by Ari Marmell
Jace lay upon the thick down mattress, arms crossed behind his head, and stared up at the ceiling—just as he had for many hours, across the span of many days. And he wondered, not for the first time, if Tezzeret’s notion of an exciting life was perhaps different from his own. Oh, he had his training sessions to look forward to. They weren’t anyone’s definition of “fun,” and he might have thought seriously about leaving after that first one—except that they worked! Damned if, in mere days, he hadn’t felt his mind expanding, comprehending spells he’d never used before, honing even familiar incantations like a razor’s edge.
But those sessions were sporadic, occurring when Tezzeret had the time to devote from his many other concerns on many other worlds. And Jace was getting more than a little bored.
The Consortium’s Ravnica compound was, or so Tezzeret had claimed, one of the nicest on all the various worlds. Jace had passed through marble-walled and lushly carpeted halls, kitchens capable of producing foods that nearly qualified as magic in their own right, libraries boasting any book one could ask for, on any topic one might imagine. His own domicile was a suite of chambers, complete with self-lighting chandeliers that glowed without heat; a fireplace that never ceased burning and produced either warmth or cold depending on Jace’s command; even a few mechanical servants that were, if not as efficient or unobtrusive as Emmara’s animate dolls, still more than capable of accomplishing whatever menial task Jace might assign them.
For the first few days, it was a paradise, and Jace luxuriated in an opulence he’d never known.
After two months of dwelling here with nothing to do but peruse said libraries or wander about the streets of Ravnica (something he’d been quite capable of doing before the Consortium, thank you very much), he was ready for a change of pace. But neither Tezzeret himself nor the Ravnica cell’s own leader seemed ready to actually let him do anything.
That local lieutenant was an enormously corpulent, sausage-fingered fellow with untamed hair and beard of darkest black, so short and squat that Jace briefly wondered if he might be one of the mythical dwarves he’d heard of on other worlds. Paldor was his name—“Almost like platter,” he would say at every opportunity, hands clutching at one roll of fat or another, “so really, could my parents have expected anything else?” It was a joke nobody found funny, but that never stopped him from repeating it.
He seemed a friendly enough sort, willing to show Jace around and introduce him to other members of the cell, but Jace wondered more than once just how black a dark side the man must possess to have worked his way so high in Tezzeret’s ranks. But of course, Paldor’s duties prevented him from spending more than a few moments on that project, and again Jace found himself left to his own devices. He couldn’t really even go out to make new acquaintances on his own, for he didn’t know how many members of the Ravnica cell knew about the Consortium’s other-worldly nature—and he wasn’t about to spill Tezzeret’s secrets to the uninitiated.
And so he lay on his back, and stared, and brooded, and fell into that state of half-sleep that comes so often when one lies abed with nothing important to do. And it took him several moments of trying to rouse himself to realize that someone was pounding upon his door.
Jace took a moment to tug the worst of the wrinkles from his tunic, flung open the door, and found himself staring, or so it appeared, into a slightly warped mirror.
“You’d be Jace,” the man suggested.
Jace blinked eloquently in response.
“I’m Kallist. Kallist Rhoka. And you need to either learn to sleep more lightly, or get yourself a doorbell. Preferably one taken from a church steeple.”
“Um,” Jace added.
“We’ve been summoned. We’re supposed to be in Paldor’s office in, oh, five minutes ago. So unless your magic can either take us back in time, or summon up a really potent excuse, I suggest we get moving.”
Still not entirely certain what was happening, Jace got moving.
Although he’d long since mastered the ins and outs of the complex, he allowed the other man to lead, and took the time to study his guide. Now that he was a bit more awake and a lot more alert, Jace realized that they did not look quite so similar as his drowsy senses had at first suggested. Kallist was clad in black leather armor over deep blue padding; a match to Jace’s own wardrobe in color, perhaps, but certainly not in style. The various blades that Kallist wore about his person also indicated a wide gulf between their skill sets. Still, they could certainly pass as relatives, a fact that Jace refused utterly to dismiss as coincidence.
Kallist clearly knew the winding halls at least as well as Jace, since he hesitated not at all in his path to Paldor’s office, on the uppermost floor of the highest building. Jace was vaguely irritated, as he panted for breath at the top of the stairs, to note that Kallist wasn’t even winded.
The office, which Kallist entered after giving a perfunctory knock, was massive but largely empty. A mahogany desk, quite broad but abnormally short to accommodate Paldor’s stature, occupied the far end of the room. Several chairs stood scattered before it, arranged in a vague semicircle. On the wall above hung a large clock of brass gears and heavy pendulums. The rightmost wall was one large window, staring out over the slowly recovering expanse of Rubblefield, while the leftmost …
On the leftmost wall was a peculiar contraption, smaller but far more complex than the clock itself. Tubes of glass twined over and about each other; some seemed almost to be tied in knots, bending at impossible angles. Through those pipes flowed long wisps of … It wasn’t smoke, exactly, for no smoke had ever been so unnatural a color. It took Jace long moments to recognized the æther of the Blind Eternities, for never had he seen so much as a puff of that stuff in the physical world. He couldn’t begin to imagine what purpose the device might serve.
But that was it, the entirety of the office. A great deal of space, with little purpose except, perhaps, to show visitors that Paldor could afford to waste a great deal of space.
Paldor looked up from the desk, scowled briefly at the clock above his head, and then took several steps away from the desk. Today he wore what Jace would politely have called a robe, and more honestly thought of as a tent. It was wine-purple and made Paldor look like a giant, bearded grape. “Welcome to your first assignment, Beleren,” he said.
No response. It required a not-so-subtle “Ahem!” from Paldor to draw his attention from the peculiar contraption on the wall.
“Ah, yes,” Jace said. “Sorry.”
Paldor scowled, then shook his head. “You’ve heard the name Ronia Hesset?”
“I’ve come across it. Who is she?”
“The head of a merchant family who used to have connections with the Orzhov and with whom the Consortium has had a great many dealings since the guilds went away. She’s even dealt with Tezzeret himself, a time or two. She doesn’t know our true nature—or the existence of other worlds at all, for that matter—but beyond that, she knows as much of the Infinite Consortium as any outsider.
“Of late, more than a few of our transactions with her House have come up short. For a time, Tezzeret and I were willing to let it go; most mercantile sects have one or two corrupt members, and she’s done well enough by us in the past. But now she’s claiming to have lost an entire payment, several thousand-weight of gold in value. Since this happened at roughly the same time one of her relatives paid off an outstanding debt to certain criminal interests … Well, you can see how this might arouse my suspicions.”
“Aroused?” Kallist muttered from behind. “I’d say they were downright seduced.”
“Your job,” Paldor told Jace, “should be simple enough for a man of your talents. We’d hoped to just have you meet with Hesset, read her that way, but she’s refused any meetings for the next few days. ‘Too busy,’ she says. And frankly, Tezzeret’s not willing to wait. You’ll accompany Rhoka into Hesset’s home. He gets you into her house; you then get into her mind. If she’s truly innocent and ignorant of
these thefts, you’ll return to me, and I’ll deal with it. If she’s behind them, as I suspect at this point she must be, you tell Kallist and he makes an example of her.”
Jace frowned sharply. He’d known that working for the Consortium would require what he preferred to think of as “extra-legal” activities. Hell, that was how he’d lived for years. But murder?
His gut churning, Jace opened his mouth to object, or perhaps simply to inform Paldor that this had all been a mistake, that service to Tezzeret wasn’t for him after all.
The words wouldn’t come. The fear of losing out on all the opportunities Tezzeret had promised—to say nothing of the far greater fear of what these people would do to him if he backed out now—formed a fist around his vocal cords that he could not shake. And so, feeling a new sickness in his gut that definitely wasn’t fear, he nodded.
“Kallist’s already studied the layout of Hesset manor,” Paldor told them. “You shouldn’t have much difficulty.”
Jace turned. “And you’ve chosen Kallist in particular since you have a swordsman who happens to greatly resemble your only mind-reader—or a mind-reader who resembles your best swordsman,” he added with a sarcastic smirk at Kallist, “and you might just be interested in seeing how well they work together on a simple assignment, so you know if you can take advantage of their resemblance down the road.”
Paldor grinned broadly. “Now you’re thinking like a member of the Consortium. Now get moving.” Paldor twisted in his seat and lifted an oddly shaped tube-and-funnel contraption from the wall. No magic, here, but a simple speaking device, designed with perfect acoustics to carry his voice to the room beneath. “Captain,” he said, grinning at Jace and Kallist, “please have a pair of Hesset Estate servant’s uniforms made ready for Rhoka and Beleren …”
Jace didn’t have to be a mind-reader to tell, from the sound of Kallist’s groan, that he wasn’t going to like the outfit.
And that was pretty much that. They gave Jace half an hour to change—into a horrible set of livery, with canary yellow leggings and deep red tunic—and to gather what supplies he felt he might need, admonished him to trust his partner when he asked if he could have some time to memorize the layout of the estate, and then they were on their way.
“I feel like a fruit salad,” Jace said to Kallist as they made their way out of the Rubblefield.
“Tell me about it. I’m afraid to look down at my feet, for fear of burning my eyes out of my skull.”
Silence for a time, as the pair made their way toward the Hesset property. Jace found at least some relief in the fact that much of the district was middle-class, so he and Kallist weren’t even the most garish people on the streets.
“This operation,” Jace commented as they finally approached the outer wall of the estate, “seems a bit half-assed. Wouldn’t it have made more sense to wait for a more social opportunity to have me read Hesset’s mind, rather than break into her house?”
“Probably,” Kallist admitted. “Tezzeret’s got a pouch of jade arriving in two days; surprise shipment, something that another cell just got hold of. Other people, outside the Consortium, have begun spreading rumors about our losses in dealing with Hesset’s people. He really wants the matter settled—and blatantly so—before there’s any risk of losing the jade to someone who decides those rumors mean we’re vulnerable.”
“Got it.” Then, exercising a sudden suspicion, Jace added, “I’ve never before met a planeswalker who preferred blades to spells.”
“You still haven’t. I’ve worked with enough of your kind, Tezzeret included, to have a pretty good idea of what’s really out there. But no, I wouldn’t know a spell from a spittoon.”
And then they were there, and further conversation would have to wait.
The outer wall of the estate proved no trouble at all. Jace cast his sight out and beyond the wall, watching until neither guard nor dog nor drake was present. Once it was clear, Kallist tossed a rope—enchanted to grab hold without need of a hook—and they were up and over, Jace somewhat less gracefully.
“That’s a handy trick,” Kallist whispered to him once they stood within the grounds. “Maybe I should learn a spell or two.”
Jace’s reply wasn’t even a whisper; it sounded only within Kallist’s mind. Perhaps you should.
Kallist started, gave Jace a look the mage couldn’t begin to interpret, and led the way forward.
Traversing the grounds gave them no more trouble than had the wall. Between Kallist’s trained senses and Jace’s supernatural ones, they sensed the approach of any guard or beast, and took appropriate cover behind one of the estate’s various hedges or trees. Still, a pair of great hounds, tugging their keeper along by the leather leash, nearly discovered them. The topiary behind which they crouched might block the eyes of the men, but not the noses of the dogs. Even as Kallist reached for his blades, cursing the inevitable racket, he noticed Jace muttering under his breath. And without the slightest pause, the hounds passed them by.
“What did …?”
When Jace answered, he spoke aloud once more. “Most people think of illusions only as sight or sound. It’s harder to do smells, but if you know what you’re doing …”
Kallist grinned. “You have got to teach me how to do that. But, uh… Try not to do that too often, all right? That mind-speaking-thing is weird.”
The front door proved but a momentary obstacle. Kallist fiddled with the lock as Jace kept watch, and while Kallist seemed to be doing more cursing than actual manipulating, the device did eventually pop open with a dull snap. Jace allowed his vision to go unfocused, examined the door and the entryway for magical alarms, but if any were indeed present, they were of a sort he couldn’t recognize.
“Should it really be this easy?” Jace asked as they softly closed the door behind them.
The other shrugged. “Well, I don’t normally have someone with me who can see through walls or plug up dog snouts at thirty feet,” he whispered. “So I’d expect it to be easier.”
A few moments passed as they made their way through darkened halls.
“Should it really be this easy?” Jace pressed again, after the third hallway that boasted no guards at all.
“No,” Kallist whispered with a sigh, “probably not.”
The manor was fairly typical, as manors went. Lots of halls with many rooms to each side; nice carpeting and fancy paintings in fancier frames; a collection of chandeliers, fireplaces, sweeping stairs, and dining tables that were all far larger than necessity dictated. The strong scent of rose petals wafted along the corridors, and Jace couldn’t tell if it came naturally from the many vases that decorated the various mantles and shelves, or if a touch of magic were involved. The utter lack of dust or dirt, however, was certainly magical, since even the most obsessive maid could not have done so perfect a job.
Once, and once only, Kallist and Jace had to duck into a small alcove as they heard the footsteps of heavy boots approaching. They watched a trio of guards, all armed and armored as though they were truly knights marching to war, pass their shadowed shelter and disappear down the hall. Not a one of them bothered even to glance left or right as they walked their patrol.
Jace and Kallist shared a suspicious look, shrugged in unison, and continued toward the stairs.
Still nobody interfered, and within a matter of moments, they found themselves outside what Kallist swore was the bedchamber of Ronia Hesset herself. Slowly and steadily he reached for the doorknob, only to freeze as Jace’s hand latched onto his own.
“What?” Kallist hissed. “Don’t you need to see her to get into her mind?”
“Since I don’t know her well, yeah,” Jace nodded. “But … I don’t know. Shouldn’t we oil the hinges or something? What if the door squeaks?”
Kallist’s lips quirked in a larval grin. “Jace, as a thief, you make an excellent wizard.”
“What?”
“Tell me what you notice about this door.”
“Well, it’
s heavy wood. Crystal doorknob. Opens inward … Oh.”
“Yeah. ‘Oh.’”
“Why don’t we just crack open the door, then?”
“Why don’t we?”
Kallist gently turned the knob, and then shoved swiftly to minimize the duration of any noise the door might indeed have made. It opened only a few inches, enough so that he could reach the hinges on the inside—but as it happened, the door didn’t squeak at all. Far more slowly, he inched it open farther, until both men could look into the opulent chamber.
Even in the faint moonlight trickling through the window, they could make out a towering wardrobe, a large canopied bed with silken sheets, and a form wrapped in the blankets.
“Ready?” Kallist breathed, barely even a whisper.
Jace nodded. Please, he thought to himself, begged the Multiverse at large, let her be innocent. Then he and Kallist could leave, and neither Ronia Hesset nor any part of Jace’s soul would die tonight …
Jace stared at the sleeping form, spent several nerve-wracking moments gathering his focus, and found himself strolling the byways of someone else’s mind.
With a gasp, Jace was back in his own head.
“Well,” Kallist asked. “Is she guilty?”
“I can’t say for certain, but I’d imagine so,” Jace murmured sadly.
Kallist blinked. “What do you mean, you can’t say?”
“That’s not her beneath those covers. It’s one of her guards, wide awake, and there are more on the way. Kallist, they knew we were coming!”
“That would seem to suggest some amount of guilt,” Kallist said dryly. “I—”
Afterward, Jace was never sure if he’d sensed a flash of the decoy’s intentions through some lingering strand of his telepathic link, or if he’d just seen movement from the corner of his eye. In either case, he yanked Kallist aside with both hands as a crossbow twanged from within the room. The bolt flashed through the tiny crack of the open door, punching with alarming accuracy through the spot formerly occupied by Kallist’s skull.