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    Spy Glass

    Page 33
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      trance to the building.

      She gestured to the men. “Thieves will be a concern once

      news about the messengers spreads.”

      I paused in the threshold, soaking in the warmth and

      hum of the kiln. Pazia gave me a quick tour of her gleaming

      shop. Everything appeared to be in order. All the right tools

      hung within reach, the mixing room was stocked with the

      proper ingredients and the annealing ovens contained cooling

      projects.

      But no diamonds. Black or otherwise.

      She tsked at me when I asked. “You can’t just leave them

      lying around!” Pazia led me to a windowless office in the

      back. A safe had been built into the wall. She spun the dial

      with practiced ease, opening the thick door.

      Magic poured from the safe. Pulling out a drawer, she set

      it on her desk. Then she hefted a couple of super messengers,

      stacking the blocks next to the drawer. I hesitated.

      “Go on, Opal. I trust you.”

      Being trustworthy hadn’t been my concern. It was the lumps

      of black that caused my reluctance. No vial of blood in sight. I guess I should be happy the super messengers were legitimate

      except I couldn’t produce the emotion.

      When I reached for one of the diamonds, Pazia said, “Be

      careful, they’re charged. You’ll be okay as long as you don’t

      try to use the magic.”

      Spy Glass

      311

      I paused. “Who charged them?”

      “One of my father’s people.”

      Pushing through a thick layer of magic, I picked up a small

      black stone and held it up to the sunlight. It looked familiar, but as a gemstone, it failed to impress me. “Why doesn’t it

      glitter?”

      “No sense polishing and faceting them if they’re going into

      the glass.”

      I replaced the stone and grabbed one of the messengers. The

      power felt muted. “Can you send messages?” I asked her.

      “Yes.” An inner excitement danced from her eyes.

      “You can do more with them.” It wasn’t a question, but a

      heartrending realization.

      “Can’t you?” she asked. “I so hoped they would help you,

      too.”

      “No.” As usual, I felt the power, but couldn’t use it. “What

      else can you do?”

      “It’s…odd. It’s like I have magic again, but instead of draw-

      ing from the power source through my…” She tapped her

      chest. “Through me, I draw on the cube. And when the

      power is gone, I take it back to my father and he has them

      charged again. My abilities from before remained the same. I

      can still light fires, move objects and read minds, but I have

      to be touching the glass.”

      Another thought struck me. Even if I recovered my blood,

      no one would want my little glass animals when Pazia’s super

      messengers could do so much more. Except for the cost. “Has

      your father decided on a price?”

      “No. But he plans to be…egalitarian about them. He’s going

      to give one to each Master Magician for free, and then anyone

      can purchase one. He’ll work out payment plans. If you think

      about it, you could buy one and then charge a fee for others to use. Once the messenger is paid for, you could make money.

      I’m sure businesses will capitalize on that.”

      The possibilities were endless. The richest man in Sitia

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      Maria V. Snyder

      would be even richer. What would he do with all that gold?

      I’d purchased a number of things with mine, but besides the

      wedding, none of them touched the emptiness inside me.

      Devlen’s Story Weaver mumbo jumbo about it being filled

      had been wrong.

      Pazia returned the messengers and drawer of diamonds to

      the safe.

      Trying to see all angles, I thought if I did regain my powers,

      my animals would be much cheaper and they would compete

      with Vasko’s, especially if he had only a few super messengers.

      Would he steal my blood to keep that from happening?

      I pointed to the safe. “Is that all the diamonds?”

      “No. The vein is pretty thick.”

      I considered. I’ve never seen a black diamond before. So

      why did they feel familiar? “Can I see the vein?”

      “I’ll have to ask my uncle.”

      We left the factory and searched for her uncle. He worked

      in a building that Pazia called the command center. She ex-

      plained it was an old family joke that stuck.

      Hans Cloud Mist stood up as soon as we entered his large

      office. His resemblance to his brother Vasko was uncanny, and

      I wondered if they were twins. Hans insisted he was not only

      the younger brother but also the smarter and better-looking

      one, as well.

      Pazia rolled her eyes. “Just humor him. He thinks he’s

      funny.”

      Hans pretended to be hurt, but his pout lasted less than a

      second. “Did Pazia show you her factory?” he asked me. “She’s

      quite proud of it.”

      She blushed and quickly changed the subject, asking about

      a tour.

      “You’ll have to get permission from Galen.” He glanced

      out the window. “He should be overseeing checks now.”

      She

      frowned.

      “Another uncle?” I asked.

      Spy Glass

      313

      “No. My father’s right-hand man and I don’t need his

      permission.”

      “Are you going to be her tour guide?” Hans asked.

      Pazia shivered. “No.”

      “And I don’t know where the vein is, so it’s Galen or

      nothing.”

      She grumbled, but didn’t argue. I followed her from Hans’s

      office.

      “Why can’t you take me?” I asked.

      “I can’t stand being in the mines. I’m claustrophobic.” She

      stopped. “Are you?”

      “Afraid of small spaces?”

      She nodded. “And the dark?”

      “No

      lanterns?”

      “Plenty of light, but sometimes an errant wind blows them

      out. We pump air down into the shafts to keep it fresh.”

      I thought of my various adventures, being hidden in a box

      under a pile of sand, swimming through a tunnel in a cave

      and spending a couple weeks chained in a dark cell. “I’m not

      claustrophobic.”

      “Good.”

      “Do you know the location of the vein?” I asked her.

      “No. I think only Father and Galen do. They tend to get

      all paranoid when they make a new find. Both of them know

      every shaft below. I don’t even think there are any maps.” She

      shook her head and continued.

      Pazia led me to the lowest level of the command center.

      Rumors about the main entrance to the mines hadn’t been

      too far off. Instead of being in the basement of his house,

      the doorway for the miners was deep under the command

      center.

      I waited with Pazia as the day shift’s personnel streamed

      in from the large cavern. Under the keen gaze of another

      group, the workers stripped off their jumpers, stood under

      spouts of water and were searched before they donned clean

      314

      Maria V. Snyder

    &
    nbsp; clothes. The process reminded me of Wirral. Except they

      seemed more worried about what might be smuggled out of

      the mines than in. Mirrors lined the wall opposite the search

      area and I suspected they were two-way ones and observers

      lurked behind them.

      When the last worker left, Pazia told me to wait while she

      slipped behind the mirrors. It didn’t take her long before she

      returned.

      “Come on,” she said, almost running from the underground

      entrance. She finally slowed when we exited the building.

      “I hope you’re not in trouble,” I said.

      “Not at all. Galen just gives me the creeps. He practically

      lives in the mines. In fact, I haven’t seen him in seasons,

      which is fine by me. But when I do see him, he acts like he’s

      in charge.” She smoothed her skirt. “He gets away with that

      attitude because my father trusts him.”

      “What does he do?”

      “Whatever my father wants.” She took a breath. “I know I

      shouldn’t be so down on him. He’s dedicated to our family, and

      he was the one who found the black diamond vein. And Galen

      promised to find someone to give you a tour tomorrow.”

      I accepted her offer to stay in their guesthouse, but con-

      vinced her to join me at the Tourmaline Inn for supper. Pazia

      made the proper appreciative noises over the large pink tour-

      maline the inn’s owner, Carleen, wore around her neck.

      Carleen remembered me, but since I had paid in full before

      Janco and I had made our sudden departure, she welcomed me

      back. She led us to a nice table and served us each a heaping

      portion of beef pie. Pazia and I chatted about our days at the

      Keep.

      “How is your brother doing?” I asked.

      She crinkled her forehead. “Which one?”

      “Walker. Do you have another brother at the Keep?”

      “No. My older brother also attended, but he graduated the

      Spy Glass

      315

      season before I started. I guess Walker’s doing okay. He hasn’t written to say otherwise. Have you met him?”

      I smiled, thinking about his attack. “Brief ly.”

      “Don’t mind him. He’s a hothead like all the male members

      of my family. They get all high and mighty about honor and

      family and duty.”

      “Your uncle Hans seemed nice,” I said.

      “They’re all nice as long as you play their game. Once you

      cross them, look out. They think it’s a personal assault.”

      “Does your older brother work here, as well?”

      “Sort of. My father calls him his secret weapon. He sends

      him off on missions and to strong-arm the people who owe

      my father money.”

      Interesting. He would have enough money to purchase my

      blood. As for motive, he could want revenge. “What type of

      missions?”

      “I don’t know and I don’t care. I never wanted to be in-

      volved in the family business, but…” Pazia drained her wine,

      then changed the subject. “So what’s new in the Keep’s glass

      shop?”

      I filled her in on the new kiln and water system. As we

      talked, Nic and Eve entered the inn’s common room and

      f lagged down Carleen. They rented a room and followed

      the innkeeper up the stairs. Eve had signaled me her room

      number, and after a few minutes I excused myself to meet up

      with them.

      Nic bounced on the edge of the bed. “I think you have

      more pillows,” he said to Eve.

      “She also has the best mattress in the house,” I said.

      “It’s discrimination. All this pink is unfriendly to men.”

      “At least she didn’t tell you to take a bath,” I offered, but

      he wrinkled his nose.

      I tried to stif le a laugh. “She’s concerned about your

      health.”

      “She’s concerned about her clean sheets,” Eve said.

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      Maria V. Snyder

      He crossed his arms and continued to look sour. “Should

      I be listening for anything in particular at the bathhouse?”

      “Good idea. I think there’s a bathhouse over by the miners’

      village,” I said. “They’re basically barracks for the under-

      ground workers. Listen for any comments about black coal or

      black diamonds from the miners.”

      “Do they know what’s going on?” Eve asked.

      “They’re not supposed to, but…”

      “It’s hard to keep something that big a secret,” Nic finished

      for me. “I wouldn’t be surprised if one of them smuggled a

      few stones out.”

      “It would be difficult.” I explained about the search.

      “But not impossible,” he said.

      I recalled what I had been able to carry into Wirral with

      me. “You’re right. Nothing’s impossible.”

      “We should make that our motto.” Nic surged to his feet.

      “This is probably a waste of time,” I said. “So far, every-

      thing appears to be legitimate.”

      “Nothing wrong with good news,” Eve said. “It would be

      refreshing.”

      I felt a small twinge of guilt as I crept from the guesthouse.

      My actions were not exactly proper guest behavior. Oh well.

      A half-moon hung high in the sky, illuminating the buildings.

      Even at this late hour, armed guards patrolled the walkways

      and a dozen guarded the main house.

      Avoiding Vasko’s residence—I needed more training to slip

      past so many watchers—I sneaked into a couple of the utili-

      tarian structures. Conveyor belts from underground brought

      up crushed rock, dumping it into piles. Workers shoveled the

      rock into screens and sifted the material. Others watched.

      Interesting how all the sorting was done inside. Even the

      wagons filled with rejected material were taken to another

      building. I found a couple of open mine shafts, but they were

      Spy Glass

      317

      too small to be anything but air vents and they had protective

      walls around them.

      From my nighttime explorations, I couldn’t find another

      way into or out of the mines. Before stopping, I circled the

      command center. Guards had been stationed next to the two

      entrances, but no one bothered to watch the sides of the build-

      ing. With no windows on the first two f loors, there wasn’t a

      reason to be concerned. Unless the thief ’s teacher happened

      to be Valek, who delighted in climbing up sheer walls. And

      most people didn’t bother to lock shutters on windows above

      the fourth f loor.

      I kicked off my boots, tied the laces together and looped

      them around my neck. Using fingers, toes and a mortar crum-

      bler invented by Valek, I scaled the side of the building. By-

      passing the third and fourth f loors, I found an open window

      on the top level and entered a dark office.

      I poked around the offices on the fifth f loor, read a few

      papers by moonlight and worked my way down. All the offices

      looked the same, and I found nothing out of the ordinary. Even

      Vasko’s spacious work area held nothing incriminating.

      After searching a few more rooms, I decided to exit the

      building through Vas
    ko’s office on the third f loor. Unlocking

      the shutters, I pushed them wide. The light from the moon

      pierced the darkness and shone on the desk. Metal glinted

      from under the wooden top. I pulled the chair back and ran

      a hand along the wood. Encountering a small lock, I crawled

      under and used my picks. A small panel clicked open.

      Inside the hidden drawer were stacks of files. I brought them

      out into the moonlight and skimmed the papers. About three

      files down, I hit the jackpot.

      My name had been written on the file folder’s tab, and

      inside was an accounting of expenses. The list included prices

      for forged documents, bribes, the purchase of drugs and weap-

      318

      Maria V. Snyder

      ons. Damned expensive, but worth every piece of gold, was scrawled under the total. And farther down it in big letters, Success!

      Junior pulled it off again.

      Finally a connection ! Junior had to be Vasko’s son and Pazia’s older brother. And from the list of prison officials Junior had bribed, he had to be Finn. He was the right

      age and had attended the Keep. I did another quick search of

      Vasko’s office, but uncovered nothing to implicate him. They

      hadn’t used my blood for the super messengers. So where was

      it? Locked away?

      “Find anything interesting?” a male voice asked from the

      doorway.

      I stif led a yelp and grabbed my switchblade. The snick of

      the blade cut through the quiet office.

      “Easy, Opal. It’s me.”

      “What are you doing here?”

      “Same thing you are, looking for clues.”

      “I meant why here in Ognap?”

      “Oh, that.” Janco entered the office. He wore a skintight

      black coverall and had darkened his face.

      “We linked Finn to Vasko Cloud Mist and I’m playing

      miner, hoping he’ll show up. But no luck so far.”

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      Maria V. Snyder

      “And the message to me that you found Finn is en route to

      the Citadel?”

      “I didn’t find him,” he said. “He’s Vasko’s oldest son and

      he has dropped out of the gossip network. None of our…in-

      formers have been able to tell us where he’s been for the last

      half year.”

      I showed Janco the file of expenses. “Why would Vasko

      send his son undercover? It doesn’t make sense.”

      “From what I’ve been hearing, Vasko doesn’t trust many

      people outside his immediate family. And he kept his children

      out of the spotlight. Perhaps for that reason.”

     


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