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CHAPTER SIXTY.
Wisdom's Tool THE MAER'S EYES WENT wide at my words, then narrowed again. Even in the midst of his infirmity, Alveron's wit was sharp. "You were right to speak that close and soft," he said. "You are treading dangerous ground. But speak, I will hear you."
"Your grace, I suspect Threpe did not mention in his letter that I am a student at the University as well as a musician."
The Maer's eyes showed no glimmer of recognition. "Which university?" he asked.
"The University, your grace," I said. "I am a member of the Arcanum." University, your grace," I said. "I am a member of the Arcanum."
Alveron frowned. "You're far too young to make such a claim. And why would Threpe neglect to mention this?"
"You were not looking for an arcanist, your grace. And there is a certain stigma attached to that sort of study this far east." It was the closest I could come to speaking the truth: that Vints are superst.i.tious to the point of idiocy.
The Maer blinked slowly, his expression hardening. "Very well," he said. "Perform some work of magic if you are what you say."
"I am only an arcanist in training, your grace. But if you would like to see a bit of magic ..." I looked at the three lamps lining the walls, licked my fingers, concentrated, and pinched the wick of the candle sitting on his bedside table.
The room went dark and I heard his startled intake of breath. I brought out my silver ring, and after a moment it began to s.h.i.+ne with a silver-blue light. My hands grew cold, as I had no source of heat other than my own body.
"That will do," the Maer said. If he was at all unnerved, there was no hint of it in his voice.
I stepped across the room and opened the shuttered windows. Sunlight flooded the room. There was a hint of selas flower, a trill of birdsong. "I've always found that taking in some air is good for whatever troubles a body, though others disagree." I smiled at him.
He didn't return it. "Yes, yes. You're very clever. Come here and sit." I did so, taking a chair near his bedside. "Now explain yourself."
"I told Caudicus I was compiling a collection of stories from the n.o.ble houses," I said. "A handy excuse, as it also explains why I have been spending time with you."
The Maer's expression remained grim. I saw pain blur his eyes like a cloud pa.s.sing in front of the sun. "Proof that you are a skilled liar hardly gains you my trust."
A cold knot began to form in my stomach. I had a.s.sumed the Maer would accept the truth more easily than this. "Just so, your grace. I lied to him him and I am telling and I am telling you you the truth. Since he thought me nothing more than an idle lordling, he let me watch while he made your medicine." I held up the amber flask. The sunlight broke itself into rainbows on the gla.s.s. the truth. Since he thought me nothing more than an idle lordling, he let me watch while he made your medicine." I held up the amber flask. The sunlight broke itself into rainbows on the gla.s.s.
Alveron remained unmoved. His normally clear eyes fogged with confusion and pain. "I ask for proof and you tell me a story. Caudicus has been a faithful servant for a dozen years. Nevertheless, I will consider what you've said." His tone implied it would be a short, unkind consideration. He held out his hand for the vial.
I felt a small flame of anger strike up inside me. It helped to ease the cold fear settling in my gut. "Your grace wants proof?"
"I want my medicine!" he snapped. "And I want to sleep. Please do-"
"Your grace, I can-"
"How dare dare you interrupt me?" Alveron struggled to sit upright in his bed, his voice furious. "You go too far! Leave now and I may still consider retaining your services." He was trembling with rage, his hand still reaching for the vial. you interrupt me?" Alveron struggled to sit upright in his bed, his voice furious. "You go too far! Leave now and I may still consider retaining your services." He was trembling with rage, his hand still reaching for the vial.
There was a moment of silence. I held out the vial, but before he could grasp it, I said, "You have vomited recently. It was milky and white."
The tension in the room rose sharply, but the Maer went motionless when he heard what I said. "Your tongue feels thick and heavy. Your mouth is dry and filled with an odd, sharp taste. You have had a craving for sweets, for sugar. You wake in the night and find you cannot move, cannot speak. You are struck with palsy, with colic and unreasoning panic."
As I spoke the Maer's hand slowly drew away from the vial. His expression was no longer livid and angry. His eyes seemed unsure, almost frightened, but they were clear again, as if the fear had awakened some sleeping caution.
"Caudicus told you," the Maer said, but he sounded far from certain.
"Would Caudicus discuss the details of your illness with a stranger?" I asked pointedly. "My concern is for your life, your grace. If I must bruise propriety to save it, I will do so. Give me two minutes to speak and I will give you proof."
Alveron gave a slow nod.
"I'm not going to claim to know exactly what this is." I gestured with the vial. "But most of what is poisoning you is lead. This accounts for the palsy, the pain in your muscles and viscera. The vomiting and paralysis."
"I've had no paralysis."
"Hmmm." I looked him over with a critical eye. "That's fortunate. But there is more than simply lead in this. I'm guessing this contains a goodly amount of ophalum, which isn't exactly poisonous."
"What is it then?"
"It's more of a medicine, or a drug."
"Which is it then?" he snapped. "Poison or medicine?"
"Has your grace ever taken laudanum?"
"Once when I was younger, to help me sleep through the pain of a broken leg."
"Ophalum is a similar drug, but it is usually avoided as it is highly addictive." I paused. "It is also called denner resin."
The Maer grew paler at this, and in that moment his eyes grew almost perfectly clear. Everyone knew about the sweet-eaters.
"I suspect he added it because you had been irregular about taking your medicine," I said. "The ophalum would make you crave it while easing your pain at the same time. It would also account for your sugar craving, your sweats, and any odd dreams you've been having. What else did he put in here?" I mused to myself. "Probably st.i.tchroot or mannum to keep you from vomiting too much. Clever. Horrible and clever."
"Not so clever." The Maer gave a rictus smile. "He didn't manage to kill me."
I hesitated, then decided to tell him the truth. "Killing you would have been simple, your grace. He could easily dissolve enough lead in this vial to kill you." I held it up to the light. "Getting enough to make you sick without killing or paralyzing you, that that is difficult." is difficult."
"Why? Why poison me if not to kill me?"
"Your grace would have better luck solving that riddle. You know more about the politics involved."
"Why poison me at all?" The Maer sounded genuinely puzzled. "I pay him lavishly. He is a member of the court in high regard. He has the freedom to pursue his own projects and travel when he wishes. He has lived here a dozen years. Why now?" He shook his head. "I tell you it doesn't make sense."
"Money?" I suggested. "They say every man has a price."
Maer continued to shake his head. Then he looked up suddenly. "No. I've just remembered. I fell ill long before Caudicus began to treat me." He stopped to think. "Yes, that's right. I approached him to see if he could treat my illness. The symptoms you mentioned didn't appear until months after he started treating me. It couldn't couldn't have been him." have been him."
"Lead works slowly in small doses, your grace. If he were going to poison you, he would hardly want you vomiting blood ten minutes after you drank his medicine." I suddenly remembered who I was talking to. "That was poorly said, your grace. I apologize."
He nodded a stiff acceptance. "Too much of what you say is too close to the mark for me to ignore. Yet still, I can't believe Caudicus would do such a thing."
"We can put it to the test, your grace."
He looked up at me. "How is that?"
"Order a half-dozen birds brought to your rooms. Sipquicks would be ideal."
"Sipquicks?"
"Tiny, bright things, yellow and red," I held up my fingers about two inches apart. "They're thick in your gardens. They drink the nectar from your selas flowers."
"Oh. We call them flits."
"We will mix your medicine with their nectar and see what happens."
His expression grew bleak. "If lead works slowly, as you say, this would take months. I'll not go without my medicine for months on some poorly supported fancy of yours." I saw his temper burning close to the surface of his voice.
"They weigh much less than you, your grace, and their metabolisms are much faster. We should see results within a day or two at most." I hoped I hoped.
He seemed to consider this. "Very well," he said, lifting a bell from his bedside table.
I spoke quickly before he could ring it. "Might I ask your grace to invent some reason for needing these birds? A little caution would serve us well."
"I have known Stapes forever," the Maer said firmly, his eyes as clear and sharp as I had ever seen them. "I trust him with my lands, my lockbox, and my life. I do not ever wish to hear you imply he is anything other than perfectly trustworthy." There was unshakable belief in his voice.
I dropped my eyes. "Yes, your grace."
He rang the bell, and it was barely two seconds before the portly manservant opened the door. "Yes sir?"
"Stapes, I miss being able to walk in the gardens. Could you find me a half-dozen flits?"
"Flits, sir?"
"Yes," the Maer said as if it he were ordering lunch. "They're pretty things. I think the sound of them will help me sleep."
"I'll see what I can do, sir." Before he closed the door, Stapes scowled at me.
After the door was shut, I looked at the Maer. "Might I ask your grace why?"
"To save him the trouble of lying. He hasn't the knack for it. And there is wisdom in what you said. Caution is always wisdom's tool." I saw a thin layer of perspiration covering his face.
"If I am correct, your grace, tonight will be difficult for you."
"All my nights are difficult of late," he said bitterly. "What will make this one any worse than the last?"
"The ophalum, your grace. Your body is craving it. In two days you should be through the worst of it, but until then you will be in considerable ... discomfort."
"Speak plainly."
"There will be aching in your jaw and head, sweating, nausea, cramps and spasms, especially in your legs and lower back. You may lose control of your bowels and there will be alternating periods of intense thirst and vomiting." I looked down at my hands. "I am sorry, your grace."
Alveron's expression was rather pinched by the end of my description, but he nodded graciously. "I would rather know."
"There are a few things that will make it slightly more tolerable, your grace."
He brightened a bit. "Such as?"
"Laudanum for one. Just a bit, to ease your body's craving. And a few other things. Their names are unimportant. I can mix them into a tea for you. Another problem is that you still have a goodly deal of lead in your body that isn't going to go away on its own."
This seemed to alarm him more than anything I'd said so far. "Won't I simply pa.s.s it?"
I shook my head. "Metals are insidious poisons. They become trapped in your body. Only by a special effort can we leach the lead away."
Maer scowled. "d.a.m.n and bother. I hate leeches."
"A figure of speech, your grace. Only imbeciles and toad-eaters use leeches in this day and age. The lead needs to be drawn drawn out of you." I thought about telling him the truth, that he would most likely never be rid of all of it, but decided to keep that bit of information to myself. out of you." I thought about telling him the truth, that he would most likely never be rid of all of it, but decided to keep that bit of information to myself.
"Can you do it?"
I thought for a long moment. "I am probably your best option, your grace. We are a long way from the University. I wager not one in ten physicians here have any respectable training, and I don't know who among them might know Caudicus." I thought for a moment longer then shook my head. "I can think of fifty people better suited to the job, but they are a thousand miles away."
"I appreciate your honesty."
"Most of what I need I can find down in Severen-Low. However ..." I trailed off, hoping the Maer would understand my meaning and save me the embarra.s.sment of asking for money.
He stared at me blankly. "However?"
"I will need money, your grace. The things you will need are not easy to come by."
"Oh, of course." He produced a purse and pa.s.sed it to me. I was a little surprised to find the Maer had at least one well-stocked purse within easy arm's reach of his bed. Unbidden, I remembered my tirade to a tailor in Tarbean years ago. What had I said to him? A gentleman is never far from his purse? A gentleman is never far from his purse? I fought down an inappropriate fit of laughter. I fought down an inappropriate fit of laughter.
Stapes returned shortly after that. In a surprising display of resourcefulness, he produced a dozen sipquicks in a wheeled cage the size of a wardrobe.
"My word, Stapes," the Maer exclaimed as his manservant rolled the fine mesh cage through the doorway. "You've outdone yourself."
"Where would it suit you best, sir?"
"Just leave it there for now. I'll have Kvothe move it for me."
Stapes looked a trifle wounded. "It's no trouble."
"I know you'd be glad to do it, Stapes. But I was hoping you would fetch me a fresh pitcher of appledraw instead. I think it might settle my stomach."
"Certainly." He hurried out again, closing the door behind him.
As soon as the door was closed, I moved to the cage. The little gemlike birds darted from perch to perch with a blurring speed. "Pretty things," I heard the Maer muse. "I was fascinated with them as a child. I remember thinking how wonderful it must be to eat nothing but sugar all day."
There were three feeders wired to the outside of the cage, gla.s.s tubes filled with sugar-water. Two of them had spouts shaped like tiny selas blooms, while the third was a stylized iris. The perfect pet for n.o.bility. Who else could afford to feed their pet sugar every day?
I unscrewed the tops of the feeders and poured a third of the Maer's medicine into each. I held out the empty vial to Alveron. "What do you normally do with these?"
He set it on the table near his bed.