“I could ask you the same thing, Apprentice boy,” said Lucy.
“Um, well, I just felt like going for a walk,” Septimus replied lamely.
“Weird walk,” muttered Lucy. “Could think of better places to go. Well, get a move on, get on with your walk—or are you stopping here for the night? I hope not because you're blocking my way and I've got things to do.”
With no alternative, Septimus carried on with his slow shuffle along the Outside Path. Lucy's impatient breath sounded behind him. “Can't you speed up a bit? We'll take all night at this rate.”
“I'm going as fast as I can. Anyway, what are you in such a hurry for? And where are you going? Aargh!” Septimus's foot slipped but Lucy grabbed him and set him going again like a clockwork toy.
“None of your business. None of anyone's business,” Lucy replied. “The Path gets wider now, so you can go a bit faster, can't you?”
To Septimus's relief, his boots found a firmer hold as the Outside Path did indeed widen. “You've done this before, haven't you?” he asked.
“Might have,” said Lucy. “Can't you go any faster?”
“No, I can't. So why are you on the Outside Path ... it's because you don't want Gringe—I mean, your father—to know where you're going, isn't it?” asked Septimus, a suspicion forming.
“It's none of his business what I do or where I go,” said Lucy huffily. “Oh, just hurry up, will you?”
“Why?” asked Septimus, deliberately slowing down. “ Why don't you want Gringe to know where you're going?”
“Gosh, you're irritating. I can see why Simon says you're an awful little— ” Lucy halted in mid-sentence, but too late.
Septimus stopped dead and Lucy walked into him with a bump. “You're going to see Simon, aren't you?” he said.
“What are you doing? Stupid boy. You nearly had us both in the Moat.”
“You are going to see Simon, aren't you?” Septimus repeated. “That's why you've come this way. So that no one sees you go. You know where he is, don't you?”
“No,” said Lucy sullenly. “Now get going, will you?”
“I'm not going anywhere until you tell me where Simon is,” said Septimus, stubbornly holding his ground.
“Well, we'll be here all night then,” said Lucy, equally stubbornly.
Lucy and Septimus stood with their backs to the huge Castle wall, which reared up into the night. Neither was willing to back down. The standoff had lasted for some minutes when they both heard a low scuffling sound some ways behind them. This was followed by the sound of a stone being dislodged and falling with a quiet plop into the water.
“Look, Septimus,” Lucy said in a hoarse whisper, “it's not safe out here. Things use the Path—I've seen them. Let's just get to Snake Slipway. We can talk then, okay?”
Septimus needed little persuading. “Okay,” he agreed.
Ten minutes later, Septimus and Lucy had negotiated a particularly treacherous part of the Path below the East Gate Lookout Tower and were nearing Snake Slipway when Septimus stopped unexpectedly. Lucy crushed the backs of his heels with her heavy boots. “Ouch!” Septimus said under his breath.
“Oh, do stop dithering about,” Lucy hissed, exasperated.
“But I thought I saw a light. On the Slipway,” Septimus whispered.
“Good,” Lucy hissed back. “At least we'll be able to see where we're going.”
Septimus set off again, only to hear a quiet splash a few seconds later and see the light disappear. He nearly stopped again but thought better of it. “Did you hear a splash?” he whispered.
“No. But there'll be an irritating-boy-size splash in a minute if you don't stop twittering on, Septimus Heap.” Lucy gave Septimus a sharp poke in the back. “Now hurry up.”
Thinking how lucky he was not to have a sister like Lucy, Septimus hurried on.
Soon Septimus and Lucy were clambering down the narrow flight of stone steps that led to Snake Slipway. As they stepped onto it, the muffled sound of the Courthouse clock striking one o'clock reached them through the still night air. Septimus looked around, but it was as he expected—there was no sign of Marcellus Pye.
Septimus yawned, and suddenly he felt very tired. Lucy caught his yawn and shivered in the chill. She took a large key from one of her many pockets and drew her cloak around her. Septimus thought that he had seen the cloak somewhere before, but he could not remember where. It was, he thought, a surprisingly nice cloak for Lucy to have. The Gringes were not a well-off family and Lucy usually made her own clothes and stomped around in a stout pair of brown boots that looked a size too big for her—even her long brown plaits were always tied up with a scruffy assortment of homemade ribbons and bits of string. But her dark blue cloak hung gracefully from her shoulders and had an air of luxury about it.
Lucy was, however, still wearing her big brown boots. She clomped over to a wide door, which Septimus knew went into the boat shed where Lucy's brother, Rupert, kept the paddle-boats that he rented out in the summer. With a practiced air, Lucy turned the key in the lock, pushed the door open and disappeared. Septimus ran after her.
It was dark in the boat shed. Septimus put on his Dragon Ring and soon the shed was filled with a dull yellow glow. He could see Lucy in the shadows, struggling to put a paddleboat onto a small trolley.
“Go away,” hissed Lucy when she realized that Septimus had followed her in.
You're going to see Simon, aren't you?" asked Septimus.
“Mind your own business,” Lucy replied, trying to heave the surprisingly heavy paddleboat onto the trolley. Septimus took the other end of the boat and together they managed to lift it. “Thanks,” puffed Lucy as Septimus took hold of the trolley handle and helped her pull the boat out of the boat shed.
Together they trundled the paddleboat, painted a garish pink, down the Slipway to the lapping waters of the Moat, unaware that a ghostly figure with a pointy nose and a disapproving expression was standing in the shadows watching their efforts. As Septimus pushed the trolley into the water and allowed the paddleboat to float free, Queen Etheldredda's ghostly foot tapped the ground soundlessly in exasperation.
Septimus gave Lucy the boat's rope to hold, then he pulled the trolley up the Slipway and trundled it back into the boat-house. As he passed by the ghost, she glared at him and hissed under her breath, “Punctuality is a virtue; lateness is a vice, boy,” but Septimus heard nothing above the squeak of the trolley's wheels.