
| DargonZine | Volume 11, Number 4 |
riel jumped out of her chair. "Marcus!" she shouted. She stared at
Karina's husband, who was also Camron's cousin-in-law and briefly her
landlord. Then she ran to embrace him. "What are you doing here?!"
"Came for you, of course," Marcus replied. He hugged her. "You do
seem to have gotten yourself into a bit of trouble last night. Who were
you talking to?"
"Who? I was talking to --" Ariel looked over her shoulder and
realized that Mouse was nowhere to be seen. "I was --"
"Rehearsing a speech to give the Duke when you throw yourself on
the mercy of his Court?" Marcus grinned.
"I --" Ariel didn't feel like grinning back.
"No," Marcus' face quickly became serious. "That's not funny. Your
struggle against the forces of Dark Earth is no joke --"
"No," Ariel agreed, "but Marcus, how did you find me? I thought I
was *hiding* here."
"Ah." Marcus' smile returned. "That's part of the good news I'm
bringing you. I'd never have known where you were without him. Now, you
don't have to fight alone any longer. Cyrrwiddyn Hawkwing, priest of the
Seventh Circle, has come to bring you into the Congregation of Iliara's
Faithful."
"Iliara's Faithful?" Ariel repeated.
"Who else?" Marcus grinned. "Come in, Cyrrwiddyn," he called out
into the hall.
A man came in the door of the library -- and Ariel felt a surge of
disappointment.
He was quite ordinary, she thought, this priest of the Seventh
Circle of the Congregation of Iliara's Faithful. The clothes he wore,
the grayish tunic, the darker breeches, the cloak of undistinguished
fur, could have been worn by a hundred other men in the city. The face,
with all the usual parts in all the usual places and a general smile
that looked unimproved by any great spiritual insight, could have
belonged to a miller hopeful of her custom. Indeed, the man was short
and his glance darted to the corners of the room. He simply wasn't what
she'd hoped for from a colleague of Stefan's in the Great Struggle.
Her reaction was obvious in her expression.
"He doesn't look like much just now, does he?" Marcus quickly said.
"Hardly a sight to make you think that he's one of the brave few that
keep the world from spinning into the complete chaos that would mark the
final triumph of Haargon. Or something like that," he added, when the
priest arched an eyebrow at the effusive speech.
"We must walk disguised," the man named Cyrrwiddyn murmured, "lest
the forces of dark earth find us before we find them. We must be
vigilant and alert," he added, continuing to inspect the room
circumspectly, "lest they catch us unaware. You're alone here?"
"Except for --" Ariel glanced back at the reading table, but Mouse
was still missing.
"Where is the little one called Mouse?" Cyrrwiddyn asked.
"You know about her?" Ariel asked, turning back to the priest.
"My dear Ariel," Cyrrwiddyn said smoothly, "you are one of the
chosen of Iliara. Do you think there is anything about you that your
Mistress doesn't know?"
"Then why did she leave me alone all that time while those earth
priests were after me?"
"Ariel," the priest clasped his hands in front of himself, "Iliara
knows you -- perhaps better than you know yourself. She knew that those
priests and their assaults were not more than you could handle. See,
they have done their worst and you are still whole --"
"I am not whole!" Ariel declared forcefully. "I am wanted for
murder."
Cyrrwiddyn allowed an eyebrow to rise. "But you did not commit --"
"Of course not," Ariel said bitterly. "But it'll be hard work
convincing the Watch of that."
"Hard work, perhaps," Cyrrwiddyn said calmly. "But in time, of
course, the truth shall prevail."
"How much time?"
"That's not important, Ariel," the priest reproved her. "What is
important is that you have come through your trial -- as have we in our
struggle against Haargon. You have been tempered and are the stronger
for it. It is now an acceptable time for you to join with your
companions in the fight."
"I don't feel stronger," Ariel complained. "I don't feel any relief
now that you've finally showed up."
Cyrrwiddyn sighed. "You have been separated from your true friends
for too long," he declared. "Come. Embrace me." He held out his arms.
"And then we can sit down and tell brave tales of our respective parts
in the hidden war."
Ariel looked at the man, feeling no desire to hug him. He held for
her not even a flicker of the spirit that she'd felt Stefan kindling in
her when he told her about Iliara. He seemed to her a pleasant man who
sighed and smiled and spoke the same language and meant well. But he
wasn't anything more -- and something at the back of her mind made her
wonder if he might be even less. It occurred to her -- and as she
thought it, she realized that this was a shift in her perspective --
that perhaps Iliara wasn't going to get her out of her present mess
after all.
"Come," he repeated.
Reluctantly, she went to him. The embrace was awkward and she broke
it before he wanted to let go. He sighed again.
"It is as I feared," Cyrrwiddyn said to Marcus. "I have not dealt
personally with this Mouse, but it's clear to me that she is an agent
for the Other Side. Earth darkness has enveloped this child. She yet
struggles against it, but the influence of Haargon already weighs
heavily upon her."
"What, from Mouse?" Ariel exclaimed. "That's absurd! Mouse doesn't
even believe in earth darkness. Or Haargon. Or the War. Or even in
Iliara -- at least, not the way you -- we do."
Cyrrwiddyn gazed at Ariel with compassionate sadness. "And you see
what she has done to you? You're confused now, no longer sure what to
think. And whose work was that? The seeds of bewilderment, those are
sown by Haargon and by his minions."
"But she's not his minion!"
"She only says she's not his minion. How do you know what her true
purpose is?" Cyrrwiddyn's soft, gentle voice began to harden as he
continued to raise questions. "How do you know why she accosted you? And
it was just last night. That was awfully convenient -- for Haargon,
don't you think? You don't know anything about her, not really."
"And where is she now, anyway?" Marcus asked.
"I don't know," Ariel admitted.
"You see?" Cyrrwiddyn said. "She is actually a follower of the Dark
Way. She was trying to trip you out of the Path of Light and make you
stumble into their grasp. But she had to flee when your true friends
arrived."
"I don't know," Ariel said again. "She didn't seem to me to be
trying to make me do anything."
"The ways of the Evil One may be subtle indeed," Marcus remarked,
sounding as if he was quoting something.
"Be therefore three times subtler," Cyrrwiddyn responded, "yea,
more circumspect than a woodcock." He looked at Ariel. "The Letter of
Jamison," he explained. "Did Stefan tell you about it? I don't suppose
he offered you a copy of it to read." Ariel shook her head. "Too bad. It
would have been a comfort and a help to you after he -- after your
loss."
"Perhaps," Ariel admitted doubtfully. "But --"
"I think," Marcus interrupted, "that you and Cyrrwiddyn should go
now to the nearest post of Iliara. You'll be much safer there."
"Post of Iliara?" Ariel asked.
"House of Zephyrs," Cyrrwiddyn said, as if that should explain all.
When Ariel's expression made it plain that the term explained nothing,
he added "A place of safety here in Dargon for the followers of Iliara.
Marcus is right, though. We should go now."
"But -- my friends --"
"Are not your true friends," Cyrrwiddyn cut off the protest. "They
do not have your real interests at heart. They try to separate you from
the love of Iliara. But we are your true friends -- your true family. We
only will help you serve Iliara more faithfully and bring the light of
Air and Truth more fully into the world. Now come. We need to get to a
place of greater safety."
"I should at least tell them where I am," Ariel said. "And that I'm
all right."
"I'll come back and tell them you're fine," Marcus promised, "that
you no longer need their dubious help."
"I'm sure they meant well," Ariel resisted.
"Whatever they may have meant," Cyrrwiddyn told her, "the result
was that they were doing Haargon's work."
"Unless you're doing Haargon's work," Ariel suggested.
"I?!" Cyrrwiddyn exclaimed with clear affront. "How dare --" He
caught himself. "But Ariel, Marcus, here finds me genuine."
"Perhaps you've managed to deceive him as well," Ariel shrugged.
"Ariel," Marcus said solemnly. "I assure you that I have no doubt
that Cyrrwiddyn has come from the counsels of Iliara herself. I do think
you should accept his advice and counsel. And quickly! We don't know
when the Groundlings might mount their next attack on you."
Ariel gazed at the two men, watching their impatience become a
little more blatant. Finally, staring into Marcus' eyes, she suggested,
a little reluctantly, "Or perhaps Marcus is doing the work of Haargon as
well."
"Ariel, no!" Marcus exclaimed, clearly wounded.
Cyrrwiddyn blinked, then cleared his face, becoming again the
pleasant, blank man who'd first come into the room. He smiled that
chilling smile and said "Of course, child. You have to consider
possibilities like that. Iliara herself suggests that you must be
subtler than the woodcock. But you mustn't wallow in such speculations.
You can raise the question if you must, but Marcus is a good man and
trustworthy. And as you twist and turn your way through your part in the
Great Struggle, you will find, Ariel, that you must trust someone."
"That's true," Mouse said. She climbed back up from the underside
of the table. Marcus and Cyrrwiddyn stared at her. "You have to trust
someone," the tiny girl said calmly.
"There you are!" Ariel exclaimed. The sight of Mouse, unlike the
previous arrival of Cyrrwiddyn, did make her feel better.
"She *is* small," Marcus breathed.
"We can see that," Cyrrwiddyn snapped. "A perfect guise for someone
who wants to persuade that she's an agent of Iliara," he suggested.
"She's never tried to convince me of that," Ariel reminded him. To
Mouse, she asked "What happened to you?"
"Strangers barging into my house make me nervous," Mouse replied.
"So I laid low until I felt less nervous."
"You feel less nervous now?" Ariel asked.
"Odd, isn't it?" Mouse said cheerfully. "Here, I've been listening
to these friends of yours calling me a nasty little agent of Haargon and
no good for you. And I've also heard you declare doubt about whether
anyone cares about you -- whether anyone's on your side in this Great
Struggle. You know, I think we're not in full agreement about what this
Great Struggle is struggling over." She paused for a moment, gazing
thoughtfully at Cyrrwiddyn, then shrugged.
"Oh well," Mouse continued. "Maybe I'm less nervous because the
priest of Iliara finally said something I can agree with. Ariel, there
is such an intricate dance of purposes here that it does look as though
you'll have to let your heart pick _someone_ and then, just trust that
person. I'd vote for Je'en, of course. A very straight arrow. Or Alec,
who, however he came to know about you, I think does care about you. But
neither's here right now. Perhaps you should wait here for one of them."
Cyrrwiddyn frowned. He glanced at Marcus. "You sense it too, don't
you?" he asked.
"Uh, I'm sorry Cyrrwiddyn," Marcus replied cautiously. "I fear I'm
not as sensitive in these matters as you. Uh --"
"Something *soiled* has just presented itself to us!" Cyrrwiddyn
shouted. "Didn't you notice how it just got a lot mustier in here?"
"Oh -- of course I noticed that," Marcus admitted. "I thought you
were referring to something subtle."
"Well I didn't notice that," Ariel said, feeling vexed by the
self-proclaimed priest of Ariel. "I didn't notice anything like that.
And I don't think --"
"Ariel, she has corrupted you," Cyrrwiddyn said, abruptly changing
his tone back to a pretty good approximation of a sweet, conciliatory
tone. "She has blunted your sensitivity to the odor of earth. Now
please, you're too important to Iliara --"
"I am?" Ariel asked.
"Every one of Iliara's followers is important to her," Marcus said.
"Isn't that right, Cyrrwiddyn?"
"Then why did you abandon me for so long when I came to Dargon and
needed you?"
"We didn't abandon you," Cyrrwiddyn said. "Iliara yet was with you.
But her support was more subtle than you might have liked."
"Subtler than a woodcock," Mouse remarked.
"See how she continues to try to poison your will against the
Lady," Marcus said. "Twisting even the sacred words of Jamison."
"Please, Ariel," Cyrrwiddyn appealed. "She's likely to summon other
minions of Haargon --"
"-- if she hasn't already," Marcus added.
"We need to get to Zephyrs as quick as we can," Cyrrwiddyn
continued. "Please, don't let Iliara down. For Stefan's sake, if not
Iliara's herself. Come on!"
Ariel flinched at the mention of Stefan. She clasped her hands,
stared at Cyrrwiddyn, then asked "Mouse, what should I do?"
"Cyrrwiddyn is a wise man," Mouse said. She watched the priest
relax a moment at the unanticipated compliment. Immediately, though, the
man seemed to doubt whether the words would have only a single meaning;
he tensed up again in expectation of an oblique attack. Mouse gave it to
him: "He said you have to trust someone and you do. But Ariel, the
someone you should trust first is yourself. Go with them if you think
that's right."
"You're not going to tell me to order them out of my sight?"
"I --" Mouse bit back her first answer. Instead, she said "No
point. The priest has called me an imp of Haargon. Either you agree with
Cyrrwiddyn and anything I say is damnable or you deny him and leave your
options open."
"My options open?" Ariel repeated. "*My* options open? Yes. That's
true. If I refuse Cyrrwiddyn's help and place of safety, then I'm pretty
much on my own coping with my problems. Those priests of Haargon,
they'll be *my* worry. That murder charge at Camron's, that'll be an
accusation against *me* that'll be *mine* to disprove. Mastering the air
wizardry, that'll be my subject to study. It'll all belong to me again,
won't it?"
"But you can hand it all over to Iliara," Cyrrwiddyn suggested, a
hint of desperation in his voice. "Cast your burdens before Iliara, for
she can carry you on the wings of the morning --"
"But they're *my* burdens," Ariel insisted. "What if I don't want
to share?"
"Then you don't have to," Cyrrwiddyn quickly acceded. But his
message was now muddled.
"No thanks," Ariel said firmly. "I just don't want to go with you
and I'm not getting arguments from you that persuade me otherwise. You
might as well leave now." She glanced around at the friend she'd decided
to trust. "Mouse, we have to figure out what --"
The moment of inattention was a mistake. The priest of Iliara was a
whirl of motion for a moment and then Ariel gasped before falling to the
floor, a wicked looking dart stuck in her neck.
"I would rather have talked her into coming with us," Cyrrwiddyn
remarked to Mouse. "It would have gone easier if she'd thought she was
doing the right thing. But I had no intention of leaving here without
her. And we can change her attitude later, at our leisure, though the
process will be more time consuming and painful this way. Now, the only
remaining obstacle is you." He and Marcus started walking slowly,
casually, toward the table Mouse was standing on. "How are you at
vanishing while people are watching you?"
"I was thinking I'd like to ask the same question of you," a voice
announced from the doorway behind him.
"What?" Cyrrwiddyn spun around. Kittara Ponterisso leaned against
the doorjamb. The crossbow she carried with deceptive casualness was
pointed at the priest.
"I was thinking," she said lightly, "of asking you how good at
vanishing you were if someone armed with, say, a crossbow was watching
you and that watcher didn't want you to go disappearing until you'd
stopped to answer a few questions."
"This is none of your business --" Cyrrwiddyn growled.
"Oh, I'll be the judge of that, I think," Kittara declared. "After
all, I'm the one with the crossbow. But to be fair," she went on, as
casually as if this were taverntalk, "I really ought to be putting this
question to your colleague -- Hello Marcus." She waved with the loaded
crossbow at Marcus. Marcus remained frozen, staring at Kittara, but
Cyrrwiddyn, as soon as the crossbow shifted away from him, snarled a
filthily misogynous epithet and sprang at Kittara.
In a blur, the crossbow was targetted again on the priest, steadied
with both hands, and fired. At the same time, Cyrrwiddyn slightly
misjudged his spring and tripped over the fallen Ariel. He stumbled and
then caught Kittara's crossbow bolt in the neck. He crashed against the
reading table and was still.
"Saren's spit!" Kittara exclaimed with clear annoyance. "They're
not supposed to die unless I mean for them to die." She watched the
priest for any sign of life, but the only movement was the seeping blood
around the embedded quarrel. Marcus, however, began to ease his right
hand under his cloak.
"Hold it right there, Marcus," Sylk ordered. He stepped forward
from the hall into the library and pointed his loaded crossbow at the
man. "It's true that we just wanted to ask you and your 'friend' some
questions -- though our list of questions has been getting longer each
mene. But, as Kittara here demonstrated --" he nodded to her and she
walked over to Cyrrwiddyn to inspect her work "-- we can't promise that
if I have to fire, I won't kill you."
Marcus looked at the crossbow. He looked at Sylk's grim expression.
He looked at Cyrrwiddyn and he looked at the bloody quarrel. He raised
his hands over his head. "Guess I should've warned Cleo not to mess with
Crossbow Kitty, huh?" he asked.
In a blink, Kittara had crossed the two steps to Marcus and her
fist smashed into his temple. Marcus collapsed in a heap and Kittara
stood over him, wringing her hand. "Damned clod has a really thick
skull," she complained to Sylk.
"That may be, but --"
"No buts, Sylk," Kittara said. "I told you. Nobody *ever* calls me
that."
"I understand," Sylk said. "But look around." He gestured at the
unconscious Ariel and Marcus who were lying on the floor along with the
expired Cyrrwiddyn. "If you keep popping people like this, we're never
going to get our little list of questions answered."
The night was almost completely gone, but the passage of time was
marked in this interior chamber only by the occasional replacement of
tapers with fresh ones. Ariel sat slumped in one chair and Marcus
occupied another. Kittara leaned against the only door to the room while
Sylk glared at Marcus over one small table.
"So that's still your story," he said again. "You last saw Ariel
before tonight when you found her at this --" He glanced at Ariel.
"Terkan's house?" Ariel nodded. "You last saw her last night when she
said good night and gave you to understand that she was turning in."
Marcus nodded. "And then this evening, this Cyrrwiddyn - - whom you'd
never seen before -- came to you and threatened your life if you didn't
come with him and help him persuade Ariel here to go away with him?"
Marcus nodded again. "How could he threaten your life? He didn't look so
tough to me and you --" Sylk glanced at Kittara's hand. "You, I call a
bit more solid than a rock. How'd he threaten you?"
Marcus shrugged. "I've got a wife," he said. "I've got a nice
little house. He said he had friends. The friends wouldn't stop from
hurting Karina or burning things. Anything."
"So you helped this Cyrrwiddyn just to keep your wife safe from
these friends," Sylk shrugged. "Helped with a lot of enthusiasm, I'd
say." Marcus shrugged. "Why did Cyrrwiddyn want Ariel?" Marcus shrugged.
"Why did you go after Ariel last night?"
"To make --" Marcus stopped. "I didn't go anywhere last night," he
corrected himself.
"Bad lie, Marcus," Kittara murmurred, coming over to stand directly
behind his chair. "I happen to know you were out last night because we
had a very close encounter. I found you fighting in an alley with
someone else and you ran right over me when I tried to break the thing
up. Now, I'm not very good at faces and I do fail to recognize a name
from time to time, but I never forget a footprint. I recognized you. I
knew you were lying earlier today when you said you'd been home all last
night. I knew you were hiding something --"
"So is that how you found me this evening?" Ariel asked.
"Sure," Kittara replied breezily. "We shadowed Marcus. We sure
didn't have anything else more useful to do, what with everyone
interesting lying pretty low today. But it wasn't too terribly long
before Cyrrwiddyn came to Marcus's house and then the two of them led us
to you." She turned back to Marcus. "Now, you were in that alley last
night. The question is why?"
Marcus licked his lips.
"When did you first meet Cyrrwiddyn, Marcus?" Sylk asked.
"A few days ago, I guess," Marcus said. "He said that Camron had a
bird named Ariel who was going to help take care of an annoying audit.
He wanted me to put her up and keep an eye on her."
"When you say 'help take care of an annoying audit,'" Kittara
asked, "do you mean --"
"Marcus, who killed the auditor Jarvis?" Sylk interrupted.
"I don't know."
"It wasn't Ariel, though, was it?"
"A twittering fool like her?" Marcus sneered. Behind him, Kittara
nearly let fly with another shot to his skull, but controlled herself.
Unaware, he continued: "Think anyone would really trust a job like that
to her? Nah. She didn't do it -- but she was set to catch the noose for
it."
"That, Ariel, is hopefully the most backhanded character reference
you will ever get," Sylk grated, glaring at Marcus. "So who could tell
us who killed Jarvis?" he asked. "How about Camron?"
"Cyrrwiddyn probably could," Marcus mused.
"But Cyrrwiddyn's conveniently dead," Sylk pointed out.
"Pity."
"So how about Camron?" Sylk asked again.
"I don't think he'd know about something like that," Marcus
replied. "He preferred to keep to clean, legitimate subjects, 'cause he
was always talking to nice, respectable people like Duke Jastrik.
'Course, you have to wonder if he was always talking to the Duke about
completely respectable, legitimate --"
Kittara's fist smashed into his face.
Sylk sighed. "Kit," he said.
"You expect me to just let him insult both Ariel and the Duke?"
Kittara demanded.
"Yes," Sylk said simply. "Look Kit, it's an interrogation. We want
him to talk. But you're the reason this is taking so long. We keep
having to revive him every time he says something you don't like."
"*Almost* every time," Kittara said, with satisfaction.
Ariel stood at the gate to Duke Jastrik's compound. Kittara stood
with her.
"So I'm not under arrest?" Ariel asked again.
"No," Kittara shook her head. "We've got Marcus and we've got
reason to go after Camron. We don't think you're involved and we'll
advise the Watch the same way."
"And you don't have to turn me over to the Watch?"
"No -- and you should be glad. The Watch -- Ariel, between you me
and the gate here -- they sometimes lose people who've been entrusted to
their care."
"Lose? They escape?"
"They die. People connected with certain names. Look, I wouldn't be
surprised if, after we've squeezed Marcus a while longer, he coughs up
some more of those names --"
"More?"
"You know that priest named Cyrrwiddyn? Marcus referred to him once
as Cleo. That's one of --"
"Cleo!" Ariel shouted.
"Shh!! Didn't I just tell you that's a name that can get you
killed?"
"Sorry," Ariel whispered. "It's just that -- I have a friend named
Alec. He's sort of a friend. An acquaintance, really. But he was working
for a man he called Cleo. Except that he thought that Cleo knew
something about Jarvis' murder so he was going to help us trap Cleo so
we could ... we could --" She stopped. "Alec's missing," she said. After
a pause, she added, "He's been missing most of the night."
"But he's just an acquaintance, right?" Kittara asked.
"You think he's in trouble, right?" Ariel asked.
"Uh, yeah -- no. I think he's probably past just being in trouble.
I think you'd better figure he's dead."
Ariel nodded. "I see," she said dully, then shoved the subject
away. "Well. Thank you."
"Sure." Kittara glanced inside the gate again. "Well, good luck to
you. I want to see how much 'Cleo' will make Marcus sweat."
"Bye." Ariel watched Kittara go back inside.
"Back to Terkan's?" Mouse asked. Ariel stared at her.
"Where've you been?" she demanded.
"Around. I'm uncomfortable about strangers who barge into houses. I
told you that."
"Kittara and Sylk are on our side."
"Well, I know that *now*. We might as well go back to Terkan's."
"M-Mouse!"
"What?"
"I was in trouble and you just abandoned me."
"You weren't in that much trouble -- nothing, at least, that I
wouldn't have made worse. And I didn't abandon you. I was around, so I
know just how well you did getting through it."
"But I didn't do anything."
"And you controlled yourself very well. And Ariel, if you really
had needed me, I would've shown up. I promise. Now --" Mouse danced onto
Ariel's shoe. "Shall we go back to Terkan's house?"
"Might as well," Ariel sighed. "I doubt I have a job anymore, or
anywhere else to stay, for that matter."
At Terkan's house, Mouse and Ariel found a note from Cefn pinned to
the front door. It advised that the Septent of Jhel was smashed and the
last survivor was slouching toward Magnus. A desire for complete
finality required the two to pursue. They were not sure when and if
they'd be back. "... Please be sure to feed the apprentice," it
continued. "Actually, it's probably safe to free him now. Good luck with
the dead auditor, watch out for murder investigators, and be careful
putting hot drinks in Terkan's brown mugs. They hold the heat extremely
well."
"Now he tells us," Ariel said.
Entering the house, Mouse and Ariel found that someone had already
freed Bret. He was gone, as was Terkan's silverware.
Kittara and Sylk turned Marcus over to the Watch with a promise
that Marcus wished to implicate Camron in the murder of the auditor
Jarvis.
Within five bells of being placed in the custody of the Watch,
Marcus managed to kill himself through the simple technique of
swallowing his tongue.
Camron steadfastly denied any irregularities in his books. However,
several investors in his trading house (led by Duke Jastrik) abruptly
withdrew their capital. Camron and his House were both ruined.
Karina, though lacking any apparent source of income besides the
steady stream of boarders she took in, managed to persist in comfortable
poverty. She denied throughout that there was ever any hint of
wickedness in either Camron or Marcus.
Due to the poor choice of distributor, Rockway House had a bad year
in rhubarb relish sales. A set of lovely doll's clothes that had also
been shipped with one of the barrels, however, was sold to Lady Katia
Rombar (age 6) for a very satisfactory price.
Mouse was in the late Terkan's library again, avoiding facing the
enormous task of replacing her lost Court dress by trying to make sense
of a tome that she'd not ever copied for him. It appeared to be an
attempt to describe the mathematics of the motion of magical bubbles,
but it was very hard going. She sighed.
"Hello Ariel," she said. "Any news?"
"I'm supposed to be invisible," Ariel complained.
Mouse looked up at Ariel. "So you are," she agreed, technically.
Ariel was *supposed* to be invisible, but there was a ways to go yet.
"And quite transparent, too," Mouse continued. "But you're still
audible. I take it the air magery is going well?"
"I suppose," Ariel sighed, giving up her effort and allowing
herself to be seen again and taking a seat at Mouse's table. "They
posted a notice on the door of the house today."
"They?"
"Bailiffs. Very official and legal and longwinded. A whole lot of
whereases and therefores, but the news is that someone named Valory
Westbrier now owns this house and he owes the Duke some serious
money."
"Valory?"
"A nephew or cousin or something, I suppose. It's too soon for the
house to've been sold already, isn't it?"
"I don't know."
"Anyway, it seems to me that it's time to move," Ariel said.
"You don't think that every house needs a Mouse?"
"That's easy for you to say," Ariel smiled. "You could probably
stay on here after this Valory moved in and he might never notice. But
that won't work for me. Besides, I've found Dargon just a little bit
more exciting than I like. And the way people have come and gone --"
"Still nothing about Alec?" Mouse asked.
"Nothing.
"He had all your spare clothes and stuff. If we work at it we might
be able to find someone who knew him and --"
"Who wasn't part of this Haargon cabal?" Ariel asked. "Thanks, but
there really isn't anything there that I want back."
"You told me about a journal you were keeping."
"Full of -- of Stefan." Ariel made a face. "Do you think I want to
be reminded of that?"
"I suppose not," Mouse admitted. The two sat together in silence,
burying Stefan. Then Mouse asked "What do you suppose happened to Alec?"
Ariel shuddered. "That's another thing I don't want to be reminded
of. The way that crossbow woman --"
"You said her name was Kittara?"
"Yes. The way she described Cleo, I'm sure now that Alec is dead.
Beyond that, I don't want to imagine." Ariel sat still, resolutely not
imagining.
Mouse was tempted to return to the oscillation frequencies of
bubbles that were caught in Chalcedensian inversions, but Ariel spoke
first: "I'd just like to go somewhere quieter -- at least for a while.
Do you think you could write me a letter of introduction to Brother
Muskrat at Rockway House?"
"You want to go there?" Mouse exclaimed. "Of course! It's a great
idea! You'll love them there. They're great." She jumped to her feet,
abandoning the bubbles. "Where's a pen? Where's ink? And they'll all
love you, because you're a great person too -- even when you're
invisible. I need parchment." She jumped to the floor and started
running over to Terkan's writing desk. Then she stopped.
"I'll miss you, you understand," Mouse said gravely. "I consider
you a very good friend, but I do still have business to complete here in
the city."
"You're my friend too," Ariel replied with a smile. "And I did know
about the business. If you don't mind, I'd really rather not go with you
to see the Duke. That sounds too much like an adventure and I've had
enough of that. That's why I asked for the letter."
"The letter. Right." Mouse resumed her sprint to the leg of the
writing desk.
"Remember to write big."
"It's all settled, then?" the master asked after sipping his wine.
"Except that we'll need a new trading house, sir," the man standing
in front of the desk promised. "And Cynthia is out of circulation the
rest of this month and next. Cleo commended her work at Camron's.
Everything he asked of her, both eliminating the auditor and dressing to
look like the other girl, she accomplished perfectly. It's scarcely her
fault that our operation there went down the river."
"Whose was it, then?"
"Camron's. He was careless, letting his filthy books get anywhere
near that auditor."
"And has he been dealt with appropriately?"
"He's ruined."
"That doesn't sound sufficient. See to it. Something slow, I think.
I want him to have time to contemplate his failings. And aquatic. After
all, if you live by the sea, you ought to die by the sea --" He smiled
at a private joke. "I think I have an idea for that." The man took a
sheet of parchment and began to sketch. While he drew, he said "As for
Cynthia, I think an extra bottle of sherry for the little thief's infirm
mother might be appropriate."
"Her mother's a lush, you know," the underling offered cautiously.
"She's dying of too much drink."
"It's the thought that counts. Now, what are you doing about a new
trading house?" The man looked up at his underling, but quickly returned
to his work, remembering that he disliked having the man standing over
him. He was too tall. It was annoying, but the man was valuable in other
ways.
Sketching delicate wavelets, the master said, "Camron was all
right, mostly, but I want no more minority partners from the
aristocracy. I don't care how much of an air of respectability they
lend. The next one we take over, I want full ownership." He sighed and
pushed the parchment across the table. "This is for anyone who
disappoints me. Have Camron try it out first. You know, I'd rather
looked forward to playing a High Priest of Iliara, spewing all those
platitudes, having that wench worshipping me --"
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