As Triand had predicted, the way to Prey had taken over a week. Iwy was glad when, after wandering the mountain-fenced region for so long, one morning at dawn the mage made her climb a hill to look down into the valley and see lights that derived from civilisation.
Prey had been built at the end of the valley, a stoneâs throw away from the banks of a lake that looked more like some creator godâs apprentice had accidentally dropped an ocean. The locals called it Lake Familiar, which was not ominous at all. Roads leading around either side of the lake and one from the valley were the only ways in and out of the city.
It didnât take long to discover that Prey was a postcard city; better seen from far away. It was the polar opposite of the surrounding valley. The sight of the dark wooden rooftops, worn limestone walls, broken roads, and a fog that wouldnât clear even at noon immediately dragged at Iwyâs mood. She couldnât see why a wizarding Order had decided to settle here.
Triand didnât seem to want to lose any time and Iwy couldnât blame her; she noticed people looking at them. Well, people always looked at strangers, and more importantly at wizards, and even more importantly at Triand, but these stares were different.
This sanctum of the Order was the opposite of Riestra, an unwelcoming grey stone abbey with seven thin, round towers piercing the sky. Small windows were scattered around the walls, along with symmetric holes for archers and artillery or, knowing wizards, something more destructive. Iwy wondered uneasily why the architect had felt that was necessary.
The gate held enormous wooden doors, as dark as the stone. When Triand knocked, Iwy prepared herself for this to go over about as well as in Riestra.
She didnât get a chance to find out, because no one answered. Triand tried again. The building remained silent.
âCome on ...â
A third knock.
Triand sighed heavily.
âKnow anyone at the backdoor you can bribe?â Iwy asked, almost hopeful.
âNot really. What says we find a place to stay the night and try again later?â
The street had become busier as the morning dragged on. The stares never left them and Iwy tried to pay them no mind.
Someone bumped into Triand as he passed, and she grabbed his shoulder before he could get away. Iwy expected an argument and braced herself.
âEliphas?â Triand pulled the man into a laughing embrace, which he returned.
The man was clad in blue robes only a few shades darker than his eyes, the sleeve hems frayed. He carried a staff overcarved with symbols. His pepper-and-salt hair was cut short in the Northern style, his beard trimmed close to the skin. Someone other than Iwy would have thought he looked quite attractive. The warmth of their greeting made her wonder if he was Triandâs brother, then she remembered she had never mentioned any siblings.
âWhat are you doing here, I heard you moved away. How are you? Howâs the husband?â
The man named Eliphas scratched the back of his neck. He seemed pleasantly surprised, but a little overwhelmed. âOh, that, well ... we parted a while ago.â
âOh, damn, Iâm sorry. You were so good together.â
âI know, but you know ... we wanted different things in life.â He navigated them to the side of the street so they wouldnât be in the way of the cityâs mid-morning buzz.
âThis is Iwy, my apprentice.â
âHello.â Iwy shook his offered hand. She noticed Eliphas was the first one who didnât laugh when Triand introduced her as her apprentice.
âWait, donât tell me. That accent ... Ocrance, right?â
âClose, Riansfield. You know anyone in the Midlands?â
âI have a second cousin in Ocrance. Maybe you know her? Witberta?â
âThe farrier? Yeah, I met her once or twice.â
He turned to Triand. âI canât even believe youâre here. How are you? What brings you to Prey again?â
âI need the library.â
His smile was a bit wary. âThought of a new spell?â
âSort of. But right now, no oneâs home. Do you know anyone who could let us in?â
âI can.â
âYou can?â
âIâm assembling the works of Gurtrama the Scholar and Atusior the Elder. I can come and go as I please as long as the libraryâs open.â
Triand boxed him on the shoulder in appreciation. âYouâve come far.â
âWell ... the Archmage took pity on me after, uh ... I didnât make it up the ranks fast enough.â
âYou still got some time. But thatâs great. Weâll go get a room somewhere and we can meet later.â
He laughed as he took her free hand. âNo, youâre not, youâre staying with me. Save your money. Iâve got room to spare ... you know, after Ilram and I split. Itâs been a bit lonely.â Eliphas held Triand at armâs length and looked her up and down. âAnd anyway, you look like youâve been on the road for months.â
âWe donât want to trouble you ...â
âYouâre no trouble. Itâll be like back at Riestra.â
âYou remember I scorched the ceiling once?â
âAnd you tried to douse the flame with your last beer, I remember. Come on.â
Eliphas lived close to the sanctum, in a house that looked much too ordinary for a wizard. It was a timber-framed construction with two floors built around a small patio. The slanted roof sported a large round window; Iwy thought she spotted a telescope through the rain-stained glass.
The inside was gloomy until Eliphas lit the fireplace in the main room with a gesture. The light revealed half a dozen dark bookshelves crowding around a wooden table that had been taken hostage by a number of hastily wrapped scrolls, and an overladen writing desk in a corner.
He led them upstairs and had them put their bags in the guest room, which was opposite his own. It had only one large bed meant for two, and Triand told Iwy to feel free to construct a barrier out of pillows.
They had the street window. Iwy looked down to see two or three passers-by outside looking up. They might be the talk of the neighbourhood.
âI like what youâve done with the place,â Triand said, exploring the house without any restraint.
âWell, itâs missing a few of your signature touches, like holes burned in the curtains,â Eliphas said with the kind of sarcasm that was a declaration of love between old friends.
âWe can add that,â she called from down the hall while he led Iwy to the kitchen.
âThe bath is down there and if you want to do laundry I have a tub in the basement.â
âThanks.â
The kitchen was a large, white-washed room with a good-sized fireplace at the end of it. The scrubbed oak table in front of it could seat six. She looked up; Eliphas kept all his provisions in baskets under the ceiling, just like back home.
He lit the fireplace in the kitchen with a wave of his hand. Iwy almost wished it was this easy for her.
âIf youâre hungry or anything, the pantryâs all yours.â
âThanks. I eat a lot, though.â
Eliphas smiled. âOh, to be that age again. Just help yourself.â
âLook what I found!â Triand leaned in the kitchen doorway, swinging a bottle. âYou didnât tell me about the wine cellar.â
Eliphas sighed, but he sounded amused. âSheâs been here five minutes and sheâs found the booze.â
âSheâs good at that,â Iwy said before she could stop herself, but the comment earned an appreciative chuckle from Eliphas.
Triand uncorked the bottle without asking and took a swig. Eliphas didnât seem to mind. In fact, he looked as if this was expected. âLeave some for the rest of us, will you?â
âNot a chance.â
âCan I persuade you to use a glass?â
âOnly for you.â
He selected one from a shelf and wiped the dust off. âYou should eat something with that.â
Triand filled her glass to the brim. âYou sound like Iwy.â
âHeâs right, you know,â Iwy said.
âYou sound like him.â
âHow about you two get settled, and then we all go for lunch and see about the library?â Eliphas suggested. âWhat do you need there?â
âHistory section.â
âThey shouldnât have a problem with that. Iâll help you. Itâs been a while since we did research together.â
Iwy had a sudden vision of the both of them sitting in the vast library of Riestra and Triand waving the most outlandish titles she could find in his face.
âHow come no oneâs there?â Triand asked over her glass.
âThey are there, but they ignore anyone they donât know.â
âIâve been here before. They might remember me at least a little.â
âWell, thatâs another matter. Theyâre a bit ... careful.â
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Iwy looked sideways at her master. âDid you blow something up here, too?â
Triand scratched her chin, earnestly considering the question. âNo. Not that I remember. Well, guess we better go freshen up. Iwy, you can have the bath first.â
âAlright. To the left, was it?â
Eliphas followed her, and Iwy threw him a quizzical look.
âOh, right, sorry. Triand hasnât told you, has she?â
âTold me what?â
Instead of answering, the wizard rolled up his sleeves and held his hand out over the wooden tub. Water rose in it as he weaved his fingers left and right. This was a much more useful power than hers. But aloud Iwy just said, âNeat.â
Eliphas chuckled. âAt university we never used the well. Take your time.â He handed her a towel and closed the door behind him.
----------------------------------------
Triand meanwhile had looted some titles from the private library and had taken them and her wine bottle over to the kitchen table. Eliphas leaned in the doorway, a smile spreading over his face. âSee something you like or just browsing?â
âWhy do you need to know so much about the benefits of locally sourced crystals, are you getting weird in your old age?â
âItâs a new technique. It might ... it might help.â
He sat down next to her. She patted his hand. âAnd does it?â
âIâm not sure.â He put his arm around her shoulder. âYou being here might. I missed you, you know. Youâre hard to reach the way you hop from one place to the next.â
âYou know, Iâve completely forgotten how it feels when someoneâs glad to see me.â
âSend my roof flying into the lake like back with my dorm room and I wonât be glad for long.â
âThat was one time.â
âWouldnât have happened if youâd listened to me. I told you you canât make your own arcane blast infused brandy in a tub in a dorm room.â
She boxed his shoulder. âAre you alright?â
âIâm fine. Iâm getting there.â
âWanna tell me about Ilram?â
âThereâs nothing to tell, really. Heâs gone back home to Cirrane.â
âIâm sorry. You always seemed so happy.â
âHappiness is a fleeting anomaly.â
âDonât get all melancholic on me or Iâll have to distract you. You know my distractions.â
Iwy returned from the bathroom, wearing the old trousers and the shirt sheâd bought. âWaterâs still warm,â she said to Triand, dragging the towel over her wet hair. âI feel so much better.â
âYes, travelling by foot can take it out of you,â Eliphas nodded. âWhy didnât you rent a cart?â
Triand shrugged. âNo money, too many people to bribe.â She took the half-empty wine bottle with her.
Eliphas turned to Iwy. âHungry?â
âI can wait.â Her stomach growled like a naftwhale trying to attract a mate.
Eliphas chuckled again. âCome on. Iâll get you something to hold you over. Triand can take forever to get ready.â
A plate, a loaf of bread and a block of cheese careened through the kitchen before settling on the table. Iwy tried to ignore her stomach and eat with some table manners.
Eliphas didnât seem to mind either way as he moved to sit down across from her. âSo. Midlands. Have you ever been this far north?â
âNo. But itâs nice,â Iwy added. âWith the lake and all.â
The wizard threw her a look. âHomesick?â
âThat obvious?â
âItâs nothing to be ashamed of. Itâs quite normal. I still get homesick sometimes myself. Then I remember my work.â
Iwy was about to ask where he was from but was distracted by half a verse of croaky song from the direction of the bathroom. âHow long have you not seen each other? I mean, if you donât mind me asking.â
âNo, ask away. Iâd say about ... five years now. Yes, thatâs when she was here last, when I thought weâd be moving south soon.â
âItâs nice that you still get along so well.â
âI know. I donât see her often, but every time she comes around itâs as if she was never gone.â
His smile was soft when he talked of her. Iwy began to wonder if her own friendships could stand the test of distance and time. She really ought to write home. âIâve never seen her like that with anyone. I was beginning to wonder.â
âTrue, she doesnât make friends easily. Sheâs a wanderer. Canât stay in one place for too long. Makes it hard to keep in touch with her. She used to write to me, but I never knew where to send a reply to.â Eliphas summoned the water jug. âYou probably know her better than me these days, being her apprentice and all.â
âAll I know is that she wants me to learn every kind of magic on this planet.â
âHas she taught you the beer illusion yet?â
Iwy nearly choked. âThe what?â
âShe once snuck into the cellar at the sanctum at Riestra, grabbed every barrel and conjured an illusion to make it look like they were still there. The student body had a party that night.â They both laughed. âDonât mind Triand. Sheâs a bit all over the place but she means well.â
âShe can be a bit much sometimes.â
âI remember. Does she get overprotective on you?â
âI donât think so.â Well, she had saved her once ... twice ... a few times, but sheâd also shoved her towards armed robbers, got her arrested, and made her stroke a dragon.
âHuh. She might actually get soft in her old age.â
âWas she overprotective of you?â
âAnd how. I ... had some trouble fitting in when we first met. She let no one mess with me. Back then it was a bit embarrassing. But I like to think back on it now.â
Triand returned after a while, looking pretty much no different than before, but her wine bottle was almost empty. Eliphas managed to wrest it from her with the promise that the pub had a better one as he shooed them out the door.
âShouldnât we close the windows?â Iwy asked.
âNo, let some air in. Donât worry, I have this place secured. No one can come in that I donât want in here.â
Eliphas led them to the Stone in the Sword Tavern, a notorious haunt for sanctum students and faculty alike. The current innkeeper was a round and pleasant woman who knew Eliphas well; in fact, she seemed to have unofficially adopted him. She was friendly with the other patrons â who once again looked in their direction with suspicion â but Eliphas had hardly sat down when she patted his shoulder and asked him how he was and if he wasnât working too hard and when was the last time heâd eaten.
If you wanted seafood in the Midlands, you had to go to Fallhaven. Bringing anything back home was a task for people who had a fast horse. In Prey, anything that could be found within that enormous lake was fair game for the kettle. This dayâs special was fish soup and crab pies. Iwy had two bowls of both, wondering if her appetite would lessen one of these days, seeing as the only work she did was walking and trying to make grass see-through. Eliphas was the complete opposite of her, picking at his pie until Triand nudged him and said something about the usual twenty bites. Kind of like when someone back home was in a melancholic mood and one of the family would make them eat at least a little so they wouldnât turn ill.
The tavern was only a few minutesâ walk from the wizarding sanctum, which was a blessing considering the city inhabitants. They might as well have taped their eyeballs to their backs.
âWhy is everyone looking at us?â Iwy whispered out of the corner of her mouth.
âItâs my ravishing beauty,â Triand said flatly. âOr maybe his. Maybe both.â
Eliphas leaned closer to them. âThere was an attack on the Riestran sanctum. It has people worried. Weâre awaiting a delegation from the other sanctums to discuss solutions.â
âReally?â Triand piped up. âAny idea when theyâll get here? Tomorrow? Day after? Next week?â
âI donât know,â Eliphas said, all perplexed eyebrows and calming smile. âIs that important?â
âOf course not. What are you discussing?â
âYou know, the uh ... the Faceless?â
âYou know about them too?â Iwy cut in.
âTheyâre very hard to overlook. Have you met them?â
âOne,â Triand said before Iwy could elaborate. âActually, Iâm surprised it wasnât more.â
âDo you ... know anything?â Eliphas asked like someone who would prefer it if the questionee didnât know anything.
âNot more than you do,â Triand shrugged.
Eliphas had begun to fidget with his frayed sleeve hem. âItâs not true, is it?â
âWhat?â
âThe Faceless, theyâre not really his people, are they?â
âUnfortunately, I think they are.â
âI know itâs a difficult topic, but ... are you in contact with Acarald?â
âNo. I left his Circle.â
âI donât know what to believe here, I keep hearing he went mad, others saying heâs on the hunt for a magical orb, then some of the Elders said he had a point with something ...â
âHeâs not the man you thought he was.â
âWhat does that ...â
âNot now, Eliphas.â
They had reached the sanctum, but Eliphas made them take a left turn, walk past the research centre for magical depletion, then performed a small spell at the side of the building and let them in through a smaller door that grew out of a blank wall. âAssistant privileges.â
They came in directly in front of the library and an old, frail-looking wizard passing through the corridor. Eliphasâ face lit up as he approached the older man. âHead librarian Woras. Itâs good I ran into you. These are friends from out of town. They need secondary literature on a history subject. You wonât mind if I help them out for a while?â
No further introduction was needed as Worasâ ancient face crinkled into immediate interest. âAh. Of course not. What are you researching?â
âThe history of Peophia and the Order of Uyane, and the Orders that followed,â Triand said, conveniently leaving out most of the truth.
Woras nodded approvingly. âThatâs no small project you picked there. I can recommend you some texts by Eptior the Historian. The great Orelune has written on it as well. She was one of the last people to leave Peophia ...â
The head librarian recited a long list of possible sources as he led them through the doors into the main hall where the lanterns along the walls and candles on the desks bathed the rows of shelves in gloomy yellow light. The library was not less enormous than the one at the sanctum in Riestra, but it was stuffy like a tomb.
âDoes it work like the library in Riestra?â Iwy asked, squinting, and took the offered candle.
âMore or less,â Eliphas said. âItâs an older spell, so it might not function as well. Oh, and mind the biting books.â
âBiting?â
âSpecial precaution against unauthorised readers,â the head librarian said. âNow, if youâll follow me, I think I remember where I left Eptiorâs scrolls ...â
They followed behind him along the narrow passage between shelves. The selection seemed a bit more outlandish than at Riestra. Iwy noticed some titles in passing. Dretin University Companion to Extinct Runes. Guidebook of Strange Wonders. Noviceâs Compendium of Fundamental Advice on Unknown History. Complete Handbook of Uncommon Performances. An entire section was dedicated to forbidden spells. Well, not so much forbidden as slightly frowned upon, Eliphas explained. They were dangerous to the user and often permanent. Like the rite of Jyataz the Elder that could put objects inside someoneâs body and killed anyone trying to retrieve them; the only copy on reversing this had been lost decades ago. Another fine example was the harrowing Otasimâs Folly, devised by Jyatazâ student, which allowed the user access to othersâ dreams, often trapping them inside.
The shelf dedicated to magical pranks was somehow not any more harmless, from temporarily removing the prankeeâs bones to a mind-transmit curse that rendered the targetâs most embarrassing thoughts readable to everyone in their vicinity. Making the target drop whatever they were holding was comparatively mild.
Iwy tried to subtly keep an eye out for literature on magical depletion. Maybe she could ask Eliphas later, casually, out of interest.
A grey-haired librarian in a grey dress was feeding books as they walked past to the history area. She glanced over briefly; she didnât look like any type of mage, but that wasnât the sort of judgement you should pass in a wizardsâ sanctum lest you ended up as a bubbling heap.
âWe call her Lady Grey,â Eliphas whispered.
Iwy raised an eyebrow at him. âBecause sheâs old?â
âOf course not. Weâve just never seen her wear any other colour.â
The head librarian supplied them with so many treatises, essays, and plain lists of order members it took the three of them to carry everything to an empty table without an accident. He finally left them alone after emphasising the importance of Yonud the Preciseâs tractate âThe order of Ordersâ, which was considered a standard work for any decent historian.
âSo. Peophia,â Eliphas said, readying his writing tools. âWhy are you looking at the history of a lost city?â
âItâs not the city, itâs what was in it,â Triand said.
âLike? Come on.â
âThe less I tell you, the less you can say under torture.â
Eliphas gestured at Iwy for help, who shrugged. It wasnât her place to tell him. She didnât see why he shouldnât know, but maybe Triand was right; she might really be keeping him safe.
Eliphas glanced in every direction before he got up, dragged his staff around them, and tapped the floor three times.
Triand crossed her arms. âYou forgot the ceiling. Again.â
âSorry.â He circled his arm over his head three times. âThat should do it. No oneâs listening in. Wonât you tell me?â
Iwy could almost hear Triandâs internal debate. âFine,â she said finally. âHeâs after an artefact. Iâm gonna destroy it.â
âWhat artefact?â
âItâs called the Eye of Manisum. Itâs apparently immensely powerful.â
âSo he has gone mad.â
âI donât think so. Thatâs the scary part.â
âDo you know where it is? Do you have it?â
âI know where it is, alright.â Triandâs hand brushed her staff that leaned against the table. She sat up straighter. âAnyway. Iâll get rid of this thing before he gets his rotten fossil hands on it. Weâve found some tales about a crucible that could maybe destroy it. Crucible of Atrius ring a bell?â
âNo.â
âThe crucible used to be in Peophia. I think the Order of Uyane took it with them. You find out which Orders the Uyane turned into. Iâll check if a crucible is mentioned anywhere else around the time. Iwy ...â
âIâm researching the artefact.â
Triand blinked. âYouâre doing what now?â
âI want to know everything about this artefact. And I mean everything.â
âI can tell you that.â
âHow do I know youâre not leaving something out?â
âYou hurt my feelings.â
Iwy marched off into the shelves.
Eliphas looked after her and began sorting his pile of literature by date. âI like her. Sheâs stubborn. Reminds me of you.â
âSheâll be better than me.â
âYouâre really not going to tell me more about that Eye, are you?â
âCanât. I couldnât live with myself if something happened to you because you knew too much.â
âThis attack on the Riestran sanctum ... did that have anything to do with you?â
Triand scratched her head. âAnything, everything, whoâs counting?â
Eliphas nodded, as further prodding seemed futile. âI didnât think youâd ever take on an apprentice. I thought you hated teaching.â
âYeah, well, was a bit of an accident. She has a sort of control problem. Burned down a barn back home, scorched a guy a bit, and you know how people get about that. And with the witch hunters around, you know.â
âThere are witch hunters in the Midlands? We donât get them up here, thank the gods.â
âYouâre in a city, Eliphas, you donât know whatâs happening in the villages.â
âI think weâd hear about that, though.â He took in the wealth of scrolls and books strewn across the table. âWell. We have a lot of ground to cover.â