Wirrin was not nearly as relaxed as she left Esbolva the second time.
âTheyâre following you,â Mkaer rumbled.
âI can see that,â Wirrin thought.
âI smell fun,â Naertral hissed.
Wirrin was on a barge headed north up the Boclas river. Since the swamp, the Fiends had been far more talkative than Mkaer had ever been alone. And their recollection of the Godsâ War was sufficient that Wirrin hadnât bothered going to the library again, despite her desire to see Bilar before she left the city.
Also on the, relatively sparsely populated barge were Ketla Tassavolt and the mage who travelled with her. Given that they were supposed to have arrived at Epatlok three days ago, their presence was conspicuous.
âKetla,â Wirrin called, waving. âI didnât expect to see you here.â
Ketla visibly flinched from the other side of the deck and did a meek little wave. When she didnât approach, Wirrin took it upon herself to wander over. The mage stepped slightly in front of Ketla, as if trying to block Wirrin from getting too close.
âHere I thought you were going to Epatlok with Dartol,â Wirrin said, smiling.
âMust you?â Mkaer rumbled.
âOh, she must,â Naertral hissed.
âChange of plans, I suppose,â Ketla said, jaw clenched. âIâve been asked to go to Hekaulseg to conduct training with the Church there.â
âConduct training?â Wirrin grinned, talking too loud. âI forgot youâre so important to the Church, Ketla.â
A couple of the bargers looked over, but no one was too interested.
âAnd you, Wirrin?â Ketla said. âIf you donât mind my asking, of course.â
âI donât mind at all,â Wirrin said. âOur destinations are the same, in fact. Though I donât plan to stay in Hekaulseg. Iâm off to spend the winter in the desert.â
âIt still gets cold in the desert, you know,â Ketla said.
Wirrin nodded. âI surely do know that, Ketla,â she said. âIt doesnât get cold compared to Ogesivanen, though.â
Ketla failed to completely conceal a scowl. âYou mean the Snowy Mountains?â
âI do mean Ogesivanen, Ketla,â Wirrin said. âDifferent names from different places.â
Ketla settled on frowning. âTheyâre officially called the Snowy Mountains.â
Wirrin shrugged. âIt has been a long time since I would have been forbidden by law to call them Ogesivanen, Ketla.â
Ketla kept on frowning.
âA pleasure as always, Ketla,â Wirrin said, with a smile. âI expect weâll see a lot of each other on the way to Hekaulseg, so Iâm glad weâve got this misunderstanding out of the way early.â
âAre you trying to bait them, Wirrin?â Mkaer rumbled.
âThe Church claims to believe in discipline, Mkaer,â Wirrin thought. âSimply speaking Estanen isnât enough for her to decide to kill me.â
âAnd how do they know where youâre going?â Naertral burbled.
Wirrin explained about Dartolâs caravan.
The Boclas river was much wider and slower than the Toravan river. The barge was much less crowded. The sun was out and the air was cool. Wirrin watched to the west as the Esbolva basin swiftly transitioned from muddy greenery to pale, tufty grass, and sandy soil.
Wirrin had spent the least of her time in the desert, compared to the rest of Nesalan. Less than a year, all told. Like the Verdant Plains in the West, or even the Blavan Plains near Tellan, it was all too flat for Wirrinâs taste. Not to mention far too hot.
That just increased the appeal, for Wirrin. Why not take the opportunity to explore somewhere she rarely visited? And certainly sheâd never been to the centre of the desert before.
âYou could simply stay on the barge all the way to Ahepvalt,â Mkaer rumbled, interrupting Wirrinâs appreciation of the view.
âFinding Haerst would make travelling in the desert much easier,â Naertral burbled. âNot to mention, it would be more fun.â
âYou donât know it would be more fun,â Wirrin thought. âAnd Ulvaer would be equally as useful finding Haerst as the other way around.â
âWhat use could Ulvaer have in finding Haerst?â Mkaer rumbled.
âThe Fiend of Drought? Finding a sunken island? Think about it,â Wirrin thought. âAnd besides, I want to know why you dislike it so much.â
âUlvaer is unpleasant, as we have told you,â Mkaer rumbled.
âWhat does that mean, though?â Wirrin thought, smiling to herself as the edges of the desert drifted past. âUnpleasant?â
Taken from Royal Road, this narrative should be reported if found on Amazon.
âIt is just as much the Scavenger as the Drought,â Naertral burbled. âIts interests are unpalatable.â
âAre you not the Fiend of Rot, Naertral? What ground do you have to call someone else unpalatable?â
âDecay is a natural process,â Naertral shushed. âAll things decay.â
âAnd Iâm sure no snake has ever eaten decaying meat.â
âNo mage of mine has ever eaten decaying meat,â Naertral shushed.
Wirrin had to hold back a laugh. âI have eaten decaying meat, in my time,â Wirrin thought back. âSo I can assure you that is not the case.â
âAnd did you enjoy it, Wirrin? Did you savour it like a fine meal?â Mkaer rumbled.
âOh certainly not,â Wirrin thought, still smiling. âIt was quite an unpleasant experience, all told.â
âAs we have said, Ulvaer is unpleasant,â Mkaer crashed.
âHad I been a mage of Ulvaer, I think I would have had a much better time,â Wirrin thought, still holding back a laugh. âI would never have had to starve in the mountains, certainly.â
âStarve? With your skill?â Mkaer rumbled, much quieter all of a sudden.
âWe learn from our mistakes, Mkaer,â Wirrin thought. âI have learned from my mistakes. And, perhaps, you should learn from yours.â
âIgnoring Ulvaer was not a mistake,â Mkaer grumbled. âIt would have been no help to me when the so-called Gods came to my mountain.â
âWould it not?â Naertral shushed. âTo have such hunters in my swamp would have been a great boon, I suspect.â
Wirrin resisted the urge to wave vaguely as if making a point. âSee, Mkaer?â
âI still think we should go to the coast and look for Haerst,â Naertral burbled. âHaving the storm mages would have been a much greater boon.â
Wirrin resisted the urge to shrug. âUlvaer is closer, and warmer. If you can force me to go to the coast, do so.â
The rumbling and burbling of Mkaer and Naertral stayed as the Fiends did not speak.
âIf only I had not missed the opportunity in my convalescence,â Mkaer grumbled, after a minute. âThere is something interesting about you, Wirrin.â
âIâm much older than most beginning mages,â Wirrin thought.
âYou are not so much older,â Naertral burbled. âWe always sought adults. There is a hardiness that was required to be a mage that is rarely found in the young.â
âWas required?â
âWhat do you know of the Godsâ War, Wirrin?â Mkaer rumbled.
âQuite a lot, I thought,â Wirrin said. âBe more specific.â
âHad the so-called Godsâ mages been ordinary, Gnaer could have destroyed the Church with little effort,â Naertral shushed. âThey found some way, through Iltavaer, no doubt, to keep them going far beyond what had once been absolute limits.â
âSo no headaches? No need to eat so much?â Wirrin thought. âThat does sound quite useful.â
âDespite great efforts, it proved to be insurmountable,â Mkaer rumbled.
âI was under the impression that the trouble was that the Gods worked together and you six didnât,â Wirrin thought.
âIs that what the Church of these so-called Gods told you?â Naertral hissed.
âThe Church just tell it as Good triumphing over Evil,â Wirrin thought, resisting the urge to shrug. âItâs been five hundred years, they can say whatever they want.â
âFive hundred years?â Naertral burbled.
âYour friends in Ettovica told you that we didnât work together?â Mkaer rumbled.
âOh, of course,â Naertral shushed. âTevinan would say we didnât work together, wouldnât they? We were all too busy being banished for five hundred years to help poor Finaer fight the Church.â
âIn Finaerâs defence, Tevinan did hold out longer than the rest of Nesalan combined,â Wirrin thought.
âThey would, wouldnât they?â Naertral burbled. âThe only defensible geography in Nesalan, packed full of crazed Lentovt.â
Wirrin couldnât stop herself from frowning. âLentovt? Iâm Sovtanen, you know?â The landscape passing the barge was calm and basically uniform, certainly not worthy of Wirrinâs severe frown.
âValnentovt,â Naertral hissed. âRemember how we met.â
Wirrin took a breath and relaxed her face. âTetalovt, thank you.â
Naertralâs laugh was like a hundred frogs blowing bubbles in mud.
âI brought you into this world, I can take you back out,â Wirrin thought.
âProve it,â Naertral shushed.
âThe trouble was that we were unprepared,â Mkaer thundered into the conversation. âWe did as best we could, but we were limited.â
âSurely if every one of all your mages had gone to Tertic, you could have stopped the Church,â Wirrin wondered.
âNot only were their mages much more resilient than ours, but they already outnumbered us by the time they reached Tertic,â Mkaer rumbled and cracked. âIt would have taken all the armies of Nesalan to defeat them, and even then I am not so sure.â
âTevinan held them outside Bitalen for nearly ten years,â Wirrin thought. âTertic held out for what, two years?â
âTertic was surrounded, and held for five years,â Mkaer rumbled.
âAnd in the process, we destroyed almost all of the West beyond the Dividing Range,â Naertral burbled. âReduced it to rotten swamp.â
âTertic is still like that,â Wirrin thought, fighting back a frown. âBarging down the river next to the swamp is enough to get some people seriously ill, depending on the season.â
âRaerna was still pushing back the swamp four years later when the Church reached me,â Naertral burbled. âIts mages still werenât halfway done.â
Wirrin smiled, perhaps a bit more pointedly than was warranted by the first signs of cacti off in the distance. âWhen I reached that rocky hill, Mkaer told me that you wouldnât let the others into your wetland.â
âItâs more complicated than that,â Naertral burbled. âMy swamp was full of dangers that only my mages could manage. All kinds of traps and poisons and psychedelics. We did not want to risk our allies.â
âPsychedelics?â Wirrin thought.
âI was sometimes called the Fiend of Illusions,â Naertral shushed. âAll sorts of plants and frogs can have psychedelic effects. Some of my mages could replicate that, but more deliberately.â
Wirrin managed not to nod along. âAlright, so the six of you simply werenât up to the challenge,â she thought. âHas anything changed?â
âWe have but a single mage between us,â Mkaer rumbled. âWe once had more.â
âI think that was a joke, Mountain,â Naertral burbled. âMy congratulations.â
âIt was difficult,â Mkaer rumbled.
âSo we need to work out how the Godsâ mages could just keep on going?â Wirrin thought. She resisted the urge to glance across the deck to where Ketla was sitting with her mage.
âAre they still like that?â Naertral burbled.
âI have no idea,â Wirrin thought. âIâve never seen a mage do magic for an extended period of time. The closest would be perhaps half an hour of solid fighting during the riots.â
âRiots?â Naertral shushed.
Wirrin explained the 500 years riots to the two Fiends. âAnd during the four-hundred-year riots, they tore down the big Church prison in the Sovet valley. That was when the ban on Estanen finally got completely lifted.â
âWhat has actually happened in the last five hundred years?â Mkaer rumbled. âNo wars? No uprisings?â
Wirrin took a deep breath and resisted the urge to shrug. âTheyâre all called riots, arenât they?â she thought. âSupposedly there were uprisings all through the first century in Ettovica, Bitalen, Esbolva, and Louyava. None of them worked, there were still too many mages. Since then itâs riots, mostly in Ettovica.â
âNot Toravan?â Naertral shushed.
âToravan was wiped out during the war,â Mkaer rumbled. âCompletely destroyed.â
âSupposedly there are clans in the desert that are separate from the Church,â Wirrin thought. âI never found any, but I havenât spent as much time in the desert as the mountains.â
âI think youâre right, Wirrin,â Naertral burbled. âWe should find Ulvaer first.â
Wirrin smiled pre-emptively. âOh, what changed your mind?â
âIf there really are people in the desert who donât like the Church, it means our whole army wonât just be Tetalovt.â
Wirrin clapped a hand over her mouth and hoped her burst of laughter looked like a sneeze.