`What?’ said Carding, as they set off down the stairs to the new incarnation of the Great Hall.
‘ “I considered I’m a mad hat?”‘ Spelter suggested.
‘Just shut up, all right?’
The haze still hung over the city, its curtains of silver and gold turned to blood by the light of the setting sun which streamed in through the windows of the hall.
Coin was sitting on a stool with his staff across his knees. It occurred to Spelter that he had never seen the boy without it, which was odd. Most wizards kept their staves under the bed, or hooked up over the fireplace.
He didn’t like this staff. It was black, but not because that was its colour, more because it seemed to be a moveable hole into some other, more unpleasant set of dimensions. It didn’t have eyes but, nevertheless, it seemed to stare at Spelter as if it knew his innermost thoughts, which at the moment was more than he did.
His skin prickled as the two wizards crossed the floor and felt the blast of a raw magic flowing outwards from the seated figure.
Several dozen of the most senior wizards were clustered around the stool, staring in awe at the floor.
Spelter craned to see, and saw-
The world.
It floated in a puddle of black night somehow set into the floor itself, and Spelter knew with a terrible certainty that it was the world, not some image or simple projection. There were cloud patterns and everything. There were the frosty wastes of the Hublands, the Counterweight Continent, the Circle Sea, the Rimfall, all tiny and pastel-coloured but nevertheless real …
Someone was speaking to him.
‘Um?’ he said, and the sudden drop in metaphorical temperature jerked him back into reality. He realised with horror that Coin had just directed a remark at him.
‘I’m sorry?’ he corrected himself. ‘It was just that the world … so beautiful …’
‘Our Spelter is an aesthete,’ said Coin, and there was a brief chuckle from one or two wizards who knew what the word meant, ‘but as to the world, it could be improved. I had said, Spelter, that everywhere we look we can see cruelty and inhumanity and greed, which tell us that the world is indeed governed badly, does it not?’
Spelter was aware of two dozen pairs of eyes turning to him.
‘Um,’ he said. ‘Well, you can’t change human nature.’
There was dead silence.
Spelter hesitated. ‘Can you?’ he said.
‘That remains to be seen,’ said Carding. ‘But if we change the world, then human nature also will change. Is that not so, brothers?’
‘We have the city,’ said one of the wizards. ‘I myself have created a castle-’
‘We rule the city, but who rules the world?’ said Carding. ‘There must be a thousand petty kings and emperors and chieftains down there.’
‘Not one of whom can read without moving his lips,’ said a wizard.
‘The Patrician could read,’ said Spelter.
‘Not if you cut off his index finger,’ said Carding. ‘What happened to the lizard, anyway? Never mind. The point is, the world should surely be run by men of wisdom and philosophy. It must be guided. We’ve spent centuries fighting amongst ourselves, but together… who knows what we could do?’
‘Today the city, tomorrow the world,’ said someone at the back of the crowd.
Carding nodded.
‘Tomorrow the world, and-’ he calculated quickly-’on Friday the universe!’
That leaves the weekend free, thought Spelter. He recalled the box in his arms, and held it out towards Coin. But Carding floated in front of him, seized the box in one fluid movement and offered it to the boy with a flourish.
‘The Archchancellor’s hat,’ he said. ‘Rightfully yours, we think.’