Baruk closed his eyes. Behind him the broad window shutters rattled in a gust of wind, then settled again. A moment later there came a sharp rap against the smoky glass. Baruk sat upright, his eyes startled open. A second rap, louder than the first, brought him round with a swift alacrity surprising for one of his girth. On his feet, he faced the window. Something crouched on the ledge, visible through the shutters only as a bulky black shape.
.
.
Baruk frowned. Impossible. Nothing could penetrate his magic barriers undetected. The alchemist gestured with one hand, and the shutters sprang open.
.
.
Behind the glass waited a Great Raven. Its head snapped to view Baruk with one eye, then the other. It pushed boldly against the thin glass with its massive, ridged chest. The pane bulged, then shattered.
.
.
His Warren fully open, Baruk raised both hands, a savage spell on his lips.
.
.
"Don't waste your breath!" the Raven rasped, swelling its chest and ruffling its mangy feathers to rid itself of glass shards. It cocked its head. "You've called your guards," it observed. "No need, Wizard." A single hop brought the enormous bird onto the floor. "I bring words you will value. Have you anything to eat?"
.
.
Bark studied the creature. "I'm not in the habit of inviting Great Ravens into my home," he said. "You are no disguised demon, either."
.
.
"Of course not. I'm named Crone." Her head bobbed mockingly. "At your pleasure, Lord."
.
.
Baruk hesitated, considering. After a moment he sighed and said, "Very well. I've returned my guards to their posts. My servant Roald comes with the leavings of supper, if that's agreeable to you."
.
.
"Excellent!" Crone waddled across the floor to settle on the rug before the fireplace. "There, Lord. Now, a calming crystal of wine, don't you think?"
.
.
"Who has sent you, Crone?" Baruk asked, walking over to the decanter on his desk. Normally he did not drink after sunset, for night was when he worked, but he had to acknowledge Crone's perceptiveness. A calming balm was exactly what he needed.
.
.
The Great Raven hesitated slightly before answering, "The Lord of Moon's Spawn."
.
.
Baruk paused in the filling of his glass. I see," he said " quietly, struggling to control his surging heart. He set the decanter down slowly and, with great concentration, raised the goblet to his lips. The liquid was cool on his tongue, and its passage down his throat indeed calmed him. "Well, then," he said, turning, "what would your lord have of a peaceful alchemist?"
.
.
Crone's chipped beak opened in what Baruk realized was silent laughter. The bird fixed a single glittering l eye on him. "Your answer rode the very breath of your words, Lord. Peace. My lord wishes to speak with you. He wishes to come here, this very night. Within the hour."
.
.
"And you're to await my answer."
.
.
"Only if you decide quickly, Lord. I have things to do, after all. I'm more than a simple message-bearer. Those who know wisdom when they hear it hold me dear. I am Crone, eldest of the Moon's Great Ravens, whose eyes have looked upon a hundred thousand years of human folly. Hence my tattered coat and broken beak as evidence of your indis- criminate destruction. I am but a winged witness to your eternal madness."
.
.
In quiet mockery Baruk said, "More than just a witness. It's well known how you and your kind feasted on the plain outside Pale's walls."
.
.
"Yet we were not the first to feast on flesh and blood, Lord, lest you forget."
.
.
Baruk turned away. "Far be it for me to defend my species, he muttered, more to himself than to Crone, whose words had stung him. His eyes fell on the shards of glass littering the floor. He voiced a mending spell and watched as they reassembled. "I will speak with your lord, Crone." He nodded as the glass pane rose from the floor and returned to the window-frame. "Tell me, will he as easily disdain my wards as you did?"
.
.
"My lord is possessed of honor and courtesy,," Crone replied ambiguously. "I shall call him, then?"
.
.
"Do so," Baruk said, sipping his wine.
.
.
"An avenue will be provided for his passage.
.
.
" There came a knock at the door."
.
.
"Yes?"
.
.
Roald stepped inside. "Someone is at the gate wishing to speak with you, the white-haired servant said, setting down a plate heaped with roast pork.
.
.
Baruk glanced at Crone and raised an eyebrow.
.
.
The bird ruffled her feathers. "Your guest is mundane, a restless personage whose thoughts are thick with greed and treachery. A demon crouches on his shoulder, named Ambition."
.
.
"His name, Roald?" Baruk asked.
.
.
The servant hesitated, his soft eyes flicked uneasily at the bird now ambling toward the food.
.
.
Baruk laughed. "My wise guest's counsel indicates she well knows the man's name. Speak on, Roald."
.
.
"Councilman Turban Orr."
.
.
"I would remain for this," Crone said. "If you would seek my counsel."
.
.
"Please do, and, yes, I would," the alchemist replied.
.
.
"I am no more than a pet dog," the Great Raven crooned slyly, anticipating his next question."To the councilman's eyes, that is. My words a beast's whimper to his ears." She speared a piece of meat and swallowed it quickly.
.
.
Bark found himself beginning to like this mangy old witch of a bird. "Bring the councilman to us, Roald."
.
.
The servant departed.
.
.
Archaic torches lit an estate's high-walled garden with a flickering light that threw wavering shadows across the pavestones. As a nightwind swept in from the lake, rustling leaves, the shadows danced like imps. On the second floor of the building was a balcony overlooking the garden. Behind the curtained window, two figures moved.
.
.
Rallick Nom lay prone on the garden wall in a niche of darkness beneath the estate's gabled cornice. He studied the feminine silhouette with the patience of a snake. It was the fifth night in a row that he had occupied his hidden vantage-point. The Lady Simtal's lovers numbered as many, but he had identified two in particular worthy of attention. Both were city councilmen.
.
.
The glass door opened and a figure walked out on to the balcony. Rallick smiled as he recognized Councilman Lim. The assassin shifted position slightly, slipping one gloved hand under the stock of his crossbow, reaching up with the other to swing back the oiled crank. His eyes on the man leaning against the balcony railing across from him, Rallick carefully inserted a quarrel. A glance down at the bolt's iron head reassured him. The poison glittered wetly along the razorsharp edges. Returning his attention to the balcony he saw that Lady Simtal had joined Lim.
.
.
No wonder there's no shortage of lovers for that one, Rallick thought, his eyes narrowing in study. Her black hair, now unpinned, flowed down sleek and shiny to the small of her back. She wore a gauze-thin nightdress,
and with the lamps of the room behind her, her body's round curves were clearly visible.
.
.
As they spoke their voices carried to where Rallick lay hidden.
.
.
"Why the alchemist?" Lady Simtal was asking, evidently resuming a conversation begun inside. "A fat old man smelling of sulfur and brimstone. Hardly suggestive of political power. Not even a council member, is he?"
.
.
Lim laughed softly. "Your naïveté is a charm, Lady, a charm."
.
.
Simtal pulled back from the railing and crossed her arms. "Educate me, then." Her words came sharp, tightly bridled.
.
.
Lim shrugged. "We have naught but suspicions, Lady. But it is the wise wolf that fol. lows every spoor, no matter how slight. The alchemist would have people think as you do. A doddering old fool." Lim paused, as if in thought, perhaps weighing how much he should reveal. "We have sources," he contined cautiously, "among the magery. They inform us of one certain fact heavy with implications. A good many of the wizards in the city fear the alchemist, and they name him by a title-that alone suggests a secret cabal of some sort. A gathering of sorcerers, Lady, is a fell thing."
.
.
Lady Simtal had returned to the council-man's side. Both now leaned on the railing studying the dark garden below. The woman was silent for a time, then she said, "He has Council ties?"
•
•
•