that are already there and enable them to flower for a brief moment for my own gain before they are subsequently smothered by shame.'
The sadness in Kestrel's face tugged like a great weight. 'Now I do have the skill of observation,' he said. 'I can see through men to their true worth. And unfortunately, I am among the best.'
Kestrel stopped his rambling. He looked at Astron with questioning eyes. 'Now do you understand any better?' he asked.
'No,' Astron said. 'It is all very interesting, but in fact, I guess I do not. Why would this Evelyn say she would return and then change her mind without letting you know?'
Kestrel sighed again. At least for the moment, the bitterness was expunged. And it was far better for a demon to hear his confession than for someone who could manipulate the information against him. For a long moment there was silence; then Kestrel waved back to the wagon. 'Climb inside and let us be going,' he said. 'I have some clothing that you should don so that you will not attract notice as we travel northward.'
Astron nodded. 'But you have not yet told me of the wizard. Why did you return for her at such great risk?'
'I do not know.' Kestrel shrugged. 'But it does not matter. Into the wagon, I say. Let us be gone.'
'You had no real need,' Astron persisted as he climbed aboard. 'As I understand it, it could only be the act of a hero.'
CHAPTER EIGHT
THE race across the Southern Kingdoms was swift. Kestrel pushed the mare as much as he dared, barely stopping for food and sleep. Astron had no requirement for nourishment and Phoebe in her entranced state needed little. In three days' time they crossed Samirand and Laudia and entered Ethidor, which bordered Procolon on the south. During their trek, Astron saw no sign of the searching imps, but the compelling sense of urgency did not abate. At any moment, the wizards could discover where they were and subject them to their wrath. The tale of what awaited Astron back in his own realm, if he did not succeed in time, Kestrel could scarcely believe, but the demon remained steadfast in urging the wagon onward.
Toward dusk of the third day, they arrived in the port of Menthos as the onshore breeze blew thick plumes of dark smoke from foundries across the isthmus. Kestrel pulled his horse to a stop at the head of the main street of the town. He glanced back at Phoebe, who appeared to be sleeping on a rough bed under the wagon's canopy. The branches and snags meant to be foisted off as anvilwood had long since been discarded. Astron sat at Kestrel's side, wearing a long cape and hooded like a master, although no logo was displayed. A worn tunic, leggings, boots and gloves covered most of his faintly scaled skin.
On the left side of the main street, behind a sidewalk of rough planking, stood a long row of apothecaries, wooden-faced structures mainly of one storey. Some were brightly painted and prosperous-looking, others were dull with isinglass windows scratched and hazy. 'Galena and cinnabar,' some of the placards over doorways proclaimed; 'Fresh vacuum of all quantities, created daily,' said others.
On the right, steep stairways led down a short cliff to docks and quays. Riding gently at anchor were broad- beamed galleons, all lying high in the water, though some had their decks filled with closely packed bottles, their sails unfurled, ready to weigh anchor.
At the other end of the street, behind high fences, large smokestacks towered into the sky, belching dense black clouds. Even from the distance, one could hear the roar of huge bellows feeding air into furnaces and smell the hint of metallic fumes.
The traffic on the street was the usual mixture of scurrying messengers, maids hawking fruits and material from simple carts, merchants in animated conversation, and an occasional litter bearing someone of importance. Mixed with the rest were men-at-arms in groups of twos and threes, wandering aimlessly, apparently looking for something to spark their jaded interests.
'An alchemist's town, no doubt about it,' Kestrel said as he pointed to the rising smoke. He had decided it best to explain things to Astron as soon as something new was seen by the demon. It would reduce the chance of questions at inappropriate times, like those that had been asked at Phoebe's cabin.
Kestrel shook his head slightly as he spoke. He had become quite used to the physical presence of the demon. The oddity of his bizarre origin had long since faded away. A wrinkled nose, Kestrel now understood, indicated puzzlement, the flicking of the eye membranes a retreat into the deep logical thought. But beyond these simple signs, he still could not fathom any motives behind those that the devil professed. Hopefully, they would become more apparent as they drew closer to the archimage.
Despite his statements about experience as a cataloguer of the realm of men, Astron was totally ignorant about some of the simplest things. Abstract concepts beyond what one could see and touch took a good deal of explaining. But the demon was an eager and attentive pupil, asking questions until he was sure that he fully understood.
'If this is the lair of alchemists, then what formulas do they work?' Astron asked. 'The chance for success must be quite high, judging from the number who are congregated all in one place.'
'Vacuums,' Kestrel said. 'By melting metals, the alchemists of Menthos can produce the hardest vacuums on the great sea. They are in demand by magicians and thaumaturges for their own rituals and simulations.'
'But a vacuum is the total absence of matter. How can that have any value at all?'
'I do not understand the details,' Kestrel said, 'but by connecting one of the bottles produced here to another vessel, the air can be removed far better than by any pump. Lids can be sealed with greater force than that provided by the finest waxes. Huge pistons can be made to move along long cylinders, raising bridges over navigable rivers.'
'The absence of matter,' Astron mumbled, 'and in the realm of men great effort is put into its creation.' He wrinkled his nose. 'Another fascination. If only there were more time.'
Kestrel started to say more, but he suddenly spotted what he was looking for on the crowded street. Half a block down from where they had stopped, three brown-robed young men were performing their services for a queue of men-at-arms standing on the sidewalk, waiting their turn. Kestrel pointed out his destination and started the mare slowly forward.
'Thaumaturges,' he said, 'a journeyman and two apprentices. See, one wears but a single wavy line on his sleeve; the other two are unadorned. But no matter that a master is not present. They will know what is happening by the nature of their trade better than most.'
Astron leaned forward to watch the activity as the wagon approached. One of the apprentices deftly clicked short shears through the long hair of a sergeant who sat in a portable chair set up on the sidewalk in front of the line. The second scooted about on his knees sweeping up the locks as they fell and passing them on to the journeyman seated at a table a little distance away.
The last of the three carefully extracted a single strand of hair from the rest of each tress and dipped it into a pot of glue at his side. With a smooth motion, he aligned the sticky hair along the length of a piece of twine directly in front of where he sat. The men-at-arms chatted among themselves and the apprentice who wielded the shears, apparently totally oblivious of the other activities about them.
'I recognize the craft,' Astron said as they approached. 'The one with the doubled blades is called a barber. In exchange for a coin he removes hair from the head and face.'
'In the Southern Kingdoms, there is no fee.' Kestrel pulled the wagon to a halt directly in front of the line of waiting men. 'The hair itself is payment enough.'
'Something new for sale?' one of the men-at-arms called out, jingling the purse at his waist as Kestrel vaulted to the ground. 'It has been a fortnight of staring at the fires across the marsh. This is our first day of leave.'
'How much for an evening with the wench?' A second poked his head into the interior of the wagon and spied Phoebe's reclining form.
'Although she is mine to command, such base use is not-' Astron began before Kestrel reached up and laid a hand of warning on his arm.