The Lost Steersman (Steerswoman Series)

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The Lost Steersman (Steerswoman Series) Page 30

by Rosemary Kirstein


  Rowan hardly knew how to begin answering. She stood mute while the reasons ranked and ordered themselves in her mind.

  A wizard living perfectly hidden, in a perfectly secret place.

  An old friend who had lied to her, lied about her, betrayed her.

  Slado. Janus.

  Rowan said, “I need to know.”

  Steffie dropped his jaw. “ ‘Need to know,’ ” he said in a small voice. “I guess I can tell I’m talking to a steerswoman. She needs to know.”

  Rowan swung on her cloak, passed the other to Zenna. “Second off,” Zenna said as she donned and clasped it.

  “What?”

  “You said ‘first off.’ There ought to be a ‘second off.’ ”

  “Second off,” Steffie said. Then he turned to the chart on the table. “Second off— I don’t know much about maps, ladies, but I’m looking at this one, and what I see is a lot of exactly nothing, exactly where you’re meaning to go. Miles of nothing. Wizard’s got to be in some one place in all them miles, and you don’t know where that is.”

  “Charts,” Zenna said.

  “Nautical charts,” Rowan amplified. “Any sailor would have them. If Janus kept returning to the same place, he’ll have made charts of the course.”

  “They’ll be in his boat,” Zenna said, swinging herself toward the door.

  Rowan held the door open; rain swept in. “No. I looked there. But he has a room in town, and he keeps it locked; that’s where they’ll be.”

  “Good. We should take a lamp.”

  “I’ll get it.” Rowan stepped back, brushing past Steffie, snatched the lamp from the mantel, and used a twist of paper to light it from the fire.

  “Third off,” Steffie said. Rowan looked up. “What about them demons? Janus knew how to keep ’em back, when he was facing them anyways, but you don’t.”

  “Not yet.” Rowan adjusted the flame, returned to Zenna’s side.

  “Steerswomen write things down,” Zenna said to Steffie. “It’s like an instinct with us. If Janus learned anything at all, he’ll have kept notes of some kind— ”

  “If we find nothing, then you’re right, and there’s nothing I can do,” Rowan said. “And I’ll abandon the whole idea. But I believe that we will find something. If we find charts, we’ll find notes.”

  “Between Rowan’s knowledge and mine, the two of us might just be able to reason out how Janus’s spell operated.”

  “Spell?” Confusion on Steffie’s face; then sudden realization.

  “It could be something quite simple,” Rowan said to Zenna. “If it’s an incantation, the entire spell itself might be sitting up in his room, written out ”

  “With any luck,” Zenna said.

  “It had better not be!”

  Steffie stood in the center of the room, arms flung out, hands in trembling fists. His eyes were huge. “If, if,” he said in a voice that cracked, “if you find a magic demon spell that could have kept people safe, sitting right up there in his room all this time, then— then, Rowan, I swear I’ll knock you on the head and sit on you for three weeks straight until I think that wizard has got all his answers and killed Janus dead! I’ll do it, Rowan, I swear I will!”

  The change in him stunned Rowan, and she was a few moments finding a response. “Steffie,” she said, “if I find a spell that simple and that strong … then I will go and get Janus and personally deliver him into the justice of the people of Alemeth.”

  “Good.” His eyes told her what he thought the people of Alemeth should do with Janus. Then he drew deep breaths, relaxed his stance, looked away from her, eyes narrowed. “Good.”

  Zenna spoke. “It’s a one-person spell.”

  Rowan turned to her. Zenna continued, “Possibilities are two: either only Janus himself can work the spell, or only one person at a time can work it. He would have shared it if he could— I know he would have. But he didn’t. So he couldn’t.”

  Rowan was not at all convinced of this. Nevertheless: “Let’s take that as a working assumption.”

  “Right,” Steffie said. “Let’s go and find out.” And he pushed past the steerswomen roughly on his way out.

  When they did not follow immediately, he turned back to them, standing in the street in his shirtsleeves in the rain. “If that door’s locked, you’ll be needing someone to knock it down,” he said, raising his voice over the hiss of water. “Right now, I feel just like knocking something down.”

  26

  By the time they reached the cooper’s shop, rain had cooled Steffie’s anger. Nevertheless, Rowan stood back and let him use the hilt of her sword to smash at the rotted, thin wood beside the padlock, which he did with a cold and methodical efficiency.

  Down in the courtyard, Zenna’s up-tilted face was a spot of paleness in the gray, rain-pattering light. The stairs were too narrow and unsteady for her to negotiate.

  The wood gave; Steffie handed back Rowan’s sword, pried away the hasp with his fingers, then swung the door open and stood aside to let her enter first. She raised the lamp as he came in behind her. “Hell of a way to live,” he commented. He brushed water from his face, shook his head like a dog.

  “It’s hardly worse than Mira’s when I arrived.” Piles of used clothing were scattered about; the motion of the lamp gave them moving shadows, like small animals ducking in and out of hiding. “At least there are no dirty dishes.”

  “Well, here’s a place to start.” Steffie made for a small chest in the room’s far corner. Rowan slipped out of her cloak, allowing it to drop to the floor, then remained where she stood, scanning the room.

  If she herself lived here, and she wished to work, to study or write, where would she do it?

  There was no table, or desk. A straight-backed chair stood alone against the damp-stained outer wall, but clean clothing stacked on it demonstrated that it was rarely used.

  The bed was merely a straw-stuffed canvas mattress lying directly on the floor, strewn with ancient pillows. A small lath crate served as nightstand, with a reflector candle-holder resting on it.

  Rowan crossed the room, set the lamp beside the candle, and sat on the mattress, finding musty pillows already cradling her back comfortably.

  A sweep of bare floor lay before her, illuminated by a wash of lamplight. A perfect work space.

  The crate was open on the side toward the bed. “Here,” Rowan said.

  It had been agreed that the first examination of notes must take place in Janus’s room. Rowan had good evidence of magic’s dependence on precise conditions; quite possibly the spell could only be worked, or even comprehended, in this one place. As Steffie folded himself to a seat opposite Rowan, she pulled out the contents of the crate and spread them on the floor: a fat folder of stiffened paper, tied with a ribbon; pens, spare quill nibs, and a penknife; a brass ruler and calipers, a stone bottle of ink; a leather roll; a burlap sack.

  The sack was unexpected. Rowan loosened the drawstring, upended it. A number of brown and black objects spilled out. “What in the world?”

  They were like nothing she had ever seen. She sat regarding them stupidly, entirely unable to integrate their shapes into anything she could name. Presently, she resorted to counting them: nine. The act of enumeration steadied her, oddly, and she found that she could at least see that the objects were designed with a particular orientation. She reached out to begin setting upright those that were lying on their sides.

  But the first that she touched, she recognized not by sight but by feel. “I know this …” She closed her eyes to let her hands remember. “In the Outskirts, we found something near where a demon had been. A sphere … we thought it was a demon egg, but it had only water inside. It felt like this …” Both sandy and gummy, as if some steerswoman had not waited for the soles of her boots to dry before walking on a beach.

  Rowan opened her eyes again. “But it did not look like this.” The sphere had been simple and the reddish-brown color of Outskirts earth. The object now in her hands w
as complicated and mottled brown and black.

  It was a canted cone, she saw now, with odd bulbous protrusions and a flat base. She set it down. The next was a rounded ellipsoid section from which rose three curving flutes, their surfaces completely covered with close, shallow depressions. The others were vague blocks, scarred masses, and a number of rough, flattened pyramids.

  Cautiously, Steffie touched one. “Be careful,” Rowan said. Handling the sphere had caused the Outskirters’ hands to itch and peel the next day. “I’m sure these are the cause of Janus’s problem with his hands.” Steffie drew his finger back, more quickly than was necessary. “The effect is cumulative,” she assured him. “If you do handle them, be sure to wash your hands later.” She set down the object she was holding.

  The leather roll almost certainly contained the charts, and at that thought, Rowan felt a sudden, sharp yearning, as if the maps were almost audibly calling to her. But the spell was more likely in the folder. She opened it, found a collection of loose pages. She sorted through them, seeking the unexpected.

  She found first: pages with torn edges and writing spoiled by immersion in water— from Janus’s own logbook, Rowan surmised, rescued by him after the shipwreck. Then: sketches in charcoal on dried, damaged paper: a mudwort; the leaves of a tanglebrush; a skinny, four-limbed insect Rowan recognized as a trawler— Outskirts lifeforms, with the proper accompanying descriptions and measurements. Among these, executed in lampblack ink, was a diagram of one dissected quarter of a demon’s body, nearly exactly as Rowan had drawn her own.

  Finally: page after page of drawings, each resembling the others closely. Rowan thumbed through them to confirm the fact, then returned to the first of that series.

  Steffie tilted his head, trying to read the notation. “What’s that say?”

  “ ‘Talisman,’ ” Rowan read. She drew a breath. “This must be it.”

  “Is that a one-person spell?”

  “Yes.”

  The sketches showed a truncated pyramid, with a swirling grooved surface; the notes described it as standing about four inches square at the base, rising to two and a half inches, rounded at the top, colored in blotches and twists of black and brown.

  Rowan glanced through the pages. All were views of the talisman: careful, detailed. At first sight they seemed exactly the sort of precise work Rowan would have expected of any good steerswoman, but there were far more sketches than were necessary to convey the information. She went through them again, more slowly.

  First: rough sketches. Next: sketches less rough, with measurements more and more specific and precise. Then: one depicting the object with an obsessive, almost hallucinatory clarity but which included no measurements whatsoever, rendering it oddly mute to Rowan’s eye, and disturbing.

  After that, all the way to the end, the talisman: page after page, view after view, numbered, measured, marked, each executed with dry, detached precision, each page telling the same tale, over and over.

  Rowan reached among the strange objects on the floor, pulled out one of the rough pyramids. She compared it to the eerie, voiceless drawing. “Similar …” But not exact. It was close in shape, but the colors did not match at all, the surface was uneven, the raised swirls clumsy and notched.

  She picked up the penknife, compared its size to the irregularities. “He was trying to make one. And failing.” And handling the objects barehanded— at least for a while. Janus must not have realized, or not realized at first; apparently, with repeated exposure, even washing between times was not enough, and damage to the skin became permanent and self-sustaining. If Janus had learned this, he had learned it too late.

  She set aside knife and object, turned the pages to the later drawings. “These specifications are very precise …” Decimal divisions of an inch down to four significant places, for the size and height of each swirling groove; degrees of arc for the cross section of a typical groove, and a formula for increase and decrease along the groove’s length. “I’m not sure this is humanly possible,” she told Steffie.

  He did not reply. She looked up, and found him sitting loose limbed and slack jawed, stunned, his eyes on Janus’s failed creation. “Bloody hell?” he managed to get out, barely audible.

  “Steffie?” Rowan felt a sudden twist of fear at the thought that magic might be about to manifest itself, here and now, somehow choosing to devolve upon Steffie. She put out a hand to touch him, then held back.

  Very slowly, he reached out and picked up one of the pyramids. He gazed at it in a breathless puzzlement for a long moment, then carefully placed it in his left hand.

  He rose. He stood in the center of the room, holding the object away from his body, slightly to his left— and then, in a movement utterly natural, and so seeming even more bizarre, he hefted it, as if testing its weight.

  “Bloody hell!” He flung it down, and was out the door and pounding down the stairs.

  Rowan scrambled after him, tripping over her cloak on the way. “Steffie!” She picked it up.

  “It’s still there!” she heard him call back.

  “What?” Zenna shouted the question. Rowan was halfway down the stairs when she discovered that she had somehow snatched up the roll of maps.

  In the courtyard, Zenna was trying to restrain Steffie. “What do you mean?” she asked him.

  “He tried to give it to me!”

  “When?” Rowan reached them, swung her cloak on. “How?”

  “In the fight!” He blinked rain out of his eyes. “He threw it at me! It’s still there— it’s got to be! Come on!” He pounded off into the street.

  With a glance back at Zenna, Rowan ran after him, sighted him, called ahead, “Wait! We don’t know where you’re going!”

  “Galer’s place!” But he did pause, jittering with urgency, while Rowan and Zenna caught up. “See, see,” he said as they hurried on, “them demons, they only could come up behind him, ’cause that thing, it was always in front or to the side— ” he paused to gasp for breath “— and that’s why they would come at his sword on the right side, but not on his left— ”

  “Shut up and run,” Zenna said, and then suddenly did so herself, using an astounding, efficient method that Rowan had never before seen. Steffie showed no surprise, but sped up, then fell in beside Zenna as easily and naturally as if he had been doing it all his life.

  Rowan followed close behind, clutching the roll of maps under her cloak, ignoring a startled shopkeeper standing in his door and two gossiping, oilskin-clad fishers who called after her.

  Harbor Road ended; Steffie led them into a woody path, slower now. They passed a burly woman dragging a burlap bag on which lay a demon corpse, a man with a wheelbarrow that held a demon in two pieces, and then entered a cluttered yard that stank of wet, burned wood. Three women were sifting through a pile of smoking rubble; other workers stood by the open door of a shabby house, conversing.

  Steffie ignored them all, went straight to the tilted wreck of a wagon. He knelt. “Here. I was standing behind, Janus threw that thing, it hit here”— he rapped the wood— “and fell.” The three of them grubbed among the grass in front of the wagon. The workers left their duties and drifted over.

  “I’ve got it.” Rowan’s hand knew it immediately. She drew it out carefully, mindful of the rain-driven grass wrapped around it; she did not wish to injure the critical precision of its surface.

  She stood; Zenna and Steffie crowded close to see. The object lay in Rowan’s hand, wet and streaked with broken grass, otherwise exactly like Janus’s drawings. I’m holding magic, Rowan thought; but the idea seemed unreal.

  “Now that we have it, somebody please tell me what it is,” Zenna said. Rowan did so, describing her findings in Janus’s room.

  “What’s a talisman?” someone asked. Rowan discovered that the work crew, Corey among them, had gathered around to listen.

  “According to general information, a talisman is a magical object that protects its user from evil,” Rowan replied.


  “A one-person spell,” Zenna amplified. “And Janus was trying to make more of them. He was trying to help.”

  Rowan did not point out that Janus ought to have reported the finding to the steerswomen; they could have set a dozen people to copying the spell.

  Corey looked extremely uncomfortable as Rowan explained further, and she could see that he was struggling with ideas beyond his usual scope. “But he couldn’t make another one, so Rowan just said,” Corey stated finally. “So there’s only one of them.” He glanced around at the assembled people. “I think it’s me that better keep that.” Perhaps the simple pragmatism of his duties overrode any fears of magic; still, he did not put out his hand for the talisman but only held Rowan’s gaze levelly.

  She passed the map case to Zenna, not doubting that Corey knew that the action freed her sword hand. “It’s staying with me,” she said firmly. “You won’t need it again. No more demons will come to Alemeth.”

  “And how’s that?”

  “They were sent by a wizard, to get Janus. They got him. There’s no reason for them to be sent again.” It had been Corey himself who, after dealing with the other attacks, had led a crew of archers along the trail that ended at the beach.

  “Are you sure it’s him they wanted and not that talisman thing?”

  Steffie spoke up. “When Janus threw it away, it was him they went for, not this.”

  “I assure you,” Rowan said, clearly enough for the statement to carry to all listeners, “we have no intention of damaging the talisman.” She did not mention that it, and she, would be leaving town entirely.

  Corey studied her determined expression, then considered Zenna’s, and even Steffie’s, seeming to give equal weight to all three. “Right,” he said, also pitching his voice to carry. “You lot go ahead and study it all you like.” He turned to the little crowd. “And you— got plenty to do yourselves, haven’t you? More dead demons to clear up, more wood to salvage.” He shooed them and followed them but paused to call over his shoulder. “Rowan, if you don’t want us putting demons into the sea, what should we do with ’em?”

 

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