The Azure Market was, as ever, thronged with busy life, the plants all aglow with a cobalt light which reflected and intensified the blueness of the buildings all around. Sumptuous fabrics were artfully arranged on wooden mannequins, showing off the cut and shimmer of the material to best effect – Alses' own personal green-eyed monster reared up as she greedily drank in the fine silks on display; the feel of silk on her skin, feather-light and wonderfully liquid, that was something she longed to recapture. Ornate braziers hung on brassy chains strung between shop canopies, spilling thick smoke and exotic scents as spice merchants, incense-men and philterers of all shades of legality hawked their wares, and food of all sorts sizzled and sputtered in enormous iron pots and pans. Banners and canopies waved and flapped in the battling waves of hot air rising from the various shops and the tide of citizens who browsed from food-stall to philterer's lab to toolworks to clothier and thence to any one of the myriad other specialised stalls that were squeezed in between narrow blue-washed walls and sudden, crowded courtyards.
Alses moved through the crowds, revelling in the unusual sensation of anonymity. Few people spared her more than a glance – there was none of the usual rippling bow wave of bows and gentle greeting, just citizens hurrying to and fro about their business, the soft chatter of people going about their daily grind beating against her ears. The heat of their collective presence warmed her skin, and she relaxed somewhat, ducking inside the entryway of the philterer's shop favoured by the Dusk Tower for such potions and compounds as were necessary; everything from attar of roses for the baths to calias-impregnated paints for glyphic enhancements in the more advanced classrooms.
The shopfront was drowning in bottles of all shapes and colours. Vials and flasks and other, more esoteric vessels, of glass and stone and metal, all were mounded high on creaking wooden shelves, labelled with spidery writing and organized according to an intricate system to which she, a mere customer, was not privy.
Elixirs glittered in all the colours of the rainbow from every corner, and a vast bureau of some sort covered almost all the back wall, easily two hundred pigeonholes holding all sorts of rare and fascinating ingredients for the professional philterer and her assistants to use.
Amid the blaze of liquids and different coloured glasses, the heady melange of smells – this particular shop, the Starry Chalice, used a powerful lily scent to cover up the unpleasantness of their philtering reactions, as well as some of their products and ingredients – was almost overwhelming. Certainly, the apprentices, assistants and even the owner herself weren't the first thing which caught the senses on first inspection.
Had she been in celestial guise, doubtless Tian – the redoubtable proprietress – would have been making her way forward already, a smile on her lips and her fingers eagerly twitching for whatever challenge the Tower was setting. Most people thought of philterers as crabbed and old, bent under the weight of years, their fingers stained with unknown chemicals and their eyes rheumy from the fumes of their work – but then, as was so often the case, 'most people' were wrong. 'At least,' Alses added, in the spirit of fairness '-when the craft is practiced properly.'
Tian herself was no more than thirty, a full-figured human with masses of lustrous black hair whose generous frame showed that she partook regularly of the fruits of her work and whose booming laugh was fit for three people at once. She wore supple, sturdy gloves and aprons whenever she worked with her apparatus and ingredients and ensured her apprentices did the same, with an almost fanatical devotion – more than once Alses' ears had been subjected to Tian's impressive full-bore bellow of “GLOVES, Bartleby-” or whichever hapless apprentice it happened to be “-you fool! GLOVES!” Alses herself was in awe of the woman's uncanny ability to see everything that was going on in her shop and the laboratory behind; she seemed able to sense when one of her subordinates was even thinking about doing something foolhardy or unwise, able to correct them with a sharp word or gesture before anything got out of hand.
Alses was present as a Konti, though, completely different from her glorious daytime form, and so not a one of them recognized her. After a moment, one of the apprentices – not the hapless Bartleby, the most clumsy of the current crop of apprentices who usually had at least two dressings on various chemical burns whenever she came in, but one of the more advanced ones – moved forward with a short, perfunctory bow. “Good evening and welcome to the Starry Chalice, miss. Can I help you with anything?”
Well, perhaps it was time to have a bit of fun. “Yes,” she replied, drawing out the syllable. “I have a commission from my employer for a competent philterer, one that needs the utmost of care and precision in its preparation.”
The apprentice beamed and bent into another bow. His hair was slicked back with some sort of pomade, she noticed, and it gleamed under the light and gave off a faint smell of cherries. “The Starry Chalice hasn't survived and thrived in the Azure Market by being anything less than scrupulous, miss. May I see your master's instructions?”
Alses pursed her lips, secretly enjoying this. “Words are all very well, sir philterer, but my employer likes to be sure of matters before committing. I've been instructed to ask you to identify the components of this.” she produced, from the recesses of her backpack, a small pot containing some of the weedkiller from the gardening pavilion. She wasn't running out, exactly, but it would be a good thing to know what it was made from, and in what amounts. “If you can, the commission is yours.”
Casting a glance over his shoulder at Tian, who was hunched over a complex piece of spiralling glassware, focusing furiously and occasionally tapping it as drops of a pale pink liquid fell into a bell-bottomed jar, the apprentice took Alses' little pot with some caution. “It's not poisonous, is it?” he asked.
This gave her some pause. “To my knowledge, not to people,” was what she eventually settled on; this didn't seem to fill the philterer with confidence. He cracked the waxy seal with some trepidation, only taking the smallest and most tentative of sniffs. He evidently didn't find anything overtly dangerous in its odour, for he relaxed and almost immediately began to bustle around, decanting small amounts of it into various pots and flasks, carefully observing what happened – bubbles, fizzing, a puff of coloured smoke in once instance that left him looking rather surprised, or nothing at all.
“...steric acid, a touch of philterer's fury...quite a powerful purge...some hydronium fluid in there too...” he mumbled to himself, hands flashing about the equipment, only to freeze suddenly as Tian's authoritative, booming tones stopped him in his tracks. “Opeth! What do you think you're doing?”
Opeth, that was the name! Alses shook her head; she really was bad with names and faces – Opeth was Tian's senior apprentice, some relation – a cousin, perhaps? that the philterer was training up to take over her business. “We have a customer, ma'am,” he replied, sketching a short bow. “She has a commission from her employer, provided we can identify a liquid she brought with her. I've done the usual preliminary tests; it's a pretty common mix of caustics; steric acid, three parts, to philterer's fury, one part, to hydronium fluid, two parts – but there's a touch of something else I can't identify, if you'd have a look...” he trailed off as Tian's face darkened.
“We do not just give out information for free, Opeth! Zintila preserve us from fools, that liquid's properties was probably all she wanted from us, and you've just gone and handed the recipe to her on a skyglass platter!”
Opeth cringed at her electric gaze, and then coughed. “She's still here, ma'am,” he murmured, feebly; Tian rounded on Alses, a formidable woman on the warpath.
Unexpectedly, she found a lump in her throat and had to swallow, hard, under the flinty gaze of the shop's proprietor, who stuck out a meaty hand peremptorily. “The letter from your employer, girl, if you will, and if it exists. This is a busy shop and I don't have time to waste.”
Suppressing an irrational nervousness, Alses produced the Dusk Tower's order - after a moment of riffling through all the other missives for delivery - and handed it over, crest-first. It didn't take long for Tian's expression to change, annoyance and what would have to be classified as at least medium dudgeon draining away to be replaced by intrigue, and just a touch of curiosity.
“My apologies for doubting you, courier,” she said, once she'd finished thoroughly reading the missive. Behind her, Opeth looked smugly vindicated. “But I do have one question – the Dusk Tower and I have done business together for years; why this test, all of a sudden? Did they give you a reason?”
Internally, Alses winced. Time to come clean – otherwise the Tower might get an irate visit from Tian, and that would get very messy, very fast, and probably result in her being thrown out of the Tower, at the very least, if not Lhavit itself. “Ah, that was all me, actually,” she said, not looking at the philterer. “I was just having a bit of fun with your-” 'Somewhat stuffy and self-satisfied,' her mind interjected “-apprentice. I did need to know what was in that jar, though, but I am happy to pay for the knowledge.” Opeth's face, over Tian's shoulder, was a study.
Was that a smile tugging at the sides of Tian's expressive mouth? “Hmph. Well, no lasting harm done, I suppose.” There was a pause as Tian considered her. “I know you're a student, but didn't you ever get taught not to play such pranks on people you've never met before?”
“We have met.” It was out before Alses could stop herself; Tian's eyebrows shot up.
“Have we indeed? I'm sure I would have remembered; we don't get that many Konti all the way up here.”
Alses sighed. “We met...two, three weeks ago? You took me into the back room so I wouldn't distract your apprentices from their duties and you tried to make me blackberry tea, which I told you was delicious without actually drinking any of it. You asked me how I could be so sure when I hadn't had any, and then I told you I didn't need to eat or drink and used magic to taste things. I think you said that wasn't natural, then laughed and told me that next time I came by you'd have something called raspberry fool for me to try. I still haven't found out what that is, by the way.”
Most of the work in the shop had stopped at this point, the apprentices not even bothering to make it look like they were busy.
“Alses?” There was a note of incredulity in Tian's voice.
She nodded, quickly. Perhaps it hadn't been such a good idea after all. “The same. This is what I look like when I'm not...pretty,” she finished lamely. There weren't words to describe what she was in the day, how different it was to the pale and weak night and the form it imposed on her. “Remember the ring?” she held the heavy golden sunburst signet up, flashing in the light. “How much do I owe you for the analysis?” she murmured quickly, digging for her coinpurse.
“Don't worry about it,” was the brusque reply. “You've shown me there's a gap in m'training.” Her voice lowered. “And besides,” she murmured “Opeth needed remindin' he doesn't know it all yet.” Her voice suddenly rose to its previous level. “Apprentices! What is the fourth rule of commerce?”
“The customer is a wily creature that will do his or her best to outwit the merchant. I must be prepared for any and all tactics in order to make a sale and a profit,” came the reply, in varying shades of drone. Tian nodded. “Evidence of that in action tonight, everyone.” Her eyes lingered on Opeth, a high blush of embarrassment prominent on his cheeks. One meaty hand grasped the little pot that Alses had brought, bringing it up to her nostrils for a surprisingly dainty sniff.
“The ingredient that Opeth couldn't identify for you is essence of kuhari, Alses. Wouldn't suggest trying to make this stuff yourself, if that's what you were planning. What's it for, anyway?” There was a note of warning there; Alses waved her arms in demurral. “I just wanted to know what was in it, for reference. I was curious,” she admitted. “And it's weedkiller; I found it in the Respite's gardening shed.”
“Weedkiller, eh? I daresay it's very effective. Now, be off with you, girl. I'll see to the Dusk Tower's needs, don't fret on that score. Word of friendly advice, though, before you go – don't try and pull something like that again in my shop.”
END