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The Shadow Stone

Page 13

by Richard Baker


  Ahead of them, a brilliant flash of ruby light speared through the night, illuminating the scene. Kneeling in the apron of debris at the tower’s foot, a brown-robed master with a dun hood confronted an awful beast, a doglike thing the size of a small horse. Its mouth gaped open with a double row of teeth, one set vertically across its nightmarish maw. The master’s spell launched a lance of energy at the creature, a fiery bolt searing Aeron’s eyes and charring stone, but the flame splashed from the beast’s flanks harmlessly. As the brief flare of light died away, the creature crouched and leapt with impossible speed. The master’s scream rang through the darkness as night cloaked the scene again.

  “Aeron! Your light!” cried Melisanda.

  Abandoning subtlety, Aeron barked the brief syllables of the dweomer. With his hands, he wove a bobbing sphere of wizard light and cast it into the air, to hover a few feet ahead of them. A globe of eerie blue radiance brightened the night. Aeron shuddered in horror; the dog-thing had the master in its jaws, splintering bone and rending flesh. The dying man groaned and wheezed, pushing weakly at the creature’s black snout.

  “By the gods,” Aeron murmured. Although every bone in his body ached with the desire to flee, he forced himself forward two steps and raised his hands, considering which of the spells at his command to employ. As he watched the scene in sick horror, he noticed an odd metallic gleam on the creature’s foreleg. A strange silver band graven with twisted runes was clasped to its dark flesh. He pushed the odd bracelet to the back of his mind and started to speak the words for fire hand. He had to do something, even though it was clear that nothing could aid the master.

  Melisanda caught his arm and dragged him back. “No, Aeron! It’s too late for him.”

  “We’ve got to help him somehow!”

  The Vilhonese girl shook her head. “It wasn’t even fazed by the best spell a master could throw. The only thing we could do is get killed. Come on! We’ll get help!”

  Numbly, he nodded assent. They backed away quickly, stumbling across the loose stones of the tower’s wreckage. Aeron could not wrench his eyes away from the terrible scene before him; the creature was tearing the master to pieces. “What in Faerûn is that thing?” he stammered.

  “I have no idea. But I recognize the master. That’s Raemon, the High Master of Abjuration.”

  “Not anymore,” Aeron gasped. Suddenly he tripped over an unseen stone beneath his feet and fell heavily. Rubble grated and clattered over the bitter shrieking of the wind. He scrambled to his feet, bruised and a little embarrassed, but the monster’s great head swiveled from its grisly work, two small, squarish ears quivering and twitching, its nostrils flaring. It doesn’t have any eyes, he noted in surprise. Then he realized that the creature could hear quite well. It sniffed and took a tentative step toward them.

  “Aeron,” Melisanda whispered. “It’s got our scent.”

  “Be quiet. It can’t see us,” he said softly. The bitter wind gusted, wracking him with cold, and he realized that the howling gale was the only thing standing between the two of them and an unpleasant death. They were downwind of the creature, and even with its unnaturally acute senses, it could barely make them out. Aeron stood slowly, trying not to jostle the loose rubble any more than he already had, but small stones clicked and scraped beneath his feet.

  The creature snarled into the night and bounded in their direction, leaping from spot to spot as it tried to flush them out. Melisanda started to bolt, but Aeron caught her arm in an iron grip. He pressed his mouth to her ear and whispered, “If we move, we’re dead. Don’t make a sound.”

  Sniffing and growling, the horrendous creature tracked back and forth across the rubble, swinging its great dark head from side to side as it cast about for some hint of their location. Aeron could feel Melisanda shaking like a leaf in his arms. For a long moment, the thing seemed to stare right at them, only a dozen paces distant, and then, with an angry snort, it broke away, bounding back to the place where Master Raemon lay. With deliberate care, it rooted through the splintered wreckage of the wizard’s body, as if to make absolutely certain that no possible spark of life remained. Then, its work done, it bounded off into the night, vanishing like a shadow.

  The supernatural chill, the cold presence, faded away like a memory of pain. Aeron gasped for air and dragged Melisanda into motion. “I think it’s gone. Come on.”

  Staggering against the freezing winds, they headed toward the flickering yellow lights of the hall. Although Aeron couldn’t feel the creature nearby, his shoulder blades itched, anticipating the pounce of black claws from the flickering shadows. “What was that thing?” Aeron asked again, muttering to himself.

  “Some kind of fiend, I think,” Melisanda replied. “If Dalrioc had sent us out a few minutes earlier, it might have come across us instead of Master Raemon.”

  They darted up the steps to the Masters’ Hall and battered their way inside. In a matter of minutes, they gathered a half-dozen masters and a handful of students, including Telemachon and Oriseus. Although several of the wizards viewed the novices with extreme skepticism, their obvious fright carried their story for a moment, and the procession started out into the cold.

  “There had better be something truly horrifying out here,” one of the masters stated as they returned to the scene. “If I’ve been dragged out into a night like this for a prank, the two of you will wish you’d never been born.”

  Telemachon remained silent, but Oriseus spoke up. “I suspect that even the most addlepated novice would have more sense than that. But we shall see.”

  Several of the masters created powerful spheres of brilliant mage light, driving away the darkness as they approached the ruins with deliberate caution. Aeron’s heart sank. There was nothing there, no trace of the monstrous creature he and Melisanda had seen! He could feel the eyes of the masters turning toward him. “The two of you will have a lot of explaining to do,” one said ominously.

  “Wait,” said Telemachon. He directed his light at the rubble. A tatter of red fluttered in the wreckage. The masters fell silent as the mangled corpse of the Master Abjurer appeared. Perversely, his face was untouched, staring sightlessly into the ebon sky.

  “What of the creature that attacked him?” Oriseus said. “Melisanda? Where did you see the creature?”

  “It was right here, Master Oriseus. It had already killed Master Raemon when we fled.”

  “You abandoned him?” one of the students asked.

  “Easy, now,” Oriseus said. “If a High Master could not defend himself against the creature that did this, how could two novices have made any difference? In this case, discretion was clearly the better part of valor.”

  “There will be questions to answer,” the first master said in a low voice. “Many questions.”

  Telemachon knelt by the body, his face expressionless. “Indeed. First we must see if the creature still lurks nearby. Summon the rest of the masters. And get these two inside.”

  Eight

  No sign of the creature was ever found. Melisanda’s novitiate examination was delayed by the death of the Master Abjurer, the extensive interrogations that she and Aeron endured, and the chaotic maneuverings of electing a replacement to the college’s Ruling Council. Classes and lectures were suspended for a week as the masters debated, schemed, formed alignments, and broke them, and finally elevated a senator’s son to the council. Students and novices alike waited nervously, although Aeron noticed that Dalrioc spent much of his time conferring with the masters. Supposedly no student had any say in how the masters managed their affairs, but the prince of Soorenar could and did make his voice heard.

  A few days after the ceremony of advancement, Aeron was surprised to receive a summons from Lord Telemachon. When a High Master sent for a novice, the fish dropped what he was doing and answered the call, so Aeron trotted over to the Masters’ Hall with all due haste. The hall felt silent and suspicious, still simmering with the unresolved arguments and the disturbing circumstance
s of Master Raemon’s death. He went straight to Telemachon’s chambers. “Lord Telemachon? You sent for me?”

  The Master Diviner sat immersed in a sea of musty tomes, crackling yellow scrolls, and old rag-paper books stitched to wooden covers. His own personal library was quite extensive, but he had doubled its size since Aeron had last been in his chambers. Telemachon was visibly fatigued; dark bags pouched under his eyes, and he wheezed with each breath. The diviner frowned and looked up from his book. “Aeron. Have a seat.”

  The novice carefully cleared a leather chair and sat down. “Thank you, my lord.”

  “As Fineghal foretold, you have demonstrated great promise as a mage,” the old wizard began. “While you still need to work on your mundane lessons, particularly your command of Untheric and Old Rauric, I understand that your spellcasting skills are without equal among the novices. Therefore, you will stand for your novitiate examination at the end of the week.”

  Aeron glanced up, his eyes alight. “I’m ready.”

  “Of course you’re ready. I know that you can pass the examination easily, or I wouldn’t have challenged you to attempt it. We’ll observe the forms, but you need to be instructed as a student, not as a novice.”

  “Yes, my lord.”

  “I didn’t expect this so soon, Aeron,” Telemachon said, meeting Aeron’s eyes. “But several students are about to graduate, and we expect to place some new fish soon, so there’s no sense in holding you back. Most of the High Masters favored accepting you as a student based on your performance so far.”

  Aeron assented with a nod. He knew he could learn more as a student … and it would incense Dalrioc Corynian if Aeron climbed from the ranks of the novices to the exalted status of student. It also meant that he could remain close to Melisanda. “I won’t fail, Lord Telemachon.”

  The old wizard leaned back behind his desk, studying Aeron. “Are you certain you’ve recovered from your harrowing experience of a week ago?”

  “Yes, my lord. I was not injured.”

  “Through auguries and divinations, we’ve gleaned some information about the creature that attacked Master Raemon,” Telemachon said. “It was a yugoloth, a supernatural horror from black dimensions beyond the circles of the world. A powerful fiend indeed.”

  Aeron straightened in his seat. “How could such a creature appear in the middle of the college?”

  “Obviously it was summoned here,” Telemachon said, a trace of irritation in his voice. “There are a number of wizards among us capable of such a feat, which leaves us to ponder the reason of it, not the means.”

  “I’ve been told that the ruins of the pyramid are dangerous. Could Master Raemon simply have stumbled across something better left undisturbed?”

  “Perhaps,” Telemachon said without expression. “Yet I find it curious that a powerful mage, one of the best among us, should simply happen to be abroad in the tower’s ruins on such a night, and that he should happen to disturb something, and that the thing he unleashed should happen to be a creature capable of destroying him … and that his death should happen to occur in front of two defenseless novices, conveniently located to observe that no one else was near to rend Raemon limb from limb.”

  “You suspect foul play?” Aeron asked.

  “Suffice it to say that I find the circumstances of Master Raemon’s demise to be suspicious,” Telemachon replied.

  “But who would kill him, and why?”

  Telemachon shrugged. “That,” he said, “is what we still need to learn. Although it does not escape my notice that Raemon was one of nine members of the Ruling Council, a supporter of the Sceptanar, and that he has been replaced by Andreseus, who is a lord and senator of the city. With one unfortunate encounter, the balance of power has shifted.”

  “You don’t think one of the masters favoring the senate killed him, do you?”

  The High Diviner turned a frigid gaze on Aeron, the weakness and fatigue of his manner sloughing away to reveal an iron will beneath. “Novice Aeron, it is unwise in the extreme to speak such accusations of a High Master. The affairs of the Ruling Council are not the concern of novice or student. Do I make myself clear?”

  Aeron recoiled. “Yes, my lord,” he muttered. “Lord Telemachon … neither Melisanda or I had any part in this.”

  Imperceptibly the diviner’s ire softened. “I know, Aeron. I suspect you were simply moved into place as one might move a piece on a chessboard. Some of my compatriots are not so certain of that.” He settled his bulk into his chair and steepled his fingers in front of him, turning his gaze out the window. “Have you considered which colors you want to wear when you become a student?” he asked suddenly.

  “No, my lord. I haven’t thought that far ahead. Illusion and invocation are my strongest disciplines.” Aeron paused and added, “A few weeks ago, Oriseus told me that he wanted me to consider conjuration as my school of choice.”

  Telemachon scowled. “Oriseus wants you, eh?”

  “He said my talents lent themselves to summonings.”

  “Do you feel that is true?”

  “No other master has encouraged me to choose another school, my lord. I hadn’t wielded many conjuration spells before I came here; the spells I studied under Fineghal were invocations that relied on the elements around me, or illusions crafted from my own force of will.” He shrugged. “I think I could choose any school except necromancy and do well, but I’d do best in illusion or invocation.”

  “I believe so, too, Aeron. Master Sarim is a good man, one of the best here. Think on the yellow of invocation.”

  Aeron smiled thinly. Invocation, the direct manipulation of the Weave through natural forces such as wind or fire, had always been his strong suit. “I will,” he promised.

  Telemachon nodded and drew his hand over his face, dismissing Aeron with a wave. “You are excused from your classes for the rest of the week in order to prepare. You and Melisanda will take the examination together, along with Briet from Crown Hall. Now go study. You have no excuse for a mediocre showing.”

  As Telemachon advised, Aeron secluded himself for the rest of the week, throwing himself into his studies and preparing for the examination. Traditionally the test lasted three days; most novices could not hold more than two or three spells in their mind at once, and since the test consisted of demonstrating at least one spell from each of the eight disciplines, the prospective student was allowed to rest and study the next spells he would have to cast during the course of the examination. Aeron probably could have managed all eight in a single day, but it would have sorely tested his limits, so he decided to take full advantage of the examination’s generous rules.

  The first morning, Aeron, Melisanda, and the third novice reported to a small chamber in the college’s academic halls, where they were called upon to perform extensive translations of documents in Thorass and Untheric. Aeron passed these with fair marks, although he was allowed a chance to gain some additional credit by demonstrating his familiarity with Espruar.

  In the afternoon, the three novices took turns casting spells before the assembled masters of the Ruling Council in the college’s council chambers. This was the first time Aeron had set foot in the room, and he found it intimidating. The chamber was floored in dark, rich hardwood, and the masters’ seats were gleaming, paneled boxes carved with ornate figures. While the college masters were sometimes less than punctual about attending other duties, the novitiate examination was considered a serious matter, and all nine High Masters were present. Oriseus offered Aeron a sly grin when his turn came, but Telemachon and the others showed no partiality.

  Aeron had decided to get the more difficult spells out of the way first. He started with the only necromantic spell he’d yet mastered, a baleful spell known as the cold grasp. He performed it flawlessly. Without pause, he moved on to a basic abjuration, a barrier against evil. For his final effort of the day, he demonstrated the spell of opening, the alteration he’d used to escape Raedel Keep months ago. In all t
hree cases, he passed with flying colors.

  On the following day, his morning was consumed by an extensive oral examination on the theory, practice, and ethics of magic, administered by one of the lesser masters. Again, Aeron passed without note. That afternoon, before the Ruling Council, he cast his spells of conjuration, enchantment, and divination. Melisanda struggled with her castings that day, and the third novice, Briet, fell short in his last spell, failing the examination. He was sent back to his classes with the rest of the novices.

  On the third day, Aeron suffered through an interminable grilling on the fine points of Chessentan history, geography, and lines of descent, barely passing. But he saved his best spells for that day, proving his command over illusion magics by working the charm of invisibility, and then showing his affinity for invocations by casting fire hand. When he finished, the guardsmen showed him to a small antechamber to await the council’s judgment.

  Fifteen minutes later, he was called back into the council chamber. Telemachon, Oriseus, and the other masters watched as Aeron bowed and announced himself. “Novice Aeron at your service, my lords,” he said.

  Telemachon stood slowly and glanced down at a piece of paper before him. “Novice Aeron, you have passed the novitiate examination. You no longer have any assigned classes; as a proven wizard, you may pursue your studies by arranging to study under any High Master you wish.”

  “Although you should keep working on your history,” the sardonic Master Enchanter remarked.

  Telemachon resumed. “Have you decided which discipline you will devote yourself to?”

  Aeron drew a deep breath. “My lords, if the council favors it, I will study in the School of Invocation under Master Sarim.” He noticed Oriseus’s face darken for a moment, but the Master Conjuror quickly recovered.

  The assembled masters turned to a tall, muscular Calishite in their midst. He wore yellow robes with a topaz hood draped over his shoulders. He smiled and nodded. “The Master Invoker is glad to accept Student Aeron into the School of Invocation,” Sarim answered.

 

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