“You used magic on me?” asked Pazel sharply.
“Trust me—I had no wish to do so,” said Ramachni. “This is not my world, and when I come here I must use spells the way a nomad uses the water he carries, knowing it must last him across the desert. But fear not: the spell has long since snapped. And our meeting may yet prove lucky for us both.” He flashed his white fangs at Pazel. It was perhaps as close as he could come to grinning.
Thasha sighed, and dropped him on the bed. “So you've been aboard all this time?”
Ramachni nodded. “Deep in the hold, out of sight. I had to listen to the ship, and try to gain some understanding of your peril.”
“And this ‘Other,’” Thasha went on, “did you learn who it is?”
“Alas, no. But I did learn what he is. He is a mage—a magic-weaver like myself.”
“But less powerful, of course,” said Thasha.
“Oh no,” said Ramachni. “He is mightier, for he belongs to this world. I could not, for example, pierce his veil of secrecy—and with secrecy this mage is obsessed. Yes, he is strong indeed, and that troubles me. He could be a disciple of Arunis, the Blood Mage of Gurishal, the foulest sorcerer this world ever spawned. Arunis' greed was infinite. He even plundered other worlds, my own among them, in his search for deeper powers. I fought him there a century ago, in the great Library of Imbrethothe-Under-the-Earth, and cast him from my world. He limped back to Alifros, to the Mzithrin lands, and took refuge in the court of the Shaggat Ness. And the Shaggat was his doom, it seems: Dr. Chadfallow assured me that he died shortly after the Mad King himself.”
“Chadfallow assured me he'd be aboard, taking care of Prahba,” said Thasha. “I don't trust him. But you think this sorcerer could be Arunis' pet pupil, is that it?”
“Something of the kind,” said Ramachni. “Mages, like tailors and poets, have styles to their names, and in the work of this sorcerer I detect more than a little of Arunis' influence—and all of his wickedness. We must be very careful.
“The only good news is that there are so many spells and shreds of spells, so many cobwebbed centuries of magic in this ship, that a few charms of my own may pass unnoticed for a time. Oh, he will find them eventually—he will know another mage is aboard, and fighting him—but with luck that will not happen soon.”
“Mr. Uskins is a bad man,” said Pazel firmly. “And Captain Rose is horrible. Come to think of it, he also hears voices—spirits, he calls them. Could he be the one you mean?”
“Anything is possible,” said Ramachni. “And Nilus Rose is a born conspirator. But there is no time to speculate. I have asked Hercól to keep Ambassador Isiq and his Lady away for thirty minutes, and we have already talked for ten.”
Ramachni looked at Pazel again. “Will you hold my paw a moment?”
Pazel hesitated only long enough to remind himself that he was not facing a wild fanged animal but a great mage, and Thasha's friend. He took the little paw in his hand.
Ramachni closed his glittering eyes. He breathed deeply. “It's true,” he said. “You're a Smythídor.”
“I'm an Ormali,” said Pazel.
“Of course. But not just any Ormali. Your mother is Suthinia Sadralin Pathkendle—a mage herself, and the daughter of mages.”
“You know her name! How?”
“Elementary, boy. She signed her spell, and I have just read the signature—” Ramachni reached up to touch Pazel's lips. “—there. A formidable spell! But dissolved in some rather unsanitary fruit juice, it appears.”
“Please,” said Pazel, repressing a shudder, “can you switch it off? Like the potion-seller in Sorhn? It almost killed me and my sister.”
Ramachni looked up at him, compassion dawning in his eyes. “Don't you understand yet, Pazel? No one can switch it off. Your mother did not just toss a spell over you like an old coat. She changed you to the last drop of blood. In a sense, she really did kill you—killed your old self so that a new self could be born. That potion-seller did not cure you. He merely slammed a lid on the boiling kettle of your Gift—a most foolish act. If Dr. Chadfallow had not slipped those antihex-salts in your tea, sooner or later you would have run mad. As I say, lad, you're a Smythídor, a person changed by magic forever. And I have spent half of forever looking for you.”
There was a pause. Thasha looked from one to the other.
“So,” she said in a constricted voice, “you've found him. And I suppose all these years you only needed my clock, needed my family and me to help you find this oh-so-special tarboy. Congratulations.”
Ramachni sighed. “I will not say that you are wrong, Thasha dear.”
Thasha looked as if she had hoped he would do just that. She seemed about to say more, but Ramachni spoke first:
“Mind you, I am also not saying you are right. Let me say instead that mages see but little more than normal folk of that mist-shrouded land called the future. Do you ever know why you make a friend, Thasha? Do you know what good or ill must come of it, in time?”
Thasha glanced shyly from mink to tarboy. Her face was crimson. “All these weeks I've been dying to talk to you. To ask you something I can ask of no one else.”
Ramachni looked up at her. “Ask,” he said.
“Will you help me escape this marriage? Please?”
The mink's head drooped. After a moment he said, “Yes, I will.”
Thasha threw her arms around him in delight. But Ramachni raised a paw.
“I may not succeed. And if I do, the help may be as painful as what it remedies—or worse. But my heart tells me your fate will not be decided by marriage vows.”
“Ha!” said Pazel. “That's for sure! Blur baffle—”
Thasha made a face at him. She was overjoyed.
“And now,” said Ramachni, “we must concentrate on the peril at hand. This much I have learned by eavesdropping: besides the mage, who has been aboard for many weeks, another man of evil will soon be among us. Someone terrible. All the sly whispers center on him. He may be passenger or sailor or servant. He may stay aboard for weeks or hours: I do not know. But Rose and Uskins—and the mage-in-hiding, too—think of little else. And the only being of goodwill who knows this terrible man's name is a rat.”
“A rat!” cried Pazel and Thasha together.
Ramachni nodded. “A woken rat, amazingly. You will know him by his stumpy tail. I've tried many times to speak to him, but the rats of Chathrand are ruled by some awful fear and attack anyone who approaches their warren. If you find him, treat him kindly. He must be the most unhappy creature on this ship.”
On that point Ramachni was wrong, Pazel thought: no one could be as miserable as Steldak, the prisoner in Rose's desk. But the little mage did not seem to know about the ixchel, and Pazel dared not speak of them. He could still hear Diadrelu: They will be the last words you ever speak. And she was the friendly one.
“Ramachni,” he said, “why have you been looking for me?”
“To enlist your help,” said the mage. “By that I mean: to ask you to accept another Gift.”
A brief, astonished silence. “You're joking,” said Pazel.
The mink shook his head.
Pazel fumbled behind him for the doorknob. “Absolutely not,” he said.
“It would have no unpleasant effects,” said the mink. “At least, not for many years.”
“Fantastic—not much chance of living many years with this crowd. But if I do? What then? Do I sprout horns and tail, so that when I start babbling like a murth I'll look the part?”
“Oh sky!” said Thasha suddenly. “Grow up, Pazel. Ramachni's so careful with magic I didn't think he could do any for the first year I knew him. If he says it's safe, it's safe.”
“But he's not saying that.”
The mink clicked his teeth, making him appear to grin once again. “Very true, I am not.”
“Pazel,” said Thasha, “are you afraid?”
Idiotic question. He opened the door and fled across the stateroom—snatching
up the cake as he went. Then he heard feet pounding behind him. A whirl of motion, and Thasha stood between him and the outer door.
“You can't say no to Ramachni.”
“No?”
Pazel looked back at the mage, who had walked calmly into the stateroom. “Do it to Thasha the Brave, here,” he said. “One Gift was enough to ruin my life.”
“It will not be enough to save your world from death,” said Ramachni.
Pazel froze, the cake halfway to his mouth. Ramachni sat back on his haunches.
“Eavesdropping is difficult in the hold of a ship, but it is a thousand times more difficult from another world. For ninety years Alifros has been my chief concern, bound as it is to my own world by blood and happenstance. Dawn to dusk have I listened, and midnights, too. Now at last the moment comes. A fell power is brooding over the Chathrand. Greater than the evil mage already aboard her, or the horrible man who will board soon—though they perhaps seek to use it. What is it? When and how will it strike? I do not know. But I know that it cannot be ignored, for I have walked in lands where it prevailed, where men hoped it would pass them by, and were wrong. Trust me this far, Pazel Pathkendle: you do not know the meaning of ruin.”
Pazel looked at him: a small creature on a bearskin rug, its black eyes blazing.
“What do you want?” he said.
“To listen with you. And if you should hear something … extraordinary, to teach you a word to know it by. Perhaps several words. It depends on what you hear.”
“That's all?”
“That, Pazel, is enough to shake the foundations of this world. The words I would teach you are Master-Words: the very codes of creation, spoken in that ethereal court where will is matter, and rhymes become galaxies. Normal men cannot learn them, you see—”
“But he can,” said Thasha.
“Perhaps,” said Ramachni. “But Pazel's Gift is a tiny spark compared with the wildfire power of such words. Only two or three do I dare teach you—for your sake, and that of Alifros itself. And Pazel, you will only be able to speak each word once. After that it will vanish from your mind forever.”
“But why don't you use them yourself?” Thasha asked.
“I am a visitor here,” said Ramachni. “The Master-Words belong to this world, not mine. They would be as dust on my lips.”
Still Pazel hesitated. “What am I to do with these Master-Words?”
“Fight the enemy.”
“But how? You don't even know who he is!”
“In time he will show himself. And then you must choose the word, and the moment for its use. And you must choose wisely, for there will be no second chance.”
“This is … absurd!” sputtered Pazel. “I don't even know who I'm supposed to fight! How can you expect me to beat him? What if he just stabs me in my sleep?”
“He will not know about you, either, nor of the power in your keeping. And years may pass before he strikes—years, or days, or mere hours. Try to understand: this is a battle in the dark, and I am as blind as any. I know only that I have found in you and Thasha my best champions—the very best in ninety years of searching. Will you refuse?”
Pazel walked slowly to the table and put down the cake. “No,” he said. “I won't refuse.”
“Then as soon as we can arrange a time—”
“Now.”
Ramachni twitched his tail in surprise. “Are you certain? It will tire you greatly.”
“I'm certain. Do it now. Before I change my mind.”
Ramachni drew a deep breath. He looked at Thasha. “When this is done, Pazel will be tired, but I shall be exhausted. Too exhausted even to return to my world through your clock. I will go to my secret place in the hold, and sleep for some days. Can I depend on you, Thasha? Will you guard him, and guard yourself, and be strong for everyone till I awake?”
Beaming at his confidence in her, Thasha said, “I will.”
“Then go to the window, Smythídor, and lie down.”
Pazel walked to the gallery windows. The window seat was eight feet long, with red silk cushions propped in the corners. Did they have time for this magic? Was he wrong to have insisted it happen now? He lay down, trying not to touch the cushions. Even after his bath he was still too dirty for this room.
The little mage sprang up into Thasha's arms, then twisted about to face him.
“Do not think,” he said. “Thought is the task of all your life in this frail universe, but just now it is the wrong task. Instead, listen. Listen as though your life depended on it, as one day it shall.”
Pazel looked at him, but the mage offered no further instructions. So Pazel crossed his arms on his chest and listened.
At first he merely heard the ship—sounds so familiar he scarcely noticed them anymore. Beneath the windows her sternpost churned the swell, and her rudder creaked as Mr. Elkstem turned the wheel. Gulls cried. Men laughed and shouted. There was nothing strange about any of it.
Then Ramachni whispered something to Thasha, and she leaned over Pazel and flung open a window. Wind filled the chamber, lifting her hair, and Ramachni slid from her arms to the window seat. Gingerly he crept onto Pazel's chest.
“Shut your eyes,” he said.
Pazel obeyed, and the instant his lids closed he was gone—hurled like a leaf on a vast cyclone of sound. It was not loud, but it was deeper than the sea itself. He heard a thousand beating hearts: every one on the Chathrand, from the slow kettledrum hearts of the augrongs to the bipbipbip of newborn mice in the granary. He heard the sound of Thasha blinking. He heard Jervik laugh secretly at something, and Neeps retching at some foul chore in the galley, and the lookout sobbing a girl's name (“Gwenny, Gwenny”) in the privacy of the crow's nest. He heard a rat speaking, howling, about the wrath of the Angel of Rin. He heard Rose whisper, “Mother!” in his sleep.
But the sounds of the Chathrand were but a puff of wind in the storm. Pazel could hear all the waves in the Nelu Peren, breaking on every rock and raft and seawall in the Empire. He could hear the layers of the wind, pouring over the world like drifts of snow, mile over mile, and thinning at last to the icy flute-song of the void. He heard sea turtles hatching on a warm Bramian beach. He heard a creature many times Chathrand's length devouring a whale on the floor of the Nelluroq.
Then a gentle breeze tamed the cyclone. It was Ramachni's breath, Pazel knew, and it flowed into that mad cauldron of sounds and silenced them—entirely. In seconds it was all gone, even his own heartbeat was gone. The world might have been dead, or frozen for eternity in solid diamond. And into that perfect silence Ramachni spoke three words.
He was sitting up. Dizzy, dazed. Thasha was stumbling toward an armchair. Ramachni trembled at his side.
What had happened? How much time had passed? For a moment Pazel was reminded of the time years before when he had woken to find the lilies grown tall in his mother's garden, and himself barely escaped from death. But no, not this time. Minutes had passed, not weeks, and he wasn't ill. Just full, to the very edge of madness, with remembered sounds.
“I heard the whole world breathing,” he said.
Slowly, achingly, Ramachni raised his head. Pazel met his gaze.
“The words,” he said. “I have them. I can feel them in my head! But what are they for?”
“They are the simplest of Master-Words. But when you speak them they will be spells of fabulous power. One will tame fire. Another will make stone of living flesh. And the third will blind to give new sight.”
“Blind to give new sight? What does that mean?”
“You will know.”
“Look at this place,” said Thasha vaguely. “It's a disaster.”
So it was: a whirlwind seemed to have passed through the stateroom. Pictures were crooked, chairs overturned, crumbs of cake spread everywhere. Thasha herself, with her hair bedraggled and her silver necklace twisted over one shoulder, looked as if she had just climbed down from a mast.
Ramachni touched Pazel's arm. “Remember: each w
ord is gone forever after you speak it. Everything depends on your choices. Listen to your heart, and choose well.”
He crept down from the window bench, wheezing like an old man. Thasha hurried forward and lifted him. Her face was suddenly very worried.
“Be strong, my warrior,” Ramachni said to her. “Now go and find Hercól, and let him take me to my rest.”
But there was no need to go looking for Hercól. Seconds later he threw open the outer door, leaped inside and slammed it behind him.
“Ramachni, you have kept them too long!” he whispered. “Hide! Her father comes! By the Night Gods, you two—straighten your clothes and sit down to your studies!”
Ramachni vanished into Thasha's cabin while Hercól began frantically putting the room in order. Snatching up Thasha's grammar book, he thrust it into Pazel's hands.
“For the love of Rin, watch that tongue of yours!”
They had just enough time to drop into studious postures before Eberzam Isiq flung open the door.
“So,” he said with a glance at Hercól, “you found them.”
He was furious. Pazel reflected dimly (his mind was still rather thick) that he had never apologized—but how could he apologize for speaking the truth?
Hercól cleared his throat. “I found them. Hard at the books, Your Excellency.”
“But not in public chambers,” said Isiq. “Did I give you the run of my cabin, Pathkendle?”
“No, sir,” said Pazel, struggling to his feet. His voice sounded odd to his own ears. Thasha started to rise as well, then sat again with a thump.
“And yet you dare return,” said Isiq, breathless with rage, “after your insolence a month ago.”
“Don't blame him, Prahba,” said Thasha, her voice equally strange. “I couldn't stand the noise in the lounge. I made him come here.”
He looked at her, clearly taken aback. “You brought him? Well, then—it is not your fault, Pathkendle. But it is most improper that you two should be alone! Bring Syrarys, next time—or fetch Nama, or Hercól. Hmmph! And how is her Mzithrini, boy?”
Pazel swallowed. “She … amazes me, Excellency.”
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