But it seems to me that if you wait around until you know you need an antidote, itâs probably too late to pick one up.â
âI suppose I could sell you a pennyâs worth,â he said. âThat would be about a dose for a person your size. But itâs dangerous stuff in its own right. It only cures certain poisons. You can hurt yourself if you take it at the wrong time.â
âOh,â I said. âI didnât know that.â In the play it was touted as an infallible cure-all.
Abenthy tapped his lips thoughtfully. âCan you answer me a question in the meantime?â I nodded. âWhose troupe is that?â
âIn a way itâs mine,â I said. âBut in another way, itâs my fatherâs because he runs the show and points which way the wagons go. But itâs Baron Greyfallowâs too, because heâs our patron. Weâre Lord Greyfallowâs Men.â
The old man gave me an amused look. âIâve heard of you. Good troupe. Good reputation.â
I nodded, not seeing any point in false modesty.
âDo you think your father might be interested in taking on any help?â he asked. âI donât claim to be much of an actor, but Iâm handy to have around. I could make you face paint and rouge that arenât all full of lead and mercury and arsenic. I can do lights, too, quick, clean, and bright. Different colors if you want them.â
I didnât have to think too hard about it; candles were expensive and vulnerable to drafts, torches were dirty and dangerous. And everyone in the troupe learned the dangers of cosmetics at an early age. It was hard to become an old, seasoned trouper when you painted poison on yourself every third day and ended up raving mad by the time you were twenty-five.
âI may be overstepping myself a little,â I said as I held out my hand for him to shake. âBut let me be the first to welcome you to the troupe.â
Â
If this is to be a full and honest account of my life and deeds, I feel I should mention that my reasons for inviting Ben into our troupe were not entirely altruistic. Itâs true that quality cosmetics and clean lights were a welcome addition to our troupe. Itâs also true that Iâd felt sorry for the old man alone on the road.
But underneath it all I was moved by my curiosity. I had seen Abenthy do something I could not explain, something strange and wonderful. Not his trick with the sympathy lampsâI recognized that for what it was: showmanship, a bluff to impress ignorant townsfolk.
What he had done afterward was different. He called the wind and the wind came. It was magic. Real magic. The sort of magic Iâd heard about in stories of Taborlin the Great. The sort of magic I hadnât believed in since I was six. Now I didnât know what to believe.
So I invited him into our troupe, hoping to find answers to my questions. Though I didnât know it at the time, I was looking for the name of the wind.
CHAPTER NINE
Riding in the Wagon with Ben
A BENTHY WAS THE FIRST arcanist I ever met, a strange, exciting figure to a young boy. He was knowledgeable in all the sciences: botany, astronomy, psychology, anatomy, alchemy, geology, chemistryâ¦.
He was portly, with twinkling eyes that moved quickly from one thing to another. He had a strip of dark grey hair running around the back of his head, but (and this is what I remember most about him) no eyebrows. Rather, he had them, but they were in a perpetual state of regrowing from being burned off in the course of his alchemical pursuits. It made him look surprised and quizzical all at once.
He spoke gently, laughed often, and never exercised his wit at the expense of others. He cursed like a drunken sailor with a broken leg, but only at his donkeys. They were called Alpha and Beta, and Abenthy fed them carrots and lumps of sugar when he thought no one was looking. Chemistry was his particular love, and
Ruth Axtell
Unknown
Danette Haworth
Kartik Iyengar
Jennifer Wilson
Jon Sourbeer
K.A. Parkinson
Pearl Love
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Mia Cardine