Page 4 of Of the Abyss


  She nodded, grateful he had forgiven her rudeness and decided to change the subject.

  “My name is Cinnabar,” he said, when he returned. “I think I’ve seen you working near the main docks’ marketplace. Am I right?”

  “That’s right.” The work she did there—­whatever needed doing, really—­should be inoffensive to the Order of A’hknet, unless this particular member objected purely because it was legal.

  She sipped the tonic he had provided, welcoming the cold the way she normally did heat when she had worked too much magic.

  “Mother brought you in during the middle of last night,” Cinnabar said. “What were you doing out alone in this kind of condition?”

  “I didn’t realize how sick I was,” Xaz lied, effortlessly. She had been providing excuses for her behavior for as long as she could remember. “I went to the market to buy tea.” Halfway through the explanation, she remembered she hadn’t had any money on her, a fact most followers of A’hknet were unlikely to miss. “I must have been delirious. I don’t think I even brought my purse. Did I faint? Where did your mother find me?”

  “Not my mother; that’s just what we all call her,” Cinnabar replied. “She takes long walks sometimes, when nightmares trouble her. She found you near the upper market.”

  Nightmares. Probably the Numini whispering to her. They must also have hidden Xaz from searching Quin guards, since otherwise they would have discovered her when they tried to find the knife the Abyssumancer threw.

  “She gave you her bed, which means she’s in mine,” Cinnabar added, with a raised brow, “so I can’t invite you back there even if you are feeling well enough.”

  Apparently he hadn’t decided to ignore her earlier stare. The only safe answer seemed to be, “Pity,” before she took another large sip of the tonic. He and Mother had taken her in, saving her life in the process, so there was no need to tell him she would sooner swim in the frozen Mars harbor than engage the ser­vices of a prostitute.

  That the Numini objected to such practices was only part of her hesitation. The other part was pure resentment: despite Quin disapproval, prostitution remained legal.

  The Order of A’hknet was a small, foreign sect that stood in the face of almost everything the Quin believed, but it was a powerful force in Tamar, one of Kavet’s major trade partners. Without Tamar, there was no rice, tea, or coffee, not to mention a variety of luxury goods. There were no mancers in Tamar, or Silmat, or even the Wild Islands or anywhere Xaz had heard of.

  Therefore, the freedom of the Order of A’hknet had been carefully safeguarded, while the laws that made a mancer’s life ever more difficult—­such as restrictions on the use, possession, or trade of key spell components—­were constantly refined and expanded. Occasionally Xaz daydreamed about hopping on a Tamari or Silmari ship and traveling to one of those other countries, but passenger rooms were exorbitantly expensive and few hired foreigners.

  “I need to get ready to head out,” Cinnabar said, glancing to the clock ticking on the mantel. “You are welcome to stay a while longer, if you need the rest.”

  “I think I can make it home now.”

  Cinnabar looked skeptical, but it wasn’t the Order’s way to interfere if someone wanted to be stupid. He was right that Xaz would not be able to walk far in her condition, but she needed to get out of this house and away from these strange, prying eyes, and thought she could manage as long as she took it slow.

  “You’ll want your belongings, then. Let me go see where Mother put them.”

  He disappeared into the next room, and emerged again several minutes later with a clean set of clothes in about Xaz’s size. There was no sign of the knife. She fervently hoped it had slipped from sight, as Abyssumancers’ tools tended to do until called back by their owners.

  CHAPTER 5

  Captain Feldgrau of the 126 listened diligently as Cadmia reported word-­for-­word what the mancer had said to her before his black magic caught up to him.

  “What is your opinion?” he asked, before voicing any thoughts of his own.

  She took a deep breath, passing the mancer’s statement through her mind again. As Baryte had said, it was her duty to remember and meditate upon a man’s last words, which meant her training had prepared her to recall and reproduce those words exactly.

  “Baryte was angry,” she said. “He felt the Abyssi he was working with had betrayed him, and he wanted to thwart whatever plan he believed it was trying to enact. The fact that they silenced him implies they did not want him speaking.” With a mental shudder, she added, “That they could silence him, even though he was branded and in a warded area, is a little frightening. They shouldn’t have been able to do that.”

  Feldgrau nodded, slowly.

  “He mentioned having a knife, which the Abyssi made him throw away. Has anyone found it?”

  “The guards who arrested him say the mancer produced another knife when he woke,” Feldgrau confirmed, “but they did not see what happened to it, and we have been unable to locate the item.” Unsettling. Anyone could have picked the knife up, in which case what might it be doing to them? “Do you believe the Abyssi could be planning something?”

  Cadmia shook her head. “I was taught Abyssi can’t plan. My guess is that Baryte assigned human motivations to creatures incapable of such forethought, but I’m not comfortable dismissing his words entirely.”

  Feldgrau nodded again. “I’ll confer with the other captains about what precautions they think we should take. Thank you for your counsel.”

  “Of course.”

  She wished she had not been the one called. All her study supported what she had told the captain; Abyssi were not creatures of rational thought. They were powerful, bloodthirsty monsters, but they lacked the ability to scheme. So why were her instincts still telling her something was deeply awry?

  She had barely stepped out of the Quinacridone Compound when she was confronted by another individual from the Order of A’hknet. This one was not a run-­down mancer but an exhausted monger, as that order called its members who engaged in the trade of questionable goods and ser­vices. He was dressed in the loose, casual pants, shirt, and vividly colored vest he favored. His fashionably-­long hair, which Cadmia knew was naturally a weathered straw color before an application of henna turned it rich, chocolate brown, looked like it had been hastily tied back without the benefit of a mirror. For Cinnabar of A’hknet, who took pains with his appearance as a professional asset, that was positively unkempt.

  Cadmia smiled in greeting while instinctively putting a hand on her small purse. “Were you looking for me?” she asked. There was no other reason for Cinnabar to loiter outside the Quinacridone Compound, within sight of four members of the 126.

  Noticing her distrustful gesture, Cinnabar said, “I wouldn’t steal from family.”

  “We are not family,” she pointed out.

  “Not by blood, thank Numen,” he replied with a flirtatious smile that was as engrained a habit for him as breathing—­and which still made her blush. “You look good, Caddy.”

  Cadmia stifled the impulse to check her own hair and clothes self-­consciously, even though she was confident the wavy, strawberry-­blond hair Cinnabar had once admitted to envying was held primly back with wooden hair combs and the plum-­violet robes of her order were neat and modest.

  If he had been a stranger or a distant acquaintance it would have been easier to meet his eye and respond as a Sister of the Napthol should, but she was keenly aware the nearby guards were watching her. It didn’t matter that they didn’t know her history with him. She knew.

  “What do you need with the Order of the Napthol, Cinnabar?” If he teases, I’ll just turn my back and walk away. That’s all.

  “I need to show you something,” he said, all flirtation leaving his face and tone. “Can we go inside?”

  She led the way into the C
obalt Hall. Only once over its threshold did Cinnabar begin to relax.

  “I lifted this from a guest we had recently,” he said. “I took it because it looked like silver. I didn’t examine it until she was gone.” He flipped the disk onto the table between them, using the end of his sleeve to keep his hands from touching it directly.

  The round disc was about the size of Cadmia’s palm around, but thin as a coin. The upward-­facing surface was marked with elaborate geometric designs that shifted and made Cadmia’s eyes water as she tried to make sense of them.

  When she picked it up, cold flashed up her arm as far as her shoulder. It spun twice before falling to the floor with a bell-­like ring.

  That kind of cold could only come from the Numen. The divine realm was supposed to be the destination for good souls when they died, but Numenmancers were not content to wait. They manipulated the Numen and disturbed the peaceful dead to command the Numini and achieve more power in mortal life. Though not as physically brutal as Abyssumancers, Numenmancers were in some ways more dangerous, as they altered the nature of divinity and so could endanger not just this life, but the next.

  “I came to you because I know you’ll trust me it isn’t mine,” Cinnabar said, his voice soft and desperate. “Mother got up last night after one of her nightmares, and brought back a woman who looked half-­dead. I figured it was ship-­fever, something like that, until I saw this. She was in my house, Caddy. She was alone with Mother.”

  Mother Avignon was one of the oldest and most respected members of the Order of A’hknet. She had lived through the revolution, or so ­people said, though she never spoke on those days. Cadmia had left that order and joined the Napthol when she was seventeen, but she still shared Cinnabar’s instinctive outrage that a mancer had come so close to Mother.

  “I know Mother probably will not wish to, but both you and she are welcome to stay here until the mancer is identified and captured,” Cadmia said. No one knew why mancers could not enter the Hall, but Cadmia had seen one faint trying. She did not question the blessing, but appreciated that there was one safe place in the city. “Can you give me a description of the woman?”

  “Description, name, workplace,” Cinnabar answered. “I’ve seen her around before—­not professionally,” he was quick to add. “She’s moderately attractive, a bit on the thin side, average height, brownish-­auburn hair, brown eyes. Well-­spoken when called to be, but she keeps her head down. She calls herself Dioxazine—­Xaz—­and she works down at the docks market almost every morning. I don’t know where she lives, but I’m sure someone there can tell you. I can’t believe I—­” He broke off. “Just find her, please.”

  “Would you be willing to come with me to make this report directly to the One-­Twenty-­Six?” Cadmia asked, because she was expected to, though she was certain the fear that had driven Cinnabar here would never get him across the threshold of the Quinacridone Compound. She didn’t bother to ask if he wanted guards posted near Mother’s home.

  Cinnabar shook his head and said, “I trust you to do what needs to be done.”

  So it was that Cadmia crossed to the compound for the second time in one day, and found Captain Feldgrau conferring with one of the guards that Cadmia recognized as one of Pearl’s favorites. Bole had a daughter near Pearl’s age, and so had a soft spot for the orphan girl who lived at the Cobalt Hall.

  Tiredly, she said to Captain Feldgrau, “I think I have another one for you.” She handed over the disc, now carefully wrapped, and said, “A monger just brought this to me. He stole it from a houseguest, then realized that it is obviously a Numenmancer’s tool. He said the woman’s name is Dioxazine, and that she works down at the docks.”

  “Did he say what she looks like?” The soldier who interrupted them appeared alarmed. “Pardon me, Captain.”

  Captain Feldgrau indicated for Cadmia to continue, so she repeated Cinnabar’s description, and watched the soldier go pale.

  “Do you know her, Bole?”

  The soldier nodded. “I know her. She moved in to the river way in the south district about a year ago.”

  “Near Lieutenant Viridian?” the captain asked.

  “Right next door to his childhood sweetheart.” Bole grimaced. “With your leave, I’d like to go warn him immediately.”

  Feldgrau shook his head. “We don’t know if she might be watching him. Sister Paynes, thank you for the information. We will handle this from here.”

  Cadmia returned to the market square feeling unsettled. It seemed like mancer activity had been steadily increasing in the last few years, despite every effort to control the threat. Of course, the 126’s efforts were sabotaged by the fact that every paranoid farmer and fishwife cried sorcery whenever anything went wrong, so the few soldiers with the sight were constantly running around trying to determine if slaughtered chickens were the result of mancers or foxes.

  That wasn’t to say mancers weren’t far more dangerous than foxes. They had the ability to stop a person’s breath with a touch. The power was addictive, and just like a man who had fallen to Tamari crystal elation or even something as mundane as alcohol, those who meddled with sorcery seemed to need more and to become more irrational about how they supported that magic.

  The power gets hungry, Baryte had said, to explain why he had committed murder.

  The soldiers will deal with it, she told herself. That is what they are for.

  She spotted Cinnabar again in the market, this time with one hand on an empty wooden pull-­cart as he spoke with a honey merchant, his famous smile no doubt getting him a deep discount. If he was still worried about the mancer, it didn’t show—­but then again, a man in his profession had to be good at hiding his thoughts while appearing to be an open book.

  He glanced up and noticed Cadmia watching him, and raised a hand in a half wave, half salute.

  This time she managed to school her face. As a Sister of the Napthol, especially with her specialty counseling individuals who had fallen on the wrong side of the law, it was expected that she knew all types of ­people—­even an Order of A’hknet prostitute. Others who observed them had no way to know Cinnabar was also the man to whom she had lost her virginity long before Kavet’s legal age of consent.

  “The Quin stole Mother’s cart,” he explained as she approached, patting the worn wooden handle. “It took a while to get them to give it back to me. Did you . . . get everything sorted out?”

  She appreciated that he kept the question intentionally vague to avoid being overheard and causing a disturbance. She nodded, and told him the only part he would care about. “It will be dealt with. I didn’t need to use your name.”

  “Thanks.” He smiled again, and this time she thought it was genuine. “Do you want to walk down with me? You haven’t come to visit us in ages.”

  “I used to come to visit Mother—­my mother,” Cadmia reminded him. Scarlet Paynes had died two years prior, caught in the middle of a fight for her affection between two men who would have forgotten her within the day. Cadmia had never known her father, so Scarlet’s death had meant the last of her blood family was gone, and with it the last of her responsibility to visit with those who followed A’hknet.

  “She isn’t the only one who looked forward to your visits,” Cinnabar said, softly.

  “Have a good day, Cinnabar,” Cadmia said, trying to disengage from the conversation.

  “If I asked for your counsel—­”

  “If you put in a request for counsel, I will be sure to send one of the Brothers.” It was more common for men interested in religious study to dedicate themselves to the Quinacridone and become monks, but there were a few among the Napthol as well.

  Cinnabar quirked a brow, reminding her wordlessly that his flirting wasn’t limited to women. Despite Kavet laws and Quin norms that made same-­sex relations strictly illegal, Cinnabar willingly worked both sides—­he was just a
little more careful not to get caught when his clients were male.

  Her scowl made him say, “You used to be fun.”

  He turned away, and Cadmia found herself relieved and disappointed to see him go—­and fighting the urge to watch him go. Cinnabar had been awkwardly cute when they were younger. Now that he had grown into his broad shoulders and sharp, dramatic features it was clear how he was so successful in his chosen line of work.

  It might have been easier to stoically toe the “no sex outside marriage” line both the Quin and the Order of Napthol held so dear if Cadmia had been as naïve as most initiates were when they took vows, but Scarlet Paynes’s daughter had needed to start fighting off amorous intentions, often from sailors twice her age, when she was twelve or thirteen. Though only a ­couple years older, Cinnabar had taken it upon himself to become her protector, which included sleeping beside her with a dagger in his boot. They had become lovers when she was fourteen.

  When she was seventeen, Tamari slavers had beaten Cinnabar senseless while attempting to claim him and Cadmia. She had put Cinnabar’s dagger in the slaver’s back, carried Cinnabar to the Cobalt Hall for healing, and dedicated herself to the Order of Napthol on the spot.

  She only occasionally regretted the decision.

  CHAPTER 6

  Hansa had faced down murderers, sorcerers, would-­be-­slavers, and all manner of violent, dissolute men and women, but this was probably the most frightened he had ever been—­at least since the last time he had tried to propose to Ruby, back when he was twenty-­three and she was twenty.

  She hadn’t said “no” last time, but “later.” She wanted to establish herself in her career before settling down. She was three years younger than he was; he had understood why she wanted to wait. Four years later, he prayed the answer would be different.