The Fall of Ossard

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The Fall of Ossard Page 20

by Colin Tabor

He turned to the doorway as his brow furrowed and nostrils flared.

  I could smell it too.

  Death…

  The yelling died down beneath us as disappointment soured its tones.

  Sef called out, “Well?”

  Cherub answered, “They’ve gone!”

  Sef led me down. “Watch the door.” Its ruin lay strewn the length of the stairs.

  I descended fearing what I’d find at the bottom. Before I reached it I was trembling and covered in a cold sweat.

  The kidnap victims had been there and two of them still were - dead.

  It wasn’t Pedro and Maria or Lord and Lady Liberigo, so I let out a selfish sigh of relief. The unfortunates were Heletian; an old woman and a young man. I didn’t recognise them. They’d been left hung from chains and their throats slit.

  Piles of flattened hay lined one of the damp cellar walls. It had been used as bedding. I walked its length until I reached a corner. Somehow I could sense who’d lain there; my husband and daughter. Dropping to my knees I put a hand to it.

  It was still warm!

  Tears flooded my eyes.

  So close!

  Amidst my disappointment came something cold and bitter, it whispering to me with a celestial voice, “They were still there when you were showing off in the alley.” It was Lady Death.

  My heart sank.

  While I’d been using my meagre skills against her hunting pack, my daughter and husband had been spirited away.

  In a hoarse voice, I said, “Let’s get out of here. They may have planned a trap.”

  Sef nodded, but got some of his fellows to search the room for anything of import while he led me back up the stairs.

  We withdrew and fell back through Ossard’s alleyways. Sef and four others took me back to the river, and then saw me safely across to home.

  Before they left me to rejoin their brothers, Sef said, “Juvela, the search hasn’t ended. I’ll watch for them tonight. We’ll begin afresh if we have to tomorrow. Have faith.”

  I stepped forward and embraced him. “Thank you Sef, be careful.” The move embarrassed him, but he didn’t fight it. After a moment he even returned it with feeling.

  “Take care, Juvela, and eat before you retire. Your castings will have drained you.”

  I nodded and watched them leave before turning to go inside.

  My home was cold and quiet. The maid wasn’t about or her belongings. Like so many others, it seemed she was frightened of me and had fled. After walking the abandoned halls with only the rhythm of my footsteps for company, I retreated upstairs.

  My bedroom only seemed emptier.

  I sat on the edge of my bed and tried to kick off my boots, only to end up wrestling with them. The effort made me angry - and then came the tears.

  Eventually I found myself barefoot on the balcony in the cold night air. I needed no goading to join the chorus that rang out across Newbank; Schoperde’s song of sorrow.

  It felt good singing its long and mournful notes. Through it I burned away some of my grief and disappointment, and rediscovered my resolve. I would find my family, I had to, and I’d discover how they’d been moved moments before our arrival.

  How did they know we were coming?

  17

  Momentous Times Indeed

  Eventually, I left the balcony and sat on my bed where I cradled my grandmother’s tome. I was exhausted, but still fell into a restless urge to search for my family, to at least do something. From there I dipped my perception into the next world and began to search through a city-state of a million souls. I started the hunt at the celestial equivalent of the opera house, and then spread towards the port and the south.

  It was tedious work involving far too many souls - still, I persisted. I also supposed whoever held them would be using some kind of shielding magic to keep them hidden, as they had before. Nevertheless, I continued.

  Sef roused me from my hopeless search midmorning, to drag me from its misery. Of them, I’d not found a hint.

  “Juvela, don’t fret, we’ll find them,” he said grave-faced.

  My eyes burned from my tears. I’d also become cramped and lost to shivers, something that saw my voice shake, and my breath wheeze. All of it only made Sef fuss over me like my mother.

  With a hoarse voice, I said, “Sef, I’m alright!”

  “You look terrible…”

  “Really Sef, I’m just a little tired.”

  “You haven’t eaten, have you?”

  “No.”

  “Or slept?”

  “No.” So lost in my misery, it hadn’t occurred to me. My stomach growled. I tried to laugh at its timing, but the sound came from me as a weak rattle that sent aches shooting through my chest.

  “Juvela, you have to understand that magic is a taxing thing. I know what you did last night might seem simple, but I could feel the power you gathered, and the way it surged and boiled.” He knelt down in front of me with concern in his eyes. “You keep a great well of power in there,” he pointed to my belly, “but crafted only the smallest portion of it. To do so, to gather such energy and not spend it, or recover by properly resting and eating, will only see you waste away.”

  I didn’t know what to say. Wasn’t casting magic all about other people suffering the consequences?

  He saw my confusion. “Juvela, the power’s corrosive, so much so that only a healthy body can withstand it. If you’re half-starved and tired, it’ll work away at your muscles and bones, it’ll even boil your blood away given the chance. It becomes a cycle, one that’s harder to recover from. If you’re not careful, it’ll kill you by burning you out.“

  I nodded; what he said made sense, even if I didn’t appreciate the gravity of his words.

  He saw that, and shook his head in anger. “Please, Juvela, you must be careful! You’re no ordinary magician…”

  And that comment got my attention.

  He went on, “I don’t know what you are, but I can feel such strong currents of power around you when you reach into your font. If you’re not careful, it’ll kill you; just look at your hands!”

  What about my hands?

  I looked down at them.

  My long fingers normally lay thin and fair, and well covered with skin stretched not too tight. They weren’t now. I spread them before me as they trembled, my body lost to some kind of shock. Wrinkles ran their length, and the skin hung loose with folds and creases deep in the thin flesh, yet that wasn’t the end of it. I could see liver spots and other shadows, and a mix of sickening colours finished with yellowed nails.

  I gasped.

  Sef looked me in the eye. “Have I got your attention now?”

  I nodded, horrified by the hag’s hands in front of me.

  “We’ll get you some breakfast, and then we must go.”

  My hands were reaching up for the flesh of my face, but I was already cringing at the wrinkles and folds I knew I’d find there. I whispered, “Go where?”

  “Juvela, you need to change and eat. Don’t worry, you’ll get your youth back, and sooner than you think. Please, just do as I say. I’ll answer your questions downstairs.”

  I nodded, still stunned. “Thank you, Sef.”

  He got up and left me.

  I went downstairs to find him stirring a pot of porridge over a freshly lit fire. He looked up and smiled. “It won’t be long.”

  “Thank you.” I sat down, grateful to rest my weary bones.

  “You’re tired, aren’t you?”

  “Exhausted.” It seemed that the casting had taken a lot out of me.

  My gaze left him to settle on the cooking fire, where I lost myself in the dance of its flickering flames.

  “You really are tired, aren’t you?” His smile became a grin.

  I rested my head in my withered hands. “I’m glad you find it so amusing.”

  To my surprise, he laughed. “I’m sorry, but I’m as confused as you.”

  “You are not!” I snapped, and then took a
deep breath. “I’m sorry, Sef, but I don’t understand any of this.”

  “It’s alright.”

  I smiled, grateful he’d chosen to ignore my tone. “Sef, why has it taken so much from me, to produce so little? Last night, I could feel a storm of power brewing in me, but all I magicked was a bucketful of glowing coins and handful of hot coals?”

  He tended the oats before pulling up a stool. “Juvela, all power comes at a price. To be honest, I worry for you.”

  “Why?”

  “A good question, but one I can’t answer.” He shook his head in frustration, though he felt only a trifle of what troubled me.

  “Sef, I need your help. Tell me what you can, even guesses, for it’s more than I already have.”

  He sighed. “I don’t know where to start, so indulge me.” He gathered his thoughts for a moment, and then said, “I guess your own words are a good starting point.”

  I nodded.

  “You said that you felt your power brewing?”

  “Yes.”

  “I could feel it too, as could anybody sensitive to such things. You need to learn more discipline in that regard, so you can hide it, just as those of us who wield the celestial learn to hide our souls.”

  “Why?”

  “To keep them safe.”

  “From what?”

  He checked the oats before continuing. “The celestial is another world, but not like ours. It’s where magic comes from, and where spirits, souls, and the very gods dwell. It’s where the spark of life is born to flare, and we in this world, our mortal selves, are merely the smoke of those eternal fires.”

  “I think I understand.”

  He nodded. “The magic you work, as do I as a priest of Kave, is just us pulling some of that fire through, not just the smoke, but the actual flame. It’s a skill for only the strongest of souls. Simply said; the more power you can pull through, the stronger you must be. Learning and experience will expand your limits, but in the end we all have them.”

  “I understand.”

  He went on, “I’m surprised at the amount of power you can draw upon, even though you know so little of what to do with it. I suppose in time you’ll learn, but still, what you can gather astounds me.”

  “Learn through the Cabal?”

  He looked thoughtful for a moment, until the pop and hiss of our breakfast drew his attention. After giving it a stir, he turned back. “I first noticed your soul when I started working for your parents. It’s old and powerful, and always held a complex weave.”

  “Am I a Cabalist?”

  He shrugged, “I don’t know. Perhaps you need to talk to others…”

  I snorted. “Others! Sef, my parents know nothing of this, and I can’t trust anyone else. I can’t rely on my grandmother, as her aid is sporadic, and Kurgar promised to help me with the Cabal, but has done nothing since. If I’ve a powerful soul, then you’d think it might be a priority, the way the city is falling apart, to teach me how to use it!”

  He grabbed two bowls and split the steaming brew. He handed one to me, the biggest, and then topped it with some syrup. “Eat up, all of it.”

  I took it, but only felt bad again for my tone. “Sorry, Sef.”

  “It’s alright.”

  We began to eat.

  After a short silence, he looked up and said, “What about your grandmother? What’s going on? I saw what happened when we neared the Inquisitor and she tried to use you to confront him. Is she always struggling for control?”

  “No!” I was surprised at his choice of words. “I sometimes hear her voice warn me of things, and often it comes accompanied by others. Only once has she tried to force me to do anything, back then in the coach. I think she wants to help me, to awaken my magic, but Inquisitor Anton’s arrival has also awakened her thirst for revenge.”

  He gave a grim smile. “We’ll just have to watch her. It would also help if you tried to talk to her.”

  “How?”

  “In the celestial. You know how to get into that world, to drag your perception across?”

  I nodded. “I can do it, but I’m not really conscious of how I do it. It seems more a reflex.”

  “That’s good; it took me a full season to master. When you’ve time, you need to go into the celestial and speak with her. She’s bound to you, so I’m sure she’ll not be hard to find. Talk to her and discover her truth. It’s the only way to work out what her part in all this is.”

  I sighed as I put down my half empty bowl. “And what will that do to me?” I asked, while spreading my wrinkled fingers, though their colour had already improved.

  “All magic has its costs, but shifting your perception between worlds is one of the easiest things to do. When you finish your meal, you’ll be surprised to see how much your skin will renew itself.” He gave a wry smile. “The years will just fall away.”

  I raised an eyebrow, not sure if I should believe him, yet I picked up my bowl and got back to eating.

  “Juvela, you gathered enough power last night to torch Market Square, but you didn’t release it. It’s a miracle that you didn’t burn yourself out - and I mean that literally. That’s why you look as worn as you do.

  “You need coaching, guidance, and improved skills, all those things will help. Most importantly, you need to learn to gather only the power you want for whatever casting you’re trying to complete.”

  I interrupted, feeling that I finally understood something. “The power I felt last night used my soul as a gateway into this world, didn’t it?”

  “Almost. It used your soul as a gateway out of the celestial, and your body as a gateway into this world.”

  “It felt incredible, so vital and alive.”

  He nodded. “And after you summoned it, drawing in such a great flood, all you did was hold onto it and melt a single cobble!” He shook his head in disbelief. “You could have turned night into day, or called a firestorm!”

  I didn’t know what to say.

  He went on, “You stir such power, and so easily, it’s why so many people are interested in you.”

  “Who?” I asked around another mouthful of porridge.

  “I’m sure Lady Death is curious, as are some of my fellows, and also the Inquisitor. And then,” he paused, “then there was when Mortigi himself came and marked you.” He watched for my reaction.

  I remembered the icy pain, and the feeling of being overwhelmed by an anger so hateful that it had to be divine. It had all come after Lady Death cursed me. Chilled by the memory, I swallowed and whispered, “Yes.”

  He nodded. “Yes!”

  I just looked to him.

  He said, “It’s true, Mortigi himself branded you with his mark!”

  With a hesitant voice, I asked, “And what does that mean?” I then took another mouthful of porridge.

  Thankfully, his animation drained away, his manner becoming more sober. “It means that all his followers will know you, and that their master has a bounty on your head.”

  I choked on my breakfast. “The god of murder wants me dead?”

  “Yes, but don’t fear…”

  “Don’t fear!”

  He shifted, becoming uncomfortable at my distress. “Trust me, you’ll be well protected.”

  I gasped, “Sweet Schoperde, what hope is there?”

  With a firm voice, he said, “There’s always hope, that’s why we search for Pedro and Maria.”

  He was right.

  I took a deep breath and tried to calm down. “Why didn’t he just kill me?”

  “Because, to be honest, this way you suffer more; living each day while wondering if it’s your last.”

  I just stared at him.

  “Don’t worry about it.”

  I was shaking my head. “How can I not worry? I just want my family back!”

  “In all this you’re not alone, others also live with divine marks.”

  “Who?”

  “Anton is marked by many gods, and so too is Lady Death…”
<
br />   Such exalted company…

  “…and even me, your loyal Sef.”

  “What?”

  “I’m also marked, but in a lesser way. Regardless, one day my time will come.”

  And then I had a thousand questions and fears for him, but only one found my mouth. “Who?”

  “It’s something we can discuss another time, and I mean it, but for now we need to talk about you.”

  I nodded, but sat in silence, still stunned by his news. After a while, I asked, “Why did Lady Death curse me; because of the light?”

  “It was more because of the power she sensed stirring in you.”

  “Can I really call on that much?”

  He nodded again. “Though it all comes to nothing if you can’t do anything with it.”

  He was right.

  “Juvela, the gods have never looked to me in the celestial, or moved to mark me with such a strong curse. If they did, it’d kill me.”

  This was all getting to be too much.

  “Juvela, you’re not a witch of the Cabal - I think you’re something else.”

  We sat in an uncomfortable silence, looking to each other. Sef then checked my bowl, chuckling, pleased that I’d nearly finished. “Good eating and sleep will solve your problems in regard to the cost of magic. You’re still human and need to take care of yourself.”

  His words reminded me of how tired I felt. “I believe you.”

  “Good.”

  “You know, last night I felt something in my soul weaken and crack. I don’t know what it was, but with it breached, I seemed to be free to draw upon the power that leaked through.”

  “What?” Now Sef looked confused.

  “It was holding my power back, blocking it, but I got so angry and frustrated that I think the barrier somehow broke.”

  “A barrier?”

  “It allowed me to gather power in the celestial, but stopped me from bringing it through. I’m certain it remains, but now it’s damaged. Do you know what it is?”

  He shook his head. “Let me look at you.”

  For a moment his words puzzled me, but then his eyes lost focus; he’d slipped into the celestial. I followed.

  The blue-white of his life-light shone out against the dark of the void. I could sense that he was scrying me, as he looked deep into my soul.

 

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