My name is Ribaal Ali and I present this in defence of my
actions. As I write this, at my behest, Aunt Mandalee has already gone
to fetch my father from a critical moment, a thousand years ago. I
understand that this Time Intervention is illegal and dangerous.
Potentially catastrophic. Yet, I maintain I am right to do this. To me,
the choice is simple: sit here, meekly playing by the rules while the
world burns, or throw the rulebook on the fire and save…everything.
Or try to.
But I’m getting ahead of myself, or possibly behind myself.
That’s the trouble with Time manipulation: it can be hard to tell. Either
way, let me take a step back, or forward, take a breath and begin to
compose myself.
The moon is but a silver sliver in a starry sky, as I gaze out of my
window. Hence, my desk is littered with lighted candles aplenty and an
oil lamp for extra illumination on this page. Of course, I could simply
speak a word of magic and light up this room as brightly as if it were
Midsummer's Day. Indeed, in this age of magical wonders, there are
commonplace spells with which I could transfer my thoughts directly
onto magical recording devices. But tonight is not a night for magic.
These days, there is a small but vocal group of individuals who
believe we have become lazy in this modern age and desensitised to the
non-magical wonders that have surrounded us for who knows how long.
Aunt Dreya would call that ‘sentimental nonsense.’ For her, magic is
all; even more so since Ascending to the higher planes. Oh, how I miss
her!
Me? I take a more balanced view of magic. While I appreciate its
place in the world and all we can do, tonight, as I say, is not a night for
magic. So, I sit at my desk, armed with nothing more than a pen and
inscribe the words onto paper, as it was done in ages past – simpler
times, when the dew of Creation was still fresh upon the world.
Please, gentle reader, forgive my ramblings. I sometimes get so
caught up in the simple pleasures of this form of non-magical creativity
that I forget what it is I am supposed to be writing about. For the record,
allow me to introduce myself: I am the only daughter of Daelen
2
StormTiger and Catriona Redfletching. These are names that are
remembered with honour in times past, present and, I trust, in the future
as well, if you will forgive such crude temporal terms. In case there is
ever such a time that the old legends fade and are forgotten, however,
let me write further.
My name is Arshes Megane and I am immortal.
Perhaps I should have led with that, but there’s a fine line
between dramatic and pretentious.
When I say immortal, I do not mean merely long-lived, but nor
should you imagine that immortality is the same as omniscience or
invulnerability, though I do possess unique powers and natural defences
that I use to protect myself and those I care about. Immortality means
that my ageing process stopped more than nine centuries ago and will
never restart, leaving me with the appearance of a young woman of
around nineteen or twenty. Barring some grand cosmic accident, or
unless I fulfil my final destiny, whatever that might be, I shall exist until
the end of eternity. Does eternity have an end, or does it go on forever?
I do not know. Moreover, it occurs to me that true immortality is
something that cannot be proven. Who but another immortal could be
around to verify it? Philosophy aside, however, proof or not, I know
that it is true.
How this came to be, I cannot say. A consequence of being born
within the Guardianship? The Guardians exist out of Time, and I am so
far the only child to be born in its embrace. A legacy of my father? He
did originate from one of the higher planes of existence, where Time
flows differently. Heritage from my mother's Faery blood? To the Faery
of Quarthonia, I am Emryse Amrosia – Ever-Living – the latest of
several immortals that feature in song and story, if one is to believe such
things. (As a corollary to my earlier musings, I can’t help but wonder,
if there have been other immortals before, why have I not met them?
By definition, they must be alive somewhere!) Maybe it is a
combination of all these factors. Perhaps it is none of them. Once again,
whatever the reason, all I know is that it is true: My name is Arshes
Megane, and I am immortal.
Accepting this fact, you will appreciate that I have a unique
perspective on the world. That is why I am sitting here, preparing to
write this story: no other could.
I am choosing to call these ramblings, ‘The Salvation of
Tempestria’ in desperate hopes that events yet to come will match the
3
title. If anything goes wrong – perhaps the smallest mistake – then as
far as this world, this reality is concerned, the events I relate to you will
never happen. Yet I swear to you on all I hold sacred – by the memory
of my father, through the love of my mother, on the very essence of
magic itself – that every word I write is true.
But I am in danger of starting my story at the end instead of the
middle. I understand it is customary to start a story at the beginning, but
when one lives outside Time as I do, the beginning can sometimes
be…elusive. Besides, sometimes, unless the middle happens as it’s
supposed to, the beginning may never happen. So, gentle reader, allow
me to present the Salvation of Tempestria, in the middle.
*****
As I gaze through Time to that moment, gentle reader, I can see
that Daelen has agreed that it would be best to camp for one more night
and begin the final push to Kullos' fortress at first light. Since there are
no more plans to make, while the others head for their tents for the night,
the shadow warrior has chosen to go for a walk alone to relax. He knows
it will probably be his last chance to enjoy something so simple.
Even with all his power, the great shadow warrior always took
pleasure in the smallest things.
That is a side to my father that people often do not appreciate.
Perhaps it is his influence, as much as my mother’s, that compels me to
write this story in such an archaic manner as ink inscribed onto paper
with a pen.
The shadow warrior has been walking for close to an hour, when
he comes across a female figure standing in the moonlight, dressed in
white body armour much like his own, with white boots and a purple
mask that conceals the upper part of her face.
“Greetings, Daelen,” she offers. “Ah, but it is good to see you
like this again; it's been a while.”
I can see he recognises her. Almost. Something about her causes
Daelen's memory to flashback to when his current mission all started.
She looks very different, but somehow, her aura is the same.
“You’re her, aren’t you?” he says, at last. “You’re the one who
woke me from my rest and made me aware of the threat and the power
of Kullos in the first place. Who are you?”
4
Considering how to answer without revealing too much too soon,
her mouth twitches as a very old memory flashes through her mind. A
thousand years ago from her perspective. Just a few days from his.
“You once referred to me as an Assassin Peacemaker,” she
replies at last.
“Mand—?”
“—Don’t say my name!” his visitor cuts him off. “You don’t
know what terrible trouble you could cause. That’s why I didn’t use it
myself. You asked who I am, and now you know, but I'm not who you
think I am…or maybe I am, in a way, but never mind, there will be time
for explanations later. Assuming there still is a later. Right now, I need
your help.”
Ever stubborn, Daelen wants some answers right then and there.
“But how can you be here?” he demands. “When I left, you were
asleep back there!”
“Oh, don't worry, I still am,” is her reply, “and I'm not here…that
is, rather, I am here, but you are not. Yes, well, it's a bit difficult to
explain, really.”
Ah, gentle reader, that is so typical of my dear Aunt Mandalee,
the White Assassin. She often said she dearly wished these things
weren't so hard to explain. Even now, I know she sometimes wonders
if she makes any sense at all. She's too hard on herself. She never chose
to be a diplomat, a teacher or a politician. She became a demon hunter,
an assassin and a Cleric of Nature. How strange it is that she is the only
one of the original Three Guardians still in the position, at least she was
until she agreed to this desperate act. I'm sure any rational person would
have placed wagers on her being the first to resign. Of course, one
wonders what exactly counts as reason in this irrational world, but that,
gentle reader, is a subject better suited to my philosophy texts. For now,
I have a story to tell.
“Look, if you’ll just come with me a little way further into the
woods, we’ll be able to speak more freely.”
“Alright,” Daelen agrees and extends his arm for Aunt Mandalee
to take as they stroll along.
She smiles at the gesture. It’s a rather old-fashioned tradition,
from her perspective, but she can see no harm in indulging him.
*****
5
After walking for no more than five minutes, the woodland opens
out into a clearing and Mandalee declares that they have arrived.
Releasing her hold on Daelen’s arm, she at last removes her mask
so he can see her face. A face that appears about ten years older than
when he last saw her an hour ago.
“You're from the future!” Daelen realises. “You're a future M–.”
He catches himself. “A future version of the woman I know.”
Mandalee pulls a face.
“That is a very crude description, Daelen. The reality has to do
with the true nature of Time and its relative spatial dimensions, but I
can't tell you about that.”
“Why not?”
“You're not ready for it. Your entire home plane of existence isn’t
ready for it yet.”
“Are you really so advanced in your time?” Daelen breathes in
awe, trying to imagine a future where the knowledge of mere mortals
might surpass that of his people. It’s hard for him to imagine how such
a thing is possible.
“Yes,” Mandalee agrees, “as a matter of fact, we are. In some
ways, at least.”
“If you are so advanced, how come you need help from someone
as primitive and backward as me?”
“Now, now, Daelen. Be nice,” Mandalee chides him gently.
“Sorry,” Daelen apologises. “That was uncalled for, wasn't it?”
“Yes, actually, it was. To answer the essence of your question,
though…well, for now, let's just say the danger we face is unique to
your own experience. Will you help us?”
Daelen gazes around the clearing in which he is standing. It
surely reminds him of Catriona’s Meadow, except he knows it’s entirely
the wrong world for that. He feels there’s something else about it,
something strange – it’s been nagging him since he first entered, but he
can’t put his finger on what it is. That’s making him irritable and
stubborn.
“In case you've forgotten your history, I'm in the middle of
something important right now.”
“Not from my perspective, you're not,” Mandalee counters.
“Look, if you help us and we succeed, I shall return you but a moment
after we left, and you can get back to fighting Kullos. It won't affect you
in any way.”
6
“And if we fail?” Daelen asks, fearing the answer he knows is
coming.
“If we fail, my friend, nothing you do here will matter.”
“It doesn't seem like I have much choice,” the shadow warrior
grumbles.
“Of course you have a choice,” Mandalee counters. “But within
the parameters of who you are, I agree – there’s no other you could
make.”
“You've changed,” Daelen observes.
The assassin shrugs. “Happens to the best of us, dear.”
*****
He couldn't have failed to notice how evasive she is, and there’s
a casual flippancy in her voice that the Mandalee he knows would never
have used. The Mandalee he knows is a throw-caution-to-the-wind
young woman who often uses ‘get very drunk, armed to the teeth and
go for it’ as the way to catch her mark. What Daelen doesn’t know is
that for so long, she has been the White Guardian, not the White
Assassin and that has led her to adapt.
Living outside Time, she has aged no more than ten years in the
traditional sense, due to accumulated days within the Timestream. Even
so, one day, a few years ago, when I asked her how she was truly
feeling, she admitted to me, “I feel old.”
As an immortal, gentle reader, I am beginning to understand what
she meant.
After she has assisted me with this Illegal Time Intervention, she
has vowed to resign from the Guardianship, both in protest at the others’
refusal to act and, as she put it, “Because it’s time,” which is a strange
concept for one who lives outside Time, but I could see the sense of it.
Take it from one who knows: Timelessness is wearying.
If all goes well, Mandalee will return to the timestream to live
out the rest of her natural human life. It is my hope and my prayer that
she will recapture her youth and rejoin the hunt. When I project that
possible future, the early signs are promising. Her feline friend
Shyleen's coat seems to already have a new glossy golden sheen to it,
as well.
Yes, no doubt her resignation is the best thing for her, even
though I know it means I will lose her as I have lost everyone else.
7
As I have said, I am not merely Timeless; I am immortal. I just
wonder, gentle reader: how exactly does one resign from immortality?
*****
Accepting her plea for help, Daelen says, “Alright, are you going
to open the portal, or shall I?”
“Portal?” Mandalee looks amused.
“Yes, you know, to travel to your time.”
“Portal?” she repeats, laughing despite the seriousness of the
situation. “My goodness, how quaint! I'm almost tempted to let you do
it, just for the experience, but now is not the time for such crude
techniques. We don't use portals anymore, my friend.”
“Then how do we get to your time?”
With a smile, she replies, “We're already here.”
“That's why this place feels strange! I've walked through this
forest so many times, and I don't remember ever noticing this place
before.”
“That's because it doesn't exist,” Mandalee explains.
“You mean, it doesn't exist in my time?”
“It doesn't exist in any time.”
“Then, where are we?” Daelen looks confused. “I mean, this
ground we're standing on, where is it?”
Mandalee sighs; exasperated. “It's nowhere! I told you – it doesn't
exist!”
Poor Mandalee. It’s like trying to explain the Origin of the
Universe to a baby. Daelen is simply not sufficiently developed to cope
with it. So many of what are considered the most basic root concepts
are beyond anything the shadow warrior has had to deal with, and
Mandalee has neither the time nor the patience to take him through
nursery education.
Trying to rationalise it, Daelen asks, “Are you saying this glade
is an illusion?”
“Oh no, it's real; it just doesn’t exist. Look, it all comes down to
the manipulation of spatial dynamics and dimensional harmonics to
annexe a section of spacetime. This place is special because it’s
Timeless, but similar annexes are routinely created. It’s simple enough
– delicate and intricate, but not hard. Any other questions?”
“Just one, about Time travel: you act as if it's commonplace.”
8
“It is,” she replies.
“Since when?”
“For the Guardians, from their creation – it’s a natural
consequence of existing out of Time. For the members of the Higher
Council, over a century. For your average wizards, druids and clerics,
about half that time. Then in recent years, basic observation-only Time
travel has been available to all for recreation, vacations and study.”
“That’s impossible!” Daelen insists. He’s obviously finding it
very hard to adjust to a world that has left him behind. “I would have
noticed! Where are all these travellers from the future? Why aren’t they
all over the place? Why haven't I met any, apart from you?”
“Oh, the arrogance!” Mandalee rolls her eyes. “I had almost
forgotten that about you. I often used to wonder if the real reason you
left your plane of existence was that your ego grew too large and it just
sort of spilt out like an overfilled bathtub. The reason you haven't met
any other Time travellers is that, except for the Guardians, nobody has
ever gone back this far.”
“Why not?”
“Because, my dear shadow warrior, you're just not interesting
enough yet. Now, if you're quite finished, it's time for us to join a friend
of mine so she can explain the current situation. She is looking forward
to seeing you.”
With that, the White Guardian flies into the air, leaving Daelen
little choice but to follow meekly behind.
*****
Lying is generally frowned upon by White Clerics, but I’m sure
all the gods of goodness will forgive Aunt Mandalee for her taking
sweet revenge for how the shadow warrior had acted so superior and
condescending when they first met. Surely, in that context, no-one
could blame her for this harmless bit of fun.
I’m sure, gentle reader, you will have noticed, that she used the
phrase ‘observation-only.’ That’s because the real answer to Daelen’s
question is that the magic used for mass-market Time travel necessarily
makes the visitors completely invisible and incorporeal to the natives
of that time. Only the Guardians and I have Interactive Time travel,
which is why only Mandalee could visit Daelen in this way and enlist
his much-needed help.
9
Now that he’s agreed, I can get on with my story, secure in the
knowledge that my plans are in motion, metaphorically speaking.
Literally speaking, nothing is in motion, because I’m keeping my house
frozen in what I suppose one might call a bubble of Time.
In another quirk of my unique magio-physiology, I can create a
Time travel dead zone around me, which I can extend to those nearby.
That’s how I’m holding the Black and Red Guardians captive in my
room, so they can’t interfere with what Mandalee is doing. Effectively,
I have changed the Time settings to ‘observation only’ so that I can see
and relate a first-hand account of what happened in what one might
crudely call the past. The two Guardians can’t stop me, because – and I
say this without conceit – they’re not powerful enough without the
‘Power of Three.’ And, before you say anything, yes, I know that’s a
cliché, and no, they don’t really call it that. I just say it to wind them up
and prick their egos a bit.
Nevertheless, the point still stands: The Guardians are greater
than the sum of their parts, which is why it’s so sad to see them divided
like this. It is my hope that the story I write will convince them, the
Council, and you, gentle reader, that I am doing the right thing.
‘Who keeps me in check?’ you may ask.
Why, Aunt Mandalee, of course! If ever I am on the receiving
end of one of her Looks of Disappointment, I am completely powerless.
No magic required. And failing her, there’s always Shyleen. You might
not know it to see the leopard as she is now, curled up by my fire and
beginning to purr, but trust me: that is one cat you don’t want to cross!
In case you haven’t guessed, the ‘friend’ Mandalee is bringing
Daelen to see, is me. I suppose it was easier for her to go with the word
‘friend’ rather than ‘immortal daughter from your future, a product of a
relationship you never even got to have and who, if things go wrong
between you and Catriona before they’re supposed to go wrong, might
never exist, but no pressure.’
It will be strange to meet him, when for nearly a thousand years
I’ve believed I would never have a chance to know him.
But my special relationship with Time is relevant for another
reason. Even though from an external frame of reference, the pair will
be here any moment, I still have as much time as I need to write this
story. I know it’s weird, but as Mandalee so eloquently put it: The
explanation has to do with the true nature of Time and its relative spatial
10
dimensions, but I can't tell you about that because you’re not ready for
it.
No offence.
Actually, I am doing you a favour by not telling you how it
works; I know exactly how it works, and the whole thing makes my
head hurt. I wouldn’t want to inflict that on all my innocent readers, so
in short, it’s best to stick with the image of a bubble in Time.
Now, I think it’s high time I gave you some much-needed
perspective on my mother, Catriona, and my two Aunts, Mandalee and
Dreya. The people who made me who I am and the world what it is. To
do that, I must take us back to the beginning…
…Or, at least, an earlier part of the middle.
Chapter 2
The world of Tempestria was well-named, for the sky, both day
and night, was dominated by a perpetual vortex of swirling energy. The
shape and pattern were continually shifting, and its intensity seemed to
wax and wane according to some vast cosmic cycle, but even at its
lowest ebb, it was far from what anyone could describe as ‘calm.’ Of
course, in those days, no-one in this world considered this unusual or
strange. After all, they knew of no other worlds with which to compare
theirs. To the people of Tempestria, this was simply the nature of
reality.
Now and then a group would spring up, claiming that the world
had not always been so and that it had once had another name entirely.
Depending on prevailing social attitudes, the response to these
individuals ranged from polite sympathy for their delusional state
through to, I’m sorry to say, gentle reader, persecution and violence.
Catriona was born to parents who many considered mismatched.
Her father, Gabrian, was one of the long-lived Faery who was as rooted
to his sun-drenched Quarthonian forest as any oak tree. Like many
Faery, he grew uncomfortable if he strayed too far from his forest home.
The one time he visited a human city, he became seriously ill. While
not as ancient as many of the Quarthonian trees, at almost two hundred
years old, he was considered middle-aged. Gabrian was a druid mage,
a healer in the community, while Catriona’s mother, Velena
Redfletching, was a fierce warrior. Equally adept at hunting both
animals and people, she was well-known for the battle frenzy that
would come upon her when she felt threatened. This greatly enhanced
her speed, strength and focus, to the point where nothing could sway,
divert or reason with her. Aged just nineteen when she first met
Gabrian, she was more at home in the crowded city streets at night and
rarely stayed in one place for long. She was indeed the unstoppable
force to Gabrian’s immovable object. The name Redfletching came
from Velena's trademark ruby-coloured feathers, which adorned the
tails of all her arrows. Catriona adopted the practice and earned the
name on the day she outshot her mother.
Despite their differences – or perhaps because of them – Gabrian
and Velena were hopelessly attracted to each other. Catriona was the
fruit of their love, their only child. Trained in the formidable archery
12
and hunting skills of her mother and the gentle magic of her father as
she grew up, she proved to be highly gifted in both sides. From a young
age, she appreciated the strength that is found in diversity and
committed herself to the pursuit of Balance in herself, in magic and in
the world.
Outwardly, modern-day Faery were slightly smaller than the
average human and considerably lighter, possessing hollow bones as a
legacy of evolution from creatures that could fly. Faery did not have
wings, however, and depictions of winged Faery were generally
deemed offensive. Their most distinctive feature was a stripe of small
brown spots that ran down each side of their body, legs and arms.
Catriona’s markings extended to her face, although as a half-Faery, they
were faded, so they could easily be mistaken for freckles. Cat was
always quick to make it clear that they were not.
The mortals of Tempestria shared their world with higher planar
beings, powerful even beyond the gods to whom they prayed. Every
now and then, Daelen StormTiger would drop out of the sky and fight
some unfathomable cosmic threat known as Kullos, and often their
great and terrible battles took their toll on innocent Tempestrians.
According to legend, one particularly devastating battle, in ages past,
caused Daelen to somehow split in two. He and his twin, generally
known as the dark clone, did not get on, and so Daelen had two nemeses
to fight. Relative to my mother’s time, that was a thousand years ago
and even now, almost a thousand beyond that, we know almost nothing
about the world before that time. There are no records, no history books.
Nothing. To all intents and purposes, that was Year Zero, but that’s
clearly impossible.
All mortals knew of Daelen was that he was something called a
shadow warrior – as was Kullos – a being of incredible power and their
world’s self-styled protector. It was a matter of some debate as to
whether the world would, in fact, need a protector if he would simply
go away, which, to the relief of many, he did for long periods. Still,
nobody, not even the wizards and the clerics, had the power to do much
about it when Daelen StormTiger chose to return and ‘protect’ them
once more.
*****
13
At first, the attack on Catriona’s village seemed just another
unfortunate site of these cosmic battles. Daelen appeared, as he always
did, in the middle of a violent storm, bringing thunder, rain and
lightning flashes that seemed to be shaped in the image of a great tiger.
But there was something different about this attack: this time Kullos
appeared to have an ally, which was unheard of. An ally who seemed
intent on razing their quiet little village to the ground, as if in revenge
for some terrible affront or unknowable offence they had caused.
The village was not entirely alone in the face of this supernatural
force. The Champion of the Gods, the faithful companion of Daelen
StormTiger, was with them. He was called Ossian Miach Kaidool, but
Tempestrians tended to call him ‘Michael’ as they could never
pronounce his real name correctly. Trust me, gentle reader, it is not as
simple as it appears on the page. There were complex inflexions to be
observed and several of the common mistakes apparently translated into
something highly insulting in his language. So frankly, he’d rather they
just stick to ‘Michael.’
Standing at seven feet, with dried, translucent skin stretched like
parchment over a horned skull, he was somewhat disconcerting to look
at. Still, he was quite an amiable chap. Just as long as one did not
mispronounce his name and he wasn’t suffering from one of his bouts
of depression, which were pretty understandable considering he was
Fated to die at the end of every Final Battle. And there had been many
Final Battles. Such death was not permanent – Daelen would always
Resurrect him at a later time, but he could only do that when there was
dire need.
On that fateful day, Michael was forced to leave Daelen’s side,
and try to defend the village, while the shadow warrior assailed Kullos
with powerful blasts from his beam cannon and drew their great battle
away from the area.
The being attacking the village, gentle reader, was difficult to see
– a phrase I use quite literally. He certainly wasn’t hiding, nor was it
merely a case of camouflage. He wasn’t invisible as such, but more like
a ‘void-creature.’ When one looked at his position, one didn’t really see
him, so much as see the absence of him. As if there were a humanoidshaped hole in the fabric of reality in the place he was standing. Michael
had never seen anything like it before.
Or should that be, he had ‘never not-seen nothing’ like it before?
Whatever. Let’s just go with ‘void-creature.’
14
Michael brought his powers to bear on this individual, but it
remained unaffected. He summoned swarms of deadly insects, but they
were swallowed by the void. He tried ‘A Murder of Ravens in Fugue’
bringing forth a dozen undead ravens from the Gates of Hell. Heralds
of Death, they would inspire fear in those they attacked, but their calls
seemed to echo and fade as if the void-creature were simply much too
far away for their song to carry. Abandoning such tactics, he decided to
go for a more direct approach, launching himself at the void-creature
with his great Warhammer made of hardened, unbreakable petrified
wood, which would imprison those it struck in the same material. The
void-creature was fast – almost shadow warrior fast, but the centuries
of training with Daelen paid off, and he finally hit his target. For a
moment, the void-creature was cocooned, and it seemed the battle was
won, but a moment later, the wood began to vibrate and quake until it
shook itself apart, throwing Michael clear.
Michael rushed at the void-creature with his golden Sword of
Maruk, imbued with the power of the gods, but the void-creature
opened a pocket dimension, from which he produced a great cannon
and aimed it at Michael. Time slowed as Michael looked on in horror:
From his readings, it seemed like a version of what Daelen and Kullos
used, only even more powerful.
Except it couldn’t be.
The idea of a more powerful beam cannon was plausible enough
in itself since the cannon drew power entirely from the shadow warrior
who used it. In fact, the warrior was the real weapon – the cannon
merely aided focus. A more powerful cannon really meant a more
powerful shadow warrior. Just one problem: There were no more
shadow warriors. Maybe not anywhere, but certainly in this realm, there
were but three: Kullos, plus Daelen and his dark clone.
But if this attack was indeed what it appeared to be, then Michael
could not survive. Michael could always sense when he was Fated to
die, and this was not one of those occasions. The gods had created him
with the knowledge that if ever he died when it wasn’t Time, he could
never be Resurrected. He would die, permanently. Forever.
In a last, desperate attempt to make his existence count for
something, he channelled every last drop of power from his very being
through his sword to strike at the void-creature. As he did so, three
figures appeared between them. Again, Michael couldn’t see them very
well, but in a different way to the void-creature. They seemed to be
15
shrouded by magic. All he could make out through his haze of pain was
that they seemed to have a more feminine silhouette, and each seemed
to radiate a particular colour: one white, one black and one red. They
had woven some kind of magical net between them, which had a lensing
effect on both energy beams, magnifying Michael’s and diffracting the
cannon blast.
The result of this Intervention was threefold: First, Michael was
thrown to the ground in agony, but still alive – barely. Second, the voidcreature was stunned long enough for the three newcomers to go on the
offensive with what appeared to be a combination of all three flavours
of mortal magic: wizard, cleric and druid. How mere mortal magic
could be effective, Michael could not understand, but it was. The third
effect of this Intervention, however, was that the portion of the
diffracted cannon blast that had missed Michael slammed into the
village around them. The young Catriona Redfletching was at the
extreme edge of the explosion and was thrown clear. Others were not
so fortunate. Cat dragged herself to her feet and cried out in tearful
horror as her father, who had been only slightly closer to the blast,
disintegrated into nothingness before her eyes.
Also witness to the horrific scene was Velena who had been
hunting away from the village at the time of the attack. Cat sensed her
mother before she saw her, and when she turned to look at her, she felt
like her spirit had been ripped from her body. She knew well the look
on her mother’s face – it meant only one thing: the battle frenzy was
upon her. Catriona’s fears were confirmed as Velena dropped the
carcass of the stag she had slain for their dinner and reached for her
weapons.
“Mum! No!” Cat screamed, desperately, tears coursing like rivers
down her cheeks. “You can’t fight them, they’re too powerful!”
But she could see it in her mother’s eyes: at that moment, she
didn’t even recognise her own daughter. Catriona tried to physically
stop her, but Velena threw her aside like she was nothing to her. That
hurt Cat far more than the rock that struck her head as she landed on her
back.
“Please!” she begged. “Please, Mum, I—I can’t lose you, too!”
Velena ignored her pleas and rushed, heedless into battle,
shooting arrows futilely at the void-creature.
“Mum,” Cat whispered, her world fading as her concussion took
its toll, and she lapsed into unconsciousness, “I…love…”
16
*****
The three newcomers were holding the void-creature at bay with
their combined magic but did not seem able to deal a decisive blow. Not
until a fourth figure appeared, glowing with a light so bright, Michael
wondered if a piece of the sun had somehow broken away and decided
to shine in the night sky. Michael could not look at this creature of light
directly, lest it damage his eyes. Through the delirium of pain, Michael
thought he could detect a strange aura and a kind of magic that he
couldn’t identify.
The figure stood unflinching before the void-creature and said,
“I can’t allow you to interfere any further here. Go back to where you
belong. You know I can make you, but I’m giving you this one chance
to leave by your own power.”
The void-creature spoke for the first time. Michael suspected it
would have been terrifying even without the heavy distortion that
surrounded it, but he was in too much pain to give it any real thought.
“If I go,” it said, “I’ll not be doing you any favours. It would be
easier on all of you if I succeeded this day. Back home, your tricks
won’t work on me the way they do here. You know that.”
“Yes, I know,” the other admitted, “but that is how it must be.”
“Fine, we’ll do it your way. See you later!”
With that, the void-creature opened a portal and stepped through
it.
Once the void-creature was gone, Michael observed the four
newcomers quickly consult one another over something. Apparently, an
agreement was reached because the first three faded from reality,
leaving just the last one behind alone. The glowing figure continued to
defy any analysis, remaining incorporeal and insubstantial as it floated
towards Michael.
“Greetings, Ossian Miach Kaidool,” came an ethereal voice. To
Michael’s astonishment, they pronounced his name perfectly.
Michael always described the sound as ‘barely more than a
whisper,’ and yet with ‘a kind of hidden musical quality’ that he
couldn’t really explain.
“I can help you,” said the figure, “but I will only do so on one
condition: as a demigod, I know you have perception beyond that of
mortals and a direct line to the gods. I am about to have an important
meeting with someone, and neither you nor the gods must know
17
anything about it. The pain you’re suffering right now is blocking all
that out, so leaving you as you are would serve my needs perfectly. But
I’m not without compassion, so I’m willing to take your pain away, if
you agree to my taking away all your other senses, too.” The figure
paused for a moment and appeared to reconsider. “Actually, I can leave
you your sight, because nothing you see will matter without the wider
context. Don’t worry, it will only be for a short while. Daelen’s latest
fight with Kullos will soon be over, and he’ll come back here to help
you, but I must be gone before he arrives, so I need your answer now.
Do you consent to my terms?”
“Yes,” Michael gasped. “The pain…is too…too much, I…I
consent.”
The instant the words left his mouth, all of his higher senses
vanished, taking the pain with it. He couldn’t feel anything at all or hear,
or taste, or smell. The stranger was true to their word, however, and left
him with his sight intact. Michael almost wished he had asked them to
take that away, too, given the terrible carnage and devastation all
around. But since he felt at least partially responsible for it, Michael
accepted that he had no right to be shielded from it, so he looked on.
The figure seemed to crouch down beside the still form of
Catriona Redfletching and gently wake her with a touch. Cat stirred and
opened her eyes. She looked puzzled for a moment as if she couldn’t
quite work out what she was doing there. Then the memory rushed
back, and the half-Faery girl shot to her feet, darting away as if trying
to find something or someone. The ethereal figure seemed torn between
trying to comfort or help Catriona, and impatiently checking what
Michael assumed to be a timepiece on their wrist. As if some pressing
need were threatening to drag them away against their wishes. After a
short while, Cat sank to the ground once more, in the middle of the
devastation that had been her home but moments before and buried her
head in her hands. That was the moment the shrouded figure chose to
approach her once more.
Michael was unable to hear the words that were said, but he
guessed they must have been profound indeed, for they were enough
for the distraught Catriona to look up and cease her tears. The girl
seemed fascinated by the other’s presence as if they presented a puzzle
intriguing enough to put her grief aside for the moment. Cat gazed at
the other like she could not believe they were even real but couldn’t
fathom why she felt that way.
18
After a short conversation, the shrouded figure convinced
Catriona to stand and watch as the mage opened a pocket dimension
and produced a small wooden staff, approximately three feet in height
with a large blue crystal on top. Then the figure performed magic on
the land, causing the grass to regrow, trees to mend and flowers to
bloom. In short order, the village and its buildings were restored, not
quite to their original design, but a fair approximation of it, as if they
were reconstructing it not from recent memory, but from something
more distant. The mage’s talents did not extend to bringing back the
people who were lost that day, but by the time they were finished, at
least those Quarthonian survivors that remained had somewhere to
rebuild their lives. All through this, the crystal at the head of the staff
sent a lightshow high into the sky, but frankly, Cat was far more
interested in what was happening to the land.
Catriona looked on with wide-eyed astonishment, while all the
other mortals seemed baffled by this apparent miracle. Some of them
lifted their heads in praise to their gods, though Michael knew they had
nothing to do with it. Others fell to their knees to worship Tempestria
itself, perhaps in reverence to Blessed Alycia, Mother of Nature.
Somehow, Michael thought this was nearer the mark, but none of them
seemed to link what was happening with the mysterious figure floating
beside Catriona. It was as if they could not perceive them at all. None
except Michael and of course the young Catriona.
When the magical demonstration was done, the figure gave the
staff to Catriona, who beheld it in wonder. The mage began to move
away as if they were going to use the distraction of their gift to make
good their escape, but then, as if pulled by unseen forces of compassion,
they swooped back over to Catriona and embraced her. When they
broke the hug, the mysterious figure took one more glance at their
timepiece. It seemed that their time was finally up, for they stepped
away from Catriona and began to fade. As they did so, Michael’s senses
came flooding back, along with the agonising pain.
“I’m sorry, my friend,” came the whispered, melodic voice in his
mind. “I think I might have forgotten to mention this part of our
agreement. Sorry.” And then they were gone.
*****
19
My mother always referred to that glowing figure as her ‘Angel,’
but to this day, even with all our abilities, the Angel’s shroud remains
impenetrable to all our scans. I only know what happened through a
much later telepathic link with Michael, seeing his memory of events.
Our best guess is that they were a future Guardian. Assuming we still
have a future by the time I’m finished.
Investigation through Interactive Time travel is entirely out of the
question. It’s a Temporal Black Spot where all are forbidden to venture,
employing magical wards to prevent entry, and I know better than to try
to breach them.
To interfere too often with the same events is potentially
catastrophic. Time Intervention is not something the Guardians take
lightly. Apart from myself, they are the only ones with the necessary
knowledge and skill. Anyone else would be destroyed and scattered in
the void like a dandelion in a hurricane.
Yes, I know I’m in the middle of an Illegal Time Intervention at
this very moment (relatively speaking), but I assure you I would never
endanger reality simply to satisfy my selfish curiosity about my
mother’s Angel! Besides, this was the worst day of my mother’s life;
Michael’s memory of watching an innocent young girl have her whole
world ripped apart was distressing enough. I have no desire to witness
it first-hand. I don’t know how she bore it. I’m certain I could not.
It took time to find out exactly what happened to Velena. In all
the terror and confusion, keeping track of one individual had been
difficult. But there were enough eyewitness accounts to confirm that
she, like many others, was simply vaporised.
In later life, whenever Catriona spoke of these events, she always
described her mother fighting with a ferocity that rivalled the void
storms in the sky. She chose to remember Velena desperately giving her
life to save the daughter she loved. While that may not match the
account that I have written, gentle reader, I’m sure you can understand
why my mother would prefer her own memory of events.
But I promised you that every word of this story would be true,
so I shall not sugar coat these events…or those yet to come.
Chapter 3
It was a few years later, and Catriona Redfletching was talking
to an old White wizard named Renjaf.
“Oh, come on!” she pleaded, “It’s not like I’m asking for the
moon!”
Renjaf was something of a recluse. He lived in a tall tower, as
was the fashion for wizards in those days, that sat within several acres
of much-neglected land a few miles from the town of Compton, leaving
only rarely. Why was Catriona there, gentle reader? The answer to that
requires some explanation.
It naturally took some time for Cat to come to terms with
everything that had happened, but eventually, life went on, as it always
does. Pyrah helped enormously, with her frequent visits.
Who is Pyrah?
Well, not all higher planar beings appear human. They may
manifest in all manner of guises. Pyrah, gentle reader, was one such
creature, who seemed to be a small, green, highly venomous snake that
had been Catriona’s friend and protector since she was a child. Cat first
met her while playing in the forest around her father’s Quarthonian
home. Pyrah had been injured, caught in the middle of another of
Daelen’s battles. That time it was not against Kullos, but rather his dark
clone, although that was a distinction without difference when dodging
beam cannon blasts.
Cat said, “hello,” and was astonished when the snake said ‘hello’
back.
Well, not ‘said’ exactly, but communicated certainly –
communicated sympathically. Let me see…how to explain sympathic
communication… More than empathy, less than telepathy. Not that you
can draw a straight line through the three. Sympathic communication
involves the transmission of concepts. So rather than saying, “I am your
friend,” Pyrah simply transmitted the concept, the idea of friendship. It
didn’t allow for much in the way of subtlety in those days, but thanks
to Catriona’s efforts to nurse her back to health, they managed to
develop a powerful bond. Pyrah was sorry she had not been around to
help when Cat lost her parents. Catriona was glad she had been absent.
Otherwise, she might have lost her, too.
21
Still, there was no denying things had changed for Catriona.
Before the day she lost her parents, the Day of the Monster, the Day of
the Angel, Cat had been a promising student at magic school – a
relatively new concept at the time, but one that would eventually
supplant the old apprentice system. Three years later, her grades at
college were mediocre at best. It just didn’t hold her interest as it had
before. Now, she was more interested in her Angel.
I should point out that my mother didn’t really consider her
miraculous visitor to have been an Angel in the literal sense. It was just
that she couldn’t think of another label she could use that fitted any
better. She dearly wished for something better, though, for one reason
above all others: everybody said her Angel wasn’t real.
To everybody else who was there that day, the restoration of their
village was an unexplained miracle, and they seemed happy for it to
remain so. Not Catriona. Everybody attributed her imaginary guardian
Angel to an expression of her grief. A way of dealing with the trauma
and even survivor guilt. Her way of explaining the inexplicable, why
she survived when others only a few feet away from her – her father
included – did not.
‘Poor Catriona’ people would say. ‘It must be so hard for her to
accept that there was no reason, just random chance.’
‘Give her time,’ the experts said. ‘In time, she will see and learn
to accept it.’
But she never did.
She knew her Angel was real. How else did she acquire her
‘Crystal Mage Staff’ as she had named her gift, mostly for the
convenience of having something to call it. She didn’t want to give it
some grandiose name like ‘The Great Staff of Zarathon’ or ‘The
Mystical Rod of Destiny’ or ‘The Almighty Staff of the Gods.’ No. It
was a simple wooden staff, something that mages liked to use to channel
magic and it had a large blue crystal on the top. Hence ‘Crystal Mage
Staff.’ Simple. Unassuming. Unpretentious. Although, it did radiate a
kind of higher planar energy that Cat did not understand, buried beneath
layers upon layers of security and protection.
Her Angel had warned her not to tamper with that energy,
“Except,” they said, “in the event of some dire emergency of
worldwide, cataclysmic proportions. And even then, think twice.”
Catriona kept that part to herself. No sense in drawing attention
to it if it were that important. There were always those who were
22
covetous of power and might seek to take the staff from her. She could
never allow that. She herself was hardly likely to be involved in any
‘dire emergency of worldwide, cataclysmic proportions.’ Besides, she
wasn’t interested in power as such. She was much more interested in
acquiring knowledge. Specifically, knowledge relating to the Crystal
Mage Staff, because that was her only link to her Angel.
On a more practical level, her Angel had inspired her to look at
druid magic in a new way. Of the three principal flavours of magic,
druid abilities were something of a poor cousin next to wizardry and
clerical magic.
Not knowing how magic works on your world, gentle reader, or
indeed whether any such equivalent exists where you are, I should break
off for a moment to explain how it works on Tempestria. To put that in
its proper context, however, I first need to discuss dimensional
cosmology.
*****
Although I’ve been alive for a thousand years or so, I look like a
human girl of about twenty, and perhaps it’s vain of me, but I like to try
and stay in touch with people who really are that young. One of the best
ways to do that, I have found, is to go back to college and be a student
again for a while. After all, a lot has changed in the last millennium, so
there’s always more to learn.
So, to help me explain things to you now, I’m going to borrow
from one of my many college dissertations:
THE GREAT COSMIC SANDWICH
Barring some grand, cosmic catastrophe, all mortal worlds exist
in the middle of The Great Cosmic Sandwich.
The layer above is the cheese, aka the realm of the gods. There
are a wide variety of gods to choose from, different gods suit different
people according to their tastes, and quite frankly, some of them stink.
The layer immediately below is the first of the demonic planes – I like
to think of them as the tomato layer with all that red simulating blood.
No-one knows precisely how many layers there are below that, although
I’m convinced one of them must be pickles. Apologies to anyone who
likes them – it’s all a matter of taste of course, but to me, they are vile
23
and disgusting things and surely sent from hell itself. Besides, some
people like to ‘pickle’ specimens in jars for all manner of strange
experiments. This fits symbolically with what those Greater Demons
tend to do with the unfortunate mortals they snatch when they make
their way up through the planes of reality to the mortal realm.
Above the gods, there are other creatures, mostly beyond mortal
comprehension. To me, these are the sauces: adding to the overall
flavour of the cosmos without contributing anything of nutritional value
and – if your sandwich shops are anything like ours, gentle reader – not
always what you expected to get when you ordered. Similarly, with rare
exceptions, these higher planar beings contribute little of substance to
the cosmos, from a mortal’s point of view, but neither do they do any
harm. Then you have the shadow realm where my father and his people
come from – more on them later. For now, suffice to say they are the
lettuce in the sandwich. They’re good for us, and they know it. In fact,
they’re so good for us, they’re going to help us whether we like it or
not. The trouble is, since they are so good for us, they’re convinced
they’re better than mortals. Frankly, I’m rather more interested in the
meaty bit in the middle – that’s mortals along with the Guardians and,
if I may be so bold, myself – although if I’m honest, a good, wellbalanced sandwich is probably best for all of us.
Of course, all the fillings of the Great Cosmic Sandwich need
something to contain them. At the bottom, the deepest part of the
demonic planes is home to the Keeper of the Underworld, often seen as
some kind of Source of Evil, topped by a spread of fallen Angels. But I
can’t help thinking that I, too, would probably be a bit grumpy, if I were
always being squished by the weight of the universe pressing down on
me like I was a flattened slice of bread. At the other end, at the pinnacle
of the sandwich, the crowning glory, as it were, the Creator stands on
the shoulders of their own spread of Angels, who think they’re the best
thing next to sliced bread. As for the Creator themselves, I see them as
a large bun: risen too high, over-inflated with their own self-importance
and probably slightly burnt on top.
I should probably point out, gentle reader, that my college
dissertation was, in point of fact, marked down for my ‘flippant
treatment of the subject matter.’ But this is my story, my world that’s
in danger and as my mother’s Angel put it, this is indeed a ‘dire
emergency of worldwide cataclysmic proportions,’ so I’ll be as flippant
as I like.
24
Oh, and in case you think my mother’s staff is somehow the key
to my saving the world, gentle reader, you’re absolutely right. It doesn’t
have any power anymore, the last of it faded centuries ago, but it is the
perfect device for wedging my bedroom door shut so that the Red and
Black Guardians can’t get out. Physics of triangles plus an adaptive
anti-magic field and two of the world’s most powerful individuals have
to take it in turns to take a nap on my bed. Well, I suppose they could
squeeze up and share, but I don’t think they’re that close! Is that flippant
enough for you?
Actually, all flippancy aside, in complete and utter seriousness,
there is a compulsory side order to our Sandwich. A force, an entity
infinitely more dangerous than the Keeper of the Underworld. IT is
formless, IT is genderless. IT is the enemy of life and structure and
Creation itself. IT is the antithesis of order but calling IT chaos is to try
to put IT in a box that is far too small to contain ITs nature. IT is
nameless; the only term we have for this entity is ‘IT.’ IT cannot be
killed or destroyed, for death and destruction are ITs food and drink.
The Guardians and I stand against IT and must be constantly
vigilant against IT, especially when we Intervene in Time. If we get
things wrong, we could unravel Time and the whole of Creation. That’s
why the current Black and Red Guardians are so against what Mandalee
and I are doing: they’re afraid and justifiably so. I’m not going to sit
here and say we have no choice, because we do. Our choice is to act,
fully aware of the risk. That’s why I’m writing this.
I’m sure you’re wondering what danger we could possibly be
facing that we would risk everything to do this, but I can’t tell you yet.
Sure, I could give you a name – unlike IT, this threat does have one –
but I might as well call him ‘Bob’ for all that it would mean to you.
What you need is context, and that takes time.
Fortunately, gentle reader, I’m something of an expert in that
field.
25
Chapter 4
Now, where was I before I got carried away by the Great Cosmic
Sandwich? Ah yes, magic.
Clerical magic came first, historically speaking. The gods feed
on the worship of mortals and to help encourage this, it was in their
interests to use some of their powers to help mortals achieve things
down here. It made mortals more inclined to worship them if they felt
they were getting something from it. Clerics grew powerful in this way,
but there was a drawback: gods are often fickle and determining what
might please them from one moment to the next was challenging, to say
the least. That made their magic unreliable at times.
Some people got fed up with this dance with the gods and
postulated that mortals could achieve the same results by themselves
with patience and study. They believed that the clerics’ real source of
power was not the gods themselves, but a power that the gods refined
from the inter-planar repulsion forces. Simply put, that which allowed
the planes of reality to remain separate and distinct. Over time, wizards
learned to take this power for themselves, and their spells grew to match
clerical prayers in power and intensity.
There was a third group known as druids, who were worried
about draining inter-planar forces by either gods or mortals. However
vast and immeasurable these forces might be, they were surely finite.
What if those forces were weakened as a result? What if that caused the
planes of reality to touch in ways they were never meant to? What if it
was happening already? What if that was why their world was
constantly assailed by demons? What if the growing use of inter-planar
repulsion forces as magic was bringing the demon realms somehow
closer, thereby making it easier for them to sort of jump or climb up or
whatever it was demons did to get here?
Druids didn’t use those forces for their magic. Instead, they used
the ‘Providence of Blessed Alycia, Mother of Nature’ – the ancient
name for the kind of subtle energy that emanated from Tempestria
itself. This kind of energy, they believed, actually healed the cosmos,
replenishing that which wizards and clerics took for themselves. The
drawback: it simply wasn’t as powerful, and so it never caught on
except in the areas of healing and garden maintenance. Most druids did
not seek to stop the other two flavours being used. They simply sought
26
a state of balance where their magic could effectively recycle that which
the others used. Unfortunately, no-one had found a way to make druid
magic work in a way that could even remotely achieve this. In fact, it
was generally believed to be impossible.
Catriona knew better. She had seen it. What her Angel did on that
fateful day was unlike anything wizards or clerics could achieve. Others
might think it was an inexplicable miracle, but to her, the explanation
was simple: druid magic, and she wanted to learn how it was done. It
became her personal quest, for which her only lead was the staff. It
didn’t matter if others told her it was an ‘unhealthy obsession borne out
of grief and loss.’ It didn’t matter if nobody else thought her Angel was
real. Catriona knew better.
What hurt the most was the pity she would see on the faces of
people she knew. Sympathy for the ‘poor young woman’ who had lost
everything…including her mind. Still, she would not be swayed from
her chosen course. It was her life, and if her parents had taught her
anything, it was that she was damn well going to live it her way.
There was, of course, one other individual who Cat knew could
most likely back up her ‘version of events’ as people liked to call it:
Michael. Needless to say, though, he didn’t get out much, and he was
currently unavailable, on account of having died in Daelen’s latest Final
Battle against Kullos. Which she felt was as inconvenient for her as she
supposed it was for him to be stuck in his Deepest Slumber. It wasn’t
as if she could roll up to the front door of his tomb and knock very
loudly until he woke up. For one thing, Daelen StormTiger had set up
defences that, given the shadow warrior’s power, she could not hope to
counter. Besides, regardless of anything she might do, Michael would
Sleep until the Time of Greatest Need and clearly, helping Catriona
Redfletching did not count. Which once again left her with her staff.
She began to research both its security and its history –
something that took her time away from what her college tutors kept
telling her she ought to be studying. She often wondered how they could
possibly believe they knew better than her what she ‘ought’ to be
studying.
*****
One day, her class had a visitor in the form of the head of the
Black robe mages, Laethyn. He was there to talk about the history of
27
wizard magic. In days gone by, Cat conceded she would have been
interested. Now all she felt was irritation. Where was the talk on the
history of druid magic? Even when Laethyn waved the famous
Nameless Book in the air, Catriona barely raised an eyebrow.
The Nameless Book, gentle reader, was neither nameless nor a
book.
OK, in the most basic sense, it was a book, but in another way –
given the layers upon layers of magical protection that prevented it from
being opened – it was the most heavily fortified installation of magic
ever constructed. As for the title, it was only Nameless in the sense that
nobody knew what it was called, because it was written in a completely
unknown language. According to legend, the book had been the work
of Magias, the first wizard, based on the evidence of dating techniques
applied to the book itself. It was the closest thing that secular wizard
society had to a sacred religious artefact. According to tradition,
Laethyn would keep possession of the Nameless Book until he retired,
at which time he would pass it on to either the Red or White leader,
depending on which of them had seniority.
Catriona was sitting too far away to make any significant
observations beyond a mild surprise that a book that was supposedly
almost a thousand years old should be in such good condition. Still,
modern magic had developed remarkable preservation techniques, so it
was no great mystery. The students, in general, were not allowed to
touch the precious object or even get close. As if breathing on it might
somehow cause damage to something that was unmarked by the
passage of centuries.
Despite her general disinterest, though, the college did have
resources that my mother thought might be useful to her, so she
continued to attend and do just enough to keep from being removed
from classes entirely.
Information on her staff was extremely hard to come by. Cat
chased many a wild goose down many a dead end, but little by little she
found references to help her. Through a combination of obscure books,
tenacious research and experimentation, her druid magic began to grow,
and she unlocked the first layer of her staff’s protection.
One of her favourite things she learned, gentle reader, was
shapeshifting magic. It involved the careful manipulation of her body
and what we would these days call her genetic structure, although that
knowledge was unknown at that time in my mother’s life, and I’m sure
28
she never thought about it in those terms. Mostly, druid magic works
on knowledge, instinct and a strong belief that you can do what you are
trying to do. Almost as if one is talking to Blessed Alycia herself and
explaining what you’re trying to achieve, and no matter how clumsy
one’s explanation might be, if you have the right attitude, she seems to
smile upon the druid, and it happens. As knowledge and understanding
grow, however, the magic becomes easier and more controlled.
Catriona’s favourite form quickly became that of a red-banded
falcon, so named for the pair of red stripes that encircled its legs. Now,
there is no such thing as a red-banded falcon, but the red bands helped
to serve as an anchor to her true self, linking in her mind with her name
and of course her mother’s: Redfletching. Flying was undeniably a fast
and convenient way to travel, but the problem she had was how to carry
her staff around with her. There was no way she would leave it
anywhere – it never left her side. Here, her decision to keep her foot in
the door at wizarding college paid dividends as she became interested
in a course on Advanced Dimensional Harmonics.
These days, gentle reader, what she learned would be considered
Basic Misconceptions in Dimensional Harmonics, but that’s progress
for you! Still, through creative combinations of this course material
with her own independent study and druid magic, she found a way to
put her staff, her clothes and anything else her half-Faery self might
need in a kind of pocket dimension, such that it was always effectively
right next to her, within reach, no matter where she was. It was crude,
it was tiring, and it was unstable, causing her belongings to fall out of
her pocket dimension at inconvenient times…or even fall in, sometimes
leading to her find herself suddenly naked with her backpack on her
head.
OK, I’m being flippant again, but I certainly don’t mean to mock.
All the techniques we take for granted today had to start somewhere,
and my mother was a pioneer in this field…just sometimes a naked
pioneer. But I digress.
By now, gentle reader, you must be wondering what all this has
to do with Catriona’s conversation with that old White wizard recluse.
Well, as I have said, my mother was obsessed with researching her
Crystal Mage Staff. She would pursue tenaciously any strand of a clue,
and one such strand led her to believe that the wizard Renjaf had in his
possession, a particular book that other references had hinted contained
29
such information. Yes, I know that’s a bit tentative, but it was good
enough for my mother, so she went to see him.
The problem with this idea lies in the word ‘recluse.’
Renjaf was one of those people who simply didn’t have much use
for other people and would prefer to be left alone. He was a grumpy old
man with poor eyesight and terrible manners.
*****
The door was yanked open, suddenly.
“Who are you?” a scowling, squinting Renjaf snarled before Cat
could get a word in. “You don’t look like my usual delivery boy!”
“Oh, no,” she giggled. “I’m sure I don’t! In fact, I’m quite glad I
don’t look like him. Not that there’s anything wrong with how he looks,
as far as I know. I just don’t really want to look like a boy at all.” She
giggled again. “And I’m afraid I don’t have any delivery to give you.
In fact, I want to get something from you. I—”
He slammed the door in her face. She knocked again and the door
opened.
“Sorry, bit nervous,” she said. “Short version: all I want is a
book.”
“A book?”
“Yes,” she confirmed. “Specifically, something called Shifting
Stars; it’s pretty rare from what I gather. In fact, you have the only copy
as far as I can tell. You see, I have this staff,” she held it up to show
him.
He tried to slam the door again, but Cat was quicker and shoved
her staff in the door.
“Please, let just let me pop in and borrow the book and I’ll be out
of your hair. I’ve been working on a locator spell that should be able to
find a specific title pretty quickly. Or you can get the book, if that’s
easier – although, given your eyesight, I’m not sure it would be, no
offence. Can you still read, these days? Either way, your hair will be
free of me.”
“Go away!” he yelled.
“Not until I get that book,” Cat insisted. “Sorry, but it’s really
important to me. Look, I’ll pay you for it,” she offered.
“Don’t want your money.”
30
“Alright then, I’ll trade you for it! Anything you want. Name it,
and I’ll get it for you.”
“Don’t want anything from you! I just want you gone!”
“Oh, come on!” Catriona pleaded. “It’s not like I’m asking for
the moon! Actually, I’ll give you the moon if that’s what you want. I
mean, I’m not exactly sure how I’d do it, but that’s not the point. The
point is I’m willing to give you the moon if you’ll just give me what I
want. A moon for a book – that’s not a bad deal! Please just let me have
it.”
By the way, gentle reader, if you were wondering where I get my
tendency to ramble, I trust that question has now been answered to your
satisfaction.
Forcing herself to calm down, Catriona asked, simply, “Why not?
Just tell me that. What would it cost you just to let me borrow one
book?”
“Nothing,” Renjaf said. “Just don’t care.”
“What do you mean?”
“I mean I don’t and never ever will care! My whole life nobody
ever did a damn thing for me, so why should I do anything for anybody
else?”
Cat was so stunned by that response that she involuntarily
stepped back and relaxed her grip on her staff. The wizard kicked it out
of her grasp, and it skittered down the path, forcing her to scamper after
it. Renjaf waited until she retrieved it and ran back, and then
deliberately slammed the door in her face. Cat yelped in pain, her eyes
watering. Just a bit more force and he could easily have broken her nose.
In fact, she wasn’t altogether sure he hadn’t been trying.
Still, she refused to get angry.
“I’m sorry you feel that way, Mr Renjaf,” Cat said to the closed
door, “but one way or another I’m getting that book. Tell you what: I
will do something for you! I’ll…I don’t know…” she paused to
consider.
As she looked around for inspiration, she could see how the
grounds were grown wild and out of control. It seemed to Cat that it
wouldn’t be long before Renjaf’s delivery boy would have to bring an
axe to cut his way through a forest just to reach the door.
“I’ll work on your garden!” she declared, triumphantly. “I’m a
druid – druid magic is great for garden maintenance!”
Still no response.
31
She had no idea if he could still hear her, but it didn’t matter –
even with his bad eyesight, he’d be able to see the results soon enough.
And so, Catriona spent all of her free time for the next few days,
tidying and reshaping the land, gathering up fallen leaves and branches,
removing the moss from paths, cleaning up the overgrown pond she had
discovered, and encouraging flowers to grow.
Then, one day, as she was regrowing the wooden fence that
surrounded the property, the delivery boy turned up with a horse and
cart decked out in a distinctive blue and white company livery. The gate
wasn’t wide enough for his transport, so he dismounted. The boy began
to struggle up the long path on foot, armed with a load of heavy
groceries and Catriona saw an opportunity.
32
Chapter 5
As I gaze through Time, gentle reader, I can watch my mother
living her life. I’ve done that for a long, long time. Ever since I first
discovered that I could manipulate the temporal dimensions in this way.
Given this ability, you might expect me to watch the major events for
which she is renowned: her roles in the Fall of Kullos, establishing the
Guardianship, battling demons, defeating an Angel. But often, I get the
greatest joy from her, shall we say, less than stellar moments. They
make me feel better about my own mistakes, mishaps and
misunderstandings. Perhaps my favourite of these is the story of ‘The
Cat Who Smelled of Horse.’
*****
Catriona immediately rushed over to give the delivery boy a
helping hand.
“Hi,” she said, “I’d shake your hand, but you don’t seem to have
one free. If I can take some of that stuff for you, then you will.”
“Oh, thanks a lot, miss…?” he replied, handing out some of the
bags.
“I’m Catriona,” she said, shaking his now free hand, “but you can
call me Cat because we’re friends now.”
“Jacob,” he said, returning the handshake, “and that’s Bonnie,”
he added, indicating his horse. “So, Cat, what brings you out here? I’ve
never seen anybody visit old Renjaf before. Are you a relative?”
“Oh no,” she said. “I’m just helping out, you know, tidying up
the grounds and making sure your deliveries get through.”
Jacob looked around in amazement. “Is all this you?”
She nodded. “Yep, all me. Been busy.”
“I can see that. Well, you’ve certainly made my job easier, so
thanks for that.”
“No problem, it’s a public service.”
“I’m sure the old guy will appreciate it.”
“You’d think so, wouldn’t you?” Cat agreed. “So, if I were to ask
him for one teeny, tiny little thing in return, like, say, I don’t know, just
for instance, a book. That would be perfectly reasonable, right?”
“A book?”
33
“I’ll explain later,” she said. “For now, let’s just deliver these
groceries!”
She gave him an enthusiastic punch on the shoulder and regretted
it instantly when he looked at her strangely.
They had reached the door by now and, trying to cover her
embarrassment, she cleared her throat and asked, “Do you want to
knock or shall I?”
Jacob did it himself.
“How does this work?” Cat asked. “We go inside and drop all
this off in his kitchen, or something?”
Jacob laughed, “No, I leave it just inside the door.”
That wasn’t as good as Cat had hoped, but still, it was inside the
tower, which was closer than she had been so far.
When the moment came, however, the wizard only let Jacob
inside, using his magic to keep Catriona on the doorstep while snatching
the bags from her hand.
Doing her best to seize the moment, she said, “Jacob here was
just saying he thought I’d done a good job with your grounds, Mr
Renjaf, and he thought it would be pretty reasonable if you were to give
me that book I wanted, in return.”
“Well, I didn’t exactly—” Jacob began, but Cat shushed him to
cut him off.
“So, what do you say? Deal?”
Renjaf’s response, gentle reader, was something rude and
offensive that I see no need to write here. Suffice to say, as Jacob
stepped back outside and began to head back down the path, Catriona
was left once again staring at the door, frustrated, hands on hips.
Not one to give up, though, a new approach formulated in her
mind. After all, there was clearly at least one person who was allowed
inside Renjaf’s door. If she could just get where Jacob had been a
moment ago, she would need only a moment longer to get what she
wanted.
“So, Mr Renjaf,” she muttered to herself, quietly, “I don’t look
like your usual delivery boy, eh? Well, I’ll just have to see what I can
do about that.”
Calling out to the delivery boy, she asked, “Jacob, where are you
off to now?”
“Back to Compton,” he replied.
“Great! Any chance of a lift?”
34
“Sure,” he shrugged. “No problem.”
“Excellent, thanks,” she said, linking arms with Jacob as they
walked back down the path. Jacob seemed surprised but didn’t object.
“So, tell me about yourself: do you come this way often…”
During the ride back to the town, Catriona flirted shamelessly
with Jacob, learning everything she needed to know to pull off her plan.
Studying his face, his body, his voice, committing it all to memory. She
found out that Renjaf’s deliveries mostly ran to a specific schedule, and
so Jacob would be out that way again in just a few days. Catriona got
him to agree to her joining him, on the pretext of her doing more work
on the grounds in hopes of gaining Renjaf’s favour. Of course, she
didn’t really need any help getting out there, her falcon form being
much quicker than any horse, but he didn’t need to know that. That’s
how Catriona got there over the next few days, to work on the grounds
some more. She brought Renjaf bottles of wine, chocolates, pastries
from the bakery, anything she could think of to persuade him to change
his mind, but nothing moved him, so her plan went ahead. When the day rolled around, to make things as easy as possible,
she had decided to forgo her customary red wizard’s robes for a simple
top and trousers.
This time there wasn’t as much to carry, so Cat made sure she
grabbed everything almost before the horse had stopped. Jacob called
for her to wait up, but she only walked faster. Once inside the grounds
of the wizard’s tower, she used her magic to cause a few of the plants
to reach out and grab Jacob so he couldn’t move. She even persuaded
them to place a broadleaf over his mouth so he couldn’t cry out.
Once she judged herself sufficiently far away, she concentrated
hard and shapeshifted her body to match the image of Jacob that she
had in her mind. When she looked at her reflection in the pond, she was
reasonably satisfied.
“Not bad,” she said, in a slightly deeper voice than usual. It
wasn’t perfect, but it should be good enough to fool someone from a
distance or someone with poor eyesight.
Steeling herself, she walked the remaining distance to Renjaf’s
door and knocked.
35
Cat had her locator spell fully prepared in her mind, ready to cast
the instant she was inside, then she could run after it, find the book, pop
it in her pocket dimension and get out again before the old wizard knew
what had happened or that she’d taken anything.
After a moment, the door opened.
“Good morning, Mr Renjaf,” said Catriona, brightly, in Jacob’s
voice. “I’ve got your delivery for you if you’ll just let me pop in with
it, OK?”
Renjaf scowled and squinted at ‘Jacob.’
“Something different about you,” he growled.
“Who m-me?” she stammered. “N-no, I don’t think so…”
She had to stifle a giggle. It was something she did when she was
nervous, but it wasn’t really ‘in character’ for Jacob.
“Oh!” ‘Jacob’ cried in sudden inspiration. “New haircut.”
Catriona’s real self had long ginger hair halfway down her back
– she’d been growing it out since she was little – whereas Jacob’s hair
was dark and short. She did worry that she’d made it a bit too short,
though, when shapeshifting in a hurry. She also hoped she would
remember how long her own hair should be when she changed back.
Of course, gentle reader, my mother could have used her magic
to grow her hair as long as she wished, but she always considered that
cheating, somehow.
So far, her real self had always snapped back on cue, but she
supposed there was a chance that it wouldn’t. That’s why she still added
a pair of small red bands when she shifted, as an anchor to her real self.
They were currently around ‘Jacob’s’ left ankle where they were
covered by ‘his’ socks so they wouldn’t be conspicuous.
With another grunt, Renjaf, apparently satisfied, stepped aside,
and finally Catriona found herself inside his home. She wasted not a
moment looking around before placing the bags on the floor and casting
her locator spell, which the druidess followed with her mind as it shot
up the stairs to Renjaf’s library on the tenth floor. In seconds, she would
have a precise location, but her attention wavered as she felt something
brushing against her back. Something familiar and yet somehow wrong:
her hair.
“Uh-oh!” she cried.
While casting her locator spell, she had inadvertently let go of
her image of Jacob and reverted to her old self.
36
“You!” Renjaf cried, his face darkening like the sky preparing
for a thunderstorm. “Get out of my house!”
“Look, I’m sorry, OK?” Cat said, holding up her arms in
surrender.
Damn, she had been so close!
“I just really need that book. That’s all! Really! There’s no need
to—” but she never got to finish her sentence as Renjaf picked her up
with his magic and literally threw her out of his home, through the air
and into the pond where she landed with a splash.
After crawling her way out of the water, she stood up and walked
back down the path, where she freed Jacob. He was understandably
livid.
“What the hell was that?” he demanded.
“The plants wouldn’t have harmed you,” Cat assured him. “I just
needed you out of the way.”
Jacob shook his head, “You don’t get it, do you? I wasn’t
worried about the plants.”
“Then what?” Cat wondered with a puzzled frown.
“It’s pretty solitary, this job of mine,” he said. “Not much chance
to meet people. I know Renjaf’s a grumpy old miser, but even the polite
customers aren’t interested in getting to know the delivery boy. Still,
here I thought I’d actually made a friend. But no! You were just using
me, weren’t you?”
A dripping wet Cat reluctantly nodded. “Yes, I was,” she
admitted, quietly. “I hadn’t thought of it like that, but you’re right. I’m
sorry.”
“At least you’re honest about it,” Jacob allowed.
“Oh yes, I’m fully prepared to be completely honest about my
total dishonesty,” she quipped.
Despite himself, Jacob laughed, “You know you could have just
asked me to help, right?”
“It never occurred to me,” she confessed. “When it comes to this
staff of mine, well, everybody thinks my story is insane, so I tend to
keep it to myself.” There was a pause for a moment, then she said, “So,
what now?”
“Well, I’ve got more deliveries to do around Compton…”
“Alright.”
“…and after what you pulled today, I should just leave you here.”
“Absolutely fair enough. You should probably do that.”
37
“But I’m not going to.”
“You’re not?”
“Come on,” he said, taking her arm, “Let’s see what we can do
about getting you dry.”
“Only if you’re sure,” Cat said.
“Well, I can’t leave a half-drowned Cat to fend for herself, now
can I?” Jacob quipped, taking her arm and leading her back to his cart.
“Well, OK, then,” Cat smiled. “If you put it like that, thanks. I
just don’t want to be any trouble.”
Jacob snorted, “You’ve already been that, and you really
shouldn’t thank me yet – there is a price: On the way, you can tell me
your ‘insane’ story, so I know exactly who it is I’ve made friends with.”
“That’s fair,” Cat agreed.
“Also,” Jacob added, “the only blankets I have are for Bonnie, so
before long you’re going to smell like a horse.”
“‘The Cat Who Smelled of Horse’!” Catriona laughed. “They’ll
be telling the story a thousand years from now.”
*****
And so, gentle reader, here I am, doing exactly that!
One of the reasons I include this part of my mother’s story is to
provide balance. Catriona Redfletching is a legend, but she was once a
person, and like all of us, she was flawed, fallible. She made mistakes.
I just hope, for all our sakes, that I am not making one now.
38
Chapter 6
It occurs to me to point out, gentle reader, that my mother wasn’t
completely obsessed with her quest for knowledge of her staff, her
Angel and her magic. She was, for the most part, a well-rounded young
woman with an active social life. She still had a few friends and
relationships with both Faery and humans, though she was never
particularly close to any of them. She had learned not to discuss her
Angel for fear of accusations of insanity, or her staff for fear of drawing
too much attention to it. Even her advancing druid magic was seen as
little more than a curiosity, like an obscure hobby that nobody else gets
unless they share it.
Except nobody did.
Jacob was different. When Catriona opened up to him, he did not
judge her sanity. If she said she saw a sort-of-Angel who gave her the
staff and mended her village with druid magic, then Jacob was prepared
to accept it. After all, as Cat herself argued, she had clearly got her staff
from somewhere – it could hardly have just been lying around,
unnoticed for who knows how long.
As for the ‘miraculous’ restoration of her home, he said, “I don’t
believe miracles really happen.”
“Miracles can happen if people make them happen,” Catriona
countered.
Still, from what Jacob had seen Catriona do with druid magic –
tending Renjaf’s grounds and getting the plants to restrain him – it
didn’t seem an unreasonable extrapolation. He was only sorry that the
stubborn old goat in his tower was standing in the way of something so
crucial to Cat when co-operating would cost him next to nothing. He
promised to help her in any way he could, but for now, Catriona had no
further ideas of how she was going to get her hands on that book.
There did not seem to be any other copies of the book. From what
Catriona could gather, it had never been what one could call popular,
being considered a fringe text at best, and the ravings of a madman at
worst. However, given how quick people were to question her own
sanity, she wasn’t willing to dismiss the anonymous author of Shifting
Stars so easily.
*****
39
Catriona’s friendship with Jacob grew strong over the following
weeks and months, even to the point of moving in together. Although it
was never a romantic relationship as such, she was always quite happy
to get physical with the right person under the right circumstances.
Indeed, there were a few more incidents of her pocket dimension
swallowing their clothes, which led them to take full advantage.
Everyday life continued for the best part of a year until Cat came
home from college mid-afternoon, one day, and was surprised to find
Jacob there.
“What are you doing home?” she asked. “You were going all the
way out to old Renjaf’s place, weren’t you? I thought you’d be
delivering for an hour or so, yet.”
“Demon attack near Compton,” he told her. “We don’t deliver to
outlying areas when there’s a demon attack – it’s company policy to
keep us safe.”
Catriona narrowed her eyes as she thought about the implications
of this, and the beginnings of an idea took shape in her mind.
“So, how will Renjaf get his stuff?”
“Well, if they catch the demon tonight, I’ll have to go out there
tomorrow, instead.”
“What if they don’t catch the demon that quickly?”
“They usually do,” Jacob said, not sure where his friend was
going with this.
“Yes, but sometimes it can be days, can’t it?”
“Sometimes,” Jacob agreed.
“So, what would happen to Renjaf’s delivery if you couldn’t get
through?”
“Then he’d get a magical message telling him his stuff is being
held securely in Compton ready for him to collect at his convenience.”
“Or, I suppose, inconvenience, in his case,” Cat mused.
Jacob laughed, “You’re not wrong! He gave our reception
workers a right earful the last time. He hates leaving his tower.”
“Could he authorise someone else to pick up his delivery on his
behalf?” she wondered.
“In principle, yes,” Jacob agreed, nodding, “but I don’t think he
has anyone to ask. I mean, who’s going to help out that grumpy old
miser?”
“I am!” Cat declared. She glanced at her timepiece and did a
rough calculation in her head. “His tower isn’t all that far as the falcon
40
flies. If I’m quick, I should have time to fly there, get his permission,
fly back and deliver his stuff by nightfall!”
“You’re not serious!”
“Of course I am! Think about it: you said yourself he hates
leaving his tower. If I save him the trouble, get him his delivery on time
– within a few hours, anyway – he might just be grateful enough to give
me Shifting Stars!”
“But how will you carry his stuff from the town centre to his
tower?”
“Easy! I’ll just shove it all in my pocket dimension. I’m getting
better at that.”
“Cat,” Jacob broached, carefully, “I don’t want to dampen your
enthusiasm, but the way our clothes keep popping in and out of your
pocket dimension, I’m not sure it's as stable as you’d like to think.”
Catriona smiled, moved over to Jacob and, to his astonishment,
kissed him full on the lips. She broke the kiss, shifted her head slightly
and whispered in his ear, “It’s so sweet that you still think those were
accidents.”
Jacob stepped back and gasped, “They were deliberate?”
Cat nodded.
“All of them?”
“Yes!” she assured him. “Well,” she amended, “most of them.
It’ll be fine…probably. As long as I don’t try it too close to any major
sources of wizard magic.”
“Such as Renjaf’s tower?”
“Oh, Jacob!” she cried. “Don’t worry so much! I’ll land a short
distance away, take his stuff out of my pocket dimension and carry it
up the garden path, so to speak. What could possibly go wrong? Look,
I’d better go.”
Never one to stand in her way, Jacob simply wished her luck.
*****
In the end, gentle reader, my mother’s dimensional magic was
never put to the test that day, because unfortunately, she had
underestimated how stubborn old Renjaf really was. She had already
returned many times to tend his grounds, grow the flowers, clean his
pond and even reshape and repair his stone walls, all with her druid
41
magic, but through it all, the stone wall that was Renjaf himself
remained unmoved.
She offered to get his delivery for him. He refused. She offered
to make sure his next five, ten, twenty demon-affected deliveries got
through. He still refused. She said she was prepared to do it even if it
was a Greater Demon from the lower planes, and it meant risking her
life just to bring him a few groceries. Still, he refused.
“But that means you’ll have to get it yourself,” she pointed out,
“and you hate leaving your tower!”
“Yes,” he agreed, “I do! But I’d rather do that than accept help
from you or anyone else! But by all means, keep coming back here with
more harebrained ideas on how to win me round.”
“Why not just tell me what you want and then I can do whatever
it is?”
“Because what I want is to keep denying you. I want you to keep
coming here, trying your heart out to get that book and I want to be
here, standing in your way every time.”
“But…but why would you do that?”
“Because I might not be able to see much, these days, but I can
see the pain on your face very clearly. Because I enjoy seeing that look.
Because knowing I am standing in the way of your dreams and
ambitions, the way everyone stood in the way of mine, gives me life!
And if the occasional trip into town means I get all that, then it’s a price
I’m willing to pay, and you will never, ever get what you want!”
With that, he once again slammed the door in her face. Hard.
*****
Well, that was it for my mother. She had tried to be kind; she had
tried to help. She had shown, I freely confess, gentle reader, far more
patience than I would have in her place. Now she was done. Renjaf was
a bitter, twisted, horrible old man, and she was done playing nice. She
was angrier than she had ever been in her life, but through that anger
came a smile – a dark, dangerous smile – because he had made a
mistake.
Logically, if Renjaf wouldn’t give her the book, she’d just have
to take it. Unfortunately, the wizard’s tower had excellent defences
against intruders, and it would take her some time to probe for
weaknesses and find a way to sneak in. To do that, though, she would
42
need the recluse to leave his home – her druid magic may be growing,
but she didn’t fancy going up against an enraged wizard. Up until now,
Cat had been unable to imagine anything making Renjaf leave his
tower, but he had just told her that whenever there was a demon attack,
he would definitely do exactly that, just to spite her. So, it was clear that
this was precisely what she needed: another demon attack.
*****
“And how exactly do you plan to arrange that?” Jacob demanded,
later, when she told him her idea. “Make a pact with a wizard who’s an
expert in summoning demons? Put innocent people in danger just so
you can get your book?”
“No, of course not,” Cat replied, “but that demon clause in your
contract covers any kind of demon, not just the dangerous ones, right?”
Jacob insisted they were all dangerous, but Cat disputed that.
“What about Tricksters?” she asked. “They’re more of a pest and
a nuisance than dangerous, wouldn’t you say?”
If there was a layer missing in my Great Cosmic Sandwich,
gentle reader, it’s the Tricksters – the mayonnaise of the cosmic planes.
Some people actually liked Tricksters with their pranks and their
mischief while others hated them more than hell itself. No-one was sure
where they even came from, whether from a higher or lower plane or
somewhere else entirely. They didn’t appear to have any ill intent
beyond causing random acts of chaos that they seemed to find hilarious.
They’re like that relative or co-worker who adores practical jokes and
doesn’t seem to understand that not everybody thinks they’re funny.
And like those practical jokes, they can on rare occasions get out of
hand and go dangerously wrong, which is why they are legally classed
as demons.
“Tricksters could be enough to stop my deliveries – there have
been instances of them stealing parcels before – but it's entirely
discretionary on the part of the delivery person.”
“I can work with that,” said Cat.
“But how do you propose to summon a Trickster?” Jacob asked.
“Tricksters aren’t really summoned. They just appear because
they feel like it.”
43
“So again, how—”
“—Don’t you see?” gasped an exasperated Catriona. “I don’t
need to summon a Trickster…” she shapeshifted in front of her friend.
At about four feet tall with skin the colour and texture of coral,
bulbous, squid-like head with tentacles for hair and a mischievous grin,
Jacob had to admit she did make a pretty convincing Trickster demon.
“I can become one!” Cat finished, redundantly. “All I have to do
is run around Compton like this for a couple of days, and people will
think there’s a real Trickster.”
She changed back to her usual self. She didn’t much like being a
Trickster demon, but she would do it if it meant she could finally get
her hands on Shifting Stars.
“I don’t even need to do anything much. Maybe knock the odd
rubbish bin over, grab people’s washing off the line and swap it with
next door’s. Silly things; nothing dangerous. And if it just so happened
to be a day when you’re supposed to be delivering to Renjaf…”
“…Then he’ll leave his tower and come into town,” Jacob
concluded. “But you can’t be in Compton and at his tower at the same
time,” he pointed out.
“Don’t need to be,” she countered. “You know what it’s like
when a Trickster turns up – people start blaming it for everything!”
She was quite right, gentle reader, and it’s still the same a
thousand years later. A gust of wind blows some rubbish bins over, it’s
the Trickster. A freak rain shower ruins a garden party, or someone
misplaces their keys, it’s the Trickster. That’s people for you – all this
time, all the progress, and they never really change.
“So, what exactly is your plan?” Jacob wondered, with some
trepidation.
“Well, I realise my plans don’t always work perfectly…” she
began.
“How very self-aware of you!” Jacob returned. That earned him
a playful shove.
“…and I’m keen to make you completely blameless in all this,”
she continued, ignoring his remark.
“That would be appreciated.”
“So, I’m thinking, what if you planned to deliver as usual – at
your discretion – and the ‘Trickster’ stole something from
44
you…something that would make it absolutely impossible for you to
complete your deliveries?”
When Cat outlined the rest of her idea, Jacob told her, “That has
got to be the most ridiculous radical plan I’ve ever heard in my life.”
He grinned. “Sounds great, let’s do it!”
“Ridiculous radical plan,” Cat echoed. “I like that!”
It had a good ring to it, she decided.
Catriona rewarded Jacob’s support in the bedroom that night, and
a few days later, the day before Renjaf’s next delivery was due, Catriona
and Jacob set their plan in motion.
A ‘Trickster’ did indeed appear in Compton and start causing
mischief. Jacob delivered as usual, despite having to track down a few
items that went ‘missing’ from his cart. (Actually, hidden by Catriona
in pre-arranged places.) Jacob was commended for his efforts and
reminded that he need not make his deliveries the next day if the
Trickster were still around. Jacob said he was determined to go anyway
– after all, it was only a Trickster out there, wasn’t it?
That first day, the Trickster was tolerated as people simply hoped
it would get bored and go away, but by the second day, they’d decided
enough was enough and did what people always did in these situations:
call in a demon hunter.
Demon hunters loathe Trickster cases. With all the second-hand
rumours and false sightings flying around, getting to the truth is almost
more trouble than it’s worth. Usually, some novice demon hunter is sent
in to sort it out, both because none of the more experienced ones can be
bothered and because they had to do it when they were novices. In fact,
by Catriona’s time, it had become a rite of passage for some young
demon hunters. Especially ones who felt they had something to prove.
45
Chapter 7
The second day of the Trickster attack on Compton was the day
the rains came, although Cat and Jacob both knew it was neither a real
Trickster nor a real attack. It was, however, real rain, in case you were
wondering. Weather notwithstanding, Jacob set out on his deliveries as
usual, ‘intending’ to do his full rounds, including going all the way out
to Renjaf’s tower. Along the way, however, true to Catriona’s
‘prediction,’ he managed to lose his horse. Naturally, everybody would
blame the Trickster demon, as they always did in these cases, and in a
way, they were right. Just not in the usual way. The horse was, in fact,
not really a horse at all, but Catriona herself.
Where was his real horse, you may ask, gentle reader?
Well, that morning, my mother had got up early, taking her ‘sortof-Jacob’ form and ‘stealing’ Bonnie. If anybody happened to see them
that morning, in the dark, from a distance, it would not arouse any
suspicion. She had considered stealing the horse as the Trickster, but
the last thing she wanted was to attract the attention of the demon hunter
she had heard was in town.
The previous evening, when going over the plan, she had asked
Jacob to draw up a list of all the locations in and around Compton that
he would look for Bonnie if she ever wandered off. Places where a horse
could be safely left for a few hours.
Now, having been ‘stranded,’ he could still make deliveries
within the boundaries of the town itself, though it would obviously take
longer, while at the same time ‘looking’ for his horse. But Renjaf’s
delivery was out of the question, so he simply took his packages back
to the depot and ensured that a message was sent. During the day, as he
did his rounds, Jacob planned to ‘look’ for Bonnie in all the places he
usually would, making sure that he ‘found’ the correct one as late as
possible.
Meanwhile, Catriona made sure that the Trickster was seen all
over Compton that morning, never staying in one place for too long. It
wasn’t easy, staying two steps ahead of the demon hunter all that time.
She had nearly been caught on one occasion, already, but had managed
to give her the slip by running around a corner, shapeshifting into her
red-banded falcon form and flying away.
46
Around midday, Cat decided she had pushed her luck enough for
one day and, seeing an inn up ahead, she decided to stop for a drink and
a bite to eat. Cat rolled her eyes at the tacky name ‘FaerWay Tavern’ –
obviously making a ‘clever pun’ out of her Faery heritage. The sign – a
nonsensical tiny winged Faery hovering above a road – was even worse,
and as a rule, she would refuse to go inside on principle. But going
anywhere else would waste time she didn’t have, and she really was
famished, so she stuck to her plan.
When she stepped outside again, she began walking, searching
for a suitably secluded spot to shift to her falcon form once more, so
she could quickly fly to Renjaf’s tower to watch for him leaving. She
had to walk quite a distance away from the town centre, as the early
afternoon was a busy time in Compton. It didn’t matter that the
Trickster wouldn’t be around the rest of the afternoon; no doubt the
rumour mill would be enough to keep the demon hunter busy.
Unfortunately, Catriona was so busy checking all around to make
sure no-one would see her, that she failed to look where she was putting
her feet and stepped right into a demon trap. A small bubble of magic
surrounded her, keeping her inside.
“No, no, no!” she cursed herself. “I don’t have time for this!”
She tried to use her druid magic but cut off from nature as she
was, it wouldn’t respond. Nothing they had taught her at wizard college
would help her in this situation, either. Attempts to retrieve her staff
from her pocket dimension also failed to yield results, not that she could
have used it, anyway. Even if she could unlock its power, when her
Angel spoke of a ‘dire emergency of worldwide cataclysmic
proportions,’ it was unlikely that ‘getting out of a demon trap that you
blundered into and is only there because you’re running around,
pretending to be a Trickster,’ is quite what they had in mind.
Fortunately, the demon hunter came by before long to check on
her trap. She cut quite the imposing figure, dressed all in white from her
tight-fitting top and short woollen skirt over white leggings that were
just visible before disappearing inside long white boots that finished
over the knee. The only splashes of colour were a silver-embroidered,
purple leather mask that covered the upper half of her face, just leaving
her mouth free, and a matching bandana tied around her neck. By her
side was a large, ferocious-looking leopard.
The demon hunter looked Catriona up and down, then finally
spoke not to her, but to her leopard.
47
“Well, Shyleen,” she sighed, taking a beer bottle out of a pocket,
popping the cap and taking a good, long swig, “looks like we’ve got
ourselves another one.”
“Hi, any chance of getting me out of here?” Cat asked with a
sheepish grin, feeling incredibly embarrassed at having been so
careless.
The demon hunter scowled and took another drink.
“I suppose you’re going to blame the Trickster like the last one?”
“The Trickster?” Cat wondered, then quickly seized the excuse
she’d been offered. “Oh yes, that’s right,” she giggled, “the Trickster,
erm, pushed me in here.”
The demon hunter drank some more. She seemed unconvinced.
“Twice in half a day, that’s already wearing thin. Personally, I
think you people just need to watch where you’re going!”
Cat decided honesty was probably the best policy if she was
going to get out of this before it was too late, so she confessed that she
had, indeed, just stepped into the trap by mistake.
“I knew it!” cried the demon hunter. “The gods only know how
you people manage it! The last one, at least he had an excuse, carrying
all that stuff. What were you doing, daydreaming?”
Catriona spread her hands, helplessly. “Pretty much, yeah. Sorry.
So, any chance of getting me out of here? I don’t mean to be rude, but
there’s, erm, somewhere I need to be, really quite urgently.”
“Oh yeah?” The demon hunter shot back, taking one more swig
from her bottle. “Well I have a Trickster to catch really quite urgently,
but instead I end up wasting half my time chasing rumours and the other
half rescuing townsfolk from my demon traps!”
Cat was getting really desperate and frustrated. Yes, she’d
blundered into one of her traps. Yes, it was stupid and careless. Yes,
she had definitely wasted this young woman’s time, but she needed to
get out, and she needed to get out now.
The demon hunter’s eyes narrowed, shrewdly. “How do I know
you’re not really a demon yourself?”
“What?” Cat forced a laugh. “What do you mean?”
“Well, there’s a Trickster demon running around here,
somewhere,” said the demon hunter, intending to take another drink,
but discovered her bottle was empty. She held it up to the light and
peered inside as if to check if she’d missed any and got a drop in her
eye for her trouble. She swore and turned away for a moment, lifted up
48
her mask and used the corner of her bandana to wipe her eye. When she
turned back, her mask was back in place.
“I was chasing it, earlier,” she continued. “Thought I had it
cornered. Next thing I know there’s a bird with weird markings on its
leg, and the Trickster’s vanished somewhere.”
Cat tried to suppress a panicked look. “What, erm, what’s that
got to do with me?”
“Well, I don’t know. All I know is there’s a girl stuck inside a
trap that’s supposed to catch a Trickster. So that gets me wondering:
Maybe you’re not really a girl at all. If a Trickster demon can turn into
a bird, what else can he turn into? Things aren’t always what they seem,
believe me, I know! So, as I say, maybe you really are a girl, or maybe
you’re really a Trickster demon that’s just pretending to be a girl. How
am I to know, eh?”
Catriona’s pulse was beating rapidly. This demon hunter was so,
so close to the truth. Too close. She didn’t know what to say, what to
do. Fortunately, she was saved from having to think of anything.
With a flourish, the demon hunter pocketed her empty beer
bottle, and disarmed the trap, allowing Catriona to step free, although
she was so nervous by now, she could barely stand up.
“Nah!” the demon hunter said, dismissively. “Only messing with
ya! Of course you’re not a demon! I mean, come on: shapeshifting
magic? Pfft! As if!”
“Yeah,” Catriona laughed, allowing her nervous tension to flow
out of her body. “As if!”
“I should know better, really. The rumours in this place are out
of hand already, without me giving you lot any more ideas! Honestly,
if I were to believe all the stories, the Trickster would have to be in two
places at once. Fortunately, thanks to my link with Shyleen here,” she
indicated her leopard companion, “I can be, too.”
“Well, if it helps, I’m not really from Compton,” Cat assured her,
secretly delighted that her ruse had worked so well and sparked so many
false rumours. “Just passing through, so they’re not actually ‘my lot,’
and I definitely won’t be spreading any daft rumours about
shapeshifting Tricksters.”
“Thanks for that, at least,” said the demon hunter, “and sorry
about the wind-up job. You must have thought I was totally mad and
drunk to believe such a thing.”
“To be fair,” Cat smiled, “you are drunk.”
49
“Well, of course I’m drunk! You’d have to be mad to do this job
sober!” the demon hunter quipped. “Anyway, didn’t you say you have
to be somewhere?”
“Yes, I do,” Cat agreed. “Shame. It was actually kind of fun
meeting you.”
“You have a strange idea of fun.”
“Oh, you have no idea how I get my kicks around here…er…I’m
sorry, I got your leopard’s name, but not yours.”
“Mandalee,” she replied.
“I’m Catriona. Cat to my friends.”
“Ah, now that explains it,” Mandalee said.
“Explains what?” asked Cat.
Mandalee stroked Shyleen’s head and replied, “I’ve always got
along really well with cats!”
Cat grinned and hurried away, this time making absolutely sure
she was out of sight before shapeshifting to her falcon form and taking
to the sky. She knew Renjaf would have received his message about his
waiting packages by now and if he were true to form, he would want,
however grudgingly, to leave his tower and get them as soon as
possible. Cat just prayed she wasn’t too late. She couldn’t pull this stunt
a second time, and she had no other ideas of how she was going to get
her hands on Shifting Stars. Without that, her research into her Angel,
her staff and everything related to it were at a dead end. Frankly, this
research was such a part of her now that she couldn’t imagine what she
would do with her life without it.
This was so important to her, it felt as though she was burning
inside. She felt like she was on the verge of a new phase in her life, and
it was imperative she did not miss her chance. Renjaf’s tower had been
in her way for too long already. Catriona thought about the things
Renjaf had said to her last time. He wasn’t merely stubborn, and it
wasn’t that he didn’t understand or care about what this meant to her as
he had first suggested. No. He knew, he understood perfectly, and he
was actually enjoying her suffering. She had no idea what had happened
to make him that way, but she was done feeling sorry for him. Now she
felt only the burn.
She let these feelings fuel her, energise her for what she was
about to do. This was it: this time she was getting that book, even if she
had to destroy Renjaf’s tower to get it. Because she’d figured it out,
now – that demon hunter had given her the answer. No matter what
50
wizard magic Renjaf had in place, defending against intruders, there
was one thing he couldn’t possibly have prepared for because nobody
believed it existed. Mandalee had practically seen it, and she still didn’t
believe it: shapeshifting. But not just changing her own shape. Her
magic had grown significantly through working on Renjaf’s land, and
she’d already done what she needed to do. She’d just been doing it
backwards.
51
Chapter 8
The rain that had met the day in Compton was very much present
in the outlying areas, too, which helped Cat in her reconnaissance of
Renjaf’s tower. Muddy footprints leading away from the tower told her
that the wizard had already left the building. That was good news in one
way because she wanted the tower empty for what she was about to do
– she had no wish to harm him. In another way, however, getting there
late meant she did not have as much time to do what she was about to
do, as she would have liked. Still, it was now or never.
This was a turning point in my mother’s history. You see, gentle
reader, what Catriona had finally realised, was that when she had been
trying to think of a way to affect entry, she had been thinking too much
like a wizard. It was how she had been taught to think in college, but
she now knew those lessons were valuable in only one respect: they
were an excellent example of what not to do. She didn’t need to
penetrate the shields and wards that were attached to the stonework of
the building. That’s what a wizard would try to do. For all their fancy
tricks, much of wizard magic came down to power and pure
mathematics. To penetrate the shield, the power of the attack would
have to be greater. Different types of magical attack might work better
than others, as shields tended to be unequal in their resistances, but
ultimately, it was all about the numbers.
Druid magic was different. It wasn’t about power. If Catriona
could use her druid magic to reshape and repair his stone walls, then
she could use that same magic to tear them down.
Catriona inhaled a few deep breaths and took a firm grip on her
staff. She wasn’t going to pull power from it, but it did serve as an aid
to concentration and focus. She sent forth her magic, not quickly and
violently, but slowly and gently. In moments, the stonework began to
reshape itself, growing softer and eroding away as if the building had
not seen any maintenance for centuries. At last, with an almighty crash,
the tower collapsed under its own weight.
‘What about the shields?’ you may ask, gentle reader.
Well, you see, the shields were attached to the surface of the
building, but when the building was reduced to rubble, that surface area
grew exponentially. Through it all, the magical shield tried its best, but
ultimately, there simply wasn’t enough of it to go around, and so there
52
were gaps. Catriona sent her locator spell through the remains of the
building until it found Shifting Stars. It was buried beneath the rubble,
but that was OK, she just asked the debris very nicely if it would mind
moving a bit more in one place, allowing her to retrieve it. The rubble
didn’t much care what shape it took, so it was a simple task to move it
aside. When Cat finally got her hands on the book, she found it
somewhat worse for wear, but again, that was no problem, she just used
her magic again. It was all just shapeshifting when she got right down
to it; she just needed the book to return to the shape and condition it was
in a moment ago when it was sitting on a bookshelf, and soon enough
it was. It was all a question of imagination and explaining to Blessed
Alycia what it was she wished to do. The Mother of Nature freed up a
tiny portion of the energy she was holding in, which was channelled
through Catriona, used to accomplish what she needed and then
recycled back into the cosmos.
It felt exhilarating – both the magical achievement itself and the
fact that she finally had the book she had been seeking for so long – and
her staff itself seemed to reward her with a rather pleasant jolt. It had
done something similar when she had unlocked its first layer of
security, she remembered. At the time Catriona wasn’t sure if she’d
imagined it – now she was sure she hadn’t. The staff definitely seemed
to be ‘rewarding’ her when she moved a step closer to understanding it.
She carefully slipped the book into her pocket dimension and
took a moment to bask in her feelings. That was a mistake because
before she knew what was happening, she was being thrown to the
ground by wizard magic. Renjaf had returned.
In the split second that she was falling, she was able to persuade
the vegetation to move and grow rapidly enough to cushion her fall. She
couldn’t afford to surrender to unconsciousness. Still, she was held
there, hands pinned beneath her, unable to move a muscle.
“What the hell have you done!” Renjaf demanded. “That was my
home!”
Only a day ago, she would have talked to him, tried to reason
with him, but things were different now – she was different now. She
had woken something within herself. Call it stubbornness, call it
confidence, call it arrogance, call it madness – she would be accused of
all of these in the years that followed. But whatever name one might
wish to give it, she was done playing nice with those who refused to cooperate.
53
Laying there, she focussed her mind and reached out to the
grounds that surrounded her, because the tower might have been his
home, but the grounds were hers. He had neglected them where Cat had
tended them. Through his inaction, they had been choking. Through her
actions, they were thriving. Now, when she needed their help, she
scarcely needed to ask. Tree branches reached out to restrain him, and
vines snaked through the grass to tie his hands, for wizard magic had a
weakness: it relied on the user weaving intricate patterns in the air,
writing in the language of magic. But what if he couldn’t move his
hands? What if his hands were tied? Well then, his powers were
severely diminished, if not entirely absent.
She felt him try to attack her with powerful mental magic, but her
link with Pyrah meant he was wasting his time. Time he didn’t have.
Plants grew tall around him, pressing, squeezing, choking him even as
Catriona was released. She stood and mentally thanked nature for her
help, but enough was enough, so they loosened their grip.
Striding purposefully towards Renjaf’s feebly struggling, greencovered form, she said, “You brought this on yourself, old man. All I
wanted was the book. That’s all. Just one book. I have no idea what
happened to you that made you the way you are, and frankly, I don’t
care anymore. You’ve pushed me too far, and this is the result. Stuck in
the undergrowth like an oversized garden gnome and your tower in
ruins at your feet. I’m not going to apologise for this, and I’m not going
to ask for an apology from you because I know you won’t mean it. What
I am going to do is what I came here to do in the first place, and as it
stands, my work here is only half done.”
With that, she spun around, raised her staff, and channelled her
magic once more, allowing Renjaf to watch wide-eyed as his tower
gradually knitted itself back together, reverting to its former shape and
dimensions until it was impossible to tell anything had ever happened
to it in the first place. As if to mock the wizard’s abilities, even his
shields were back in place. When he later probed them with his magic,
they would assure him that they were never breached, which was
technically accurate. It was hardly their fault that his tower had decided
to change its shape.
With a glance from Catriona, the greenery retreated from the
wizard, freeing him once more.
“How did you do that?” he breathed in awe.
54
“You can puzzle over that in your own time,” Cat replied. “My
time is better spent elsewhere – I’ve wasted enough of it here already. I
suggest you go inside; it’s quite safe. Everything should be as you left
it…more or less.”
“I’ll get you for this!” he swore, glowering at her.
Cat snorted a laugh and shook her head in disbelief.
“You really want to threaten me now? I just beat you with both
hands literally behind my back! As I say, I’ve wasted enough of my
time here already, and I’ll waste no more. I will be leaving now; don’t
even think about trying anything.”
With that, she strode down his path, all greenery parting before
her. The gate opened as she approached and shut itself behind her. She
wanted to shift into a red-banded falcon and return to Compton as
quickly as possible, but she wouldn’t do that until she was definitely
out of his sight. She had learned that lesson already today. As soon as
she was positive that she was well hidden from Renjaf, she paused just
for a moment and asked the wind to carry her voice to his ears.
“Almost forgot,” she said. “I suggest you get someone to tend
your grounds every now and again. I won’t be coming back, and they
might get a bit cranky if you neglect them again.”
She flew back without incident to Compton and the place where
she’d left Jacob’s horse – literally, the last place her friend would look
for her. It was one of several disused barns on the outskirts of Compton,
dating back to when the town used to be farmland.
This time, she made absolutely sure there was no demon hunter
around when she shapeshifted to her ‘delivery boy’ form so that she
could pass as Jacob while she brought Bonnie outside where her friend
could ‘find’ her.
It was imperative that any passers-by wouldn’t recognise
Catriona. That could lead to awkward questions about what she was
doing with Jacob’s horse when it had supposedly been stolen by the
Trickster. Catriona tied Bonnie up safely outside, and then, moving
away from the immediate area, chose another old barn as the place to
discreetly change back. She smiled at the sight of the Trickster tracks
she had left, earlier. Mandalee was right – she did have a strange sense
of fun, sometimes.
Flushed with a newfound confidence, she visualised what she
wanted to do next: Reach into her pocket dimension, throw in her boy
clothes, shapeshift and immediately clothe herself in her customary red
55
wizard’s robes, all in one fluid movement. As she initiated the process,
however, a small spider brushed her left ear, causing her to reflexively
jump forward while trying to brush it off. In doing so, she once again
failed to watch where she was going and fell into a demon trap, midprocess.
That, gentle reader, left my mother still looking a lot like Jacob,
completely naked except for a strategically placed wooden staff with a
large blue crystal on top. And just as before, cut off from nature, her
magic simply refused to work. She was stuck. Again.
56
Chapter 9
Isn’t it always the way, gentle reader?
There you are, feeling on top of the world, flush with success and
the next thing you know, you’re stuck in a trap with nothing but a stick
to protect your dignity.
Catriona was grateful for the cover of the late evening darkness;
it was the only cover she was going to get until the demon hunter,
Mandalee, came along to rescue her. That was not a meeting she was
looking forward to, but she knew it was the only way she was getting
out.
Eventually, the young woman in white strode into view, leopard
by her side. Her expression seemed to fluctuate between annoyed and
amused.
“Hi,” Cat-as-Jacob said sheepishly with a small wave.
“I can’t wait to hear your explanation,” Mandalee said, hands on
hips. “It had better be spectacularly good if you expect me to let you
out!”
“It isn’t easy to explain.”
“I bet it isn’t!” Mandalee returned. “Well, while you’re trying to
work that one out, let me ask you an easier one: Do you have a brother?”
“A brother?” Cat frowned. “No, why?”
“Because you look a lot like some guy I fished out of one of my
traps this morning.”
Cat thought for a moment, and then realised who she must mean.
“Was he carrying a load of packages by hand because he’d lost
his horse, by any chance?”
Mandalee nodded. “So you do know him.”
“Yes, that’ll be Jacob,” Cat replied, “and no, I’m not his brother.”
“Then how come you look so much alike?”
“Ah, well, you see, now we’re back to the part that isn’t easy to
explain.”
“I can leave you for a while to figure it out,” Mandalee offered.
“No!” Cat cried. “Wait! You can’t leave me like this, it’s a bit
cold to be naked.”
“Better talk quickly, then.”
“Alright, I’ll tell you, but you’re not going to believe me.”
“Try me.”
57
“Alright then, well, for a start, I’m not really a boy, I’m a girl.”
All trace of humour left Mandalee’s face. “What?” she
demanded.
“I said you wouldn’t believe me, but it’s true: I’m really a girl.”
For some reason Catriona couldn’t fathom, Mandalee looked
furious. “Are you trying to be funny? Why the hell would you say
something like that? I've got a good mind to leave you in there for the
rest of the week!”
“But it’s true!” Cat protested. “We met earlier,” she pressed on,
quickly, seeing the demon hunter turn as if to walk away. “I’m Catriona.
Cat. You said you always got on really well with cats, present situation
excepted!”
Mandalee turned back around, her anger gradually giving way to
puzzlement.
“You’re serious?”
Cat nodded.
“Not taking the piss?”
“No, why would I?”
“You honestly don’t know?”
“I’m sorry, I really don’t know what else I can say,” Cat admitted,
“but if you let me out, I can show you.”
“Alright,” Mandalee accepted, “but if I find out you really are
taking the piss, well, let’s just say Shyleen here’s feeling pretty
hungry.”
With that warning, she deactivated her trap. Cat immediately felt
her connection to nature restored and breathed deeply before shifting
back to her natural form, ensuring her long hair fell strategically over
her breasts.
Mandalee stared, wide-eyed and open-mouthed.
“Sorry,” she apologised, turning away, “but if you’re really a girl
why would you ever want to—” she seemed to catch herself, “—I mean,
how did you change like that? Obviously, it’s shapeshifting magic, but
don’t you lose a year of your life whenever you do it or something?”
Cat looked at her, quizzically. “You’ve been reading too many
books! Basically, it’s something I’ve learned to do with my druid
magic. Speaking of changing, do you mind if I put some clothes on?
People don’t usually get to see this much of me unless they buy me a
drink first,” she quipped, trying to ease the tension.
58
“Of course!” The demon hunter gasped. “Sorry, it’s just a lot to
take in, erm…” she started to take off her backpack, “…I think I might
have something you could throw on—”
“—No need for that,” Cat interrupted. “If you could just hold my
staff for a minute…” she held it out with one hand as she started to open
her pocket dimension with the other.
When Mandalee, trying not to look at Cat’s now fully exposed
body, wrapped her hand around the staff, there was a flash of magic as
they briefly held it simultaneously, sending them and the staff flying
apart. At the same time, Catriona’s clothes fell out of her pocket
dimension, along with Shifting Stars, and Mandalee’s clothes fell in –
even the mask and bandana were gone. Now the tables were turned,
with a naked Mandalee desperately clinging to the staff to try and hide
something Catriona had really not expected to see.
All at once, Cat put two and two together. Things Mandalee had
said, the mask hiding her face, her reaction to the idea that Cat might be
‘trying to be funny’ when she said she was really a girl. Mandalee had
– biologically speaking – been born male, or at least with a male body.
Something the demon hunter was obviously not happy about.
Catriona was abject in her apology. “Mandalee!” she cried. “I am
so sorry!”
She immediately grabbed the demon hunter’s stuff from her
pocket dimension and handed it to her, gently. She turned her back and
retrieved her staff as Mandalee dressed. Cat didn’t trust herself to throw
them straight on with her magic, nor did she believe that would be polite
or acceptable to Mandalee.
“That’s what you were going to say, before, isn’t it? That’s why
you were furious, because you thought I was…but I wasn’t, I swear! I
had no idea! Dear gods, I had no right to ‘out’ you like that. I would
never—”
Mandalee placed a hand on Cat’s shoulder and turned her around.
“It’s OK,” she assured her. “I believe you. I’ve mostly learned to pass,
and the clothes and mask help with that,” she was fully dressed, now,
apart from her mask, which she was about to put on, “but without
them…” she trailed off.
Cat gently touched her arm to stay her hand. “You don’t have to
hide your face,” she said, “not from me, and you shouldn’t for anyone
else, either. It’s not right.”
59
“It’s just easier when I’m interacting with people,” Mandalee
shrugged. Even so, she didn’t put her mask back on. “Which, to be
honest, I do as little as possible.”
Cat asked if she would like to go somewhere and talk, but
Mandalee pulled a face at that.
“Well at least let’s sit down here,” Cat suggested.
“I don’t know, the ground’s still pretty wet from all the rain,”
Mandalee pointed out.
“Oh, I can soon sort that out,” she replied dismissively and used
her magic to encourage the grass, trees and plants to drink a bit quicker,
effectively creating a dry patch large enough for two women and one
leopard to sit in comfort.
“Shyleen says ‘thanks,’” Mandalee said with a smile.
Pulling on her experience of communicating sympathically with
Pyrah, Cat tried to project, ‘Welcome, respect, friendship.’
Mandalee’s eyes widened in surprise. “What was that? You
spoke to her?”
“Well, sort of,” Cat allowed. “I call it sympathic communication.
It isn’t easy to explain.”
“Like how you end up naked, cross-gendered and stuck in a
demon trap?” Mandalee laughed.
Cat joined in the laughter, “Yes, like that,” she agreed.
“Shyleen said it’s not like when I do it – I'm a Cleric of Nature, I
speak just about every major animal language telepathically. She says
she didn’t hear her language but still understood what you were trying
to convey.”
“Well, that’s a better explanation than I could have given you,”
Cat admitted.
“Don’t worry, her explanations are a lot better than mine, too.
She’s a very philosophical cat, our Shyleen. She’s taken a definite liking
to you and approves of our friendship.”
“Oh, so we’re definitely friends now, then?” Cat smiled.
“Shyleen says we are, so we must be,” Mandalee insisted with a
grin. “She’s never wrong.”
“Well then, far be it from me to argue.” She held out a hand,
which Mandalee shook, warmly. “Glad to meet you, Friend,” she said.
“Likewise, Friend,” the demon hunter affirmed. “Dear gods, I
can’t remember the last time I felt so free talking to someone, without
worrying about,” she gestured vaguely to indicate herself, “you know.”
60
Cat waved that aside and with a wink, she quipped, “Hey, I
showed you mine, you showed me yours!”
Mandalee snorted. “We’ve certainly left ourselves with very little
to hide from each other. How did that actually happen, anyway? Any
ideas?”
“Ah, you gave me the final piece of the puzzle I needed to put it
together.”
“I’m all ears,” said Mandalee.
“Not from what I saw!” Cat remarked.
Mandalee gave her a shove for her trouble and tried to look
intimidating while stifling her laughter.
Cat then explained about her pocket dimension magic and how,
although it was mostly under control, now, she’d had problems with
instability in the presence of wizard magic.
“It seems your cleric magic was enough to confuse it, too. Just
like your cleric-powered demon trap kept me stuck in a male body.”
With a grimace, Mandalee replied, “I know that nightmare all too
well. Honestly, if I could shapeshift like you, I’d never go back to this
body.”
Cat fixed her new friend with a serious look. “Do you really mean
that?”
“I’ve meant it all my life,” she replied ruefully. “Unfortunately,
miracles don’t happen.”
“Miracles can happen if people make them happen,” Cat
countered.
“Nobody has that kind of power,” Mandalee insisted with a shake
of her head.
“Power isn’t everything,” Cat returned. “With the right
application of knowledge, skill, technique and imagination, people can
achieve all kinds of things.”
“What are you saying?” Mandalee demanded, her heart rate
accelerating. “That you could…” she wiggled her fingers, vaguely.
“Well it’ll take a bit more than that,” Cat told her with a smile,
“and I certainly can’t do it right here this minute, but with time and
study, I really don’t see why it shouldn’t be possible.”
“Don’t do this to me, Cat!” Mandalee pleaded. “Not unless
you’re sure.”
61
“I’m not sure,” Cat admitted, “and I won’t attempt anything until
I am, but I am confident. Give me time and I honestly, truly believe I’ll
be able to do it.”
Mandalee wrapped her new friend in a huge embrace. “That
would be amazing.” She broke the hug, held Cat by the shoulders at
arm’s length, staring into her eyes. “But whether you can do it or not,
the fact that you’ll try makes us friends for life. That’s it, now. You’re
stuck with me.”
“I’ll drink to that with pleasure!” Cat declared, then she realised
something. “Hey, you don’t have a drink with you!”
“I only drink when I’m on duty. I’m done for the night. Let the
Trickster do what it will!” she declared.
“Ah,” Cat remarked.
“What?” Mandalee asked.
“In the interests of having nothing to hide, there’s one thing I
haven’t told you.”
“About the Trickster?”
Cat nodded.
“You know something about it?”
Again, Cat nodded.
“Go on, then. What is it?”
“There isn’t one,” Cat admitted. “It was just me. All part of my
ridiculous radical plan to get this.” She held up Shifting Stars.
Mandalee screamed with laughter. “You spent two days running
around as a Trickster just to get your hands on a book?” She was
incredulous.
“Oh, you have no idea what I’ve been through to get this,” Cat
replied, ruefully.
Wiping tears from her eyes, the demon hunter stood up and held
out a hand to her friend, “I think this story is going to need a drink.”
Cat took the hand and pulled herself up. “I thought you said you
only drink when you’re on duty?”
“I am on duty,” she replied, linking arms with Cat and sending a
telepathic invitation for Shyleen to join them. “I just caught the
Trickster!”
The two friends laughed as they walked together, heading for the
FaerWay Tavern.
62
Chapter 10
Serendipity. A beautiful word for a beautiful concept. Through
this happy accident, gentle reader, a friendship was born: a friendship
for the ages. From this moment, though the paths of their lives might
send them apart, they would always find their way back to each other.
Only one thing could part them forever, and I know Aunt Mandalee still
misses my mother terribly. Having said that, my mother wasn’t entirely
convinced their meeting was just an accident. She had the strangest
feeling it was more than that.
“There is still one mystery,” Cat told her friend after she shared
her story. They were enjoying a drink outside the FaerWay Tavern –
for some reason, they didn't allow leopards inside. At least, she hoped
it was Shyleen they were objecting to and no-one else.
“What's that?” Mandalee wondered.
“My staff.”
“Your staff?”
“Yes, I have no idea why it reacted the way it did when we
touched it together before.”
“Has another cleric ever held it before?” Mandalee asked.
“Not while I’ve owned it, no, but it’s deeper than that. Mandalee,
I don’t normally let anyone else touch it!” She trusted Jacob, but she’d
never let him get his hands on it. “In fact, come to think of it,” she
mused, “I’m not even sure why I let you. It just felt…right, somehow.”
“Are you saying we were destined to meet, or something?”
Cat shook her head, emphatically. “Not exactly. I’m not really
one for destiny as such, but I do have the strangest feeling…”
“What kind of feeling?” Mandalee prompted.
Catriona took a few breaths to consider before responding, “Like
somebody wanted us to meet. They didn’t make it happen – more like
they encouraged it to happen. Like when you introduce two friends to
each other, and you hope they’ll get along and you’re pleased when they
do.”
“Well, you’re a druid, and I’m a Cleric of Nature, so maybe it
was Blessed Alycia herself who encouraged it,” Mandalee suggested.
“Maybe,” Cat allowed. “Anyway,” she continued, dismissing it
for the moment, “what would life be without a few mysteries?”
63
“Quiet?”
“You say ‘quiet,’ but all I hear is ‘dull,’” Cat replied, finishing
her drink.
Mandalee smiled and downed the remains of hers.
“Why do I get the feeling my life is going to be neither of those
things ever again now I’ve met you?”
Cat spread her hands. “I really can’t imagine!”
By this time, Catriona was getting slightly worried about Jacob.
She would have expected him to have turned up by now. She sent out a
sympathic message to him, conveying a sense of ‘searching’ and
‘concern.’
While she waited for a response, she explained to Mandalee that
since Jacob had no magic, she had to initiate contact and it took mental
effort to sustain it even for a short period. In theory, with another magic
user, she believed she could set up a permanent, effortless, two-way
sympathic link.
Jacob responded with the concept of ‘getting closer’ and
‘location query.’
“He’s on his way and wants to know exactly where I am,” she
translated for Mandalee, then she sent a sympathic message, telling
Jacob she was drinking at the rear of the tavern, rather than simply
meeting outside as they had planned.
Jacob returned an image that conveyed suitable disgust at her
projected image of the culturally offensive sign in front of her: a road
or path over which hovered a nonsensical tiny ‘Faery,’ complete with
wings.
Why was it so difficult for some humans to realise that Faery did
not have wings; that was Piskeys, their smaller cousins. Except there
weren’t any anymore.
*****
Long ago, gentle reader, Faery shared their forest homes with
Piskeys. Then, gradually, infertility increased, and their numbers began
to decline. Nobody knows why. By my mother’s time, the last of the
winged Piskeys had died around eight hundred years ago, and the
species became extinct.
But their legacy did not entirely disappear from Tempestria,
because before their fertility problems began, interbreeding with Faery
64
was common, and so modern Faery retained within their bodies, a small
sliver of what the Piskeys once were. Their smaller, lighter builds were
the primary example, but every now and then, a baby was born with
tiny, vestigial wings on their back. The Piskey legacy was stronger in
them, which also meant they could not have children.
Sadly, some humans were wilfully ignorant about other cultures,
and depicting Faery like Piskeys with wings was an example of this.
The way my mother saw it, it was not only insulting to the Faery, but
also to the memory of the Piskeys who were no longer around to protest.
*****
Jacob’s response told Cat he had correctly deduced that, against
her better judgement, she was an actual customer at the appallingly
named FaerWay Tavern and told her he’d be there in five minutes.
After relaying that to Mandalee, she said, “I don’t want to be
rude, but do you mind if we drop the conversation for a bit so I can read
some of Shifting Stars? Having gone to so much trouble to get hold of
this book, I’m itching to see if it was worth it.”
Mandalee said she didn’t mind at all and was curious herself. So,
Cat opened the book that was apparently so ridiculed.
*****
The world is wrong, and the stars make no sense.
Catriona and Mandalee shared a look – not the most promising
start.
Clerics would have us believe that the cosmos is a plaything of
the gods, and not to be understood by mortals. But that is what they said
about magic, and yet through study, wizards can now do what clerics
said was impossible without recourse to any gods. I put it to you that
the world is inherently understandable, conforming to laws that we can
begin to formulate. At least it should be.
Yet the stars will not behave.
For a while, they do. Sometimes for long periods, their positions
in the heavens are entirely rational, sensible, predictable. Then, every
now and again, at seemingly random intervals, there is a Star Shift, and
65
some of them stray off course. The question is: Is something moving the
stars, or is something moving our world relative to them? What effect
might that have on Tempestria? This is to say nothing of the void storms
– the vortex that swirls all around us. That seems to change its pattern
at the same time as the Star Shift. Why? What are the void storms? Is
there some link between them and the stars? Is the movement of one the
cause of the other, or are both symptoms of the same problem?
In this book, I intend to present my evidence and hope to at least
begin to answer some of these questions.
*****
I am not going to reproduce the entire book here, gentle reader,
for reasons of copyright violation if nothing else. Suffice to say, what
followed was mainly annotated diagrams and star charts along with
wild, speculative theories about the forces that might be involved. It
appeared to be superficially scientific in its approach, but as Mandalee
said, “You could probably write a book all about the science of the flight
of pink elephants, but that doesn’t make them real.”
Even Catriona might have been sceptical except for one thing. It
was the thing that made her seek out this book in the first place. The
other books she had read that referenced Shifting Stars if only to point
and laugh. References that suggested this book contained a supposedly
first-hand account of an event that connected to something very
precious to Catriona. After flicking through the book, she found it, right
at the end, just as Jacob showed up and joined them.
*****
A figure appeared, glowing with a light that made it hard to see
them directly. I could determine neither race nor gender. I thought I
could detect a strange aura and a kind of magic that defied
identification. The mage produced a small wooden staff, approximately
three feet in height, topped with a large blue crystal. I know not from
where they got it, save that they seemed to open some kind of rift or
perhaps a door to some other reality and simply pulled the staff into our
world. This figure invoked some sort of magic on the staff, or possibly
through it, and the crystal atop the staff sent a coloured lightshow high
66
into the sky. The void storms twisted and danced in response, and that
is when one section of stars changed their position in the heavens.
Who was this figure, and what were they doing? My
investigations lead me to believe this has happened many times before.
Every time it does, this glowing figure seems to be able to hide from the
gaze of almost everyone there present. But among the masses, there is
always a Chosen One who can see through their magic. Unfortunately,
since they are the sole witness, they are disbelieved and even ridiculed.
That is why I have written this book, in hopes that it will touch the minds
of those who can see this threat for what it is.
Shifting Stars is not just an academic curiosity, but a warning to
all. It is my opinion that whatever this strange magic is, we must find a
way to stop it before there are any further such occurrences. For if they
continue unchecked, I fear they are going to destroy the world!
*****
Literally bookending one’s academic work with ‘The world is
wrong’ and ‘They are going to destroy the world’ is unlikely to give it
much credence, but I’m sure, gentle reader, you will recognise much of
this. Catriona and her two friends certainly did.
“That sounds like your Angel with your Crystal Mage Staff,”
Jacob remarked.
“Yes, it does,” she agreed, “and if he’s right about that, then I’m
not going to be so quick to dismiss the rest of it. I think the conclusion
is all wrong, though: I don’t believe my Angel is a threat. Not after all
they did to mend Quarthonia.”
Mandalee concurred, “Why fix a village if you’re going to
destroy the world?”
“Seems a bit counter-productive,” Jacob agreed.
“Question is,” Mandalee put in, “was there a star shift on the day
you met your Angel?”
“No idea,” Cat said. “I wasn’t paying attention to that. I was
looking at the land. But I certainly intend to find out and also to verify
the ‘evidence’ of star shifts in this book. I’m not going to dismiss it out
of hand like most people, but I’m not going to accept it on faith, either.
Looks like I have plenty more studying to do.”
“Somehow I think you’ll cope,” Jacob said with a wry smile.
“I think you’re right,” Mandalee agreed.
67
Cat gasped, and apologised, “I’m so sorry, you two!” She closed
her book and tucked it safely away. “I haven’t even introduced you.
That’s so rude!”
“That’s OK,” Mandalee assured her. “We met this morning when
I fished him out of one of my demon traps, which I’m going to have to
start calling ‘people traps,’” she added with an annoyed frown, “since
so far that’s all they’ve caught.”
“I have some ideas about that,” Cat told her. Turning to Jacob,
she teased, “How could you be so careless? Just watch where you’re
going!”
“Hey, it’s not my fault! The Trickster pushed me in!”
“Oh, that old chestnut!” Mandalee groaned, rolling her eyes.
“Yeah,” Cat agreed. “I tried that one the first time.”
“I wasn’t buying it,” Mandalee said, “and it’s OK, I know Cat
was the Trickster. You don’t need to pretend.”
“Good to know. Wait – the first time?” Jacob wondered.
With a blush, Cat admitted, “Oh, yeah, I’m actually in no position
to wind you up about walking into one of Mandalee’s traps – I managed
it twice!”
“Twice?” Jacob repeated, suppressing a smile.
“Yep,” Mandalee confirmed, “and the second time she did it
naked!”
“No!”
“Looking quite a lot like you.”
“Oh, this gets better!” Jacob grinned. “Really?”
Cat nodded. “Sat there in my – well, your birthday suit.”
“With nothing but her staff in her hand,” Mandalee added.
“I hope that’s not a euphemism!” Jacob quipped.
All three cracked up at that.
When they’d sufficiently calmed down, Jacob asked, “So why’d
you do it, Cat?”
“I was distracted by a spider, and my magic got a bit confused by
Mandalee’s,” she explained. “Then, once inside her trap, I was cut off
from nature and couldn’t do anything.”
Jacob shook his head. “No, I mean, why did you push me in
Mandalee’s trap? That wasn’t in the plan!”
“What are you talking about?” Cat frowned. “I didn’t push you
in that trap, you just blundered in by mistake like I did.”
68
“No,” he disputed, “you were running around as the Trickster,
and you pushed me in the trap!”
“Wait, are you serious?” Cat asked.
“Yes, of course!”
“No kidding? You’re honestly saying the Trickster pushed you
in that trap?”
“Yes, really, no kidding! Why are you asking this, Cat? You were
there!”
“No, Jacob, I promise you I wasn’t.”
Mandalee leaned forward, a serious look on her face. “So, Jacob,
if the Trickster really did push you in my trap…”
Jacob nodded.
“…and Cat, it definitely wasn’t you…”
Cat shook her head.
“…that means, there really is a Trickster loose in Compton!”
Eyes wide, Catriona gasped, “Mandalee, didn’t you say
something about if you were to believe all the reports of sightings, the
Trickster would have to be in two places at once?”
“You’re right, I did,” the demon hunter confirmed. “Seems I
dismissed the reports too easily.”
“We have to track it down!” Cat said, resolutely.
“We?” Mandalee wondered. “It’s my job, there’s no need for you
to get involved.”
“But it’s my fault!”
“How is it your fault?” Jacob asked. “You didn’t bring it here.”
“Actually, she might have,” Mandalee countered. “Tricksters are
drawn to pranks and mischief, and with everything Cat’s been up to,
I’m afraid a real Trickster may have taken it as an invitation to come
out and play!”
“That’s why I have to help,” Cat insisted.
She stood up, ready to spring into action, but she swayed on her
feet and had to use her staff to hold herself up. She hadn’t realised how
tired she was.
“It’s getting late, and you’re exhausted,” Jacob observed.
Catriona smiled weakly.
“I am feeling a bit drained, now you mention it,” she conceded.
“Big day.”
“Go home and rest up,” Mandalee advised, reaching out a
steadying hand. “You can help me tomorrow if you like. It’s not like
69
it’s a Greater Demon that’s going to drag people down to hell. It’s only
a Trickster.”
Cat agreed and asked where Mandalee was staying.
“Out here,” said the demon hunter. “Bit difficult to find a room
that allows leopards,” she said, stroking Shyleen.
Once again, Cat fervently hoped it was the leopard people
objected to.
“Besides, I prefer to be out underneath the stars…even if they are
all wrong!”
“I remember what that was like,” Cat replied, with a distant,
slightly haunted look. “I haven’t really done it since the night I met my
Angel…since my Mum and Dad…since they were…well…”
Jacob put his arm around her and Mandalee quickly moved the
conversation along so her friend wouldn’t have to finish that sentence.
“What about your sympathic thing?” she suggested. “You could
contact me like that when you’re ready to get going.”
As an experiment, Catriona projected, ‘tired, sleep.’
“Curious sensation,” Mandalee remarked and tried to project
back. It took her a few goes, but soon she managed to send, ‘night,
dreaming’ which Cat took to mean, “Goodnight, sweet dreams.”
Cat thought the latter was unlikely since she had never
experienced a dream in her life, but she took the sentiment in the spirit
in which it was intended.
With that, they exchanged hugs and went their separate ways.
70
Chapter 11
The next morning, Catriona met up with Mandalee and Shyleen.
Shapeshifting into her falcon form, she was able to scout around the
town while Shyleen tracked down the Trickster’s scent. Now that there
wasn’t a second Trickster confusing the trail, it made things easier by
far. Once they found it, Cat was able to work her magic on the plants to
cut off escape routes. Shyleen herded it into one of Mandalee’s traps,
which, with Catriona’s help, she had adjusted to give off an inaudible
vibration that would naturally repel distracted mortals, while still
attracting lower planar demons. Once captured, the demon hunter used
her clerical magic to Banish the Trickster, robbing it of the energy it
would need to return to the mortal realm anytime soon.
Mandalee and Cat made a good team. Their skills complemented
each other and their sympathic communication, plus the telepathy
between Mandalee and Shyleen, helped them work together as one.
They didn't know it at the time, but this was only the beginning for
them. Soon, they would be working together regularly as the
consequences of Catriona’s actions caught up with her and changed the
course of her life.
*****
Cat, Mandalee and Jacob were all together when the message
arrived. It was a magical message from the Council of Wizards.
Catriona was summoned to stand before them in Conclave.
Renjaf had filed a formal grievance against her, and this was a
hearing to determine the degree of culpability and decide on what, if
any, punitive action was warranted.
The Council of Wizards recognised no single leader. Instead, it
was governed by a Triumvirate composed of the highest-ranking wizard
from each of the three orders of magic: White, Black and Red. The
White were primarily concerned with the defence and protection of the
people of Tempestria, especially from the harmful effects of magic. The
Black were mostly interested in the security and protection of magic,
arguably from the harmful effects of people, which often manifested in
the form of a lust for power. The Red were focussed on promoting the
71
advancement of magical knowledge and encouraging diversity in
magic.
Choosing one of the three magical colours was not compulsory,
but it was highly recommended as it gave one a voice on the Council
and support in cases like the one Cat was now facing.
*****
Renjaf, not being one to leave his tower unnecessarily, had
already given the Council his full testimony that backed up his claim
that Catriona Redfletching had attacked him, destroyed his home and
stolen his property in the form of one book, namely Shifting Stars.
Cat now had the opportunity to give her side of the story. She
told the truth, although she did omit anything to do with pretending to
be a Trickster, because it wasn’t directly relevant, and Jacob’s help, to
protect him from the consequences of her choices.
Throughout the proceedings, the Red robe leader used her magic
to cause a pen to write out a complete record without her having to hold
it. Every now and again she spared it a glance as if to check it was
working correctly, but generally, she was able to leave it to its own
devices. Cat hadn’t seen that kind of magic before and tried to distract
herself from her own nerves by considering how it might work.
The reactions of the three leaders were in deep contrast to one
another. Maia of the White was keen to focus on the ‘unprovoked
attack’ on one of her order. Justaria of the Red argued that it was far
from ‘unprovoked.’ As for Laethyn of the Black, he wasn’t remotely
interested, saying, “If this young druid were a Black robe, we would
have dismissed this Conclave and be calling for a counter-claim.”
“Counter-claim? On what grounds?” Maia demanded to know.
“For the obstruction of her growing magical power. As it is, I say
we should throw the whole thing out. If we vote, I’m going to rule in
her favour, and so are you, Justaria, we both know it, and your vote
counts twice, so that’s three. It doesn’t matter how Maia votes, so let’s
not waste any more time.”
“I appreciate your position,” Justaria said, smoothly, “but due
process must be observed. You cannot presume to know how Maia or I
will vote before we have considered all the facts.”
“Thank you, Justaria,” Maia said. “I am pleased to know you are
taking this matter seriously.”
72
“I strive for balance in all things,” Justaria told her colleague.
“Especially justice.”
Laethyn was incredulous. “You can’t be serious, Justaria! You
won’t guarantee to support one of your own order?” He shook his head
in disbelief. “There’s loyalty for you.”
“That’s rich, considering all the in-fighting among those of the
Black order!” Maia remarked.
Laethyn ignored her. Instead, to Catriona, he offered, “Don’t
forget, you have the right of Realignment.”
This referred to a mage changing their allegiance from one colour
to another. It would not be allowed if this were a trial, but during a
hearing like this, she did have that right. “I’ve already guaranteed my
vote either way because I think this whole thing’s a farce, but if you
switch to the Black, my vote will count double, making your worst
possible outcome two for and two against.”
In that event, the case would become a trial, leading to a full
Council debate. The majority of Black robes would share their leader’s
view, so all Cat would need was a majority of Red robes on her side,
and it wouldn’t matter what the White robes thought about it. Any
punishment would be likely to be no more than a slap on the wrist.
“Thank you for your support, Master Laethyn,” Catriona replied
respectfully, “but I’m afraid I am compelled to decline your offer of
Realignment.”
“You would gain more power our way,” Laethyn pointed out.
“Power isn’t everything,” Catriona shrugged. “I am perfectly
willing to place my confidence in the justice of this Conclave as a
member of the Red robes of Balance.”
“Well said,” Justaria approved. “On the other hand, Maia,” she
continued, addressing her White robe counterpart, “I think our Black
robe colleague raises a valid point. I appreciate that you are seeking
compensation for the physical damage done to Renjaf and his property.
However, consider for a moment the emotional and spiritual damage
done in reverse, and in fact, inflicted first, when all Catriona wanted
was to borrow a single book. On that basis, I raise the counter-claim
that Laethyn proposes.”
“What!” Maia exclaimed. “I thought you were on my side a
moment ago!”
Justaria spread her hands. “Apologies if I gave you that
impression; I am simply trying to achieve a balance. Laethyn,” she said
73
to her Black robe colleague, “might I suggest you raise that counterclaim in pursuit of damages against Renjaf on behalf of Catriona?”
With a smile, Laethyn readily agreed, “Anything to poke holes
in the White robes’ holier-than-thou attitude. Yes, I hereby officially
raise that claim.”
“Noted for the record,” Justaria accepted, her pen scribbling the
entry onto the page all by itself.
Turning back to Maia, Justaria said, “Do you want me to support
your pursuit of damages against Catriona on behalf of Renjaf?”
“Yes, I do,” she affirmed.
“Very well. Now, as Laethyn says, I believe we all know which
way both of you will vote in these claims, so that leaves my vote, and
of course, in the case against Catriona I get two.”
That was one of the benefits of Council membership. In the case
against Renjaf, Maia would be the one with two votes. It was a system
intended to prevent collusion between any two leaders.
“Now, it is assumed in these cases that the member with two
votes will vote the same way twice, but there is nothing in the rules of
the Council that says that must be so. Therefore, I propose to split my
vote in the grievance against Catriona, while voting in her favour in the
counter-claim.”
That meant there would be two votes ‘for’ and two ‘against’ both
claims.
“But that will send both claims out to full Council!” Maia
objected.
Justaria nodded her agreement. “Which would be a sad
indictment on the three of us if we can’t resolve this simple dispute
which has, to my mind, already resolved itself.”
“Agreed,” Laethyn said.
“I don’t believe it’s right to throw out either claim, because I
firmly believe there was indeed damage on both sides, but there is a
way we could avoid this deadlock.”
“I’m listening,” said Maia.
Justaria explained that she was willing to vote twice to support
Renjaf’s claim against Catriona, if Maia would split her vote, instead.
Thereby supporting the counterclaim as well.
“As for sentencing,” Justaria continued, “I suggest the following:
For destroying Renjaf’s tower, Catriona Redfletching will pay damages
by rebuilding it. Which she’s already done.”
74
The other two nodded their agreement.
“Now, I believe her magical attack on Renjaf was largely in selfdefence since he struck first, but his reaction was understandable since
she’d just demolished his home. Therefore, she will pay damages in the
form of no less than ten days of community service tending his
grounds.”
“Which she’s already done,” Maia said, seeing her colleague’s
line of thought.
“Finally, in the case of the counter-claim, for extreme emotional
distress and failing to provide all reasonable assistance to someone in
need, as per White robe policy, I suggest Renjaf pay compensation in
the form of precisely one book: the aforementioned Shifting Stars.”
“Which she’s already got,” Laethyn said.
Justaria nodded. “This way, we acknowledge the culpability of
both sides, we avoid needlessly wasting the Council’s time and quite
frankly,” she added, shooting the others a conspiratorial glance, “we
look like we know what we’re doing!”
The other two agreed to her terms, the Triumvirate formally cast
their votes, and the sentences were passed. Catriona stood and bowed,
respectfully as Maia and Laethyn left the Council chamber, but Justaria
remained behind.
“Catriona, please sit,” she said and sat down beside her. “There
is one other matter I need to discuss with you, but it needn’t involve the
others because it’s a matter of internal Red order discipline. Your druid
magic is interesting to me, and I am happy to see you exploring the
potential of your abilities, as it is perfectly in line with our desire for
diversity in magic. As you so succinctly put it, ‘Power isn’t everything.’
However, with any new magic, there must be rules, and while you
haven’t broken the letter of any of them, because they haven’t been
written yet, I think you know you broke the spirit of their intent.”
Catriona nodded. She’d been thinking about this, herself, in the
cold light of day and reached the same conclusion. “Shapeshifting into
the form of another person: Jacob. Essentially impersonating him. It’s
identity theft.”
“Yes, it is,” Justaria agreed. “and I’m glad you see that. Now, I’m
not going to be too harsh on this occasion, because I suspect you did it
with his consent…”
Cat opened her mouth to object – she didn’t want any of this
falling on Jacob, it wasn’t fair – but Justaria cut her off.
75
“Don’t worry about confirming or denying that. This isn’t a
hearing; we’re just having a chat, and that was pure speculation on my
part. The point is, what you did was a misuse of new magical knowledge
and could be seen as a violation of the terms of your membership of our
order.”
A tearful Catriona offered no excuse or defence. She didn’t want
to lose her membership, nor her voice on the Council. She believed in
what the institution stood for and wanted to be a part of that, but
Mistress Justaria was right.
“Knowledge is neutral; its application is not,” Cat quoted from
the Code of Balance.
“I’m pleased to see you take that lesson to heart,” Justaria said,
kindly reaching out and resting a gentle, reassuring hand on Cat’s arm.
“As I said, I’m not going to be too harsh with you. You made a mistake,
and I can see that you know it. I’m not going to warn you to never do it
again, because I’m quite sure you won’t. Therefore, I will not revoke
your membership of the Red Robes of Balance…” Catriona’s relief was
palpable, but Justaria wasn’t finished. “…but I will be recommending
you be expelled from the College of Magic and banned from using its
resources in any way. Do you understand?”
Catriona assured her that she did, so Justaria allowed her to leave.
Before she reached the exit door, however, Justaria called out her name.
“Officially, this is a punishment,” she said. “Unofficially I
believe I’m doing you a favour. I don’t think the College has a clue how
to teach you – there's never been a mage like you before – and I also
believe you will never find the knowledge you seek without severing
your ties to that institution. Their ways are not your ways. Let your
instincts and your research guide you, free yourself to follow where
they lead, and I predict an exciting future for you, Catriona
Redfletching.”
Stunned by this, the only words Cat could find to express herself
were, “Thank you!”
They seemed inadequate, but they would have to do.
One day, gentle reader, both would realise just how prophetic
Justaria’s words had been.
*****
76
As you may have gathered, I can use Temporal projection magic
to see possible future paths, but I have no need of that to foresee my
own Conclave. If that surprises you, it shouldn’t. The Guardians and I
may operate outside Time, but that does not mean we can operate
outside the law without the modern-day Council having something to
say about it. When that moment comes, I pray I will be as strong as my
mother, prepared to accept whatever their decision might be.
And I can only hope for an equally favourable result.
77
Chapter 12
Having spent so much time on Catriona and introduced Aunt
Mandalee, gentle reader, I think it’s high time you met my other Aunt,
Dreya the Dark.
Dreya’s story is well known, as she herself is famous, or
infamous, depending on one’s point of view. There are many versions
of this story, but I promised you that every word I write would be true,
and so as I peel back the layers of Time, I can relay the events,
effectively, as they happen.
*****
The first significant, documented account of Dreya’s life was
when one day, not long after the devastating attack on Catriona’s
Quarthonian home, she casually knocked on the door of the Red wizard,
Xarnas. He had recently retired from the Council where he had served
for the last five years as Triumvirate representative, succeeded by
Justaria. When he answered the door and looked down at the girl on his
doorstep, barely a teenager, lost in too-large robes of a Red wizard, she
declared, without preamble, that she wished him to train her in magic.
Xarnas kindly explained that he had retired.
Dreya replied that she knew that, which meant he now had
sufficient time to devote to her training.
Her presumptuous tone caused raised eyebrows. Few adults
would speak to him like that, let alone a child. Yet her voice, when she
spoke, was calm and quiet. As if she were merely stating a fact that he
had simply overlooked.
When he asked, “Why me?”
Her answer was simply, “Because you are the best.”
Again, there was no flattery in that statement, no attempt to curry
favour. Dreya was just stating a fact. Still, Xarnas wasn’t taking on any
more students at this time and told her so.
Dreya, in that exact same tone, replied that of course, he wouldn’t
be taking on any more students, as training her would require all of his
focus and attention. That’s why she had waited until now when he was
done with the distractions of Council business.
78
Xarnas would later admit that he was curious about this girl from
the start. Her calm, controlled manner and absolute confidence that
somehow came over as self-assured, not arrogant, were fascinating to
him. Still, he was looking forward to his retirement and did not want an
apprentice disturbing his peace.
Dreya told him in her matter-of-fact way that he would be taking
her as his apprentice, “before this day is done, so you are really just
wasting time. But I am patient and will wait until you are ready to make
the right choice.”
“In that case,” he said, “I suggest you make yourself comfortable
on my doorstep because you’re going to have a very long wait.”
To his amazement, Dreya thanked him, politely and promptly sat
down.
Xarnas shrugged. He could see no harm in letting her sit there if
that was what she wanted. Soon enough, she would get bored and go.
Except she didn’t.
Late that evening, he settled down to read a letter he had received
from his youngest daughter, Bronwen, away at magic college. From
time to time, he would look out of his window and see Dreya sitting
there, either reading a book that she had been carrying in her
voluminous robes or practising magic. It was distracting enough for
Xarnas to learn about his eighteen-year-old daughter’s first serious
boyfriend – a Faery, no less – when he was sure Bronwen had been a
little girl only five minutes ago, without having an impertinent young
Faery girl on his doorstep. Yes, he was missing having his daughter
around, but that didn’t mean he was looking to adopt a new one!
The evening gave way to night, and still, young Dreya sat there.
As midnight approached, Xarnas was preparing to retire. He opened his
door, and Dreya immediately stood, respectfully.
“Don’t you have a home to go to?” he asked.
“Until now, my home has been in the woodlands with my Faery
people, but before this day is done, I shall be living here with you. That
will maximise the time you have to train me. Travelling from anywhere
else would waste time. Obviously, I could teleport here every day, but
that would be a waste of power.”
This was the first time she had said something that was clearly
arrogant nonsense. Teleportation was a highly advanced wizard spell,
which was learned only after years of study and practice.
79
“You don’t seriously expect me to believe you can teleport!” he
scoffed.
“No,” said Dreya, her tone unwavering. “I do not know how to
teleport.”
“So why would you imply that you did?
“I did not mean to imply any such thing,” she assured him. “My
apologies for the misunderstanding. What I meant was, while I do not
know how to teleport yet, before this day is done, I will.”
“The day is almost done, already,” Xarnas pointed out. “I highly
doubt you can learn teleportation or much of anything else in these last
few minutes.”
“I know you have doubts,” Dreya replied, “but before this day is
done, they will trouble you no longer, and your training will begin.”
By now, Xarnas was tired and had simply run out of patience.
“Very well,” he said, “if you’re so interested in teleportation, let me
show you how it’s done.”
With that, he wrote the highly complex spell in the air and sent
young Dreya more than a hundred miles away to the heart of the nearest
Faery woodland community. She would be safe enough there. The
Faery would never hesitate to take care of a lost child, no matter how
superior and irritating her attitude. Before he could close his door,
however, the young girl reappeared in front of him.
“Thank you for the lesson,” said Dreya.
Xarnas was stunned. “How did you do that?”
“I spent the day on your doorstep, reading all I could about the
magical theory behind teleportation, how it connects with other powers
and the spell form required to activate it. Experiencing it from the inside
was just the last piece I needed to do it myself.”
“Show me,” he demanded. “Prove to me you didn’t get someone
else to teleport you back here. Prove you can truly do it yourself.”
And so, she did.
Dreya teleported herself all over the place in front of his eyes and
Xarnas’ astonishment grew. To learn teleportation like that was
incredible. At that moment, he knew his retirement was postponed. He
had always enjoyed teaching even the most challenging of students, but
this one would be a challenge of an entirely different order. One could
search for ten human lifetimes and still never find a student as
intelligent, gifted and talented as this one, and she had just turned up on
his doorstep. This was an opportunity he could not refuse.
80
Moving aside, he said, “Please come in, Apprentice Dreya.”
Stepping inside, she bowed and replied, “Thank you, Master
Xarnas.”
No sooner had the Red wizard closed his door than a sound
drifted on the air: the sound of the town hall clock striking midnight.
Listening to the chimes, he remembered Dreya’s prediction that he
would accept her as his apprentice ‘before this day is done’ and he had
– just before the stroke of midnight. He stared open-mouthed at the teen
who now stood inside his home.
“Speaking of lessons,” said Dreya, “I trust you have also learned
yours?”
“And that lesson would be…?”
“Never to underestimate me again.”
The Red wizard would indeed never again underestimate her, and
he firmly believed that anyone who did so in the future would be lucky
if they lived to regret it.
*****
It was about three years into Dreya’s training, and she continued
to surpass Xarnas’ wildest expectations. From the very first day, he had
made it widely known that Dreya was with him, thinking that her
parents or guardians would claim her. No-one ever did, and Dreya
herself flatly refused to talk about her past. Her claim that she was from
one of the Faery woodland communities didn’t exactly narrow it down
– there were a dozen such places on the continent of Elvaria alone. So,
for those three years, he unofficially adopted her.
She never shied away from hard work, and she never complained
when he assigned her tasks and puzzles that were apparently unrelated
to magic, seeming to instantly grasp the lesson he was trying to teach
her and how that would later apply to her magic. Her questions were
astute and challenging, her aptitude unparalleled. She wanted to know
everything about how magic worked, down to the smallest detail and
she grasped it all, although she wasn’t afraid to question assumptions
and challenge beliefs.
Through it all, however, there was a puzzle about Dreya that
Xarnas simply could not work out. He could sense the Darkness
growing within her nature, demonstrated not least by her interest in
blood magic, which had been attempted by Dark mages past. It was
81
more powerful but had proven impossible to stabilise. It had been
banned by both White and Red mages, but the Black robes would never
agree to anything that stood between a mage and power. Even between
the other two orders, there was disagreement. For the White robes, it
was a banned subject, while for the Red robes, there was no such thing
as forbidden knowledge. So, while Xarnas could not demonstrate any
aspect of blood magic, he would not withhold information, so he shared
what he knew. Being aligned with the Balance, Dreya’s Darkness
neither feared nor worried Xarnas, for both Light and Dark magic had
a place in the world.
Still, he was curious about Dreya’s attitude towards it and so, one
day, he came right out and asked her, “Why have you chosen to study
and train as a Red robe instead of the Black?”
“You learn more this way,” she answered, “gaining control and
discipline. Pulling from both sides of the spectrum while being
beholden to neither. One day, perhaps, I may take on the Black robes,
but I will do so at a time of my own choosing. Dark magic will serve
me, not the other way around. That is the mistake Dark mages always
make in the end – they lose control. I will not. I shall be mistress of my
own destiny, dancing to no-one's tune but my own. I know I am only at
the beginning of my journey, but one day, I will be the Greatest Mage
Who Ever Lived.”
Xarnas did not doubt that at all. At this stage in her training, of
course, he had any number of spells up his sleeve that Dreya could not
counter and in a mock battle, there were any number of ways he could
beat her, although that number was getting smaller almost daily. One
thing he could not do, however, was break her control: not of herself
and not of her magic. He agreed with her mature assessment of Dark
mages: they did lose control until the power consumed them. If Dreya
could truly break free of that fate, then her potential was virtually
limitless.
I wonder, gentle reader, if Xarnas ever truly realised how far
Aunt Dreya would go, just as I wonder if any of us now understand how
far she may yet climb.
Dreya’s studies with Xarnas lasted a little under five years. She
absorbed everything she was exposed to until one day, after a full
twenty-four hours of tests, both practical and theoretical, followed by
82
an intense mock battle, the master found that his student had finally
surpassed him.
Picking himself up off the floor, where Dreya’s magic had left
him, he told her, “Congratulations, Dreya. I have taught you all that I
can. I have nothing left to give you.”
“In that case, Master Xarnas,” she said, in that calm, quiet voice
of hers, “I see no reason for me to stay any longer. Thank you. You may
now retire.”
With that, she gathered her red robes around herself and made to
leave.
“Where will you go?” Xarnas called after her.
She did not turn around, but she did pause at the door to answer,
“Oh, I have a destination in mind. I’ve known since before I came to
you. Now I am ready.”
Then, without so much as a ‘farewell,’ she was gone.
83
Chapter 13
The Black Tower was situated in its own grounds on the border
between the human port town of Gaggleswick, and Ainderbury – a
province of the lands of the Faery known as Sylfrania. More than three
hundred years ago, it had been the home of the infamous Black wizard,
Ulvarius. Widely regarded as the most powerful and dangerous
renegade in history, he terrorised the continent, humans and Faery alike,
routinely abducting innocent people and subjecting them to the most
horrific and torturous of magical experiments. Vast, powerful forces of
might and magic assailed him, but he brushed them aside. His power
consumed vast acres of land, burning whole towns if but one person
defied his will.
It is even said, gentle reader, that Lake Quernhow was formed
when a baby dared to cry in the middle of Ulvarius’ speech to the people
of a town that existed there in his time. In response, he used his magic
to make everybody cry.
Now, that may not sound so bad, but let me clarify: every human
and Faery, every adult and child, every animal and plant within the
boundaries of that town cried. Water poured out of every living creature
until they were nothing but dried up husks and the ground sank under
the weight of the water, forming the lake.
Whether that story is true or exaggerated, I can’t be sure. It’s
another Temporal Black Spot, off-limits to even observation-only Time
travel. Good thing, too, for if the legend is accurate, and I bore witness
to it, then I fear that I too would cry and never stop. Except perhaps to
tear apart the fabric of reality to stop the bastard that did it, plunging the
universe into the maelstrom of chaos.
By the end of his time, Ulvarius’ influence had expanded until he
had virtually the whole of Elvaria in his grasp, and it was only a matter
of time before he conquered the world. That is, until one day he did the
world a favour and took his own life by jumping off the roof of his
tower. No-one knew – or cared – exactly why. Perhaps he was simply
consumed by his own power, going the way of so many powerful Dark
mages before and since. But there was another legend that said he had
learned a prophecy saying that no matter how powerful he became,
there would be one other, yet to be born, who would be more powerful
84
still. That brought him both figuratively and literally to the edge, or so
the story went.
Whatever the truth of it, in the process of taking his own life,
even as he fell, he cast out his magic, cursing the tower and its land. All
life within his grounds became twisted under his power, forming
devastating defences against any future intruder and casting the Tower
under a thick blanket of darkness that had never once abated in more
than three centuries since.
Adventurers and knights, wizards and clerics tried to enter the
grounds over the years, but none got very far before they were struck
down and killed, or worse: absorbed into the very defences that had
defeated them.
*****
The red-robed figure materialised in the centre of the town of
Gaggleswick, teleporting from Xarnas’ home, and gazed at the Black
Tower in the distance. It was an impressive, imposing sight.
Enshrouded in her hood, Dreya breathed deeply and allowed herself a
small smile at the sweet caress of magic all around her. All the power
at her command, under her control.
She began to walk, unhurriedly, along the streets of the town,
pausing along the way to buy a juicy red apple from a stall along the
way. Eating it calmly, she threw away the core just as she reached the
gate. Typically, people stayed well away from the border of the Black
Tower’s gardens of torture, so the sight of this lone red-robed young
woman heading for it with purpose and intent attracted a good deal of
attention. Many called out to her, warning her, even begging her to go
no further, not to throw her life away.
Her only response was, “If I die, I die in the magic. Magic is all.”
Taking one more breath, she opened the gate and entered the
grounds.
Immediately, she was assailed by spells of fire, ice and lightning,
but they bounced harmlessly off her shields. She was sprayed with
poison and disease, but none of it could touch her. Animated skeletal
warriors attacked her by the dozen, but they were soon dust beneath her
feet as she walked. Her pace never wavered, as she encountered
animated corpses containing the twisted, tortured souls of former
champions who had tried and failed to approach the Black Tower. They
85
wanted to drain her of life and magic, but instead, she drained them,
restoring whatever power she had so far expended, freeing their souls
in the process. And all the time she drew closer to the tower.
Hellhounds beset her with their teeth, werecats with their claws.
A single piercing of her skin would mean the end of her life, but she
held out a hand, and all cowered, whimpering before her. Demons that
had been trapped there for three hundred years, came at her,
desperately. Jealous of her sweet life, shining like a beacon, they sought
to snuff it out. Half of them she destroyed, while the other half fled back
to the lower planes in terror.
Ulvarius had been a master of the True Undead, in his day.
Autonomous creatures with sufficient intelligence to follow complex
instructions, yet still enslaved to their creator’s will and equipped with
regenerative magic. Those that still guarded his tower were the most
powerful ever created. Rather than waste her energy trying to kill them
– most likely impossible without the use of Holy Water – she focussed
her power on the control magic and wrested it from the long-deceased
tyrant. From now on, they would serve her, instead.
None of Ulvarius’ defences could stop her or even slow her down
until, finally, she reached the steps leading to the door of the tower
itself. The ragged remains of a robe of black fluttered in the breeze,
revealing the bones beneath it: the cursed, skeletal remains of Ulvarius
himself. Remains that, the moment Dreya put one foot on the lowest
step, picked themselves up off the railings, took on shadowy flesh,
wrapped in that tattered old robe and drew itself up to a height of seven
feet, looming over Dreya in the form of a lich.
A sibilant voice in Dreya’s mind said, ‘Long have I waited for
thee. Faery blood, no less. Excellent! You see, Ulvarius planned this all
along: Ulvarius achieved much before, but that shall be as nothing to
what I can do with thy power and mine combined. Thy body and thy
magic shall serve Ulvarius for an exceptionally long time to come. Now,
kneel before Ulvarius and submit thyself!’
The horrific sound of the lich’s laughter carried for miles around.
Dreya's hood fell from her head, seemingly blown back by the power
of the lich, and the wind its laughter created.
Dreya sank slowly to one knee…
…and casually picked a single black rose, bringing it up to her
face to smell, deeply.
86
Standing once more, she said, calmly, “Get out of my head, go to
hell and take your pretentious speech with you. Referring to yourself in
the third person is impressing no-one.
“Now is the time!” she declared. “I choose the Darkness.”
Her red robes darkened and lost their colour until they were the
deepest, darkest black. Her Realignment complete, Dreya pricked her
finger on one of the thorns on the rose’s stem. Watching her blood
trickle down her hand, she allowed her magic to mingle with it and flow
through her veins.
“You are weak, Ulvarius. This is now my home, and you have no
place in it.”
The lich had now stopped gloating and begun to back away.
‘Blood magic? That’s impossible!’
Ignoring him, wasting no words, Dreya cast out a beam of dark
energy, slamming into the lich, who began to disintegrate before her
eyes.
‘But blood magic is unstable!’ it cried, even as it faded.
“It is perfectly stable,” Dreya countered, still never raising her
voice. “It just…requires…” The lich exploded and vanished into
nothingness, banished to the depths of hell. “…control,” Dreya
concluded.
With nothing left to impede her, she climbed the remaining steps,
opened the door with a look and stepped inside her new home.
*****
Over the next few days, Dreya was seen strolling through her
grounds, re-examining Ulvarius’ defences, either changing them to
better suit her, to ward and protect rather than maim and kill, or
eradicating them. She even set the undead guards to work on tidying the
gardens. The once perpetual dark sky was banished, giving way to a
blazing sun amid high, fluffy clouds and Tempestria’s typical swirling
vortex of energy.
Most of the people of Gaggleswick adapted, as people often do,
and seeing no immediate danger, they continued with their lives,
regardless. Once they learned the name of the new Mistress of the Black
Tower, a nickname began to surface. When it reached the ears of the
sorceress herself, she decided that, while not particularly imaginative,
87
it did have a certain ring to it, and she found she rather liked it. From
that day forward, then, it became her official name: Dreya the Dark.
However, the Squire and local assembly were not so content.
They all knew the history of the Black Tower and Ulvarius’ reign of
terror, and they feared that with this new occupant, the violence, horror
and bloodshed might begin all over again. The squire filed an objection
with the Council of Wizards, but his complaint was thrown out.
He received a reply:
Dear Sir,
Further to your complaint against Dreya the Dark, Black robe
sorceress currently occupying the Black Tower.
After due consideration, we write to inform you that the Council
of Wizards has ruled in her favour. She has broken no laws of magic,
and as such, we cannot countenance any action against her. As for her
claim of ownership of said Black Tower, the only former owner of the
tower, Ulvarius, has been declared officially deceased for three
centuries, so Dreya has merely chosen to make use of a vacant property.
Border disputes are generally outside our jurisdiction; however, our
research suggests the Black Tower was never officially part of the town
of Gaggleswick, being instead its own private estate.
Therefore, on the matter of your complaint, we find there is no
case to answer.
Yours in magic,
Laethyn, Justaria, Maia,
Council representatives.
*****
Given this ruling, the Gaggleswick Assembly resigned
themselves to their new neighbour, but Squire Johanssen himself was
not so easily swayed. He sent an envoy to the ruler of the neighbouring
Faery Kingdom of Sylfrania, King Theodorus, to seek his views on the
matter. Again, most Faery were inclined to let things be. A Balancealigned Faery wizard had been a curiosity; a Dark-aligned one was a
scandal, but no-one was interested in doing anything more than gossip
about it.
Except for one.
88
The King’s youngest son, Prince Travarin of Ainderbury, the
closest Sylfranian province to the Black Tower, was incensed by the
ruling. He believed a Dark-aligned Faery was an affront to all that was
good, and that Dreya the Dark was already having a corrupting
influence on the purity of his daughter, Princess Zarinda, who seemed
fascinated by her. The two leaders, then, agreed to launch an attack,
before Dreya, having removed most of Ulvarius’ defences, had time to
build her own.
*****
Three days later, a quad of the bravest holy Knights from
Gaggleswick and a trio of the most devout White clerics from
Ainderbury entered Dreya’s lands, intent on wiping out this dark stain
on their community. To their surprise, no magic assailed them, no
hellhounds tried to bite them, and the only things the undead warriors
were interested in attacking were the weeds. It seemed to these
righteous defenders that Dreya had made a grave mistake in leaving
herself unguarded. They finally reached the Tower itself, where Dreya
the Dark was sitting quietly in the sun, reading a book and sipping a
glass of wine. As their shadows fell over her, she finally looked up.
“Greetings,” she offered, pleasantly, “and what brings you to my
door on such a fine afternoon?”
“Surrender or die, Black Witch!” the knight leader declared.
“‘Black Witch’ is it, now?” Dreya remarked with raised
eyebrows. “And I was just getting used to ‘Dreya the Dark.’ I do wish
you’d make up your minds about my nickname, it’s getting hard to keep
track.”
“Your tower is a blight on the land!” insisted one of the clerics.
Dreya looked hurt as she glanced around her grounds.
“Well, I agree it’s a bit of a mess right now, but ‘blight’ is a bit
harsh,” she pouted. “Be fair, this mess is three hundred years in the
making, and I’ve been here about three days. I’ve got my best people
working on it.”
“You are the scourge of the people, and you must die!” another
knight declared.
“Or surrender,” Dreya suggested. “At least according to your
friend here.”
89
The knight blinked, confused. He had expected a fight, not a
debate.
“Well, yes, I suppose you can surrender instead. Do you wish to
surrender?”
“Well…” Dreya closed her book and considered the question.
“…I’d say that rather depends on what happens after I surrender.”
The knight leader answered, “You will be taken to Gaggleswick,
where you will be tried, sentenced and executed.”
Dreya slowly stood. “On what charge?” she asked. “I believe I
am entitled to know that, am I not?”
“You are a threat!” said the cleric spokesman, as if it were
obvious.
“I’m sorry,” said a puzzled Dreya, “who exactly have I
threatened?”
“That’s for the court to decide,” a knight asserted.
“But according to you, the court has already decided, since I am
to be tried, sentenced and executed. So, it seems to me as if you are
giving me a choice between dying here or dying in the town square.
That’s not much of a choice, is it?”
“Well, it’s the only one you’re getting!” the lead cleric insisted.
“In that case,” Dreya’s voice gained an edge of steel and her gaze
sharpened to match. “Let me give you a choice: leave my lands and
never return or enter my service and never leave.”
“We will not leave until you die!” the knight insisted; the others
murmured their agreement. All readied weapons.
“Very well, I accept your choice,” Dreya replied.
With that, she unleashed her power at her enemies. She tore out
the knights’ souls and discarded them, turning all four into her very own
death knight bodyguards, each with the strength of ten mortal knights,
unyielding, untiring. Meanwhile, with the clerics, she took the opposite
approach. Discarding their lifeless bodies and corrupting their souls, so
they became ghouls, floating on the breeze as insubstantial as light and
sparking with the power of the gods of Darkness, each one more than a
match for any dozen mortal clerics.
“Tell me,” Dreya said, “whom do you serve?”
“We serve our Mistress, Dreya the Dark,” they chorused.
“And when will you leave my service?” she asked.
“We will not leave until you die,” they said.
“Excellent,” Dreya approved.
90
*****
You see, gentle reader? Aunt Dreya gave them a choice – a far
better one than the non-choice they gave her – and she accepted their
decision. They would serve and protect her, and never leave until the
day she died, and technically, gentle reader, a thousand years later, she
still hasn’t.
91
Chapter 14
Dreya assigned duties to her attackers, treating them as her
household staff, while she retired to her study.
An hour or so later, she emerged with a pair of sealed letters and
handed one to each of her two groups with instructions to deliver them
to the individuals who sent them to kill her. They were under strict
orders to take no hostile action except to defend themselves and ensure
the letters reached their recipients on the stroke of midnight. They
bowed and obeyed.
That night, Squire Johanssen and Prince Travarin were both
shocked to receive their unexpected visitors. With trembling hands,
each opened their identical letters, which read:
Dear sir,
You are cordially invited to attend Mistress Dreya the Dark for
a banquet at her private residence, the Black Tower, in precisely 72
hours from the moment you receive this letter. Please arrive promptly
at the gates to my grounds by the first stroke of midnight, whereupon
your hostess will be delighted to escort you to her tower. (Formalwear
required, leave all weapons behind, no plus ones.)
Once here, it shall be my honour and privilege to treat you to an
evening of delicious food, fine wine and the charming conversation of
yours truly.
Then afterwards, we shall retire to my drawing room where we
will discuss, in most pleasant surroundings, our future as neighbours
in these lands.
At the end of what is sure to be a night to remember, you will, of
course, be free to return home to your lives, as usual, all of us secure
in the knowledge that there will be no further misunderstandings
between us.
Attendance is not compulsory, but it is in your best interests, for
should you choose to decline my formal invitation, you will find my
terms are not nearly as favourable.
Yours in magic,
Dreya the Dark
Mistress of the Black Tower
92
p.s. In the interests of safety, please do not attempt to enter my
grounds unescorted. A few of the late Ulvarius’ defences are having
some difficulty adapting to the new regime here, and I would hate for
there to be any unfortunate accidents.
Too terrified to do other than as they were told, seventy-two
hours later, Squire Johanssen and Prince Travarin were waiting
restlessly at the gate to the Black Tower’s grounds. On the stroke of
midnight, Dreya emerged silently from out of the darkness. Neither
human nor Faery could say whether she had teleported just that second
or whether she had been there, unnoticed, as one with the shadows,
since before they arrived.
“Good evening, gentlemen,” came Dreya’s voice from the depths
of her hood. “I am so pleased you were able to attend. I trust you had a
pleasant journey here?”
Both men nervously agreed that yes, their journeys were indeed
trouble-free.
“Excellent,” Dreya declared. “Now, if you would allow me…?”
She moved between them, a hand on each one’s arm as they
strolled through her garden. As they walked, she pointed out various
items of interest along the way, and both men were sure to make
appropriate appreciative noises.
“Are you two quite alright?” Dreya asked innocently. “You seem
almost nervous about something.”
Both men scoffed at such an absurd notion. Of course they
weren’t nervous. Why would they be?
“Why indeed?” Dreya agreed as they reached the steps of her
Tower. “It would be extraordinary if you were nervous. After all, you
were bold enough when you were sending others into my grounds to
attack me, so why would two such brave men be nervous at the prospect
of meeting me yourselves, for a harmless little dinner party?”
Before either could think of any kind of response, she removed
her hands from their arms and dropped to one knee to examine the black
roses. “Look at these!” she exclaimed delightedly. “Aren’t they
beautiful?”
Both men grabbed this new line of conversation with both hands,
waxing lyrical on the astounding beauty of the flowers.
Dreya picked one and stood, turning to face them. “I used one of
these roses to banish the lich form of Ulvarius that had been guarding
93
this place for three centuries. Naturally, I know the stories of that time.
It must have been terrible to live in the shadow of such a tyrant, not
knowing from one moment to the next whether one might live or die at
their slightest whim. When it came down to it, though, all I had to do
was prick my finger on a thorn.” She demonstrated, holding her hand
close to their faces so they could watch a trickle of blood run down her
fingers and drip onto the ground. “Then I invoked blood magic and he
simply vanished in a puff of smoke.” She made the rose turn to dust in
her hand and blew it in their faces. “Oh, I do apologise,” she gasped.
“Must have been a freak gust of wind.”
As the two men followed her inside, they assured her that there
was no harm done and not to worry about such little accidents.
“It’s good of you to be so forgiving,” she said as two death knight
guards opened the doors into the dining hall. There, a ghoul awaited
them, carrying, of all things, a white towel as if it were a waiter at a
restaurant, there to greet them and show them to their table. Which, of
course, was precisely its function that night.
Dreya removed her hood and regarded the two men with a
puzzled expression, cocking her head to one side.
“There’s definitely something about you two tonight. Are you
sure you’re not nervous about something?”
Both men assured her they were fine.
“Well, if you’re sure. But I should tell you, this is my first time
entertaining two such important visitors, so if I say or do anything
tonight that makes you the slightest bit uncomfortable, you will tell me,
won’t you?”
They both agreed they would.
“Promise?” she pressed them.
Forcing a smile, they both promised.
“Excellent,” she declared, “now if you would care to follow my
ghoulish waiter here, he will show you to your places on the dinner
table.” She rolled her eyes. “Sorry, slip of the tongue, I meant at the
dinner table, of course, not on it! I mean, it’s not like I’m going to
gobble you up or anything, is it?” she laughed.
The two men nervously joined in her laughter as they walked into
the dining room and stood at their places until Dreya, at the head of the
table, sat down.
“Ah, such gentlemen,” she said. “Waiting for a lady to sit first.”
The ghoul flew away and returned with the wine list.
94
“Do you mind if I choose?” Dreya asked her guests.
They assured her they didn’t mind at all.
“Excellent. Hmmm…Red for tonight, I think,” Dreya mused. Let
me see…she stabbed the list with a finger.” The ghoul flew away again
and returned a moment later with a bottle, which he presented to his
mistress. When he poured a small amount into a glass for her, she stared
at it for a moment, her eyes wide. Dipping her little fingertip into the
liquid, she hesitantly tasted a drop on the tip of her tongue. Screwing
up her face in disgust, Dreya flushed with embarrassment, and shooed
the ghoul away with the bottle and glass. “Don’t bother with the list
again!” she called after him. “Any will do. Just make sure it’s actually
wine, this time, and not…blood!”
To her two guests, she said, “I’m so sorry. He’s new – I’m just
training him up. Only been with me a few days, but then you knew that.”
After that, the rest of the dinner passed without incident. They
talked about small, inconsequential things and the two men almost
started to relax. Almost.
The dinner came to an end and true to her word, Dreya invited
them into her drawing room, leaving her ‘household staff’ to clear
everything away.
Settling into soft leather chairs, surrounded by books on shelves,
paintings on the walls and a large plush rug on the floor, Dreya took a
sip of wine, and remarked, “Isn’t this civilised?”
Yes, it was, they agreed.
“Well, think how much more enjoyable it could have been, had
you not sent your people to kill me. If you had simply asked to meet me
to discuss your concerns, we could have avoided so much
unpleasantness. Instead, we are here, as I said in my letter, to discuss
our future relations. Specifically, the terms of your surrender.”
“Surrender?” the men demanded.
“Of course,” Dreya said as if it should be obvious. “You went to
war with me, and you lost. Now you have a choice: you can either
escalate the conflict, or you can surrender.
“Let me be clear, gentlemen: I am not Ulvarius. Just because a
person lives in a house that once belonged to a monster, that does not
mean they must be a monster, too. I have no interest in a war with you.
I don’t do random violence. What I will do is neutralise, without mercy,
any threat to my life. I have no interest in your politics. I have no interest
in conquest or in ruling the world. If I wanted the world, I could have it
95
tomorrow, but frankly, I wouldn’t want the paperwork. Leave me alone
to study my magic, and I have no reason to harm any of your citizens.”
“So, what exactly are your terms of our…surrender?” Prince
Travarin asked hesitantly.
“Well, since you came as requested today, they’re
straightforward: Leave me alone, and I’ll leave you alone. In your case,
I am unlikely to venture into Sylfranian lands because it would
be…painful for me,” Dreya admitted.
There were wards in place, set by White clerics, that would react
badly to the presence of her Dark wizard magic.
With a flash of her eyes, however, she warned him, “but don’t
imagine that would stop me if ever you gave me cause.” Point made,
she reverted to her usual pleasant, conversational tone. “I would,
however, ask for a gift. You know the house and family I belong to,
don’t you?”
“Of course,” he concurred.
“Then I want my ring back, please. You see, I left in something
of a hurry and left it behind. Get it for me within seven days, and I
guarantee the safety of any messenger carrying it. Can you arrange
that?”
The truth was, she didn’t care about her ring, and the noble
Sylfranian house it represented meant nothing to her, but it meant
everything to Travarin.
Working hard to mask how painful it was for him, the Prince
agreed to her terms, so Dreya turned her attention to Squire Johanssen.
“The terms for you are slightly different,” she said, “because I
am very much interested in visiting your town.
“There are bound to be things that I need, so I expect to be
granted the freedom of Gaggleswick and full access to its services, just
like anyone else. I will, of course, pay the going rate. I always pay my
debts. However, as an apology for your thoughtless attack, I would like
a gift from you, too. These linen robes of mine are not the most
comfortable. They chafe and scratch in places – it’s very distracting.
Therefore, I would like a bolt of black fabric, please – I’m thinking the
softest, most luxurious velvet money can buy – and to hire the services
of your finest tailor to ensure a perfect fit every time. Once again, the
safety of that tailor will be guaranteed on the condition of absolute
discretion on their part.”
96
Without any further explanation for that condition, Dreya
concluded, “Now, considering you tried to take my life from me, I
consider that a bargain price.”
The squire quickly agreed to organise the tailor and have
Freedom of Gaggleswick documents drawn up and signed.
“Good. Again, shall we say seven days?”
He assured Dreya that would be no problem.
“Excellent,” she said, satisfied. “In that case, gentlemen, our
business is at an end.” She stood and began to escort them from her
home. “I hope you have enjoyed this evening. Do not expect it to
happen again.
“One last thing,” she added as they reached her door. “You
attacked me, yet you still live. Understand the rarity of that. From this
day forward, you live only because I choose it. Do not give me reason
to choose otherwise. Farewell, gentlemen, and don’t worry about
walking through my grounds alone. They’re all under control now,” she
assured them.
“Mostly,” she added as she closed the door behind them.
*****
After that, gentle reader, she was indeed left alone, and all was
well, apart from one incident a few months later, when a mob of hotheaded thugs decided if they couldn’t attack Dreya directly, they would
go after the one who trained her. After all, it was his fault she was there
at all.
Xarnas was a skilled wizard, but it had been a while since he had
been involved in a real fight and he was getting slightly worried about
the large gang that was advancing on him. He need not have feared,
however, as a figure in velvet robes of the deepest black he had ever
seen, materialised beside him.
Dreya made short work of the attacking group, sending out an
energy beam that incinerated all but one who had been trying to sneak
up behind them. Now he turned to flee, instead.
“What was that?” Xarnas gasped in astonishment. “It almost
looked like the cannon thing that those higher planar beings fight with.”
Dreya inclined her head in respect. “I see your mind has lost none
of its sharpness in my absence,” she said, getting remarkably close to a
compliment. “It’s not that powerful, yet, but give me time.”
97
Watching the fleeing man, she said, “I suppose this is the part
where I say, ‘Let’s leave this one alive so he can warn any others what
happens if they attack us.’”
“Actually, I’ve never seen the point of that,” Xarnas replied.
“No,” Dreya agreed, snapping the ruffian’s neck with a flick of
her wrist. “Neither have I.”
She turned to Xarnas, pulling the hood from her head. “I’ll send
a message to Squire Johanssen, get him to spread the word that you’re
under my protection and an attack on you is an attack on me.”
“An act of kindness from a Black robe, Dreya?” he wondered.
“Kindness has nothing to do with it,” she insisted, flicking her
long dark hair out of her eyes, a look of irritation passing over her
usually impassive face. “You helped make me what I am. I owe you,
and I always pay my debts.”
Without another word, she left her former Master’s tower for
what would be the last time.
In the years that followed, Dreya got more involved with the
Council of Wizards, keen to support anything that promoted order and
control in magic as well as its protection. The Black division was well
known for its infighting, with its wizards vying for power. That
exasperated Dreya, as it stood against her dual desires for order and an
increase in the power of magic. But if a threat came her way, she would
not hesitate to kill her attacker and drain their magic to increase her
own. This fuelled her reputation as someone to be feared. She found
that useful and did everything she could to cultivate that reputation.
That kind of fear, it seemed, meant other wizards didn’t attack her. She
wasn’t afraid of those attacks, but they wasted her time and energy.
Dreya hated that.
In time, she grew to be the second-ranked Black robe wizard,
which gave her a loud voice on the Council – necessary for some of the
reforms and changes she had in mind – but without the excessive
administration of the highest position. Dreya wasn’t overly keen on the
head of her order, Laethyn, but she was confident she would find a way
to gain enough influence over him to serve her purposes. Her
opportunity came when she saved him from an assassination attempt.
“An act of kindness from Dreya the Dark?” Laethyn wondered,
afterwards, when they were together in his office within the Council
building.
98
“I wish people would stop accusing me of that,” Dreya muttered
in annoyance. “No, I saved you to demonstrate that I have the power of
life and death over you. You live only because it suits me. At the same
time, I am showing you that I do not want your job. If I did, it would be
mine now, and you would be dead.”
“So, what exactly does Dreya the Dark want of me?”
“Most of the time you can keep doing as you wish, but your voice
carries a lot of weight on the Council, and there will be times when I
want your voice to support my position, to make sure I get things done
around here.”
“Is that all?”
“No, there’s one more thing: Don’t pick fights. If you think I’m
going to rush by to save your life from something you bring on yourself,
think again. The infighting has to stop. Pursue your own agenda as
much as you like but do it without weakening Dark magic or any other
magic for that matter.”
“That’s just not how things are done, especially in our order.”
Dreya invoked her magic to choke him, slowly, cutting through
his defences like they weren’t there.
“It is now,” she said menacingly. She released him. “Are we in
agreement?”
Gasping for breath and rubbing his neck, Laethyn nodded.
“But why are you doing this?” he asked. “I’ve heard you want to
be known as the Greatest Mage Who Ever Lived.”
“I do,” she affirmed. “But I want that to mean something. Look
at it this way,” she said. “Suppose I wanted to be the world’s greatest
mathematician: That doesn’t mean I want to live in a world where
nobody else can add two and two!
“Don’t you see?” she cried, throwing her hands in the air in
exasperation. It was a rare show of emotion for her. She was just
desperate for one other person to understand what she was trying to
achieve. “This is too easy! I could kill you with a single thought, but
what’s the point?” she demanded. “What do I gain? Your title? Your
rank? Your office? They mean nothing to me! Even Ulvarius – Tyrant
of Tempestria, Scourge of Elvaria – his grounds, his defences, the lich
form of the man himself were dust beneath my feet. Don’t get me
wrong, I enjoyed claiming his Tower – my home is everything I could
wish for, but seriously, Scourge of Elvaria?” Dreya snorted, derisively,
collapsing in a chair, breathing heavily – she wasn’t used to this. “He
99
might as well be called the Menace of Mrs Miggins’ Pie Shop for all
the threat he was to me! Tell me honestly, can you think of a single
mage anywhere in the world who could at least offer me a challenge?”
“Quite frankly, no,” Laethyn admitted, grudgingly.
“Exactly, so clearly I need to look beyond this world.”
“Other worlds?” Laethyn said, incredulously. “Do you really
believe they exist?”
“An interesting thought,” Dreya conceded, “and one worth
exploring, but right now I have my mind on higher things.”
“Higher things?” Laethyn wondered, then he gasped. “You
mean…higher planes?”
“Well, I don’t want to go there,” she said with a wry smile. “I’m
not a tourist, but I do want their power. Moreover, I want this world to
stand up to those creatures. They come here and fight their battles and
don’t care how much damage is done in the process. Aren’t you sick of
it? Don’t you want to do something about it?”
Laethyn snorted. “What? You want to save the world now?”
Dreya jumped to her feet like she’d been bitten. “No, I don’t want
to save the world!” she cried, giving Laethyn a disgusted look. “Don’t
be ridiculous.”
“Then what?” Laethyn wondered.
“I want to kill Daelen StormTiger.”
*****
Dreya had long been envious of the shadow warriors’ power,
gentle reader, even as she railed against the seemingly indiscriminate
way in which they used it.
I know my father himself felt as if he were stuck in a loop. Battle
after battle he fought, with always the same result: He was evenly
matched against his enemy, but Michael always gave Daelen an edge.
Enough to beat back his enemy, but only temporarily. It seemed as if
nothing would ever break this cycle, but Daelen did not count on one
thing: Tempestria was changing, growing, developing.
Mortal magic was out of its infancy now, gentle reader. By the
time of Catriona, Mandalee and Dreya, they had already abandoned
crawling in favour of walking. In their different ways, each of them had
started to run, and soon, very soon…
…they would learn to fly.
100
Chapter 15
“I’m flying!” Mandalee cried, laughing in joy and exhilaration.
“See, I told you it would work!” Cat called back from her vantage
point, sitting on a cloud.
“Remind me never to doubt you again,” the White cleric replied.
“Oh, doubt me all you want,” her friend countered, “I do! I just
see it as a challenge to do it anyway.”
“In that case,” Mandalee replied, “remind me to challenge you as
often as possible because this is amazing! I… AM… FLYING!
Woohoo!”
*****
Technically, gentle reader, Mandalee was not really flying. She
was actually sitting on the back of a giant albatross, and it was flying,
but that’s just semantics. As for my mother, ‘sitting on a cloud’ isn’t
just a metaphor, though it would be an accurate one. She had been
working on her druid magic and realised that if she could change the
density enough, it would be possible to walk on air. (Again, not a
metaphor.) Cat thought it was a better approach than trying to levitate.
Floating around would be so undignified. Of course, she could just
change into a red-banded falcon, or a tawny owl, which was another
thing she’d recently added to her repertoire, but then she couldn’t talk.
Sympathic communication had its limitations. The other advantage of
being in midair in her natural half-Faery form was that she could bring
Pyrah along, whenever she was visiting her half-Faery friend.
To say Pyrah ‘wasn’t keen’ on being stuck in a pocket dimension
at Catriona’s slightest whim, would be a gross understatement. Not that
she was that much happier being in midair. Honestly, Cat wouldn’t have
believed it possible for anyone to complain so colourfully by sympathic
means, but somehow Pyrah managed to get her point
across…repeatedly.
My mother’s Conclave was a good eighteen months behind her
now, and with no more college, after their success in tracking down the
real Trickster in Compton, she had decided to join Mandalee full time,
demon hunting. Jacob had been sad to see her go, but he had always
known he could never tie her down. He wasn’t sure anybody ever
101
would. (‘Tie her down’ is mostly a metaphor, although there had been
a few occasions…)
*****
Demon hunting proved to be the perfect practical outlet for both
young women to push the boundaries of their abilities, and sometimes
my mother would come up with one of her ridiculous radical ideas. On
this day, she reasoned that Mandalee’s special relationship with nature
should surely extend beyond animals to birds. And if Mandalee could
just befriend one that was large enough then, in effect, she would be
able to fly.
Cat learned to adapt her access to her pocket dimension so that it
would not be affected by Mandalee’s clerical magic, thereby avoiding
any more clothing mishaps. She had also learned from her experience
of being twice stuck in her friend’s traps, cut off from nature and
therefore the source of her magic. She was determined never to let that
happen again, especially when the solution was so simple: carry nature
with her at all times. Since druid magic couldn’t create something
directly from magic alone, she needed ingredients that she could
manipulate. An extra bottle of water gave her access to any water or
ice-based spells. A few herbs gave her control of plants, even when
there were none around. She had also learned to carry a vial of sand
from which to create what she called ‘Nature’s Mirror,’ for cosmetic
purposes. To her, carrying a selection of small pebbles, weighing
nothing at all, meant she had with her the potential for a boulder, a wall,
an entire stone shelter, if necessary.
Perhaps the most important lesson she had learned was that,
unlike wizard and clerical magic, for druids, size was unimportant for
the most part. The scale of what she wanted to create made no
difference. Just like in nature: the movement of a single pebble could
start a landslide; a slight shift of snow could cause an avalanche; a
single spark could lead to a forest fire.
An ice cube in her drink or a towering wall of ice; a potted plant
or a towering tree – it was all the same to her. If Cat could provide the
seeds, nature could deliver the garden. For the moment, she was wary
of doing too much with fire-based spells, for fear of what she might
unleash if her ambition outstripped her control. She also didn’t bother
with any kind of animal control – that was more Mandalee’s field,
102
although it wasn’t really control, but rather co-operation. Catriona’s
interest in animals was mostly confined to shapeshifting into them.
Wolf-form was her latest success, excellent for long-range land-based
scouting and, if necessary, self-defence. She’d even dabbled with a
mole form for burrowing underground. Mandalee couldn’t for the life
of her imagine why her friend would want to do that.
In between demon hunts, the two young women pushed each
other’s magical abilities. Mandalee would adapt her demon traps to try
and counter Cat’s ability to escape, forcing Cat to think up a new way
to get out. This helped the cleric adapt her magic again and that in turn,
challenged Cat’s magical imagination once more. In addition to her
magic, Cat pulled her archery skills out of mothballs. Mandalee was
highly proficient both in hand-to-hand combat and with long-range
weapons. In many ways, her fighting style reminded Cat of her mother,
except that as much as her friend seemed to dance on the edge, she never
crossed the line into a real battle frenzy. She always kept her head, even
when she got very drunk. Long-range, it was a close call who was better,
and as with their magic, the competition served to raise both their
standards.
Council of Wizards rules allowed a mage to train with a single
bladed weapon for defence purposes. Just in case they were ever in a
situation where their magic wouldn’t work, such as in an anti-magic
field. Cat had chosen the bow and arrow, which she still routinely
carried in her pocket dimension.
Two things had started to bother my mother about the Council
generally and the reason behind that rule specifically. In general, the
name – Council of Wizards – had begun to feel pejorative. Druids were
supposedly acknowledged by the Council and definitely subject to their
laws, and yet still it was called the Council of Wizards. Not to mention
the fact that many female wizards preferred ‘sorceress’ which, from a
certain point of view, made the name sexist, as well.
As for that specific rule, the concept of an anti-magic field
seemed bizarre to Catriona. She tried to explain her thoughts on this to
Mandalee one day.
“Surely,” she said, “an anti-magic field is itself a form of magic.
If magic doesn’t work within that field, then how does the field
operate?”
Unfortunately, gentle reader, Aunt Mandalee was never much of
a one for philosophy – she left that to Shyleen. Nor could she muster
103
much enthusiasm for studying, unlike my mother. Conversely, Cat was
no match for Mandalee at close range fighting – it wasn’t Catriona’s
style. But diversity is strength, and it worked well for them. While
Mandalee was training her body, Catriona was training her mind. She
was still very much focussed on her staff, her Angel and of course
Shifting Stars. Nor had she forgotten her promise to Mandalee. All of
her fields of study were progressing – they were just progressing
slowly.
Catriona had managed to get her hands on star charts from before
what she had begun to refer to as ‘The Day of the Angel’ to try and
distract herself from the fact that it was also ‘The Day of the Monster.’
The Monster that killed her parents. She had gained this knowledge
from a couple of helpful mages who had an interest in astronomy. The
wizard helped because he was afraid she would demolish his home if
he didn’t. The sorceress simply wanted to exchange one book for
another. A rare magical text she had been searching for. If there was
one thing Cat was good at, it was sniffing out obscure references, so in
this way, she fell into a new career as an information trader. Still, on a
couple of occasions, she had needed to demolish the wizard’s tower to
get what she wanted. She always gave them two chances to co-operate
without punitive measures, but on her third visit, she would use any
means necessary to keep them out of their home, so she could work her
magic without harming them. And she always rebuilt their homes,
afterwards.
So far, she’d confirmed that part of one constellation had
definitely moved out of shape on ‘The Day of the Angel’ and another
section had done so on at least one occasion described in Shifting Stars.
She wasn’t yet ready to accept a causal relationship between that and
her staff, but she was intrigued by the possibility, which spurred her on
to solve more of the puzzles that allowed her to unlock another level of
the security protecting the tantalising higher planar energy at its core.
Not that she was especially interested in the power itself. Her
fascination lay in the understanding of what it was, why it was so locked
away and what knowledge she might gain not just from the final answer,
but from the exploration.
Everything my mother learned, she kept in a journal. Although
she always seemed to be quite capable of working on five different
puzzles in her head, simultaneously, the very process of writing helped
her. Putting pen to paper was something she enjoyed for its own sake.
104
(Like mother, like daughter!) However, as someone who understood the
value of knowledge, Cat had developed her own shorthand, which she
never shared with anyone, not even Mandalee, ultimately taking the
secret language to her grave. Much of her knowledge she shared, but
because no-one could read her journals for themselves, she could be
sure to do so on her own terms.
Still, even as Catriona had fun with her friend, there was a sense
of frustration bubbling underneath. What she needed was a library.
Books and resources all in one place. Ideally, one that had lain
untouched for a century or two, so that she could research possible
earlier sightings of her staff, her Angel and perhaps more shifting stars.
It was a bit of an ask, but there was a solution. She’d thought of it some
time ago; she’d just hoped to find another way. Unfortunately, the only
other possibility was overseas, and she had not the means to get there.
That left her with her original idea and her original problem: there was
a wizard in the way. Or rather, a sorceress.
As I’ve said, gentle reader, that was familiar territory for her by
now, but Catriona knew this mage would be unlike any she had faced
before. Still, the only other choice was to give up…and that just wasn’t
an option.
Even from her unfamiliar avian point-of-view, Mandalee could
read her friend by now.
“Let’s land and talk,” she suggested.
Cat nodded and manipulated the air around her to create Windy
Steps all the way to the ground, while Mandalee asked her albatross to
glide down gently. Once on the ground, the bird flew away but
promised to return whenever she called.
“Come on then, Cat,” said Mandalee as the pair sat down. “Out
with it. You’ve got another of your ridiculous radical plans, haven’t
you?”
Cat nodded.
“But this – whatever this is – is different, isn’t it?”
“What makes you think so?”
“You’re not happy about it.”
With a rueful smile, Cat replied, “You’re not going to be happy
about it, either.
“OK, now I definitely need to know!”
Steeling herself, Catriona took a deep breath and said, “There’s
only one place I can go, now, that could have what I need for my
105
research. All my research. My staff, my Angel, my magic, the stars…”
she looked her friend in the eye, “…you.”
“And that place is…?” Mandalee prompted.
“The Black Tower,” Cat stated, flatly.
“What!” Mandalee gasped. “You can’t possibly be serious!”
Cat insisted she was. “I told you, you wouldn’t like it!”
“You’re planning to go up against Dreya the Dark? There isn’t
enough alcohol in the world to get me drunk enough to make that sound
like a good idea!”
“It’s not a good idea,” Cat replied. “It’s just the only idea.”
“OK, let me get this straight. You’re going to – what – ask Dreya
the Dark very nicely twice, and when she refuses, assuming the
sorceress hasn’t killed you, you’re going to attack her and demolish the
Black Tower itself?”
“Don’t be ridiculous,” Cat shook her head. “I’m not going to
attack her; I’m desperate, not suicidal. No, I need to do something far
more difficult: I need to impress Dreya the Dark.”
Mandalee snorted, “I don’t think Dreya the Dark does
‘impressed.’”
“That’s because she hasn’t met me, yet,” Cat replied.
“Oh!” Mandalee laughed. “So, because I fell for your charms
after you blundered into my traps, you think Dreya’s going to do the
same?”
Cat offered a mischievous smile. “Are you saying you don’t
believe I can do it?”
“Message getting through, at last, is it?”
“Is mine?” Cat retorted.
“What do you mean?” Mandalee asked with a frown.
“You’re doubting me again, and I’ve told you how I react when
you doubt me.”
Mandalee groaned, “You take it as a challenge to do it anyway!”
Catriona stood, confidently. “Challenge accepted!” she declared.
“All I need now is your blessing.”
Mandalee, too, got to her feet and embraced her friend.
“Always,” she insisted. “You know that. Whatever ridiculous radical
plans you come up with, I have your back, no question.”
When they broke the hug, Cat’s smile had grown into a broad
grin. “Thanks for the support,” she said, “but when I said I needed your
blessing, I actually meant your clerical blessing. Specifically, on my
106
arrows.” She pulled a few clear of her quiver. “And maybe a bottle of
water or two.”
“What ever for?” Mandalee wondered.
Cat laughed. “Don’t worry, Mandalee,” she said. “It’s all part of
my ridiculous radical plan!”
*****
Catriona didn’t head straight for Gaggleswick and the Black
Tower. First, she had another destination in mind, flying all the way to
the home of the Red wizard, Xarnas, who had trained Dreya. Nobody
else could know Dreya the Dark half as well as him, and that was
information she needed.
My mother had already done background research on Xarnas and
discovered a useful little nugget of information. His youngest daughter
was married to a Faery boy, and they were expecting their first child.
Out of respect for the boy’s heritage, Xarnas wanted to give them a
special gift: a book of traditional Faery children’s rhymes and lullabies.
Such a book was tough to find without the right Faery contacts since
human-Faery relationships were still something of a rarity at the time.
Even Catriona herself couldn’t find a book that was good enough,
in her opinion, so pulling from her childhood memory of growing up
among the Faery, she had written her own.
Xarnas was astonished by the book when Catriona knocked on
his door, introduced herself and presented it to him.
Recognising Catriona’s Faery heritage, he told her, “I’d wager
that much of what you’ve written here is deeply personal to you.”
Cat felt a pang of regret, thinking about her fantastic childhood
and the parents she had lost far too soon.
“Yes, you’re right,” she nodded, sadly, “but I felt it had to be that
personal, to match the value of the information I seek in exchange. In
fact, no,” she reconsidered, “not ‘in exchange.’ For once, I’m not going
to trade the human way. I’m happy to hear of another human-Faery
couple and delighted that a great man such as yourself would respect
Faery culture enough to give them such a book. In Faery culture, trade
is based on giving freely that which is precious, so in that spirit, the
book and all it contains are a gift from me to you, given freely, so that
you might, in turn, give it freely to your daughter and son-in-law, and
they eventually to their child.”
107
“In that case,” Xarnas said, “it seems to me, as a point of honour,
that I should give freely to you something that is precious to me. What
can I do for you?”
Cat told him she wanted to learn everything she could about
Dreya the Dark.
Xarnas studied Catriona as he considered that. “When most
people ask about Dreya, they either want to know about her
extraordinary power, or how I could train what they see as a ‘servant of
Darkness.’ Some have even been known to use the word ‘evil.’” He
shrugged. “At least they’re honest: many others think it while not daring
to say it. I suspect you are not like any of these.”
Cat shook her head, emphatically. “I would never be so
pejorative,” she promised, “and I very much doubt Dreya is a servant
of anything.”
She explained further that she was not only interested in Dreya's
powers and abilities, but also the Faery woman herself. Her personality,
her interests – to understand her, or at least begin to.
“A laudable goal,” Xarnas approved. “To seek knowledge and
understanding lies at the heart of our Red order of Balance.”
With that, he invited her into his home, where he was pleased to
tell her everything she wanted to know.
He also told her he had heard varying accounts of Catriona
Redfletching, but the only one he paid attention to was Justaria, his
successor on the Triumvirate, who described her as ‘a handful of
trouble.’
“I’m certain she intended it as a compliment.”
Cat smiled a smile of secrets. “Oh, you have no idea how much
trouble I can be,” she said, eyes dancing with mischief. “I’m a veritable
Trickster, sometimes!”
Xarnas grinned, “And that is exactly what you will need to be to
grab Dreya’s attention. If you want to impress her, you will have to fight
her without ever attacking her.”
He paused for a moment, before adding, “I would never tell this
to anyone else, no matter what they tried to trade, but in the spirit of
giving freely, I will say this: I feel sorry for Dreya the Dark.”
Cat was stunned. She never would have imagined hearing such a
statement, but now that he’d said it, she knew this was the most critical
part of their conversation. This was why she’d come here. More than
anything else, this was what she needed to know.
108
Xarnas explained himself, saying, “She once told me her
ambition was to be known as the Greatest Mage Who Ever Lived.”
Cat nodded. She could understand that sentiment. She didn’t
share it – she didn’t think of her druid magic in quite those terms – but
she could understand it. In many ways, it was admirable: if you’re
passionate about something, why not strive to be the best?
“But to my mind,” Xarnas continued, “that title is hers already.
Think about it: You’ve studied the reign of terror for which Ulvarius
was responsible three centuries ago?”
Again, Cat nodded, not wanting to disturb the moment by
speaking.
“Well, it’s easy to imagine the story of a powerful mage, working
their whole lives to try and take his tower, remove the blot on the
landscape that he left behind as a deadly, terrifying legacy. Then maybe,
after decades of preparation and study, at the peak of their powers, they
finally succeed at some terrible personal cost, and retire to their wellearned new home.”
Once more, Cat nodded. The story practically wrote itself, and
she knew the twist that was coming.
“But Dreya finishes her apprenticeship with me and takes the
Black Tower in five minutes flat, with nary a scratch apart from a prick
on her finger from a single rose thorn, as she invents stable blood magic
practically on the spot.”
Cat knew the story – everybody did – she'd just never looked at
it the way Xarnas did.
“Then, having moved in and begun to make the formerly
dangerous place a thing of beauty, her new neighbours attack her!
Attack her? They should have been thanking her! I swear, if she hadn’t
ripped out their souls, I would have done it myself!”
Catriona placed a gentle, reassuring hand on his arm. He was
almost in tears; such was his passion.
“So, what’s left for her? She’s so young, especially by Faery
standards. She’s achieved more than any mage in history, and it’s not
enough.”
Catriona understood. “She’s bored,” she realised. “She must be.”
“And that’s why I feel sorry for her. Be creative, Catriona, be
inventive. Keep her guessing. Don’t underestimate how dangerous she
is and don’t let her pin you down, literally or figuratively. Keep her off
balance, never knowing what’s coming next, and I truly believe you
109
might just succeed. I hope so, because in my opinion, knowing Dreya
as I do, a ‘handful of trouble’ could be exactly what she needs in her
life.”
110
Chapter 16
My mother had learned her lessons well, gentle reader, and by
this stage of her life, she refused to go into any situation unprepared.
For this action, she knew she had to do her homework like never before.
She would get only one shot at this, and if her preparations were
anything less than meticulous, she would fail. Perhaps even die.
Thanks to Xarnas, she had done the theory, and her magic was as
prepared as it was ever going to be. There was just one more factor to
consider: the lay of the land. If she were going to impress Dreya the
Dark, she would have to confront her in her own grounds. Typically, of
course, the land was a friend to my mother, but these lands were
different. They had once belonged to Ulvarius, but Dreya had tamed
them and made them her own.
It was the night before Midsummer, and under cover of darkness,
Cat flew over Sylfrania in the form of a tawny owl. Unsurprisingly, the
whole Faery woodlands were in full bloom. Midsummer’s Day was a
big day of romance in Faery culture and a traditional day for prominent
weddings. As a Quarthonian Faery, she wasn’t up with Sylfranian
politics, but doubtless both communities would be busy tomorrow.
Passing over Ainderbury and crossing into human lands, she
found a quiet perch in a tree in Gaggleswick, close to the Black Tower,
and took a moment to rest and go over her plan. In this form, she was
hopeful that she could scout Dreya’s lands with impunity. In truth, she
had no way of knowing how far Dreya’s powers of detection might
extend, but this was the best she could do. She had decided to forgo any
red bands, confident that she was too focused on her goal to lose herself.
In fact, she was mostly ready to let go of that crutch altogether, except
for her red-banded falcon, just because it was the first form she’d
successfully used and after so long, it wouldn’t feel right without the
red bands. Catriona was encouraged when a passing barn owl seemed
to take a liking to her. If another owl was convinced of her ‘owliness’
and did not find anything strange about her, she was hopeful that any
detection magic would be equally unconcerned.
Resuming her flight and crossing into Dreya’s lands, she could
see Xarnas had not exaggerated about the beauty of Dreya’s grounds,
now that she had had time to work on them. In fact, Cat grudgingly
admitted that she couldn’t have done much better herself. Dreya had
111
transformed this patch of nature, freeing it from a three-hundred-year
curse. It would not easily be turned against her. Catriona had prepared
for this, however. That’s why she was here.
As I have said previously, gentle reader, my mother routinely
carried nature with her, but for this, she needed to go one step further
and plant the literal seeds of success in Dreya’s grounds.
She had been carrying plant seeds in her beak since she
transformed, and now she let them fall onto the ground beneath her. She
was glad to spit them out, but it had been the only way. Using her pocket
dimension magic here would no doubt set off all kinds of alarm bells,
which would be counter-productive, to say the least. As it was, she only
had to use a tiny bit of druid magic, in essence, whispering to the soil
to move ever so slightly, to cover the seeds, and encouraging them to
begin to quietly germinate. Job done, for now, she flew away to get
some rest. She would be back in the middle of the day in a different
form.
*****
At noon the next day, as the sun beat down upon the Black
Tower, a red-banded falcon was perched on a tree just outside the
grounds observing, with her sharp eyes, the black-robed woman sitting
on the steps of the Tower, reading a book of magic and occasionally
sipping on a glass of wine. The bird also observed the patches of
greenery that had grown overnight. Plants that wouldn’t look at all out
of place unless the observer was keenly in tune with nature. Certainly
not the undead guards that served as groundskeepers. The stage was set,
the player was ready. Time for the performance to begin.
Gliding silently to the ground, Catriona reverted to her natural
form, pulling her clothes and spell ingredients out of her pocket
dimension, as well as her bow and arrows. She was nervous but
embraced the butterflies as she walked calmly but purposefully towards
the ornate iron gate that opened into Dreya’s gardens.
The groundskeepers paid her no heed. Dreya didn’t often
entertain visitors, but neither did she kill everyone who set foot on her
land. Her guards and defences would react only in the event of a threat
to Dreya herself. Cat had to make sure to not play her hand too soon.
For now, she had to walk and wait.
112
After a few minutes, Catriona arrived at the optimum distance
from where Dreya sat and, making no sudden movements, came to a
natural halt. Tied to the end of her arrows, along with her trademark red
fletching, were roses – some red, some white. Being careful of the
thorns, she nocked a non-matching pair and let them fly, swiftly
followed by another and a third. The half dozen arrows never got close
to Dreya, sailing high and wide to stick to her doorframe, thanks to
some magically modified tree resin on the flattened tips. From there,
the flowers grew into a rosebush that blocked the entrance entirely.
Dreya’s groundskeepers stopped their gardening and moved
threateningly towards Catriona, but a quick mental word with nature
caused the plants she had seeded to proliferate and grab them, the stems
wrapping around them and preventing any movement. The more they
struggled, the more the plants grew, and the tighter they squeezed.
Unconcerned, Dreya placed a bookmark in her book, closed it
and put it away in a pocket in her black velvet robes.
Cat found herself feeling quite envious of Dreya’s robes. They
looked so soft! Their colour was, without doubt, the blackest black she
had ever seen – as if they were spun from the fabric of the night sky.
Dreya glanced behind her at the roses and then finally looked up at
Catriona.
“That’s an original way to deliver flowers,” she remarked.
“Oh, I’m nothing if not original,” Cat replied.
“And what’s the occasion?”
“Occasion?”
“Well, call me old-fashioned, but when someone brings me
flowers, there’s usually an occasion of some kind.”
“Usually?” Cat wondered. “Do people bring you flowers often,
then, Dreya?”
“No,” Dreya admitted. “Not often. In fact, I can’t remember the
last time anyone did. Which brings me back to…”
“…an occasion,” Cat finished, nodding. “OK, that makes sense.
Well, I suppose you could say they’re a ‘thank you.’”
“A ‘thank you’? For what?”
“For agreeing to my proposal.”
Dreya arched her perfectly plucked eyebrows. “You’re
proposing to me now?”
Cat winced slightly at her choice of words and warned herself not
to be too smart mouthed. Catriona loved playing with words, but
113
clearly, she was in the presence of a master wordsmith. She’d meant to
say ‘proposition’ but having said ‘proposal,’ she had little choice but to
go with it.
“Well, it is Midsummer’s Day,” she reminded Dreya. Perhaps
that was the reason for her slip of the tongue. “But I think we should
take it slow,” she said, “date a bit first. Starting with, say, a study date
in your library.”
“Interesting idea,” Dreya remarked, “although if we’re going to
be dating and eventually married, it seems to me I should probably at
least know your name.”
“Thought you’d never ask,” said Cat. “I’m Catriona
Redfletching, and you’re going to give me access to your library before
this day is done.”
Dreya got to her feet with a kind of fluid grace that reminded
Catriona of Shyleen when she’d spotted some fascinating prey, just
before her claws came out.
“‘Before this day is done,’ eh?” Dreya echoed. “Someone’s been
doing her homework, but then Xarnas does like to brag about his finest
student. Not that I can blame him.”
“Well, you are his crowning achievement.”
“Flattery will get you nowhere,” Dreya said, dismissively.
“No flattery,” Cat assured her. “You’re Dreya the Dark – you’re
famous.”
“As are you, Catriona Redfletching,” Dreya replied. “According
to legend, you’re quite happy to demolish a wizard’s entire home just
to get your hands on a single book. I can only imagine what you’ll do
for an entire library.”
Cat gave her a crooked smile. “I’m showing you what I’m
prepared to do.”
“Do you really believe you can just tear the Black Tower apart?
Do you really think you have that power?”
“Power isn’t everything,” Cat shrugged, “and what I believe is
that I will have access to your library before this day is done.”
“And what’s to stop me calling on my grounds’ defences to kill
you where you stand?”
Cat glanced around, making a show of being unconcerned. “Your
guards seem to be a bit tied up at the moment.”
Dreya snorted, “If you’ve done this much prep work, you must
know I have a lot more defences than that. Unlike Ulvarius, I keep them
114
dormant, because I’m not insecure enough to jump at every shadow that
passes across my land.” She paused before adding pointedly, “No
matter what shape that shadow might take.”
Cat fought the urge to respond to that. It was possible Dreya knew
all about her avian activities. However, it was equally likely the
sorceress knew only that she could shapeshift and was simply making
a perfectly reasonable guess. Cat was an information trader, and she
wasn’t going to make the mistake of volunteering information just
because the other party might already know. She’d used that trick
herself.
“Still,” Dreya continued, “it only requires a thought to reactivate
them, if necessary. So, tell me, Catriona Redfletching—”
“—Call me Cat,” she interrupted, taking back some control over
the conversation.
“Very well, Cat it is, then, and while we’re on the subject of
names, given my rank as Secondmage of the Black order, you really
should address me as Mistress Dreya, according to Council rules.”
“Actually, I have a few issues with Council rules,” Cat told her.
“So do I,” said Dreya.
“You see? We’ve got something in common. Our date’s going
really well already!”
“It is, isn’t it?”
“Sorry,” Cat apologised. “You were going to ask me something
and I interrupted you.”
She was determined not to let the supreme mistress of control
have things her own way, so she made it seem as if Dreya needed her
permission to continue.
“That’s OK,” Dreya accepted, showing not a hint of irritation. “I
was just talking about my defences.”
“What about them?”
“Well, why shouldn’t I activate them and be rid of you?”
Cat pounced. Now she knew she’d got Dreya’s attention.
“Because you’re not insecure enough to jump at every shadow
that passes across your land,” she said. “Come on, Dreya, if you want
to be rid of me, do your own dirty work!”
“An excellent suggestion,” Dreya conceded. “I could use the
exercise.”
115
Without warning, she conjured a flight of poisoned darts that
flew towards Catriona, but a sudden gust of wind blew them harmlessly
away.
“OK, direct approach, then,” Dreya remarked, focussing her
magic to create the poison directly from the magic inside Catriona’s
body.
Cat shot her a withering look. “Really, Dreya? Poison? I’m a
druid – we’re awesome at curing poisons.”
“Well then, let’s see how you fair if I take your magic away.”
Dreya had developed the ability to literally drain magical power
from a wizard’s body, take it for herself. But Cat wasn’t a wizard, she
was a druid. Her magic came from an entirely different source.
“You can’t drain me because the power isn’t really mine. It’s the
power of nature herself, and you can’t drain nature.” Some of Catriona’s
plants began to extend themselves towards the sorceress. “Come on,
Dreya,” she said. “Take me seriously, or I’ll just tie you up in your
garden and demolish your tower, after all!”
“Alright then,” Dreya agreed. “Let me take things up a notch.”
With that, she unleashed flames from her fingertips, but Cat threw some
water in the air and directed it to form a jet of water in the path of the
flaming attack, extinguishing it, harmlessly. Dreya upped the power to
a pair of fist-sized fireballs, but Cat used more water to create a
suspended aquatic shield that blocked the strike.
“So, you need water to make water,” Dreya observed. “What
happens if you run out?”
She invoked her magic, and Cat’s water bottles shattered, spilling
their contents on the ground. Then, for good measure, she caused the
spilt water to boil away, robbing Cat of her aquatic resources…or so
she thought.
“Well?” she prompted. “Where are you going to get your water
from now?”
“Dreya!” Cat admonished her. “I thought you’d be more
observant than this. Haven’t you noticed the sun?”
Dreya glanced up at the sky.
“It’s gone behind some clouds, so what?”
“Look at those clouds, Dreya,” Cat said. “Really look. Clouds
like that mean only one thing. It looks to me like it’s going to…”
Right on cue, the rain began to pour – hard!
116
“Well, you certainly have a flair for the dramatic,” Dreya
remarked, approvingly. “Just two questions: First, if you can make it
rain on cue, why carry water around with you?”
“Partly for convenience, but mostly because the rain makes my
hair go frizzy.”
For the first time, there was a flicker of something on Dreya’s
face, and while Cat wouldn’t go so far as to call it a smile, it was a
beginning.
“Second question?” she prompted.
An enormous fireball, three feet in diameter grew between
Dreya’s hands. “Do you think a bit of rain is enough to stop this?”
In response, the rain in the air between them became a waterfall,
a curtain of water separating them.
“This might,” said Cat.
Dreya just shook her head, sending the fireball forth. Cat was
confident of her aquatic shield, but to her surprise, instead of passing
through it, the fireball quickly darted around it. Choosing the better part
of valour, Cat shifted to her falcon form and tried to fly away from the
approaching fireball, calling off the rain to make flying more
comfortable, but no matter what aerobatics she tried, it tracked her
every move. She’d never tried to use weather control magic in another
form before, but staying as a falcon was the only way she could stay
ahead of the fire. It helped that it was the first form she’d ever mastered.
By now, it was almost as familiar to her as her real body, which meant
she didn’t need much concentration to maintain it. Compartmentalising
what her avian-self needed, she devoted the rest of her brain to
manipulating the airflow around the moving fireball into a miniwhirlwind, spinning faster and faster until it removed the air from the
eye and extinguished the flames.
That done, she shifted back to her true self in midair, standing on
one of her Windy Steps.
“Didn’t your mother ever tell you not to play with fire?” she
wondered.
“I think she may have said something about that,” Dreya
admitted, “but then she also told me to marry a prince, who was willing
to overlook certain things, and get showered with rose petals in a
traditional marriage ceremony. As if becoming a Faery princess should
have been the pinnacle of my ambitions.” She shrugged. “I tended not
to listen to my mother too much after that.”
117
Catriona flattered herself that if Dreya the Dark was volunteering
personal information now, then she was definitely making an
impression.
“Still,” Dreya continued, “perhaps you’re right. Maybe I should
change things up now. Let’s see how you handle this!”
Cat felt the tiny hairs on her arms start to stand up in response to
the build-up of charge around the sorceress that was clearly going to
develop into a lightning bolt heading in her direction. The druidess had
just the thing. Out of her pocket dimension, she pulled out, of all things,
a bucket of water, which she threw all over Dreya the instant the bolt
was ready, causing it to backfire, painfully. While the sorceress was
momentarily stunned, the druid used that same water to trap Dreya in a
cylindrical cage of ice.
“Don’t play with electricity, either,” Cat admonished her, as she
stepped back down to the ground. “Especially with so much water
around.”
Dreya levitated out of the trap, scoffing at Cat leaving such an
obvious escape.
“I’m insulted if you think that would be any kind of challenge.”
“Back at ya!” she retorted, making the wind pick up so much that
Dreya was thrown back down to the ground with a bump. “As if I’d
leave such an obvious escape route without it leading to a trap! You’re
still not taking me seriously, Dreya. Stop holding back – show me what
you’ve really got, or I might start to doubt that you’re really as powerful
and deadly as you make out.”
“Alright,” Dreya acceded. “If you’re sure that’s how you really
want it. Just remember you asked for it!”
With that, for the next half hour, Dreya turned up the power and
frequency of attacks, putting Cat firmly on the defensive, working
frantically to counter whatever came her way. Cat kept on the move,
never letting Dreya pin her down, countering with magic or
shapeshifting to escape and buy time. The way she ran up and down her
Windy Steps, Cat was thankful that her time with Mandalee had got her
in shape. Still, she needed a breather for a minute and decided to put a
barrier between them while she got her breath back. Throwing a few
pebbles on the ground, she grew a stone wall between them as she
landed. She didn’t think Dreya would try to levitate over it after what
happened the last time. Hopefully, breaking through it would at least
take a minute.
118
“Stonewalling me now, Cat?” Dreya called out. “And here was
me thinking we were communicating really well since we started
dating!”
“Oh, you know how it is,” Cat returned. “Everybody in a
relationship needs their own space, sometimes!”
“True,” Dreya allowed, invoking her magic to shatter the stone
into fragments, “but I’m all about breaking down barriers and moving
forward. Standing still for too long can be bad for you. It can take the
magic right out of a relationship.”
Cat found herself suddenly surrounded by an anti-magic field.
“But our two magics are different,” Cat pointed out.
“Yes, of course, I know you’re a druid – don’t think I haven’t
adapted the field to take that into account.”
“You know, I really don’t get these things,” Catriona said. “An
anti-magic field is itself a form of magic, so how does it operate?”
“It works on a different frequency to other magic and cuts off all
other frequencies but its own.”
“Interesting,” said Cat, “so in theory, if I could determine the
right frequency, I could adapt my magic to run off the field itself.”
Dreya’s eyes widened slightly, betraying interest in a concept she
hadn’t considered before.
“Can you do that?”
“Not yet,” Cat admitted, to Dreya’s apparent disappointment,
“but you’ve just given me a big piece of the puzzle. Give me time.”
“Time’s something you don’t have. You’re trapped.”
Cat shook her head. “I’ve been in worse traps than this, and after
criticising me for leaving an obvious escape route, earlier, you’ve done
the same thing.”
Dreya scoffed, “I don’t make mistakes like that – the field forms
a dome over your head. You can’t fly out.”
“Wasn’t planning to,” Cat returned.
The anti-magic field only blocked her from sending her magic
outside the barrier, she could still use it on herself, so she shifted to her
mole form and burrowed underneath. While she remained underground,
Dreya had no way to track her until she came back up and nipped Dreya
on the ankle. As the sorceress whirled around, Cat shifted straight to
falcon form and flew up into the air over Dreya’s head, where she
reverted to her true self and stood on her Windy Steps.
119
“If this were a real battle,” she said, “I'd have changed to wolf
form and bitten you properly, or falcon form and pecked out your eyes,
or owl form and…hooted…really loud…or something.”
Dreya’s face twitched to a half-smile, just for a moment before
she could get it under control. “Started well, that threat.”
“Wasn’t trying to threaten you; I was trying to make you laugh.
Almost succeeded, too!”
“You’re not that funny,” Dreya refuted.
“I am so that funny!” Cat insisted. “Come on, this one was a
classic!” she said, pulling another bucket out of her pocket dimension,
brandishing it over Dreya’s head.
“Using the same trick twice, Cat? I’m disappointed.”
“Dreya!” Cat rebuked her. “As if I would!”
Cat tipped the bucket’s contents over Dreya, but it wasn’t water,
this time, but rose petals.
120
Chapter 17
“What the—?” Dreya began, unsure how to react to the flurry of
rose petals fluttering around her in the breeze. Given the way druid
magic worked, it was entirely conceivable that this might be some new,
inventive form of attack, although Dreya couldn’t imagine what
offensive use rose petals could have.
“Well, I thought our relationship was going so well,” Cat
explained, “we could skip right to the wedding.” Then with a mock hurt
look, she asked, “I didn’t misread the situation, did I?”
This time Dreya’s smile was fuller and lasted longer. “I think it’s
a bit too soon, that’s all. I haven’t accepted your proposal yet.”
“Ah, but you’re going to. You’re almost there, I can tell!”
“You’re very sure of yourself,” Dreya said, putting on her very
best frown.
“Aww, don’t be like that – at least let me blow you a kiss!”
The wind picked up, suddenly, forcing Dreya back towards her
tower steps. Cat had noticed the rain had left a pool of water at the
bottom, which gave her an idea of how to get Dreya to do something
she’d planned from the beginning. Unfortunately, she hadn’t pushed
Dreya quite far enough. Doing the same thing twice would make Dreya
suspicious. She needed one more roll of the dice. It was highly
dangerous, but it was the only way.
“How was that for you?” Cat quipped, trying to use their verbal
sparring to manipulate Dreya.
“Well I must admit, I was very moved, but you’re still no nearer
getting inside my tower.”
“Oh, I’m closer than you realise,” Cat retorted, “and if you want
to stop me, you’ll have to stop playing and fight me properly. “Come
on,” she demanded, “you didn't fight Ulvarius with these tricks!”
“No, I used blood magic.”
“But that's unstable!” Cat mock gasped.
“It’s perfectly stable. It just needs control.”
“Yes, I’ve heard you like to be in control, so control me. If you
can. Come on, Dreya, turn up the power all the way: show me what you
can really do. Show me your famous blood magic. I’m not going to
believe you can really do it unless you show me.”
“Don't try to goad me – it won't work.”
121
Cat knew that. Dreya’s refusal was part of the plan. “Not trying
to. I know what you can do. Aren't you curious to know what I can do?
Alright, forget blood magic. Best conventional spell. In fact, tell you
what, you can blast me with your deadly magical energy beam.”
“You know about that?” Dreya wondered. “Oh, of course, I used
it to defend Xarnas,” she realised. “You can’t really want me to do that.”
“Yes, I do,” Cat insisted, “and I'll fight you with…let’s see…”
she made a show of checking what spell components she still had left,
“…a handful of sand.”
“You'll die.”
“What do you care?”
“I don't. It's just a shame to end the fun so soon.”
Cat pounced on the victory. “Ha! I got you to admit you're having
fun!”
Dreya actually winced, conceding the point.
“But seriously,” Cat continued, “quite a few wizards will thank
you. I've become something of a thorn in their side.”
“Like old Renjaf,” Dreya said.
It was Cat’s turn to be surprised.
“You're not the only one who does their homework,” Dreya told
her.
“Renjaf will probably send you flowers and have my friend Jacob
deliver them,” Cat said, recovering quickly. “You can say hi to him for
me. Anyway, are we doing this or not?” As she was speaking, she
slowly, casually, moved towards the optimum position that she had in
her mind.
“It's your funeral. Any special requests for that, by the way?”
“Just bury me here in your garden if you don’t mind. I like what
you've done with the place.”
“Thanks. It’s certainly a big improvement on the Black Tower's
previous owner's taste. Tell you what: I'll cut down those roses you
grew around my door and put them on your grave.”
“Sounds nice.”
“Well, it’s been a whirlwind romance, Cat,” Dreya considered.
“I only just met you, and yet we’ve dated, you’ve proposed, we’ve got
married, and now I have to plan your funeral.”
“Ours is a tragic love,” Catriona agreed, solemnly, coming to a
natural, gentle halt so that she could draw an exact straight line between
herself, Dreya and the door to the Black Tower. She wanted the
122
sorceress up those steps. Now in position, she grew the plants around
her to grip her tightly in place no matter what Dreya threw at her.
“OK, then,” Dreya said. “Ready?”
“Ready,” Cat confirmed, fist closed tightly around her sand so it
couldn’t trickle out.
Without further warning, Dreya built up her power and shot out
her energy beam. Cat threw her handful of sand into the air and fused
it, turning it instantly into Nature’s Mirror, reflecting the energy right
back. Dreya shielded as Cat knew she would, but the force of the blast
sent her recoiling backwards to sprawl on the steps of her Tower.
Cat silently celebrated. She’d got Dreya the Dark exactly where
she wanted her.
Dreya was literally and figuratively stunned. Picking herself up,
she demanded to know how Cat had done that.
Cat explained, “Druid magic is the opposite of wizard magic, in
a way. I take the power you use, change it, recycle it and send it back.
So, logically, if you think about it…”
“…the right kind of druid magic shield can reflect my wizard
magic,” Dreya concluded. “Excellent.” Then with a dangerous gleam in
her eyes, she suggested, “Shall we see if it works just as well against
blood magic?”
Cat was indignant. “If you're determined to be Miss Serious Face
again, I’m going to start getting all frosty, too!”
The pool of water froze at the base of the steps and grew into an
ice wall, keeping Dreya trapped on her steps, unable to set foot in her
garden, cut off from her black roses.
“Oh, I see what you’re doing,” Dreya said. “Nice move. Thing
is, though, I don’t need my black roses for blood magic – not when
you’ve provided roses of your own.”
She reached out to prick a finger on the roses around the door,
but the rosebush reached out to grab her instead, immobilising her
without breaking the skin so as not to give her access to the kind of
magic she was trying to unleash. Dreya was in obvious pain.
“My arrows were fashioned from the same wood as those roses,”
Catriona explained, “and I had them blessed by a White cleric friend of
mine who has a particular affinity for nature. Quite painful for a Dark
wizard, I imagine.”
123
She grabbed her Crystal Mage Staff out of her pocket dimension
– the better to make an imposing impression as she walked close, just
behind her ice wall.
“You see, there’s a drawback to wizard magic. You need to use
your hands to inscribe the language of magic in the air. You can't do
magic if you can't move. Now, I’m not sure about blood magic, but I
figure if you’re immobilised, you can’t prick yourself, so you can’t
access that power!”
Dreya’s smile was chilling, and suddenly Cat wasn’t quite so
smug. Her mind raced, frantically, trying to see if there was something
she’d overlooked. If there was, she couldn’t see it.
“If you were dealing with any other wizard, you'd be right,”
Dreya conceded. “But this is me. Do you really think I'd let this stop
me? Here’s a little thing I’ve been working on…”
She focussed her gaze on Cat through the clear ice and spoke but
one word.
“STUN.”
Cat found herself completely unable to move. A new anti-magic
field formed around her, skin-tight and completely encasing her from
the top of her head to the soles of her feet. Dreya wasn’t one to make
the same mistake twice.
Dreya moved her penetrating gaze to the roses trapping her.
“BREAK.”
The wood and green stems snapped, allowing Dreya to step clear.
“SHATTER,” she told the ice wall, and it blew apart into a
million fragments.
Cat was grateful that Dreya’s stun magic allowed her to close her
eyes against any incoming ice shards. She still had her eyes shut tight
as she felt Dreya’s breath on her face.
“SQUEEZE,” came Dreya's voice, and at her command, a force
of magic took hold of Cat in a vice-like grip.
Her eyes flew open in genuine fear and panic.
“Shapeshift into something smaller, and I squeeze tighter,” Dreya
warned her. “Finally out of tricks, druid? Feel free to nod your head.”
Cat thought hard but had to admit defeat. She nodded.
Still not releasing her, Dreya turned her attention to Catriona’s
Crystal Mage Staff. “Interesting staff you've got there. It seems to be
giving off higher planar energy as well as a very mixed up magic
signature, like druid, wizard and cleric magic all squeezed together like,
124
well, like you are at the moment,” she taunted, like a spider savouring
her power and control over the annoying insect snared in her web.
“Mind if I take a closer look?” Dreya asked. “Oh, that’s right, you don’t
have a choice, do you?”
Higher planar energy was the power of the shadow warriors. The
power Daelen StormTiger wielded. If ever she was going to take him
on as she planned, she would need that power. She had begun
experimenting with the residual traces left behind after their devastating
battles. Scraps off the shadow warriors’ table. But the power within the
staff this druid girl possessed was a feast by comparison. It was
irresistible.
Dreya reached out, but as soon as her hand touched the staff, a
brilliant flash of energy broke all magical bindings and sent both mages
flying. Cat landed in the soft garden. Dreya was not so lucky. Her head
collided with her door, throwing it wide open and knocking her
unconscious.
This was Catriona’s first peek inside the Black Tower. She could
see that the front door led to a large porch or portico area, and eventually
to an interior door made of frosted glass. Through that glass, Cat could
just make out figures rushing closer: Dreya’s personal staff, she
realised. Presumably, while Dreya was conscious, she had kept them
out of it, preventing them from interfering while she ‘dealt with’ Cat,
personally. But with Dreya unconscious, there was nothing holding
them back anymore. They were going to come rushing out, believing
their Mistress to be under attack.
Catriona had never intended to seriously harm Dreya –
throughout their fight, she had carefully avoided that – but her elite
guards were not likely to take intentions into account. They would kill
Catriona without a moment’s hesitation.
Cat still had a couple of small vials of the water Mandalee had
blessed, in her pocket dimension, in case of emergency. This definitely
qualified. With a prayer to Blessed Alycia, Mother of Nature, she used
one to create a new ice wall to keep them trapped in the porch.
Mandalee’s blessing meant it was effectively frozen Holy Water, which
would make it difficult and painful for the undead guards to break
through, but it wouldn’t stop them for long.
She knew how powerful Dreya’s elite guards were. They weren’t
like the lumbering, unthinking ones in the grounds, still unable to work
out how to break free of the ties that bound them. No magic Catriona
125
possessed would stop them, and if they touched her…well, she didn’t
want to think about what would happen then. Suffice to say, when
dealing with powerful undead, simply dying is often seen as a positive
result.
My mother could have shifted to falcon form and flown away,
but if she did that, there was no way Dreya would ever let her into her
tower. Moreover, ‘Get the Greatest Mage Who Ever Lived really
annoyed and out for your blood’ was not on Cat’s to-do list for the day.
If Dreya interpreted this as an actual attack, their next fight would be
for real, not the fun playtime of this afternoon. Cat had to pray she could
make her see reason and healing her would be a pretty good first
gesture.
Catriona ran to Dreya's side and focussed all of her energy on
restoring her. She told Blessed Alycia to take what she needed directly
out of her own body. It would weaken her but, given the way her ice
prison was breaking up, if Dreya did not recover quickly and in a
favourable mood, Cat’s strength would make no difference.
After an eternity, Dreya came around. The ice was beginning to
splinter. The guards would be through any second.
Cat panicked. “Not an attack!” she exclaimed desperately.
“Promise! Not an attack! Please call off your guards so I can get you
inside!”
Dreya’s head was fuzzy from the concussion, but she still
managed to quip, “You’re determined to get in my tower one way or
another, aren’t you?”
“Dreya, please!”
“You could just fly away.”
Cat shook her head. “I won’t leave you.”
“Why not?” Dreya asked, just as the ice finally broke apart. “Be
honest,” she warned. “Tell the truth like your life depends on it.”
“Because…” Cat began. Dreya’s death knights stepped through
the broken ice wall, the ghouls at their side. “Because it’s my fault you
got injured…”
“The truth, remember?” Dreya insisted.
“That is the truth!” she insisted. “Well,” she amended, “that and
I won’t get what I want from you if I do.”
She cringed at the admission, but Dreya just smiled.
126
“Now, that is the truth.” To her guards, she commanded, “Stand
down, all of you, and return to your duties! Catriona here is not to be
harmed unless I specifically order it.”
Her guards complied.
“I’ll have to train them to recognise the difference between an
attack and an accident. It’s never come up before.”
“You know it was an accident, then? Not an attack?”
“Of course,” Dreya reassured her, choosing to remain seated on
the ground for the moment. Catriona sat beside her, drained from the
healing on top of all her other exertion. “You’re not stupid. Reckless,
yes. Stupid, no.”
Cat apologised. She hadn’t expected that to happen when Dreya
touched her staff.
“Only happened once before,” she said. “Actually, I don’t even
know why I got it out of my pocket dimension. It’s like it wanted to
come out. Needed, even. It’s very odd.”
“Well, as a further gesture of peace,” Dreya said, “would you
mind allowing my gardening staff to get on with their work? You've left
them tied up.”
Cat looked over and realised Dreya was right. “Sorry. I forgot.”
She asked nature to release the undead gardeners, who simply
returned to their ceaseless duties. Cat further promised to tidy up the
mess she’d made with her various magics, once she had her strength
back, and take the roses away from around her door.
“Leave them,” Dreya told her. “In fact, why don’t you move the
black ones and put all three colours together? It would be a good symbol
for the co-operation of the three orders of magic, which is something
I’m trying to achieve with the Council. As for you, Catriona
Redfletching: you beat me.”
“Technically, my staff beat you,” she refuted.
“Semantics,” Dreya insisted. “You beat me.”
“Please don't kill me!” Cat cringed.
“Kill you? That's the best contest I've had for years. I'm in your
debt, and I always pay my debts. Besides, why would I kill my
betrothed?”
“Your what?” Cat laughed.
“You proposed, remember? I accept.”
“So, we’re getting married, after all?” Cat wondered.
127
Dreya grinned, and replied, “Well, like you said, why don’t we
take it slow and start with a study date? I grant you full access to my
tower's library and facilities whenever you like. How’s that for a
romantic gesture?”
“Really? That's amazing!” Cat cried out in joy.
Dreya tried to stand, but even with Cat’s help, the world was still
spinning too fast, and she promptly sat down again.
“Well then, in a romantic gesture of your own, you can carry me
across the threshold.”
With help from some low-level levitation from Dreya, Cat was
able to get them both into her main sitting room, where they collapsed
together on a sofa.
“I underestimated you,” Dreya admitted. “It won't happen next
time.”
“Next time?”
“Well, I was hoping for a rematch…but not right now, please,
dear. I've got a headache.”
“I blame the door,” Cat quipped. “Your door dared to attack
Dreya the Dark and must be destroyed.”
Dreya laughed, “I’ll have it burnt, immediately.” Cat gave her a
meaningful look and Dreya got the message. “OK, I admit it: you are
pretty funny.”
“Ooh!” Cat grinned, delighted. “You think I'm pretty, too?”
“I think your magic is beautiful,” Dreya replied.
Cat choked on a laugh and then blushed when she realised Dreya
was serious. “Wow, thank you! No-one's ever said anything like that to
me before.”
“That's because other people don't see magic as I do. Magic isn't
just a tool or a weapon, it's…”
“It's an art,” Cat finished.
“Precisely,” Dreya agreed. “Your creativity is part of what I'm
trying to achieve in magic.”
Dreya called one of her death knights to make some tea.
“Now, let’s talk about what you need from me, Cat, and how we
might advance magic, together because, thanks to you, I'm more
convinced than ever that magic can do so much more.”
*****
128
Sitting there, beside someone she dared to think of as a new
friend, my mother slowly started to relax, and that, gentle reader, is the
story of how Catriona Redfletching impressed Dreya the Dark.
If Catriona and Mandalee was a friendship for the ages, this was
something altogether more complicated.
129
Chapter 18
When Catriona showed Dreya Shifting Stars and the other
references that seemed to verify the claims made therein, Cat wasn’t
expecting Dreya to snap her fingers and immediately advance her
research. After all, it wasn’t reasonable to suppose the sorceress would
have a complete inventory of the Black Tower’s vast library in her head.
Fortunately, that wasn’t necessary.
Dreya had been interested in some of the magical research
conducted by Ulvarius. That may have worried some people, but not
Catriona. She didn’t make the mistake others made with Dreya, in
assuming she would one day become a tyrant like Ulvarius before her.
That was prejudice, pure and simple: her black robes, plus her chosen
residence did not automatically equal a prelude to world conquest.
Dreya’s interest in Ulvarius was purely academic: nobody had had
access to his research before, and to Catriona, leaving that resource
untapped made no sense. How could anyone know whether there was
something of value unless someone was prepared to look? It seemed to
Cat that although Dreya was wholly committed to Dark magic and the
power it could bring her, she had not forgotten her Red robe roots. No
doubt Xarnas would have told her, many times, the central tenet of the
order of Balance: ‘Knowledge is neutral; its application is not.’
In this case, gentle reader, the knowledge in question came from
an entry in Ulvarius’ personal diary from the Day of the Lake of Tears
that I have mentioned before. The day when, according to legend and
his own journal (which is hardly unequivocal evidence), Lake
Quernhow was formed.
A whole town wept for me this day. The baby started it, perhaps
sensing how the greatness of Ulvarius was to be challenged. The rest of
the town had to drown before they had a chance to spread the word and
try to undermine me. Those deaths caused the ground to shake and sink
beneath the waters of a brand-new lake, blessed with the souls of those
I killed. It was truly magnificent.
Some higher planar creature came today to witness the glory of
the power of Ulvarius. It refused to bow down to my greatness, even
daring to suggest that a mage more powerful than I would one day rise.
All nonsense, of course. The truth is, it secretly feared Ulvarius – I
130
could tell – and was just using that ridiculous claim to try and make me
hesitate to kill it. In the end, I let it run away so that it could warn other
higher planar beings not to mess with Ulvarius in the future.
Even as the magic of Ulvarius made the whole town weep, it used
some kind of staff to create a magnificent display of light in the sky in
Ulvarius’ honour.
Nothing will be the same, now. Now that I know my magic has
caught the attention of the higher planes, everything has changed, even
the sky. For today, the stars moved for Ulvarius.
Now, I daresay something struck you about that, gentle reader –
besides the revelation that Ulvarius even wrote about himself in the
third person! It certainly struck my mother.
“The stars moved for him!” she cried, breathless. “Three hundred
years ago, my Angel appeared, and the stars moved for him.”
“Well, I very much doubt they moved for him,” Dreya said.
“That’s just his ego talking. To be honest, when I read this before, I just
assumed it was a metaphor – or a delusion.”
“Understandable,” Cat accepted.
“But now that you’ve shown me your research and told me your
own experiences, the similarities are too striking and repeated too often
to ignore.”
Comparing star charts from Ulvarius’ time to more recent ones,
showed a seemingly random group had once again moved out of
position.
Some obvious questions naturally suggested themselves: Why
did the Angel keep popping up at various times in history? Why did
they conceal themselves from all but one person? And what were they
doing with the Crystal Mage Staff to cause that lightshow?
“Can’t answer any of those,” Cat admitted, “but I do have a
theory about the star shifts.”
“Go on,” Dreya encouraged her.
“Well, the author of Shifting Stars questioned whether it was the
stars or Tempestria itself that was moving. He made a case for the latter,
but I think he overlooked a third, more likely possibility. Maybe it’s
neither. Maybe the stars and our world remain unchanged in their
relative positions in the heavens. Maybe it’s merely our perception of
the stars that is changing.”
131
“You mean, something in between is filtering or refracting their
light?” Dreya considered. “You’re right, that does make more sense. I
can’t imagine any magic moving heavenly bodies around but bending
light – we can do that already. It’s just a question of scale. But why?
What’s the point?”
Cat shrugged. “And that’s as far as my clever theory goes, I’m
afraid. We don’t even know whether the shifting stars are a goal or a
side effect.”
Dreya had to admit she could suggest nothing more.
“Also,” Cat continued, “there’s one other question that you’re
being really sweet not to bring up, Dreya: Whatever my Angel’s been
doing with this staff for goodness knows how many centuries, it must
surely be important. So why in the name of Creation give it to me?”
“Maybe that’s important, too?” Dreya suggested.
“Yeah, right!” Cat scoffed. “Because I’m so important!”
“You’re important to me,” Dreya stated, matter-of-factly, “and I
happen to think I’m pretty important, so it doesn’t seem an entirely
unreasonable hypothesis.”
Cat shook her head and offered a wry smile. “Only you could
combine a compliment and self-aggrandising in one sentence.”
Dreya smiled back. Cat got the impression that not many people
got to see that. “Just telling it like it is.”
“Well, that does lead me nicely to something I wanted to bring
up,” Cat said. “Since I’ve met you, you’ve talked about your interest in
bringing diverse magic together to strengthen the whole, and in that
context, something else has struck me about my staff.”
It had occurred to Dreya, too: The readings from the Crystal
Mage Staff seemed to indicate it contained diverse forms of magic,
somehow bound together with higher planar energy. How, or for what
purpose, the sorceress could not fathom.
Catriona snapped her out of her thoughts, speaking Dreya’s name
in the most solemn tone the sorceress had heard from her, and following
up with a most unexpected question.
“We’re friends, aren’t we?” Cat asked.
Dreya looked puzzled. “I like to think so.”
“But more than that – and I know it hasn’t been that long – I think
we have a pretty good understanding of each other.”
Dreya agreed.
132
“So, I’m under no illusions: for you, the power will always come
first.”
“I won’t deny that,” Dreya said, “but don’t for one moment
imagine that means I don’t…” she hesitated, unused to expressing such
thoughts, “…care. I am, in point of fact, very pleased to have you in my
tower and in my life.”
“I know,” she assured her with a smile, “and no matter
how…unconventionally you say things like that, as I say, I understand
you.”
“What are you getting at, Cat?”
“I just want you to understand me when I say that I would never
ask you to turn down a chance for power for the sake of friendship. You
wouldn’t, and I get that, I really do.”
“Why do I feel there’s a ‘but’ coming?”
Cat nodded. “But equally, my staff and whatever it contains, is
more important to me than your friendship, if it ever came down to a
choice.”
“I can appreciate that,” Dreya agreed, “better than anyone. I think
I can see the point you’re heading towards but say it anyway.”
“My point is that I want to try and find a way for us to live and
work together, to grow as friends, in full understanding of each other,
and I want—”
“—You want assurance that I will never take power from your
staff, no matter how tempted I might be.”
“Exactly. I know asking you to promise is futile. Your word is
not as binding as your debts. Therefore,” she concluded, “I want you to
think of taking power from my staff, as a debt that can never be repaid.
“Because that is the one line I would never cross,” Dreya replied.
Cat shrugged. “Like I say: I understand you.”
Dreya took a slow breath, in and out, in deep consideration of
how to answer.
*****
Aunt Dreya was always far more multifaceted than any tyrant
ever was. People don’t often give her enough credit for that, but my
mother always did. Cat was right that Dreya would break a promise if
circumstances changed, but she did not like lies. To her mind, that was
a form of debt. She would keep secrets, conceal strategic information,
133
but first and foremost, she wanted to spearhead the building of a world
of magic on Tempestria. Lies, it seemed to her, served as feeble
foundations upon which to build anything.
Dreya’s quest for power, Cat’s search for knowledge, and their
friendship for each other – all of these things were important to Dreya,
and she was of one mind with Catriona in that she wanted to find a way
for those things to co-exist.
*****
“Currently,” Dreya said at last, “the different powers are too
entangled to even think of tapping into them. I couldn’t possibly control
what might be unleashed. As for the future, you want to know exactly
what is buried in that staff before you decide what to do with it. I
completely agree. So, since I believe your word to be more binding than
mine, I want you to promise me something: whenever you break
through to the final layer of security and are ready to uncover what is
buried, promise me I will be there, and you will include me in whatever
you find. If you promise me that, I will consider myself indebted to you
before the fact. Deal?”
“Deal,” Cat agreed.
She and Dreya shook hands to seal it. “OK Cat, having sorted
that out,” Dreya said, “I have a compelling urge to shoot you.”
Cat knew, when Dreya said things like that, she didn’t mean it
the way it sounded, but all the sane, she feigned indignation as she said,
“And I thought we were getting along so well!”
“Don’t worry, I can turn the power of the energy beam right
down. No sense in wasting power.”
“Heavens forbid you should ever waste your power on me,” her
friend remarked.
It was Dreya’s turn to shake her head in wonder. “Oh, Cat,” she
said, “only you could make it sound like I’m insulting you by not
shooting you with a deadly energy beam.”
“Well, power isn’t everything, Dreya, but it’s nice to know I’m
worthy of yours.”
“Has it occurred to you that half the things we say to each other
don’t make any sense, conventionally speaking?”
“Of course!” Cat concurred. “We’re unconventional people. If
we did make sense, that would be weird.”
134
Deciding not to comment on that, Dreya led Cat to her training
room, magically shielded to prevent any accidents due to stray magic.
Having shut the door behind her, she wasted not a moment before
shooting her friend. As promised, the power was turned down so much,
it was about as dangerous as any other beam of torchlight. Still, Cat
treated the threat as real and responded with her Nature’s Mirror,
reflecting it back.
Dreya repeated the attack numerous times, sometimes with high
frequency, other times with a long gap in between, so as not to give Cat
any rhythm to anticipate the ‘attack.’ Still, every time, without fail, Cat
reflected it back. Dreya switched to other magic, periodically, which
allowed Catriona time to recycle the mirror back to sand.
“Interesting,” Dreya remarked. “Why don’t you just reuse the
mirror?”
Cat picked up the most recently used one and invited Dreya to
shoot her one more time. When she did so, the mirror failed to stop the
torch beam and disintegrated into magical energy, leaving her with
nothing to recycle back to sand.
“See?” Catriona said. “They only work once. I have to recreate
all my magic from scratch every time. It’s one of the drawbacks of druid
magic.”
“Everything has drawbacks,” Dreya replied. “Conventional
wizard magic takes more power than what you would need to
accomplish the same thing, and as you pointed out, it requires the free
use of the hands. Blood magic requires self-harm and the utmost
concentration.”
“What about your power words?” Cat asked, referring to the way
Dreya had turned their initial contest around with nothing but the words,
‘STUN,’ ‘BREAK,’ ‘SHATTER,’ and ‘SQUEEZE.’
Dreya explained that one of the more thought-provoking parts of
Ulvarius’ research had involved trying to compress writing in the
language of conventional spells into what he referred to as ‘power
words.’ He had been close, but as with blood magic, what he lacked
was control.
Before explaining further, Dreya fetched a simple wooden chair
from another room.
“If this broke apart, could you put it back together with your
magic?” she asked. Cat agreed that would be perfectly simple. “Good,”
Dreya said. “I rather like it.”
135
She set the chair down in a corner and stepped back, indicating
Catriona should join her.
“If I just look at the chair and say ‘Break,’ nothing happens.”
Sure enough, nothing did. “But if I use my power word, ‘BREAK’…”
The chair broke apart. “Over to you, Cat,” she said. Catriona used her
magic, visualised how the chair looked before, and reconstructed it,
flawlessly. “Now, I can’t just do that again straight away, because
power words aren’t as simple as they look.”
Dreya left the room again for a moment, returning with a pen and
a sheet of paper. Then, by way of analogy, she wrote the word
‘BREAK’ and then folded the paper in a specific and elaborate way.
“That’s like your power word,” Cat understood. “Compressed,
made small, but you can’t just fold it any old way.”
“That’s one of the things Ulvarius didn’t understand. In his
arrogance, he thought he could make magic bend to his will as easily as
he could bend people. Magic breaks if you fold it the wrong way.”
“So do people.” Cat remarked. “When you use your power word,
then, you unfold the piece of paper, I presume.”
Dreya took hold of one corner and with a deft flick of the wrist,
caused the paper to unfurl once more. Catriona clapped in appreciation
of the trick.
“I take it Ulvarius couldn’t do that?”
“Not consistently, no. Because Ulvarius was folding the magic in
random ways, the results were also random. He might intend something
to break, and it wouldn’t because there was no power behind the word
or vice versa.”
Cat’s eyes widened. “You mean if you didn’t fold and unfold the
magic properly and you said something like, ‘Let’s take a break’…”
“…I could break you, yes,” Dreya affirmed, “or myself. And I
don’t think you could use your druid magic to put you or me back
together as easily as that chair. Folding the magic properly takes time
and concentration. I can’t risk doing it on the fly and getting it wrong.
Interrupting a power word could make it backfire on me.
“I can only use a power word once, because after I use it, the
magical sheet of paper I wrote it on does this…” the paper burst into
flames, leaving nothing but ash. “Now, the analogy isn’t perfect,
because the magic will regenerate in time, but still it means every time
I use a power word, I have to remake it from scratch.”
136
“As you say, everything has drawbacks,” Cat said, accepting the
point.
“Yes, but the drawbacks of your druid magic are balanced by a
huge advantage that I don’t think you’ve fully realised.”
Cat frowned, trying and failing to think what her friend could
mean.
“I had a suspicion already, and the experiments we did today
prove it.”
“Prove what?” Catriona wondered, fascinated. This was so much
better than her lessons in college had ever been.
“When I shoot my energy beam at you, you reflect it with your
Nature’s Mirror, right?”
“Yes, I’ve really got that down, now.”
Dreya nodded. “Definitely, but there’s a problem I couldn’t
figure out until today.”
“What problem?” Cat asked, still not seeing it.
“Cat, it’s impossible. You can’t anticipate and block a beam of
light. There isn’t time to make your mirror in the fraction of a second
before my beam hits you.”
Cat had never thought of it like that, but she couldn’t deny
Dreya’s logic.
“Your magic has a Temporal element. Somehow, you’re
manipulating Time so that the Mirror is in place exactly when you need
it to be. It’s the same when you mend a chair or old Renjaf’s tower:
you’re rewinding Time. Only to a small extent, but you’re doing it.
Clerics can do it, too. That’s how they heal injuries: they make the body
revert to its pre-injured state.”
“That’s where it’s different to druid healing,” Cat agreed. “We
just speed up the body’s natural healing process.”
“I’ll take your word for that,” Dreya said, “I haven’t had chance
to study druid magic before, but even that ‘speeding up’ process is
temporal magic, in a way.”
“But they told us at college that time magic is impossible,” Cat
objected.
She knew Magias, the first wizard, was supposed to have figured
it out, according to legend, but since nobody could read the Nameless
Book, she didn’t know how they thought they knew that.
“That’s because they’re only thinking about wizards.”
137
“Oh, just for a change!” Cat grumbled. “That got so annoying
once I started growing my druid magic – they just wouldn’t take it
seriously, like wizard magic was all that matters.”
Dreya agreed completely. “There isn’t only one way of doing
things, there never is. That short-sighted view is holding magic back.
You see, Cat, your fight is my fight, especially now.”
Cat found herself having to blink away moisture welling up in
her eyes. “Dreya! You really do say the most unexpectedly sweet
things.”
Dreya shifted, uncomfortably and replied, “Yes, well, don’t
spread that around, OK? I have a reputation to maintain.”
“Your secret’s safe with me,” she promised. “Although there is
someone I would like you to meet.”
Catriona had been living with Dreya for a month by now, and she
thought it was finally time to broach the subject of Mandalee. Cat
wasn’t sure how the Dark sorceress would feel about having someone
else spend time in her home. After all, she may not kill all intruders like
the Black Tower’s previous owner did, but still, she was hardly a
socialite. Plus, Dark wizards and White clerics were usually an
explosive combination. Even so, Cat knew it was vital that they should
meet. The Crystal Mage Staff was nagging her about it with distracting
persistence.
“Dreya,” said Cat, taking a deep breath, “when we first met, and
you grabbed my staff, you remember how it reacted?”
“I’m not likely to forget it,” Dreya replied, rubbing the back of
her head. “I’m sure I still have a small dent in the back of my skull!”
“Well, do you remember me saying that something similar had
happened once before?”
“Vaguely, now you mention it. It’s all rather hazy, I’m afraid. I
was a bit dazed at the time.”
“Well, I was thinking, if my staff reacted when you and I touched
it, and also when my other friend and I touched it, then the obvious
question is…”
“…What would happen if we all touched it together?” Dreya
concluded. “Why haven’t you mentioned this before?” she wondered.
“Since the first time, that is.”
“I wasn’t sure how you’d react,” Cat admitted. “My
friend…she’s a White cleric, and I know you’re a big proponent of cooperation in magic, but still…”
138
“…Co-operation with wizards and druids from across the
spectrum is one thing, but including clerics as well?”
“You’re opposed?” Cat wondered.
“On the contrary,” Dreya shook her head, “I’m fascinated by the
idea. Imagine the power that could be gained from such a joining of
magic! As you say, your staff seems to indicate that such a thing is
possible. I’m just not sure even my ambition stretches that far. But this
isn’t about including clerics in the Council or some grand joining of
power. This is just about me joining hands with one cleric of Light, and
for the sake of this one magical experiment, your friend has my
invitation if she’s willing.”
Cat threw her arms around her friend. “Thank you!” she cried.
“You never cease to amaze me,” she said, breaking the hug. Dreya
seemed startled by the physical contact but did not object to it. “I really
must stop underestimating you. Dreya the Dark inviting a cleric of Light
into her home – whatever will the neighbours think?”
Dreya shrugged. “With any luck, it’ll confuse the hell out of
them.”
“They might start to think you’ve turned nice!” Cat pointed out
with a wink.
Dreya pulled a face. “There’s no need to be insulting, Cat!”
*****
When Cat sent a sympathic message to Mandalee, extending
Dreya’s invitation, the power of the negative response almost knocked
her off her feet. She’d never felt anything like this when she’d touched
her friend’s mind before: Mandalee was furious. At first, Catriona
thought it must be Dreya or the Black Tower she was objecting to.
Sympathic communication wasn’t always clear on details, but when Cat
projected ‘friendship,’ there was no doubt whatsoever. It wasn’t Dreya
that Mandalee had a problem with – it was Catriona.
Honestly, Dreya’s power word could not have stunned her more
forcefully. So much so, a concerned Dreya gently guided her friend to
the chair so she could catch her breath. When Cat tried to project
‘negative understanding,’ all she got back was ‘LATER’ and then she
felt Mandalee slam her mental doors shut, putting Cat in mind of the
time Renjaf had done that, physically, and nearly broken her nose. This
hurt far more.
139
The emotional freefall, going from having such a fantastic time
with Dreya to the fear that she was somehow losing Mandalee was too
much for her, and she burst into tears.
140
Chapter 19
When Mandalee eventually turned up, she was in quite the state.
Her clothes were blackened and torn, with patches of dried blood
absorbed into the fabric. Her eyes were red-rimmed and bloodshot. She
was limping slightly, favouring her left leg and she was visibly
exhausted, practically ready to drop.
“Mandalee!” Cat cried, momentarily too frozen to move. “What
happened?”
The cleric snorted, “Like you care!”
“How can you say that?” Catriona gasped. “Of course I care, I’m
your friend!”
“Yeah, I used to think that,” she muttered. Then when Cat moved
to apply druid healing, she yelled, “Don’t you dare! You don’t get to
erase this and say it all worked out in the end.”
“What—?”
“I needed you, Catriona!” Mandalee emphasised her full name,
which she’d never used since the day they met. Her message was clear:
‘Your friends call you “Cat” but I’m not that anymore.’ “I needed your
help, but you were too busy with ‘her’!” she spat, pointing at Dreya.
“Hey, don’t drag me into this,” Dreya objected. “It’s not like I’m
keeping Cat prisoner if there’s somewhere else she needs to be.”
“You’re right,” Mandalee accepted. “I almost hoped you were
keeping her prisoner.” To Catriona, she added, “I almost believed that
was why you suddenly asked for my help.”
“What? No, it’s nothing like that, it’s just about my staff…”
“…Of course it is!” Mandalee rolled her eyes. “It’s always about
your bloody staff!”
“Look, Mandalee, I only need you for an experiment—”
Mandalee laughed without humour.
“You are unbelievable! You only need me for an experiment!
Otherwise, you have no use for me anymore? Well, that’s perfectly
clear, thank you.”
“You know I didn’t mean it like that!” Cat protested. Then
realising the leopard was missing, she gasped in horror, fearing the
worst. “Wait, where’s Shyleen?”
“She’ll pull through. Not that I’d bring her to this gods’ forsaken
place, anyway.”
141
“Pull through? You mean she’s hurt?”
“I paid for a group of druid healers to tend her.”
“You paid?” Cat was incredulous. “Why wouldn’t you just ask
me?”
Mandalee fixed her with her bloodshot eyes, and spat, “I needed
help I could rely on!”
“Mandalee, why are you acting like this?”
“Why?” Mandalee demanded, incredulously. “You know
why…” she trailed off, seeing Cat’s blank look. “Dear gods,” she
breathed, “you really don’t remember, do you?”
“Remember what?” Cat asked. “Mandalee, I have no idea what
you’re talking about.”
Mandalee finally relented to being helped inside the Black
Tower, where she could sit down.
*****
Mandalee explained how she’d been contracted to kill a demon
that was terrorising a town some fifty miles from the Black Tower, not
far from Compton, where she’d first met Catriona. Only about an hour
away as the falcon flew. From the reports, it seemed like it was a Greater
Demon from one of the lower planes, and almost certainly the most
powerful she had ever faced. The other odd thing was that demons of
that kind didn’t usually climb up from the depths on their own, which
suggested it had been summoned. That, in turn, meant a wizard. With
any luck, she could avoid the wizard and just take out the demon. After
all, that was her job.
She had occasionally been contracted to kill a summoned midlevel demon before. Last time, the wizard himself had hired her when
the demon he’d been studying broke free of his magical containment.
Still, there was always the danger that a wizard could be angry at the
interference, in which case, given the power of this demon, Mandalee
was going to need help to defend herself. She hadn’t fought a wizard
before, but she knew her friend had.
She had discussed all of this with Catriona when the contract
came through a couple of days ago, and although her friend had had her
nose in a book, as usual, she’d said, “Sure, Mandalee. Whatever you
need.”
142
Cat frowned and searched her memory. “I think I vaguely
remember saying that, but to be honest, I must not have been paying
attention, because I don’t recall anything about you needing my help
against a wizard. Just that you were going demon hunting miles away.
Mandalee, I’m sorry, but why didn’t you remind me?”
“When?” Mandalee demanded. “I haven’t seen you since!
You’ve been here all the time.”
“You could have contacted me sympathically,” Cat suggested.
“No, Cat, she couldn’t,” Dreya spoke up. “The shields around my
Tower block incoming mental communications. Telepathy or anything
similar. Some wizards favour mental attacks over physical ones. Had
you but mentioned you had this sympathic link, I could have adjusted
the shield, just as I did today.”
“So, what happened?” Cat asked Mandalee.
“I got lucky is what happened!”
It had taken pretty much everything Mandalee and Shyleen had
to kill the demon, but the wizard was linked to it, so he knew instantly
and came for her. Shyleen got between Mandalee and his first blast of
magic, which nearly split the leopard in two. All the time, Mandalee
was mentally screaming for Catriona who, as far as she was concerned,
had promised to be there. Mandalee thought she was dead, for sure,
when two figures whooshed overhead.
“It happened too fast for me to see properly, but it was most likely
Daelen StormTiger fighting another of his great battles with Kullos or
the dark clone – as if we don’t have enough problems without them!”
“Couldn’t agree more,” Dreya affirmed.
Mandalee blinked in surprise, then dismissed it as unimportant.
“Yes, well, in this case, I suppose it was just as well because it
distracted the wizard – only for a moment, but it was long enough for
me to run him through. Then, just as I’ve found a druid temple to take
care of Shyleen, I get a sympathic message from you, Catriona, asking
me to come and help you, after you singularly failed to be there for me!”
Cat opened her mouth, but she didn’t know what to say, except,
“I’m so sorry, Mandalee.”
“And would ‘sorry’ have brought Shyleen back if that wizard’s
magic had been just a bit stronger and killed her?”
Cat shook her head, tears welling up in her eyes. “Thank the gods
it wasn’t,” she whispered.
143
“You should thank them,” Mandalee insisted, “because that’s the
only reason I’m even talking to you rather than killing you.”
Cat offered to fly to Shyleen immediately and make sure they
were doing the healing right, but Mandalee was scathing.
“No! As I said, you don’t get to undo this. Besides, I don’t trust
you not to get distracted by something on the way. The only reason I
came here was to make sure you were OK, and this one,” she pointed
at Dreya, “hadn’t hurt you yet.”
“Hurt me?” Cat said. “What do you mean ‘yet’?”
“She’s Dreya the Dark. Give her time.”
Dreya raised her eyebrows but did not deign to comment.
“Come on, Mandalee, that’s not fa—”
“—Not fair?” Mandalee snapped. “You seriously don’t want to
talk to me about fair right now!” Before Cat could say anything else,
Mandalee rushed headlong to ask, “I don’t suppose you’ve found a way
to do anything about this,” she indicated her body, “amid all your
research?”
“About what?” Dreya asked, not understanding.
As delicately as possible, Catriona explained about Mandalee’s
gender identity issues.
“Oh, is that all?” Dreya said.
“What do you mean, ‘Is that all’?” Mandalee demanded.
Dreya held up her hands. “My apologies, I didn’t intend to
belittle how important this must be for you. To me, flesh is fleeting –
the magic is all. I just meant, do people seriously give you grief over
this?”
Mandalee nodded. “Oh yes, prejudice is still very much alive and
well out there.”
Dreya shook her head, her usual calm demeanour slipping to
display anger. “When is the world going to actually move forward?”
With a facial shrug, the cleric replied, “I’ve often wondered the
same thing.” She paused, then, before admitting, “You know, I don’t
dislike you as much as I expected.”
Dreya gave her a wry smile. “Well, that’s progress, at least, and
in return, I must say, you’re the least disagreeable White cleric I’ve ever
met.”
Mandalee acknowledged that with a nod. “But you still haven’t
answered my question,” she reminded Catriona.
144
Taking a deep breath and cursing herself for letting her friend
down twice in one day, she had to admit that she had so far been unable
to find a way to affect a permanent change. Shapeshifting wasn’t the
answer – not by itself. Cat couldn’t hold another shape for more than a
few hours. She tried to waffle about temporal magic, to turn back time
for Mandalee’s body to a point before puberty when it was easier for it
to switch tracks and develop along the biological female line before
returning it to Mandalee’s current age. But she had to admit she had no
idea how to do that.
“In that case,” Mandalee said, “it seems to me, there’s only one
more thing to do before I go: this stupid experiment of yours.”
“Go? Where? Why?” Cat began, then realised, “Oh, of course, to
stay with Shyleen until she’s better. But then you’ll come back, right?”
There was no immediate response. “Right?” she prompted, panic rising.
She couldn’t lose Mandalee. Obviously, she’d made a terrible mistake,
but surely, they could work it out. Couldn’t they?
Rather than answer, she just asked, “Are we doing this
experiment or not?”
“Screw the experiment!” Cat insisted. “Just tell me you’re
coming back as soon as Shyleen’s OK! Please tell me that!”
“No!” Mandalee yelled. “I’ve always been there for you,
Catriona,” she still couldn’t bring herself to use her nickname. “No
matter what ridiculous radical notion you got in your head, even when
you said you were going to fight Dreya the Dark, I was there for you.
Then the one time I asked for your help, when I needed you, you
couldn’t even be bothered to listen! That’s not something I can get over
just like that. I’m offering to help you this one last time; then I’m done.”
“Not forever, though?” Catriona’s tears flowed once more.
“Please, Mandalee! I’m not asking you to forgive me, and I’ll give you
all the time you need. Please just say you’ll come back when you’re
ready.”
Mandalee shook her head. “I can’t promise that. I hope so. That’s
all I can say.” Cat opened her mouth, but the cleric cut her off. “Don’t
push me on this, Catriona,” she warned. “There’s nothing you can say
right now that won’t make it worse. Now, this experiment?”
Cat was floundering, her mind spinning, emotions in turmoil. She
was grateful when Dreya came to her rescue, all business-like and
professional. The sorceress explained how the Crystal Mage Staff had
reacted to both of them individually, and the question was how it would
145
respond to both, simultaneously. Mandalee agreed to try it, so Dreya
led her two guests upstairs to her training room. Catriona said nothing.
She was too terrified to even look at her friend. Former friend? It broke
her heart to imagine that might be true.
In addition to the three young women, Dreya’s death knight
guards were also in the training room. Mandalee did not like them one
bit and demanded to know what they were doing there. Dreya explained
that they were a precaution, in case the staff’s reaction was even more
violent than before.
“If we fly apart, they are swift enough to catch us and break our
fall. Frankly, it’s either that or concussion.”
“Concussion has never sounded more attractive,” Mandalee
grumbled.
“I could always tell them not to stop your head from going splat
against my wall,” Dreya offered.
Mandalee sighed, deeply and relented. “OK, let them catch me.
I’m not going to risk dying. Shyleen needs me, and I won’t let her
down.”
Cat flinched at the barbs that flew her way but accepted the
punishment without comment. Seeing that all was ready, she took her
staff out of her pocket dimension and held it in a trembling hand. Then
on the count of three, Mandalee and Dreya gripped the staff at the same
time.
The violent reaction they had feared did not happen. There was a
kind of pull, but it seemed somehow more balanced than before. Light
flared from the crystal, painting a pattern on Dreya’s ceiling that looked
not unlike the void storms in the Tempestrian sky. For a moment, the
light began to form symbols, but they flickered and died before
achieving full resolution. The staff seemed to indicate to Catriona that
something was missing, but frankly, at the moment, she didn’t care.
*****
The accepted historical view of this event, gentle reader, is that
it was a truly momentous occasion: the first time the Original Three
came together – the Three who would one day become the first
Guardians of Time and Magic, and save the world many times. That’s
all very well for those of us who merely observe, detached, from a
distance. For the three who were involved at the time, far from the
146
beginning of something, it felt like an ending, and I’m sure the whole
thing seemed utterly pointless.
Still, all relationships have their ups and downs. Even a
friendship for the ages. Especially a friendship for the ages.
147
Chapter 20
Mandalee didn’t stay long after that. Stepping outside into
Dreya’s grounds, she immediately called for her giant albatross to give
her a lift back to Shyleen.
Cat couldn’t let her go, though. Not without risking saying
something more.
“Mandalee, wait, please,” she pleaded. “Just for a minute. I want
you to do one last thing for me.”
“You can’t be serious,” Mandalee scowled.
“No, not like that. Please, hear me out.”
Mandalee folded her arms.
“One minute.”
“Our sympathic link. Please don’t sever it. You know it’s not a
tracker. It won’t tell me where you are or what you’re doing, and I
promise I won’t use it to contact you. Just keep it there. Just in case. I
know you have no reason to believe me, but I swear in the name of
friendship if you ever need me, or want to talk, I will be there.”
“For what it’s worth,” Dreya put in, “I have adjusted my shields
so they will permanently allow full communication between you,
should you wish it.”
Mandalee considered for a moment and finally nodded her
assent. “OK, as you say, in the name of friendship.”
Catriona’s relief was plain for all to see, as she grabbed hold of
that lifeline of hope.
“Also, in the name of friendship,” Mandalee said, “some advice.
I know you won’t listen to me, but I’m saying it anyway.” She glared
at Dreya the Dark as she said, “This one might be acting all reasonable
at the moment because you’ve got something she’s interested in, but
never forget what she is. She’s a Dark sorceress with a lust for power,
and she would betray you in a heartbeat if it were to her advantage.”
Far from being offended, Dreya agreed, “You’re right, I would,”
she said, then with a smile at Catriona, she qualified the admission,
saying, “but it would have to be the advantage of a lifetime.”
Cat stared at Dreya with an open-mouthed expression, as if she’d
just heard a declaration of love.
“Ugh!” Mandalee grunted, shaking her head in bewilderment.
“Unbelievable!” she spat in disgust.
148
The gigantic bird landed, and Mandalee mounted up.
Cat leapt forward, trying to explain, but Mandalee was done and
with a simple telepathic request, the giant albatross took to the sky,
winging away.
Catriona wept for her lost friendship, burying herself in Dreya’s
soft black robes as the sorceress helped her inside and closed the door.
To Cat, that felt symbolic, as if a door had just closed on a huge,
important part of her life. She could only pray that one day, it might just
open again.
*****
It took several days for the druid healers to restore Shyleen to full
health and vitality, but soon she was ready once again to take on the
demons of the world by her human friend’s side. Mandalee, however,
had other ideas. Although the leopard was out of immediate danger, the
demon hunter’s fear had morphed into a seething anger. These feelings
drove her to move south to new hunting grounds, many leagues from
the Black Tower and any memory of her old friend, Catriona. She also
began to rethink her whole approach to demon hunting.
She'd been doing it professionally for a few years, now, and it
wasn't exactly a niche profession. Thousands of demon hunters were
out working every day, all across the world and stretching back an
unfathomable distance into the past. All that time, effort and risk by an
uncountable number of people, and what did they have to show for it?
Were there fewer demons now than ever before? No. Were people now
any safer from demon attack than their ancestors? No. OK, there might
be no way to stop demons from coming up through the planes of reality
any more than they could stop Daelen StormTiger and his kind from
wreaking their brand of havoc upon Tempestria. But demons didn’t just
appear – not all of them, anyway. Wizards were responsible for
summoning many of them.
It wasn’t just Black robes, either, despite what some might say,
but White robes, too. They usually claimed to be acting in the name of
some imagined ‘greater good,’ but that was just an excuse. Red robes
tended to do it only for purposes of study, but although that information
had proved valuable to demon hunters, despite their best intentions,
sometimes the demons got free. Then once again, people were put in
149
unnecessary danger. If a demon killed someone, were they any less dead
if it was released accidentally rather than deliberately? No.
It had to stop.
Demon hunting was futile by itself, Mandalee concluded. It was
treating the symptom while ignoring the cause. Demon summoning had
to stop, and since nobody else seemed to want to make that happen,
Mandalee would have to do it herself.
This was the moment, gentle reader, that Mandalee the demon
hunter became Mandalee the White Assassin, although the title would
not come into common usage for some time. She sought out training to
hone her fighting skills, as well as her unique, synergistic relationship
with nature, generally, and Shyleen, specifically. Together, the pair
became a force to be reckoned with.
Before long, she added a new weapon to her arsenal: a Pureblade.
A sword blessed and sanctified by White clerics. It was a gift from the
clerics of a temple whom she had saved from a demon attack. She loved
her Pureblade. It was a thing of beauty, her most prized possession.
The first time she put it to use wasn’t a contract from a human,
but something Mandalee heard about from animals that were fleeing the
scene. As a Cleric of Nature, Mandalee could freely converse in most
of the primary animal languages and quickly learned about a ‘bad man’
who seemed to think it was fun to let his ‘pet demon’ loose on the
village. It had already killed and injured many people and animals, and
the wizard showed no signs of growing bored.
The demon hunter’s response was to get very drunk, armed to the
teeth and rush to the scene. Mandalee and Shyleen tore into the demon
first because the wizard had it on a tight magical leash. If they killed the
wizard first, the demon would be free and only become that much more
dangerous. Mandalee’s White cleric magic was physically painful to a
Dark wizard, so she was able to keep him at bay until the demon was
no more. Then she turned on him. He assailed her with spells, but he
wasn’t quick enough to track her movements. The wizard didn’t seem
to think it was quite so funny when he was the one about to be hurt and
killed.
He begged for mercy, but Mandalee was unmoved by pity. She
resolved to grant as much mercy as he had shown the innocent people
of his village. For a moment, though, she did hesitate to deliver the
killing blow, and the wizard lashed out, thinking to escape. The firebolt
that flew from his panicked fingers was not well-directed, however, and
150
did nothing more than singe a small patch of Shyleen’s fur. But it was
enough. Enough to trigger the memory of the last time, when that
magical blast had almost split the leopard in two. The vision flashed
through Mandalee’s mind, along with her memory of screaming for
help from a ‘friend’ who would never come.
Never again. From now on, she vowed, it would be Shyleen and
Mandalee against the world, and the world didn’t stand a chance as long
as it tolerated people with power endangering those with none. That
was the last time she would hesitate to kill in defence of those innocents.
Never again.
The wizard’s last few breaths were agony until that blade
skewered his heart. He would summon no more demons. He would
harm no-one else ever again, and if she could repeat this action enough
times, then maybe one day there would be fewer demons.
151
Chapter 21
When Dreya came home one day, several months later, her chief
death knight handed her a note from Catriona. The sorceress smiled to
herself. She could guess the gist of what was written even before
reading it. No doubt Cat had found an interesting nugget of information
either in the Black Tower library, or even just a rumour, and she was
off to investigate. She did this, from time-to-time.
Catriona wasn’t big on waiting around, even to tell her where she
was going or what she was planning. In fact, she wasn’t big on planning
at all. The plans she did have were always ridiculous and radical, and
like her Nature’s Mirror magic, seemed to have a way of forming on
the spot precisely when she needed them. Then, as soon as she got one
of these ridiculous radical ideas in her head, she would act on them. It
was impulsive and reckless, but that was her nature. It was exactly that
nature that had brought Catriona into her life on Midsummer’s Day, and
for that, Dreya was grateful beyond words.
The sorceress dismissed her guard, saying, “Looks like it’s
dinner for one, then.”
He bowed once and left.
“What are you up to this time, Cat?” the sorceress pondered, as
she headed up the stairs to read the note in her study.
No doubt it would turn into some grand adventure with which
Cat would delight in regaling her, upon her return.
‘What was it last time?’ Dreya tried to recall. ‘Of course,’ she
realised, ‘the photography incident.’
*****
As an information trader, Catriona got wind of all kinds of things,
and a couple of weeks ago, she’d somehow found out about a wizard in
Gaggleswick who was experimenting with combining magic with the
science of photography, to try and project a three-dimensional image
from a two-dimensional photo. Cat was intrigued and decided to pay
the wizard a visit. No doubt with the aid of her natural charm and wit,
she’d managed to persuade him to let her help, or at least observe.
It was a good thing Cat was there, as it turned out. The subjects
of the photographs on which the wizard, Asante, was experimenting,
152
were demons. They were destined for a book intended to help demon
hunters identify different kinds of denizens of hell. Asante believed that
it would surely be even more helpful if the images were three
dimensional and life-size. Unfortunately, his magic worked a little too
well and the demonic images went on the rampage in the town. For
blurry, semi-transparent constructs of light, they certainly packed a
punch, and several people were killed. Demon hunters tried to kill them
and failed because they weren’t really alive. Nor could they be
Banished down to the lower planes – they never came from there in the
first place.
Thankfully, Catriona had a ridiculous radical plan, born of her
endless creativity in magic. Using herself as bait – something of which
Dreya would not have approved, had she known – she shapeshifted into
the form of a Trickster and taunted the creatures until they all chased
her. The druidess led them all down a dead end, where she immediately
fused some sand into a huge, curved mirror that grew to surround the
monsters. The endless reflections confused them long enough for her to
spring the trap. Shifting to red-banded falcon, she escaped, while
Asante cast a powerful light spell that reflected off all the mirrors until
the glare of the white light was too bright to look at. The intense light
bleached the creatures out of existence, like a photographic film left out
in the sun.
Somehow, that adventure had sparked a rumour that Catriona
was romantically involved with Asante. It wasn’t the first such story to
circulate. For some reason, the public seemed determined that such a
famous and popular figure as Catriona Redfletching must necessarily
be involved with someone. They just couldn’t seem to agree on who
that someone was. Cat gave up denying the rumours when she realised
such denial only made people even more convinced it was true.
What difference did it make what people believed? Cat knew the
truth. That was all that mattered.
The incident with the runaway photographic demons was just the
latest in a line of such adventures, and now, as Dreya finally sat down
at her desk to read Catriona’s note, it seemed she’d found another one.
Dear Dreya,
Just read something incredible in Ulvarius’ journals. Perhaps
the real reason why he obliterated the village at Quernhow. He was
looking for something: an ancient repository of knowledge. Not a
153
library, as such, but more like a store, or possibly a hiding place. Most
likely trying to keep knowledge safe during some long-forgotten ancient
war. But that’s not the best part. The best part is, according to Ulvarius
– and in this case I have to say his research is pretty convincing – the
books in this repository predate the void storms!
I know it’s heretical to even suggest that such a time existed, but
everybody thought I was crazy to believe in my Angel, so who knows?
Either way, I know you’ll understand that, for me, the chance to
uncover forgotten knowledge from more than a thousand years ago is
utterly irresistible. No idea how I’m going to get in – Ulvarius couldn’t,
that’s probably why he wiped out that village, to destroy any knowledge
of this repository. If he couldn’t have it, he was determined no-one else
would, either.
But you know me – I always find a way when it’s important, and
as a Red robe, there’s nothing more important to me than knowledge.
So yes, that’s where I’ve gone.
See you soon.
Aye, ever yours,
Catriona
~x~
Quernhow. Dreya was sure she’d read something about that
herself, recently. Rising from her seat, she crossed over to the cabinet
where she kept notes from sessions of the Council of Wizards. Flicking
through recent papers, she found what she was looking for.
The area surrounding the Lake of Tears, allegedly formed when
the tyrant, Ulvarius, made the historic village ‘cry,’ had remained
undisturbed since that time, three centuries ago. The story of that
atrocity had always scared people away. In recent years, though, there
had been a renewed interest in the area. People had begun to argue, quite
logically in Dreya’s opinion, that Ulvarius had committed countless
acts of cruelty and barbarism across Elvaria, but that didn’t stop people
living their lives there today. Nor should it. So, without wishing to
diminish the magnitude of the Quernhow Massacre, why should that
place be any different? The Council had conceded the point and gave
the go-ahead for a new village to be developed there.
However, more recently, there had been reports of undead
activity from New Quernhow. It was most likely just superstition, or
154
even an attempt to generate a kind of macabre tourism that would hardly
be unique on Elvaria.
Still, Dreya thought as one of her ghoulish guards shimmered
into the room to inform her that dinner was ready to be served, undead
creatures did exist all over Tempestria. Ulvarius had a particular
penchant for them, she knew. In fact, had he had his way, the whole
world would have been populated by the undead. He had considered
them infinitely more useful than the living. So, given the Ulvarius
connection to Quernhow, it was plausible that he might have left a
legacy beyond just the lake. Dreya knew Cat wouldn’t be fazed by such
reports, though, and Dreya herself was not worried as she descended
the steps to the dining room.
Catriona Redfletching, the girl with a thousand ridiculous radical
plans in her head, searching for a lost repository of ancient knowledge
at the site of a terrible atrocity, committed by the most dangerous tyrant
in modern history, perhaps infested by the undead?
What could possibly go wrong?
*****
“Thank heavens for shapeshifting,” Cat said to herself as she
retook her natural form on the outskirts of New Quernhow. Flying there
swiftly as a falcon avoided all the hassle of a long, uncomfortable
journey on horseback. She, more than anyone, understood the truth of
the expression, ‘free as a bird.’
Cat began wandering the streets of the village. Houses and
businesses were still being constructed as the settlement was developed.
The expansive Lake of Tears at the bottom of the valley, surrounded by
gentle grassy slopes certainly made for a picturesque landscape. She
could see the attraction, as long as one wasn’t put off by the history. Cat
felt it would be rather hypocritical of her to criticise, considering the
history of the Black Tower that she called home. That it had once sat at
the heart of Ulvarius’ web of tyranny and death was all the more reason,
in her opinion, to turn it into a place of beauty and life. The same was
true of Quernhow.
Thinking of Ulvarius, Cat took her notebook out of her pocket
dimension and went over the notes she had made regarding the wizard’s
exploration of this place. As always, her notes were written in her own
private shorthand in case of prying eyes, so they meant nothing to
155
anyone but her. In between the pages, she also had a few photographs
of three-hundred-year-old sketches Ulvarius had made of the
surrounding area, to aid her search. With these references as a guide,
she believed it should be possible to tread in his footsteps. After all,
three centuries may be a long time to humans or even Faery, but on a
geological timescale, it was no time at all.
Ignoring the new construction, then, Cat continued to walk, all
the time trying to match up the outline of the lattice of peaks and valleys
to the sketches. However, Ulvarius was not known for his artistic skill,
and the view from one side of the lake was similar enough to that from
the opposite side, so even after an hour, she still wasn’t sure which was
correct.
“Ah, there you are!” came a voice, breaking her out of her inner
thoughts.
Cat looked up to see a young, red-robed wizard she knew at least
in passing. His name was Jett and she’d first met him a couple of years
back, when she’d been researching all things related to Shifting Stars.
As usual, her research had told her that he had a rare text that could be
useful to her, so she’d gone to visit him. Thankfully, there had been no
need to demolish his home, as he was only too pleased to exchange
knowledge. He was an archaeologist by profession, and as such he, too,
was often searching for rare texts to advance his research. Therefore, he
told Cat he would be happy to dig out the book she wanted to borrow,
if only she would try and find what he was looking for, in return. She
didn’t just try – she succeeded.
As soon as she’d come across Ulvarius’ notes about this store of
ancient knowledge, she immediately thought of Jett. After all, what was
the point of knowledge without people to share it with? So, she’d sent
him an urgent magical message, inviting him to join her on what she
had described, without hyperbole, as ‘the archaeological find of a
lifetime.’
Grinning, he opened his arms wide and said, “Hey, Cat!”
“Jett!” she cried, matching his smile and embracing him. “How’d
you get here so fast?”
“Asked a friend to teleport me.”
Teleportation may be faster than flying, Catriona conceded, but
it meant missing out on all the scenery along the way, and the sheer joy
of flight itself.
156
Realising they were attracting attention, Cat said, “Better break
the hug, or people will start saying you’re my new wizard lover!”
Stepping back, Jett nodded. “Yeah, I heard about you and
Asante.”
“Oh? Do you keep tabs on all my love interests?”
“That would be a full-time job, wouldn’t it?” Jett laughed. “But
most of your love interests don’t come with photos.”
Cat blushed slightly and agreed, “Yes, you’re right, photos of me
with my ‘lovers’ are much rarer, but that one was not at all what it
looked like. The camera just went off accidentally and the angle
was…unfortunate.” She shook her head to clear her mind of
distractions. “Why am I even explaining? I didn’t ask you here to talk
about rumours,” she said. “Well,” she amended, “not rumours about me,
but rumours about an ancient repository of knowledge buried around
here, somewhere.”
When she explained in detail, Jett was clearly as excited as she
was. “If we could really find it,” he said with a crooked smile, “that
would be well worth putting up with a few rumours about being your
new lover!”
Doing her best to act offended, Cat replied, “I don’t even know
how to take that, so I shall rise above it.”
Of course, Jett couldn’t read her notes, and she wouldn’t translate
them word-for-word – that would defeat the object of her secret
language – but she gave him the gist of what they said. In concert with
her photos of Ulvarius’ drawings, they agreed on a place to start,
although they still weren’t sure which side of the lake they were
supposed to be on. Decision made, Jett felt they ought to share at least
some of their plan with whoever was in charge of the local community.
That person turned out to be a lady called Solana, who the locals
acknowledged as Community Leader. It was an unofficial post. Unlike
somewhere like Gaggleswick, New Quernhow wasn’t yet large enough
to have a local government. She was simply the first resident here,
having been involved in the original petition to form this settlement. As
such, she knew all the right contacts if there were any issues the
residents wished to address.
Cat and Jett explained, in broad terms, that they were in
possession of certain documents that suggested there might be
something buried underneath New Quernhow that predated even
Ulvarius’ reign of terror. The area they were intending to begin
157
excavation was well away from any buildings in the fledgeling town,
but as a courtesy, they felt they ought to ask permission before starting
work.
“What exactly do you hope to find?” Solana asked.
Jett opened his mouth, but seeing Cat shake her head, slightly, he
let her jump in with, “I’m sorry, but we’d prefer to keep that to ourselves
for now, if you don’t mind.”
If she was right and there was such a repository here, the place
would have to be protected and secured. The last thing she wanted was
for a crowd to burst into the place and potentially destroy what they
found. Besides, knowledge could be dangerous.
Accepting her wish to keep the details confidential, Solana
agreed, “Well, whatever it is, I wish you luck. It would certainly be nice
if this place could be known for something other than a three-hundredyear-old massacre. And the least said about the so-called hauntings, the
better.”
“Hauntings?” Jett wondered.
Solara explained about the rumours that had begun to circulate,
but Cat wasn’t worried.
“There are plenty of undead around where I live,” she said. “They
don’t bother me anymore.”
“Besides,” Jett put in, “the rumours are probably just that:
rumours, and we all know how ridiculous they can be, eh, Cat?” he
added with a wink.
Cat gave him a playful shove for his trouble.
*****
Returning to their chosen site, Cat began to use her earthshaper
magic to gently tease the ground apart. At the same time, Jett gathered
some local stones and placed them in a large ring around the area, which
Cat grew into walls to keep people and animals out. Returning her focus
to the ground, she took her time, peeling back a layer at a time, not
wanting to destroy any vital clues that Jett’s expert eye might spot.
After a few hours, the daylight began to fade, and they decided
to leave their work for the night. The village didn’t have any lodging
houses, but Solara managed to find a couple of local families who were
willing to take them in.
158
The painstaking process of digging continued for five days until
at last, Jett shouted, “Stop! I think I see something!”
Crouching down, he moved some more soil aside with his bare
hands so he could feel what he thought his eyes had seen: stone. It
wasn’t just compressed earth, but a stone slab, and given the way it
curved, there was no question – it was the roof of an artificially
constructed tunnel heading directly towards the lake.
“Of course!” Cat cried. “That’s why he did it! That’s why
Ulvarius killed all those people in that particular way and formed the
Lake of Tears in that spot.”
Jett caught on saying. “You think, the repository is—”
“—right under the lake!”
In his journal, which Cat conceded was hardly unequivocal
evidence, Ulvarius had been quite clear that he had found the lost
repository he was looking for. Of course, he could have been lying, but
if so, since it was his own private journal, he would only have been
lying to himself. Again, the idea that the tyrant might have been selfdelusional was far from unreasonable, but if he was going to lie to
himself about finding it, why admit that he had been unable to get
inside?
“You’re right,” Jett said, “it makes sense. An artificial lake with
no runoff would naturally accumulate all kinds of silt and soil and
debris to cover anything that might lay beneath.”
Cat nodded. She also knew that, according to reports from
periods of drought when the water level was lower, the lake was filled
with the skeletal remains of Ulvarius’ victims.
“Not exactly the kind of place that makes you think, ‘Let’s go
skinny dipping,’ is it?” Cat remarked.
159
Chapter 22
“Now,” Jett said, “a responsible archaeologist would excavate
this entire site to try and find the original entrance.”
“We could do that,” Catriona agreed, nodding. “Then again, I do
have stoneshaper magic.”
“So, you could carefully part the stone and we could levitate
down into the tunnel through the roof.”
Cat made a rude noise. “Levitate? So undignified. I’ll use my
Windy Steps, thank you. But your point still stands.”
“Well, what are you waiting for,” her wizard friend asked with a
cheeky grin, “a responsible archaeologist?”
“Don’t know any, I’m afraid,” Cat grinned back.
“Me, neither.”
Catriona did as he had suggested and a moment later, they were
inside the ancient tunnel.
“Make yourself useful,” she said, “and make us some light.”
He did as she asked, illuminating their surroundings just enough
for them to see where they were putting their feet, while keeping the
area beyond in shadow. If they found what they were looking for, the
contents could be sensitive to light, and he didn’t want to risk causing
damage. On the other hand, if they couldn’t see properly, they could do
even more damage by blundering into things or stepping on something
delicate.
In keeping with Catriona’s theory, they followed the tunnel,
slowly and carefully in the direction of the lake. They had to walk in
single file, but at about ten feet high, it was perfectly comfortable. There
was no need to mark their passage, as it simply continued in an
unbroken straight line, sloping ever downwards.
They walked in silence, all joking suspended, as if it might
disturb the blessed sanctuary of which this place somehow spoke. In
time, the passage ended in a wooden door.
“If this place is as old as it appears to be, how come this door
looks brand new?” Jett wondered, gently probing it with his magic.
“Some kind of preservation spell?”
“No,” Cat replied, shaking her head. “Or maybe yes,” she
reconsidered, “but not the way you mean. The wood looks fresh because
it’s still living.”
160
“What? How?”
“No idea,” Cat replied, “but I can feel it through my druid magic.
The wood of this door is every bit as alive as that of any tree. It may not
be growing in the sense of getting larger – it’s the same size it’s always
been – but it is constantly rejuvenating itself.
“Astonishing!” Jett breathed.
His light caught an inscription above the door. That was not so
well preserved, and some of the letters had faded over the course of
centuries. All they could make out for sure, was:
IN LOV G ME RY F ALYCIA
But it was still legible enough to deduce the intent.
“Surely, ‘In Loving Memory of Alycia,’ yes?” Cat whispered,
reverently. “That’s not just the half-Faery druid in me talking, is it?
That’s what it says, right?”
“That’s what it looks like to me,” Jett agreed.
Blessed Alycia, Mother of Nature, was a revered figure to Faery,
wielders of nature magic and just nature lovers in general.
There was another line underneath, in a smaller script that had
suffered even more erosion over time, such that only a single portion
was still legible and then just barely.
E L ST W
The rest was lost to the passage of time and guessing the meaning
was futile. There simply wasn’t enough to go on.
Logically, the next step was to open the door, but that proved to
be easier said than done. Jett and Cat lent all their weight to the task,
but the door would not budge an inch. Catriona tried her woodshaper
magic, but the door remained untouched. She switched to stoneshaper
magic to try and create a gap around the door, but it seemed whoever
built this had thought of that, so it failed.
Jett had been reluctant to try anything with his wizard magic, not
wanting to risk causing damage, but they seemed to have run out of
alternatives.
“I won’t blast it,” he said, “but I will try a focussed fire spell.
That should burn through the wood, but I’m not much of a multi-tasker,
so would you mind taking over with the light?”
161
“Alright,” Cat agreed, and took her Crystal Mage Staff out of her
pocket dimension, causing it to cast a blue light over the door.
Jett cancelled his own light spell and cast out a thin jet of intense
flames. He sustained it in one spot for two or three minutes, but the
wood didn’t even begin to char.
“Fireproof wood?” he breathed in wonder, as he cancelled the
spell.
“I don’t think it even warmed up!” Catriona marvelled, stepping
forward to carefully place her free hand on the door. “I guess this is why
Ulvarius couldn’t get in.” The instant her hand touched the wood,
however, some kind of mechanism on the other side clicked and the
door swung open. “What the—” she cried, jumping back.
“Maybe it likes you?” Jett suggested.
“Maybe,” Cat allowed, “or maybe it’s this,” she said, holding up
her staff.
“Your staff?”
Cat nodded, “Or perhaps the combination of magic and higher
planar energy within it.”
“Why would that work?” Jett wondered.
“It’s just a guess,” she shrugged.
She supposed all that mattered was that they had gained entry.
The how and why weren’t really important.
Stepping through the now open doorway, Cat found her breath
taken away by the sight of a cavernous space carved into the bedrock
of Quernhow. Carved with magic, druid magic like hers. She recognised
the signs. Inside, were rows upon rows of shelves filled with books,
scrolls and other documents. It wasn’t just one room, either, but many
adjoining ones. Despite this, however, those ancient people had run out
of space and had been forced to stack yet more volumes on the floor.
Many of those stacks towered above their heads. She could see why
Ulvarius had referred to it as a ‘repository of knowledge’ – calling it a
library wouldn’t do it justice.
Into the silence, Jett whispered, “Well, Cat, you promised me the
archaeological find of a lifetime.”
Cat raised a quizzical eyebrow. “Disappointed?”
He answered her clearly facetious question with an entirely
serious, “Yes.”
Cat frowned, incredulously.
162
“I’m disappointed that I have only a single human lifetime,” he
clarified, with tears in his eyes, “because I doubt that’s enough time to
even catalogue what’s down here, let alone study the contents!”
Cat moved over to him and embraced him. “I know what you
mean,” she said. “At best, I hoped to find a small hidey-hole, maybe a
few dozen books if I was lucky. I never imagined all this!”
Jett gently broke the hug, stepping away to try and come to terms
with what he was seeing.
Catriona, too, began to wander around, stepping carefully around
the stacks, not knowing where to begin. After a few moments, though,
something caught her attention: a book of star charts. It was sitting apart
from everything else, propped up on the floor with its content on
display, as if somebody long ago wanted this to be the first thing any
future visitor would see.
“Well, whoever you were, it worked,” the druidess said softly, as
if the spirit of that long dead individual might hear her, if only she were
quiet enough.
Not wanting to even risk handling it, she called Jett over and
asked him to use some of his levitation magic on the book.
“Good idea,” he approved. “The less we touch things, the better.”
The star charts contained within those pages were astonishingly
detailed, putting current efforts to shame. Even more extraordinary was
that the charts all seemed to be in pairs, like before and after images.
Before and after what, was abundantly clear, for the left-hand
page was completely free of void storms. They didn’t exist before, only
after what the title referred to as:
THE GREAT STAR SHIFT
The two companions began to risk touching a few other volumes
at random. It turned out there was nothing at all fragile about them. This
time, it was preservation magic, just as Jett had suggested earlier.
Enough to protect the books from just about anything short of wilful
damage, fire or flood.
They adopted the policy of flicking through a few pages to try
and gain an essence of what the book was about, before returning each
one to the place they found it, just in case there was some kind of system
in place that currently eluded them.
163
Ulvarius, evil tyrant though he was, had been right about this
repository of knowledge. These books were definitely from a time more
than a thousand years ago, before Year Zero, and it was obvious that
they were describing a world that was very different to the one they
knew.
“Lost world!” Cat blurted out, suddenly.
“Random,” Jett remarked.
“No, it’s not,” she refuted. “It’s the inscription on the door – The
Lost World.”
“The world that was lost when the void storms began,” Jett
realised. “The time of this Great Star Shift. I think you’re right.
“And I’ll tell you something else,” he continued. “That book of
star charts is obviously from shortly after it happened, which, relatively
speaking, probably makes it the most modern thing in this whole
place!”
Catriona’s jaw dropped. She hadn’t thought of it like that. Calin’s
Tower, overseas, was the foremost public library of knowledge in the
whole world. It was about a hundred and fifty years old. Some of the
books in the Black Tower’s library dated back four centuries. But this
book of thousand-year-old star charts, was probably the most modern
thing here. Overcome by the enormity of it, she had to sit down for a
moment to catch her breath, cradling the precious book of star charts in
her hands.
Some of the books they opened had hastily written notes on the
inside cover. The meaning wasn’t always clear, but the tone was one of
urgency.
While Catriona puzzled over that, Jett explored further until he
came across another door, identical to the one through which they had
entered.
According to Ulvarius’ map there was only one entrance, but
then, he supposed, having found one, since he couldn’t get in, what
would have been the point of searching any further?
“I wonder if it needs your staff to unlock it from the inside?” he
said.
Cat heard him open it, which she supposed answered his
question, but as he did so, he immediately screamed for help.
Thrusting the book into her pocket dimension, she rushed to his
side, where she saw him frantically pushing against the door with all
his strength, trying in vain to shut it while through the gap were half a
164
dozen skeletal limbs, pushing back. She added her own weight to the
door, desperate to get it to shut, while using woodshaper and
stoneshaper in concert to try and seal the doorway shut. It wasn’t
working, but it did buy time.
“The passage!” Jett gasped. “It’s full of undead creatures!” and
by the looks of what was trying to squeeze through, it wasn’t just
undead people, but animals, too.
All at once, Cat put it together. More than three hundred years
ago, Ulvarius had come here, found the repository and tried to gain
entry. He probably tried for a long time but ultimately, he was forced to
give up. He laid waste to the entire town, not only in revenge, but also
to prevent knowledge of either the repository itself or his failure, from
spreading. But, having a penchant for creating undead creatures, he
hadn’t wasted the living resources. He had kept them here on guard, just
in case anybody else ever found the place. Until now, Cat and Jett had
got lucky – because the maps weren’t entirely clear, they had found a
second entrance that Ulvarius didn’t know about. But as soon as Jett
opened the door they had been left to guard, all the undead had
reanimated almost immediately, and set about following their threehundred-year-old instructions to kill anyone they saw.
But there was no way that passage was large enough to
accommodate the entire human and animal population of a town. So
where were all the rest?
“The lake!” Cat cried out in realisation.
“Dear gods!” Jett caught on. “The Lake of Tears is full of the
remains of people and animals from Ulvarius’ time. An undead army
lying dormant…until now!”
“And we’ve woken them up! They’ll kill everyone up there! It’ll
be a massacre, just like before!”
“What can we do?” Jett asked, desperately.
“How do people usually destroy the True Undead en masse?”
Cat returned. “Holy Water!”
Clerics used it all the time. It wouldn’t destroy them by itself, but
normally, it would weaken them to the point where conventional magic
or steel could finish them off. But these weren’t just any undead, they
were created by Ulvarius for the single-minded purpose of guarding this
place for eternity. He would have made them to last. When Dreya took
the Black Tower, she managed to wrest control of the undead guards
from Ulvarius’ magic, but she didn’t destroy them.
165
In the years since, she had experimented on a few of them to find
the best method of destroying them, should it ever be necessary and she
had confirmed that Holy Water was the best way, although it took a
long time.
“Exactly!” Jett shot back. “Know any clerics you can call on,
quickly?”
“Not anymore,” Cat answered, sadly, thinking of Mandalee. Still,
that thought triggered a memory. “But if I’m lucky,” she said. “If I’m
really, really lucky…”
She opened her pocket dimension, closed her eyes and made a
wish. If she was right, salvation would come to hand. If she was wrong,
well, she supposed she could call Dreya. She might be able to get here
in time to rescue her – she might even save Jett – but that wouldn’t help
everyone else.
“Please let me be right!” she prayed.
She felt something fly into her hand, a small glass vial, and
quickly closed her fingers around it. It was cold to the touch, she
thought as she closed her pocket dimension, but she’d never felt
anything more beautiful.
Catriona opened her eyes, daring to look.
“Yes!” she cried. She was right: she still had a single vial of water
Blessed by Mandalee. Tears in her eyes, she brought it to her lips and
kissed it. “Oh, Mandalee. Even now, you’re here for me. In spite of
everything.”
“How’s that little thing going to help?” Jett demanded, trying to
force the undead limbs back with his magic.
He was right. Time for sentiment later. Now the people of New
Quernhow needed her to act.
“I have a ridiculous radical plan,” she told him, “and you’re
going to hate me for it.”
“Why?”
“Because I already hate myself for thinking it!”
Even as she spoke, the door finally gave way, and undead by the
dozen, the score, came pouring into the chamber. Jett fought them off
with his magic as best he could, as they retreated through the alcove
into the previous chamber, which Cat tried to block with an ice wall.
Knowing that wouldn’t hold them back for long, Cat’s mind was
racing, trying to fill in the details. She needed to do something that had
never been done before. Something clerics would say was blasphemy:
166
replicate Holy Water. She could replicate regular water in her sleep, but
Holy Water had to be Blessed by clerics. Or so they said. Cat didn’t
believe it. There had to be a way.
“How does Holy Water work?” she pondered, mostly to herself.
“Strip away the religion, and how does it physically work?”
Well, she considered, druid healing sometimes used water. For
some infections, or for healing multiple patients at once. The magic was
suspended in the water, so as the water penetrated the skin, so did the
magic. Then that magic could draw the infection out of the body. Holy
Water must do the same.
“The undead absorb the water, then the magic can get to work on
them from the inside! You can call it a Blessing; you can call it anything
you like. But it’s just magic at a particular frequency, to which the
animation magic is susceptible.”
It was the same phenomenon that meant Mandalee’s magic
caused Dreya pain. It wasn’t a matter of good magic versus evil magic.
Magic wasn’t good or evil. Magic, like all power, like all knowledge,
was neutral. It was the application that made it good or evil.
Dreya wasn’t evil, either, just because she was aligned with the
Dark. The idea that Light was good, and Dark was evil was lazy
thinking. There were many good deeds done in the shadows, and much
evil done in the light of day.
The reason White-aligned cleric magic was painful to a Darkaligned wizard was nothing more than a clash of incompatible
frequencies. Like music that was full of discordant notes.
Disharmonious.
“So? How does that help?” Jett demanded.
“It helps because now I know I can definitely do it and I hate
myself even more!”
Her ice wall shattered under the relentless assault.
“Give them one last push with magic and then run out the door
we came in!” Cat ordered. “On three…One…Two…Three!”
With their different magics, they created a powerful gust of wind
that pushed the undead back about twenty feet. It also knocked over
whole piles of books and papers that had stood undisturbed for a
millennium. The companions ran for the door as fast as they could.
As Cat ushered Jett out, he cried out in warning, “Look out!”
Cat yelped as she felt something grab her ankle: it was a
disembodied skeletal hand. She tried to strike it with her staff, but it
167
wasn’t enough to make it let go. “Get ready to close the door!” she
yelled. She had an idea, but they needed to be fast.
The druidess quickly shifted to falcon form, leaving the hand
nothing to hold onto, and flew out before it could try again. Jett
slammed the door shut as she shifted back, staff in hand. Pressing her
palm against the wooden door, she closed her eyes and spoke softly to
the spirits of that place.
“You recognised me, or my staff, or something, before. Please
recognise it again and seal this door.” To her relief, the mechanism
clicked into place. “Thank you, and I’m sorry,” she whispered.
Jett was distraught at the thought of the undead on the rampage
in there, tearing all that ancient knowledge to shreds. “You’re right, I
hate this plan,” he told Cat.
The druidess shook her head. “Haven’t even started yet!”
“But you’ve got a way to get them out, right?” She didn’t reply.
“Right?” he tried again, desperately.
She couldn’t even look him in the eye as she said, “I’m sorry.”
168
Chapter 23
Without another word, Catriona shifted to falcon form and flew
away. Jett could levitate himself out the way they came, but she didn’t
have time to wait for him. As she flew up and over the lake, she could
see how the water was already churning as the undead stirred and began
to rise from their aquatic bed. The people of the village, seeing what
was happening, began screaming and running away from the lake. Now
that they been awakened, the undead would kill every last person, just
as Ulvarius ordered three centuries ago. Others would come; other
settlers, friends and relatives, and the undead would kill them, too.
More than likely, some people would escape, but the undead
could be very literal when it came to following orders. If they had been
told to kill anyone with knowledge of this place, they would hunt down
those who escaped. When the undead reached the next town, they would
have no way of knowing who the escapees might have told, so they
would slaughter the whole town, just in case, and use their innate magic
to turn many of those people into True Undead, like them. Thus, their
numbers would swell as they spread like a plague to overrun more and
more settlements.
And Catriona knew all those deaths would be her fault because
she woke them up. Jett may have opened the door, but he never would
have been there if not for her. She couldn’t let this happen. She had to
stop it here and now.
Staying in her falcon form, then, she caused the water around the
edge of the lake to rise up into a cylinder of ice that would hopefully
keep the village safe for a few moments, while she did what she had to
do. Underground, the undead would try to escape the passage they were
in, and no doubt, given time and their numbers, they would tunnel their
way out. She wasn’t going to give them that time.
Coming to a halt, high above the Lake of Tears, she shifted back,
standing on one of her Windy Steps. The undead were hacking at her
ice wall and cracks were beginning to form. Given the size of the lake,
there could be hundreds of undead down there, maybe thousands, and
no wall of ice or even rock could stand against that for long, so she
needed to hurry.
She focussed her magical senses on the vial of Holy Water in her
hand, probing, analysing.
169
“Now, Blessed Alycia,” she said aloud, “I really need your help
to save all these people. I need you to take my analysis of the water in
this vial, and when I pour it into the lake down there, I need you to make
all that water like this. This has to work. It will work.”
Taking a deep breath, she kissed the vial once more and then
broke it, tipping out the contents. As the Holy Water fell like raindrops,
Jett levitated over to join her.
“What are you doing?” he asked.
“Watch,” she said, determined that her magic would function as
she envisioned it.
There was nothing visible about the change to the water, but all
of a sudden, the undead began writhing in silent agony as the replicated
Holy Water seeped into their bones, attacking the magic that animated
them. As long as they were immersed, they would be weakened, but if
they should escape, it wouldn’t take them long to dry out. It was
imperative they should be contained until the `Blessing` magic could
overcome the animation spell. Unfortunately, there was no way of
telling how long that would take. Many years. Decades. Maybe
centuries.
“That’s all very well for that lot,” Jett conceded, “but what about
the ones underground? They’re still strong enough to break out and
when they do, even if these are still contained, they’ll shatter your ice
walls, and all this will be for nothing.”
“I know. This is the part where you hate me.”
“Why? What are you going to do? I still don’t get it!”
“Jett,” she said, “I think you’re forgetting where we are. What’s
below us?” she prompted.
“The Lake of Tears,” he answered.
“And what’s below that?” she asked. “What’s directly below
that?”
At last, the wizard caught on. “No!” he gasped.
Cat nodded, sadly. “I told you, you’d hate me.”
“You can’t!”
“I have to.”
The lake was directly above the ancient repository, like an
enormous bath full of Holy Water. All she needed to do was let the plug
out. Put a big enough hole in the bottom and all the undead would be
flushed down to join their fellows. The repository was easily big
enough. The water would flood every chamber and the adjoining
170
tunnels, drowning the undead. When the lake was no more, she could
fill in the hole, reseal the tunnels and the undead would be trapped.
“But all that water…all those books! They’ll be destroyed.
Ruined! All that knowledge, lost.”
“I know,” Cat nodded.
As she’d said, she hated herself for thinking it, but there was no
other way. Even if some scraps miraculously survived, there was no
way to be sure how long it would take for every last undead creature to
become inert, permanently at rest. If somebody tried to open it up,
believing it had been long enough, and they were wrong, they would be
killed and the undead would escape their watery prison. No. The
repository would have to remain sealed and flooded, effectively forever.
“This would always have happened,” Cat said. Was she trying to
convince Jett or herself? “Sooner or later, somebody would have
uncovered that repository and the undead would have risen to stop
them. Ulvarius made sure of that. Three hundred years ago, a petty,
jealous man learned of that place, full of ancient knowledge, and he
decided that if he couldn’t have it, nobody could. Not ever.”
“But he doesn’t have to win!” Jett insisted. “We could let the
undead out, put together an army, fight them out here. Then the
repository would be safe.”
“At the cost of how many lives?” Cat challenged him.
“But you’re not with the Light!” Jett protested. “You’re not a
hero. You’re a Red robe, like me. You’re supposed to value knowledge
above all else.”
“I know,” Cat insisted, making it clear she wasn’t going to
change her mind.
“Those books must have been buried for a reason,” Jett pointed
out. “Those ancient people wouldn’t have gone to all that effort unless
it was important. You saw the notes inside some of those books. They
were trying to tell us something. For all we know, the knowledge they
contain could be vital to the future, vital to the world!”
“You think I don’t know that?” Cat shot back, venomously.
She’d replayed Jett’s argument in her head a dozen times before he
spoke the words. It was a perfectly valid point. He could easily be right.
By saving the present, she could be condemning the future. How could
she know?
“You think I want to be making this choice?” Her voice cracked
on the words. She wasn’t qualified to make this choice, she sure as hell
171
wasn’t authorised, but the fact remained she was the one here making
it. “If it were just a matter of our lives, I’d agree with you,” she told
him. “I know if it were just me, I would give my life to protect that
knowledge, to preserve it for future generations as our ancestors did a
thousand years ago. I could make that choice and so could you, but what
about everyone else? I can’t make that choice for them. I don’t have the
right!”
She couldn’t know the future. All she could do was deal with the
situation in front of her and do the right thing as best she could.
“I could stop you,” Jett told her in a quiet voice, filled with
menace. A fireball flared and grew in his hand.
“Then do it now,” Cat replied, “because I’m out of time.”
Even in their weakened state, some of the undead in the lake were
on the verge of breaking through her ice wall. It was time to pull the
plug.
She worked her earthshaper magic, ripping the lakebed apart,
delving deeper until she reached the roof of the tunnel. As she switched
to stoneshaper, Jett’s expression darkened further. He drew his hand
back, ready to unleash his magic at Catriona.
“Don’t make me do this!” he growled.
“Do as you will,” was Cat’s only reply.
She didn’t move. Didn’t try to stop him. She needed every bit of
focus she could muster to execute her plan. If he chose to execute her
in the process, well, maybe it was no more than she deserved.
At the crucial moment, however, Jett faltered and extinguished
the flames.
“I can’t,” he said, shaking his head. “As much as I hate you for
this, Catriona, I can’t murder you and you’re right, I can’t let others die,
either.”
The druidess broke through at last and the lake began to drain
away. She widened the gap as much as she dared, and then switched her
focus to her wall, replenishing it and contracting its dimensions to force
the undead around the edge to plunge down the plughole, down into the
depths.
Catriona was in tears as she worked, weeping for all that lost
knowledge and the efforts of countless people, so long ago, who tried
to preserve it. Effort that was now wasted, all because of the vindictive
actions of one small-minded man that forced her, a simple half-Faery
druid girl to do this to save lives.
172
*****
A while later, when it was safe once more, community leader
Solana approached Catriona as she stood exhausted on the bank,
panting and leaning heavily on her staff.
Actually, she considered, could it still be ‘the bank’ if there was
no longer a lake?
“You saved our village!” Solana cried, gathering Catriona up in
an embrace.
“That’s one way of looking at it,” Jett grumbled.
“But what did you do to the lake?” she asked, stepping away.
“I drained it,” Cat answered, frowning in puzzlement at the
question.
“Obviously,” Solana rolled her eyes, “but I mean, before that!”
“Oh, replicated Holy Water,” Cat replied.
Solana raised her eyebrows. “I didn’t know that was possible.”
“Neither did I until today,” Cat admitted. Then, catching Jett’s
meaningful look, she excused herself, saying, “Look, we’d better go.
There’s nothing more we can do here.”
She turned to leave, but Solana caught her arm to ask one last
question. “What did you find down there?”
Cat opened her mouth, but Jett got in first, smoothly, to assure
her, “Oh, just some ancient tunnels. Interesting, archaeologically
speaking, but nothing worth facing Ulvarius’ legion of the undead for.”
Solana accepted that with a smile and a nod, and then shook both
their hands before heading off to see what she could do to restore peace
and order to her village.
When she was well out of earshot, Jett explained, “We can’t tell
anyone what we really found. The temptation could be too great for
some.”
Cat nodded. She understood that all too well. The lure of this
place had been so strong for her. It was in her nature; she just had to
know. She couldn’t help wondering how much trouble that attitude
might get her into in the future. She didn’t dare tell him about the one
thing that she had saved. The book of star charts that was now inside
her pocket dimension.
“Much as I don’t like it,” Jett continued, “Solana’s right: you did
save this village, perhaps the whole of Elvaria, and knowing you, you’ll
probably go on to save the world.”
173
“Don’t be ridiculous,” she insisted, blushing. “I’m just a simple
half-Faery druid girl.” Frankly, she didn’t want that responsibility.
“If you say so,” Jett shrugged. She might not believe it, but he
did.
Then, to Catriona’s surprise, the wizard briefly hugged her.
“I don’t hate you,” he assured her as he pulled away again. “At
least, I won’t once the open wound has had time to scab over. But it
would probably be best if we didn’t see each other again. Sorry, but
your face would always remind me of what was lost today, reopen this
wound and I don’t think I could bear that. Besides, otherwise, people
might start to wonder if we really did find something here.”
“That’s OK,” Cat accepted. “You know what the rumours are
like. You’ll just end up being the latest in a long line of wizard lovers
I’ve apparently had and broken up with.”
Giving her a crooked smile that failed to reach his eyes, he
suggested, “There is a way we could help those rumours along, if you’re
willing.”
When he explained, Cat replied, “That’s almost as bad as one of
my ridiculous radical ideas. Let’s do it, but just before that, if I’m not
going to see you again, can I just say, thank you and, well, I suppose,
have a good life.”
“You, too,” he replied. “No hard feelings. Ready?” he asked.
Cat nodded.
Jett kissed her, full and long, and then, when she was sure they
had attracted plenty of attention, Cat pulled away and slapped him.
With a huff, she shifted to falcon form and flew away, leaving
Jett to find a horse and travel home the conventional way.
*****
That evening, when Dreya returned to the Black Tower after a
Council session, she could immediately see Catriona’s haunted look as
she gazed with unseeing eyes at what appeared to be a book of star
charts.
“What’s wrong, Cat?” she asked. “You look like you’ve seen a
ghost.”
“Bit more than ghosts, I’m afraid, Dreya,” she replied with a
weak smile. “Legacy of Ulvarius.”
174
Despite what Jett had said, she had to tell Dreya. That repository
would hold no lure for her. There was no power in it.
*****
“Did I do the right thing?” Cat asked when she reached the end.
“I mean, Jett had a point: I’m aligned with the Balance. That’s supposed
to mean knowledge first.”
“Light, Dark, Balance – Life, Power, Knowledge,” Dreya began.
“Are they so different in the end? To me, it’s just a question of
emphasis. What’s the point of knowledge or power without people to
use it? What’s the point of living without knowledge of reality, and the
power to change it? That’s what I’m striving for with the Council –
better co-operation between the factions so that we can move this world
forward together. As I once told Laethyn, when I say I want to be the
Greatest Mage Who Ever Lived, I want that to mean something. Tyrants
like Ulvarius and threats like the shadow warriors cannot be allowed.
The loss of that ancient repository is a sad victory for Ulvarius but
letting his undead army loose would have been worse. You absolutely
did the right thing, and you did it, as always, in a way only you could
have possibly dreamed up. I’m proud of you.”
*****
In the days that immediately followed, gentle reader, my mother
viewed that ancient book of star charts as a prized possession.
Unfortunately, in practical terms, without any real context, it proved to
be of little use, so after about a week, it simply sat untouched on a shelf.
It would be many years before its value was truly realised.
There were many more grand adventures for my mother over the
next year or two, though none quite as harrowing as the story I just told.
Through it all, however, she could find no trace of her old friend,
Mandalee. True to her word, she wasn’t actively trying to find her, but
she never strayed far from her thoughts. Through her sympathic link,
she could take solace in the knowledge that her old friend was alive
somewhere. She just thought it would be nice to at least hear something
about what her life was like, now.
175
My mother was going to have to wait a while longer, yet, but one
day, when the world was held in the balance, their paths would cross
again.
*****
It’s a great pity that my mother was forced to flood that
repository, a thousand years ago. The knowledge we could have gained
over the centuries might have told us much that would be relevant even
in my time. If those books were recorded when the void storms started,
they might also have documented how and why. Then we might have
learned how to stop them.
I can see them now, as I gaze out of my window once more,
burning brightly in the sky, though currently frozen in Time. In the
millennium since my mother’s time, though they continue to wax and
wane, their average intensity has gradually increased to the point where
they can cause tremors and quakes, reactivate otherwise dormant
volcanoes and cause flash floods. The magical techniques we now
possess are usually enough to mitigate the worst of the damage and save
lives, but for how much longer? How long before they grow too
powerful for anyone do anything about it? How long before the tidal
forces they generate rip our world apart? According to official
calculations, we have, at best, about ten years. But others can’t see Time
like I do. They can’t see the way the void storms are tearing the fabric
of our world apart. I can’t prove it, but I know we don’t have ten years.
It’s less than that. A lot less.
Unfortunately, we are unable to expend the resources we would
need to combat this danger, because there is an even more imminent
threat.
I wasn’t there when it began, that summer evening, but I’ve seen
it many times, since. Too many.
The gleaming city of Walminster, home to more than a million
residents and thousands of visitors, is much changed from my mother’s
time. Only the historic Council building, with its Protected status,
remains the same.
Gone are the standard medieval cottages, smoky chimneys and
horses for transport. Residential buildings can be whatever shape,
colour and style the owners wish. A few change that night, perhaps to
176
make room for a new arrival. In the sky, transport pods race along roads
that appear only when they need to, and teleport pods provide more
long-distance options for those who can’t teleport themselves. A
holographic concert is underway in the nearby arena, beamed live from
another world. Others seek their own entertainment with smaller
displays that appear above the palm of their hands and still more people
are pulling up tourist information, as well as interactive map images and
directions out of thin air, as well as news and weather reports.
A recreational park is pulled out of a pocket dimension, for
people to enjoy the evening sunshine. Children are soon chatting,
laughing, and playing with shapeshifting magic. Eventually, they
decide to go somewhere else, so they all change into a variety of birds
and fly away, meeting up with another group along the way, doubling
the flock size.
The sky overhead grows black, as if it’s suddenly been ripped
apart to reveal nothingness beyond. Out of that void, comes a Monster.
The Monster that killed my mother’s parents.
The void-creature casually shoots the flock of birds below him.
The children blink out of existence, and the blast continues,
uninterrupted. A long travel pod train gets caught in the blast, vanishing
as the power strikes the ground, where it leaves a quarter-mile diameter
crater. The concert is obliterated. Emergency services respond, but they,
too, are caught in the attack. Mages and fighters of all descriptions try
to stop the void-creature, but the cannon rips through shields and
armour, like they’re not there. He must be stopped.
Mandalee and the other Guardians arrive, fighting with Temporal
magic, using every bit of skill and power they possess, and at last,
something slows the creature down, but even they can’t stop it.
Temporal shields that could hold back an Angel, buckle under the
assault.
Aunt Mandalee finally calls me in – she probably should have
called earlier, but she feared for my safety. I can sense the Temporal
component of his weapon and try to wrap him in a Time bubble. After
experimenting with various harmonic variations, I manage to nullify the
Temporal aspect of his blasts. They still cause mass destruction, but I’m
hopeful that the Guardians can find ways to undo much of that through
some clinical Time Interventions.
At last, the tide of battle turns, and the void-creature slips through
a portal. The Guardians are exhausted, but I give chase. I can’t let him
177
damage Time, but by that same token, I must be careful – pitched battles
between us through Time would make the ancient feud of the shadow
warriors look like playground fighting.
He eventually flees somewhere even I cannot go, which should
be impossible, but I have come to realise that the rules don’t apply to
him, because his power comes, in part, from outside the Great Cosmic
Sandwich. Somehow, he is channelling the chaotic power of IT.
We’ve been waging a war for over a year since that first day, and
we’re powerless to do anything more than slow the void-creature down.
If this Monster is not stopped, we’ll never need to worry about
the void storms, and if he’s not stopped quickly, the void storms will
make our war magnificently irrelevant.
But where did this Monster come from and where does my
desperate and dangerous plan fit into this? Why have I sent Mandalee
back in time to fetch my father from the past, and why from that
particular moment? To give you those answers, I must continue to hold
back Time and keep the Red and Black Guardians from interfering.
Speaking of which, they’re giving me some trouble at the
moment, and I’m afraid they might just break free if I don’t do
something to discourage them. So, if you’ll excuse me, gentle reader, I
shall go and deal with them. Then on my return, I shall tell you the story
of how Daelen StormTiger, my father, first met my mother, and
everything was set in motion.
The series continues at:
https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B08QMGJ7Y4
Hi there!
I hope you enjoyed this book. If so, it would really help me if
you could leave a star rating or even a short review at:
https://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/product/B08PPW7DCC/
or
https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/56856086-shifting-stars
Tell your friends, too!
Thanks
Gary Stringer
A sneak preview of the sequel
to Shifting Stars
Gathering Storm
The Salvation of Tempestria
Book 2
Gary Stringer
Available Spring 2021
1
Chapter 1
The Council of Wizards was in crisis: wizards were going
missing.
There was no obvious pattern relating to faction, power, ability
or involvement in Council affairs, so there was no way of knowing who
might be next.
Exactly when this started, gentle reader, it was difficult to say.
Missing people were an unfortunate fact of life, in ways both ordinary
and extraordinary, such as demon attack. These disappearances were
different, however. It wasn’t always possible to determine precisely
where they were when they disappeared, but where it was possible,
investigations revealed an energy source of higher planar origins.
This was new: beings from the higher planes had never before
shown any interest in taking mortals. They were often collateral
damage, caught in the crossfire, but never deliberately attacked. If that
had changed, and the shadow warriors were now kidnapping innocent
Tempestrians for who-knew-what purposes, what could be done about
it?
My mother, Catriona, already knew Aunt Dreya’s views on the
matter. She had shared her intention to kill Daelen StormTiger not long
after Cat had moved in, and current events, more than two years later,
as the Tempestrian chronometer flies, compelled Catriona to share
something that had been puzzling her about it.
“Why Daelen, specifically?” Catriona asked her. “Why not
Kullos, or that other one…the dark clone. The one that looks a bit like
Daelen but isn’t…has anybody heard that one’s name, by the way?”
“Not that I know of,” Dreya replied. “Anyway, what do you care
which one I kill?”
“I don’t, especially,” Cat shrugged. “They’re all about as
dangerous as each other, as far as I can tell. They’ve got no business
fighting their war here, and I’d be quite happy to be rid of the lot of
them. Which is precisely why I ask the question: Why Daelen,
specifically? Why do you care which one you kill?”
Dreya frowned. She’d never really questioned it. Daelen was a
self-proclaimed Protector and seen as a hero to many, trying to save
them from Kullos, who was generally viewed as the villain. Recently,
2
though, there had been growing, popular support for the reverse
sentiment. Dreya the Dark agreed with Catriona that there was little
basis for either view, but that only further highlighted her question.
Surely it wasn’t a matter of killing Daelen because of his hero image or
because he was famous. Those were not worthy motivations for Dreya
the Dark. Yet, something was nagging in her brain, almost like a voice,
her own voice, telling her he was the one she should go for. It was
important.
‘Kill Daelen StormTiger,’ said the voice, ‘and take his power.’
The voice kept telling her to ignore the reasons why, but that
wasn’t how Dreya operated. She didn’t do random violence. She didn’t
attack without cause.
“I don’t know,” she admitted, finally, “and I don’t like that I don’t
know. If I didn’t know better, I might suspect some kind of mental
attack or a post-hypnotic suggestion, but my shields prevent any such
thing.”
Her shields were intact. From the day Dreya claimed the Tower,
the only magical signature that had ever passed through her defences,
apart from Catriona’s, was her own. Still, the point was chiefly
academic for the foreseeable future. Dreya knew she wasn’t ready to
take on a being from the higher planes. Not yet. Besides, she didn’t even
know how to find them if she wanted to. Nobody knew where the
shadow warriors went, between battles. Dreya suspected the answer lay
on some other world, but her best efforts to probe the cosmos with her
magic had so far failed to prove their existence.
“Anyway, it’s a moot point at the moment,” Dreya told Cat,
dismissing the issue. “After all, it’s not as if Daelen StormTiger himself
is going to come knocking on my door!”
Cat laughed, “That’s true.”
And so, she let the subject drop.
Returning to their original topic of conversation, Dreya needed
to share some news that she knew Catriona was not going to like.
“Cat,” she began, “I just came from an emergency Council
meeting.”
“I know,” Cat nodded, “you told me this morning, remember?”
“Yes, but I didn’t tell you why it was called.”
“About all those wizards disappearing, I presumed.”
3
“Yes, but the situation’s got even more serious for your faction
in particular, though it affects everyone, really. Cat, I’m sorry to have
to tell you this, but the latest wizard to vanish is Mistress Justaria.”
For one of the Triumvirate to disappear was a severe blow to the
whole magical community. If Daelen or one of his kind were proved to
be behind it, that could be seen as nothing less than a declaration of war.
Catriona liked Mistress Justaria. The leader of the Red robes of
Balance had been fair-minded at Catriona’s Conclave, and the druidess
had always taken to heart the conversation they’d shared afterwards.
Justaria had been absolutely right that the college was entirely the
wrong place for her, and in many ways, her encouragement to seek
knowledge elsewhere was a key reason why she was now living and
working in the Black Tower. More than that, she felt she owed an
enormous debt of thanks to Justaria for her hand in events that had led
to her close bond with Dreya the Dark. The chance to see the person
behind the mask, the woman beneath the black velvet robes. The
opportunity to come to know and understand Dreya in ways no-one else
did.
Dreya had visited many of the known disappearance sites herself,
but she understood Catriona well enough by now to be completely
unsurprised when the druidess declared her intention to investigate this
one personally.
*****
A red-banded falcon alighted in Justaria’s garden. It wasn’t large,
but it was well maintained. Flowering plants were blooming in a wide
border between the fence and the lawn on the right-hand side as she
faced the white cottage at the end of the gently meandering path. Over
to the left, the Red robe leader had gone for a different approach, with
a blanket of buttercups and daisies encircling a sycamore tree.
Catriona reverted to her natural form and breathed deeply. She
could immediately sense the signature of higher planar energy that had
got everybody so worked up. But there was something else not quite
right about this place. A spell of wizards had been all over Justaria’s
garden, probing with their magic and in their wizardly wisdom, turned
up absolutely nothing.
“Wizards!” the druidess muttered to herself. “Can’t see past their
own spellbooks!”
4
She sent a sympathic apology to Dreya, with whom she was
linked.
‘Not wrong,’ came her reply.
Barring a few footprints where wizards had trodden carelessly,
the garden was beautiful, but not immaculate. It didn’t look like a
professional job to Cat. More of a constant labour of love. Clearly,
Justaria spent a lot of her free time planting, pottering and pruning,
tinkering and tidying her garden. So why were the daisies bent over? If
they had just been stepped on, why was it just the daisies and not the
buttercups? And why all in one direction, towards the tree? Cat stepped
lightly around to the far side of the tree where the trunk was in shadow.
On the ground was a trowel with a sharp metal point, which had
obviously been used to carve words into the bark:
RHYNAS
DESERT
The druidess wasn’t sure where that was, apart from being
somewhere overseas, but by concentrating hard, she was able to project
an image of the words to Dreya, sympathically. In return, Dreya sent
‘Meeting’ and ‘Map,’ which Cat took to mean she would meet up with
her and show her on a map.
Looking around Justaria’s garden once more, there was no other
evidence that Catriona could detect. It was a wonder the sorceress had
found time to do as much as she did. She could almost picture the scene:
whoever had come for Justaria, she had found out where they were
taking her and delayed them long enough to leave clues.
At her Conclave, Cat had seen Justaria use delicate magic to
make a pen inscribe words on a page with barely a glance. In principle,
using a floating trowel to scratch words into a tree was no different. As
for the daisies, they were just more evidence of Justaria’s deft touch
with magic. Still, it would have taken time, which told Cat something
else: unless Justaria’s case was different from all the others, wizards
were not being kidnapped as everyone assumed. If it were a simple grab
and teleport job, there was no way Justaria could have done what she
did. She must have kept them talking, and if they were talking, it wasn’t
kidnapping, it was persuasion. Recruitment. That said, given the lack of
5
reports of wizards saying ‘no’ to this recruitment, it was likely the sales
pitch boiled down to ‘join or die,’ but still, recruitment for what?
As she was puzzling over that one, someone arrived who had the
answer.
The wind suddenly picked up, and Cat was instantly alert. Storms
didn’t just start like that. Not natural ones, anyway. There was a flash
of equally unnatural lightning, creating an outline of a member of the
big cat family: a tiger.
Cat shifted to her tawny owl form, quieter through the air than
the falcon, approaching the new arrival stealthily from behind. She
changed in midair and stood on one of her Windy Steps.
“Daelen StormTiger,” she said, scowling indignantly, arms
folded. “What the hell are you doing here?”
GARY STRINGER is the author of the new novel Shifting Stars.
Shifting Stars marks the beginning of the epic series, The
Salvation of Tempestria. A fantasy world within a wider sci-fi universe,
populated by bold characters with ridiculous radical ideas, as told by an
immortal girl from the future with a plan to save the world...or possibly
end it.
Scientist by profession, Gary gives real science concepts a
fantasy twist in his writing.
While studying for his B.Sc. in Chemistry, he discovered the
fantasy genre and he’s barely stopped reading since!
He lives in the seaside town of Blackpool, UK, and enjoys long
walks and theme parks in the summer, and theatre shows in the winter.
His previous work includes the Majaos Trilogy available from
Obooko.com rated 5 stars out of 5 across the 3 books. This work is a
decade-long labour of love stemming back to his University days that
turns familiar fantasy tropes on their heads.
No comments:
Post a Comment