conjurer. Nevertheless, she kept her rapier rock-steady against his neck.
“Of course,” he continued nervously, “if that's too much to ask, I'm more than willing to negotiate.”
“Who are you?” Widdershins barked at him. “What do you want?”
“Oh. That is, my name is Brother Maurice. And as far as what I want, well, I imagine that the first priority would be to have your sword just a bit farther from my throat.”
She stepped back, moving the blade away from Maurice's jugular. “Stand up.”
He did so, and it was only then that she finally noticed the tonsure shaved into the top of his head.
Maurice brushed the worst of the dirt from his chest, attempting to salvage some modicum of dignity. He carefully smoothed the front of his robe and met Widdershins eye-to-eye, though he couldn't entirely hide the fear lurking behind his own. Widdershins reluctantly lowered the rapier.
“I wouldn't dream of speaking for you,” the young monk told her, “but I find this arrangement substantially more comfortable.”
“Did you want something, Brother Maurice?” she asked bluntly, eyes darting in all directions. This felt too much like a deliberate distraction.
“My instructions,” he said, taking refuge in duty and orders, “are to deliver to you an invitation. That is, assuming you
Lying just seemed more effort than it was worth at this point.
“Yes, that's me. An invitation from whom? And for what?”
“From the archbishop William de Laurent. Apparently, you made an impression at your first meeting. He's quite anxious to speak with you at your earliest convenience.”
Widdershins blinked. “He…I…
Maurice shrugged. “I couldn't say. He told me to deliver his request; he didn't confide his motives, and I don't make it a practice to ask.”
“No, you wouldn't.” Widdershins shook her head, finally sheathing her rapier with a hiss that masked the monk's sigh of relief. “How did you
“His Eminence told me what part of town to start with.” The young monk raised his eyes heavenward. “I wouldn't dare speculate on the insights made available to the archbishop in times of need, but I imagine that knowing your name and, uh, profession was helpful. After that, I asked around until someone mentioned that you frequent this establishment.”
“You…you just went around Davillon's poor neighborhoods asking random strangers about a
“The gods watch over me,” Maurice said stiffly. “I was in no danger.”
Widdershins wondered how the man could fit that much naivete into a frame that skinny. And yet-here he was. Nobody had harmed a hair on his tonsure.
All she could was shrug; given what she'd seen Olgun do, it wasn't as though she had any real standing
This, Maurice had been warned, was where it could get difficult. “The archbishop, unfortunately, is watched by too many eyes to go anywhere without being noticed. He apologizes for the inconvenience, but he fears you'll have to come to him.”
“At some House estate?” Widdershins's voice could have shattered glass. “Is he insane?!”
“He expressed his utmost confidence in your ability to arrange such a rendezvous, mademoiselle. Apparently, your ability to reach him the first time impressed him.”
“Yes, but that was
“No trouble,” Maurice told her, hoping the heat in his own face didn't show. “I do understand your concerns,” he continued, “as does my master. But he assures me that this is most important, and there simply is no other way.”
“There never is.” Widdershins sighed.
She couldn't just sneak in. The repercussions if she was caught were too severe. Madeleine Valois could just ring the bell, but it would mean revealing her noble alter ego to the archbishop, and she didn't know how far she could trust him. So how to…?
Ah.
“His Eminence has nuns in his traveling entourage, yes?”
“Why, yes, but what difference does that-?”
“You,” she told him with a smirk, “are going to help me pick up a new habit.”
Maurice choked as understanding crashed down upon him. “Oh, gods. I'm going to hell.”
“Probably, but you're the one who invited me, and now I'm too damned curious to ignore it.”
The monk deflated in his robes. “Fine. I'll get you what you need.”
“Excellent. Don't be in
“Where
“The gentleman's name is Alexandre Delacroix.”
Widdershins didn't even blink. “Of course it is,” she said.
Had she not been so distracted, so overwhelmed by worry, so utterly exhausted, Widdershins might just have realized that someone had followed her from the Flippant Witch to the ramshackle flop in which she was currently staying. Or maybe she wouldn't; the man was no slouch himself.
Louvel-or Scarface, as she knew him-rose from the corner on which he'd been begging, allowing himself a clear view of the Witch's front door, and shadowed the little thief all the way home, practically bursting at the seams. Brock would be delighted, Eudes would be avenged, and Louvel himself would earn himself a nice, fat bonus. Just a quick detour back to his own apartment to shed his beggar's garb and pick up some heavier blades, and he'd be ready to report back to-
“Don't move a muscle.”
He froze, one hand on the latch to his door, and glanced over his shoulder. Coming at him from both directions down the dilapidated hall were uniformed Guardsmen led by an officer with a thick brown mustache. Half a dozen flintlocks, and even a pair of blunderbusses, gaped open in his direction.
“In the name of Davillon, Vercoule, and Demas,” the officer continued, “you are under arrest for arson, conspiracy to murder, and being an accomplice to the murder of a City Guard.” The officer stopped just beside him, jabbing his flintlock into Louvel's side hard enough to draw a pained grunt and leave a bruise that wouldn't fade for some time.
“Just so you know,” the man whispered gruffly, “I had myself a friendly chat with your Shrouded Lord the other night. You, my friend, are on your own.”
The thug visibly sagged.
“And if it's all the same to you,” the Guardsman continued, “I'd really like you to resist.”
Louvel decided, rather wisely, not to oblige. And all he could think, as the Guardsmen led him away in manacles so heavy it was all he could do to shuffle along, was
Alexandre Delacroix was not in a pleasant mood. The archbishop's early arrival to his home had upset a very delicate timetable and inconvenienced a great many people. Parties and balls needed rescheduling; appointments had to be pushed up, pushed back, or canceled; other projects and endeavors postponed. His servants had scurried about the house and the city, light or dark, rain or shine, for days on end, preparing for the churchman's untimely, and possibly extended, stay. Claude, who really should have been here doing half a dozen different tasks, was instead out and about in the city performing a dozen more and leaving the master behind to deal with all manner of bookkeeping that Alexandre had not touched in years.