The junkyard had known magic, that much was obvious to any untrained eye, and not the kind of story book magic which pulled rabbits from hats and produced fireworks for starry eyed children. No, this was wyld magic and it's taint was visible from the rainbow puddles coloring the littered ground to the animated teddy bears scurrying through the shadows and the bickering rats who debated each other in scholarly tones over a chunk of cheese. The Junkyard, a word of dread on the lips of Blight Fae. A place of deranged magic and the humans who exuded it from their pores, the wyldings. A graveyard for every wreck and scrap of iron from the Blight and beyond. Rusting piles of the hated metal ringed the junkyard, an impassable barrier warding the sanctum from all faeries. Inside, the scrapheaps twisted and tangled into a vast maze so confusing that any fae who dared the iron sickness to enter would soon find himself hopelessly lost. At the center of this gauntlet sat Adin, fingers drumming impatiently on a throne welded of the same scrap that formed his kingdom. As he lounged, he watched a crow who also watched him with a singly bloodshot eye bulging above it's beak. For the life of him, he couldn't remember who'd ensorcelled it. Maybe he made it last night when he was drunk. Perhaps due to boredom, perhaps on artistic whim, he decided it needed work and waved a hand. Wild magic crackled through the air in crazed bolts of violet energy. The other people gathered, even those completely drunk on magic, ducked or fell flat to the ground as if someone had tossed a grenade. One bolt laced up the side of a discarded mechastrider sprouting a line of pretty daisies from its rusted hull. Another flew wide exploding in a greasy puddle which erupted in a effusion of hopping, croaking frogs. The third did strike the crow, but it was a glancing blow, replacing its left wing with a frying pan. Weighed over by the heavy cookware the bird tilted on its perch and fell out of sight.
"That's better," Adin opined, cracking his knuckles, the seven that were left anyway (wild magic had its cost). He turned his eyes, each a dazzling mixture of blue and pink, on his right hand, a bald fellow with thick spectacles. Nedd looked too straight laced to be an insane aether addict, but that's why Adin liked him. Nedd handled the contacts upslope where magic stuck out like a troll in a dwarven ale house. "She should be there by now, don't you think?"
"I imagine," replied Nedd dryly. He didn't show much emotion but then again he never did and he'd never liked Claire anyway.
Adin turned to the lean figure shivering to his right. "You hear that, Cabriel, she's all yours."
The high elf wiped the sweat from his brow and staggered forward, trying desperately to retain his noble bearing. "You've... made a wise.... decision," he managed. "United, the Seelie Court and Wyldings... can crush... any competition. We'll have the glam trade to ourselves."
"And our replacement alchemist?"
"My liege, Queen Juliana, has someone selected, a talented gnome.... I'm sure you'll find his work... far surpasses this changeling of yours..." he took a deep, painful breath, "so long as you can provide him a lab away from all this iron."
"I'm sure we can work something out, though commuting to work might not be an option," Adin laughed. "About the changeling.... do you intend to?"
"I believe... the terms of our deal required.... you ask no questions regarding her... fate."
Adin grinned as he turned to his number two, "he keeps his wits even when knee-deep in iron, I believe I like this elf." Cabriel somehow managed a diplomatic smile. "Well a deal is a deal, you'll find her in a room at the Boggart's Hole. She'll be carrying a shipment of glam. Keep it, a show of good faith to seal the deal with our Majesty the Queen."
"Very well. We'll send a couple knights to... escort her." the high elf started off at a calm but quick pace, obviously eager to escape this metallic hell.
"Oh and Cabriel..."
"Yes?"
"Don't underestimate her, I Do Not want an angry changeling with a weeks supply of mana out for my blood."