Read The Shadowmage Trilogy (Twilight of Kerberos: The Shadowmage Books) Online
Authors: Matthew Sprange
Standing in front of him, Adrianna wore a pained expression.
“Please, Lucius, he will keep us here all day if you don’t do as he says.”
“There are worse ways to spend an afternoon,” Lucius said, but dutifully closed his eyes and concentrated on the threads of magic.
“Now, take a deep breath, and open your eyes,” said Forbeck, “but keep the magic in your vision.”
This was an exercise Lucius had been made to practise many time before, and he had become somewhat proficient at it. While using magic in battle or on a thieves’ mission, he had grown used to summoning the arcane power in a split second. However, doing it slowly, while training, had always been more difficult. Perhaps it had something to do with the lack of adrenaline, maybe it was simply because his life was not at risk.
Gradually, it had dawned on him why Forbeck continually repeated exercises like this, concentrating on elements of the craft that, in theory, he could already do quite easily. By performing the actions slowly, consciously, he could study the magic more closely. It was like duelling; there were people who were natural talents in the use of a blade, and could be quite formidable fighters. If, however, they were taught to slow down their actions and actually study what they did and
why
, they could be rebuilt as far superior warriors.
In the end, magic was not that different from combat. The source of the power just came from elsewhere.
“Create fire.”
Lucius held up a palm and a swirling ball of fire sparked in his hand, then steadied.
“Good,” said Forbeck. “Now, pass it to Adrianna.”
Adrianna waited patiently as Lucius willed the fire to, slowly, lift from his hand and cross to hers. He felt a mental nudge as her magic briefly brushed against his own. Their eyes met, and she gave him a slight nod. He realised they were both thinking the same thing; a year ago, this amount of control would have been beyond him. Today, however, Forbeck wanted more.
“Nice. Now, let Adrianna pass into the shadows.”
Lucius took a deep breath before starting the new conjuration. He had wreathed himself in darkness many times while working with thieves, and it was something all Shadowmages could do. To pass that ability onto someone else, however, was quite difficult.
In his mind, he saw the threads spinning around the single strand that fed the natural forces sustaining the fire in Adrianna’s hand. He could see wisps of energy spiral off that strand as his spell continued to pull energy away. Concentrating, he slowed the other threads down so he could pick the grey, almost colourless strand that governed the magics he used to hide himself from others.
Plucking the thread, he suddenly became mindful of controlling the conjuration he already had manifested. A break in concentration could either snuff out the flame or cause it to swell in intensity, searing Adrianna. He felt his forehead grow wet with perspiration.
“Steady, Lucius,” Forbeck said softly.
Lucius visualised draping a cloak of raw arcane power around Adrianna. Before him, her outline turned indistinct and pale.
Lucius could also feel Adrianna’s presence in his mind, a vessel that contained a solid core of magic, potent and vivid. He felt the warmth of her arcane power breathe through him. Adjusting his control of the shadow cloak that he had spun around her, he reached out to brush against her presence, feeling the magical energies respond to his touch.
Looking up, he saw Adrianna staring at him, wide-eyed, mouth slightly open in surprise. She then smiled wolfishly, and he reddened in embarrassment. Though he had known Adrianna for years now, he had never had a moment with her that was so intimate.
The cloak of shadows fell from Adrianna and the ball of flame spluttered as Lucius’ control was disrupted by a flood of emotion.
“Concentrate,” Forbeck said, apparently unaware of what was passing between his two students. “We have a long way to go yet, Lucius.”
The next exercises took a while to work through, as Forbeck pushed his levels of concentration further and further. Every time Lucius’ mental control failed, Forbeck would start him again from the beginning.
First, Adrianna’s cloak of shadows was brought back into existence. Then Lucius was commanded to flood his muscles with power, greatly increasing his strength and physical endurance, before he created an invisible shield that he had to manoeuvre to deflect small stones that Forbeck pelted him with. He was told to cast his mind around the warehouse to locate the nearest vermin – and then suck its life out with the most vile of death magics.
Each new task required a new strand of energy to be pulled, teased and shaped, even as Lucius tried to maintain the other conjurations. He was not always successful, and he received a particularly painful lesson when his shield failed and one of Forbeck’s pebbles caught him on the temple. Even then, he was proud that of all the spells that failed from the break in concentration as his world spun around, the flame in Adrianna’s hand was not one of them.
Finally, soaked with sweat, Lucius thought he had achieved what Forbeck was searching for. With the ball of fire, stone shield and cloak of shadows, he had three spells running simultaneously, and he felt he could keep them going for at least a minute or two longer. However, Forbeck still wanted more.
“Feel the magic flow through you, Lucius. Reach out with your mind, and search the remaining threads. You have always felt their presence, but I want you to become ever more familiar with them. Imagine a time when you can control any number of them. Don’t see them,
feel
them.”
Reaching out, Lucius could clearly visualise the spinning threads, three of them static and stable as he continued to draw upon their power.
He brushed against each thread, drawing a murmur of satisfaction from Forbeck as he passed over two of them, triggering a tremor in those forces that Forbeck could feel. While Forbeck was a far more accomplished Shadowmage than he was – would likely ever be – the master was limited to just a few forms of magic, as were all Shadowmages. It was Lucius’ ability, perhaps unique, to feel
all
forms of magic that had drawn Forbeck to him.
The threads that he was still taking power from felt taut and straight, while the others seemed to snake around his fingers, ready to be moulded and forged. Slowly, Lucius made his way from strand to strand, sensing each one’s energy and potential. He reached out for the next and felt... nothing. An empty place that should be filled. All he could feel was darkness, and a chill cold swept over him, freezing his mind. Lucius stared straight into a void, a region of absolute, utter nothing.
Crying out, Lucius fell, the conjurations forgotten.
Lucius came to and opened his eyes to look up at Adrianna’s face, her expression a mixture of curiosity and concern. Her hand was brushing his brow, and his head lay in her lap.
“Are you alright?”
Lucius frowned, trying to recall what had happened. “I think so.”
“You gave us quite a scare,” Forbeck said. “I’ve never seen a loss of concentration do that before – not to someone as proficient as you.”
“No, it wasn’t that,” Lucius said. “It was something else. Something cold and dark and... I don’t know how to describe it.”
Adrianna helped Lucius to his feet.
“Try,” Forbeck said.
“I just saw nothing. No, that’s not right. It was an empty space. I reached for a new strand, one that, somehow, I knew should be there. But it wasn’t.”
“Have you used this strand before?”
Lucius thought hard. “No. Never. But I just felt as though it should be there. It’s like... someone takes a book from your shelf, but you cannot remember which book they took. And yet you still know it is gone. Does that make any sense?”
“Maybe,” Forbeck said. “It is certainly fascinating. Lucius, I have always said you are something of a mystery to me. Most Shadowmages are confined to the study of just one or two forms of magic. But you are different. You have access to all forms of magic, and I don’t know why. My interest, of course, is whether this is something that all Shadowmages
should
be able to do, but have just forgotten over the ages.”
“So what type of magic is it that is formed of nothing?”
“I really don’t know. Maybe some strand of magic is missing...”
He trailed off, prompting Lucius to speak.
“Yes?”
Forbeck smiled. “I can give you a legend, for whatever that is worth. What do you know of the Old Races?”
“They built the harbour outside the city thousands of years ago. Apparently. Every now and again we hear about some artefact of theirs in the guild. That’s about it.”
“The two Old Races formed two great empires, elves on one side, dwarfs on the other. These two empires were far more advanced than we men have ever been. There are tales of huge towers a mile high, of great magics that could fulfil any desire, of mighty sky ships that, some say, could even voyage to Kerberos itself.
“For millennia, these two empires worked together in peace and mutual prosperity, but something went wrong. Elf began to fight dwarf, and a terrible, terrible war broke out. The land shook and the sea boiled – even the sky itself burned with the magic the two empires unleashed upon one another. The death toll was catastrophic, but still they fought on, each determined to construct bigger and better war machines or destructive spells. In the end, one side went too far. Think on this for a moment. The wizards of Pontaine long ago classified the types of magic: necromancy, natural magic, spells of shadow, elemental forces, and battle magic. Once the wizards had this structure and began classifying individual spells, however, certain issues became readily apparent.”
“What issues?” Lucius asked.
“They soon discovered that necromantic castings were naturally more powerful than those rooted in natural forces. In their turn, spells governing natural forces had dominance over shadow.”
“That means one wizard will naturally be better than a peer, no matter how hard they both study,” Lucius said.
“Well, sort of,” Forbeck said. “Effort and raw talent still count for something, I am happy to say. But you have the essence of it. However, think about it in respect to your own abilities.”
“If I understand the relationship of magic, then when I face another practitioner, I can gain a natural advantage over him.”
“Precisely.”
“So why did you not explain this to me before? It might have come in useful!”
“I was interested to see whether this would have been something you discovered for yourself. You may have come across something altogether more fundamental.”
“Which is?”
“Well, there are some contradictions with this view of magic. Imagine a circle. We’ll call it the Circle of Power. Start with necromancy at the top. It is ascendant over nature, which is next around the circle. Nature, in turn is dominant over shadows. Then follow the elemental forces and battle magic.”
“So battle magic trumps necromancy, completing the circle,” said Adrianna.
“You would think so, wouldn’t you?” said Forbeck. “That is exactly what every master wizard thought for centuries. However, it has never been proved. There has never been one successful experiment or casting that proves that battle magic is ascendant over necromancy, or that necromancy is subservient to battle magic.”
“So what is dominant over necromancy?” asked Adrianna.
“Nothing. Or, at least, nothing that we have found.”
“So...” Lucius began hesitantly, not sure he had understood where Forbeck was going. “It is like a part of the circle is missing?”
“Precisely!”
“But what can cause magic to go missing?”
“The two empires fought, and one of them went too far. Everything I have ever heard and read has said it was the elves that pushed too hard and brought destruction to both empires. It is said that they had such a mastery of magic that they were able to bring one of your threads, as you call them, into the physical world – permanently. Imagine that, the essence of raw magic, made physical. It would be like... being able to wield the power of the sun. You could control the stars themselves!”
“That didn’t happen, though,” said Adrianna flatly.
“Of course not. They could not control that much magic. A cataclysm befell them. Huge portions of their empires fell into the sea, which began to churn with endless storms, as it does today. Elf and dwarf were completely wiped out, leaving our race behind. All their knowledge, all the grandeur of their civilisation, wiped out in an instant because of greed and the desire to massacre their enemies. In doing so, they took some part of magic with them.”
“Is all that true?” Lucius asked.
“No idea!” Forbeck grinned. “It fits all the known facts, but could still be completely wrong. We may never know the answers! We’ll continue your training and see what happens. Still, we have done enough for today. Rest and reflect on the tale. For my part, I must bid you farewell – affairs of other guild members call upon my time.”
“I’ll come with you,” Adrianna said.
“Foolish girl, don’t worry for my safety – I am more than capable of taking care of myself.”
“She’s right,” Lucius said, suddenly thinking of Magnus, the previous guildmaster of thieves. “You should not wander the streets alone.”