“No. I was able to adjust the latching point. That, at least, is not a concern.”
“Hurrah for small miracles,” said Meralda. She sighed, glared at her empty coffee cup, and looked wearily toward the door.
“Mug, please watch the glass. Tower, I need a way to speak to you beyond this room. I assume there are other artifacts you have trifled with, over the years?”
“Fourteen, to be exact. All designed for observation, but two will suffice for communication. Tulip’s Talking Jewel, and Montrop’s Singing Flame.”
“You’re a nosy old barn, aren’t you?” said Mug.
“The jewel, then. It should fit in my pocket. Aisle four, isn’t it? Shelf, um, sixteen?”
“Just so.”
Meralda marched off to fetch the jewel, and Mug turned his worried eyes back toward the glass.
“The sticks just sent word about Nam,” said Mug, his voice squeaky and barely audible from the Jewel. “He’s using some kind of fancy concealment spell. Tower thinks it might be Hang. The sticks think they can break it, but he’ll probably notice if they do.”
Meralda frowned and lifted the jewel close to her lips, covering it with her hand and pretending to stifle a sneeze.
“Tell them to wait,” she said. “Tell them to stay close to the Vonat rooms. See if they can get a count of the people inside. But only if they can do so without being seen.”
Meralda could hear Mug relaying the instructions to the Tower.
Her open topped cab pitched and bounced. Her cabman glanced back over his shoulder and smiled at her before quickly turning his attention back toward the busy street.
“Done,” said Mug. “Donchen is gone, by the way. Heading back to the palace, on foot. If he shows up here, what do I tell the Bellringers to tell him?”
“Ask him to meet me for a late supper,” said Meralda. “In the lab.”
“Ooooo,” replied Mug. “Shall I order flowers and violins?”
Meralda rolled her eyes and shoved the jewel deep into her pocket.
My feet ache, she thought. She’d used Finch’s Door again to sneak out of the laboratory, hailing the first cab she saw after stepping onto Hopping Way. If the Vonats could sense the door opening, she knew she was undone. But old Finch’s handiwork was nothing if not subtle. Even the Tower had marveled at its silence, in strictly magical terms.
And if the Vonats are watching me, it’s best they see the Bellringers by my doors and think I’m still inside. Especially given where I’m heading, and what I’m about to do, she thought.
What I’m about to do. Is this the right thing? Am I saving Tirlin, or dooming it?
I wonder if Tim the Horsehead ever wondered that very thing.
Probably, Meralda decided. After all, Tim’s exploits were rather more desperate than mine.He was lucky, more often than not.
I wonder if someday, some mage will say the same about me.
“We’re here, ma’am,” said the cabman, urging his ponies to a halt.
Meralda stepped out of the cab, placed a handful of coins into the man’s palm, and hurried up the steps and into the shade of Fromarch’s red brick house.
Fromarch himself met her at his door. “Took you long enough.” He shoved a bottle of Nolbit’s in her hand. “We’re all here, Mage. I reckon you’ve got things to tell us.”
Meralda took a long draught of the beer. “That I do, she said. “And you’d best lock the door.”
“So the Tower is haunted after all,” said Shingvere.
In the middle of the room, a single candle burned. Fromarch’s tiny sitting room was midnight dark, and with all the windows shuttered and bolted the air was hot and stale. Meralda could barely make out the three wizards who faced her, and could read nothing in their faces.
Beside the candle sat a crude contrivance of wood and glass, which hummed and buzzed and sometimes spat tiny showers of bright blue sparks. Fromarch insisted it would render any attempt at arcane eavesdropping futile, and Meralda fervently hoped the elderly wizard was correct.
“She never said it was haunted, you daft old Eryan,” muttered Fromarch. “She said it was alive. Bit of a difference.”
“Gentlemen!” Meralda took a breath. “Please. Tirlin is in danger. It’s up to us to save it.”
“I was right about the Tower all along, but I see your point, Mage Ovis.” Shingvere leaned forward, his face grim and unsmiling in the wash of flickering candle light. “So how do you intend to fight?”
Loman, the Hang wizard, raised his finger and smiled.
“Before you answer, young mage, it would perhaps be wise to dismiss me. I will take no offense. You do not know me. You are under no obligation to trust me.”
“Shingvere. Fromarch. Do you trust this gentleman?”
“Aye.”
“Without reservation.”
“Then so do I. Please, sir, remain. This concerns you as well, since your people are being targeted.”
Loman bowed his head briefly. “As you wish. Know that I am honored.”
Meralda smiled, and the old man grinned back.
“I plan to allow the Vonats to believe they have latched a killing spell to the Tower,” she said. “I plan to keep them believing that, right up until the hour Yvin takes the stage. Tower is studying the spell now. With any luck, I can render it harmless without alerting anyone that I’ve done so.”
Fromarch nodded. “And the curseworks?”
“They will have to be stabilized or removed.”
“Bit of a tall order, that.”
“That’s why she’s Mage of Tirlin,” said Shingvere. “Still, that’s a lot for any one person to do, Meralda. Especially with who knows how many Vonats running around doing who knows what kind of mischief in the meantime.”
“That’s where you gentlemen can help. I need the Vonats, and any Hang helping them, kept busy for the next seven days. The Vonats want trouble at the Accords? Well, gentlemen, I say we give them trouble. Just not the kind they planned.”
“What kind then?”
Meralda grinned. “Magical trouble. I don’t care what kind. Just keep their mages busy chasing will-o-the-wisps. Make them think their Hang partners are spying on them. Make them think I am. Make them waste time. Make them waste effort.” Meralda stood and smoothed her skirts. “The contents of the laboratory are at your disposal. I won’t watch and I won’t ask. Just don’t burn down any historic landmarks. Can I trust you gentlemen? To make trouble?”
Fromarch slapped his knee and guffawed. “Oh, that you can, Mage. That you can, indeed.”
“Anything for old Tirlin,” said Shingvere, his eyes glinting in the candlelight. “Especially that.”
Loman just smiled and sipped at his beer.
Meralda risked Hopping Way again and stepped through Finch’s Door to return to the laboratory.
Mug greeted her with a mock salute. “All quiet,” he reported. “Tower, any word from the sticks about Nam?”
“None.”
“Are there any signs I was observed using the door?”
“Again, none. I believe the door’s operation is unknown to anyone save us.”
“I hope so.” Meralda made for the doors and opened them just enough to speak through them. “I’d like some coffee and something to eat,” she said.
“Yes, ma’am,” chorused the Bellringers. Kervis frowned and tilted his head. “Ma’am, are you all right?”
“I’m fine, Guardsman,” she said. “Just a bit hungry.”
“Tervis spoke from beyond the door. “I smelled fried chicken earlier. Will that do?”
“Indeed it will. Thank you.” Meralda closed the door.
“Mistress,” called Mug. “Have a look.”
Goboy’s glass showed a door. A pair of black crows regarded the door with curious stares for a moment before taking flight. The glass did not follow.
“Nameless and Faceless.” Meralda sat. The door opened, and a man stepped out into the sun.
“So this must be Humindorus Nam.”
Meralda saw a tall man, dressed all in black, from the soles of his knee-high leather boots to the cowl of the robe that hid his eyes. He took a single step out into the sun, and then he produced a pair of dark lensed spectacles from a pocket and slipped them over his long beak of a nose.