Book 9: Chapter 14: VM
Memory was a dangerous thing. It played tricks on you, mocked you, showed you scenes of torment again and again, and, in theory, was also how you learned.
Remembering everything was a curse. Remembering nothing was the opposite of bliss.
Everything in moderation, or balanced, was probably the [Philosopher] or [Bar Drunk]s takeaway on the issue. Another interchangeable group.
But what if you danced on the far end of the spectrum, so deep on one side you were in danger of falling off? Reasonable, sociable, likable, stable people were all very well. Yet they would never become true [Mages]. That was what Archmage Valeterisa preached, but Montressa du Valeross didnt really understand what she meant. Not at first.
After a month of the Archmage of Izrils company, Montressa began to understand everything.
Montressa remembered being a new student at Wistram. All nerves, high-pitched voiceor so it feltand uncertainty. Everyone felt like they were ten levels higher than you, and a 3rd-year student seemed like a full [Mage].
Of course, that was due to the unfamiliarity with how everything worked. Later, she began to separate the false pretenders from the [Mages] with actual talent. She identified the gifted students, those who could parse a Tier 4 spell while everyone was still sounding out the name.
It hadnt helped that shed had terrible role models. Not that Pisces, Beatrice, Calvaron, and Ceria had been bad students. Far from it; even Calvaron, the laziest of the lot in that he was a Secret Broker, had been a good magic-user. Pisces?
Pisces had taught himself [Invisibility] in a month. Ceria had won an apprenticeship from Illphres, the first apprentice the [Cryomancer] had ever taken seriously.
In hindsight. Inmemorandum, they should have all graduated and gone on to do great things. Nevermind the fact that some of them had; even Beatrice washad beenArchmage Nailihuailes personal assistant.
It should have gone better. Montressa still remembered how they felt, the days after Pisces and Ceria had been expelled. Everyone had known her name, then. She had been the outcast that no one wanted to teach or associate with.
In Montressas 3rd year as a student of Wistram, she had, desperate to reinvent herself, taken a roommate.
Cognita assigned rooms to new students, and Wistram was so large that roommates were not a requirement, but there was a social element to such things. Lizardfolk got lonely, and in response to some students becoming isolated [Hermits], the Council had long ago instituted the option for a [Mage] to take a roommate.
They got a nicer, larger suite, and there were perks like getting an occasional ticket to get room service from a Golem, or bonus allowances for an older [Mage] who showed a 1st or 2nd-year the ropes.
Montressa had volunteered for the program, mainly in the hopes of establishing a good name among the 1st years before her past caught up with her. She had been nervous, ready to sponsor a few special meals, introduce her new roommate around the academy, and bribe her if need be.
What Montressa had not expected was for a six-foot-tall Minotauress to come striding into the rooms, introduce herself as Bezale of Maweil, and ask for Montressa to show her to Zelkyrs Final Test. Bezale had beena challenge.
Not that the Minotauress didnt have her own issues with Montressa as a roommate. She had occasionally pointed them out to Montressa, much to the [Aegiscaster]s shock.
For instance, Montressa, apparently, snored. So badly that Bezale, despite them sharing adjoining rooms in the same set of chambers, had had to sleep with her head under her pillow until shed learned to cast [Silence]. Also, Montressa had, since growing up in House Valeross, never considered how annoying her hair was.
In that Bezalea Minotaur, grantedobjected to finding Montressas red strands of hair everywhere. Spellbooks, breakfast bowlsMontressa had no idea how it happened, but she had a suspicion growing up with a personal [Maidservant] made one miss certain lessons about personal hygiene.
By contrast, Bezales faults were her strident personality, constant requests for you to find her an esoteric book if you happened to be by the libraryand return six books at onceand forcing Montressa into doing pushups on the beach as the tide rolled in at the break of dawn.
Needless to say, they were great friends. Montressa missed being with Bezale dearly; they had been an excellent team, both magical and personality-wise. However, Bezale was running a new business in Invrisil, and Montressa
Montressa was realizing that her new apprenticeship under Archmage Valeterisa would make them the student and teacher of legends, or end with her throwing herself into a well.
If a six-foot Minotauress was a decent roommate with some flaws, Valeterisa was the roommate from below Rhirs hells. The one that you didnt hear about because all her other roommates had vanished or been taken into a [Healer]s custody.
Case in point. Thirty-one days into acting as Valeterisas personal apprentice, assistant, manager, and, yes, roommate since the Archmage of Izril was constantly on the move, Montressa received an unhappy revelation.
Archmage Valeterisa. Can yourepeat yourself?
Montressa swallowed her breakfast, hard. She looked across their campsite as the magical tent theyd had to share began to fold up. Little, shadowy figures darted around it, yanking up tent pegs and clumsily folding the tent into the bag from which it had come.
[Shadow Familiars]. A kind of summoned creature similar to a Golem or Elemental, and dumber than both. They had no real personality and definitely no actual soul; they just hovered there until you told them to do something. Attack a Troll, clean up a spillwhich they would do until their mana ran out.
Perfect for a busy person like Valeterisa, and a nightmare for anyone subjected to their idiocy. Like Salamani, the Mage Runner, who had nearly perished in the way of hundreds of others as the Shadow Familiars captured each person trying to meet with Archmage Valeterisa. They had orders to strip each victim of gear, heal their wounds, and feed them until Valeterisa could see to them, even dealing with water, changes of clothes, and the needs of the privy.
It was justthe Shadow Familiars had faithfully taken portions of food from the storehouse and fed the prisoners until theyd run out of food. Afterwards, theyd just pushed dust into the cells as the victims of Valeterisas mansion expired.
Still, they could pack up a tent, and good thing too, because Montressa had her hands full in the mornings. A figure sat across from her, barely responding as she poked vaguely at a bowl with a spoon. Her hair was grey, although the roots had the same blue as Lady Ieka Imarris, her niece. She was thin, not by an obsessive diet, but more from forgetting to eat. Valeterisa wassurprisingly ordinary until you looked into her eyes, which appeared to be distant clouds, also blue and grey, as deep as could be.
The thing that marked her was her robes. They were the Archmage of Izrils robes and whirled around her, a deep green laced with grey across the midsection at a diagonal angle. The top was embroidered with the crests of the Five Families, the bottom of the robes surrounded by the Six Walled Cities of Izril.
Compromise. Balance. Valeterisa was Izrils only Archmage, and the crests were colorful; her robes were enchanted with so many spells they were the highest-grade artifact you could get in the modern era before becoming a Relic of their own.
She was the greatest spellcaster short of a true [Archmage], for that matter. Valeterisa was a [Grand Magus], which was, in a general sense, the penultimate stepping stone before [Archmage], as Montressa understood things.
[Apprentice] or [Hedge Mage] or [Spellcaster], the many classes of the self-taught, became a full [Mage], [Magus], or [Sorcerer] with training. They evolved to specialties, like [Wizard], [Druid], [Pyromancer], and so on. But [High Mage] was denoted as a further step towards power. From there, [Grand Magus] was the next step before [Archmage] became the symbol of true mastery recognized worldwide. There were higher classes, but Wistram still used the term Archmage because of how it was perceived by all.
Valeterisa was, in her own words, a Level 52 [Grand Magus]. Her exact class was [Grand Magus of Mind and Studies]. A fitting class for someone whose specialty was research and who had obtained the famous [Parallel Thoughts] Skill that had nearly killed her, a prisoner of her own mind and a research that had taken eight years of her life.
She had no other class. Even Montressa was a [Lady], but Valeterisa had devoted her entire life to her sole class. It was, then, ironic that a girl from Earth had nearly reached her level within a year. But Erin Solstice was, to Valeterisa, an anomaly, as were all the Earthers. Plus, even in the old ages, Level 50 had still been a respected milestone; levelling grew infinitely harder past that.
Back to Valeterisa. The Archmage of Izril, the great [Mage] who had allowed Montressa to act as her assistant, handle the chores of the mundane worldsat, poking a spoon into the table repeatedly.
She got to the bowl of cereal after twenty-five tries. Then she vaguely scooped out some of the grains, stuck them into her mouth, and chewed. She did all this without once looking away from the book she was reading. It floated in front of Valeterisa; sometimes, she read it one-handed, but when she recalled she could, she had them float.
Her other hand was busy penning a reply on a [Message] scroll. Valeterisa could write legibly enough without looking, and one of her many thought processes was clearly devoted to writing a letter. Montressa pitied whomever it was; Valeterisa seldom devoted enough energy to more than her form-polite responses.
Archmage Valeterisa. Archmage Valeterisa. Archmage
Hm? What was the questionMontressa?
She remembered Montressas name! It had taken three weeks, and Montressa wished she didnt feel a surge of pride at being acknowledged. Twice now, shed woken up to find Valeterisa aiming a wand at her, prepared to blast her to oblivion until she recalled the young woman sleeping there was her apprentice, not a thief or some kind of incredible [Lecher].
Archmage Valeterisa, please tell me you didnt just say what I think you did.
The woman paused, glanced up, and put a finger to her head.
Hm. [Rewind Memory]. I said I do not change my clothing or apparel unless something is frayed. That is correct.
Including your undergarments?
Valeterisa took a longer moment in replying. She reached for some tea, took a sip, and made no face whatsoever. It was justfood. She ate because she had to.
I foresee more unnecessary changes in my life.
Archmage! How long have you worn that set of underwear?
Valeterisa gave Montressa a curious look, like this was some kind of trap. She raised a few fingers, and Montressa heard her counting out loud to her horror.
Four, fiveis this a worthy use of our time, apprentice? You could be learning a spell.
Humor me.
Montressa breathed. Valeterisa sighed.
There was a ball in which Ieka had me dress up. Soeight months.
Eight months!?
Montressas shriek roused a few birds from around the warded campsite. They were camped in a grove of trees Valeterisa had decided to land in on their journey across Izril. The Archmage raised a finger and clarified.
I was not finished. Eight months, eight years.
Even Pisces Jealnet himself might have hesitated when faced with this revelation. But Valeterisa watched as Montressa tried to put as much space between herself and her mentor as possible.
I hardly see the need to overreact, Montressa. I am perfectly clean. I cast [Cleanse] every night and morning.
It is the principle of the thing, Archmage!
Ah, yes. Principles. The very same reason you would have me write a response to every missive I receive and perform social functions nonstop.
Anyone who is a [Merchant] or above Level 30! Social functions? Greeting a Guildmaster at a Mages Guild is not hard.
Valeterisa blinked sleepily at Montressa. She stared as the [Aegiscaster] launched into another rantand then put on a huge, fake smile. She sat up, propped her head on her hands, and Montressa broke off.
Archmage. Archmage.
Yes, fascinating. I take your point and will amend my ways.
Archmage, please dont use your fake greeting personality on me.
Valeterisas fake smile turned into a brief scowl of annoyance.
Drat.
Like it or not, Montressa was getting to know her teacher. Unfortunately, the same went for Valeterisa. Neither one had been sure of the other at first, and there had been hiccups. But now, Valeterisa pondered Montressa and nodded slowly.
A change of clothing. If it truly elicits such a reaction from you, this may be a faux paus that can be used against me in social engagements. Especially by [Rumormongers] or [Socialites].
Ithats correct.
Montressa faltered. It amazed her when Valeterisa did this, but the Archmage of Izril wasnt helpless, just careless. She had risen to Archmage in Wistram, and so Valeterisa mused onwards.
I also take your point, unhappily, about the social impact of a pleasant greeting and due diligence with regard to replying to missives. Therefore. Apprentice Montressa, you will perform all these tasks for me. Arrange a new set of clothing when we come to our next stop, and I will trust you to reply to all my letters and greet everyone in my name.
Montressas head thunked onto the table. The worst part of working for Valeterisa was that she was intelligent enough to figure out ways to push all her work onto Montressas back. Valeterisa went back to eating.
The [Aegiscaster] went back to inserting the wild raspberries shed gathered into her cereal. Cereal and milk was not, actually, a regular breakfast food in this world.
Porridge? Grains? Certainly, certainly, but Montressa knew Earth customs, hence her copying the breakfast format. It helped that Valeterisa wasnt a picky eater; as long as Montressa had some cereal grains and milk, and it kept reasonably well, they could have breakfast and source lunch and dinner.
And for all Montressas understandable problems with Valeterisa, there were some perks of working for her. For instance, as both women finished eating, Valeterisa pointed at their table.
Done? Familiars, clean the table.
The shadowy imps, with vague tails and horns, flitted forwards and snatched the bowls and utensils. They tossed everything into a bag of holding as Valeterisa pointed.
[Cleanse]. [Cleanse]. [Cleanse]. [Cleanse].
Two bowls, two spoons. Valeterisa paused and made a face.
Note to self: learn [Mass Cleanse] now that I have an apprentice. Four castings is inefficient. Are we ready to leave, Montressa?
Almost, Archmage. Let me check the campsite
Montressa hurried around. They had only made a fire and put out the tent, foldable table, and other camping goods, but she always checked that Valeterisa hadnt left a book or something behind. Or theyd be wasting an entire day to get it, and Valeterisa hated wasting time.
Not that she didnt mind spending a lot of time and effort to a purpose. Hence them camping out here anyways; Valeterisa had been laying another teleportation sigil down. She was growing increasingly picky about finding spots where they would be unnoticed and undisturbed, especially past Liscor in the south of Izril.
Ready to go, Archmage!
Good. [Levitation].
Valeterisa touched Montressas shoulder, and the young woman felt her feet leave the ground. But not because Valeterisa had made Montressa fly.
[Accelerate Spell: Levitation]. [Windward Barrier: Self]. [Lightform Platform, Dais]. [Invisible Spectrum]. And
Towing, towing, Archmage!
Yes, yes. [Anchor Spell: Self].
Valeterisa finally let go of Montressa, and the invisible platform of light moved as she flew forwards. Montressa saw their campsite, a small clearing, turn into a stand of trees amidst which frightened starlings were screaming as the Archmage of Izril and her apprentice emerged. She sat carefully as Valeterisa began to pick up speed.
Then they were soaring down from the mountain range that stretched down around the southeast of Izril. They were only in the foothills, and the mountains quickly turned into the northern cliffs: sharp drops caused by continual erosion. From there, the land widened, and Izrils south truly began.
Valeterisa flew higher and higher until they were at a dizzying height. Montressa already felt sick, but she knew the dais was fairly large. Andthe Archmage was flying this high up for a reason.
Consider Valeterisa. She was no Xrn of the Free Antinium, no great being that defined an entire species. Nor was she Feor, a famous name by deed and his own magic. She had largely been forgotten, and even with her return, Grand Magus Eldavin, now Archmage Eldavin, had overshadowed her by far.
He was capable of casting [Flight]; there were other [Mages] of similar calibers, like Silvenia, the Death of Magic. Valeterisa could only [Levitate]. Yet Montressa had learned to respect Valeterisas methods.
Archmage. Why do we fly high all the time?
Valeterisa glanced sideways as Montressa called out. It was time to begin lessons, it seemed, but they werent always magic. She responded, as if it were only natural.
Why, because the higher I go, the more distance I travel.
Really?
Valeterisa gave Montressa a strange look.
An arrow flies farther the higher you aim it. It follows flight is the same, even if I produce my own velocity. I suspect altitude matters when flying. I have observed birds climbing for altitude; that they do not always skim across the ground makes me suspect that height matters for efficient transit in the air. Garuda fly higher for the same reason. Height matters in flying.
Itdoes? Why would it? Air is air.
Montressa was a bright student of Wistram, a few years past graduation, but she was still a [Mage]. She did not consider distance a function of altitude. Valeterisa, by contrast, gave Montressa a look as if she were an idiot.
It is my observation that higher altitudes decrease the time to my destination. I believe the factors may include a lack of air resistance higher up, but I have never quantified that theory. Let us observe the phenomenon directly.
With that she dove, and Montressa yelped as they skimmed over the treetops until it opened up into rocky ground. A few Rock Golems turned to stare up at the Archmage and Montressa for ten minutes, then Valeterisa climbed straight up until she was so high Montressa was able to see the clouds just overhead. She flew and then had Montressa calculate their relative distances.
Montressa had to do that with a light-magic spell, which projected a ray of light and, upon hitting a target, told you how long it had taken for it to reach the target. But since it was so fast, you had to memorize a formula which you converted the number into.
That was how you came up with the [Measure Distance] spell. Montressa was forced to learn it as Valeterisa hovered in the air, impatiently correcting Montressas magical math. The answer, when it came, was that they had covered about 28% more distance using a higher altitude.
It was an interesting lesson. And Montressa learned a new spell!
Huzzah? The [Aegiscaster] wondered when shed need to use [Measure Distance] in her life. But that was Valeterisa for her. No spell was wasted, and she studied mathematics along with magic.
Valeterisa could read every single known writing script in the world, from Drake to Human to Drathian. She was as much a [Scholar] as [Mage], and it separated her from a lot of Wistrams graduates.
Like Ceria. Love her or hate herthe half-Elf was, uh, not a scholarly type. She cast magic with excellent memorization, but part of the skillset that went into a [Mage] of her and Illphres type was aim; composing their ice to be properly cold, balanced, and shaped; and concentration.
Like [Pyromancers]. Some of them made fire hot. They didnt care that fire required oxygen to breathe for most spells.
Valeterisa did. It fascinated her, the interplay between physics and magic. Some [Mages] were idiots whose answer to everything was [Fireball]. Valeterisa stood on the other end of that ideal, and that was the reason she was, well, an Archmage.
She was one of the few people who could push magic forwards or rediscover what had been lost. Yes, a natural, instinctual [Mage] could invent a new type of spell, but Valeterisas magic was exceptionally complex.
Just like [Measure Distance]. Montressa appreciated the lessons Valeterisa taught. She had felt like she was straying from the path of true magic into mundanityand a lot of alcohol.
Valeterisa was pulling her back to her roots. Not that the Archmage of Izril could spend all the time she wanted in her mansion. She actually conducted a lot of business these days.
Eight years. Eight years of neglected duties. I am getting tired of travel. Apprentice, do you think the Walled Cities would accept you in my stead?
Er, no, Archmage. At least, not for this.
A few hours had passed since their morning and breakfast. Montressa glanced up from penning another [Message] to a [Merchant]. She regretted her comments to Valeterisa already. She had written eleven apologies to [Merchants] who had been selling Valeterisas latest magical puzzle. Only, the dratted Archmage hadnt told them it required magic to solve, so they wanted refunds.
Valeterisa was famous for her failed business ventures. Like the poor House of Elwell, it was all for a goal. Meetings, travelshe needed money for spellbooks and her research. It was just that Valeterisas ideas for making money didnt always pan out. The Kaalblades, on the other handthat was a substantial sum coming into her coffers of late.
They were coming to a city. Or rather, a mountain placed incongruously far from the mountain range proper. Yet again, Montressa admired the Walled City of Salazsar. The City of Gems was still constructing itself out of the mountainside, and it was half-done, to look at it. Spires of gleaming stone rose high above the common folk, each one a companys property, while the mines stretched deep into the gem-rich strata.
Valeterisa descended with Montressa, on time for her appointment. She was only delayed by the Watch being really unhappy to spot her in their airspace. Montressa spent a few tense minutes telling them it was Valeterisaagain. Then she landed as Drakes and Gnolls gathered, staring at the absent woman reading a spellbook.
Montressa looked around for a Drake from House Gemscale who was hurrying to direct them to their appointment, and Valeterisa nearly flew up to the tower rather than walk.
The second delay was the challenge.
Archmage of Izril! I challenge you to a duel!
Ah, another random encounter.
Montressa saw Valeterisa close her book with a sigh. The Archmage glanced up as a furious Drake wearing fiery red robesand holding an equally flaming staffplanted himself in the street. Instantly, the Watch and other passersby moved back.
A what?
These events do find me. Monsters. Dueling [Mages]. Wars. I term them random encounters. I get them on a rather regular basis. They are predictably random.
You meanpeople living their lives and you running across them?
Valeterisa gave Montressa a genuinely pleased smile.
You do understand. But its how they intersect with my life that I try to mitigate. Hello, are you attempting to kill me?
The Drake floundered as Valeterisa swung towards him. He lifted the staff.
No, and dont you dare hide behind the Watch! I am Magus Fyres of Salazsar! I spit in your face, Valeterisa of Izril! A true Archmage is a master of magicand combat! Face me!
Montressa began to get what this Drake was on about. He wanted credit for knocking down the slim Valeterisa, who, indeed, looked like a breeze might send her sprawling. She was famously bookish, and Archmage Feor had once nearly fallen to Grimalkin of Pallass in a duel.
Even a great [Mage] was not necessarily adventurer-material, and this looked like a combat-[Mage]. No guesses as to what his specialty was.
Archmage Valeterisa is not accepting duels!
Montressa had three barrier spells ready and was looking around for Salazsars Watch. But againValeterisa surprised her. She peered at the Drake.
A [Pyromancer]? Oh. Ignore her. I accept. Shall we begin? What are the rules? Do I win your staff if I beat you? I will wagermy clothes. Underwear included.
Whreally? Your clothes?
The Drake, Fyres, was clearly unprepared for her to accept so readily. Hed probably hoped to egg her into a duel, but now the audience was murmuring.
A duel?
No magical battles on the streets!
A nervous [Guard] called out, but Valeterisa gave Montressa a vague gesture.
My apprentice will seal the area. Apprentice. Do we have a deal?
The robes of an Archmage for my staff?
Fyres looked confusedbut eager. Montressa edged over.
Archmage, he looks like hes decent. He might be a Gold-rank adventurerhes at least a Level 30 [Pyromancer]!
She was worried about Valeterisa, whose reflexes and combat abilities were an unknown. Yes, she had famously surprised Eldavin in a fight and taken part in the battle at the Meeting of Tribes, but she was no Amerys. Yet Valeterisa simply waved Montressa off.
My robes and underwear.
No, I dont need that
Fyres croaked, but the audience was muttering.
Thats Fyres? What is he doing with that Human?
Trying to strip her naked, it sounds like.
What?
Montressa tried not to laugh at the poor Drake. Either way, his reputation was now damaged, but she was casting a wide barrier spell as he spluttered. Valeterisa stood there, chewing on a fingernail, as Fyres lifted his staff.
Someone count us down!
Archmage?
Yes, count.
Too late to stop. An eager Drake began the count, and Montressa waited for Valeterisa to do something. She had a wand, a good one, but she had no grand artifact, like Nailihuailes Serkonian Lance, to focus through. How good was she at fighting?
two, one
Fyres exploded into an attack so fast Montressa didnt see it. His spell left his flaming staff and flashed across the ground. It wasshe realized as the explosion sent her stumbling back, even though the barrier caught the force, if not light and sound
A [Fast Fireball]. Probably pre-charged in his staff. As opening spells wentthat would kill most Silver-ranks outright. It was dirty, and Montressa opened her mouth to scream when she saw Valeterisa.
Faced with the combat-trained Drake, Valeterisa waslying on the ground, coughing soot and wiping it out of her eyes.
Ow.
You pre-cast those barrier spells! Foul!
Valeterisa lifted a hand as Fyres howled. He cast another spell, and a ball of fire lashed out, but it struck Valeterisa harmlessly; the force of the [Fireball] had knocked her over. He sent a spray of Tier 3 [Fire Orbs] at Valeterisa, but they struck a slightly glowing sheen of magic covering her.
She was an Archmage. But Fyres just loaded a second [Fast Fireball], and he began calling an even more powerful spell as Montressa bit her tongue. The second [Fireball] was already shooting out across the dueling ground as Valeterisa managed her first spell.
[Remo
Whumph. She went spinning across the ground as the second [Fireball] kicked her like a mule. Valeterisa sat up, looking dizzy, her spectacles askew.
I regret this. I may vomit.
[Flame Pillar]!
Fyres howled and struck his staff. Valeterisa looked down as a line of flames appeared and formed a circle around her, ten feet wide. She muttered as she pointed a finger down.
[Lesser T
Again, the pillar of fire hit her faster than her spell. Valeterisa ignited as the audience winced, and then she popped into position ten feet away. This timeshe looked singed.
Her barrier spells had saved her from two fireballs and a hail of flames, but the pillar was a step too far. Valeterisa winced, and Fyres smile was wide and delighted. He was pantinga bitbut his opening was on par with any of Cerias attacks.
Montressas hands were clenched, nails digging into her palms.
[Pyromancers] ran hot and burnt out fast. If Valeterisa could regain her composurebut that idiot had mana potions!
Archmage, fight back! Dont let him keep pressing!
Fyres glared her way, but it was sound tactics. If he had to defend himselfbut Valeterisa just saw him aiming a third [Fireball] her way and raised her hands.
[Aura Binding: Five-fold Arcane Barrier].
She recast her barrier again, and while it was on par with one of Montressas best spellsthe [Archmage] went skidding back.
Yield or die! [Siege Fireball]!
Fyres had her. He raised a claw, and a powerful Tier 4 spell began gathering. It was a spell slightly beyond his abilities to instantly cast, so it appeared as a glowing orb growing larger with each second. It was soon as large as he wastwice as large
Dead gods, he must have some kind powerful fire-enhancing Skills to go along with his magic! Montressa feared even Valeterisas recast barrier wouldnt save her from that, and she was preparing an emergency spell.
But at this point, Valeterisa began fighting back. She was spitting out more soot, coughingbut her finger rose even as she staggered around.
[Parallel Thoughts]. One part of her spun off to cast and uttered a spell.
[Dispel Magic].
The [Siege Fireball]winked out. Fyres blinked at his empty hand, then he hissed.
Cheap trick! [Fast Fireb
[Dispel Magic].
Valeterisa pointed at his staff. The Drakes eyes bulged, and he raised his staff.
[Flame P
[Dispel Magic].
The audience watched, suddenly amused, as the onslaught of magic stopped. This time, Fyres tried to cast a Tier 2 spell, without incantations, but Valeterisa was just repeating the spell.
[Dispel Magic]. [Dispel Magic]. [Dispel Magic]. [Dispel Magic]. [Dispel Magic]
Someone began laughing. Montressa watched, open-mouthed. It was stupidbut it proved clearly the difference between the two. Combat-readiness or not, Valeterisa had the technique and mana reserves to dispel Fyres at range.
It was hard, exponentially harder to use that spell the further you got, let alone on a [Mage] directly casting, but she was doing it. Fyres grew angrier and angrier as the audience laughed, but he wasnt done. Nor was he a one-trick [Mage].
Wellhe was a multi-trick [Mage], and all his tricks were fire. His eyes narrowed, and then he let go of his staff, pointed one claw at Valeterisa, swept his tail across the ground, and kicked the air lightly.
He cast four spells at the same time. Montressas eyes widened. A spell from his stave, one from his claw, and his tail gathered a wave of sparks that morphed into a wall of fire as his foot flicked a fourth tendril of magic out.
That was impressive! Without a catalyst, spells were harder to cast; they also cost more mana, hence most [Mages] needing a wand. Even Ceria used her bone hand, and while Pisces could cast free-handed, he acknowledged it was less effective than a wand.
Fyres, though, needed to get some magic past Valeterisas counterspells. And she got three of his attacks. The fourth
The kick of the tail morphed into a [Fire Orb] that shot at Valeterisas face. It didnt strike her; she had her barrier redeployed. Instead, it burst in a dazzling spray of flame and smoke that blinded Valeterisa. She blinked, lost focusand Fyres aimed his staff at her.
[Rivet-Lance of Flames].
No!
Montressa saw him cast his trump-card, drawing on his stave to send the Tier 5 spell straight at Valeterisa. The Archmage blinked at a lethal jet of white-hot flames aimed at her, a barrier-breaking molten spell
It fizzled out. Fyres stared at his staff. He blinked. Then he began gulping hard. He spoke in a choked voice.
What[Fireball]
He pointed again, and Montressa saw his staff sparkthen suddenly stop, as if the magic were dead. But Valeterisa hadnt cast [Dispel Magic]. She had flinched when he went for his final spell, but now she watched with an academic interest.
Ah, it does work.
Fyres was clawing at his throat. Eyes bulging. It took Montressa a moment to understand what was going on, then she realized.
There wasnt any air. The [Mage] toppled to his knees, gagging, trying to breathe, but suddenly his magic and, indeed, lungs were betraying him! Valeterisa stood, thoughtful, then she clicked her fingers.
Well, that was disappointing. I thought hed produce some fire that didnt rely on air. Perhaps it is a viable strategy after all? But I didnt enjoy getting knocked about for a few minutes. I need more of a quick dispersal. A vacuum?
Fyres inhaled, and the confused crowd saw Valeterisa turn, sigh, and rub at her back with a wince. At this, someone demanded to know what was going on, and it fell to Montressa to explain as Fyres gulped air.
But what had happened? She had a vague idea, but Valeterisa elaborated.
Oxygen. A component of air, or so [Alchemists] tell me. I met a naked Drake who once told me that most non-magical flames need air to burn. The concept is thus simple: any fire can be defeated by removing the air. I tested my theory with this helpful [Mage], but it seems as though the method is too slow. Alsomagical flames do exist. Apprentice, healing potion.
She looked rather disgruntled, and Montressa suspected getting burnt hadnt been the plan, but Valeterisa had risked her life for that idea. She brightened up when she realized she would get the staff, though. Montressa was just about to lower her barriers when Fyres sprang to his feet.
I havent lost yet! I neither yielded nor fell, youyou treacherous cheater!
I cast that spell at the beginning of our encounter. You were about to asphyxiate.
Valeterisa looked annoyed. Fyres raised his staff, and Montressa saw a dangerous blue flame gathering in his claws and the staff.
I dont know what that word means, but this battle isnt over. Have at you!
He snarled and lunged, claws burning. Valeterisas eyes narrowed.
Very well.
[Blue Blaze]!
[Howl of the Blizzard]. [Deathbolt]. [Chain L]
The last spell went thwoom as it struck the magical shield in the air. Crackling bolts of lightning blasted Montressas spell apart, and the [Aegiscaster] staggered in the backlash, but Valeterisa stopped casting and glanced irritably at her. Then she looked up.
The audience throughout the battle had been mocking Fyres, cheering on Valeterisa, then laughingthen asking in confusion what the trick had been. When hed gone for round two, theyd been shouting in excitement or calling him down.
Nowthey were silent. Silent, because as Montressas barriers flickered away, the puddle of red robes and frost-covered Drake was lying on his face. He had dropped his staff, and Montressa pulled herself up and wondered if he was dead.
He wasnt moving. Valeterisa strode forwards as a cone of ice made the ground crack with the sudden temperature change. She slipped, frowned, then levitated up an inch. She pointed, and the staff flew into her hands. Valeterisa inspected it, shrugged, and tucked it into her bag of holding. She then began to float upwards, leaving the stricken Fyres behind.
Was he dead? Montressa hurried forwards as someone shouted for a [Healer]. She bent down and heard a rasping breath.
Not dead. Frostbitten and almostthe [Deathbolt] hadnt killed him, high-level as he was. The lightning would almost have definitely done so. Montressa gazed up, shaken, as a Watch [Sergeant] arrived at the scene and saw the damaged street, unnerved bystanders, and fallen [Pyromancer]. He glanced up to see Valeterisa flying ahead, and, with commendable foresight, placed a claw on Montressas shoulder before she could slink off.
Guess which faithful apprentice had to sort out that mess? Montressa had to explain the circumstances with witnesses, file paperwork for the Watchs records, pay a fine for the street, and pay for the street-cleaning service. She would have washed the damn flagstones herself, but she just wanted to find Valeterisa.
Then she had to talk her way into the Gemstone tower and get directions to Valeterisas meeting with a Wall Lord Ilvriss, which most of the company was not aware was going on. But for a Gnollish [Administrator] who personally came down to retrieve her, she might have been arguing for hours at the front desk.
Archmage Valeterisa didnt mention me?
I dont believe she recalled, Mage Montressa. She is speaking to the Wall Lord in the Gemscale familys personal apartments. Just across that bridge; the guards are aware you are coming, now.
By the time Montressa arrived, it was forty-one minutes later. A fact Valeterisa informed her of.
I was nearly about to leave, apprentice. [Message] me next time you have personal business.
I did!
You did? Ah. So you did. I was devoting all my attention to the Wall Lords discussion. I will have some projections for youum, by the end of the week. My apprentice will remind me.
Valeterisa turned and put a huge smile on her face, and Montressa saw a familiar purple-scaled Drake wearing an expression of pure sympathy. Ilvriss turned it into a smile as Valeterisa bowed to him.
Thank you, Archmage. Your fee will be waiting for you upon delivery of your first projections. May I ask about my second offer?
Valeterisa hmmed.
Staying? I have a mansion which I am eager to return to. Frankly, having seen the Meeting of Tribes and BelavierrI have had some interesting, nay, fascinating insights from those ghosts who were capable of such a mass-terraforming spell, but all the [Shamans] appear to be too busy to answer [Message] spells. Or dead. I do not know if I have business that will keep me in the south long enough for your undisclosed matters of Salazsars security.
Ilvriss winced with each sentence Valeterisa uttered, starting with Belavierr. From the look he and his surly, blue-scaled bodyguard shot Montressathis was clearly private. Unfortunately, as he seemed to know full well by now, Valeterisa was a leaking faucet. Attached to a sieve.
Please give it as much thought as possible, Archmage. I am prepared to be exceedingly generous. And discretion
I have committed it to my most secret categorization, Wall Lord. Mentally.
Valeterisa smiled again, and Ilvriss looked at Montressa. He bowed slightly.
Mage Montressa, I believe?
Yes, Wall Lord? I meanyes! I dont know if weve ever met, personally?
Montressa didnt think so, aside from the Meeting of Tribes, and that had been a battlefield. But he clearly knew her name, and she had a sinking feeling she knew from where. Ilvriss gave her a curt nod.
I have heard your name from The Wandering Inn. A slight unpleasantnesswhich I was pleased to note was resolved. I hope everyone is well, Erin Solstice especially? Did you have the chance to see her after her resurrection?
He sounded hopeful and nostalgic, and Montressa was sorry to shake her head.
Im afraid I left before that, Wall Lord, but I have heard from a friend, Bezale, that she is mobile. On two legs, even.
I did hear about that. Excellent recoveryI dont know if you are planning on staying in Salazsar tonight? I should like to invite youinvite you both to dine with me if you have time.
The Drake smiled, and Montressas mouth watered at the idea of cooked, fine food, and someone as sane-sounding as him. Plus, he clearly held Erin in some regard! But then her heart sank as both she and Ilvriss looked at Valeterisa.
She was fidgeting, like a child clearly bored with the conversation. Now, she broke in hurriedly.
I regret to say that is impossible, Wall Lord. We will be flying out immediately. With all due plaudits for your offer.
We will? I meanyes, Archmage. At once. Wall Lord, I am so sorry
He lifted a claw as Valeterisa nodded to the nearest balcony. He leaned over and shook her hand as he murmured.
Not at all. Or rather, I should say, the apologies are all mine. Foryour sacrifice.
Montressa gave him a wan smile, and then she was striding to catch up with Valeterisa. The two were flying from Salazsars balcony, and Ilvriss swore he heard Montressa begging the Watch not to shoot them down as they exited the City of Gems as fast as theyd arrived.
He turned to Shield Captain Osthia. The Drake was watching Montressa go with much the same expression Ilvriss feared was plastered on his face.
And that was the first [Mage] you hoped to recruit, Wall Lord? I hope we havebackups?
Osthia was tactful, but she couldnt hide how off-putting shed found Valeterisa. Ilvriss sighed, rubbed at his neck-scales, and cursed quietly.
A few. But she was the best one. All this timewasted? Perhaps well get lucky.
His tone suggested how likely he thought that was. Osthia hesitated and then peered at Ilvriss.
May I ask why the Archmage of Izril, Wall Lord? From the sounds of her duel earlier, she didnt seem the most capable, and there are fine spellcasters across Izril, if not so famous. Fissival, for instance, although thats tricky.
Ilvriss nodded. He threw himself into a chair and was somewhat glad Montressa hadnt taken him up on his offer. Hed have had to reshuffle a meeting with Salazsars [Generals], and that would have been a bad look.
After allSalazsar was at war with Fissival. Hed struck the first damn blow at the Meeting of Tribes, and while their armies werent marching into open combat yet, all trade had ceased and both cities were calling on their allies.
Actions had consequences. He would have to pay for his, but he didnt regret what hed done. Ilvriss answered Osthia curtly as he rubbed at his forehead.
She might not be the most ideal candidate in somemany respects, but there was one reason I wanted her, Osthia.
Which is?
Ilvriss glanced thoughtfully out the window. The Archmage of Izril had already vanished, and she should have been visible for miles. Interesting.
Of all the [Mages] you could name, she truly is a daughter of Izril. North and south. She belongs to a noble house in the north, but she grew up in a Walled City. Scatterbrained she might seem, but she would be a cunning ally. I think.
Ilvriss was not wrong. Nor was he completely right. Valeterisa teleported Montressa and herself within minutes of leaving his tower, just as soon as she left Salazsars aegis that prevented hostile teleportation spells.
They popped into the air, and Montressa nearly threw upthen saw the same damn campsite theyd been at this morning!
Well, it proved Valeterisas new teleportation network was in order. Shed laid spots across the continent and could now leapfrog across Izril. It wasnt like Eldavins [Grand Teleportation] spell, but it would facilitate travel.
Archmage! I protest! I told you there are boundaries, and not only did you get me into a lot of trouble, you insulted Wall Lord Ilvriss, and now were on the road again? Where?
Valeterisa landed on the ground as Montressa began to shout. Even for herthis was a lot, but Valeterisa sat down on the dirt, took out Fyres staff, and began to inspect it, probably gauging its worth before she sold it for coin or dissected it for knowledges sake.
She replied slowly, but her eyes glanced up as Montressa glared. Even Valeterisa had to wait to recharge her mana after a teleport.
Were heading to Fissival next. I havent been home in years. Not that its home. And I left because that Wall Lord made me nervous. He wants me to train his [Mages], arm them with Tier 4-5 spells. Scrolls they can learn from. High-power magic. And he wanted me to accompany him into a sealed magic room and discuss something top-secret. Possibly treasonous? He offered me four hundred thousand gold pieces to listen and agree to a number of top-tier privacy spells.
Hehe did?
Montressas rage evaporated, and she listened. Valeterisa glanced up sharply, and Montressa realized she was in a rare opportunity to talk to all of the Archmage of Izril at once.
Yes. The room was cunningly disguised, and I detected no more high-level individuals present, but it would have rendered me vulnerable the moment I entered. His business may have simply been a plot for power; Ilvriss has a reputation for financial and political acumen. However, it may have been that my refusal would have ended with an attempt on my life or a blood-sealed agreement. It spoke of a trap.
Wall Lord Ilvriss? Montressa couldnt quite believe it, but she didnt know him that well. It was justErin talked favorably about him.
Perhaps he was paranoid?
Valeterisa nodded instantly.
Perhaps. There are countless scenarios, and I am running through them now. But most of them place me in a form of danger I do not seek. Top of the list is that the quote-unquote secret forces he is training are not just to combat the Antinium.
Hes training secret forces?
The Archmage shrugged.
That is a secret. I trust you to keep it private given your background at Wistram. Yes. My top projects include him forming a task force to either strike the Antinium directly, some other threat like the northor murder the King of Destruction. That is one of the individuals who would require someone of my level, in which case I would be handpicked to oppose Amerys. Far from ideal.
Any of those ideas sounded outlandish, but Valeterisa sounded like she was considering them all. Montressa laughed weakly, trying to play it off. She was no stranger to Wistrams shenanigans, but this wasa bit too much. Even for Ullsinoi.
Archmage, Im no stranger to the Academys cloak-and-dagger. Dead gods, Ive even worked for Nailihuaile, and she hassome cold-blood maneuvers, even for a Lamia. Or had. But how likely is it youd be part of one of those operations?
Valeterisa sat there, fiddling with the staff, then tossed it into the air. It floated towards Montressa, and the young woman caught it instinctively. It felt hot, and she wondered if it were magicore or something stronger in the staff. It was nicer than her staff, even if the fire-element wasnt her style.
Eight years agono, its nine and two months. I was approached by [Assassins] for recruitment into the Circle of Thorns. I witnessed their reemergence shortly after my awakening. It would have been extremely unfortunate to be part of a poisoning attempt against House Veltras or have that blackmail me into further actions. I have been asked, privately, by numerous individuals if I would consider casting spells to kill the King of Destruction while he slumbered for the last twenty years. Attack the Antinium. Murder Feor. I make a point of checking my involvement in any dangerous plans.
She gave Montressa a long stare, and the [Aegiscaster] gulped, hard. Murder Archmage Feor? Valeterisa nodded to the staff.
That is yours. You need a better staff. We should reach Fissival in two days of flying. I wish to return home.
The sudden change of topic caught Montressa off-guard. She scrambled to her feet.
Do we have more business, Archmage? I thought we were done.
Her schedule for Valeterisa only included activities in the north, but the Archmage clearly had one last place to visit. Interestingly, the Archmage of Izril hesitated. It seemed natural she might want to visit the famous City of Magic, even if it was the most remote of all the Walled Cities, far east along the coast of the continent. Remote via trade ships, which had usually preferred the western approach, and geographically, unlike Pallass, Oteslia, and Zeres, which all occupied roughly the middle of the continent.
Yet Valeterisa cast her gaze eastwards and took her time replying. When she did look at Montressa, it was all of her that looked.
There are a few old acquaintances I wish to meet, and I will introduce you to some talented spellcasters even Wistram lacks. Most of all
She hesitated. Valeterisa glanced at the horizon, and her lips moved for a while before she spoke, sounding almost abashed.
I suppose Im simply nostalgic. I havent returned since they made me an Archmage, long, long ago. It would befun? To visit.
She thought about the word.
No, not fun. But well do it anyways.
Montressa glanced at the odd expression on Valeterisas face. It was there for a second, a real person behind the Archmage of Izrils blank mask, and then Valeterisa tapped her head.
[Clear Emotions].
She glanced at Montressa, and the look was gone. But the rest of itValeterisa began casting her spells again, and she spoke as they lifted into the air, heading towards the City of Magic.
Apprentice, I notice a lack of fresh underwear. Did you forget?
The Walled City of Fissival had a lot of stories about it. Every Walled City did. Montressa paid attention, but really, every nation said much the same thing.
Calanfers Eternal Throne never grew dark. Noelictus fields, a somber reflection of any other nation. Pheislants lighthouses, and so on. Desonis hadswamps with Hydras in them.
But they said of the Walled Cities, truly ancient pieces of architecture by any standard, that their heydays had been sights of wonder and glory, each and every day. Pallass forges had once supplied half a continent with steel, and while they only manufactured enough to fill half a floor with smaller foundries, Montressa had seen the old steelworks, and the elevators were new and fascinating; the aqueducts that ran uphill were marvels of engineering.
Salazsar had grown its legend, and its mines still produced rare Adamantium. Zeres, that City of Waves, had ironically also grown more notablea giant gemstone halberd was sticking out of one of its towers.
Oteslia had a big tree. And a Dragon, but no one knew that. Fissival, nowthey said of the City of Magic that it floated. Fissival flew, and it was the greatest mage school in all of Izril. In all of the world? It had always rivaled Wistram, but there had been times when Fissival eclipsed even the famous Academy of Mages. A hall of learning where the grand magics still held strong, including the teleportation network so many forgot about.
And the legends were true! Montressa du Valeross saw Fissival was indeed at the far edge of Izrils south-eastern coast. The land rose into a plateau, a massive one bordering the ocean. Not that Fissival hugged the cliffs, but it made any attacking forceor travellersclimb the long path to Fissival, an exposed approach, or scale cliffs and attack via sea.
Ideally placed, in short, to have survived even the Antinium Wars with few threats. Because Fissival, like every Walled City, was unlike every Walled City.
Its architecture was unique. For instance, Fissival had a series of mage-towers and fortified checkpoints leading up to the city proper. They were clearly ancient towers, and as Valeterisa flew past them, Montressa saw one, sixty feet tall, slowly rotating towards her. A glowing gem warningly flashed at Valeterisa until she dove lower, and Drakes holding wands and bows shouted at the Archmage of Izril.
From Salazsar? You have gone up in the world instead of offering me homemade quartz filled with mana. Have you visited the Scholarium yet?
Not yet.
The Djinni gave the Archmage a long look.
Save it for last. They will have words for yousavor your visit. And return your books before you leave, Valeterisa, or I will have to hunt you down myself.
He was reading when they left, and Montressa kept turning her head to stare at him.
Ive never seen a Djinni with that much free rein.
Nor will you again. He knows almost every book of value in the library, and no one would dare replace him. He is still slave to the Grand Librarium, but as he told mehe won parts of his freedom within his bondage by knowledge. Knowledge which he imparts to few.
Valeterisa brushed the ancient book, and Montressa saw that there was a slip inside the cover written with Heorths own words that listed the book and author. The cover itself was actually a replacement; the book had been worn or damaged.
Which made her think that only someone who knew what it contained or who was very, very lucky would ever find it. Even for a fictitious tale about a [Thief] in the days of Mershithis was an old, rare book.
She glanced up suddenly and saw Valeterisa watching her. Montressa spoke, keeping her voice low.
I dont believe Heorth recommended that book idly, did he, Archmage?
Of course not. He never does. The only books he recommends that are useless are two million word-long sagas about romance which I refuse to read. But he has told me to check out other books now and then. Comeyou are not allowed to check out books, but I am.
Valeterisa was carrying up their books to check out when Montressa saw the last, final unique thing about the library. Some magical lettering and a huge crowd on the second floor caught her eyes, right below the surface. She stopped and actually plucked at Valeterisas sleeve.
Archmage. Is that aspellbook?
A giant spellbook was sitting in a glass case, illuminated by a [Light] spell. A crowd of students and ordinary civilians, even a Human girl, were reading the page on display, which looked to be a basic [Purify Water] spell. Valeterisa glanced over.
Mm? Yes, the public spells. Ah, theyre changing them.
A [Librarian] was going from case to caseand Montressa saw no less than sixteenand flipping the pages to pre-arranged selections. A Drake was arguing with one of them.
Give me half an hour! Ive nearly got this spell! Half an hour?
Public spellbooks?
Montressa had never seen such a thing! She was appalled, but Valeterisas look was sardonic.
Why not? Theyre books. Meant to be read.
But theyre spellbooks!
Some of the other people had heard the quiet discussion and looked amused or exasperated. Valeterisa rolled her eyes.
Yes, and why cant everyone learn from them? That was what I said at Wistram until I learned spellbooks were hoarded. The same is true of the Scholarium, but at least there are the public spellbooks. Anyone can learn from them, and their pages are rotated each day.
It astounded Montressa, even offended her. She instinctually felt like each spellbook should belong to a [Mage]. Just as patently, Valeterisa found that a ridiculous idea.
Fissival is a city in which every citizen may learn magic, Montressa du Valeross. Liscor famously has every citizen gain one level in [Soldier]. The boast of the City of Magic is that every single citizen has a level in [Mage].
Every single citizen? Montressa mouthed the words, and then she thought of the cheap wands. She saw a little Drake boy waving a wand around and casting [Light], rather than needing a candle.
Magic was learned here. Taught on a wider scale than even Wistram. And yetand yetlooking at the library, the public spellbooks, Montressa had to wonder.
Why isnt Fissival overtaking Wistram if it produces this many spellcasters?
To that, Valeterisa sighed and hesitated. She didnt say anything, but a Human called out. He stood there, reading from a spellbook, but his eyes had been on Valeterisa the entire time.
It is said of Fissival that many of the Drakes [Mages] come from here or study here. Fissival makes competent [Mages], but they do not make great [Mages]. With rare exceptions like Grimalkin of Pallass. Or the Archmage of Izril.
His words caused a stir in the crowd, and heads turned to Valeterisa. She glanced at the man, and Montressa saw he had long, gloved fingers, brightly polished shoes, and a vest that had hands on them like that of the sun-clocks. Valeterisa blinked at the man.
Milaw?
Hello, Archmage. Stop by my shop later today.
He plucked a small cap from his head, revealing a shiny bald pate, and bowed as he touched his grey beard. Valeterisa nodded, her eyes never leaving him.
I will.
When they left the Librarium, Montressa was split on Fissival. Split, but warming to elements of the city. Right up until she ran into a statue of Wall Lord Dragial.
It was new and being put up closer to the inner city, where the Scholarium towered over everything. A private installment paid for by an anonymous donor, honoring the Wall Lords heroic sacrifice during the Meeting of Tribes.
Ah. Its him again. You know, he was a student-instructor at the Scholarium when I was young. I was older. He never liked me.
Valeterisas voice was slightly strained as she stared up at him. Montressa looked at Valeterisa from the side.
What was it like, growing up in the Scholarium?
Valeterisa tugged on her robes absently.
Fascinating. They had great [Mages]great [Teachers]and they were more organized than Wistram. I graduated at the top of my class, then applied and was accepted to Wistram. I could have been a teacher here or taken office and become a First-Class Citizen.
You didnt stay?
Valeterisa stared at the Wall Lords upraised expression and the gauntlet shining upon his arm. How history changed. The Blade of Mershi looked like it belonged to him, and he seemed more satisfied than he was in life.
No. If I had stayed, I would not have been half as far down my journey to understand magic as I am now.
Valeterisa looked away, and Montressa gazed around the square. She heard a familiar rat-a-tat-tat, and as if heralded by the statue, a group of marching Drakes wearing Fissivals armor and the icon of their city crossed by a wand and staff called out.
Fissival is at war with Salazsar, the traitors! Sign up to defend your homes! Join the City of Magics army! Win a promotion to First-Class Citizen! Level casting spells behind mage-shields, not dying in the press of bodies in another Walled Citys armies!
Even their regular [Soldiers] were armed with wands, as opposed to bows or swords and shields. Fissival was famous for their long-ranged, magical combat. It worked wellaside from when someone engaged them in hand-to-hand combat. Like Niers, Ilvriss, and the other forces to battle them had done rather successfully.
Valeterisas face closed off when she saw the army, and she and Montressa stepped back as the [Recruitment Officer] marched about this place. ThisHuman-centric district.
Second-Class Citizens, youll win a promotion! You, Miss? Or you, Sir? Anyone who can cast a Tier 2 spell is guaranteed a bonus on signing!
Few Humans looked interested, and there were many of them in this area. A Second-Class district. Close to Valeterisas home.
It didnt look as poor as Montressa had thought it might. Most of the Humans seemed to have decent clothing, but she noticed few shops selling goods for public display and few pricesagain, marked up so high due to the tariffs there were even fewer buyers.
How could they survive paying 15%? Maybe it was only for trade goods? Somehow, she doubted that. She saw a number of [Tax Inspectors] here and arguably more than in the first plaza.
Yet, Valeterisa brightened up as she came to a large line of people waiting at what seemed to be a public kiosk tied to the local Mages Guild. Fissival, obviously, had more Mages Guilds than any other city, but this one had a public service, and she lined up with Montressa.
Lets stop and get my weekly, Montressa. Oh, and well find our inn here and do a bit of trading. And visit Milaw.
Here?
This didnt seem like the hub of magic or commerce that Valeterisa wanted, but Montressa waited in line as it moved at a brisk pace. Even so, the famously impatient Valeterisa waited seventeen minutes as Humans shuffled out of line until a Drake at the counter asked for her identification.
Second-Class CitizenValeterisa? And a Foreigner? Theres nothing for you. If you were a Third-Class Citizen, youd get a food card.
The Drake shoved Montressas papers back, but he clearly knew Valeterisa. The Archmage of Izril waited patiently.
I would like my weekly, please.
Your weekly?
The word still confused Montressa, but she had seen Humans stepping out of line with little cards. They turned out to be food cards, which they could trade for, well, food. But the Drake seemed reluctant to hand over the small stack.
Arent you the Archmage of Izril?
He stared accusingly at Valeterisa. She smiled brightly.
I am. Im also a Second-Class Citizen. I would like my cards and my weekly supplies. Thank you.
The Drake stared at her. Then he reluctantly forked over eight cards, one for each day of the week, and, to Montressas amazement, placed an ink pot and ten sheaves of parchment, decent quality, on the counter.
Fine. There.
Only ten? I should get sixteen.
Its been lowered. Next!
The Drake scowled and snapped. Valeterisa collected the ink and parchment and made Montressa carry the cards.
We can use them for about a meals worth of food. Its usually a bit less. The ink isnt that goodhere, for you.
She handed the ink and parchment to Montressa. It was far worse than the stuff Bezale had, but Montressa looked back.
What was that?
Weekly food cards and supplies. Every citizen, even Second-Class Citizens, gets ink and paper. We are citizens of the City of Magic. Our taxes pay for them. Although you cannot live on eight food cards easily. I remember lining up all the time.
Food cards. Another complete surprise to a Terandrian citizen of Pheislant. Yet it did explain the copious taxes. Sort of. But Montressas sense of oddity only increased the further Valeterisa went into the Second-Class district.
For it seemed like everyone knew her. And she knew everyone. Valeterisa stopped by a stall, and the owner, an old woman, looked up.
My, is it?
Valeterisa.
Valeterisa! Its you! Oh, its been so long! Sit down, my dear. Did you want a sunrise mango? Ive got some, fresh! From the islands, you know. Oh, dont mind your coins. Here, have two, and two for your friend.
That would be lovely.
Valeterisa reached for her coin purse, but stopped as the old woman gave her two fat sunrise mangos. The exotic fruit hadnt come from Oteslia? Montressa saw Valeterisa peer at the old womans face.
Arent youMnoB?
Bestre! Bestreyou silly girl.
Of course, Bestre. Here. Ive brought you a gift.
Montressa, to her great surprise, saw Valeterisa produce a handful of pieces of jade and other precious stones shed brought from Salazsar. Shed gone shopping! But the old [Shopkeeper] just glanced at the stones and only plucked two from Valeterisas hands.
Are you sure? You shouldnt have.
No, go on. Im rich.
Bestre hesitated, then plucked two more after glancing at Valeterisas face. The old woman watched as Montressa and Valeterisa took a bite of her sunrise mango, and Valeterisa asked about her children.
Doing fine, my dear. And youre so tall! But do something with your hair, would you? And stop by again!
Then they huggedand with Montressa choking on her sunrise mango, staring, she watched Bestre pull Valeterisas cheek, pinching it gently. Valeterisa smiled, and they were on their way.
Whwho wasdid you know her, Valeterisa?
Nope.
The Archmage kept eating the tangy mango as they walked on. Montressa choked again, but Valeterisa had stopped once more as an old man waved at her.
Is that Valeterisa? Its you! Stop a secondIve got a handful of scrolls, and I heard Milaw was on your path. Would you take him some gears? Pallassian steel I just got done filing. And can I give you anything for the road?
Me? No, but have a mango. Arent you Toruth? Didnt I date your son?
Montressa nearly spat out her second mangountil she saw the old man laugh and produce a bag of delicate gears, as finely done as anything you could find in Pallass. She glanced at the two as they hugged, and he asked if Valeterisa would take pity on the poor ladwhod been divorced, didnt you know?
And in the background, Montressa saw a Drake [Tax Inspector] glaring at Valeterisas back. And the two shopkeepers. The female Drake sighed, loudly, as the mango stayed with the man and Valeterisa walked on with a bag of steel gears.
Then Montressa got it. When they stopped at a local inn with exorbitant pricesfourteen silver for the cheapest roomsValeterisa knew the owner.
Archmage, it is a delight to see you. I wouldnt dream of charging the Archmage of Izril for a room!
The [Innkeeper] spoke loudly, and Valeterisa smiled.
Then you must accept a gift. Here. I have some stones from Salazsar
Ooh! Those would make delightful little presents for some friends. Expensive, now that the markets are closed and were at war.
I thought so too. A present, a present. I cant take your money.
And there it was. Montressa saw the [Innkeeper] swing his gaze to her.
And will your apprentice need a room? Free of charge as well, naturally!
Youre too kind. Can I offer youhow about some of these food cards? I dont know if Archmage Valeterisa and I will stay long enough to use them.
Montressa, those are legal tender. You cant give them away.
Valeterisa scolded Montressa noisily, and the [Innkeeper] nodded. He nudged Montressa and smiled into the inn, which had mostly Human customers and a few Drakes. And at least one was listening a bit too hard, Montressa thought.
Exactly. We exchange them for coin. I wouldnt dream of taking that as a gift.
Ohthen would you accept this charm I made? Just in case. It repels bugs.
Montressa had few tradable items, and the [Innkeeper] laughed when he saw it and heard what it did.
What a lovely gift! I think well have a fine banquet prepared for the Archmage and her apprentice. Thank you, thank you!
The Drake said nothing as he ushered them to their rooms high up in the inn. Only when he let them put their things down did Valeterisa enter Montressas room.
You overpaid him.
I know! I didnt have anything less expensive, and its fine.
Valeterisa shrugged.
Youre learning.
She gave Montressa a rare look of approval, and she seemed sopresentthat Montressa had to know.
Is that how it works here?
Valeterisas eyes lit up with actual mischief, and she sat down on Montressas bed. The quilted bed was lovely and soft, but now Montressa wanted to see the rest of this Human district. Valeterisa clicked her fingers, sealing them off from any eavesdroppers.
Of course. Everyones a friend around here. Its a little game, and the [Tax Inspectors] and the eavesdroppers know whats up. Theyll pop up and fine you for a mistake, but a gift is a gift. Just be careful; theyll play tricks on you too, and not all the Humans are on the same side.
It seems ridiculous to do it this wayfunny, but ridiculous.
Valeterisa just sighed heavily. She leaned back on Montressas bed and stared up at the ceiling.
Yes. Yes, it does, especially having lived in other parts of the world. I thought it all justworked like this when I was young. Heorth told me otherwise, but I didnt believe it. The Scholarium is like thisbut worst of all. Incidentally, Im sorry to tell you, but your bug-repelling charm has been stolen.
It has?
Montressa felt at her remaining charms, but that wasnt what Valeterisa meant.
Not the [Innkeeper]. Whomever you sold it to. They probably ran it to the Scholarium and filed a patent. Now, theyll be able to claim they invented the charm. Patents, applying to use a spellits easier to learn a Tier 4 spell here than in Wistram if you have the coin. But grand magic is few and far between, even with the plazas.
Patents? So the Hot Spoon wasnt even a joke! Montressa threw herself back and closed her eyes.
Ugh! Imagine begging to learn a spellis this it? Is this the City of Magic? Are these the finest spellcasters in the Drake lands?
Yes and no.
Valeterisa looked tired as she sat next to Montressa. Tiredand younger than she had ever been before. She seemed alive, there, andnostalgia was neither good nor bad, but it cut you either way. She patted Montressa on the knee and then felt the bag of gears.
Sit up, Montressa. Its time I introduced you to the finest spellcasters in Fissival. Then we will see if my great [Teacher] lives. Fissival is still the City of Magic, and there are lessons for you to learn from spellcasters who taught me.
Montressa sat up. Unlike before, she didnt argue or ask questions. Not when Valeterisa looked out on the street and smiled like that. Montressa roseand that was how she met Milaw.
The [Clockmaker].
When Earthers came to this world, they spoke of intricate parts. Of electricity, harnessed to create a conceptual web of interwoven ideas. They talked about flying in planes, and cars, and the basis of that was a level of machinery they claimed far outstripped even Pallass in design.
One of the things they said they had were clocks. But this world had clocks. Everything from the sundial to magical timekeepingbut it wasnt as if most people had a clock. The sun was a decent timekeeper, and most people used that.
However, there were sun clocks. How they worked was similar to the sundial, which was a piece of stone placed such that, with adequate sunlight, the light from the sun would always strike what time of day it was. It was susceptible to other forms of light, clouds, and it needed to be calibrated to wherever it stood, making it highly, highly immobile.
Sun clocks were different. They had an open case to the sky and actual arms that pointed at each hour of the day. The case reflected, via pieces of glass mirrors, light downwards into it, whereupon a simple spell measured what angle the light was coming from. Unlike a sundial, the sun clock had multiple sensors, because it used the mirrors to reflect the light into the enchanted timekeeper.
It was a far, far more complex piece of magical machinery than Montressas Cloak of [Protection]. Mostly because the enchanted stone had to both calculate angle and match that against the position of the sun to get the arms to swing to the correct time. In factif you shone a [Light] spell, you could trick the sensors and get the arms to move to any time you wanted.
That was how Milaw, the [Clockmaker], was testing his latest clock. He had inserted the tiny gears Valeterisa had brought him into the device, and he was shining a [Light] spell, a ray of it, at different angles inside his shop.
Accordingly, the arms of the sun clock swung around to each time he wanted. Montressa held her breath.
It was so mathematically complex it hurt her head, despite her knowing how he had done it. The magic was very low; just the configured timekeeper. Everything else was an assemblage of gears. Yetthat single piece made the sun clock more advanced than most Wistram students could hope to make.
And he was doing it. Milaw wore a small cap over his vest and polished shoes, and his beard and mustache were grey. He winked at Montressa, and he was a [Clockmaker].
Not a [Mage]. But he was a citizen of Fissival, and he knew Valeterisa. Actually knew her. She sat in his shop as he spoke.
Lastly, 12 oclockand we are done. A perfect sun clock for the Scholarium. Some noble buyer from there. A perfectworthless clock.
He placed it delicately in a box designed to hold it, closed the lid, attached the latch, and Montressas mouth opened.
What? But its beautiful!
The lacquered wood of the clock showed a pair of Drake [Mages] holding wands along the redwood clock, and the dial that showed the times had the moon and stars on it. You could open a hatch in the back to adjust the gears, and it was as rich as anything she could have seen in the du Valeross household.
And yetthe [Clockmaker] poured himself a cup of tea as Valeterisa sat with him and smiled.
It is a lovely piece of art. A poor clock. Light must dictate the time, and I think even someone who trusted the clock would look out the windowjust in case it were wrong. It fails if theres a storm and tells no time at night. What kind of a useful clock is that?
Montressa hesitated.
I know its not always practical, but the Mages Guild has the time even in the night.
Correct. And they transmit the times to each other to make sure theyre right and ask Fissival, or Wistram, what time it is. Theyre off a few minutes some days, but they can always confirm with Wistram or Fissival. Because we have better clocks. Take a look at this.
So saying, Milaw showed Montressa a completely different type of clock. It had no sensors, nor did it take in light. There was no ticking sound from within, but as Montressa watched, a minute-hand moved slowly, and the hour hand seemed in the right place.
This is a Math Clock. Far less popular because they require manual setting and they require mana stones, rather than the almost mana-free Sun Clocks. They run purely on numbers.
How?
Montressa stared at the clock, and, for answer, Valeterisa lifted one finger. She projected a beam of light straight up, and Montressas eyes narrowed.
[Measure Distance].
Milaw produced a wand and performed the same spell.
Light is a constant, Miss Montressa. Soa Math Clock shoots a beam of light in a tiny part of the clock. Constantly, and it measures how long it took for the beam to travel. It must add, and add, and adduntil it reaches what we call a second. Then it moves this gear here.
He opened the panel and showed her a gear. Then it was simple. Sixty seconds equaled a minute. Each minute, the turning second-gear rotated the minute-hand, and the entire clock moved.
There are other methods. Some have hourglasses built in, which measure one minute and simply rotate. Others? They let a single drop of water fall. I use light. It takes the most energy, so my clocks need constant recharging.
And they are the most accurate clocks of all the Math Clocks. Milaw taught me [Measure Distance], Montressa. He works part-time as a [Builder].
[Supervisor]. Ive changed my class.
Oh. Congratulations. I should have bought you a cake.
The gears will do, and seeing you is a treat enough. I thought you were dead. Everyone did. You didnt answer any [Message] spells, no one had seen you in years
Milaw rested a hand on Valeterisas shoulder, and she flinched.
I was trapped. I made a mistake, and I nearly died.
Thats Valeterisa, the greatest [Mage] to come from our streets.
The conversation was so surprisingly serious and intimate that Montressa was almost as embarrassed as Valeterisa, who looked away from the old [Clockmaker]s proud expression. He knew her. He must have helped raise her. Because she was curious, Montressa had to ask
How are you a [Builder]er, [Supervisor], Master Milaw?
He chuckled.
Only because I help make sure everything is straight. All the numbers line upand that everything is level. I keep telling the others they can do it with a glass of water. Just see if its straight. But magic is in Fissivals blood. If you cant do it with magic, it cant be done at all. So
He pointed his wand, and a line of light shot out. A little number popped into being over the counter.
0.0003411
Montressas eyes narrowed.
What is that?
A number. How flat it is. I keep trying to go below four zeroes, but its too difficult, and no one can notice after the second one. Would you like me to show you how? Light and numbers. Everything is light and numbers. You can calculate anything, not that its very useful!
He laughed cheerily, and Montressa thought of the Earthers and their math you couldnt see that required precision without end. She looked at Valeterisa, and the Archmage of Izril dangled her legs over a stool, sipping her tea like a girl, as Milaw smiled.
So this is the greatest spellcaster in Fissival?
Instantly, Milaw turned beet red and looked at Valeterisa in shock. But the Archmage of Izril only nodded.
Yes, he is. Milaw, are the others coming off work?
The crafters of Heneith Street are all coming now they know youre back. What was that about? An apprentice? You came to Fissival so fastI thought youd be a month travelling from the Great Plains, even if you can fly! A joke. You always had a strange sense of humor.
He spoke, giving Valeterisa a strange look. But the Archmage just shook her head.
The world is changing, Milaw. It is not the age of magic. Not yet. But this is my apprentice, and I decided she had to meet Fissivals true masters of magic.
He laughed, uncertain. Waving his hand and telling her not to tease him in his old age. But now Montressa sawshe stood as Valeterisa turned to greet the [Crafters], [Artisans] of Fissivals district. And Montressa bowed and shook their hands as they exclaimed over their lost child who had returned.
Men and women with white hair. Not even just Humans; some were Drakes who hadnt won First-Class Citizenships, and not all were Valeterisas great spellcasters. But some were.
It was not about the level of magic, as Montressa had realized, it was how it was used. For instance, a single [Tailor] lifted her hand and showed Montressa a trick.
You can thread any needle in the world far easier than with your hands, my dear. See? Not that Id ever manage it with a hundred tries, but it keeps me employed, even at eighty years old.
For proof, she raised a shaking hand which couldnt perform that task. Montressa glanced at herand then at the needle moving in loops and arcs. That was one thingmoving a thread into a needles eye was already tough. Telekinesis via magicTelim could do it, probably. High Mage Telim could do it. Montressa couldnt, not on the first try, but the old [Tailor] could do it every single time.
Like moving a single, tiny thread of magic with perfect control. Valeterisa copied her. It was hard to thread a needlebut another to thread six needles at once and have each one sew neat rows of stitches.
Could Archmage Viltach, could Nailihuaile manage that? They could throw a [Fireball], but work on six sewing projects at once? Every artisan of Fissival was a citizen, and so they incorporated magic into their craft seamlessly.
Like the [Smith], already so old he had all but retired, and his son who had taken up his mantle. They had no ability to cast [Fireball], again, but he had learned how to heat up his steel to degree-perfect forging temperatures without the need for a fire.
I met a traveller, a Stitch-Man from Chandrar, who once told me I could work for the Tannousin Clan! I didnt realize it was a compliment for years.
He laughed at Montressa and, like Milaw, like the others, made very little of it.
Its just a single spell. Control is all. Your teacher, Valeterisashe can perform actual magic. All we taught her were some craft tricks; she was the one who beat every student, even the [Mage Lords], and won every duel and wrote her papers.
They were endlessly proud of her. Just as clearlythey didnt see how Valeterisas own magic echoed theirs.
Control. The old [Tailor] was performing a cats cradle with some yarn, but doing it magically, and Valeterisa was copying her.
Oh, youve gotten better! How about this? Can you unthread this ball of yarn? I made it specially for you.
The [Tailor] cackled, and a look of chagrin passed over even Valeterisas face. Milaw groaned.
Ierythe, dont
The ball of yarn was tightly wound, and it had a simple rule: you could only unravel it from the string buried on the inside. You had to sense where it was and then untangle it, moving it through the countless layers of fiber internally until the ball came apart.
Montressa couldnt even sense the thread inside it. Valeterisa stared blankly at the ball as the conversations continued, and Montressa had to tell stories of her, because Valeterisa refused to. In turn, she heard the ones they told of her.
Archmage Valeterisa. I remember a girl who would walk to the weekly line and stand there with a book in her hands. Day in, day out. And who could keep up with Ierythe when she needed hands for her sewing.
The old [Tailor] cackled.
None finer! To afford lessons, she helped Milaw make clocks, worked with meand was always chatting with our Djinni down below. He likes and loves no one, except the little girl who began bringing him snacks. Like other Drakes and Humans made mud pies, shed enchant some quartz with magic.
Valeterisa blushed faintly, but the Humans were so proud of her. Proudand never once did they speak of the Scholarium or ask where Valeterisa had been.
Archmage. Did you learn a lot in the Draconae Scholarium?
Montressa had to ask. Valeterisa looked up, and everyone fell silent. Slowly, the ball of yarn fell apart in her hands, and a single thread spooled into the air and into Ierythes lap. The old woman smiled, but her face clouded as Valeterisa sat there. She took a long time replying as everyone looked and didnt look at her.
I learned a lot from the people of Heneith Street. Not just this street; there is a [Butcher] I will introduce you to who learned to find rot in any piece of meat. Drakes who can carve wood along every unseen seam. Fine teachers, but I did not level much as a [Mage], for I was young. A girl. I entered the Draconae Scholarium when I was eleven years old. I graduated at fifteen at Level 23.
In half the time, at the top of every class. No matter how much they claimed you cheated
Milaw raised his voice. Valeterisa spoke quietly.
I graduated at Level 23 and applied to Wistram. When I left the Academy of Magic, I was Level 35. In both cases, my growth as a [Mage] was clear. My roots were ever here. My levels I gained as a student of the Scholarium. Those are the numbers and the facts.
And how they lied. Montressa sat there as Valeterisa turned her head, unseen, to the distant Scholarium, the last point on their visit. And she wondered, if Valeterisa had never entered an academymuch less the Scholariumwould she still have leveled like that, if she had started here, on this street?
That night, Milaw closed his shop, and he and the crafters spoke late into the night as Valeterisa cast magic.
Simple magics, like enchanting a pair of knitting needles, unwarping a beam in the [Clockmaker]s shop. She cast simple magics for the Drakes watching her from outside, through the glass windows.
The Archmage of Izril cast the grand ones in secret, hidden in illusion spells. She reached out, and Ierythe raised a trembling hand.
Are you sure, Valeterisa? I have nothing to barter and nothing to trade for what it should cost.
She looked afraid, not of the spell or Valeterisas ability, but of what she felt it should be. And to that, the Archmage of Izril, that unfeeling bit of magical code and logicshe bent down, like a younger woman, eyes sparkling with passion and righteousness, and Montressa saw a light as beautiful as the Grand Plazas spell knit around her.
It should cost nothing at all. Its just mana. [Restoration].
Like a sigh, a glow enveloped the old [Tailor], and her hands stopped trembling. She cried outbut when the others leapt to their feet, she stood, clutching at her back, and collapsed back into her chair.
Dont standyour muscles are weak. Its restoration, not a cure for all.
Valeterisa helped her back down, but the old woman was weeping.
I stood! Did you see it? I felt I could stand, and I did.
The Healer of Tenbaults magic. How did you learn it?
The others stood around as Valeterisa gazed about blandly. She took her time in replying and recharging her mana as she beckoned another person over.
Goblins.
That, of course, made no sense. But Valeterisa had both the spell and the means to teach it. If only the [Crafters] had the means to cast it. Montressa thought they did. She thought even old Ierythe couldif only she had the mana reserves, the training in the kind of magic to produce the spell. The complexity was not beyond her.
What a tragedy.
A tragedy?
Milaw didnt understand what she meant, and he was shaking his head. He looked at Valeterisa.
You could patent that in the Scholarium. In front of them all. They would have to make you a Mage Lady of Fissival, then. First-Class? They would make you the Draconae Magis. One of Three.
Valeterisa just shook her head as she laid her hands on the next person.
No. They wouldnt. I would rise, but I dont think I would ever become one of Fissivals Three. I see that, now. It was good I never learned this before.
It should be for everyone, Valeterisa. Even if you cant cast itwill you please listen? Ten. Ten times. I will sell everything I have to pay you.
Ierythe whispered desperately. Valeterisa bent over her and embraced the old woman so awkwardly it hurt. Because she did it.
I can only cast it three times per day, Ierythe. Even the Healer, with all her Skills, can do it ten times each day, with every mana potion she has.
Oh
So I will stay three more days. But I do not know if I will show the Scholarium. I have met the Healer of Tenbault. I did not care for her. I will not make more of her kind.
That was what Valeterisa had been pondering. She turned to Montressa, and the [Aegiscaster] jumped. But Valeterisa just beckoned her over.
Apprentice, link with me. Try to learn the magic; we may be able to do it four times before we need mana potions. Then we will dine. And rest.
That night, Montressa felt so drained she and Valeterisa ate every dish the [Innkeeper] brought out, and as promised, he had sent a feast. A Tier 6 spell. Valeterisa knew a Tier 6 spell.
Perhaps Eldavin knew it, but Valeterisa was no ancient [Mage] of days, but a new one, however old she claimed to feel. Wistrams return to glory was far from here.
MontressaMontressa wanted Valeterisa to shine brighter. So much so that she felt, in her heart, that this was the right thing to do.
Returning home was unraveling Valeterisa like the ball of yarn, but what had been buried was better than the yarn itself, if that made sense. They were both a bit travel-worn, so that night, Valeterisa inquired, and it turned out both could refresh themselves at the inn.
I didnt know Fissival had such good plumbing that it has private baths everywhere.
Hm. It doesnt. Come, well refresh ourselves together.
A public bath? Montressa hoped so, or that Fissival wasnt that intimate. But it turned out they would be using neither. Instead, the [Innkeeper] directed them to a private room out around back, and they found themselves sitting in a wood-lined room with a pot of steaming water and some coals in the center.
A sauna. Montressa had never been in one before, but Drakes loved hot baths and saunas. Valeterisa added water until it was steaming, and then both just sat there, towels for modesty. It was only then that Valeterisa referred back to the crafters.
Fissival is the City of Magic. Its great spells are built upon each citizens own talents, and they have kept this city floating even in the days when great magics have left it.
That was all Valeterisa said. Montressa glanced up at her.
They truly were inspiring. Archmage
Valeterisa. I am a Second-Class Citizen, here.
Montressa stared at Valeterisas straight face. She amended her statement.
Valeterisa, is it alright to show me [Restoration]?
For answer, the Archmage just scrubbed at one arm.
You swore to be my apprentice. If I teach youI teach you. If you are a liar, a thief, someone to steal my magic or claim credit for my workyou would not be the first.
Montressa stared at her, then burst out.
I never will. I swear!
Valeterisa just nodded. She sat there and gazed out one steam-clouded window.
The Scholarium will not be pleasant. If Wistrams politics are something you knowthink of the Scholarium much the same.
And Fissivals Three? What is that about?
The ruling body. The Draconae Magis, the Draconae Pricepe, the Draconae Duxel. Magic, governance, and war. The Mage Lords and Ladies and high spellcasters have equivalent power to your [Lords] and [Ladies]. Wall Lord Dragial was able to command armies to march even after his exile.
Magic rules.
Valeterisa closed her eyes. She lay there as the sauna cooled, and Montressa stoked the coals. She murmured.
A certain kind of it, yes. This should be my city. Why isnt it? Ieka is my family in the north, and these are my people and teachers here. I belong to Izril more than Wistram. But what I crave I have never found. Those who hunger for magic, and magic alone, without distraction or compromise. Do I not see it? Or am I still looking?
Montressa didnt know what to say. She went to sleep, and the next day, they visited the Draconae Scholarium.
Archmage Valeterisa stood in the Draconae Scholarium, the heart of Fissivals magic. Learning and education, where [Mage Lords] gathered with the greatest [Mages] of Drake-kind. Izrils seat of magical power.
From here, the [Mages] ruled. Not as Wistram did, but with classes, some sitting outdoors, lecture halls filled with more students than even Wistram could boast of.
But fewer [Mages] could fly here, even compared with Wistram Academy. Students graduated under great teachers like Wardmistress Geyasa and went on to fulfill vital roles wherever they went in business, war, and on other continents.
However, the Scholarium was a riotous place, and their greatest membersfrom the teachers to the aforementioned [Mage Lords], who were both nobles and successful spellcastersformed the Scholariums Court. They convened, unofficially or in formal settings, often in the largest courtyard, which could also be a font for lessons as it overlooked much of Fissival.
A green courtyard of obsessively-trimmed grass across from a wide fountain, a sizzling stretch of coals that Montressa just bet new students were hazed upon, let practitioners use the elements. Students sat on a glassy plaza, tails stretched out as a Drake [Professor], an actual one, gave them a lecture about a rock.
Here stood the Wardmistress, demonstrating a level of defensive barrier that made even Montressa look twice. A group of idle Drake [Scholars], speaking to a [Mage Lady] about the impending war.
The Scholariums Court stood here, and their peer did likewise. The Archmage of Izril. A student of this very place who had gone on to define Izril as their chief spellcaster.
Montressa could have admired the buildings that led deeper into the private libraries, the remaining magical towers that enabled such great feats as a scrying tower capable of reaching even Rhir with perfect accuracy, or the famed teleportation network that transported goods across Izril and had once done far more.
But she was unable to; her face was almost as fiery red as her hair. She stood, the staff of the [Pyromancer], Fyres, in hand, anger smoking off her like magic. Valeterisa?
She said nothing. She stood there, like a younger [Mage], as the Scholarium buzzed around her. And ignored her. Completely and utterly as the Archmage of Izril stared down at her shoes. Some Drakes, like Geyasa, glanced her way, but none dared do the unthinkable and breach the bubble of isolation around her.
First, the Archmage of Izril petitioned to meet the Scholariums Court in formal redress. They accepted, in two months time.
Second, the [Mage] of the Scholarium requested to meet with the [Headmaster] of the Scholarium, [Professors], and received polite refusals, as was their right.
Third and last of all, they could not stop her from entering, so Second-Class Citizen Valeterisa stood and stared at her feet in the Scholariums courtyard. And still no one said a word.
Archmage Valeterisa of Izril? Now there is a name I have not heard in a long, long time. Almost a decade. If she has the gall to enter Fissival, let alone approach the Scholarium after her involvement in the war, let alone her long absence? That would be unwise. The Scholarium will light her aflame if they dont ignore her completely. She is no mage of Fissival.
A Drake disembarking a ship caught wind via [Message] spell that Valeterisa was in the City of Magic. He glanced high, high up the plateau as the ship finally unloaded its passengers. Drakes, tired from circumnavigating Izril, and Humans, equally sea-sick and wary of their new home.
A new prison, a better one? Or just more of the same with different scales? The other [Mages] were tired too; they could have disembarked at Zeres and arguably come here faster. But then, likely, some of the Humans would have disappeared or become guests of Zeres or Pallass. Manus and Oteslia too. Let alone the damn war with Salazsar.
Politics. Were they in this together or not? Ah, wellthey were home. Another Drake, nursing a scar from his encounter with Cognita of Wistram, glanced up as one of the [Mages] commentated.
Youre too young to remember Mage Valeterisa, arent you, Magus Reinall?
Mage Lord Ascoden spoke lightly as one of the [War Mages] who had participated in the raid on Wistram stared up at their home. Reinall shook his head.
Ive only heard of her. You would have been close to her age, Mage Lord?
Ascoden nodded.
I am younger, but I remember Magus Valeterisa. Top of her year. We lost her to Wistram.
He had graduated around the same time as Magus Grimalkin, and Reinall shook his head.
Not one of ours. I heard shes a Second-Class Citizen, still. Which is amazing that we kept her as a citizen.
Not a [Mage] of Fissival.
Ascoden nodded. He glanced at the Earthers, disembarking, and caught the eyes of some of them. Eun, Saifalong the way, he walked past Reinall and kicked him into the surf, over the edge of the landing boat.
The other Drakes watched as a flailing Drake with pearlescent blue scales went head-first into the sand and came up, spluttering.
Mage Lord!
Ascoden leaned over the landing boat and fixed Reinall with a long stare.
I studied [Valeterisas Complex Seeker Projectile] spell. And it was almost as hard to memorize as that name. We lost her to Wistram. The Archmage of Izril. If shes here, I hope she stays long enough for someone to greet her.
The Scholarium wont appreciate that, Mage Lord!
Reinall sounded nervous. But Ascoden just smiled.
The Scholarium is never united unless someone manages to bully the others into silence. Dragial is dead, and Valeterisa has returned. Two good events in one month.
He turned and smiled upwards, but his smile was wan, and as he walked off the boat, he was conscious of the stares and politics enfolding him like the magical aura of home.
Bad magic. Poor magic. If he had the chance to meet Valeterisa, he would shake her hand. And tell her to leave. Fissival did not deserve her. Even if it needed her, perhaps he had to wait and see if the great plateau the City of Magic was built on broke and fell into the surf below, first. Then, and only then, would he learn if Fissival, the Walled City of Magic, could truly fly or not.
Authors Note: Aaah. Do you feel it?
Im dying. Which is the dramatic way of saying Im reaching my natural endpoint before I need a vacation. It doesnt feel like dying and, being conscious of the fact that my words can be taken literally, I shall now continue to dramatize how it feels.
It feels like knowing I can do better, and failing to produce it. Chasing for the same easy eloquence or noting that I fall bad into writing habits. To go even further, if theres a perfect chapter, a ray of sunlight I can tell exists in the distance, at the heart of each chapter, all Im producing is murky waters. And that becomes more true the more fatigued I get.
Also, you dont deal with negative emotions as well the closer to burnout you get, although thats a nebulous term and mine is more like fatigue, not a complete meltdown.
It feelslike being Squidward from the Spongebob show and watching that stupid sponge make words of art. And the irony for writers and I suspect, a lot of tasks in general, is that the key to getting some of the inspiration and quality back is to take a break. Perhaps the ideal state of mind to be in means taking as long as 2 weeks break per chapterbut then Id fall into the trap of some famously unfinished series. Balance.
But its also true that I can do a chapter in two parts, which Ive strayed from. I dont like to do it because it feels like I can, with effort, create contained narratives. But perhaps thats pushing too far and the best stuff comes out of a state of grace. Seeing where the chapter goes.
This wasnt quite that graceful, but Ill write one more chapter which should do it, however long or short it is, then take my weekly break. Its been sort of a hectic writing cycle with my failed vacation and other things interfering at times, but then, there have been good points too. I hate banks. I appreciate family.
I still hold a grudge against Canada but Ill give it another shot. Airlines suck. I just wish fatigue didnt seem to creep in faster than when I started writing, but thenI probably managed to write non-stop for years because they were 14,000 word chapters, or 8,000. I can do 8,000 chapters all year long.
Thats my musings for the day. Hope you enjoyed and see you next chapter!
Bela Fishing, Void Goat, and Goat Walking by /Brack_Giraffe
Tom by maniclittle!
Rags Laugh by butts!