The Vengekeep Prophecies (8 page)

Read The Vengekeep Prophecies Online

Authors: Brian Farrey

Jorn brandished a piece of parchment. “I've got scores of witnesses claiming that you lot saved the day with … whatever happened out there. Ullin Lek himself swears that you were”—he squinted, consulting the parchment—“‘solely responsible for saving the Promenade from the lava men.' What the zok are lava men?”

Ma shrugged. “Guess you had to be there.”

“In fact,” I added under my breath, “I wish you
had
been there.”

Da emerged from the cell to find Aronas in his path. The captain's eyes became slits. “I still say it's a trick, Castellan. Something the Grimjinxes did to make it
appear
they were the heroes. I'd bet they instigated the whole lava mess just so they could swoop in and live up to what the tapestry predicted.”

I folded my arms. “I'm sorry, Captain Aronas, but wouldn't your men be able to verify that? You did have them following us, didn't you? Can't they speak to what happened?” I shot a look at Maloch. “Or did they go running away with the rest of the crowd when all the trouble started?”

Maloch looked down as Ma's eyebrow arched. “Abandoning their posts in a crisis, Captain? Isn't dereliction of duty punishable by, and I'm no expert on the law, a year in gaol?”

Before the Captain could respond, Jorn cleared his throat, knowing that we had a point. With a grunt, Aronas and Maloch stepped aside, allowing us all to move out. As she passed Jorn, Nanni gave the Castellan a wallop.

“I'm eighty!” she hollered. “You're incarcerating an octogenarian.”

Aronas rolled his eyes. “You said before you were seventy.”

Not one to be called a liar, Nanni lashed out and slapped Aronas as well. “Respect your elders!” She made to whack Maloch, too, but he flinched, ducking behind his mentor.

As we left the gaol, the looks we got from people were odder than ever. News of our first official actions as the town-state's saviors had spread like wildfire. When one girl blew me a kiss, I tripped on my foot and did a face plant into the road.

Ma picked me up. “And just when did you become so nimble?” she asked. “Climbing up that water tower.”

I smirked. “You saw that?”

“You couldn't hear me screaming over the crowd? ‘Jaxter Grimjinx, you get down from there before you slip and break your neck!'”

We laughed, but Da stared at us with complete seriousness.

“So, none of us thinks this is a coincidence, right?” he asked. “And if none of us thinks it's a coincidence, what should we do?”

“We wait,” Nanni suggested. “We wait and see what happens. It might have been an isolated incident.”

Da's lips curled. “We could do that. But I was thinking about something a mite more preemptive. Something that doesn't involve waiting around for those winged creatures Allia dreamed up.”

I'd forgotten about those.

“And that would be?” I asked.

Da stopped on the street corner and looked across the square at the town-state hall. “We need another look at that tapestry.”

Lightning split the night sky as rain blanketed Vengekeep. I'd miraculously managed to stay dry during the collapse of the water tower but now, crawling along the roof of the town-state hall in the middle of the night, I was soaked to the bone.

Nearby, I could hear Da fidgeting with the lock to the skylight over the Viewing Room while Ma secured the rigging of ropes and pulleys that would lower us to the tapestry. As the lock clicked and Da raised the glass on the skylight, I fastened the harness across my chest to Ma's rigging, and the three of us slowly descended on the ropes we'd lowered into the room. The room was pitch-black and as it swallowed us, I lost my bearings.

I slowed my descent and whispered, “Should I light a candle so—?”

“No!” Ma and Da said, a little too quickly and firmly.

I flashed on an image of the Castellan's burned house, a reminder of the last time I tried to light a candle, and fell silent.

I heard both my parents touch down lightly, and, thinking I was close, released my hold on the rope. And fell flat on my back with a thud. As Da helped me to my feet, Ma lit candles and handed one to each of us. We all leaned in close to the tapestry and reviewed the images and words Ma had woven.

“When you're good, you're good,” I told Ma. “But I think, for once, you were too good.”

Da reached out and felt the tapestry, pinching sections of it between his fingers. He ran his palm against the length of the weaving, up and down, side to side. Then he glanced over at Ma, who took the pack from her shoulder. Opening it up, she withdrew the Spider.

Ma had invented the Spider years ago to help her with the intricate detail in her forgeries. The Spider was a thick leather helmet with eight hinged legs attached to the front, each with a magnifying glass on its end. Da slid the Spider over his brow as I moved in close with my candle to give him proper light.

He pulled two Spider legs down, positioning one lens in front of each eye. His head moved back and forth, his eyes staring intently at the tapestry. He pushed those lenses out of his way and pulled down two more, this time both in front of his right eye. Still nothing. He did this several more times until he'd used each lens at least once. Sighing, he shook his head.

“Okay, let's see what we're up against.” He held out his hand to Ma, who slid her fingers into a small pouch on the side of her backpack. From within, she pulled a red-tinted monocle in a thin brass frame. The one enchanted item we owned, it offered amazing magnification with the added bonus of being able to see hidden magic. We didn't use it much. We kept it hidden for special occasions, seeing as it wasn't exactly
legal
for anyone but a mage to possess a rubyeye. That's why we had to sneak in to study the tapestry.

Da removed a lens from one of the Spider's legs and replaced it with the rubyeye. Breathing deeply, he pulled the red lens over his eye and peered closely at the tapestry.

“Zoc!” he cursed, a mite too loudly. Wide-eyed, he turned to Ma and me. “It's fateskein!”

Ma's hand went to her mouth. Without realizing, I took a step back from the tapestry, suddenly nervous. Our family had our code and we stuck to it. We never preyed on the weak or poor. We never filched from other thieves when their backs were turned. And we never, ever dealt in illegal, dangerous goods. There's decent money to be made in selling muskmoss, but we don't touch it because selling it's a direct ticket to Umbramore Tower, the High Laird's prison. And of all the prohibited substances in the Five Provinces, fateskein was the most dangerous. Possession of fateskein was the only crime, apart from treason, that was punishable by death.

Disbelieving, Ma pulled the red monocle toward her, looking through it at the tapestry. She gasped. “No … no, it can't be.”

“How did you get fateskein?” Da asked, slipping the Spider from his head.

“I don't know!” Ma insisted. “You don't think I'd be so stupid as to do this on purpose?”

I took the Spider from Da and used the monocle to study the tapestry myself. Through the tinted glass, the deep-brown fibers looked like massive strands of blood-colored rope. Fine golden strings wove in and out of the red fibers, binding them together. The gold strings seemed to pulsate. Looking again at the fabric with my naked eye, I saw only the brown, woven designs. But peering through the red lens, it became very clear to all of us what had happened.

As its name implies, fateskein, once woven, has the power to influence fate. Whatever images it depicts come true. That's all I really knew about it, as its illegal nature made it taboo to even discuss. Centuries ago, during the Great Uprisings, the reigning High Laird had narrowly evaded a bloody coup when a rogue mage attempted to use fateskein to make himself supreme ruler. The High Laird prevailed, the mage was executed, and fateskein had been illegal to make, possess, and use ever since.

And my mother had used it unknowingly to craft for our family a fate where we were supposed to save the town from a series of unthinkable disasters.

“We have to tell the Castellan,” Ma insisted.

You knew the Grimjinxes were in a corner when they considered turning to the authorities for help.

Ma continued. “Explain to him at once—”

“That you used fateskein?” Da asked. “Even if he believes it was an accident, we'll all be hanging from the gallows by morning if we tell him we destroyed the original tapestry and replaced it with a fake.”

“Can't we just stop this?” I asked. “Destroy
this
tapestry. Shouldn't that break the—”

Before I'd even finished my suggestion, Da drew a small dagger from a sheath concealed on his wrist. The blade flashed in the candlelight as he brought it up and down in an arc, slashing at the tapestry. But the instant the blade touched the fabric, the magical light that had only been visible through the monocle flickered into brighter evidence, rippling across the tapestry like tiny bolts of golden lightning, and the steel dagger shattered like glass.

To confirm what we were beginning to suspect, I held my candle directly to the cloth and the flame immediately went out. There would be no destroying the fateskein tapestry. Not through regular means, anyway.

Da began his nervous pacing again as the thunderstorm outside raged on. “Okay, Allia, think. Can we trace this back? Do you remember where you got it? Maybe whoever sold it to you can tell us how to undo this.”

Ma's licked her lips nervously. “Of course I remember where I got it. We talked about it when we came up with this scheme, remember? I told you I couldn't just walk into Brassbell Promenade and ask for yarn the exact color of the tapestries. So we agreed I'd have to look—”

“At Graywillow Market,” Da finished with Ma. He cupped his face in his hands and groaned.

Graywillow Market was an unofficial market upriver from Vengekeep. It sprang up every weekend, tents erected across a small clearing on the riverbank. The average person who came upon the impromptu bazaar might just assume they'd stumbled on a group of local merchants selling their wares to the countryfolk who lived outside the town-states.

But, in reality, Graywillow Market was known in thieving circles as a great place to unload stolen merchandise to unsuspecting customers, swap with fellow thieves, and make other unfortunate acquisitions go away.

A picture formed in my mind. Some two-bit vagabond accidentally found himself in possession of fateskein and, desperate to pawn it off on someone before the authorities closed in, set up shop in Graywillow Market. It just happened that my mother became the mark. There was no way to trace the fateskein back to its source.

Ma pointed at the tapestry. “Those predictions are going to keep coming true.”

I said, “And everyone in Vengekeep is going to look to us to keep them safe. What are we going to do?”

Da pulled himself up to his full height and stuck out his chin defiantly. “What we do is what Grimjinxes have done for generations when faced with insurmountable odds. A time-honored family tradition for con artists.”

We all nodded.

“Run.”

6
No Escape

“Triumph is the reward of a shrewdly timed exit.”

—
The Lymmaris Creed

L
ook, we just weren't the hero types. It's not like we
wanted
to see Vengekeep attacked by giant flying skeletons. Or overrun by hordes of killer vessapedes. If we stayed, it was only going to end with a bunch of dead Grimjinxes to clean up. Really, it just made sense to leave the defense of Vengekeep to the likes of Aronas and the stateguard. Fateskein or no, the Grimjinxes knew how to save only one thing: ourselves.

We spent the next day quietly packing the house. Da brought our covered wagon around to the front door. Long ago, Ma and Da had converted the interior of the wagon into a miniature home: chairs, storage, hammocks for beds. “Just in case,” they said. Which meant “just in case we ever have to leave in a hurry.” Like tonight.

We tried to be discreet as we packed it with all our possessions. Once night fell, Ma made for the livery stable to “borrow” a couple mangs to pull the wagon. As Da, Nanni, and Aubrin finished packing, I kept watch on the street corner for Maloch or any of the other stateguards assigned to watch us.

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