*This is the Fantasy novel I’m posting here for free, one chapter every Friday. If your conscience troubles you getting something for free, do hit the donate button on the right side and down. Anyone donating more than $6 will get a non-drm electronic copy of Witchfinder in its final version, when it’s published.
There is a compilation of previous chapters here and I will compile each new chapter there, a week after I post. When the novel is completed and about to be edited the compilation page will probably be deleted.
Oh, this is in pre-arc format, meaning you’ll find the occasional spelling mistake and sentence that makes no sense. It’s not exactly first draft, but it’s not at the level I’d send to a publisher, yet
And yeah, today’s chapter is on the short side. I’ll post the next one by noon, unless something intervenes.*
For previous chapters, look here: https://accordingtohoyt.com/witchfinder/
Bump In The Night
“You should be asleep,” Penny said. And Seraphim knew that it was true.
He sat on the bed that had been freshly made and changed. The smell of burnt feathers and the broth used to quench the fire was gone from the air.
And Penny, with bright efficiency, closed curtains and did other things. He probably thinks I can’t see his magical work, Seraphim said. That I don’t see him erasing the greasy feel of dark magic in the air, effacing any residual bad smell and making the entire room feel safe and secure.
It should be safe and secure too. Penny knew his arcana, and at any rate he’d as much power as Seraphim, if of a different bend. He could not secure the entire house, but surely, now that he was aware of danger he could secure this room.
But something still nagged at Seraphim, a sense of something gone very wrong, something unwinding, something… Something he couldn’t quite pinpoint. Making a stab at his feeling of uneasiness, he told Penny, “I’m not sure I can sleep, with Michael gone.” And realized he was being uncharacteristically open. It was not normal of him to talk about his missing brother. To think about it, surely, and to mind his disappearance, of course, and to be restless in his longing to find Michael and save him. But not to talk about it. Seraphim had learned long before he became head of the family that too many people depended on him – as opposed to his volatile father – to allow him to show weakness or excessive concern. He managed to discipline his face and say, “I beg your pardon, Penny. I must be more tired than I realized.”
Penny nodded. “What is amazing is that you’re not dead,” he said. “As for Michael, we’ll find him,” Penny looked, in turn, very tired. “There are certain things I can do. And my mother might know something I can use as leverage to discover what has become of Michael, but most of all…” He pressed his lips close. “There is such a thing as single combat, and if it’s needed I will challenge my uncle.” He closed his mouth again, his eyes flashing menace, and Seraphim was shocked to hear his own mouth pronounce, “Would you want it, Penny? The throne of fairyland?”
Penny’s chuckle surprised them both. At least it surprised Seraphim and it was followed by such a startled expression on Penny’s face that it would have been funny under other circumstances. He smiled, after the surprise, and shook his head. “You were not attending,” he said. “There is this thing you mor– That people who have never visited fairyland or never lived there, and who have no elven blood in their veins, think, this idea that all fairyland is is enchantment and beauty and effortless magic. You know that fairykind does not work the land, and does not make machines, and none of the contrivances of everyday life for a human, and you assume that it must be beautiful in the land of fairies, where no one ever need work, where nothing ever need decay, where no one ever grows old.
“To me it seemed like a cruel joke from the beginning, to hear it talked of as the isles of the blessed or the summer land. It is beautiful, perhaps, as a naked sword can be beautiful in the sunlight, but it is…” He hesitated. He stood by the window where he had just drawn the windows closed, and now he turned to face Seraphim, and Seraphim noted how harsh Penny’s eyes looked, and how glittering, like the eyes of a man suffering from a fever. “I can’t describe it, but if you can imagine a very sweet poison, or a very beautiful torturer’s chamber, you’ll be closer to understanding fairyland than most who never experienced it. King? I’d rather live forever among humans, cast off. I’d rather be a beggar in London than a king in fairyland.” He shook his head and took a deep breath, and Seraphim got the impression that he was disciplining his expression and his emotions to the realm of what was acceptable. “Rest, Seraphim. Tomorrow will be time enough to worry and to try to find Michael. And that will be hard enough if you’re well. With you ill and weak, it is hopeless. And I know you know your duty to family and house too well to allow yourself the uncertainty and despair that will render you useless to them. Someone is trying to kill you – and possibly me. The fairyland is somehow enmeshed in these plans, and I forebear to guess on which side, though I doubt it’s mine. And Michael is missing. I thought, at first, that all of this, including getting you trapped in the betweener was just a side-result of our activities in other worlds. I thought someone, perhaps the Others that we’ve detected in those worlds, had tried to eliminate us and stop our bothersome rescues. But now I think it’s much more than that – something so big that the borders of it seem to reach everywhere, and the tangle at its heart seems too huge and convoluted to make sense. Still there is sense in it, and we will find it.”
He came over to the bed and reached for the mage light on Seraphim’s bedside table. It extinguished at his touch, but then, as though thinking better of it, he brought it back to a dim glow, just enough to see the contours of the room. Seraphim didn’t comment, but he had not kept his magelight on, even this low, since the age of ten at least. So why would Penny think Seraphim wished it on now? Or perhaps Penny was trying to assuage his own fears. He turned to Seraphim now, “And the woman, Miss Felix, is mixed in it somehow?”
“On whose side?” Seraphim asked.
Penny shrugged. “Well, she knew the man who tried to kill you,” he said. “But perhaps we shouldn’t hold that by itself against her. After all…” He shook his head. “I sense no harm for her. And no fairy magic, before you ask.”
Seraphim wasn’t going to ask, but now that Penny had said it, he couldn’t get it out of his head. He looked at his half-brother as he turned and said, “Well enough, now, I too must get my rest, and then we’ll see what we can do tomorrow in the light of day. I’ve put wards in place. Call me if you need anything.” And then he was gone, which was good because for a moment Seraphim had feared that Penny meant to sit up all night by his bed, ensuring that another attack didn’t find Seraphim.
And I might very well not be able to sleep with him in the room, Seraphim said, and felt guilty about it. He didn’t remember when he’d first found out that Penny had elf blood. Not that first day surely, and not the second. He suspected he’d discovered it either by listening to servant gossip – years ago, before they’d come to know Penny well, all the servants had been a little afraid of him – or by Penny himself telling him about it. It felt as though Seraphim had always known it, though surely that wasn’t true, since at the very first he’d thought Penny was his full brother, brought into the family as a gift to him. All of which showed Seraphim’s understanding of human reproduction had been both lacking and fanciful. But all the same, he felt as if he’d always known that Penny was part fey.
And yet, in his heart, he’d never thought of Penny as anything but his brother. Oh, his valet too, he supposed, particularly as they’d got older and had to learn to act their respective positions in public. But most of all his brother and his friend.
So what had changed, now, that Penny’s presence in his room while he slept would feel less reassuring that vaguely threatening. Was it all due to Seraphim’s memory of the chant in inhuman words? Or was it… Yes, it was Gabriel’s sudden slip of tongue, his almost referring to “mortals” to signify those unlike him, his talking about you as opposed to himself. As though he didn’t consider himself human. Wasn’t he? Was Gabriel Penn some form of immortal?
And what did he mean by telling Seraphim – who’d never thought of it before – that Miss Felix didn’t have the blood of fairykind. Seraphim didn’t like that preemptive denial. Was it true? Or was it part of that “me” and “you” that Penny suddenly seemed to divide the world into?
Oh, Seraphim believed Penny about the throne of fairyland. At least he thought he did. There had been too much loathing in Penny’s voice to be false. But would he feel the same way about a creature like himself, half human and lost in the world of humans? And was Miss Felix such? There was something odd about her magic, Avalon born but learned by utterly alien means not even normal in any civilized world.
Seraphim stifled a groan as he sat up in bed. He knew he was about to do something he’d regret. He regretted it already, in fact, and yet it must be done. His silver-headed cane was resting against the bedside table.
He grasped the head and rose with the aid of the cane. Getting on his feet was more difficult, but he managed it. Putting on his dressing gown was only difficult because he must hold onto the bed with one hand or the other.
One of the advantages of having known Penny since they were both very young is that Seraphim knew exactly where Penny would have placed the spell that told him if Seraphim tried to leave the room. And also that, having learned the earliest spells together, Seraphim knew Penny’s magical habits and how to disarm his traps. At least he was fairly sure that if an alarm went out to Penny telling him his magical alarm had been rendered ineffective, it would be delayed.
He walked down the hallway as fast as he could. He must go to Miss Felix. Somehow, it all hinged on her. The world had been rational before her path crossed his.
Oh, this is going to be an interesting eavesdropping/intrusion, yes-indeedy-deed…
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“And yeah, today’s chapter is on the short side. I’ll post the next one by noon, unless something intervenes.”
You should know better than to Jinx yourself like this.
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And Penny, with bright efficiency, closed curtains and did other things.
OK, but I thought that Seraphim did not allow the curtains to be closed…see just before the attacks in chapter 9, Two Attacks and an Alarm:
Though both the bed and the window were equipped with heavy brocaded curtains – somewhat faded since the old duke’s profligate spending hadn’t allowed expenses such as replacing furnishings – Seraphim never let either set be closed.
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