A Precious Cornerstone Chapter Four – Cacophony in the Dark

Previous Chapter

“Watch out for that shelf, Cassie.”

“I can see it,” she assured her brother, listening to the Armory door close behind Roy as his footsteps faded towards the front of the house. “Bronze is brilliant, after all. It stands out, even to someone who can only see the outlines of things.”

“Well, don’t go fiddling with it, you’re in no condition right now. Not that this thing is any safer.”

His voice was dimmed by the influence of the iron in the corner, suggesting he’d moved closer to whatever it was Roy kept there. “What is it, do you think?”

“I don’t know.” Brandon’s tone suggested he wasn’t interested in finding out, either. “It looks like a chunk of rock someone found on the side of a mountain and gave to a statue.”

“Gave it to a statue?” She couldn’t keep the smile out of her voice. “How can you tell that, Brandon? Does it have a dedication plaque attached to it?”

“There’s a couple of stone fingers stuck to it still, that’s all,” Brandon said, disgust creeping into his tone. His voice grew slightly stronger as he moved away from the iron’s influence. “It’s not right, I tell you. Wish I knew why Harper kept it.”

“He sounded like he wants it destroyed,” Cassie said, her own mood turning dark as well as a new set of footsteps scraped across the floor overhead. They slid lightly, like a sheet of paper drifting on the breeze. She could almost see the source of them in her mind. Tall but whip thin, lithe and dangerous, like a mountain lion stalking its prey.

“That might explain all this magical paraphernalia he’s collected. I don’t know what that rock is but I can tell it’s a major working of some sort and I imagine just smashing it with an iron hammer won’t do a lot to it. He must be looking for some way to unravel it. That would explain the yew branch, it’s used as a foundation for many of our hex breaking compounds.”

Cassie let Brandon’s musings distract her from her sudden bout of nerves. “Those are only intended to counter plant toxins, though.”

“Just because he sounds like a druid doesn’t mean he’s an initiate of the Stone Circles, Cassie. He just looted one after the war. He might not have known what yew is used for, just that it’s a counteragent. Reasonable enough place to start.”

“If an iron plate hasn’t sapped the magic from it then it must be getting more from somewhere or another,” Cassie mused. “Do you know anything about Tetzlani magic?”

“I believe the modern lithomancers there work based on the Iberian traditions brought over by their settlers. They use fire as the power and stone as the vessel.” Cassie was familiar enough with Brandon’s habits to hear him shrug in mystification. “I couldn’t tell you whether something from old Tetzlan follows the same principles or not. The Mated Pair taught Arthur most of the magic Avalon relies on to this day, I suspect this Huaxili did much the same for Tetzlan.”

Cassie hissed air through her teeth, frustrated. “We should have studied more about the local magics before this, Brandon. No matter how settled the Columbians think they’ve made the place, the old ways are still sleeping all over this continent.”

“It was a gold drinker that nearly broke my knee. We’ve had plenty of those -”

There was a thump overhead and the roof rang like a bell. Then a moment later a similar tone echoed back from underfoot. “It’s coming.”

“The workbench is three steps to your right and two steps forward. Pull the stool out and get under it.”

“Brandon, I’m hardly -”

“You’re in no condition to sing, Cassie.” Brandon’s tone was gentle but firm, backed by the creaking of yew wood as he covered himself in bark. The branch on the wall groaned in sympathy with Brandon’s grafts as they transformed him. “You can barely see. Another song now could strike you blind decades early.”

Cassie scowled, well aware that he was right but annoyed that he knew about the fact. Their father must have told him about that possibility before they left Avalon for Columbia. Assuming he hadn’t figured it out on his own. Brandon could be deviously clever when he wanted to and when he was being clever it was best to listen to him. So she stepped forward and to the right then felt about until she found the bench.

As she climbed underneath it she heard the sudden, staccato clattering of something churning up from deep below. Setting dignity aside, Cassie placed her ear flat against the dirt floor. The crunching noise of an advancing elemental became much clearer, the glorious percussive song of the waking earth. “It’s a small elemental,” Cassie said, one finger tracing a slow arc through the air as she tracked the creature’s movements. “Travelling that way.”

The floor crunched underfoot as Brandon moved in the indicated direction. “Just one?” He asked, his voice taking on a reedy tone, like an oboe, as his transformation took deeper hold. “Or can you tell?”

“Just one. If there were more there would be harmonies.”

“Oh, naturally. I should have known.” His tone suggested that, in fact, he should not have known.

“It stopped.” Cassie frowned and lifted her ear from the floor, refocusing her attention overhead once again. It was difficult for her to get a clear idea what was going on. Roy Harper was what druids like Brandon would call a firemind, a person who thought in flames. To her his presence was always accompanied by the sound of a small, crackling fire. It made him very easy to locate.

The problem was, when he was in certain moods the sound ramped up to incredible levels and right now he was definitely in one of those moods. It was impossible to make out anything Roy or his guest were saying over what sounded like a bonfire blazing overhead. Cassie cupped one hand to her ear. In practical terms it didn’t really help her gift perform any better but she’d learned it as a technique to improve focus when she was a child and it still worked.

Improved focus just made it easier for her to hear how much Roy was struggling to control his temper. It was kind of fascinating. She’d seen him annoyed with a lot of people in the past but generally her focus had centered on the people annoying him, listening for ways to back them down. Now that she could only hear him she noticed things she’d never realized before.

There was a definite cadence to Roy’s flames, something she’d never noticed in other magics that drew power from fire. She’d always assumed flames burned in ways that were totally random. Either that or she just couldn’t hear any music in fire. Stone singers drew power from air and invested it in the earth so the forces of fire and water hadn’t been a large part of her education.

Regardless, she found an audible pattern in Roy’s sound that she’d never heard before. The flames snapped like a rattling drum, the tempo slowly ratcheting higher and higher, before suddenly slowing down. She found she could picture his expression. Eyes narrowed under the brim of his hat, shooting daggers at whoever was getting under his skin, until a new fact or thought came to mind and he paused to consider it.

She was so focused in on it that the second tone that rang out nearly deafened her. Cassie hissed and yanked her hand away from her ear, shaking her head in annoyance. She was already half blind, she was not about to let some other disaster take her ears as well.

Brandon’s voice cut through the buzzing sound the deafening tone left behind. “What happened?”

“He just signaled the elemental,” she croaked out, still trying to shake out her ears. “It’s on its way now.” She couldn’t actually hear the thing coming with certainty but signaling the elemental was the only reason she could think of for such a loud burst of earth magic.

“On my way.” Brandon’s footsteps headed towards the quiet corner where the strange rock sat, pausing briefly by the wall. Cassie thought she heard him taking something from a niche there but she couldn’t guess what.

The floor of the Armory was little more than compressed dirt and the earth elemental was able to come up through it with less noise than a turtle surfacing in a still pond. Cassie could hear it but because the song of the dirt turned grumpy as it was pushed aside. As soon as it rolled out of the earth a glassy voice came from Roy’s collection of magic paraphernalia, yelling, “Hey! Who are you? Who goes there!”

Cassie jerked in surprise, then chided herself. Obviously Roy would have set up some kind of alarm system to keep watch on his Armory, he wasn’t a fool.

The elemental ignored the squawking thing and rolled towards the corner where Brandon was waiting. A whistling noise cut through the air and something metallic hit the rolling ball of stone. Cassie pulled herself deeper under the workbench as the elemental flew up so violently it struck the ceiling before thudding back to the dirt with a dull impact. It dispensed with any semblance of stealth and made a beeline for Brandon. In the process it toppled over one of the weapon racks with a spectacular crash, the sound of clattering weapons mixing with pounding footfalls overhead. The cacophony overwhelmed any nuance she could draw from the sounds and Cassie found herself completely lost.

Just like that, terror gripped her. A small voice in the back of her mind told her to sing, to take the pressing noise and spin it into a melody, but it was lost in the shouting rage of the moment. Even if she could have found a song there she wasn’t sure she could have given it voice. She wasn’t ready to live in darkness like this for the rest of her life. She just couldn’t do it.

A second metallic impact cut through the noise followed by a thunderous crash. Panicked, Cassie pulled her knees up to her chest and pushed herself as deep into the corner under the table as she could. The light, stalking footsteps she’d heard before scampered down the stairs. The weight of the elemental thumped along behind them.

A clattering noise came from Brandon’s direction. Then a louder one, mixed with the sound of wood scraping across dirt and finally the sound of a massive shelf crashing into the stairs as Brandon threw it at the intruders. Debris clattered off the ceiling, walls and workbench. Cassie whimpered involuntarily as pieces of wood banged off the table overhead.

The thrown shelf apparently hadn’t hit because the unfamiliar footsteps continued until they stopped by the table. Then a hand grabbed her and dragged her out into the open.

A Precious Cornerstone – The First Exchange

Previous Chapter

“Marius Julian Herrera Menendez, at your service.” He bowed from the waist but didn’t take the hand the Columbian offered. “Do I have the pleasure of speaking with Mr. Roy Harper, the Giant Killer?”

A twitch of annoyance pulled at the other man’s lips, vanishing almost as soon as it appeared, and he pulled his hand back, instead using it to offer Marius a chair. “That’s me. Pleasure to make your acquaintance, Senor Menendez. What brings you to Oakheart Manor? From what I’ve heard you don’t exactly need the services of a professional firespinner.”

“Oh, such things depend as much on circumstance as anything else, as I’m sure you understand.” Marius’ eyes darted around the room. Oakheart Manor was built as a very defensible structure, which didn’t surprise him, and Harper had made the predictable decision to place them in the front room. It was little more than a pinewood box with a window overlooking the front path, a table and two simple, wooden chairs. The similarities between it and a coffin were not lost on Marius. He returned his attention to the man seated across the table from him. “However if you’re curious whether I need your skills or not then I will be forthright. I don’t. My business is of another nature.”

“Then you are here on business?”

“I am.” He reached into the inside pocket of his short jacket, pulled out a sack heavy with silver, and set it on the table between them with a heavy noise. In the process he also drew a thin ceramic tile from the pocket and palmed it. As the silver hit the table he tapped it down on the wood under his other hand. After a brief pause it vibrated softly then went still. “You have something I wish to buy.”

“No.” Harper’s face was blank yet Marius still got the sense that the answer was final.

“I haven’t even told you what I want to buy yet.”

“It’s not a hard thing to guess, Senor Menendez, and you’re not the first one to come to me with that offer in the last seven years.” Harper leaned back and crossed his arms over his chest. “You have the opportunity to leave peaceably, just like they did.”

There had been the possibility that other interested parties would come for the prize, in fact Menendez had taken it as a given. Having the confirmation was nice, although it did make things more difficult. He picked up the pouch of silver and tossed it meaningfully in one hand, letting the coins jingle as he snatched it out of the air. “Well, if one of them left peaceably with the item in hand I could discuss the matter with them. Although I could offer a commission if you could put us in touch?”

The only hint to Harper’s mindset was a tiny narrowing of the eyes. Frustration? Anger? Cynical analysis? Marius couldn’t begin to guess so he figured it best to wait. Let the man show his hand. After several seconds of tense silence Harper finally said, “We’re in the same line of work so I’ll do you the courtesy of telling you I haven’t sold it and I don’t intend to.”

“I see.” It felt like a probe and Marius responded in kind. “Are you even aware of what the thing is intended to do?”

This time Harper’s riposte came immediately. “I broke it out of the fingers of the last person to hold it so yes, I think I have a fairly good notion.”

Marius winced internally, able to picture what Harper had done all too well. “Of course. I’m sure you’re also well aware what kind of people generally seek out the item question.”

“I would say I’m familiar with them, yes.”

“Then you know they are not going to stop looking for it and sooner or later there will be enough of them to take what they want. One way or another, they’ll get around you.” Harper didn’t reply so Marius pushed him a little bit harder. “A lone man in the middle of the Columbian West is hardly the safest way to keep one of the most wicked artifacts of ancient Tetzlan safe. My employer is ready to return it to Mayati. The Iberian government there has built a much stronger, better guarded vault for it this time around. It will be safer… and so will you.”

The other man stared at him with cold, distant eyes. “That’s not very reassuring, Senor Menendez, especially given how little success the Iberian Government has had keeping it under control in the past. Might I remind you that I have it now because it wasn’t kept safe.”

“That’s so,” Marius admitted. “Yet I wouldn’t call you the best guardian, either. You’re not here half the time, more so if all the stories people tell about you are true. Who guards it then? The woman I met outside was with a child younger than ten. Are they safe with such a wicked thing in the house? There’s a town and a sky train station less than an hour’s walk from here and it would make quite a mess there, should it fall into the wrong hands. What about the safety of Winchester County? Does that bear no consideration?”

That thrust hit home. “Your patrons left the coalstoking thing in the hands of a literal blood cult for almost a year. How can anyone be safe when such dangerous things are left to the care of irresponsible men?”

Marius pressed his lips together in a tight line. He hadn’t really expected he’d come to an understanding with Harper. If the stories about the Summer of Snow were true he wasn’t the type to give up on a task he’d undertaken, whether he was getting paid for it or not. At the same time, Harper seemed to lack a certain self awareness that was quite worrying.

“Very well, Mr. Harper. I suppose that’s the end of the matter for now.” Marius scooped a few coins out of the bag and scattered them on the table in front of him, using the noise to cover a second rap of the tile. “Can I at least commission you to notify me if anyone else comes looking for the artifact?”

“No.” Although his voice remained flat Marius could tell that Harper was getting more and more annoyed with him.

Not that it mattered. Marius could feel the tile gently tugging in the direction of the elemental he’d sent burrowing under the house. He palmed the tile again as he scooped the coins back into the pouch then put the silver in his pocket. He kept hold of the tile. “I can’t say I’m surprised.”

“The only shock was that you bothered with the offer,” Harper said, getting to his feet and gesturing to the door. “Now, I believe we’re done here.”

Marius also stood up and took a single step back from the table. “I suppose we are. I wish we had reached a better conclusion.”

“Don’t come back, Senor Menendez. I’d hate to have to kill you.” His voice had a forced lightness to it but his eyes burned with sincerity.

“I’m sure you would.” Marius performed another bow, angling slightly so his off hand nudged his rapier hilt down slightly. The tile in his hand jerked violently but he hid his surprise. As he straightened he said, “Let’s hope such dark times don’t come over us.”

“Georg.” Harper’s servant poked his head in the door. “Show Senor Menendez out.”

A muffled yell came from somewhere under the floorboards then something heavy thudded against them. All eyes focused on the ground by instinct. Marius hissed under his breath, annoyed. The big man who’d ridden up from town with Harper hadn’t been in evidence so far and Marius had suspected the stranger was on guard in the manor’s basement. Not that he was happy to be proven right.

The elemental had gone into motion before Marius even approached the house and he’d been prepared for it to encounter trouble before he left. It still took him a moment to respond to the sudden noise. Even with that slight delay he was in motion before the other two, driving his shoulder into the gardener’s chest, knocking him down and stepping over him. He burst out of the tiny front room and into the manor’s entrance hallway.

He’d scouted the house as thoroughly as he could in the half day before he made contact but Marius still hadn’t figured out how to get into the basement. All he knew was the small earth elementals that finally answered his summons told him there was a basement. They didn’t report a cellar door so there must be a stair or trap door in the house. In Tetzlan such things were typically in kitchens or store rooms, which were kept towards the back of buildings. So that was the way he went.

Harper was only a few steps behind him, leaping over his downed servant while barking, “Catch up!”

Marius dimly heard the fallen man call, “Coming!” as he crashed through the door at the end of the hallway and into a kitchen. He took the barest details, noting the back wall of the building in front and a door to either side. A large stove sat against the outside wall and a table in the middle of the room held a knife block and other cooking utensils. It was the knives that interested him.

Snatching one up in his off hand, using his dominant hand to slam the door behind him, Marius drove the thin paring blade into the door on the side with the hinges. When Harper tried to shove the door open a second later it blocked the swing. Marius shoved a second, more substantial knife into the gap to be on the safe side then quickly crossed the kitchen to check the lefthand door.

It opened into the dining room. Through that Marius caught a glimpse of what looked like a sitting room. As he was pulling his head out of the dining room Roy burst into it from the hallway, forcing Marius to spend a few more precious seconds jamming that door with knives from the block as well. Then he dashed over to the other door and yanked it open.

There was another door directly across a short hallway. It was built into a staircase going up to the building’s second floor and when Marius opened it he was gratified to discover it led down into the basement.

He was less gratified when the boulder body of his elemental crashed into the top of the stairs. It tore the boards off the top few steps, splintered the doorframe and nearly broke his leg as it careened past. The only warning the creature was coming was the sudden, violent shaking of the tile in Marius’ hand. Fortunately that was enough for him to dance back before it struck him. Annoyed, he tapped the tile and barked a word in chthonic. Then he looked down the stairs.

A living tree looked back up at him, a bronze headed hammer in two branches.

Not quite what he’d been expecting but at this point it was better to press forward than back off. Marius jumped over the broken steps and charged down the stairs, rapier point held in front of him, his bound elemental rollinging close behind. The tree tossed the hammer aside and prepared to meet them.

A Precious Cornerstone – An Arsenal of Memories

Previous Chapter

“Good morning, Miss Fairchild,” Roy said, walking into the sitting room with Brandon right behind him. “How are your eyes today?”

“Good morning, Mr. Harper.” Cassie’s eyes fixed on a spot just to the left of his shoulder. “My eyes are improving, though slowly. Are you wearing your brown suit today?”

“He only owns brown suits,” Brandon replied with an amused chuckle. “Message came in for us via semaphore. Do you want me to read it to you or would you rather wait until you can look at it yourself?”

A strange expression crossed Cassie’s face, a mix of doubt and anxiety that struck Roy as a slowly unfolding crisis of purpose. He knew the Fairchild siblings had come seeking the Secret of Steel. Cassandra had gotten some hint to it via the clairvoyant powers of her stone singing gifts that had eventually brought them to him. He’d pointed them to the only lead he knew of and it hadn’t panned out.

Now, Roy suspected she was wondering if she should keep looking.

“Who is it from?” She asked, clearly stalling for time.

“The Palmyran librarian we spoke to when we visited,” Brandon said, glancing over the envelope. “It doesn’t say anything about the message being urgent. There’s no harm waiting a day or two for your vision to return fully, either he’s going to suggest a new place to investigate or invite us back to review the records again. Either way, I doubt you want to travel until you can see again.”

“No, I think not.” The doubt on her face bled away and she gestured in the general direction of the writing desk in the sitting room’s corner. “Put it in my letter drawer and I’ll look at it when I’m able.”

Your letter drawer?” Brandon asked in a teasing tone, although he still did as she’d asked. “Are you planning to move into the Manor long term?”

Cassie made an unimpressed sound and Roy tuned them out. He’d gotten used to their banter and he had a letter of his own to look at, one delivered in a more conventional fashion. He sat down in an armchair and slit the envelope open with his knife. By the handwriting he already knew who it was from and he was curious what it was about.

He’d just skimmed past the general greetings when Cassie’s voice broke into his thoughts again, asking, “Will you be going out on work again, Mr. Harper?”

“Probably not,” he said, skimming the rest of the letter. “This is from Lost Crow, the last of Tyson’s Nine, the one who couldn’t join us in Riker’s Cove. It looks like he’s just explaining why he wasn’t there. Sounds like he’s trying to sort out some issue with Columbians on their side of the border, wants me to check if there’s prices on their heads. He’s got names but he doesn’t say what they look like…”

“Is that important?” Brandon asked.

“I’ve told him before that the Territorial governments put out bounty posters that have drawings of faces on them,” Roy said, putting the letter on a table and pointing to a folio on his desk. “That’s my collection of the latest in Winchester County. Grab it for me. The problem is that the Sanna think names are one of the most important things about a person, it’s got to do with the way they respect language. In their view a person who uses a fake name is well on their way to transforming into a monster.”

“Ah.” Brandon handed Roy the leather folio with a wry look. “So they never suspect Columbian criminals might not give them their real names?”

“I think Lost Crow knows it can happen.” Roy pulled out his stack of posters and started thumbing through them, glancing over the names. “The problem is he doesn’t think about how to work around that. You or I might think of describing how a person looks to work around a false name, Crow tells me how the men introduced themselves and their favorite turns of phrase. Might help us identify a Sanna criminal. Not very helpful with Columbian ones.”

“You know their culture very well, don’t you?”

“For a Columbian I’m better than most.”

Cassie cleared her throat. “Did either of you hear that?”

The two men exchanged a glance, both well aware that they couldn’t hear the majority of what she could. “No,” Brandon said. “The only thing I could hear was Mr. Harper going through his papers.”

“It sounded like something in your basement falling over, Mr. Harper.”

Roy froze in the process of shoving a stack of posters back into his folio. “Falling over?”

“Yes. A clattering sound, nothing large.”

“Stone, wood or metal?”

A wave of confusion crossed her face. “Not wood. It was hard to make out with the two of you talking over it, but…”

“Was it stone?” Roy demanded, throwing the folio down on his chair as he scrambled to his feet.

“It was hard to tell but possibly?” 

Cassie and Brandon trailed along behind him as he stormed through the house to the kitchen. “Mrs. Sondervan,” Roy barked, poking his head into the kitchen. “Send Georg in, then go and keep Nat company. He’s fishing, right?”

“Yes?” Gertie looked quite shocked at his sudden intrusion. “Is something wrong?”

“I don’t know. Stay with Nat until I send Georg to get you. If you don’t see him by sundown do not come back in the house. Have the semaphore in town send the message ‘smoke and wax’ to the bean office. Do you understand?”

Gertie shook her head. “Not in the least. But I’ll keep the boy out of the house and send Mr. Booker your message if I have to.”

“Good.”

Roy continued to the south side of the house, digging a key out of the breast pocket of his vest. Behind him, Brandon asked, “Do you want either of us along on this adventure or should we stay with Mrs. Sondervan?”

“I’d like you to come along, as Miss Fairchild is the one who can sing to the stones, but it could go very badly so don’t feel that you must.”

From the eager look on Brandon’s face Roy knew he was keen. The problem was the flicker of hesitation he saw from Cassie, a moment of indecision that was out of character for her. She’d been very withdrawn for the last few days. Whatever was bothering her, crisis of purpose or otherwise, it seemed to have sapped her resolve in all areas. That wasn’t surprising. At the moment it wasn’t helpful, either. However it didn’t last very long as she quickly rallied and put on a brave face again.

“I’m fine, Mr. Harper.” Once again she pointed her face not quite in his direction, a habit that was becoming a little uncanny. “I heard the noise. I’m just as curious about what it is as you are.”

“Curious is not the word I would use,” Roy muttered, unlocking the door to the Armory.

“Which one would you use, then?”

“Concerned. I’m very concerned about the things I keep down here.” He shoved the key back into his pocket and pulled a bead of fire from his sulfurite cufflinks, sending the flame darting around the large, underground room to ignite a quartet of lanterns. He heard Brandon whistle softly as they made their way down the stairs into the Armory proper.

“Sounds like a large room,” Cassie said. “I know you’re a professional mercenary, Mr. Harper, but how many weapons do you need at one time?”

“There’s a workshop for basic maintenance down here,” Brandon replied. “But a lot of this is very niche stuff. I always suspected you liked to be prepared but this is much worse. You’re a collector.”

“Guilty as charged.” Roy grimaced as he walked past his whetstone and workbench into the twin racks of swords he’d collected over the years. On his right were the backswords, to his left the rapiers and cut and thrust models. Leaning in niches on two walls were an array of even more varied polearms. Under normal circumstances, which is to say when he was in the Armory alone, he quite enjoyed surveying his collection. However, whenever he brought someone else there he felt vaguely uncomfortable.

“Got a few empty slots down here,” Brandon mused, studying the sword racks. “What happened?”

“Combat. Swords don’t last forever and I’m told I’m particularly hard on them.” Roy pointed to the spot where his prized Alexopoulos falcata had rested until just a few months ago. “I broke that one a couple of days before I met you, believe it or not.”

“I’ve never seen you use a pike or poleaxe before.”

“Like you said, I’m a collector. Most of those I took off of other people, mainly to make sure they wouldn’t stick them in me when my back was turned.” He grabbed a Tetzlani rapier with a silver gilded hilt. The leather sheath had a brass plate depicting a snarling panther wrapped around the center. “This one is what got me started. I got it off a cult leader south of the border seven or eight years ago.”

Brandon took the rapier and drew it a few inches out of the sheath, studying its bronze blade with a critical eye. “No sulfurite crystal. This thing must be an antique.”

“You should have seen the guy it belonged to.”

“Did you plant a tree down here?” Cassie’s voice came from the far wall, where Roy kept his equally extensive collection of other magical junk he didn’t have a use for. His most recent addition was the steel mirror frame they’d acquired from von Nighburg. However that wasn’t what held her attention. She’d found the six foot long, twisting yew branch that was mounted over the shelves of smaller artifacts and her fingers traced its old, cracked bark lightly. “What is this?”

Roy swallowed once, mouth suddenly dry. “It’s a reminder that even the greatest men can fail.”

With a soft thunk Brandon pushed the rapier back into its sheath then handed it back to Roy. “There’s time for stories about these things later. What was it you were so concerned about down here? I doubt you just wanted to check on trophies from old jobs.”

“Actually, I did.” He put the sword back and headed to the corner furthest from the stairs. There was a small stone plinth there, set apart from the rest of the shelves and racks by a few feet, with an iron plate covering the top. A misshapen lump of rock sat on top.

It was the first thing he’d looked for when he lit the lanterns and he was glad to see it was still in place. Yet the simple fact it hadn’t moved didn’t mean much. He knew this. Roy gently took Cassie’s arm and led her over to the plinth. “Do you still hear the noise that bothered you?”

She waited a moment, turning her head one way and another, eyes closed. She looked quite serene like that. Finally she shook her head and said, “Nothing. It’s almost totally quiet here. I can’t even hear you crackling, there must be something deadening the sound. Do you have an iron weapon here? That can dampen stonesong.”

“Not a weapon but yeah, there’s iron here.” Roy chewed on his lip for a moment, wondering. “Well, at least we know it wasn’t Huaxili causing mischief. That does leave the question of what you were actually hearing…”

“Who-axe-eel-lee?” Brandon pronounced the word with exaggerated care. “That doesn’t sound like a Sanna word and, while I know you Columbians mangle the language, it doesn’t sound Avaloni either. That makes it Tetzlani, no? A person? Organization?”

“A god, though one mostly forgotten now.”

The door at the top of the stairs clicked open and Georg’s voice echoed down. “You sent for me, Mr. Harper?”

“Grab a weapon and keep it with you, something odd is going on and I want us all ready for it, whatever it is.”

“Right away,” Georg said, clunking down the steps, rolling down the sleeves of his shirt with dirt stained fingers. “What kind of trouble are we expecting today?”

“It’s not clear at the moment. I thought something malicious was working down here but I’m not seeing any signs of it at the moment.” Roy moved back to his sword racks and selected a weapon for himself. “We may have unexpected guests.”

“Certainly do, Mr. Harper,” Georg said, taking a simple cut and thrust sword off the rack and shoving it into his work belt. “He met us at the door as Mrs. Sondervan was explaining things to me. Said his name was Menendez. Come all the way from south of the River to see you. Given the circumstances I had him wait outside and sent the missus and my boy off to town.” 

Roy hesitated in the process of beIting his messer on. “You don’t say.”

“Someone you know?” Cassie asked.

“Only by reputation.” Roy added an iron dagger to his bell and took a few things off the knickknack shelf and tossed them in his pockets. “Marius Menendez is rumored to be the best duelist for hire in Tetzlan, that’s all.”

“Ominous,” Brandon muttered.

“Could be nothing,” Roy said, affecting a lightness he did not really feel. “I’ll go see what he wants. Would you and your sister do me a favor?”

A Precious Cornerstone – A Clattering in the Basement

To Cassandra Fairchild, going blind was simply a part of life.

Or that was what she had told herself over and over in the seven years that had passed since her father first sat her down and explained the nature of stone song. She had inherited his gift for the song and the accompanying fate of blindness. She had never really spent much time considering what that would mean for her practically speaking.

At first singing a song or two just made the edges of her vision blurry. As the years passed and her powers grew the cost became more pronounced. She would see spots or flashes of light as she sang. Then the world would turn fuzzy for a few minutes, then a few hours. Yet she could still see, even if it wasn’t with great clarity and that was some comfort to her. The fear of darkness was still a long ways away.

Certainly she had never once wished she couldn’t see.

Not once, that is, until a black hearted wizard dumped terror itself into her brain and it refused to leave. Then, it seemed, blindness might offer some respite from the fear. So she’d sung recklessly, seemingly endlessly, until the wizard fled and left the fear to pursue her into the dark. For a time she’d held it at bay, keeping herself busy. However, business in Riker’s Cove could only keep them occupied for so long and she’d been forced to make the long train flight back to Keagan’s Bluff in complete darkness.

During that time she learned what dread really was. 

It took a full week for light to come back into her vision. Five of those days were spent blindly stumbling around Oakheart Manor, trembling at every sound. The panic von Nighburg set on her had faded as sight crept back in. The dread, however. That remained.

It made itself known at all hours of the day. In the sound of animals scurrying past the walls at night, in the roar of winds on stormy days. Even in the sound of footsteps passing down the hall or even stopping in the doorway.

“Morning, dear,” a bright, clear voice said, chasing the specters away and grounding Cassie in the present. “Did you sleep well?”

“Better, thank you, Mrs. Sondervan.” Cassie turned her face towards the sound of the housekeeper’s voice, imagining the woman’s round, pleasant face beaming with her customary smile. “I can almost see you this morning. Are you wearing blue?”

She tutted under her breath, something Gertie Sondervan was in the habit of doing when she was upset but didn’t want other people to know about it. Cassie knew Roy had explained her remarkable hearing to his employees when she first came with her brother but she wasn’t sure Gertie really understood what he was saying when he said she heard better than most. However, the woman didn’t mean ill so Cassie was willing to overlook it.

“More of a green dress, dear,” Gertie said in her normal tone. “Not to worry, though, the gentlemen aren’t planning to hare off on any errands today, once they’re back from Mr. Harper’s customary visit to the post. They aren’t likely to leave you here with such poor company as myself.”

“I’ve spent my time in far worse company, and recently.” Cassie closed her eyes and took a deep breath, letting her hearing slowly submerge her in the song of the stones. Pebbles trembled and sang. The dirt churned in the slow and ancient dance of the earth. A shovel cut through the ground outside as Georg Sondervan dug weeds from the garden and the pattering footsteps of Nat Sondervan echoed up the bluff as he scampered towards the river at the base of the hill.

Beyond that, the steel clop of horseshoes echoed on the dirt path up from Keegan’s Bluff. Cassie’s eyes fluttered open and she got up from the chair at her dressing table, extending a hand towards Gertie and said, “Could you take me down to the sitting room, Mrs. Sondervan?”

“Of course, dear.” A feminine hand with a surprisingly strong grip took her elbow and gently guided her through the hall and down the stairs. “The gentlemen aren’t back yet, though. Would you like to eat breakfast while you wait?”

“They’ll be back soon,” Cassie said. “And I’m sure your breakfast is delicious, Mrs. Sondervan, but I’m afraid I’m not hungry this morning.”

Another tutting came but Gertie didn’t say anything else as she helped Cassie navigate the stairs. At the bottom Cassie paused, a strange wave of foreboding washing over her. The songs of the earth had their own tone and tempo, far different from human music, but she knew them just as well. Yet for a brief moment she thought she heard an unnatural staccato among them.

The grip on her arm adjusted slightly. “Something wrong, dear?”

“No…” Cassie listened a moment longer but the strange rhythm didn’t repeat itself. “I just thought I heard something from the basement.”

“The basement?” Gertie sounded incredulous. “Nothing making noise down there when the gentlemen are out.”

“Might have been rats?” She’d heard rats in the pantries before and they didn’t sound like that. Then again, Roy had never told them what he kept in the basement, just that he kept it locked for a reason.

“Not likely,” the housekeeper replied. “Mr. Harper’s Armory isn’t a place the living would like spending a lot of time. I used to go down once a month to tidy up but it’s so very unsettling down there.”

Cassie frowned. It made sense that a professional firespinner like Roy Harper would have a large collection of weapons and a place to store them. It was strange that his employees would find them distasteful. Especially since she’d seen both the adult Sondervans carrying blades on trips into town. There were mountain lions living in the higher bluffs, after all.

“I see. Well, let’s hope we won’t have need of the Armory today, then.” She patted Gertie’s hand and they continued on to the sitting room, a warm room on the eastern side of the house. Cassie’s shoes sank deep into a thick, comfortable rug. A few steps later Gertie rested her hand on the back of an armchair and she found her way into the seat. “Thank you, Mrs. Sondervan.”

“Of course, dear. I’ll let your brother and Mr. Harper know where you are when they get back.”

The housekeeper bustled away and Cassie leaned back into the chair, listening to the hoofbeats in the distance. The quiet rumble of the men’s voices echoed off the bluffs. Between the walls and the wind off the highlands it was impossible to make out the words but she could guess they were only five or ten minutes away. She settled in and waited, taking deep breaths and trying to ignore the dread creeping back.

Something felt wrong. It might have been the last echoes of Heinrich von Nighburg’s malice but it might not. Maybe the temporary loss of her sight had made her more sensitive to whatever was in the Armory that made Gertie so wary. It was impossible to tell. Whatever it was, there wasn’t much she could do but keep her ear to the ground and listen for that strange staccato rhythm to come again.


Marius lowered the spyglass once Harper and his companion vanished inside the house. He didn’t know who it was the firespinner was riding with, everything he’d heard told him Columbia’s best mercenary preferred working alone. That was an unfortunate wrinkle. Marius was working on a very tight timetable and he hadn’t anticipated an additional fighting man at Oakheart Manor.

And the new man was definitely used to violence. He was enormous and carried himself with an air of comfortable power that made that clear. It was hard to tell when he was in the saddle but Marius thought he’d been favoring one leg once he dismounted, so at least that was something. There was still no getting around the fact his job had become much more difficult.

Making matters worse was the fact that he could not get the earth elementals around the house to answer when he called them. Some other working kept him from establishing a connection with them. That might explain the new face among Harper’s employees. The stories agreed that Roy Harper himself was not particularly skilled in magics of the earth. 

Perhaps he had hired someone to offset that weakness. If a powerful lithomancer had done something that bound the local elementals to him it would make it much more difficult for Marius to summon them. There were countermeasures one could take, of course. The problem was that many of those countermeasures would make it obvious to the lithomancer that there was an interloper on hand. Much of Marius’ plan relied on speed and subterfuge.

Of course, he could also be reading too much into things. Elementals were finicky things where mercenaries set in their ways very much were not. Perhaps Roy Harper was just entertaining a friend from when he served in the Columbian Regulars and the stones were so deeply asleep they couldn’t be bothered with answering Marius’ summons.

Whatever had happened Marius would have to figure out how to respond to it quickly. He had given his word that he would sort matters out by the end of the month and a Menendez did not go back on his word. He collapsed his spyglass and tucked it into his jacket then scrambled away from the edge of the bluff he’d been observing from. He would cast the tiles on his lithomancy board again. Perhaps the stones would speak to him this time.

If not, there was nothing else to do but press forward.