| Aluvians
Gharu'ndim
Sho
Viamontians
Ispar
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Auberean
History
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We'd left the front door open after
coming in, but the cabin was still very dark. I kicked piled furniture away from the rear
door, and opened it. Wan red sunlight spilled across the threshold and painted the
cluttered gloom the color of desert stone. Behind me, Kei, my fellow apprentice, repeated
in her most soothing voice, Jarilyn, where's your daughter? Ma'am? What happened to
Cortrima? over the hysterical wails of the Aluvian woman we'd found here. Cortrima, Jarilyn sobbed. They came and took her. They took
her in the night. Their hands came through the walls! I couldn't stop them.
I doubted we'd get much information from her.
Here comes another one. At the front door, Master
Celdiseth stood with arms folded across his barrel torso, staring coolly up at the
monstrous Spire that howled but a few furlongs away. I hopped back across the room to
look, and a jumble of furniture toppled as I went. The woman resumed flinching and
shivering. Kei shot me a poisoned look and grabbed her trembling hands again.
Sure enough, the heart-like organ at the center of the Spire
had begun to pulse brighter once more. Celdiseth sat, carefully arranging the folds of his
dark red robe around him. I stood. I knew what was coming would hurt, but I was determined
to stay on my feet.
The organ gave a final, tremendous pulse, squeezing out from
between the black claws that held it.
The ground recoiled. Leaves spun away from the quivering
trees. Shreth howls floated over the hill.
A thousand invisible razors entered my head from all sides
and crawled and dragged themselves slowly down my spine. Light fell away into a long
tunnel, with the red heart of the Spire flickering at the end. Around the edge of my
vision, black shapes swam and twisted like columns of smoke. The Spire's howl washed out,
and behind it I seemed to hear the distant squealing of something noisome and unnatural.
Then I heard a harsh, unwilling cry of pain, choked out by
unendurable agony. The voice was my own. From back in the cabin, Kei released an
unembarrassed shriek. From the ground to my right Celdiseth released a mere grunt. My legs
disappeared from under me, and I was rolling on the dying grass, clutching at the ethereal
blades that lacerated the space inside my skull.
With a final shudder, the ground fell still.
I panted, spitting clover blossoms and dust, and rolled onto
my back. Discolored clouds squirmed across the yellow sky, like beads of oil across a
puddle. Celdiseth sat quietly beside me. His face was still, though white and drawn.
We should leave soon, he said, quietly. Check
on Kei. We'll take Jarilyn with us. EpiK Sucks
The woman, lacking any sensitivity to magic and therefore
unaffected by the quake, carried on as if nothing happened. I couldn't do anything,
she sobbed. They took her and I couldn't stop them. Blessed Mothers forgive me, I
couldn't keep my baby safe . . .
* * *
We traveled many leagues, and as we went, the pains
associated with the quakes became less intense. By nightfall, we were deep under the green
shelter of Tiofor Wood. Celdiseth and I gathered up the logs we'd chopped for a large
fire. I doubt it will keep the Shadows at bay, he grunted, but at least
we'll be able to see them when they come. Kei, meanwhile, sat huddled with the
Aluvian woman, stroking her fine, cornsilk hair and murmuring reassuring nothings to her.
I'd wrapped Jarilyn up in a heavy woolen blanket. My mother had given it to me when I
began my apprenticeship with Celdiseth in the far north. The paleness of her hair against
the dark material was striking. It made her seem still more thin and frail.
Her story had come out in pieces, spaced by fits of helpless
tears. Varel, the enchanter we had come in search of, had been married to her for a number
of years. The pains of the Spire had apparently driven him mad, and he ran away into the
woods. The loss of their child had driven Jarilyn to madness as well, though she was too
defeated by the knowledge to run anywhere. Celdiseth and I had taken turns carrying her
across the wilderness. My arms were quite sore, though he seemed unaffected.
After a time, Jarilyn fell into a restless sleep. I sat
beside her to eat my mushroom stew. I listened to her breathe, and to the crickets that
serenaded the pale rising moons. She made a small noise in her sleep, began to turn and
twitch. Her breathing became fast and shallow, and her eyes and hands squeezed tight, as
if dreams were showing her things she would rather not see. I reached for her, to brush
the hair away from her eyes, smooth the wrinkles of worry and pain that creased her
forehead -- but hesitated. I looked towards Kei and Celdiseth, feeling foolish and
embarrassed, and my hand darted away.
Celdiseth had boiled water for green tea, a passion he had
absorbed from the scholars of Hebian-to. He sat with his hands wrapped around a
hand-carved pine stoup, a gift from a powerful Sho enchanter he knew, and watched the
cracking shadows cast by the fire.
Master? Kei asked quietly, trying not to wake
Jarilyn. She knelt on a reed mat near the fire, her hair unbound for the night, and
hanging to her waist. A single ivory comb held the sable cascade away from her eyes and
the flames. She pushed the loose sleeves of her robe back, so she could warm her hands.
Is magic different here? Compared to Ispar, I mean.
The magic of Dereth is different in many ways,
Celdiseth said. The most fundamental way may be the most important.
What do you mean? I asked.
On Ispar, mana suffused all the land and sea, in an
unseen cloud. When a mage drew upon it, there might be a gentle breeze as other mana moved
to fill the void he had made. It was hard to touch, though. One needed talent and skill to
manipulate the mana of Ispar, and mages rarely managed to ascend above the third circle of
their spells. One who managed to reach the sixth circle was almost unheard of. Here,
though . . . Tell me, young Evaen, have you ever heard a mariner speak of ocean-currents?
No, Master, I said. I'm from the highlands.
The Luparvium Mountains. That's about as far from the sea as you can get, and --
And no shipwrights or sailors have come across from
Ispar, Celdiseth finished for me. Yes. Quite so. At times, I have wondered if
that might be by design. He sipped from his stoup thoughtfully, and continued.
The oceans are not simply large, stagnant puddles. Rivers, called currents, run
through them. They are powerful and invisible.
It is similar with the mana of Dereth. There is no
cloud of mana here, no gentle breezes. Magic flows through the land in raw torrents.
Rather like the Canfeld River in spring, I'd say, when the snows of your mountains melt.
Some of that power may leak or spill, yes, and we use that to work our little magics.
There is little enough of this spillage, though -- that is why our spells weaken as more
learn the arts -- and that is easy to touch. Almost anyone can cast here. The mass of this
world's mana seems to run unseen and untapped through the land -- far more power than any
mage could hope to control. It is somehow locked up, though, and we cannot touch it. I
suspect even attempting to do so would be fatal.
Why is that important? Kei asked. Whether
magic floats like a pollen on the wind or rushes like a mighty river, we seem to able to
influence it well enough. If there is more power here than a mage could control, enough to
kill even, is it not for the good that we cannot touch it?
Celdiseth's vein-blue eyes stared at her intently from across
the fire. Because, Kei -- these are not earthquakes that have been rocking the land.
Each time one occurs, these mana-currents shift. The 'rivers' are being dragged out of
their courses, towards the Spires. That is why they cause some of us pain; the mana we
command is literally being ripped from our bodies. What we are experiencing are . . .
one corner of his mouth twisted downwards at the inelegance of the word, manaquakes.
Why are they happening? I said. Is that
what the Spires are for?
I believe that is their purpose, Celdiseth said.
As for why, I don't know. I have been trying to find out since they first erupted.
Whatever the Shadows do has a reason, whether we understand it or not. They are a wily
foe, or so the records of the last Shadow war tell us. If we do not understand their aims
. . . we cannot defeat them."
But we have defeated them, I said. We
fought at Stonehold, Kei and I, and . . . Celdiseth shot me such a fierce look of
disapproval that I stammered and fell silent.
We were through with our studies for the day, Master,
Kei said reasonably. We couldn't let others fight where we would not. Are we not
being trained to serve the good of all?
You're twisting my words, Celdiseth said darkly.
You are being trained so that you might, someday, be capable of serving the good of
all. Until then, you risk yourself and those who think to depend upon you . . . Why do you
suppose I make my apprentice robes the color I do? he asked, suddenly.
Kei pursed her lips. I had thought, Master, that it was
in honor of the Elder Spirits. Orange is the color of breath from the Dragon of Power,
from whom we might learn the discipline needed to control great magics. It is also the
color of the Firebird of Splendor's wings, who teaches us to disregard the pleasures of
the world and focus on our studies. Finally, it is the color of the sparks struck by the
hooves of the Unicorn of Grace, who reminds us that we must help all, even should it cost
us our lives.
Celdiseth chuckled. A pretty lie. Heard that from
Shoyanen Kenchu, did you? Kei looked stricken, and Celdiseth's expression softened.
Well, perhaps she was sincere. She likes that sort of symbolism. That's not my
reason, though. I make them such a bright color because, until you have learned to control
your abilities, you are more a danger to yourself and your comrades than whatever you
fight.
I felt my jaw hang. You mean, I said slowly,
that we wear this bright orange . . .
So that experienced mages will be able to spot you in
the confusion of combat. So they can be prepared to avoid your misfires and fizzles, and
watch to ensure you don't get in over your head. He took another sip from his stoup
as I sat back heavily, and Kei squirmed in embarrassment. It's nothing to be ashamed
of, Celdiseth added. I wore the orange robe of an apprentice for many years
myself, back in Feirgard.
All beside the point, of course. He sighed
impatiently, and his silvered brows furrowed. He peered into his stoup. And my point
is simply this: the attacks the Shadows have made cannot be their true goal. If they were,
they would send greater numbers. Empyrean lore tells us that they have infinite legions,
and that they slew all the heroes and heroines who tried to stand before them. If they
were invading, why would they send only a few hundred at a time, and fall back so readily?
No, their true goal is something else . . . and I will
wager you an Olde Ispar Stout that it involves the Spires, and what is happening beneath
us. The attacks are merely to keep us distracted, to allow their generals to assess our
strength, while they achieve whatever their true goal may be. They are ancient, and we are
something new in the world. Are we a force to be reckoned with, toyed with, or ignored? We
do not yet have a place assigned to us in their plan.
The release of Bael'Zharon, I said, and the words
fell cold and heavy on the ground.
Celdiseth grunted. The Hopeslayer. Probably, yes . . .
Though I cannot imagine what the Spires or the old standing stones have to do with it.
Frore was far from either, and the thesis that the Great Work was a piece of his crystal
prison has been accepted by almost all of the wise. Regardless, the Shadows are achieving
their goal someplace hidden, as we -- as you -- run hither and yon, fighting their
captains and generals.
His keen eyes sought mine across the campfire. With a
decisive snap, a spark was sent up towards the bloated moons. Do you see why I want
you to keep clear of the fighting, Evaen? You are not yet ready to fight legends . . . and
until we understand the nature of the enemy, I believe we must hold a reserve.
(To be continued . . .) |
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