Book 5: Prologue – Ancient secrets finally revealed
245 1 3
X
Reading Options
Font Size
A- 15px A+
Width
Reset
X
Table of Contents
Loading... please wait.

Five thousand one hundred thirty-two years earlier …

“Have they started yet?” Gaiana asked, breathless from rushing through the corridors. She’d lost track of time trying to teach shaping magic to a group of children far too young to be learning such complicated spells. The Chosar would need more shapers if they were to rebuild the cities that had been lost.

Her husband nodded a greeting but didn’t smile. “They’re just starting now,” he said. Time had changed Argyros—he was no longer the man she’d married. The war had drained all of the humor and joy out of him, leaving nothing but a sense of duty and a determination to keep moving forward. It had been years since he’d touched her with any passion, and, in truth, she hadn’t wanted him to. She’d changed as well, more interested in her research than her marriage with this hard man she could no longer love. They were partners and friends, nothing more.

But the war was over now. Perhaps Argyros could learn to be happy again. Perhaps something could be salvaged of their relationship.

Lydos gave her a wide grin. “Perfect timing as always, Mother,” he said.

“Don’t start that,” she said, wagging a finger at him.

He just laughed. The war had shaped half his life, but unlike his father, it hadn’t broken him. His generation provided hope for the future.

First Admiral Myrrhine nodded to Gaiana but remained with the other Councilors at the far end of the observation window, giving the royal family some space.

On the other side of the window, in the ritual chamber itself, the wardens had separated into two groups, the wizards in one and Demea and Hera in the other. Boreas and Iris would be handling their parts of the ritual from a distance, with Hera participating as an elder mage rather than a wizard to even out the numbers.

The four in the wizard group arranged themselves facing each other from the cardinal directions, ten feet from their closest neighbors. Hera and Demea, too, faced each other. There was no visible indicator of Iris’s or Boreas’s readiness, but the other wardens seemed to sense it was time. They began the ritual without delay, closing their eyes as they entered a trance, the wizards muttering the words to the spell while the elder mages did something Gaiana couldn’t follow.

The wardens had been designing this ritual for years, but Gaiana had doubts about whether their goal was even possible. They’d claimed to have found some conjunction of the magics in a realm that didn’t otherwise exist, but the only people who could see it were the wardens themselves and a few wizards who could wield both elder and arcane magics. Gaiana had taken the time to learn the spell they’d used, but it had never worked for her.

General Straton snorted quietly as the ritual dragged on with no apparent effect. “This is nonsense. I don’t care what Pallis says—there’s no way a ritual to choose more wardens would be harder than a ritual to change the nature of magic itself.”

“When did you become an expert on wizardry, General?” Lydos asked. “The wardens have more experience with this than anyone.”

“And they’re centering more power in the hands of those who already wield it! Each new warden means nine more mages can achieve their full potential. Instead, we’re granting more power to the ones we already have.”

“It’ll help all of our mages, not just the wardens.”

“Did you ever notice what they didn’t say, Lydos? They never said it would make you stronger. You’ll still have trouble lighting a candle; you’ll just learn multiple ways to fail to light a candle.”

Lydos scowled. Gaiana’s son was an excellent commander of wizard troops in battle, but he wasn’t much of a wizard himself … and he had too much pride to ask Hera to bond him. Perhaps Gaiana could give the woman a few gentle hints.

Argyros cut in. “Enough! This is what we’re doing now. We can discuss other matters later.”

The two men put their argument on hold, turning back to the observation window.

“Is that supposed to happen?” the seneschal asked.

Pulses of blue and white light had begun flickering through the ritual chamber. The wardens hadn’t noticed yet—their eyes were still closed and they were now deep in trance, the ritual spell requiring their full concentration.

Gaiana’s skin tingled. She recognized wild magic from an excursion around Donvar when she was young. The ship she’d been on had sailed close to land in the hope of sighting scourlings, but instead they’d attracted a burst of wild magic which had disabled the ship’s enchantments and killed two sailors. The ship had completed the voyage on wind power alone.

Was wild magic supposed to be part of the ritual? The wardens had never mentioned it, but the spell was incredibly complicated and the smaller details were known only to the four wizards amongst them.

Then she saw something that made her blood run cold. The wardens had placed a protective barrier around the ritual chamber to prevent any distractions, but they hadn’t built it to block hostile magics from escaping. It was a cylinder rather than a sphere, and the pulses of wild magic were slipping through the floor into the undercity.

That couldn’t be intentional, could it? There was no way to control wild magic, and many of the enchantments that allowed The People to live in comfort within the mountain were located in the lower levels. What would happen if the water purifiers were destroyed? Or the power collectors for the cookers? Unleashing that much energy all at once might kill everyone in the undercity.

“Stop them!” Gaiana exclaimed. She rushed to the observation window and pounded her palms against the glass, shouting through it, but the protective barrier blocked all sound. “Try the door!”

“What’s going on?” Argyros asked her.

The others stared, confused, until Myrrhine gathered her wits and pulled on the door handle. “I can’t open it—it’s inside the barrier. What’s wrong?”

“The spell’s gone out of control!” Gaiana said. She slipped her wardbreaker out of her pocket—she’d borrowed it back from her sister at the beginning of the war—and tapped the small iron bar against the window.

Nothing happened. The protective barrier was too strongly warded for the wardbreaker to overcome, and there wasn’t time to craft a new spell designed to pierce it.

The others started pounding on the window and shouting while Straton tried to kick the door down.

It was all pointless, but somehow, something woke Warden Zachal from his trance. He saw the pulses of light and his eyes widened in panic, then he shouted something at the other wardens. When they didn’t react, he grabbed Pallis by the shoulders and shook him. The other warden still didn’t wake, too deep in the trance to notice.

Zachal saw the observers’ efforts through the window and yelled something to them, but they couldn’t hear his words through the barrier. Then another burst of wild magic pulsed around the room before launching itself downward.

A look of horror grew on the warden’s face as he realized the implications. His lips moved again, but from his stance and demeanor, it was apparent he wasn’t trying to talk to them this time. He was casting a spell.

“What’s he doing?” Argyros demanded.

Lydos started murmuring but Gaiana beat him to it, triggering her stored arcane sight spell. Her vision was immediately overlaid with information about the structure of all the spells and enchantments within view.

“A healing spell!” she announced in relief. Zachal was a healing wizard, and he’d apparently realized the danger to the workers in the undercity. An undirected, wide-area healing cast over a long distance wasn’t ideal, but it had a warden’s strength behind it. It was better than nothing.

And it was a message to the observers as well. Lydos realized it first. “We need to send healers below!”

“And warding specialists to block the wild magic!” Gaiana said.

What wild magic?” Argyros asked.

She didn’t answer her husband’s question—there was no time to explain. Before she could summon help, though, another pulse of wild magic echoed around the chamber, but instead of escaping downward, it flowed into Zachal’s healing spell. In the visible spectrum, nothing changed, but to Gaiana’s arcane sight, the spell turned dark and sickly—necromancy, the magic of death. Zachal realized the same thing and stopped his casting, but the spell didn’t end. Both it and the bursts of wild magic were now pulling their power from somewhere else—that strange conjunction to which the wardens had tried to open a gateway.

If there was necromantic magic loose below, sending rescuers was no longer an option.

“Evacuate the undercity!” Gaiana said. “Sound the alarms!”

“I’ll go!” Admiral Myrrhine said, heading for the nearest alarm control.

But just as she reached the entrance to the corridor, there was a flash of blue. Myrrhine cried out in pain, and then half of her body disintegrated. There were quiet thumps as the remaining pieces fell to the ground.

That burst of light had escaped through the top of the barrier rather than the bottom. It was loose in Fortress West … which was full of spells, wards, and enchantments that could be twisted and warped by the wild magic.

Gaiana stared at the mangled remains of her friend, then forced her attention away. I’m back in the war, she told herself. Mourning comes later.

Zachal attempted another casting, perhaps to banish the flawed healing spell, but the longer he was locked in there with it, the more it drained his strength. He fell to his knees, dazed, before he could finish.

It was the growing encroachment of the necromancy magic that finally woke Pallis. He saw Zachal at the center of the corrupted spell and shouted angrily at the other man, but Zachal didn’t rouse from his stupor. In frustration, Pallis triggered a stored banishment spell. Gaiana held her breath in hope, watching through her arcane sight, but the spell drew in another burst of flickering blue and white light. The banishment spell faded away as it was swallowed up by the wild magic, and Pallis realized for the first time that there was a greater danger. He seemed to think Zachal was the cause, and with a grim look of determination, he waded into the heart of the necromancy spell, drawing his sword and thrusting it through the human warden’s chest.

Zachal’s life faded away, as did the necromantic spell, but not before it claimed Pallis. The First Warden dropped his sword and slumped to the ground, struggling to push himself up to his hands and knees before falling again. This time he didn’t move.

But he’d succeeded, at least in part—the necromancy spell was gone.

Another flash of blue raced down the corridor outside the observation room, followed by screams from deep within Fortress West. And then the repeating sound of a deep bell—someone had reached the alarms. But the tone was wrong. It was the attack alert for Fortress Central. The wild magic had already escaped the western complex.

Argyros and Lydos were talking, trying to get Gaiana’s attention, but she ignored them. Her mind leapt from idea to idea, processing and discarding plans as fast as she could think, until she was left with only one.

The necromancy spell was gone. It might have drawn power from the conjunction, but it had still failed once the mage who’d cast it was dead.

The same was likely true for the ritual spell and the bursts of wild magic.

The wardens had to die.

It wouldn’t stop the wild magic that had already escaped, but it would prevent more from coming through.

Another pulse of blue, this time within the observation room. General Straton was left staring in shock at his left arm, which now ended just below the elbow. Blood gushed out and he swayed, slumping against the wall.

The wardens were protected by the barrier, and Gaiana wasn’t skilled in direct combat magics, but there was another option. Her wardbreaker might not be strong enough to cancel the barrier spell, but it could certainly take out a ward that Gaiana herself had crafted … and directly above the wardens was the three-foot-thick ceiling of shaped stone. And above that, another level, and another, and another.

But all of Fortress West was part of the same shaping. The early settlers of Tir Yadar had crafted each portion of the city in massive blocks, applying ritual magic to shaping spells for the first time. To undo part of Fortress West, Gaiana would have to undo all of it.

Could she make that decision? There were nearly a thousand people in the complex—not just the wardens but the researchers, the wizardry academy, and all the support staff. Plus Gaiana herself, and her husband, and her son. There wasn’t enough time to flee. If the ritual progressed any further, it would be too late.

If she didn’t take action, everyone in Tir Yadar was doomed. Everyone in Van Kir. Possibly everyone everywhere. The people in Fortress West would die no matter what she did.

Sacrifice a thousand to save millions. Sacrifice her son to save her people.

There was only one choice she could make.

She touched the wardbreaker to the shaped stone, canceling the stability wards across all of Fortress West, then slapped her hand against the wall and cast the spell of unshaping as quickly as she could utter the words. The crushing weight of the stone should be enough to kill, but wardens were resourceful and Gaiana couldn’t guarantee they hadn’t taken protective spells or devices into the ritual chamber. For good measure, she modified the spell to turn the stone solid once again, ten seconds after it was unshaped. Long enough for the fortifications to fall, but not long enough for the liquid stone to drain away from the area and leave its victims uncovered.

She spoke the last word of the spell.

There was just enough time to grab Lydos’s hand before the end.

--

Darkness. A flash of blue light. Or was it a thousand flashes?

Shouting, one voice and then another, the words incomprehensible.

Pain, beyond anything she’d ever felt before.

Then darkness again.

Time passed in the formless void. She needed to remember. What did she need to remember? Where was she? Who was she?

Fractured thoughts began to coalesce.

Hera. That was what she was called by others. Others? What others? There was only endless nothingness.

She tried to move. It was slow, as if swimming in … swimming in … water. That was it—swimming happened in water. But this wasn’t water. It felt wrong. She had to get out.

How did she know that?

Elder senses. That was a new memory. Elder senses could show her the way. She cast out with her mind and was inundated with new information that was both comfortably familiar and impossible to understand. But it was enough to know there was an open area ahead, if she could just push through.

She continued toward it, moving with her mind, not with her … what was it called?

Body.

Yes, her body could help her move, if she could just remember how. But the few memories that slipped through weren’t of any use.

She had to get out. She had to get to the open area before …

Before what?

Time was a new memory. Time moved from one moment to the next. That meant something had happened before the dark void of nothingness. That was the thing she needed to remember.

And then she was there, emerging from wherever she’d been into a scene of chaos.

People shouting, running in different directions. Others walking slowly and silently, injured and dirty. It was like the war all over again.

And with that, memories came rushing back, each one slamming into her with the force of a weapon. Not everything, but enough to remember who she was, beyond just the name.

Hera stood in the courtyard at the center of the fortress complex. Ahead of her, the World Fountain had stopped flowing, its waters no longer rippling over the surface. The lights lining the metallic orb flickered before becoming steady again.

Near the orb was a series of large figures in strange shapes. Statues. The totem walk, her mind whispered to her. A place of familiarity and comfort. She headed in that direction. Moving was easier here. She no longer felt like she was being held back.

A woman stumbled into her path, trying to support a man with blood running down his face.

“Help us!” the woman shouted at a mass of people who’d gathered on the far side of the courtyard. The man was heavier than her, and close to losing consciousness. The two wore similar clothing. Uniforms. Soldiers. Of course—the military complex was nearby.

They hadn’t noticed Hera.

What happened? she tried to say, but nothing came out. She’d forgotten how to speak.

The details would have to wait—she could still help them. She reached for the man’s other side.

Her hands passed through his body.

In shock, Hera looked down at herself. There was nothing to see. Her hands had been barely visible when she’d moved them, transparent, but when she stopped, they faded away to nothingness, along with the rest of her body.

The two soldiers hadn’t noticed her at all. They walked through her as if she wasn’t there.

Hera looked back the way she’d come. Fortress West was gone. The outer walls of shaped stone had melted, hiding the entrances. Her elder senses told her the same thing had happened throughout the entire facility. That’s what she’d been swimming through—solid stone.

Was this death?

What had happened? There had been others in Fortress West with her, hadn’t there? Were they all dead? They’d been doing something before the dark void had come, doing something in the time she couldn’t remember.

A cloud of flickering blue and white light descended through the cavern’s stone roof, causing panicked screams from the people gathered in the courtyard. They fled in fear in all directions. One wasn’t fast enough. A clerk, by the look of him. He was struck by what almost seemed to be a small bolt of lightning, but instead of the burning scars typical of lightning magic, the man’s entire body dissolved.

Then the cloud struck again, at the World Fountain. The lights on the orb went out, and this time they didn’t return.

The cloud passed through the floor, heading for the undercity.

Was this some sort of attack? Had Vatarxis returned and assaulted Tir Yadar itself? It didn’t have the feel of demonic magic. Had some researcher’s spell gone awry?

Whatever its origins, it had to be stopped, but how? As a Mage Knight, Hera’s arcane magic had been deliberately limited, and she’d never learned much in the way of warding spells. But she had magical defenses of her own—she could protect herself while she sought out someone who could help.

Who, though? Many of the best combat wizards would have been in Fortress West. And the wardens …

That thought stopped her cold. The wardens—her people’s strongest defense—had been with her before the nothingness. If they were still alive, they would have already been fighting back against the attack.

The wardens were gone, Fortress West was gone, and even if she found someone who could help, how would she get their attention if no one could see or hear her?

Her attention was drawn once again by the seven statues along the totem walk. Eight totems, seven statues—Snake wasn’t welcome in Tir Yadar.

The totems could help. Were they aware of what was happening? They couldn’t be everywhere, and though they favored the Chosar, the world was a very large place.

Then a bird appeared high in the cavern, circling around the courtyard twice before landing on a statue that matched its shape. An owl. The creature was only there in spirit, transparent like Hera’s hands when she’d moved them. Its physical body was elsewhere. How did she know that? It was new information, not a memory.

The owl spoke into her mind. What have you done, foolish child? it asked. You’ve altered the structural integrity holding the Collision in balance! You risk destroying our worlds!

Hera shrieked in pain. The voice was too loud. Much too loud. She had to make it stop.

She thrust her hands forward and a stream of darkness swirled out. Magic, but not like anything she’d known before. Three magics working together as one. Elder magic, the first she’d ever touched, was easy to distinguish. And arcane magic, though not a spell she’d ever seen before. And then there was something new. A fragment of a memory. Something about a ritual.

The darkness lanced out at the owl spirit and the creature disintegrated before her eyes.

And then the void of nothingness returned.

--

By the fourth time Hera flickered back into awareness, she’d recovered enough of her memories to think clearly. The best place to learn more about what had happened would be Fortress Central and the Governmental Council chamber. In a time of crisis, the chamber would be occupied at all hours of the day.

But first, she had to get there. Each time she woke, she was back inside the melted remains of Fortress West. She floated through the stone once again, more quickly than before.

The courtyard had been different on each attempt she’d made. The second time, the panicked crowds had disappeared. Instead, dozens of bodies had been laid out side by side, a mix of clerks, librarians, and soldiers—people who worked near Fortress West and who must have been killed by the rogue spell. By her third waking session, the bodies had been moved away somewhere and the courtyard was nearly empty. The few people present walked quickly, with a sense of purpose, but their eyes darted all around, searching for any of those clouds of flickering blue light.

Now, on this fourth attempt, the courtyard had changed again. There was a makeshift infirmary set up near the entrance to Fortress East—the military complex. More bodies had been laid out nearby, and healing wizards, surgeons, and nurses were attending to the wounded, all of whom were wearing soldiers’ uniforms.

What had happened? Hera stopped, tempted to change direction. Many of her friends were in the High Guard. Were they safe?

But she only had a limited amount of time before she disappeared again. The council was still the best option.

She passed by the totem walk, averting her eyes from Owl’s statue, then continued on to Fortress Central, passing through the walls so she wouldn’t accidentally run into someone in the doorways. There was no physical sensation when people passed through her, but she hated the thought of it.

Near the administrative offices, one of the head clerks was issuing orders to his underlings.

“Take only this year’s ledgers,” he said. “Leave the rest.”

Leave them?” a young woman asked.

“We’ll return for them when it’s safe. Go—and hurry. I want everyone down in the tunnels within the hour.”

Return from where? Which tunnels?

“My parents …” one of the clerks said, a worried expression on his face.

“Bring your family groups. Let them know they can move to the front of the line as long as they’re ready to leave immediately.”

A wave of relief washed over the group and they dispersed to their tasks.

What was going on?

Hera imagined herself having legs—a trick she’d learned during her previous waking session—and jogged to the Governmental Council chamber.

It was occupied, but not by the people she’d expected to find. Sitting in the king’s spot at the head of the table was the elderly Under-General Timos. Where was King Argyros? Prince Lydos? General Straton? Hera recognized a few of the other faces, but she didn’t know anyone else by name.

Someone wearing the uniform of an undercity engineer was speaking. “The recyclers aren’t designed to provide all of our air,” he said. “They’re only meant to keep it fresh. The enchantments are already failing in North Tower. We need to reopen the vents.”

“Then we’ll all choke to death on the smoke,” said a High Guard scout, his face streaked with soot. “It’s too thick to breathe, and it’s getting worse now that the firestorms have moved into the forests.”

Timos spoke up. His voice was tired. “Why haven’t the elder mages put out the fires yet? We need to protect the outer city.”

The two soldiers nearest him exchanged glances. The younger, a lieutenant, was Timos’s adjutant, if Hera remembered correctly. He said, “General? We already lost the outer city. Do you remember?”

Timos slumped down in his chair. “The people?” he asked hesitantly.

The lieutenant shook his head, his face grim. “Some made it inside when the firestorms first hit, but … Sir, it was only a few hundred. Everyone else is dead.”

A few hundred?

Hera felt the need to steady herself, but she couldn’t touch anything. The outer city was gone? Nearly a quarter of a million people lived there, and that wasn’t counting all the human tribes who’d gathered for protection during the war, or the refugees from Tir a Tir and Tir Ankara.

They were all gone?

Timos shook his head slowly back and forth as if trying to ignore what he’d just been told. “The fires,” he said. “We still have to put out the fires so we can open the vents.”

“We can’t,” the scout said. “The wizards say there’s some sort of power still leaking out from Fortress West, and the firestorms are feeding on it even when there’s nothing left to burn. Any time the elder mages do manage to put out a fire, the wildstorms just light another.”

Wildstorm? That must be what they were calling the clouds of blue and white light.

“If we let the recyclers fail, we won’t have a choice about opening the vents,” the engineer said. “Smoke or air poisoning.”

“Can the enchanters fix the recyclers?” Timos asked. “Or make new ones?”

The others in the room looked away, leaving it to the lieutenant to break the news. “Sir, most of the enchanters and shapers were in Fortress West when it was destroyed.”

“Oh. Oh, yes, so you said.”

This was the person making the decisions? Timos had been retired to desk duty before the war had started, but even if he’d still had his full wits about him, he wasn’t the right man to be leading the council. The Under-General had the soul of a bookkeeper, not a warrior.

He stared blankly at the papers in front of him.

The young lieutenant stood and paced back and forth. “If the elder mages can’t put out the fires, don’t waste their strength trying. Bring them back here. They can help clean the air long enough for the evacuation to get fully underway.”

General Timos didn’t contradict him, nor did any of the other higher ranking officers.

The scout nodded. “Yes, sir,” he said, then hurried out of the chamber.

Timos stared after him. “Good, yes, good idea.” That seemed to wake him up. “We have to speed up the evacuation. Tell the people to take no more than they can carry. Commandeer any cart and wagon you can find in the inner city that’ll fit into the western tunnels. Don’t allow the carters to sell or rent them—we need them to transport food and supplies.”

The western tunnels? The city was evacuating all the way to the Skotinos Mountains? The newly discovered route was narrow and cramped, and the miners and tunneling golems were still working to enlarge it into a real road.

Once they were done, they would have a secure underground passage between the two most heavily fortified Tirs, but it wasn’t done yet. How could the entire city—even just the inner city—evacuate through the hundreds of miles of tunnels?

“Sir, the horses were killed when Fortress East collapsed.”

Fortress East? This time Hera did need support. She thumped down in a chair. Somehow it held her up though she couldn’t feel it beneath her. The military complex was destroyed? All of it? There were tens of thousands of people there at any given time—people Hera had fought alongside in the war.

That explained why no one more competent was in charge. The officers’ quarters and administration compound were located in Fortress East, along with the command center where the High Guard generals would oversee the military response to any disasters or emergencies.

A look of sorrow passed over Timos’s face at the mention of horses. He’d been cavalry once. “The people will have to pull the wagons themselves.”

He paused again, and the lieutenant spoke up. “What about the Enchantment Repository? We need that other golem to help clear the tunnels. Three isn’t enough.”

“The warding extends around the entire repository,” said a gray-haired woman of middle years. Hera recognized her as a wizard, one of Allos’s researchers. “We can’t break through. We’re still trying to get a Sending past the storms to ask the other Tirs for a wardbreaker, though I don’t know if there are any strong enough.”

Why would they need to break into the Enchantment Repository? The wardens might be dead, but most of the senior members of the council could open the door.

“Can the Mage Knights open it?” asked an infantry colonel. “Thedan sits on the council.”

“He was new to the council,” the wizard replied. “According to the records, he hadn’t been added to the warding spell yet, and we haven’t wanted to risk bringing him out of stasis to find out for sure.”

“Why not?” the lieutenant asked. “Without the wardens, we’ll need the knights.”

A look of sorrow passed over the woman’s face. “Because of the children,” she said. “Before the ritual, Allos sent away all the other mages who could wield both arcane and elder magic, but he thought the children we were watching for their potential would be safe because they hadn’t yet built up the arcane pathways in their minds. All seven of them have been killed. The wildstorms are seeking out anyone who wields both magics.”

“Then we’ll have to leave the Mage Knights in stasis for their own protection,” Timos said. “Swords won’t be of any use against this enemy. We’ll come back for them once the wildstorms are gone.”

“Have you learned anything more about the storms?” the lieutenant asked the researcher.

“We’ve confirmed they’re wild magic, similar to what we’ve seen near Donvar in the past,” she replied. “We can’t banish them, but warding spells to block magic will stop them for a short time. And …” She hesitated. “We have a final toll for the large storm that passed through West Tower yesterday. It killed over nine hundred Chosar, but it left three human servants unharmed.”

Everyone sat forward at that.

“What do you mean?” the lieutenant asked. “It only affects our people? Is it an attack on us?”

“I don’t see how,” the wizard said. “The wildstorms aren’t bound by any mage or spell, and we’ve measured the point of origin for the storms in Van Kir—they definitely came from the ritual chamber in Fortress West.”

“What about the other points of origin?” asked one of the officers. “It could still be an attack.”

“The storms are causing too much interference to identify the exact locations, but we’re seeing the most activity here, Tir Navis, Donvar, and an island chain west of Donvar. Donvar is actually getting the worst of it. If it is an attack, the scourlings may have been the target rather than us, but the timing of the wardens’ ritual is too close to be a coincidence.”

Another memory sprang into Hera’s mind—not all the wardens had been in the ritual chamber. Boreas’s presence at Tir Navis was public information, but no one in this room was likely to know Iris had been on that unnamed chain of islands. And that didn’t explain Donvar. Why was it always Donvar that attracted wild magic?

“Unless it was the wardens themselves who were trying to attack the scourlings,” the lieutenant said. “But you’ve confirmed the Skotinos Mountains will be safe?”

“No,” the researcher said. “The wildstorms are everywhere, but it’s safer there than here. Besides, if the firestorms reach as far as the mountains, there’s less vegetation there to burn.”

“It’s too late to second-guess our decision,” General Timos said. “Thousands of people are already on their way, and we have nowhere else to send them.” He flipped to another page in his stack of papers. “Have we learned anything new on the undercity victims?” He sounded more confident with his notes to back up his questions.

It was a High Guard healing wizard that replied. “We have them trapped in the sewer levels.”

“Trapped? You’re supposed to be helping them!”

“We managed to capture three, but healing spells don’t do anything. Their minds and bodies have already shut down. They may be moving around, but by any reasonable definition, they’re already dead. We would like permission to destroy the rest. It’s cruel to leave them like that.”

“No,” Timos said. “I’m not going to authorize killing our own people.”

“General, they died two days ago.”

“You don’t know that! Maybe by someone else’s definition, they can still be saved. You say you have them trapped? Fine. We’ll leave them locked up where they can’t hurt anyone, and make sure they have enough food and water.”

“They don’t eat or drink,” the healing wizard said. “They’ll kill anyone who comes near, but other than that, they just stand around. They ignore the food we leave out for them.”

“Why did that only happen in the undercity?” the lieutenant asked.

It was the other wizard who replied, the woman who’d worked for Allos. “There was a wave of necromantic magic shortly before Fortress West was destroyed. It might be the reason the ritual failed, but there’s no way of knowing.”

Hera didn’t remember anything like that, but she’d been in a trance, and busy with the elder magic half of the ritual. Necromancy was arcane magic, and she hadn’t been paying attention to the wizards.

But that brought to mind another fragment of a memory. The king, the prince, and the rest of the council had decided to watch the ritual in person. No one had expected it to be dangerous.

The wardens were dead, or perhaps in the same half-dead state Hera had found herself in.

There was no Governmental Council. Not anymore.

This was all that was left.

--

Six months later …

Hera was crouching down, holding her hands over a sleeping, pregnant refugee’s belly, when Demea’s incorporeal form popped into existence beside her.

“Hera! I—. What are you doing?”

“I’m trying to concentrate!” she snapped.

Demea was quiet for a moment as she watched. “I can’t follow the magic.”

“Don’t use your elder senses alone. Combine it with the new one.” The totemic sense. The magic they’d stolen from their one-time allies. Not allies any longer, though. The remaining totems knew Hera had killed Owl. They’d abandoned the Chosar to their fate.

“You’re changing the child?” Demea asked.

“Iris showed me how.”

“She hasn’t completed her experiments yet. We don’t know if it’s safe!”

“We can’t wait any longer!” Hera said. “The wildstorms will kill the Chosar one by one unless we do something about it.”

Iris had found a way to make The People immune to the direct effects of the wildstorms, as if they were human or elven, but it could only be performed on unborn children. Every day Hera waited, more babes were born that were still at risk. She refused to delay any further.

“You’re changing them all?” Demea said. “Iris is only dealing with a few thousand of The People, and fewer than a hundred pregnancies. There were a quarter of a million refugees from Tir Yadar!”

“Not anymore. We lost forty thousand over the winter.”

Many of the deaths were due to hunger and sickness rather than wildstorms. The elder mages had created indoor water gardens in every cavern that could be spared, but it wouldn’t be enough to feed everyone. The stored grain at Tir Yadar had run low, and then two weeks earlier, seven miles of the tunnel system had collapsed. There was no longer a safe route through the firestorms to retrieve the last of the supplies and knowledge left in the once-great city.

Scavenging parties went west from the mountains on a daily basis, and there’d even been a few attempts at planting winter crops, but their efforts were stymied by roving bands of armed humans who blamed the Chosar for the destruction. While the wildstorms themselves didn’t kill humans outright, they could still pervert any spell they encountered, and the fires and lightning storms they brought had caused devastation all over the continent. The heavy smoke in the sky was only now beginning to disperse. Hopefully it would be gone before it ruined the summer growing season.

“Forty thousand? We have to do something!”

“I am!” Hera exclaimed. “This was all it would allow! Whatever your great plan was for combining the magics, it failed. I wield more power now than I ever have before, and I can’t do anything with it!”

This new reality had placed restrictions on what the wardens could and couldn’t do with their powers. Hera hadn’t had any luck in deciphering the rules behind it all.

“It wasn’t my plan,” Demea muttered.

Hera wanted to rage at her, to let loose with all the anger she felt toward the other wardens, but what good would it do? Demea was right—she’d hardly been the driving force behind the ritual. Plus, the woman was grieving. All five of her bondmates who’d made it through the war had been killed by the ritual. Two had been instructors at the wizardry academy, which had been destroyed along with the rest of Fortress West, while the other three had been killed by the firestorms in the outer city and elsewhere in Van Kir.

Hera hadn’t had any bondmates to lose, and unlike Demea and the other wardens, she was still young enough to have living family. Her grandmother and two cousins had survived the war, and all three were with the Skotinos Mountain refugees.

“No, it wasn’t your plan,” Hera said, “but we’re all responsible for what happened. We should have asked more questions.” Even now, they had no idea why the spell had failed. Allos and Arodi insisted they didn’t know, and no one had seen Pallis or Zachal since the ritual.

She finished her work and stood up. Or, rather, an incorporeal representation of her former body stood up. “That’s six so far. A thousand to go.” There would have been more, but the majority of the pregnancies had begun before the evacuation. Very few women had chosen to bear children since then. That might change if Hera’s plan worked—she’d have to monitor the Chosar women for the next fifty years to ensure any child born would have the changes.

“I don’t suppose being able to breathe underwater will be as helpful here as on Paraido, but at least they’ll be safer from the wild magic,” Demea said.

“I changed the spell,” Hera said. The people here needed something different.

Demea’s eyes widened. “I didn’t know you could … What did you do?”

“They don’t need to breathe underwater, but I tried to make them hardier, and I gave their elder mages a way to manipulate stone without any shaper wizards. I changed them to be more comfortable in the deeper tunnels—the builders never finished the new city here, and only one of the golems is still functional. They’ll need more space, and the safest direction to go is down.” The wildstorms passed through the mountains on a regular basis, but they rarely went much below ground level. The elder mages among the children would have an easier time digging deeper to avoid them. She’d also changed them so they’d be able to digest the strange plants and creatures that lived in the lowest tunnels. The water gardens wouldn’t be sufficient to feed the people, and if they couldn’t farm above ground, they’d have to learn to do so below the surface.

“You can do all that?” Demea asked. “Iris never said anything about it.”

“I had to split up her spell and take just the parts I wanted,” Hera said. Her new totemic senses had seemed to guide her, helping to keep her from making mistakes. “Each new change gets harder than the last. Iris said it has to, or you risk undoing it all once they start having children of their own.”

Demea stared south, though there was nothing there but a rough cave wall. “Can you show me how?”

Hera tilted her head to the side. “Vestath?” she asked.

While Demea’s kin had died hundreds of years ago, she traced her ancestry to the Vestathi Tirs. She’d been watching over them as Hera had with the Skotinos refugees.

“The humans there have rebelled, and they’ve blockaded Tir Shova. We already lost Tir Nok and Tir Taval during the war.” Demea hesitated. “I keep seeing … visions, I guess you’d call them. Like waking dreams. Each one is different but similar. I think Tir Shova is going to fall. Not right away—the humans aren’t well organized yet—but in fifteen or twenty years. They’ll chase The People into the Salt Desert and that’s where we’ll die. No one can survive there, but if you help me change them …”

Hera understood what Demea was referring to. She’d had disturbing visions herself. In the futures she saw, The People would come to an end. The changed children might survive, but far too many of the adults would not, and without the adults, who would keep the children safe?

“I’ll help,” she said. “We’ll save as many as we can.” She sighed. “I just wish we could do more. We have all this power and we can’t use it!”

“No!” Demea said. “That’s what I came to tell you! We can use it, just not on our own. We have to gift it to others.”

“What do you mean?”

“The totemic magic, it’s not limited to just us. Allos figured out how to grant a sliver of magic to one of The People. Healing magic to replace the healing wizards and surgeons we lost. Protection magic to block the wildstorms. There’s more we’re still figuring out. It’s deeper than the totems ever let on. Allos has picked nine so far, and I’ve already chosen my first, in Tir Shova. She was a field medic during the war, but now she can heal better than any healing wizard ever could. It takes something out of you, so you have to choose each one carefully, but we can help! We can help everyone!”

Hera took in a shaky breath—or at least her spirit form acted as if she had. This would change everything.

The People would come to an end.

But they could be reforged into something new.

3