The mayor of Riker’s Cove was a compact, beady eyed man in his late fifties. By name, Eustace Hughes. Some disaster, likely of a nautical variety, had taken his left arm but there was still a fierce vitality and charisma to him that made it clear how he’d come to lead the village after Jonathan Riker’s death. Like many villages of its size, the Cove didn’t have a dedicated office for the Mayor. So after they surrendered the body of Hank Birch to the Hearth Keepers the Mayor, who had arrived on the scene some time during Avery and Roy’s stint in the mindscape, asked them all to accompany him back to his dock.
According to the stories Avery heard when he arrived in town, Hughes was once a pirate of some sort. Whether that was true or not, he’d given up the sea when he lost his arm. He’d come to the Cove in an effort to start a serious shipbuilding enterprise there but the difficulty of getting good lumber and woodworkers when most of the timber on the western coast of the continent was in Sanna hands had thwarted him so far. He still employed a handful of shipwrights and managed a small drydock at the south end of town.
Like Riker before him, Hughes discharged most of his mayoral duties from his place of business. In his time living there, Avery had never heard anyone complain about this. Indeed, such things were common out West and of the people who made the five minute trek down to the Hughes dry dock the only ones who seemed surprised by it were the Fairchilds. Perhaps in Avalon they were used to more formal political arrangements. What did surprise Avery was the people who were waiting for them at the docks already.
There was a small, sheltered area atop the dock itself, little more than a pavilion with three walls and open toward the dock’s work area, where Hughes and his workers kept their tools and blueprints at a collection of work benches. However none of the mayor’s employees were there at the moment. Instead, Aaron Strathmore greeted them as soon as they arrived at the pavilion while further inside the hulking figure of Samson Riker stared down at papers scattered on a bench with a brooding expression.
Jonathan Riker’s only surviving son was a big man, about ten years older than Avery was and a similar amount younger than the mayor. His size wasn’t rooted in hard earned muscle nor did it hang from him in rolls of fat. His frame was simply tall and wide, covered with a typical amount of flesh of all kinds, although perhaps a trifle plump around the middle. A dull, red beard streaked with gray tickled the middle of his chest. When he glanced over, noting their arrival, sharp black eyes glinted under his thick, bushy eyebrows. In contrast with his otherwise hirsute face, not a single strand of hair grew from the top of his head although the sides and back of his skull were wreathed in a fringe that fell to his shoulders. Samson set down his papers and walked over to shake the mayor’s hand. “Mayor Hughes.” His polite manner turned hostile as he pivoted to glare at Avery. “Sheriff.”
“Thank you for coming, Mr. Riker, Mr. Strathmore,” Hughes said, ushering the group of them back into the shelter with gentle shooing motions. “Unfortunately Mr. Tanner will not be joining us this morning.”
“Is it true his sister’s boy turned up in a crystal coffin down by the docks?” Aaron asked.
“Not a coffin,” Avery said, “but close enough.”
Samson tugged at the end of his beard, which everyone in town knew meant he was loosing out when haggling. Or, in these circumstances, he was nervous about something else. Since his daughter Jennifer was now the only one of von Nighburg’s hostages still missing it wasn’t hard to guess what. “How bad?”
“Not good, Mr. Riker,” Harper said, pushing up past the group to look over the papers Samson had been studying before they arrived. “I’ve seen a lot of strange and frightful things since I came out West. Whatever von Nighburg did to that boy falls into a very special category of wickedness.”
Samson’s eyes tracked the firespinner around the room although he moved the bulk of his body as little as possible as he tracked Harper’s progress. “Do you know what it was?”
Harper picked up a piece of paper – Avery stepped close enough to see it was a blueprint of the lighthouse – and studied it as he answered. “I’ve never seen anything like it although I’ve heard of a couple of curses that could do something similar. Johan? Was that some kind of Teutonic curse? Or related to that moon magic you mentioned?”
“All Teutonic magic is based on repeating patterns.” Van der Klein clasped his hands behind his back, his eyes looking upward as if reading facts of the back of his eyelids. “Crystals, especially cut crystals, are one such pattern. The cycle of the moon is another, both widely referenced in the existing traditions and literature. However I can categorically say that warping the child into… that… was not done via any Teutonic methodology.”
“Categorically? How so?”
“There was no pattern to his laughter.” Van der Klein snapped back to the present. “And before you ask, yes I did take a moment to listen and count out the beats of the noise he was making. It was entirely chaotic.”
“Laughter?” Aaron looked confused. “Who was laughing?”
“What. The appropriate question is, ‘what was laughing?’” Harper set the blueprint back down. “Miss Fairchild, could there have been a musical pattern to the noise he was making?”
“No.” The stone singer shook her head. “I know it sounded like wild laughter but it was actually very repetitive, Mr. Harper. The rise and fall of the tone in his laugh was the exact same every time.”
The mayor swung his hand up, chopping it between Harper and Cassandra and catching both their attention. “I’m sorry. This is a matter of the peace in my town and the safety of its citizens. I don’t know who you two are but would you mind waiting just a few moments while I sort out the rest of this matter with the sheriff and my constituents?”
Out of the corner of his eye Avery saw Brandon bristle at the slight. He held himself back when his sister put a hand on his arm but Avery could tell he wasn’t sure why the mayor was brushing them off. The Stone Circle was probably used to much more cooperation in Avalon. He was about to try smoothing things over when Samson turned to Hughes and said, “Mr. Mayor, I asked Mr. Harper here to help. I wanna hear his opinion and if he has to talk to his friends to sort it out I reckon we should let him do it.”
The mayor shot the big man a deadly look through narrowed eyes. “You did, did you? I suppose you’re going to explain to Chester why you were willing to let his sister’s boy die like that? Dust and ashes, man, you didn’t even have to look at the corpse.”
A lesser man might have lost his temper at Hughes’ accusatory tone. Samson didn’t even twitch. “You and the sheriff have ignored every thing I’ve suggested for the past two weeks, Hughes. My daughter is no closer to coming home than she was when she vanished and I’m not willing to wait any longer. The most famous monster hunter in the west owed my pappy a favor so I called it in. Frankly, this whole stormwracked town wouldn’t exist if it weren’t for the old man so I’d reckon you owe him a little bit, too. If you won’t help me the least you can do is get out of my way.”
Hughes squared up against Samson, a challenge that Riker’s son completely ignored. “Listen, I understand your concerns. The sheriff and I have been contacting everyone we know who’s skills-”
“Giant!” Samson pointed a finger at Harper, his voice razor sharp. “Killer!”
“I’ve heard the stories, Samson! But Hank Birch is dead because Nighburg got wind of your stunt and we might have been able to save him if we’d coordinated this better!”
“No, you wouldn’t.” Harper had focused on the blueprints for the last few minutes, ignoring the bickering around him. Only now did he bother to look at Hughes. “I’m sorry, Mayor Hughes, but in my professional opinion there was no way to save all three children. Frankly, I’m amazed you got any of them back.”
Hughes spun on him so fast the empty sleeve of his jacked whipped out and slapped Aaron, standing next to him. “Listen here, Harper. You’re a hireling here, not a citizen or even an Army man. I got no problem with firespinners but you better remember your place and stick to it. You’re not responsible for the lives of the people in this town.”
“Mighty rich coming from a privateer who nearly started a war with Iberia,” Harper said, a trace of amusement running under the words.
“My coalstoking point, Harper.” If the Mayor was put off by the firespinner’s reputation he didn’t show it, stepping right up into his face and jabbing a finger in the man’s chest. “I’ve been on your side of things and I know the blind spots from that point of view. I’m not saying you’re responsible for what happened out there. Nighburg is. But so help me, if you won’t respect the rule of law in this town I will have the sheriff put both you and Samson in jail until the circuit rider comes to drag you to Hancock!”
“Slow down, mayor,” Avery said, sensing it was time for him to say something. “He hasn’t broken any laws yet.”
“Who’s side are you on here?” Hughes said, glaring at him over one shoulder. “You’re supposed to work for me.”
Technically the sheriff of Riker’s Cove was elected, just like the mayor, so they both answered to the townspeople. The problem there was that Avery wasn’t elected. He was the only deputy to survive the first clash with von Nighburg so he’d succeeded to the office. According to the town charter he’d serve until the next election or until the town mayor and treasurer called for a vote to remove him. Which, in Avery’s opinion, wouldn’t be a great tragedy. Sheriff of a port town in the West turned out to be a difficult and unrewarding job even when there wasn’t a murderous magus threatening it.
However, now that he’d started a fight against von Nighburg Avery was reluctant to give up part way through and Hughes definitely had the political sway and vengeful attitude to strip him of office if he wanted to. Also, there was the fact that Low Noon was that night. If von Nighburg’s ambitions came to fruition then, as Harper and his allies suspected, they didn’t have time for any political shenanigans. “I work for everyone in the town, yourself included.” Avery gestured to Harper. “I originally didn’t think Mr. Harper had much to offer us in solving this problem but, to my surprise, he’s not only brought someone who can break whatever control von Nighburg has over the children; he even found someone who understands the magic he used to hide in the lighthouse. I don’t think we can afford to pass on their expertise if they’re willing to share it.”
Hughes chewed on his lower lip for a long moment. Then he looked back to Harper. “Word is you never work for free but I should make it perfectly clear that the town isn’t paying you. Whatever commission you get from Samson is all that’s in it for you. There’s a price on Nighburg’s head you can split however you like but I don’t want you coming to me with your hand out when this is all over, understand?”
A wistful smile touched Roy’s lips for just a moment then he said, “Don’t worry, Mayor Hughes. Jonathan Riker settled your bill long before we came here. The only ones in a position to ask anything more of you are the Fairchilds and something tells me they wont.”
“That’s so,” Brandon put in.
“Very well.” From the way Hughes scowled when he said it Avery guessed the mayor had brought up payment in an attempt to provoke Harper into giving up the job. Clearly he hadn’t been expecting the firespinner’s response. “Sheriff Warwick will work with you on this and any townspeople you want to go with you will have to prove they can meet his standards to be deputized. If you can wait three more days-”
“We can’t,” Avery said. “I’m sorry, mayor, I know you were trying to call in favors from the Navy just like I was looking for some of the old druids to help me out but there just isn’t time. There’s a good chance von Nighburg’s magic will become much more powerful during Low Noon tonight and he’ll be able to do… whatever it is that brought him here in the first place.”
“Dust and ashes.” Hughes ran his hand through his thinning hair. “Tonight?”
“Almost certainly,” van der Klein put in. “Eclipses of both types are of benefit to Teutonic magic and there’s good reason to believe a lunar eclipse will give his chosen field of magic unique opportunities. The sooner we get into the lighthouse the better.”
“Then I’ll leave you to make your plans. Sheriff, let me know if there’s anything in particular I can do that will be helpful or if there are precautions that will keep people out of danger.” He pointed at Aaron Strathmore. “Mr. Harper, I know the sheriff and your friends already talked to him once but Aaron wanted you to know he’s willing to tell you anything else he knows that might help you save the other children held hostage. I closed the docks today so you’d have a place hidden from view to make any preparations you need. No chance Nighburg will see you here.”
Samson turned to Avery. “Sheriff, I’d like to-”
“Samson.” Hughes took a firm grip on his arm. “Before that, I’d like to talk to you alone.”
The big man glanced between Hughes and Harper, then nodded and followed the Mayor wordlessly. Harper turned back to the blueprints on the table. “Okay, I suppose we’re offically hired now so gather around, everyone, we have a fortress to breach. Van der Klein, tell us how we magic our way into this place.”
Samson stopped for a moment to contemplate his father’s statue. The monument to his father continued to look out over his town, ignoring his son, in a perfect encapsulation of Jonathan’s own behavior. The statue, at least, had an excuse. The younger Riker dismissed the edifice after a moment, turning to the mayor and saying, “Alright, what’s this all about? I hope you’re not going to try and talk me out of rescuing my daughter again.”
“You have three other children to think about,” Hughes said. “You could think of them. I know you Rikers are incredibly big picture people, set on preserving the great and the good without any care for the cost-”
“Stop that,” Samson snarled. “Don’t pretend you know me or my father, Hughes, you and your crew may have won over the town but I don’t trust you. Pa told me about you.”
“Your father hated me for good reasons, Samson. We were professionally and personally incompatible, no doubt, but you hold the grudge just cause your papa did. I ain’t waylaid your ships or taken your cargo, have I?” Hughes shoved his hand in his pocket. “I’m not the heavy hand of Hancock on the high seas anymore. I’m the mayor of this town. I watched your mother slowly pass on from grief after Jonathan died and I don’t want to do it again, see?”
“Don’t bring Ma into this, either.”
Hughes glanced from the man to the statue, his bafflement clear on his face. It was like he couldn’t tell which was the statue and which was the man, which one was completely unyielding and which one was just stubborn. “Then if you really have to go up that coalstoking tower, take Tanner with you.”
Samson’s face turned cloudy. “Your lackey? Why.”
“He went home because I sent him but he wants a piece of old Nighburg, same as you. His sister sent the boy here to learn a trade because she trusted her brother. Hank was a gem, Samson. He didn’t deserve that.”
The big man thumped one heavy hand down on the mayor’s shoulder. “What’s in this for you?”
A weary look crossed Hughes’ face. “If it’s not clear yet, I don’t trust these outsiders. Ironic, I know, since I settled less than a decade ago over your papa’s objections, but there it is. I was the same kind of man as them. Someone needs to keep an eye on them and you two are the ones they’re most likely to bring with you.”
Samson thought it over for a moment. Then he looked up at the statue, nodded to himself and looked back at the mayor. “Fine. If the sheriff is okay with it. Did you talk to him?”
“No. Let Tanner work on him. Don’t mention this conversation to any of them, okay? I brought you out here because I don’t want them hearing we doubt them, not even the sheriff.”
“If you say so.” With that Samson turned his back on the statue and walked back towards town.”
