Read Fimbulwinter (Daniel Black) Online
Authors: E. William Brown
magical forces were an addition to normal biology, not a replacement for it.
Living things had a natural magical field that acted as a sort of life force,
affecting and sometimes enhancing physical processes. But I still had organs,
cells and biochemistry, and so did the various people I’d healed.
Similarly, my understanding of magic made it pretty obvious that it was
a force of nature rather than a living thing. But this world was swarming with
tiny, invisible elemental spirits that were basically made of magic, and they
seemed to have at least animal levels of intelligence. So it was entirely
possible that when Cerise stole power from a magical creature she was
ingesting fragments of its personality too. That wasn’t exactly the same thing as
the ‘white’ and ‘black’ magic the book talked about, but it was close enough to
explain why people would believe in such things.
As the afternoon wore on I gradually began to see how these bindings
could work. At first I’d thought it was a matter of imposing commands on the
victim, but the human mind is far too complex and malleable for that to be
practical. Even if you invented a spell to let you perceive the subject’s mind,
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how would you ever pin down what the individual parts did in enough detail to
accomplish anything? You’d need some kind of mind control sorcery to make
that work, and I got the distinct impression that there wasn’t any such thing.
So instead, binding rituals always involved making the subject consent
to some sort of verbal or written agreement. A basic binding simply compelled
the victim to avoid any action she believed would constitute a violation of the
agreement. More complex versions could force actions or even changes in
mental state, which I found rather chilling. The victim’s own magic was the
power source for such a binding, so the more powerful she was the more
complete it could be.
With that foundation laid, the second half of the book was a dissertation
on how to word a binding to enslave a witch in the most abject servitude
imaginable, and how to torture her into agreeing to the binding.
After a few pages of that I was sorely tempted to march into town and
level the temple. Maybe try out some of their own torture techniques on the
priests, and see what they thought of them. A gang rape would be hard to
organize, but the hot pokers and thumbscrews would be easy to duplicate.
I kept reading, though.
It had struck me that the Church’s witch-binding techniques sounded
like they had a lot in common with the coven-bonds the witches themselves
used, and there were a lot of potentially important observations in between the
stomach-turning passages about the best ways to torture a young woman
without marring her appearance too badly.
The major loophole in these binding techniques, which the author
returned to time and time again, was that a binding’s meaning is interpreted by
the mind of the subject. A witch bound to tell the truth can still be mistaken. A
delusional witch will still be crazy after she’s bound. More subtly, a quick-
witted victim can choose how to interpret any ambiguity in her bindings.
That was an enormous problem with verbal bindings, because the
fallible nature of human memory meant details would inevitably be lost or
distorted over time. Make a homicidal witch swear to ‘never do harm of any
sort to anyone’ today, and she’ll eventually convince herself that only applies
to physical harm. Make the vow more complex, and that just gives her more
details to mix up and build loopholes out of.
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Written contracts could be far more complex, but had the drawback
that the binding was anchored in the physical document. A binding you can
break just by burning a piece of paper isn’t very reliable, unless you can be
very certain the paper is well protected.
The solution the church of Odin had come up with involved a standard
set of bindings known as the Riven Covenants, which were chiseled into stone
tablets and stored in some secret location. A clever bit of sympathetic magic
allowed anyone with a sliver of stone from one of the tablets to bind victims to
abide by their contents, despite having never seen them.
The last few pages of
In Tauro de Maleficis
claimed to be a copy of
the text of the Riven Covenants. The contents looked like they’d do an
exceptionally thorough job of making the victim into a devoted slave of her
binder, but of course there was no way to check their accuracy. For all I knew
the actual text on those tablets was completely different, and I wasn’t about to
bind someone just to see how they acted afterwards.
I was considering whether to add finding those tablets and destroying
them to my to-do list when a distant rumble and crash distracted me. A
cacophony of faint shouts and scream rose up as I hurried to the top of the
tower where I’d been taking my last break of the day.
I reached the parapet to find a pall of smoke hanging over the town.
From my vantage point I could see a wide gap in the old town wall, and dozens
of figures rushing across the snow-covered fields beyond. The setting sun cast
long, weirdly-distorted shadows across the mob, and for a moment I couldn’t
tell what they were. Large figures and small ones, some on two legs and others
on four.
Then the breeze blew some of the dust away, and I picked out a goblin
mounted on wolf-back. Beside him a troll lumbered through the snow, waving
a huge club studded with spikes over its head.
There were hundreds of them, and the lead elements were already
halfway to the breach.
“Damn it,” I growled. “Don’t these guys ever give up?”
There was no time to descend to ground level and make my way
through the crowded streets of the town. By the time I reached the fight that
way there’d be a few hundred goblins and half a dozen trolls inside the town,
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and I had no idea if there were enough troops in the garrison to drive a force
like that back out.
I vaulted over the parapet, pushed off from the side of the tower, and
threw myself into the air with a burst of force magic.
I still hadn’t figured out how to fly properly, but I had more than enough
power to throw myself around. I pushed again, sailing high into the air over the
town. Activating my force field muted the wind in my face, but the sudden
change in aerodynamics sent me into a spin.
I straightened out, found myself far too close to an approaching rooftop
and pushed off again. Up, arching high over a clump of three-story buildings. A
sideways push to correct the beggining of a tumble. A flex of my flesh magic to
suppress a sudden flash of nausea.
Up again, and now I could see the breach clearly. A thirty-foot section
of the old town wall had simply collapsed, crushing the buildings built against
it and throwing the townspeople into confusion. A band of goblins wearing
white cloaks were standing in the rubble, shooting arrows into the crowd of
fleeing civilians. Sappers? Some kind of goblin commandos?
Another push, angling for the center of the breach. If I could throw up
an obstacle before the main force arrived maybe we could keep them out of the
town. I could hear horns blowing and bells ringing all over the settlement now.
One of the white-coated goblins spotted me as I fell towards them. He
shouted, pointing and dancing around, and the others turned their heads
skyward. A rain of arrows rose to meet me, but my new shield was far stronger
than the one I’d used before. Goblin arrows weren’t going to do anything to it.
None of them missed.
The first few arrows rattled off my shield just as I’d expected, raising
little showers of blue sparks as they were thrown away. But these projectiles
were magical, imbued with all sorts of minor spell effects. Bursts of flame and
electricity flashed uselessly against the barrier, but speed and penetration
effects took a heavier toll on my amulet’s energy reserve. One carried a
dispelling effect that attacked the magic of my barrier directly, while another
struck with such force that it started me spinning again.
Then four shamans raised their little bone staves, and hurled dark blobs
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that trailed streamers of sickly green smoke at me.
I managed to dodge one, but the second went right through my barrier
and grazed my leg. Agony flared through me as the immaterial spell ate into my
flesh like acid, and for a crucial second I was too distracted to dodge. Another
curse smashed into my side.
I screamed.
I hit the ground moving far too fast.
My shield stopped first, but I’d intentionally designed it not to transmit
impacts to me. So an instant later I slammed into the inside of the barrier, still
tumbling from those last seconds of uncontrolled fall. I hit a solid mass of
stone, flipped over it and plowed face-first into a cavity in the rubble. For a
moment I hovered on the edge of unconsciousness.
But my amulet was still around my neck, mindlessly trying to heal all
my damage at once. With that help I somehow managed to cling to
consciousness. With a groan, I tried to move.
My right arm was a mass of pain, and my hand didn’t want to work. My
face was covered in blood, and my front teeth were missing. Worse, I couldn’t
feel my legs at all.
I managed to shift a little, so I could turn my head and see out of the
hole I was in. The flash of pain from my arm nearly made me pass out again.
Definitely broken.
An arrow smacked into my depleted shield with a flash of green smoke.
Goblin voices gabbled at each other in their own language, and then a shaman
cautiously peered over the edge of the hole.
His eyes met mine, and a toothy grin split his wrinkled face.
“We got you now, flying man,” he said. “No more running and killing
of goblins for you. Spirits of earth, crush!”
The stones beneath me shifted, and began to move.
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Chapter 11
The shifting stones pressed against my shield, raising showers of blue
sparks. It was holding for the moment, but I knew now they had non-physical
spells. I groped for my flesh sorcery, trying to focus enough to shut out the pain
so I could try to escape.
A silver knife opened the shaman’s throat, sending a spray of bright red
blood arcing over me. A lithe form vaulted the rock he’d been standing on, and
slid down my shield to land next to me.
“Daniel!” Cerise gasped. “Shit, you’re fucked up. What can I do?”
“Keep… off me…” I gasped. It was hard to breath, and my voice
wasn’t working right.
More goblins were coming into view now. One loosed an arrow at her,
but she sidestepped it neatly. “You got it. Fading light, flee from my presence!
Devouring night, make my shadow your home!”
The dim light of twilight suddenly faded to pitch darkness. I heard the
frantic jabbering of goblins, and more arrows whistled through the air. Then a
goblin shrieked in pain.
“I can keep them busy for a few minutes,” Cerise’s voice whispered in
my ear. “But the shamans will tear down my shadows pretty quick and then I’m
fucked. So work fast.”
“’kay.”
I gathered my focus again, and managed to get a pain block in place.
With that done I was able to levitate myself without passing out from the pain,
and get all my body parts arranged more or less the way they were supposed to
be. Damn, that was a bad landing.
Priorities.
I had broken ribs, and one of them punctured a lung. That was why I
couldn’t breathe right. Okay, push the ribs back into place, clear my lung and
stop the bleeding. No time for anything more. Why couldn’t I feel my legs?
My spine was severed down near my waist. Damn. I needed mobility,
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and I levitating myself took too much concentration. I couldn’t fight and move
at the same time that way. Alright, I’d have to try to fix it.
Cerise yelped in pain, and the impenetrable blackness around me faded
to something more like a moonless night. Now I could make out vague outlines
moving around me, and an occasional flash of magic.
Was that a faint tingling in my toes, or just my imagination? Damn it,
this was taking too long!
Sounds of combat were springing up all around me now. Screams and
shouts and the ringing of steel against steel. A wolf howled nearby, and the
bellowing roar of a troll echoed it. An impact glanced off my shield, which
still wasn’t back to full strength. Why not?
Oh. Maybe putting defense and healing on the same item wasn’t such a
smart idea. The amulet was mindlessly dumping almost all of its energy into