Aletheia and Eris mumbled endlessly together. Melitas gathered they had found some revelation on the childâs curse, but never paid much attentionânor, thankfully, was he invited to. Unbanishable monstrosities of night and shadow were well beneath his talents to handle, of course, but he also knew that Eris was famed for her skill as an exorcist. If she did not know how to handle this problem, Melitas had little desire to linger and find out more. Sometimes disengagement was the correct course, even for a battlemage such as him.
They were almost done with this business. The Boyar would be cured, an inexhaustible fountain of wealth would pour down upon them, and their names would be sung from Ewsos to Kem-Karwene. With luck, his ability proven, Melitas would be invited back to the College of War in Pyrthos, where he could resume his studies in more comfortable surroundings.
â¦or he could linger, in immense danger, and hope Eris deigned to share her spells with him. Peril fretted him not, yet he doubted she would do it. She was not a team magician.
But Aletheia was.
The town of Bahaty came into view on the horizon. They were in the north of Veshod now, on the coast, far past the Spire and the Oldwalls. They reached an ancient fortification, the half stretch of a ruined wall built along the top of a hill and toward a watchtower. Such ruins were everywhere in this part of Veshod. Having been spared the worst ravages of the Fall, the grasslands were still scarred with the traces of structures made of huge black stones from a time before the secrets of true magic were lost forever. Two thousand years ago, the people of Veshod built metropolises to house millions, with apartments ten stories tall and fortresses impenetrable to even the worst of demons.
These days, their descendants lived in mud huts.
The Boyarâs fortress was beyond the town, out on the water. It was built on an island and unreachable except during low tide, across a very narrow stone bridge. Melitas couldnât see it now. But in a gap in the wall he could see the town itself.
It was mostly made of mud huts. A few had thatched roofs. The roads were unpaved, the chimneys coughed black smoke, and there wasnât a tree for miles.
They had passed a dozen places just like this one in the last week. But Bahaty was the Boyarâs domain, and that made it their destination.
They made camp beneath the wall and crumbling tower. Erisâ lights were beginning to drive Melitas mad, and though he only had to endure them for one more night, he couldnât resist his impulses.
âYouâre going to attract the whole of the town to us come morning,â he told her as she pitched her tent. Corvo helped her silently. âYou canât leave these lights burning all night.â
âI cannot?â she said without looking at him. âIt seems I already have.â
âHow do you think weâll greet the Boyar, if a thousand savages come running out to see your magic? We could all be stoned before we made it to the fortress. And who else will come visit? A Seeker, perhaps? Someone a lot more dangerous than your âShadow Manâ.â
Dorian stood nearby, readying his sleeping roll. âHe has a point, Eris.â
She glared at the old man. Then she glared back at Melitas. But a smile broke at the corner of her lips, and she snapped her fingers.
The lights went out. Instead a new one ignited within the tent.
âHow right you are, Dorian. âTis dangerous to be so conspicuous. For tonight, we will be content with one light.â She flipped her hair with a sudden snap of her neck, like a princess at a ball, before stepping up to Melitas. âDo not press your luck any further.â
He took her advice. And for how bright the tent still was, its fabric glowing from within like a lantern, he decided to go the other way around the wall, to the place where he could watch the town in the distance. He set himself up for the night there.
But he couldnât sleep. His heart spasmed with anticipation. He endlessly imagined how their encounter with the Boyar and his mother would go. The other magicians seemed convinced the acorns would workâyet what if they didnât? And then what if they did? His head roared with a thousand outcomes, most of which involved the unwavering adoration of scores of beautiful maidens. It was too much to put out of mind.
That was when the shadow moved.
On the edge of his peripheral vision. Something in the dark, where it was blocked by the wall before the moon, in a spot of shade, moving nearer to him.
He gasped. He scrambled out of his bedroll, untangling himself from blankets and sheets, and tried to prepare a spell of fire that would shed light.
But he hesitated, and that was long enough for him to see that the shadow had a source.
A girl.
Aletheia. She stepped into the open and gazed downward at the distant view, where only a few burning lights were visible on the horizon, and then out beyond at where the moonlight sparkled across midnight-black waters of the Veshod Sea.
She had her bow in her hand, clutched more like a stuffed animal than a weapon, and she stared for a while. She hadnât noticed him.
Then she glanced up at the wall behind her. It was fifteen feet at that parapet, and the tower was three times taller. For a moment she seemed to stare at its top, doing nothing more than that, and then she froze.
She stopped moving. She stood completely still.
Melitas blinked.
She disappeared.
A ripple of expended mana came to him through the air. It was sweet, like the burning of oil in a lantern, and he recognized itâhe had smelled it when Eris had teleported to the top of a boulder on the day they found the Oak of Spring.
Aletheia knew the same spell. Of course she did. She knew every spell that Eris did, didnât she? Werenât they friends?
They didnât much seem like it, he had to admit. But thatâs what they were.
She must have teleported up to the top of the wall for a better glimpse at the view.
Suddenly he had an idea.
He ran around to the wallâs edge. It ended abruptly with a pile of rubble where the brick frayed and the dark masonry crumbled.
He tried to climb it. He made it halfway, too, before realizing that there was no need.
He stepped back and imagined floating to the top. Just as he had beneath Eris, he levitated to the top.
This time he made it all the way. He came to a gentle rest on the ramparts, and ahead of him was the shape of Aletheia.
He took one step toward her and collapsed. A wave of nausea hit him. His muscles erupted in ache. He had expended far too much of his Essence, draining the mana in his bloodstream rather than the magic in the air to power his spell. But he knew he looked like an amateur to be so winded after a simple spell, so he rose, and he strode confidently toward her.
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She was staring at him. In the moonlight her features were unreadable. When he came closer, she glanced toward the view, leaning on the parapet and, seemingly, inviting him to stand near her.
The invitation was accepted. He mimicked her gesture from a foot or so away, trying to seem confident and capable.
âYou know,â she said, voice hushed, âthere are stairs in the tower.â
Melitas scoffed. âOf course I know,â he said, panting. He did not know, as he hadnât thought to check. âI could say the same back at you.â
âMy spell didnât leave me radioactive.â
âRadioactive?â
âYou smell like a Manastone mine.â She brushed a strand of hair from her eyes, glancing his way, before returning to the view.
She was very small for an adventurer. Not really what he had imagined when he left the Tower. One heard stories of rogue wizards like Eris, or wizened warriors like Dorian, or ancient elves like Trito, but Aletheiaâshe seemed remarkably normal, if it was possible to remark upon normalcy. She had been stoic and direct while she led them first to find the keystone for Bornimirâs sword, and then to the Hydraâs lair. Compared to Eris, he felt her to be a satisfying captain, although, naturally, Melitas presumed he himself would have been far better still.
But she had almost seemed to disappear since Erisâ arrival. Only in moments like these did he really remember that she was there at all.
He looked at her back while her eyes were forward. He couldnât quite figure out why he had stopped noticing her. She was pleasingly petite, very fit, athletic, well-shapedâpretty, too, although also plain, and he found her to be much too muscly in the arms. He especially liked that she tended to wear tight-fitting pants, which hardly any other Kathar women didâ¦.
âDid you want something?â she asked.
He was losing track of his objective. Women often had that effect on him. He tried to refocus. He pried his eyes away from her and instead leaned forward, looking ahead as she did.
âWell, Iâa Manastone mine?â he said. âIs that a compliment?â
âSure,â she said. Her voice was less affected than usual. It oozed deadpan. She seemed disinterested, perhaps even morose.
He decided to be direct. âActually, it was your spell that caught my attention. Eris cast it in the woodlands, too. Iâve never seen it before. Whatâs it called?â
âBlink.â
âIâm sorry?â
âItâs called Blink.â
âOh. I see.â
He caught a smile forming along her face in the dark. âItâs called Blink because it only works once everyone who can see the caster blinks.â
âNaturally. Thatâs what I suspected.â That this girl saw through him so effortlessly was terrifying. âI donât believe Iâve seen that one in the libraries. Nor heard of its use by the Magisters.â
âYou wouldnât have.â
ââ¦then where did you learn it?â
âAn old friend.â She sighed. âI wish he were here. He would know what to do.â
âYou and Eris seem to have an awful lot of old friends. Any others I should know about?â
Finally she turned to look at him. She gave him serious consideration. Her golden eyes were the only color he saw across her body in the shadow. âAre you trying to flirt?â
âWhy would I be trying to flirt?â He tried to laugh the question off.
âBecause Iâm the only accessible girl, and youâre a teenage boy.â
âThereâs Eris.â
âEris isnât a girl. Sheâs a praying mantis. Also, she doesnât like you.â
âDo you not like me, either?â
âNot especially.â
âOh.â Melitas felt his intestines sinking. This was not exactly how things were intended to go. He was powerful, of course he was, and handsome, and, in his opinion, generally charming, and he didnât quite understand what had gone wrong.
She sighed. âIâm sorry. That was mean. IâmâI came here to be alone.â
âI thought you wouldâve been alone already.â
âI was,â she said.
ââ¦then why did you come here to be alone?â
Now she shrugged, and she smiled again. âI was lonely.â
âThen Iâll keep you company,â he said. âIn fact I was thinkingâI was thinking you might teach me a spell. This âBlinkâ perhaps, in recompense for what Iâve done for you and Eris on this expedition.â
âWhat have you done, exactly?â
Melitas nearly exploded in indignity. âI slew the Hydra. Have you forgotten?â
âOh. Right. I had.â She considered his proposition for a moment, before replying, succinctly, âNo.â
âNo?â
âItâs too powerful. And too rare. My friendâwouldnât approve. And I donât trust you enough yet.â
âSo I have to earn your trust? After what weâve gone through together?â
âWe havenât gone through anything together,â she said. âIf you stick around, maybe Iâll teach you the spells youâre ready to learn. Like Floating Disk.â
Now Melitas felt a surge of real anger. âYou would teach me, an initiate of the College of War, a useless spell like Floating Disk?â
âItâs best to start small.â
âIâve started small already. Youâre hardly older than me, you know. You will not teach me Floating Disk.â
âOkay. How about Hold Portal?â
âI can see what you think of me, then,â Melitas said. âUnderestimate me at your own peril. If you donât want my help, I should do just as well without you. And as for the curseâor whatever it isâon that child, be grateful to know you shanât have my help in lifting it.â
He was furious now and near to lashing out. Magicians were rare anywhere in Esenia, especially in Veshod, and he had come this far with the intention of being special. Aletheia, and now Eris, robbed him of that.
He had turned his favorite professor to cinders with a single spell. That was power he knew he had. Immense and dangerous. It was within him, as sure as it was within any magician. That these two women would not recognize it was their loss. He did not need to endure it.
Aletheia sensed his anger, because her deadpan softened, and she said, âMelitas. I didnât know any real spell for years, after I started traveling with Eris. And Erisâwhen she left the tower, she didnât know any at all, except Wisdom of the Sages. She learned most of the rest from books. You canât just skip the line and ask us to teach you rare magic. It isnât safe. Youâll kill yourself trying to use it, not to mention the people around you. You have to earn it.â She sighed. âAnd the fact that you killed your own professor just shows that you arenât ready. Iâm sorry. You need to learn how to control your Essence.â
His teeth never parted as he spoke: âThen teach me. Fine. Do you want to start withâwith Hold Portal? Then letâs start with it.â
She shook her head. âI canât. Itâs too much work. And⦠you arenât worth it. Not yet. Weâre not even friends.â
She seemed to take no joy in the words. Eris would have savored every syllable, telling him he was worthless, that he should kill himself, that she would kill him for him if he preferred. But Aletheia wasnât cruel. He had seen already that she was patient and kind. And for her to repudiate him like thatâshe meant every word.
Melitas wanted to show her his power. He suddenly came to hate her. He could do to her like he had done to Professor Rasena. She had been a powerful warmage; what was Aletheia? A small girl? Nothing, not compared to a Magister, nor even to Melitas himself.
His cheeks were red. His skin felt hot everywhere. He imagined what she would look like when turned to ash and blowing away in the wind.
But he held himself back. He needed to wait until tomorrow, when he had met the Boyar. Thenâthen he could let his anger loose.
He turned and stormed back down the parapet. âUgly bitch,â he said as he turned, and Aletheia said nothing in response.
He made it to the wall and jumped to the ground. A quick burst of mana was enough to break his fallâthat was easy magic. Then he retired to his bedroll.
He still couldnât sleep. He covered his head in blankets anyway.
âIs he awake?â
Melitas stirred. He pulled the blanket down to his neck. The moon had set and the sky was pitch dark, but it was still night. At first he saw nothing but black against black.
And then he saw two red eyes.
He recognized it. He knew what it was without ever having seen it before.
âDo not scream. I will not harm you.â
He tried to scramble away. He didnât know any spells of light, except to conjure flame, but he could not concentrate closely enough to use such directed magic. Instead he shook his head as his heart exploded.
âGet away,â he said. âYouâabomination! What the hell are you?â
âDonât you want to play with me?â it said.
It kneeled down, to bring its head very near his.
Melitas closed his eyes.
âI will not hurt you, if you play.â
He dared to peek. The Shadow Man brought a tendril-like and inky hand up to his face; and when it brushed against his skin, he felt pure ice.
âYou will like this game,â it added.
âWhat?â he whispered. âWhat game?â
âYou do not like the small one. She will not play with you, because she does not value you. Nor do you like the mother, for she plays with no one. Not even my little crow. She is cruel and evil. She treats you and I as though we are enemies, when we seek only to be friends.â
Melitas had to focus to speak through his panting. âYouâyou listened to what I said? To Aletheia?â
âOf course, silly magician. I hear everything said in the dark.â
âWhat do you want?â
âI have watched you. You desire the cruel motherâs stick. You have watched it from afar. You have mumbled on it in your sleep.â
âI have?â
The dark head nodded. âAnd I can see, you would like the small aunt to suffer, for how she has treated you. But you neednât suffer in return.â
âYou want me to kill them,â Melitas said slowly.
âNo. You need only to make it dark.â
He had calmed for a moment, but his heart picked up again. He began to shake. âDo it yourself,â he whispered.
âI cannot. The magicians make it bright the moment they see me. I am driven away. But if they could not make it bright, then I could do to them as I did to the troll. Then my little crow will be mine forever, and no one will stand between us. And you will have revenge for how cruelly they have treated youâand Erisâ magic items shall be yours.â
Melitas shook his head. Yet he stared at the Shadow Man closely, and he saw a new flurry of visions.
He could forget the Boyar. The Tower would not be his concern. If he had Erisâ staff, and her focus, and if he were to be known as the one who killed herâhe had had these thoughts before, hadnât he? And now, with this monsterâs help, they could be put into action. Showing Aletheia her mistake would be nothing more than dessert.
âOkay,â he said. âConsider it done.â