I felt like I was coming back to life. The pain in my chest was receding. I tried to move my arms—an experiment—and found that I could. I slid them up my body and over my chest, expecting to find a couple of holes and a lot of blood. But I was dry. Instead of holes, my hands found a piece of metal flattened like a coin. I closed my hands around it, picked it up to look.
It was a bullet. It had not pierced my body. I was not dying. The bullet had embedded itself in my scarf.
The scarf Horace had knit for me.
He had known, somehow, that this would happen and had made me this scarf from the wool of peculiar sheep. Thank God for Horace …
I saw something flash across the room and lifted my head—I could just do it—to see Bentham standing with his eyes ablaze, cones of hot white light beaming from his sockets. He dropped something and I heard a tinkle of glass.
He’d taken a vial of ambro.
I used all my strength to turn onto my side, then curled and began to sit up. Bentham hurried along the walls, looking up at the jars. He was studying each one carefully.
As if he could see them.
And then I realized what he’d done, what he’d taken. He’d been saving my grandfather’s stolen soul all these years, and now he’d consumed it.
He could see the jars. He could do what I did.
I was on my knees. Palms to the ground. Pulled one foot under me, then pushed myself up to standing. I was back, risen from the dead.
By then Caul had wriggled into the corridor and was halfway down it. I could hear my friends’ voices echoing from the other end. They hadn’t escaped yet. Perhaps they refused to leave Miss Peregrine behind (or me, possibly). They were still fighting.
Bentham was running now, as best he could. He’d spied the other large urn and was heading right for it. I took a few limping steps toward him. He reached the urn and tipped it over. Its blue liquid hissed into the channel and began circulating toward the spirit pool.
He turned and saw me.
He limped for the pool and I limped for him. The urn’s liquid reached the pool. Its water began to rage and a column of blinding light shot up toward the ceiling.
“WHO IS TAKING MY SOULS!” Caul bellowed from the corridor. He began to worm his way back into the chamber.
I tackled Bentham—or fell on him, whichever you prefer. I was weak and dizzy, and he was old and brittle, and we were just about a match for each other. We struggled briefly, and when it was clear I had him pinned, he gave up.
“Listen to me,” he said. “I’ve got to do this. I’m the only hope you have.”
“Shut up!” I said, grabbing at his hands, which were still flailing. “I won’t listen to your lies.”
“He’ll kill us all if you don’t let me go!”
“Are you insane? If I let you go, you’ll just help him!” I grabbed his wrists, finally. He’d been trying to get something from his pocket.
“No, I won’t!” he cried. “I’ve made so many mistakes … but I can put them right if you let me help you.”
“Help me?”
“Look in my pocket!”
Caul was backing slowly out of corridor, roaring about his souls.
“My vest pocket!” Bentham shouted. “There’s a paper in it. One I carry with me always, just in case.”
I let go of one of his hands and reached into his pocket. I found a small piece of folded paper, which I tore open.
“What is this?” I said. It was written in Old Peculiar; I couldn’t read it.
“It’s a recipe. Show it to the ymrbynes. They’ll know what to do.”
A hand reached over my shoulder and snatched the paper from me. I spun around to see Miss Peregrine, battered but human.
She read the paper. Her eyes flashed at Bentham. “You’re certain this will work?”
“It worked once,” he said. “I don’t see why it shouldn’t again. And with even more ymbrynes …”
“Let him go,” she said to me.
I was shocked. “What? But he’s going to—”
She put a hand on my shoulder. “I know.”
“He stole my grandfather’s soul! He’s taken it … it’s in him, right now!”
“I know, Jacob.” She looked down at me, her face kind but firm. “That’s all true and worse. And it was a good thing you caught him. But now you must let him go.”
So I released his hand. Stood up, with help from Miss Peregrine. And then Bentham stood, too, a sad, bent-backed old man with the starry black drippings of my grandfather’s soul running down his cheeks. For a moment I thought I could see a flash of Abe in his eyes—a little of his spirit there, sparking back at me.
Bentham turned and ran for the column of light and the spirit pool. The vapor was gathering into the shape of a giant almost as large as Caul, but with wings. If Bentham reached the pool in time, Caul would have a worthy challenger.
Caul was nearly out of the corridor now, and he was raging mad. “WHAT HAVE YOU DONE!” he cried. “I’LL KILL YOU!”
Miss Peregrine pushed me flat to the ground and lay beside me. “There’s no time to hide,” she said. “Play dead.”
Bentham stumbled into the pool, and immediately the vapor began funneling into him. Caul had finally wriggled out of the corridor and lurched heavily to his feet, then ran toward Bentham. We were nearly crushed as one of his enormous feet crashed down not far from our heads, but Caul arrived at the pool too late to stop Bentham from merging with whatever old, great soul had been in that urn. Miss Peregrine’s younger, weaker brother was already rocketing up to twice his original height.