Rose and the Lost Princess Read online




  Copyright © 2010 by Holly Webb

  Cover and internal design © 2014 by Sourcebooks, Inc.

  Cover design by Jane Archer

  Cover illustration © Kevin Keele

  Sourcebooks and the colophon are registered trademarks of Sourcebooks, Inc.

  All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means including information storage and retrieval systems—except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles or reviews—without permission in writing from its publisher, Sourcebooks, Inc.

  The characters and events portrayed in this book are fictitious or are used fictitiously. Any similarity to real persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental and not intended by the author.

  Published by Sourcebooks Jabberwocky, an imprint of Sourcebooks, Inc.

  P.O. Box 4410, Naperville, Illinois 60567-4410

  (630) 961-3900

  Fax: (630) 961-2168

  www.jabberwockykids.com

  Originally published in 2010 in the United Kingdom by Orchard Books, a division of Hachette Children’s Books.

  Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication data is on file with the publisher.

  Source of Production: Versa Press, East Peoria, Illinois

  Date of Production: February 2014

  Run Number: 5000582

  Contents

  Front Cover

  Title Page

  Copyright

  One

  Two

  Three

  Four

  Five

  Six

  Seven

  Eight

  Nine

  Ten

  Eleven

  Twelve

  Thirteen

  Fourteen

  Fifteen

  A Preview of the Next Book in the Spellbinding Rose Series

  About the Author

  Back Cover

  For Jon

  One

  Enjoying the quiet, Rose leaned against the window, staring out at the last few browning leaves of the wisteria that climbed up the wall and feeling the smooth chill of the glass against her cheek.

  She jumped as a soft, insistent white head butted against her arm, and Gus squirmed into her lap, kneading her apron to the right consistency with determined paws.

  “It’s getting colder,” he remarked, settling down at last. “I can smell snow.”

  Rose blinked at him, surprised. “Do you think so? It’s only October. Isn’t it a bit early for snow?”

  Gus wriggled onto his back and yawned, showing a bright pink tongue and shark-like teeth. His stomach was round and soft and tufty, framed by delicately hanging paws. Rose was tempted to stroke it but suspected that Gus might claw her for being overly familiar.

  “You can if you like,” he purred, opening his orange eye for a moment. “I’m in a tolerant mood.”

  Rose stroked one of the velvet paws with the back of her hand instead and sighed.

  “What’s the matter?” Gus asked, opening the blue eye this time, just for a second.

  “Just tired…” Rose murmured.

  Gus sniffed irritably and opened both eyes to glare at her. “Well, it’s entirely your own fault for being so ridiculously stubborn. Why you persist in working as a housemaid and trying to be a magician’s apprentice at the same time is completely beyond me. You have to choose one or the other.”

  Rose didn’t answer. He’d said it several times, and today she felt weary enough to wonder if he was actually right. He quite often was, having a cat’s natural cunning coupled with a hefty dollop of magic. But it still seemed odd, being advised by a cat.

  “You see! I was right,” Gus mewed triumphantly, now standing on her lap with his front paws resting against the glass.

  Rose, who had been staring out the window but not actually looking, shook herself and gazed out at the trees in the square’s garden. The color had bled out of the sky, and fat white snowflakes were swirling slowly down.

  “It’s snowing!” Freddie burst into the room, flinging the door open with a bang. “Do you see? Really snowing. And it’s cold enough to stick.”

  Rose looked at him in surprise. His dark eyes were glittering with excitement, and his cheeks were flushed, as though he’d raced up the stairs. It was only snow, and Rose didn’t think she liked it all that much. It was beautiful but somehow menacing too—the falling flakes had a horrid inevitability about them, as though they would keep falling whatever happened and smother anything that tried to stop them. Rose shook herself crossly. This was nonsense. It was snow. Just weather.

  “Aren’t you pleased?” Freddie asked her, frowning slightly. “It’s snowing!” The frown disappeared as he said the word, as if he couldn’t mention snow without grinning.

  Rose watched him dubiously as he pressed his palms against the window, gazing hungrily out at the dancing feathers of snow. Why was he so excited? It snowed every year, as far as she knew. For an orphanage brat, snow didn’t mean treats. It just meant that your dormitory was so cold you climbed into bed with the girls next to you, so you could shiver together. And the washing water froze. When the orphans walked to church in snow, no one threw snowballs; they just got wet feet, as the dirty slush seeped through their patched boots. She supposed this was the difference. For Freddie, snow probably meant snow fights and sledding and riding out to the country to skate on a beautiful frozen lake. He probably came home and had cocoa afterward too.

  “It looks very cold,” Rose told him rather primly, and he shook his head.

  “Honestly, Rose, you really are the most dreadful wet blanket,” Freddie murmured dismissively as he watched the snowflakes, unable to tear himself away.

  Rose smiled. Sometimes it annoyed her that Freddie had no idea how lucky he was, how privileged. But it wasn’t actually his fault. He just happened to have been born that way—to a family with a long history of magic. And money. Just as she happened to have been born to a family so poor they couldn’t keep her. Or maybe not a family—she didn’t know. Perhaps just a girl on her own, a girl who’d found an old fish basket somewhere and used it to shelter the baby she was abandoning in the churchyard.

  When she wasn’t exhausted, Rose felt privileged too. She had been taken away from the orphanage at a far younger age than most the girls, to be trained as a housemaid in the London residence of Mr. Aloysius Fountain, Chief Magical Counselor to the Treasury. Rose loved it. She had dreamed of this—a proper job, no more charity, but actually earning her own living. Then she had discovered that she was a little bit magical too, and everything had changed all over again.

  It seemed odd that two people with such different childhoods should end up as apprentices together. Rose wasn’t on the same social scale as Freddie, of course. Most probably she never would be. But she was better at a lot of the magic than he was. That was hard to believe too. It almost certainly meant that at least one of her unknown parents had been a magician. Since Mr. Fountain had gently pointed this out in their first magic lesson, Rose had thought about her parents far more than she ever had before. She knew something about them now—or one of them, at least. Before, all she’d known was a possible connection with fish. Having inherited her magic was far more interesting than having inherited fish.

  She had never daydreamed about her parents back at the orphanage, as so many of her friends did. No, far better to rely on herself, as she always had. She shouldn’t waste time wondering; she would never know the answers anyway. Unless she could divine them somehow, of course. One of her ne
w powers was making strange pictures appear on shiny surfaces. Some of the images were true, and some were…Rose wasn’t quite sure what. Perhaps they all had some sort of truth in them, or they wouldn’t come to her.

  Could she see her parents? If she tried hard enough, found the right place to look? Did she even want to? Rose wasn’t sure she wanted to know why they’d left her on the war memorial. What if they just hadn’t liked her very much? Or something awful had happened to them?

  But the more Rose found out about her own magic, the more intriguing her family history was becoming. Left alone in Mr. Fountain’s workroom, she’d found herself staring at mirrors, silver bowls, that strange mother-of-pearl sheet…She knew she could see in all of them if she could only bring herself to try.

  “I wish he’d hurry up. I want to go out before it gets dark. Where is he, Rose? Do you know? Rose!” Freddie’s voice grew sharp, and Rose turned away from the mesmerizing snowflakes with a guilty start.

  “What?”

  “Where is Mr. Fountain?” Freddie demanded impatiently. “It’s twenty minutes past three. What’s he doing? Come on, Rose, down in the kitchens you know everything! Where is he?”

  “He had a lunch guest, someone from the palace. Miss Bridges was panicking, and me and Bill had to polish all the silver yesterday. She checked. Even the bits we never use, like that strange cup with the mustache on it.” Rose sounded disgruntled. Bill, the apprentice footman who did all the odd jobs around the house, had confided to her on her first day that although they were supposed to polish all the silver every week, he never did, except on very special occasions. Visitors from the palace, even if not actually royalty themselves, clearly had to be treated like royalty, and that meant everything needed to be shiny.

  Freddie looked thoughtful. “I wonder who it is. My cousin Raphael is an equerry at the palace, so I know some of the staff.”

  Rose gazed at him wide-eyed. “Your cousin works for the king? What’s an equerry?”

  Freddie sniffed. “An odd-job man, judging by Raphael. But he’s a bit of an idiot. In a dream world all the time, and he isn’t even a magician. He’s from my mother’s side of the family.”

  Rose couldn’t help giggling. Someone that Freddie thought was stupid would have to be monumentally silly. Freddie fell down flights of stairs on purpose to see if he could fly. (He had, almost, but it was still a stupid thing to do. He said it was in the spirit of scientific inquiry and scientists had to be willing to take risks. Rose just thought he was bacon brained.) But Freddie had raised an interesting point.

  “So, your mother’s not a magician, then?” she asked curiously. “Only your father?”

  “Yes.” Freddie smiled. “But Mama loves magic. My father courted her by making roses grow out of the carpet of my grandparents’ drawing room, and she accepted his proposal on the spot. Not that she might have turned him down,” he hastened to add. “Papa has very handsome side whiskers.”

  Rose couldn’t stop laughing. She imagined Freddie’s father rather like Freddie, smooth and small and blond, but with luxuriant muttonchop whiskers.

  “Stop it, Rose! I can hear Fountain coming.” Freddie frowned at her, still giggling in the window seat, and shook his head disgustedly.

  Rose sat up and tried to take deep breaths, but the image of a furry Freddie wouldn’t go away. At last, the turning of the door handle distracted her enough, and she jumped up excitedly. She adored their magic lessons, however tired she was, and Mr. Fountain had promised to teach Freddie and Rose a real spell today. Rose dug her fingernails into her palms. She wanted to be as calm and collected as Freddie, who’d rather be out throwing snowballs than learning magic, but she could hardly stand still. She could smell Mr. Fountain, she suddenly realized, as the door opened. A mixture of cigar smoke, very dear eau de cologne, and an added tang of powerful, lethal, wonderful magic…

  Two

  It had only been a week since Rose and Freddie and Mr. Fountain’s spoiled little princess of a daughter, Isabella, had set out on a mission to rescue one of Rose’s friends who had gone missing from the orphanage. Freddie and Rose hadn’t wanted to take Isabella, but she could be very persuasive, combining all the usual talents of a spoiled child with a rather large magical inheritance. It was extremely hard to say no to her, and most people just didn’t bother.

  Maisie had been kidnapped by another magician, an evil madwoman trying to discover the secret of eternal life by drinking children’s blood. As Mr. Fountain had explained to them afterward (along with dire threats never to go off and do anything so infernally stupid ever again, at least not without telling him first), it was a quest that tended to warp people’s minds. Magicians seeking the power of life and death went absolutely batty, it seemed, “mad as a spoon,” as Mr. Fountain put it.

  Miss Sparrow had been much madder than that. She had been maddened enough to murder, and she slit children’s wrists to harvest their blood for her infernal plans. She didn’t even kill them cleanly—she kept them alive, like little milk cows in her cellar, so she could do it again and again and again. She’d had Maisie’s blood, and that of fifteen other stolen children. She’d been working on Rose and Freddie and Bella, but thankfully they’d escaped before she had set on them with her sparkly silver knife.

  Rose had used magic to save Maisie and all the others, but she’d lost her secret. After she and Freddie came back to the house in triumph, on the heels of a ragged gang of lost children, she hadn’t been able to hide it any longer. Not when Freddie and Gus had spilled her story to Mr. Fountain, and he insisted on her becoming another apprentice. It was wonderful upstairs in the drawing room, for all of two hours. Mr. Fountain promised that she could still be a maid as well. Rose hadn’t wanted to change worlds completely. She’d spent her life at the orphanage dreaming of a job where she could work for money, where she wasn’t a little charity girl. She wasn’t going to give it up yet.

  None of the servants had gone to bed—they couldn’t anyway, with the drawing room full of stolen children and the police upstairs demanding tea at all hours. Miss Bridges, the housekeeper, was in her little room, writing a list of houses that she thought might take the orphans and street children into service, and Mrs. Jones and Sarah, the kitchen maid, were making towering piles of sandwiches. Miss Sparrow had fed the children in her cellar, but only to the extent of throwing in a couple of loaves every day. The first batch of sandwiches Mrs. Jones sent up had disappeared in seconds, and now she was thinking that they might need to bake some more bread.

  Bill wasn’t there—he and the stableboy had been sent off with messages to the parents of the children who’d been stolen from their homes. He had known already anyway; he’d seen Rose in action, when she’d done magic by accident, and at first he’d been angry with her. He’d forgiven her now, especially since one of the children she’d rescued had been a friend of his from St. Bartholomew’s, the orphanage on the other side of the wall from where Rose had lived. Rose had saved Jack, so Bill was willing to give her the benefit of the doubt.

  Susan, the upper housemaid, who spent most of her time making life unpleasant for Rose—far more time than she spent working—looked up at her as she came into the kitchen. “Oh, so you’ve decided to come back down and do some work now, have you, instead of getting in the way upstairs? Bill says you went out and got into some fight with a magician!” Susan sneered. “You’ll be dismissed for sure.” She’d been pressed into making sandwiches as well, and she brandished a butter knife at Rose, her eyes glittering with excitement. She loved getting other people into trouble.

  Rose stared at her. Susan’s sharply pretty face was distorted by resentment and jealousy. She noticed for the first time that little sour lines were setting in around her mouth and nose. “Mr. Fountain asked me to stay,” she murmured, looking away.

  “Rose, what were you doing out there?” Mrs. Jones demanded, looking fretfully at her over a pile of her precious jars
of jam. “You weren’t here for dinner; we were worried. I thought you might have gone back to the orphanage, seeing as some people weren’t as well-behaved to you as they should have been.” She put the jars down on the kitchen table and glared at Susan, who calmly licked butter off her fingers. “And then you came back with Mr. Freddie and Miss Isabella! What were you thinking of, Rose? You should never let those strange children bully you into doing who knows what!”

  “It wasn’t like that…” Rose started to say, but she didn’t know how to explain. Besides, she felt a tiny spark of anger growing inside her, which made it hard to be polite. Freddie and Bella weren’t strange! Well, yes, maybe they were—in fact, of course they were. But no more than Rose herself was! What was “normal,” anyway, if a little half-starved pauper girl from an orphanage could turn out to be a magician?

  “You’re a servant, Rose dear.” Mrs. Jones’s face was anxious, and Rose’s momentary anger faded. She didn’t want Mrs. Jones to look like that because of her. The cook had been kind to her ever since she had arrived.

  “Don’t go getting mixed up with those children. Never forget, they could have you dismissed with one word! One complaint, Rose, and then where would you be? Be careful, dear.” Mrs. Jones stared at her, her cheeks red with sincerity.

  Miss Bridges appeared in the doorway from the passage that led to her room, the yard, and the stables in the mews. Susan suddenly started buttering bread again, rather quickly, and Rose looked around for something to hold so she could at least try and look busy.

  Miss Bridges wasn’t scared of magic. She had far more to do with Mr. Fountain than the rest of the servants, and she’d always thought there was something special about Rose anyway. Besides, Rose worked hard, and for Miss Bridges that was what mattered. The news she had been given earlier that evening, that Rose was to become an apprentice in her spare time, had merely made her smile grimly. She wondered what Mr. Fountain thought Rose did that she should have spare time. She had given her employer a regal nod and promised to organize Rose’s duties to make room for her lessons with Freddie.

 

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