Cast in Honor (Chronicles of Elantra, #11)

“And just happened to find a suitable house in which to raise her?” The word skeptical did not do justice to his tone or expression.

Put that way, it sounded bad. Kaylin poked the adornment draped across her shoulders; he lifted his head and yawned. Evanton frowned.

“You saw this so-called Shadow?”

The small dragon nodded.

“And you accepted his presence?”

And yawned.

“Kaylin, do not take all of your cues from your familiar. While he does seem to serve you, he is not mortal. He is not human. His concerns and his fears are not—and cannot be—yours.”

“I know that, but they spoke to each other. He’s pretty clear on what he thinks is dangerous, and he didn’t consider Gilbert a danger.”

“Gilbert.”

“I think Kattea probably named him.”

“Gilbert.” Evanton shook his head. “Were you alone?”

“Severn, Teela, Tain and Bellusdeo were with me at the time. Bellusdeo was willing to accept Gilbert’s existence, and if she does...” Kaylin offered Evanton a fief shrug.

“So you came to ask me about...Gilbert.”

“Well, no. I mean yes, but not just about Gilbert.” Kaylin sighed, resigning herself to the idea of Marcus’s inevitable snarling back at the office. “Let me tell you about my morning.”

*

Teela added the details that Kaylin glossed over in her attempt to get to the office in time to preserve her job—and her throat—while Evanton listened carefully. He asked no questions until she reached the end of her narrative.

Suprisingly, his first question was not directed to Kaylin.

“An’Teela, have you seen the ruins just south of the West March?”

Teela frowned. “No.”

“They are not easily accessible; simple scholars have managed to lose themselves in the surrounding forest without reaching their place of study. They are, however, accessible if the scholar is an Arcanist.”

“This is relevant?”

“It may be. It is not clear who dwelled in those ruins; they are architecturally inconsistent with the West March and its environs. The ruins existed before the Barrani and the Dragons started any of their ill-advised wars. As ruins do, they attracted the attention of the curious.”

Teela said nothing.

“Entry to these buildings was often complicated—even after the buildings themselves were deserted. Kaylin, I believe you have some experience of this.”

Kaylin bristled. “Helen is not a ruin.”

“No. But her appearance—both internal and external—is under her own control. She cannot be easily invoked or altered against her wishes. I am not claiming that the basement of a nondescript building within the city is in any way equivalent to Helen—but there were always wards and protections cast upon buildings, and death does not always render them inactive.

“From the sounds of your staircase, it is possible that the homes in that area were built upon the foundations of older works.”

“But who would know enough about that to sneak into a basement with a member of the family? And what would they stand to gain by killing the three men?”

“Investigation of this nature is what you’re paid to do.”

“Meaning,” Teela said, “you don’t know.”

Evanton raised a brow at her tone, but nodded. “I admit that the bodies—and their presence or absence—is new to me. But difficulties of this nature are, sadly, becoming more familiar.”

“What exactly is the nature of these difficulties?” Kaylin demanded.

Evanton, however, shook his head. “That, I cannot reveal to you at this time. However, I will, I fear, be spending more time in the Garden in the immediate future. My knowledge is inexact, but my function is not. I keep the world...real.”

Scary thought.

*

Kaylin thought she could hear Marcus growling from two blocks away. The Halls of Law loomed like a gallows as they marched briskly toward them. Teela was tight-lipped and blue-eyed by the time they reached the doors. Tanner and Clint framed them, but one look at Teela’s expression made them instantly wary. Fair enough. Barrani blue was not a terribly safe look.

Clint’s eyes, however, were already the wrong color for an Aerian: coal gray, which made them look hard. He lowered his weapon as they approached, but didn’t raise it to allow them passage, and given Teela’s mood, that was significant.

“What’s wrong?” Kaylin asked.

“I heard a rumor in the mess hall.”

“Was it about me?” Kaylin asked.

“Got it in one go.”

“I can hear Ironjaw growling from here, Clint. He’s been waiting for us to arrive.”

Clint had the grace to wince, but didn’t immediately grant them passage. “It’s about you and Moran.”

Kaylin blinked. “Pardon?”

Tanner held out a hand, palm up. Clint dropped a few coins into it, although he didn’t really look away from Kaylin. Tanner then said, “Caitlin said you’re going to offer Moran a place to stay while she recuperates.”

“Caitlin told you this?” Kaylin demanded, feeling a bit of a pang.

“Clint grilled her.”

Michelle Sagara's books