Ariadne thumbed through the two spell books. âYou found these in the same chamber as the kingâs weapons?â she asked the elf.
âYes,â Ellerie said, âbut Bobo and I were too busy exploring the city to finish translating them. Do you recognize them?â
Ariadne raised an eyebrow. âWhy would I? Theyâre just spell books.â
âOne is labeled. Bobo translated it as Fundamental Materials. Does that sound familiar? Itâs not like any spell book Iâve seen before.â
âThe label is handwritten,â Ariadne said, skimming through that book more carefully. âItâs just there so the owner can identify it separately from her other spell books. Iâm sure she has a lot of them.â She grimaced. âHad a lot of them.â
âShe?â
âIf you found them in the kingâs chambers, these must belong to Gaiana, his consort. Argyros isnât a wizard. These look like formulae for shaping materials. Stone-shaping, metal-shaping.â She flipped to the end of the book. âAnd the spells to create and shape them.â
âYou can read the wizard language?â
âI am a wizard.â
Ellerie glanced at Ariadneâs metal armor but didnât comment.
âCan you tell me more about it?â the elven woman asked instead. âIâd already figured out that the book explains how to create some of the metals your people used, but Iâm having trouble understanding even the parts weâve already translated.â
âIâm not a shaper.â
âAnything you know would be helpful.â
Ariadne shrugged. âShaping is used to construct materials that canât be created through normal means. For shaped stone, you start with the stone thatâs already there, and then add other components based on what type of stone it is. Youâd have to read through the book for details. You use one spell to turn all the components into a liquid and mix them together, and then another spell to create the shape you want and return it to solid form. The inner city is mostly built of shaped stone. The builders added enchantments to ensure the structures could never collapse or crumble, but shaped stone holds up well on its own.â Which left more questions. How had the shaped stone in Fortress West melted? How had the entire eastern section of the city collapsed?
âWhat about metals?â Ellerie asked.
âThere are a lot of shaped metals, but most are rare and just used for specific purposes. This book only includes a few of the more common ones.â
âThe first one is like the armor youâre wearing now, right?â Ellerie asked, indicating the cuirass Ariadne had borrowed.
Ariadne had to stop for a moment and think about how to translate the name. The necklace didnât provide a direct translation, so she had to split up the component words and translate them separately, then recombine them.
âYes, silversteel,â she said. âItâs used for armor or jewelry, or sometimes expensive dinnerware.â
âItâs steel?â
âIâve never studied shaping. I donât know if itâs truly steel or if thatâs just what itâs called.â
âWhat about the others?â
Ariadne sighed and glanced down at the book again. âThe next ⦠Iâm not sure what to call it. Fortisteel, perhaps? There isnât a precise translation in this language. Itâs used for weapon blades and certain tools.â
âLike the weapons we found in the armory?â Ellerie asked.
âYes.â Ariadne flipped through the pages until she reached the next formula. âThis last one is mirrorsteel. Itâs expensive to create, and hardly ever used outside the Mage Knights, or certain war mages who can benefit from its properties. Itâs similar to silversteel, but can be easily infused with temporary enchantments. It also dampens spells cast against the bearer.â
âThatâs what your own armor is made from?â
âYes.â
âIs that why you can cast spells while wearing it?â
âNo.â Ariadne didnât elaborate.
The silence stretched uncomfortably long, and then Ellerie said, âIâm sorry about our last conversation. I really do want to help you, but I also want to learn as much as I can about the Chosar and Tir Yadar. I think we can help each other.â
Ariadne hesitated, then nodded. âWeâll see.â
âThereâs a warden in Aencyr by the name of Hildra. She claims to be over two thousand years old, and sheâs heard of the Chosar before. Corec has spoken to her, and says she didnât seem to know much about them, but if we tell her what you know, she might have some ideas we havenât thought of yet.â
Another of these false wardens. Or, perhaps, she should simply think of them as new wardens. Ariadne had seen the six blue sigils along Corecâs arms a few times when heâd been sparring shirtless, and three of them matched the sigils sheâd seen on Leena, Shavala, and the redheaded humanâKatrin. Ariadne wasnât sure who the other sigils belonged to, though she suspected Ellerie was one of them. It seemed a strange ruse to keep up if Corec wasnât actually a warden. And if he was, then perhaps this Hildra was as well.
She nodded again. âWeâll see,â she repeated.
âThereâs something else I wanted to talk to you about,â Ellerie said, looking uncomfortable. âWeâre granting you two shares from the expeditionâs profits.â
âI donât want your charity,â Ariadne said, scowling at the other woman.
âItâs not charity. As the last livâ ⦠as the last resident of Tir Yadar, youâre entitled to a portion of what we found. It comes out to a bit over ten percent. It should be enough to help you do ⦠whatever it is that you want to do. Youâre going to need money and resources if you want to find out what happened to your people.â
âI suppose,â Ariadne admitted.
âAnd your shares are separate from the Mage Knightsâ equipment and the kingâs swords,â Ellerie continued. âWe figure those things belong to you and your people, and we donât have any claim on them. The same with the necklace and the bracelet.â
Ariadne scowled. âI didnât take the damned bracelet.â
âThen why didnât you say so before?â
âBecause what I do or donât do is not your concern!â
Ellerie took a moment to visibly calm herself before responding. âPerhaps thatâs true, but if you didnât take it, then it actually was stolen, and we donât know who by. It would have been helpful to know before now.â
âYouâre all thieves. Whatâs the difference?â
âWe donât know if itâs dangerous! Do you know what it does?â
âIâd never heard of it until you mentioned it. If it came from the Enchantment Repository, Iâm hardly the best person to ask. Itâs just luck that I recognized the Necklace of TonguesâIâve spent enough time in the Fortress complex to have seen someone wearing it before.â
âWould you recognize anything else from the Enchantment Repository?â
âNo,â Ariadne said. Then she shrugged. âMaybe from stories.â
âWould you be willing to look at the other items?â
âTo what end? To aid in your looting?â
Ellerie looked down, a disappointed expression on her face. âNever mind,â she said.
Ariadne wanted to shout at her, to argue with her about what the group had done to Tir Yadar, but she couldnât muster the energy. She was tired of being angry all the time. Besides, after thousands of years, even by Chosar law it wouldnât be considered looting. Worldly goods were of no use to the dead.
âIâll consider it,â she said.
#
Tears blurred Yassiâs vision. Jasper was dead? That sweet old man?
And it was all her fault. She was the one whoâd found him for Rusol. She was the one whoâd sealed his fate when he could instead have continued to live his old life in Westport. First Samir and now Jasper. How many more deaths would she be responsible for? Sheâd found Rodulf too. Would he be the next to die?
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âAre you paying attention?â Rusol snapped.
âHow did it happen?â she asked.
âHow did what happen?â
âHow did he die?â
âYouâre still going on about Jasper? Iâm trying to talk to you about something important!â
âRus, please!â
Rusol growled, then relented. âHe wasnât ready for a battle, even with the new spell books. Itâs unfortunate, and Iâm sorry, but thereâs nothing I can do about it now. I need you to find me some real wizardsâones who actually know how to fight. Stop looking in Larso. Weâre only finding the dregs here. Look in Matagor instead.â
Just like that heâd already forgotten Jasper. He thought nothing of the old manâs death, just as he thought nothing of the compulsion spell heâd laid upon Yassiâs mind, or the orders heâd given her that had slowly stripped away more and more of who she was. She had to face the truth. To Rusol, other people only mattered to the extent he could get something from them. Sometimes heâd say something that let her believe there was more to him, some part of him that wanted to do the right thing, but in the end, it always came to nothing. He was friendlier to Kolvi and Magnus simply because of the power they brought him. Heâd forced Yassi to marry him only because marriage gave him an air of respectabilityâor perhaps because heâd wanted a bedmate. There was nothing more to it, and there never would be.
âYassi! Are you listening?â
âIâm listening,â she answered in a dull tone, not meeting his gaze.
âLook for wizards or other mages we might be able to hire. In Matagor, they wonât be hiding, so it should be easier than the ones youâve found here. If we find more than we need, thatâs even better. Iâll bond the best of the bunch, and turn the others into hunters.â
He wanted her to find him more puppet slaves, and since heâd ordered it, she wouldnât have any choice in the matter.
âWhy are we talking about this in front of him?â she asked, indicating the other man in the sunroom, who stood staring blankly at a wall.
âDo you remember Sir Barat, from our last visit to Northtower?â Rusol said. âIt seems heâs an elder witch, from one of the northern clans. Heâs not very strong yet, but I bonded him and Kolviâs going to work with him. I need you to find chambers for him near hers.â
Yassi shivered at the dead expression on the young knightâs face. âWhy is he like that?â
âI donât think heâs going to be happy about what I did, and I didnât want to deal with him on the trip back, so I left the other compulsion spells on him. Tonight, Iâll sit down and come up with a list of commands to make sure he wonât turn against me. Once thatâs done, Iâll remove the other spells.â
Yassi kept her face expressionless as she considered what Rusol had said. Despite the compulsion magic heâd woven into the modified warden bond, he was still concerned one of his bondmates could act out against him if he didnât give all the right commands. But how? Yassi was forced to obey anything he said, and heâd given her so many orders, sheâd practically forgotten what it was like to make a decision for herself. Was it possible heâd missed something?
âIâll ask the housekeeper to find rooms for him,â she said.
âGood. Get him settled, then watch over him for a while to make sure he understands whatâs going on. Iâd better go talk to Father and tell him what happened in Northtower. Iâll see you tonight for supper.â
Rusol left, and Yassi went to find a maid to send a message to the housekeeper. By the time she returned to the sunroom, Queen Merice had arrived and was attempting to engage Barat in conversation.
âYouâre from Northtower, arenât you Sir Knight?â the queen was saying. âDo you know my son, Rikard? Heâs a knight at Fort Hightower, but heâll be king one day. Heâs Martenâs son!â She had a bright smile on her face.
Mericeâs condition had worsened, and there were no longer any days where she remembered what had happened to Rikard. Sheâd descended into a permanent fantasy where her son was still alive, and Marten had given strict orders to everyone in the palace not to say anything to the contrary, not wanting to upset her.
âI donât know him,â Barat said tonelessly.
But he certainly knew Rikard was dead, so Yassi spoke up quickly. âYour Majesty, is it time for your medicine?â
âI already had it, this morning!â the queen insisted. âI just woke up. I donât want to go to sleep again!â
Yassi hesitated. Sometimes she wasnât sure just how much the medicine was helping Merice as opposed to simply being used to keep her out of the way.
âWell, all right, but I need to show Sir Barat to his rooms. Will you wait here for me? Iâll come back and we can have tea together.â
âOf course,â Merice said. âAnd then Iâll braid your hair so you can look pretty for Rusol. Heâs such a sweet little boy. You must be so happy to have him back.â
Yassi managed a fake smile and a nod, then excused herself.
As she and Barat walked down the corridor, she glanced at him and sighed. âDo you have any idea whatâs happened to you?â she asked.
âMagic,â he said. âHard to think.â
âHeâll change that soon. Youâll be able to think again, but it wonât make things any better.â
#
âYou turned them all?â Marten roared. âWhat kind of idiocy possessed you to do that?â
Rusol withered under his fatherâs gaze. Marten had rarely been this angry with him. âI didnât have a choice. Too many people knew something had happened involving magic. There would have been questions.â
âThereâs always a choice!â
âDonât yell at him!â Sharra, Rusolâs mother, exclaimed. The concubine had followed the two into the kingâs study to hear the results of the trip.
âDo you have any idea what heâs done?â Marten spat out.
âHe did what you should have done a long time ago! He took control of the situation!â
âNo! Heâs risked turning the entire Order of Pallisur against us, and with them, half the kingdom!â
âThatâs better than sitting back and manipulating puppet strings for decades, hoping someday youâll get what you want,â Sharra said, ice in her voice. âThe priests are your subjects, Marten, and itâs about time they started acting like it. Take away the Churchâs right of doctrinal law. If anyone complains, behead them. The rest will fall into line if they donât want to be banished from the kingdom.â
âThatâs not how it works! Right now, weâre balanced on a knifeâs edge. The Church has been allowed too much political power over the centuries, and it takes time to undo that. If we move too fast, weâll start a civil war!â
âThatâs always your excuse, Marten, but Iâve read through Larsoâs code of civil law and the code of royal law. The king still retains absolute authority. Your great-grandfather used it to stop the Church from burning mages, but you never do anything with it!â
âHow do you still not understand after all this time? It doesnât matter what the law says if the people believe differently! My great-grandfather changed a single law, and because of that, the monarchy lost popular support until my fatherâs time, giving the priesthood more power. Larso was founded by the Churchâkings come and go, but the Church is constant, and most of our own soldiers are among the faithful. The people see me as an extension of the Church, but if I take action against it, a rebellion might start within our own royal guards!â
âMore excuses,â Sharra said. âIâm glad it was Rusol at North Tower and not you. Itâs a good thing he didnât fall for your nonsense the way Rikard did.â
âEnough!â Marten growled, his eyes flashing red as he stalked toward her, his fist raised. âDonât talk about Rikard ever again! Iâve had enough of your constant sniping! Heâs been in his grave for five years!â He stopped when he realized what he was doing, and unclenched his fingers with visible effort, the red fading from his eyes as he got the demon rage under control.
Sharra had shrunk back against the wall. âBut Marty, Iâm justââ
âGet out!â
Rusolâs mother stormed out of the room, slamming the door closed behind her.
Marten shook his head. âHow can she be so blind?â he muttered, staring after her. âThe change has to come from within the Church or itâll never work, and Iâm so close to convincing them. You understand that, donât you, Rus? Do you realize why what you did is so dangerous?â
âI was careful,â Rusol said, trying to keep his voice steady. Heâd killed a warden; he could surely face his fatherâs disappointment. âI took steps to make sure a blessed priest wonât discover the compulsion spells.â
âCan you guarantee that?â
Rusol hesitated. âNo.â
âDo you know how many people will die if we go to war with ourselves? Our first duty is always to the people of Larso. Even if we won the war and exiled the Order, the people would never trust us again. You couldnât be king once they know youâre a mage, not without slaughtering the tens of thousands of civilians who would rise up against you. Do you want to become a tyrant?â
âThe clans would follow us.â
âWould they? We havenât exactly done much for them over the past three hundred years. And even if they trusted our blood ties over our actions, the clans still in Larso are few and scattered. Except for the witches, theyâre just like any other farmers and villagers. Theyâre hardly an army. No, the best way to save lives would be to cede the eastern half of Larso to the Churchâfrom Telfort to the Black Crow Mountainsâand take the coastal cities and clan territory for ourselves. The western cities have always been less provincial, more accepting of magic.â
Rusol couldnât believe what he was hearing. âYou want to cut Larso in half?â
âNo, I donât want to!â Marten shouted, slamming his hands down on his desk with a thump. âItâs an absolute last resort if the Church discovers the royal family is full of mages! We take the rich half of the country, and let the Church try to support and protect the poor half while they lose out on three quarters of the tax income.â
âThree quarters?â Rusol had known the coastal cities were rich, but he hadnât realized how wide the difference was.
âOf course. Ninety percent of our trade goes through the ports, and if the Black Crow mines want to continue using our ports, we can start taxing them, too. Why do you think I never conquered the hillfolk? The hills would cost us more to support than they could possibly provide in revenue. Everything is carefully balanced, Rus! Iâve told you that over and over! If you upset the balance, weâll lose everything Iâve been working for!â
âIâll see to it that it doesnât come down to that.â
âBut you canât be sure,â Marten said more quietly. âThatâs the problem. Weâre so close. The next step is to get the Church elders to vote on removing all criminal sanctions for mages. Between the men Iâve turned and the ones Iâve managed to convince, I believe we can win that vote, now that most of the blessed elders have been shuffled off to the outlying regions. After the sanctions have been removed, itâll be harder for the priests to argue against fully legalizing magic. Your mother doesnât know what sheâs talking aboutâthereâs no reason to end doctrinal law completely. Itâs doctrinal law that created the monarchy.â
âIâll do whatever I can to help,â Rusol promised. âWhatever you need me to do.â
Marten sighed. âI suppose thatâs the best I can hope for at this point. I need to think about this for a while. Iâll see you at supper.â
Rusol had clearly been dismissed, but he stopped at the door. His father had to know the whole truth. âThere might still be a threat from Blue Vale,â he said.
âYou think theyâll want revenge for killing Leonis?â Marten asked. âAre they organized enough to put together a fighting force?â
âHe only brought one or two of his bondmates with him. The others were just regular priests.â
âHow do you know?â
Because Iâm still alive, Rusol thought to himself.
Out loud, he said, âWhen a bondmate dies, the rune on the wardenâs arm burns itself into a scar, but three of Leonisâs scars were old. Two were more recent. Magnus killed one of themâwe know because the manâs own rune reappeared on his forehead after he died. Weâre not sure about the other. Some of the bodies were burned too badly for us to check. But three of the runes were still alive, so Leonis still has three bondmates who could rally his troops.â
Marten tapped his fingers on his desk. Rusol waited for another explosion, but it didnât come. Instead, his father said, âI suppose we should have expected that. We made an assumption without evidence. There was no real reason to believe that all eight of the priests he traveled with were his bondmates.â He thought for a moment. âWeâll be stretched too thin to try to wage war against them up in Blue Vale, especially without knowing what sort of army they can assemble. I suppose you just found your first use for your new troops. Theyâll have to patrol the northern border more carefully than usual, to watch for any trouble. Send half of the mercenaries up there to support them, and see if Yassi can find out what theyâre doing.â
âYes, Father.â