my father said heâd never known a man to run a better still.
By his second day in our troupe I was making a habit of riding in his wagon. I would ask him questions and he would answer. Then he would ask for songs and I would pluck them out for him on a lute I borrowed from my fatherâs wagon.
He would even sing from time to time. He had a bright, reckless tenor that was always wandering off, looking for notes in the wrong places. More often than not he stopped and laughed at himself when it happened. He was a good man, and there was no conceit in him.
Not long after he joined our troupe, I asked Abenthy what it was like being an arcanist.
He gave me a thoughtful look. âHave you ever known an arcanist?â
âWe paid one to mend a cracked axle on the road once.â I paused to think. âHe was heading inland with a caravan of fish.â
Abenthy made a dismissive gesture. âNo, no, boy. Iâm talking about arcanists. Not some poor chill-charmer who works his way back and forth across caravan routes, trying to keep fresh meat from rotting.â
âWhatâs the difference?â I asked, sensing it was expected of me.
âWell,â he said. âThat might take a bit of explainingâ¦.â
âIâve got nothing but time.â
Abenthy gave me an appraising look. Iâd been waiting for it. It was the look that said, âYou donât sound as young as you look.â I hoped heâd come to grips with it fairly soon. It gets tiresome being spoken to as if you are a child, even if you happen to be one.
He took a deep breath. âJust because someone knows a trick or two doesnât mean theyâre an arcanist. They might know how to set a bone or read Eld Vintic. Maybe they even know a little sympathy. Butââ
âSympathy?â I interrupted as politely as possible.
âYouâd probably call it magic,â Abenthy said reluctantly. âItâs not, really.â He shrugged. âBut even knowing sympathy doesnât make you an arcanist. A true arcanist has worked his way through the Arcanum at the University.â
At his mention of the Arcanum, I bristled with two dozen new questions. Not so many, you might think, but when you added them to the half-hundred questions I carried with me wherever I went, I was stretched nearly to bursting. Only through a severe effort of will did I remain silent, waiting for Abenthy to continue on his own.
Abenthy, however, noticed my reaction. âSo, youâve heard about the Arcanum, have you?â He seemed amused. âTell me what youâve heard, then.â
This small prompt was all the excuse I needed. âI heard from a boy in Temper Glen that if your armâs cut off they can sew it back on at the University. Can they really? Some stories say Taborlin the Great went there to learn the names of all things. Thereâs a library with a thousand books. Are there really that many?â
He answered the last question, the others having rushed by too quickly for him to respond. âMore than a thousand, actually. Ten times ten thousand books. More than that. More books than you could ever read.â Abenthyâs voice grew vaguely wistful.
More books than I could read? Somehow I doubted that.
Ben continued. âThe people you see riding with caravansâcharmers who keep food from spoiling, dowsers, fortune-tellers, toad eatersâarenât real arcanists any more than all traveling performers are Edema Ruh. They might know a little alchemy, a little sympathy, a little medicine.â He shook his head. âBut theyâre not arcanists.
âA lot of people pretend to be. They wear robes and put on airs to take advantage of the ignorant and gullible. But hereâs how you tell a true arcanist.â
Abenthy pulled a fine chain over his head and handed it to me. It was the first time I had ever seen an Arcanum guilder. It looked rather unimpressive,
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