we were better at conning people, we wouldn’t get so much practice at running.”
Her words thudded at me like a padded hammer. I had wanted very badly to hear that she was innocent and that it had all been a mistake. I mean, she was so pretty, so sweet, I would have bet my life that she was innocent, yet here she was openly admitting her guilt to me.
“But why?” I managed at last. “I mean, how did you get involved in swindling people to begin with?”
Her soft shoulders rose and fell in a helpless shrug.
“I don’t know. It seemed like a good idea when Matt first explained it to me. I was dying to get away from the farm, but I didn’t know how to do anything but farm work for a living ... until Matt explained to me how easy it was to get money away from people by playing on their greed.
“’Promise them something for nothing,” he said, “or for so little that they think they’re swindling you.’ When he put it that way, it didn’t seem so bad. It was more a matter of being smart enough to trick people who thought they were taking advantage of you.”
“... by selling them magical items that weren’t.” I finished for her. “Tell me, why didn’t you just go into the magic trade for real?”
Her head came up, and I caught a quick Hash of fire in her sad blue eyes.
“We didn’t know any magic, so we had to fake it. You probably can’t understand that, since you’re the real McCoy. I knew that the first time I saw you at Possiltum. We were going to try to fake our way into the Court Magician spot until you showed up and flashed a bit of real magic at the crown. “Even Matt had to admit that we were outclassed, and we kind of faded back before anyone asked us to show what we could do. I think it was then that I ...”
She broke off, giving me a startled, guilty look as if she had been about to say something she shouldn’t. “Go on,” I urged, my curiosity piqued.
“It’s nothing, really,” she said hastily. “Now it’s your turn. Since I’ve told you my story, maybe you won’t mind me asking how you got started as a magician.”
That set me back a bit. Like her, I had been raised on a farm. I had run away, though, planning to seek my fortune as a master thief, and it was only my chance meeting with my old teacher Garkin and eventually Aahz that had diverted my career goals toward magic. In hindsight, my motives were not discernibly better than hers, but I didn’t want to admit it just now. I kind of liked the way she looked at me while laboring under the illusion that I was someone noble and special.
“That’s too long a tale to go into just now,” I said brusquely. “There are still a few more answers I’d like from you. How come you used our place as a getaway route from Deva?”
“Oh, that was Vic’s idea. We teamed up with him just before we started working our con at the Bazaar. When it looked like the scam was starting to turn sour, he said he knew a way-off dimension that no one would be watching. Matt and I didn’t even know it was your place until your doorman asked if we were there to see you. Matt was so scared about having to tangle with you that he wanted to forget the whole thing and find another way out, but Vic showed us the door and it looked so easy we just went along with him.”
“Of course, it never occurred to you that we’d get stuck with the job of trying to bring you back.”
“You better believe it occurred to us. I mean, we didn’t think you’d have to do it. We expected you’d be mad at us for getting you involved and come after us yourself. Vic kept saying that we shouldn’t worry, that if you found us here in Limbo that he could fix it so you wouldn’t be able to take us back. I didn’t know he was thinking about setting up a frame until he sprang it on your partner.”
I tried to let this console me, but it didn’t work.
“I notice that once you found out that Aahz was being framed, you still went along with it.”
“Well