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Lost

Sarah Prineas




  The Magic Thief

  Lost

  Book Two

  by Sarah Prineas

  Illustrations by Antonio Javier Caparo

  TO THEO,

  BECAUSE THE BIRD

  WAS HIS IDEA

  Contents

  Maps

  Chapter 1

  “A wizard is a lot like a pyrotechnist,” I said.

  Chapter 2

  I blinked the brights out of my eyes. The floor…

  Chapter 3

  I gave Brumbee’s letter to Nevery and he spelled it…

  Chapter 4

  Once Rowan and I had snuck out of the Dawn…

  Chapter 5

  “So the lurkers are in the Twilight, too,” Rowan whispered.

  Chapter 6

  We’d been warned twice about the bad ones, the Shadows,…

  Chapter 7

  The next afternoon Rowan met me on the Night Bridge.

  Chapter 8

  After talking to Nevery about what I’d been up to…

  Chapter 9

  “I have to be sure he’s all right,” I said.

  Chapter 10

  By the time I got home to Heartsease, my wings…

  Chapter 11

  While Nevery was at another meeting, I went up to…

  Chapter 12

  That night after supper, Nevery and I were at work…

  Chapter 13

  Nevery found Benet, and between them they got me home…

  Chapter 14

  In the middle of the afternoon, I waited until Nevery’d…

  Chapter 15

  Down I crashed, lashed by twigs, bouncing off branches, until…

  Chapter 16

  At the bottom of the hill, the forest began. In…

  Chapter 17

  Four more days of walking as fast as I could…

  Chapter 18

  The first thing I did was steal my knife back…

  Chapter 19

  Another day of trudge-travel through the forest. Everyone was twitchy…

  Chapter 20

  Another day of traveling. As we went along, me walking…

  Chapter 21

  At last, after a stay at a posting inn at…

  Chapter 22

  I stayed in Argent’s rooms and read two of his…

  Chapter 23

  I decided to start discovering things for Nevery right away.

  Chapter 24

  The next night, after the usual dinner party had ended…

  Chapter 25

  After leaving Jaggus’s rooms in the gray light of morning,…

  Chapter 26

  I was at the table in the room I shared…

  Chapter 27

  I’d have just one chance.

  Chapter 28

  In the darkest part of the night, I set off…

  Chapter 29

  I woke up with the rising sun in my face…

  Chapter 30

  After camping, we traveled most of the next day, me…

  Chapter 31

  Stumbling after Half-finger and his two men, I looked down…

  Chapter 32

  The bread was hard as rocks, but after soaking it…

  Chapter 33

  In the dusty, gray light of morning, I heard the…

  Chapter 34

  I had the whole night before anyone would come looking…

  Chapter 35

  The stairway was completely dark. With the door closed, the…

  Chapter 36

  At the posting inn, I woke up long enough to…

  Chapter 37

  In the guardroom at the Dawn Palace, Kerrn and her…

  A Guide to People and Places

  Thanks to…

  Credits

  Copyright

  About the Publisher

  Maps

  CHAPTER 1

  “A wizard is a lot like a pyrotechnist,” I said. “You mean magic and explosions, boy?” Nevery said from the doorway of my workroom. In one hand he held his gold knob-headed cane, and he had his flatbrimmed hat under his arm. He’d just gotten back from a magisters’ meeting, which always made him grumpy.

  “They’d be controlled explosions,” I said.

  “Controlled explosions? That would seem to be a contradiction in terms, Connwaer.” He looked around my workroom and scowled.

  Benet had helped me strip the faded wallpaper from the walls and whitewash them, and I’d swept the floor and scrubbed the grime and dust off the tall windows and set Lady, the white and tabby-tailed cat, to deal with the mice. A few books from Nevery’s library were stacked neatly on the shelves. After everything was ready I’d hung my picture of a dragon, the one I’d nicked from Nevery’s study, on the wall. The picture was so sooty and dirty from hanging over a fireplace that it looked like a dragon hidden behind a cloud, but I could make out a gleam of golden wing and a snakelike tail and a sharp eye, red like an ember in a hearth.

  I’d been reading Prattshaw’s treatise on pyrotechnics. The book lay open on the table in front of me, along with some papers and a dirty teacup.

  “Yes, this is a bad idea,” Nevery said. “What would pyrotechnics accomplish, hmmm?”

  That was a very good question.

  To do magic, every wizard had to find his or her own special locus magicalicus. It could be a piece of gravel or a small chunk of crystal or a rounded river stone or a pebble found in the street. When you found it you knew, for it called to you. My own locus stone had been the finest jewel in the city, the center stone from the duchess’s necklace, leaf green and glowing with its own light, and it had been my way to talk to the magic. It had been destroyed when I’d freed the magic from Crowe’s prisoning device. After that, I’d spent most of the summer looking all over Wellmet for another one. Nevery’d told me I’d find a new locus stone, but I hadn’t. Then I checked every grimoire in the academicos, and none of them said anything about wizards finding a second locus stone. If their first stone was destroyed, they died along with it. But I hadn’t died.

  “Well, Nevery,” I said, “the magic talked to me when the Underlord’s device exploded.” Nobody except Nevery believed me, but I knew what I’d heard. “If I make a very small pyrotechnic explosion, it might talk to me again.” And then I could be a wizard, even without a locus stone.

  “Hmph,” Nevery said. “Pyrotechnics is not a reliable method, boy.” He paced across the room and leaned over the table to lift the book I was reading to see the title. “Prattshaw,” he said, dropping the book. He shook his head. “I suppose you can’t get into too much trouble just reading about it. Don’t be late for supper,” he said, and swept-stepped out of my workroom and down the stairs.

  Had I ever been late for supper? No.

  I went back to the book. Tourmalifine and slowsilver, it said, were contrafusives; that meant slowsilver attracted and confined magic, and tourmalifine repelled it. When mingled, they exploded.

  I closed the book and set it aside. In a box under the table where Nevery couldn’t see it, I had a stoppered vial of tourmalifine crystals. And I had a little lockbox with a few drops of slowsilver in it that I’d nicked from Nevery’s workroom.

  I brought out the vial and the lockbox. The book said that very small amounts of slowsilver and tourmalifine caused very small explosions—just puffs of smoke, really. Clear as clear, Nevery didn’t want me doing pyrotechnics. But he wouldn’t notice a puff of smoke, would he?

  With the raggedy sleeve of my apprentice’s robe, I wiped out the teacup and set it on the table; then I tipped in a few crystals of tourmalifine, careful not to get any on my fingers. I didn’t have a key for the lockbox, so I pulled out my lockpick wires, snick-picked the lock, and opened it. The slowsilver swirled at the bottom of the box. As I set the lid back, it crept
up the sides, almost like it was trying to escape. I tapped the box, and the slowsilver slid back to the bottom again.

  I dipped the end of one of my lockpick wires into the slowsilver. A mirror-bright bead clung to it as I lifted it out. Carefully—steady hands—I brought the slowsilver to the teacup and tapped it from the end of the wire. Like a drop of water landing on sand, it splatted into the center of the little pile of tourmalifine in the bottom of the cup.

  I held my breath and bent closer to see.

  The slowsilver soaked into the tourmalifine. I counted one, two, thr—

  With a pop the cup shattered. A whirl of fizz-green sparks flung me away from the table and fountained up to the ceiling, then swarmed ’round the room, crashing from wall to wall. I scrambled to my feet. On the table, the vial of tourmalifine cracked open like an egg, spilling green crystals across the tabletop; the box of slowsilver tipped over, and a silver-bright snail crept out.

  “No!” I shouted, and grabbed for the slowsilver. It squirmed out of my fingers and I ducked as the sparks flew over my head again, whoosh.

  The slowsilver reached the tourmalifine. They mingled.

  In a corner of the ceiling, a whirling ball of sparks and fire gathered, then streaked across the room, knocked the table over, and slammed into me.

  At the same moment, the mingled elements exploded.

  I lay flat on the floor and ducked my head. White fire and crackling sparks filled the room. And so did the voice of the magic. Damrodellodesseldesh, it began, the words vibrating low and slow in the bones of my arms and legs. Ellarhionvar, it went on, faster and higher, the words rattling around in my skull. Then a shriek that made my teeth hurt, arhionvarliardenliesh!

  Then, silence.

  To the Magisters,

  Magisters Hall, Wellmet.

  Because you are clearly unwilling—or unable—to understand what happened when Dusk House was destroyed, I will explain it to you yet again. The explosion at Dusk House was not—I repeat, not—a pyrotechnic experiment gone awry. Pyrotechnics had nothing to do with it. Underlord Crowe and the wizard Pettivox, who betrayed us all, built a device—a massive capacitor created, using large amounts of slowsilver, to attract and then imprison the city’s magic. The reason, magisters, you have found no evidence of the existence of this device is because it was completely destroyed in the explosion, which also destroyed Dusk House and killed Pettivox.

  My apprentice and I have speculated on the reasons why Crowe attempted this magic thievery. Perhaps it was a move to seize control of the city; perhaps he had plans to weaken our magic for some other purpose. We know that they succeeded in almost depleting the entire city’s magic. As you know, Crowe admitted nothing, and has been sent into exile; his reasons, therefore, would seem to be lost to us.

  On to magical issues. My fellow magisters, you have made it absolutely clear that you cannot believe my apprentice’s theories about the magic of Wellmet. I repeat them to you now: The magic is not a thing to be used, but a living, sentient being which—or perhaps I should say who—serves as a protector of the city of Wellmet. The spells we use to invoke magic are, in fact, the language of this magical being. Our locus magicalicus stones, my fellow magisters, enable us to communicate with the being. Much research remains to be done on the being’s actual nature, to discover why it is here in the city, whether other cities are inhabited by similar beings, and to determine what the magic intends for us, the humans who live here.

  Whether you believe this theory or not is of no consequence. Do note, however, that as a result of Conn’s actions, the city and its magic have been saved from almost certain disaster. The magical levels of Wellmet have stabilized, though I am concerned that the levels remain lower than they were before. Yet despite the fact that Conn sacrificed his locus magicalicus to save the city, you argue that because he no longer has a locus magicalicus he should no longer be considered my apprentice. That is for me to decide, not you.

  It is said that only a fool stands in the way of a new idea; I trust, magisters, that there are no fools among you.

  Yours sincerely,

  NEVERY FLINGLAS

  Magister

  Heartsease, Wellmet

  CHAPTER 2

  I blinked the brights out of my eyes. The floor of my workroom was covered with shattered glass and torn book pages. The table lay with its four legs in the air like a dead bug. Smoke and dust swirled around in the corners. A scrap of charred paper floated to the floor next to me. I squinted at it. A page from Prattshaw’s book, the part about contrafusive effects.

  The pyrotechnics had worked. The magic had spoken to me again—without a locus stone. But what had it said?

  Step step tap. I heard the sound of Nevery hurrying up the stairs. He threw open the door. “Curse it, boy!” he shouted. “What are you up to?”

  I coughed, brushed slivers of glass out of my hair, and got to my feet. “Just some pyrotechnics,” I said. I looked down at my apprentice’s robe. It had a few more scorch marks on it than before.

  Nevery scowled. “A pyrotechnic experiment. I thought you had more sense.” He lowered his bushy eyebrows. “And where did you come up with the slowsilver, hmmm?”

  I shrugged.

  More footsteps, and Benet, Nevery’s bodyguard-housekeeper, loomed up behind Nevery in the doorway. His knitted red waistcoat and shirt were dusted with flour, and he had a smudge of flour on his fist-flattened nose; he’d been kneading dough. “He all right?” he asked.

  “Yes, I am,” I said. “Nevery, the magic spoke to me.”

  Nevery opened his mouth to shout at me some more, and then closed it. “Spoke to you? A pyrotechnic effect, then. You were right. Interesting. What did it say?”

  “It sounded—” I shook my head. Had the magic sounded frightened? But of what? “D’you know this spell?” I recited the spellwords the magic had said to me: “Damrodellodesseldeshellarhionvarliardenliesh.”

  “No, boy. I’ve never heard those spellwords before,” Nevery said. “Hmmm. Say them again.”

  I did, more slowly this time.

  He pulled on the end of his beard, frowning, but not at me. “Something—,” he muttered.

  “Dinner’s ready,” Benet said, and turned to head down the stairs.

  “Well, boy,” Nevery said. “Come along.”

  We went out and started across the courtyard that lay before Heartsease, Nevery’s cane going tap tap on the cobblestones.

  Heartsease glimmered in the last bits of daylight. It was a wide mansion house built of sand-colored, soot-stained stone. Most of the house had been missing for a long time, as if someone had taken a huge boulder and smashed a hole through its middle. Blocks of stone and columns and tangled ivy and rosebushes spilled out of the hole, and the roof gaped open to the sky. At one end of the house left standing was my workroom. Nevery’s part of the house, along with the kitchen and storage room, Benet’s room, and my attic room, was at the other end.

  “Nevery,” I asked, “how did Heartsease get the big hole in the middle of it?”

  Nevery gave me one of his keen-gleam looks. “Quite a point on that question, boy.”

  I nodded.

  He paused and leaned on his cane. “Listen, lad. I have experimented with pyrotechnics myself, yes. But be warned. My experiments led to twenty years of exile from Wellmet. This sort of thing”—he pointed with his cane toward my workroom—“will get you into trouble if you’re not careful.” He spun around and swept-stepped away, across the courtyard.

  Exile. I didn’t want to risk that. But my locus magicalicus had been blown into sparkling dust. That’d left me with no way to talk to the magic, even though I could feel it all the time, looking out for me as it always had.

  I didn’t have any choice about it; I had to do pyrotechnics, at least until I found a new locus stone.

  I started after Nevery and then, from the corner of my eye, caught a glimpse of a black flutter. The big tree in the middle of the courtyard had been empty of black birds ev
er since last winter, when Nevery and I had destroyed the Underlord’s prisoning device and freed the magic. But now something was different. Up in the tree, in the highest branch, perched a single black shadow, looking down at me with a glinting yellow eye.

  “Hello up there,” I called.

  The bird shifted on its branch. Grawk, it muttered, and looked away.

  Just one bird. Had the magic called it back to keep an eye on things? Had it come because of the explosion? Would the rest of the birds come back, too?

  Nevery stood in the arched doorway that we used to get into the house. “Come along, boy!” he called.

  “Look, Nevery,” I called back, pointing at the high branch.

  Nevery step-tapped back across the courtyard cobbles. “What is it?” he said, peering upward.

  The night had come on; the black bird was invisible in the darkness. Never mind.

  “Hmph,” Nevery said. “Come along.”

  He crossed the courtyard and led the way inside and up the narrow staircase to the kitchen, where Benet had set the table for supper. I sniffed the air, hoping for biscuits and bacon. Fish and—I glanced at the table—stewed greens, pickles, and bread. Mmm. I took off my gray apprentice’s robe, hung it on its hook beside the door, and joined Nevery at the table.

  Benet thunked a jar onto the tabletop. “Jam,” he said, then went back to the stove, where he fetched a pan, then scooped a steaming, bony fish onto each of our plates. After clattering the pan back onto the stovetop, he sat down and we started eating.

  “You going to do that again?” Benet asked me. He pointed with his chin in the direction of my workroom.

  I nodded and picked a bone out of my fish. I could feel Nevery glaring at me. All of a sudden I didn’t feel quite so hungry.

  Nevery scowled and took a long drink from his mug of ale. “No, he is not.” He pointed at me with his fork. “If the magisters find out that you are conducting pyrotechnic experiments, my lad, they will throw you out of the city so fast your head will spin. They have other concerns at the moment, other problems to deal with than one recalcitrant apprentice.”