Over at the Palace, in Sarah Heap's small sitting room, Septimus was beginning to stir. His head felt fuzzy as he opened his eyes, wondering where he was. A dull grayish light filtered through Sarah's flowery curtains and Septimus could feel the dampness from the river in the air. It was not the kind of morning that made him want to get up.
Jenna yawned, still sleepy. She pulled her crocheted blanket up over her head and wished the day would go away. A strange feeling of foreboding was weighing her down, although she could not remember why.
“Morning, Sep,” she said. “How are you?”
“Wherrr...” Septimus mumbled blearily. “Where am I?”
“Um ... Mum's sitting room,” Jenna mumbled sleepily.
“Oh, yes, I remember ... Queen Etheldredda—”
Jenna was wide awake all of a sudden, remembering what her sense of foreboding had been about. She wished she hadn't.
Suddenly Septimus remembered something else: his Prediction Practical. He sat up, his straw-colored curls standing on end, a look of panic in his bright green eyes. “I gotta go, Jen, or I'll be late. I knew I was going to mess this up.”
“Mess what up?”
“My Prediction Practical. I knew it.”
“Well, then, that's all right, isn't it?” Jenna sat up and grinned. “I guess you've passed.”
“Don't think it works like that, Jen,” said Septimus gloomily. “Not with Marcia, anyway. I'd better go.”
“Look, Sep,” said Jenna. “You can't go back yet. You have to come see something first. I promised.”
“Promised? What do you mean, promised?”
Jenna did not reply. Slowly, she stood up and carefully folded the crocheted blanket.
Septimus saw a dark and anxious look in her eyes and decided not to push things any further. “Well, don't worry,” he said, reluctantly crawling out of his makeshift bed,
“I'll come see whatever it is first and then I'll go back. If I run fast I might just make it.”
“Thanks, Sep,” said Jenna.
As Jenna and Septimus closed the door of Sarah Heap's sitting room behind them, the ghost of Queen Etheldredda descended through the ceiling with a look of satisfaction on her sharp features. She settled herself down on the sofa, picked up the small book that Sarah had left on the table and, with fascinated distaste, began to read True love Never Lies.
Septimus and Jenna made their way along the Long Walk, the wide passageway that ran the length of the Palace like a backbone. It was deserted in the dim light of the morning, for the Palace servants were quietly employed elsewhere getting things ready for the day, and the various Ancients who haunted the Long Walk at night had fallen asleep in the early-morning light. Some were propped up in doorways, others were contentedly snoring in some of the moth-eaten chairs that were scattered along the Walk for the benefit of those who found the distance too far to travel in one trip.
A threadbare red carpet that covered the old stone flags ran like a broad path in front of Jenna and Septimus. The Long Walk always felt to Jenna as though it went on forever, although now it was more interesting than it had been, since her father, Milo Banda, had brought back all kinds of strange and bizarre treasures from the Far Countries and set them up in its empty niches and alcoves. In fact, Milo had been so pleased with what he had called “brightening up the place” that he had soon set off on another voyage to bring back even more treasures.
When they passed by what Jenna thought of as a particularly weird section—the area where Milo had displayed some shrunken heads from the Cannibal Islands of the South Seas—Septimus lingered, fascinated.
“Come on, Sep,” Jenna chided. “Don't stop here, this is a really creepy part.”
“It's not the heads that are creepy, Jen. It's that picture. Isn't that old Etheldredda?”
It was an imposing, full-length painting. Queen Etheldredda's sharp features gazed down at Jenna and Septimus with her usual expression, accurately caught by the artist. The Queen was posed haughtily against a backdrop of the Palace.
Jenna shivered. “Dad found it in a Sealed room in the attic,” she whispered as though the portrait was listening to them. “He took it out 'cause he said it was frightening his new Counter Colony. I'm going to ask him to put it back.”
“The sooner, the better,” said Septimus. “Before it scares the shrunken heads.”
A few minutes later, Septimus and Jenna were outside the Queen's Room on the top floor of the turret at the end of the Palace. A tall golden door with beautiful emerald-green patterns glinted in the dusty shafts of the early-morning sunshine.
Jenna unclipped a large emerald and gold key from the leather belt that she wore over her gold sash. Carefully, she placed the key in the keyhole that was in the middle of the door.
Septimus stood back and watched Jenna put the key into what appeared to him to be a completely blank and rather cracked wall. This did not surprise Septimus, for he knew he could not see the door to the Queen's Room. Only those who were descended from the Queen could see it.