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Fire Mage

Page 12

by John Forrester


  A mistake. More like it would cost him his life. He had no choice…

  “Apologies for my intrusion.” Talis bowed. “I will take my leave.” As he walked away, he could hear Aurellia whispering to Rikar.

  Before Talis reached camp, Rikar jogged up to him, breathless.

  “Wait…before you—”

  “Who is he? Have you been feeding him information all along?” Talis gripped his sword hilt.

  Rikar backed away, pressing his palms out. “This conversation is going in the wrong direction. If you try to fight me, you’ll lose. That sword will do you no good.”

  “I want answers…”

  “You won’t get them from me. Only Aurellia can give you answers, so you’ll have to be patient.”

  “No…you can tell me who he is…how long have you been studying with him?”

  Rikar’s face contorted to a snarl, glancing down at Talis’s fire sword now positioned over his heart. “You really want to do this? You think you can beat me with that sword?”

  “I just want answers…you owe me that at least.”

  “Aurellia is my true master of magic…his knowledge and abilities are beyond any of the wizards in Naru.”

  “And how did you find him?”

  A pained sigh escaped from Rikar’s lips. “After my father was killed, I kept having nightmares of my father tortured in the Underworld. I visited the Temple of Zagros, begging mercy for my father, but the nightmares continued. Once at midnight I bumped into a robed figure worshipping at the Temple. I was surprised, because I’d rarely seen anyone there. I asked the person if he was a temple priest and he chuckled, saying perhaps in a way he was.

  “The man asked me why I had come here, so I told him my story… It turned out that the man was Aurellia, one of the most powerful magicians in the world. He helped stop my nightmares and once he knew my abilities at magic, he took me in as his apprentice…”

  “But who is Aurellia, really? Where does he come from?” Talis released his grip and lowered his sword.

  Rikar shook his head, eyes dark and mysterious. “You’ll have to ask him that yourself.”

  “So we go on, continue our quest and act as if nothing has happened?”

  “Nothing has happened…yet. Once we get to the island, things will change, I can promise you that. And perhaps you’ll have your opportunity to find the answers you seek from Aurellia….”

  The Surineda Map led them to the island and yet Talis felt like it was a trap waiting to spring. He couldn’t trust Rikar, and he didn’t feel like he could trust Aurellia either. But that island was where the map led them and he could feel the power waiting for them, the power of the sun, the power of the Goddess Nacrea.

  Talis turned his back on Rikar and walked back to camp, his mind filled with thoughts.

  The next morning Lenora glanced at Talis as if she sensed something had changed overnight. Mara noticed also and sent him a look that said, What’s going on?

  He motioned Mara to follow him over to the river and they sat behind an upturned tree stump.

  “You look like you slept in a pile of leaves.” Mara brushed a strand of hair from his face.

  “After everyone was asleep, Rikar snuck off…to meet the sorcerer from the desert.”

  Mara’s face paled in disbelief. “The one who slew all the undead?”

  Talis lowered his voice and leaned in closer to Mara. “I followed Rikar last night to the river. The sorcerer…Aurellia, he’s…he’s some kind of a terror. But Rikar told me he’s studying with him…since his father’s death.”

  “Rikar’s changed, ever since his father was killed on the hunt.”

  “Who is this sorcerer?” Lenora said, jumping over the stump, her eyes filled with mischievousness.

  Talis bolted upright, startled. “You…you followed us here?”

  “This doesn’t involve you,” Mara said, bringing a dagger out, glaring at Lenora.

  Lenora frowned and sat back against the trunk. “It does now, now that my fate is intertwined with yours. I’m not frightened of your pitiful weapons. Now, who is this sorcerer you speak of?”

  “We don’t need to tell you a thing,” Talis said.

  “I have ways of finding the truth…gazing into your eyes will tell me more than your lips would ever reveal.” Lenora’s eyes changed to silver and her pupils widened until they shone bright. Talis felt dizzy, as if he were spinning down into some dark chasm. He pictured Aurellia, slaying the undead in the desert, and Aurellia again, talking with Rikar by the river.

  Lenora shrieked, startling Talis awake. He glanced around, spotting Mara sitting on top of Lenora, her daggers pricking the side of Lenora’s delicate neck, until a line of blood dripped down.

  “Get her off of me!” Lenora shouted, wriggling underneath Mara.

  “If you continue moving, these pitiful weapons, as you called them, are going to do a lot more damage. Now what were you doing to Talis, you witch… Casting some kind of charm, a truth reveal spell?”

  Lenora’s body stiffened, and a look of triumph crossed her face. “I knew something was strange about your story. People rarely survive attacks from Jiserians… So this sorcerer, Aurellia, is connected with your friend Rikar? And you saw this Aurellia last night? Why is he following?”

  Talis gaped at Lenora in disbelief, how did she know Aurellia’s name? Did mystics have the power to read minds? “Talk to Rikar about that… But if you try that trick on me again, you’ll wish you hadn’t. We’ll take you as far as Khael, you have family there, right?”

  Lenora pursed her lips, as if greatly displeased. “You want to get rid of me, don’t you?”

  She climbed over the stump and stormed off, her dress swishing back and forth.

  “We’ll need to watch her,” Mara said. “She’s a witch. All those tears for her father…now it’s as if she’s forgotten about him completely.”

  “Now she’s gone to Rikar…she’s talking to him.“

  “Flirting with him is more like it, and it’s working. Why do girls resort to such trickery?” Mara scowled, then blinked as if remembering something.

  “This morning, I woke up and heard Rikar mumbling to himself. It didn’t make sense. He said, ‘I obey, master, to Darkov…under the temple, Zagros commands.’ What does that mean?”

  “I’ve never heard of Darkov, a city perhaps?”

  “Look on the map. You can read the runes, right?”

  Talis glanced back at camp, making sure they were all there. He withdrew the map from the case and stretched it out. Immediately the map lit up, symbols and markers glowing as if on fire. All over his body, his skin tingled from holding the map.

  “There’s Lorello,” Mara pointed. “But the island is so small on the map…”

  “I wish we could see more detail.” As if responding to his desire, the map changed, and now displayed a larger view of the island. New markers appeared. “This one says ‘Seraka’, along the coast.“

  “And this one, over here?” To the south and east lay an immense marker, and within, a shimmering golden triangle.

  “Urgar…and this one is the Temple of the Goddess Nacrea, our destination.”

  “What about this?” She tapped a city to the north, shrouded in mist.

  “Darkov…”

  18. INTRIGUE IN KHAEL

  After three days of hard riding, Talis and the others gazed over the city of Khael. The city was nestled in the side of a cleft overlooking the mystical Melovian Sea. The ocean glimmered as if enchanted by the Goddess Nacrea. Talis had dreamed about seeing the ocean ever since his father told him bedtime stories of his youth along the fair seas of Onair. How he missed his family and his home…

  High above the city of Khael, sandstone spires ran along the mountain ridgeline like a dragon's spine. The sun lingered low on the horizon, painting the countryside in shades of violet and gold. A tower rose from the highest point in Khael, next to the cliffs, part of a palace that glimmered from the last rays of sunlight. He caugh
t sight of a shadow cast from a low cloud floating over the harbor, a shadow that sent crooked fingers spidering across the rooftops. He gripped his reins tighter and prodded his horse on.

  “I don’t like how it looks,” Mara said. Other than the palace and the surrounding compound, the rest of the city was a dark hovel. The difference between the two areas was startling. Along the docks and leading up towards the hills, old dilapidated buildings and crumbling earthen homes were crammed in so close together, Talis could hardly spot any streets. The town was heavily guarded with soldiers marching in many places throughout the city, with a large contingent stationed near the palace. Outside, no guard posts or walls or patrols of any kind protected Khael. It was as if the government had no interest in keeping people out. This struck Talis odd, a stark contrast with Naru’s enormous walls and regular patrols.

  They reached what appeared to be a town gate: the broken down remains of two old stone guardhouses. A man’s body hung from a guardhouse, a noose cinched around his neck. His eyes were gone and the rest of him was being torn asunder by a gang of crows working mightily on his flesh. The stench was nauseating and Talis forced himself to look away.

  Long shadows knifed their way down the main street past the guardhouse. The air inside smelled of burned meat and moldy bread. Women scowled at the party, slamming their shutters closed as they approached. Past the town square, down narrow, winding streets, the way opened up to the docks, and beyond, the sea. It went on forever. So this was the sea father had talked about so much. Where you could spend an eternity on those wild waves, drifting from island to island, alongside whales and dolphins and sharks, hoping and praying to reach a friendly port.

  A breeze whipped up and filled Talis’s nostrils with the smell of fish and other pungent smells he didn’t recognize. A sudden craving struck him, to eat the bounty of the sea. He glanced around, hoping to find an inn or a tavern. The docks were thronging with people in tattered clothes. Ship’s hands, beggars, thieves with shifty eyes, and dotted here and there, soldiers harassing well-dressed sea captains and traders. Ladies of obvious poor-reputation sauntered amongst the crowd, looking for victims with coin. Talis spotted an inn, “The Rusty Harpoon,” and decided it the best choice. Fewer drunks littered the steps outside.

  He motioned the others towards the inn. Rikar grunted and guided his horse to the stables, Lenora trotting next to him.

  Mara chuckled. “She’s been cuddling up close to him for days.”

  “Young love.” Nikulo flashed his teeth. “Catch me if I start to swoon.”

  “Our uncle will never approve,” Nuella said, and frowned. “I don’t know what she’s thinking.”

  “Love’s a mystery.” Nikulo stuck his finger in his mouth, as if pretending to barf.

  “She’s not in love,” Mara said. “She’s just using him.”

  Nikulo laughed at that. “Let me say, for the record, Rikar has no problem being used in this situation.”

  Inside the inn was packed and noisy, smelling of smoke and ale and garlic. Ladies danced with drunken sailors in uniform, older officers sat drinking, eating, scheming. Talis followed Rikar and Lenora to a rickety table in the far corner under the stairs. Dust spilled down on them as people stormed up and down.

  “No wonder the table was available.” Mara waved away the dust.

  “It’s the only free table…stop complaining,” Rikar said, and motioned to a barmaid.

  “Always liked a layer of dust with pork roast.” Nikulo brushed off the table with his hat.

  “Do you have coin?” The barmaid frowned at them suspiciously.

  Rikar flourished a silver coin. “Food and ale…and a room for the night.”

  “A room?” Nuella said. “Aren’t we to have a room of our own?”

  “Aren’t you bound for Uncle’s house?” Lenora spat, shifting her chair closer to Rikar’s.

  “And you aren’t?”

  Lenora shook her head, then glanced at Rikar. “I’ll not set foot in that drunk’s house.”

  “But the plan was to live with Uncle and—”

  “Plans change, sister. It’s hard for me to leave you, but I imagine you’ll manage somehow.”

  The barmaid cast a disapproving glance at them, and swiped the coin from Rikar’s hand, storming off.

  “You’ve scared her.” Rikar grinned. “You sisters shouldn’t fight. We’ll find your uncle tomorrow, and reunite you both with your family.”

  “But you said!”

  Rikar put up his hand as if to silence Lenora. “Eat first, your hunger is affecting your mood.”

  “This seems a good place to ask…for ship’s passage to Lorello.” Nikulo flicked his eyes towards the seamen at the other tables.

  “The crooked lot of them…the whole town included.”

  “Be vague then,” Talis said. “Ask where they trade, home ports.“

  Mara sighed. “That’s not how it’s done. Ask what trade garners the most coin. Pretend like you’re interested in signing up as a ship hand.”

  The barmaid slapped down a large plate with a haunch of pork, roasted potatoes oozing in oil, and a whole cod. “Now there’s a feast.” Nikulo rubbed his hands together and sampled a potato.

  “And ale?”

  “Save your mouth for the food,” the barmaid said. “Ale’s coming soon enough. And you owe another silver for the room. That foreign coin of yours needs more weight.”

  Nikulo handed her another coin, and gave Rikar a look as if trying to pacify him. “This is not Naru…prices are different.“

  “More like robbery once they saw the foreign mint.”

  “The inland mint…most people in this room are sailors…except us. Our coin gives us away.” Talis noticed the barmaid whispering to the innkeeper.

  “We’ll see about changing coins in the morning.” Nikulo’s eyes brightened as the barmaid sauntered up, carrying a tray with six mugs of ale.

  “Father complains from the grave,” Lenora said, and raised the mug to her lips.

  “Your father walks the Grim March in the Underworld.” Rikar scowled at his hands. “Begging mercy from Zagros.”

  Lenora paled, eyes widening. Instead of protesting, she bit her lip and drank half her ale.

  “You cruel bastard…” Mara said. “Have you no feelings at all?”

  Rikar shook his head slowly. “Not in many years…I’ve no need for them. You’ve enough emotions for the two of us. Wear them with pride.” He gulped down his ale in one go.

  Talis wanted to kill him. He glared at Rikar, and gripped his sword.

  “What do you want, oh you of royal blood? Do you want to murder me? You’re all just dripping with tender feelings. Plump morsels for the Master. Do you all realize how insignificant you are?”

  Nikulo coughed. “Indeed we are…next to an ego such as yours… That’s right, I forgot to bow down and worship your lordship’s arse.”

  “Go ahead, laugh until your fat face turns red. We’ll see how well your wit serves you on that island.”

  “Promises and threats, my favorite bedtime stories. Is there something you know that we don’t?”

  “Volumes, my old friend, volumes.”

  “Who pray tell invited you on this quest? Am I missing something here? All this talk of Zagros, and mystery on the island. We arrive at Khael—a ship’s journey away—and my old friend shows his true colors?”

  Lenora stared at Talis, as if begging him to say something. Talis cleared his throat. “Rikar here is in league with a dark sorcerer—”

  “Say another word and I’ll slice your head off.” Rikar smiled madly. “I told you he will explain himself when he sees fit. Until then keep those words to yourself.”

  “Are we to understand that this master of yours will explain everything once you lead us to the city of Darkov?” Mara scoffed.

  “Who told you about Darkov?” Rikar’s face paled.

  “You did, you stupid fool.”

  19. PASSAGE TO LORELLO

  Rikar
woke early to take Lenora and Nuella to their uncle, ignoring Lenora’s final protests. Talis said goodbye to them, noticing the look of sadness in Lenora’s eyes. He didn’t buy it for a moment. She wanted to stay with them and continue on to Lorello, but everyone had agreed they had no interest in having her along.

  Talis and Mara were to scour the docks in search of a ship bound for Lorello, and Nikulo mumbled something about finding rare ingredients. They split up. The air was cold and clammy from a dense mist and the ships in the harbor bobbed listlessly, their sails disappearing into the fog.

  “Trade mostly in seal furs from the Isle of Tarasen,” an old salty sailor barked in response to Talis’s question.

  They moved on, trying a broken-down tavern so close to the sea, Talis was sure it would soon fall in.

  “Salt…salt from the salt flats of Douraman…we stay close to the coast. Yonder sea is vicious out in the open.” The barrel-chested hairy sailor puffed on a pipe, blowing rings of smoke thoughtfully. “Talk to Captain Calfour. He might know a thing or two about adventure on the high seas. Oldest and craziest dog amongst us.”

  They tried the Captain and got a sour stare and plenty of grunts. He didn’t want their ale and wasn’t interested in speaking a word. As they were leaving the tavern, a man tapped Talis in the shoulder, and motioned them outside, down a dark alley.

  “So you’re looking to join up on the Captain’s ship?” The man wore a white cap, and had two front missing teeth. “I’m his first mate, anything you want to say to the Captain has to go through me.”

  “And where does your ship sail?” Mara said.

  “Quite a lip on this one.” The first mate frowned at Mara. “We sail where there’s money in the wind.”

  “Such as?” Talis said.

  “Well if you must know, south to Tsenga, north to Blighter’s Bay, and if the need arises, east, far out to sea, to Seraka.”

  So there it was, Seraka. Talis hated the look of greed and thievery in this man’s eyes, but it was their only lead so far. “And where will you be sailing next?”

 

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