeles to escape investigation for being Communists, which they weren’t—that was another thing that hadn’t been fair. But now they were in Michigan, teaching at the university in Ann Arbor, without fear of U.S. marshals showing up at the door with a subpoena. The tide was turning against Senator McCarthy, who had never produced a single Soviet spy for all his insistence that he had a whole list of spies.

  Her parents had been given the drugged champagne, too, and their memories of Janie’s vanishing were gone, which was good. It would have worried them too much. They would have made her come to Ann Arbor with them, which she didn’t want to do. Instead, they had settled for letting her board at Grayson Academy.

  The original founders of Grayson had been Quakers, and the school prided itself on its progressive attitude toward women. It admitted a few girls every year, at a time when most girls’ boarding schools were training young ladies to become suitable wives. Janie wanted to study chemistry. She’d become preoccupied with chemistry at St. Beden’s, and had won a school prize there, and had gotten a scholarship to Grayson.

  She couldn’t imagine going back to Hollywood High now—the easy, sunshiny school she had once missed so much. Hollywood High was the place to be if you wanted an agent to spot your blond hair and your violet eyes and put you in movies. But Janie knew enough about show business not to want that, and besides, she didn’t have blond hair or violet eyes. She had what Benjamin Burrows had called “American hair,” by which he meant there was a lot of it—brown—and it was a little out of control. In the chemistry lab, she tugged it back in a ponytail so it wouldn’t dangle in the hydrochloric acid or sizzle into smelly ash in the Bunsen burner.

  Jin Lo, who was Janie’s role model, wore her hair in a long, smooth braid down the back of her neck. Sometimes Janie tried to braid her own hair like that, but wayward wisps escaped around her face by lunchtime, and the braid was never as perfect and smooth as Jin Lo’s.

  The peacoat was Janie’s best reminder of everything that had happened. It had been cleaned, sadly, and no longer had its strange smell, but it convinced her that Benjamin and his father and their friends were real, that they had taken that long journey north together and returned, against terrible odds. It made her feel safe.

  Her roommate at Grayson was a girl named Opal Magnusson, and on that windy night, Opal’s parents had invited the girls for dinner at Bruno’s, the Italian restaurant across the street from the Grayson campus. Janie leaned into the wind, peacoat clutched tight at the neck, and crossed the street into town. She pulled open the restaurant’s glass door and was enveloped in the cozy smell of tomato and garlic. The sudden warmth made her cheeks tingle, and the soft light from sconces on the walls made her blink.

  Bruno, the owner, called out “Buona sera!” and the white-coated waiters turned and beamed at Janie. She thought they must be tired of serving Grayson students by now—so many of the kids were spoiled and entitled—but the waiters were always kind.

  “Janie!” Opal’s father said, standing from his table. Mr. Magnusson had thick, wild, white-blond hair, sparkling blue eyes, and a ready grin. He held out his big arms to welcome her.

  His wife, Opal’s mother, was tiny, with wide dark eyes. Her thick black hair was pulled back in a chignon at the nape of her neck. She gave Janie a demure smile and a nod. She had been a Malay princess, as Janie understood it, the youngest daughter of a powerful sultan. Mr. Magnusson had vast holdings in Southeast Asia, and had met the princess there and whisked her away. The war had been inconvenient for him, but after the Japanese were defeated, he had become richer than ever.

  Opal gave Janie a wan smile, looking sick of her parents already.

  Janie took the empty chair at their table, and a waiter tucked it under her. “Sorry I’m late,” she said, unfolding her napkin. “I was in the chemistry lab.”

  “On a Sunday?” Mr. Magnusson asked.

  “The teacher gave me a key.”

  “Such devotion to your studies,” Mr. Magnusson said. “Opal could use some of that.”

  Janie cast around for some response. Mr. Magnusson was infuriating because he made his disappointment with Opal the subject of every conversation. “It’s just something I’m playing around with,” she said.

  “But it shows you have real purpose and drive,” Mr. Magnusson said. “Unlike some young people I could mention. Now let’s order some food.” He waved to the waiter.

  Janie caught Opal’s eye and mouthed, “Sorry.”

  Opal just gave a tiny shake of her head and rolled her bread into round pellets. Opal had long silken brown hair, green eyes, and honey-colored skin. She made Sarah Pennington, who’d been the prettiest girl at St. Beden’s School, look ordinary: just another blonde. Opal was so beautiful it was hard to look at her, and she seemed to know it, so she hid behind heavy, clunky glasses she didn’t need. It was as if she were in disguise, like Clark Kent.

  “So,” Mr. Magnusson said, after they had ordered. “The great experiment. Tell me everything.”

  “Well,” Janie s
aid, glancing again at Opal, “I’m trying to find an efficient way to desalinate large amounts of seawater. To take the salt out, and make it drinkable, without using a generator. So that the ocean could be a water source more easily.”

  Mr. Magnusson’s blue eyes grew wide. “But this is magnificent,” he said. “It could alleviate so much suffering.”

  “I hope so,” Janie said, tearing off a piece of warm bread.

  “Wars will be fought over water,” Mr. Magnusson said. “It will be the great commodity. Cheap, large-scale desalination would change everything.”

  “I haven’t done it yet,” Janie said.

  “But you’re close?”

  “I think so.”

  “Who gave you the idea?”

  Janie nearly choked on her bread. “Sorry?” she asked.

  “Well, it’s not an idea that a schoolgirl has on her own. Am I right?”

  Janie felt her cheeks getting hot. Why had she had to brag about the project? She couldn’t say anything about Jin Lo or the Pharmacopoeia. “I just—figured it out by working on it,” she said, which was sort of true. “It’s been a slow process.”

  “But how did you become interested in chemistry?”

  All Janie could think of was Jin Lo, who was not a normal chemist in the way that the apothecary was not a normal apothecary. “In London,” she said. “I had a good teacher. I won a prize there, and that got me the scholarship here.”

  “Remarkable!” Mr. Magnusson said. “I’ll be your first customer! I can use your desalination in the islands. I predict, Janie, that you will do great things.”

  Janie smiled, uncomfortable. “And so will Opal.”

  Mr. Magnusson waved the idea away. “Oh, Opal will inherit a lot of money,” he said. “She might do good things with it. And she could marry a very rich man, if she stops making herself ugly.”

  “Daddy!” Opal said.

  “Seriously, though, Janie,” Mr. Magnusson said, leaning forward. “I would like to buy your experiment.”

  “It’s not for sale,” Janie said. “Anyway, it isn’t finished.”

  “When it’s finished, then,” he said. “I insist.”

  There was a silence. Opal crossed her arms and slumped in her chair, her heavy glasses sliding down her nose. Her mother took up her wineglass and glanced at Janie like a frightened rabbit.

 
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