The Magehound

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The Magehound Page 25

by Elaine Cunningham


  “Wizards,” she emphasized. “Your men will do better.”

  Andris thought this over. “We went into Kilmaruu with a purpose. I won’t risk these men’s lives again without knowing that there is just cause.”

  The elf woman sat silent for a long moment as if in private debate. Then she rose abruptly, the glowing sphere in her hands. Raising it aloft, she began to sing.

  Never had Andris heard anything like that elven song. Naming it music would be a disservice; he would sooner refer to the finest wine as spoiled grape juice! Kiva’s song was magic and starlight and wind and every emotion he had ever felt or imagined. The keen of a funeral dirge was in that song, and the exhilaration of a battle yell, and the sweetness of a first kiss.

  Her bell-like voice enchanted the globe as surely as it did him. The light deepened, and glowing forms began to swirl within. Finally Kiva finished the song on a clear, ringing note. Before the sound died away, she flung the globe to the floor.

  There was no explosion, no tinkle of breaking crystal. But suddenly the room was crowded with softly translucent shadows, all of them elves, all of them regarding him and Kiva with profound joy and gratitude.

  Motes of lights shimmered in the ghostly forms, which began to slowly dissolve. The lights drifted through the open window and rose into the night. Andris could have sworn that the stars shone brighter.

  Kiva watched them go, then turned her face to Andris. It seemed to the wondering jordain that some of the light lingered on her coppery features.

  “I do not think I can explain to you what happened here, but since you will surely ask, I will try.”

  Andris nodded, not sure that he could speak.

  “Some elves join together to work magic. One elf acts as a center, drawing together the magic of the others and that of the surrounding land, focusing it and weaving it into a spell. In the city in Kilmaruu, there once were many elves, engaged in working a great magic. You can probably guess what they might have been attempting.”

  “A spell battle,” he said. “They fought against the three wizards who diverted the river and created Kilmaruu Swamp.”

  “Fought, and lost,” she said tersely. “The crystal was a tool to help focus their magic. Something went terribly wrong, and some of their essence was trapped when they died. But they were also linked to the magic of the land, and this link stayed open. I suspect that this is what drew and empowered the undead. I cannot say for certain. I do not know what terrible spells the three human necromancers might have used. But the elves are free now, thanks to you.”

  Andris considered this. “So we serve not only my people but yours as well. This is true also of the Swamp of Akhlaur?”

  “Doubly so,” Kiva said in a soft, dark tone. “One of those three necromancers was named Akhlaur. Like you, he learned from his experiences in Kilmaruu and went on to ‘greater things.’ I will not sooth you with pretty lies: What you saw in Kilmaruu is but a preparation. Knowing this, will you follow me still?”

  The jordain glanced through the open window. The sky near the horizon was beginning to fade toward silver, but the stars still blazed, brighter and more joyous than he’d ever seen them.

  He turned back to the magehound, and a passion that had nothing to do with Kiva’s beauty burned in his hazel eyes.

  “I will follow,” he swore.

  CHAPTER SIXTEEN

  Tzigone hauled herself over the window ledge and dropped into the chamber. She crouched low to the floor and listened for sounds that spoke of the room’s rightful occupant. No lights were on, but she hadn’t lived this long by abandoning caution. Nor did she feel any qualm about invading Matteo’s sanctum. After all, the shutters hadn’t been closed and barred. If he had truly wanted to keep her out, he wouldn’t have left them open.

  She rummaged through the chest at the foot of his bed for one of his white tunics. The garment was far too long for her and hung almost to her knees, but it didn’t look too bad once she’d belted it up. The jordain’s pendant she already had, and she quickly looped it over her neck. She already wore white leggings and a loose, long-sleeved white shirt. In this weather, the jordaini usually left their arms bare, but that would give away the game. Tzigone was strong and fit, but there was no way anyone would confuse her slender arms with those of a trained fighter.

  Before she ventured out into the palace, she went into the bath and practiced before the mirror until she’d produced the calm, certain expression she associated with the jordaini. Looking the part was important. A misplaced smirk might be enough to draw attention that she could ill afford.

  She walked down the halls purposefully, even though she had no idea where she was going. Whenever she passed someone, she merely put on an abstracted expression, as if she were puzzling over deep secrets or committing to memory some three-scroll epic. But an hour passed in this fashion, and she began to think that she might be wandering about the palace forever. Finally she stopped a scullery maid and asked where she might find the queen’s new counselor.

  “If Matteo’s in the palace, he’d be in the queen’s workroom, like as not,” she said. She shuddered as if the thought horrified her. “No, wait. No one will be there until dusk. Matteo sent word to the kitchen to pack a picnic for the queen and her guards.”

  Tzigone threw up her hands in feigned disgust. “Well, that’s just fine! He bade me tend an errand and didn’t even tell me where to go. My first day as his assistant, and he isn’t here!”

  “Ill point you the way,” the servant offered.

  Tzigone listened to the directions and took off. To her delight, the queen’s workroom was utterly abandoned but for the guard seated by the vast door, nodding and snoring. A quick pressure to his neck and temples ensured that he’d sleep a bit longer and deeper than he had intended. Tzigone quickly patted him down for keys. There were none, but she found a small silver wand. It looked a great deal like the lockpicks she occasionally employed.

  With a shrug, Tzigone inserted the wand into the lock and began to tinker. But there was no mechanism inside, no gears and levers to catch and trip. Not a tool, then, but an artifact.

  She heaved a frustrated sigh and stepped back a pace, leveling the wand at the door and hoping that no trigger word was needed. To her relief, the door melted away, and then another. The third door actually did require picking, but she handled the matter quickly, and in moments she stood at the entrance to the queen’s inner sanctum.

  The rows and shelves of clockwork creatures didn’t interest her. Tzigone wanted books. There was a new rumor on the streets, whispers suggesting that the records of the secret Cabal might be kept under the queen’s watchful eye. If that were true, Tzigone might finally find some clue about her ancestry, a clue that might lead her to learn of her mother’s fate.

  She found a small room off the workshop filled with scrolls and volumes. With a small cry of delight, she settled down to read. These were not the Cabal records—the script was Halruaan, not the unique Southern Magic runes developed to protect the land’s magical secrets. But they were interesting nonetheless.

  The hours slipped by as she searched, but none of the names listed in the elaborate genealogies jogged her memory. Tzigone didn’t remember her own name, much less her mother’s. She doubted that she ever heard her father’s name spoken. She found very little that would help her, but there was some very interesting information about Matteo and his fellow jordaini.

  “Here now, what are you doing here?” demanded a dry and indignant voice.

  Tzigone started and looked up. A wisp of a man regarded her peevishly. He was not much older than she, but his hair was the color of dust and his frame was as insubstantial as a reed. Chances were she could burst right past him. But her chances of dashing out of the palace without being stopped were considerably less likely.

  “Oh, good,” she said with feigned relief. “I was hoping that a scribe would happen by. You are a scribe, aren’t you?”

  The man frowned in puzzlement. “Yes,
of course. But what need would a jordain have of my services? You do not send or carry written messages.”

  Tzigone realized her misstep. “I’m sure I don’t know,” she said sullenly. “Matteo told me to have some spells copied out, and he also wants a shopping list of the required components. I can only assume they’re for the queen.”

  The scribe’s look of suspicion deepened. “It has been quite some years since the queen requested either spells or components.”

  “Well, it’s been a while since she went out on a picnic, hasn’t it?” retorted Tzigone.

  This logic silenced the scribe for a moment. “You don’t look familiar,” he said, eyeing her intently. “I keep the household accounts. You are not of this house.”

  “No,” she agreed. “I’m Matteo’s friend. He sort of invited me here.”

  “How unfortunate for him,” said a resonant alto voice at the door.

  The scribe spun to face the king’s counselor. “Lady Cassia! It is a most unexpected honor to see you in this place!”

  Something in the scribe’s voice made Tzigone suspect that the female jordain was not only unexpected but unwelcome. Apparently Tzigone wasn’t the only person to take advantage of the queen’s absence.

  But Cassia gave away nothing. “An intruder was reported in the halls. I came myself to see how diligently the queen’s servants tended their mistress’s affairs.” She glanced at Tzigone. “In all truth, I am not impressed.”

  The scribe paled. “I was about to call the guard and have this boy removed.”

  “A good thought,” Cassia said. “Do not let me hinder you. If it’s all the same to you, I think I should stay until the guard arrives.”

  He hastened into the next room, and in moments a tinny clockwork alarm began to sound. Tzigone heard the clatter of approaching footsteps and willed herself not to panic. Her first instinct was to bolt, but there was nowhere to go. The room had no windows and only one door, and that was barred by the imposing form of the king’s counselor.

  Tzigone didn’t dare try her hand there. She was quick on her feet and could throw a decent punch when called upon to do so, but Cassia was a trained, well-armed fighter.

  The woman looked up as the first two guards hurried forward. “Take this ‘boy’ to the tower and then go fetch Matteo.”

  The two men exchanged uneasy glances. “But he attends the queen. We cannot command him away from her side, lady, not even by your word.”

  “You can if her safety is threatened by his presence,” Cassia returned coldly. “I have reason to suspect both Matteo’s veracity and his devotion to his order. This thief wears the jordaini vestment and pendant of the queen’s counselor. Pretending to be a jordain is a serious matter—a deadly one, if she is found to have any magic. Any man who would consort with such street trash is suspect, but it appears that Matteo has actually brought this thief into the palace. Perhaps I am wrong about him; I hope so. But a magehound will examine them both and decide the matter. See to it!”

  The guards flanked Tzigone and hauled her out of the chair. Her first response was to blind them with a quick fireball and then run like a rat. But using magic would ensure her death if she were caught. She tamely submitted to the guards, but her mind raced as she devised ways out of this mess.

  Not much more than an hour or two passed before the door to her cell opened. Matteo stepped in. His gaze skimmed her attire and then clouded with resignation.

  “My medallion, I suppose?”

  She took it off and handed it to him. “You’re welcome to it. It’s caused me nothing but trouble.”

  Matteo sighed and put the chain around his neck, adjusting the medallion into place. “What have you done this time, Tzigone?”

  “Oh, I like that,” she retorted. “All the scrapes I’ve gotten you out of, and that’s the thanks I get?”

  “The story,” he prompted. “Unadorned, if possible.”

  She took a deep breath. “I am secretly a member of the Jordaini Council. In the guise of a clever street waif, I protect the rights of any jordain targeted by treachery or jealousy. Currently I am following you to ensure that Frando does not attempt to place you in damning circumstances.”

  Matteo folded his arms. “Really.”

  “And it’s a good thing I did! Are you aware that a pair of nubile Amnian twins are being smuggled into your bedchamber even as we speak? And that they are clad in the queen’s gowns, and wearing wigs and face paint so that they both resemble Beatrix? Frando plans to accuse you not only of depravity, but of theft of the queen’s property and treachery against the king. I suppose that would be treachery by proxy, since the twins are not actually Beatrix,” she mused. “The niceties of Halruaan law escape me.”

  “Indeed,” the jordain said dryly. “That’s an ingenious plot, considering how little time Frando had to conceive it. He must have more talent than either you or I credited him with.”

  “Who knew?” she marveled.

  Matteo sighed. “Tzigone, why do you insist upon telling such outrageous tales?”

  “It keeps me in practice,” she said with a shrug, then patted the wooden bench. “You might as well have a seat We could be here for a while.”

  “Until the magehound is summoned,” he said grimly. “Do you realize how serious this situation is?”

  She met his eyes. “All my life I have been pursued by wizards and magehounds,” she said quietly. “Once before I was caught I escaped, but not before I learned exactly how serious the situation can be. Here’s a tall tale you can believe: If I don’t get out, I’m dead.”

  Matteo nodded slowly. “Then you are a wizard after all.”

  “Must you keep singing that dreary tune?” she snapped. “I told you, I’m no wizard. I have never been trained, I have never gone to any of the schools, I have not even been tested for gifts.”

  Matteo suspected that this was true, as far as it went He sat down beside her. “I believe that you will be slain if the law gets hold of you. But I suspect that theft is the least of your crimes.”

  “Compare my situation to yours,” she suggested. “I’ve been a street entertainer, making my way by doing tricks that supposedly had nothing to do with magic. If fraud is proved, there’s a price to pay. Same as with the jordaini.”

  He thought of Andris and of the price that had been exacted from his friend. He couldn’t stand quietly by while that happened again. After a moment he looked up and let Tzigone see the resolve in his eyes.

  The girl nodded and then began to plot. Matteo could almost see the gears working behind her eyes, as if she were one of the queen’s clockwork creatures.

  “I want you to stand over there in the far corner, where the shadows are deepest. Put your white cloak over your shoulders. Turn your back to the door, so that the first thing someone sees is a faceless jordain. You’re not much taller than Cassia. It might work.”

  He quickly followed the line of her reasoning. But impersonating a jordain was a serious offense, even if one jordain pretended to be another. “Is this truly necessary?”

  “Depends. How attached are you to the idea of living? Personally, I’m quite fond of the notion.”

  Matteo nodded in acceptance. He rose and took the position she had indicated, his daggers at the ready.

  Tzigone rose and walked to the door.

  “Guards!” she demanded in a peremptory tone. Cassia’s voice rang from her throat, strong and commanding. “Open this door at once.”

  The guard came over to the door, glanced at the jordain in the shadows, and made the assumption Tzigone had anticipated. He dug the key from his bag and bent to unlock the door.

  Tzigone seized his hair with both hands and yanked his head into the iron bars. He fell senseless. The key remained in the lock, twisted in a half turn.

  Nimbly she reached around and finished the task. Motioning for Matteo to follow, she darted toward the narrow winding steps that traced the interior wall of the tower.

  Matteo followed her up th
e steep flight, knowing full well what he was leaving behind. Saving Tzigone’s life had only one possible result He could never return to the only life he knew.

  He acknowledged that this wasn’t a new choice. He had merely taken another step along the path he set upon the day he stepped between Tzigone and the deadly wemic. The day that Andris had died. The day, he realized suddenly, that his unwavering faith in the jordaini order had been shaken beyond repair.

  A strange desolation assailed him as he followed Tzigone out of the tower. He was a jordain, sworn to the service of truth and to Halruaa and her wizard lords. This had been his whole life; it was all he knew. He couldn’t conceive of anything that could replace it.

  But first, survival. They raced to the top of the tower and then squeezed out the window and climbed down the vines that somehow found purchase on the smooth marble walls. From there they moved to the curtain walls, and from there to the branches of the first of several trees. But they didn’t speak until they reached the leafy sanctuary of Tzigone’s bilboa tree.

  Matteo watched as Tzigone took dried rations and a flask of water from a hidden cache. “Do you know every such tree in the land?”

  “One or two in every city and main village,” she said. “I move around a lot I doubt I need to explain why.”

  “In truth, an explanation would be in order,” Matteo said. “For what are you searching? What is worth the risks that you’ve taken?”

  For once Tzigone gave a straight and simple answer. “I’m looking for my ancestry.”

  Matteo’s brow furrowed. “This is so important?”

  “I can see why you wouldn’t think so. You’ve never known family.”

  “All jordaini are taken to the school shortly after birth,” he agreed. “It is the traditional way.”

  “But haven’t you ever wondered who your family were?”

  He gave that careful thought. “From time to time, I have wondered who might have given me birth. But the jordaini are my brothers, and I have known no real lack. Your situation is different, I take it?”

 

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