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Fire and Sword (Sword and Sorcery Book 1)

Page 17

by Dylan Doose


  “Where did you get that fine piece?” Ken asked.

  “It was gift,” said Theron. “My travels took me to Ygdrrast, far to the north and across the sea. I met a great Jarl there, by the name of Vulknoot Therickson. His brother was slain in a hunt for a frost boar. To this day I have still not seen such a beast.” Theron stared before him, his muscles tensing, as if the boar were down there in the armory with them. “Twice the size of the biggest bull was that gargantuan swine. He had tusks as long as spears and thick as oaks. His eyes were as wild as a thousand reeling maelstroms.” Aldous thought for a moment how such eyes would look, then decided it was a thing better left un-thought. “Jarl Therickson and I, just us two. Together we achieved conquest over the most quarrelsome quadruped. It took eight spears to slow him enough to get in close, but even then the white behemoth fought to the teeth. Blood stained the snow, and its squeals echoed through the mountain pass. The Jarl got his axe in its belly and my claymore found its throat. We feasted like Therickson’s gods that night as we took shelter from the elements in the boar’s carved-out rib chasm.”

  “I am certain that story told of some great adventure,” Ken said. “But I was unable to understand it for all the words. Quadru-what?”

  Ignoring him, Theron took off the helmet and stared at it in admiration. “When we returned to his great hall, as a gift he gave to me this helm, the helm of his fallen brother… Fine men, the Thericksons… fine men. ”

  Aldous looked at the size of the helmet, wondering if he would even be able to lift it. Already did he feel small and weak next to just Theron and Ken. He could not imagine an entire hall of Therickson behemoths.

  After a moment, Theron placed the helmet back on his head and turned to Aldous.

  “And you, Aldous? What here in this great armory lights the kindling of dormant violence in your chest?”

  “I can read your fine mood, brother, in your flowery language,” Chayse said.

  Theron ignored her as well, and said, “Aldous?”

  Aldous winced. “Perhaps a quill and parchment? Is that not the task you assigned me when we were in the dungeon? That seems best suited to my skills.”

  “That would be magnificent, good Aldous,” said Theron. “This is a desire I have held since our first meeting, but you cannot write in the thick of the action. In the thick of the action, you will need a weapon, so it would seem you have two mighty tasks, whereas the rest of us just have one.” Theron turned his back to Aldous and went through the racks.

  “He has been practicing well with short sword and shield,” said Ken. “Let him try with that in the field. In sparring, he fares better than most would.”

  “What say you to that, Aldous?” Theron asked.

  Before he could respond, Chayse spoke. “Give him the sword and shield, but why isn’t he using his gift?”

  They all fell silent at this. And in the silence, Aldous’ anxiety heightened.

  “Why shouldn’t he be using his magic?” Chayse continued.

  “Aldous is yet to repeat whatever spell he called upon in the chapel. When the rats attacked the village…” Theron let his silence speak for itself.

  “Magic cannot be summoned at the snap of a finger,” Chayse said. “Even our mother, skilled as she is, needed a catalyst, brother.”

  Ken’s axe clattered to the ground.

  Aldous felt like all the breath had left his body. He thought he must have misheard Chayse, but there was no other way to interpret her words. She spoke of magic. And she spoke of her mother—Theron’s mother—in the same breath.

  Theron and Chayse, the two people he thought most of in this world, had magic in their blood. The revelation made him feel terror and wonder and despair and hope all at once.

  Theron stalked toward Chayse, his good humor evaporated.

  “Tread carefully, sister.” Each word sounded like it was bitten out between clenched teeth.

  “We must help Aldous tread carefully, must help him hone the skills to control his magic,” Chayse said, not backing away. “We are going into the hunt with Aldous, so trust him. You spent too much time alone, Theron. Surviving alone is about trusting yourself. Surviving as a pack is about trusting the individuals that make up that pack. You asked me to trust Kendrick the Cold, to live under the same roof, to eat at the same table, to fight by his side… a killer, a monster in human form.” She shot Ken an apologetic look.

  He shrugged.

  “If Aldous truly has a dormant power,” she continued, “then let us trust him. Let us use the keys we have in this very house to unlock that power.”

  Though a part of Aldous didn’t want to know his power, the bigger part of him wanted to unlock it just as Chayse said.

  “It will take time, Chayse,” Theron said. Aldous wasn’t sure if that meant Theron had agreed to share the secrets or not. “He will not be able to simply loose bolts of lightning and flame just because he has scrolls and a catalyst.”

  “Scrolls?” Aldous whispered.

  They both ignored him.

  “So let him learn as he goes,” Chayse said. “He has already proven to be a quick study with a sword.” Ken snickered. “He will be equally quick with magic,” Chayse finished.

  Aldous turned to Ken with a scowl, and the large man rolled his lips inward in mock fear.

  Theron reached into his pocket, and from it he retrieved a Brynthian ducat.

  “Theron, really? Now?” Chayse shook her head in dismay.

  Theron ignored her and flipped the coin. It spun in the air end over end. Aldous’ stomach was in his chest with anxiety as he struggled with the reality that this coin would have a pivotal role in his life.

  Theron caught it. He slammed it on his hand. The face of the king.

  The hunter scowled at the coin for a long moment then flipped it over.

  The face of the dragon.

  “Very well,” said Theron. “Very well, but he is taking a sword and shield nonetheless.” He turned to Aldous. “Do we have a deal, wizard? You fight no matter what, whether your magic can be tamed or not.”

  “Yes,” Aldous said, the excitement rising again, rising to the thought of a dormant power and the new and unexpected opportunity to learn about that power. He lifted a light wooden shield from the rack and belted a sheathed short sword.

  “Follow me,” said Theron, his voice stern, his presence more formidable than ever in his armor. They were about to pass some sort of threshold; an irreversible step was about to be taken, and although afraid, very afraid, Aldous Weaver followed, ready to study and learn and grow his power.

  Lady Wardbrook’s hidden study was past the baths at the very end of the hall. A loose brick, when pushed in, activated some mechanism incomprehensible to Aldous, and as if by magic, but more likely by magnificent engineering, the wall simply opened.

  “Sneaky,” said Ken as he watched the secret gate part.

  There were steep stone stairs that led down into black. The torches on the wall burst into flame, illuminating the stairwell. This was certainly by magic. It was just like in the chapel when Aldous lit the candles with tinder or flint. Aldous looked at his hands.

  “It wasn’t you,” said Theron. “My mother put a spell on the torches to illuminate whenever the gate was opened.”

  “Why didn’t you tell me your mother is a sorceress?” Aldous asked.

  “I’m more than telling you now,” Theron replied.

  “Where is your mother?” Aldous asked, following Theron as they descended deeper under the earth, Chayse and Ken following behind. Cobwebs ran across the ceiling and walls, causing all of them to swipe in front of their faces to remove the things from their path. It had unquestionably been a very long time since anyone had been in this deep, reclusive part of Wardbrook.

  “My mother’s whereabouts are more unknown to me than those of our mortal enemy the Emerald Witch, so please let us deal with one demon at a time,” said Theron. His tone—and the cracking of his knuckles as he clenched his fist—made Aldous
think it wise to immediately stop that line of questioning.

  The further they went down the stairs, the stranger Aldous felt. His palms grew hot and moist, and an icy, damp sensation slithered down his spine. He thought he heard Chayse whisper something, but when he turned around to look at her, it was clear she had not spoken.

  They reached the bottom of the stairs. The ceiling was perhaps only nine feet high, but the room extended for at least a hundred. Like many other rooms in the estate, the walls were all lined with books.

  “Are these all…?” Aldous approached a shelf and read a single title at random: Lightning Possession.

  “Yes,” said Chayse, “they are all tomes of spells.”

  “Does your mother—”

  “Yes,” said Theron, “she knows them all.”

  A shudder shook Aldous’ frame. He again took in the vast room: thousands of books, tens of thousands of spells. What power would such a person possess?

  You will one day know, Aldous Weaver. The voice was a hushed whisper, nearly a hiss; it was the voice of a woman.

  Something tugged on his chest. Something was pulling him.

  “What is a catalyst?” Aldous asked, as he looked around the room for the voice, or the thing that pulled him, wondering if that, in fact, was this catalyst they described.

  “It is a magically imbued anything,” Theron said. “Well, inanimate as far as I know. It is magically imbued by an arch mage and passed down to disciples, so they may, with greater ease, access their powers.”

  “The first time you called fire, what was in your hand, Aldous?” Chayse asked.

  Aldous thought back and replied, “Father Riker.”

  Chayse and Theron exchanged a glance. “Nothing else?” asked Chayse.

  “Nothing else.”

  “What is so fascinating about you, Aldous, is that the very first time you used your powers you had no catalyst,” Theron said. “Arch mages spend most of their lives trying to reach that point.”

  “Could a sword be a catalyst?” asked Aldous, as he gripped the hilt of the blade at his hip, and in his mind’s eye he saw the weapon ablaze, hordes of rats closing around him, and he was not afraid.

  “Yes, as I said, any inanimate object,” Theron said. “An arch mage could imbue a spoon if he desired, or a chair if they had an urge to watch their disciples run round shooting bolts and blasts from a chair.” He snickered.

  “In the far east I saw a battle mage,” said Ken. “He wielded an axe that blazed with hellfire. It set men ablaze by the score and cut through the heaviest plate like a hot knife through butter. He and twelve of his men held a mountain pass against three hundred of us.”

  “How did you defeat him?” asked Aldous.

  “They say that the practitioners of magic use their own life force to generate their spells. After killing over two-thirds of our force, his twelve followers long ago butchered, the battle mage simply wore out. He was exhausted, and his axe fizzled. He became a normal man. I shot him in the eye with a crossbow.”

  “Ah,” said Aldous. He thought of what Ken had just said about the use of life force as a currency for spells. He remembered the feeling after he’d set the chapel ablaze; it was the feeling of slipping into death’s black fade. It was painless, but it was the temptation of an embrace much unlike sleep, for sleep promises of awakening. This had been different, a sweet song that sang only of eternity.

  “Here,” Chayse said as she opened a chest next to a massive oak desk and from it pulled out a four-foot wooden short staff. “This was one of my mother’s earlier staffs, given to her by a great druid who dwelled in the Nevidian forest.” She walked back to the others and extended the staff to Aldous with both hands.

  He took it with the utmost care. It was fashioned from ash and perfectly smooth in the center. The rest was carved with the most intricate details, a relief of an unkindness of ravens on one half, and a pack of fang-baring wolves on the other.

  The dreams. Dreams of wolves and ravens.

  Aldous ran his hand over the carvings, and there was a stirring in him as he touched the wolves. In the furthest abyss of his mind he could hear them howling, and the sound echoed down his spine and found his heart. It thumped in his chest to the moon song of the wolves on the staff. He twirled it in his hands so that the raven side was up, and he inspected the art closely, running a single finger over one of the forbidding birds’ forms. The unkindness of ravens joined the wolves in their song, and the ballad of beasts grew louder, as the wings flapped up and the claws ran across ice and snow from the depths of his consciousness to the front of his mind.

  Aldous could no longer see the room. Chayse was gone. Ken and Theron both gone. He was in the woods. The trees grew so tall they must have reached clouds, the branches so thick the sky could not be seen. Fireflies shimmered gold and gave the black wood light. It was haunting; it was beautiful. The wolves surrounded him. And the ravens perched on all the branches. They painted the already dim canopy forever black, all but the reflection of the fireflies in their obsidian raven eyes. The wolves came closer. Hundreds of massive wolves. Aldous was not afraid, for they were bowing their heads. He felt powerful, immensely powerful. His heart thumped and thundered in his ears. It was the thudding like the drums of war, and all at once, in perfect unison, the wolves howled and the ravens cawed. It was a thing most divine, but this was no action performed by the God of Light. This was a god altogether more savage and altogether more present.

  Aldous stood upright, his legs completely stiff and rooted, while his torso and head convulsed madly as he screamed and frothed, his eyes rolled back so that they were completely white. All the while he clung to the staff, holding it with both hands directly out in front of him. One hand on the wolf carvings, the other on the ravens. The veins in his wiry forearms bulged. It was a sight Theron had never seen before in person. He knew it happened, for his mother had told him, but it was a bloody strange thing to bear witness to.

  So the boy truly is a wizard.

  “What the bloody hell is happening?” Ken asked as a few of the nearby books fell off the shelves and Theron’s and Chayse’s hair began to blow.

  “It is called binding,” said Theron calmly, although he spoke loudly enough to be heard over Aldous’ grunting and screaming. “When a magic-blooded human takes hold of an imbued object, it becomes bound to them, until they release it from themselves to give to another through a spell, or until they die.”

  “But you said this staff belongs to your mother, and you speak of her as if she is alive. How, then, can the object bind to the boy?”

  “She released it and left it behind.”

  “And if someone other than the boy were to try…”

  “When Chayse touched the staff, it was no more than a piece of wood with elegant carvings. The same would occur if you or I held it, unless you are hiding some secret.” Theron looked at Ken inquiringly.

  “Is he in pain?” Ken asked.

  “I’m not sure, to be honest. We will have to ask the lad when he returns to our world,” said Theron, and at that Aldous stopped shaking and lowered the staff—it was not abrupt but gradual.

  “Aldous?” Chayse said, waving a hand in front of the wizard’s face.

  “Chayse,” he said, “I was somewhere else.” He looked dazed, as if he’d had a bit too much ale.

  “Are you in pain?” asked Ken, putting his massive hand on Aldous’ shoulder.

  “No. I feel… altered.”

  “How so?” asked Theron.

  “I feel… changed.” Aldous turned to Theron with a smile. He was drenched in sweat, and faint purple circles had formed beneath his eyes. A strand of his black hair hung in front of his face, right down to the edge of his grin. He looked a bit mad. He looked a bit sinister. “I feel powerful,” he finished, and on the tail of those words, he shrieked.

  “You squeal like a pig at slaughter,” Ken said.

  “You pinched me!” Aldous said, and pulled away, touching the spot on his nec
k that had already begun to turn purple.

  So much for powerful, Theron thought, amused.

  “What was that for, you mangy brute?” Aldous tried to shove Kendrick in retaliation, but the mountain of a man was unmoved.

  “I was just making sure you were still Aldous,” said Ken as he ruffled the boy’s hair then shoved his head.

  “Who else would I be?”

  Ken shrugged. “You left your mind, went somewhere else. I just wanted to make sure you were the one who crawled back into your skull and not some… something else.”

  “Well, I’m me,” Aldous said.

  “I could tell from the way you shrieked.”

  Aldous reached out and pinched Ken right in the neck as hard as he could. Ken’s eyes went wide. Chayse gasped. Theron laughed. Aldous backed away slowly then turned and ran. Ken gave chase.

  “Was this a good idea? Giving him a catalyst?” Chayse whispered to Theron as the other two ran circles round their mother’s old study.

  “You were the one who decided yesterday to bring him here without consulting me,” Theron said.

  “And you were the one dead set against it.” Chayse paused. “Well, was it? A good idea?”

  “I suppose we will find out soon enough.” His smile faded. “Hopefully what became of our mother does not become of Aldous Weaver.”

  “We can offer him some small protection,” Chayse said, lifting something from a black leather box tooled with intricate designs. “The amulet.”

  “That will protect him from the seekers’ eyes only as long as he does not summon his magic,” Theron said, taking the silver medallion set with an ancient ruby from his sister’s hands. “It will not protect him from the lure of what the magic may make him become.”

  “We must trust that he will protect himself from that.”

  “As our mother protected herself?” Theron asked, and was not surprised that Chayse could offer no answer.

  “Get off me, you fat bastard!” Aldous said in a tone more than a bit too high-pitched for a boy of his age, which was really a man, but the noise he’d just made was enough reason for the others to continue calling him boy.

 

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