likely. She had the family look. No doubt she hated him. She'd seen that Kip had a chance of passing the test, so she'd sabotaged him. Gutsy. Foolish and infuriating, but gutsy.
'The supplicant cheated,' she said. 'He threw out the rope. I put it back in his hand.'
'You're not to touch the supplicant in any way during the testing. Is there something about that rule that's unclear?'
'I didn't touch him-Pardon me, High Luxlord Prism, I put the rope back in his hand without touching his skin. I was trying to preserve the integrity of the test.'
'Malargos,' Gavin said. 'You're Ruthgari, right?'
'Yes, Lord Prism.'
Gavin looked at her flatly. 'When your own Blessed Satrap Rados crossed the Great River to fight the Blood Foresters who outnumbered him two to one, do you remember what he did?'
'He burned Rozanos Bridge behind his army,' she said.
'Was that cheating?'
'I-I don't follow,' she said.
'He burned the bridge so his men knew they couldn't flee. He gave them no way out. Every last man knew he had to win or die. It's where we get the expression 'burning your bridges behind you.' '
'But I saw him reaching for the rope,' she complained weakly. She swallowed, suddenly unnerved to have contradicted the Prism to his face.
'And you gave it back to him.'
'Of course.'
'So you would have built a new bridge behind Blessed Satrap Rados?'
'Of course not, that would be…'
'And doomed him. How long did you last before you pulled the rope?' Gavin asked.
She flushed and looked away. 'Seventeen seconds.' She pulled her robe tighter around herself, finally covering up.
'And you destroyed a young man's chance at passing.'
'We could retest-' she started.
'You know we can't. Once supplicants know it's not real, the Thresher doesn't work. Everyone would say it was because he got special favor for being my nephew-'
'I didn't mean-'
'And you know it!' Gavin said, only keeping his voice down with effort.
'It doesn't matter what you meant,' Mistress Varidos hissed.
While the mistress was speaking, Gavin split some superviolet from the light of the torches. Just a little. The beauty of superviolet was its invisibility. Even though there were at least half a dozen people in this room who could see superviolet luxin if they tightened their eyes, Gavin was betting that none of them was tightening her eyes at this very moment. And even if someone was, what Gavin was about to do was so small and so quick that even someone looking might miss it. Magical sleight of hand. The superviolet settled into his fingertips.
'You broke the rules, Tisis,' the mistress said. 'You botched your duties, and you may have destroyed a young man's future.'
'But nobody passes!' the young woman protested. It had become a mark of pride just to hold on for a long time. Conspiracies, the dark, tight spaces, heights, spiders, snakes, rats-the Thresher hit all of the most common fears. Usually, believing that failure would mean the loss of everything and with their eyes dilated from fear, the applicant drafted any and all colors before they pulled the rope. It wasn't perfect, of course, but it was the best test they had.
'Get out of my sight,' Gavin said.
She went, huffing, furious, crossing between Gavin and the mistress, just as Gavin had planned. He pulled a stone from his pocket, holding the short rod behind his wrist, slid the samite off the hole, flicked invisible superviolet out of his fingertips and used it to snatch the testing stone out of its grooves. He snapped the luxin back to his wrist, binding the testing stone to his forearm with bands of superviolet, and with the last of the superviolet in his finger dropped the false testing stone into place.
It had all taken less than a second, and Gavin hadn't so much as leaned over. 'Well, let's see what we have, shall we?' he said, still drawing the rich samite cloth away from the hole.
In full view of Mistress Varidos, Gavin set the samite aside and reached into the receptacle, leaning over, grabbing the testing stone, and pulling it out. The testing stone was an ivory bar-either from sea demon washed ashore or from elephants deep within Ruthgar-tipped on each end with obsidian. The ivory was precious, but the obsidian was the real wonder. No one knew where the obsidian extant in the world had been harvested, or mined, or made. Obsidian was rarer than diamonds or rubies, so after every testing the obsidian ends of each testing stone were removed to be reused.
The superstitious called it hellstone. Most drafters were just happy that it was rare, because it was the only stone that could draw luxin directly out of a drafter. Gavin had heard that in the ancient world kings and satraps-and in more mythic tales, the assassins of the Broken Eye-had created entire daggers or even swords of obsidian. But obsidian only evinced its magical properties when two very special conditions were met. First, it had to be in near- total darkness: that is, a total lack of light in the visible spectrum-for some reason superviolet and sub-red didn't interfere with it. Second, it needed the drafter's blood, an open cut at that. There had to be a direct physical connection between the obsidian and the luxin for the luxin to be drawn out of the drafter. When that connection was made, however, the pull was quite strong. Cut a drafter's shoulder with obsidian while he was holding luxin in his hand and hold the stone against the cut, and within maybe ten seconds the luxin would be gone. Scholars speculated that was because drafters had luxin throughout their bodies at all times, so the connection was direct, even if it was distant within the body.
Because the rates at which obsidian pulled colors out of a person were different for the different kinds of luxin, they made nice lines as they were pulled out of the body and into the ivory. If a color formed and stayed and was thick enough, the supplicant was deemed worthy of receiving training in that color. If there were two colors, of course, the supplicant was deemed a bichrome, and more than two made them a polychrome.
Gavin took the testing stone. He caught a faint whiff of cloves that was the scent of superviolet luxin. He held it for just a moment, willing the scent to disperse, and handed the stone to Mistress Varidos. As the head tester, it was her place to declare the findings. As he did, everyone else gathered around. She carefully removed the obsidian tips and stowed them in a special box, and then held the testing stone over her head. There was a clear, thick green bar, peaking toward the blue side, and next to it a less full blue. Yellow was faint. There was a tiny bit in the superviolet. It was a classic bell, the most common pattern in drafters.
The mistress said, 'I hereby declare Kip of Rekton gifted of Orholam in the colors green and blue, with superviolet undecided and to be tested further at a later date. Kip, congratulations, you're a bichrome.'
A cheer went up.
Only Kip still looked confused.
Gavin walked around the table, put an arm around Kip's shoulder, and squeezed. 'Well done, Kip.'
Kip was limp in Gavin's embrace. 'So I passed?' he asked quietly.
'You passed. You made me proud.'
Another cheer went up, and within no time, wine and brandy and special cakes and fruits and meats and sweetmeats were being produced by slaves who flooded the chamber.
Gavin released the boy, who was looking at him like he was utterly befuddled, like he couldn't believe the words Gavin had just said. Some of that, too, was the magic. The emotional effects of every part of the spectrum had just passed through Kip for the very first time. He didn't know yet what to do with the residue. It took time. Gavin gestured toward the door, beckoning Aliviana.
'Kip,' Gavin said. 'I've brought you someone special. A surprise for you. She'll be your mentor. She'll explain how things work and teach you some of the basics until we leave. Kip, may I present-'
'Liv?!' Kip said as the girl stepped out from behind Gavin.
'Kip!'
'Why don't you go ahead and take him up to his room, Liv,' Gavin said. 'And remember what I said.'
Kip was still in a daze, so Liv took his hand and turned to lead him toward the main door. There would be a crowd there, no doubt. No need for Kip to think anything was out of the usual.
