Chapter 29 - Let's Get the Party Started
Blind As A Witch
The only things a woman needs to take over the world are a twirly dress, great heels, and the right shade of lipstick. I walked down those stairs feeling like a million bucks and acting like I owned the placeâwhich was really bold of me if you think about it.
I had not one but three Oliversens in the house, and, presumably, they would also be wearing dresses and heels. And they wouldâve had a lot more practice walking in them.
But if confidence was smart, it wouldnât be confidence.
Jacky had barely come down himself, so he was waiting for me at the bottom. He was dressed in his normal suit. It worked for him, and he could probably make it look natural if he was walking through a barnyard.
When I reached the main floor, I did a little twirl to impress death.
âHow do I look?â I asked.
Jacky hesitated. âLike a human?â
I laughed at the obvious confusion in his voice, took up his arm, and put mine through his. âOh, good. Iâll fool everyone.â
I wasnât offended. Big Jacky had once told me that he couldnât tell that Owen Ashworth was handsome, and if that misplaced male supermodel could fly under the radar, then so could a tap-dancing nuclear bomb.
Speaking of Owen Ashworth.
âHave the other guests arrived?â I asked.
âAbout half of them from what I gather, but I havenât been introduced to them yet.â
âThen letâs go mingle!â
There was already a decent-sized crowd in the living room, but there was also space to welcome a lot more. I recognized a few faces, including Rall Axton, who stepped away from the unknown couple he was with to come and greet us.
âMr. Noctis, Miss Cole,â he said, âIâm so glad that you could make it. Iâm sure that Ellis would say the same thing, but I think sheâs already been pigeonholed by someone. My main job is to go around every ten minutes to see if she needs rescuing from a conversation.â
He said this so cheerfully and matter-of-fact-ly that I couldnât tell if he was joking or not. If I was a betting girl, Iâd say he was serious, and I would have put an extra wager on the proposal that Ellis Oliversen had asked him to do it.
âIs Olivia down yet?â he asked.
âSheâs a second or two behind us,â I said.
âOh!â He hooked his hands into his pants pockets and beamed at me. âThen Iâll go escort her in. I never get to do that.â
With an equal mix of jealousy and happiness for Olivia, I watched him leave. I hoped heâd embarrass her real good.
We hadnât made it more than two steps into the living room when I felt a hand on my shoulder. I turned around and saw Nylah Oliversen, looking like two million bucks in the worldâs chicest navy-blue dress.
âEmerra,â she said, âthereâs someone hereââ
Before she could say anything else, I heard a voice that made me lose all interest in poor Nylah.
âEmerra!â
The voice was about as average as a voice can be for a middle-aged white male, but it instantly brought a grin to my face.
âCosmo!â
I bounded past Nylah toward the man whoâd called me. He smiled, and we both reached out in that supremely awkward and friendly way that two natural huggers do when they know that social expectations dictate they arenât good enough friends to justify an embrace. It usually settles into a handshake-slash-arm-grab combo.
We were so happy to see each other, neither of us minded the awkwardness. Or maybe we were both used to it.
Cosmo was still clean shaven and round of face, with the same gray-white in his hair, down-turned eyes, and glasses that Iâm pretty sure he wore as a fidget toy. His normal blue sports coat and collared shirt had been traded in for a gray and black number. He wasnât fooling anyone, but Iâd die before Iâd be the one to tell him that.
âDonât you look sleek tonight?â I said.
He blushed and pushed up his glasses despite the fact they were already at the top of his nose. Any final traces of coolness that heâd been trying to cultivate curled up and died. I felt no guilt. A man that sweet and cute has no business being cool anyway.
âThank you, Emerra.â
It was about then that the rest of the room came to intrude on our happy reunion. You can only ignore the pressure of that many stares for so long.
I grinned sheepishly and leaned closer to him so I could mutter, âIâm sorry. This is your territory, isnât it? Should I call you Mr. Uhler or Master Uhler or something?â
He put his hand on my arm. âNo, no. We agreed on Emerra and Cosmo. I get enough âMaster Uhlerâ around here.â He lowered his voice and added, âIâd rather be around a friendly face than a respectful one at the moment.â
âOh! Then, no worries.â I winked at him. âIâve got you covered.â
We both became aware of the presence haunting our side and turned. Nylah was standing beside us. The stiffness of her body and the way her eyes were widened made me think sheâd suffered an unpleasant surprise.
She took an uneasy step toward us. âYou know each other.â
Her voice was breathy, with a slight squeak. It sounded like someone was using a bicycle pump to attempt CPR on a small rodent that was already dead.
Oh. Sheâd thought Iâd been lying.
Of course, she was right, but the unfortunate soul had guessed wrong about which part was the lie.
âOh, yes,â Cosmo said. âWeâre good friends.â He turned his head toward me. âThough I am surprised to find you here. Is there something these witches know that I donât?â
âNah.â I waved off any unwarranted interest. âIâm here with Jacky.â
Cosmo paused. It was an infinitesimal moment. If I hadnât been watching his face, I might have missed it.
âJackyâs here?â His eyes scanned the room, searching for the skeleton.
Not a skeleton, I reminded myself. And thereâs a chance Cosmo wonât be able to find him.
I pointed to Big Jacky, whoâd migrated toward another group. âHeâs over there.â
Cosmoâs eyes widened when his brain registered Jackyâs presence. âWell,â he muttered, âthis is an interesting party.â
A familiar voice said, âNylah?â
All three of us looked around as Ellis Oliversen walked up and laid her hand on Nylahâs elbow. She looked beyond her daughter to me and Cosmo.
âOh,â she said. âIâm sorry. I didnât know youâd arrived, Master Uhler.â
Hearing Ellis Oliversen refer to good olâ Cosmo as âMaster Uhlerâ threw a wrench in my brain-cogs. Iâd subconsciously come to think of her as the most powerful witch in the stateâif not the worldâbut there was no mistaking the deference in her voice.
I was standing, elbow to elbow, with the most powerful witch in the roomâ¦and Iâd winked at him.
Since the positioning of our group would make a handshake difficult, Cosmo inclined his head in a polite bow. âGood evening, Mistress Oliversen. Thank you for allowing me to come on such short notice.â
âNot at all,â she said. âYour invitation always stands, and weâre honored to have you. Was someone at the door to meet you?â
âMiss Oliversen showed me in.â Cosmo nodded toward Nylah.
âAnd she introduced you toâ¦Miss Cole?â
âShe didnât have to,â Cosmo said.
âTheyâre friends,â Nylah added.
The bicycle pump had been put aside, and the words were uttered with the same numb finality as âtheyâre dead.â
Ellisâs eyes slid from her daughter over to me. I had no idea what expression would appease those calculating eyes, so all I could do was try to avoid looking like an idiot. No bets on how well I succeeded.
âDid you need Miss Oliversen?â Cosmo asked.
Ellis looked at him.
âYou called her name,â he said.
âOh,â Ellis blinked. âYes. Thank you. Iâm sorry, Nylah, but do you mind if I drag you away for a moment?â
Nylah looked at Cosmo. âUmââ
âDonât worry, Miss Oliversen,â he said. âIâm sure Emerra can take care of me.â
âIf youâre sure, Master Uhler.â
Ellis and Nylah excused themselves. As soon as they disappeared into the crowd, Cosmo put his arm out like an old-fashioned gentleman.
âShall we?â he said.
I grinned and put my arm through his. Middle-aged men could be so darling sometimes.
To solidify his image as a gentleman, he leaned his head closer to mine and said, âYou look lovely in that dress, by the way.â
I swished the skirt out from my legs using my free hand. âThank you.â I added in a conspiratorial whisper, âNylah had to loan it to me. I didnât come prepared for all this socializing.â
Cosmo nudged his glasses again. âEmerra, I wear a suit coat whenever Iâm out, and Iâm never prepared for socializing.â He put his hand over mine. âYouâll protect me, wonât you?â said the most powerful witch in the room.
âDo you need protection?â I asked.
âThatâs how introverts survive when we have to go to parties. We find a friendly looking extrovert and stick to them like a lamprey.â
I threw back my head and laughed.
Cosmo reminded me a lot of Conrad. Both immeasurably powerful men, but if you put them in a room with a crowd, theyâd be the ones hiding in the corner.
Still thinking of Conrad, I said, âYou donât go to many parties, do you?â
âNot if I can help it. And I can usually help it.â He made a face. âIâm the torrman for several different covens, so I get a lot of invitations to these kinds of gatherings, but I think most of them are a formality.â
âYou have to invite all the fairies, lest you offend one of them.â
Cosmo looked at me out of the corner of his eye. âYouâre joking, but youâre not far off the mark. They donât dare ignore me, but theyâd be awfully surprised if I came.â
âYou came tonight,â I pointed out. In my head, I added, And on short notice.
The torrman looked uncomfortable. âItâs unusual circumstances. I needed to talk to Mistress Oliversen.â
âIs everything all right?â
âOh, fine. Fine.â Cosmo was smart enough to know he wasnât much good at lying; he rushed to change the topic. âAnyway, me being here isnât half as surprising as Jacky being here.â
âHe never comes to parties?â I asked.
âI donât think heâs ever been invited to them.â
âWhich is funny,â I said with a smile. âYouâd think people would be a lot more worried about offending that particular torrman.â
Cosmo didnât answer. When I glanced over, I caught him watching me from the corner of his eye again. The thoughtfulness in that look reminded me of Ellisâs calculating gaze. For the first time, I was really impressed by the fact that Cosmo Uhler was a witch.
He looked away. âMost people donât realize who he is.â
A slight sense of uneaseâno, it was smaller than that. A sense of imbalance caused my thoughts to tilt. Cosmo (who I was beginning to suspect concealed gobs of intelligence behind those fidget glasses) had so carefully pitched his voice that I could almost hear the echoes of all the details heâd left out.
Cosmo Uhler was the witchesâ torrman, Reynell was over the alchemists, Thorburn had his squad of thrismages, and Ashworth led the sorcerers. Jack Noctis was over no one. How many people even knew there was a fifth torrman?
The narrative has been taken without permission. Report any sightings.
Then again, it could be the fact that he was the embodiment of death. His existence and the events of his life seemed to be built on secrets.
Cosmo said in an almost convincingly off-handed tone, âI wonder if Ellis Oliversen knows.â
I was glad I could at least put his mind at rest about that.
âJackyâs invitation was more of a fluke than anything,â I explained. âWe came down here for a different reason, but since weâre staying with the Oliversens, Ellis had to invite us.â
âAh. Do you mind if I ask what brought you down here?â
âUhhhh, itâs kind of convoluted.â
It also involved a lot of Oliversen family drama, and I didnât feel comfortable airing my hostâs dirty laundry. It seemed ungrateful.
I picked the safest line of explanation and went for it. âWe came down here to watch Jackyâs apprentice give her first-year report.â
Cosmo let out a soft hum. âIâd heard he had an apprentice. That must be an interesting relationship.â
âOh, dude. You have no idea.â
âYou know her?â
âShe lives with us.â
Cosmoâs eyebrows jumped. âI didnât know you lived with Jacky.â
âOh. Right. Well, I do, and so does she. Would you like to meet her?â
âI would love to.â
The crowd had grown since weâd started chatting, but it wasnât hard to spot Olivia. Her red hair stood out. Sheâd left it down in loose waves that I now knew, for a fact, took fifteen minutes with a curling iron and a lot of profanity to perfect.
She was talking to Owen Ashworth and the alchemist, Cameron Misserly. Rall Axton was beside her.
I led Cosmo up to them while trying to think of an elegant way to insert myself into the group.
I shouldnât have bothered. Ashworth saw us coming.
âCosmo! Miss Cole! Come join us.â He looked at the others in his group. âDo you mind?â
Axton answered for all of them. âNot at all.â
Misserly stepped aside so weâd have room as we approached.
âI didnât know youâd be here, Cosmo,â Ashworth said.
âGood evening, Owen. Rall.â
âMaster Uhler,â Rall said, âI donât know if youâve had the chance to meet my youngest daughter.â
âThatâs why I brought him over,â I said. âCosmo, this is Olivia Oliversen, Jack Noctisâs apprentice. Olivia, this is Cosmo Uhler.â
In the most humble voice Iâd ever heard from her, Olivia said, âItâs a pleasure to meet you, Master Uhler.â
Cosmo gave her one of his shy smiles. âThe pleasureâs mine, Miss Oliversen.â
âJacky got himself an Oliversen,â Ashworth said wryly. âCan you believe it? I donât know about you, Cosmo, but Iâm jealous.â
Olivia blushed in a most becoming manner. I smiled when I saw it. Rall put his arm around his daughter and pulled her closer to his side.
âGot her?â he said. âMr. Noctis is enjoying a temporary loan. And only by Oliviaâs leave.â
âItâs all right, Daddy.â Oliviaâs voice was low and menacing enough to remind Rall Axton he was supposed to be on his best behavior.
âHa!â he said. âI know these magician types. Theyâll try to put a collar around your neck if youâre not careful.â
He glared at the two torrmen. Owen and Cosmo looked at each other with faintly embarrassed smiles, but neither tried to deny the accusation. Misserly, however, was eager to disassociate himself from the corrupting influence of the power market.
He held up his hand. âYouâre safe from my intrigues, Miss Oliversen. Iâve no earthly use for you.â
âIâm sorry,â Cosmo said to him, âI donât think weâve met.â
âNo,â Owen said, âwe got distracted by Mr. Axtonâs defense of his daughterâs autonomy.â
âItâs a worthy defense!â I cried.
âThank you, Miss Cole,â Rall said.
We nodded to each other with mock seriousness.
Dr. Misserly reached out to Cosmo. âMiss Oliversen referred to you as Master Uhler? Youâre a witch, sir?â
âI am.â
They shook.
âIâm Dr. Cameron Misserly.â
We all saw Misserly hesitate, but it was Owen Ashworth who guessed its cause.
âGo on,â Owen said. âYou can say it here.â The torrman turned to his fellow torrman. âDr. Misserly is an alchemist.â
âIs it some kind of a secret?â I asked.
âNo more than normal,â Misserly said, âbut Iâm not used to being surrounded by other magicians.â He looked over both his shoulders as if he expected to be swarmed at any moment.
Owen leaned closer to me. âThe alchemists are the most anti-social of our lot. They work by themselves, passing along their knowledge from master to apprentice, or making it up as they go along. Poor Reynell spends half her time trying to flush out the new alchemists from whatever hole theyâre hiding in long enough to get their names.â
A sudden thought popped into my head. And, of course, it was out of my mouth before my brain had time to register and file it away.
âHow do you guys handle all that when youâre talking with non-magicians?â
âIâm sorry?â Misserly said.
âLike, when someone asks you what you do, youâre not allowed to say that youâre a sorcerer or an alchemist, are you?â
Cosmo said, âIt depends on the circumstance, but most of the time weâre not supposed to.â
âThen what do you do?â
Ashworth bestowed upon the group one of his priceless smiles. Since he was looking at me when he unleashed that weapon, I felt my heart beat faster.
âThereâs strategy there,â he warned me. âYou have to be able to make good on your bluff, so I recommend using a hobby you know a lot about. Half the people I know think Iâm an investorâor, rather, that Iâm only an investor.â
Yup. That fit him. And his suits.
I turned to Cosmo.
When he saw me looking at him, his shoulders tweaked up in a fidgety shrug and he blew out his breath. âI usually go for the boredom angle. I tell people Iâm a middle manager. Iâve never had anyone ask me questions.â
My nose wrinkled up when I held back my laugh.
Rall said, âWhat about you, Doctor?â
âOh, I got lucky there,â Misserly said. âMost of my background is mundane. I know enough about science to get myself into all kinds of trouble.â
Cosmo said, âIs that what your doctorate is in?â
âYes.â
âWhich branch of science did you study?â
Misserly shrugged, probably in an attempt to create an air of cool detachment, but he was betrayed by the interest in his eyes. âA bit of everything. Biology. Chemistry. I settled on physics to get my degree, but I love it all.â
âGood god, man!â Rall cried. âWhat on earth kind of an alchemist does that make you?â
Every once in a while, I wondered if Iset offered a course like âMagicians and Magic 1010â or if there was some kind of a book: The Complete Idiotâs Guide to Not Standing Out in the Magical World. If there was, I hadnât read it.
I squeezed Cosmoâs arm so heâd lean closer to me. âAre there different kinds of alchemists?â
Iâd lowered my voice, but I hadnât lowered it enough. Ashworth heard me, and he loved to lecture.
âIf you ask an alchemist,â he said, âtheyâll tell you there are hundredsâmaybe thousands. A different type for each one of them. If you ask the other magicians, we usually shove them into three or four categories, depending on what they like to work with.â He raised a new finger for each category. âAtmos, bios, khemos, mekhanos.â
Rall added, âTheyâre a lot like how they soundâbios for biology, khemos for chemistryââ
Olivia grabbed her fatherâs arm. âStop. No, stop.â
âHmmm?â he turned to look at her.
âCanât you see youâre hurting him?â Olivia nodded to Dr. Misserly.
Olivia had winced when her father started his recital, but the man who was both a scientist and an alchemist had twice the reason to be offended by it. You could tell by the pained expression on his face.
âThatâs notâ¦quiteâ¦how that works,â he said with a sigh.
âOh, I know,â Rall assured him, âbut thatâs the only way I remember them. I donât know about âatmos,â though. Iâve never heard of that one.â
âAtmos, as in, atmosphere,â Ashworth said. âI think the word means vapor.â
Rall betrayed an unconscious (and adorable) confidence in his daughter when he looked to her for a better explanation.
She said, âThey specialize in working with the magic that wafts off the elements.â
âI thought they all did,â Rall said.
âAtmos alchemists donât bother changing it much.â
âOh.â Rall Axton looked up at Ashworth. âThat must be a rare group.â
âIncredibly so,â Ashworth agreed. âFordâheâs the head of Ledaseinâis trying to round them up and force them to join his school.â
âHe wants them to become sorcerers?â Rall asked.
Ashworth nodded.
âI wish him luck,â Misserly said. âThe two atmos alchemists Iâve met are the most stubborn people I know. I think itâs required for their work.â
Ashworth bowed his head to hide his smile.
âWhat about you?â Cosmo said to Misserly. âYou never saidâwhat kind of alchemist are you?â
Misserly shoved both hands in his pants pockets. âOh, Iâm none of the above. I must be in one of the other thousand categories that Mr. Ashworth didnât name.â
The joke had been delivered with the exact amount of flippancy required for cocktail party humor.
While we were all smiling in appreciation, a familiar looking woman came up to Oliviaâs side and gently laid a hand on her shoulder.
To the rest of us, she said, âExcuse me,â then she looked at Olivia. âI heard you were asking for me, dear?â
âOh! Mrs. Bovoyay. Yes, thank you.â Olivia turned to her father. âWould you excuse me for a few minutes.â
âOf course, darling,â Rall said. âYou go on. Iâll hunt you down and bother you later.â
Olivia glared at him for a second, but all she got from that was a narrowed-eyed view of his most charming smile. She rolled her eyes and left with Mrs. Bovoyay.
Beside me, Cosmo lurched a half-inch forward. âActuallyââ
The other men turned to listen, but Cosmo was watching Rall Axton.
He went on, âIf this group is breaking up, I wonder if I could borrow you, Rall.â
âMe?â Axton turned to the torrman.
âDo you think you could arrange for me to talk to Ellis?â
âMaster Uhler, Iâll have you know, Iâm rude enough that I can arrange anything. Come on. Itâs about time for me to go find her anyway.â
Cosmo said to me, âWill you be all right, Emerra?â
I smiled and said, âIsnât that my line?â
He smiled back. I withdrew my hand so he could escape. He and Rall excused themselves. I was left with Ashworth and Misserly.
That wasnât exactlyâ¦comfortableâ¦for me, but it was a darn sight more comfortable than if Iâd been left alone with Ashworth.
Owen Ashworth was probably a decent human beingâyou know, for a self-serving aspirantâand the poor guy couldnât help the way he looked any more than I could. But prejudice isnât reasonable, and I didnât like standing next to a guy who a) kept trying to figure out my secrets, and b) could make my heart race faster by standing too close.
That made Dr. Cameron Misserly my new best friend. I had to keep him there.
I sidled closer to the alchemist. âSo, youâre a none-of-the-above type alchemist? Do you mind if I askâdo you use a mix of all the types or something else altogether?â
Being addressed so suddenly made his eyebrows jump, but he said, âI donât mind. I use a mix. Itâs mostly khemos and bios, but I have to make a lot of devices just to do my work. It really is hard to classify an experimental investigator. Our entire methodology is âwhatever works.ââ
Owen stepped toward us, closing in the ranks and making it easier to hear. âExperimental investigator? Lord! I thought you were all dead!â
âGive me time,â Misserly said. âIâm sure an experiment will get me someday.â
The two men were smiling, and neither of them seemed bothered by the morbid turn in the conversation.
When Ashworth noticed the confusion that was written all over my face, he explained: âA hundred or so years ago, it was fashionable for alchemists to call themselves âexperimental investigators.â Like the good doctor, they tended to use a mix of the different types of alchemy.â He turned back to Misserly. âI donât know why that fashion died out.â
âNeither do I,â Misserly said. âItâs a damn good title.â
âHow did you learn your craft?â
âOriginal source research.â
Ashworthâs eyes widened. âYou used books?â
âThatâs what you have to do when all your masters are dead.â
The torrman shook his head. âIâm glad Iâm not an alchemist. You have my respect, Doctor.â
Without warning, Misserly said to me, âWhat do you do, Miss Cole?â
I gaped at him. Half my mind went blank and watched with zen-like detachment as the other half of my brain spun into high gear.
Crap!
What was I supposed to say? I couldnât claim to be Big Jackyâs wardenâAshworth wouldnât fall for that, and Misserly didnât know enough about Jacky to care. âFreeloaderâ was accurate, but not something I wanted to brag about to a man with a Ph.D.
Wait! Hadnât we been discussing how to lie about what you did less than five minutes ago? What had they said? Something about using your hobbies or trying to be as boring as possible?
I was still deliberating between claiming to be an artist and claiming to be a call-center worker when Misserly added, âI suppose Iâll have to ask outrightâare you a witch?â
Oh, thank god! An easy one.
âIâm not a witch,â I said. âIâm not actually a magician.â
I could feel Owen Ashworthâs eyes on me. It felt like spiders crawling up my neck.
The torrman had been among the crowd of people kicked out of the courtroom when Iâd invoked the bòid. Itâs possible he believed that I wasnât a magician, but he knew that wasnât the end of the story. The question was, would he say anything?
Misserly, free from any concern about what I may or may not be, nodded. âThat makes sense. Forgive me, but I wondered when I saw you waiting outside ARC Hall while the rest of your party was inside.â
âOh, but that wouldnât matter,â Ashworth said. âIâm pretty sure theyâd be less likely to let her in if she was a witch.â
His voice sounded odd, as if he was trying to sound casual while laying down a trap, hoping that I would talk. It would probably be a sticky trap. Something like a tar-pit.
I pressed my lips together. It'd be hard to get tar off these shoes.
Misserly, who was definitely my new best friend, came to my rescue. âHow do you mean?â
âThereâs a process for getting into the archives of ARC Hall when youâre not a member of the coven,â Ashworth explained. âItâs lengthy, tedious, and after all your hard work appeasing the bureaucrats, whether you get in or not is still at the whim of the head librarian or mistress of the coven.â
âYouâve tried to get in before?â Misserly asked.
âSeveral times. I was approved onceâwhich is still infinitely more times than Iâve heard of them letting in a witch from another coven.â
âWhy would you want to go in?â I asked. âCan you use their magic?â
Ashworth had the gall to raise one of his perfect eyebrows at me. Who did he think he was? Darius Vasil?
âTheir magic?â he said. âNo. Parts of their spells? Possibly. Thatâs what I was researching. But even if a sorcerer canât use the spells themselves, we can usually use their knowledge.â
Thoughts drifted through my head. The memory of Olivia bent over three books at once. The fact that she could recognize most sorcery spells.
âShe has learned principles and theories from every major branch of magicâ¦â
Oliviaâs determination to overcome her magical blindness had turned her into some kind of magicianâs mutt. Was that normal?
I said to Ashworth, âAre most sorcerersâ¦um, you knowâbilingual? Like you?â
The torrman laughed. âIâm sorry?â
I let out a short sigh. Some people were over here speaking magic in three different languages, while I was still struggling with English. I despaired sometimes. I really did.
I tried again: âWould most sorcerers know how to use the magical theory from, oh, say, the witches?â
Ashworth only watched me, his face completely inscrutable.
I grunted. âDude, youâve got to help me out here. Iâm not a magician, remember? Was my question even close to intelligible?â
âI understood it,â Misserly said quietly.
I shot him a grateful look.
When Ashworth finally answered, his voice was low and level. Iâd heard him talk that way to Jacky and Dariusâbut never to me. He must have turned off the charm.
âIf I was estimating,â he said, âIâd put my guess at around fifteen percent.â
âFifteen percent?â I repeated.
âMost sorcerers are content to learn what they can from their colleges and apply it. The better ones develop their own spells using the system theyâre trained in, but sorcerers that reach outside their own study to try to gain insightâtheyâre rare. And they tend to be among the best.â
Like you, I thought.
I turned to Dr. Misserly. âWhat about the alchemists?â
âMany more. Most of us.â He smiled. âItâs the rule of whatever works.â
So there would be a lot of people interested in the contents of ARC Hall. Not that I actually knew what those contents were.
I asked Misserly, âDid you get a chance to see anything during your tour?â
âI got to see exactly how large and impressive it was,â he said, âthen I was whisked away.â
Ashworth clapped a hand on Misserlyâs shoulder. âI know how you feel, sir. Believe me, I know.â
Movement caught my eye. I looked over in time to see something large cross the opening that led from the living room to the hall. Since it was only the briefest glimpse, all I got was an impression of size and color before it disappeared behind the wallâbut that impression was enough to make me feel like someone had yanked the floor out from under my feet and left me standing on thin air.
âMiss Cole?â Misserly said. âAre you all right?â
âUm, yeah.â I tried to focus my attention back on him. A brief, bemused laugh bubbled up from nowhere. When that was over, I said, âThank you. Iâm fine.â
But it was no good. My eyes drifted back to the doorway.
âExcuse me,â I said.
I walked between Misserly and Ashworth, toward the door, but stopped when I felt a hand take my arm. I looked back. It was Ashworth.
âAre you leaving?â
Heâd turned the charm back on.
âIâm notâwell, yes,â I sputtered, âI am leaving. But Iâm not leaving, leaving.â
One edge of the torrmanâs lips lifted in a smirkish smile that was both devastatingly handsome and profoundly irksome.
âCare to try again?â he said.
I was blushing hard enough my cheeks were the right shade of magenta to compliment the color of my dress.
Sure. He could be casual about it. He was probably used to people around him stuttering like idiots.
âI thought I saw something,â I explained.
âSomeone you know?â he asked.
âNo.â I hesitated. âJustâ¦something.â
âThis is a busy party. If youâre not sure what you saw, then it was probably nothing.â
He had a point. By then, most of the guests had arrived. There was movement and colors everywhere. The room was dancing with little gestures and the occasional shine of light off of various cocktail glasses. As I watched, a couple strode past the opening. They were looking at each other, and they displayed no agitation or surprise.
It was probably nothing.
Ha! Forget that.
If it was nothing, then it was about to be a well-investigated nothing. I knew my brain, and I knew it wouldnât shut up until it had some answers.
âThen Iâm going to the bathroom,â I growled.
At first, Ashworth didnât move. His eyes stayed fixed on my face. He had good reason to be suspicious of my overly convenient bladder, but itâs not like he could call my bluff by offering to come with me.
Three cheers for social conventions!
He let his arm drop back to his side and said, âWhen you get back, youâre welcome to join us.â
I was already halfway to the door. I wasnât even sure if he heard my hasty âuh-huh.â