“Better put it back,” said Roger uneasily, and Lyra upturo its immemorial resting place before returning to ts oime panion still close to h.
“ers get coffins. turies t t be room to bury t cut ts t important part of em anyway.”
t tabs uory kept Lyra and Roger busy for days. Once sried to play a tri some of tche wrong daemons.
Pantalaimon became so agitated at t o a bat and fletering s sook no notice: it oo good a joke to e. S later, t top of Staircase t tood at ting to sumps treat, bag ao tance of til all t ed doo tabs aored to tful places, and he skulls.
tabs oo .
o be found turention else before tted leaving t by tercessor, ory.
tercessor . It o prea an i in ual o be founded by ances. S spiritually promising, he had decided.
urned relutly and , into t musty-smelling dimness of tory. dles flickered of images of ts; a faint and distant clatter came from t, beed from try door.
“o times noo?”
one accusatory. erested. o them from her per his shoulder.
Lyra said, “e ed to look do.”
“ever for?”
“ted to see all the coffins,” she said.
“But why?”
S response when she ressed.
“And you,” on, turning ter. Rogers daemon anxiously ail to propitiate s your name?”
“Roger, Father.”
“If youre a servant, wch you.”
Roger turned and ran. Lyra dragged from side to side on the floor.
“As for you, Lyra,” said Fat, “Im pleased to see you taking an i in ory. You are a lucky co ory around you.” “Mm,” said Lyra.
“But I your choice of panions. Are you a lonely child?” “No,”
she said.
“Do you...do you miss ty of other children?” “No.”
“I dont mean Roger tco sort?” “No.”
“But irls, perhaps...” “No.”
“You see, none of us you to miss all times. I sometimes t must be a lonely life for you ?” “No.”
apped ogeterlaced fingers, uo to ask tubborn child.
“If troubling you,” ell me about it. I .” “Yes,” she said.
“Do you say your prayers?”
“Yes.”
“Good girl. ell, run along.”
iturned a. o find Gobblers beloook to treets again. S here.
t erest in the Gobblers appeared in Oxford.
t Lyra ian family she knew.
It time of ts and butty boats, raders and travelers, and terfront in Jeric ealing a ride on a less-ttended unities for provoking warfare.
And ture of t teime to make a proper voyage before being turned out. If sc as far as Abingdon, the weir....
But to be n along t Meadoyard in t Roger for once (ailed to ery floor) but and Simon Parsloolen cigarette from oo anot tentatiously, when she heard a cry in a voice she reized.
“ell, w h him, you half-arsed pillock?”
It once, because ta, given gingerbread on ted for tu-ousness of t. tians, and Lyra admired Ma Costa greatly, but seo be , for t she had hijacked.
One of Lyras brat panions picked up a stoomatically Lyra said, “Put it down. Semper. Swig.”
In fact, Ma Costa looked more anxious trader, was shrugging and spreading his hands.
“ell, I dunno,” e and go. I never saw w....”
“he was helping you! he was holding your bloody horses for you!”
“ell, ayed t he middle of a job—”
no furta suddenly dealt y blo up uro flee. traders nearby jeered, and a flig reared up in alarm.
“s going on?” said Lyra to a gyptian ccs s?”
“Its s Billy. S ve dooo. I aint seen him meself since—”
“to Oxford, then?”
tian boy turned ao call to ca.
“S knohe Gobblers is here!”
s ture do. Everyones daemon instantly became alaimon, ptuous of ted imaginations of tian daemons, became a dragon the size of a deer hound.
But before ttle, Ma Costa ians aside and fronting Lyra like a prizefighter.
“You seen him?” she demanded of Lyra. “You seen Billy?”
“No,” Lyra said. “e just got seen Billy for months.”
Ma Costas daemon a gyptian: in tig gyptian boat ly loved, and a mot if a c of sig be far from someone elses it instinctively.
But a, a queen among tians, in a terror for a missing c was going on?
Ma Costa looked tle group of ed ao stumble t ourned back to one anothe face of her grief.
“ is them Gobblers?” said Simon Parslow, one of Lyras panions.
t gyptian boy said, “You knoealing kids all over try. tes—”
“t pirates,” corrected anotian. “ts whey call em Gobblers.”
“t kids?” said Lyras ot, a kitc.
Michaels.
“No one kno gyptian. “take em a never seen again.”
“e all kno,” said Lyra. “e been playing kids and Gobblers for mont. But 1 bet no ones seen em.”
“they have,” said one boy.
“ed Lyra. “ ent just one person?”
“ girl. “talked to took tle boy out the garden.”
“Yeaian boy. “I seen em do it!”
“ did they look like?” said Lyra.
“ell...l never properly sae truck. t ttle boy in trud drove off quick.”
“But whey call em Gobblers?” Lyra asked.
“Cause t em,” said t gyptian boy. “Someoold us in Norton. ton, ook, and sook old o eat him.
Everyone kno. they gobble em up.”
A gyptian girl standing nearby began to cry loudly.
“ts Billys cousin,” said Charlie.
Lyra said, “?”
“Me,” said offee-apple seller—I seen he e—”
ed it out, s Billy ain not less two hours previously.
“So,” sime in t two ve been Gobblers here....”
te of tar and rouble because no one kne be a Gobbler, as Lyra pointed out to tians alike.
“to look like ordinary people, else t once,” s nig if t, t to look ordinary. So any of t be Gobblers....”
“t,” said a gyptian uainly. “I know em all.”
“All rig t anyone else,” said Lyra. “Lets go and look for em! Aruck!”
And t precipitated a s ones, and before long, ty or myptian d of t of stables, scrambling over tyard, leaping over to teen at a time on ter, and running full pelt treets of Jerictle brick terraced o t square-toory of St. Barnabas t. kno it a lark, but t to Lyra felt a real fear and appreime tary figure doory: a Gobbler?
But of course it . Eventually, Jericime ians gat to anding in angry groups, ated and rising in nervous flig shadows.
“I bet t dare e in o Simon Parsloepped over to t lodge of Jordan.
“No,” ainly. “But I kno.”
“ of t c s his.
“Jessie Reynolds, out t t sting-up time yesterday, and s of fisea. S and everywhere.”
“I !” said Lyra, indignant. S a deplorable lapse on t of s not to tell once.
“ell, it erday. Sve turned up now.”
“Im going to ask,” said Lyra, and turo leave the lodge.
But s got out of te before ter called her.
“ to go out again ters orders.”
“?”
“I told you, Masters orders. ay in.”
“You catced out before the old man could leave his doorway.
Sreet and doo t. tting-up time, t a knot of youtood smoking and talking by tral gate opposite tone . Mi-year-old s furt and ed o notice her.
“Yea do you ?” he said finally.
“Is Jessie Reynolds disappeared?”
“Yeah. hy?”
“Cause a gyptian kid disappeared today and all.”
“tians. After every hey disappear.”
“So do horses,” said one of his friends.
“t,” said Lyra. “ternoon and t him.”
“t?”
“t you he Gobblers?”
It o t from a fes tened closely to hem.
“Gobblers,” said Lyras acquaintance, upid. tians, tupid ideas.”
“ted, “and taken. to Oxford noo get kids from us. It mustve been t got Jessie.”
“t over Coie, serday, cause s a van, and s it....Some little boy, ts it...I dunno about t real, Gobblers. Just a story.”
“tians see tch, and...”
Sopped in midsentence, because someto her mind.
During t strange evening s iring Room, Lord Asriel ern slide of a man reams of lig around it; and . Lyra remembered t severed meant “cut.”
And t : where was Roger?
S seen he m....
Suddenly s afraid. Pantalaimon, as a miniature lion, sprang into o te and ly bato turl Street, and t for Jordan lodge, tumbling in tah-shaped daemon.
ter imonious.
“I ter and tell pleased at all. I be in your s for money I .”
“heres Roger?” she demanded.
“I ent seen , too. Ooches him—”
Lyra ran to tc o t, gorous, steaming bustle.
“ed.
“Clear off, Lyra! ere busy here!”
“But ?”
No one seemed ied.
“But t away.
Berry cook tried to calm s be soled.
“t er catce em! You dont care aber—”
“Lyra, Roger—”
“You dont, else youd all stop work and go and look for now! I e you!”
“t turned up. Listen to sense. e got dio prepare and serve iers got guests in ting over t means Co attend to getting t dont go cold; and to go on. Im sure Roger11 turn up....”
Lyra turned and ran out of tcack of silver dis arose. Seps and across too t buildings of tood.
Pantalaimon scampered before airs to top, , and scrambled out. toter a foot beloanding in t, surned and clambered up over tiles until sood on topme of talaimon, wh her.
t, cream: tender little ice-cream clouds in a oood around t no eau-Vert a and t. Rooks of a gas engine annou of tc climb a. Mic first as tip of tle finger arms lengteadily smaller until it in the pearly sky.
Surned and looked doo to drift in ones and totery, trutting or fluttering alongside or percs ained-glass o glo moved up tables ligeo toll, announg half an hour before dinner.
ted it to stay t it ealing the re, in hands.
“e better rescue alaimon,” sll be dangerous,” .”
“Remember iring Room.” “?”
“Somet a cic. t attrag t.”
“t ire c about it?”
“t mig to do ter and tians and ther kids.”
“?”
“ell, ire mean?”
“Dunno. t em in of em.
td be more use. t mines up tomcraft. I bet ts is. And if t groead because t less. ts h him.”
“I think—”
But alaimon t o , because someone began to s from below.
“Lyra! Lyra! You e in tant!”
tience:
it here was no hiding from her.
tigo tter, and ter into ttle co t of a great groaning and he pipes.
“times you been told about going out t you! Just look at your skirt—its filtake it off at ond ent torn. keep yourself and tidy...”
Lyra oo sulky even to ask o olid retriever, trying in vain to annoy him.
“Look at tate of t this—”
Look at t t...Lyra didnt to look. S owel.
“Youll just o as it is. t time to take an iron to it.
God bless me, girl, your knees—look at tate of them....”
“Dont to look at nottered.
Mrs. Lonsdale smacked all t dirt off.”
“ last. “I never my knees. ve I got to do all t care aber —” An.
“None of t nonsense. Im a Parslo you didnt kno, cause I bet you never asked, Miss Lyra. I bet it never occurred to you. Dont you c g about the boy.
God kno you, and you give me little enoughanks.”
S t pink and sore, but .
“to er and s. I o God you beo, be quiet and polite, smile nicely and dont you ever say Dunno wion.”
S dress onto Lyras skinny frame, tugged it straig of red ribbon out of tangle in a drawer, and brush a coarse brush.
“If t me knooo bad. As long as t look too close...tand up straig pateher shoes?”
Five minutes later Lyra ers lodging, tly gloomy opened into to talaimon, an ermine noeness, rubbed ers manservant Cousins, an old enemy of Lyras; but bot tate of truce.
“Mrs. Lonsdale said I o e,” said Lyra.
“Yes,” said Cousins, stepping aside. “ters in the drawing room.”
o t overlooked t of to it, to up tures and ter collected.
It also lit up ts, and Lyra realized o dine in s were women.
“Aer. “Im so glad you could e. Cousins, could you find some sort of soft drink? Dame t Lyra...Lord Asriels niece, you know.”
Dame . Lyra sely as sroduced to ts, eresting. ter came to t.
“Mrs. Coulter,” o Mrs.
Coulter.”
“er.
Siful and young. her sleek black hair framed her cheeks, and her daemon was a golden monkey.
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