Kelder stepped to the next window and was relieved to find a perfectly normal view of Krithim, laid out below them like a collection of toys; the only unsettling thing about it was how very high up they were. The wizard’s workshop was clearly atop the tallest tower in the castle.
“Oh, I can’t think of any just now,” Perina said, as she, too, got to her feet, “but I can loan you a few pieces of silver if you like, and when you find that countercharm that will cover it. It would be worth, oh, I’d say ten pieces to me, and I could give you half of that now.”
“What if we don’t find it?” Kelder asked, breaking his silence.
“Oh, Kelder, don’t be such a bore,” Irith said.
“Then you’ll find some other way to pay me back,” Perina said, dismissing the problem with a wave.
Kelder hesitated, but he was tired of doing stupid little jobs and constantly worrying about where the next meal was coming from. Five pieces of silver-that was fifty in copper, four hundred bits. Added to the handful they had, that would make life a good bit easier all around.
Irith threw him a questioning look, and he nodded.
“Thank you, Perina,” the shapeshifter said, “that would be wonderful.”
“Wait right here, then,” she said. “I’ll get my purse.” She hurried to the spiral stair.
That left Irith and Kelder standing a few feet apart, with no one else in the room. Kelder said quietly, “She seems to know a lot.”
“Hmm?” Irith looked at him questioningly.
“Well, I mean, all this magical stuff here, and all those powerful wizards she was talking about-if
Irith shook her head. “Silly,” she said, “don’t let Peri fool you; she’s not part of any inner circle or anything. She
“Oh,” Kelder said.
“The countercharm could be in one of them,” Irith said, “but we’d never find it. We’d probably get killed by some silly warding spell if we tried to look for it.”
“Oh,” Kelder said again.
Then Perina reappeared, descending the stair, a velvet purse in her hand.
“Here we go,” she said, pulling out a handful of coins.
When the money was safely tucked away-three pieces in silver in Kelder’s purse, two in Irith’s, and the rest back where it came from-Irith kissed Perina goodbye and stepped to the window.
“Must you go?” Perina asked, as Irith opened the casement.
“I’m afraid so,” Irith said, as wings sprouted from her shoulderblades.
“Well, take care.” She and Kelder watched as Irith stepped up on the sill, and then flew away.
Feeling suddenly awkward, Kelder said, “Well, I guess I’ll be going, too.”
Perina smiled at him. “Oh, I’m sure,” she said. “Tell me, though, lad, how did you meet Irith?”
Kelder shrugged. “Just bumped into her on the highway,” he said.
“You’ve taken a fancy to her, haven’t you? I can always tell these things.” She smiled a smile that Kelder supposed was meant to be conspiratorial; it came off as condescending, instead.
“I suppose,” Kelder mumbled.
“It shows,” Perina said. “At least, to someone as experienced as I am, it does.”
“I’m sure it does,” he muttered, embarrassed.
“I might be able to do something for you, you know,” she said.
Kelder blinked.
“I really don’t know Fendel’s Infatuous Love Spell,” she said, “but I do … Oh, it isn’t
“No, of course not!” Kelder said uneasily.
He didn’t
“Oh, good, I didn’t think so,” Perina continued, smiling-smirking, almost. “Well, then. I don’t know that one, but I
“To use on Irith?” Kelder asked.
Perina nodded, her smile coy.
For a moment, Kelder seriously considered the idea. He wanted Irith, wanted to marry her, and if she were enchanted, the way Ezdral was, he could have her, for as long as he wanted. She wouldn’t argue with him any more. She wouldn’t get bored and fly away. She would be very much in his power.
It was tempting, no doubt about it.