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I

It took me a week to figure out how to do the lights. During that week, Gwen continued to bring me breakfast every morning, though not quite so early. I had told her that, in spite of my friendship for the chaplain (or maybe, I thought, in order to preserve that friendship), I would not be attending chapel every morning. Once or twice she brought me crullers, but usually it was cake donuts.

Although she was perfectly cordial, I got no more winks or saucy looks. I wondered if she had been warned against me, and if so by who. The constable, who oversaw the castle staff, seemed the most likely person, except that I couldn’t picture him doing it. I preferred to think that she had found out that wizards are not supposed to marry and was trying to rein in her affections before she developed a broken heart.

My initial problem with the lights for the stairs was finding something suitable to which to attach the magic. The headroom was so limited that I decided to use a flat surface rather than the more normal globes. My first thought was to do something with glass.

The constable introduced me to the young man who blew glass for the castle. I recognized him as one of the trumpeters who played at dinner. Once he had his livery off and his leather smock on, however, I would never have known him.

When he had his fire burning so hot that his glass was liquid and I had to stand back at the far side of the room, he dipped a long tube into the molten glass and began to blow. I was fascinated; I had never seen glass being made before.

He blew a large, thin bubble, brilliantly red, then laid it down and rolled it flat before it could cool. He stepped back, wiped his forehead with the back of his arm, and waited for comments from me.

It was exactly what I had asked for, an oval piece of glass a little thicker than a window pane. But I had had an awful thought. I had knocked my head on the ceiling going up the stairs to the chapel, and I was not the tallest person in the castle. I didn’t want my magic lights shattered into shards of glowing glass the first time Dominic raised his head too quickly.

“I’d like to try something a little different,” I said. “Maybe this time could you make something hollow, like a flat-bottomed bottle that tapers toward the top-” I waved my hands in the air, sketching the shape. I was describing the base of a telephone.

“These are going to be strange looking lights,” he said with a grin when he had blown it. “How many do you want?”

“Just one more, I think,” I said, looking at my telephone; it was still glowing hot. “And then I’ll want some more parts in different shapes.” For the next hour, he blew different shapes to my specification. The mouth piece was the trickiest part. At the end, I had a glass oval and two very lovely though very unusual glass telephone instruments.

“These actually aren’t all going to be lights,” I told the young man. “Have you ever seen a telephone?”

“Those are telephones?” he said with interest. “And I made them? Can I make a call and tell my mother?”

“Does she have a telephone?” I said quickly, hoping that she didn’t and wanting to forestall explaining that these were far from operational.

“No,” he said and frowned. “I hadn’t thought of that. You need two of them, don’t you, one for each person. I expect that’s why you made two. She lives in the next kingdom, about fifty miles from here; maybe I’ll send her a message by the pigeons.”

“You do wonderful glass blowing,” I said. “And I also very much like your playing at dinner.” I hurried back to my room with my prizes.

The telephones I set carefully on a high shelf, but I sat down with the oval of glass to try to make it glow. This piece, I thought, I could use for just inside the door from the great hall, where the ceiling was still high. Once I had been able to attach magic light permanently to it, I would talk to the armorer about getting some pieces of steel made in the same shape, for further up the stairs.

At first I was no more able to make my piece of glass shine permanently than I had been able to do with my belt buckle. I had been spending much of the day with my books of spells when, in the middle of the week, Joachim, the chaplain, invited me to his room after dinner.

I think I was the only person who called him Joachim. I had in fact known him for some time before even learning he had a name. Almost everyone else in Yurt called him Father, which I resisted doing, both because he wasn’t my father and because I was afraid that to do so would let down the dignity of wizardry. He didn’t seem to mind.

As I sipped the wine he poured me, I looked around his room. It was lit with candles, no magic globes here. He had only the one room, rather than the two I had, and his bed looked hard. The walls were unadorned, except for the crucifix over the bed, and all the books on his shelf seemed well-thumbed.

“Have you started feeling comfortable with your duties yet?” he asked, setting down the bottle and sitting on another hard chair opposite mine. The air from the window made the candle flames dance and his shadow move grotesquely behind him.

“I keep on hoping I’ll find out what my duties are,” I said. I was wondering if I could trust him with my climb up the north tower and the sense of evil I had first felt there. “They hired me as Royal Wizard, and they’ve given me some tasks, but these aren’t going to keep me busy forever-or I hope not. Do you know exactly what your duties are?”

“A chaplain’s are a little clearer. I perform the service in the chapel every day, or oftener if needed, I encourage the sick, give solace to the dying, write treatises if treatises need writing, and am here whenever I’m wanted. But maybe a Royal Wizard’s duties are not much different; I would think your principal responsibility is to be at hand whenever magic is needed.”

“Is that what our predecessors did, perform useful tasks if called upon and spend the rest of the time waiting to be needed?” I had a vision of spending the next two hundred years of my life trying to make glass glow, and I didn’t like the picture.

“I think that’s what your predecessor did, at least part of the time, though he spent much of his time alone up in his tower. He sometimes wouldn’t emerge for days. He always said he was trying to gain new knowledge. Certainly his illusions at supper were livelier when he’d been gone for a few days. As for my predecessor, I don’t know; he was dead when I came.”

“He was dead? I hadn’t realized that.”

“He’s buried in the cemetery out beyond the gate. I think he was very old. But as I told you before, there had clearly been some sort of disagreement between him and the old wizard, and though it colored the wizard’s attitude toward me, I never found out what it was.”

I slowly drained my glass, giving myself time to think. I had a vague recollection of hearing that young priests were rarely sent out to their first positions alone. Usually they went where older priests could guide them for a few years before retiring themselves. Everyone knows that we wizards fight with each other all the time, which is why a new Royal Wizard only takes up his post when the old one is well out of the way, but priests are supposed to show each other Christian charity and support.

The shadows from the candle made my companion’s eye sockets enormous and so dark that his eyes were invisible. I shivered involuntarily, not liking what I was thinking. Four years ago, the king had married, and, according to Dominic, had still been strong and vigorous. Three years ago, probably after their old chaplain had died unexpectedly, the kingdom had had to send for a new one. Not long afterwards, the king began to grow weaker.

It was a small kingdom. When they wanted a wizard, the best they could do was me. When they wanted a chaplain, they got a young man, who perhaps had a dark stain they had already suspected at the seminary, and who took up his duties without all the fatherly guidance and assistance that was normally considered necessary. I liked to give the impression that wizards were familiar with the powers of darkness; priests had to deal with them every day.