Powder Mage: The Autumn Republic - BestLightNovel.com
You’re reading novel Powder Mage: The Autumn Republic Part 40 online at BestLightNovel.com. Please use the follow button to get notification about the latest chapter next time when you visit BestLightNovel.com. Use F11 button to read novel in full-screen(PC only). Drop by anytime you want to read free – fast – latest novel. It’s great if you could leave a comment, share your opinion about the new chapters, new novel with others on the internet. We’ll do our best to bring you the finest, latest novel everyday. Enjoy
"You're joking." Uskan seemed to find this genuinely funny, but his dry chuckle trailed off after a moment.
"I saw his gloves on Saint Adom's Day," Adamat said. "He's a Privileged and even you, locked in here with your books, will have heard he's one of Tamas's councillors. You trust him, don't you?"
"Of course! I've known Prime Lektor for most of my life."
"And how much money have the Holy Warriors of Labor donated to the university since the midsummer?"
"What does that have to-"
"Just answer the question."
"Several million krana. They're the only ones who have really given us any support."
"Well, right now I'm on a case for Ricard Tumblar, the head of the union, who is another one of Tamas's councillors. Give Tamas a little credit. He's trying to do good by all of us. Don't blame everything on him. You have to look beyond your books, Uskan. If Tamas hadn't been caught beyond enemy lines, I suspect he would have paid a little more attention to the disaster here." Adamat would have liked to think so anyway. Was he saying all this to convince Uskan, or himself?
Uskan raised his nose indignantly. "You speak as if he's still alive."
"He is. I've seen him myself."
"You just told me he was dead. And now that he is alive. What am I supposed to believe?"
"I only said that it was 'reported' he was dead."
"To try to trick me into-" Uskan stopped himself with a frustrated sigh. "There's no need for any of this. What was it you needed to know?"
"Do you know anything about why a person might not have a shadow?"
Uskan blinked at Adamat for several moments. "What? Well, no. I've never heard of that before."
"That's too bad." Adamat tried not to let his disappointment show. Another dead end. Adamat had hoped Uskan, of all people, might have heard something in all his studies. "Could it be a side effect of being a Knacked or a Privileged? I know you've made a hobby of sorcery studies."
Uskan rested his chin in the palm of his hand and stared at something above Adamat's head. After several moments he finally said, "No. Nothing at all."
Adamat hoped that his old friend was not withholding information just out of spite. "Anything in any of the books on sorcery in your library?"
"Many of those were destroyed or vandalized before you came looking after your last mystery. You're welcome to look, but I doubt you'll find anything. I can let you into the library, but I don't have the time to help you look."
"Thank you, but I'm here on more important business, to be honest. I'm curious if you've heard about anyone experimenting with black powder."
"In what way?"
"Refining it. Creating something better, more destructive. More explosive."
Uskan tapped a finger on his chin. "Now, that I can help you with."
Adamat perked up. A lead? "Oh?"
"There's a chemical company out on the west side of the city. They make and import gunpowder for the Adran army, and they employ several chemists who make powder of various consistencies and burning temperatures. Very important for artillery, bombs, and all that. I heard earlier this summer that they were working on something called 'blasting oil.' Something they want to use in mining."
"Do you remember their name?"
"The Flerring Powder Company."
"Excellent." Adamat got to his feet. This was exactly what he was looking for.
"There's something else," Uskan said.
Adamat paused, concerned by the sudden bleakness of Uskan's voice. "What is it, my friend?"
Uskan stared at his fingers for several moments before answering. "The vice-chancellor-Prime Lektor-has fled the country."
"He what?"
"He fled. I caught him here about three weeks ago, collecting things from his office. He cleaned everything out, sold his home in the countryside, and left. He told me that I should flee too."
"Why on earth would he do that?"
"He said that Adom was dead. Kresimir was coming back and with him something worse. And that we'd all burn for Tamas's mistakes." Uskan rubbed his sleeve across his eyes. "The man was my idol, Adamat. I've known him for decades and he's been calm, unflappable Prime. But when I saw him that night, he looked like a madman on the verge of hysterics. He left me here, alone. He said I was the new vice-chancellor if I wanted to be, but told me I'd be dead within months if I decided to stay."
"Uskan, I'm sorry."
Uskan sniffed and wiped his eyes once more, sitting up straight. "Nothing to be sorry for. You're right, I need to look beyond my books. I've been rather fraught since the battle on the campus, but I thought we'd rebuild. I figured Prime would help us create everything anew. And now he's gone."
"Is there anything I can do for you?"
"If Tamas is still alive... well, put in a good word for the university."
"Of course."
Adamat rounded the desk to put a hand on Uskan's shoulder. "You're right, you know. I shouldn't have gotten involved in any of this. It's hurt the people I love in so many ways."
"I don't think it's your fault," Uskan said.
"Thank you for that."
SouSmith, still leaning on the door frame of the tiny office, cleared his throat.
"Yes," Adamat said. "Well, I should get going."
"Wait."
Adamat stopped just outside the office and turned back to Uskan.
"You should check a private library," Uskan said. "Someone who will have books not accessible to us or to the Public Archives."
"I'm open to suggestions."
"Charlemund's manor," Uskan said. "The Arch-Diocel had an enormous library before he was arrested. It's meant to be split between Adopest University, the Public Archives, and Jileman University, but we haven't had the time to work on it."
"And it's at his manor still?"
"Under guard, I think. But not inaccessible to someone with friends in high places." Uskan gave him a lopsided smile.
"I'll look into it. Thank you very much."
Out in the hallway, SouSmith fell in beside Adamat as they headed back toward their carriage. "Anything?" he asked.
"I have two leads now," Adamat said. "We'll sniff it out. I know we will."
"What was that about the vice-chancellor?"
"He fled the country, apparently." Adamat fiddled with the head of his cane. "I'm curious what he knows that we don't."
CHAPTER.
35.
Tamas sat brooding in a cloth folding chair in front of the tent his soldiers had set up for him to take his lunch.
His last report from Olem arrived twenty-four hours ago, letting him know that they were going into Brude's Hideaway to hunt the Gurlish magebreaker and his Kez cavalry. Tamas couldn't help but glance to the northwest, wondering why Olem hadn't sent his morning report. Two a day, Tamas had ordered. It was vital that he be kept abreast of the situation on the western plains if he was to proceed against the Kez armies to his south.
The messenger's horse may have thrown a shoe, or he might have been sent off a few hours late. Tamas chewed on the inside of his cheek. Olem may have been defeated in battle, for all he knew. Whether it was a portent of ill or not, he didn't like the lag in communication.
"Olem!" he shouted.
"Olem's not here, sir." Andriya, one of Tamas's powder mages, appeared from inside his tent. He was a tall man with scraggly blond hair and a pockmarked face.
"b.l.o.o.d.y pit." Tamas rubbed at his temples. "How many times is that?"
"Seventeen in the last four days."
"Sorry. Habit, I suppose. d.a.m.n bodyguard has been with me less than a year and I'm already doing that."
Andriya picked at his teeth with one fingernail and turned to spit. "Funny, sir, but when Cenka died and you got Olem to replace him, you never confused the two."
"Surely I must have."
Andriya shrugged. "Maybe. That's fine, I never liked Cenka anyway."
"You don't like anyone."
"I liked Erika," Andriya said after a moment of introspection.
"My late wife saved you from the hangman's noose in Kez. I certainly hope you liked her."
"It wasn't just that," Andriya said. "She had a certain"-he made a rolling motion with one hand-"something about her."
"I know," Tamas said quietly.
If Andriya noticed Tamas's discomfort, he didn't show it. He leaned on his rifle and began to pick at his nails again. "Messenger coming in, sir."
Tamas stood up and stretched, trying not to look too eager. Had Olem's man finally arrived? Tamas needed to know what was going on at his flank. He couldn't meet the Kez infantry in battle with that Gurlish Wolf at his heels.
Tamas's heart fell. The messenger coming in was not one of Olem's. He was an outrider, a scout with the Second Brigade, keeping track of the Kez movements to the south. Someone was following the scout. As they drew closer, Tamas could see it was a woman in a gray woolen dress and a tan ap.r.o.n. Tamas knew that uniform. It was the clothing given to camp followers in the Kez army.
The scout said something to the woman and she stopped a ways off while the scout approached. He saluted. "Sir. Found this woman early this morning making her way toward our camp. She said she has news, and it's urgent."
"And you brought her to me?" Did chain of command mean nothing in this army anymore?
"She wouldn't talk to anyone else. She had the right pa.s.swords."
"Pa.s.swords?"
"I'm one of your spies, you daft man," the woman said in Kez, her voice husky, her tone impatient.
Andriya let out a laugh. Tamas silenced him with a glance and looked at his other bodyguards. Andriya seemed to be the only one present who spoke Kez, other than Tamas himself. The rest hadn't understood her. "Let her through."
The woman approached. She looked about thirty, with raven hair, brown eyes, and hollow cheeks-she could have fit in anywhere in the Kez countryside. Her dress was well kept but covered in stains, her knees and elbows caked with mud, likely from crouching in the long gra.s.ses on her flight from the Kez camp.
"Would you like to clean up?"
"No time, but I could d.a.m.n well use a drink." Her switch to Adran was so flawless that Tamas wondered if he'd imagined her speaking Kez a moment ago.
"Get her some water," he told Andriya.
"Wine."
Tamas rolled his eyes but nodded. "All right. I didn't know we had any spies left in the Kez army."
"There are few enough," she said. "There was a purge about seven weeks ago. Like someone gave them a Kresimir-d.a.m.ned list of names. It was pure luck that I didn't get nabbed as well. I haven't been able to use any of our normal channels to send reports-you've gotten nothing from me for weeks and for that I'm sorry."
Tamas put his hands behind his back and gave a sharp nod. "Glad you made it out alive." Inside, he was seething. General Hilanska, no doubt. When this whole thing was over, he was going to drop Hilanska into the deepest part of the Adsea and see how long he could swim with that one arm. "What's so urgent that you had to leave your cover?"
The woman took an offered wineskin from Andriya and drained half of it before answering. "Aside from the intelligence I haven't been able to pa.s.s on for the last month? I slept with General Fulicote last night. You know who he is?"
Tamas nodded. One of Ipille's many infantry commanders. As far as Kez command went, he was a decent commander. He'd commanded a brigade in the Gurlish Wars twenty years ago.