Techromancy Scrolls: New Cali
By Erik Schubach
Copyright © 2019 by Erik Schubach
Self publishing
P.O. Box 523
Nine Mile Falls, WA 99026
Cover Photo © 2019 OutsiderZone / Depositphotos.com license
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. This book contains material protected under International and Federal Copyright Laws and Treaties. Any unauthorized reprint or use of this material is prohibited. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system without express written permission from the author / publisher, except by a reviewer who wishes to quote brief passages in connection with a review written for inclusion in a magazine, newspaper, blog, or broadcast.
This is a work of fiction. Any resemblance to real persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental.
Manufactured in the United States of America
FIRST EDITION
Prologue
I closed my eyes as I sat in the Garden of the Great Mother, listening. My ears straining, catching murmuring voices on the breeze that teased like ethereal promises that were just out of grasp. They were ever-present there in the Whispering Walls Mountains which bisected the Lower Ten realms of Sparo.
Many have gone mad trying to make sense of the whispers, thinking to have caught the voices of loved ones long since passed, or learning of a prophetic future which then comes to pass. But more seek the solace and peace the whispers instill inside them, like the ghosts of voices welcoming them home with a warm embrace.
All the times I had traveled through the range, catching those phantom voices on the wind, I never would have imagined that all of these tales could be true. Once becoming the co-ruler of all of the realms, and having the mantle of Great Mother of Sparo thrust upon me by trickery and happenstance, I learned the truth of it all.
My predecessor and architect of my current fate, the former Great Mother Ranelle, has been instructing me on all the secrets of the Great Mothers that are passed down from one generation to the next. Now the burden of these secrets and these unbelievable truths are my responsibility now.
Rain had shared with me that those voices that echoed around the peaks, centered here, around Father Stone, the most imposing peak in the range, are those of all the People and Altii of the touched. Those who hold or will hold a spark of magic within them. Past, present, or future, it makes no matter to the mountains who stand witness to the world around them like sentinels of history.
It is something in the magic which connects us all, and only if you listen long enough, letting the world fall away and only exist for the whispers to tease and play with your senses, can you catch the words of those you left behind in the steady march of life, and sometimes voices of the future echo back through the breeze to entice or torment you with the possibilities of that which is still to come.
I smiled at the echoing memory of something that was both my past and present, as well as my future, of my love, my life, of the knight of my heart. My Celeste's playful whisper, “Laney...” drifted through my awareness.
I held onto this moment, for it was not to last. I have barely had a moment of respite in which to rest in the past three years since fate played the awful trick on me, of making me, Laney Herder, chicken herder of Wexbury Keep, a ruler. Because with that title, my life is no longer my own, and I long for moments like this where I can catch my breath between performing my duties for the People, the Mountain Gypsies of Sparo, and for the Altii of the fourteen realms.
Sighing, I remembered when there were but eleven realms in the habitable lands of Sparo, but as we discovered more lands and peoples, and they voted to petition to become realms of the Kingdom, I've seen just in the past three years that number grew by three. Not to mention the protectorate of Avalon.
Protectorate... a polite way of saying occupied territory since they fell to the knights of Sparo after they waged a war upon us in an attempt to steal our resources and enslave our people with the technology of the Great Wizards of the Before that they possessed. We had fought for and won the freedom of the people of the three Outlands which Avalon had conquered and enslaved.
A tragedy that, since most of the Avalonian people were not even aware of the disposition of the Outlands, as they were told by their government that the barbaric Outlands were working with Avalon, exchanging resources, material, and labor for education and the protection of Avalon. When in truth the Avalonian military had conquered those lands, enslaved the peoples, and systematically stripped the lands of any resources needed to keep Avalon from falling to the ravages of time.
I almost jumped when Rain said from beside me in the tongue of the people, “Ah... you've heard it I see. Your smile betrays you. I heard the Lightbringer's voice calling your name in the whispers, playful and loving, in the days before our first meeting. The future speaking to me of your coming.”
I gasped out, realizing my hand was already halfway to the small dagger in my boot, an unfortunate side effect of my many years of training as a knight and Kanset form Femeie de Sabie training, “Don't sneak up on a woman like that. You almost gave me a heart attack.”
I felt her overwhelming magic tugging at me, and realized she was tucking all of me into the now, into the present we were currently experiencing. The other future versions of myself; or were they the past versions?; she pulled into one present. She grinned. “Better, it is disconcerting when you are flitting around, blurring in and out of time like that.”
I felt the burn of a blush on my cheeks. I hadn't even realized I had pushed the ghosts of myself a few seconds forward as I relaxed and let the voices of Father Stone inside me. It is almost my natural state now and has saved me on numerous occasions in battle, and even from two assassination attempts in the past year alone.
I rasped out from my damaged vocal cords, “Sorry, I was just trying to relax. How did you ever catch your breath when you were co-ruler with King George?”
She gave a humorless chuckle as she balanced the point of a dagger on her fingertip. “Ah, that is your folly, believing I ever had a chance to catch my breath. Being a ruler is a state of being, not a job like chicken herding in your case or a minstrel in mine. It is all-consuming for the sake of all those who look up to you for guidance, for strength, and assurance... to feel... safe.”
I grumped, “Sounds like lip service.”
The tall, dangerous Mountain Gypsy tilted her head back, her dark locks pooling on her shoulders, and gave one of the heartfelt laughs that you couldn't help but smile at. It was so good to hear her laugh again. She had lost her humor, her... light, when the man she loved, and my friend, Sir Bowyn, had died in my stead when he took a shot meant for me in the Battle of Aratreya in New Home. But her new wife, my... well my sister, Sylvia, had reignited that fire inside her, showing her she could love again.
She placed a hand on my arm and her smile went wistful and showed me she knew what I was thinking while she stared off into the garden valley that was hidden by magic from the world outside of it. “I sometimes think I can hear him on the wind. It isn't uncommon for those who are not touched, but spent much of their lives around those who are, to be heard in the whispers.”
I sighed for her broken heart but was also happy that she and Syl had found their own happiness. Then I asked plainly, “Not that I don't enjoy your company, but why are you here, Rain? It can't be to just catch up with a friend.”
“Friend? Laney, dear, we are family.”
“You know what I mean, smarty pants.”
She laughed again, getting me grinning, even though dread was building in me. She was going to take me away from the on
ly moment of peace I've had in months, wasn't she? “Where is your lovely bride and my delightful grandchildren?”
Yup, it was like that. I sighed again, over-dramatically for her benefit, and pointed lazily into the valley. “They're fishing down by the lake.”
She nodded almost sadly and said, “We should collect them, you are needed.”
Of course.
I stood and stretched and looked around the gardens.
The secluded little valley had high peaks all around it, with no other way to reach it besides a tunnel which was hidden by magics so ancient and powerful that I couldn't comprehend their casting. The gardens had a glowing beauty beyond compare, with trees, plants, and flowers rolling off into the distance, mists coming from the waterfalls that fell from the peaks into various lakes that seemed to ring the entire valley, giving the place an almost ethereal look.
Odd, large butterflies and smaller colorful ones flitted around to gather the nectar from the strange flowers. Tall and majestic deer, with long straight horns, foraged the sweet-smelling grasses near the ancient, well preserved Gypsy wagon not twenty-five yards from the tunnel.
The deer, like the other animals in the garden, were protected from man here, so were not afraid of us as they hadn't been hunted by bow or by spear in centuries, cut off from the outside world.
The garden of the Great Mother preserves all the dying and threatened species of plants and animals in Sparo, giving them a chance to thrive again, until such time as the Great Mother deems it time for them to be reintroduced back into the world. I would not be that Great Mother, as long as I hold the title, they would be held safe in the gardens, and in my heart.
I had to smile. My eldest daughter, Misty, who is the most powerful nature elemental Sparo has seen in ages, has taken it upon herself to search out other threatened species to give them a new home and new hope here in the valley.
Rain flipped the knife on the tip of her finger, cocked her hip, and the dagger landed neatly in its sheath. I shoved her shoulder as I stood. “Flamboyant showoff.”
I looked around as I dusted some yellow pollen off my boots. “Where's Syl?”
She grinned and indicated the wagon, where I saw smoke drifting out of the stovepipe on the roof. I blinked. Just how out of it was I that I hadn't heard them come in or apparently set camp?
Rain seemed to know what I was thinking yet again as she assured me, “You needed to commune with the world and we didn't wish to disturb you so we were extra sneaky.”
Smiling I bantered, “I'll extra sneaky you right upside the head, woman.”
She snorted.
Well, I didn't blame her. I posed less than zero physical threat to her. There were few knights that would be her equal with a blade, my wife being one of them. Rain was among the most dangerous women in all of Sparo and undoubtedly held the most magic inside her than any other woman, though she insists that my Misty may eclipse her by the time my daughter hits her age of consent.
I inhaled to sigh again, but her cocked eyebrow showed me she was wise to my theatrics. She bowed slightly though she was among the very few people in the Realms who didn't need to, being a retired Great Mother put her outside of the rule of man, just as the Templars of Sparo were. With a flourish of her hand and a teasing, “After you, Great Mother,” she ushered me forward.
And before I could start walking down the hill toward the first of the lakes below, she stepped off on her own with a jaunty gait. I chased after her at a jog to keep up with my much shorter stride, calling out in English, “Hey, wait up, wench! You just now said after me, like three seconds ago.”
“How does George put it? You snooze, you lose, Great Mother.”
“I hate you.”
“No, you don't.”
“Fine, I love you, but you aren't as funny as you think you are.”
“Yes, I am.”
“Grrr.” Fine whatever, she was as funny as she thought she was. I giggled and took the lead since the silly Gypsy didn't know which lake my family was currently at.
As we walked, I asked, “When did you arrive?”
She shrugged. “About an hour ago. Syl threatened me with great bodily harm if I disturbed your communion with Father Stone, that you needed to relax. But I'm impatient.” Her unrepentant grin told me she wasn't sorry one bit.
“You are so bad.”
“I'm just oddly relieved that all that pressure is finally off my own shoulders. But I know that you can take the burden, Laney, else it wouldn't be quite as humorous. Mind you that it would still be humorous, just not as much so if you were ill-equipped to take the responsibility.”
I rolled my eyes. She was incorrigible. I smirked when she stumbled a little when two misty versions of me returned to merge with me after I sent them ahead to shove her shoulder.
Ranelle just chuckled and told me, “You are getting better with your control over your magics. I didn't even see when you pushed yourself forward that time.”
I smirked. “When you looked back at the wagon while you spoke of Syl.”
“Ah... used my weakness against me.”
“I'll let Sylvia know you view her as a weakness.”
She chuckled. “You're a horrible, horrible woman. I don't even know why I chose you and your wife as my mostenitors.” She furrowed her brow as she took a bite of an apple from the blade in her hand. Where had those come from? “I didn't know that Celeste fished. She doesn't strike me as the patient type.”
It was my turn to chuckle at her. “Oh, she fishes with no bait or hooks on her line. She just uses the time to relax and find serenity within herself, to prepare for our next trial in life.”
The serious but mischievous look on her face told me that the next trial would be sooner than any of us would like. Mother Luna, couldn't we get just a day of peace before being thrust into the machinations of the realms again? It seemed that someone, somewhere, was always in need of us.
Oh well, there was nothing for it then. I glanced from the path in front of back the way we came and asked with a smirk, “Is...”
“Oh yes... Ingr is here.” She placed the back of her hand on her forehead and over dramatically acted out in a good approximation of Ingr's voice. “It's been forever since I've seen Misty.”
Then she rolled her eyes. “They were together just before your trip to Avalon last week. I swear, all teens have to be so dramatic all the time.”
Nodding, I affirmed, “Misty is the exact same.” I affected Misty's tone. “But mom, why couldn't Ingr come with us, or why can't I just stay with Auntie Syl?” My daughter knew exactly why. First, Sylvia and Rain hadn't seen their daughter in a month, which is why I suspected they had come to Carnival at Wexbury a few weeks earlier than anticipated. And President Cutter... Esme hadn't seen Misty in a few months. Her duties as president of Avalon demanding all her attention. I understood the feeling.
Esmerelda was the logical choice for Sparo to install as leader pro tempore of the occupied territory. Imagine her dismay and my delight when it was made official by a vote from their people.
Though it was a close thing. The anti-Sparo sentiment is thick in Avalon, as most of the people had been kept in the dark and fed propaganda about the “savage horde” of Sparo who was waging “unprovoked” war against their people. So imagine their response when our forces were delivered upon their doorstep in the final battle of the years-long war which defeated President Kensington and the military forces loyal to him.
The Purist party, a faction that sanctioned violence against Sparo, had taken forty percent of the vote. I still didn't fully understand how their democracy worked. It seemed so alien to me as Sparo was a feudal monarchy system with a King who ruled over all. And even that has changed, as the Altii and the People have formed one people now with dual rulers that represent the two peoples. Every ten years, the primary leadership is passed from one to the other. It is a merging of cultures.
Though I could see the allure of
the democratic way of governance, where every person had a vote, every person had a voice. But we saw first hand how that system could be manipulated so that one group of people could stay in power, rendering it basically the same as a monarchy, but by duplicity.
I don't envy Esme at all, as the atrocities her people had perpetrated upon the Outlands for so many years have been laid bare to the population, showing them that all they were told about the lands beyond the Glass was a lie.
As much as she protested, Misty had a great time in Avalon, visiting her honorary aunt and the zoological domes in the frozen land that housed so many animals and plants thought to be extinct after the Great Impact. To my embarrassment and chagrin, Misty has a certain affinity for the platypus pool since it is on our family crest.
And with our visit, we brought dozens of more chickens to bolster their rapidly growing population of the meat and laying birds. Theirs had been wiped out long ago by an aggressive avian sickness and they believed them extinct until we reintroduced them. Esme herself was gifted the first flock by me, as well as strawberry seeds to start new crops of the lost berries in Avalon. I've learned that she is doing quite financially well because of both now.
Rain couldn't contain her smile of joy when we came out of a heavily forested path to a hill above the bank of a river flowing into the small lake or oversize pond that my family favored. There, sitting on the ground with her back to a tree, holding a fishing pole, was my wife, Celeste, looking... relaxed and peaceful, her fiery mane of red hair hanging over her face as if she slept. A state I have rarely seen her in even before I was thrust into my current position, and it warmed my heart to see.
And just a few yards away, standing knee-deep in the water, were our daughters, Misty and Shanicia. Misty, who has grown like a weed the past three years and is now taller than me, was patting the water with her palm, and fish were drawn to her as her magics she could barely contain flowed almost freely from her, calling out to those fish. It was like this wherever she went, animals just flocked to her.
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