“We’ll see you later, then,” he said, uncowed. I closed the door firmly behind him and sat at my desk, doing nothing but listening until I was sure the hunting party was gone.
Then I did turn again to my books, looking for a spell that might protect against the action of any other spell. In an hour I determined that there actually was no such thing, but with enough effort I might be able to create one.
I put the volumes back onto the shelf, hoping I would not have to try. Even the simplest spell can have unforeseen results, and a spell against magic would create enough tensions within the natural fabric of the cathedral city that I might end up with the whole church sinking into a giant hole in the earth.
Instead I reached for another book. If I saw the Romney children again, I wanted to be ready with something to impress them.
It had been years since I had tried to make myself invisible. When I first came to Yurt, I had become quite good at making my feet disappear, but I had never been able to become invisible above the waist. Now, after reviewing my books, flipping back and forth between several volumes with fingers and three pencils marking different places, I thought I finally understood the problem.
I stood up, took a moment to review the spells in my mind, and began. As the heavy syllables of the Hidden Language rolled into the silent room, I slowly became invisible, starting at the feet and working up to my head. I looked into the mirror with delight. Nothing was there.
There was a sharp rap on the door. “Come in!” I called without thinking.
This time it was the kitchen maid. “I’m sorry, sir,” she said, coming in. “But with the extra people staying, I’m afraid I lost track of your breakfast tray, and so-” She stopped, not seeing anyone. I smiled to myself and tried not to breathe. “Sir?” She looked directly through me to my bedroom beyond.
She shrugged then and picked up the tray. For a moment I was tempted to break the spell and appear abruptly before her, preferably with a flash and a lot of smoke. I went as far as to tiptoe over to the doorway where she would pass directly by me.
But I resisted. She was a very young kitchen maid, and it would not be fair to make her suffer for Vincent having surprised me. Besides, I didn’t want to have to sweep a lot of broken crockery off my clean flagstone floor. I stepped silently aside and let her pass.
As she swung my door back open, sunlight poured in from the courtyard. She didn’t see it, but I did: my shadow stretching out from invisible feet. The door swung shut and the shadow was gone, but I was left considering. My spell of invisibility made me and my clothing invisible to the human eye, but apparently not to the sun.
I snapped my fingers, said the two words to break the spell, and reappeared in the mirror. I doubted even the wizard or magician the Romney children had seen could have made his shadow disappear. Now all I had to do was to find a way to make a cloak of fire.
Since the spring morning was so warm, I had not lit a fire. Now I knelt at my hearth and put a pile of kindling together. Some wizards, I had once heard, could create fire straight from the air, but that was something never taught at the school.
The challenge with a cloak of fire would be to surround oneself with living flames yet emerge unscorched. Once I had a small fire burning, I pulled another book off the shelf and started putting a promising spell together. Sitting with one hand holding the volume, I tentatively reached the other hand toward the flame and then rapidly drew it back. This particular protective spell didn’t seem to do anything against heat.
I tried a different spell, one that I knew was effective against arrows. But it worked no better against fire than the first. The third spell I tried seemed to have potential until I realized that I was able to put my hand closer to the flame only because the flame was dying.
I stood up, sucking the burnt back of one knuckle. “If the Romney children aren’t satisfied with illusions and invisibility, then it’s no use even trying to satisfy them,” I told myself and went out.
Gwennie, daughter of the cook and the constable, was crossing the courtyard, staggering under a pile of leather-bound ledgers. I hurried to help her, putting a lifting spell on the volumes. “Where are these going?”
She gave me a quick and grateful grin and pushed the hair back from her face with a dusty hand. “To the storeroom. I decided Father doesn’t need all these old ledgers cluttering up his office. Some of them even date from before I was born!”
I had to smile because I well remembered when she was born, which didn’t seem long ago to me. “I would have thought you’d be helping your mother in the kitchens instead of your father.”
Gwennie shook her head hard. “Not me! I’ll never be a cook. I’ve decided I’m best at organizing and keeping track of things. I’m going to be constable of Yurt some day, like my father.”
“Do you think people will approve of a woman constable?” I asked, amused.
“Well, Paul approves,” she said proudly, adding, “Prince Paul, that is,” after a very brief pause. She flushed a little and looked away as I considered her thoughtfully. She and Paul were nearly the same age and had been childhood playmates, but I had assumed the prince and the cook’s daughter had drifted apart in the last ten years.
“I want to tell you, Wizard,” she said hastily as though wanting to change the subject, “that the staff all support you.” She unlocked the storeroom and showed me where she wanted the ledgers. “We don’t think that wizards have to be stopped before they wrest control from the aristocrats. After all, we’ve known you for years, and you’d never be able to take power from anybody!”
She realized at the last minute that this was not coming out the way she intended and started to blush again. I excused myself before she could become any more embarrassed. But as I crossed the courtyard toward the main gates I decided I had better find out more of what Vincent seemed to have been telling the court.
On the grass beyond the moat a table was set up. The young chaplain and the Lady Maria sat in the sun, playing chess.
“Checkmate!” cried the Lady Maria in delight as I came toward them. If she was indeed moonstruck by the chaplain, as Paul had suggested, it wasn’t stopping her from beating him. “You moved right into my trap!” The chaplain gave me a complacent smile over her head as though to suggest that he and I both knew he had deliberately let her win. He didn’t fool me for a minute.
“Did Prince Paul go hunting with the others?” I asked.
“He rode out by himself,” said the Lady Maria. “He took his new horse and told his mother she wouldn’t be able to keep up with him!”
The chaplain was busily putting the chess pieces back in the box, clearly in no mood for another game.
I leaned on the back of the Lady Maria’s chair and smiled down at her. “The chaplain tells me you’re opposed to the queen’s marriage yourself, even though you did tell Paul a woman like her deserves her happiness. I would have thought you’d love it: after else, who else could plan the wedding but you?”
“Surely, as I told you the other night, in the case of a widow-” the chaplain began, but I ignored him.
“Well,” Maria began, confused now and not wanting to meet my eyes, “I did hope to reassure the boy. And normally I would love planning the queen’s wedding. You never saw anything as beautiful as her first one, so many years ago! And although of course she wouldn’t wear a white dress for her second nuptials, I had thought that pink, both for her dress and for her bouquet, or maybe light blue-”
The chaplain cleared his throat meaningfully.
“But in the last few weeks I have come to think about it differently,” Maria continued resolutely. “The chaplain has made it clear to me that, at a certain age, only a heavenly spouse will do.”