He chirped and said, “You take all the fun out of life, Quinn Larson.”
Someone took my hand and placed a warm mug in it.
“So, you heard what happened,” Clarence said.
“I hear you let someone blind my favorite wizard.”
Lionel’s voice came from across the room. “I don’t think anyone let it happen, Olan.”
The impending argument was already giving me a headache. “Forget who is responsible. We need to figure out how to fix this. I have what we went there for. We’ll have the other ingredient soon.”
“Okay,” I heard the sigh in Olan’s voice. He really liked a good argument. “Tell me what happened, exactly.”
“I cast a spell to release the brick. The lights dimmed and I thought the wisps were leaving. I reached in and grabbed the amulet and by the time I put the brick back, it was dark.”
“When Quinn touched my shoulder, I didn’t think anything of it. We followed the wisps to the top of the stairs; they went through and came back with the all clear signal. That’s when Quinn mentioned it was dark.”
Olan hopped onto my shoulder. “The lights dimmed right after you cast the spell?”
“That’s when I noticed it.”
“Do you think that’s important?” Lionel asked. I felt sorry for the kid. He was being ignored by the adults in the room. What everyone forgot about apprentices is they had power and they knew some things very well.
Olan fluttered his wings in my face. “I don’t know, but it is information. I’m going to have to search for a cure. This might take a while. Unless someone gives us the components of the spell that took your sight, we might not be able to cure it.”
“Thanks for the lesson in magic, Olan.” I was losing my last bit of patience.
“Sorry, I am thinking out loud.” I felt his feathers brush my cheek as he flapped off my shoulder. “You will have to teach Lionel how to cleanse the amulet. We can’t afford to bring anyone else into this.”
“We’ll both learn it.” I didn’t have a lot of confidence that Lionel would be able to accomplish the task, but he had a better chance than me. If I had learned the spell before it would be different. “If push comes to shove, we’ll hide it so at least we’ll have control of it.”
“Not good enough,” Olan cawed. “I am going to find out what is happening out there.”
“Do you have the spell with you?” I asked in the general direction of Lionel’s voice.
“Yes, I wrote it out.” His voice came from the kitchen. “Let me show you, um I mean, let me read it to you.”
“Okay, but don’t just read it out; we don’t want to accidentally cast it.” I patted the couch next to me. “Sit here and start by reading the ingredients.”
I heard his heavy footfalls cross the room and then felt a breeze. “Oh, hi guys.” Lionel said then I heard him gasp. “What happened?”
“Who is it?” I asked. This blindness was getting more frustrating by the minute.
“Burr and Sting,” Lionel said.
“It looks like they ran into some opposition.” Clarence seemed to be in the same place he was last time he spoke.
“Someone tell me what’s going on, please. Try to remember I can’t see.” It was going to take a lot of energy to get people to deal with my blindness.
“Nothing to worry about.” One of the fairies answered me, I couldn’t tell which one.
“If you were beaten it is something to worry about.” I kept my voice gentle so I wouldn’t put them on the defensive. “I have been struck blind. You have been beaten. I don’t think this is a coincidence.”
“I am Burr.” I could hear a slur in the fairy’s voice as though her lips were swollen.
“Okay, Burr tell me what happened.”
“We have the blood.” She put a warm jar in my hand. I held it out and felt Lionel take it.
“When were you beaten?”
“As we finished, maybe an hour ago. This is why we are late.” Sting spoke this time.
“Lionel, describe their wounds.”
“Burr is beaten badly around the face; I think she has a broken nose, maybe more damage I will have to see. Sting seems to have a broken arm as well as bruises forming on his face.”
“Who did this to you?” I thought I knew but it is best to be sure.
“Sidhe, two males,” Burr slurred again. “They will be sorry, though. When we finish this spell, Sting and I are going after them.”
“I think we can assume Fionuir has realized we took the amulet.” It meant we had to work faster. “Did they ask you anything? Or, say anything.”
Silence.
“Let me rephrase that. What did they say?”
Still silence.
“Lionel, please tell me what’s happening.” I felt his hand on my arm.
“I don’t think they are going to tell you. They won’t look at you.”
Clarence growled. “I can make them talk if need be.”
“No, haven’t they been through enough?”
“Let me talk to them.” Lionel’s voice moved away from my side. “Alone, Clarence.” A new sound of authority in his tone impressed me.
“They have left the room,” Edrinda said. “Perhaps this is not related to our plan. Fairies and Sidhe often have fights.”
“I don’t believe this is a coincidence,” I said. “If they were followed here, or told their attackers where we were meeting, the Sidhe are already on their way.”
“If that were the case, we would have been attacked by now,” Clarence said. “If the boy cannot get them to speak, what will you do? Just take the chance?”
“We’ll deal with that if it happens. I’m going to have to give that boy a crash course in spell casting; it would help if you spent your time boosting his confidence instead of cutting him down,” I said.
I heard a sigh and a slap of fist on armor. “Quinn is right, husband, help or shut up.”
I sat trying to think of any other plan than teaching high level spells to someone else’s apprentice. I don’t know what the Kobolds were doing, but they were silent at least.
Five minutes, or what felt like it, later I heard Lionel come back into the room. “The fairies are gone. But I have the information.”
I waited and felt him sit beside me again.
“They did find out that the Rose fairies would forgive Princess Elizabeth if we were successful,” he said.
I didn’t like the way he had started with a different topic. “Is this a good news bad news thing? If so, just hit me with the bad news.”
“Yes, get on with it,” Edrinda snapped.
“Well, the two Sidhe who beat them wanted to know why they were visiting the other tribes. They asked if it had anything to do with you, Quinn. Burr and Sting didn’t tell them anything and they think they got away clean. They checked very carefully to make sure they weren’t being followed. They took the long way here and swear we are safe.”
“That’s the bad news? It’s not that bad.” I waited for the other shoe to drop.
“Well, when I checked their wounds, I found this.” Lionel put something in my hand.
I felt the smooth edges of the object, it seemed to be teardrop shaped and about the size of a walnut. “They didn’t know they had this?”
“No, it was hanging from the edge of Burr’s coat. There were a lot of pieces of debris there.”
“What is it wizard?” Clarence sounded like he understood my earlier frustration.
“It’s a gem.” I turned to Lionel. “Is it blue?”
“Yes, how did you know?”
“Maeve wears these on her clothes.”
“You think she was there?” Lionel’s voice was hushed.
“I hope not. This is complicated enough.”
Chapter Thirty-One
“No, it’s your right hand.” I stopped Lionel from passing his left hand over the lump of coal we were using as a model amulet. “Using your left hand will change the spell and I don’t have time to figure out how to fix that.
It was hard enough to train someone when you were blind but to train someone who couldn’t seem to remember from one try to the next where he was making mistakes was impossible. I had Edrinda read the spell to me and then asked Lionel to narrate as he practiced the moves. It wasn’t working.