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This chapter
takes place between the events of Descendants #8 and #9)
North of
Wales, 1130 A.D.
Elise stood
on top of a hill within view of the great stone house of her new
teachers, Agnes of Berwick and Mary Hillingsworth.
Her father
thought that she was off playing with the other children in the
village. Those children were already being apprenticed for their
future professions, and in a way, so was his daughter.
She stood with
her eyes closed as she’d been told to, feeling the breeze
and letting her imagination roam as she recalled the words Mary
had imparted to her.
“This
will be the first lesson.” Mary said, not looking up from
her knitting as Elise knelt before her, begging to be taught the
mystic arts. “Got to the hilltop not far from here and stand
on top of the rock you find there. Close your eyes, feel the breeze,
and think about what I am about to say.”
The knitting
needles clicked through a long pause, and then Mary corrected herself.
“Nay, do not just think, bring it to your mind’s eye,
see yourself and know the potential within you. Do you understand?”
Elise nodded
timidly and Mary continued. “Good, child. Then the first lesson
is to understand what we are, what we do—the way in which
magic can be commanded.”
On the hilltop,
the thought of commanding magic made her imagine a swirling cloud
of color drifting in the air like a chattering sea of chaos waiting
to be molded.
“Wizards;
they use magic for magic’s sake. ” Mary’s voice
whispered in her ear. “And cast spells to study them, to learn
how to cast more spells to study. They know many spells, but are
master of no magic. They are unfocused.”
Elise’s
mind’s eye grabbed the cloud of color and turned it upon itself,
using it to prod and examine its own existence. It became whatever
she needed to explore deeper, but never felt quite within her grasp.
“Then
there are sorcerers. They're driven by their emotions; rage, fear,
lust, protectiveness. This makes them powerful; it makes their magic
overt and impressive. But it limits them. They must maintain those
feelings to use the power and those emotions are unpredictable and
easily manipulated.”
Elise imagined
throwing her nervousness and uncertainty into the sea of color.
It responded, taking the shape of the thoughts she had offered up
to it. But it only became the single shape. It didn’t vary
and it didn’t conform to her wishes like the wizardly magic
did.
“The
cunning folk,” Mary's voice continued, “have little
capability to work magic, but they use it in its raw form to see.
They see the maladies that afflict man. They see the locations of
things lost. They see the future.”
This time,
Elise didn’t touch the swirl of magic, but peered into it.
Dim shapes rose within it, beyond her control and beyond her comprehension.
“We,
dearest Elise, are witches. Our magic is that of the body; the living
body and the unliving hulk. Magic seeks living or once living matter;
it clings to it and changes it subtly. We can make those changes
greater.”
In her mind’s
eye, Elise dove into the magic, allowing it to permeate her body.
“With
it, you can become stronger, fairer, faster. You will be able to
change your shape and the shapes of others. You will be able to
ensnare feeble minds and make objects move at your whim.”
She felt all
these things and so much more. The power, the sensation, even if
imagined, was dizzying. She knew that was the moment in which she
was first alive, that she would reach for this touch for the rest
of her days. She could be anything she wanted. She could be the
offspring her father desired.
“Accept
this power and you will go beyond mortality. You will do what they
cannot. You will move in shadows, you will hear the songs from deep
beneath the Earth. You will fly.”
Elise’s
eyes flew open with a jolt. While she had meditated on the hill,
the sun had reached its zenith above the pale shelf of rock she
stood atop. She looked upon it with new eyes. Those eyes weren’t
just more capable; they were new, the feeble brown faded to a striking
yellow.
Mary had said.
“Your mind is open and you imagination and the reagents required
by it are your only limit. More so than any of us before you; you
will be transformed.”
Morganna glared
at the forest before her before turning that glare on Renst. The
yellow point of light floated back in alarm. “Renst…”
She began slowly. “You said... this was the border this realm
shares with the Mountain Realm.” She stared at the mote, which
remained silent in fear. “Where... are the mountains?!”
She demanded loudly enough to send her cloud of attendant motes
scattering for cover.
Renst shivered
at the shout. “But… is way to Xolinar.” It promised
shakily. “Mankind must be walking through border.”
She looked
at it oddly for a silent minute before returning to the path. Renst
had stopped her just before she passed through a natural arch formed
by two young saplings growing into one another at the crown.
She wished
she still had her enhanced senses. Of course she would need sugar
to activate them, but the motes seemed adept enough at seeking anything
she required and the spriggans; Laupso and his mate Suayco, were
equally good at procuring such things or crafting them when asked.
At the moment,
she was dressed in a simple, homespun shift of some soft, off-white
material stolen from the home of a humanoid fey race the motes called
daoine. It was belted with the remarkable tough skin of some manner
of serpent and over her shoulder, she slung a satchel the spriggans
had fashioned for her from the pelt of an animal that fled into
the wilderness after being skinned. Both items, they assured her
possessed special qualities. The belt would supposedly allow her
to leap greater distances and the satchel was larger inside than
it appeared from the outside.
The fact that
she could send them to fetch reagents didn’t make up for the
fact that those reagents were useless to her at the moment. She
was without magic and forced to trust the word of Faerie creatures.
The prospect put a lump in her throat.
Still, trusting
them was the only way to gain the relics that would give her power
again. The moment that thought entered her head, no force in Faerie
could have kept her from plunging across the border.
The world fell
away, taking all sight and sound and smell with it. Cold closed
in around her, pushing her as if she was being swallowed by some
great beast with a body of liquid ice. It lasted only a moment,
long enough for her to start to regret passing through.
She stumbled
out of a cave to find herself beneath the green sky once more. The
forest was gone; in its place were jagged rocks and shelves of stone
as flat as tabletops. The land was barren and craggy in all directions.
Far away and
far below where she stood, she could see the green of a forest.
In the other direction, she saw an entire camp full of trolls. And
an entire camp full of trolls saw her back.
“See?”
Renst said, emerging from the cave. “Mountain Realm Xolin…”
it trailed off as it met with another of Morganna’s murderous
glares.
“Renst…
Renst dearest…” Morganna began as more motes emerged
as well as Laupso and Suayco. “What is it… that I’m
looking at?”
“Is troll
village at mouth of seventh border. Mankind is happy, yes? Wanted
to find troll for relic.”
The nearest
troll grinned a crooked toothed grin as it stood from the rock it
had been sitting on and hefted a wicked looking maul and laid it
across its shoulder. The head of the weapon was capped with a dull,
grayish metal and looked crude and deadly, perfectly matching its
owner.
The troll was
only around six and a half feet tall, easily dwarfed by the ogre
Morganna had defeated, but where the ogre was huge and stout, the
troll was all tightly wound sinew. Its skin was like a weathered
sheet covered in gravel, all gray leather and rough edges. Most
of its height was in its torso, which was inhumanly long with angular
ribs showing.
Its head was
mostly human, though gray and bald. It had a pronounced under-bite
from which a lolling tongue flicked to lick pronounced canines and
a nose the was long and crooked as if it had been broken dozens
if not hundreds of times. Tiny ears, like leather flaps, lay flat
against its head and nearly invisible.
“Yes...
yes I was looking… for a troll. Singular. One.”
Morganna said as more trolls stood, wielding similar weapons, all
variations on the hammer. “This… this is many trolls.”
“Renst
is sorry, Mankind.” Naife spoke up, floating up beside its
compatriot. “Is what motes thought Mankind was looking for.”
It seemed to finally register the score of trolls that were forming
a wide semicircle around the cave mouth. “Maybe is time to
be running now. Other borders with less trolls…”
“No.”
Morganna turned her glare on the trolls.
The nearest
one grinned, exposing flat, grey teeth. Its voice was low and growling,
yet disturbingly casual. “What’s this, then? Little
daoine take a wrong turn? You know the price. You wanna to pass
through Xolinar, you gotta pay the toll.” Its tongue flicked
out and licked the bridge of its nose.
“Toll…”
Morganna blinked. She had been expecting demands to eat her, or
at the very least, some mention of making her bones into bread.
Was it possible that she only needed to give them a gift to get
their help? “I don’t... want to pass. I want to speak.”
“Daoine
don’t speak to trolls.” A female troll said. She was
differentiated by her darker skin, and tusks. “Daoine is too
ugly. Pay the toll or leave.”
This was getting
her nowhere. It irked her that they were mistaking her for the daoine.
She wasn’t entirely sure why, considering that she hadn’t
personally seen one. “What... is the toll?” She finally
asked after chewing on the words a bit.
“Wood!”
one of the creatures hooted excitedly. The others took it up and
soon there was a cacophony of hooting over the word. “Dry
wood.” One added. “Wood that burns slow!” another
roared. “For the forge!” A number exclaimed at the top
of their lungs.
Morganna’s
brow went up. “Wood? All you want is… is wood?”
“The
forges run on coal.” The first female said with an odd bit
of wistfulness in her basso voice, “But wood is better. Makes
fey metal stronger; sharper.”
A grin twisted
Morganna’s lips. It really was that easy. “I will bring
you wood… my friends. But I want something else… something
different in exchange for my gift.”
The word ‘gift’
bought the cacophony to a screeching halt and replaced it with confused
murmurs. “Gift?” a one female asked. “What gift?
This is a toll.”
“I don’t
want a… toll.” Morganna spat, agitated. “I...
want the location of one of the old Vaults.”
This time,
there were no murmurs, only stunned silence. It was quiet enough
to hear each individual hammer creaking as hands gripped them tightly.
“You
overstep your place, daoine.” The first troll snarled, stomping
forward.
Morganna’s
eyes blazed. She raised a hand in the air, pulling tension into
it in her mind’s eye until part of Tatiana Farnsworth’s
psyche screamed at her that it was too much. Then she flicked three
fingers in the direction of the ground at the troll’s feet.
The stone exploded,
sending fist sized chunks of rocks spraying out into the ranks of
trolls. Roars of both pain and rage filled the air. The troll that
had come at her was thrown on his back, his belly torn open. The
wound was closing rapidly, but he was a while in recovering from
the shock of the attack.
“Is that…
something the daoine do?” Morganna gave her own roar. “I
am… of the Man kind. And you will obey!”
The trolls
paused long enough to share confused glances before rushing her
enmasse.
Morganna watched
them come; giving over a tiny bit of her thoughts to hoping that
the spriggans (who were currently sprinting back for the border)
had told the truth about her belt. The first of the trolls made
it to her and raised his maul.
She leapt backward,
unleashing Lady Nightshade’s power into the ground with both
hands. The ground erupted into another storm of flying stone. Scarcely
had her feet found purchase on the top of the cave mouth than she
threw two more invisible knives into the knot of trolls, drawing
painful roars.
“Their
eyes…” She called to the motes. “As I told you.”
The motes hesitated.
They were used to what normally happened when mote met troll: pain
for the mote. But they were more afraid of what would happen if
Morganna became upset with them: death. Thus, they boiled forward
in a colorful cloud, rolling up around the trolls and coming to
light directly before their eyes.
Alone, a mote
is a single point of light. In a large group, they are brilliant.
Trolls screamed now less out of pain from wounds and more for their
poor, useless retinas. They clawed at their faces but the motes
evaded, dancing out of the way so that all the trolls did was cause
themselves more pain.
One troll staggered
out of the color cloud. Crimson blood ran down his face in rivulets
as his eyes grew back and locked onto Morganna. In the confusion,
he had lost his hammer, but that wouldn’t stop him. Howling
with rage, he leapt at her.
Moments later,
his arms took leave of his shoulders under a renewed assault from
the invisible knives. In the instant it took him to recover from
the pain, he found Morganna clutchined his detached limbs.
All he could
see was her smiling face.
“You…
need these, don’t you?” She asked, not letting him see
how difficult a time she was having holding the heavy limbs aloft.
Behind him, the trolls, heedless of their blindness were lashing
out at one another, knocking one another cold with wanton brutality
as they hoped they were striking enemies.
The troll,
breathing hard, was stunned out of his rage as he realized the tiny
creature was right. Trolls healed faster than anything in Faerie,
but they couldn’t regrow bone. He needed to reattach his arms
soon to grow them back. He glared at her, not wanting to vocalize
his defeat.
“Yes…
yes you do.” She said purely to convince herself. “Do
you know where I can find... a relic?”
There it was.
Trolls were the keepers of the Lesser Vaults, the secret places
where pieces of the Old World were hidden. They even had a rule
about them: Trolls will keep their secrets. It was as impossible
for him to tell her where the Vault whose secret he kept was as
it was for her to breath in stone.
At least that
was what he thought. In his moment of doubt and pain, his felt the
heady rush of the basic need for self preservation take him. He
couldn't tell her, however...
His lips moved.
“I will take you to it.” He said, “In exchange
for the gift of my arms.”
Morganna smiled.
To Be Continued...
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