Shadowplay (21 page)

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Authors: Laura Lam

Tags: #YA fiction, #young adult fantasy, #secret identities, #hidden history, #fugitives, #Magic, #Magicians, #Ellada

BOOK: Shadowplay
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A small thought trickled through my mind, despite my best intentions. I wondered what Drystan would have looked like now, had he not given up Lerium, and what he would have looked like in another decade or more. It did not matter, I told myself. He’d never be like Taliesin.
“I thank you, Solicitor Aspall, for your ruling on the agreement,” Maske said.
Taliesin grinned, a fearsome sight in his ruined face. “Ah, but Jasper, my old friend, what would you say for a chance to absolve our old contract, eh?”
Maske stared at Taliesin’s face for the first time since he entered the parlor. “You would abolish it?” he said, his voice carefully neutral.
“Not for nothing, no.”
“What are you proposing, then?”
The silence in the room was almost another presence. Taliesin rummaged about in his coat pocket, bringing out a crumpled, wax-sealed envelope.
“From my own solicitor,” he wheezed. “Just in case.” He passed it to Aspall.
The solicitor held the envelope delicately, investigating the seal. “Are you sure you would not wish to have your own solicitor present? Should we arrange another meeting at a later date?”
Taliesin motioned for him to open it. “Let him see what it says. We can sign it all official-like later if he agrees to it now.”
Aspall broke the seal and read the letter. His eyebrows rose, just once. I nudged Cyan with my elbow, but she was already staring at him with a distant gaze I recognized.
Aspall passed the crumpled paper to Maske. As our mentor read, his face flushed, and then blanched.
“Alright,” he said. “I will consider it.” Maske’s eyes flashed to us, and the look in them made me shiver – there was rage, but also the fierce excitement of a gamble.
Taliesin leaned back, a shaking hand resting against the patchy stubble of his cheek. “I thought you might, Jasper. I thought you just might.” Taliesin, too, relished the gamble, but what was to be gained or lost? We were ignored – children to be seen and not heard.
Cyan knew. Her face grew thoughtful, but she couldn’t tell us.
“Well,” Aspall said, somewhat taken aback by the turn of events. “If you are both in agreement, then we shall meet at the Collective of Magic’s headquarters on Thistle Street in a week’s time at 10 o’clock. I will discuss this with the Collective and ensure that this meets with their approval. Though the thought of two magicians emerging from the shadows to the limelight again will no doubt please them immensely. I know that many, like myself, were great admirers of the Specter and Maske shows as children.” He coughed, and the brief glimpse of the man beneath the solicitor’s façade disappeared. “You have until next week to change your mind. Once you put the ink to paper, it is done.”
“I expect much the same result as last time, young Aspall. Merely proving another point.” Taliesin heaved himself to his feet. The shaking grew visibly worse.
Taliesin took a cool look in our direction. I forced myself to meet his stare. “Hope these little ones don’t embarrass you as much as I think they will, old boy.”
Maske’s knuckles tightened about his knees.
“We shall settle this again,” Maske said. “And you may find that the last fifteen years have treated us differently.”
Taliesin looked about at the faded glory of the Kymri Theatre. He arranged his fur coat, the gold rings on his fingers glinting. “That they have. Until next time, Jasper.”
“Pen.”
Maske stayed poised for flight until we heard the front door close, and then he collapsed onto the sofa.
“What happened? What’s going on?” I asked.
“A rematch,” he said, his voice faint. “In three months’ time. Between you two and Taliesin’s boys. The Specter Shows only started up again in the autumn. Perhaps when the Collective of Magic was going to ban him permanently from performing, he cooked up this scheme. With the expenses on his theatre and the lavish way he lives, money must be precarious. He wants the notoriety – the Specter Shows on everyone’s lips.” Maske seemed to be speaking to himself more than us.
“You are going to accept it, aren’t you?” I asked. “And we’ll put Taliesin and his boys to shame.”
Drystan perched next to Maske, taking his hand in the first sign of affection I had seen between them. “He has no choice. The Collective already know of it.”
The Collective. It sounded so sinister. “Why?”
“The Collective would have salivated at a chance for this much publicity. Magic shows have fallen a bit out of favor lately. They get amalgamated into circus or theatre acts rather than having the starring headline. They’ll never keep it quiet.”
“So if Maske turns it down, everyone will know anyway,” Cyan said, and I wondered if she were voicing her own thoughts, or echoing Maske’s. Or Drystan’s. The thought of her reading Drystan’s mind made me uneasy.
Maske nodded miserably.
“But why wouldn’t you say yes, Maske? It’s a way to get Taliesin back and show him who the best magician is.” I frowned at them.
“Well, we still don’t know the entire rules of the game,” Cyan pointed out. “Mister Maske, what happens if we lose?”
Maske wilted even further. “My ban on magic remains in place, but is also passed onto you. And… I’d have to give Taliesin the Kymri Theatre.”
“Lord and Lady,” I breathed. “This time you’d really lose everything. What would he lose if we win?”
“His ban is put into effect for a certainty, and extends to his grandsons. We gain his premises.”
High stakes indeed. “No matter,” I said. “We’ll win, right?”
“Sam,” Maske said.
I sighed. “You can call me Micah if you wish. Cyan knows.”
He blinked in surprise. “Micah. Taliesin’s grandsons might be new to magic, but they’ll still have been around it their whole lives. And Taliesin has been designing tricks for the last fifteen years, studying the psyche of the audience, which always shifts with the times. I’m a decade and a half out of date. Washed up.”
“Rubbish!” I said. Maske blinked at me as I continued. “You’re the Maske of Magic! You taught him everything he knows. And he’s a ruin of a man, now. We’ll beat him and his kin, no problem.” Though I was not as confident as I pretended to be. We were outcasts from the circus, novice magicians and would be up against performers trained enough to star in the Specter Shows. We could not even pull off the levitation illusion yet.
Drystan and Cyan echoed my reassurances, knowing it was what Maske needed to hear. From the stiff way he held his shoulders, it was clear that seeing his old rival had unnerved him. And no wonder – he had been living in his workshop, dreaming and creating. Occasionally, in the evenings, he went off for séances or card games with his friends. It was a rude awakening from his dream world, with performing only a distant fancy. Not three months from now. Not as a duel. All of his old hate, betrayal, and jealousy were naked on his face, warring with a forlorn fear. Taliesin had tricked him again.
As we told him we could do it, that we knew that we could beat him, he straightened and his eyes grew beetle-bright with the challenge.
“You’re right. I was only being foolish. We’ll win. And then I’ll perform again…” He faltered. His next words were whispered in awe: “I’ll perform again.”
“You will,” I said, clasping him on the shoulder.
He looked up at me, a slow smile on his face.
“We’ll beat him,” I reassured him.
Inside, I hoped so. And I could not shake the feeling that while the Shadow was off our trail, other problems still darkened our path.
 
17
DUST MOTES
 
“With each life, they learn more, they become the truer essence of themselves. With each passing generation, our children are growing into what we hoped they would be. Of course, there is always the threat that they will learn too much.”
Translated fragment of Alder script.
 
The next day, we threw open every window of the Kymri Theatre, despite the thin layer of snow on the ground and the bite in the wind.
The work warmed us. We swept dust from the stage, and then sanded, stained, and varnished it until it shone. We scrubbed the aged velvet of the seats, mending the tears. We mopped the mosaics and glued the loose tiles back into place. We washed the stained glass windows. I climbed to the roof and made it possible for light to shine through the grimy skylights again.
Lily Verre, true to her earlier promise, helped us during two afternoons. Maske said nothing of their date, but I knew that they planned to meet again. Lily kept meeting his eyes and smiling as she chattered and dusted vaguely. She brought bouquets of roses “to freshen the air,” even though it was rather pointless. No members of the public would enter the Kymri Theatre during the remaining life of the dying roses.
At the end of the week, the theatre was in a semblance of order. Decades of grease and grime no longer coated everything. We discovered the original pinkish beige of the walls before we coated them with warm yellow paint.
When the paint had dried, we surveyed our handiwork. My back ached from the dull, repetitive motion of scrubbing. I was weary to the bone, and my palms were wrinkled and chapped from filthy soap suds.
In that moment it did not matter. The Kymri Theatre sparkled. It looked like a place for magic shows and wonder. I could imagine audience members in the seats. The rustle of skirts, the waving of fans and the crinkle of paper as men and women consulted their programs. Before, the dusty seats only seemed like they could be filled with ghosts.
“Tomorrow is the meeting with Aspall and Taliesin,” Maske said, breaking the silence of the theatre. “You three still want to participate?”
We did.
“Then we’ll see this through to the end.”
With that, he twisted the controls, and the chandelier of gas lights above us shimmered to life, bathing the empty theatre in a warm yellow glow to match the walls. I breathed in the smell of the varnish, lemon-soaped water, and roses.
It was not a circus ring, but it was our new stage.
 
To celebrate the scrubbing of our home, we invited Lily for tea. She hadn’t reported us to the policiers, after all, and Maske wanted every opportunity to see Lily Verre. Around her, Drystan and I always wore our Glamours, just in case.
We cooked the most lavish meal within our capabilities, with Cyan making traditional Temnian dishes, the recipes passed on from mother to daughter for generations. Cyan wore a bittersweet smile as she kneaded the dough for mooncakes, the smell of yeast and spices in the air. She marinated chicken and vegetables in a thick, spicy sauce before cooking them on a skillet and made rice, a fluffy grain I had only tried a time or two before.
To showcase my cooking lessons over the past few months, I made little savory tarts filled with leeks, cheese, and bacon. Drystan made an old circus favorite for a second dessert – peanut brittle. It was an extremely disparate meal, but it was ours.
Lily brought a bottle of wine and a bottle of whisky, which I still could not stand to drink. She wore a russet dress, her hair tumbling from its chiffon in its usual disarray.
We gave her a tour of the finished Kymri Theatre.
“You worked your magic on this place, right enough,” Lily said.
“Thank you, my dear Mrs Verre,” Maske said.
We sat in the kitchen rather than the formal parlor. For a time, the only sounds were the clink of cutlery and the splash of wine into glasses, then Maske and Lily carried the conversation through the meal. I was too hungry from a solid week of cleaning to do much but put one spoonful of food after another into my mouth.
“It’s a shame about those Forester protests, isn’t it?” Lily said, fluttering her hand. “Frightful, really. Not that I’m completely unsympathetic to their cause, mind, but the protests are truly getting out of hand, aren’t they?”
“Out of hand?” I asked.
“Well, there were those fights outside the palace the other week, and now there’s the vandalism of the estates in the Emerald Bowl. They cut down all the trees around it and painted: “LEAVES TO ROOTS” across the windows. That’s a bit much. They’re even threatening a civil war if their needs aren’t met.”
Civil war? Surely it wouldn’t come to that. “Which family was vandalized?” I asked, nervously.
“The Ash-Oaks, I believe.”
They were staunch royalists. I knew them. Lord Ash-Oak was an adviser to the Steward and very active against the Foresters. Their son was only eight. He must have been so frightened.
“I bet the Steward wasn’t too happy about that,” Drystan said.
“I’m betting that’s a gross understatement,” Maske said. “That man will be calling out for their blood, and that leader Timur’s especially.”
“He won’t be able to do anything to them. And no one knows where Timur is hiding, do they?” Cyan asked, biting her lip.
I felt a… knocking on my mind, like someone was asking to enter. Cyan’s brows furrowed.
I know a few Foresters
, she said in my mind.
Some of those in the circus left to be Timur’s followers.
I nearly reeled in shock at the sound of her voice in my head, setting down the wine glass with a clatter. Cyan’s voice in my head. What had she discovered? What had I unwittingly disclosed?
Sorry. I didn’t know if this would work. I won’t do it without warning again.
Don’t!
I thought. I tried to push her from my mind, and “felt” her drift away.
I stared into the coffee cup. I did not like her invading my head at all. It felt like a violation. Maske and Lily continued speaking, but my mind did not follow the words. I clutched the coffee cup until my heartbeat returned to normal.
But then I wanted to know something. After the initial shock, it seemed silly not to take advantage of something so extraordinary. I did not relish the thought of her in my mind again, but at the same time, I was curious. I sent a wisp of thought toward her, which she met, almost like taking my hand.

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