None of the other four soldiers had turned up yet, and that meant Lady Kalira was in a very bad temper. Sterren made no attempt at conversation as he led the way up Warehouse Street, through Shortcut Alley to North Street, and on out of Spicetown.
As they neared the Grand Canal, however, the overlord’s palace gradually became visible ahead, and Sterren noticed all three Semmans staring at it.
They weren’t being quite attentive enough to encourage escape, and besides, he had promised not to, but he did venture to remark, “Pretty, isn’t it?”
“Is that where the wizards live?” Lady Kalira demanded.
Startled, Sterren said, “No, of course not! That’s Lord Azrad’s... ah... castle.”
“How far to the magicians, then?”
“Well. North Street forks ahead and we go left on...” He hesitated and then switched to using Ethsharitic for place names. “We go left on the Promenade, then on the other side of the Palace Plaza we take Arena Street, and then it’s about a mile to the Arena, I guess.”
“You’re joking!”
“No, I’m not.”
“A mile?”
“About that.”
“I will never get over the size of this city,” Lady Kalira said, more to herself than to Sterren. “What a mess!”
Sterren did not consider his home city a mess, but he knew better than to say anything. They made the rest of the journey in silence.
The streets were almost empty because of the snow, and the city’s normal odor was largely suppressed by the pale gray blanket that covered the rooftops and most of the streets, but the scent of spices, wood smoke, and charcoal was still strong. The mansions of the New City were silent and elegant, the snow hiding much of the damage that time had done them; even the slums of the outer Arena district were quieter and less offensive in such weather.
They passed Camp Street, then the Arena itself, and came to the plaza just south of the main entrance.
There, to the right of the rampway into the Arena, was the message board that Sterren had remembered, a six-foot-high wall of rough pine planks weathered gray, fifteen feet long, plastered over its entire surface with faded and torn bits of paper, parchment, and fabric.
Sterren had written up his notice the night before, aboard ship, but he realized as he looked for a place to put it that he had not thought to bring any tacks or nails. With a shrug, he found a notice that had been attached with unusually long cut nails, announcing an estate auction that had taken place a sixnight before, and he rammed the corners of his own message over the blunt ends of the nails.
Satisfied, he read it over again.
“Magicians,” it said in large letters at the top, then continued in smaller writing below, “Employment opportunity for magicians of every school. The Kingdom of Semma is recruiting magicians for government service for a term of several months, but not to exceed one year. Room and board furnished, and transportation both ways, as well as payment in gold and gems. To apply, or for further information, contact Sterren, Ninth Warlord of Semma, aboard the Southern Wind, now docked at the Tea Wharves in Spicetown. Final application must be made by nightfall, 24 Snowfall, 5221.”
He stepped back and realized that his fine, big page was almost lost amid the jumble of paper and cloth.
There was, however, nothing he could do about it.
He looked at some of the other messages on the board, wondering what they were all about. One caught his eye immediately.
“Acclaimed prestidigitator seeks part-time employment. Leave message with Thorum the Mage, Wizard Street.”
Sterren was unsure exactly what a prestidigitator was; some sort of magician, surely! Part-time employment, that wasn’t exactly what he was offering, but still...
Thorum the Mage, he told himself, on Wizard Street. That wouldn’t be too hard to find.
He was about to start looking for more notices when he was reminded of his companions by the sound of feet shuffling in the slush.
“Hai, you three,” he said, “come here and help me read these! Some of them are from magicians looking for work! I should have come here in the first place, instead of bothering with Shiphaven!”
Dogal shook his head. “I can’t read,” he said.
Lady Kalira and Alder started forward, but then Alder stopped. A moment later, as she got close enough to make out the messages, so did Lady Kalira.
“We can’t read them, either,” she said. “They’re all in Ethsharitic.”
“Well, of course they...” Sterren let his voice trail off as he realized that he was the only one present who could read Ethsharitic. He turned back to the board and drew a deep breath, then let it out in a sigh.
“I’ll read them, then,” he said.
Two hours later he felt he had covered the board adequately. Snow, meanwhile, had attempted to cover Alder and Dogal; Lady Kalira had taken shelter in the arched entrance of the Arena.
“Doesn’t this stuff ever stop falling?” Dogal asked.
“Of course it does!” Sterren retorted, instinctively leaping to the defense of his native city.
“And then what happens to it?” Alder asked. “What do you people do with it all?”
“Nothing; it melts, of course,” Sterren said. “This isn’t Sardiron, where it piles up all winter.”
“Well, how would we know that?” Alder replied angrily, his temper obviously shortened by the long, cold wait.
“From experience, of course. Haven’t you ever seen... seen it before?” He could not think of a Semmat word for “snow.”
Alder and Dogal both stared at him, startled. “No, of course not!” Alder replied.
“How could we have seen it before?” Dogal asked.
It was Sterren’s turn to be startled. “Oh,” he said. “Doesn’t it... I mean, don’t you have this stuff in Semma?”
“No,” Alder answered.
“It doesn’t fall in the winter, like this?”
“No, it rains in the winter in Semma. We don’t have snow.”
Sterren noted the word for later use, then dropped the subject. “Oh. Well, I have a dozen messages here from magicians looking for work and I want to follow up on them, before I forget any names. Come on.”
The “dozen” was actually fifteen, though there was some overlap in the message drops they used.
With much grumbling, the soldiers came. Lady Kalira emerged from the entryway and joined the party as Sterren led them back out to Arena Street and on to the southeast, toward the Wizards’ Quarter.
Five blocks took them to Games Street, a thoroughfare that Sterren remembered well, even though he had rarely played there. The times when he tried it had all been remarkable enough to stay very clear in his memory.
And Games Street, of course, marked the line between the indeterminate streets between the Arena and the Wizards’ Quarter, where various performing magicians made their homes, and the heart of the Wizards’ Quarter proper, where virtually all the city’s magic shops were clustered.
In fact, just one more block south on Arena brought them to Wizard Street. There was no marker, but it was unmistakable. “Tanna the Great,” advertised a signboard at the corner, “Wizardry for Every Need, Love Charms a Specialty.” Peculiar odors mixed with the inevitable smell of wood smoke, the city’s famous spices had been left behind a mile to the north, but here there were strange new scents that might have been spices, or herbs, or something else entirely.
Two doors down on the right was a signboard announcing the presence of Thorum the Mage, which was one of the names Sterren had memorized. He headed directly for it.
Two hours later they took a break for a midday meal and bought bits of beef fried in dough from an open-front shop between two gambling halls on Games Street. They ate in silence, leaning against a wall, as snow drifted by and Sterren, between bites, considered what he had learned.
For one thing, he now knew what a prestidigitator was, little more than a charlatan, really. A great deal of magic appeared t
o be fraudulent. Never having had money to spend on spells and amulets, he had never had occasion to find this out.
Other magic, of course, was completely real and authentic and could be enormously powerful.
Unfortunately, while the frauds would often work cheap, for the more serious magicians a pound of gold would not pay for a sixnight’s work, let alone the month or more that might be necessary for a trip to Semma and back with a war in the middle.
He had been turned down by two witches, two theurgists, a wizard, a warlock, and someone who called himself a thaumaturge, a term Sterren was not familiar with.
On the other hand, he had turned down a prestidigitator, an illusionist, a sorcerer whose talents seemed genuine but hopelessly inappropriate for the job at hand, and an herbalist.
Not all of these were from the advertisements at the Arena; the theurgists and the sorcerer had turned up on their own while Sterren and his party were discussing matters with Thorum the Mage, a pleasant old fellow who, thanks to his central location, made a significant income as a message center and referral service, in addition to what his wizardry brought him.
The morning, Sterren had to admit, had been a washout. He chewed his last bite of dough, pulled his coat collar tighter, and stared longingly through the snow at a dice game visible through a tavern window on the opposite side of the street.
He wished that he could just go back to playing dice and thinking entirely in his native tongue, without having to switch languages every few minutes, without worrying about wars or wizards or warlords or warlocks, hereditary duties, and summary executions. He wanted to forget that Semma had ever existed, forget that he had ever met any of the inhabitants of that silly little kingdom.
He couldn’t, of course. Semma was real, and somehow or other he had the misfortune to be its warlord now, rather than just a tavern gambler.
Joining that game across the street was a tremendous temptation, but a glance at Lady Kalira’s sour expression convinced him that it wasn’t even worth asking if he could take a few minutes to replenish their finances.
He sighed, swallowed the last traces of his meal, and said, “Come on.”
The three Semmans looked at him, uncomprehending. “Oh, come on,” he said, in Semmat this time. They came.
CHAPTER 17
The afternoon was more successful than the morning. For one thing, the snow stopped and the sun came out, which improved tempers all around. For another, the neighborhood grapevine was working for them now and when they checked back in at Thorum’s they found a young witch, eager for adventure in foreign lands and willing to work cheap.
Another cooperative and promising witch turned up a few stops later, and then a sorcerer by the name of Kolar, whose collection of talismans included a few that clearly had some military usefulness, and, fortunately for Sterren, not all that much commercial value, so that Kolar was willing to accept Sterren’s offered job.
All three of these individuals were instructed to report to the chartered ship, the Southern Wind, by midday on the twenty-fourth.
At the next stop an argument broke out. The magician in question here was ready and willing to take the job, but Lady Kalira recognized the emblem she wore at her throat.
“She’s a demonologist!” she said. “We can’t take a demonologist!”
“Why not?” Sterren demanded. “She can probably do more for us than the rest put together! Demons love war! They created it!”
“And that’s one reason that using a demonologist is too dangerous!” the Semman aristocrat shouted.
“That’s ridiculous!”
“It is not...” Lady Kalira began; then she caught herself and continued with enforced calm, “it is not ridiculous, my Lord Sterren. And in any case, the reasons do not matter. If I might remind you, his Majesty specifically forbade the inclusion of sorcerers or demonologists. Are you going to defy a royal edict? Might I point out that the penalty for doing so is entirely up to the king’s discretion, even to beheading, for a member of the nobility?”
Sterren opened his mouth to argue, then stopped.
Phenvel III was more than a little foolish and prone to whims. For all Sterren knew, he really might order Sterren’s execution if he was angry enough and only think better of it after it was too late.
And he had specifically forbidden demonologists and sorcerers.
Sterren had forgotten that for a moment. He had not made the connection when he hired Kolar, Kolar the Sorcerer.
“Oh, damn,” he said.
He apologized to the demonologist, a woman by the name of Amanelle of Tirissa, and led the way back to the house where Kolar rented an upstairs room.
When that little problem was dealt with, Sterren continued with his search.
When the sun was below the rooftops and the shop-keepers began lighting the torches out front, he called it a day and headed back toward Spicetown, the Semmans trailing along behind him.
He didn’t even think about trying to slip away. The quest for magicians had caught his interest.
If was full dark well before they reached the wharves, and Sterren had to ask directions twice before locating the Southern Wind. He was asleep within seconds of falling into his hammock.
That was the twenty-second of Snowfall.
On the twenty-third, once again, the day was spent in the Wizards’ Quarter, recruiting. Word had gotten around, however, and this time Sterren was able to sit at Thorum’s table, drinking cheap ale and making jokes with old Thorum about the Semman barbarians he was saddled with, while candidates presented themselves.
The Semmans sat idly by, wondering what Sterren and the fat old wizard found so funny.
The weather was warmer, too, and the snow had melted away completely by midafternoon.
Even the now-familiar walk back to the ship seemed easier, especially since Sterren took care to set out well before dark. Lady Kalira brightened considerably when she discovered Alar aboard the vessel, waiting for her, apologetic about both his own extended absence and having completely lost track of Kendrik, Bern, and Zander.
Sterren thought he was a fool for coming back, but did not say so.
Sterren did not bother to leave the ship on the twenty-fourth, but instead began the preparations for the journey back to Akalla of the Diamond.
He had found no chance to slip away and he was not at all sure he would have taken it if he had. Princess Lura’s grin and Shirrin’s blush lurked in the back of his memory, and he did not want to leave them defenseless.
When the ship sailed on the evening tide, she had aboard her Sterren, Lady Kalira, Alder, Dogal, and Alar, of the original party of eight; the other three had never turned up. Sterren hoped that they would get by, stranded in a foreign city where they didn’t speak the language or know the customs. They had chosen to desert, but they had not necessarily known what they were getting into; life in Ethshar was much more complex than their simple existence back in Semma.
Perhaps, he thought, Alar was not such a fool after all.
In addition to Sterren and the four Semmans, the Southern Wind carried the warlock, who had still not given a name; Annara, the journeyman wizard; three witches, named Shenna of Chatna, Ederd of Jiastwark, and Hamder Hamder’s son; and a wizard who called himself Emner of Lamum. All but the warlock were young, beginners who had not yet found places for themselves, though none of the others were quite so young as Annara and Sterren himself.
Sterren had turned down assorted frauds and charlatans, and given in to the royal fiat against sorcerers and demonologists; he had talked to several theurgists, only to be told that they could not help with anything to which the gods objected as strongly as they objected to war. No other warlocks had turned up once the amount of the pay was known. A few of the more obscure or minor sorts of magician had turned up, such as oneiromancers and herbalists, but after much discussion had not stayed.
Still, Sterren had half a dozen assorted magicians.
He hoped it would be enough.
/> He wished he knew more about magic.
He did know a little, of course. He had taken an interest in the arcane arts as a child.
It was only a little, though, not much more than a few characteristics of the major varieties.
He knew something more than a minimum about warlockry, of course, from his brief stay with old Bergan. He knew it used no spells or incantations, but only the warlock’s will, to guide and shape the Power it drew upon. The only differences between what one warlock could do, and what another could do, depended on the relative level of imagination and expertise in manipulating Power.
The other magics did not appear to operate that way at all. For example, theurgists and demonologists used rote formulae to summon superhuman beings, as Agor had explained to him, and those beings were specialized and individual.
To a warlock, Power was Power, at least until the nightmares began, and there were no formulae, or at least, so Bergan had told him, and Sterren had no reason to doubt his old master.
That meant that Sterren’s warlock would be able to do as much as any warlock in waging war; there were no special spells or formulae he had to know.
Wizards, on the other hand, carried formulae to bizarre extremes; where theurgists and demonologists just used words and songs and signs, wizards needed an incredible assortment of ingredients for their spells, dragon’s blood and virgin’s tears and so forth. Wizardry seemed to have no logic to it whatsoever. And Sterren, accordingly, had no idea at all what his two wizards were capable of. Annara had a small pouch of precious ingredients for her spells; Emner had a large traveling case jammed full of jars and boxes for his. Neither would specify what spells he or she could perform. A demonstration would be meaningless; spells that proved beyond doubt that their wizardry was authentic and powerful would not mean that they knew any spells that would stop Ophkar or Ksinallion.
Witches fell somewhere in between. Witches used rituals, chants, trances, and so forth, but could improvise them apparently at will and did not require the arcane substances that wizardry called for. Witches had individual spells, but seemed to be able to modify them far more readily than wizards could. They had specialties, but almost any witch could tackle almost any piece of witchcraft, though naturally, a specialist in a given field could outperform a novice.
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