Remember Spyros, this is not your world. Tread carefully.The words were like a whisper in the back of Amaranth’s mind, seeping out from a dark hole somewhere buried underneath all of her thoughts. It was a voice that had become as familiar as her own, so much to the point that there were days when she could no longer tell which mind had spoken. Their souls had reached equilibrium, like two volatile substance trying co-exist in the same vial. It was only a matter of time before she exploded, but Amaranth built contingencies in the event that this should this go wrong. Except it seemed the old sorcerer had retired into the abyss for the night after leaving her that cryptic warning.
The small, black-haired woman looked up, tilting her head back to see the top of the
elegant auction house she now stood in front of. Around her, carriages were arriving, each one full of well-dress guests. The sounds of civilization and warm life rang harshly in her ears, reverberating painfully in her skull. She wanted to go back to her island. It was the first time she had stepped foot on the mainland in over a year, and already she wished to be away from all the people. She had never felt like she belonged, now even more than ever. She was just a visitor in the land of the living.
But she had a purpose. Amaranth had known about the Dark Bazaar all her life, and had even gone twice before the incident. Back then she had been blind and naïve. But even as she was, she knew the value of some of the items being traded here. Some of the most influential dark wizards would be in attendance. Herpo had warned her that there were a number of pieces being traded here tonight with value far beyond mortal understanding. She had to get her hands on them no matter what, lest they be relegated to a piece of pretty at the top of someone’s mantle when they could be used to solve the mysteries of the universe. She wouldn’t have set foot back in her old stomping grounds for anything less.
She pulled her
veil tighter, as if it would really hide her face. She didn’t expect to be recognized here, since everyone believed her to be dead, but it made her acutely uncomfortable to even think about showing her bare face to the rest of the civilized world. She didn’t belong here after all. Amaranth was wrapped in a
shroud of the night sky, sewn with gently glowing ivory moons and twinkling stars. Beneath the fabric, one of her
familiars was coiled around her neck, the cool scales and beating of his heart a small comfort to this stranger in a now-foreign land.
Taking a deep breath for morale, Amaranth walked forward purposefully, her bare feet climbing the stairs to the front door. Two impeccably dressed young men stood at the top of the stairs, and when she flashed her auction disk, they pulled open the double doors for her. She stepped out of the brisk night air into the warmth of the auction house
atrium. To her left was a small window. She passed the woman behind the window a slip of paper, and received two strings of fifty rings. Despite what she expected, the rings were extremely light, the strings flexible enough to fit in the folds of her dress. She would have traded more than a pair of soul-stealing drachma from the lair if she had known she could carry this many rings. Maybe next year.
Amaranth made her way to the other end of the atrium, and entered the gallery. It was like a maze, the auction floor one wide, convoluted hall with twists and turns into that led into curtained
alcoves,
rest areas, and even an
open bar. The items on display were brightly lit, but the hall much dimmer, as it seemed that Miss Fox wanted to protect the client’s discretion. That was why people liked her, after all. Amaranth had even requested the the woman’s fence services back in the day when she found herself with particularly valuable items to move on the black market. There were quite a few people here, and even with one eye Amaranth could recognize some of the other patrons. Going to the Bazaar had always felt kind of like meeting legends, but that was a world away to her now.
She began to move through the crowd, hardly paying attention to who she bumped into. She was much smaller than everyone here, but she cut through them with purpose as she spotted the first item on her list. She made her way to the front of the crowd, she was only a few paces from the item under the glass case. The auctioneer at this case was telling the dozen or so people in the crowd the history of this item: a small mirror set in dented iron. According to the auctioneer, the mirror was made in the early 200 B.C.E and allowed the viewer to behold the stars up close. Amaranth stood in front of the case, the man’s voice turning garbled as if he was underwater very far away. The sight in her blue eye began to flicker like a dysfunctional muggle film, the sight of the mirror behind the case suddenly overlaying with that of a roiling ball of flame as her golden eye began to glow.
Amaranth quickly tapped the top of her shortened cypress staff to the golden disk in her hand. Around her, other people began to do the same. Amaranth watched them carefully, her sight flickering painfully as she tried to focus on who she had to beat out. It seemed that very few people were willing to pay too much for a glorified sky scope, and Amaranth ended up winning. The crowd began to dissipate around her, and Amaranth stepped forward and lowered her veil to better examine her prize. 5200 galleons for what she strongly suspected was Archimedes’ mirror was a steal.
She was so pleased with her victory that when she heard someone call her name, she turned around without thinking. She didn’t even consider who would be calling her by a name she hadn’t used in the last thirteen months. Her blue and golden eyes widened in shock, and for once the maelstrom in Amaranth’s mind went deadly silent. It was the last person Amaranth had wanted to recognize her here, after everything that had happened between them. She found herself rooted to the spot in panic, realizing frantically that was no escaping from the figure making a beeline toward her.
Oh no. Merciful Merlin, don’t do this to me.