Authors: Sarah Prineas
Stoichiometrical
. What did that mean, exactly?
One of my torn-up books was a lexicon. I looked up the word, but it wasn’t there. Nevery would know, though. I went back to the book.
A long time later, my last candle guttered and went out. I sat up, blinking. The room was completely dark. The book. It was full of information. I didn’t understand any of it.
Except that in chapter two were special pyrotechnic instructions and a spell for finding a locus magicalicus. A finding spell!
I stood up and stretched. Carefully, I felt my way to a shelf and set down the book so the rats couldn’t
get at it. Words from the book swirled around in my head.
Magical interference effects.
Metal jelly.
Absolute stoichiometric control must be maintained!
Solution will be vertuminous blue.
Hot filament ignition.
I was too excited to sleep. This was a lot more complicated than making blackpowder, or combining slowsilver and tourmalifine. But the results! What if I could do this spell? I might find a new locus magicalicus in a few days! Then I’d be able to do a lot more to protect the Wellmet magic from Arhionvar.
For the rest of the night I paced in my black-dark room, listening to the rats scrabble in the walls, waiting for daylight so I could see to read. As soon as the sky turned glimmer-gray, I stood by the window with the book open, reading.
All day I read, getting hollower with hunger, but filling up with ideas.
When I finished the book, I lay on the floor and stared up at the slanted ceiling. Rain pattered on the roof and leaked in through the windows. So many instructions. And a list of ingredients, and things called
solutions
and
reagents
. Words that weren’t in my lexicon. Maybe Nevery would understand it.
The sky outside my attic window was dark gray.
Dark gray.
Meet Benet at Tryworks warehouse dock tomorrow night just after dark
.
Drats, I was going to be late.
Quickly I put on my coat. One of its pockets was ripped on the inside, so I slid the book in so that it went down through the pocket into the lining of my coat, where it would be safe.
As darkness fell over the Twilight, I ran through puddles until I arrived at Ten Crane Street, panting, my head spinning from having nothing to eat except half a biscuit for two days. Down here the air smelled like the river, fishy and muddy. Thunder grumbled overhead and the rain got heavier, running down
my neck like cold fingers.
There, the Tryworks warehouse, looming out of the mist and rain like a barge on the river. ’Round the back on the side nearest the river was a doorway where I could wait for Benet. As I rounded the corner, a big hand reached out from the shadows and grabbed me by the scruff of my neck.
“You’re late,” a rough voice said.
I caught my breath. “Hello, Benet.”
Benet was Nevery’s bodyguard, and his cook and housekeeper. He was big and broad, with bristly brown hair, a face like a fist full of knuckles, and a scar across his forehead. He wore a plain brown suit and a red waistcoat he’d knitted himself.
He kept ahold of me, glaring. “What’re you up to?”
I grinned. “I found a spell in a book.”
“Spells, is it?” He let me go. “Come on, you. Boat’s tied at the end of the dock.”
I followed him out to the dock and into the rowboat he’d tied up there.
“Underneath,” he said, pointing with an oar.
I crawled under a sheet of canvas to hide, just in case anybody was watching from shore. It was dark under there and smelled like rotten fish, but it was out of the rain.
The boat jerked as Benet pushed us away from the dock, and I heard him drop the oars into the oarlocks, and the squeak and splash as he started to row. We had to go upstream for a while to get to Heartsease.
I settled down against the curve of the boat, my warm coat wrapped around me, and closed my eyes. As long as I was with Benet I was safe. The river wavelets lapped against the boat, and the rain went
patter-pat
on the canvas just over my head.
I woke up with Benet poking my shoulder with the oar. He stood on the rocky shore of Heartsease island, glowering down at me.
I rubbed my eyes and sat up, then stood up, the boat tipping as I stepped onto one of the slippery
black rocks that lined the island. For just a second my head felt light, with hunger most likely, and I wobbled a little. Benet grabbed my arm and pulled me to shore, then gave me a sharp look. “Come on, you.”
Once Heartsease had been Nevery’s home, and the home of his family for years and years. But I’d blown it up. The explosion was where Benet had gotten his scar. Nevery was trying to rebuild Heartsease to be a home again. Maybe it’d be my home again, too, someday.
I could see that the workers had put up a foundation and four brick walls with rows of tall windows.
“In here,” Benet said. He led me through an empty doorway into a room scattered with piles of brick and canvas bags of dry mortar, and slabs of slate for the floors, and builders’ tools. In one corner Benet had rigged up a canvas roof, and in the new hearth he’d lit a fire.
Nevery was there, a shadow in the firelight,
sitting on a barrel of nails. “There you are,” he said. “You’re late.”
“Sorry,” I said. “I was reading.”
“Ah.” Nevery nodded. He understood how hard it was sometimes to stop reading.
Benet set down the lantern and leaned against a wall with his burly arms crossed. I sat down on the dirt floor with my back against the wall. “Nevery, d’you have anything to eat?” I asked. I’d been hoping for a pan of bacon sizzling in the hearth, three or four fried eggs with pepper, maybe some biscuits dripping with butter.
“Set aside your preoccupation with food, boy,” Nevery said. “What is the trouble with the magic you had to tell me about on this miserable night?”
Drats. My stomach gave a hopeless growl. “The magic’s at Dusk House,” I said. I stared at the glowing-gold embers in the hearth. And Embre. I needed to tell Nevery about the book Embre had given me.
“And?” Nevery said.
Right. “It’s at Dusk House,” I said. Had I said that already?
“Boy…,” Nevery began.
“Should’ve realized, sir,” Benet said, from where he was leaning against the wall. “He looks peaky.”
“Hmmm,” Nevery said, and then he reached down and took my chin in his hand, turning my face so he could see me. “Benet is right, my lad. What’s the matter?”
I shrugged.
Nevery knew me well enough to wait for an answer.
“I’m having a little trouble with the minions,” I said.
“Curse it,” Nevery said fiercely. He let me go and looked across at Benet, who nodded and went out. “What kind of trouble, boy?”
“They found out my hiding place,” I said.
Nevery muttered angrily into his beard.
“They showed me the magic thing,” I said.
“Magic thing?” Nevery asked. “At Dusk House, I assume.”
I told him about the magic welling up from the pit and lifting me off the ground, then draining away.
“Hmmm,” Nevery said, and stared into the fire. “Extraordinary. Never heard of magic behaving so strangely. Not a pyrotechnic effect, clearly. Nothing to do with a locus magicalicus. Very odd.”
A chilly wind from off the river swirled through the open door. I edged closer to the fire. Inside the lining of my coat the book Embre had given me bumped against my leg. I pulled it out. “Here, Nevery,” I said, holding it out to him.
He glanced at the title, then opened the book to the first page. “Where did you get this, boy?”
“From Embre.”
Nevery shot me a glare from under his bristly eyebrows. “A friend of yours?”
I wasn’t sure if Embre was a friend or not. “He’s
a pyrotechnist in the Twilight. His aunt’s name is Sparks.”
“Ah.” Nevery nodded. I wondered if he knew Sparks from when he’d done his own pyrotechnic experiments. He turned a page. “Hmmm,” he muttered, and turned another page.
“Look at chapter two,” I said. Then I put my head down on my knees and closed my eyes.
“Hello, Connwaer,” Rowan said.
I looked up. Rowan was tall and had a proud face, gray eyes, and red hair that was sparkling with raindrops and floating around her head like wild fluff. Across her cheek she had a thin scar, fading from pink to white, got from her fight with the sorcerer-king’s Shadows and guards. She was the duchess’s daughter and she was my best friend, and, except when she was furious with me, I was hers. She wore an embroidered black wormsilk dress with a green woolen cloak over it and black button-up boots. She stood beside Nevery, who glanced up
at her, nodded, and went back to the book.
“I can’t stay long.” She sat on the floor next to me and rested her elbows on her knees. “Argent rowed me across from the Sunrise. He’s tying up the boat now.”
Argent. Or
Sir Argent
, as he liked to be called. Rowan’s friend.
Nevery looked up from the book. “This finding spell,” he said, tapping the page.
“Can you make sense of it, Nevery?” I asked.
He nodded, pulling at the end of his beard. “I can, yes. But I am not sure that working with pyrotechnics is a good idea at this particular moment.”
Because of our other pyrotechnic preparations, he meant. But we had to do the finding spell. We
had
to. “I can fight Arhionvar a lot better with a locus stone than without one,” I said.
“You’re talking about doing a pyrotechnic spell to find your locus magicalicus?” Rowan asked. She leaned forward, her eyes gleaming in the firelight. “Don’t be stupid, Connwaer. It’s too dangerous.
What if you’re caught? You fought Arhionvar in Desh, and you did it without a locus stone.”
True, I had. But the dread magic had almost gotten me then. It wanted me to be its wizard, to take me over as it’d done to the wizard it’d found in Desh—Jaggus. The sorcerer-king had been lost to Arhionvar because he’d been alone, with no one to turn to for help. Arhionvar had corrupted Jaggus until he’d attacked his own city’s magic. Arhionvar wanted to do the same to me so it could attack Wellmet’s magic. I’d fought it off once because I knew I had friends and I wasn’t alone, but I’d need a locus magicalicus if I was going to face it again.
“Nevery—” I said. My voice shook a little bit.
“All right, boy,” Nevery interrupted. “But you won’t be able to work this spell in some Twilight attic. We’ll have to use a workroom.”
We
, he’d said. So he would help me.
“Some of the techniques described here…” Nevery shook his head. “Stoichiometry, hmmm,” he muttered. “Hot filament ignition. Have to tune the dock pendulum.” He went back to the book.
“What exactly is a finding spell?” Rowan asked me.
I turned to her. “A spell I can use to find my locus magicalicus. Nevery can’t cast a finding spell for me because it’s my stone we have to find. I have to do it.”
“I see,” Rowan said. “And your locus stone is somewhere in Wellmet?”
I glanced at Nevery to see what he would say.
“It is, almost certainly,” Nevery said without looking up from the book.
“It won’t be one of my mother’s jewels again, will it, Connwaer?” Rowan asked, smiling.
“No,” I said. Probably not. Hopefully not. A wizard’s locus magicalicus called to him or her. It could be anything, a pebble on the road, or a rounded river stone, or a piece of gravel. My first locus stone had been a leaf-green jewel, the center jewel in the necklace of Rowan’s mother, the duchess of Wellmet. To get my hands on it, I’d stolen it.
This time, finding my locus magicalicus was not going to land me in trouble, or in jail.
Rowan Forestal
Captain Kerrn’s guards are watching me all the time, waiting for me to lead them to Conn. Kerrn has asked me several times if I know where to find the thief. I don’t know where he is staying, so I can say with perfect truthfulness that I do not. I think she suspects me of helping Conn escape from the Dawn Palace. I didn’t, but I wish that I had. I have tried to tell my mother and Kerrn that Conn had to return to Wellmet from exile, that in defeating Arhionvar he showed more bravery than any palace guard, but they both still see him as the thief who stole the most valuable jewel in the city from the ducal regalia.
Sneaking out of the palace tonight wasn’t easy, but I got out, through the Sunrise, and down to the river without being seen. Argent was at the riverbank with a boat and a flask of hot tea. He was trying very hard to be noble about waiting in the rain.
Poor Argent; he does not know what to make of Conn. He sat uncomfortably on a pile of bricks while
we talked, and then he grumbled all the way home about Conn’s terrible manners. It bothers him that Conn does not call me Lady Rowan. Then Magister Nevery’s manservant cooked up potatoes and bacon in a pan, and Conn fell on it like a pack of ravening dogs, eating with his fingers because the servant, Benet, hadn’t brought a fork. Argent has a point about the manners.
While Argent sat scowling, Conn and Magister Nevery and I talked about the Wellmet magic and the threat of Arhionvar. Conn told us about the strange behavior of the magic at the Dusk House pit. Magister Nevery said he did not know what it meant, and Conn said maybe Nevery should go and try to get the magic to talk to him. After that, they argued about magic and talked about magical spells in great technical detail. Conn seems wound very tightly. I think he is more worried about Arhionvar than he lets on. He’s always been quiet. I expect that’s because he spent so much of his
childhood alone, on the streets of the Twilight, so he’s not used to telling people how he feels. But when he’s worried about something, he gets even quieter.
Conn asked about my mother. She isn’t any better. I’m afraid she is worse. She sits in her chair, so still and silent, like a pale marble statue. When I kiss her cheek, her skin is like cold stone. Magister Trammel says it is the wound given her by the Shadows that pains her. He works healing spells, but they don’t seem to make a difference.
This morning at breakfast I tried to tell her about the magic in the Dusk House pit, but she wouldn’t listen. Instead, she told me to cancel my swordcraft lesson so I could attend a meeting with the factory owners, then another meeting with her council, and then yet another meeting with the leaders of the city’s chimney swifts.
While she is ill she is asking me to take over more and more of her duties. I’m glad she trusts me, but I’m afraid it means she is not going to recover from her wound.