“Wait. What happened today?”
“Assassination attempt on the governor,” Steris said. “You really don’t know?”
“I’ve been busy. Rusts! Someone tried to kill him? Who?”
“Some deranged man,” Steris said. “Not in his right mind. They caught him, I’m told.”
“I’ll need to talk to the suspect,” Wax said, walking for the door. “It might be connected.”
“He wasn’t a credible threat,” Steris said. “By all reports, the man’s aim was terrible. He didn’t come close to hitting his intended victim. Waxillium?”
“Wayne!” Wax said, shoving open the door. “We’ve got—”
“On it already,” Wayne said, holding up a broadsheet from the table. Evening edition; Wax had a subscription. The top line read, “Bold Attack on the Governor in Daylight!” Wayne tossed Wax his hat off the rack, then snapped his fingers toward the butler—who was in the process of hanging Wayne’s duster in the coat closet. Darriance sighed, getting it back out and carrying it over.
“I’ll try to make the party,” Wax said to Steris, pulling his hat on. “If I’m not back, feel free to go without me.”
Steris folded her arms. “Oh? I suppose I should take the butler instead, then?”
“If you like.”
“Be careful about that, Steris,” Wayne added. “Wax’s butlers have a tendency to explode.”
Wax gave him a glare, and the two of them charged out the door toward the coach.
“You still need private time for that thinkin’ of yours?” Wayne asked.
“Yes.”
“Never touch the stuff myself,” Wayne said. “Causes headaches. Hey, Hoid. Can I catch a ride up there with you?”
The new coachman shrugged, making room for Wayne on top of the carriage. Wayne climbed up, and Wax stepped inside. This wouldn’t be ideal, but it would have to do. He pulled down the window shades, then settled back as the coach began rolling.
He took his earring out of his pocket—the earring of the Pathian religion. His was special. He’d been hand-delivered it under mysterious circumstances. Lately, though, he had avoided wearing it, as the book made clear what it must be. Long ago, a small spike of metal like this had allowed people to communicate with Ruin and Preservation, gods of the ancient world. It was Hemalurgy.
Had this earring, then, been made by killing someone?
Hesitantly, he slipped it in.
Unfortunately, a voice said in his mind, your fears about the earring are correct. It is a Hemalurgic spike.
Wax jumped, throwing open the carriage door with Allomancy—preparing his escape—while pulling out Vindication. Rusts! He’d heard that voice as if someone were sitting beside him.
Firing that gun would not have the effect you want, I think, the voice said. Even if you could see me, shooting at me would merely ruin the furnishings of your coach, costing precisely eighty-four boxings to repair when Miss Grimes takes it to the shop next week. You’d be left with a new wood panel on the coach body just behind me which would never quite match those around it.
Wax breathed in and out. “Harmony.”
Yes? the voice said.
“You’re here, in my coach.”
Technically, I am everywhere.
Wax trembled, mouth going dry. He forced himself to close the door and sit back down.
Tell me, the voice said in his head, what were you expecting to happen when you put in the earring, if not this?
“I…” Wax slid Vindication back into her holster. “I wasn’t expecting an answer so … promptly. And my reflexes tend to be on the jumpy side lately. Um, Your Deificness.”
You may call me Harmony, or “Lord” if you must. The voice sounded amused. Now. About what do you wish to speak?
“You know.”
Better to hear you say it.
“Better for You to hear me say it,” Wax said, “or for me to hear myself say it?”
Both.
“Am I insane?” Wax asked.
If you were, speaking to a figment of your delusion would certainly not diagnose that fact.
“You’re not helping much.”
Then ask better questions, Waxillium.
Wax leaned forward. “I…” He clasped his hands before him. “You’re real.”
You’ve heard my voice; you’ve followed my Path.
“A few whispered words when I was in a moment of great stress, when I was gravely wounded,” Wax said. “Words I’ve doubted ever since. This is different. This is … more real.”
You need to hear it then, do you? the voice said. It sounded as clear and ordinary as if someone normal, someone visible, sat there talking to him. Very well. I am Harmony, the Hero of Ages, once called Sazed. At the end of one world, I took upon myself the powers of protection and destruction, and in so doing became the caretaker of the world to come. I am here,