Authors: Auston Habershaw
The lies came quickly to Tyvian's lips. After the night he'd had, pretending to look shocked was easy. “What do you mean?
Didn'
t
you frame Myreon? Didn't you
bring
me here?”
Xahlven sighed, shaking his head. “You're always a step or two behind, Tyv. Very frustrating. I didn't bring you here, noâÂMother did. She framed Myreon.”
Oh, very good, XahlvenâÂkeep thinking I'm stupid.
“Why?”
“To contest me, of course. She is as capable of manipulating Gethrey as I am. I created him, in a senseâÂI gave him the resources to do what he is about to doâÂbut Mother was able to steer his thought process through her control of the Mute Prophets, in which Gethrey so desperately wished to advance, as you know. When Alafarr was framed, Gethrey felt he was safe, but rumors, when precisely fashioned, are as accurate as bowshots. She gave Andolon the idea of trying to hire you, knowing you would hate him, and therefore knowing you would disrupt his plans.”
Tyvian didn't bother trying to follow the convolutions of Xahlven's fictitious plot; he focused on looking confused. He wasn't here to parley, he was here to buy time. Just enough time for Myreon to work a little weakness into Xahlven's illusory roomâÂjust a
little
one.
He kept up the charade. “But . . . when you visited me before my trial, you told me to give Gethrey up . . . so . . .” Tyvian slapped his forehead. “Of course.”
Xahlven chuckled. “Tyvian, you are far too predictable. What better way for me to prevent you from doing something than to tell you to do it?”
Tyvian pressed on. “But
why,
Xahlven? Why crash the Secret Exchange? How does it help you to get all that money?”
Xahlven shook his head, toying absently with the pieces on the
couronne
board. “What is the point of this conversation, Tyvian? Do you honestly expect me to reveal my endgame? NoâÂnot a chance. What is
your
endgame, hmmm?”
Behind Xahlven there was a small alteration in the illusionâÂa door, not large, but big enough to admit a person's hand. Myreon had done it, Hann bless her.
Tyvian advanced on Xahlven slowly, putting subtle menace into his limping steps. “My endgame is to stop this, obviously. Don't let the market crash. It's madness. The whole West will suffer. You'll embolden the Kalsaaris. You'll . . . you'll make another tasteless, rich twit like Gethrey, and I don't think the shipbuilding industry could handle another
Argent Wind
.”
If Xahlven had one weakness, it was his lack of
physical
guile. He backed away from Tyvian smoothly, closer and closer to the little door. The little door that was now opening. Xahlven raised his free hand. “You talk as if the market crash is something that can be stopped, Tyvian. It isn't, thoughâÂ
you
made that possible.”
That one took Tyvian a bit off-Âguard. “What?”
“What makes markets flow, Tyvian?” Xahlven stopped just before the wall and leaned on the mantel of the illusory fireplace. “Fear. Uncertainty. The real challenge to Gethrey's plan was to foster false confidence and then pull the rug outâÂwith my agents working on his behalf, he did quite well. He just needed a tipping point. He was originally going to use various crime syndicates, but then he stumbled upon a better option, or so he thoughtâÂnamely you. That was Mother's doing and, but for my interference, it would have worked to prevent the crash. You would have stopped Gethrey, end of story.”
Tyvian frowned. “What did you do?”
“I knew you'd escape from Keeper's Court, if you wound up there.” Xahlven shrugged. “After that, the auguries were pretty clear. It would end with a war-Âconstruct rampaging through Crosstown, a monster assaulting Defenders all over town, and youâÂknown criminal mastermindâÂbarging in here and insisting upon a private audience with Gethrey Andolon in the midst of his apparent attempt to commit financial suicide.”
“That's the tipping pointâÂme, here, now. I'm causing the crash. You've won. But . . . why?” Tyvian stared at his brother. This partâÂthis singular partâÂmight just be the truth. Xahlven knew this conversation was going to take place. Did he, though, foresee Artus's hands under his cloak?
Xahlven was smiling. “I don't have to tell you anything. âWhy?' is not a question pawns like you get to ask, Tyvian.”
Tyvian smirked. “I should think I would at least rate a shepherd.”
Xahlven kept smiling. “I'm glad you and I agree that I've already won and we're down to debating semantics. I thank you for your serÂvice.”
The illusory chamber dropped away and Tyvian was left face-Âto-Âface with Myreon and Artus, both of whom gave him curt nods and stony expressions. He clapped his hands together and faced the glares of scores of confused-Âlooking traders. “Well, must be goingâÂDefenders and whatnot. Enjoy making your fortunes, everybody!”
Xahlven cocked his head. “Wait . . . what are you . . .”
Tyvian, though, did not pauseâÂhe and his companions vanished into the crowd, losing Xahlven-Âas-ÂGethrey behind a few massive pillars. It wasn't until they were clear on the other side of the exchange that he dared ask Artus. “Well, did you make the switch?”
Artus grinned and held out a hand. There, stacked neatly in sweat-Âstained bundles, were all the trade receipts Xahlven had collected that day as well as his ledger and autoquill. “Jackpot,” he said.
Â
CHAPTER 31
TO REAP THE WHIRLWIND
H
ool stood at the center of the seething chaos of the floor with all the regal tranquility of a predator among prey. The analogy was apt, even to herâÂthere were many times on the Taqar when she had stood among the fleeting antelope and watched them scatter, terrified beyond the capacity for thought. This place, this “exchange,” was not unlike that. Like all good predators, she stood still and silent and waited for the right moment to pounce.
She left her hands folded behind her back. No one approached her, no one paid her any heedâÂthat was normal, Tyvian had said, since she was unknown here. In a few moments, however, she was going to make them remember her name. For once, the collected masses of humanity would beg her attention and hang on her every word. She would defeat them at their own stupid game. She liked the idea of it.
Look for the moment
. Hool studied the crowd, still waiting. A lifetime of studying the body language of large animals had given her an exceptional capacity to cold read others. After several years among humans, she had fine-Âtuned it into a tool that could be used to predict what humans were going to do just before they did it. She could do this without sorcery and without magic hats or crystal balls or power sinks or whatever else humans used. She was a gnoll; she did not need sorcery to be powerful and smart. Lyrelle Reldamar had been right: she knew them better than she thought.
Around her, the Âpeople shouting to each other and slapping hands were growing more frantic. The numbers Âpeople were shouting got lower and lower and lower. Soon nowâÂsoon she needed to act. From across the exchange she saw Artus, Tyvian, and Myreon watching her carefully. She nodded to them, holding her human posture upright and serene, as she had seen Lyrelle Reldamar do.
“Now, Mama?” Brana asked at her side. Unlike her, he was a bundle of nervous energy, his eyes flitting to every bustling human as though ready to chase them down.
“Wait,” Hool cautioned him, and then looked toward where the shrouded Xahlven stood, his hands also folded behind his back. He had no idea that the paper tickets hidden in his robes were, in fact, blank. The real ticketsâÂthe only true record of his trades for the dayâÂhad been passed to her by Artus and were nestled securely underneath Hool's shroud. Xahlven, in his arrogance, hadn't even checked them yet. Even if he did, he could not reveal himselfâÂfor one thing, that would mean acknowledging that he was pretending to be Andolon, which was a crime, and it would
also
require him to show everybody he was a mage on the floor of the exchange, which was
also
a crime. There was nothing he could do but call in the Defenders.
And now it was too late.
“Buy!” Hool barked at the nearby men. “Buying karfan! Buying
cherille
! Buying all the things!”
The traders' heads cocked in her direction, but they hesitated.
Hool fixed them with her copper glare. “What are you waiting for? Buy, stupid!”
Above her, floating near the center of the exchange, rotating illusory numbers of the current day's trading showed the dire straits of the marketsâÂthe warnings were clear, and the traders on the floor were rapidly adapting their strategies to try and salvage themselves from bankruptcy. Though she did not fully understand the numbers in front of her, Hool knew enough to expect the wild surge of humanity that swarmed her, waving their tickets at her in the vain hope she could save them.
As Tyvian had instructed, she bought every ticket waved in her face, each purchase recovering what Andolon/Xahlven had sold just a short time before. Those goods? They were borrowedâÂpinned at their original high price from the original stakeholders. For every pile of goods Hool purchased now, she made a huge profit at the expense of the men who had loaned the goods to the false Andolon that very morning when the prices were high. Hool did not have a head for math, but the speed with which she was slapping hands with sweaty-Âpalmed fools was such that she had no doubt the profits would be exceptional. Stupid as it was, she felt her adrenaline surge at the thought of having power over these humansâÂof being able to finally do as she pleased without their incessant judgment and foolish notions of propriety.
For the first time, she thought she might be coming to understand wealth.
“We're doing it, Mama!” Brana shouted over the din, slapping palms with another man and exchanging tickets.
“Yes.” Hool nodded, but didn't let herself get carried awayâÂsomething was wrong. She glanced over toward where Xahlven should have been. He was not there. “Almost time to go,” she yelled to Brana. She noted also that Tyvian and Artus and Myreon were likewise goneâÂthey knew their time was short as well.
“Buy!” Brana called. “Karfan! Wine! Salt!”
They slapped more hands.
Suddenly, everyone stopped. Hool blinked at them all, “What?”
No one answered. They were all staring at the center of the Exchange, where a massive wraith of none other than Archmage Xahlven Reldamar floated. Around him the numbers of the day's trading so far floated as wellâÂeven Hool could tell they were dire, worse than dire.
“In the interest of the health of the Domain of Saldor and its allies,”
Xahlven said solemnly,
“trading is hereby suspended for the day, possibly longer, while we look into what caused this loss.”
One trader couldn't believe his ears. “What? WHAT? He can't do that! Who does he think he is, doing that? This is
business
! This is
money
! He can't just
stop it from happening
!”
The manâÂhopeless, wild eyedâÂcast his gaze around at the other traders on the floor, most of whom were standing stone still, in a state of abject shock. Gaping at the wraith of Xahlven, they looked like rows of animated corpses wondering what happened to their souls.
“We don't have to listen to him!” the man screamed. “Keep trading! Keep going! Selling karfanâÂcheap! Sell! SELL!”
Nobody listened. Everyone was too busy cleaning up the ashes of their own financial empires to hear an angry little man scream. Hool noted that Xahlven had slapped hands with this man several times early in the run. She walked up to him and found the tickets with the man's smell all over themâÂthey smelled like fish oil. “You owe me for these,” she said simply.
The man sagged as he looked at his own handiwork. “Who . . . who in blazes are you?”
“I am the richest lady you know.” Hool looked down her human nose at him. “Now, pay me or I will rip off your arms.”
T
he
Argent Wind
sailed out of Saldor Harbor with most everyone ashore assuming Gethrey Andolon had skipped town to avoid his debts, assuming Tyvian's plan had worked as he'd hoped, though they hadn't tarried long enough for him to confirm it. In any event, the ponderous vessel sailed along the coast, heading west toward Eretheria. There was no sign of pursuit.
Hool was the unofficial new owner of the vessel, a fact that she did not seem to enjoy. It was, on some level, piracy, but Gethrey's former crew of thugs and brutish sailors didn't seem to mind so long as Hool's newfound wealth paid them for the voyageâÂwhich it did, and amply.
Brana spent most of his time in the rigging, working with the sailors. He nattered on to anybody who would listen about everything he was learning about ships. His Trade was improving markedly, though it was now healthily spiced with various maritime curses that made Hool grumble. The journey, all things considered, was going well.
Tyvian was sitting at the table in the wardroom, the ship gently rocking to and fro. Across from him was Hool, looking miserable as usual, and Myreon, who had her boots up and was reading one of Gethrey's vast array of books that had clearly been selected based on the impressiveness of their bindings and not the intelligence of their contents. This particular book was an Eddoner bildungsroman about a young Wardenrider seeking to avenge his father's death at the hands of gnolls, of all things.
“Hool,” Myreon asked, “do gnolls drink blood?”
Hool's ears went back. “Does that stupid book say we drink blood?”
“It does indeed.”
Hool snorted. “Well . . . we do. Sometimes.”
Myreon flipped across a few pages. “Do you also howl at the moon?”
“Why would we do that?”
Myreon read a short passage. “It says here because you think it's a god.”
“It's not a god. It's the moon.” Hool put her head on the table. “Stop asking stupid questions.”
She shrugged. “I've just never had the opportunity to read one of these with an actual gnoll present, is all.”
Hool snarled something rude in gnoll-Âspeak and left. Myreon kept reading. Tyvian said nothing. “Well?” she asked at length.
Tyvian felt a stab in his guts; he knew what was coming. “Well what?”
“Is this how you usually celebrate a stunning victory? Moping and staring off into space?”
“I'm still not convinced we won.”
Myreon shook her head. “It's been two daysâÂnobody is following us. We've made it.”
“Escaping with your life isn't the same as winning,” Tyvian said. He looked at herâÂthe salt air and sunshine had washed away the pallor petrification had left in her cheeks. She was radiant, frankly. He could scarcely believe she was trying to cheer him up. Him, of all Âpeople.
Myreon reached out and grabbed his hand. “You couldn't have prevented the crash. None of us could. I see that now. At least we stopped XahlvenâÂwe did that much.”
Tyvian gave her a thin smile and kissed the back of her hand. “You're the best person I know.”
Myreon's eyes sparkled. “And you're the worst.”
He withdrew, climbing up on deck. He found Artus staring out to sea on the quarter deck, the wind tousling his mop of hair. Gods, Tyvian thought, eyeing the boy's attire, he's already grown out of those damned pants.
Artus nodded to him. “Hey.”
“Artus.” Tyvian said, standing next to him.
They said nothing for a moment. Then Artus cleared his throat. “I'm sorry.”
“What?”
Artus looked at him. “How'd you know I'd throw that sparkstone at you?”
Tyvian shook his head. “I don't know.”
Artus nodded and looked off at the sea. “Thought you'd say that. Me? I think it means you trust me. Don't you?”
Tyvian nodded. “I suppose so.”
Artus grinned. “So, what's the plan now?”
Tyvian rubbed the ring and looked out at the sunset. “Artus, for once, let's have no plans at all.”
Artus nodded, breathing deeply of the salt air. “Sounds good, partner.”
Tyvian put his arm around Artus and held him there for a moment, but no longer. Then they stood together awhile, staring deep into the green swirl of the summer ocean.