The Wizardry Consulted (Wiz, #4)(51)


Llewllyn simply nodded and picked up one of the chickens. “Hmm,” he said stroking the bird’s feathers. He prodded the fowl gently. “Ah, yess.” Then he studied the bird’s eyes. “Quite so,” he said, lifting the chicken higher to study its feet. “Uh huh.”

By this point the chicken was thoroughly confused by these goings-on, and Wiz and the bird’s owner weren’t much better.

“Yes,” Llewllyn said at last, “I see the problem clearly.”

“If you can do that you’re better than the rest of them so-called magicians,” the chicken man said. “But what are you going to do about it? That’s what I want to know.”

The bard put the chicken down on the table. “Why my good man, I’m going to solve your problem. That’s what we wizards, ah, consultants, are here for. Now this is a difficult case. The causes are obviously complex and subtle. I will not go into the boring details, but suffice it to say that the cure is straightforward. Simply pluck a sprig of tansy and place it above the door to your henhouse.”

“That’s it? That’s all?”

Llewllyn smiled a superior smile. “The secret is in knowing the cure, not in performing it.” Then he leaned over the clucking chickens and waggled his finger under the man’s nose. “But this is most important. Do not go into the hen house until the moon has waned and waxed again. Feed and water your chickens outside the coop but otherwise do not go near them.”

“Why?”

“Because during this delicate period it would not be safe. You might contract the dread-“ his voice lowered to a near whisper “-chicken pox.”

“Oh, right. Of course. I’ll do just as you say. Thank you sir. Thank you.”

With that the man gathered his chickens and strutted out.

“Chicken pox, huh?” Wiz said when the man had left, birds dangling.

Llewllyn shrugged. “Not my most inspired invention, I will admit, but it should suffice.”

“And tansy?”

“The stuff’s a roadside weed around here and it stinks. The smell makes them think it’s powerful. Like putting alum in medicine so it will taste bad.”

“What do you think he’s going to do if his chickens don’t improve?”

“Oh, they will improve.” Llewllyn’s face screwed up as if he was thinking of something unpleasant. “My Lord, I have a certain experience with chickens. The only thing wrong with those birds is that he is pestering them to death. If he leaves them alone they will settle down and all will be well. And if not-“ Again the shrug. “I will simply tell him he must obtain a coal black cock without a speck of white upon him. That should occupy him for a few moons.”

Their next client was a heavyset young woman with a bad complexion and a red nose. She ventured through the door as if she was afraid that the two men would bite her. In one plump hand she held a handkerchief which looked as if it had seen recent use. Wiz decided that was a bad sign.

Llewllyn didn’t seem to notice. He rose and made a sweeping bow to their client. “Come in young lady. Please sit and tell us what has brought you to us.”

The young woman twisted her hanky and bit her lip. “I don’t know,” she said in an undertone. “It’s such a small thing, really.”

Llewllyn’s smile grew even brighter. “There is no problem too small for us, dear lady. We are here to serve your every wish. Please be seated and tell us about it.”

Thus encouraged the girl eased herself down into the chair.

“Well, I, I hardly know where to begin.”

“Begin wherever you feel like, dear lady,” Llewllyn said gently. “The magic will tell me the rest.”

“There is the young man,” the girl said in a low voice.

“Ah,” Llewllyn nodded. “A special young man? Perhaps one who does not notice you?”

“How did you know?” the girl asked.

“Magic tells me many things. But do go on.”

“Well,” the girl relaxed in her chair, “he’s our neighbor you see . . .”

By the time Wiz left fifteen minutes later Llewllyn and the girl were head-to-head across the table. He hadn’t given her any advice that Wiz could see, just a lot of encouragement, but she seemed to think he had the answer to everything from her love life to the riddle of Dark Matter-or she would have if she’d known what Dark Matter was, Wiz thought.

Obviously his new assistant had a future in this end of the business. Now if Wiz could just keep him from bilking the customers or trying to practice unauthorized magic, he’d have one less thing to worry about.

That morning the director of the FBI had a lot of things to worry about. As her assistants filled her in on Clueless Pashley’s latest exploit, she stubbed out her cigarette and lit a new one. She was back up to a pack-and-a-half a day and headed rapidly for two packs. Her fingers were stained, her breath stank, she had burn holes in her clothes and twice she had nearly set her desk on fire when she missed an ash tray.

“Where is this clown now?” she asked Paul Rutherford when he finished his report.

“The local office bailed him out,” her assistant said. “They’ve got him stashed in a safe house to keep him away from the newspapers.”

This was a public relations disaster.

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