A Threat of Shadows

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A Threat of Shadows Page 15

by JA Andrews


  “Why would we?”

  “Exactly! Since when do we drop all the treasure we find off with him? Did we give him the gold from that crown?”

  “Or the barrels of whiskey from the monastery?” Douglon added.

  “Don’t worry, cousin,” Patlon said. “I’ll smooth things over with him. It will be taken care of long before you get back there.”

  “What will happen to you if it’s not smoothed over?” Brandson asked Douglon.

  “Jail,” Douglon said.

  “Well,” Patlon tugged nervously at his beard. “Actually, he would be executed.”

  “You said banished,” Douglon said in a low voice.

  “Did I?”

  “But execution isn’t the penalty for breaking a banishment. It’s the penalty for treason.”

  “I didn’t mean for him to leap to treason,” Patlon said, holding his hands out to keep Douglon back. “But somehow, Horgoth convinced himself that you were collecting wealth so that you could set yourself up as High Dwarf.”

  “What?” Douglon shouted. “You got me banished by convincing Horgoth that I wanted to be king? And he believed you?”

  “I didn’t do anything! You know how he is,” Patlon said, inching backward. “He’s always been a little insecure about your claim to the throne.”

  “Douglon has a claim to the throne?” Brandson asked.

  “It’s nothing,” Douglon tossed the words at Brandson and turned back to Patlon.

  “Sort of,” Patlon said, leaning around his fuming cousin to look at Brandson. “Douglon’s grandfather was the twin brother of King Horgoth’s grandfather. There’s this interesting story that draws into question which twin was actually born first. Douglon’s grandfather had six toes on one foot, and one midwife claims—”

  “Enough!” roared Douglon. “I do not want to be king. Neither did my grandfather. I hope Horgoth has a litter of sons so that their family line is indestructible. I would chop off my beard and live with an elf before I would submit to sitting day in and day out on that ugly throne. I cannot believe Horgoth believed you!” Douglon looked plaintively at his cousin. “He really charged me with treason?”

  Patlon winced. “In front of a full court.”

  Douglon dropped his head into his hands. Then he looked back at his cousin. “And how exactly are you going to smooth this over?”

  Patlon began tugging at his beard again. “I’m going to have to tell him it turns out you were just waylaid and you’re on your way to bring it to him now.”

  “I’m not giving that treasure to my addle-headed cousin! Even if it were mine to give.”

  “If you can think of another idea,” Patlon said, “let me know.”

  “King Horgoth dislikes wizards, doesn’t he?” Alaric asked.

  “Hates ‘em,” Patlon said.

  “Tell him the treasure belonged to a wizard and Douglon was bewitched.”

  “Ooh! That’s good! Then you’re innocent, Douglon!”

  “And Horgoth will never want the treasure,” Douglon said, nodding at Alaric.

  “Good, because he can’t have it,” Alaric said. “I need it.”

  “You?” Patlon asked.

  “It’s a Keeper’s Wellstone, and I’m a Keeper.” The claim rolled off his tongue almost easily.

  “I keep forgetting that Kordan was a Keeper,” Douglon said. “He seemed so evil.”

  “Did you hear that from anyone besides Gustav?” Alaric asked.

  Douglon narrowed his eyes.

  “No,” Ayda answered for him.

  “Kordan was a Keeper,” Alaric said. “I have read the records of his work. He wasn’t evil. There was an accident while Kordan was performing some magic, and a boy died, despite Kordan’s efforts to save him.”

  Ayda leaned toward Douglon and whispered loudly, “Kordan sounds diabolical.”

  “Shut up,” the dwarf said. He turned to Alaric. “What do you need the Wellstone for?”

  Alaric almost gave a generic answer about Keepers loving knowledge. But as he reached for the pouch at his neck, he realized that he wanted to tell them about Evangeline.

  As the silence dragged on, the faces of his companions grew concerned. Looking from face to face, something loosened inside of him and he began to talk. He told them of meeting Evangeline, marrying her, of the stupid accident when she had been poisoned, about how he had searched and searched for an antidote and finally had real hope that it was held in Kordan’s Wellstone.

  There was silence for a long moment.

  “Oh, Alaric,” Milly said quietly.

  “I didn’t realize Keepers married,” Brandson said.

  Milly smacked him in the arm. “What Brandson means is that is terrible and we will do everything we can to get the stone back.”

  “Not many Keepers marry,” Alaric said. “Most spend too much time stuck in the Stronghold or libraries to meet anyone. But it happens occasionally.”

  “Do you think Gustav knew Kordan was a Keeper?” Brandson asked.

  “I’m sure of it, if he knew about the Wellstone,” Alaric said. “Although, I don’t know where he heard about it.”

  Patlon looked at them all curiously. “What story did Gustav tell you about Kordan to get you all to look for the treasure?”

  “Douglon was the one looking for the gem,” Brandson explained. “Gustav was already at my house when Douglon showed up.”

  Patlon tilted his head in confusion. “But Gustav’s been looking for it since last summer.” He stopped and snapped his mouth shut.

  “You’re getting old, cousin,” Douglon said dangerously. “Brandson didn’t meet Gustav until spring. How do you know that Gustav was looking for the treasure before that?”

  “You knew Gustav,” Alaric said.

  “‘Knew him’ is a little strong,” Patlon began.

  Douglon growled.

  “I met Gustav last summer while I was hunting,” Patlon said quickly. “He was sneaking along a game trail, and I almost shot him. We got to talking, and he told me he had found a cave the night before with veins of silver in the walls. He’d scraped some off for his potions but had no need of the rest of it. He gave me directions to it and said he was seeking a different sort of treasure. He had heard rumors of a valley with no beginning and no end. It was said to hold both treasure and magical objects.”

  “He told you about the valley where we found the map?” Douglon asked. “And you never told me?”

  “I was going to, but when I followed the old man’s directions to his cave with ‘huge veins of silver’, all I found was one streak so thin it was barely visible. I had spent my whole hunting day on a wild goose chase.” Patlon’s scowl turned a little sheepish as he looked at Douglon. “I didn’t feel like telling you I’d been duped. Then when we really did find the valley, it seemed too late…”

  “You never saw Gustav again?” Alaric broke in before Douglon could answer.

  Patlon shook his head again, then paused. “Now that you ask… maybe.” He tugged absently on his beard. “After you ran off with the map, Douglon, I stopped by the tavern at the river crossing and had a drink. Partway through the evening, an old man came in and sat near me. Hulgrat and Swenrich were there, and”—he glanced at Douglon—”I may have been telling them about what you did.”

  Douglon growled again.

  “You stole from me!” Patlon exclaimed.

  “The old man?” Alaric reminded him.

  “Yes, well there was something familiar about him, but I couldn’t seem to look at him clearly enough to figure out what. He just sat nearby, and I had the impression he was listening. Then at one point, I looked over and he was gone. I honestly haven’t thought about him again until right now. But now that I think about it, he did remind me of Gustav.”

  “It was him,” Alaric said. “Shade Seekers have a way of affecting what people focus on. They call it influence. Gustav could have manipulated you until you didn’t care enough about him to pay attention.”

 
; “Then he knew I had the map,” Douglon said, “months before I ever met him.”

  Alaric nodded absently, struck by an idea. Influence. Gustav used influence. The questions that had been fluttering through his mind since he met this group settled. Answer after answer burst into light.

  “If Gustav is skilled at influence, that explains everything.” Every single thing. “It’s easy to make people not notice someone they weren’t looking for in the first place, like an old man in a tavern, but I think Gustav’s influence may range far past that.

  “I think Gustav is the reason you are all together,” Alaric said. “If he had tracked Douglon near Kordan’s Blight, Gustav could have used influence to draw Douglon to him.”

  “No one drew me,” Douglon objected.

  “If Gustav was good at it, you would have thought it was your own choices that guided you,” Alaric said. He gestured to Milly, “It’s similar to the magic the borrey used.”

  “That doesn’t explain why Ayda is here,” Brandson pointed out.

  “They both came to you at about the same time, right?” Alaric asked. “Then it makes sense. An influence spell to draw someone isn’t one that Keepers use, but I understand the concept.” He ignored Ayda’s snort. “You can draw a specific person if you know a great deal about them. The better you know them, the more specific to an individual the spell will be, but it will work over a smaller distance.

  “Gustav knew little about Douglon. Just that he was a dwarf, really, but since Douglon’s probably the only dwarf within two days’ walk, Gustav could afford to be vague. Since he didn’t know how close Douglon was, he would have wanted to make the spell as general as possible. I’m guessing he drew any intelligent, non-human. That would bring Ayda as well.”

  “You might be right,” Ayda said. “I hadn’t planned on going to Kordan’s Blight, but I never thought much about it. I have a hard time paying attention to things sometimes.”

  Douglon rolled his eyes. “Sometimes?”

  “And it explains why I just couldn’t focus on him. Ever,” Ayda said. “I thought he was just boring, but I could barely look at him.”

  “I’m sure he knew you would notice too much about him if you did,” Alaric said.

  An irritated line creased her brow. “That’s why I don’t know what color he is, why I didn’t ask how the dragon knew him, why I never wondered about the wizard at all.”

  “So Gustav kept drawing Ayda back whenever she left?” Brandson asked.

  Alaric groaned. How had he not seen any of this? That’s what Gustav had been doing in the woods when Ayda had wanted to leave. It wasn’t Brandson that had convinced her to stay at all. Gustav had used his influence. “I thought elves were hard to influence,” he said to Ayda.

  She winced. “That’s another thing my father said was human about me. I’m easy to fool.”

  Milly looked at Ayda, her brows drawn together. “Why would he keep drawing Ayda back? He needed Douglon’s map, but what did he need Ayda for?”

  Alaric looked at Ayda. Why did Gustav want her there?

  Ayda shrugged. “Maybe he just liked me.”

  “That can’t be it.” Douglon shook his head. “He must have had some other crazy reason.”

  Ayda ignored him and looked to Alaric for an answer.

  “I’m not sure,” he said. “Maybe it was because you have such unusual powers.” Alaric certainly felt better knowing where Ayda was. Maybe Gustav had noticed the same sort of thing; the idea that Ayda had the potential for something extraordinary. Or devastating.

  “So if Gustav was just after the treasure,” Brandson said, “why not just steal Douglon’s map?”

  “He couldn’t read it,” Alaric said. “The runes on that map are complicated. To anyone other than a Keeper, they would say the gibberish Gustav read. Shade Seekers study runes, but not to the extent Keepers do. I’m not sure anyone studies ancient runes the way Keepers do.”

  “Which means,” Ayda said, “not only did Gustav draw the map to him, but he also drew one of the only people on earth who can read it.” She smiled sweetly. “I think it’s reasonable to think that Gustav drew you as well.”

  Alaric snorted. That old wizard hadn’t drawn him. He had already been seeking information about Kordan. His own journey had brought him here.

  Except here was finally an explanation for the ridiculous coincidence of finding this exact group. Gustav had drawn them together. And it explained the slight fuzziness Alaric had felt the whole time they were together. It was Gustav, subtly controlling everyone’s decisions for his own gain. Alaric had never heard of anyone using influence so subtly.

  “A troubling idea,” he said. “Gustav seems to use influence as a kind of net, sending out ideas of what he wants and then drawing in whatever it catches. What’s even more troubling is that it still might be working. Borreys are ridiculously rare. What are the chances that we would stumble across one right when we decide to follow Gustav?”

  “Do you think Gustav’s still around then?” Milly asked.

  “I don’t know why he would be,” Alaric said, “but he could have set things in motion before he left. It’s still a big coincidence, but every other coincidence so far has been Gustav’s doing.”

  “Well,” Brandson said, “there’s one thing Gustav didn’t plan. In attempting to collect a team to find his treasure, he’s also brought together the perfect group to stop him—dwarves who know what the nomads are doing, a Keeper who knows about the Wellstone, and an elf who knows where Mallon’s body is.”

  Alaric looked around the group as they all nodded.

  “So where do we find Gustav?” Brandson asked.

  Alaric felt the pressure as one gaze after another turned toward him. It would have been nice if he had an answer.

  Chapter 23

  Alaric looked around the group. “We’re not on a treasure hunt in the safety of these hills any longer,” he began.

  “Yeah, nothing dangerous here…” Douglon muttered to Ayda.

  Alaric ignored him. “Since Gustav is a Shade Seeker, he is most likely headed to Sidion.”

  At this, Milly paled and Brandson shifted.

  “Do you know where it is?” Brandson asked.

  Alaric nodded. “I haven’t been to the Shade Seekers’ Keep itself, but I’ve been close enough to know where it is. Douglon probably does too.”

  The dwarf nodded.

  “It’s not an easy place to get into.” Alaric looked at Milly. “We need to go through Kordan’s Blight and get horses. We’ll drop you off at your home. Now that things are settled with Patlon, you’ll be in no danger.”

  “Home?” Milly asked, one eyebrow rising. “You’re not sending me home.”

  “I suppose I can’t convince you to stay home, either, Brandson?” Alaric asked.

  Brandson leveled a steely gaze at the Keeper. “Mallon killed my parents. I’m not going to just sit by and let Gustav bring him back.”

  “We may not be great wizards or powerful warriors,” Milly said, “but we aren’t just going to go sit at home while you all go off to stop Gustav. A lot of regular people like us are going to suffer if Mallon is raised. It’s only fair that we should get to help stop him. You don’t have to be some great hero to contribute something good, you know.”

  Brandson and Milly were sitting, chins raised, daring the others to disagree. Alaric nodded to them. “All right then. Does anyone have any ingenious ideas on how to stop him besides chasing him across the country? I think we have to assume he has the cooperation of his dragon, so he’ll be moving a lot faster than we will on horses.”

  “Could you draw Gustav back here the way he drew everyone?” Milly asked.

  Alaric shook his head. “An influence spell can prod someone in the direction that you want them to go, but once they realize it’s happening, it’s worthless. I don’t think I could fool Gustav into thinking he wanted to come back and find us.”

  “Can you do something else magical?” Brandson asked.
“Grab him and bring him here or make some sort of glowing trail to find him?”

  “It doesn’t work that way. Magic is pretty limited. Everything living has energy. Magic involves redirecting that energy. To do that, it has to travel through me. But it’s like heat—a little is okay, too much burns.” He held up his bandaged palms.

  “But Keepers in the past have done amazing things,” Milly said. “What about when Chesavia fought the water demon?”

  “Chesavia was killed by the water demon,” Brandson pointed out.

  “Actually, she wasn’t,” Alaric said. “Chesavia died because she used too much magic. The demon was strong, too strong to be destroyed without Chesavia using more energy than she could manage. She knew it. She chose to continue past what her body could handle. She defeated the demon, but it cost her her life.

  “Keepers aren’t great wizards or powerful warriors, either. Chesavia was one of the few who single-handedly saved the day.”

  “Then what good are they?” Douglon asked.

  “We work more with knowledge than magic. We spend a lot of time watching for trouble, searching out the truth if we find the rumor of any. Then we try to assemble the people that could do something about it and provide them with the knowledge they need.”

  “Well, that is perfect,” Brandson said, rubbing his hands together. “We’ve definitely found trouble, and the group’s assembled. Provide us with knowledge.”

  Alaric laughed and Douglon spread a map of Queensland out on the floor. At the top, in tiny detail, rose the Wolfsbane Mountains. The great river snaked south from them until it flowed off the southern end of the map. The Scale Mountains ran down the western edge, and the Marsham Cliffs lined the eastern side.

  Patlon pointed out the location where the nomads were rumored to be gathering to Douglon.

  “That’s a huge valley,” Douglon told Alaric. “It’s well supplied with water. A large force could gather there.”

  “How many are there?” Alaric asked.

  “No idea,” Patlon said. “It’s all just rumors.”

  “Isn’t that near the entrance of Duncave? Haven’t the dwarves bothered to see what’s going on right above their heads?” Alaric asked.

 

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