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From time to time, she cocked her head as iflistening. According to Avidan, that was precisely what washappening.

There is no silence, Avidan claimed, only sounds onecannot hear. If he was to be believed, every metal, every liquid,even every scent had a sound, as precise as a well-tuned harpstring. Avidan said that everything, living and inanimate, vibratedat its own unique pitch. Hearing these sounds and blending them innew harmonies was not magic-at least not as most people understoodmagic-but art assisted by keenly honed senses.

Of course, Avidan was as crazy as three cagedsquirrels.

Fox banished the young alchemist from his thoughtsand watched as the herbalist poured the medicine into a vial,stoppered it firmly. She set it aside. Without even a moment’shesitation she reached for another mortar and pestle and began togrind dried feverfew and mint.

She’d already forgotten it, Fox realized. He pickedup the vial and took the ducks from his bag. He offered them with aslight bow.

Her face lit up with pleasure, which quickly dimmed.“I can’t afford those.”

Fox held up the vial. “A fair trade.”

Panic flared in her eyes. Fox gave himself a swiftmental kick. In some part of her mind, she remembered what happenedto green witches.

“I found this bottle in your yard,” he liedsmoothly.

She looked relieved. “Oh, that’s all right, there.But I should pay you for taking it away. Such things aredangerous.”

“I know.”

“Don’t hold onto it long.”

“I won’t,” he said, mimicking the singsong tone of achild told not to muddy his new boots.

The woman smiled at that. She reached out andstraightened the collar of his tunic, a maternal gesture as naturalas breathing.

For a moment hope burned bright in Fox’s heart. Hesearched the herbalist’s face but found no spark of light.

Muscles have memories.

Fox dropped his gaze, unable to meet that emptystare. His attention fixed for a moment on a small, familiarobject-an old silver locket, tarnished with age and neglect. Thechain was gone, but she’d tied it to her belt with a bit of ribbon.The locket gaped open. Fox squinted and noticed that the clasp wasmissing.

“Your locket is broken,” he said. “Do you want me tohave it repaired for you?”

To his astonishment, she untied the ribbon from herbelt and handed the locket to him.

Just like that.

The possession she most treasured, the only thingshe’d carried away from the ruin of her home and life. The thing soprecious and personal that she’d never once permitted Fox to handleit, much less look inside.

Fox thrust it into his pocket. “Someone’s at thedoor,” he said gruffly.

She nodded and wandered off, though no knock or callbeckoned. Fox slipped through his hidden door and slumped to theground.

Not everyone can be saved. Some wounds go too deepfor healing.

Avidan had repeated those words more times than Foxcould count. One of these days, he’d likely come around to thealchemist’s way of thinking on this matter.

But not today. Not when there was still a chance forDelgar.

Fox pushed himself to his feet and set a course forRhendish Manor.

Chapter Three: Curiosities

“What kept you so long?” Vishni demanded.

Fox held up the herbalist’s vial. The girl took aninvoluntary step back.

Her caution was probably unnecessary, but fairies hadstrange and sometimes dangerous reactions to an odd list of things.Iron, of course, but several plants and fruits could have oddeffects. In times past, certain green witches knew the secret ofherbs that could ward against the fey, bind them to a promise,render them helpless through fits of giggles, or simply make themsneeze. Fairies believed, with some justification, that elves hadtaught witches these things.

Elves belonged in this world. Fairies did not. Noneof the fair folk forgot this for a moment.

Vishni flicked one hand toward the waulking bowl asif she could ward off the stench.

“You couldn’t have picked a better place tomeet?”

The waulking bowl was actually a barrel, broad as acottage and nearly as tall as Fox. It provided a place for servantsto empty night water, which, in sufficient quantity, could stripthe grease from sheep fleeces. As useful as the waulking bowl mightbe, Fox could see why it had been located downwind of the workshopsand cottages.

What interested Fox, however, was a second, tallerbarrel.He took a bundle of carefully carved sticks from his packand fitted them together until he had a long-handled spoon. Foxscampered up the ladder secured to one side of the barrel andtwitched off the canvas covering. A cloud of flies arose, alongwith a barnyard stench.

Inside was a mound of dung, surrounded by a mulch ofrotting potato leaves. A neat pile of buckets stood on the groundnearby. Judging from the smell, they were used to carry thelant-stale cow urine-that was poured on the pile three or fourtimes each moon cycle.

Vishni’s face brightened. “Saltpeter! We’re makinggunpowder! How wonderful! You didn’t tell me there would beexplosions.”

“Only as a last resort.”

She sniffed. “That’s what you said about myillusions. You can’t have more than one last resort.”

“I’ll assign numbers to them. In case of disaster,we’ll count back in reverse order.”

The fairy nodded as if this made perfect sense.

Fox tossed her a half-filled leather bag that, Avidanassured him, lack only saltpeter. He lowered the spoon into thepit. Working quickly, he scraped off some of the white crystalsthat had formed on the top of the pile and transferred them to thebag Vishni held open.

He jumped down from the ladder. Vishni had alreadycinched the bag’s strings and was giving it a good shake.

“Thanks for mixing the gunpowder,” he said. “But justso you know, shaking won’t make it explode.”

“Oh.”

Fox laughed at her woe-stricken expression andreclaimed the bag. He tucked it into his pack and drew out a curvedivory flask as long as his hand.

Vishni’s eyes sparkled and she clasped her handstogether in delight. “A dragon tooth! Avidan was right? He solvedthe alkahest conundrum?”

“Seems likely,” Fox said. “The more bizarre his ideassound, the better they seem to work.”

That seemed to satisfy the fairy. They hurried pastthe odorous vats and half walked, half slid down a rocky incline toa narrow ledge.

Vishni stopped a few feet from the ledge, clinging toa large rock and staring down at the ledge with an expression mostpeople reserved for poisonous snakes.

“There’s iron down there. A lot of iron.”

“You’re safe where you are. Just stay put.”

Fox jumped the last few feet. His boots crunched onthe gravel covering the ledge. He kicked aside some of the stone toreveal an expanse of rusted iron.

For several moments he shoved at the gravel with hisboot. The ledge had been paved with vast plates of iron, the edgesof which had been welded together to form a surface too large andheavy to dislodge.

Finally he found what he sought: A round metal lid,padlocked and chained to the iron floor.

Vishni looked up at the distant manor, then back tothe lid. “This is the adept’s well? Way over here?”

“No, this is just an access shaft to the aqueduct.Rhendish has water moved through a tunnel leading from the well tothe manor.”

“Seems like a lot of work.”

“The tunnels were already here,” Fox said. “Rhendishbuilt a clockwork system similar to the Mule, with ropes andpulleys and buckets that carry a steady flow of water up to there.”He pointed to a water tower within the manor walls.

Fox uncapped the dragon tooth and poured a clearfluid, one careful drop at a time, onto the lid’s iron hinges.Better the hinges, he figured, than the padlock. The latter wasmore likely to be warded against intrusion with lethal shocks,small capsules that would release noxious fumes, or some othernasty little alchemical trick.