饭饭TXT > 海外名作 > 《发现者之石三部曲(英文版)》作者:[美]Kate Novak > Finder's Stone 02--Wyvern's Spur.txt

第 27 页

作者:美-Kate Novak 当前章节:15510 字 更新时间:2026-6-19 12:19

Cat looked down at her hands. "I didn't know for certain. I just began to suspect it yesterday. He looks just like your cousins, Steele and Frefford. I was afraid that if you realized he was a relative, you might not take my side against him and let me remain in your protection."

Not very good at making up lies, are you? Olive thought.

Giogi looked wounded. "How could you even think such a thing?" he asked.

"You're always talking about how important your family is to you," Cat whispered. " 'Wyvernspurs look out for one another,' you said."

"But, you're family, too," Giogi protested.

"Suppose I weren't" Cat said.

"But you are," the nobleman insisted. "The guardian let you past, so you must be."

And I'm willing to bet, Olive thought, that that's not just because of your marriage to Flattery.

"But suppose I weren't in your family?" Cat insisted.

"It would make no difference," Giogi replied coldly, offended that Cat did not think more highly of his honor. "I'm not the sort of man who leaves young women in the hands of murdering wizards."

Cat looked down at her lap, unable to explain her anxiety. Giogi sat stiffly beside her, no longer holding her hand.

You've made a miscalculation, woman, Olive chided Cat mentally. You knew you couldn't tell Giogi that he's fallen in love with another man's wife. He might have accepted your not confiding in him, but, by suggesting he might turn you out, you've wounded his pride.

He's not suspicious of her, but at least she's on the defensive, Olive thought triumphantly.

"Anyway, you are a member of the family," Giogi insisted as if reminding himself he still had a duty toward her. "As a Wyvernspur himself, Flattery must have a record of the missing branches of our family tree. That's how he knew it would be safe to send you in after the spur."

Olive nodded, then caught herself. She wasn't supposed to know Cat had been in the crypt. "Do you mean to say Flattery had Mistress Cat steal the spur?" she asked, acting surprised.

Giogi flushed, realizing he'd just betrayed Cat. "Well, yes and no."

"My former master sent me after the spur, but it was gone when I got there," Cat explained hurriedly. "You see, their family crypt has a secret door, which opens—"

"Every fifty years," Olive concluded with a dismissive wave of her hand. "Yes, we know about that as well. What I don't understand is why Flattery sent you after the spur."

The question that had plagued Olive occurred to Giogi in a flash. "Yes! If Flattery is a Wyvernspur, why didn't he just go after the spur himself?" Giogi asked.

"If we knew the answer to that question, Master Giogioni," Olive announced, "we might just know how to defeat Flattery."

14

Breakfast Talk

Thomas knocked and entered the parlor. "Breakfast is ready, sir. Shall I set an extra place for Mistress Ruskettle?"

"Oh," Giogi said, turning from Thomas to Olive. "Would you do us the honor of joining us?" he asked.

"That would be most convenient," Olive replied. "We have much to discuss." Another breakfast couldn't hurt, she thought. It'll be different, at any rate, from eating all that hay and grain he's fed me.

"Yes, Thomas. Three for breakfast," Giogi replied. The nobleman stood and offered Cat his hand. After the mage rose to her feet, however, Giogi ushered her ahead and waited for Olive to rise. He could hardly offer the halfling his arm, as she didn't stand any higher than his hip, but he walked beside her to the dining room.

As Olive and Giogi followed Cat to breakfast, the halfling could sense Cat's displeasure. Again she reminded Olive of the sorceress Cassana. Cassana never could stand any competition, no matter how small.

Thomas set out a high chair for Olive at Giogi's right hand, leaving an ordinary chair for Cat on his master's left. The servant was heartened to see that the unusually serious halfling had an appetite comparable to all the other halflings he had ever known. Her conversation topics, however, were most disturbing.

Giogioni listened with unusual attentiveness to his new guest. It seemed to Thomas that his master was disturbed as well, though not completely by the halfling's talk. The servant couldn't help but notice that Giogi's attitude toward the mage had turned considerably cooler.

Thomas wished he'd had the opportunity to put an ear to the parlor door so he could know what had happened between them.

"We will need the help of others of talent and power," Olive explained as she reached for two breakfast rolls and smeared a tablespoon of butter on each. "I will leave it to you to choose persons you feel you can trust with the knowledge of Flattery." Olive bit off half a roll.

Giogi thought for a moment. "I was going to visit Mother Lleddew today. I don't know how I will be received exactly, but I'm sure I can trust her with a family secret. She once was a companion of my father."

"Mother Lleddew," Olive muttered through a full mouth. She chewed rapidly and swallowed. "Mother Lleddew," she repeated. "Priestess of Selune, isn't she? Has quite a reputation. If you're willing to trust her, I'm sure she'll be most useful.

"There is something else you might consider, Master Giogioni," Olive said, dabbing a stream of butter from her chin. "It may be unseemly to bring it up so soon after your uncle's demise, but did he possess any magical items we could use?"

"I don't know," Giogi admitted. "I was going to search through his lab for his journal this morning. I wouldn't really know what to look for, though, when it comes to magical items."

"Mistress Cat would be able to aid you in that respect, surely," Olive said as she plopped five sugar cubes into her tea.

"I had hoped to keep her hidden from Flattery's sight," Giogi explained without looking in Cat's direction.

The enchantress, who had remained silent until now, reminded her protector, "It may be too late for that." Then she looked into her lap to avoid Giogi's eyes.

Olive looked up in surprise. Are we to get a confession now? she wondered, thinking that Cat was about to admit to having contacted Flattery the day before.

"Oh, yes. I'd forgotten," Giogi said, his forehead furrowed.

"Forgotten what?" Olive asked.

"Late last night, someone broke in and attacked Mistress Cat. Fortunately, she managed to raise an alarm, and her attacker fled."

"I thought it was my master, Flattery," Cat explained, still not looking up. "It looked like him in the moonlight, but I don't think Flattery would have tried to smother me in my bed."

"No. I can't see the wizard who disintegrated Jade relying on down pillows," Olive agreed.

There was a clatter of silverware on oak at the far end of the table. All three diners looked up suddenly at the noise. Giogi's manservant was looking at the halfling, temporarily oblivious to the disturbance he'd just created by dropping a pile of flatware on the table.

"Thomas, is something wrong?" Giogi asked.

"Excuse me, Mistress Ruskettle," the servant said, looking pale and stricken, "but did I hear you just say someone had been . . . disintegrated . . . by this Flattery person?"

Olive held her ham-laden fork suspended in midair. "Yes, Thomas," she answered. "My partner, Jade More. Two nights ago. Why?"

"Forgive my interruption, sir," Thomas addressed Giogi, "but, um, I understand from the servants up in Redstone that nothing was found of your Uncle Drone, save a pile of ash, his robes, and hat."

Giogi tapped his forehead with the flat of his palm. "Sweet Selune. You're right. It looks as if this Flattery could be responsible for the death of my Uncle Drone as well. Good thought, Thomas." Thomas did not hear the compliment however. He'd bolted for the kitchen.

"Why should Flattery kill your Uncle Drone?" Cat asked.

"I would think it's obvious," Olive answered her. "Flattery sends you in after the spur. You don't come back right away. He must presume you're in trouble. Remember, later that evening, when he mistook my partner for you, he said, 'you've escaped, and now you try to steal what you have not earned.' He may have assumed you'd been captured by Drone—"

"That's possible," Cat admitted, softly. "Flattery told me he would not be able to watch me with his scrying crystal because the catacombs and crypt were proofed against magical eyes."

"Uncle Drone had them shielded from magical sight from all but himself," Giogi added, "and even he had trouble looking into the crypt after the robbery."

Not that either of them would have been able to spot Cat, Olive thought to herself. Like Alias and Jade, Cat must be proofed against magical detection and scrying. It seems, though, that Flattery has never told her. He wouldn't want her to think she could hide from him.

"Mistress Ruskettle, you were saying," Giogi prompted Olive out of her reverie.

"Anyway," Olive continued aloud, "when Flattery sees Jade later that evening, he assumes you've escaped, and, thinking you have just picked his pocket; he believes you have betrayed him and he slays Jade, mistaking her for you. Like the witness to Jade's murder, namely myself, who he did try to kill, Drone is a loose end. Drone may have interrogated you and learned all about him. Also, Flattery would not have given up his quest for the spur. Drone might have taken the spur from you and have it in his lab, where it would be easy to get. If the spur was still safe in the crypt, Flattery could have stolen Drone's key before killing him."

"But I never had the spur, never even saw it. It wasn't in the crypt when I got there," Cat protested, some of her old spirit returning to her voice. "Someone else had stolen it."

"Ah," Olive said, "but Flattery couldn't see into the crypt, so he couldn't know that, unless he looked for himself. Later in the day, after he'd already destroyed Drone, Flattery would have discovered that someone had been successful at stealing the spur."

"Yes" Giogi said guiltily. "It does seem to have gotten out."

Cat, Olive noticed, stirred uncomfortably in her seat. As well she should, since she was the culprit, the halfling thought.

"And somehow," Olive said, pointing a spoonful of eggs at Cat, "Flattery's found out you're still alive and at large."

"I told you he has a scrying ball," Cat said.

"If he thought you were dead, he wouldn't have been scrying for you," Olive pointed out. She hoped Cat would realize that if she hadn't been stupid enough to contact Flattery yesterday, he'd probably be pretty much in the dark. Too bad the mage hadn't known that Flattery can't scry for her at all. At least we can use that to our advantage, Olive thought.

"In any event, Flattery discovers you're still alive," Olive continued, explaining to Cat, "and learns that you've taken refuge here. It may look to him as if you've got the spur, and you're negotiating to return it to Master Giogioni. So he sends a flunkie after you. I presume he has flunkies?" Olive asked.

Cat nodded. She looked very confused, though, and Olive could tell she'd planted the seed of doubt in the woman's head.

"Master Giogioni, I believe it is probably safer for Mistress Cat to remain with us wherever we go," Olive concluded. "We will no doubt profit from her expertise as well."

"You asked yesterday if you could come with me," Giogi said to Cat. "I guess you'll get your chance. Thomas!" the young noble called out, ringing a small silver bell beside his plate.

Thomas, looking pale, appeared at the doorway to Servant Land. "Yes, sir?" he asked.

"After breakfast, the ladies and I will be riding up to Redstone and then to the Temple of Selune. Would you please harness Daisyeye to the buggy?"

"Yes, sir," Thomas said, fading back through the doorway.

Olive downed her breakfast with relish, except the oatmeal. She didn't quite have the stomach for that. The two humans poked their food around their plates in silence, though. Olive could understand Cat not being very hungry. She'd just lost her place in the sun. Giogi's loss of appetite worried Olive more. She needed him to be alert and enthusiastic.

Olive was just finishing her third pot of tea when Thomas, looking distraught as well as pale, returned to the dining room. "It appears we've had some vandalism in the carriage house, sir," he informed Giogi in a tight, level voice.

'The deuce you say," Giogi replied, rising with alarm. "Not the animals?"

"Daisyeye appears to be unaffected. The buggy is damaged, though, sir, and it appears someone started a fire but extinguished it before it did much damage."

"What about Birdie?"

"Birdie, sir?"

"The burro. I named it Birdie. Did it have another name already?"

"Uh . . ." Thomas looked like a man whose ordered life had been disrupted by a visit to another plane. "What burro, sir?" he asked with confusion.

"The one I took into the catacombs yesterday."

"Oh, yes. You mentioned a burro, I recall. Did you rent the burro from a local stable, sir?"

"Did I—? I thought you bought the burro for me, Thomas." Giogi replied.

"I, sir? No, sir. Why would I buy a burro for you, sir?"

"Look here, Thomas. If you didn't buy the burro, what was it doing in my garden the night before last eating my roses?" Giogi demanded.

"It's only Ches, sir. Barely spring. There aren't any roses in bloom yet," Thomas pointed out.

"Eating my roses was only a figure of speech, Thomas," Giogi said sternly. Then he sighed. "Please, send down to Dzulas's Stables for a carriage and four while I go search for the burro. Perhaps you ladies would care to wait in the parlor while we get this straightened out," Giogi suggested.

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