CHAPTER
FIFTEEN

Joshua had seen the newcomers as he returned to the city on Filly, uncomfortably aware of the pain throbbing through his thigh. Filly had finally managed to unseat him, just as they were about to start heading home, and Joshua had landed badly. The protective spells had saved him from breaking something, but it still hurt. He’d used another freeze charm on the horse until he felt able to ride again, and then tied the beast to a tree until he became rather more subdued. Swearing that he would never ride again, Joshua had ridden back towards the city.

The newcomers had passed through the detectors at the gate without incident, thankfully. There was no such thing as a group of Scions – normally, they could barely tolerate the company of other magicians – but it was quite possible that the mystery magician had decided to travel with a group of traders in hopes of slipping into the city without being identified. It would have been a false hope, Joshua suspected, yet Master Faye had warned him that detection spells could be tricked. If there was enough doubt over who was the Scion, attacking the wrong person could be very dangerous.

Joshua scrambled off Filly as soon as he passed through the gates and handed the reins to one of the guardsmen, who would take the horse back to Master Faye’s house. There would probably be a lecture in Joshua’s future about using guardsmen as his personal servants, but his aching thigh made it hard to care. Instead, he watched from a distance as the carriages were searched, while one of the senior guardsmen worked his way through the bodyguard papers. Joshua had never fully understood why so many records had to be kept, but it was Master Faye’s command. Many of the other Pillars did the same thing.

The guardsmen evidently found nothing illegal, so they took the list to the merchant, made him check and sign it, and then allowed him and his party to head to the inn. Joshua watched them silently; there was nothing special about their leader, or the sour-faced man who had to be an apprentice, judging from his grey clothes, but the women were beautiful. The merchant’s wife was striking and the two daughters were absolutely stunning. There was something about their beauty that looked timeless; Joshua knew, without a doubt, that every unattached man in Warlock’s Bane would be trying to court them. On impulse, he ran through the spell to detect glamours and illusions and found nothing. Their beauty was real.

He wanted to follow them to the inn, but he had his duty – and besides, they would need to rest. Laughing at himself – he’d become pompous, at least inside his head – he walked over to the guardsmen and took the list of trade goods, scanning it with practised ease. Master Faye had forced him to read until he could do it quickly, even when the handwriting was badly scrawled. Joshua’s own handwriting wasn’t much better.

The list was interesting, to say the least. Spices from far overseas were rare in Warlock’s Bane; they’d be sure to make hundreds of gold coins if they sold carefully. The other supplies were more mundane, although stirrups from Night Watch were better than anything produced closer to Warlock’s Bane, Joshua checked to see if they were selling swords from Caitiff, but none were listed. He’d wanted a sword from the famed city of swords for years, yet they were expensive even for a magician’s apprentice. Master Faye could have pulled strings, but he’d refused to help Joshua, pointing out that a magician shouldn’t need a sword. He should know far more powerful protections.

“We were going to take the list to your master,” the guardsman said, quickly. Judging from his expression, a number of rich merchants were about to receive tips that would make them even richer. Master Faye would have frowned on a monopoly, or a cartel, but he would tolerate a certain amount of insider trading. “And the gold coins, for verification.”

Joshua smiled and took the bag. They’d be happier allowing him to take them, secure in the knowledge that no one would dare to rob the Pillar’s apprentice – and, of course, that the guardsmen wouldn’t miss out on any bribes through leaving the gatehouse. The demanding of bribes was something else he was resolved to change when he became Pillar... shaking his head, he walked out of the courtyard and back onto the streets. The newcomers had vanished, no doubt having headed straight for the Golden Arch. They would probably want some rest before they confronted the merchants in Warlock’s Bane.

Thoughtfully, he took the guardsman’s report out of the bag and studied it. The newcomers had been really rather vague about where they’d come from, providing only brief and basic answers to the questions. That wasn’t too uncommon in merchant travellers; they tended to prefer to stay on the road, rather than remain permanently in a single city. Who knew when the local Pillar would decide to become a tyrant rather than a reasonably benevolent ruler?

The girls were called Elyria and Adana, both apparently sixteen years old and unmarried, he read. Neither of them were betrothed, something that struck him as unusual. At their age, they should have had offers for their hands; their families were certainly rich enough to attract attention even if they hadn’t been beauties. And the daughters of travelling merchants could often read, write and do their sums, as well as cook, clean and carry out the rest of women’s work. They would have been attractive prospects the moment they started their feminine cycles.

Putting the thought out of his mind, he walked back to Master Faye’s house and stepped in through the side door. Master Faye was kneeling in front of a bowl of water, trying to hunt for the mystery magician. Joshua knew that he’d been trying every day since the first hint that they were being watched and had found nothing, even when they’d shared blood and used it to power the magic. He took a seat and waited, knowing better than to interrupt his master until the spell was completed. The results of interrupting a magician could be disastrous. It had been one of the first lessons Master Faye had beaten into him.

Several minutes passed before Master Faye stood up, nodding to one of his servants to take the bowl and pour the hot water into the cauldron they were using to boil meat for dinner. Joshua waited until his master had finished stretching and then passed him the bag, along with the notes from the guardsmen. Money from outside visitors was always suspect; it had to be checked, carefully, before it was allowed into the city. Joshua doubted that anyone would be fool enough to try to pass off forged coins in a Pillar-ruled city, but there were no shortage of dupes out there who couldn’t test the money. Someone might bring it in without having the slightest idea that it was fake.

“I saw nothing,” Joshua said. He hesitated, and then outlined what he’d felt when he’d reached the clearing. He’d been told, time and time again, to listen to his senses. “I don’t know if it was real or not.”

“There could be anything out there, beyond the borderline,” Master Faye said, thoughtfully. He reached into the bag, pulled out a coin, and tested it thoughtfully. “Fake.”

Joshua looked up, sharply. “Fake?”

“Maybe,” Master Faye said. He sounded confused, something that bothered Joshua. What could confuse his master? A second coin was tested and then dropped on the table beside the first. “A very strange fake.”

Joshua swallowed. “Why?”

Master Faye eyed him as if he’d said something particularly stupid, and then relaxed slightly. “You are aware, of course, that coins are minted and then marked to prove that they were tested by the proper authorities,” he said. Joshua nodded. Turning lead to gold was difficult, but possible, at least for a few hours. Eventually, it reverted, by which time the forger would be well away. “These coins do not carry the mark of any known mint.”

Joshua nodded, following the explanation. The marks were magic, impossible to duplicate – and bound up in the mint’s sense of honour. Once crafted and stamped into the metal, they were impossible to remove short of melting down the entire coin, which would render it useless until it was sold back to the mint. They would be a permanent guarantee of the value of the coin.

“But I used a testing spell,” Master Faye said, a moment later. “These coins are gold. They could have been forged at any mint and then marked, but they were never marked. I don’t know what it means.”

“They’re real gold?” Joshua repeated. Who would bother to forge gold coins out of pure gold? They could just take the gold to the mint and have it made into coins, coins that would carry the mark verifying their value. “But why?”

“They don’t appear to be old enough to have been produced before the first mints,” Master Faye said, a moment later. He span the third coin in his hand and watched as it tipped onto its side. “In appearance, they seem to come from the Southern Mint, but they don’t carry the mark. Why not?”

Joshua frowned. “Could they be something else, transfigured into gold?”

“They’d have a very clear signature if they were,” Master Faye explained, absently. He was still staring at the coin. “No, these are forged gold coins made of real gold. It makes no sense.”

He looked over at Joshua. “You saw the newcomers, didn’t you?”

Joshua nodded. He’d been watching newly-arrived traders for so long that it had become something of a joke between them. Carefully, he outlined his impressions, trying not to give the impression that he was dwelling too much on either of the girls. Master Faye wasn’t fooled, judging from his expression, but he said nothing. A relationship with a travelling trader girl wouldn’t be as serious as one with a local girl, one who might expect marriage and children.

“Interesting,” Master Faye said, finally. “I’ll tell you something else that didn’t happen, something that should have happened. They didn’t trigger the sensing spells at all.”

Joshua was puzzled for a moment, and then he understood. Any trader who wanted to travel through the badlands would purchase something magical to help deter bandits from attacking his carriages. Or hire one Scion to defend them against others, if they could find one who could be bought. The absence of magicians wasn’t too surprising, but the absence of magic was inexplicable. Unless...

“They might have been attacked along the way,” he said. “Maybe they were cursed badly enough to burn out the defences...”

Master Faye cocked an eyebrow. “Without actually killing them? Or taking their goods? Or destroying their carriages? Or kidnapping the girls?”

Joshua flushed. “And they reported nothing,” he added, a moment later. “They’d certainly report a bandit attack.”

“Or drained defences,” Master Faye agreed. “And they would have to be insane to travel so far, with such valuable goods, without some form of protective magic. It makes no sense.”

“Maybe all it did was drain magic,” Joshua suggested. “Something like that could have removed the marks from the coins...”

Master Faye laughed, unpleasantly. “If someone had developed a technique for doing that,” he pointed out, “they would rule the world. Our wards wouldn’t be able to keep them out at all; they’d just be able to charge in, cut us apart and take the city. No, if someone had a technique for that, they would have used it by now.”

He looked up at Joshua. “I will speak with my peers,” he added. “I suggest that you wait here and read a book. This may take some time.”

Joshua watched him go and then stood up, heading over to the bookcase. Master Faye had a large collection of books, not all of them on magic, and he’d insisted that Joshua read his way through them. None of the collection Joshua was allowed to read were actually secret, although they were kept from the Minors. He rather doubted that there was anything in them that wouldn’t be known to a Scion or another Pillar.

He was midway though a textbook on comparative charms for long-distance communication when Master Faye walked back into the room, looking grim. “I spoke to the Pillar of Athol and he spoke to his Keeper of Records,” he said. “There is no record of any of the traders there.”

Joshua frowned. “But they said they came from Athol...”

“The concept of lying is surely not unknown to you,” Master Faye said, sarcastically. He seemed more than a little on edge. “There are too many things about this that don’t make sense. If they are trying to hide where they came from, why? We wouldn’t turn anyone away, even if they came from Drumgeld. Why are they being stupid?”

Joshua made a face. Drumgeld, four hundred kilometres away on the other side of the mountain, had once been a prosperous city to rival Warlock’s Bane, before its previous Pillar had been replaced by a madman. In two years, he’d created a nightmare so bad that Minors and Scions alike gave the place a wide berth, while imprisoning most of his population inside the walls. There were rumours of what was happening to them now, each one more horrifying than the last. Joshua had heard that several Pillars had actually considered teaming up to deal with the situation, but nothing had ever been decided. The principle that Pillars had total authority within their bailiwicks was too strong.

“If they’re using false money, they should be arrested,” Joshua said, slowly. “And yet, might arresting them be very dangerous?”

“If they’re connected with the person spying on us,” Master Faye said. He shook his head. “If the idea is to make an excuse for a fight, why bother? Any Scion who wanted to take the city could just walk in and challenge me. They wouldn’t need to contrive an excuse for a duel.”

Joshua had to admit that his master was right. There was little point in anything elaborate if someone just wanted the city. They’d have to fight for it sooner or later, so why not sooner? The longer they waited, the longer Master Faye would have to prepare his ground. They should have moved the moment they realised that their spying spells had been detected.

“I see,” he said, finally. “What do we do?”

Master Faye said nothing, thinking hard. “We could take them into custody and interrogate them under truth spells, but that would be unpopular,” he said. In theory, there was nothing anyone could do if Master Faye decided to allow it, but in practice traders would start diverting away from Warlock’s Bane and ruining the city. “And if we set out to tamper with their memories, it might be noticeable.”

“Yes,” Joshua agreed. He’d been taught how to watch for altered memories very early on, forced to practise and practise until he got it right. A Scion would have no difficulty in spotting altered memories, at least unless it was done very carefully – and that took time, time they might not have. “Could we not arrest one of them for using forged coins and interrogate them?”

“We might have to,” Master Faye said. He shook his head. “I hate working in the dark. I’d almost sooner watch a Scion walking down into the city to challenge me for power.”

Joshua nodded. At least there would be a very clear threat.

“You will keep an eye on them and see what you can learn,” Master Faye said, finally. “The girls are beautiful, so no one will be surprised if you attempt to court them. But be careful what you tell them in return. It is possible that they have come to learn secrets of magic.”

“But a Scion would know everything you know,” Joshua said. “Wouldn’t he?”

“It depends on the Scion,” Master Faye admitted. “There are quite a few secrets I didn’t know until I found them in Master Spark’s notes, after I killed him. This could be just another attempt at scouting Warlock’s Bane out before the Scion shows himself. Or it could be a complete coincidence...”

He shook his head. “No, this cannot be a coincidence,” he added. “I want you to watch them closely, both through magic and through your eyes. And don’t let the girls seduce you instead. Watch them.”

Joshua grinned, a grin that vanished when Master Faye glared at him. “This is important,” his master snapped. “Whoever takes this city will not want an apprentice so close to him. You will be killed or enslaved after I die.”

“I understand, Master,” Joshua said, formally. And his Master was right. Joshua would be useless to any new Pillar – and a potential threat. He would be lucky if he was simply killed out of hand. “I won’t let you down.”

“Get a bath and then get an early night,” Master Faye ordered. “I want you to be ready to leave the house as soon as they start having breakfast at the inn.”

Joshua nodded, suddenly remembering the dull ache running through his body. Riding all day was hard enough even without the horse being intent on throwing him off every time he relaxed his guard. Maybe he could convince Master Faye to sell Filly to a stud farm if he showed his master the bruises, before realising that it wouldn’t matter. He would never be a good horseman.

Shaking his head, he walked upstairs and undressed in the bathroom, where the maid had already filled the bathtub with cold water. Joshua had to cast a heating spell to warm the liquid, one of the first exercises that Master Faye had forced him to perform. There was nothing like burns – or cold baths – to teach someone how to be careful.

And he would have to be very careful tomorrow.