It was a long, gruesome afternoon. Gruesome mostly because Iwy regretted her decision to know more about the artefact. She had planned to establish a timeline, see if anyone had ever tried to destroy it, but the authorsâ commitment to unnecessary details made her wish she had skipped lunch.
It wasnât so much history as it was a legend, and not a popular subject; Iwy had to dislodge the scrolls from behind tractates on the history of thaumaturgical analysis. The few texts she could find were so old they almost crumbled. What she could tell was that the Eye had been used for an impossibly long time. Iwy circled similarities in her notes. It might be the same as the Hungry Eye the priestess Cuthal had banished to the bottom of the sea, a thousand years before Queen Boud had united the human tribes. This text said it fed on blood.
The most famous text she found described the story of a wizard named Manisum who had kept the Eye for a hundred years during which he apparently established a reign of terror over an area of countries Iwy had never heard of. His order grew in number every day and his followers seemed to delight in torturing and decimating the population. Iwy wondered if this Acarald character had gotten his ideas from this story. Manisum kept feeding the Eye, but it would not be satisfied, draining a hundred mages every day, which seemed plain exaggerated, but the author was really getting into it. Iwy skipped to the next paragraph as soon as she got to âwading knee-deep through visceraâ.
It wasnât clear what happened to the Eye afterwards; apparently it was lost in the First War. One of them, anyway. There was a âFirst Warâ every few centuries. Details got fuzzy from there. Erunos the Younger claimed that the Eye had been in the hand of one Clebahna, Scourge of the Arid Fjords, while Oszor the Scribe maintained it had belonged to Hilior the Watcher at the same time, among others. At times, it seemed they were not even the same Eye, or the wizards of centuries forgotten had been playing an elaborate game of musical chairs with the thing. What if there were more of them? But if that was the case, surely someone would be using one right now. Were they all lost except the one Triand found?
Beside her, the two older mages mumbled on about the wizarding orders. Iwy noticed Triand giving Lady Grey the eye as she passed with her wooden cart to return books to the nearby History of Haunt Rituals shelf.
She glanced at Triandâs staff, which leaned innocently against the table. Burying didnât work. Tossing it in the sea hadnât worked. Someone always found it again. Wouldnât destroying it be the first thing someone would try if they wanted to keep it out of the wrong hands? Was it impossible to destroy?
She noticed the librarian looking at them from behind the cover of History of Delightful Dark Arts. Triand winked at her. Lady Greyâs grey cheeks flushed pink.
Iwy sat over her scrolls until they had frustrated her enough with their lack of definite answers and turned to the others. âFind anything yet?â
âHm, about halfway through the orders,â Eliphas said and stretched his back. âAbout the 15th century. Think we get the remaining six hundred years in before they close in ten minutes?â
âNope,â Triand said, rubbing her eyes.
âIâll take these back,â Iwy said, loading her arms. She remembered their original places fairly well. Perhaps the library was helping. All it left to be desired was a new spell that instantly returned books to their designated places.
Lady Grey stopped her halfway between Miraculous Items and Mythology. âExcuse me, young woman?â
âYes? Did I put it back in the wrong order?â
âNever mind the books,â she said haughtily. âTell your handsome friend that Iâm, uh ... interested. In what she has to say.â
Iwy nodded for her own safety. âIâll give the message.â
She returned to the table with an eyeroll. They could not pass a single town without ... âTriand, youâre wanted. That grey lady wants to know what you have to say, and I donât want to know what that means.â
A broad grin spread across the mageâs face. She spied between the rows of shelves to spot the librarian. âOh, nice.â
Eliphas poked his head out between two shelves where he was putting scrolls in order. âNot really, right?â
âYou two returned all your literature?â
âYes. We should get going anyway, Woras gets antsy when his routine is interrupted.â
Triand left them outside the library doors. âYou kids go on, I have some steppinâ out to do.â
âCan you believe that?â Iwy said, mostly to herself.
Eliphas shrugged. âI know, I put my money on the innkeeper.â
âWhat?â
âTheyâre both her type, so it was a tough decision.â
âShe has a type apart from âeveryoneâ?â
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He shook his head, trying to conceal a laugh. âLetâs get home and get some dinner.â
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Eliphas told her three times that she didnât have to help prepare the stew he had in mind, then finally gave up. It felt strange for Iwy to have someone cook for her without doing anything; she could hardly let her own mother do it without at least cutting the vegetables. That was something for sick days when you really couldnât work.
Eliphas was a surprisingly good cook. His former husband had taught him most recipes he knew, but he said it with such a sad smile the topic was soon dropped. Instead, he asked her about her home and her family since he didnât come around the Midlands often. Whether anything had changed in the area, but, of course, it hadnât.
When Iwy set the table, she realised her muscles had stopped tensing, even her jaw. She finally felt relaxed; he was the exact opposite of Triand. He was predictable. With Triand you never knew if she was going to sit still for hours or jump up and break into a library or chat with a dragon or try spells that by rights should be illegal. At one point, theyâd had a cat for two days. Triand had found it outside some village they stopped at, fed it scraps sheâd stolen from someoneâs plate at the inn, and it had stuck around until there were too many miles between the animal and its next meal. She had named it Oatcake. She insisted the cat had named her Mackerel.
Eliphas shrugged out of his robes as he sat down; he wore a blue tunic and black trousers underneath that both seemed different from the city style. Iwy wondered which part of the country he was from originally, but he turned the topic to her before she could ask anything.
âI donât want to be rude, but Iâve never seen you use your powers since youâve been here.â
It was bound to come up. Iwy gave a half-hearted shrug, reaching for the bread. âItâs because I canât. I canât really do anything. It ... sort of comes and goes.â
âAre you specialised in anything?â
âFire, I guess. At least thatâs the part that keeps ruining my life.â
Eliphas nodded appreciatively as he ladled out bowls. âAdd more pepper if you like. Fireâs fairly common but few people can properly control it.â
The great news just kept coming. âI canât control anything.â
âSheâs going to help you.â
Iwy glanced at her hands lying on the table. âI donât think anyone can help me.â
âYouâd be surprised what she can fix if she puts her mind to it.â
âI mean, she did just talk a dragon into working regular hours, but ...â
Eliphas stopped mid-chew. âShe did what?â
Iwy told him about the interlude at the town and then had to wait five minutes for the wizard to stop laughing. âThat is so dangerous, what was she thinking?â Eliphas said, wiping his eyes. âThat could have gone so wrong.â
âI know. All I could think of was, I canât even help her.â
âThat must have been difficult for you.â Eliphas fidgeted with the tablecloth before he continued. âYou know, I ... I had a similar problem when I was young. One day everything was fine and the next ... nothing. It just stopped. Complete depletion. It took three years until I could control my powers again.â
Iwy sat up in her seat. âHow does that happen?â
âI donât know. It had everyone stumped. Like I said, it was very sudden.â
The girl slumped back. âThatâs not reassuring.â
âWhat Iâm trying to say is everything can be fixed.â He patted her shoulder kindly, and Iwy was glad that he had completely misunderstood her.
âDid Triand help you with it?â
âNo, my old master did. I still suppose he only took me on out of pity. Heâd had a similar problem in youth. I didnât know Triand back then. She, uh ... doesnât know this about me, so Iâd appreciate it if you didnât tell her.â
âAlright, but how come donât you want her to know? Sheâll understand.â
âItâs a sensitive subject for me. I donât want her to worry. You didnât grow up in a sorcerer community, did you? Itâs a bit of a family embarrassment. I only ever told Triand that I have a condition that makes me weaker. I mean, that part is hard to hide.â
âI couldnât tell.â
âLighting chimney fires or filling tubs is not as powerful as you might think. The only time I attempted a decent wave I collapsed, and she had to take care of me for a week. She used to tell me I need to seek other avenues. Maybe even try witch magic. Witch magic, can you believe it?â
âWhatâs wrong with that?â Triand seemed to be getting by fine with witch magic. And druid magic. And strange combinations and whatever else she was doing. Of course sheâd advise her friend to try different ways if they worked for her.
Eliphas shifted in his seat. âYou canât just mix disciplines. Things explode when you do that.â
âThat explains a lot,â mumbled Iwy, thinking back.
âBesides ... itâs different for me. Itâs why I only made it to researcher and not even close to Archmage. Iâm not even a very high rank in my order.â
Up until now, Iwy hadnât even thought about the wizard orders in that way. They just seemed like a way to keep the magical folksâ hands where the general population could see them. âWhy is that important?â
âIt simply is,â he shrugged. âI see you share Triandâs opinion on this. Sheâs not in favour of orders either.â
âNo, it just seems ... silly. Sort of like a really fancy guild. Only Iâm not sure youâre even doing anything useful,â Iwy added with a little more contempt than she had intended.
âSometimes I think so too. These days, maybe youâre right.â
âWhy do you even have orders?â
âWell, back in the old days they were meant to emulate the covens. Protect us from the non-mages, safety in numbers and all. But also to find better ways of performing magic, better ways to help people ... then history happened and now theyâre ... what did Triand call it? An elite club of tossers who think theyâre better than the rest even though they can hardly find their own elbows under all the sequins?â Eliphasâs fingers bunched the tablecloth for a moment. âItâs ironic. She could easily be an Archmage if she wasnât so committed to doing as she pleases.â
âI thought it was because ... yâknow, her parentage.â
âOh, that, right. I keep forgetting that.â He sighed. âWhat can you do, people are close-minded. I better take care of these dishes.â
The dishes took flight to the already filled basin and took care of themselves. Iwyâs parents would have loved a spell like that.
This was the most relaxed evening sheâd had in a while. It was nice to talk to someone about magic who had his share of trouble with it. Triand, she made everything seem easy. And everything that wasnât easy for her, she found an elaborate way around it. Nevertheless, Eliphas had been a better student than Triand; he told her about the blood hypothesis, that magic was inherited, though Iwy couldnât pinpoint who in her family might have been a mage. Her mother had indicated her own grandmother, who Iwy had never met, but youâd think people would talk about it. This was completely different from Triandâs hypothesis, Eliphas explained, that magic consisted of tiny invisible parts that technically everyone could manipulate given proper practice and equipment, something she had picked up abroad. She had sent him a nineteen-page letter about it some years ago. It was far from the only strange hypothesis she had.