Helikaon snorted. ‘Please. You’re
‘Okay.’ I laid the cup of tea carefully down upon the ground. ‘Why did you turn Lyle down?’
‘Why d’you think?’ Helikaon pointed at me. ‘I don’t want to do what you’re doing, and if you’re smart you won’t either. Go back to Arachne and find a hole to hide in.’
‘It’s not as simple as that.’
‘You get in the middle of this, could end up dead. Council can’t pay enough to be worth that.’ Helikaon glared at me from under his bushy white eyebrows. ‘Used to be I had to twist your arm to go near those old men.’
‘There’s someone else.’
‘Ditch ’em.’
‘What’s with turning your house into a deathtrap?’
Helikaon grinned. ‘Caught you out, heh? Shouldn’t have been snooping.’ His grin vanished. ‘These boys play rough. You want to convince them to leave you alone, you have to talk their language.’
I looked away.
Helikaon studied me. ‘Time was you’d be happy as a pig in shit to see a Dark mage get eaten by a trap like that. Change of heart?’
‘It’s not that.’ I turned back to Helikaon. ‘Look, I’ve been out of the loop. I know you’ve still got your contacts. What’s going on?’
Helikaon sipped his tea, then shrugged. ‘Been building a few years. Dark mages pushing for status. I know,’ he held up his hand to forestall me, ‘they’ve got it. But they want more. Seats on the Council.’
I stared at him. ‘The
‘Old news, boy.’ Helikaon gestured out towards the vista below us. ‘Council are split as usual. Some want to give in, some want to stall. Darks’ll probably get their way in the end. Weight of numbers.’
‘Numbers?’
‘They’ve been recruiting. Pretty aggressive. Some mages, they can turn. The ones they can’t …’
‘I know what happens to the ones they can’t,’ I said flatly.
‘But not united. That’s what it’s about.’ Helikaon pointed south. ‘That relic’s got a Precursor artifact, big one. Dark mage who got hold of it could set himself up as their leader. More power than any faction in the Council. Council wants it too, use as a bargaining chip. All of ’em need a seer to get inside.’ Helikaon pointed at me. ‘All’d rather see you dead than helping the others. ’S’why I’m up here. You should be too.’
The two of us sat silently for a minute. ‘What does this thing do?’ I asked.
‘Don’t know. Wards too heavy. Council knows more. Not getting close enough to ask.’
‘So that’s what Cinder and Khazad are after.’
Helikaon shook his head. ‘Muscle. Someone’s giving ’em orders.’
I remembered the masked woman I’d seen just a few hours ago, and somehow I was sure it was her. ‘So now you know,’ Helikaon said, interrupting my thoughts. ‘What’ll you do?’
‘I don’t know,’ I said after a pause.
Helikaon snorted. ‘Bull. You’re going to that ball no matter what. I’ll tell you what’s going to happen with that relic. Light and Dark are going to fight and kill for it. Use their fancy magic to blow holes in each other till one side wins, then everything’ll go on just the same.’ Helikaon paused. ‘What’s up with you, Alex?’
I sat silently. ‘When you came to me I told you,’ Helikaon said. ‘“Forget about revenge. Keep your distance.” You listened then. Now you’re getting involved. You’re smarter than this.’
‘Maybe I’m tired of not getting involved,’ I said. I looked up. ‘What about friends, family? Don’t you have anything you’d stand and fight for?’
‘You ever listen to a word I say?’ Helikaon looked at me, his eyes hard. ‘Remember what I told you first time we met? Anything you take into your life, you have to be able to walk away from ten seconds flat, never see it again. Anything else,
The silence stretched out. ‘Hard way to live,’ I said at last.
‘You think life’s supposed to be easy?’
I finished my drink and set the cup down with a click. ‘Thanks for the tea.’
Helikaon didn’t say anything and I walked away. The pegasus came trotting over to me as I passed out of sight, and I gave him a final pat. ‘Bye, Thermopylae.’ Then I reached into my pocket for the gate stone that would take me home.
I had a lot to think about on the journey back.
When I’d first met Helikaon, it had been right after the final showdown with Tobruk. Even back then Helikaon was a master, able to do things with divination magic I didn’t even know were possible. I’d learned more about the art from him than anyone else – path-walking, precognition, future sight – but more important had been