A Magic Broken Read online

Page 6


  The hoofbeats grew louder, and it was not long before the first horseman rounded the gentle curve of the Amorran road and came in sight. It was a city guardsman wearing light chain mail. But it wasn’t the guard or any of the five other guards following him that drew Lodi’s attention—it was the rider accompanying them in the red robes of a Malkanian city mage.

  “You!” the city mage shouted, his face nearly as crimson as his robes. Lodi wasn’t always able to tell with Men, but he was beardless and therefore appeared to be youthful. “Savonder! Raise your hands above your head!”

  Lodi saw the tall wizard smile as he half-complied. The Man raised his hands and exposed his empty palms, although he raised them only to the level of his ears.

  “Disarm Aetias’s guards,” the city mage instructed his men. “Dwarf, name yourself. Are you with him?”

  “Me Blombur son of Blowen,” Lodi lied, purposefully thickening his accent. “Me never see this Man afore,” he added truthfully.

  “Then you are not with him?”

  “No, Man lord. He stop me on road. Me no know why.”

  “Is that true?” the city mage asked Aetias’s guards as his men took their weapons from them. When the two guards confirmed Lodi’s words, he turned back toward the wizard with his hands upraised.

  “Know that I can kill you where you stand, Savonder. Do not be deceived by my years. I am a magus of the Red.”

  “Are you really?” Lodi heard the tall wizard drawl. “I cannot tell you how impressed I am.”

  The magus of the Red didn’t rise to the bait. “I suspect you are perfectly well aware that the penalty for unauthorized entry into Malkan is death for any magic user. But I will make you an offer. Surrender to me, tell us how you kept your power hidden from us, and your life will be spared. It is even possible that you may be granted residence in the city, if you wish it.”

  “Your offer is a generous one, boy. I appreciate it. I only wish I could offer you a similar one. But my lord is not so kind.”

  “Your lord?”

  “His Majesty Louis-Charles, the thirteenth of his Name.”

  The red mage’s eyes widened momentarily with surprise, but even so, his reactions were lightning swift. His left hand whirled around in a circle while a gesture from his right hand sent a burst of crimson hellfire directly at the Man standing next to Lodi.

  Lodi shouted in alarm and dove to his right. He did not attempt to get up, instead he desperately continued rolling as fast as he could until he was off the road and into the grass, scuttling on all fours for the relative safety of the trees. But when he looked back, he was astonished at what he saw.

  Instead of lying dead and smoking, as Lodi assumed, the tall Savonder was still upright, sending one blue flash of lightning after another crashing into the golden aura with which the younger mage was desperately protecting himself. All seven guards were lying in crumpled positions on the ground, although Lodi couldn’t tell if they were dead or merely unconscious.

  The crackling thunder was deafening, and the acrid stink of sulfur and ozone reminded Lodi of one particularly horrific underground battle during the second year of the siege, when he’d been escorting a pair of dwarven spellmasters and they’d run into a group of orcs accompanying three blood shamen. He watched with awe as the Savonder used his free hand to draw the same dagger he’d been using when Lodi had first spotted him, then shifted his grip and waved it at the struggling Malkanian.

  “Do you know, boy, in the early days of my training, I used to complain about the way we were forced to waste time learning the use of conventional weapons. After all, we were to be the masters of fire, water, earth and air. Such a simple thing, this hammered bit of earth. Even a child could use it.”

  The red mage’s face was slick with sweat, and his eyes were filled with terror. “Battlemage!” he hissed.

  “Even so. An interesting choice of deaths, is it not? I wonder, will it be earth—” he lifted the dagger— “or fire?” The wizard threw two more bolts of lightning at the red-robe, shrugged as they were blocked by the latter’s shield, and then his wrist snapped forward. A moment later, the golden aura disappeared, and the young mage collapsed to the ground, both his hands clutching at the hilt of the dagger protruding from under his chin.

  “Earth it is. A wise choice, boy. Quicker and with a little less in the way of pain.

  Lodi froze as the tall wizard turned from the dying mage and regarded him without expression. Lodi still held his axe in his right hand, but he had the dreadful feeling that even if he could throw it faster than the wizard could hurl his deadly lightnings, it would probably just bounce off of some sort of magical shield or demon-cursed robe.

  “There is no need to fear me, dwarf.” The wizard shook his head. “When I said I intended you no harm, I meant it.”

  Lodi silently lowered his axe, less because he trusted the wizard’s words than because he suspected the weapon was useless to him.

  “They dead?” he asked, pointing to the seven guards lying on the ground.

  “Unfortunately, yes. Had that young fool there only kept his mouth shut, I would have spared them. But my king would not have Malkan know that we are capable of passing their wards as easily as dwarves pass their walls.”

  Lodi took the hint. “Dwarves got no interest in Man wars,” he hastened to assure the wizard.

  “I ventured to assume as much. As it seems we now share each other’s secrets, please convey the good wishes of His Majesty to the King of Iron Mountain. Savondir has always held the lords of the underdeep in the utmost regard, and he seeks no conflict with them. Now, would you be so kind as to do me the honor of presenting me to the Lady Everbright?”

  The mage’s words were gentle enough, but Lodi recognized the steel underneath them. He shrugged. If the Savonders wanted to sneak a thousand mages inside the walls of Malkan, it was no concern of the dwarves.

  “Come out, all of you,” he called. “There is no danger.”

  Although he knew it would not do the elfess the least bit of good if the wizard were lying, he was pleased to see the four young dwarves step forward in front of her, acting as a shield of sorts. And he was even more pleased to see the tall wizard nod gravely to them, acknowledging their courage. He suspected the Man knew how unlikely it was that dwarves would lift a finger for an elf, let alone defend one, in normal circumstances.

  “This Man is a warmage from Savonder, Dashella,” Lodi told the elfess. “He say he been looking for you for a long time. Man, she call herself Dashella.”

  “An honor, Lady Everbright,” the wizard said as he smoothly dropped to one knee and kissed her hand. To Lodi’s surprise, the Man said something in Elvish, something that produced a look of surprise, followed by the barest hint of a smile on the elfess’s long, narrow face. She gave him a reply in the same tongue.

  “Alas, my lady Elf, that very nearly approaches the sum total of my knowledge of your tongue. I do beg your pardon. I ask only that you allow me the privilege of escorting you first to Suessa, from whence we will take ship to Oeile. After my colleagues in the art, who are very interested in consulting with you, are able to meet you in Lutèce, you will be provided with an honor guard to the court of your cousin.”

  Lodi blinked. The elfess was of the blood royal?

  “I know what you want, magic man,” the elfess said in the Man tongue. “But I am no use to you, as you already know. My powers, they are gone.”

  The wizard shook his head. “Forgive me, lady, but that is not true. The power may be gone, but you are still of considerable interest to me. Your memory remains. I am sorry for your loss, but the L’Academie has no need of power, not even royal elven power. What we lack is a certain bit of lore that I know is in your possession.”

  “Lore?”

  “Words. Knowledge. That is all. Nothing more.”

  “Which words would that be, precisely?”

  The Man smiled and replied in Elvish.

  The elfess looked pensive and was qu
iet for a moment.

  “I know the spell of which you speak. It will be of little use to you. Our steeds of the sky cannot be tamed. They are too old and proud to serve Men.”

  “I assure you, His Majesty does not covet your sky steeds. No, let me restate that. He harbors no designs on your warhawks, nor does he imagine any will consent to serve him. The spell is needed for another matter entirely.”

  “That purpose being…?”

  “A noble one. One that will shake the earth.”

  The elfess stared at the Man. Lodi noticed for the first time that they were of a height. “That may be, but is it in the interest of my people that the earth be shaken?”

  “Come, my lady, you are too intelligent and you have lived far too long to believe that things can remain as they are. Kingdoms wax and wane. Peoples rise and fall. Your people broke the Witchkings and nearly broke themselves in the process. Do the three kingdoms still have the strength to resist Zoth Ommog in the west and the growing power of the empire in the south?”

  The Man did not, Lodi noticed with pride, see fit to mention the troll kings. It was the dwarves, and the dwarves alone, who had ended that particular threat. The elfess said nothing, and her silence spoke volumes.

  “Furthermore, in giving, your people will receive a gift of rare value in return.”

  “How so?”

  “Through you, they will be the first to know that noble purpose of which I speak. If it can be done, it will be done. Our Immortels shall succeed eventually, with or without elven assistance. What I seek from you is not the gift of power, but rather the gift of time. One hundred years may be little to an elf, but it is two lifetimes to a king of men.”

  “I see.” Lady Everbright looked off into the forest. When her gaze returned to the mage’s face, her eyes were hard. “And what else shall I receive, warmage, if I give your king this gift of time?”

  “What is your desire?”

  “Vengeance,” she hissed. For the first time since she stabbed the naked man, Lodi saw life in her light green eyes. “I want the race of Man to pay for the insult they have done to me, for the injuries and indignities they inflicted upon me, and most of all, for robbing me of my magic!”

  The Savonder smiled grimly. “Will you settle for lives of the men who enslaved and abused you?” He gestured toward the two dead men who had accompanied him. “Note the second payment on that debt. They were in the service of Quadras Aetias, the whoremaster who bought you from the slaver.”

  “The first payment?”

  “The slaver himself. I killed the man from Orontis two moons past.”

  The elfess stared at the mage for a long moment, then reached out her hands to take his. “Thank you,” she said. “And will you kill the rest?”

  “Aetias will have records of his clients. All who used you, who insulted you, shall die. Then Aetias himself, and, if you wish it, all of his household.”

  “I wish it,” she said imperiously.

  “Then you shall have it, in the name of His Majesty Louis-Charles, the King of Savondir and Lord of the Seven Seats.”

  Lodi winced, but upon reflection, he decided it was likely for the best. The barely controlled fury he could see flickering in her green eyes might well have led her to demand the massacre of everyone in the city, including the dwarves residing there. And whatever it was that the wizard sought, he wanted it badly enough that he might well be willing to give her one.

  “Now,” the wizard said, “as it appears we have more than a few horses at our disposal, may I offer you your choice of mount, my lady?”

  Thorald and Hodli helped Lady Everbright stow a share of the food supplies on the horse selected to serve as the pack horse for her journey, so Lodi took the opportunity to approach the royal battlemage on the other side of the road.

  “You say your king be friend to the dwarves, yes?”

  The mage looked down at him with a bemused expression on his face. “I believe he wishes to remain on good terms with your people.”

  “Then I got one question. The dwarf king will want to know: What is this thing you want from the elf?”

  “You can’t imagine I would tell you that.”

  “Maybe. See, if you kill me, or if I make sign to the lads, they kill your elf.”

  The Man’s bemusement abruptly vanished. He glanced sharply at the two dwarves closest to the elfess. Thorald winked at him and adroitly twirled the axe in his hand.

  “You rescued her. You expect me to believe you would kill her now?”

  Lodi snorted. “Why not? Don’t play fool with me, magic man. I know slavers, and I knows a setup when I sees one. How you know what slaver to kill? How you know where he from? I thinks you set this up. You had her catched by the slaver, but he don’t sell her to you. You get outbid by that rich whoremaster in Malkan, and you don’t even know it. That’s why you kill the Oronti: He double-cross you. No wizard know nothing about slavers, but I buys from them many times. They double-cross their mother if they get just one more copper.”

  For a moment, the wizard looked nonplussed. Then he shook his head ruefully. “Yes, well, I imagine it would have saved me a considerable amount of trouble to have hired you as an advisor from the start. But what was your interest in her? My understanding is that dwarves customarily have little use for elves.”

  “We got lots of interest for an elf they pay gold to get back. I didn’t know she was a cousin to the Forest King, but I knowed she’d be worth something. Now, I want my gold, and I be thinking the dwarf king should be knowing what you Savonders is about. I knows we can’t stop you. I don’t even knows that we want to stop you. We don’t stick our beards in Man business. But we likes to knows what’s going on over our heads. So tell me, give me my gold, and then you can send the elf to the Dark if you like.”

  The wizard pursed his lips. Lodi had the impression that he was trying to decide if he could kill them all fast enough and still preserve his long-sought prize. Finally, he shrugged in acquiescence.

  “Very well, dwarf. It’s a small enough price and will do no harm. Look to the skies, my inquisitive friend. Not tomorrow, not next year, but I’m told you are a long-lived people. When you see fire in the sky, then you may tell your king under the mountains that the shaking of the earth is nigh.”

  Lodi nodded and made a mental note to urge the King of the Underdeep to see that the deep strongholds under the mountain were well-supplied in the years to come. Even a dwarf could see how the pieces of the puzzle fit together.

  The wizard had gone to dangerous lengths in seeking a specific spell used to control flying beasts. Fire. The sky burning and the earth shaking. Dragons! Even the evil witchmen of the north, with all their dark and demonic arts, had never managed to tame dragons! He stifled the urge to laugh at the wizard’s lunatic purpose and somehow managed to limit himself to a knowing nod.

  “Do you understand, then? I suppose you must be rather more quick-witted than you look.” The wizard smiled, but there was little humor in his eyes. “Well, my bearded friend, I shall now bid you adieu. To the matter of the gold: As I would not have you suffer any loss for the services you have rendered to the crown, do allow me to compensate you for it.”

  Lodi hid a satisfied smile beneath his beard as the mage produced a small, heavy-looking leather bag, which he was certain contained at least ten coins. Gold, he hoped. Any thought of warning the elfess of the Savonder’s role in her enslavement vanished—he’d thought to get only five or six out of the wood elves.

  He knew a moment’s pang of shame when the pair mounted horses and the elfess looked back to wave at him and his four companions. But then he recalled another time when he’d seen elves on horseback, a time when he’d watched in utter despair as two thousand elves rode away, and he turned his back on the southbound pair with a clean conscience.

  “You didn’t help us at Iron Mountain,” he growled under his breath. “Did you now.”

  “What’s that?” Thorald asked him as he reached up to pa
t a horse’s nose. Besides Lodi, he was the only dwarf who wasn’t terrified of the huge beasts.

  Lodi had decided to keep the five remaining horses. They would journey on foot in the same direction as the wizard and the elf had gone, sell the horses at the first Man town along the way, then strike out northeast through the wilds until they reached the safety of the mountains. And he would buy a crossbow or three, he reminded himself.

  Lodi grunted. “Get a move on, lads. It’s an evil sign when men are getting to be as devious as bloody elves. We got a long way to walk before we get home, and I want a thousand tonnes of rock over my head before those foolish Man wizards start learning what a bad idea it is to wake a dragon.”

  closing time

  Table of Contents

  Copyright Information

  Scene 1

  Scene 2

  Scene 3

  Scene 4

  Scene 5

  Scene 6

  Scene 7

  Scene 8

  Scene 9

  Scene 10

  A Throne of Bones