Chapter Three
The king is the absolute authority in the land,
but he requires the support of the great families and they require
him. They feed off each other. He sees to it that they are
constantly vying for his favor. Alliances and ties between the
Peers of the Realm run together like the notes in a symphony. The
person conducting the orchestra is not the king, but the Countess
de Marjolaine.
Only the noble and ancient Dragon families of Rosia
remain aloof from the politics of the royal court. Since the
disbanding of the Dragon Brigade, the offended dragons have shunned
court altogether. His Majesty does not appear much bothered by
their absence. Perhaps because he no longer requires the dragons in
his new, modern navy.
—Musings on Rosian Politics
by Rodrigo de Villeneuve
by Rodrigo de Villeneuve
COUNTESS CECILE RAPHAEL DE MARJOLAINE was
fifty years old and the poets of the age still wrote songs to her
beauty. They spoke of luxuriant silver hair, with curls falling on
alabaster shoulders. Her blue eyes were likened to sapphires, her
cheeks to the damask rose. Her figure was superb. Tall and slender,
she moved with a languorous grace that suited her height.
Her complexion remained smooth, perhaps because no
strong emotion was ever allowed to touch her. She had never been
heard to laugh. No lines of joy creased her lips or crinkled the
corners of her eyes. No lines of worry or care marred her forehead.
The only two flaws on her lovely face were a single deep furrow
slanting between her brows that deepened when she was absorbed in
thought and a small, white scar on the right corner of her lip. The
only sign of her age was the skin on the back of her hands. Once
white and delicate, the skin was now stretched taut and
crisscrossed beneath with blue veins.
The countess did not follow fashion. She set
fashion. Her gown was simply and elegantly made of sky-blue satin,
the skirt falling in sumptuous folds from a pointed bodice, the
sleeves tight to the elbow, then flowing and lined with lace. She
wore a necklace of blue sapphires and several very fine jewels on
her fingers. Among these rings, lost and unremarked amidst the
rubies and diamonds and sapphires, was a plain golden band, which
she never took off. When she was preoccupied, she would often
absentmindedly twist this little golden ring.
The countess led Stephano from her study into a
library filled with books, whose leather bindings gave off a
pleasant scent. The books were not merely decorative, as were books
in the homes of much of the nobility, many of whom were practically
illiterate. The countess had always been fond of reading and
whereas the other fashionable women of the time invited the rich
and the powerful to their salons, the countess preferred to invite
poets and artists, philosophers, musicians, and scientists.
She and Stephano passed through the library and
entered a small and cozy sitting room. Glass-paned doors opened out
onto a charming patio enclosed by a waist-high stone wall. Trees of
all varieties, many of them rare species imported from other
countries, had been planted in tubs made of wood and stone. The
trees formed a miniature forest that effectively screened the
garden from view of prying eyes peering out nearby windows.
Looking through the trees in one direction, the
observer could see blue sky and the deeper blue-purple of the
mountains, green woods, and the sun shining off the crystalline
surface of a distant lake. In the other direction rose the spires
of a magnificent cathedral, surrounded by a large complex of
buildings, all protected by a wall, all stuck far below on solid
ground. The bottom level of the floating palace were about even
with the cathedral’s bell tower.
How the grand bishop must hate that, thought
Stephano, amused.
“Shut the doors,” said the countess.
Stephano complied. The countess rearranged her
scarf around her shoulders, then walked over to the wall and gazed
out into the cloudless blue sky. She began, unconsciously, to twist
the small golden ring.
Stephano remained near the door, silent, waiting
for her to speak. He had never been in her garden and he was
entranced by the beauty of the view. He was also, truth be told,
always a little awed and uncomfortable in the presence of his
mother, though he would have knocked out the teeth of any man who
said so.
“What do you know of the Royal Armory?” the
countess asked abruptly, turning to face her son.
Stephano was accustomed to his mother’s manner of
doing business; no pleasant niceties or idle talk. She went
immediately to the heart of matter at hand. This was the last
subject he would have expected his mother to bring up and he had to
take a moment to think.
“The Royal Armory makes the weapons and armor for
the king and the Royal Regiment, the king’s guards. When I was
Commander of the Dragon Brigade”—his voice took on a tinge of
bitterness—“the Royal Armory outfitted me and my company with
magically enhanced riding armor and our muskets. The Royal Armory
made some of the finest armor and weapons I’ve ever owned.”
“The Armory also looks for ways to improve those
weapons and armor,” said the countess.
“That’s a given,” said Stephano.
The countess eyed him. The small furrow dug into
her brow. “Don’t stand there hovering by the door as though you are
ready to bolt any moment. Come closer, so that I don’t have to
shout.”
She was hardly shouting, and Stephano realized
suddenly that there was a reason she had brought him to this
garden, when usually their business was conducted in her audience
chamber. Here, amid the thick foliage and trailing vines with
nothing except blue sky above and the ground far below, was
privacy—as much privacy as one could have in a palace populated by
many hundreds of people.
Stephano felt a prickling at the back of his neck.
This job was starting to sound more interesting. He joined his
mother at the wall, where she stood gazing down upon the cathedral
and the large, squat, towered structures that clustered around
it.
“The Bishop’s Palace,” said the countess in
reflective tones, her thoughts echoing her son’s. “Fixed firmly on
the ground. His Grace moved his office, you know, to the other end
of the building, so that he wouldn’t have to look out his window to
see His Majesty floating above him.”
First the Armory, now the Grand Bishop
Montagne—King Alaric’s longtime friend, longer time enemy. Where
was this conversation leading? Stephano kept quiet and waited to
find out.
The countess turned to Stephano; as she did so, a
shaft of sunlight, filtering through the green leaves of a
flowering crab tree, illuminated the scar on her lip. He had never
really noticed the scar before now. The scar appeared to be an old
one and he wondered how she had come by it. Some childhood
accident, perhaps? Oddly, the scar made her seem more human.
Perhaps that was why she always tried to conceal it by touching her
lips with carnelian, the only cosmetic she deigned to wear.
“By law, the Church of the Breath of God oversees
all development of technology involving magical constructs, even at
the Royal Armory,” said the countess. “Any research into new uses
of magic must be approved by the grand bishop. The law has stood
for centuries.”
“I suppose such a law makes sense,” said Stephano.
“Scripture says ‘from the Breath of God comes His voice and the
quiet whispers of his words’ and that is magic.”
His gaze shifted from the cathedral to the Breath
as it lapped at the Rim of the bay. “The truth is, magical energy
flows in the Breath. We harness the Breath with constructs and use
it to lift our airships. The Breath powers our technology and
augments our machines. The Breath is magic and magic is
power.”
Stephano turned to his mother. “And power without
the divine teachings of the church for guidance is an ‘open door
for the darkness that lies in wait for the heathen.’ ”
“Your tutor taught you well,” said the countess
dryly.
“Actually, it was Rodrigo,” said Stephano.
“In fact, your friend, Monsieur de Villeneuve, is
one of the reasons I thought of asking you to undertake this
job.”
“If it involves the seduction of women, you’ll find
Rodrigo outstanding,” said Stephano, grinning.
“Actually I was thinking more of his outstanding
skills as a crafter. At least, I am told he has such skills,” said
the countess.
“And, as usual, your spies are correct, Mother. But
what have crafters and Rodrigo to do with the bishop and the Breath
of God and the Royal Armory—By Heaven!” Stephano answered his own
question. “His Majesty has been conducting research into new
weapons technology involving magic. And he has not shared it
with the bishop.”
“You always were a smart boy,” the countess
murmured.
“What would happen if the bishop were to discover
this little indiscretion?”
“The king would be embarrassed—”
“My heart bleeds,” said Stephano, his lip curling
in a sneer.
The countess smiled faintly. “There would be other
ramifications, as I am certain you are aware.”
The sun drifted behind a tower, throwing the garden
into shadow. The countess drew her scarf more closely around her
shoulders. “Sit here. The air is chill in the shade.”
The countess took her seat on a wicker divan,
surrounded by plump cushions. There was room for Stephano, and she
made a polite gesture for him to sit beside her. He chose, instead,
a seat on a marble bench opposite her. His rapier rang against the
stone wall as he settled himself.
Now we’re coming to it, he thought.
“I had a visit yesterday morning from Douver,
Master of the Royal Armory. Master Douver was quite agitated. It
seems one of his journeyman, Pietro Alcazar, did not come to work
the day before.”
“Hardly an event likely to sink the continent,”
said Stephano.
“So one would think,” said the countess
imperturbably. “Douver assures me, however, that this journeyman is
completely reliable. Alcazar has not missed a day’s work since he
came to the Armory six years ago. He does not chase women. He does
not indulge in strong drink. He is known to be a dedicated and
brilliant crafter who lives solely for his work. He is so
brilliant, in fact, that he recently made an amazing discovery. He
found a way to manufacture steel utilizing the Breath of
God—”
Stephano laughed. “And I can turn lead into gold.
Crafters have been trying to mix metal and magic for years, Mother!
It can’t be done.”
“I am aware of this,” said the countess sharply,
annoyed at the interruption. “Hear me out. Douver was so excited by
Alcazar’s discovery he reported it to His Majesty.”
“But not to the bishop,” Stephano inserted.
“As required by law.”
“He went to the king first, as was proper,” said
the countess. “The king was thrilled, naturally, but also, like
you, my clever son, he was skeptical. He demanded proof. Douver
promised to bring a sample of this Breath-enhanced steel to His
Majesty.”
“What sort of sample?” Stephano asked.
“Something that would appear quite ordinary—a
tankard, I believe. Douver was to meet with His Majesty yesterday.
When Alcazar failed to come to work, Douver was concerned that his
journeyman might have been taken ill or—”
“—he was, in fact, a charlatan who knew his fraud
was about to be revealed,” said Stephano.
“That was Douver’s fear, especially as he had
allowed the king to labor under the mistaken belief that
he—Douver—had developed this new metal.”
Stephano smiled and shook his head.
“Douver hastened to Alcazar’s rooms,” the countess
continued. “He found the front door had been forced open. Furniture
was upended. There were signs of a struggle. Alcazar was gone and
so was the tankard he had been going to show to the king. Seeing
this, Douver came to me at once.”
“Why you?” Stephano asked, frowning.
The countess was exasperated. “You could hardly
expect Douver to go to the king! What would the fool man say? That
he had lied about the fact that he had created this new metal? That
he had allowed the journeyman who did create it to be snatched out
from under his nose? The king would think Douver had been lying all
this time. He would lose his job, if not his head.”
“So he hoped you could get him back into the king’s
good graces. Well, that should be easy for you, Mother. Just slip
into His Majesty’s bed . . .”
The countess sat quite still. Her eyes were gray as
a winter sky, her face expressionless. When she spoke, her tone was
smooth and cold.
“There is a far more important consideration here,
Stephano, as you would realize if you were not constantly occupied
in hating me.”
Stephano realized he had gone too far. What she
said was true. He was allowing his feelings to cloud his judgment.
Beyond that, his remark had been unworthy of a knight and a
gentleman.
“I beg your pardon, Mother,” he said quietly. “I
should not have said that.”
The countess stood up and took a turn or two around
the garden. She twisted the little golden ring on her finger.
Stephano waited in silence, still feeling the sting of her rebuke.
Her next question surprised him.
“Tell me, Stephano, if Alcazar had succeeded in
producing steel that could be enhanced by the Breath of God, what
would be the ramifications of such a discovery?”
“Astounding,” Stephano answered. “Cannonballs would
bounce off our warships like hailstones. Armor could withstand
bullets or, conversely, bullets could punch through ordinary steel.
Such a discovery would make our military invincible. But that is
assuming this Alcazar actually succeeded, and I don’t
believe—”
“Someone does,” said the countess flatly.
Stephano was brought up short. He thought this over
and now understood her concern. Alcazar had disappeared, perhaps
not of his own free will. Someone had snatched him. The idea of
such magically enhanced steel in the wrong hands was
appalling.
“I need you to discover the truth, Stephano. Go to
Alcazar’s lodging, search it, see what you can learn. You will be
discreet, quiet, circumspect. No hint of what has happened must
leak out.”
“Which is why you came to me,” said Stephano.
“I dare not trust any of my local agents,” said the
countess, nodding agreement. “Not with something this important.
Here is the address.”
She reached into her bosom and drew out a piece of
paper and handed it to Stephano. The address was in his mother’s
own hand, bold and firm: 127 Street of the Half Moon. He
thrust the paper into an inner pocket in his coat.
“How flattering to know you actually trust
me, Mother,” he remarked.
“I do trust you, Stephano,” said the countess
gravely. “Do not let me down.”
She moved to the door and stood beside it, waiting
for him to open it for her. The interview was at an end.
Stephano stood up, pressing his hand against his
rapier to keep it from striking the bench. “One question. You
mentioned Grand Bishop Montagne. Is it possible that he could have
found out about Alcazar?”
“I thought of that,” said the countess. “I have
made inquiries and am convinced that the bishop knows nothing. If
his creature, Dubois, were in Rosia, it would be a different
matter. Dubois knows, sees, hears everything. But Dubois is in
Freya, attending the royal court. And now I really must go. I am
late for a meeting with the Travian ambassador.”
Stephano opened the door, and the countess swept
past him with a rustle of satin and the faint fragrance of
honeysuckle.
“I hear Travia and Estara are hurling cannonballs
at one another over which of the two nations owns mineral-rich
Braffa,” said Stephano. “Rodrigo’s father is ambassador to Estara.
He writes that the situation is grim.”
“They are both trying to draw us into the fight,”
said the countess. “I won’t allow that to happen.”
“Shouldn’t King Alaric be handling this matter,
along with his officially appointed ministers?” Stephano asked,
grinning.
“His Majesty has far more important matters to
concern him,” said the countess.
Stephano leaned near to say, “There’s not a twitch
of your cobweb that you don’t feel, is there, Mother?”
“You’ve fought the Estarans. Do you want to do so
again?” the countess asked, as they passed through the sitting room
and into the library.
“I would not be given the chance, as you well
know,” said Stephano caustically.
“May I remind you, my son, that you were the
one who resigned the commission which I had managed to
obtain for you,” the countess returned.
“And may I remind you, Mother, that I resigned
after the king disbanded the Dragon Brigade and took away my
command,” said Stephano heatedly.
“His Majesty offered you a post—”
“—as a lowly lieutenant on one of his new-fangled
floating frigates. I am a Dragon Knight. If you think I would
stoop—”
Stephano stopped to draw in a deep breath. He was
not going to quarrel with her. Not that they ever quarreled. She
was Breath-enhanced steel. Words, like bullets, could never
penetrate her. He came back to business.
“If I find out what you need to know about this
Alcazar, you will clear all my debts?”
The countess glanced at him. “I said I would. I
keep my word.”
Stephano flushed. He hated to mention this next,
but he had no choice. He did so with what dignity he could muster.
“Rodrigo tells me that I am . . . er . . . rather short of funds
right now. If you could advance me—”
“I have given instructions for you to receive the
paperwork clearing you of your debt and I have provided money for
expenses,” said the countess.
They had returned to the audience chamber. She
remained standing. Business concluded, she was ready to be done
with him.
Stephano bowed. “I will take my leave, then,
Madame. I will be in touch. Who do I see about the money?”
The countess extended her hand for him to
kiss.
“My secretary, Emil,” she said, adding, with a hint
of a smile, “The young man you insulted.”
![005](/epubstore/W/M-Weis/Shadow-raiders/OEBPS/weis_9781101514634_oeb_005_r1.jpg)
While Stephano was back in the antechamber, forced
to endure Emil’s sneers while waiting for his mother’s money, one
of the men he and the countess had been discussing was also being
forced to wait. Only this man was waiting to clear customs, not
waiting for an insufferable secretary.
For once, the countess’ spies were wrong. Dubois,
the bishop’s “creature,” as the countess had termed him, was not in
Freya attending the royal court. His ship had docked at the Rosian
port at about the same time the wyvern-drawn carriage containing
Stephano and Rodrigo had flown over the dockyards. If Stephano had
looked down and Dubois had looked up, the two men would have seen
each other.
Seeing Dubois would not have done Stephano any
good, for he did not know the man. They had never met. Dubois knew
Stephano, however. Dubois made it his business to know everyone who
had anything to do with the politics of any of the royal
courts.
Once he was through customs, Dubois—known by
everyone simply as Dubois—did not waste time. He met with several
men who were waiting on the dock for him. He heard their reports
and gave them instructions. These meetings with agents concluded,
he hastened to a nearby inn where he always kept a horse in
readiness, mounted, and rode swiftly through the crowded streets,
paying no heed to the curses of those he nearly ran down.
Upon reaching the vicinity of the Bishop’s Palace,
Dubois left the horse at the stables of another inn in which he had
taken up lodgings, then walked the rest of the way. He did not
enter by the main gate. Instead, he went to a small gate located in
the wall directly behind the bishop’s private residence. The gate
was hidden in some shrubbery, and Dubois had the only key.
The gate led into a small walled-off terrace, still
filled with last autumn’s dead leaves, located at the rear of the
house. A door with a lock to which Dubois also had the key opened
into a long, narrow hallway.
The hall was dark, but Dubois had walked it many
times and did not need a light to find his way. At the end of the
hall was another door with yet another lock. He opened this door
with yet another key and entered a small closet, big enough for him
and a single chair.
Dubois walked over to the wall and pressed his ear
to it. He could hear voices: the deep, resonant voice of the grand
bishop and other voices he did not recognize. He could hear the
bishop quite clearly for his chair was near the closet door, which
was concealed by a thick, velvet curtain hanging behind the
bishop’s chair. The other voices were agitated, less distinct, but
Dubois was a master at eavesdropping.
The Abbey of Saint Agnes had been attacked during
the night. Many of the one hundred nuns living there had been
slaughtered, the abbey burned.
Dubois was shocked at the terrible news and was
surprised he had not heard of the attack from his agents, but then
he reminded himself that he had only just landed. A devout man,
Dubois said a prayer for the dead. He took a seat on the chair and
waited with some impatience for the visitors to leave.
In his mid-forties, Dubois was hard to describe.
Plain and ordinary to look at, Dubois fostered the appearance of
being plain and ordinary. His dress and demeanor were that of a
lowly clerk (and a poorly paid lowly clerk at that). What lifted
Dubois out of the ordinary was his extraordinary mind. He had only
to look at a face and he would remember that person for the rest of
his life. He had merely to peruse a document once and he could
later copy it word for word, comma for comma. He could repeat a
conversation verbatim, though it might have lasted hours. These
amazing talents had been noticed many years ago when he was a young
man by his parish priest, who had brought Dubois to the attention
of the grand bishop.
Ferdinand Montagne was grand bishop of a church
that had been struggling with various problems for these past
twenty years. Once a power in the world, as the world’s only true
religion, the Church of the Breath of Rosia had seen that power
wane. The Church of the Breath of Freya had split off and begun
calling itself the Church of the Reformation. Its ministers
preached that the Church of the Breath of Rosia was rife with
corruption, had lost its way, and should no longer be responsible
for the salvation of men’s souls.
As if this were not trouble enough, King Alaric,
who had once been a devoted follower of church doctrine and friend
to the bishop (who had sacrificed a great deal for His Majesty),
had started to rebel, to go off on his own. Now he was looking for
a reason to end the Church’s control over the magic and take it
(and the revenue it provided) for the Crown.
Such a reason existed in the form of a terrible
secret. The bishop possessed certain knowledge about the Church,
about the Breath of God, about the magic—“the quiet whispers of his
words” that was so dreadful, so awful, that should the king find
out, he would have the excuse he needed.
Beset by enemies without, wrestling with danger
within, the bishop had needed help. He needed to know what his
enemies in Freya were thinking, plotting. He needed to know what
the King of Rosia was plotting, if not necessarily thinking. His
Majesty left his thinking to the Countess de Marjolaine.
The grand bishop required spies. He had a few, but
they were not nearly of the caliber of the spies in the employ of
the Countess de Marjolaine. Montagne had been impressed with Dubois
and had given him one or two small jobs, which Dubois had handled
with skill. The grand bishop had provided him with funds to set up
an intelligence network. Dubois had handled the task with such
success that for the last few years, the bishop had been able to
breathe freer and sleep somewhat more soundly at night.
The visitors departed. Dubois heard the door close.
He waited another moment to make certain the bishop was alone. The
only sounds were the rustle of the bishop’s cassock and the
creaking of the chair as he sat down; Montagne was a large man.
Over six feet tall, he was massively built. At sixty years old, he
was in excellent physical condition, looking more like a wrestler
than a clergyman. He wore his gray hair short, his whitish-gray
beard and mustache neatly trimmed.
Ferdinand Montagne was ambitious, political, and a
true and devoted believer in God—a dangerous combination. He
believed that his voice was God’s voice, his will was God’s will,
and that everything the bishop did or ordered to be done was for
God’s glory.
Dubois silently opened the door of the closet,
silently drew aside the folds of the heavy curtain, and silently
glided out.
“Good afternoon, Your Grace,” said Dubois in his
deferential clerk’s voice.
Grand Bishop Montagne gave a great gasp and a start
that caused his pointed, gold-decorated miter to slip from his head
and fall to the floor. The bishop twisted around in his chair and
fixed his man with a baleful look.
“By all the Saints, Dubois, some day you are going
to sneak up on me like that and cause my heart to stop beating.
Damn it, you could at least cough or bump into something.”
Dubois smiled slightly as he bent to pick up the
miter, brush off any dust, and hand it back to the bishop. Montagne
motioned Dubois to set the miter on the desk, then directed him
with an irritated gesture to take a seat.
Dubois did not immediately sit down. “I might
suggest it would be well, Your Grace, if you were to send the
monsignor, your secretary, and his assistants on an errand.”
“And what would that errand be, Dubois?”
“I need to know who has been meeting with the
Countess de Marjolaine during the past few days. I need the list of
visitors to date, including all her meetings scheduled for
today.”
The bishop’s face stiffened, as always when the
countess’ name was mentioned. He rose to his feet, his blue,
gold-trimmed cassock swishing about his ankles, and went out to
speak to the secretary.
Dubois looked about the prelate’s study, taking
note of any changes that had been made in his absence. The room was
lit by narrow windows, two stories high. Each window was set with
beveled, leaded glass. The interior walls were lined with bookcases
and rich paneling carved of cherry inlaid with rosewood and
precious metals. Two andirons, each taking the form of an angel
with sword raised and feet on the heads of writhing demons, stood
before the gold-veined, white marble fireplace.
Seeing nothing of interest, Dubois flipped through
the papers on the bishop’s desk, his retentive memory absorbing
their contents. He resumed his seat as the bishop came back into
the room, closing the door behind him and turning the key in the
lock.
“I assume you were eavesdropping? You heard the
news about the abbey?” the bishop asked grimly.
“I could not help but overhear, Your Grace,” said
Dubois. “I cannot imagine who would perpetrate such an
outrage.”
“I have contacted the Arcanum to investigate.
Father Jacob Northrup is coming to meet with me. He would have been
here by now, but he and his team were in Capione, investigating
reports of that Warlock and his coven.”
“The Warlock? What has that evil young man done
now?” Dubois asked.
“It seems he seduced the daughter of a nobleman.
She ran away from home to join him and his followers. Several
bodies of his young followers have been found, drained of blood,
which the Warlock uses in his heinous rites. He gives the deluded
children opium and lures them into orgies, then murders
them.”
“I ask myself, ‘Why?’ ” said Dubois,
frowning.
“What do you mean ‘why?’ Because he takes pleasure
in killing people,” said the bishop. “He’s insane.”
“I doubt that,” said Dubois. “He does this for a
reason.”
“Well, whatever that reason is, pray God this time
Father Jacob has managed to find him and stop him.”
“If anyone can do so, it is Father Jacob Northrup,”
said Dubois.
The grand bishop was silent, frowning. “So what are
you doing here, Dubois? Your orders were to remain in Freya until
the end of the summer court.”
“Might I have a glass of wine and something to eat,
Your Grace?” asked Dubois. “I am famished. I have spent the last
two days traveling. I came here immediately on my arrival.”
The bishop indicated the sideboard on which stood a
crystal decanter of wine and a collation of cold meats and bread.
Dubois forked beef onto a slice of bread, devoured it in a few
bites, then poured himself a glass of wine and returned to his
chair.
“I fear I have more bad news, Your Grace. Sir Henry
Wallace has left Freya.”
Bishop Montagne’s eyes opened wide. His frown
deepened, his face grew dark. He said a word suited more to a
dockyard worker than a bishop, then added, “Where is the
bastard?”
“I have no idea, Your Grace.”
The bishop gave a heavy sigh. “Tell me everything,
Dubois.”
“Yes, Your Grace. Ever since his marriage, Sir
Henry has been seen at court on an almost daily basis. His
movements have been unremarkable.” Dubois shrugged. “People say he
dotes upon his young wife, who is in the last few months of her
pregnancy. A short time ago, however, there was a break in his
routine. I was informed by my spy, a maidservant, in his household,
that a wooden box had been delivered to Sir Henry by a man who had
the appearance of a sailor.
“The maid got a good look at the box, on the
pretext of dusting Sir Henry’s study, and reported that the box was
plain, with no writing on it, nothing to indicate its origins or
what was inside. She assumed it was some gift for his wife and
thought nothing of it. He did not give his wife a gift, however,
and yet, oddly, the box vanished. The maid asked some of the other
members of the staff, but no one knew what had become of it.
Several days after Wallace received this box, he suddenly, without
advance notice, moved his wife and household to his estate outside
Haever. He stated as his reason his wife’s impending
lying-in.”
“What happened to this mysterious box?”
“I do not know, Your Grace, but a most curious
incident occurred after Wallace arrived at his estate. The staff
was told that Sir Henry was going to be conducting scientific
experiments in the kitchen and they were not to be alarmed if they
heard any odd sounds. Such experiments are, apparently, not unusual
for Sir Henry.
“That night, the maid was awakened by what she
swears were gunshots, followed by a loud explosion. The next
morning the kitchen smelled strongly of gunpowder and was in such a
mess, with pots and pans lying on the floor, that the cook
threatened to give notice. The maid found several bullets,
flattened, in the fireplace. Wallace left immediately afterward,
telling his wife he was bound for Haever. He never arrived there.
It took me two days to learn that he was no longer in Freya.”
“You think . . .”
“I think something important was in that box, Your
Grace.”
Montagne grunted in agreement. “Did you find out
where the box came from, anything about it? You said the man who
delivered it was a sailor.”
Dubois paused for a sip of wine. He drank
sparingly, preferring to have all his mental faculties unclouded by
the fumes of the grape.
“All I could find out was that two merchant vessels
had docked immediately before the box was delivered. One was from
Travia and the second a free trader from the Aligoes
Islands.”
“Which do you suspect?” the bishop asked.
“Free traders smuggle Estaran wine into Freya,
along with other contraband. Given the fact that Estara and Travia
are on the brink of war on the eastern frontier over Braffa—”
“But Freya is neutral in this conflict,” the bishop
interjected.
“It is well known in Freya that you, Your Grace,
support Estara in its claim of Braffa and that His Majesty, King
Alaric, supports Travia in its claim—”
“Say, rather, that fiendish woman, the Countess de
Marjolaine, supports Travia,” said the bishop.
Dubois nodded. “I noted the last time I was in the
Travian court that it is crawling with her operatives. But, as I
was going to say, this war between Travia and Estara over Braffa
has resulted in a serious rift between Church and Crown here in
Rosia. It might be very tempting to Wallace to heat up the fire
under this cauldron, see perhaps if he can’t make it boil
over.”
“To what purpose?” the bishop asked.
“Ah, who knows with Sir Henry,” said Dubois.
The bishop glowered. “Do I detect a note of
admiration in your voice, Dubois?”
“One should never underestimate one’s enemy, Your
Grace. I also have the highest regard for the Countess de
Marjolaine.”
A rumbling sound came from the region of the
bishop’s stomach. He placed his hand on his belly. “Bah! This news
has made me bilious. Pour me a glass of wine.”
Dubois did as he was told, returning to set the
goblet at the bishop’s hand. As he did so, there was a knock upon
the door. The bishop gestured and Dubois crossed over to the door,
opened it a crack, and received a book bound in red leather. He
closed the door and once more turned the key. The bishop eyed the
red leather book in Dubois’ hand.
“Where the devil is Wallace? I don’t like it when
that fiend is on the loose.” Montagne gazed moodily into his wine
goblet.
“That is what I am endeavoring to ascertain, Your
Grace. That is why I asked to see who has been meeting with the
countess.”
Dubois opened the red leather book somewhere around
the middle and began to read. At the top of each page was a date.
Below the date was a list of names. Dubois scanned several pages.
The bishop watched hopefully, but his hopes were dashed when Dubois
shook his head and closed the book.
“Nothing?”
“The usual: favor-seekers, courtiers. Only three
are in any way remarkable. Yesterday, the countess met with the
Master of the Royal Armory. This morning, she met with her son,
Captain de Guichen—”
“What is so remarkable about that?” asked the
bishop. He was in an ill humor and inclined to be petty. “She is
his mother.”
“The two are not on speaking terms, Your Grace,
though the countess does occasionally employ her son on sensitive
business. And he did fight the Estarans prior to the Dragon Brigade
being decommissioned. After he left, the countess was closeted for
a long time with Lord Hoalfhausen, the Travian ambassador.”
“There, you see!” said the bishop in angry triumph.
“That woman is meddling in this war, consorting with my
enemies.”
“So it would seem, Your Grace,” replied Dubois.
Disappointed, he tossed the book onto the desk. “Unfortunately,
this tells us nothing regarding the whereabouts of Sir
Henry.”
He rose to his feet and prepared to take his
leave.
“Keep me informed, Dubois,” said the bishop. “May
God speed your endeavors.”
“May He, indeed, Your Grace. And may He aid the
labors of Father Jacob as he confounds the Warlock and discovers
who murdered our Sisters in God.”
Dubois bowed, circled around behind the bishop’s
chair, parted the curtain, and entered the closet. A glance over
his shoulder showed Montagne sitting with his shoulders hunched,
his head bowed. He picked up the goblet, drank off the wine in a
gulp, then rang a bell to summon the monsignor.
Dubois left the palace the way he had come, passing
through the small patio, out the hidden gate, and onto the street.
Returning to his lodgings for a long overdue meal, he found an
agent waiting for him.
Dubois eyed him. “You’re the one who has been
shadowing Wallace’s agent, right? You sent me word that Harrington
had arrived in the city a fortnight ago and has been keeping to
himself.”
“Yes, sir. There has been a development. I
dispatched news of this to you yesterday, but then I heard you had
left Freya, so I feared you might not have received it.”
“I did not. What has happened?”
“Yesterday, Harrington, dressed as a common
laborer, pretending to be a drunkard, spent the day in the
neighborhood of the Church of Saint Michelle. He is back there
again today, sir.”
“The devil he is!” said Dubois, startled.
“He was still there when I left. Sleeping on a
bench with a wine jug in front of a statue of the blessed
saint.”
“How very strange,” Dubois murmured, frowning.
“Where is it?”
“Street of the Half Moon, sir. The church is at the
southern end, near the bridge.”
Dubois sent his agent to keep an eye on the inn
where Harrington was staying. Dubois ate his meal standing and
ordered a fresh horse to be saddled. While dining, he wondered what
to make of this news.
The Street of the Half Moon ran through a bustling
neighborhood of shops, boarding houses, and private dwellings, most
of them occupied by middle-class families. What could James
Harrington, one of Sir Henry’s top agents, be doing lounging about
Half Moon Street?
Mounting his horse, Dubois rode off to find
out.