She got home safely. And all the way, she was planning.
And the next night, when darkness had fallen, she again crept into the alley behind the wizard’s house, listening intently, waiting for her eyes to adjust to the darkness. This time, though, she carried a small shuttered lantern that she had appropriated from a neighbor in Northangle. Entering on a whim was all very well, but it was better to be prepared.
If she found any sign at all that her earlier visit had been detected, she promised herself, she would turn and flee.
The lock was just as she remembered; she opened one lantern-shutter enough to get a look at it, and saw no scratches or other marks from her previous entry. Unlocking it again took only a moment.
The mudroom beyond was just as she remembered, and as she glanced around she realized that she had, in fact, stolen something—the candle she had burned for light. In a household as rich as this, though, she was reasonably confident that the loss of a single candle would go unnoticed.
The dining salon was also undisturbed; when she shone her lantern about, however, the teapot rattled in its cabinet and turned away in annoyance.
The plant in the parlor was still waving; the mantel where the little creature had sat was empty.
A few things had been moved around in the workroom, but she assumed that was just a result of normal use. Nothing seemed to be any more seriously disarrayed than before.
At the entrance to the cellars she encountered her first real obstacle: The door was locked.
She put her ear to it and listened intently, and heard the wizard’s voice. He was beginning the night’s lesson—his voice had that droning, lecturing tone to it.
Frantically, she set to work on the lock, and discovered, to her relief, that it was no better than the one on the alley door. Really, it was disgraceful the way the wizard was so careless about these things! If she ever became a rich and powerful wizard, she would make sure that she had better locks than these. Relying entirely on magic couldn’t be wise.
And she hadn’t even seen any sign of magic; really, the wizard appeared to be relying entirely on his reputation, and that was just plain foolish.
The door swung open, and she slipped through, closing it carefully behind her, making sure it neither latched nor locked. With the lantern shuttered tight she crept down, step by step, to the landing.
And just as the night before, there sat the wizard and his apprentice, facing each other across the center of that rug. The wizard was holding a silver dagger and discussing the qualities important in a knife—not magical qualities, but basics like balance, sharpening, and what metals would hold an edge. Tabaea placed her lantern to one side and settled down, stretched out on her belly with her chin on her hands, to listen.
It was scarcely ten minutes later that the wizard finished his disquisition on blades and began explaining the purification rituals that would prepare a knife for athamezation.
Tabaea watched, fascinated.
Night after night, she crept in and watched.
Until finally, there came the night, after studying this one ritual, this one spell, for over a month, when the apprentice—her name, Tabaea had learned, was Lirrin—at last attempted to perform it herself.
When Tabaea returned for the conclusion of the ceremony, the grand finale in which the apprentice would trap a part of her own soul in the enchanted dagger that the wizards called an athame, she settled down on her belly and lay on the stone landing, staring down at the two figures below.
Lirrin had been at it for more than twenty-three hours, without food or rest, Tabaea knew. Her master, Serem the Wise, had sat by her side, watching and calling what advice he could, the entire time.
Tabaea, the uninvited observer, had not done anything of the sort. She had watched the beginning of the spell, then slipped away and gone about her business. Throughout the day she had sometimes paused and thought, “Now she’s raising the blade over her head for the long chant,” or “It must be time for the third ritual cleaning,” but she had not let it distract her from the more urgent matter of finding food and appropriating any money left sufficiently unguarded.
The silver knife was glittering white, and Tabaea really didn’t think it was just a trick of the light. The spell was doing something, certainly.
She could hear fatigue in the master’s voice as he murmured encouragement; the apprentice was far too busy concentrating on the spell to say anything, but surely she, too, must be exhausted.
Perhaps it was the certainty that the objects of her scrutiny were tired, or fascination with this climax, or just overconfidence acquired in her many undetected visits, but Tabaea had crept farther forward than ever before, her face pressed right against the iron railing. The black metal was cool against her cheek as she stared.
Lirrin finished her chant and placed her bloody hands on the shining dagger’s hilt; blood was smeared on her face, as well, her own blood mixed with ash and sweat and other things. It seemed to Tabaea that the girl had to force her hands down, as if something were trying to push them back, away from the weapon.
Then Lirrin’s hands closed on the leather-wrapped grip, and her entire body spasmed suddenly. She made a thick grunting noise; the dagger leapt up, not as if she were lifting it, but as if it were pulling her hands upward.
Something flashed; Tabaea could not say what it was, or just where, or what color it was. She was not sure it was actually light at all, but “flash” was the only word that seemed to fit. For an instant she couldn’t see.
She blinked. Her vision cleared, and she saw Lirrin rising to her feet, the new-made athame in her right hand, any unnatural glow vanished. The dagger looked like an ordinary belt-knife—of better quality than most, perhaps, but nothing unreasonable. The girl’s face was still smeared with black and red, her hair was a tangled mess, her apprentice’s robe wrinkled, stained, and dusty, but she was no longer transfigured or trembling; she was just a dirty young girl holding a knife.
She looked up, straight at Tabaea.
Tabaea froze.
“Master,” Lirrin said, tired and puzzled, “who’s that?” She pointed.
Serem turned to look, startled.
When the wizard’s eyes met her own, Tabaea unfroze. She leapt to her feet and spun on her heel, then dashed up the short flight of steps. She ran out through the wizard’s workroom as fast as she could, and careened out into the utter darkness of the hallway. Moving by feel, no longer worrying about making noise or knocking things over, she charged down the hall, through the parlor and dining salon, banging a shin against the animated fanning plant’s pot in the parlor, sending one of the ornately-carved dining chairs to the floor.
The door to the mudroom was open; she tumbled through it, tripping over somebody’s boots, and groped for the door to the alley before she even regained her feet.
Then she was out and stumbling along the hard-packed dirt toward the light of Grand Street. She was breathing too hard to seriously listen for pursuit, but at any rate she heard no shouting, no threats, none of the unnatural sounds that accompanied some spells.
At the corner she hesitated not an instant in turning toward Grandgate Market, even though that meant passing in front of the house. The marketplace crowds were unquestionably the best place to lose herself. She hoped that Serem and Lirrin hadn’t gotten a good look at her, and that Serem had no magic that could ferret her out once she was lost.
By the time she had gone three blocks she felt she could risk a look back over her shoulder. She saw no sign of Serem or Lirrin, and slowed to a walk.
If they spotted her now, she would just plead innocent, claim they had mistaken her for someone else.
Of course, if they insisted on taking her anyway, and if they had some magical means of discovering the truth, or if they had none themselves but took her to the overlord’s Minister of Justice, who reportedly kept several magicians around for just such matters ... well, if anything like that happened, she would just have to throw herself o
n somebody’s mercy and hope that the penalty wasn’t too harsh. After all, she hadn’t actually stolen anything.
She glanced back again, and saw lights in the windows of Serem’s house; the shutters had been opened, and light was pouring out into the streets.
Maybe they thought she was still inside somewhere—but that was silly. She hadn’t even taken the time to close the alleyway door behind her.
Well, whatever they thought, they weren’t coming after her, as far as she could see. She let out a small gasp of relief.
And the market square—which was called that even though it was six-sided and not square at all—was just ahead. In only seconds she would be safe.
Then the arched door at the corner of Grand and Wizard opened, spilling light, and even from four blocks away Tabaea could see Serem stood silhouetted against it, peering out. Tabaea shuddered, and forced herself not to run, and then she was in Grandgate Market, in the milling crowds.
Even so, even after she had seen Serem march out into the street, glare in all directions, and then go back inside, it was hours before she felt at all safe. It was two days before she dared go home, and two sixnights before she dared pass within a block of Serem’s house.
Chapter Six
During the days following Lirrin’s athamezation Tabaea reviewed the ritual repeatedly, both silently and aloud. Tessa and Thennis heard her mumbling the incantations, and mocked her when she refused to explain—but that was normal enough.
The whole question of how to use what she had learned was a baffling one. The secret of the athame was clearly one of the most important mysteries of the Wizards’ Guild, and therefore tremendously valuable—but how could she cash in on it? There was a word that described people who crossed the Wizards’ Guild, by stealing from them, or attempting to blackmail them—the word was “dead.”
So she couldn’t do anything at all that would bring her to the attention of the Guild. That left two other options: sell the secret elsewhere, or use it herself.
And where else could she sell it?
Wizards and sorcerers were traditional enemies, so one afternoon in Summerheat she strolled over to Magician Street, in Northside, and wandered into a sorcerer’s shop. The proprietor didn’t notice her for several minutes, which gave her a chance to look around.
The place didn’t look very magical; there were no animated plants, no strange skulls or glowing tapestries or peculiar bottles. There were some tools, but they looked as appropriate for a tinker or a jeweler as for a magician—pliers and hammers and so forth. Assorted colored wires hung on one wall, and crystals were displayed on another, but Tabaea, who had a competent thief’s working knowledge of precious stones and metals, quickly concluded that none of these were particularly valuable.
The sorcerer finally realized she was there; he took in her youth and ragged appearance in an instant, and said, “I’m not looking for an apprentice just now, young lady.”
“I’m fifteen,” Tabaea replied, annoyed.
“My apologies, then. What can I do for you?”
Tabaea hesitated; she had thought over a dozen possible openings without definitely choosing one, but now she could put it off no longer.
Might as well be direct, she thought.
“I think I might have something to sell you,” she said.
“Oh?” The sorcerer was a black-haired man in his thirties, with thick, bushy eyebrows that looked out of place on his rather pale and narrow face. Those eyebrows now rose questioningly. “What might that be? Have you found an interesting artifact, perhaps? Some relic of the Northern Empire?”
“No,” Tabaea said, startled. “There were never any Northerners around here.”
“True enough. Then it was around here that you found whatever it is?”
“Yes. It’s not an artifact—it’s a piece of information.”
The sorcerer frowned, those eyebrows descending. “I am not usually in the business of buying information,” he said.
“It’s about wizards,” Tabaea said, a note of desperation creeping into her voice.
The sorcerer blinked. “I am a sorcerer, young lady, not a wizard. You do know the difference, don’t you?”
“Yes, of course, I do!” Tabaea replied angrily. Then, calming, she corrected herself. “Or at least, I know there is a difference. And I know that you people don’t like wizards, so I thought maybe ... well, I found out a secret about wizards.”
“And you thought that it might be of interest to sorcerers?”
Tabaea nodded. “That’s right,” she said.
The sorcerer studied her for a moment, then asked, “And what price were you asking for this secret?”
Tabaea had given that some thought, and had decided that a hundred pounds of gold would be about right—a thousand rounds, that would be, equal to eight hundred thousand copper bits. That was most of a million. She would be rich, she wouldn’t need to ever steal again. Magicians were all rich—well, the good ones, anyway, most of them—surely, they could afford to pay her even so fabulous a sum as that.
But now she found she couldn’t bring herself to speak the numbers aloud. Eight hundred thousand bits—it was just too fantastic.
“I hadn’t decided,” she lied.
The sorcerer clicked his tongue sympathetically and shook his head in dismay. “Really, child,” he said, “you need to learn more about business. Let me ask, then—would this secret help me in my own business? Would it let me take customers away from the wizards?”
Tabaea hadn’t thought about that. “I don’t know,” she admitted. Attempting a recovery, she added, “But the wizards really don’t want anyone to know about it!”
The sorcerer frowned again. “In that case, isn’t this a dangerous bit of knowledge to have? How did you come by it?”
“I can’t say,” Tabaea said, a trifle desperately.
“Well, all right, then,” the sorcerer said. “I’m not usually one to buy a closed casket, but you’ve caught my interest.”
Tabaea caught her breath.
“I’ll pay you four bits in silver for your secret,” the sorcerer said.
Tabaea blinked.
“Four bits?” she squeaked.
“Half a round of silver,” the sorcerer confirmed.
Tabaea stared for a moment, then turned and ran out of the shop without another word.
Later, when she could think about it clearly, she realized that the sorcerer had really been making a generous offer. Tabaea had given him no hint of what her secret was, no reason to think it would be profitable for him to know it—and in fact, she saw now that it would probably not be profitable.
Wizards and sorcerers were traditional rivals, but they weren’t blood enemies. Sorcerers weren’t about to wage a full-scale war against wizards—for one thing, there were far more wizards in the World than sorcerers. And what possible use would knowledge of athamezation be to any magician who was not prepared to use it against wizards?
Selling her information, she saw, simply wasn’t going to work.
That left using it herself as the only way to exploit it.
And the only way to use it was to make herself an athame.
That certainly had its appeal; she would be a true wizard, then, according to what Serem the Wise had said, even if she didn’t know any spells. And if she ever did learn any spells, the athame would make them easier to use, if she had understood correctly. The knife would be able to free her from any bonds, if she could touch it. It would mark her as a wizard to other wizards, but not to anyone else—and yet she would not be a member of the Guild.
And she had the impression that there was far more to it than she knew. She hadn’t heard all of Serem’s teachings to Lirrin. She had learned the entire twenty-four-hour ceremony, but had missed a fair amount of the other discussion about the athame.
So, one bright day early in Summersend, two months after Lirrin completed her own athame, Tabaea slipped out of a shop on Armorer Street with a fine dagger tucked under
her tunic, one that she had not paid for.
The next problem, now that she had the knife, was to find a place where she could perform the spell. Her home was out of the question, with her sisters and her mother and her stepfather around—if her stepfather had turned up again, that is.
The people of the Wall Street Field had a reputation for minding their own business, but there were surely limits, and the all-day ritual with its blood and chanting and so forth would draw attention anywhere. And what if it rained? Right now the summer sun was pouring down like hot yellow honey, but the summer rains could come up suddenly.
She needed someplace indoors and private, where she could be sure of an entire day undisturbed, and such places were not easy for a poor young woman to find in the crowded streets and squares of Ethshar of the Sands.
Maybe, she thought, if she left the city...
But no, that was crazy. She wasn’t going to leave the city. There wasn’t anything out there but peasants and barbarians and wilderness, except maybe in the other two Ethshars, and those would be just as unhelpful as Ethshar of the Sands.
There were places that most people never went, such as the gate towers and the Great Lighthouse and all the towers that guarded the harbor, but those were manned by the overlord’s soldiers.
She wandered along Armorer Street, vaguely thinking of the South Beaches, but with no very clear plan in mind; she squinted against the sun and dust as she walked, not really looking where she was going.
She heard a man call something obscene, and a woman giggled. Tabaea looked up.
She was at the corner of Whore Street, and a man in the yellow tunic and red kilt of a soldier was shouting lewd promises to a red-clad woman on a balcony.
Those two would have no trouble finding a few minutes’ privacy, she was sure—though of course they’d have to pay for it.
That was a thought—she could pay for it. She could rent a room—not here in Soldiertown, of course, but at a respectable inn somewhere. She was so accustomed to stealing everything she needed that the idea of paying hadn’t occurred to her at first.
The Spell of the Black Dagger Page 5