“May I?” Rani’s hand trembled at the edge of the volume. She had seen books like this back in her guildhall, back when she had served as an apprentice. Then, she had scarcely been trusted to wipe the dust from such treasures. She would never have been permitted to touch a master glasswright’s treatise.
“I brought it to you, didn’t I?” Davin shook his head, as if he were doubting his decision, but then he waved his hand toward the volume. “Go ahead. There’s no spell on it.”
Rani caressed the edge of the cover and breathed a prayer to Clain before she dared to open the tome. There was a creamy page of parchment, extravagant in its blankness, inviting her to turn it over. She did so with a mounting excitement and then leaned closer to the next page, picking out the words from their ornate script. “The Glasswrights’ Craft, being a Treatise on the tempering and construction of all Things glass and the Ways of the master Glaziers.”
“Not all things,” Davin grumbled. “There’s precious little on lenses there. But the book will tell you about making your own glass, about the fires you’ll need and your tools. It has quite a lot on grozing irons and bits. And there’s a useful section on dyes.”
“We don’t have anything like this in Morenia! All the treatises were destroyed with the guild.”
“I’d heard as much. I suspect you can do something with this.”
“I can.” Rani resisted the urge to turn the page, to begin reading the treatise right there, in the middle of the hall. The smell of the leather, though, kindled in her memory all the reasons that she wanted to rebuild the glasswrights’ guild. She thought of the windows she would craft, the glass creations that would capture the sacred rays of the sun and shape the very light itself. She would fill a dining hall with glowing illumination to inspire gaiety and nobility; she would soften a chapel with visions of light that would make the proudest man fall on his knees in worship of the Thousand Gods.… “Davin,” she managed to whisper, “Thank you.”
“No,” the old man said, raising his veined hands in protest. “Thank you.”
“For what?” Rani was surprised.
“For proving that the flying machine worked. For helping them to use it as it was meant to be used – in a true battle.”
Rani let the lead-embossed cover of the book fall back onto the creamy parchment pages. The book was blood-money, then, purchased with Monny’s life.
For just an instant, she remembered ducking under the wings of the moth-machine, straightening the arrows, checking their fletching. She shivered, recalling the bitter cold that had crept up from the ground in the freezing pre-dawn. She had let Crestman strap a little boy into a harness. She had stood by as Mair drove a child to his death. Rani had done nothing to save Monny. Nothing at all.
“That’s all it was to you?” Rani asked Davin. “A test of one of your creations?”
Davin raised a hand to his cheek, to the unreadable tattoo that faded into his wrinkled flesh. “I’m an old man, my lady. I’m an old man, and I create things. The boy wanted to fly.”
“The boy died!”
“And others live. Your King Halaravilli understands that. That’s why he’s invited me to Morenia.”
“He invited you to Morenia because he could not trust you here.” Rani wanted to cut Davin, to hurt him as badly as he had hurt her by summoning up the vision of Monny’s death.
The old man only shrugged. “What is trust? I make my machines, and men use them. What difference does it make to me if your king uses them, or another? Besides, you were eager enough to learn from me when I told you about lenses. You did not hesitate to learn about painting glass and carving it to meet your needs.”
Rani wanted to tell Davin that he was wrong. She wanted to tell him that he should swear loyalty to one king, and one king alone. She wanted to tell him that he was despicable, as worthless as one of Sin Hazar’s forsworn mercenaries. But who was she to lecture a man old enough to be her grandfather? Who was she to rant against the only glass instructor she would find in all Morenia?
Besides, it was safer to keep Davin close at hand. And who knew what he might invent that could serve Halaravilli?
She reached out for the book, hefting it from the table and cradling it against her chest. “You’ll take it then?” Davin asked. “You’ll accept my gift, Ranita Glasswright?”
Rani took a breath to explain, starting to untangle the confusing thoughts in her head. Before she could begin, though, the macaw bated on its perch behind her. The bird thrust out its azure wings and cocked its head to one side. Rani was pinned by that golden gaze as the macaw proclaimed, “Ranita Glasswright! Ranita Glasswright!”
Silently, she nodded at Davin and turned to carry her treasure from Amanthia’s great hall, to pack it away for her long journey home.
A SNEAK PEAK AT THE GLASSWRIGHTS’ JOURNEYMAN
Volume 3 of the Glasswrights Series
Rani Trader looked through the panes of glass, grateful that the direction of the wind had shifted, that she was temporarily spared the stench of burned wood and melted stone from the city below her tower chamber. She ordered herself not to lean out the window, not to gaze into the palace courtyard and see the refugees who huddled in their makeshift tents. She drew a deep breath, fighting the urge to turn away, to close her eyes, to shut out all thoughts of the fire that had eaten its way through Moren.
No one knew how the blaze had started. There were rumors that it had begun in a tavern brawl, deep in the Soldiers’ Quarter. Some said that it had sprung from an unattended fire in the Merchants’ Quarter, at a sausage-maker’s stall. Others said that it had begun in the Guildsmen’s Quarter, or among the homeless, roving Touched.
Rani did not care how the fire had begun. She cared only that the newborn flames had been licked to full life by the spring-time winds. The blaze had fed on winter-dry wood, devouring entire streets of the city. Good people had died trying to protect their families, and fine trade goods had disappeared in smoke.
In the end, the fire was stopped only by an experimental engine created by Davin, one of King Halaravilli’s retainers. That massive machine, intended for war, had saved some few Morenian lives, bringing down rows and rows of buildings with explosive charges, collapsing wood and mud and wattle so that the fire had nothing to consume, nowhere to go. Even Davin’s creation might not have been sufficient,, if not for a furious spring storm that flooded the darkened and charred streets after three days of fire.
Moren was crippled, wounded almost to death. The city faced a new year and old terrors – starvation, freezing cold, madness. The Pilgrims’ Bell tolled as refugees huddled in the palace courtyard, on the darkened flagstones of the old marketplace, in ramshackle doorways and unsafe structures. Children were sick, and the leeches who tended the survivors identified a new disease – firelung. The sickness was first brought on by breathing heated air or too much soot, but then it spread to others, to people who were exhausted and hopeless. Firelung killed if its victims did not receive rest and warmth and good, nourishing food. Often, it killed, even if the patients were cared for.
The only shred of grace from all the Thousand Gods, was that the cathedral had been spared. The cathedral and the Nobles’ Quarter, and the palace compound. Moren had the tools to rebuild, if it dared.
Rani turned her head away and pulled the shutters closed, turning back to the tome on her whitewashed table. A JOURNEYMAN’S DUTY, she read. The letters were ornate, the parchment page ringed with fine illustrations of journeymen glasswrights going about their business of pouring glass, cutting shapes, crafting fine-drawn windows.
The book was the newest in her collection, given to her by Davin. The old man had carried it all the way to Rani’s tower, breathing heavily from his exertion. He had pointed toward the heavy parchment at the beginning of the text, alerting her to the beautifully crafted pages. “Read it, girl. Read it, so that you can get on with your business.”
She had bridled at his acerbic tone, but she had long ago mastered swall
owing her retorts to the old inventor. Instead, she had brought a lamp closer, and she had made out the words on the page: A JOURNEYMAN’S DUTY. A Journeyman Glasswright shall exhibit all the Skills learned in his Apprenticeship. He shall show Knowledge in pouring Glass. He shall show Knowledge in cutting Glass. He shall show Knowledge in setting Glass. He shall show Leadership in teaching Apprentices. He shall show Obedience in following Masters. He shall contribute one fourth Share of all his worldly Goods to his King. Only then shall a Glasswright be recognized as Journeyman by his Guild and all the world.”
Rani had read the text so many times that she had memorized the words, inuring herself to the longing that swelled in her chest. She had once been part of a complete guild – apprentices, journeymen, masters – all working toward a common goal. Now, she was the only glasswright in all of Morenia. She must prove to herself that she was ready to advance, that she was ready to stake claim to the title of journeyman. She must prove that she was ready to step forward in her bid to rebuild the glasswrights’ guild.
After all, no other glasswrights were likely to trust their fates to Morenia. Not after the proud kingdom’s own guild had been destroyed. Not after its guildhall was torn down, stone by painful stone. Not after its own masters and journeymen and apprentices had been executed or maimed, the supposedly lucky ones traveling far from Morenia with only scars and butchered hands to show for their devotion. If Rani were to rebuild the glasswrights’ guild, she would have to start on her own, vanquishing the nightmares of the past.
And so, even after the fire, Rani began each day by reading the book’s exhortation, as if the words alone would make her succeed in the face of Moren’s calamity. That morning, she had set herself to work on a new window, a window illustrating the disaster of the fire. She was still trying to determine a strategy for cutting the pieces – long tongues of red and yellow and orange, streamers of color to commemorate the flames that had changed forever the world that she had known. She would immortalize Moren’s destruction in glass, exorcise the memories from her own mind, and cement her claim to the title of journeyman. …
She still did not have the skill to cut the long, flowing pieces. Instead, she would work on tinting the glass, creating the yellow and orange from clear glass and silver stain. She needed to determine the proper amount of gum arabic for the caustic mixture. She grunted slightly as she reached for a lead-embossed book, the first treasure that Davin had given her. That treatise held almost everything she wanted to know about glasswork, almost everything that she had taught herself in the three years since she had returned from Amanthia.
From Amanthia, where she had been kidnapped and forced into an army of children, children who were sold as slaves to further their dark king’s evil goals. Rani had liberated that army, and she had contributed to the defeat of the evil King Sin Hazar. She had learned much on her journey to Amanthia, much about the dark power of loyalty and devotion and love.
Rani set the new book on the table, carefully bringing her lamp near and ignoring the slight tremble in her fingers. She was too aware of the power of fire. Before she could huddle over the pages of tight-written script,, the door to the tower chamber crashed open. “Mair!” Rani exclaimed. “Where have you been?”
The Touched girl grimaced. “Tending the children. Six more cases of firelung. All Touched.” The disease was spreading, working its greatest damage among the people of Moren who had the least. Rani read Mair’s concern in her friend’s creased brow. Mair may have come to live in the palace, but her heart was still in the streets, with the children she had raised, with the troop she had led. With a visible effort, Mair set aside her worries, asking Rani, “What have you been up to, that you look so surprised at my coming here?”
“I was reading Davin’s newest treatise, about advancement to journeyman.”
“Books.” Mair snorted as she glanced at the volumes on the high table. Rani knew that her Touched friend was able to read; Mair had mastered her letters at the same time that the girl was learning how to survive in the City streets. Reading and writing were tools that helped a Touched girl thrive, let her read the text of royal proclamations, let her draft markers for loans.
Mair had harnessed her skills well, Rani thought, managing a troop of children with all the aplomb of a general. The Touched leader had consistently directed her followers with a combination of maternal love and mercenary zeal – skills that were sometimes wasted in the constraints of King Halaravilli’s court. Mair said, “There are more important things than books.”
“Certainly there are, Mair,” Rani sighed. “There are funeral pyres for all the victims who were not consumed outright by the fire. There is food to distribute. There are blankets to give out. But I can’t be down there all the time. I can’t watch over the damage all the time.”
“They’re your people, Rai.”
“They’re not mine!” Rani heard her voice ratchet higher, and she reminded herself to breathe, to relax her throat. “I’m a merchant girl, not a noble.”
“Merchant girl, guild girl, noble.” Mair shook her head. “You’re whatever you decide to call yourself. The fact remains that the people need you. Your king needs you.”
Rani snorted. “If he ‘needed’ me, he would have included me in his discussions with the ambassador from the Pepper Isles.”
“You’re still upset about that?”
“If I’d been there, we would have negotiated for more spices. We could have taxed the cinnamon and the pepper – we could have raised the salt tax. We’d have money to rebuild the city by the end of summer.”
“Rai, he obviously didn’t see it that way.”
“Of course he didn’t! He doesn’t understand how to bargain!”
“He understands how to be a king.” Mair shrugged. “He’s overlord of the Pepper Isles. If he demands too much of them, they’ll rebel. Morenia can hardly fight a battle now, not to keep its outlying territories in line.”
Rani did not bother to respond. If she had been involved in the negotiations, the matter would never come to open rebellion. She was more skilled than that.
After all, she had been born into a merchant family. In her earliest days, she had learned how to manipulate her older brothers and sisters, how to lure customers into the family shop, how to hone the barest edge of a bargain. Negotiating was in her blood.
“In any case,” Mair conceded, “the king says he wants you there tonight.”
“Tonight! He’s meeting with the Holy Father. He’d banish me before a messenger from the Pepper Isles but permit me to stand before the worldly representative of all the Thousand Gods?”
“Of course the king wants you there. You were the First Pilgrim.”
Rani had been selected for that honor almost five years ago, when she had been caught up in the mystery of Prince Tuvashanoran’s death. She had been snared by the evil Brotherhood of Justice, a cabal that had conspired to get her taken into the royal household, to have her adopted by the then-king as the First Pilgrim. The Brotherhood had wanted her to execute Halaravilli, to end his life and advance the cause of so-called Justice. Rani had freed herself from the Brotherhood a long time ago. A lifetime ago.
“The church hardly needs to be reminded of mistakes it made five years ago.”
“The church made no mistakes. They got you in the palace.”
“For all the good it’s done Moren these past few weeks! Why does Hal want me? The Holy Father’s so old that you could go in my place, and he wouldn’t know the difference.”
Mair ran her fingers through her always-tangled dark hair as she peered at Rani’s blonde tresses. “I think he’d notice.”
“He might,” Rani admitted. “But Hal certainly wouldn’t. He’s forgotten what I look like.”
“Is that what this is all about?” Mair clicked her tongue as she crossed the room. When she perched on top of a high stool, she looked like a benevolent bird of prey. “Rai, he’s worried for the kingdom, for all of Morenia’s future.”
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“Worried enough that he had to entertain that slattern of a princess from Brianta?”
“Worried enough that he sent her away.” Mair’s voice was surprisingly gentle. “She’s not able to give him the funds he needs; her dowry isn’t enough. He was put out with her, Rai, outright rude. He’ll be lucky if her father doesn’t revoke our right to travel along the Great Eastern Road. She left the palace this morning, and the rumors say the guards at the city gates learned a few new words, listening to her swear.”
Rani had not heard that the princess was gone. Even as a victorious smile began to curve her lips, she managed to shake her head in a simulation of disgust. “That’s what we need. Warfare on the eastern front. Any fool could see that this is not the time to provoke our neighbors.”
“So now you’re calling your king a fool?”
“If he acts like one, that’s what I’ll call him.” Rani tugged at the sleeves of her gown, forcing her attention back to the formula for silver stain.
Mair laughed. “Treason, and within the palace’s very walls.”
“Is it treason if it’s true?”
“It is treason if you speak against your king. It is treason if you leave him alone in his apartments and let him be outfoxed by the Holy Father, who was negotiating contracts before King Halaravilli was born. The church now says that we’ll have to pay a delivery fee of one gold ingot for every shipment of food they bring in.”
“An ingot! Why only an idiot –”
“Mind your tongue,” Mair interrupted, laughing. “His Majesty commands you to attend him in his apartments.”
Mair’s words shot through Rani, jamming against her spine and stealing away her breath. “He asked for me?”
“Directly.”
“So, now that he needs me, he can keep a civil tongue in his head.”
“Let it rest! You pushed him this morning. You know that you did. Your feelings were hurt that he sent you out of the room while he spoke privately with the ambassador from the Pepper Isles.”
Glasswrights' Progress Page 36