Trev and Juliet looked at one another. 'We don't know. He wasn't there,' said Trev.
'We kind of thought 'e might be with you,' said Juliet, handing her a cup of what you get when you ask for a cup of tea from someone who tends to confuse the recipe even at the best of times.
'He wasn't in the Great Hall?' said Glenda.
'No, 'e wasn't there - Wait one moment.' Trev ran down the steps and after a few seconds they heard his footsteps coming back. 'His toolbox 'as gone,' said Trev. 'I mean, it wasn't much. He made it outta bits he found in the cellars, but as far as I know it's all 'e owned.'
I knew it, thought Glenda. Of course I knew it. 'Where could he be? He's got nowhere else to go but here,' she said.
'Well, there is that place up in Uberwald he talks about quite a lot,' said Trev.
'That's getting on for about a thousand miles away,' said Glenda.
'Well, I suppose he thinks he might as well be there as here,' said Juliet innocently. 'I mean, Orc, I'd want to run away from a name like that if I was me.'
'Look, I'm sure he's just wandered off somewhere in the building,' Glenda said, believing absolutely that he hadn't. But if I believe he's going to be around the next corner or has just nipped off to... powder his nose, or has just wandered away for half an hour¨Cwhich, of course, is his right; perhaps he needs to go and buy a pair of socks?¨Cif I keep believing he'll turn up any minute, he might, even though I know he won't.
She put down the cup. 'Half an hour,' she said. 'Juliet, you go and check around the Great Hall. Trev, you go down the tunnels that way. I'll go down the tunnels this way. If you find anyone you can trust, ask 'em.'
A little more than half an hour later, Glenda was the last to turn up back in the Night Kitchen. She very nearly half expected that he would be there and knew that he wouldn't. 'Would he know about getting on a coach?' she said.
'I doubt 'e's ever seen one,' said Trev. 'You know what I would do if I was 'im? I'd just run. It was like when Dad died, I spent all night walkin' around the city. I wasn't bothered where I went. Just went. Wanted to run away from bein' me.'
'How fast can an orc run?' said Glenda.
'Much faster than a man, I bet,' said Trev. 'An' for a long time, too.'
'Listen.' This was Juliet. 'Can't you 'ear it?'
'Hear what?' said Glenda.
'Nothing,' said Juliet.
'Well?'
'What happened to Awk! Awk!?'
'I think we'll find them where we find him,' said Trev.
'Well, he can't run all the way back to Uberwald,' said Glenda. 'You couldn't.'
At last Glenda said it: 'I think we should go after him.'
'I'll come,' said Trev.
'Then I'm goin' to come, too,' insisted Juliet. 'Besides, I've still got the money and you're goin' to need it.'
'Your money's in the bank,' said Glenda, 'and the bank is shut. But I think I've got a few dollars in my purse.'
'Then, excuse me,' said Trev, 'I won't be a moment. I think there's somethin' we ought to take... '
The driver of the horse bus to Sto Lat looked down and said, 'Two dollars fifty pence each.'
'But you only go to Sto Lat,' said Glenda.
'Yes,' said the man calmly. 'That's why it says Sto Lat on the front.'
'We might 'ave to go a lot further,' said Trev.