Authors: Sarah Prineas
Book Two
Illustrations by Antonio Javier Caparo
T
O
T
HEO
,
BECAUSE THE BIRD
WAS HIS IDEA
“A wizard is a lot like a pyrotechnist,” I said.
I blinked the brights out of my eyes. The floor…
I gave Brumbee’s letter to Nevery and he spelled it…
Once Rowan and I had snuck out of the Dawn…
“So the lurkers are in the Twilight, too,” Rowan whispered.
We’d been warned twice about the bad ones, the Shadows,…
The next afternoon Rowan met me on the Night Bridge.
After talking to Nevery about what I’d been up to…
“I have to be sure he’s all right,” I said.
By the time I got home to Heartsease, my wings…
While Nevery was at another meeting, I went up to…
That night after supper, Nevery and I were at work…
Nevery found Benet, and between them they got me home…
In the middle of the afternoon, I waited until Nevery’d…
Down I crashed, lashed by twigs, bouncing off branches, until…
At the bottom of the hill, the forest began. In…
Four more days of walking as fast as I could…
The first thing I did was steal my knife back…
Another day of trudge-travel through the forest. Everyone was twitchy…
Another day of traveling. As we went along, me walking…
At last, after a stay at a posting inn at…
I stayed in Argent’s rooms and read two of his…
I decided to start discovering things for Nevery right away.
The next night, after the usual dinner party had ended…
After leaving Jaggus’s rooms in the gray light of morning,…
I was at the table in the room I shared…
I’d have just one chance.
In the darkest part of the night, I set off…
I woke up with the rising sun in my face…
After camping, we traveled most of the next day, me…
Stumbling after Half-finger and his two men, I looked down…
The bread was hard as rocks, but after soaking it…
In the dusty, gray light of morning, I heard the…
I had the whole night before anyone would come looking…
The stairway was completely dark. With the door closed, the…
At the posting inn, I woke up long enough to…
In the guardroom at the Dawn Palace, Kerrn and her…
“A
wizard is a lot like a pyrotechnist,” I said. “You mean magic and explosions, boy?” Nevery said from the doorway of my workroom. In one hand he held his gold knob-headed cane, and he had his flatbrimmed hat under his arm. He’d just gotten back
from a magisters’ meeting, which always made him grumpy.
“They’d be controlled explosions,” I said.
“
Controlled
explosions? That would seem to be a contradiction in terms, Connwaer.” He looked around my workroom and scowled.
Benet had helped me strip the faded wallpaper from the walls and whitewash them, and I’d swept the floor and scrubbed the grime and dust off the tall windows and set Lady, the white and tabby-tailed cat, to deal with the mice. A few books from Nevery’s library were stacked neatly on the shelves. After everything was ready I’d hung my picture of a dragon, the one I’d nicked from Nevery’s study, on the wall. The picture was so sooty and dirty from hanging over a fireplace that it looked like a dragon hidden behind a cloud, but I could make out a gleam of golden wing and a snakelike tail and a sharp eye, red like an ember in a hearth.
I’d been reading Prattshaw’s treatise on pyrotechnics. The book lay open on the table in front of
me, along with some papers and a dirty teacup.
“Yes, this is a bad idea,” Nevery said. “What would pyrotechnics accomplish, hmmm?”
That was a very good question.
To do magic, every wizard had to find his or her own special locus magicalicus. It could be a piece of gravel or a small chunk of crystal or a rounded river stone or a pebble found in the street. When you found it you knew, for it called to you. My own locus stone had been the finest jewel in the city, the center stone from the duchess’s necklace, leaf green and glowing with its own light, and it had been my way to talk to the magic. It had been destroyed when I’d freed the magic from Crowe’s prisoning device. After that, I’d spent most of the summer looking all over Wellmet for another one. Nevery’d told me I’d find a new locus stone, but I hadn’t. Then I checked every grimoire in the academicos, and none of them said anything about wizards finding a second locus stone. If their first stone was destroyed, they died along with it. But I hadn’t died.
“Well, Nevery,” I said, “the magic talked to me when the Underlord’s device exploded.” Nobody except Nevery believed me, but I knew what I’d heard. “If I make a very small pyrotechnic explosion, it might talk to me again.” And then I could be a wizard, even without a locus stone.
“Hmph,” Nevery said. “Pyrotechnics is not a reliable method, boy.” He paced across the room and leaned over the table to lift the book I was reading to see the title. “Prattshaw,” he said, dropping the book. He shook his head. “I suppose you can’t get into too much trouble just reading about it. Don’t be late for supper,” he said, and swept-stepped out of my workroom and down the stairs.
Had I ever been late for supper? No.
I went back to the book. Tourmalifine and slowsilver, it said, were
contrafusives
; that meant slowsilver attracted and confined magic, and tourmalifine repelled it. When mingled, they exploded.
I closed the book and set it aside. In a box under the table where Nevery couldn’t see it, I
had a stoppered vial of tourmalifine crystals. And I had a little lockbox with a few drops of slowsilver in it that I’d nicked from Nevery’s workroom.
I brought out the vial and the lockbox. The book said that very small amounts of slowsilver and tourmalifine caused very small explosions—just puffs of smoke, really. Clear as clear, Nevery didn’t want me doing pyrotechnics. But he wouldn’t notice a puff of smoke, would he?
With the raggedy sleeve of my apprentice’s robe, I wiped out the teacup and set it on the table; then I tipped in a few crystals of tourmalifine, careful not to get any on my fingers. I didn’t have a key for the lockbox, so I pulled out my lockpick wires, snick-picked the lock, and opened it. The slowsilver swirled at the bottom of the box. As I set the lid back, it crept up the sides, almost like it was trying to escape. I tapped the box, and the slowsilver slid back to the bottom again.
I dipped the end of one of my lockpick wires into the slowsilver. A mirror-bright bead clung
to it as I lifted it out. Carefully—
steady hands
—I brought the slowsilver to the teacup and tapped it from the end of the wire. Like a drop of water landing on sand, it splatted into the center of the little pile of tourmalifine in the bottom of the cup.
I held my breath and bent closer to see.
The slowsilver soaked into the tourmalifine. I counted
one
,
two
,
thr—
With a
pop
the cup shattered. A whirl of fizz-green sparks flung me away from the table and fountained up to the ceiling, then swarmed ’round the room, crashing from wall to wall. I scrambled to my feet. On the table, the vial of tourmalifine cracked open like an egg, spilling green crystals across the tabletop; the box of slowsilver tipped over, and a silver-bright snail crept out.
“No!” I shouted, and grabbed for the slowsilver. It squirmed out of my fingers and I ducked as the sparks flew over my head again,
whoosh
.
The slowsilver reached the tourmalifine. They mingled.
In a corner of the ceiling, a whirling ball of sparks and fire gathered, then streaked across the room, knocked the table over, and slammed into me.
At the same moment, the mingled elements exploded.
I lay flat on the floor and ducked my head. White fire and crackling sparks filled the room. And so did the voice of the magic.
Damrodellodesseldesh
, it began, the words vibrating low and slow in the bones of my arms and legs.
Ellarhionvar
, it went on, faster and higher, the words rattling around in my skull. Then a shriek that made my teeth hurt,
arhionvarliardenliesh
!
Then, silence.