Read Bad Apple (The Warner Grimoire) Online
Authors: Clay Held
“I thought this was where we were coming,” Simon finally said, irritated. “I thought we’d just meet up. I wanted to look up my parents.”
“That so?” Nathan closed the gap between them. “Ever occur to you to ask me? That you might go missing too if you wandered off with someone you just met? ”
Frustration exploded within Simon. “I’ve just met
you
!” he shouted. Instantly, Jo’s watchful eyes were on him, and she glared fiercely, but Simon didn’t care. Somewhere, at this moment, Sam was being held prisoner, and for all he could tell, there was not a single answer to be found anywhere, not here in the Archives, not here in Silverwood, not anywhere. The frustration choked him, and he stood there, stuck to the floor, his eyes starting to burn.
Nathan stood silent, his mouth hanging slightly open. “I...” he started. “Yes, I guess. I guess we did.” He shook his head. “That’s still not good enough reason to run off. You need to stay where I can see you. Keep an
eye
on you. Understand?”
“It’s not like anyone can get him here,” Luke volunteered. “Unwelcomes can’t enter the estate.”
“Now that’s where you’re wrong,” Nathan said curtly. “Ours is a member of the Freemancers. He can enter whenever he wants. Same as me, same as her,” Nathan pointed at Penny, who was sitting on the floor by a nearby table, petting a black kitten and humming to herself. Nathan stared down Luke. “Same as you too, right?”
Luke did not immediately answer.
“What?” Simon broke the silence. “How? He’s...he’s...!”
“I don’t make the rules,” Nathan said. “He pays his dues, his
official
record is clean, he’s welcome. As long as he’s in good standing with the Records Room, he can come and go as he pleases. So
please
, Simon, stay with me. Got it?”
“I didn’t know that,” Simon finally said. His stomach was sour with anger. “I thought it would be all right. I thought
here
was safe. I just wanted to learn about my parents.”
Nathan put his hands on Simon’s shoulders. “Soon,” he said. “I can’t lose you, too. Not now. Your room’s a safe place, the only truly safe place, so I need you to stay there, or with me, when we’re about the grounds.” He eyed Penny. “Tell me, miss, are you one of Peter Nettle’s daughters?”
“That’s my father,” Penny said, standing.
“Could you please go find him for us?” Nathan asked. “He is expecting us.”
“I’ll see what I can do,” Penny said. “He’s been busy with the new Vaudevire collection.”
“My many thanks,” Nathan said. He turned on Luke, his tone instantly changing from gentle to stern. “Your necklace--Delta Order, I think? Who in Madam Mamzelle’s Court is your master? Full title, order and verse. Show the one who trains and feeds you the respect he, she, or
it
deserves.”
Luke’s smile faltered. “I think I should help the young lady,” he said. “It would be rude to leave her unescorted.”
“That so,” Nathan said. “Perhaps just your name and mantle, I think.” Nathan squared his shoulders, addressing Luke just as he had addressed Simon that morning with the staff. His entire demeanor shifted in a heartbeat. “I speak as a mentor. By our rites I request you answer me.”
Luke looked uncertain, then finally spoke. “Luke Briar.”
“Middle name?”
“Ain’t got one.”
“That so?”
“Just Luke Briar. Born to a fox and bird, raised along the river.”
Nathan settled down, his demeanor returning to normal after one last, long stare at Luke. “We really should keep our manners, shouldn’t we?”
“Yes, mentor.”
“You best escort the lady then.”
Luke agreed with a fierce nod and hurried to catch up to Penny, who had not waited for him and was already halfway back to the circulation desk.
“I’m sorry,” Simon said flatly when Luke and Penny were out of sight. “I didn’t think it would be a problem.
Nathan waved the apology aside without another word. “What were you really looking for, Simon?”
“I told you. Information on bloodlines,” Simon said. “I thought there might be information on my mom and dad.”
Another pained look from Nathan. “I hate to say it, but probably not,” Nathan said. “At least, nothing out here, nothing out in the open. Not anymore.”
“Why not?” Simon asked. “What’s the deal with my parents anyway?” After another fierce glance from Jo he dropped his voice to a whisper. “Luke called my dad the
Walking Shadow
. That he was
rotten
. I thought you said they were
good
.”
Nathan scratched his eyebrow with his thumb, and took a deep breath, followed by another. “Simon, this really isn’t the best time--”
“Something tells me it never will be.”
Nathan started to object, then took another run at his eyebrow. He looked Simon dead in the eye and took a final deep breath. “Well, this is the thing, Simon. They
were
good. That much is true. They
were
good, until...”
“Until what?” Simon hissed, his voice rising.
Nathan looked away. “Until you.”
CHAPTER NINE
THE MESSAGE
“Nathan!” A tall man with a wild mane of rusty brown hair approached them. “Nathan, Nathan, Nathan. So good to see you again!” A scraggly brown beard framed out the bottom of his thin face. He grabbed Nathan in a fierce hug. “My friend!”
“Peter,” Nathan said after being released. “Thank you for seeing us like this.”
“Oh, nonsense, nonsense!” said Mr. Nettle. “You must be Simon, am I right? Of course I am! Come on, come on back with me. Come!” He motioned for them to follow, then he all but sprinted into the office behind the counter. Simon still wanted to ask Nathan just what he had meant about his parents, but besides one quick look, Nathan made no immediate effort to further explain his remark as they followed Mr. Nettle. Jo made no effort to stop either of them, but she watched Simon with great interest as they stepped behind the counter into her territory, then into her father’s office at the very heart of the library.
Mr. Nettle’s office was much like the rest of the Archives, occupied with huge piles of books, some which reached to the ceiling, some which even seemed to be holding the ceiling up in places. “Come in, sit down, sit down!” Mr. Nettle cleared two small chairs, sweeping a pile of papers up into his arm and displacing a small black kitten in the process. Only once they were seated did Mr. Nettle stop humming around the office, closing a second door off to the side and finally settling down on the corner of an ancient-looking desk covered with huge stacks of paper and what Simon assumed to be bottles of ink, and behind his desk a great fireplace burned brightly, a dance of flames and shadows all around him. Mr. Nettle folded his fingers in front of him while the black kitten jumped up onto an empty spot of desk and sniffed around, settling on a spot on the corner to start another nap. “Now then, Nathan, what can I do for you?”
“I need to find Nicodemus,” Nathan said bluntly.
“I see,” Mr. Nettle said slowly, leaning back in his chair. “I think you might find that the old Archmancer has not exactly been in the mood for company, not since Sterling began his term, you see.”
“Not too unusual, I guess,” Nathan said. “I heard it was a close tally.”
Nettle’s face grew dark at the memory. “Closer than a cat’s whisker,” he said, petting the kitten. “All anyone knows with any certainty is that after the Electing Board concluded, Sterling was the new Archmancer, and Nicodemus was out.”
Nathan leaned forward. “Then what?”
“Then? The same thing that always happens when new leadership takes over. Changes. Sterling had new ideas, not all good, and I’ll tell you, not all of them have gone over with everyone.” Mr. Nettle turned towards the fire, his glasses flickering from the light. “With Limnic completely out of the picture, there’s no one to challenge Sterling. He had the option to remain as Archmancer-in-Standing, but he declined even that. Then, he was just gone, off to devil-knows-where.”
Nathan leaned back. “It seems like he’s needed more than ever.”
Mr. Nettle kept his back to them. “I don’t think guild affairs are why you’ve come home.”
Nathan glanced at Simon. “Last night Fellis Boeman showed up at Sam Thatch’s hiding place.
“So I’ve heard.”
“He set fire to the home, broke the warding spells, and abducted Sam.”
Mr. Nettle turned back around slowly. He sat quietly while Nathan recounted the rest of the details, from their journey on
The Idlewild
, to their meeting in the Timeless Room. The entire time Mr. Nettle sat quietly, his eyes occasionally flicking over to Simon, but mostly his gaze stay focused on the enormous stacks of papers in front of him. “You hope that Limnic would be able to help?” he finally asked when Nathan was finished. “What makes you believe he’d involve himself?”
Nathan drew his grimoire from the pocket of his coat. “When Nicodemus--Archmancer Limnic--inscribed my grimoire, he added something small at the bottom. A note really. It read ‘good luck.’ I didn’t think anything about it at the time, but from time to time the message has changed. It’s been his way of keeping an eye on me, I guess.” He thumbed to the inscription page. “Recently it changed again, this time to something dire.”
“A warning?” Mr. Nettle asked.
“Not just any warning,” Nathan said. “A portent. An omen of things to come.”
“What did it say?” Simon asked.
Nathan gave Simon a long, sad look, then handed the grimoire to Simon “I don’t think you’d understand, but all the same, I grant you the privilege.” Nathan spoke to the book. “Reveal the secret of the dedication page.”
Simon opened the book to the front, where the same handwritten words were:
NATHAN ALAN TAMERLANE
BORN IN A SUMMER STORM, RAISED IN THE RAIN
JOURNEYMAN - PROBATION
DIVISION NO. 713
THE GREAT HALL OF THE FREE AND ACCEPTED MANCERS OF NOVA MUNDUS
REESTABLISHED 1680.
SIGNED, NICODEMUS LIMNIC, ARCHMANCER
He looked at Nathan. “Your standing has changed from good to probation.”
“What? Let me see.” Nathan took the book back and glanced at the front page. “That happens from time to time. Don’t worry about it. Do you see what it says below?”
A new message faded in below the inscription, the same handwriting, the same ink, but it seemed to have been written in a great hurry:
DARROW WALKS
“I don’t understand,” Simon said. “Who is Darrow?”
Mr. Nettle sat up straight in his chair. “Silas Darrow? The devil’s own dogs, Nathan! Just what is this about?”
Nathan stared out the window. “Just what it says. The Dreamer has awakened. Darrow walks.”
“What does that even mean?” Simon asked. “Who is this guy?”
“Silas Abraham Darrow,” Mr. Nettle said. “Born beyond the Moated Veil, raised again to rule.” He took a deep breath. “One who has walked in Thule.”
“A warlock on the less-than-nice side,” Nathan said. “Wrote the book on half the known necromantic rituals. All but invented exomancy. One of few who have walked in the necrotic city of Thule. He carries a full mantle for that--birth, life, and death.”
“Not without a great personal cost,” Nettle said. “Few who walk in the streets of Thule ever return, let alone complete.”
Simon looked between the two. The mood in the room had definitely changed. “What happened to him?”
“Necromancy is a theurgical rite,” Mr. Nettle said. “It works in deals. Divine trades. You don’t get if you don’t give, and the power of Thule comes with great and terrible costs. Since that time he has slept off and on, periodically caught in the dreams between this life and the next. They say in the twilight between worlds you hear the whisper of the Originals, the Timeworn beings of Old, and in that place you may learn their darkest secrets. If he has truly awakened from his slumber again, he is more dangerous than before.”
Simon tried to follow. “What does he want?”
Nettle took a deep breath. “Darrow does not see the world as we do, Simon. He sees a world that wishes to destroy us, a world that has hunted us for millennia. While we choose to live in quiet harmony, Darrow believes the only way to protect our people and our way of life is to strike first. He wants to go to war with those not of the Folk.”