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Mrs. Quent had said only that they had been forced to gaze into the eye. How, he did not know. Perhaps, as the binding upon it weakened, it was the artifact itself that had drawn their gazes against their will. One thing he did know was that, whatever its origin and nature, the eye was a thing of unsurpa.s.sed evil. Mr. Lockwell had understood. That was why he had sacrificed himself to keep other members from the Vigilant Order of the Silver Eye from opening it.
What would he have sacrificed to prevent its opening? Rafferdy hadn't been forced to answer that question, a fact for which he was glad. Nor would he have to answer it in the foreseeable future. The binding on the artifact had been restored, and none of the magicians would ever come again to try to open it, for they were all up at Madstone's now.
Yet they were not the only ones who knew about the Eye of Ran-Yahgren.
What had become of Mr. Bennick, they did not know. They had not seen him at the house on Durrow Street after working the spell, and he had not shown himself at Lady Marsdel's since that day. Perhaps he had returned to his manor in Torland. Even if he remained in the city, there was nothing he could do to open the doorway himself. He was not a magician.
Yet whether or not he could do magick, there was no doubt he was still a dangerous man. Mr. Quent's letter had made that clear. And while it was only a feeling, Rafferdy could not dismiss the idea that he would see Mr. Bennick again one day. Indeed, he counted upon it.
And I'll have learned more by then, he thought, twisting the ring on his right hand. Much more...
"You look very determined all of a sudden," Mrs. Baydon said. "Are you scheming something, Mr. Rafferdy?"
"Only whether to buy a new coat before a new hat, or the other way around."
With that he rose, called for his cane, and begged his leave of Lady Marsdel. This was granted, if grudgingly, and he went out into the bright afternoon.
He had promised to dine with his father that night, for Lord Rafferdy was still in the city. Although the lumenal was not long, he still had several hours to waste, so he walked along the Promenade, past gardens of flowers and groups of young women, all similarly clad in color. However, none of them caught his eye.
Lord Rafferdy had not told him why he thought the rebels had been plotting against him. When the anonymous letter arrived at Warwent Square, Rafferdy had thought it some sort of prank, but there was something about the urgency with which it was written that had caused him to show it to his father, and Lord Rafferdy had taken it seriously.
Which was fortunate. As it turned out, there had indeed been an attack planned against Lord Rafferdy upon Mr. Quent's return to Invarel. However, the king's men had been ready, and the rebels had been apprehended. Rafferdy could only believe the threat against his father had pa.s.sed.
Yet why had those men sought to harm him in the first place? Rafferdy had never wanted to know the nature of his father's business, had studiously avoided it. Since the thwarted attack, however, he could not help wondering exactly what sort of work it was that his father did for the Crown, with which Mr. Quent a.s.sisted him.
The lord inquirer. That was the person Mrs. Quent had come to the Silver Branch to meet that day-the person who had been none other than Lord Rafferdy himself. Of what sort of things was he an inquirer? Was it for these inquiries that the rebels had wished to do away with him? Perhaps tonight, if his father spoke again of duties and responsibilities, Rafferdy would not be so quick to change the subject.
He looked up as a cart rattled by, and he realized he was no longer in the New Quarter but instead walked through the narrow ways of the Old City. Perhaps he should go to the Sword and Leaf and see if Eldyn Garritt was there. It would be good to meet with his old friend, to have a drink, and to laugh a bit.
However, as he turned a corner onto a broader way, he realized it was not in search of his friend Garritt that his feet had unwittingly brought him here. Just ahead was an iron fence and high hedges of green. It was Durrow Street he walked down now, and not twenty paces away was a wrought-iron gate.
At that moment a black carriage came to a halt before the gate. Rafferdy ducked into the cover of a doorway, then peered back out. A man exited the carriage. He was neither tall nor handsome and wore a brown suit that could only generously be described as old-fas.h.i.+oned. His shoulders were thick and rather slumped, and behind a coa.r.s.e beard his face was grim-though, Rafferdy thought, not unkind.
Indeed, as he reached into the coach to help another, lither figure exit, that beard parted in a smile, and he looked younger than he had a moment before. The object of his attention smiled in return, a very pretty expression and one that Rafferdy, not so long ago, would have given much to have received for his own.
The young woman stepped into the street, the skirt of her green dress swirling around her like leaves. She started to accompany the bearded man toward the gate, only then she paused, looking over her shoulder in the direction where Rafferdy stood. He shrank back into the alcove, counting twenty heartbeats. Then he peered around the corner again.
The carriage was gone, the street empty.
He stood there for a minute, looking at the closed gate. At last he took a breath and made his way back down the street. It wasn't far to the Sword and Leaf, and he still had several hours before it was time to meet his father. He might as well go to the tavern. And who knew? That rascal Eldyn Garritt might even show up while he was there.
"If he does, it's his turn to buy the punch," he said aloud.
This thought cheered Rafferdy greatly. He gave his cane a toss, caught it in his hand, then went to get himself a drink.
T HE LUMENAL HAD ended long ago, but twilight lingered for hours, and the night was only just begun.
Usually Ivy felt a feeling of oppression when the almanac told her it was to be a long umbral: an irrational but nevertheless persuasive dread that the night would never end, that day was only a fantasy she had made up, a notion conjured from imagination and books, and that all there ever had been and ever would be was darkness. However, she did not feel that way tonight. As far as Ivy was concerned, a greatnight could not possibly have hours enough.
Then again, it wouldn't matter how long the night was if he did not cease working at his business.
"So you think me terribly dull, do you, then, Mrs. Quent?"
Ivy blinked, sitting up in her chair. "What in the world do you mean? I think no such thing."
"Is that the case? Then why did you yawn so prodigiously just now?"
She put a hand to her mouth, realizing it was so.
He tapped his pen against the ink bottle and wrote another line on the parchment before him. "Indeed, considering the evidence, you must have concluded I am dull to an exceeding degree. How could you not? For here before you is a man who has not seen his new wife in over a month-and she is a very charming wife, it should be noted. Now night has finally come, yet he continues to sit at his desk writing letters."
"I'm sure they are very important letters."
"They are. But to a young wife they should seem only to be tedious things, pointless and utterly silly."
She laughed. "I am sure nothing you do is silly, Mr. Quent."
He looked up, displaying a sudden grin. With his hair and beard being somewhat in need of tr.i.m.m.i.n.g, he looked suddenly quite wild, like a faun from a Tharosian play, scheming mischief. She had never seen him like this. All her affections, which had filled her upon his return to the city, were renewed even more strongly, and warmly, than before.
"Perhaps I can prove you wrong, Mrs. Quent," he said. "But first-" He sighed. "First I must continue to be dull and finish one last missive."
She rose from her chair. "In that case, I will go say good night to my sisters. If I desire some silliness, I am certain at least one of them will be able to comply."
However, he had already bent back over the desk. Her smile faded, and for a moment she could not help being reminded of how his work had so often taken him away from Heathcrest, leaving her alone. Ivy left the room, quietly shutting the door behind her.
They had taken the uppermost rooms at the Seventh Swan, an inn not far from the Halls of a.s.sembly. It was a fine establishment-perhaps overly fine, Ivy thought, given that some of the other guests were from the families of magnates. Nor did she think Lily and Rose required their own rooms. But Mr. Quent had insisted. He said that since both were ladies grown, they each deserved a private chamber.
Ivy thought Mr. Quent was under the mistaken impression that Lily was older than sixteen (having just had her birthday). However, she reconsidered when this announcement won him a great amount of admiration on Lily's part and even an enthusiastic kiss on his bearded cheek. For her part, Rose was astonished beyond words, but her beaming smile spoke clearly.
"You are not so unfamiliar with the manners of young women as you would have others believe," Ivy told him. "If it was your intention to win their affections, you've certainly succeeded."
"I trust if I gain their affection, it will be through deeds that are more deserving than merely spoiling them with their own rooms."
Yet he had seemed pleased and could not hide his own smile.
Now, leaving the chamber she shared with Mr. Quent, Ivy went first to Lily's room. Upon entering, she found her sister surrounded by candles, a book upon her knees. Lily hardly glanced up from the book when Ivy spoke-for, she said rather breathlessly, the footman had just been revealed as Baron Valandry's long-lost son, which meant the contessa could marry him after all. Ivy told her good night and started to blow out one of the candles, only then she smiled and left it burning instead.
She went to Rose's room next, knocking softly, and when there was no answer she took the liberty of entering. Rose lay on the bed, still in her frock, curled up with Miss Mew. Both of them were fast asleep. The excitement of these last few days must have finally taken its toll.
Quietly, Ivy moved to the bed. She scratched Miss Mew behind the ears, and the cat let out a great yawn. Then Ivy looked down at Rose; her sister's face was soft and peaceful with sleep. Ivy wondered-how many times had she awakened to see Rose gazing down at her? Only this time it was Ivy who kept watch in the night.
"Do not fear, dearest," she said softly. "He will take care of us all. I promise you that."
Rose did not stir, but her lips curved slightly. Ivy laid a blanket over her, then left the room, shutting the door without a sound.
While the inn was a comfortable place-and certainly preferable to dwelling under one roof with Mr. Wyble-she would be glad when the four of them could leave it. They had gone to the old house on Durrow Street earlier that day to make a survey of it. Mr. Quent had said that it looked to be in solid condition, and while some work would be necessary to reopen the house, it would not be long before they were able to move. Ivy looked forward to that day, and the only thing that would make it more joyous was if it was not four of them who went to live on Durrow Street but five.
However, if that would be the case she did not know. It had been more difficult than she had thought for Lord Rafferdy to arrange her father's release from the MadderlyStoneworth Hostel. It seemed the hostel operated under a charter that gave it considerable autonomy. Only an order with the king's own seal would free Mr. Lockwell.
While she had every confidence the order would come, it would take time. Until then, Lord Rafferdy had been able to a.s.sure that her father would be kept in a private room and made comfortable and that Ivy would be able to spend time with him on her weekly visits there.
As for the malady that afflicted him-she had once believed that the magicians who knew him years ago would be able to help him if she could only find them. She knew now that was not the case. Nor had entering the house helped her understand how to cure him. All the same, she had learned something in the house, for she knew now the cause of his affliction. Was not comprehending an illness the first step to curing it? That thought gave her a hope that, however slim, was hope nonetheless.
While she still held faith that Mr. Lockwell would one day be cured, she felt no such belief or concern for the other magicians of his order. Who had come to the house on Durrow Street to retrieve them all, she did not know-more from the order, she supposed. Or even Mr. Bennick. Whoever it was, the four of them who yet lived were up at Madstone's now.
Nor did she feel remorse for what had happened to them. They had been given a glimpse of what they desired. Perhaps the result would discourage any other members of the Vigilant Order of the Silver Eye who thought to try to open the doorway.
Not that she feared any of them could do such a thing. Mr. Rafferdy had renewed the enchantment, binding it. He truly was a magician. How her heart soared for him each time she considered it!
Besides, the house was well guarded. She had seen the man in the black mask briefly earlier that day, as she walked among the hawthorn trees in the yard of the house.
I am watching, he had said to her.
My father, she had replied. Can you help him?
But by the time she spoke he was already gone. All the same, she knew she would see him again one day. It was not chance that he had appeared to her.
Just as it had not been chance that the frame that held the Eye of Ran-Yahgren was fas.h.i.+oned of branches from the Wyrdwood. There was a power in the wood-a property that had allowed it to resist the magick of the artifact. What it was, how it worked, she did not know, but it was there; she had seen it, had felt it. And there in the yard, as she touched the twisted hawthorn branches, a thought had occurred to her-if the Wyrdwood could resist the power of the doorway, might it help her father resist his affliction? She had plucked several twigs and put them in her pocket, not sure what she intended to do with them, but it felt good to have them close.
Ivy paused outside the door of the chamber she shared with Mr. Quent, wondering if he had finished his work yet. To her right was a small window that looked out over the street. A flash of red caught her eye, and she gazed out the window. Above the towers of the Citadel, the new planet shone in the sky: a dull crimson spark. As she studied the recently returned wanderer, a strange idea came to her. The light coming through the crystal sphere had been that same ruddy color, hadn't it?
s.h.i.+vering, she opened the door and entered the room.
He was no longer working. Instead, he sat in a chair, a book open on his lap. However, he was not reading but instead gazed into the shadows in the corner. She watched him for a minute. His face was grim, as on that very first day she had seen him.
Ivy could not deny that, in addition to joy, she had felt some trepidation prior to her new husband's arrival in the city. The distance from the country, and the intervening time, had given her s.p.a.ce to wonder just which man would step out of the carriage-her dear, gruff Mr. Quent, or the stern master of Heathcrest Hall?
But they were both one and the same, she knew now. If his work called him away at times, which it surely would, then it was not for herself she would worry. For her task, to await his return, could be nothing compared to what he must face. And if, by being cheerful when he was with her, she could raise his spirits, then it would give him all the more strength to do what he must when it came time.
Again affection welled up inside Ivy, but it was a deeper sensation than any she had felt before, at once more fierce and more determined. As she watched him there, sitting in the dimness, she knew that her only wish in all the world was to be a light by his side.
"You seem thoughtful tonight," she said at last.
He turned his head, then smiled. "I didn't hear you come in." He rose from the chair. "Are your sisters well?"
"Very well," she said, and went to him.
He had taken off his coat and rolled up the sleeves of his s.h.i.+rt. She looped her arm around his and leaned her head on the slope of his shoulder. She heard him-felt him-sigh.
"Is something wrong?" She looked up at him. "I thought you said everything went well in Torland, that it had been more difficult than you thought but that in the end you had succeeded."
"We did succeed," he said. "We did." But the grimness had returned to his expression.
"Will you tell me what happened there?"
"I will, but let us not speak of it in the dark of a long night. Tomorrow will be soon enough." Suddenly he smiled, and he looked a bit like that wild faun again. "I would rather we pour some wine and speak of other things, for I've finished my work for the night."
"On the contrary, Mr. Quent," she said with a laugh, "I believe it's only just begun."
And taking his hands in hers, she proceeded to work a spell as ancient as humanity itself.
T HE LONG NIGHT was nearly over.
The inn was quiet as Ivy slipped from the bed and dressed. Mr. Quent slept deeply, and a quick look into the rooms of her sisters revealed they were asleep as well. Outside, the sky blushed with the first hint of dawn. It would be an hour or more before people rose for the day. However, Ivy could not sleep. Her heart was too light to lie down any longer. She wanted to rise, to move.
As mornings after a long night were always cool, she wrapped a shawl around her shoulders and went outside. For the next hour she walked past imposing edifices and dewy gardens. It reminded her of the walks she used to take around Heathcrest Hall, when the misty weather allowed, and she murmured a pleasant, wordless song as she went.
At last, in a blaze of fire, the sun lifted above the rooftops. The others would be rising soon and wonder where she was. She turned and made her way back to the inn.
She was just outside the inn's door when a boy went running by, a stack of broadsheets in his arms.
"News!" he cried. "Get the news from Torland!"
"Excuse me," Ivy said, stopping him. She didn't usually read the broadsheets, but the word Torland had caught her ear. "What news is there from the west?"
"A penny, ma'am," the boy said.
She found a coin in her pocket and took one of the papers.
"The old tales are true!" the boy shouted, running on. "Read about it in the news!"
As Ivy lifted the broadsheet, a morning wind sprang up, and it took her a moment to unfold it so she could read the words printed in large letters at the top of the front page.
A thrill pa.s.sed through her, and whether it was dread or some other feeling, she could not say. RISINGS IN TORLAND, declared the headline in bold type. And below that, Stands of Wyrdwood Rise Up, First Time in Centuries, Dozens Slain.
Except the story was wrong. It wasn't the first time in centuries, nor could she believe it would be the last. And this time it wasn't a secret. This time, all of Altania would know.
Another gust of wind s.n.a.t.c.hed the broadsheet from Ivy's hand, and the pages scattered, flapping down the street like a flock of crows.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR.
What if there was a fantastical cause underlying the social constraints and limited choices confronting a heroine in a novel by Jane Austen or Charlotte Bronte? GALEN BECKETT began writing The Magicians and Mrs. Quent to answer that question. The author lives in Colorado and is currently at work on the next chapter in this fabulous tale of witches, magicians, and revolution, The House on Durrow Street.
THE MAGICIANS AND MRS. QUENT.
end.