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Found

Sarah Prineas




  The Magic Thief Found

  Book Three

  By Sarah Prineas

  Illustrations by

  Antonio Javier Caparo

  TO JOHN,

  PRETTY MUCH

  THE BEST HUSBAND

  IN THE WORLD

  Contents

  Maps

  Chapter 1

  A wizard is a lot like a thief. If a…

  Chapter 2

  I skiffed off Shirttail Street and headed into the maze…

  Chapter 3

  The minions didn’t bother checking me for lockpick wires; they…

  Chapter 4

  On the way back to my attic room in the…

  Chapter 5

  Late in the afternoon, as the clouds crowded in over…

  Chapter 6

  Benet came to Sparks’s house to fetch the materials for…

  Chapter 7

  By we can clean everything Nevery meant that I could…

  Chapter 8

  Nevery went down; I went up.

  Chapter 9

  Benet tied the boat to the last falling-down dock in…

  Chapter 10

  In the morning I woke up under a bush with…

  Chapter 11

  Better to hide than meet somebody I didn’t want to…

  Chapter 12

  I stood in the middle of the spell-line and felt…

  Chapter 13

  The next day, Rowan said I’d have to ride a…

  Chapter 14

  Rowan had a map. She kept it folded inside a…

  Chapter 15

  When Argent had tied me to the tree, he’d left…

  Chapter 16

  It roared down over the forest, snapping off the tops…

  Chapter 17

  Morning came. First the sky turned metal-gray, then lighter at…

  Chapter 18

  I picked up my knapsack and stepped into the dark…

  Chapter 19

  In the morning I woke up with the knot of…

  Chapter 20

  “Lothfalas,” I said for the thousandth time, my voice hoarse.

  Chapter 21

  The dragon was so huge, it took up the whole…

  Chapter 22

  The flame dragon shot through the fading day. Heading toward…

  Chapter 23

  Captain Kerrn took me to the usual cell. Chair, table,…

  Chapter 24

  The guards took me to their commons room. One of…

  Chapter 25

  The darkness of Arhionvar’s arrival in the city lasted all…

  Chapter 26

  The minions brought me to the old guardhouse on Clink…

  Chapter 27

  When I’d finished telling Embre what Nevery and I had…

  Chapter 28

  My cousin, Embre, had called me the Twilight’s wizard. And…

  Chapter 29

  After some shrieking and shouting from Nimble and the councilors,…

  Chapter 30

  After a couple of hours, Nevery left to meet with…

  Chapter 31

  Kerrn and Benet and I headed down the hill from…

  Chapter 32

  The magic held me like a dragon holding me in…

  Chapter 33

  I woke up huddled in a doorway in a Twilight…

  A Guide to People and Places

  Wellmet Runic Alphabet

  Benet's Magic Thief Lockpick Scarf

  A Treatise on Dragons

  Thanks to…

  About the Author

  Credits

  Copyright

  About the Publisher

  Maps

  CHAPTER 1

  A wizard is a lot like a thief. If a wizard has quick hands, he can make things disappear. He can even make himself disappear.

  I lurked in my alley shadows, waiting for the wizard. Winter was just beginning, and the air had a sharp edge of cold. The night was thick with river fog and factory soot, and it was quiet, nobody about. A good night for minions and misery eels.

  I shivered and hunched into my coat. What was taking him so long?

  Then I heard it.

  Step step tap.

  Step step tap.

  Nevery, wizard and city magister, was coming up the steep street toward me. He paused, peering into the shadows with his keen-gleam eyes. Fog smoked around him.

  He couldn’t see me. For melting into shadows I wore dark brown trousers and the black sweater Benet had knitted for me. My black, shaggy hair hung down in my eyes. Over it all I had on my black coat with the shabby velvet collar, the one Nevery’d given me when I’d been in the Dawn Palace jail cells, a place I’d spent too much time in lately. He’d hidden lockpick wires in the collar, and I’d used them to escape. That’d been almost ten days ago.

  On Nevery went, step step and then tap with his cane past my dark alley.

  As he passed, I darted feather-foot out of the shadows and—quick hands—lifted the purse string out of the pocket of his cloak, then stepped back into the alley. His locus magicalicus was in his pocket, too, but I knew better, now, than to nick it.

  He went on, and I padded after him, sticking to the edge of the street where I could duck into a doorway to hide if he looked back. He went ’round a corner onto Half-Chick Lane and stopped. The tumbledown houses on each side of the street were dark shadows leaning against each other, with slices of dark narrow alley between them.

  “Well, boy?” he said, his voice loud in the quiet street. “Aren’t you going to pick my pocket?”

  I stepped out of the shadows. “Nevery, I already did.”

  He whirled around and leaned on his cane, scowling at me.

  “You were distracted,” I said. “You have to pay attention.”

  “Curse it, Connwaer,” Nevery said. “Now, give the money back.”

  “If you want it back, you’ll have to pick it from my coat pocket.” Carefully, so he couldn’t see, I slid his purse string up inside the sleeve of my sweater. Distraction, that was the key.

  “Learning to pick locks was easier,” Nevery grumbled. He’d been better at it, too. He was a wizard, but he was good at thinking like a thief. I’d taught him lockpicking back when we’d lived together at Heartsease, his mansion house. He handed me my knapsack, which he’d been carrying. It was full of food, biscuits from Benet, packets of bacon and cheese, apples, and wax candles.

  I nodded toward the street where it led down the hill. “I’ll walk with you back to the bridge, all right? And you can try me on the way.”

  “And you’ll be distracted, will you, boy?”

  I grinned. “I’ll pretend I am, Nevery.”

  I slung the knapsack onto my back and we headed down Half-Chick Lane and turned onto Strangle Street. I kept my eyes on the shadows just in case anyone was following us.

  “Hrm,” Nevery said after a short while. “Have you, ah, read that treatise about Arhionvar?”

  Arhionvar, the dread magic. I didn’t need to read about Arhionvar—I had enough experience with it. At the same moment, I felt his hand grope in my coat pocket. Good try. I stepped sideways and glanced at him, shaking my head.

  “Curse it,” he muttered.

  We turned another corner, onto Shirttail Street, which led straight down toward the bridge. From here, as we walked, we had a view across the rushing black river to the Sunrise, the nice part of the city, where the rich people lived and the streets were lit up with werelights, and the Dawn Palace glowed pink against the night sky.

  “I gave you the Arhionvar treatise back when we were having those troubles with Underlord Crowe, boy. I suppose you didn’t bother to read it,” Nevery said.

  I didn’t answer him. He knew I hadn’t.

  A chilly wind blew off the river, brin
ging with it the smell of mud and dead fish. Nevery paced alongside me, his cane going tap tap against the cobblestones.

  “Watch out for that pothole,” he said, bumping my arm and then dipping into my empty pocket.

  “You’re not very good at this,” I said, pulling away. “What you need is an incentive.”

  “Indeed?” Nevery said.

  “Yes,” I said. “If you’re a gutterboy and you don’t pick a pocket, you don’t get dinner, but if you try it and get caught, you end up in a guard cell or somebody beats the fluff out of you. So you have to get very good at it.”

  “I see,” Nevery said. He cast me a sharp look. “And you are very good, are you, boy?”

  “I have quick hands, Nevery,” I said. But I had gone hungry often enough, and I’d gotten caught more than once, even apart from the time Nevery had caught me stealing his locus magicalicus. After I’d picked his pocket, everything had changed. I wasn’t a gutterboy anymore; I was a wizard.

  We came down to the bridge across the river; the houses built on it were closed up night-tight. Nevery paused. From behind us I heard the skff skff of footsteps sliding along an alleyway, then silence. Drats. We were being followed.

  Nevery leaned on his cane. “Don’t forget, boy. We’ll meet at the chophouse in four days.”

  I wasn’t likely to forget that. Arhionvar, the dread magic, was coming, and the city was in terrible danger. Arhionvar had been behind the device that the traitor-wizard Pettivox and the former Underlord, Crowe, had built to confine Wellmet’s magic, and Arhionvar had preyed on the desert city of Desh until that city’s magic had nearly been destroyed. Now it was coming to Wellmet. We had to be ready when it got here, or our city and its magic would die, sure as sure.

  Nevery had a plan, one based on his long-ago experiments with pyrotechnics, the ones that’d blown the middle out of Heartsease. He knew that setting off an explosion while doing a magical spell enhanced the effect of the spell. He’d been doing research in the academicos library, looking at old grimoires to find the right spell to enhance, something that would force Arhionvar to leave Wellmet alone. We thought a banishing spell might work, if we set explosive traps all around the city to make it stronger. My part of the plan was to help with the pyrotechnics and to scout the city for good places to set the traps.

  “All right, boy?” Nevery asked sharply.

  “All right, Nevery,” I said.

  “Well then, good night,” he said, turning toward the Night Bridge.

  Not a very good night, no. Out of the corner of my eye, I caught a quick-look of a darker shadow in an alley, then another scuff of a footstep from the street behind us. Not Dawn Palace guards on this side of the river. Minions, then. They’d warned me off the streets of the Twilight, and if they caught me they’d beat the fluff out of me, or worse.

  “I will send a bird tomorrow,” Nevery went on, “with a copy of the Arhionvar treatise, if I can lay my hands on it.”

  I didn’t answer. If I could get into the alleys I might be able to get away from them. “’Night, Nevery,” I whispered, and ran.

  * * *

  To: Willa Forestal, Duchess of Wellmet, Dawn Palace

  Yes, I received your letter about the cursed order of exile that has again been passed against my apprentice. No, I will not tell you where he is hiding. And you may tell Captain Kerrn that I have no further comments about Conn’s means of escape from the Dawn Palace prison cells. I would be appalled by your stupidity on this subject, except that I already know your opinion of magic—and those who practice it.

  It is thanks to my apprentice that we know the nature of the dire threat facing us. The predator magic, Arhionvar, was indirectly responsible for creating the device that weakened our magic, nearly destroying the city last winter. Because my apprentice defeated Arhionvar at Desh, it is surely seeking its next prey—Wellmet. Willa, it is coming. If we are not ready to defend ourselves, Arhionvar will devour our magic and the city will be destroyed. Pretending this threat does not exist will not make it go away.

  The other magisters are fools and will not act. With some assistance, I have been preparing defenses for the city.

  Wellmet is approaching its darkest hour. I know you have been ill since the Shadow attack, and I am sorry to hear it. Yet I ask again for your help.

  NEVERY FLINGLAS

  Magister

  * * *

  CHAPTER 2

  I skiffed off Shirttail Street and headed into the maze of twisty, narrow streets that made up the Deeps, the part of the Twilight that rubbed up against the mudflats south of the bridge. Down in the Deeps, the alleys were clotted with mud and trash, and patches of chill fog hung in the air.

  I stumble-ran through the alleys, hearing pounding footsteps from behind. Then a shout from off to the left, and I took the next right, turning ’round a corner and racing up a stone stairway between two tall, dark buildings. At the top I paused to catch my breath and heard, from the darkness below, another shout and footsteps coming up the stairs. Drats, they kept coming!

  If I was lucky, I could make it to my hiding place in Rat Hole, the worst part of the Twilight, where the houses were in rot-ruins and nobody lived, except me. They’d never find me in those dark and tangled streets.

  I rounded a corner and stumbled into wide, cobbled Sark Square, the marketplace. Curse it, they’d herded me in this direction; out in the open was not where I wanted to be. The square was empty and dark, the cobblestones slick and wet.

  “Got him!” a man shouted, and ahead of me dark figures burst from the mouths of the streets and alleys that led into the square.

  I skidded to a stop and whirled ’round to go back the way I’d come. More men came from that direction, closing in, shouting. I flung myself at an opening between two of them, and a big hand grabbed me by the scruff of my neck.

  I struggled and kicked, and then a bag came down over my head.

  The minions shoved me ahead of them down a stone stairway; I took two steps, tripped, and bounced the rest of the way down. Ow, ow, ow. I wriggled out of the bag and crouched in the middle of the room, catching my breath and looking around. I knew at once where they’d brought me, to the cellar of a building on Clink Street that had once been a guard station. But the guards didn’t bother with the Twilight anymore, so the minions had taken it over.

  The room was long, with a low ceiling and shadows and spiderwebs lurking in its corners. Along one wall were flickery lanterns hung on nails, and along the other were prison cells, heavy doors with barred windows and pickable locks, where guards had once kept the bagmen and pickpockets they caught on the streets of the Twilight.

  I got stiffly to my feet. The room was crowded, minions leaning against the damp walls, giving me their best menacing looks. One of them tossed my knapsack onto the floor. I started toward it, and the minion glared at me and showed me his fist.

  I recognized him. He was big and burly, with a bumpy nose and just one eyebrow. His name was Fist. Standing beside him was his partner, Hand.

  “Warned you off once,” Fist said.

  He had, true.

  Fist took a heavy step forward; I stepped back, away from him. “An’ now here you are again,” he said.

  Hand came around behind me and grabbed my shoulders; I tried to squirm away, but he held me too tight.

  Fist stepped forward again and, moving slowly, rested the rough knuckles of his fist on my face, right under my eye. I held my breath.

  “What’re you up to, little blackbird?” he growled.

  I didn’t say anything. Fist and the minions thought I was making a bid to be Underlord, like Crowe, my mother’s brother, to run the Twilight, the rundown, rotten side of the city. But being Underlord was the last thing I wanted.

  Fist grabbed me by the front of my coat and drew back his fist to hit me.

  “I’m not up to anything!” I gasped, and gritted my teeth, ready for the blow.

  “You’ve been warned off,” Fist said again, leaning over me. His
breath was hot and smelled like fish. “Why’d you come back to the Twilight?”

  Because I had nowhere else to go, that was why. I couldn’t stay with Nevery and Benet because the Dawn Palace guards were watching all the time. I was under an order of exile. If Kerrn, the captain of the Dawn Palace guards, caught me, she’d drag me back to one of her prison cells and fill me up with truth-telling phlister until I told her what I was up to. And then she’d throw me out of the city.

  But Fist wouldn’t care about any of that, so I kept quiet. The flames in the lanterns flickered, sending little shadow mice scurrying along the edges of the floor.

  “Nothing to say?” Fist asked. He gave me a little shake and let me go and, behind me, Hand let me go, too. I ducked around them both and skiffed toward the door. I got two steps and felt Fist’s big hand on the scruff of my neck.

  He jerked me back. “Not done with you yet,” he growled. Keeping his grip on me, he nodded at a short, big-eared minion with a bushy mustache. “Tell what you found in his place.”

  Big-ears nodded. “Papers with writing on ’em. Books with writing in ’em. Things for writing with.”

  Drats, they’d found my Rat Hole attic room.

  “What’re you up to, little bird?” Fist asked.

  Right. I took a deep breath. “I’m a wizard,” I said.

  The minions lined up against the wall growled at that. “He’s a lying gutterboy, he is,” one of them said, shaking his head.