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The Mongolian Wizard Stories (online stories 1-7)

Page 12

by Michael Swanwick


  Director MacDonald took a long sip from his cup and then said, “I don’t know whether to be grateful to Fischer for saving my life or angry at him for blabbing in the first place.” He looked wary and his clothes were travel-stained. “How much do you recall of what occurred?”

  “I recall that I killed you.”

  “So I understand. Yet here I am. Thanks to the warning that our young melancholic hastily sent to his earlier self.” MacDonald lifted a scone from his plate and took a bite. Shedding crumbs, he said, “I am most damnably hungry. The trip to London and back was not an easy one to make in the little time I was given.”

  “Will you be attempting to undo Miss Hargreaves’ murder?”

  “Oh, Lord, no. Water under the bridge. Anyway, all this message-passing has already destabilized the area most dreadfully. As it is, I shall have bring in mind-readers to monitor the scryers and make certain this doesn’t happen again. Even at that, it will take weeks for things to settle down.”

  “And Margaret Andrewes? What will become of her?”

  “Nothing. The war effort needs her.”

  “I see.” Ritter looked down at the letter that the director had fetched back from London and found himself rereading it for the fifth time:

  My dear, dense lieutenant, it began in familiar cursive. Our mutual friend informs me that you will in all likelihood recommend that the Institute be shut down. Coming from anyone else with your knowledge, I would find this incredible. From you, alas, it is all too plausible. Allow me to remind you of the atrocities you have seen with your own two eyes in Krakow. You know what the Mongolian Wizard is capable of. Imagine a world under his domination.

  The enemy can create wizards in numbers that we cannot match. Our only hope lies in the Institute and the technology it makes possible. You are forbidden to stand in its way.

  Do nor harass my old school chum Curdie. Come home immediately. I have work for you to do.

  It was unsigned.

  “You have no doubts as to its authorship?” MacDonald’s bright eyes twinkled and he smiled impishly. “I urged Willoughby-Quirke to sign it, but Tibby said that would not be necessary.”

  Ritter touched the letter to a candle. “Sir Toby does not like to put his name on such documents,” he said. “For understandable reasons. I will pack now. If you would call up a carriage to take me back to London, we shall be done with one another forever.”

  “You don’t want to stay for supper?”

  “No.” Leaving his tea untasted, Ritter stood to go.

  In the doorway, he paused. “Have you considered the possibility that your work will do irremediable damage to the world? That it might even destroy it?”

  “Of course I have. It is a risk we simply must take.”

  Ritter stood on the gravel drive outside Yarrow House, waiting for his carriage. As he did so, a distracted young woman rode out of the twilight on a roan mare. Seeing him, she smiled nervously and drew up her horse.

  “Hello,” she said. “My name is Alice Hargreaves.”

  “I know who you are,” Ritter replied, “and I am afraid that there is nothing here for you.”

 

 

 


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