To his credit, he worked hard. Unlike some of Keturah’s male apprentices, Dhamari showed no interest in her or in his fellow apprentices. Nor did he pester the servant girls. He was always proper, always polite and respectful. Keturah would have thought him cold but for his fascination with the newest apprentice.
She sighed, troubled by the turn her thoughts had taken. Kiva, an acolyte of the Temple of Azuth, had recently been sent to Keturah as part of the obligatory training in every school of the magical Arts. Kiva was a wild elf, a rarity in this civilized land. Her golden eyes reminded Keturah of a jungle cat, and Keturah suspected the elf was every bit as unpredictable.
Of one thing Keturah was certain: Kiva was a bad influence on Dhamari. He was intrigued by creatures of legend and dark magic, and the exotic Kiva seemed to inflame his imagination with possibilities. Of late he’d been asking Keturah for spells that would allow him to call and command creatures, as she did, but Dhamari had little talent for this particular type of evocation—or any other, for that matter. Very soon Keturah would have to encourage him to seek a new master and explore other schools of magic. The very notion filled her with nameless relief.
Keturah shrugged off these thoughts and strode through the outer gate. She stopped cold, frozen as surely as if she’d been halted by an ice dragon’s breath.
Her neck prickled, and waves of gooseflesh swept down her arms. A second chill shuddered through her as her mind acknowledged what her senses had perceived: some dark and foul creature had invaded her home!
She began to chant a spell of discernment. Tendrils of bilious green mist—the manifestation of a powerful magic-seeking spell—twined through the air. Grimly she followed them into the tower and up the winding stairs. A sudden cacophony exploded from a room high above, and the mist was no longer necessary to guide her onward.
She sprinted up the final flights and raced toward the main laboratory. The heavy wooden door was closed, and it bulged and shuddered under the assault of some unknown power. Keturah summoned a fireball and held it aloft in one hand. With the other hand she threw open the door, leaping aside as she did.
The door crashed into the wall as a tangle of heaving, writhing vines spilled out into the corridor. Billows of smoke followed, bearing the acrid scent of sulfur.
Though Keturah could not see into the room, she could pick individual notes from the racket: glass vials shattering, fire crackling, priceless spellbooks thudding against the walls, furniture clattering as it overturned. A man’s grunts spoke of pain and exertion, and a beautiful, bell-like soprano voice lifted in keening chant. Above it all rang a shrill, insanely gleeful cackle that tore at the ears like fingernails on slate.
“An imp,” Keturah muttered. She left her fireball suspended in air like a giant firefly and began to tear with both hands at the vines blocking the entrance. “The idiots have summoned an imp!”
She managed a small opening and struggled through. For a moment she stood taking stock of the chaotic scene.
A richly dressed young man stamped frantically at a smoldering carpet. His boots smoked, and his thin face was frantic with terror and smudged with soot. He lofted his dagger with one hand, slashing futilely at the creature circling him like an overgrown gnat.
His attacker was a particularly nasty imp with a body the size of a housecat, enormous batlike wings, a yellowish hide, and a hideous face dominated by a twisted and bulbous nose.
The imp had been busy. The tapestries and drapes showed the assault of its claws, and the ripped edges smoldered from its touch. As the imp circled Dhamari, it spat little bursts of scalding steam, cackling with delight at the young man’s pained cries.
Kiva stood over a potted lemon tree, chanting a growth spell. This was clearly not the elf woman’s first attempt at containing the imp. The center of the room was dominated by an ornate cage fashioned from the vines of a flowering herb—an ingenious spell but for the fact that the cage door stood ajar. Imps were notoriously difficult to contain.
Keturah hissed out a sigh of exasperation.
Dhamari glanced up and caught sight of his mistress. Guilt and relief fought for possession of his face.
“Praise Mystra! Keturah has come.”
His exclamation distracted the elf from her spellcasting. Kiva whirled toward the wizard, and the expression on her strange, coppery face changed from concentration to accusation, as if Keturah were somehow responsible for the rampaging imp.
“Do something!” the elf snapped.
At that moment, Kiva’s future at the tower came to a certain end. Keturah set her jaw and reached into the bag tied to her belt She removed a bit of powder wrapped in a scrap of silk—a charm of the sort any prudent evoker carried as a safeguard against a miscast summoning. This she tossed into the imp’s path.
The silk dropped away and the sparkling powder stopped in midair, spreading out into a translucent wall. Batlike wings backbeat frantically as the imp tried to evade, but the wall caught and held it like a fly in sap. The creature struggled and shrieked and cursed, but nothing availed. Finally it fell into seething silence, yellow chest heaving as it eyed the wizard with murderous rage.
“Be gone,” Keturah said quietly. As quickly as thought, both the creature and its magical prison disappeared.
The wizard turned to study the cause of this debacle. Kiva, despite her spell battle with the imp, looked as poised and polished as a queen. The elf was clad in a fine green gown and decked with matching gems. Her dark green hair had been skillfully coaxed into ringlets, and each curl glowed with the color and sheen of jade. Subtle paint enhanced her exotic features, and a complex perfume, green and wild and somehow disturbing, mingled with the scent of the plants that transformed the room into an exploding jungle. The elf was more than a hand’s breadth taller than Keturah yet so delicately fashioned and exquisitely groomed she made the young wizard feel coarse and common. In Kiva’s presence, Keturah often had to remind herself she, not the elf, was mistress in this tower.
“So you conjured an imp,” she said coolly. “Deliberately?”
Dhamari and Kiva exchanged glances. “Yes,” the young man admitted hesitantly.
“I see.” Keturah swept one hand toward the wild, wilting foliage. “This, I suppose, is banishment that reverses this summoning?”
“You know it is not,” the elf replied in equally cordial tones. “You have not seen fit to teach the necessary banishment spells.”
With great effort, Keturah banked her temper. “Necessary indeed! It is unspeakably reckless to cast a spell, any spell, that you cannot counter. You didn’t even carry a protective charm, did you?”
Dhamari hung his head, but Kiva merely sniffed, as if to mock so obvious a question.
“Both of you have forgotten several primary laws of evocation,” Keturah continued. She ticked them off on her fingers. “Don’t cast magic you can’t counter, don’t summon creatures you cannot banish, and never, ever summon any creature you can’t handle.”
“A creature I can’t handle,” Kiva echoed, pronouncing each word with incredulous precision. “My dear Keturah, I’ve handled monsters far more imposing than a smelly yellow imp!”
Keturah held her apprentice’s glare for a moment. She peeled the tiny, sleeping behir from its perch on her shoulder and carefully placed it on a branch of the lemon tree. “Very well, then,” she said calmly. “If you’re as knowledgeable as you claim, subdue this creature.”
The elf glanced at the lizardlike creature and sent Keturah a look that, had it been on a human face, might have been called a smirk. Her delicate, coppery fingers reached for the tiny reptile.
Lighting bolts sizzled out of the behir, blackening Kiva’s fingertips and sending her green hair dancing around her face like leaves in a sudden wind. She snatched back her hand, drawing her breath in a quick, pained hiss. The gaze she turned upon Keturah was coldly furious and utterly inhuman.
“You baseborn cow,” she said softly.
A shiver coursed along Ke
turah’s spine, for the contrast between the beautiful voice and the malevolent tone was chilling—as if she’d heard her death knell tolled upon fairy chimes.
She quickly pushed aside this dark fancy. “A wizard’s reach must never exceed her grasp, Kiva, and a wizard’s pride must be balanced by skill and knowledge. Remember this lesson, and the behir’s sting will be well worth the pain. It is also your last lesson,” she continued briskly. “You have until sunset to make arrangements with your temple and quit this tower. We will not meet again.”
For a long moment the two females locked stares. Kiva broke away first, dipping into a deep and mocking bow. “If you say so, mistress, then it must be true.” She turned and left the room, moving through the tangle of foliage with the sure, silent step of a jungle creature.
Keturah watched her go, her face troubled and thoughtful. Now she had one more culprit with whom to deal, and her anger returned in full measure as she rounded on the white-faced youth.
“If you wish to continue in this tower another day, Dhamari, you will give me your pledge, by wizard-word, never again to work such a spell!”
It was a harsh condition, but Keturah did not think it unjust. Such oaths were never asked or given lightly. There was no provision for regret or disavowal. No wizard could ever be foresworn, even if he dearly wished to be—not even if doing so would save his own life.
None of this seemed to concern the fledgling wizard. His boots still smoked from stamping out the imp’s fires. His face was particolored like a painted harlequin’s: pale on one side and on the other red from the bursts of scaling steam. His dark eyes were unfocused by pain and limpid with terror. As the implication of Keturah’s words seeped through his distress, relief swept over his face like a healing tide. He took one of Keturah’s hands in both of his and dropped to one knee.
“Mystra is merciful, but no more so than you!” he said fervently. “The Lady’s blessing upon you! I was certain you would discharge me from the tower as you did Kiva.”
“So I shall, if you do not swear. Kindly rein in your joy,” she said tartly as she tugged her hand free. “What I ask of you is no small thing!”
“As you say, mistress,” he agreed, but so great was his relief that he did not seem particularly abashed by the scolding. He rose to his feet and took a golden medallion from around his neck. On it was his sigil, a magical rune that was his signature and far more. This he gave her—a symbolic act showing he was quite literally in her hands. He pushed back his sleeves, closed his eyes, and held his hands aloft in an attitude of spell casting.
“By word and wind, sun and star, by the sacred flames of Lady Mystra and the magic. She grants me, I swear that never in this life or any to come will I summon a creature I do not understand and cannot control.” His eyes popped open, and he turned an earnest gaze upon Keturah. “This oath I swear gladly and freely, as I will any other you require of me!”
Sincerity shone in his eyes and rang in his tones. “It is enough,” she said, relenting. She sent him to summon the gardener to clear away the vines and flowers. He left her presence swiftly, as if lingering might change her mind.
Left alone, Keturah started to sort through the mess. She returned two spellbooks to an empty shelf and began to kick through the vines in search of the rest. Her lips set in a grim line as she noted a burned and crumbled page entangled in the foliage. She freed the scrap of parchment and smoothed it out, hoping it was not from one of her precious books.
A glance told her it was not. Most of the page had been burned away, and what remained was brown and crisp at the edges, but she could make out a few oddly shaped characters. The markings were entirely unfamiliar to her: sharp, angular, elegant—yet somehow full of menace.
Keturah blew away some of the soot and ash and gave the scrap a closer study. She didn’t recognize the spell or even the language, but she thought the markings looked vaguely Elvish. Full of foreboding, she left the laboratory for her private library, a small room housing the treasures inherited from her last master. From a hidden wall safe she took a large, slim volume.
The book was an artifact, the most valuable thing Keturah owned. There were only two pages in it, electrum sheets hammered thin and perfectly smooth. On the left page was etched a blank scroll, and the right-hand page depicted an oval mirror and a smaller scroll. Each page was bordered by a complex design that upon careful inspection appeared to be fashioned of thousands upon thousands of runes, markings too numerous and tiny to be identified separately. According to Keturah’s master, nearly every known spell was included in the tangle. The book could reveal the origin of any spell, and sometimes the identity of the wizard who had created it Keturah had never tested the claim, for the price of such magic was high.
She set to work with a diamond-tipped stylus, painstakingly etching the strange runes onto the electrum scroll. When satisfied she had reproduced the spell fragment faithfully, she stood the open book upright on the table, angled so page faced page. She took a small candle made with costly spices and placed it between the pages, lit it, and began the words and gestures of the complicated spell. The silver-white sheen of the electrum “mirror” faded, to be replaced by clouded glass and a shadowy, featureless face. The scroll beneath began to fill with small, precise Halruaan runes.
She leaned close and began to read aloud.
“The spell is incomplete, and one of the runes is reversed and turned widdershins a quarter circle. The spell is likely Ilythiiri in origin. No wizard’s visage comes to the mirror’s call, but this much I, The Book, can say with certainty: the spell fragment is ancient beyond reckoning. Do you wish The Book to attempt a translation?”
Keturah leaned back and blew out a long breath.
Ilythiiri. The very word held terror, though it named a people gone from Halruaa since time out of mind. Ilythiiri was the name sages gave to the southland’s dark elves, the ancestors of the evil drow.
Ilythiirian magic—by wind and word, what was Kiva thinking!
Keturah hurried to her treasure room to fetch gold and gems needed for the next level of inquiry. She closed the book to erase both scrolls, then opened it and recopied the spell fragment and the spell for translation. The treasure she placed in a small cauldron, along with a chunk of beeswax and an assortment of magical powders. She placed the cauldron on the banked coals of her hearth. When the wax melted, she poured the whole of it into a candle mold and waited impatiently for the spell candle to set. She set it alight and watched as the treasure melted away with the candle, lending power to the spell. New runes etched themselves onto the electrum page. As she read, Keturah could feel the blood drain from her face drop by drop.
The spell fragment spoke of the Unseelie Folk: dark fairies that haunted the mountains of Halruaa, mysterious creatures of such unfathomable evil even the drow were said to fear them. The rune that had been reversed and twisted was a charm of warding against these deadly fey folk.
“A warding reversed,” she said slowly. “So the spell Kiva cast was not a warding but a summoning!”
Sweet Mystra! This explained why Dhamari had hesitated when she’d asked if they’d summoned the imp deliberately. The summoning was deliberate, but the imp’s appearance had been a mistake, and a lucky one. Keturah was not certain she could have handled the dark creatures her students had intended to evoke!
The Lady be praised, neither Dhamari nor Kiva was skilled enough to breach the boundaries between the world they knew and the hidden realm of the Unseelie Court. Keturah was not certain she herself could do so, and she had no desire to seek an answer. Dhamari would not try again: she had his wizard-word bond on it. But Kiva …
Keturah leaped up from the table and looked around frantically for the scrap of parchment—important evidence if Kiva’s ambitious were to be curtailed. The elf woman was a fledgling magehound. Keturah was not so young and idealistic to believe the Azuthans would rule against one of their own on her word alone. The clerics of Azuth, Lord of Wizards, were a minority in
a land devoted to Mystra and were jealous guardians of their god’s prestige and position. Most Azuthan priests were good men and women, but when faced with wizardly interference they became as defensive as cornered wolves.
Keturah’s eyes fell upon the brown-edged scrap, nearly lost in a tangle of wilting vines. It had fallen from the table while she worked her spells of inquiry. She dropped to her knees and reached for the parchment.
Her fingers closed around a puff of green mist. It swirled through her fingers and wafted up to touch her face, and with it came a deep, green scent that was all too familiar. The mist abruptly disappeared, leaving Kiva’s perfume lingering in the air like mocking laughter.…
Tzigone dragged herself from the vision and glared at the writhing, cowering Dhamari. Because illusion had such power in this place, she swore she could still smell the elf woman’s perfume and the stench of sulfur in Dhamari’s clothes.
She shook the wizard, shouting at him in an attempt to raise him from his self-inflicted torpor. He only shied away from her, flailing his hands ineffectually and pleading with her not to impale him with her horns.
“Horns,” she muttered as she rose her feet.
For a long moment she watched the wretched man, a terrible person caught in a swamp of his own misdeeds. The urge to kick him was strong, but she shook it off.
“Grow a backbone, Dhamari! Thanks to you and Kiva, I can tell you from experience that it’s possible to survive almost anything.”
The wizard responded with a shriek of agony. Tzigone muttered a phrase she’d picked up on the streets and stooped beside him. Quickly she tucked her mother’s talisman back into his hand. His screams immediately subsided to a pathetic whimper.
The Wizardwar Page 5