Read Magic Study Online

Authors: Maria V. Snyder

Tags: #Fantasy, #Fiction, #General, #Magic, #Epic, #American Science Fiction And Fantasy, #Fantasy fiction, #Fantasy - Epic, #Fiction - Fantasy, #Romance, #Romance - Fantasy, #American Light Romantic Fiction, #Romance: Gothic, #Brothers and sisters, #Magicians

Magic Study (26 page)

Catch up?
Kiki asked.

Are we close?

  The pungent smell of horses mixed with a thin scent of smoke. Through Kiki’s eyes, I could see a distant fire.

They stop.

  I weighed my options. A night alone or the possibility of facing Irys’s anger if I joined her. Not used to sitting in the saddle for more than an hour, my legs and back ached. I needed a break. Kiki, though, could travel much longer. Pulling power, I projected my awareness, feeling for the overall mood of the campsite.

  Cahil gripped the handle of his sword; the wide-open sky alarmed him. Leif lounged on the ground almost asleep. Irys-

Yelena!
Her outrage seared my mind.

  Decision made. Before she could demand an explanation, I showed her what had happened between Valek and me.

Impossible.

  The word triggered a memory.
You said the same thing when I reached out to Valek to help me against Roze’s mental probing. Perhaps there is something connecting us that you haven’t encountered?

Perhaps,
she conceded.
Come, join us. It’s too late to send you home. And you can’t go back to the Keep without me to help you against Roze’s wrath.

  With that sobering thought, I told Kiki to find the campsite. She felt glad, though, when we reached Topaz. He grazed with the other horses near the camp.

  I removed Kiki’s tack, rubbed her down and made sure she had enough food and water. Reluctance and sore muscles made my movements slow.

  When I finally joined Irys in the small clearing where they had stopped for the night, she only asked me if I needed dinner. I glanced at the others. Leif stirred a pot of soup cooking over the flames. He wore a neutral expression. Cahil’s hand now hovered near his sword handle; he seemed more relaxed about the night sky. He grinned when he met my gaze. He was either glad about my arrival, or was anticipating the entertainment from the reprimand I was certain to receive from Irys.

  Instead, Irys lectured Cahil and me on the proper way to interact with the Sandseed Clan members.

  “Respect of the elders is a must,” she said. “All requests are to be made to the elders, but only after they invite us to speak. They don’t trust outsiders and will watch for any sign of disregard or any indication that you are spying on them. So don’t ask questions unless given permission and don’t stare.”

  “Why would we stare?” I asked.

  “They don’t like to wear clothes. Some members will dress when outsiders are visiting, but others won’t.” Irys smiled ruefully. “Also they have a few powerful magicians. They aren’t Keep trained, they teach their own. Although a few of their younger magicians have come to the Keep, seeking to enhance their knowledge. Kangom was one of these, but he didn’t stay at the Keep for long.” Irys frowned.

  Unfortunately, I knew where he had gone from there. He changed his name to Mogkan and started kidnapping children, smuggling them into Ixia.

  Before Cahil could voice his questions about Mogkan, I asked Irys, “What about the Sandseed magicians that stay with the clan?”

  “They call them Story Weavers,” Irys explained. “They hold the clan’s history. The Sandseeds believe their history is a living entity, like an invisible presence that surrounds them. Since the clan’s story is always evolving, the Story Weavers guide the clan.”

  “How do they guide them?” Cahil asked with concern.

  “They mediate disputes, help in decision making, they show the clan members their past and aid them in avoiding the same mistakes. Very similar to what the Master Magicians do for the people of Sitia.”

  “They soothe a troubled heart,” Leif said, staring into the flames. “Or so they claim.” Then he stood abruptly. “The soup’s done. Who’s hungry?”

  We ate in silence. After we arranged sleeping areas for the evening, Irys informed us that we would be on the road for one more night before we reached the clan’s dwellings.

  Cahil wanted to make a night watch schedule. “I’ll take the first shift,” he offered.

  Irys just looked at him.

  “It makes sense,” he said in his defense.

  “Cahil, there is nothing to fear. And if trouble heads in our direction, I will wake you long before it arrives,” Irys said.

  I hid my smile as I watched Cahil pout. I wrapped my cloak around me against the cold night air and lay on the soft sandy ground of the clearing. I checked with Kiki.
Everything okay?

Grass sweet. Crunchy.

Bad smells?

No. Nice air. Home.

  I remembered now that Kiki had been bred by the Sandseeds.
Nice to be home?
I thought of Valek in the Snake Forest, and hoped he had regained some of his strength.

Yes. Nicer with Lavender Lady. Peppermints?
Hopeful.

In the morning,
I promised.

  I gazed up at the night sky, watching the stars dance while waiting for sleep. Kiki’s view of life sounded right. Good food, fresh water, an occasional sweet and someone to care for. That’s what everyone should have. A simplistic and unrealistic view I knew, but it soothed me.

  My thoughts, though, drifted into strange dreams. I ran through the plains, searching for Kiki. The knee-high grass grew until it reached above my head and impeded my forward motion. I pushed through the sharp blades, trying and failing to find a way out. My foot snagged on something and I fell. When I rolled over, the grass transformed into a field of snakes and they began to wrap around my body. I struggled until they immobilized me.

  “You belong with us,” a snake hissed in my ear.

  I jerked awake in the weak light of dawn. My ear tingled from the dream snake, and I shivered in the cold morning air, trying to shake off the horror of my nightmare.

  Irys and the others milled around the small fire. We ate a breakfast of bread and cheese and saddled our horses. My muscles had stiffened during the night, and they protested each movement. By midmorning, the sun warmed the land and I shed my cloak, stuffing it into my backpack.

  As we traveled, the soft ground turned into hard stone and the grasses thinned. Small sandstone outcroppings sprinkled the area. By lunch the outcroppings rose higher than our heads, and I felt as if we rode inside a canyon.

  During a brief stop, I noticed streaks of red on a pair of sandstone pillars some distance away. “Tula’s attacker had something red under his fingernails,” I told the others. “Could it be from here?”

  “It’s possible,” Irys agreed.

  “We should get a sample,” Leif said. He rummaged in his pack until he found a short glass vial.

  “We need to keep going.” Irys squinted at the sun. “I want to find a campsite before dark.”

  “Go. I’ll catch up,” Leif said.

  “Yelena, help him, make sure it’s the color you remember,” Irys ordered, then turned to Cahil before he could voice the objections behind his frown. “Cahil, you stay with me. If Yelena can find us hours after we left the Citadel, she’ll have no problem catching up today.”

  Irys and a still scowling Cahil mounted their horses and headed toward the sun, while Leif and I found a path to the pillars. They were farther away than I had thought. Then, it took us longer than we had anticipated to collect a sample. The streaks turned out to be a layer of red clay. The exposed clay had hardened, and we chipped through it to reach the softer material underneath. We placed both the hard chips and soft clay into the vial.

  By the time we returned to our starting point, the sun hovered halfway to the horizon. Kiki found Topaz’s trail, and we nudged the horses into a run.

  I felt unconcerned when the sky began to darken. Topaz’s pungent scent filled Kiki’s sensitive nose, which meant we were getting close. But when full dark descended and I could not see a fire, I began to worry. When the moon rose, I halted Kiki.

  “Are we lost?” Leif asked. He had been following me without comment since we had discovered the trail. I could just make out his annoyed frown in the faint moonlight.

  “No. Kiki says Topaz’s scent is strong. Perhaps they decided to travel longer?”

  “Can you reach Irys?” Leif asked.

  “Oh, snake spit! I forgot!” I took a deep breath and gathered a string of power, chastising myself for failing to remember my magic again. I wondered when using magic would become instinctive.

  I felt a surprising rush of power. The source seemed concentrated in this area. Projecting my awareness, I searched the surrounding land. Nothing.

  Alarmed, I extended my reach, seeking further. Then I realized that my mind hadn’t even touched field mice or any other creatures. I stopped in frustration. If I could connect to Valek in the Snake Forest, I should be able to find Irys; after all, her horse had just passed this way.

Topaz smell always strong,
Kiki agreed.

Always?

Yes.

  “Well?” Leif asked with impatience.

  “Something’s wrong. I can’t find Irys.” I told him what Kiki had just said.

  “But that’s good, right?”

  “There should have been a gradual buildup of scent from faint to sharp. Instead, it’s been the same since we found their trail.” I turned in a circle; magic pulsed in the air all around us. “Someone is trying to trick us.”

  “Finally!” A deep voice barked from the darkness.

  Kiki and Rusalka reared in surprise, but a soothing strand of magic calmed them. I pulled my bow and scanned the few faint shapes I could see in the weak light.

  “Not very quick, are you?” the voice taunted from my left.

  I spun Kiki around in time to see a man coalesce out of a blue ray of moonlight. Tall enough to meet my gaze without having to look up, the naked man’s skin was indigo and hairless. His bald head gleamed with sweat and I could see strength coiled in his powerful muscles. But his round face held amusement, and I sensed no immediate threat from him. Pure magical energy emanated from him, so I thought he might be influencing my emotions.

  I drew my bow. “Who are you and what do you want?” I demanded.

  Bright white teeth flashed as he smiled. “I am your Story Weaver.”

 

Chapter Twenty

 

  I glanced at Leif; his alarmed expression had turned to fear. Color leaked from his face as he looked from me to the large indigo-colored man. The man’s painted skin and lack of clothes made me think of Tula’s attacker, but his body was more muscular and scars crisscrossed his arms and legs. But no tattoos.

  With my mental barrier in place, I held my bow ready, but the man stood relaxed. I would be relaxed, too, if I had access to the amount of magical power within his control. He had no need to move; he could kill us with a word. Which begged the question, why was he here?

  “What do you want?” I asked.

  “Go away,” Leif said to the man, “you cause only trouble.”

  “Your stories have tangled and knotted together,” Story Weaver said. “I am here as a guide to show you both how to untangle them.”

  “Banish him,” Leif told me. “He has to obey you.”

  “He does?” That seemed rather easy.

  “If you wish me to leave, I will go. But you and your brother will not be allowed to enter our village. His twisted soul causes us pain and you are linked to him.”

  I stared at the Story Weaver in confusion; his words didn’t make sense. Friend or foe?

  “You said you were here to guide. Guide us where?”

  “Banish him now!” Leif yelled. “He will deceive you. He’s probably in league with Tula’s kidnapper and is trying to delay us.”

  “Your fear remains strong,” Story Weaver said to Leif. “You are not ready to face your story, preferring instead to surround yourself with knots. Some day, they will strangle you. Your choice was to decline our help, but your tangles threaten to squeeze the life out of your sister. This must be corrected.” Extending his hand to me, he said, “You are ready. Leave Kiki and come with me.”

  “Where?”

  “To see your story.”

  “How? Why?”

  Story Weaver refused to answer. He radiated calm patience as if he could stand there with his arm extended all night, waiting.

  Kiki looked back at me.
Go with Moon Man,
she urged.
Hungry. Tired. Want Topaz.

Smell? Bad?
I asked.

Hard road, but Lavender Lady strong. Go.

  I returned my bow to its holder and dismounted.

  “Yelena, no!” Leif cried. He clutched Rusalka’s reins tight to his chest.

  I paused in shock. “That’s the first time you’ve called me by my name.
Now
you care what happens to me? Sorry, it’s too late in the game for that to work. Frankly, I don’t want to deal with your troubles. I have enough of my own. And we have to find Tula’s attacker before he takes another, so it’s imperative that we meet with the clan elders. If this is what I need to do, then so be it.” I shrugged. “Besides, Kiki told me to go.”

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