The guards looked about in confusion as to the cause of the alarm, but no one came bounding out of the tunnel mouth towards them and they could not spy the two magicians pressed against the wall.
As more guards came streaming out of the dungeons to see what had caused the commotion, Samuel and Lomar slipped in behind them and began to move hurriedly along the main tunnel. They stepped into the first side tunnel they met, just as another group of spear-bearing soldiers came running by.
Samuel moved confidently in the dark, and Lomar trailed as best he could with his fingers trailing along the wall. Occasionally, they caught sight of a guard station, where two or three of the brutish thugs stood waiting in the lamplight, alert for escaping prisoners. They could not move directly through these spaces and, instead, had to rush around to find alternative routes.
They seemed to walk for a long time, deeper and deeper into the mountain, following Lomar’s directions, but Samuel knew it was the way of the stone to make time seem to pass so slowly.
‘Wait!’ Samuel said as they passed a familiar branch in the passage. ‘We need to free Eric.’
‘Of course,’ Lomar agreed and they started along the way that Samuel had directed.
Luckily, they did not need to go far and they soon found the passage that held their friend. Eric stepped joyfully out of his cell, thankful he had finally been set free. They grabbed a lamp that hung nearby and took it with them to guide their way. Samuel explained everything to Eric as they went, hurrying along as quickly as they dared.
They had passed many doors and passages of varying types, diving deeper and deeper into the labyrinth, when they arrived at a sloping passage at the core of the mountain. The tunnel was long and straight, so tight in places that they had to squeeze through, and they continued on until it seemed to come to a dead end. Stooping, Lomar prised open a trapdoor on the floor, first unlatching the multiple iron bars that had kept it sealed shut. At once, Samuel felt the spark of magic lingering inside. An awful stench of rot and filth also issued from the hole and it made the three of them step back to get their breaths.
‘We will be needing this,’ Lomar said, pulling a length of study rope from beneath his Paatin clothes.
A narrow shaft led down from the surface and Lomar attached one end of the rope to the trapdoor and dropped the other into the darkness.
‘Balten!’ Samuel called into the hole, but no one answered his call.
‘We will go down. Guard our escape,’ Lomar instructed Eric.
‘How?’ Eric said, looking around himself for some form of weapon, but the others had no answer for him.
Samuel started first and slid carefully down the rope, using his sight to guide him between the walls. Lomar followed with the lantern held firmly between his teeth. The shaft opened out after a short way and they found themselves descending into a widening pit.
As they hopped onto the stone floor, the lantern light illuminated the crumpled figure of Balten leaning against the wall as if mummified. He was alive, but barely.
‘Balten!’ Samuel hissed, squatting down and holding the man firmly by the shoulders. ‘Wake up! We’re here.’
They almost thought he was truly dead, when Balten’s eyes flickered open and he looked at Samuel serenely, as if waking from a pleasant dream.
‘Samuel?’ the withered magician asked. ‘It’s been quite a while. I was beginning to wonder about you.’ He moved one trembling hand, while the rest of his body remained motionless, as if pinned to the stone, and he dug into his shredded rags of clothes and drew out the Argum Stone. ‘I believe you have come for this.’
Samuel took the ring and tucked it safely away. ‘By the gods! What have they done to you?’ he asked.
‘Nothing. Nothing at all,’ Balten responded coughing. It seemed as if his life was slowly coming back to him, pulsing out from his core towards his extremities. ‘They left me here, perhaps hoping I would get bored and perish, but I really found it quite peaceful. Some more water would have been nice, but it turned out the stones were moist enough for my needs. I find it quite ironic that the mountain they sought to finish me with ended up sustaining me. I sometimes felt as if the stone itself had thought me worthy of survival and had granted me the blessing of its juices. It’s strange, what passes through one’s mind in times of such solitude.’
‘What have you been doing all this time?’ Lomar asked him.
‘I calmed myself and entered a deep state. It was the only way to survive. I knew you would come eventually and I supposed you would only want the ring, but I thought it would be better if you didn’t have to rummage around through my corpse to get it.’
‘Eric!’ Lomar called up and Eric’s face appeared way up at the top of the hole. ‘Fetch food and water. Go back to the last guard post, but be careful.’
Eric’s face disappeared.
‘You look terrible,’ Samuel stated to the man, who had now started rubbing his arms and moving his head as his blood began circulating with more vigour.
‘It is not so bad. Discomfort can be enlightening. Suffering opens the window to discovery, Samuel. It is not something that can be enjoyed at the time, but the feeling afterwards is nothing short of rewarding. You should try it some time.’
‘I don’t think it sounds very enjoyable,’ was Samuel’s reply.
‘That’s the problem with you Order lot. Old Anthem has filled everyone’s heads with his vision of a perfect world, but it doesn’t exist, Samuel. Without anguish, people get bored. Without stimulation, people’s minds stagnate. A world without some form of chaos would only create a world of blandness. That’s what Anthem could never understand. A society without hardship is like a herd of sheep. They would be very easy to control. Do you think that’s what your teacher had in mind? Perhaps I wouldn’t dislike him so much if it were so.’
‘There’s no time for talk such as this,’ Samuel replied. ‘Come. If you are ready, we must hurry. Om-rah has gone to kill the Empress. We must stop him.’
‘Om-rah?’ Balten said, and the name seemed to rouse him fully. He rose to his feet and cracked his neck slowly from side to side. ‘Then I will come with you. I just need a moment to gather my strength. What else has happened? How long have I been down here?’
‘Quite some time,’ Lomar said. ‘We have had some delays in our plans, but the time is now right to forge ahead.’
Balten took a moment to digest the words. ‘Well, then. It’s good timing that you came and found me. I was thinking of breaking out of here eventually.’
‘Could you have done it?’ Samuel asked. ‘Magic cannot work in here.’
‘Magic works everywhere, Samuel. It is everywhere and in everything. It is a fire that cannot be quelled. This mountain merely seeks to quench our will and stop us from calling our magic to action. As a blacksmith’s forge harbours the air and fire, so too can we create a haven for our will and magic within ourselves. As with any fire, with too little air the flames will suffocate. With too much air, the fire will burn out of control, blundering about in the wind. Just the right balance will result in that sweet spot that all magicsmiths seek. In this state, the fire within us will shudder and roar. It will accelerate and begin to draw strength from within itself, burning white-hot while it consumes little of its fuel.’
‘You have been busy down here,’ Lomar noted, raising an eyebrow.
Eric whistled softly from above and he dropped some bread and a sealed water bag into their hands. Balten took a hesitant sip and then started pouring the water into his parched throat, until the entire bladder was emptied. Samuel was trying to slow him, but the man gulped it all down desperately. He then shoved as much bread as possible into his mouth and began munching on it, like a child with a gob full of sweets.
‘Right! That feels much better,’ he said, his words barely intelligible. ‘We’d better hurry.’ He held the rest of the loaf in his mouth and grabbed hold of the rope, pulling himself up hand over hand.
‘Incredible,’ Lomar said
, watching him ascend. ‘He has recovered much of his strength already.’
The two of them started up after him and, once they were at the top, the four of them began away with all haste.
‘There’s just one thing to be wary of, Samuel,’ Balten said as they hurried through the passageways.
‘What’s that?’
‘Do you remember that relic we used in the desert—the one that holds your Great Spell? Unfortunately, I had neglected to leave it behind. It was taken from me by the guards.’
‘What?’ Samuel said.
‘I forgot I had it and it was not so simple to hide as a little ring. It will only take a subtle twist at its middle for the spell to be released.’
‘What kind of spell was it?’ Lomar asked with concern.
‘A very bad one,’ Balten replied. ‘It was not one of Samuel’s better moments.’
Samuel spied a path he knew and led them along it, towards his hidden entrance in the palace. ‘This way!’
They emerged from the opening and the sensation of magic poured over each of them as they stepped out into the open. Again, the clamouring sound began as soon as they broke the magical skin that covered the hole, but they knew they would be away from there in moments. Samuel led them away, stealthily exiting the room and darting across the halls as guards ran in every direction.
He drew them out into a quiet courtyard, beneath the darkening sky. Day was now fading into twilight, with only a hint of brightness still marking the sky to the west.
‘Oh my!’ Balten said, closing his eyes. ‘This feels wonderful. I had forgotten what a cool breeze felt like.’
He cast a spell upon himself and his torn rags knitted themselves back whole, and the dirt and crud dropped away, leaving him standing in the neat Paatin clothes in which he had first surrendered. After a moment, he looked like a new man.
‘We need to hurry,’ Samuel said.
‘Where are they?’ Balten asked him in return.
‘To the north,’ Samuel said. ‘In Yi’sit.’
‘I should have known,’ Lomar said. ‘Taking the Empress from there will be no easy task. I will go for the others. Leaving them here once we have escaped is nothing more than a death sentence. With the alarm sounded, they may already be under guard.’
‘True,’ said Balten. ‘We will deal with Om-rah and meet you at the Temple of Shadows with the Empress in hand.’
‘So be it,’ Lomar said with a nod. ‘Samuel, be careful.’ And with that, he walked away back into the palace.
As Balten and Eric each called their power, Samuel slipped the grimy ring upon his finger. At once, its power filled him and he struggled to fight back the dizziness and force the world back into clarity as it warped and blurred before his eyes.
‘Let’s go,’ said Balten and he leapt away with a great magical jump.
Eric followed in quick succession and Samuel came behind. They cleared the palace walls on their first leap and followed each other, leaping through the streets—to the alarm of the city folk beside whom they came bounding. In five more leaps, they were into the pastures and Samuel began to draw ahead. He filled his efforts with snippets of the Flying spell he had gleaned from the Paatin Queen, improving it with each attempt. It could not keep him completely airborne, as he had hoped, but he stayed aloft much longer than the others, surging ahead of them, with his cloak flapping wildly behind him. It took only moments before they had left the rich lands beside the river and entered the simmering desert.
‘Samuel!’ Balten called out as he sprung upwards from the sandy dunes, leaving a puff and an indent behind. ‘We can’t keep up with you. Try to slow Om-rah down. We will not be far behind.’
Samuel nodded silently. He could feel the current burst of magic waning and, as he fell to earth, he reached into the ring for more magic. As he struck the desert sands, he released the next spell and the magic of the ring flared out, throwing him forward so that the air stung his face. Eric and Balten were quickly left far behind.
He judged that Om-rah would have easily reached the Well of Tears by now, but he could not give up. He drove himself desperately forward, the Argum Stone burning its magic into his marrow with each leap.
It had not been long before he spied the lights of Yi’sit rising above the dunes. About halfway between him and the town, he noticed a magical glow upon the sand and he knew well the corrupt look of the magic.
‘Om-rah!’
He looked behind, but Eric and Balten were now too far behind to be seen.
The Paatin arch-wizard seemed to notice him approaching. Long before Samuel could draw near, Om-rah had taken flight and risen above the dunes on his flitting wings, making a beeline directly for the settlement.
Samuel landed where the arch-wizard had been waiting and he saw what had delayed the man for so long. A camel lay dead, with most of its head missing, and the remains of two Paatin nomads lay beside it, amidst a flurry of blood splattered all over the sand. Most of the nomads’ bodies was missing. It seemed that Om-rah’s penchant for fresh meat was fortunate, as he had stopped for a snack along the way.
With barely a pause to take all this in, Samuel bounded away, leaving a cloud of sand erupting in his wake.
He gained quickly on the Paatin arch-wizard, for Om-rah was reliant on the beetle-like wings that extended from beneath his dark cloak and they could only carry him so quickly. It would only take another leap to reach him, but Samuel was already gritting his teeth with pain.
At the apex of his next leap, he sent out a Holding spell. He had hoped to bring the hulking wizard to ground, but Om-rah sensed the spell’s approach and deflected it easily. In response, he made a great trilling call that carried far and wide. It was a sound that no human throat should be able to make, yet Samuel sensed no magic in its utterance.
Almost at once, the lights of other Paatin wizards came flooding out from Yi’sit—first a few, and then more and more, as wizards swarmed from the town like angry wasps.
The final orange streaks of the sun had now drowned into the west and night itself had fallen. To the east, the pale scar of the Star of Osirah was just climbing out of the sands, looking like a fiery white serpent flying atop the dunes.
Samuel landed and yelled with pain as he released his final jump. His magic felt as if it was tearing at his insides, but he could not stop now, so close to stopping the infernal wizard.
He aimed himself towards Om-rah as well as he could and he flew swiftly, crashing into the giant in mid-air. It felt as if he had struck a wall of granite and both of them tumbled from the sky, careening down onto the desert sands. Samuel managed to soften his fall with spells, but Om-rah dropped like a stone, sending up an explosion of sand where he struck.
Samuel hoped the wizard was dead, but he was taking no chances. He ran up the soft side of the dune as quickly as he could, shields firmly in place. He had just reached the crest of the dune when a great black form loomed up at him and a claw snapped out. If not for his lightning reactions, it would have taken his head off, but the impact still threw Samuel tumbling back down from where he had come.
Scrambling back to his feet halfway down the dune and spitting sand from his mouth, Samuel spied the Paatin arch-wizard hobbling away as fast as his legs would carry him. He seemed quite inefficient at running, but it was a boon for Samuel to have damaged the tyrant’s wings.
Samuel scrambled around the side of the dune and began to scramble up and after Om-rah on the next. When he climbed to the top, however, what met his eyes made him stop in his tracks. To his magician’s sight, it seemed as if a thousand burning torches were flowing up and over the sands towards him. He knew what it meant—the wizards were coming to the aid of their leader, and more continued to stream from Yi’sit by the second. Whence they had all come, he could not guess, but their numbers were overwhelming.
Om-rah used his wings to clear the next gap in the dunes, but Samuel could see he was having difficulty carrying his weight, with his black cape torn and trai
ling behind him. Looking down, Samuel was aware that the footsteps of the arch-wizard trailed ahead—but they were not the marks of feet or boots. Rather, the sand was patterned with the strides of great claws.
Spells began to whizz past him and Samuel called again to the ring—first putting up some initial defences, then rallying himself for an assault of his own. He could not let the arch-wizard get away from him.
Om-rah met the first of his underlings and continued through the sea of wizards without a pause, intent on reaching the settlement. There were too many wizards to deal with individually and so Samuel would need to find a way to deal with them all quickly.
Wizard-spells tinged and whizzed from Samuel’s shields. The attacks were steadily growing in number and strength, and would soon start taking their toll upon his defences. He needed to find a way to disable as many of the wizards as quickly as possible, and so, unfettering his poised and readied power, he set the sands to tremble.
The Paatin spells ceased at once as the wizards sensed his magic approach. They felt the threat of his spell looming, and they readied themselves to meet it.
The dunes shuddered and the sands began to shift. Some wizards ran, while the stronger ones set their defences in place. A hissing sound began as the sands swept over them and the dunes began to waver. Up and down, the hills of sand began to heave, rolling like waves in the sea, and wizards screamed and fell as they lost their footing or were swallowed from sight entirely. Many of the wizards were more skilled than Samuel had expected, and they remained balanced, protected in shells of magic and safe from harm.
In response, Samuel called for his ring to give him even more.
The pain buckled his legs and he fell to one knee, but he could not relent yet. The spell was doing its work and, moment by moment, the dunes raged higher, crashing down upon each other with a thundering roar, accompanied by the screams of Paatin men and women.
She Who Has No Name (The Legacy Trilogy) Page 45