Anywhere else, she would have worried about the dog wrecking carefully constructed piles of books or shelves full of artifacts, but Mistress Givvani displayed the kind of cleanliness Sienne normally associated with a professional laundry, though without the smell of boiling water. Nothing disrupted the well-scrubbed surface of her desk, the one bookcase was practically empty, and the only chair in the room was the one Mistress Givvani was currently sitting in. It was the only room Sienne had ever been in where the fragrance of soap was strong enough to be called a stink.
“You’re sure the spell doesn’t summon real animals?” she asked, teasing the pup by brushing the handkerchief across his nose.
“Positive,” Mistress Givvani said. Her short gray hair flew in wisps around her face from the many times she’d run her fingers through it since Sienne had entered the office. It was the only disorderly thing about her and reassured Sienne that she was a real woman and not a marble statue. “They’re realistic, granted, but they’re creatures of magic, given form by the spell and released at the end of its duration.”
“So why can’t the duration be permanent?”
“That would usurp the power of God. Our best theorists believe She grants us this limited exercise of the power of creation to give us greater empathy and an understanding of Her nature. Bringing life into being…it’s humbling, even if the being is something monstrous.” Mistress Givvani ran her fingers through her hair again. “You’ll notice none of those creatures has human intelligence. Nothing we can summon does.”
“But these creatures all seem to understand what I ask of them. Even the frog will take simple commands.”
“That’s another reason we know they’re not real creatures summoned from somewhere else in the world. The magic creates a link between summoner and summoned that makes the summoned creature inclined to obey. It goes both ways, too—you’ve no doubt noticed you understand their nonverbal communication.”
“I do, a little.” Sienne let go of the handkerchief and giggled as the puppy rolled backward tail over ears from the sudden absence of pressure. “It’s a relief to know there isn’t some child in tears somewhere hunting for his puppy.”
“That would be cruel, yes.” Mistress Givvani bent to scratch the puppy’s head. It looked up at her, yipped once, and vanished with a faint pop. “You’ll also find the more often you cast the spell, the longer the maximum duration will become as your reserves stretch to meet it. As is true of most spells with a limited duration.”
“That’s good to know. Thank you for your time.”
“It’s no trouble. You did recover the spell, after all, and provided us with a new line of investigation. Who knows what other spells have a versatility we haven’t discovered yet?” Mistress Givvani laughed. “Probably not many, given the propensity of students to mispronounce the spell languages when they’re learning. But it’s a pleasant possibility.”
“I never thought I’d be back in academia, when I became a scrapper a year ago,” Sienne said. The office looked nothing like those of her teachers at her old school in Stravanus. Those had been packed with books and artifacts, not cleaned to within an inch of their lives. But it had the same feel to it, the sense that here was a place where knowledge happened.
“Life does take us unexpected places,” Mistress Givvani agreed. “Like Omeira, apparently.”
“Like Omeira.” An odd thought struck her. “I don’t suppose you know why there are no Omeiran wizards?”
Mistress Givvani’s brow furrowed. “Aren’t there?” Her eyes grew distant, and she tapped her fingers on her desk. “You know, I had never thought about it, but it’s true we’ve never had a single Omeiran student in the wizardry school. Plenty of them in the other colleges, of course, but…well, that doesn’t mean there are no Omeiran wizards.”
“My companion Kalanath says there aren’t. But he doesn’t know why, either. I can’t believe Omeira doesn’t have any children born wizards. Even the southern continent has wizards.”
“And no more nor fewer than we have up north,” Mistress Givvani said. “I suppose it’s something you could ask about while you’re there. If it matters. I don’t know that it’s more than a curiosity, though some of my colleagues—the ones obsessed with theory, though you didn’t hear me use the word ‘obsessed’—would disagree.” She stood and stretched like a cat, unselfconscious and relaxed. “Shall we see about the other matter?”
Mistress Givvani’s office opened off her private lecture hall, which at the moment was empty of students. It was as tidy as her office, if more thoroughly furnished. Chairs and desks aligned at precise right angles to the walls and each other filled the high-ceilinged space, which was over-warm due to the sunlight pouring through the tall windows. The glass was thick and bubbly, not the thin modern glass sheets of the mathematics building across the courtyard, and it showed the world in colorful smears, some of which moved as students crossed the courtyard from one building to another. It took Sienne back in time again, to years past when she was a student sitting at a desk like these, though the room she remembered had no windows and was always cold even in the heart of true summer. Perhaps all schools were alike on some level.
The halls of the wizardry school of the University of Fioretti were thronged with students, all of them wearing the lightweight blue gown that marked their school. They walked in groups of three or four, chattering away in conversations Sienne couldn’t make out. Words came to her ear, fragments of sentences that together made no sense: activated the hummingbirds in I asked for dinner. She caught a few curious glances directed her way, assessing her trousers and shirt that said she was a scrapper, but no outright stares. She didn’t look that out of place.
They passed through the rotunda, a tall, domed room from which corridors radiated like the spokes of a wheel, and down a new hall. This one was somewhat less packed with students and had no windows, instead being lit by giant versions of the lights Sienne could summon with a thought. The lights hung from the ceiling like moons in an alien sky, cold-white and casting sharp-edged shadows on the floor and walls.
Mistress Givvani opened a door about a third of the way down the corridor. “I’m as ignorant as you are about the thing,” she said. “Let’s see what they’ve discovered.”
This room looked like a wizard’s chamber, with its high ceilings and narrow windows whose glass was yellowed with age. Bookcases crammed with ancient tomes made a maze of the room, and more books piled on mismatched chairs made the path through the maze narrower. Sienne swept a hand across the surface of the nearest pile and sneezed at the cloud of dust that went up from it. The room smelled of dust and dry paper and, astonishingly, fresh apples. Sienne dusted her hands off on her trousers, leaving a pale smudge, and followed Mistress Givvani, who walked with a confidence Sienne didn’t think the maze warranted. She felt she might be lost in this room forever.
“Vincentius? Joanna?” Mistress Givvani called out. “Don’t tell me the books have finally engulfed you.”
A thump, then a patter of louder thumps, sounded somewhere in the distance. Someone cursed loudly, making Mistress Givvani blush and say, “Sorry about that. Master Vitali isn’t always careful about his language.”
“I don’t mind,” Sienne said.
They came out of the maze into an empty space about ten feet in diameter, hedged in on all sides by stacks of ancient books and a desk big enough to seat ten to dinner. One of the piles had fallen over, and a thin, gangly man with a prominent chin knelt beside it, swearing softly now and stacking the books untidily. “There has to be a better way,” he muttered.
“There is. It’s called ‘organization,’” Mistress Givvani said with some amusement.
“I can’t be having with your organization, Elodie. It stifles the mind.” The man looked up. “Who’s this?”
“This is Sienne Verannus. The owner of the artifact I asked you to investigate?”
“Oh. You,” the man said, as if Sienne were an expected, unwanted guest
. “You’re not planning to donate the artifact to the university, are you?”
“Um…no?”
The man grunted. “No one ever does, more’s the pity. At least not until they’re dead. Could I convince you to make the bequest in your will?”
“I…I don’t have a will.”
“No? And you a scrapper? At least I assume from your dress you’re a scrapper. You of all people ought to have a will.”
“Sienne’s not here to discuss inheritance law, Vincentius. She wants to know what you learned about the artifact,” Mistress Givvani said.
Vincentius rose to his full ungainly height. He looked like a stick insect unfolding, one slow joint at a time. “It’s here somewhere,” he said. “I’m sure it’s here somewhere.”
Sienne cast an eye on the piles of books, on the clutter covering the desk, and tried not to feel anxious over the fate of the hazard deck she’d given over to this man’s care. It was in a bright red box, for Averran’s sake, it ought to be visible!
Behind them, in what Sienne thought was the direction of the door, another sliding thump and a curse echoed through the room. “Joanna!” Vincentius called out. “Where’s that artifact?”
“You’ll have to be more specific,” a woman replied. “Why do you have all these books, anyway? They should be in the library.”
“Don’t tell me my business, woman!” Vincentius roared.
“Don’t call me ‘woman’ again or so help me I’ll let you have one right round the ear!” the unseen woman shouted back.
“Treacherous whore!”
“Ignorant ass!”
“Maybe we should come back later,” Sienne murmured, shifting uncomfortably in the direction of the maze.
“Don’t worry, they talk to each other like this all the time,” Mistress Givvani said. “Personally, I think they should just sleep together and get it out of their systems, but they seem to prefer the unresolved tension.”
“Sex is a distraction from the essentials,” Vincentius said, startling Sienne, who hadn’t thought he could hear them over the shouted invective he was trading with his…colleague? “Joanna, come meet our guests.”
A woman as round as Vincentius was thin emerged from the maze clutching an oversized book to her chest. “Guests? What guests? Nobody ever comes here. It’s why I like your office better than mine.”
“The owner of that artifact. You didn’t take it, did you?”
The woman, Joanna, examined Sienne as Vincentius had. Sienne was growing tired of being stared at like a museum exhibit. “Of course not,” Joanna said. “It’s probably exactly where you left it.” The clutter on the desk shifted without being touched, pieces of artifacts and small books rising into the air and shuffling into piles so the center of the desk was clear.
“You’re a wizard,” Sienne said.
“I am. I specialize in studying the magic of the before times, which is why Elodie gave me your artifact.”
Sienne glanced at Vincentius, who gave his stack of books a final nudge to keep them from falling. “And…Vincentius…is a wizard, too?”
“No, an historian,” Mistress Givvani said. “Oftentimes we learn more about artifacts from the histories than from arcane investigation. It’s safer than working out an artifact’s function by trial and error.”
Something red caught Sienne’s eye. Vincentius picked it up. “Here it is. Right where I left it. I told you that’s where it would be.”
Joanna rolled her eyes and let the rest of the mess return to the desk. “This is a powerful artifact. I don’t suppose you want to donate it?”
“I already asked,” Vincentius said. “She doesn’t even have a will.”
“I promise I’ll draw up a will immediately,” Sienne said, cutting off Joanna, who looked about to start in on a lecture. “What does it do?”
Vincentius shoved a pile of artifacts to one side and sat on the desk. His long legs swung gently, the soles of his feet brushing the floor. “There are records of hazard decks like that one occurring as recently as five hundred and forty-five years ago. They were never common, even among the ancients. Mostly they were used as divination tools in the time before the avatars, when God’s voice wasn’t as clear as it is today. So that’s one use, if you know how to read a hazard deck.”
“But that would be like using a cannon to swat a fly,” Joanna said.
“I’m explaining it, harpy.”
Joanna scowled at him and raised one hand for a prodigious slap she didn’t deliver. Vincentius ignored her. “The real use, the magical use, took some doing to figure out, because the histories only referred to what it could do, not how to make it do it.” He removed the lid and displayed it, with its black angular characters burned into it. “I couldn’t find out what the symbol means, but based on other evidence, I think it’s a name, or a house name—something identifying the owner.”
He tipped the cards into his hand. His long, bony fingers curled easily around the deck. “First, shuffle the deck three times.” He did so, the cards riffling through his fingers with a faint snapping sound. “Then cut three times, like this.” He set the deck on the desk and cut it into three piles, then picked up the center pile, stacked it on the left-hand pile, and put both atop the right-hand pile. “Then you draw a card. No, not you. The person who shuffles draws a card. Otherwise the magic doesn’t work. You can do it once every twenty-four hours.”
Sienne waited. Vincentius continued to hold the deck loosely in one hand. “So…why don’t you draw a card?” she finally asked.
Vincentius snorted. “Every card has a different effect, and not all of them are positive. I’m no gambler.”
“Can I try?” Sienne asked.
“It’s your artifact. Go ahead,” Vincentius said, handing her the deck.
Sienne awkwardly shuffled the cards, which were almost too big for her hands, then cut the deck as directed. With only a moment’s hesitation, she drew the top card from the deck and turned it over. Three staves against a golden background looked back at her. “I don’t—” she began, then blinked. Everything had taken on crisp, sharp edges, like shadows on the brightest day in true summer. “Thirty-eight books on that shelf,” she said. “Forty-two on that one. There are seventeen artifacts on the desk—I only looked at it once and I remember everything.”
“Staves is the suit associated with intelligence and memory,” Joanna said. “This one seems to have enhanced yours.”
“And you just know that?” Vincentius said.
“I dabble in hazard reading.”
“So how long will it last?” Sienne asked. Everywhere she looked she was conscious of numbers: numbers of books, numbers of nail heads in the floorboards, numbers of hairs on Mistress Givvani’s head. It didn’t dizzy her or make her feel overwhelmed; in fact, she felt her mind clicking along like a hummingbird’s wings, zipping from thought to thought. It felt incredible.
“No idea,” Joanna said. “We only know it’s not a permanent effect. And that it seems to draw not only from the five spell languages, but from divine power as well. That is, the few effects the ancients recorded either duplicate a wizard’s spell or priest’s blessing, or do something related to those.”
“I know priests can invoke blessings to enhance memory,” Sienne said, recalling that Perrin had done something like that for Alaric once.
“Exactly,” Vincentius said. “There’s an implication, too, that the shuffling—randomizing the deck, as it were—allows God the opportunity to choose something most helpful to the wielder of the deck at that time. I don’t know if I believe it, but it’s an interesting theory.”
“Wait,” Sienne said. “You said five spell languages.”
“All five,” Joanna said. “Including charm. Another reason to be careful with it. It doesn’t contain actual spells, so it’s not banned, but you should take care how you use it.”
Sienne nodded, torn between nervousness at handling such a powerful artifact and excitement at the possibilities. Charm…
it was devastating, as she knew from personal experience, and she had no desire to cast dominate on anyone, but suppose the deck let her put enemies to sleep? Or frighten them away? Surely even the most rules-bound wizard could see the benefit to that.
Vincentius opened a desk drawer and dug around in it for a bit, coming up with a palm-sized notebook. “I’ve written down the effects I was able to uncover in my research. You can add to the list as things come up. It might not matter, since you can’t invoke an effect by searching the deck for the card you want, but you might be able to see a pattern and decide if the odds are in your favor.”
Sienne opened the book. Vincentius had remarkably neat handwriting for someone whose office looked like the aftermath of an earthquake.
Five of coins—creates small gem. Records say it doesn’t disappear.
The Seer—record of talking sword, giving advice about the future
King of swords—companion appears to fight for invoker—impossible?
“None of these seem bad,” she said.
“I couldn’t find specific evidence of cards that had a negative effect, true,” Vincentius said, “but there’s plenty of records of people referring to these decks as cursed, or of destroying them out of fear of what they might do. You should be careful.”
“I will.” Sienne put the cards into their box and tucked it away in her pack. “Thanks for everything.”
“Don’t forget about your will,” Joanna said. “You scrappers all think you’re immortal, but death takes us all, in the end.”
“Don’t frighten the girl, shrew,” Vincentius said.
“Don’t call me a shrew, you worthless excuse for a man!”
“Vixen!”
“Louse!”
“We can go now,” Mistress Givvani murmured. Sienne was grateful to make her escape.
Shifting Loyalties Page 31