Chapter 30 - Eavesdropping
Blind As A Witch
Three cheers for social conventions was probably two cheers too many. I wanted to run after whatever it was Iâd seen, but the hall was crowded, and people turned to watch me as I dodged by. My cheeks went red, and I forced myself to slow down.
A moment later, I burst out from the crowd. All the guests and servers were behind me. The empty house stretched ahead of me, dotted with only one or two figures.
I whirled around and searched the group I had emerged from. Everything and everyone looked perfectly normal exceptâjudging by a few of their concerned glancesâme.
I turned back around and wandered down the mostly empty hall, feeling grateful for the space and absence of curious eyes. I frowned at the carpet as I walked, and my brain skimmed over its ignorance, trying to pick out a few insights and getting nothing.
I was so distracted, I almost walked into someone.
âExcuse me,â said a warm, friendly voice.
I looked up.
I didnât know the woman. She was tall and moderately overweight. Her blond hair was twisted up in a knot at the back of her head, and honesty compels me to describe her form-fitting, beige-colored dress as âunbecoming.â
When Darius had taken me to buy an outfit for the trial, heâd forbidden me from buying taupe shoes. He claimed the color was too close to the light gray of my suit pants.
âYou need the contrast,â he explained.
Iâd given in because one does not argue with a vampire whoâs sacrificed his whole day-off to take you to a dozen different clothing stores, but now I understood his insistence in a deep, almost spiritual way. I had been touched by fashion enlightenment.
The shade of the womanâs dress was a bit too close to her skin tone. The sequins sparkled marvelously, but in the bad light of the hall, you had to look twice to see that she wasnât naked and covered in dew.
That explained it. Here was my nothing, and it was covered in sequins.
I fought back the urge to hug her.
âWere you just down there?â I asked, pointing.
âI was,â she admitted. She looked flustered. âThe crowds bother me after a while. It helps if I can step away.â
âI get you, sister.â
She smiled when she heard we were unexpectedly related.
âIs anyone else down there?â I asked.
âIn the hall, no, but if youâre looking for a place to hide, Iâd recommend against it. Mistress Oliversen and Master Uhler are talking in the study.â
My ears perked up.
Oliversen and Uhler, you say? Yes, any clear-thinking individual would go out of their way to avoid overhearing those two witches, lest there be some unfortunate misunderstanding about eavesdropping.
I waved away her concern. âIâll only be a minute. Iâm heading to the bathroom. Someoneâs waiting at the other one.â
She nodded and went on her way.
After she disappeared into the crowd, I snuck down the hall toward the study. When I was close, I flattened myself against the wall and eased nearer to the gap between the door and the doorframe. First I heard the sound of their voicesâspeaking in turns, low and fast. There was an edge to the noise that reminded me of an argument, and it sounded like theyâd been talking for a while. The moment I could make out the words, I stopped and held my breath.
âWhere did you hear that?â Ellis said.
My ears were straining for all their worth, but there was no answer.
The mistress spoke again: âItâs true, anyway. So, as you can see, weâre already prepared if anything should happen.â
âHas anything happened?â Cosmo asked.
âNo.â
There was another pause.
âMaster Uhler?â Ellis prompted.
âDo you ever get tired of trying to do everything yourself?â
What little edge had been in Cosmoâs voice was gone. All that was left was his exhaustion. I could hear each word sinking into it, as if they were boulders being laid in fine sand.
âI canât say that I do,â Ellis said.
âMaybe itâs easier for you Mistresses. Each coven is its own clam. All you have to do is close up ranks. Iâm the one that has to go around, trying to pry you all open. After a few years, it becomes tiring.â
The clam had nothing to say to that.
Cosmo went on, âIâm not your enemy, Ellis. I want to help if I can, but the largest obstacles I face are the people Iâm trying to helpââ
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Ellisâs voice broke in; it was quick and dismissive. âYou have helped, Master Uhler. Youâve given me the warning. What else can you do? I hope you donât expect me to allow you to interfere with my coven.â
With what must have been iron patience, Cosmo said, in his gentle voice, âThis may concern more than just your coven.â
âThatâs only if your suspicions are correct, and if they are, thatâs their concern. I will protect whatâs mine.â
A voice right by my ear said, âEmerra.â
My heart shot into my throat as if itâd been sitting in a lit cannon. I had to slap a hand over my mouth to stifle my gasp. Once the white fuzz cleared from my vision and my heart settled into a rhythm that could only compete with the slower drum lines, I grabbed onto Big Jackyâs hand and dragged him away from the study door, deeper into the abandoned hallway.
âWhatââ he started to say.
One glare from me was enough to get him to shut his flapping jaw bone.
We were a few rooms away, standing next to the stairs that led to the basement, when I finally let go of his hand and turned to him.
âWhat are you doing?â I whispered fiercely. âYou nearly killed me!â
Despite the complete lack of face to have an expression with, Jacky still managed to look skeptical. âItâs not in my nature to ânearlyâ kill people, Emerra.â
âOh, yeah. Thatâs really comforting.â I craned around him to keep an eye on the door.
âI saw you leave the party and followed you,â Jacky explained.
My eyes jerked back to him. âYou were following me?â
He nodded.
âAnd I didnât see you?â I asked.
âYou seemed intent on other things.â
âHow long were you standing beside me?â
âIâm not good with time.â He sounded reproachful, as if I should have known that.
And I did know that.
A day and a decade felt the same to Jack Noctis. Whenever he told you heâd be home âsoon,â it was a good idea to press him for a few details. He couldâve been standing next to me in that hall for a second, or he could have been there the whole time.
It bothered me to think that someone so important to me could be standing right there and I could miss him.
âWhat were you doing?â he asked.
âI was spying on Mrs. Oliversen and Cosmo.â
âWhy?â
âHe was trying to warn her about something.â
âWarn her? About what?â
âI donât know. I didnât catch it.â I glanced at the door again. âCan you ask him? I mean, youâre his boss, arenât you?â
Jacky turned and gazed toward the study. âIâll talk to Iset.â
âNot Iset, Jacky! Cosmo! I need you to ask Cosmo!â
âI understood the request, Emerra, but my relationship to the Torr is not as simple as that of a boss and his subordinates, and Iâd rather not put Mr. Uhler in a position where he would want to lie to me.â
My mouth clamped shut. Hard. A chill wafted through my stomach.
No. Nobody wanted thatânot Jacky, not me, and certainly not Cosmo.
âJacky tends to treat omission of facts different than he does lies,â Darius had said.
I wasnât sure how Big Jacky treated liesâI was too scared to askâbut I got the impression it wasâ¦bad.
I sighed and leaned against the wall beside me. Jacky joined me.
âAre you tired?â he asked.
I nodded.
âDid you have another nightmare last night?â
âYes, but itâs nothing new. Is Kirby still alive?â
âYes.â
âGood,â I whispered. A second later, I said, âJacky, whatâs it like in ARC Hall? Can you tell me, or is that some kind of secret?â
âUnder the circumstances, I donât mind. But out of consideration for the coven, Iâd recommend you not repeat what I tell you.â
I remembered poor Cosmo, so tired of prying all the time, and Oliviaâs scorn for the tradition of silence.
âIs the secrecy all that important?â I asked.
âI donât know,â Jacky admitted. âItâs easy to see the problems itâs caused. Itâs hard to see the ones it might have prevented.â
âFair enough.â
Jacky pointed his eye sockets at a random bit of empty space near the hall ceiling. âThey have a large room used for gatherings and conferencesâthatâs where the formal dinner tomorrow will be held. They also have numerous smaller rooms for meetings and solitary study, a few offices, and three main libraries.â
âWhy do they have three libraries?â
âThe first is for storing prototypes and essential examples of devices, tools, and physical charms that have been created by members of the coven. The second is the general reference section. Itâs where students and practicing witches can look up information on magical theory and specific spells. The last library is their archives.â
Archives. The word had a distinctly historical sound to it.
âWhat are in their archives?â I asked.
âI suppose that itâs like most other coven archives. It would contain all the significant records and writings created throughout their history.â
âYou suppose? You havenât been in there?â
âNo. Thatâs the area of the Hall thatâs under the most security.â
âThey have a room full of magical toys that go boom!âbut they think the most important things to protect are their records?â
Jacky sounded puzzled. âIsnât that logical? Which would you choose to protectâthe devices, or the records that teach you how to make them?â
That shut me up.
âDid your question about ARC Hall have something to do with Nolan Kirbyâs kidnapping?â Jacky asked.
âI was trying to figure out what might be worth stealing from there.â
âUnfortunately, that question has too many possible answers.â
âIt sounds like it.â I dropped my head back against the wall.
Jacky went on, âAnd I donât see how that information would be useful. I know that weâre working under the assumption that the kidnapper is also the thief, but how would knowing their target at ARC Hall help?â
âI thought it might help us figure out who they are.â
When Jacky didnât answer, I rolled my head to look at him. He was regarding me with the deepest part of his empty eye sockets.
I tried to explain. âI was talking to Misserly and Ashworth. I know that both of them would be happy to get a free-pass into that building, but I figured that they wouldnât be interested in the same stuff. Ashworth would probably go for the spells, but Iâll bet Misserly would be more interested in the devices. If we could figure out what the thief was targeting, then maybe we could figure out what kind of person would benefit the most from having it, andâboom!â
âOne of the devices explodes?â Jacky said.
âNo! Boom! We have a list of suspects!â
âAh. I see.â He paused. âThere are several problems with your theory, Emerra.â
As far as I could tell, there were nothing but problems with my theory, and most of them centered around the fact that we had no way of knowing what the thief had been after. Anything Jacky had to add would be nothing but icing on the disaster cake.
âGo on,â I said.
âFirst, thieves donât always steal for themselves. They often sell what they take.â
âBut that wouldnât matter in this case,â I pointed out. âNot if they were trying to get some kind of tool that would help them withâ¦I donât knowâwith whatever theyâre planning on doing.â
âThat brings me to my second point,â Jacky said. âIt isnât always the person that would most benefit from possessing the stolen object whoâs the most willing to steal it. That depends too much on the circumstances of the thief. A sorcerer may normally prefer to obtain a spell, but if itâs a device they need to meet their objectiveâ¦â Jacky shrugged.
He was right. Before I could draw any conclusions, Iâd need a much better ideaâor any kind of an idea at allâabout what their final objective was.
âAnything else?â I asked.
âOne more minor point.â
Why not? That could be the cherry to go on top. I motioned for him to continue.
âI already know the type of magician that would most benefit from obtaining something stolen from ARC Hall, regardless of what that thing is.â
âWhat type?â
âA witch.â