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The moment I realised this, I knew we had run out of time. So we ambushed him.”

      “How?” asked Valkyrie.

      “When Walden was a child, his mother was murdered right in front of him. Her killer, a man who was never caught, turned to Walden and spoke to him. He said three words to a traumatised little boy, and ran. We found out what those three words were, and we used them against him. He froze, and we struck. We didn’t use violence. We just trapped him, sent him to sleep. He hasn’t woken up since.”

      “How did you send him to sleep?”

      “We targeted his brainwaves. Took them over, regulated them... He was asleep within moments.”

      “Could we use that against Darquesse?”

      “I don’t know. Argeddion underestimated us. Maybe it was his new power, making our attempts against him look harmless. Whatever the reason, he didn’t view us as a threat, and so he was already calm when we struck. Darquesse, from what I’ve heard, is not going to be calm. If you tried this against her, she’d fight it and win easily.”

      “But if we managed it,” Skulduggery pressed, “could she be contained in here?”

      “Here? No. This entire facility is equipped for only one patient. But if you were to build an exact replica of this place, I don’t see why not. She would need constant monitoring and supervision, however.”

      “If she was trapped in somewhere like this,” Valkyrie said, “that’d be it, though, wouldn’t it? There’d be no chance of talking to her, of getting her to control herself or anything like that?”

      “That would be impossible. The only reason Argeddion hasn’t escaped is because he’s been kept in an artificially induced coma. We can’t allow him to wake up – ever. With Darquesse, it would be even more important to keep her sedated. If you give someone like that a moment of consciousness, she’d kill you and everyone else.”

      “Well,” Valkyrie said, frowning, “that sucks.”

      Lament looked surprised. “You’d prefer the alternative?”

      “No,” she said quickly. “No, I was just thinking, from her perspective that sucks, not from our… Never mind. Could we have a copy of the plans?”

      “I don’t see why not,” said Lament. “But do you have enough people to monitor her? Do you have anyone who’d be willing to give up the rest of their life to spend with her?”

      “I would,” Skulduggery said.

      Valkyrie looked away.

      A girl rushed in. Petite, blonde hair, huge eyes, somewhere in her twenties. “People,” she gasped. “But…”

      Lament smiled. “It’s OK. They’re not our enemies. Lenka Bazaar, this is Skulduggery Pleasant and Valkyrie Cain.”

      Valkyrie stood to shake her hand and Lenka jumped on her, wrapping her up in the biggest bear hug Lenka’s little arms could manage. “People!” she screamed. “There are people here! New people!”

      Valkyrie couldn’t help but laugh, and finally Lenka released her.

      “Hi. I’m Lenka. Will you be my friend?”

      “Uh,” said Valkyrie, “sure.”

      “Tyren,” Lenka said immediately, “I only have room for a certain number of friends in my life, so you’re not my friend any more. I’m really sorry.”

      “I’m sure I’ll survive.”

      Lenka grinned at Valkyrie. “I don’t want to alarm you,” she said, “but there’s a skeleton in a hat standing behind you.”

      “Don’t worry, he’s supposed to be there,” Valkyrie said with a smile.

      “Very pleased to meet you,” Skulduggery said, shaking her hand.

      “Lenka is the youngest of us,” said Lament, “a Sensitive and a gifted engineer in her own right.”

      “I never thought I’d ever meet someone new,” Lenka said, her eyes still wide. “I thought that the three people I’m down here with were the only people I’d ever know for the rest of my life. And now look. Two more people! And one of them’s the coolest person I’ve ever seen!”

      “Thank you,” said Skulduggery.

      “I was talking about her,” Lenka said, and Valkyrie laughed.

      “Have you seen the Arboretum? Tyren, have you shown them the Arboretum?

      “They’ve only just arrived—”

      “Then it’s high time they saw the Arboretum!” Lenka announced, seizing Valkyrie’s hand. “Come! The tour!”

      Valkyrie cast a look back as Lament turned to Skulduggery. “Do you want me to hold your hand?”

      “I’d rather you didn’t.”

      “Perfectly understandable,” Lament said, and they followed Lenka and Valkyrie out of the door.

      They met Vernon Plight on the way. He was a narrow, dark-skinned man with a warm smile. Valkyrie had read his file. He was almost 300 years old and an Adept, with a reputation as a fierce soldier. He knew Skulduggery and they exchanged a few friendly words before Lenka dragged them on.

      “This is a momentous occasion,” said Lament. “When do we ever get the chance to show someone the Arboretum for the first time? Skulduggery, Valkyrie, welcome.”

      They stepped through a wide doorway into a vast cavern, and in this cavern a rainforest sat. The heat, the humidity, the sounds of streams and waterfalls and birds and insects met them and enveloped them.

      “Oh my God,” Valkyrie said.

      Even Skulduggery was impressed. “This is remarkable.”

      Lament smiled. “This is our very own biosphere, maintained by Lenka and Kalvin. There are adjoining caverns, each with a different kind of environment, but this is definitely the biggest. We’ve had to forgo a few luxuries, but we grow our own food here. Whatever we need. Whatever we want, really. We even have our own coffee beans. It’s actually quite good.”

      “Are those monkeys up there?” Valkyrie asked, craning her neck.

      Lament nodded. “We have animals, birds, insects... It’s a self-perpetuating ecosystem. It helps to make life interesting.”

      “I imagine boredom would be a major problem,” Skulduggery said.

      “It is, but we have access to the outside world thanks to Kalvin. When he isn’t helping me maintain the facility’s essential systems, he’s building relays and whatnot to view films and read the latest books... I don’t understand technology at all, to be honest, but Kalvin... Kalvin can access the world without leaving a trail that leads back here. He is invaluable.”

      “That must be difficult,” Skulduggery said, “to view the world but not be a part of it.”

      “That was the big debate we had when we first started,” Lament told them. “Do we cut ourselves off completely? I was in favour of total informational shutdown. I thought the alternative would be too hard to handle. But now I see the value in being open to it all. It reminds us of why we do what we do.”

      A butterfly landed on Skulduggery’s finger. “I have to say, you have my admiration,” he said. “What you’re doing is astonishingly good and decent. I tend to forget there are people like you out there.” The butterfly flew away again.

      Lament smiled. “We’re not saints, Skulduggery. We argue and squabble like the most ill-tempered family you’ve ever seen. But that’s what we’ve become. A family.”

      “It’s a shame no one knows what you’re doing,” said Valkyrie.

      “They can’t know.” Urgency

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