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Too Many Magicians, Page 2

Randall Garrett


  “You must understand, Chief Henri,” said Admiral Brencourt, “that there was a possibility that some of those papers might have borne coded or secret messages. None of them did, however, and the lot will be turned over to you. Lord Ashley will describe to you where each item lay in the room.”

  Chief Henri looked at the Commander. “Would you mind submitting a written report, with a sketch map indicating where the papers and so on were?” He was more than a little piqued at the Navy’s high-handed treatment of evidence in a murder case, but he knew there was nothing he could do about it.

  “I will be happy to prepare such a report,” said Lord Ashley.

  “Thank you, your lordship. A question: Were the papers disarrayed in any way—scattered?”

  The Commander frowned slightly in thought. “Not scattered, no. That is to say, they did not appear to have been thrown around haphazardly. But they were not all in one pile. I should say that they were … er … neatly disarrayed, if you follow my meaning. As though Barbour had been going through them.”

  “Or someone else had gone through them,” said the Chief thoughtfully.

  “Yes. That’s possible, of course,” the Commander agreed. “But would the killer have had time to look through Barbour’s papers?”

  “Suppose,” the Chief said slowly, “that there was one single paper—or maybe a single set of them—that the killer was after. And suppose he knew enough to be able to recognize those papers on sight. He wouldn’t have needed more than a few seconds to find them, would he?”

  The Commander and the Admiral glanced at each other.

  “No,” said the Commander after a moment. “No, he wouldn’t.”

  “Do you have any idea what such paper or papers might pertain to?” Chief Henri asked with deceptive casualness.

  “None,” said My Lord Admiral firmly. “And I give you my word that I am concealing nothing. This office was not even aware of the very existence of Georges Barbour; we have no idea what he was doing or what sort of papers he may have been handling. This was our first knowledge of him, and we have received no further word from London. Thus far, London does not, of course, even know he is dead. One day, perhaps, some sorcerer may discover a way to get teleson lines across the Channel, but until then we must rely on dispatches sent by courier.”

  “I see.” Chief Henri rubbed his hands together rather nervously. “I trust that your lordships understand that I am bound to do my duty. A murder has been committed. It must be solved. I am bound to expend every effort to discover the identity of the killer and bring him to justice. There are certain steps which I must, by law, take.”

  “We quite realize that, Chief Henri,” said the Lord Admiral.

  The Chief finished the rest of his brandy. “At the same time, we have no desire to hamper the Navy in any way nor to disclose information publicly that may be of benefit to our country’s enemies.”

  “Naturally,” the Lord Admiral agreed.

  “But this case is a difficult one,” Chief Henri went on. “We know—thanks to the evidence of the concierge—the time at which the crime was committed to within ten minutes. We know that Barbour stayed in that room all night, left this morning at about five minutes of ten, and came back at approximately twenty after. Everyone else in the house had left much earlier, since they are all working folk. There was no one in the building except Barbour and the concierge. All very fine so far as it goes.

  “But this case is almost clueless. We do not know Barbour. We have no notion of whom he might have known, whom he might have met, or with whom he might have had dealings. We have no idea who might have owned the very common knife with which he was killed.

  “When all that is added to the international ramifications of this affair, I am forced to admit that the case is beyond me. The law is clear upon that point; I must notify the Investigation Department of His Royal Highness at Rouen.”

  Admiral Brencourt nodded. “That’s quite clear. Certainly, anyone from His Highness’ offices would be of assistance. Is there any further way in which we can help you?”

  “If it is possible, My Lord Admiral, there is. Presumably someone in London knows something about this fellow Barbour. If it would not be a violation of security, I should like to know as much about him as possible. I should like very much to have more information from London.”

  “I shall certainly see what can be done, Chief Henri,” the Lord Admiral said. “Lord Ashley is returning to England within the hour. The Office of the Lord High Admiral must be informed of this development immediately, of course. I shall send a letter requesting the information you desire.”

  In spite of himself, Chief Henri grinned. “By the Blue! Lord Darcy is never wrong!”

  “Darcy?” My Lord Admiral blinked. “I don’t … Oh, yes. I recall now. Chief Investigator for His Highness. He cleared up that situation here in Cherbourg last year—the ‘Atlantic Curse’ business—didn’t he?”

  Chief Henri coughed delicately. “I may say that he did, My Lord Admiral. I am not permitted to discuss details.”

  “Of course, of course. But why do you say that he is never wrong?”

  “Well, I have never known him to be,” Chief Henri said staunchly. “When I made my call to Rouen to inform his lordship of the murder, he told me that he would not be able to come immediately, that he was sending down his second-in-command, Sir Eliot Meredith, to take charge until he could get here. He also said that you would undoubtedly be sending a courier to London almost immediately and he wondered if I would be so good, as he put it, to ask My Lord Admiral if the courier could carry a special message for him.”

  Lord Admiral Brencourt chuckled. “An astute gentleman, Lord Darcy. I dare say we can see our way clear to that. What is the nature of the message?”

  “Lord Darcy’s chief forensic sorcerer, Master Sean O Lochlainn, is attending a convention in London at the Royal Steward Arms. He would like you to convey the message that he is to return to Normandy, to come straight here to Cherbourg, as soon as possible.”

  “Certainly,” the Lord Admiral said agreeably. “If you will write the letter, Lord Ashley will deliver it upon his arrival. The Royal Steward is not far from the Admiralty offices.”

  “Thank you,” said Chief Henri. “The mail packet will not leave Cherbourg until this evening, and the letter wouldn’t be delivered until late tomorrow afternoon. This will save a great deal of time. May I borrow pen and paper?”

  “Certainly; here you are.”

  Chief Henri dipped the Admiral’s pen in the inkstand and began to write.

  2

  Sean O Lochlainn, Master Sorcerer, Fellow of the Royal Thaumaturgical Society, and Chief Forensic Sorcerer to His Royal Highness, Richard, Duke of Normandy, was excruciatingly angry and doing his best not to show it. That his attempt to do so was highly successful was due almost entirely to his years of training as an officer of the law; had his Irish blood been allowed to follow its natural bent, it would have boiled over. But above all things, a sorcerer must have control over his own emotions.

  He was not angry at any person, least of all himself. He was furious with Fate, with Chance, with Coincidence—poor targets upon which to vent one’s wrath even if one were to allow oneself to do so. Therefore, Master Sean channeled his ire, converted it, and allowed it to show as a pleasant smile and a pleasant manner.

  But that did not keep him from thinking more about the paper he had spent six months in preparing, only to find that he had been anticipated, than in listening to what his lordship the Bishop of Winchester was saying. His eyes wandered over the crowd in the Main Exhibit Hall while the voice of the Bishop—who was a fine thaumaturgist and Healer, but a crashing bore—droned on in his right ear, keeping just enough attention on the episcopal voice to enable him to murmur “Yes, my lord,” or “Indeed, my lord,” at appropriate intervals.

  Most of the men and women in the hall were wearing the light-blue dress clothing appropriate to sorcerers and sorceresses, but there were
many spots of clerical black, and several of episcopal purple. Over in one corner, four bearded Healers in rabbinical dress were conversing earnestly with the Archbishop of York, whose wispy white hair seemed to form a cloud around his purple skullcap. Over near the door, looking rather lost, was a Naval Commander in full dress uniform, complete with gold braid and a thin, narrow-bladed dress sword with a gilded hilt. Master Sean wondered briefly why a Naval officer was here. To give a paper, or as a guest?

  His attention shifted to the botanical section of the exhibit. He thought he recognized the back of the man who was standing in front of a row of potted herbs.

  “I wonder what he’s doing here?” he muttered without thinking.

  “Um-m-m?” said the Bishop of Winchester. “Who?”

  “Oh. I beg your pardon. I thought I recognized a colleague of my master, Lord Darcy, but I couldn’t be sure, since his back is turned.”

  “Where?” asked my lord the Bishop, turning his head.

  “Over at the botanical display. Isn’t that Lord Bontriomphe, Chief Investigator for London? It looks like him from here.”

  “Yes, I believe it is. The Marquis of London, as you may know, makes a hobby of cultivating rare and exotic herbs. Very likely he sent Bontriomphe down here to look over the displays. My lord the Marquis leaves his palace but seldom, you know. Dear me! Look at the time! Why, it’s after nine! I had no idea it was so late! I must deliver an address at ten this morning, and I promised Father Quinn, my Healer, that I’d have a short session with him before that. You must excuse me, Master Sean.”

  “Of course, my lord. It has been most pleasant.” Master Sean took the outstretched hand, bowed, and kissed the ring.

  “Indeed, I found it most enlightening, Master Sean. Good day.”

  “Good day, my lord.”

  Physician, heal thyself, Master Sean thought wryly. The phrase was archaic only in that Healers no longer relied on “physick” to heal their patients. When the brilliant genius, St. Hilary Robert, worked out the laws of magic in the Fourteenth Century, the “leech” and the “physician” might have heard their death knell ringing from the bell tower of the little English monastery at Walsingham, where St. Hilary lived. Not everyone could use the laws; only those who had the Talent. But the ceremony of healing by the Laying On of Hands had, from that time on, become as reliable as it had been erratic before. However, it was still easier to see—and to remove—the speck in one’s brother’s eye than to see the beam in one’s own. Besides, my lord of Winchester was a very old man, and the two ailments still incurable by the finest Healers were old age and death.

  Master Sean looked back at the botanical display, but Lord Bontriomphe had vanished while the Bishop was taking his leave, and, look as he might, the tubby little Irish sorcerer could not locate the Chief Investigator of London anywhere in the crowd.

  The Triennial Convention of Healers and Sorcerers was an event which Master Sean always looked forward to with pleasure, but this time the pleasure had soured—badly. To find that a paper, which one had been researching for three years and writing on for six months, has been almost exactly paralleled by the work of another is not conducive to overwhelming joy. Still, there was no help for it, Sean thought, and, besides, Sir James Zwinge felt as upset about it as Sean O Lochlainn did.

  “Ah! Good morning, Master Sean! You slept well last night, I trust?” The brisk, rather dry voice came from Master Sean’s left.

  He turned quickly and gave a medium bow. “Good morning, Grand Master,” he said pleasantly. “I slept reasonably well, thank you. And you?”

  Master Sean had not slept well, and the Grand Master not only knew he hadn’t but knew why he hadn’t. But not even Master Sean O Lochlainn would argue with Sir Lyon Gandolphus Grey, K.G.L., M.S., Th.D., F.R.T.S., Grand Master of the Most Ancient and Honorable Guild of Sorcerers.

  “As well as yourself,” said Sir Lyon. “But at my age, one must not expect to sleep well. I should like to introduce you to a promising young man.”

  The Grand Master was an imposing figure, tall, thin almost to the point of emaciation, yet with an aura of strength about him, both physical and psychical. His hair was silvery gray, as was the rather long beard which he affected. His eyes were deep-set and piercing, his nose thin and aquiline, his brows bushy and overshadowing.

  But Master Sean had known the Grand Master so long that his face and figure were too familiar to be remarkable. The tubby little Irish sorcerer found his eyes drawn to the young man who stood next to Sir Lyon.

  The man was of average height, taller than Master Sean but not nearly as tall as Sir Lyon Grey. The sleeves of his blue dress suit were slashed with white, denoting a Journeyman Sorcerer, instead of the silver of a Master. It was his face which drew Master Sean’s attention. The skin was a dark reddish-brown, the nose broad and well shaped, the nearly black pupils of his eyes almost hidden beneath heavy lids. His mouth was pleasantly smiling and rather wide.

  “Master Sean,” said Sir Lyon, “may I present Journeyman Lord John Quetzal, fourth son of His Gracious Highness, the Duke of Mechicoe.”

  “A pleasure to meet your lordship,” Master Sean said with a slight bow.

  Lord John Quetzal’s bow was much deeper, as befitted Journeyman to Master. “I have looked forward to this meeting, Master,” he said in almost flawless Anglo-French. Master Sean could detect only the slightest trace of the accent of Mechicoe, one of the southernmost duchies of New England, not far north of the isthmus which connected the continent of New France. But then, one would expect a regional accent from a scion of the Moqtessuma family.

  “Lord John Quetzal,” said Sir Lyon, “has determined to take up the study of forensic sorcery, and I feel he will do admirably in that field. And now, if you will excuse me, I must see the Program Committee and check up on the agenda.”

  And Master Sean found himself left with Journeyman Lord John Quetzal. He gave the young man his best Irish smile. “Well, your lordship, I see that you’re not only quite intelligent but that you have a powerful Talent.”

  The young Mechicain’s face took on an expression of startled awe.

  “You can tell that just by looking?” he asked in a hushed voice.

  Master Sean’s smile broadened. “No, I deduced it.” Lord Darcy should hear me now, he thought.

  “Deduced it? How?”

  “Why, bless you,” Master Sean said with a chuckle, “the introduction you got from Grand Master Sir Lyon was enough to tell me that. ‘A promising young man,’ he calls you. ‘I feel he will do admirably,’ he says. Why, Sir Lyon Grey wouldn’t introduce the King himself that way, the King having no Talent to speak of. If you have impressed the Grand Master, you come highly recommended indeed. Further, I can deduce that you’re not the kind of lad who’d let praise go to his head—else the Grand Master wouldn’t have said such a thing in your hearing.”

  Master Sean could sense that there was an embarrassed blush rising up beneath the young man’s smooth mahogany skin, and quickly changed the subject. “What’s been your specialty so far?”

  Lord John Quetzal swallowed. “Why … uh … black magic.”

  Master Sean stared, shocked. He could not have been more shocked if a Healer or chirurgeon had announced that he specialized in poisoning people.

  The young Mechicain aristocrat looked even more flustered for a second or two, but he regained control quickly. “I don’t mean I practice it! Good Heavens!” He looked around as if he were afraid someone might have overheard. Satisfied that no one had, he returned his attention to Master Sean. “I don’t mean I practice it,” he repeated in a lower voice. “I’ve been studying it with a view to its prevention, you see. I know you haven’t much of it here in Europe, but … well, Mechicoe isn’t the same. Even after four hundred years, there are still believers in the Old Religion—especially the worship of Huitsilopochtelie, the old War God. Not in the cities, or even in most of the rural farming areas, but in the remote places of the mountains and the jungles.�


  “Ah, I see. What sort of a god was this Eightwhatsisname?” asked Master Sean.

  “Huitsilopochtelie. The sort of god that’s quite common among barbaric peoples, especially militaristic ones. Rigid discipline, extreme asceticism, voluntary privation, and sacrifice were expected of his followers. A typical Satanic exaggeration of the virtues of chastity, poverty, and obedience. Sacrifice meant cutting the hearts out of living human beings. Huitsilopochtelie was a nasty, bloody devil.”

  “Human sacrifice—or, at least, the advocation of it—is not unknown here,” Master Sean pointed out.

  Lord John Quetzal nodded. “I know to what you refer. The so-called Ancient Society of Holy Albion. Their ringleaders were cleaned up in May of 1965, as I recall—or early June.”

  “Aye,” said Master Sean, “and that hasn’t got rid of all of ‘em by any means. Black magic isn’t as uncommon as you might think, either. The story wasn’t released to the public, but as a Journeyman o’ the Guild, you may have read about the case of Laird Duncan of Duncan, back in ‘63.”

  “Oh, yes. I read your write-up of it in the Journal. That was in connection with the mysterious death of the late Count D’Evreux. I should have liked to have been there when Lord Darcy solved that one!” There was a light in his obsidian eyes.

  “What has your interest in forensic sorcery got to do with black magic?” asked the Irish sorcerer.

  “Well, as I said, there is a lot of Huitsilopochtelie worship in the remoter parts of the Duchy—in fact, it gets worse farther south; my noble cousin, the Duke of Eucatanne, is constantly troubled by it. If it were just peasant superstition, it wouldn’t be so bad, but some of those people have genuine Talent, and some of the better educated among them have found ways of applying the Laws of Magic to the rites and ceremonies of Huitsilopochtelie. And always for evil purposes. It’s black magic of the worst kind, and I intend to do what I can to stamp it out. They don’t confine their activities to the remote places where their temples are hidden; their agents come into the villages and terrorize the peasants and into the cities to try to disrupt the Government itself. That sort of thing must be stopped, and I will see that it is stopped!”