Chapter 168: Raven Clouds
Thaddeus
Month 4, Day 9, Friday 9:00 a.m.
Everyone in the room except for Thaddeus was nervous, though some hid it better than others. He had taken one of the best seats in the back corner of Harrow Hill’s third floor meeting room, positioned next to a window.
An entire row of distagrams sat against one of the walls, manned by a couple of nervous-looking young coppers. Everyone who wasn’t on duty at the Edictum Council or out patrolling the streets was here. Only those so ill or injured as to be on bed rest were off duty.
In addition to that, a squad of Red Guard agents had made an appearance—under relentless pressure from the High Crown—and a couple of the man’s own Pendragon Corps operatives stood near the door. They both remained silent and straight-backed in their ostentatious uniforms, sneering at the rest, even the Red Guard agents.
The Pendragon Corps had ostentatious uniforms and sparkling artifacts, and received special training that the First Crown Family had always touted as being the best of the best. However, the operatives rarely saw combat—even less than the average copper. It used to be that the Pendragon Corps took their numbers from people who had shown real competence in the army or as a beast hunter. Historically, they even recruited extremely skilled criminals who had done nothing heinous or public enough to taint the High Crown’s reputation, offering those people service in lieu of penal servitude or death.
Now, at least half of their recruits were straight out of the University, and Thaddeus had heard rumors that the honor of the position was now warring with the realities of withstanding the High Crown’s egomania and increasing paranoia.
And yet, they sneered at the coppers, swaggered through the streets, and imagined themselves equals of the Red Guard. Totally preposterous.
Unfortunately, the Pendragon operatives’ current disdain was all too understandable.
Agent Berg, the man who had botched the Moore break event aftercare, was one of those sent to assist. He was as loud as usual. Was he partially deaf, or simply oblivious? “It was as big as a building!” Berg bragged, throwing his arms wide as several awe-struck coppers listened. “But we’re trained to handle such things, and you wouldn’t believe the kind of artifacts we get in the Red Guard. One spell, one ankle blown clean off!” He displayed none of the quietly assertive excellence that was associated with their organization’s public face.
Thus, the Pendragon operative’s disdain.
Even Thaddeus’s apprentice Sebastien would be a better Red Guard recruit than that Berg buffoon. The thought of Sebastien caused Thaddeus a flicker of concern. Hopefully, Siverling was safe in the University dorms. This would be just the sort of thing that foolish, overly-confident boy would somehow get caught up in.
But no matter Agent Berg’s attempts at distraction through braggadocio, thoughts inevitably turned back toward the reason for their presence.
“Do you have anything special to deal with the Raven Queen?” one of the coppers asked.
“If she shows her face in front of me, it’ll be the last thing she ever does as a free woman!” Berg announced, grinning widely with his hands on his hips.
A few of the coppers shared glances, dubious. “Will she show up for sure?”
Thaddeus tuned out their conversation, looking out over the city, already teeming with people like ants in a hive, all heading toward the same locus point. He had considered turning down Titus’s request to act as a consultant and one more point of backup so that he could attend the sentencing, but Thaddeus had a feeling that Siobhan Naught would surprise them. He wanted to be able to respond to that. Harrow Hill was the place that would receive information most quickly, and had both horses and carriages ready for quick deployment.
With some sideways, curious looks at Thaddeus, one of the coppers asked loudly enough to purposefully be overheard, “Have you Red Guard agents seen anything like the Raven Queen before?”
Thaddeus had experienced quite a lot of fascinating and horrific things. He didn’t remember a time when he was unaware of the horrors this world could birth, but he had experienced it truly firsthand during his first—and last—dragon hunt. It wasn’t the magical beast itself that had been the worst of it. No, that was his teammates. The other people. And then, of course, what became of them.
In the Haze War, Thaddeus had seen wondrous magic and enormous resources, all used toward the purpose of death and domination. All that effort and waste, born from greed and in the end coming to nothing. What a waste of resources.
But above all, his years of active service with the Red Guard had exposed Thaddeus to sublime magic, strange ideas, and overwhelming power—all of these things coming both from their agents and from what they fought against to protect the world against. The Red Guard collected the best thaumaturges, the most knowledgeable researchers, and innovators so close to the cutting edge that sometimes they slipped over it.
He stood, the scrape of his chair against the stone floor drawing nervous eyes his way from all over the room. Thaddeus ignored them, free-casting a lens spell in front of the window to peer clearly into the distance. He adjusted its focus with some quick calculations and a roll of his fingers.
A foot-wide section of the air in front of his face now showed a much closer view of a run-down building well into the Mires. It was taller than those around it, like a single still-living soldier amongst the sprawled and mutilated bodies of his former companions.
Birds congregated around the building in an increasingly thick flock, seemingly connected together with a single mind, sections of their multitude twisting and turning and changing direction at a moment’s notice in some kind of unfathomable dance. Even as Thaddeus watched, more and more feathered creatures added themselves to the delphic, hypnotic concord.
“Ravens,” Thaddeus said with awe. He watched unblinking, trying to absorb every moment of the display. It was exquisite, an arrangement that seemed as if it should have been accompanied by music. He had once heard a four-hundred-string orchestra in Paneth, and could imagine that reverberating sound fitting with this living mass of darkness that undulated in the sky above Gilbratha.
Something twinged in Thaddeus’s chest, slightly painful, poignant, and to his surprise his eyes itched and burned in response. He blinked rapidly, but refused to be ashamed. This was an involuntary, universal reaction to experiencing the practical application of genius. A visual representation of the weave of magic. And every second, more ravens joined the flock.
Others had gathered at the windows and behind Thaddeus, trying to peek through his spell to get a better look.
“Sweet Myrddin,” one of the coppers whispered through dry lips.
“It’s her. That’s her,” another said, gripping the shoulder of the man beside him and shaking him as if to better get his point across.
“How are we supposed to capture that? A brightlight?” a woman asked derisively, irritation only partially masking her fear.
“Teams eight, nine, ten, and eleven, move out!” the captain shouted, snapping those who weren’t already on their way into action.
Reluctantly, Thaddeus dropped his far-seeing spell and strode toward the room’s exit, then down to the front gate. Titus had arrived ahead of him, and waved for Thaddeus to join him and Kuchen in the armored carriage attached to four great destriers.
No sooner had Thaddeus closed the door behind him than the carriage sprang into motion, pushing him back into his seat from the acceleration. Outside, the coachman rang the bell to warn anyone on the streets to make way for them.
Thaddeus watched the sky through the small window set into the door, catching glimpses of the phenomena toward the south the few times when the carriage was faced to allow this.
His companions were as silent as him for the most part, though Kuchen manned the carriage’s personal distagram, relaying Titus’s message to the diviners at the University and poking his head out of the window to yell precise coordinates for the center of the cloud to the driver—not that the man would need such a thing.
The entire city could see the Raven Queen’s working. People on the streets had stopped in their tracks to stare, open-mouthed, with the more adventurous climbing onto roofs. One enterprising restaurant owner was even selling tickets to his roof to watch the show—with wine and snacks.
The distagram activated, the attached pen rising up and writing in the neat, foreign hand of whoever was sending the message. Kuchen’s eyes widened as he read. When the message ended, he tore off the strip of paper and read it again. “They found her! The divinations have shown results! She’s at...” he trailed off, looking up at Titus and Thaddeus. He cleared his throat wetly.“Well, she’s in the city, to the southwest. In the center of the raven cloud, it would seem.”
“What a revelation,” Titus drawled.
Thaddeus smirked and did his best to suppress inappropriate signs of excitement as they approached. However, one small thorn marred the experience. What was so special about Ennis Naught that she was willing to go to such lengths for him?
The Mires were far from Harrow Hill, and no matter how much Thaddeus and Titus might want to, they couldn’t literally trample through the crowds of civilians filling the streets.
Long minutes before they finally arrived, Thaddeus knew they would be too late, as the unkindness of ravens began to disperse. The teams that had raced ahead on horseback reported no sightings of her.
When the carriage finally stopped at the edge of the area that was already being cordoned off, Thaddeus grimaced. The streets and buildings were covered in bird shit, the coppers were busy questioning any civilian they could get their hands on, and the building at the center of it all was empty. Thaddeus walked swiftly through each room and examined the roof for something that the others might have missed, but he noticed nothing unusual, and suspected he would find nothing she hadn’t specifically left for that purpose.
But, visible in the distance from the vantage point of the roof, the golden spire piercing up from the dome of the Edictum Council building glinted in the sun. Thaddeus couldn’t help the smile that stretched across his face, baring his teeth in wild exhilaration. “This was a diversion,” he said.