Chapter 25
Looking For Clues
Early in the afternoon two days later, Flint wandered through Qualinost, despairing his lack of evidence and wondering how in the world he was supposed to gather clues into Eld Ailea’s death when he had no idea why she was killed. He’d spoken to everyone who might have known something, from Ailea’s neighbors to women she’d recently helped give birth. He had stopped at the Tower to deliver Porthios’s medallion and had interviewed a few of the elves whose opinions he didn’t already know.
“The note said Ailea understood about Xenoth’s death,” he mused, pausing to sit at the edge of the Grand Market.
The market, always a melange of colors and sounds, was even more exuberant today. He’d never seen elves as gaily attired as they were for Porthios’s ceremony. They normally dressed in quiet earth tones; this afternoon, pinks, teals, and purples swirled past his eyes, and more than one elf wore a mask carved in the face of an animal or bird. To the celebrants’ amusement, one elf was even dancing about dressed as a tree—garbed all in dark brown leather, his head covered with a brown cloth sack with two eye holes cut into it, his outstretched arms holding aspen branches. Another elf had fastened white feathers to her head and arms, and was wearing a white mask fashioned to resemble an owl. A third elf darted over the Kith-Kanan mosaic wearing a dark green dragon suit—an object of great mirth to her companions because dragons hadn’t been seen on Krynn for millennia, if, in fact, they’d ever existed.
The passage of Porthios from youth to adult seemed to have given the Qualinesti cause to behave like children, and they were making the most of it.
For once, the Qualinesti had dropped some of their characteristic reserve, and while they’d never match the fervor of a dwarven Fullbeard Day, they were coming close.
How Ailea would have enjoyed this celebration, Flint thought sadly. Then he pulled his thoughts back to the question at hand. “Who would Ailea have told about her discovery?” he mumbled, reflecting on his searches of the morning. “Her neighbor said she was home all that morning, and the woman saw no one enter but me and Tanis.”
“Yet Ailea must have talked to someone,” he added.
The scent of sausage and hot quith-pa met his nostrils, and he stepped into line with four elves at a luncheon vendor’s stand. The dwarf continued to mutter, which, given the carnival atmosphere, didn’t seem to faze the elves.
What if she had discovered something about Tyresian—something that Xenoth also knew? The aged elf lord had been in court for hundreds of years; certainly he was privy to vast amounts of information, some of which could have been intended to be kept secret. “Tyresian would have the same reason to kill Ailea that he had to slay Lord Xenoth,” he murmured. He wished he had Tanis to talk to, but the half-elf was barred in his chambers at the palace.
He reached the front of the line and paid the vendor, then walked away, tearing off a juicy mouthful of sausage and bread. But the lunch went tasteless in his mouth as he realized he would have to do what he wanted least to do: go back to Eld Ailea’s house and search it for clues.
Minutes later, he was standing before the midwife’s dwelling, mindless of the singing, costumed elves who eddied around him. A black-uniformed palace guard, who looked as though he’d caught the carnival atmosphere despite the gravity of his task, leaned against the front door frame. He looked sharply at Flint as the dwarf stepped off the path and picked his way to the edge of the white petunia bed that the midwife had planted before the shuttered front window. None of the plants were damaged, and, brushing the white trumpet-shaped blooms aside, Flint saw no footprints in the rich dirt. The other window in front led to the second level. An elf would have to stand on another’s shoulders to reach it.
The absurdity of his search suddenly struck Flint. “As if someone would have gone in through the window in broad daylight when there was an unlocked door an arm’s length away,” he said sotto voce. “Flint, you doorknob!”
He rose and brushed blades of crushed grass from his knees. The guard, a sharp-featured youth slightly older than Gilthanas, still watched. It occurred to Flint that the blond guard had not challenged him. “Has anyone been in the house since the death?” Flint demanded.
The guard shook his head. “The Speaker said no one was to be allowed in or near except you, Master Fireforge.”
Flint felt a glow of warmth for the elven lord. “Are there other guards?” he asked from next to the petunias.
“One at the back door. No one inside.”
The dwarf moved around the side of the house and peeked toward the back. The guard was sitting on the back stoop, eating a tomato—from Ailea’s garden, no doubt. He leaped to his feet when he saw Flint. The dwarf said nothing, however; the youth could watch the door just as well sitting down as standing up, Flint figured, and Ailea would have welcomed someone enjoying the produce of her garden if she could not have used it herself.
Flint stepped back a few paces. The dwelling was only one room wide. The downstairs had held only the entry room and, behind that, the kitchen, which had no windows, only a small door to Ailea’s backyard herb garden. The fireplace stood between the downstairs rooms, serving both the kitchen and the entry. Flint assumed Ailea’s private room was upstairs, though he’d never seen it.
The guard didn’t challenge Flint as the dwarf came around the curved side of the house and stepped up to the back door. That, too, would have been unlocked, knowing Ailea. The dwarf took a deep breath and moved through the door into the kitchen.
Ailea’s presence was still strong in the kitchen. Crocks of preserved vegetables and dried fruits lined a hutch along one wall of the low-slung room. Flint remembered how Tanis had had to duck when he entered the kitchen, moving carefully to avoid the bunches of chives, sage, and basil that hung from the low rafters. The scent reminded the dwarf overpoweringly of Ailea, and anger swept through him.
His chin set, he moved through the kitchen, which still carried the memories of cheerful lunches with Tanis and the midwife, and resolutely set a foot into the entry room.
The room had not been cleaned after the midwife’s body was removed. The smear of blood still stretched from door to fireplace. Baby pictures lay scattered. The square table, however, had been set upright, and on it was the painting that Eld Ailea was holding when Tanis found her.
Flint stepped over the brownish stain and reached for the painting. Done in Ailea’s deft hand, it showed two youngsters, an infant and an older child, both blond with green eyes. The older child’s eyes were deepset and serious, however, while the infant’s were open and ingenuous.
“I wonder who they are,” Flint murmured. Ailea had never labeled her portraits; she’d known from memory whom each one was, even though hundreds crowded the cramped room. He set the painting back on the table.
Flint suspected he wouldn’t know a clue if it leaped out and challenged him with a long sword. His gaze moved from painting to painting around the room, remembering how the abode had looked when Ailea lived there and seeking any element that no longer fit the room’s coziness. Finally, shaking his head wearily, he trudged up the stone steps to the second level.
As with most folks, Ailea’s bedroom showed more of her personality than did those rooms that the public might visit. The upstairs room smelled of lavender; bunches of the fragrant herb, tied with gray ribbons, had been laid on the midwife’s dressing table, next to her tortoise-shell brush and the silver-inlaid combs that had held her braid tight on fancy occasions. Blackened iron hooks, a gift from Flint, held the gathered skirts she sewed in profusion: purple, red, green, and bright yellow. On a nearby table was a new beige shirt, brother to the green one and the blue one she’d made for Flint earlier. A skein of brown embroidery thread and a needle waited by the new garment.
A large feather bed, laid with a purple and green coverlet, stood in the center of the room, while a smaller pallet had been erected in an alcove near the fireplace. Before the hearth sat an ancient wooden rocking chair, scuffed and scarred but polished to a sheen. The dwarf stepped into the alcove and saw the lamps at the head and foot of the pallet, a cauldron on the hearth, and thick piles of sheets, towels, and swaddling rags on a night table nearby. A basket cradle swung from a long iron hook set deep into the ceiling. This was, Flint realized, the alcove to which so many elven women had come to give birth.
Several hours later, as shadows began to lengthen into late afternoon, Flint finished going through Ailea’s private records, searching for clues but feeling like a thief. Most of her pieces of parchment referred to births or to herbal remedies that had been effective in treating particular ailments. A search of the eight-drawer chiffonnier next to the feather bed yielded no information that, as far as he could see, had any link to the crime.
Then Flint saw the painting, in a delicate silver and gold frame, that sat atop the chiffonnier. The sidepieces of the frame had been rubbed shiny, as though the owner had often stood here, beholding the painting. He touched a thick finger to it; the paint was faded and old—older, he knew, than he was. It showed a young elf, slight of build, with round, greenish brown eyes and a face like a cat’s, standing next to an elderly human man with a square jaw and clothes that proclaimed him to be a farmer. A tidy but small house, with white petunias framing the front path, stood in the background. The two figures were holding hands, and the expression on the faces managed to reflect both great content and overbearing sadness at the same time.
Feeling suddenly as though he were peering through a window into a private scene, Flint returned the painting to the chiffonnier and stepped briskly around the bed and back to the stairway. There was nothing here that contained the slightest clue pertaining to Lord Xenoth.
Downstairs, as twilight grew in the street outside, Flint found himself once more picking up the painting that Ailea had been holding when she died. It wasn’t Tanis’s portrait; the dwarf had found that one upstairs on the table next to the feather bed. Holding the framed likeness of the two elven youngsters and reflecting that he was still just a bit weak—only a little, though—from the attempt on his life, Flint eased himself into the overstuffed chair that waited at one side of the fireplace. Propping his legs on a footstool and gazing alternately at the portrait and the toy robin he’d given Ailea, he let his thoughts wander.
He’d arrived back home two nights ago to find his toy hutch cleared of everything but the soldiers. In the center of the table, however, Fionia had left him a chunk of rose quartz, fuzzy with lint and smudged with something that smelled suspiciously like grape jam.
What had the child said? “Ailea was excited. She kept saying, ‘Now it all makes sense. The scar. The “T.” The air. Now I understand.’ ”
“The scar. The ‘T.’ The air.” Flint settled deeper into the chair and gazed at the painting. “The scar. The ‘T.’ The air,” he murmured. “The air.”
Suddenly, with a shout of “Reorx!” that brought the guards crashing through the front and back doors, Flint leaped to his feet. What met the guards’ eyes was the sight of a dwarf hugging a portrait and chanting, “The air, the air, the air!”
But the guard outside Tanis’s palace chambers was adamant. No one was to be allowed in to visit the half-elf. Even the guard saw Tanis only when he allowed a kitchen elf to set a tray of food just inside the door and collect the old tray—and even then the half-elf often stayed out of sight at the back of the room.
“How am I supposed to gather evidence if I can’t talk to Tanis about it?” the dwarf demanded, waving the painting in front of the guard’s face. “Well?”
The guard, nearly as old as Porthios, was unshakable. “The Speaker left orders for no visitors,” he repeated.
“He didn’t mean to shut me out, you doorknob!”
The guard’s face grew even more stubborn. “Go talk to the Speaker, then.”
“I will!” Flint promised. “And I’ll be back!”
But the dwarf had no better luck outside the Speaker’s anteroom at the Tower.
“He’s in seclusion,” one guard explained, “meditating and praying, as part of the Kentommen. Absolutely no visitors unless a crisis of state develops. Interrupting him now could mean canceling the Kentommen.”
The dwarf practically threw the portrait on the floor in his ire. “This is a crisis of state! I’m in a state of crisis, by Reorx! Now open that door.” He advanced threateningly toward the guards …
And suddenly found himself facing twin short swords held by a pair of grim-faced palace guards. “Sorry, Master Fireforge,” one said.
Flint threw up his hands in despair. “Now what?” He stalked away down the corridor. “You elves and your traditions!” he shouted back.
He returned to the palace. There he found a spot on the steps and sat down to do some meditating of his own. Solostaran, now in seclusion, was the only one who could order the palace guards to admit him to Tanis’s room. But the Speaker was in seclusion—unless, Flint assumed, Qualinesti was attacked by minotaurs or some such thing.
Porthios, who probably would not have aided the dwarf anyway, was under guard in the Grove, not to be disturbed for anything less than another Cataclysm. Gilthanas had pledged not to help Tanis in any way, and Laurana hadn’t spoken a friendly word to the half-elf in more than a month.
Flint sighed. What a prime selection of helpers. Not for the first time, he wondered if it was time to move on to another spot in Ansalon, someplace with ale that didn’t taste like rainwater and wine that didn’t leave a dwarf reeking of blossoms.
Someplace like Solace, perhaps.
The dwarf threw that thought off, however, and reviewed the candidates. If Gilthanas even bothered to listen to the dwarf’s entire idea, the neophyte guard almost certainly would raise an alarm that would scare off the murderer until another time—most likely until after Tanis had been banished. Which would not help the half-elf at all.
That left …
“Laurana, I have to talk to you,” Flint said through the closed door.
“Go away, Master Fireforge,” came the peevish reply.
“It’s about Tanis.”
A pause. Then the same voice, a bit less ill-humored, was heard. “I don’t want to hear about Tanis.
“Fine,” Flint groused. “I’ll just let him die without speaking to you one last time. I’ll let you know when the funeral is. In case you’re interested in attending.” He stomped on the marble floor, loudly at first, then gradually more softly.
The door swung open. “Flint, wait!” Laurana called, dashing into the corridor, past the dwarf.
“I figured that might work,” Flint said smugly from next to her doorway. He traipsed into Laurana’s chambers.
The elf swung around and faced the dwarf, then stalked back into the small sitting room, a common feature in the palace’s private chambers; it was outfitted with fireplace, small table, and two straight chairs before the fire, one of which already held Flint comfortably ensconced. She slammed the door upon entering.
Her scowl gradually turned to a look of confusion as Flint sketched in the background that he’d sorted out. He concluded, “Then I realized ‘the heir’!”
But the princess still looked mystified. “The air?”
“The heir,” Flint corrected her. “That’s what Ailea was saying. The portrait she held was of Gilthanas and Porthios. The murderer, the one I now believe slew Lord Xenoth and Eld Ailea, intends to kill the Speaker’s heir, Porthios.”
If he’d been hoping for a big response, Flint was to be disappointed. Laurana just sat there, stroking the edges of the pale yellow cloak she’d thrown over her gown.
“But we’re all his heirs,” she objected. “Me, Gilthanas, and Porthios. Which one?”
Flint sat back. He’d been thinking in terms of Porthios all along. Why not Gilthanas and Laurana as well? Someone seeking to move up the ascendancy to become Speaker would have to eliminate them, too. Pieces of the puzzle were missing, but Flint still had a day to reveal the slayer before the Speaker would renew his vow to banish Tanis.
The seeds of another idea sprouted in his brain. “What better time to kill Porthios than at his own Kentommen?” the dwarf asked.
“What better time to kill all of us?” Laurana asked reasonably. “We’ll all be together in the Tower at the same time. But why, Flint? And anyway, the suspect can’t be an elf. We don’t do things like this.” She turned away from him and faced the fire.
Flint sat a few moments, gazing at the princess’s silhouette. “Ah, lass, you’ve seen so little of the world.”
She still objected, rising and pacing on the hearth rug in her agitation. “You want me to get you past the guard to see my father. But you don’t have enough evidence to warrant my interrupting the Speaker and canceling the Kentommen,” she said heatedly. “Your only evidence is your guess about what Eld Ailea was thinking right before she died.”
“But don’t you see?” he boomed. “ ‘The heir’! And she was holding the heirs’ portrait!”
“If I order the guards to let you in and it turns out that this is all nothing but an elderly midwife’s fantasy, my father …” Her voice faltered, and she grew pale. “But if I don’t, and something bad really does happen …” She sagged into the chair. “I’m too young to be making these kinds of decisions!” she complained.
Flint watched her, realizing that he was viewing the beginning of the metamorphosis of a spoiled little girl into an elf woman with great strength—if she’d only let herself show it. She jumped to her feet and resumed pacing.
“Why, Flint?” she asked. “Why would someone want to kill the Speaker’s heirs? Not that I believe you for a moment,” she hastily added.
“Greed,” Flint suggested. “Vengeance. Insanity. Unrequited love. This isn’t the kind of scheme someone comes up with overnight, you know. I’d guess the murderer has been working on this for years.”
“Well, then …” Laurana faltered again. “Then he’s probably someone we know.”
“Well, certainly,” Flint snapped. “What did you think?”
They glared at each other for a long moment, then Laurana looked away and softly said, “It won’t help Tanis if we argue, you know.”
Flint grunted. Then, more quietly, he asked, “How close is Tyresian in ascendancy?”
“To the Speakership?” Laurana looked surprised. “He’s of the Third House. We are of the First.”
“That leaves the members of the Second House?”
Laurana nodded absently. Flint pressed on. “How close is Tyresian in ascendancy, if he doesn’t marry you?”
“Oh, about twelfth or thirteenth in line,” she replied, then narrowed her eyes. “You don’t honestly think it’s Tyresian … Why, he’s a member of the nobility!”
Deciding that Laurana still had a lot to learn about life, Flint abandoned the tack he’d been taking.
“How safe is Porthios?” he asked.
Laurana faced him again. “There are more than a dozen guards around the Grove. They can’t see Porthios, but they could hear him if he called. I don’t think anyone could sneak in, with them there.”
Flint rose and strolled around the anteroom. Across the mantlepiece, Laurana kept a collection of whimsical dragon figurines. He picked up a golden one and examined it. “And Gilthanas will be with his regiment tonight? He’ll be safe there, at least.”
“Oh no, Flint,” Laurana objected. “Gilthanas will be keeping a vigil at the Kentommenai-kath all night.”
The phrase sounded familiar, but Flint had been exposed to a plethora of new elven terms in the past few days. “The Kentommenai-kath?”
“It’s the spot overlooking the River of Hope, west of Qualinost,” she explained.
Flint remembered; that was where he’d picnicked with Tanis and almost fallen to his death. “Gilthanas will have a guard with him, certainly,” he said, bending one of the legs of the figurine. The softness of the metal proclaimed it to be pure gold. Laurana gently took the little dragon from him, straightened the leg, and returned the piece to the mantle.
“Gilthanas will have an escort from Qualinost to the Kentommenai-kath,” she explained, seating herself again. “The guards will leave him, and he’ll remain alone at the spot until sunrise. Then he will return to Qualinost alone, arriving for the final portion of the Kentommen.”
Flint felt a hand of ice snake around his spine. “He’ll be alone?”
Laurana’s already pallid face became whiter. Her reply, when it came at last, was not a question. “He’ll be in danger, won’t he.”
He waved her to silence and leaned both arms against the fireplace, staring into the flames. Finally, he turned and leaned over the chair where Laurana waited.
“Laurana,” Flint said, “do you trust me?”
After a pause, she nodded. Her hair glittered in the firelight.
“Then listen,” he said. “I have a plan.”