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(This chapter
takes place during the events of Descendants #11 and #12)
North of
Wales, Winter, 1130 A.D.
There was a knock at the door. Mary glanced toward it and briefly
let her senses dance over the person behind it. It was an entirely
unnecessary exercise as only two people would be at her door, but
it was an old habit and she had no reason to break it.
“Enter, dear Agnes.”
She said a scant second after the knock. She didn’t look up
from the saddlebag she was packing when her long time friend and
confidant entered, bringing a warm breeze from the fireplace in
the main room with her.
“We need to speak.”
said Agnes with an air of dire importance.
“Good morn, Agnes.”
said Mary as if Agnes had not spoken with such urgency. “Are
you already done with your preparations for the trip to sabbat for
Solstice?”
“It’s Elise,
Mary.” Agnes frowned, “There is something very wrong
with her.”
“You take every
minor bit of mischief the girl gets into as a sign that something
is wrong with her.” Mary chided, “Filching reagents
and being engrossed in the art are not signs of madness. Tell me
with an honest continence that you never did such at her age and
I may consider it.”
“This isn’t
skulking through the herb garden in the middle of the night, Mary.
She takes things in the brightest day—often out of the owners’
very hands. I’ve kept their outrage at bay thus far only by
the grace of our purse strings.”
“And our coffers
remain respectably full.” Mary said. “We will just have
to mind her better until she learns.”
“You speak as if
that is a simple task, dear Mary.” Agnes said. “She
refuses to move from her father’s home even with his urging.
In fact, his urging has only made her more steadfast. She seems
desperate to stay near him.”
“A young girl with
great love for her father is not an aberration, Agnes.” Mary
left the ‘dear’ off to signal her frustration. “And
truly, we owe the man a debt. He has nurtured her imagination since
she was young and it has made her powerful. Do you know what she
did this past day? She turned a single feather into a pair of wings.”
“A fair trick,
but nothing a conjurer of middling power couldn’t achieve.”
“They worked.”
Mary said over the cloak she was folding. “She flew. She holds
mastery over the air.”
“That cannot be…”
Agnes shook her head. “I’ve heard tales brought by Turks
of that type of thing happening in the east and in ancient times,
in the lands of the Pharaohs…”
“Believe it, dear
Agnes.” Mary said. “For I saw it with my own eyes.”
“Then that makes
things more dire, not less.” Agnes fretted. “I didn’t
come here to tell you of her roguish actions, or her strange, incoherent
musings—you ignore those—and if they were singular occurrences,
perhaps I could as well.”
“Then what defamation
have you come to heap upon her then?” Mary asked.
“It is the truth
and a worrisome one at that.” Agnes took a long breath. “She
has been—in her odd way—asking questions. Many questions,
many that don’t make any sense. But I fear she knows something
about the Forbidden Arts.”
Mary chuckled. “Of
course she does, dear Agnes. I’m the one that told her.”
“What?”
Agnes gasped. “How could you? Do you know—“
Mary held up a hand.
“I didn’t teach them to her. I told her what they were
and the dangers inherent to them. It was a cautionary tale; that
she won’t stray into them unknowingly.”
“Hell’s
own demons, Mary Hillingsworth!” Agnes bawled. “The
girl is addicted to magic—to the power itself on top of what
it gives her. I haven’t seen her without her senses given
sharpness since the day you taught her that charm and not a day
has passed where she ha not attempted a new spell. Can you imagine
what she could do with a quintessence drain, or the Animus Scindo
Ritus?”
“You worry too
much, Agnes. Elise is not monster and even so, she has no access
to any that could teach it to her.”
“What if she can
imagine it?” Agnes shot back. “That is why you are so
impressed with her, is it not? The reason why you overlook all the
signs that say that this girl is not fit to know spellcraft? Because
her imagination means that her power is nearly limitless?”
Mary smiled and shook
her head. “I fear this may be jealousy, dear Agnes. To think
that Elise is anything more than simply an extraordinary young woman…
you would have to be blind. But I will go speak with her. Where
is she?”
“On the hill where
we placed the focal rock.” Agnes said. “Wearing nothing
but her cloak. On the coldest day this year.”
“You exaggerate.”
Mary said. “But I will go. You complete your preparation for
sabbat.”
Agnes nodded silently
and watched her go. She wondered why her friend was so blind to
the fact that the girl's extraordinary nature was precisely the
reason to be concerned.
Mary stopped
halfway up the hill, bundling herself against the cold. Agnes was
wrong on two counts at least. First, it had been colder the previous
day. Second, Elise was not standing on the hill clad in nothing
but her cloak. She was also wearing boots.
The old witch was no
fool. She saw the signs as clearly as Agnes had. More clearly, in
fact. Something had been off about Elise from the start. Her father
was the only person that existed to her. His approval was what drove
her and she paid no heed to the effect her actions had on others
as long as their end result was something she felt would please
him.
Touching magic had only
made it worse. Where before she was meek in her ways, the magic
made her bold. Where she was too shy to act on her compulsions,
spells made her not only willing but capable to see them through.
Foolishly, Mary had hoped
to place the girl on the right path; to make her into the greatest
cunning woman the world had known. But it wasn’t working.
Whatever ill humors boiled within Elise of Hafren, they could not
be corrected by a teacher.
And now it was too late.
Elise had the keys to vast power and that door could never be closed.
All that could be done was to mitigate the damage she did to others
until she delved too deeply and, as other overly ambitious magelings
before her had done, burned herself out.
Until then, she would
continue to be the caring teacher.
“Child.”
She said, trudging up the snow covered hill to stand beside her
protégé.
“Yes.” Elise
said in a monotonous drone that indicated she was mediating once
more on the power—holding it and shaping it without using
it.
“Release the magic,
child, that we may speak.”
“Why?”
“Because to converse
properly, one's mind should not be in another world.” Mary
answered.
“No. Why do you
call it magic?” Elise asked in her normal voice. She had released
her focus.
“That is what the
power is called, dear Elise.”
“I-it d-doesn’t
make sense.” Elise stuttered; something she now did fairly
often. Her mind was too much on magic to pick out the right words
some times. “Magic isn’t... this power. Magic…
it uses the power, yes. But magic is something else entirely apart
from the power.”
She started pacing on
the hill. “Just as… Elise is what I am called. But there
are other… Elises, correct? I am not an example of all that
is ‘Elise’. You see… Elise… Elise isn’t
my name, it is something I am. That doesn’t have power. Everyone
knows to call me by Elise, but they don’t… don’t
control me with it. It isn’t a true name.”
“Child, we have
been over this, true names only apply to the fey and they are rare
in this world.” Mary tried to calm the pacing girl down.”
“No.
No, you’re right. Then Elise… at least how I see and
hear and think about Elise is my true name then. But p-perhaps,
I am a fairy and don’t know it. How could I tell?”
“You are not a
fairy.” Mary said sternly. She had gotten trapped in this
conversation before.
“The fey are duplicitous.
I c-could be… could be lying to you. I could be lying to myself,
which is why I don’t know that I am a fey.” She glared
up at the sun as if it was at fault. “It would be very tricky
of me and in keeping with me fey nature.”
“Elise…”
“No!”
Elise clapped her hands over her ears. “No. I must... safeguard
my true name. If I am a fairy, and cannot tell, then that may well
be my true name or a false one. No, I will need a new name.”
Mary heaved a long sigh.
“Very well, but bring one to mind quickly. Your father will
be here to see you off to sabbat within the setting of the sun.”
“Father…
yes…” Elise lapsed into thought. “I shall honor
him but using the name of someone in his epic…”
“You will be Guinevere?”
Mary asked, not able to help herself.
“No…”
She creased her eyebrow. “Elise can’t be Guinevere.
That… that… that wouldn’t work. She is weak. No
one would respect her. No one would be proud of her. I am…
I want to be strong. Morgan was strong, even if her victory was…
pyrrhic. I will be Morgan.”
Faerie,
November of 2074
Morganna shook her head
clear of the disjointed thoughts swirling through it. She adjusted
her cloak, pulling it up to cover her mouth and nose against the
lightly blowing sand as she listened to the troll speaking.
They had set out from
Xolinar a month before, following the troll, Jaken’s, ancestral
memory toward the Lesser Vault his thrice great grand-mater had
been tasked to build. The trolls had evidently built many Vaults
in the age the faeries called the Old World and they kept them secret
to all but their eldest children, who would pass the knowledge on
to their eldest and so on.
Jaken reluctantly led
Morganna and her contingent of motes and spriggans back through
Forest Realm Cabanna and into the ungoverned Plain of Ghoujef and
the Undland Hill Realm. They had crossed the River Acheron into
Forest Realm Fannxis on the border of the Demon Kingdom of Sai'n'shree,
at last crossing into the Desert Realm Lousha three days prior.
“Not long now.”
Jaken said in the thick, slow voice he had adopted since his defeat
at Morganna’s hands. “Five thousand, seven hundred and
forty-two paces into the Lousha and we will see an iron door in
the ground.”
He didn’t understand
how he was able to tell the sorceress such things. By the Laws the
trolls lived by, they could never tell anything spoken in secret
to any that secret was not meant for. And he was certain that his
sire hadn’t meant for the witch to know.
But she had injured him,
forced him to confront his own mortality and suddenly, it was as
if the Law didn’t apply to her. It worried him. He knew it
worried the spriggans too. They whispered warnings to him whenever
he got out of line. They told him that for their mistress—his
mistress—there were no Rules.
That made her dangerous.
Everyone knew that the Laws were the things that made Faerie work.
The Demons said so. He took heart, however, in knowing that she
would never pass the lock on the door. His grand-mater had been
put to her task by a wizard of Old World tradition. The lock was
not to be opened by a key, but by proving one’s worth through
a puzzle. The fey-metal it was made of would blunt any weapon directed
at it and absorb any magic. There was nothing she could do bypass
the measures set against the unworthy entering therein.
“How... how many
steps have we taken?” Morganna asked, a distressing, far off
look in her eyes.
“Five thousand,
six hundred and…” They topped the next dune. “ninety.”
He finished. Below them, the sand formed a bowl around a circle
of dark, gray metal. Not a single grain marred its surface and it
seemed likely that none had in the centuries since it had been sealed.
The circle looked to be a single slab about ten feet across and
engraved with twisting vines and scrolls.
“We… we’re
here.” Morganna began to pick her way down the slope. Jaken
felt, as did the other faeries, the strange calm that descended
over her.
For her part, Morganna
was now only marginally aware of her erstwhile traveling companions.
She recognized the apparatus for what it was: a seal. It was the
mark of a powerful wizard to even begin to have the comprehension
required to put one in place. It took even more skill to make one
last no matter what it was made from.
It was the first sign
she had encountered in her long journey since falling through, as
the motes called it, Vault and Thorn, that she had any indication
of magical presence. Yes, she was surrounded by living points of
light and animated vegetation daily, but without her enhanced senses,
she couldn’t feel the magic behind them. The seal was a visual
representation of the power that even she, reduced to a mere mortal
as she was, could see.
Jaken stopped a respectable
distance from the masterpiece his family line had wrought and guarded
as the motes crowded around the Mankind they considered their champion.
Morganna reached the
edge of the seal and dropped to her knees before it. The strength
of the magic infused in the fey-metal made the air thrum and was
to Morganna, water burning the dry throat of one dying of thirst.
She shuddered in pleasure at the feel of magic so near her once
more.
With a trembling hand,
she reached out and touched the edge of the seal. The sun (she assumed
that the light source that illuminated and heated Faerie from beyond
the Vault and Thorn was a sun, but she wasn’t sure), should
have heated it. Or the magic should have made it unnaturally cold.
Instead, the fey-metal didn’t register any temperature at
all to her caress.
What it lacked in sensory
output, it made up for when the scrolls and vines adorning it writhed
to life, moving aside to reveal a delicate script etched into the
face of the seal:
Here
is found the Vault of Hyrilius of the Seven Points
His trappings of power, left as legacy to those who are worthy.
Brute force will avail not those who squander it,
For only wit and wisdom should prevail.
Prove thy wit and then thy wisdom,
And the Vault of Hyrilius will be open to you.
Haltingly, Morganna repeated
the words aloud. The motes have spoken true and the troll had borne
her to a place of power where she could reclaim her destiny.
She didn’t have
time the revel in this knowledge before the words faded and were
replaced by new ones in the same delicate script:
Here
is found the Question of Wit:
The
beginning of eternity
The end of time and space
The beginning of every end,
And the end of every place.
“Does it know answer?”
Naife asked after Morganna had spent several seconds in silence
before the seal.
“Is demons?”
Habsi asked. “Demons strongest of Faerie. Maybe very strong
demon?”
“No, but says ‘beginning
of eternity’” Naife argued. “Demons were no there
then, no?”
“Quiet!”
Morganna snapped at them. “It… it isn’t a real
question.” She shook her head. “It doesn’t mean
anything… anything real. That isn’t how they work. No.
No… wizards think they’re clever. They don’t...
ask anything that isn’t a trick… that doesn’t
have two meanings. They’ll ask you what is stronger than God,
or… something about a creature that walks on three legs at
night… Things that only have answers when you look at them
sideways…”
She chewed her lip. “I-it’s…
it’s all about playing with words… other meanings, and…”
she stopped and broke into a manic grin. “The words.”
She suddenly exclaimed. “Not eternity… the word we use
to... name it. Not time, not space, but the words.” Leaning
over, she held her face directly over the question that mocked her.
“’E’.” she declared. “The letter ‘E’.”
Immediately, the script
changed again:
Wit,
you have proven, but wit and wisdom are not married.
Here is found the Test of the Wise Mind.
Speak
o’er the seal four words and no more than four.
Words of supreme wisdom, that are true through all times.
Words that will chasten an hour of pride,
And will hearten in the depths of affliction.
Morganna snarled and
stood sharply, causing motes to scatter in all directions.
“Mankind is unhappy?”
Tau asked plaintively. “Tau can find other place! Demons know
other Vaults!”
If she heard it, she
didn’t take heed. The wizard Hyrilius was mocking her from
beyond the grave. She knew the answer. It had been the favorite
saying of… someone… she couldn’t remember clearly
who. But the longer she lived, the truer it had become—and
the more she hated it.
Once, she had been feared
and respected across Europe and even on the Dark Continent. Then
she had been sealed into a portrait of herself, her powers diminished.
She had clawed her way back and had located two of The 4; the fundamental
books of magic. But the psionics had stolen one and thrown her,
broken, into Faerie.
Falling through the Thorn
had taken everything from her—everything that was of worth.
It had left her as nothing. But again, she had survived and was
at the cusp of triumph once more… and the cursed wizard Hyrilius
had reminded her that it might be fleeting.
“No!” Morganna
roared, lashing out at the door with Lady Nightshade’s psionic
powers. “It cannot be true. It cannot! If it is… then
it is a rule… and they cannot touch me! Never again!”
Again and again, the
psionically generated blades of force slammed into the fey-metal
Vault. Sparks flew into the green sky. The Vault had been proofed
against weapons by Troll engineering and against spells by wizardly
magic. But the power Tatiana Farnsworth had been born with was neither.
There was a scream of
metal grinding against metal and a rough, four foot triangle of
fey-metal sheered off of the seal and plummeted into the room below.
It scrapped and clanged down stone stairs before coming to rest.
The final clatter of
the shorn piece of metal shook Morganna out of her rage. Though
she breathed in ragged gasps from exertion, her unearthly calm returned.
Chortling madly under her breath, she jumped down the hole and descended
the stairs.
The green light of the
sky filtered through dust raised by the violent opening of the space.
Ten wide stairs led down into a shallow room. Beyond the piece of
fallen metal stood a mahogany chest, upon which stood a full sized
mannequin.
The dummy was garbed
in a forest green cloak embellished with silver filigree. A toque
of two teak dragons with a thumb sized ruby clamped in their jaws
rested on its neck. A simple gold ring had been placed on the middle
finger of its left hand. That same hand held a crystal sphere the
size of a man’s fist. The right hand held an intricately carved
staff of ebony, topped with a lion’s paw embedded with a flawless,
dome cut emerald.
Smiling in the dim, Morganna
remained haunted by the words Hyrilius had asked her to say by proxy;
the same words another wizard had once used to cow her.
This too
shall pass.
“No.” she
said aloud, her fingers closing around the staff. Her eyes flared
with yellow light, “It shall not.”
To Be Continued...
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