and she didnât have fur.
âNo, she didnât!â Freddie had himself more under control by now, and he was no longer shouting. He spoke quietly, but his voice was frozen with fury. It made Rose shiver.
âOf course she did!â Gustavus actually stopped washing for long enough to glare at him this time.
âAll she did was walk in and distract it,â Freddie insisted. âWe saved ourselves. And donât talk in front of her; sheâs a servant!â
âA servant who can hear me,â the cat pointed out. âAll the rest of them would think they heard a cat mewing. Which just goes to show, doesnât it?â He rubbed his paw over his ear roughly, muttering disgustedly to himself.
Freddie looked around the room desperately while he tried to think what to say. âSo she can understand cat,â he said at last. âThat doesnât mean anythingâ¦â
Rose wished they would stop talking as though she wasnât there, but she didnât dare say anything. Freddie was Mr. Fountainâs apprentice, and Gustavus was his spoiled pet. If they complained of her, she might be sent back to the orphanage.
âShe just interrupted that creature when it was weak from binding us, thatâs all,â Freddie said more confidently. âIt was nothing to do with her, really.â
Rose watched Gustavus give Freddie a considering look, then the cat turned his particolored eyes on her. âWhere did you learn to hear cats talk, girl?â
Rose shook her head. âI donât know. I never knew they could. The cat at the orphanage never said anything, not that I heard. You just talked to me about the cream that first morning I saw you. Last week.â
The cat sniffed. âWho knows? You wouldnât expect a servant child to have magicââ
âMagic!â Freddie interrupted scornfully. âOf course she doesnât have magic. Little guttersnipe. Like I said, it was luck. Coincidence. And maybe she stole something from in here that made her understand you. Yes, I bet thatâs it! What did you take, girl?â He rounded on her, working himself into a rage to beat down his fear.
Rose stood her ground. âI never stole anything, and you know it!â She was past the point of not wanting to get on his bad side by now. It was too late, and she hated him too much to hold back anyway. âAnd if you say I didââRose leaned forward and jabbed a finger in his chestââIâll tell your master what I just saw, because Iâll bet my yearâs wages you werenât supposed to be messing with that mist thing.â
Freddie gaped at her. He clearly had no experience of servants talking back. They usually just moaned about him once heâd gone. âYou wouldnât dare,â he hissed, but with an edge of doubt.
Rose raised an eyebrow at him, and the cat sniggered. âSheâs got you there, Freddie.â
âYou helped,â Freddie retorted. âAnd Fountain will know that; he knows I couldnât do that spell on my own. I could hardly even see the thing this morning.â
âYou brought it here?â Rose asked disgustedly. âWhat on earth were you thinking?â
âWe were experimenting,â Freddie told her in a lordly way. âTesting our power, as is natural for those who hold the secrets of the mages. Which you would know if you had any magic at all,â he added, suddenly sounding much less grown up. âI donât know how you can talk to Gustavus, but apart from that, youâre the least magical person Iâve ever met.â
âReally? Are you sure?â Rose asked hopefully. She wanted to believe him so much. She wanted to be safe downstairs in the warm kitchen, away from buzzing things, with everyone else who thought those magicians were more trouble than they were worth. She did not want to be one of the troublemakers.
âIt was coincidence,
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