Gravity's Revenge

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Gravity's Revenge Page 8

by A. E. Marling


  The cane had slid down the side of the column. Without any amulet attached to it, the ebony stick had dropped all the way to the base of the Spire. Hiresha shuddered to think that without her Lightening tourmaline, the warden may have made as sharp a sound colliding with the stone floor below.

  The thin voice of the minister called up. “Warden? Provost?”

  “Quite safe,” Hiresha called back. “But do remain below yourself. Now, Warden, you were taking us to the keystones.”

  “No need to repeat yourself, Provost. My memory is superb.”

  “Of course,” Hiresha said.

  Shelves spun overhead with hundreds of jewels in velvet settings, marked with numbers on bronze plaques. Beyond the jewel archives, the column became the black of basalt. The warden glanced around herself and at Hiresha, checking no doubt to see that only another elder enchantress attempted to ascend to the highest level.

  Jewel-encrusted scimitars and shields of historical significance were secured to the Spire walls. A glove of gilt chain, a wand with an opal tip, rings mounted with human teeth, and more jewels containing the Academy’s most precious records cluttered the highest shelves.

  The warden pointed to an empty display setting. Then lifted a shaky hand toward Hiresha’s face. “Reserved for your earrings, yet I like to think Elder Enchantress Planterra prefers her soul to travel with you.”

  “I ever appreciate the brightness of her dreams.” Hiresha touched the blue diamonds decorating her ears, which glowed from the power of the deceased enchantress. Hiresha wondered if Chancellor Ringwold had planned to store her soul in a jewel instead of going to the afterlife. She doubted it, as the chancellor had never been known as a prodigious dreamer.

  The warden’s gowns flowed upward over the top of the column. A platform capped it with etchings of platinum. Hiresha followed, swinging in one long step to an upright position. Her weight disappeared. Without the Attraction spell—weakened as it was—binding her to the side of the pillar, she floated to her tiptoes. The tourmaline of Lightening shone where she had slapped it on her shoulder. She kept a firm hand on the drifting warden.

  The crystal of the spire had dimmed to tones of dusk, and the mountain range outside was a series of rippling shadows. The metal under their feet glinted blue from the light that leaked from Hiresha’s enchanted earrings. Her chin tilted up to see a cabinet of obsidian at the tip of the spire.

  “Warden, did the chancellor visit the Spire during the last few days?”

  “Ringwold never comes here. Not without a tour of nobles.”

  Hiresha wished she could better trust the warden’s recent memory.

  “In a sense, the keystones are the most precious jewels in the Lands of Loam.” The warden lifted the chancellor’s amulet and after three tries fitted it into an indentation of four concentric circles. “This is a crypt for those enchantresses who bound their souls to the Lands of Loam to empower the Academy with their….”

  She gasped. Fumbling off her mask, she gazed up into the vault. Hiresha was shocked to see the warden’s true face for the first time. Part of her had expected some disfigurement, but the woman’s features were merely plain, with aged skin dry and peeling.

  “The keystones, they’re gone!”

  “We did expect as much,” Hiresha said. “And only the chancellor’s amulet opens this crypt?”

  “Why would Ringwold remove the keystones? She had to know it’d enervate the Mindvault.”

  “I doubt the chancellor knew they were missing. She would never willfully allow anything to damage the Academy’s reputation.” Hiresha moved her fingers over the empty niches, and the glassy darkness of the obsidian chilled her hand. “What is this?”

  A grey metal sigil of four concentric squares lurked in place of the missing jewels like a warning. It weighed down her hand, a necklace chain attached to it was slinking out of the crypt. An amulet then, though not one that would open any doors in the Academy, she thought. And made of lead. The metal was poisonous to enchantments.

  The lead amulet appeared slimy, and the enchantress took care not to touch it with her bare hand. It left dark spots on her glove.

  The warden squinted at the square pendant. “The iconography is not typical of any nationality east or west of the seas. Put your young eyes to use, Provost, and tell me what the inscription reads.”

  “‘Dreams are the mind’s midden heaps.’” Between the squares, words had been carved in the lead. Hiresha frowned and rotated the amulet to read another. “‘Nothing not first forgotten.’ I see. This is mocking the Academy’s mottos. We can use this particular outrage to track down the perpetrator. A smith must have forged it, and we’ll begin a survey of….”

  Oh, no, we can’t. We can’t even descend to the valley safely. Hiresha’s hand grew slack, and the amulet and its chain slithered out of her grasp to clang on the platinum plate below her feet.

  The warden’s gaze returned to the empty crypt.

  “Ringwold had to have taken the keystones.” The warden worried the platinum chain of the chancellor’s amulet between her fingers. “And how can I have this? She cannot have dropped her amulet. Its enchantment bound it to her. Where is she? Why did the chancellor entrust this amulet to you?”

  “She did not, but perhaps she did lend it to the wrong sort of someone.”

  Hiresha’s mind flashed with the image of Tethiel with a ghost of a grin on his lips. The thought of him taking the keystones racked her with guilt. She even imagined him throwing the jewels off the cliff, and the idea enraged her, brow sweating, teeth grinding.

  Ridiculous! Why would I think that, even of him? He has no reason to sabotage the Academy. She hoped trapping scores of frightened women on a mountain was not reason enough for the Feaster.

  And we are trapped. Hiresha realized this might have been what had upset her before, had sent worms of worry wriggling through her. With the Skyway failing, the icy WaterflyRiver would be even less safe. Hiresha considered if anyone could climb the cliffs to bring supplies to the enchantresses. Fos and other spellswords made a sport of scaling rock, but not in the winter. Not when fingers turned white and lost all feeling.

  The provost and the warden descended the Spire of Magical History. At the base of the column, the tourmaline that had Lightened Hiresha for safety now caused her to drift in the air. She no longer had any other enchantments pulling her to a surface, and her magic had undone gravity. She hopped and paddled her way through the air to the Minister of Orbiting Bodies. “How long will the Academy supplies last?”

  “I would estimate four months, as the Mindvault was built to withstand a siege.” The minister stroked her chin, blinking at Hiresha. Unlike the other elders who sported a scraggle of white whiskers, the minister’s chin was smooth. “I conclude that the keystones were in fact absent?”

  “Just so,” Hiresha said. “We’ll return to the RecurveTower and begin searching for them. But not just yet. I have no wish for the wind to blow me into the mountains. These Lightening enchantments will wear off in several more minutes.”

  “And I have no wish to see another colleague in a wind burial,” the minister said.

  Once the tourmalines had dimmed and Hiresha could remove them, the three enchantresses headed out into the glitter of the stars and snow.

  “A pity that my skyscopes will be of no use in finding the keystones.” The gaze of the Minister of Orbiting Bodies lingered on the night’s stars. “Even so, might I suggest the chancellor’s offices?”

  “Reasonable,” Hiresha said. “Yet I suspect this is a matter not of ‘where’ but ‘who.’ Someone stole the keystones.”

  Hiresha’s hand strayed to her jewel sash. In the leftmost pocket she kept a black diamond. Should it touch another’s skin, the jewel would use a dual Attraction spell to implode the heart.

  She would destroy whoever had stolen those jewels. Tethiel was right about the Academy, and about what I will do to the perpetrator. What baffled her to the point of sickness was think
ing of who would commit such a murderous and profane crime. A memory tickled her of a thief she had once met in OasisCity. But, no. He is likely dead by now from the gods’ Blood Judgment.

  “Why would the keystones be in the chancellor’s office? They are in the Spire of Magical History.” The warden started turning back toward the Spire. “In the pinnacle crypt.”

  Hiresha caught the elder and explained the situation once more, leading her around the RecurveTower. They encountered Spellsword Fos again. He bowed his head to acknowledge them and lifted something pale to Hiresha.

  “Elders. Hiresha, I found the most amazing icicle for you. Look it has two tails—or whatever they’re called—that wrap around each other. Doesn’t it look like an ice scepter?”

  Hiresha took the offered icicle from Fos though she could not bear to look at it. She could think of nothing but the wounded Academy. Swallowing hard, she pushed the icicle back to the spellsword.

  “You must keep it for me. If I bring it inside it’ll melt.”

  “That’s true,” he said. “Think Alyla will like it?”

  “Fos, we have matters that need attending. All is not well in the Academy, and you mustn’t allow anyone to go down the Skyway.”

  “I’m sure you’ll put it to rights soon.” Fos handled the icicle as if it were a sword and made a convincing thrust. His inclined his head and jogged away.

  Hiresha and other elders strode to the tower door. The minister positioned herself on the circular dais to the right of the portal. The stone door Lightened, and the slab inched upward. More sluggish than I remember. The granite and its circle of quartz slid up into the wall of the tower. Hiresha eyed it, imagining what would happen to her if its weight returned when she tried to cross beneath the stone door.

  She dashed through. The minister followed with equal caution, taking the warden’s hand. The Warden of Faceted Knowledge doddered without her cane. Hiresha helped pull her train of gowns in and wasted no time in deactivating the enchantment by standing to the left of the door. The full weight of its stone returned, slamming it closed. Thick blasts of mountain chill were shut out.

  She had half turned to follow the elders when she spied something unexpected through the crystal window at the middle of the door, someone outside in the snow. A woman was walking with a black staff.

  A deeper coldness settled over Hiresha like an infestation of ice shards creeping over her skin. She did not understand why she should feel so strong a reaction to seeing the lone figure striding toward the tower and Spellsword Fos.

  He had trotted into view, and he glanced at the woman with the long staff. No walking stick, it was tall as she. Fos stopped to look again.

  Only then did Hiresha realize how out of place the woman with the staff was. She could not have been an enchantress because she lacked a gown. Not a servant or novice in those clothes of thin rawhide that would do little to blunt the cold. Rope was spooled over her shoulder, her belt clinking with metal hooks and spikes. Not even a Feaster, Hiresha thought, for she’s too plain. More surprising still, the woman walked through the snow in sandals.

  The realization of who the figure was—what she had to be—shocked Hiresha to speechlessness. By the time she sucked in the biting air to shout a warning to Fos, it was too late.

  11

  Threshold of Stone

  A gust lifted the stranger’s hair into a halo of black, crusted at the edges with frost. She raised one hand. Her fingertips and palm shone white. Her eyes pulsed once with the same moonlight glow. Hiresha could hear her calm words through the aural tunnel connecting to the outside of the tower.

  “I am Bright Palm Sheamab.”

  Her words ended with a crack, and Fos reeled back, clutching his face. The icicle flew from his hand, and he stepped back on it, leaving it broken.

  The woman’s staff completed the arc of its swing, a black streak. Hiresha had not even seen the weapon strike, and it must have come faster than a mamba snake. The woman’s calm face had given no hint of her intent, and her shining palm had distracted the enchantress and likely Fos, too.

  Hiresha lunged toward Fos, thumping against the crystal viewing portal. For a panic-frothing moment, she forgot how to open it. She clawed at her jewel sash, searching for a gem with which to fight.

  Outside, the Bright Palm sprang behind the staggering Fos. He gripped his greatsword’s hilt with one hand, the other clutching the right side of his face. The staff clamped over his throat, the woman behind him holding the bar of wood on either side of his neck in a chokehold.

  Fos struggled, even as his face flushed purple. She jerked him forward and back, maintaining the pin as she whispered something in his ear. The spellsword stopped his thrashing, and she pushed him toward Hiresha and the tower.

  “Open this door,” the Bright Palm shouted. Her chin was on Fos’s shoulder, her brows downward hooks like streaks of charcoal. “Open it, and I will not kill him.”

  Hiresha heard the murmurs of enchantresses saying something behind her, but they were drowned out in her roaring fear that she would see Fos killed before her eyes. A man so full of life and potential, broken and paralyzed. The magic of the Bright Palms drained their human emotions, and Hiresha had no doubt the woman would do as she threatened.

  She had already ruined his eye. Fluid of a distressing consistency leaked down one side of his face. I must regenerate that. Fos must live for me to heal him.

  Hiresha stepped to the right of the door, Lightening its stone. In a fist she clenched a jewel of Attraction. All she had to do was open the door, and lob the gem to immobilize the Bright Palm. Even if she hurt Fos as they fell, Hiresha’s magic could likely save him before he stopped breathing.

  The enchantress locked eyes with the Bright Palm. The woman’s blank expression reminded Hiresha of a statue with stolen eyes and skin. Hiresha hesitated. A rush of chilling uncertainty flowed over her. The spellswords never would’ve given a Bright Palm an amulet. Did she climb? Why is she here? The enchantress had a terrible sense she should not open the tower door to this woman.

  Hiresha shifted her enchanted jewel between her fingers and overcame her doubts. I will save Fos. Her amulet unlocked the door. Her gloved fingers folded under its stone designs of clouds and pushed upward. The way into the tower was opened. Hiresha lifted her hand to throw the jewel.

  The Bright Palm shielded herself behind Fos, the skin of his throat bent inward from the pressure of her staff. She turned her head to the side and called behind her. “For the innocent.”

  Two more glowing figures raced around the tower and toward the door, one with the curved blade of a scimitar in hand. Three Bright Palms, one jewel. Hiresha fumbled for more gems, but knew in that sharp moment of surprise that she would not reach them before the two hitherto unseen Bright Palms rushed into the tower. They would invade her safe world, her sanctuary. Hiresha had an instinct to drop the jewel of attraction into their path at her own feet but discounted it because the spell would entrap her alongside them.

  She flicked the jewel at the tower wall, in front of the charging man with the scimitar. The gem made no sound as it hit the carvings of interlocking geometric shapes, but the Bright Palm grunted when the Attraction spell smashed him into the wall. A thunk. A metallic snap as the bronze blade shattered into sand-colored splinters.

  The second Bright Palm stomped into the tower, seized her with metal-studded gloves, and used his momentum to swing himself around her and throw the enchantress outside. Or so seemed his intent. Her skirts tripped him up, and they both sprawled in the tower threshold.

  As Hiresha pushed herself to her feet, she realized that she should have dropped the jewel in the doorway. The Attraction enchantment would have slammed the portal shut, even if doing so may have crushed her beneath the stone. Hiresha worried she faced as great a danger amid the Bright Palms. They scorn enchantresses, our position and our craft.

  Several more figures approached, an aftertrail of glow following them with the same color as the sno
w. One man trudged with head down, carrying a bow. One Bright Palm wore only the short red robe of a tribesman, and he set down his spear to grip Fos’s arm. Another Bright Palm with an obsidian-toothed club strapped to his back took the spellsword’s other arm.

  Hiresha felt a crushing vulnerability. They’re too many, too spread out. She reached for another jewel. The lead Bright Palm slid her staff from Fos’s throat and lashed out at the enchantress. The black length of wood smacked Hiresha’s hand from her sash with such force that she worried the limb would fly free at the wrist.

  The Bright Palm swept her staff in a warding motion, to keep the other elder enchantresses from approaching the door to close it. Next she slammed the length of wood into the frame to prop it open. The serenity of her voice jarred with the violence of her actions.

  “I, Bright Palm Sheamab, am taking command of this establishment until the Oasis Empire consents to protecting the innocent.”

  Hiresha could not understand all of what the Bright Palm leader had said, especially not when Sheamab wrenched the enchantress’s bruised hand behind her back. Hiresha made a low murmuring of pain.

  Bright Palm Sheamab gripped her tighter. “You would be most wise to continue doing exactly as I say, Elder Enchantress Hiresha. Provost of Applied Enchantment. Paragon of Morimound. Once Bride to the Golden Scoundrel.”

  Hiresha stiffened, and chills cut through her. For a stranger, she knows me far too well.

  Fos thrashed in the arms of the two Bright Palms holding him. He Burdened himself downward and out of their grasps, and scrambled toward Hiresha. One Bright Palm grabbed his leg. The other reached around Fos’s throat and rammed fingers into his bound length of black hair. Hiresha was thrilled to see Fos struggling to help her, though in the end the two men torqued his limbs and returned him to a headlock.

  Sheamab gazed past the spellsword and the wreck of his eye. The sight of it sent Hiresha’s own eyes streaming.

  “Take him to the cliff,” the Bright Palm woman said, “above the College of Active Enchantment.”

 

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