Monday, November 29, 2004

DONE DONE DONE!

50021 words. Don't believe the ProMe counter, it always adds around almost 100 to that - probably counts dashes as well or something.

NaNoWriMo Progress Meter

Nanowrimo has this to add,



(In the end, I just couldn't decide).

Oh, and if you want to read the full novel (beyond what is currently here), well I'm sad to say the unedited manuscript leaves my PC only in this form.

"Nlrazurvi, ail ulr zn zgv
Izi lzrn rn ilunzvr rn azrkvig iglnv,
Irlvnav vniirluarng irn lrkv z azgv,
Giv nrgig vnazirng irn lrkv z glnz.

Iri iizala azi gzkvn urln Kvrrzn lu lla
Zi Zzlgzzzr Izluzrvva, Krng lu giv Alla
Zg llng lzig uvll zvnvzgi kzlzarni zlla
Rn rurni iri Krngaln, rn Ruzzlv iri Illa.

[...]

Lnv irnglv ulaui, z rvlra lu iri rvrgn, rvnzrni ln giv alrla, giv ulrav alngrlllrng rg zluna rnirav rg aivn Zzlgzzzr azi avuvzgva. Rg azi rnkrrilnva ulr z aillv nrllvnnrun. Zna nla, rg zvgrni gl igrr..."

Sorry for being that way. Deep down, it's all about me feeling insecure about my novel and not wanting to publicize my innermost weaknesses--- ah crap, I'm male so that line doesn't really work for me. ^_^

If you really really want to read all of it, and promise not to make that public, just drop in a friendly-worded comment below and I might email it. ;) (Because even deeper down, I can't live without compliments, so I'll risk it I suppose).

A little explanation on Mentalism


Excerpt from "Shadow's Rising, Chapter VII"

(a never-completed novel, and a chapter that does not actually exist)




Thaliomancy, of course, is the simplest type of magic. It is also the most complex type of magic. These two statements, both true, do not indicate a general state of confusion on the part of the narrator, but rather should give an idea of the difficulty to classify the magic that deals with the human mind.


As explained the Arcanor Ayin Selten of the Sixth: Magic, when referring to its practice by humans, is an almost exclusively mental process. Channelling the energy permeating the astral planes - the Chyaralia - is accomplished through the mind only, especially the Strength of Will, followed by the fine honing of Reason. Thus, all magic that is ever cast by sentient beings is really "magic of the mind", making the term Thaliomancy rather obsolete.



Which also causes the amazingly diverse area of this specific circle: So diverse it is, in fact, that initial attempts to associate it with one of the classical Elements - and place it in one of the seven towers of the academy at Carenath -, were unsuccessful.



"The Wind is Thought", argued the Aeolomancers, and called for it to be placed in the First Tower.



"The Mind is at Rest, it is the foundation of our existence", replied the Geomancers who would rather see it in their own school.



"It is not at Rest! It seeks Rest and cannot find it, like Water, and that is why the Wet element is attributed to Man," the Hydromancers would hotly retort and go on to explain that the magic, closely associated with humans, should - like the Healing circle - be within the Fourth tower.



"You are all out of your minds yourselves! Man ever Strives, he never wants Peace, he ever seeks War, he ever seeks Disorder and upheaval. His greatest inventions come from his curiosity and urge to adventure! The mind is like Fire, never resting, roving ever higher to touch the wisdom of Heaven and at last falling, blown away as ash upon the wind," the Pyromancers would finally yell, to place it in the Third.



The Light and Shadow towers never even thought about making a bid for the circle - to place it in either of their towers would have labelled Man as fundamentally Good or fundamentally Evil, and they were careful to avoid that kind of judgement.



A movement to place it in the highest tower was made (quite apt, since the Seventh was concerned with magic of all the elements, and mind magic certainly contained all of them), but dropped since that would have required any mind mage to graduate in the field of resonance magic (or metamancy), and the latter was not only radically different from the former, but also vastly harder to learn.



So one was again left with the four Lesser Towers that were so hotly contending for influence. And in the end, they decided to place it in the Wind Tower, on little other final deciding basis than that the current Archmagus of the First, Riano Mown, was the only graduated Thaliomancer among the archmagi, and his tower held a slight majority of the courses in the Thaliomancy curriculum. The decision was voted on by the archmagi, the Lesser Towers each voting for themselves, and the vote was swung by the three Greater Towers. The Aelomancers had won - the Wind was indeed Thought.



The decision, already arbitrary, was made all the more laughable by the sad fact that not even a tenth of the mentalists who wandered the land had ever set foot inside Carenath. Thaliomancy, with its broad range of applications, required a radically different syllabus than the great academy offered with its enforced elemental specialization. The college of Duskinholm had been established a little less than a century ago, and was but a blip on the map of magical education, but it had become the center of mentalism within a few years of its founding. It is here we turn our sights next.

Friday, November 26, 2004

Chapter VII - The Order wants YOU!

Chapter VII
The Order Wants YOU

"… to obey the rulings of the archmagi, follow the decisions of the council of Elders without question…”
––The oath of the magi initiates at Carenath.



Iola was upset.

“You have decided what?” Damn it, I have been studying the healing arts for three years; my next Grand Examinations are in less than two months' time; I have been preparing for them for half a year or more! “Are you aware that my assessments are scheduled to the ides of Mossenur, my assigned Tract is due to be graded even earlier than that?” Magic apprentices wrote tracts, not thesis or treatises; these were the foundation concepts for what would later on become a tome on the Arcane Arts. That bridge she would have to cross far later, in six years’ time. For now, it was a Tract.
A Tract whose concern she had elected herself, an investigation of the similarity of the arcane structure of Magic Shields and that of certain elemental states of water (forcussing especially on salt solutions). She had nearly finished with it; all the experiments she had had to do (a lot, in spite of the largely theoretical nature of the topic), had been tremendously successful. Her theories had been almost fully supported by what she had found: Though he had had to correct her thesis regarding the angles of the most effective shield, which turned out to be shaped like Ice crystals rather than salt, a hexagonal, not a square structure; and the rates of energy exhaustion were somewhat significant if the shield was kept up under the pressure of magical attacks. Also, the effects of an added catalyst of gillyweed, proved to be far less strong than she had believed to be. But now that she actually sat down to write the reasoning, she found she still had to polish on a lot of it before she went on to formlate the conclusion, before the final concepts and principles, and the basis for the dense, informative composition of a magical tome could be laid down. She would need all the time she could spare during the next two weeks, all the time she did not spend on preparing for her examinations.
It was what some called the Hell month, among the apprentices of the Tower. There would hardly be another time as stressful for them until they reached the seventh circle, where they had to perform another demanding assessment.
She was in the midst of a breakthrough, she often found. If she were given more time for this investigation, she might be able to revolutionize the entire school of magic shielding with the Aquamantic concepts. She could even receive the honorary Order of the Fourth, for her great contributions to the magic of the waves.
And in the midst of all this, she was being called upon by the Elders? They had their mercenaries, their trained mages, and their Aventers, to take care aof the affairs of the Academy. They didn’t need to bother an apprentice, much less an apprentice about to sit in her examinations. What were they thinking of?
“You can’t be serious about this! If I cannot write the Tract to its conclusion now, my next chance will be in another year! Would you have me void and resign my chance at finishing the Third Level entirely for an entrire year, at least?”

“Iola Lyrian. If you do not help on this quest, the chances are that neither you, nor anyone else, will ever have the chance to write another Tract, or sit an examination, at this entire Academy. Or in the world.”

Ah yes, the world. It always seems to need us when we have least time to spare. Oh dear.

“So, Iola Lyrian, we have elected you to accompany the Aventer Morinan-Wo.”

And that put her to a full stop. She had been about to start arguing against the unfairness of this order, against the unfairness of choosing an apprentice so buried in work, who would be totally inept on a world-important wuest anyway, when she heard the name.

Morinan-Wo.

The Nightbird.

“Morinan-… who?” She pronounced the last syllable in just the right way for it to sound like a question. What a pun.

“Yes, the Nightbird. He is our most trusted agent in such matters, and there is no other possibility than to send him.

“That will… complicate matters rather”, she immediately noted. Complication was an understatement. If half of what she had heard of Morinan-Wo was true, then complications were his second name.

“Tha task before you is quite simple, actually. There will be no combat, it is to be be hoped, and hardly any sneaking. Certainly no open battles or assassination targets. We merely want you to accompany him on a mission of embassy. He will be a negotiator for peace, a negotiator sent by the Order of the Magi, and the Academy of Carenath to the Lendranian rebls. You see, our Elder s of Coundcil have agreed that to forge peace, we fill wirst need balance: Balance between two powers, two powers that so far oppose each other. If they continue to oppose each other when the Night of the Ravager falls over the land, and the threat that Derlen Lightweaver has told you of already comes to pass, then we are doomed. They will need to forge peace, and they will have to forge it quickly. And they will not do that, unless they both think they have something to gain from making peace and that can not happen unless they know themselves to be equally powerful. So we support the rebels for now. And now, after all this madness has come to pass, we send a negotiation troop to deal and parely with the Lendaranians.

You are being sent to her Highness the resigned, deposed and – by order of the King impeached for High Treason – Countess Lendra IV Herself, who has decided to break with the royal court and support the peasant partisans in their upriseing. It is she who not only lends legitimacy and influence to this revolt, but also acquires the weapons, the military support… everything. Any negotiation to be done with the rebels would have to be conducted with and through her - she is the head of the rebellion and its face. If you ask me, the rebellion never made a better move when they let her join them and subsidize them with her ouwn power, resources and authority.

Some say she pursues selfish goals with this, but that is her own affair, is it not? Whenever has a rebellion succeeded through the pure good will of everyone involved? Down beanath, there is the urge for power.

“And you will go and negotiate with them, in two days hence. Your role will be minor probably during the traveling itself, though you will likely do a lot of the talking once you meet the countess Lendra. Morinan-Wo is not one to make much words, and while the subtlety of stealth is his greatest skill, the subtlety of diplomacy is lost on him totally. He will rely on you to lead the discussions, the parley and the debates. But heed this: Grant no support before we authrize you, and agree to no offer or request that you have not yet confirmed with us via our magical communication link.”

Ramon was referring to the link he had established mental link he had established half a year ago with Iola, when she had to travel to the capital before. This mental link would be mmensely useful, not the least because it offered the bearer direct, immediate rapport at will – on both sides – wherever in the entire continent she happened to be (there was some stuff in the theory of the spell about open fire and void, but that hardly applied over the relatively moderately climated landscape that most of Atharellia was).

Yes, magical rapport. That would aid them all immensely.

“But, tell me, why then have you chosen me to do this? There are others with these mental links, others morte powerful and more experiences. You will feed me my lines anyway during the negotiation, so why bother with me?”

Ramon grew exasperated.

“We will not feed you your lines, nor will we actually be able to communicate with you often. You are deliberately making this task sound simpler than it actually is. In actuality, we will have little opportunity to keep in constant rapport - also because the rebel’s mages will sense it. They have skilled Thaliomancers in their pay, who they use for their negotiation sessions with ambassados just as they employ them for their sessions with captives. I am told they hardly need torture there…

“Anyway, we cannot stay in rapport while you negotiate. If you are lucky, you may manage to sneak off a message once or twice during your stay.”

“But then… what did you mean by authorizing me to offer support? How will you offer that support authorization other than by mental rapport – what are you going to use?”

“This device here.”

He handed Iola a little shred of parchment that shimmered a bit in the flickering light of the run-down candles. There were tiny splotches of ink on the parchment, otherwise it was blank.

“Is that a.—“

“Yes, a parchment with a built-in faxeran spell. Do not lose it, it has cost us a lot of skill, power and time to produce. While you are shielded away in whatever kind of room they will accommodate you in, you may be able to use it. May. Unless they put an nullifying field around your room for the time you are there, just to make it more difficult for us. Understand that the rebels might be desperate, but they will not throw themselves at the nearest chance that presents itself to them. It will be difficult to earn their trust, even while you are actually working to betray them – not actually destroy them, but at least incapacitate them to neutralize the conflict. You might not succeed.

“If nothing else helps, escape.”

“And you will be sending me my orders by this sheet of parchment.”

“Yes.”

“But that makes even less sense! You say you didn’t need me because of the link, why then? Another could take this parchment, even one who never established a mental connection in her life could communicate through it. We have negotiators. Trained ones” She added, wincing at the implication of sending someone like, for instance, Ramon. He was a nice enough fellow, but he shared that slight arrogance that was common among certain, otherwise very sociable mages. Put him before a moog to negotiate and he’d quickly mess it up.

“Don’t blame me, I never put your name forward. It seems that you have been found trustworthy and competent enough to save the world – be proud.” He grinned sarcastically. “And if you really want to know, I heard tell that the ones who decided that you’d be the one to go were Mina and Ana.” Iola winced. Ana, Arcanor and Archmagus of the Fifth, sorceress of the Light, and Mina, Cerenan of the First, the most resourceful Thaliomancer that the Wind Tower had put forth within a century. And both reputed to be the two greatest seeresses of this Age.

“Pre-ordained by fate and Chosen to be hero of the Age by Lerice, the Weaver and her chosen prophets, the sorceresses Mina Aelhwyn and Ana Shalenas?” She had to break a smile at this point.

“It would appear so, yes.”

“So I’d better go packing right away then…” She began retreating into her little student cell. She was about to close the door, when a thought seemed to hit her. She hesitated, then addressed Ramon again, who had already turned away.

“Wait!” Ramon stopped and faced her. “Could you possibly find a way that will allow me to still hand in my tract when all this is done? And can you get the examiners to accept it?”

This time it was Ramon who had to break a chuckle. “Rest assured, I will. Saving the world and leading secret negotiations are certainly legitimate excuses for a delayed research paper. Just finish it when you return, and I shall personally make sure it gets the marking it deserves.”

“Thank you. And now excuse me while I get ready to embark on my world-saving quest.” She retreated into the room and closed the door. Ramon went away down the hallway, his slow steps sounding over the hard stone floor and reverberating from the high ceiling. He was still grinning a little; sending off mage apprentices to go out and be heroines had turned out to be a lot more fun that it should have been.

I get far too little opportunities to do this.



Tuesday, November 16, 2004

Chapter VI - Dark Dreams

Or what there is of it now.

Chapter VI
Dark Dreams


- Thus, after a thousand years of imprisonment, I have been freed to bring terror and destruction upon the world again, like my nephew and his father Sphaloron did in the last age. Yea, Maara Shinnora, I shall gladly serve thee as my brother did unto Shezaia Vinasroi. -
- Then it is done, high demon of Darkness and Deceit. Let the world tremble before the Third allegiance of Hell and Earth, of Maara Shinnora and the L'zothgwaur Mordaures! Let the Wizards of Carenath beware, and the simple people of Atharellia quake in their homes at night The whole world of Kerran shall belong finally to the Alliance of the Dark... –


* * *


A sudden, panting gasp tore through the little darkened room, as its occupant, Rin Merral, woke with a start, and rose in his bed in a sudden jerking movement. What was this dream? He had never dreamt anything spectacular in his life, except for that one day when he had dreamt of being a tree. And that had been while he was unconscious after he had hit his head on the axe handle while going out to the forest with his dad. And that hadn’t been very spectacular either, just weird – trees led a very boring life, he had found, and he had been ill-disposed toward them since that dream. Especially because halfway into the dream, he had suddenly turned back into a human, and had to run from the infuriated trees. Never trust a tree, that was his motto now. Fitting for a future lumberjack, was it not?
And now this. For a whole month, Rin had dreamt nothing else. Just this huge black stone on a clear dark night, on a small hill under the three moons, the yellow one of sleep, the silver of healing, and the red moon of blood. And then this dark robed woman, and her piercing keen. Of late, the dreams had become worse, showing him dark visions of monsters and carnage. And then this voice! It sounded like nothing which Rin had ever heard. Not a human voice, that was certain. Rasping, husky, almost whispering roughly, and this yearning, gurgling note in it, as if the speaker was hungering for something. Rin had no wish to know what it was the voice hungered for, or who it might belong to.
Rin had attempted to put it out of his mind, for fear of being regarded suspiciously by his neighbors. He and his father lived in a tiny, backwater village in the rural countryside of Northern Atharellia, far from the Kingdom's capital, Thara. The people here were simple minded, suspicious of magic and highly developed technology – as, for instance, three-field crop rotation, horse collars and plowshares pulled by oxen rather than sweating humans – and extremely superstitious. The last thing Rin wanted was to be a 'weird' character, like the old herb wife up at the stream, near the edge of the forest, who reputedly could converse with the spirits of the trees!
Yet the dreams had been continuing to bother Rin no matter how hard he tried to forget. He dared not tell anyone of them, but still his behavior became rather strange, or at least that was what the other townspeople noticed. Rin would be jerky, twitchy, and nervous to the point of paranoia. In the morning, his face would be pale, and his eyes reddened as if from lack of sleep. Rin would be inattentive, only reacting to a question after it had been repeated for the third time, and he would be yawning all day long.
The other villagers kept claiming that he was spending far too much time with his books – Rin was, apart from two or three men in the village, and the old herb woman, the only one who had learned to read. Not even the mayor was literate. Rin's father, one of the literate people in the village, had insisted that Rin learn the Ryllian letters that were standardly used throughout the Kingdom; one of the many remaining legacies from the old sages of the elves of yore or so it was said. Rin did not spend an abnormally huge time with reading, not any more than did his dad, who was a lumberjack and out working in the forest on most days from the first rays of dawn till sunset with the other woodcutters. Rin was a strong kid like all the others in his town, barely grown to the age of seventeen cycles, and spent most of his time playing outside or helping his father with the timber; yet in comparison to the other villagers, he was a bookworm of course.
Some of the villagers rumored that he was ill, some disease of the condition, for Rin could not stand for more than half an hour without sitting down, because he was so exhausted.

The dreams were definitely taking their toll on him.

Rin put the questions, doubts and fears from his mind as he had to do so often of late, and got up reluctantly, yawning and rubbing his sore eyes. Time for his morning chores; his father would still be sleeping from the heavy work of the last day. Rin's mother had died from a fever sickness in the cold winter six years past. Putting a ragged gown of cotton over his back, and slipping his feet into his leather sandals, he made his way to the kitchen of their little house.
After he had fetched a small wooden bucket, Rin walked to the clear stream that ran past their house at a distance of less than a hundred meters. Rin broke into a jog, then a run to exercise his tired limbs still clumsy and heavy with sleep.
None of the other villagers seemed to have risen yet; Rin met no one on his trip to the river, and he was pretty sure by the height of the sun that no one had been here before him today. Yet something seemed wrong to him. Rin's watchfulness and attention span had suffered from the nightmares that the last month had brought him with frightening regularity each night, but his paranoia and gut feelings had not. Rin felt when he was being watched. And currently, he was feeling it. It was almost like the gaze hit him straight in the back and bored into his body, for he turned around to the left. Nothing. The feeling had stopped. Rin turned to the stream again, broke into a run, and immediately felt the gaze on him again. This time, without stopping, he turned his head slightly sideways, gazing out of the corner of his eye.

There! A movement caught his eye. A tall, but stooped man in white clothing was running away through the bushes and trees, no more than, say, two hundred peds from where Rin was running.
"Hey!" he shouted. "Old man! What are you running away for! Why were you watching me?" but he got no answer. It was pointless to try to pursue the old one, he might be stooped, but he sure was lithe and could run quick, and besides, he had a head start of several hundred meters. Hopeless. A moment later, the man was gone, vanished between the trees. What a strange occurrence. Surely it was no one of the village; Rin knew everyone here by name, besides, none of the old villagers of Herrath would even think of sneaking upon him and then running when he saw them. Rin shrugged his shoulders, and continued on his jog to the river.

Running to the stream and back to the house for several times, Rin had soon filled the little tub in the kitchen with water, and he was now dripping with sweat. Taking a handful of water, he wiped his face with icy coldness. Only now did he feel he was really coming awake. It would soon be time to wake his father. But that would have to wait until after the breakfast was fixed. As so often, Rin wished that his mother was still alive, or that he at least had some siblings to share the chores. Invariably, the tasks around the household fell to him, since his father was either out working at the forest felling trees, or snoring at home, or out in the pub. The village, pub, the Rusty Hatchet, was more of a meeting place for the villagers than a drinking establishment. Occasionally, perhaps once or twice a year, a bard would come into town and perform in the Hatchet, and the whole town would gather into the little inn, cramming themselves into the tiny commons room of the establishment – the village was inhabited by about forty people. When a bard was visiting Herrath, all the men, the women and even the little children would come to the inn to listen to the wondrous tales of the history of Atharellia, legends full of magic and wonder, songs from all over the world or even just a few news from the capital, which lay so far away. For the villagers far from any other civilization, the bards were an entertainment, education, and news-bearers at once.
And there was one man who came to the little village with such a regular precision that clocks could be set with reference to his arrival. Not, strictly speaking, a bard, but an entertainer, tumbler and sage all the same, he would visit in the afternoon of the Winter Solstice, and stay in the village for a week, before leaving again. When Gregor, endearingly called Old Greg by the villagers of Herrath, the whole town would come together in the tiny inn every evening for seven days, and would be treated to stories, marvelous acrobatics, juggling, and a few news and tidbits from all over Atharellia, where – as the Herrath people had found out by now – interesting things happened almost every month, if not even every week! What a sight every single other place in this busy land must be, bustling with heroes and monsters. All the time, knights would fight dragons before breakfast, kings were crowned and dethroned, powerful wizards fought with each other for the supreme sovereignty of the astral planes, and other more exciting things happened, such as the curious love affair between the eighty-year old shoemaker and the blacksmith's daughter in the village ten miles upstream.
Old Gregor might be anything but truthful, and a lot of disreputable things might be said about him if one was in the mood and did not like him, but his fireworks were indisputably fabulous, and his stories were as fascinating as fairytales.
And tonight, he would come once again! This had been repeated in the mind of every child and quite a few adults all through the last week and even longer. According to the calendar and the sun, Gregor would be bound to arrive sometime during the day. Rin was determined to be the first to meet him no matter what. And that was why he had got up this early to complete his morning chores, even though he was still very exhausted from the dream-filled sleep he had had tonight.
By now, Rin had filled the tub of water that he and his father would use during the day for cooking and washing. He had only to wake his dad now. But what was that?
Rin stared out into the hilly countryside, looking at the narrow paved road that had been constructed by the royal builders, connecting all the tiny villages to the capital. The sound carried well here, and he was sure he had heard hoof steps. Hoof steps, the light groaning creak of a wagon's wheels, and... singing ?
It was a deep, throaty voice, an old voice, and Rin immediately recognized it. Seemingly, Old Greg was just as early as he today! Rin remembered the song, he had heard it from Gregor last year. It was Greg's favorite song, and when he was traveling in his small wooden cart, he would sing it without ending.

Traveling along the road
A lonely path it is
The wind and sun for company
And yet I'm filled with bliss!

I make my luck in wandering
And let fortune point my way
And where I find a friendly place
Perhaps a while I'll stay.

Repeating the chorus a last time, the voice ended its singing, and the creaking sound seemed to grow louder by comparison. And there it was! The small rickety cart rose over the last hill of the hills, turned a little corner, and appeared before Rin.
Rin was delighted. It had been a full year since last he had seen Greg. In his memory, Gregor had seemed much younger, and far sillier. As his cart approached now, Rin could see that Gregor looked older, far older. Lines of care were etched on a drawn face that looked with a grave expression. This was not the merry bard and juggler that Rin was used to. Gregor looked every inch of a wise sage, a wizard. His robes must once have been red, but they were a darkened, faded crimson color now, which was almost indistinguishable from gray. Had Gregor ever been carrying a staff before? He must have, he had always been somewhat frail. But Rin could not remember this particular staff; solid, hardened, black oak it was, with a ruby set in the top. It was shining with a warm light.
Pushing that out of his mind, he ran towards the cart, shouting all the while.
Gregor seemed only now to notice the dark haired youth that was running towards him. The cloud that had encompassed his face cleared up as if hit by a warm Spring wind – and in late Autumn, too! – and a relieved smile appeared in place of the worried frown from before.
He broke off his singing as he had finished the chorus a last time, and shouted a greeting to Rin, who was still running.
“Gregor! Old Greg! Oh, it’s so good to see you again.”
"Ho! You've grown since I've last visited here, I see.”
There was an understatement if ever there was one: The last time Gregor had visited, Rin had been a whole turn younger, and his seventeenth cycle had made him sprout like a sapling in good earth. He must be one and a half spans taller now, if not more.
“So, tell me.” Gregor said. “What brings you out here this early? I never knew you for one to rise before the sun,” he chuckled.
“Well, for one thing, because I wanted to meet you here!” Rin was relieved he could say this, because another reason had been the particular nightmare he had had this morning. He didn’t want anyone to know this, not even Greg.
“And for the other?” Curses.
“Hah, as if I needed another reason,” Rin made a feeble attempt at evading, but Gregor would not be put off. He wasn’t a jester and a bard for nothing: Never try to joust words with a bard, you will be tripped in your own tongue.
“Rin, you don’t look too well.” There was little sense in arguing about that – Rin’s eyes were still burning even after he had washed them at the stream, and he knew they must be reddened. His skin was a little strained, and he knew he was looking pale and haggard because he had not eaten a lot in the recent weeks. Gregor spoke again. “Have you been having bad dreams recently?” Rin swore inwardly. The man must me a Thaliomancer, one of the mind-magi of old.
“What sense is there in even telling you, if you can just read it in my head?” He jested. “Yes, I’ve had...” he did not know how to put this. “funny dreams. Curious dreams, I mean.”
“Dreams that have scared you?”
Rin could not speak. He merely nodded. “About a witch, and a dark night, and a dreadful voice, and...” he was rambling.
Gregor was not fazed by that however. He appeared to know much more than he let on.
“This voice... what did it say? Did it speak of the future, or the past?”
“They both spoke a great lot of the future, I know that much. Something about darkness, and power, and terror. But...”
Gregor had been almost relieved, but grew a little disquieted now. “Yes?”
“He said ‘it is done’. He said that several times.”
Gregor’s face clouded like a summer day that is interrupted by a storm.
“It is done...” his face grew grim. The calculations of the stargazers have not been wrong, and it was indeed the last day that the night of the ravager passed over the Shadowpike. “It is done...” It cannot be averted now, but if we act quickly we might nip it in the bud.
“Come with me now,” he suddenly spoke. “We shouldn’t keep your people waiting, now should we?” The way he said ‘your people’ sounded strange, somewhat. But Rin was sure he had only meant the people of Herrath, and had not accidentally inferred that Rin was the lost heir to any throne nearby.



Monday, November 15, 2004

Shadow's Rising - Chapter V

Chapter V
Of Courts and Kings



The Royal Court at Thara had always been a mire of intrigue. The corruption within the council of advisors as well as the council of judges was legendary, the degree of plotting and scheming that went on proverbial. “False as a grand vizier” was used since time beyond reckoning to describe anyone with less than honest intentions and a bit more ambition than was good for him. An “councilor’s friendship” was a relation between two people who regarded each other cordially, but would not hesitate to stab each other in the back for money or power. Finally, “resigning from the council” had become a polite euphemism for falling victim to an assassin, or dying in somewhat unclear circumstances.
Yet, the amount of intrigue that actually occurred was not constant. Under some kings, it would lessen to an almost normal level, during the reign of others, it became worth one’s life to get on the wrong side of the Court politics. This distinction was unnoticeable to the people, who were oblivious to this corruption for the most part, save for news the sudden death of prominent members of the council, and uncommon decisions of the board of judges: During the reign of the last king, a murderer had been known for guilty beyond any doubt, the evidence undeniable, and the decision ought to have been clear. He was let go without so much as a fuss; the evidence ignored and then covered up. The criminal was a brother-in-law to the vizier, it was rumored later.
Only those foolish enough to meddle in the affairs of the Royal Court (for a bit of pay, or a share in the power, some people will risk anything), were familiar with the depth of this mire, and only the historians who recorded all the agreements, meetings and decisions of the council knew that the more incompetent the King, the more corrupt the Council. Competence had never been a strong virtue in the crown of Thara in the last seven hundred years.
But the current king was a fool. That should be enough said of the situation.
Even worse, the grand vizier was as proverbially false as they came. Yeshnol, his name was. Famed for his mellifluous voice, meaning literally a voice that sounded like trickling honey. And he was about as sticky, but more poisonous.

* * *


The situation at the Court right now was especially precarious with the Lendranian Rebellion in full sway: A few lords and dukes in the southern regions of the kingdom – just north of the Telladar mountains – had stirred up unrest among their populace. The result was a guerilla uprising (“for liberty!”, the people proclaimed) that was backed by the aristocrat rulers’ armies, who saw in it mainly a way to gain independence from the capital of Thara. Quite a clever way, actually, considering that the main merchant routes between north and south ran through their country – besides the trade that was conducted by sea, along the eastern coastline. The traders were fuming, as they had to pay hefty tariffs for passage and protection. The sailors’ association of free trade was collectively dancing with glee, being able to increase their share over the outmaneuvered land traders – and were not disinclined to pass the populist partisans or the rebellious nobles a few shipments of arms while the King’s men weren’t looking... all in the favor of neutrality, of course.
Thus, the self-declared Republic of Central Atharellia was foundering in its newly-founded status, leading battle after battle with the crown troops, and a few battles in between when the populists got bored. It was an occurrence that could hardly be named unusual in the history of the land, and looking at King Taral’s general reigning policies – even though he was by now almost ignored by his advisors, who cherished him like a young, very volatile child – it was certainly not unjustified.
And the Royal Court, which had had hardly any trouble with its politics – nay, not even a kink of discomfort in all that incompetent reign – was equally justified to be outraged. The rebel dukes were depicted alternately as heroes, forsaking the right of their high birth to do “what their heart told them was right to do” in this class struggle (and doing little to discourage that thought in the populists), and then as traitors to King and Crown, who backstabbed their sovereign and were “in league with these peasant uprisings” to advance their own agenda.
It was all a matter of viewpoint.
Not so, however, to Relle Vidras. She did not meddle in the politics of the court (she wanted to stay alive), and thus the only exchange she had with the council were military commands, and reports. Relle was the general of the crown troops, leading the war against the rebels who flocked to Countess Lendra’s banner.

* * *


Jeyrnan Vidras liked to call himself a sorcerer. In truth, he was hardly a wizard. Most would simply have called him a mage. According to the concise classification system of Carenath, he was a Danen, a mage in the sixth circle. A mage of the Third, to be precise, which is why he would have been called a pyromancer by most of his kind.

But the most fitting description was a mercenary.

There was hardly another worthwhile profession to go into, as a fire mage, besides of course teaching. As a Danen, Jeyrnan was allowed to teach at any wizarding school in the continent. But he had long decided that the lecturer’s life was not for him – he usually had great trouble explaining the theory of magic; it just wasn’t every mage’s destiny to teach others their knowledge, and that definitely went for Jeyrnan.
There would also have been the possibility of entering the summoning school, which was halfway into the domain of the Fire, and halfway into Wind, or the daemonology school, which was shared between the Third and the Sixth, the mages of the discord. Jeyrnan had, of course, tried both, found the former little to his taste, the latter still less, and finally accepted the inevitable by offering his services for hire as a soldier, or, alternatively, an escort for one of the many trade caravans travelling the land these days. They were good customers, they needed the protection, and they had lots of money at their disposal.
Indeed, in these days, there were only three major groups who had employment for mercenaries: The royal army, the rebels and the merchants.
The rebels were out of the question. For one thing, King Taral had declared by Royal Decree that if any citizen of the Atharellian kingdom were caught fighting in their service, for financial gain or not, his life would be forfeit for treason. For the other, the rebels were gradually losing their financial strength. They were worse off than they were months, even a year ago. The low tariffs they raised from the traders worked to their disadvantage, Jeyrnan knew, and threatened to put a speedy stop to the so far successful revolt. So the rebels were certainly not the sort of people an unemployed mercenary should currently seek out.
It was the King’s army then, or the merchant caravans. The caravans sounded more attractive by a margin. They had no alternative to mercenaries, which were currently in demand. As long as they cooperated with the rebel’s reasonably low toll requests, and did not happen to chance upon any of the more ruthless bandits that were abroad these days, there was the odd chance he would not even see any combat. That option did not exist in the army, where every man (or woman) who could wield steel, shoot a bow or cast a spell went right out to the battlefield. The army also did not pay as well, since they relied on the regular troops to back them up when there was a shortage of mercenaries.
In Jeyrnan’s case, however, the army was a slightly better option. The General in charge of leading the counter rebellion troops was his sister, Relle. She was an honorable leader, but even she would not be above giving her brother a preference post. What was the fun in relations if you couldn’t have a little nepotism now and then?

* * *


“Yeah, so I was sort of wondering if you have any vacancy currently, some spot to put your good for nothing brother in.”
Relle could only stare. Jeyrnan, asking her for a job? And throwing in the unmistakable hint that he was hoping for a little favor in this appointment? Unbelievable. It just goes to show, being a mercenary is bad for bone, brain and morals. If this is what comes from it... What does he think this is, a family business?
Nonetheless, she took care to let her annoyance not show on her face.
“I am sure I could find something for you. The second infantry battalion is a little short on both archers and mages right now; unless you have something against fighting in a terrain that is alternately marshy, swampy and ridden with stinging gadflies, it should be just the right thing. Oh yes, and it’s the same thing I would tell anyone else. You seem not to be able to come to terms with the fact that this is the military, right? This is where from the moment you sign the contract, you’re property, and follow orders. I decide where to put you, and believe me, family relations are of quite a low priority when I make that decision.” Ha. Look at his face.
Jeyrnan indeed looked quite a little downcast.
“Hello, Jeyrnan! I was teasing you just now!” Incredible, how hard it was to hold back laughter even after so many years as a commander. “Of course you’re getting this position; I wouldn’t put my brother in a suicide squad would I? But,” and her face turned serious again, “you will tell absolutely no one about this. If I even get the whiff of a hint of my men talking about nepotism, I’ll make sure you get latrine duty for the rest of your contract just to show everyone that I’m not treating you unfairly well.”
“Not a word, Sir.” He saluted sharply, if a bit mockingly. In a grand show of egalitarianism, the army had long established the unwritten rule that superior officers, male and female alike, were to be addressed with Sir, to avoid any confusion. It made for a great amount jokes, not a small number of them bawdy, that had all been told at one time or another by most soldiers in the royal army.
“Come back tomorrow, and I’ll have the contract and your standard equipment right ready. I must say that at the moment, I’m rather pressed for time.” She said the last bit in a worried tone that made Jeyrnan perk up. Relle was not one to worry usually, or at least not one to show it. As a general, you could not afford to show uncertainty or anything but confidence to your soldiers; but even before she had entered the army, Relle had been sufficiently confident for three.
“Is there any trouble currently?” He was always glad to help, especially after the deal they had just worked out.
“Nothing that would concern you”, she snapped. “You can go now.”

And as he was just turning to leave, Relle again raised her head from the paperwork she was already buried in, and said, in an odd tone, a sentence that would stick in Jeyrnan’s mind for the rest of the day, “Oh, and do mention to your colleagues that they ought to remind themselves whose power they owe loyalty to.
“Huh?” He managed to put on a confused face.
“The ought to remind themselves that loyalty to the King exceeds loyalty to any secret order they may be a member of.”

Oh dear.

* * *


And that was why Jeyrnan was not in the least surprised when he received the letter.

A little explanation might be all right at this point. Magic has its own perks. One of them is that – in a world where otherwise the most efficient method would be a to make a horrific mess with a sharp metal tool – you have at your disposal a very quick and clean way of making short work of somebody you happen to not like. But another advantage, equally important (if not more so), is efficient communication. Horsedrawn carriages are horsedrawn carriages, and no matter how many horses you put in fornt of it, the delay between any letter being sent and received are measured in weeks, not days. Mages have their ways of circumventing this delay: For one thing, the Mind mages of the First tower had dutifully set up individual transmitters for the use of each of the towers, and all the archmagi were therefore able to contact their most trusted underlings instantaneously by the power of thought. But this process took effort on the part of the archmagus, a varying amount of preparation time, and a lot of training on the part of the mage contacted; extra-curricular training beside their normal area of study. Not everyone could be a Thaliomancer. Plus, it was only possible to contact one person at a time. And therefore, wizards still sent a great amount of letters.
But when wizards send letters, they don’t put them on a horse-drawn carriage. Instead, they put the parchment in a nifty little device, which reads it, transmits its contents through the chyaralia, the astral planes, to arrive at a multitude of similar (but slightly smaller) devices, which unscramble the magical signal, translate it back into letters, and transfer the contents onto a blank sheet of parchment; a number of which were inserted into the receiving device beforehand. Almost every member of the Order who dwelled outside the Academy of Carenath owned such a machine, and whenever there was an important message or order to be swiftly sent from the tower to the farthest corner of the realm, this was the way that was commonly used. The wizards who had invented it called it faxeran, for no obvious reason.

To get back to the story, when Jeyrnan returned home, he found a sheet of parchment lying in front of his faxeran. The device was still radiating warmth and a slight arcane aura, indicating the recent occurence of a magical process. He was not surprised, to say the least. Relle had sounded rather nervous at the end, and her remark about loyalty struck a hidden nerve, giving rise to uncomfortable thoughts.
Not because she was right. Rather because she was wrong.
The oath of the magi was quite clear on this point. “Place no worldly authority above that of the Elders, no personal desire above the orders of the archmagi.” That had rarely, very rarely indeed, given rise to minor interest conflicts over the last seven hundred years. When the King himself gave one order, and the Elders another, the Elders’ order was the one to be followed by the mage. And it was the one they followed, except in rare cases, which were treated with the same disciplinary action as any other insubordination. Occasionally a charge of treason against the offending mage. But, as mentioned, it hadn’t happened for a frightful long time.

But when it did, there would be trouble.

And it was happening now. Jeyrnan read over the parchment and realized immediately that it was not a mere order. It was a decree of the High Council of Elders, a decision that could only be passed by a four fifth majority of the council, during a specially declared meeting of the entire council of Elders and Archmagi. Its word was law, its validity and effect immediate, and its violation treason against the Order and the Academy.
And thus it was damn good Jeyrnan had got it exactly today, rather than a day later. It read,

"Honored mages, members of the Academy of Carenath and the Order of Magi. In the name of His High Radiance the Archdeacon of Carenath, Carhdon Caronis of the Fifth Tower, it is my duty to declare this order.
By Decree of the Council of Elders and Archmagi, seated together under the presiding of His Radiance Derlen Lightweaver, the Archmagus of the Seventh, it is declared the following.
Namely, that, to preserve Balance and Neutrality, the Order forbids any of its members from intervening in any way into the conflict that has arisen between the forces of His Majesty King Taral IV., King of Atharellia, and Her Highness the former Countess Lendra, leader of the rebellious group styling themselves the Lendranian Populists, on either side of the conflict. Furthermore, it expressly forbids all of its members from seeking or entering employment or service that would likely lead them to be ordered to such action, and commands all of its members currently in such employment or service to refuse any orders ordering it to such, in the name of the Oath.
Any knowing violation of this command shall hereby be declared Violation of the Oath of the Magi, High Treason against the Order and the Academy, and Grounds for Capital Punishment at the discretion of the Justice of the Magi.
The Decree shall be active and valid for all members, upon the reception of this letter or otherwise reception of knowledge of its existence, but at the latest a period of seven days hence.

Thus has decided the Council of Elders, on the Fifty Eighth of Bermelon, in the Year Nine Hundred and Ninety Six of this the Third Age of our world, The Magic Citadel of Carenath, Northern Atharellia. The Balance be Kept Eternally, and Light shield us all.

Signed in the name of his High Radiance the Archdeacon, Tarla Inares, Director of Secular Affairs.

Tarla Inares


Jeyrnan took a short moment to think about this. It meant, of course, that he would not be taking up his beckoning position in the military, nor would he be joining the rebels any time soon – doubly a traitor, once against the King and once the Order, was more he could have handled. Back to riding the caravans now. Oh, but Holy Canae, did he hate merchants. Most merchants anyway. Those fat, pig-eyed bastards, believing themselves to be the lords of the world by rights of their wealth, arrogant pricks. Jeyrnan supposed that any mage who had lived in the social structure of the Order for some time became inclined toward communism a little. Or socialism at least.
And what the heck was he to do otherwise? Nothing at all. So he resolved to return to notify his sister in the same evening. It was always better to do so in good time, before she had drawn up all the paperwork. She might not appreciate having spent all that time for nothing.

However, when he arrived at the post where he had been speaking to Relle a mere half a day ago, it was deserted.

* * *


Relle had been up late anyway. The paperwork was finished, Jeyrnan’s contract drafted, the day’s order to her own contingent completed and sent off. If she was lucky, she would soon get to be in the field again, and actually do the work she had meant to when she signed up, rather than sitting at this desk back in the capital of Thara. To relieve a little boredom, she was pondering some strategic puzzle or other. It had not been her battle, rather the one Commodore Tracht would have to command in a fortnight’s time, but she always appreciated a chance at practicing her skills. It was certainly a prize battle for any tactician, not the least because it could be seen coming from that far off, and could therefore be planned accordingly.
In this case, an ambush. An ambush to be busted rather than an ambush to be laid, that was what made it so interesting. A reinforcement contingent to be inserted into a key place in the battlefield very quickly, and this mountain path was by far the shortest, easiest way. Both sides knew that. The rebels would have to be fools not to lay an ambush there; after all, they had already captured intelligence of the reinforcement battallion and its time of arrival. Tracht had made sure of that, via the counter-espionage service.
Which, of course, meant that the main question concerned not the battle itself, but the time of passage. There was enough time to change it in whatever way viable. The troops were ready to march, they could make it a week early, or two weeks late. Would the rebels have moved their troops there when they arrived a week earlier than expected? Would they be preparing their ambush if they came half a week earlier? There was no better time to smash a trap than while it was being built.
Would the rebels be laxing their guard after a week of waiting for the reinforcing Royal Troops to pass? Would they be dismantling their ambush after two weeks? They could not afford to wait forever, their troops were scarce and much needed elsewhere. And that, partly that, was what had enticed Tracht to order the intelligence agents to make known the planned arrival of his troops. Better an expected ambush than an unexpected one, and it was a good opportunity for gaining a tactical advantage on the rebels, who did not have as bountiful reinforcements.

Naturally, for Relle it was impossible to really foresee the tactical developments from such an uncertain offset, just as it was impossible to foresee the oppoenent’s movements in a game of chess before the first move had been made
. Tracht could not simply assume the rebels would be doing one thing, and then go on to plan the other. He would have to think every single one of the likely scenarios through. By tradition, a team of at least three strategists would take turns in playing with model soldiers on a table against each other to explore the possibilities.
Relle did not have time for that, nor did she have even a single opponent who would think up the enemy’s movements. On the other hand, she had the advantage of not needing to actually command the battle. Thus, she was perfectly comfortable with acting out both sides of the war herself, without having to be bothered that she could be forgetting a crucial possibility.
The small set of figures, traditionally made of pewter, were arrayed on her desk, above the paperwork of the day. Each tiny swordsman represented a hundred. The map of the pass, drawn to scale of less than a hundred meters to a centimeter, spread haphazardly beneath them, had neat folding lines, which became high ridges on the rocky stone, often sending several men of the pewter armies tumbling, one even slipping off the edge of the world and falling to the floor. Relle hardly noticed, and cared less, as she moved the pewter soldiers back and forth over the paper, muttering under her breath and occasionally shaking her head. She was usually known for precision, and thus to see this apparent sloppiness – even in something that amounted to entertainment more than to training – would have been a surprise to anyone. However, she hardly needed the figures anyway, her trained mind several moments ahead of what her hands were doing, and mapping the movements inside her head only barely having to rely on visual representation.
Still, her concentration was completely engrossed in the exercise. Which, partly, was why she had decided to do it at all. The definite news she had received this afternoon – after she had already been hearing rumors all day –, only moments after Taron had left, had been enough to make anyone wish to lose their head in whatever was available. Drink, some would have chosen. Tactical exercises for her; they were easier on the liver. She paused, briefly, slightly taken aback.

Taron?

What did I just think? She had meant Jeyrnan, of course, not Taron. Taron had been another mercenary, years ago. An archer, with a knack for magic and a strange liking for history. She had liked him rather a lot at the time, but he had disappeared after only six months, when his contract had expired. He had never renewed it, and Relle had not heard of him for nearly a decade. Probably dead.
What had reminded her of him now, nay, even made her confuse him with her own brother? Perhaps the way he had come into her office on that day, when the barbarians were rallying and pouring down the mountains by the hundreds and she had just seen her first real war, as a Lieutenant. Calm, almost sluggish, he had seemed; the bookish type, yet with a face that spoke of wisdom and the many things he had seen in the world. Wearing a gray tunic and light leather armor that could have been either the garb of a particularly combat-proven battlemage, or that of an archer more in favour of the hind lines in the battle, to his back had been strapped a short, stout staff apparently made of chestnut, a full, glinting quiver and a longbow that would have looked more apt in the hands of some legendary Elven hero of old than a seedy old mercenary out of work. Yes, how well she remembered those faraway eyes, their greyness matching that of his tunic, as he entered and calmly asked for the current options of employment in the army. Just like her brother Jeyrnan had done, only hours ago.
Enough of reminiscing. The official notification had been brought to her by a representative of the magi’s contingent. By decree of the Academy, all arcane forces were to be withdrawn from the field of battle, and for the time that the war was going on, any mages – apart from those involved in healing and equipping services rather than in the line of battle – were to have their contracts suspended. All mages in the army were mercenaries; they were exempt from any draft according to a financial deal that had been worked out between King Taral and the Academy of Carenath.
The developments were enough to make anyone go maniac. The Royal Troops were not unskilled, and they were great in number, but the battle mages had been a very valuable asset in this war, and losing them was a crippling disadvantage. At least the note had indicated neutral intentions, which implied that the accursed rebels would have been stripped of their arcane support as well. Having a great lack of manpower, the rebels relied mostly on state of the art magical equipment fashioned by the wizards in their service. Assuming that the order extended to this type of support as well as actual spellcasting in battle, the sides would stay more or less equal, though the more powerful royal wizards were a greater loss to the army than the freelance mages were to the Lendranians. Still,very annoying.
And especially right after she had finished the meticulous draft of the mercenary contract for her brother, who would now have to decline the position. What a waste. And then there was a knock on the door, deep and heavy.

* * *


Jeyrnan was put nearly at the brink of panic by the disappearance of his sister. After waiting at the badly built hut that served as the general’s temporary liaison office in the capital for nearly half an hour, he was satisfied at last that Relle had not merely stepped out for a short walk or for sending a letter by the courier service. He thought she might have taken the rest of the day of to see her fiancé, Folbern Inellyot. Folbern and Relle had been in love for nearly three years, but both of their offices demanded far too much time from them to spend much time together, let alone even think of marriage.
She would be wanting to take the time to meet him, certainly, on the brief opportunity and rare occasion that she returned to the capital. But Relle was not one to take time off for anything, he remembered. Too full off her sense of duty – or stuck-up, as others like Jeyrnan would say.
She might leave in the late evening, but it had hardly grown dark.
The only remaining explanation was either that she had received disturbing news causing her to leave immediately to return to where her army was stationed (two day’s rides from Thara, if one pressed the horse), or that something had happened to her.
There was no one he could ask, and her papers – which lay neatly, if a little in disarray, on the desk – gave no indication of what had happened even when Jeyrnan started rifling through them at random. A few pewter figures lay on the floor, as well as a close scale map of some sort, folded up in a slapdash way and then swept off the desk. He recognized the models as belonging to Relle’s figurine set for tactical planning, so he assumed she had either been pondering over a battle or exercising.
Whatever it had been, she must have left in great haste, because she would die before leaving her things scattered on the floor like this. He briefly considered the possibility of an attack haven taken place, examined the door, various pieces of furniture, and found no damages or other signs of a struggle. Not even blood. And knowing his sister, when Relle got into a fight, there would be blood drawn, and not merely her own.
There was no note indicating where she had gone (and it would have been uncommon for her to leave such a one anyway), and even a surreptious glance into her calendar did not show any reason for her absence.

He paused to consider. It was not unthinkable for Relle to be suddenly forced to leave, after urgent tidings from the field, and rejoin her contingent to take up the command again. But it was highly unusual, and what had happened must have been immense. Would she have taken the letter with her? Or would the courier have delivered it orally, too urgent a message to write it down first? Questions. And no answer.

But what he did see on the desk was a letter addressed to Relle that bore the seal of the Aventer Ranino Om’W Nabrosto on it. Nabrosto was the chief representative of the Order in the royal army. He was the strategic mind where the Magi were concerned, the Carenathi ambassador to the military, and also the main source of Intelligence that the Order of Carenath had in the army. A good workout, and if anyone ever suspected Nabrosto of having a double role as informant, they hardly cared about it. He was a valuable man to have on board, for his knowledge, his power and his experience. If there were three who could be said to be Relle’s right hand men, he would be one of them in any way and by any criterium. His counsel was sure to be listened to.
The news which he had explained in the letter must have been less pleasant to Relle though. He was announcing his provisional resignation from the Royal Army, being commanded by the Order to discontinue any action involved in the war between the King and the Rebels. So that at least took care of this part of the matter. There was no more need to notify his sister of the unfortunate decree.

And, as he realized when he saw the three sheafs of parchment, on which in fine intricate letters was written – in triplicate – the verbose, expansive wording of a contract for a mercenary appointed to an Auxiliary post in the Royal Army (by tradition, the status of the Magi was that of the unspecified forces in the military), Relle must have been plenty pissed when she found out. Great.


Tuesday, November 09, 2004

Shadow's Rising - Chapter IV

Chapter IV
The Academy’s Council


“...to use my powers not in violation of the Academy’s codex, to further the Balance, the ultimate objective, to obey the rulings of the archmagi, follow the decisions of the council of Elders without question...”
––The oath of the magi initiates at Carenath



“My fellow members, the meeting is called to order.” There was a slight unilateral whisper of acknowledgement, and a rustle as everyone present took up the parchment that had been mass-duplicated for them. It was a short sheet, and nearly half full. All the Elders should have been relieved about this because it implied a short meeting – some of these sessions could literally last a whole day, or even several days. However, there was hardly a breath to be heard inside the room, and where Derlen looked, he saw grave faces. Graver than usual, that was.
A meeting with a brief agenda might take little time, but it needed a reason, especially when called on short notice. And this one had a good reason. If you could call it good.
“The agenda for today’s session has hereby been made known. Is everyone present in agreement with the proceedings?” around forty hands rose obediently to agree.
“Then we can move on to the points to discussion.” Derlen hated the days he had to preside over the council. Get out a few well-rehearsed, dusty phrases and read from a small parchment, and everyone thinks you’re the Canæ-sent solution to all the problems. Indeed, the Elders were looking at him quite expectantly already. And not just because they were waiting for him to announce the first point on the agenda, he could see that as clearly as if he was reading minds.
“There are only three points for which the meeting has been called. I have proposed to advance on these in order of increasing priority.” Again, nodding. Like dolls, not like wise and learned men and women. The horror of committees.
“Our first concern is the stance of our Academy with regard to the current situation in the southern reaches. The Kingdom has officially requested us to lend support to the royal troops in quelling the rebellion – several times. Our current course of action has been based on ignoring the affair. Are there any comments?”
Muriel, the Archmagus of the First, raised her hand. “This war has no purpose, not for either side. While it is a minor problem, it has little chance of affecting our fate negatively. To send in support to either side now would merely unbalance the conflict and escalate it.”
“I agree.” Vorlud Denvaris, acknowledged as the one in charge of the Academy’s ‘foreign politics’ if you will. “Yet, we must be careful at this time to maintain diplomatic ties with the royal court. You know the current state of affairs—“ a few members familiar with them groaned. Oh and how. “— and we are all aware of the kind of decisions being made by the dulgran and his advisors now. Any kind of harsh, outspoken rejection might provoke them.” Dulgran Monkey was a term that had gradually won popularity as an insult to the monarch of Atharellia. Dulgrani, named after their place of origin, the infamous desert isles of Dulgra beyond the Southwestern tip of the continent, were a diminutive breed of monkeys who were most known for their astonishing ability to imitate the speech of humans – and because their little part of wits allowed them to form simple, but usually nonsensical sentences, they were an attraction on every fair in the big towns. Still, asking any mage of Carenath (and some of the less timid citizens of the city of Thara, but only out of earshot of anyone who might be eavesdropping), the Dulgrani was widely acknowledged as significantly brighter than His Majesty King Taral.
Another member of the council – of the Fourth, Derlen saw from the blue-green robes that indicated the element of water, but did not recognize him – rose.
“And so?”, his question filled the room confidently, almost arrogantly, like a challenge. “What is it to us if the King should decide to commit hostilities toward us? His armies are insignificant and for the most part caught up in the rebellion he brought on himself with his foolish decisions. Even the Royal Wizards, though powerful, are under our higher command. He cannot use them against us; they would not obey.
“Why should we bend down to the worldly, to those whose only goal is the power and influence among humankind?” A murmur of approval went through the council; the mage had hit a nerve. “Why should we follow the commands of such a one, when they will only bring trouble, and there is no benefit to us or to the world we are guarding? What can the King do if we refuse?” he sat back down, his rhetorical question concluding his argument.
Derlen sighed.
“They cannot harm us directly, but you are familiar with history. You know what happened before this institution was even allowed to exist, before mages could walk in daylight and not fear banishment, or worse, torture and execution. You know what it took even after the necessity became clear.” The challenger knew, yes. Everyone present knew. “If the King is sufficiently displeased with us, he does not need to make an attack on our Citadel. He can outlaw the practice of wizardry within his realm, and see where it gets us.” He nearly rose out of his seat and began to pace as he was wont to do under pressure, but managed to remain seated.
“Do you propose to accede to his request then?" The tone was kept barely credulous.
"By all means, no!" Derlen hastened to assure, "But we must maintain diplomatic ties with the crown; we cannot reject them openly. Let us defer a direct response."
Tarla Inares, the councilor in charge of court relations, rose at this point.
"If I may add my professional opinion, that tactic will aid us for a very limited time. How much longer that will be, the gods alone know. The couriers arriving from the city of Thara is becoming more frequent, their requests more direct. They grow impatient. To maintain vagueness may soon be taken no differently than to actually deny them support."
"Then we have an impasse. We cannot send aid for fear it will bring chaos to the world, we cannot deny aid for fear our kind will be retaliated against, yet we must do one or the other, and do it soon." Derlen was ready to break down in tears. Muriel spoke again.
“We might send a token of support. This token would take some time in arriving, and then not severely imbalance the fight. Besides, we shall demand our forces to be placed under no military command, but be allowed to operate independently. That way, we will be able to keep from doing more manipulation in this fight than necessary.
“We must decide what our true objective is. Do we try to deliberately show the King our independence? That will enrage him. Do we want to conserve our forces for the times ahead? This is the way to do it.”
“And how do you propose to convince the King to be satisfied with that token? Would it not rather appear to him that we are toying with his patience, attempting to delay our decision?”
“Not if our priorities lie elsewhere, and if they do so with justification.”
“You do not actually intend to tell him of—“ they had all read the agenda, and the address. It wasn’t as if Derlen had written ‘concerning the apocalypse at hand’ in big letters as the third point in the plan, but everyone knew what was at stake.
“If the matter becomes more dire, yes I do. What difficulty do you see in that?” there was a collective snort.
“He will not believe a bit of it. And if he did, it would unnecessarily jeopardize everything. Our hope there lies in secrecy. We are where we started.” In any discussion, Derlen had long found – especially when he was first speaker – that to play devil’s advocate and the diehard pessimist was not a very thankful role, but the best way to bring the debate forward.
In the far end of the room, another man rose. He was robed in black, and his long raven hair tumbled down to his shoulders in a way that attracted somewhat envious looks from the wizards around him – following tradition there was hardly anyone in the room below fifty, and nearly all of their hair had long faded to gray. That of the men, leastways: female mages didn’t hold with showing age when it was not necessary to do so – and it was never necessary if you were skilled with magic. But this one did not need a spell to look young – he was barely in his thirties. The dark-haired wizard spoke.
“There is a time for honesty, and a time for deceit.”
Ayin Selten was the Archmagus of the Sixth; his was the magic of the Shadow. Naturally, an Order like Carenath had to maintain balance; there were towers of all the elements, which had to work to ensure an equilibrium betwen the opposites: Air (which those of the tower themselves always preferred to call Wind) and Earth, Fire and Water, Light and Shadow. The supreme order of the magi could not afford to discriminate between the tiers; chaos would result. Still, most of the mages were somewhat suspicious of the Sixth, perceiving it like an ingrown toenail, a corruption. A necessary evil to have around, but still an evil nonetheless. Those dressed in the black were accordingly looked at from the side by any but the most progressive of apprentices; you could never know when one of those scheming warlocks was up to something. Ayin Selten was one of the mages concerned who noticed this attitude toward him, but ignored it.
“Would you care to elaborate, Ayin?” Cryptic comments were Ayin’s strong point, much to the irritation of those of the council. As was his archaic way of speaking, that the older mages scoffed at as youthful romanticism.
“Not for nothing do the people of Atharellia call us the Weavers of Fate, do they? I have heard it said that this war concerns us not, that we must let it run its course. But I say that this war truly does concern the fate of the world and the academy of Carenath.
“Truly, if what our Raven has brought us is true, we are in dire danger, as is the Kingdom. Soon, it shall be ravaged by the forces of the dark, and the armies of the King shall be unable to fend them off as they are locked up in the civil war. The rebellious lands and the Kingdom alike will be swept aside by the tide from the nether, and we shall have a second Breaking indeed, a Breaking that is no less disastrous for failing to reshape these lands and cast them below the waters, for it shall lay all to waste nonetheless.
“There is only one way to avert this: We must put a stop to this foolish war. We must quite plainly force these warmongers to make peace and instead ally themselves against the darkness to come. And it shall come, I have gazed in the Darkwell and seen a time of dread, days of battle, of grief.”
“And again, how do you propose to convince them? We are running in a circle here. We cannot tell the moogs of the true threat, and we cannot convince them any other way.” Derlen was growing exasperated.
“Who speaks of convincing? Who speaks of persuading? I spoke of forcing! Ramon was quite right when he said that the armies of the King are powerless against us. He cannot hope to defeat us in an open conflict, he can only harm us slowly by persecuting mages in his realm, over a long time. If we act quickly and surely, there will be no time for that.”
“You don’t actually mean we should depose His Majesty?”
“Impeachment, I believe the term is for such a thing. No, I do not mean that, though the idea bears thought if the conflict should escalate. For now, I simply meant we would promise to send a strong force to restore peace.
“We send this force, wait until the time is right, then bloodlessly incapacitate both sides of the struggle and force peace terms down their throat.”
For a few seconds, there was silence, as the other Elders contemplated this. Then, for a brief seconds, they all looked as if they would break out in applause. Instead, they politely started knocking the heavy oaken table in respect, as was traditional.
"I dare say this represents truly what we, what the academy, and what our Order has always stood for. Long live the cause of neutrality, and the Keeping of the Balance!" Derlen was glad that his continual bickering had at last stimulated the committee into coming up with a good idea. "So we shall hold the customary referendum now."
He did not even have to speak the traditional question before nearly all hands were raised in unison.
"I would say that is enough of an answer." Derlen said happily. "We can leave the exact composition of that force and its plan of action to the Battle mages of the Third, that's their job.
"Meanwhile, we should dispatch an operative to Lendra." There was a bit of a silence at that. "She's the leader of the rebels. A countess of the southern provinces, who is rather fed up with the current tax rates to the sovereign. If we negotiate with them covertly, we will be able to make this a lot smoother than otherwise."
Tarla was unimpressed. "Balance, Derlen? Why do you want to send an emissary to the rebels, but not to the King?"
"Because they are the underdogs in this conflict." Ayin answered before Derlen could reply. "To aid them will help restoring the balance, not destroy it. Besides, the rebels have no choice but to work with us. This is their only chance at swift victory, and they will jump on it. Whereas Taral shall be Greatly Displeased indeed if he finds we are pursuing any goal but his own victory in this war." He paused.
"I sympathize with them." Grinned. "And Canae knows they have reason for doing what they are, with such a King. Besides, I like rebels."


* * *



"I believe this concludes the matter. Then let us move on to the next point." This one will be easy.
"The traders are requesting discounted prices for wizard escorts through rebellion country."
"Would this be unifiable with our plan of action concerning the rebels? After all, to help the merchants refuse their toll requests might put a dint into our negotiations before they begin." Ayin was a practical man with practical morals, as were most of the Dark tower, Derlen remembered. Yes, aid the rebels in their pilfering, so they will work with us in ensuring peace.
"No, I don't believe this will be a problem. The merchant's anger is not directed at the Lendranians. By the letter from the chief of the merchant guild, it seems like brigands have taken it upon themselves to take their own toll on top of Lendra's one, using the time when that country is not being watched by the King too closely anyway."
"Parasites." Ramon, the water mage Derlen had failed to identify earlier, uttered.
"Yes, the letter is very clear on that point. It is asking for support against the brigands only, not the populists. In fact, the merchants are quite happy that the land is currently under Lendranian control, because as a matter of fact, the rebels demand a rather substantially lower wayfare than the King's collectors did." Total fool, that King, yes. The taxes back then were simply outrageous, I remember.
"How heartwarming." Muriel commented again. Derlen suddenly noticed she was one of the five— no, six with him, only people to have spoken today, out of the forty three that were present. Just goes to prove it again; these Things are useless.
"I move we accede to their request. It is not much asked, we do not need the tithing money that terribly anyway, and it also offers a show of support for the King." Tarla was clear on that. The Order of Magi was funded from the tithing of its members, a percentage tax they had to pay out of all money they earned with selling their magical services. The percentage rates themselves varied, and even the prices were regulated. No mage was allowed to charge more than a fixed price rate for healing within the entire kingdom, for instance, while at the same time most of the other areas were regulated by a minimum price to put a stop to excessive competition, which might have damaged the Order's coffers.
"I shall arrange with our funding department to order all mercenary wizards in this respect. Limit the fees taken from merchants by fifteen percent off the usual rates for the time that their journey leads through rebel-controlled country. Oh, and see to it that the hired wizard mercenaries do not follow any demands to fight the rebels, and that they make that clear when they are hired; simply notify the merchants that this is the result of our negotiation with the guild. Are we in agreement as to that?” A lot of the wizards present raised their hands, but not all; some looked dubious at the not insignificant amount of money this would cost them.

“That would then conclude the second point. Shall we presently move on to the third?” A slight groaning was heard from a few of the Elders; this was the point that had been the real reason for the assembly.
“Theodore has sent a report again. To summarize, he has kept his ear on the ground a little and it seems like there is trouble brewing. The rogue mages a little more daring than usual. The local wildlife around the place concerned very skittish. The weather patterns acting up lately.
"He also mentioned the Stargazer Tower down South. Seems like the astronomers have at last found a pattern in the information they’ve got. They established the period of the cycle to within a year, which is quite good when you consider the period is around a millennium. Needless to say, the year they have come up with is this one.”
Ayin Selten stood again. “I myself have gazed into the eye, and found strange goings on in the swirl of the Storm.” The storm was the name by which most mages in Carenath referred to the Chaos rift, the astral plane through whence all nether creatures came and went to and from Kerran. The Eye was a crystal, one of the last Seeing Stones, that was tuned to the plane. “Seems like all those buggers are a bit excited right now. One of their bosses returning from exile, or some such, as closely as I could make out.”
The other Elders were staring at him again, some with amazement, but most with outright hard suspicion. It ain’t easy being a demonologist, it suddenly hit Derlen. Ayin appeared to be oblivious to it however, and why should he not? No matter how they looked at him or what they called him, they needed such as him; he and they both knew that.
“Indeed, if there were a mortal learned in this tier of the Art, who knew what they were doing and willing to do it... if such a one were to be present at the stone and perform the proper rituals, the creature concerned could be freed. Whether the creature will then decide to fulfill its part of the bargain and stay on this plane, or simply return to the nether, glad to be free and turn its back on our world, is another question. That is its own choice. The question now is—“ he paused. “Is there such a demonologist, who is not known by our circle, who is roaming free right now, and who would risk the total annihilation of his or her own soul for a chance at power?”
“There are ever those,” Derlen replied. “The question, rather, is, do they know of the coming event? After all, we ourselves have learned of it but recently, and surely no one would be better informed than the order of Carenath?”
“You can be assured they are, Derlen. The mages that oppose Carenath, it is said, have their own order, their own tower and their own agents.” Incredulous stares at that.
“Traitors to the order and all it represents, of all our kind they hate those of the Sixth most of all. To them, it is us who are renegades, who throw in our lot with the loathed Order rather than with the Guild of Mal’Xyr, to whose banner flocks most wickedness of this realm.” He realized he had said rather more than he had meant to, and was silent.
“How do you know of this?” Ramon, who had been staring most distrustfully, wanted to know.
“We do not speak often of it, but we know. Ever so often, we catch one of them. And ever so often, no matter how carefully we guard ourselves, they catch one of ours – what becomes of these is a matter better not thought about. And ever so often...” he paused again, for dramatic effect “... one of our kind flees, and joins them. They forsake all they are, and if we ever find them, their life is forfeit. But they still risk it, for some hint of the power gotten from exercising their skills and knowledge freely, without regard to the code of the Order.”
“Does Theodore know this?” Derlen demanded. “If there was anyone who needed this knowledge, it would be him!”
“I made sure he does, and I still make sure he is always kept on top of all the news we find of it. What he finds of it, he gives on to us directly, before he reports back, so that we may first counsel him on the matter. Erstwhile, he asked us concerning the entrapment of a powerful... creature, and the ways it could be freed.”
“He reported back on this, saying that your tower had been in agreement with his theories.”
“Yes, and so we were. Such binding spells may indeed be woven into the very star cycles themselves, thus that they cannot be undone before the same constellation comes to pass again. Of course, it is rather difficult to find such a pattern that will make the spell last longer than a few years.” But Baltazar did. Entrapping his own uncle inside the focus he had built for him, he could be sure he would be avenged when the time came.
“And when the constellation returns, the spell falls apart? Like a lock that has been opened by a mystical key?”
“No. Rather it is like a lock that turns thus that the key will fit again. It shall still require a magic-knowing person to perform the proper ritual; and I am quite certain this ritual is not commonly known. I myself have no idea what it could be, and I doubt it can be found in any but the most ancient, incomprehensible and dangerous tomes in the library of the Sixth. In fact, I doubt even those of the Guild know it. It would take one person to be sure of what they were looking for – and with a half-garbled folktale to go from, not many would be sufficiently enthusiastic, to be obsessed to the point of insanity by accomplishing this goal, in order to have the right motivation that would be required for seeking through all these old scripts. It may take a cycle, it may take ten, and all the while they would not be sure there time is not wasted. Demonologists grow old, like all others, and to waste more than a tenth of their life on a mere tale is not appealing.” He looked glum as he spoke, because inside, he knew there were mages that insane, who would risk everything on a mad chance. “Nevertheless, there is grave danger; for the texts of sorcery from that time have not all been accounted for. We do not know who might have found them, who might at this moment be reading them.”
Mora Nowin, archmagus of the Third, the tower of fire, rose, her red robe shining oddly in the light of the candles, as always. She spoke. “Then I move that we send a guard of highly trained wizards, of the Third and Fifth both, skilled in battle and in the sorcery of light, to guard the pike for the next few months, perhaps for the next year.” A stunned silence. Muriel raised her voice again.
“Mora, are you aware of what this would mean? There is no habitation, human or otherwise, within easily a hundred miles from the stone. To establish and maintain a camp in that Tar-forsaken wilderness, especially during this cold season, would be madness! Mages are hardy, but they are no soldiers. Who would you send, to take on this mission?”
“No less than those of the Phoenix, as far as my tower is concerned. The Draconic Order will be more than enough for the force intervening in the Lendranian war, if we can get the support of your Gwayhîrians as well,” Mora answered proudly. The Aelomancers had only one batallion of war mages, who they called after the great Eagle of legend, Gwayhîr. The Pyromancer’s tower was responsible for most of Carenath’s militaristic organization, but the Gwayhîrians were as powerful as the mightiest wizards of the flame, or more so. They could raise storms, it was said, that were so magnificent they shook the very earth.
“You will, though I doubt you will require them. Still, there will likely be less blood spilt if we advance more firepower – we Aelomancers can shackle our opponents and hold them motionless, as you know.” So that took care of that.
“The Draconic and Gwayhîric Order it is. The Council has decided.” Derlen Lightweaver said, scratching a point off his list. “And the Order of the Phoenix will leave to guard the stone.” The Draconians might be more powerful, but those of the Phoenix were renowned for their stamina, hardy even among soldiers, let alone mages.
“Oh, and send word to all mages under our command that the rebellion is not to be interfered with on either side. That includes the Royal Wizards.”
“Will the King not be angry about that?”
“He will, but he will do nothing before he knows the reason. And that will take some time yet, should Canae grant it.”
“That leaves only a single matter,” Derlen spoke with all the satisfaction of having finished with another of these pesky meetings.
“The covert envoy to be sent to the rebels,” Tarla commented.
Derlen nodded. “Yes. We need one who is an experienced scout as well as a powerful wizard. I suggest an Aventer.” Aventer was the title of a mage who had attained the ninth of the twelve circles. They were known for cunning, most of them were known for prowess and power, and some for wisdom. “I know just the man. Morinan-Wo.” There was a silence, then an excited whisper. Morinan-Wo! If half the stories were to be true...
“Morinan-Wo? The one they call the Nightbird?” Mora was incredulous. Morinan-Wo, the Nightbird of the Sixth. He walks here and there they say, seen and unseen, his path uncrossable, his enemies sure to be dead ere the moon has cycled.
“Exactly the one, Mora. Ayin, I shall require you to contact him and summon him to the tower. Bid him to come swiftly, as swiftly as his art can contrive.” Ayin raised his eyebrows, raising his hand to the side of his forehead questioningly. “No, not right now. Tell him to make it another two hours at least.”

“I suggest you send two.” The naturally soft voice came quietly over the table, but it met with absolute silence. When Ana spoke, she was usually saying something important. Moreover, when she spoke quietly, the importance of what she was saying was inversely related to the volume of her voice. The voice of the archmagus of the Fifth rarely went unheard; and she whose name in the Ancient was Light had never had need to raise it.

“Are you sure of this, Ana?” Mina asked. “To call Morinan-Wo competent would be an understatement; he is known for his excellence in stealth missions.”
“I know, Mina. Nonetheless, I see failure, should we send the Nightbird alone. I could not imagine how, but I see he shall have need of a companion. I have rarely seen wrong, as you well know.”
‘Never’, she should have said, the wind sorceress corrected in her mind.
“A healer, of the Fourth, I believe...” Ana was talking to herself, and, “A Terkian, but I do not know her name.” Mina replied, without even pausing, that it seemed as if one, not two, had spoken. A far-off look had entered her eyes, and she gazed off into space. Those of the light and of the wind were both gifted with the perception the Goddess’ thoughts, and thus were on occasion granted brief, vague glimpses of the future.
“I do.” Derlen retorted before he even knew what he was saying. “I have talked to her this morning.”

And with that, the Thing of the Elders was over. It was over as if by some pre-arranged signal, and all at once all of the Elders were shuffling their agenda together in the manner of every member of every council that had ever existed in the world, who was just preparing to leave a meeting.
“Fellow members of our Order, Wise and Learned Elders, our conference is adjourned,” Derlen added, uselessly, for the mages were already standing up and moving for the door. “May the Balance forever be kept in this world, and the Light shield us all.” The customary phrases for the adjournment of any meeting of the Magi.

He waited for them to file out of the great hall, then sat there for a long time, after he was alone at the end of the long oaken table, sitting alone in the murky stone hall of the center tower.

“Light shield us all...”, he repeated softly, remaining seated. He buried his forehead in his palm, one elbow resting on the table.

“Us all...”


Last part of the chapter.

All of the chapter will follow in the next post.




“No less than those of the Phoenix, as far as my tower is concerned. The Draconic Order will be more than enough for the force intervening in the Lendranian war, if we can get the support of your Gwayhîrians as well,” Mora answered proudly. The Aelomancers had only one batallion of war mages, who they called after the great Eagle of legend, Gwayhîr. The Pyromancer’s tower was responsible for most of Carenath’s militaristic organization, but the Gwayhîrians were as powerful as the mightiest wizards of the flame, or more so. They could raise storms, it was said, that were so magnificent they shook the very earth.
“You will, though I doubt you will require them. Still, there will likely be less blood spilt if we advance more firepower – we Aelomancers can shackle our opponents and hold them motionless, as you know.” So that took care of that.
“The Draconic and Gwayhîric Order it is. The Council has decided.” Derlen Lightweaver said, scratching a point off his list. “And the Order of the Phoenix will leave to guard the stone.” The Draconians might be more powerful, but those of the Phoenix were renowned for their stamina, hardy even among soldiers, let alone mages.
“Oh, and send word to all mages under our command that the rebellion is not to be interfered with on either side. That includes the Royal Wizards.”
“Will the King not be angry about that?”
“He will, but he will do nothing before he knows the reason. And that will take some time yet, should Canae grant it.”
“That leaves only a single matter,” Derlen spoke with all the satisfaction of having finished with another of these pesky meetings.
“The covert envoy to be sent to the rebels,” Tarla commented.
Derlen nodded. “Yes. We need one who is an experienced scout as well as a powerful wizard. I suggest an Aventer.” Aventer was the title of a mage who had attained the ninth of the twelve circles. They were known for cunning, most of them were known for prowess and power, and some for wisdom. “I know just the man. Morinan-Wo.” There was a silence, then an excited whisper. Morinan-Wo! If half the stories were to be true...
“Morinan-Wo? The one they call the Nightbird?” Mora was incredulous. Morinan-Wo, the Nightbird of the Sixth. He walks here and there they say, seen and unseen, his path uncrossable, his enemies sure to be dead ere the moon has cycled.
“Exactly the one, Mora. Ayin, I shall require you to contact him and summon him to the tower. Bid him to come swiftly, as swiftly as his art can contrive.” Ayin raised his eyebrows, raising his hand to the side of his forehead questioningly. “No, not right now. Tell him to make it another two hours at least.”

“I suggest you send two.” The naturally soft voice came quietly over the table, but it met with absolute silence. When Ana spoke, she was usually saying something important. Moreover, when she spoke quietly, the importance of what she was saying was inversely related to the volume of her voice. The voice of the archmagus of the Fifth rarely went unheard; and she whose name in the Ancient was Light had never had need to raise it.

“Are you sure of this, Ana?” Mina asked. “To call Morinan-Wo competent would be an understatement; he is known for his excellence in stealth missions.”
“I know, Mina. Nonetheless, I see failure, should we send the Nightbird alone. I could not imagine how, but I see he shall have need of a companion. I have rarely seen wrong, as you well know.”
‘Never’, she should have said, the wind sorceress corrected in her mind.
“A healer, of the Fourth, I believe...” Ana was talking to herself, and, “A Terkian, but I do not know her name.” Mina replied, without even pausing, that it seemed as if one, not two, had spoken. A far-off look had entered her eyes, and she gazed off into space. Those of the light and of the wind were both gifted with the perception the Goddess’ thoughts, and thus were on occasion granted brief, vague glimpses of the future.
“I do.” Derlen retorted before he even knew what he was saying. “I have talked to her this morning.”

And with that, the Thing of the Elders was over. It was over as if by some pre-arranged signal, and all at once all of the Elders were shuffling their agenda together in the manner of every member of every council that had ever existed in the world, who was just preparing to leave a meeting.
“Fellow members of our Order, Wise and Learned Elders, our conference is adjourned,” Derlen added, uselessly, for the mages were already standing up and moving for the door. “May the Balance forever be kept in this world, and the Light shield us all.” The customary phrases for the adjournment of any meeting of the Magi.

He waited for them to file out of the great hall, then sat there for a long time, after he was alone at the end of the long oaken table, sitting alone in the murky stone hall of the center tower.

“Light shield us all...”, he repeated softly, remaining seated. He buried his forehead in his palm, one elbow resting on the table.

“Us all...”