Read season avatars 01 - seasons beginnings Online
Authors: sandra ulbrich almazan
doing here, Kron?”
“We need to talk.” Kron tilted his head at Salth’s son. “Sal-thaath,
why don’t you go play for a while so I can talk to your mother?”
“Will you play with me afterwards?”
“We’ll see.”
Sal-thaath disappeared. Kron waited until he could no longer feel
the boy’s magical residue in the air before saying, “Salth, you have to
do something about your son.”
She had already returned to her scroll. “Why? He’s a fine boy, dou-
ble-strong, double-smart, and many-powerful,” she said, not even
looking up at him.
We’re equals out here, no matter how strong she thinks her magic
is. She has no right to treat me with more contempt than I’d give a first-
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year apprentice. And she’s not going to listen to me if she has a scroll
in her hand.
Kron strode to her and jerked her scroll away. She shrieked
and reached for it, but he held it out of her reach. Only when hostile
magic built between them did he say, “Sal-thaath is too powerful, and
he has no sense of right and wrong. He’s more powerful than I am; he
could destroy a city.”
“So? What are a few more or less Nils? They breed like animals.”
“Is magic all you care about? Don’t you care about Sal-thaath?”
The anger in Salth’s eyes softened. “He’s many-talented. I’ve
learned much about time from watching him grow. And when he grows
up, he and I will study magic together and peer into the heart of it.”
“Maybe, but even you can’t teach him everything. The Magic Insti-
tute won’t take him if he can’t tolerate others. Then how will he master
his magic?”
“Master his magic? He
is
magic.” She leaned forward, her eyes
gleaming with green light. “I always wondered if it would be possible
to breed without a partner. It took several tries and a lock of my favorite
brother’s hair, but I managed to create life in myself.”
Kron wondered if Salth’s brother had had six fingers instead of five.
Maybe Salth hadn’t been as successful as she thought. Instead, he
asked, “Your favorite brother?”
“There were many of us in the harem—too many. Most of them were
cruel, caring only for power, seeking favor with our father. Only Tham
looked out for me when I was Sal-thaath’s age. He was pushed down
some stairs when I was eleven. I still think Aksam did it, that bastard.
No wonder he won the throne. A plague to all who sit on it.” Although
her voice had remained even and calm, she turned her head away for a
moment before continuing, “Anyway, I wasn’t going to mate with any-
one weaker than me, Nil or magician. That includes you.” Glancing
away from him, she crooked her forefinger. The scroll in Kron’s hand
tugged at his grip like a fish on a line. He tried grasping it with both
hands, but the pressed plant leaves seemed to exude grease. The scroll
slipped away and sailed back to its mistress’s hand.
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Salth’s eyelids lowered in satisfaction before she glared at him
again. “You’ve wasted enough of my time. Go, and leave us alone!”
She didn’t gesture, so Kron was unprepared as she transported him
out of the room and dumped him into the river. Cursing, Kron leapt out
before the tools and powders in his belt pouches were ruined. The cold
water made his tunic cling uncomfortably. He’d never been good at
cleaning with magic, so he had to brush off the mud by hand.
High-pitched laughter from overhead startled him. “That was funny.
Do it again,” Sal-thaath said as he floated down to Kron’s eye level.
“No.” The soft grass was cool, but the soil crumbled under Kron’s
feet; he’d lost a sandal. “Go find my other sandal, please.”
“Please? What does that mean?”
Did Salth teach her child anything besides magic? “It’s a nice way
to ask someone to do something for you.”
“Oh, I’ve never heard that before.” Sal-thaath whistled, and Kron’s
sandal plopped next to him.
Kron wiped off both sandals on the grass, then picked the laces out
of the leather soles. In bare feet, he trudged along the river until he
found a few suitable pieces of driftwood. While it would have been eas-
ier to ask Sal-thaath to send him home, Kron preferred to leave using
his own magic.
“What are you doing?” Sal-thaath asked as Kron lashed two
branches together.
“Making a portal back to my workshop.”
“Aren’t you staying?”
“I can’t.” He had to decide what to tell Phebe about her chicken,
then he had to warn the other residents of Vistichia to avoid any strange
six-fingered boys they saw.
“That’s all right. Mother never has much time for me either.” Sal-
thaath’s shoulders drooped as he turned away.
Kron couldn’t help but feel sorry for the child, unnatural or no. He
had no one else for company besides a magic-obsessed mother. Kron
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searched through his sack until he pulled out a flat cloth ball. “Come
here.”
The boy backed up, passing through a stump without bumping into
it. “Why?”
“I have something for you, but you have to grab it with both hands
to key it to you.”
Sal-thaath took the cloth and stared at it. “I feel magic in it. What
does it do?”
“Drop it, and you’ll find out.” Kron grinned.
Sal-thaath dropped the ball on the ground, where it inflated and
bounced up to him.
“It’ll always come back to you now,” Kron said. “Toss it to me.”
Sal-thaath’s throw was so far off Kron couldn’t move to intercept
the ball in time. It rolled into the river, but then it rolled back out, leav-
ing a trail of mud as it returned to Sal-thaath. By the time he picked it
up, the ball was dry and bouncy again.
Sal-thaath beamed. “Thanks, Kron!” He floated off, bouncing his
ball.
With a sigh, remembering his boyhood in Delns, Kron finished tying
the portal together. He willed it to open onto a hidden spot by the docks,
crawled through, and collapsed it from the other side. No sense making
it too easy for Sal-thaath to return to Vistichia.
C H A P T E R T H R E E
An Apprentice?
The next day, instead of selling artifacts in the marketplace, Kron
prepared more of them in his makeshift shelter. Rather than paying for
a room at the inn, he’d twined sticks and boards together, then en-
chanted them to keep him safe, warm, and dry. While he needed to
barter his wares for meals and a better place to sleep, not to mention
passage to Delns, he wasn’t ready to encounter Phebe in the market-
place. What should he tell her about Sal-thaath? She had no magic to
keep him away. Even the city-king’s magician wasn’t powerful enough
to control—or destroy—Sal-thaath. Kron certainly wasn’t.
“Kron! Here you are!” Sal-thaath’s voice made Kron drop his chisel.
A heartbeat later, the boy appeared and squatted next to a pile of drift-
wood. “I’ve been searching all over the city for you! Is this a game?”
“A game? No. I’m making finders.” Maybe if he talked to Sal-thaath
and showed him interesting things, he could keep the boy from playing
tricks on Phebe again—or Bella.
He showed Sal-thaath the finder: a finger-length ash arrow pinned
to an oak base. A quartz crystal nestled in an indentation in the base.
Sal-thaath splayed his thumb and five fingers over the finder. He
touched first the arrow, then the crystal. “There’s no magic in here.”
“I haven’t put it in yet. Watch.” Kron unpinned the arrow and took
it in his left hand. He grasped the base in his right, then he moved his
arms straight out to each side. He closed his eyes to focus his will.
The
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ash to seek and the oak to know. The ash to seek and the oak to know.
The ash to seek…
Kron’s arms were trembling by the time the pieces of the finder grew
warm. He plunged them into a bowl of water and held them there until
the quartz glowed. He dried them off, then pinned them back together.
“Now the arrow will always point to the nearest source of water, no
matter who holds the finder.” He gave the finder to Sal-thaath. “Go on,
try it.”
Sal-thaath floated around the shelter, testing the finder. No matter
where it was, the ash arrow always pointed towards the bowl. “Double-
clever!” he said as he dropped the finder on the ground. “This is a kind
of magic Mother and I never used before!”
Kron smiled. It felt good to have another magician praise his work.
And if he impressed Sal-thaath with his magic, maybe he could teach
him some respect for others, even people without magic. Then he
wouldn’t have to worry about Phebe’s temper and could visit Bella
again.
“Sal-thaath, if you promise to be careful, you can stay and watch me
make other magical instruments. You might even be able to help me.”
“Could I! I promise; please let me stay.” The boy’s eyes shone with
excitement. “This is more fun than catching birds in the forest.”
And safer for the birds too. “All right, but remember not to hurt an-
ything – or anyone. Now, let’s start by sorting out the pieces to these
finders you jumbled together.”
For the next week, Sal-thaath visited Kron every day. Sometimes he
stayed for only as long as it took for water to drop a level in the water
clock, sometimes all day. Sal-thaath was always willing to do whatever
Kron asked, whether it was to fetch wood or water or organize his ma-
terials. But instead of physically hauling the wood or water, he
transported it from the closest source. “This is easier,” he said when
Kron tried to explain the value of physical labor. In return, Kron shared
his meals with him, taught him how to make a few simple magical in-
struments, and listened to him chatter. Kron only sold his artifacts in
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the marketplace when Sal-thaath wasn’t with him. Word had spread
about what his finders could do, so he now sold a couple of artifacts
each time he visited the marketplace. But instead of moving into the
inn, Kron stayed in his shelter, not only to save for more supplies and
passage to Delns, but to keep Sal-thaath away from other people as
much as he could.
“You haven’t told your mother you visit me, do you?” he asked Sal-
thaath once.
The boy shrugged. “She’s been very busy looking at the stars. That’s
all we talk about lately, besides magic.”
Kron didn’t know whether to be relieved that Salth didn’t know
about their association or sad for Sal-thaath that he didn’t have other
company.
One morning Sal-thaath arrived as Kron was gathering some of his
finders and other magical tools into a sack. “Are you leaving?” he
asked, his eyes shadowed with worry.
“Today’s a market day. I’m going to trade these for supplies.” Kron
hesitated. Was Sal-thaath ready for the marketplace? He’d been very
good with Kron; perhaps it was time to see how he behaved with ordi-
nary people. He knelt and looked the boy in the eye. “You can come
with me…if you promise to be the best you’ve ever been.” He shook a
finger in the boy’s face. “No leaving my side, not for a heartbeat, no
getting angry at people, and no using your magic. Do you think you can
do that?”
Sal-thaath stuck out his lower lip, so Kron added, “And if you do,
I’ll buy you a sugared pastry afterwards.”
“I’ll be good! I’ll be good! Of course,” Sal-thaath said hopefully,
“I’d be even better if I had the sugared pastry first.”
Kron laughed. “After the market, not before. Now, help me decide
which pieces to sell and which ones to keep.”
The market was less than ten furlongs from Kron’s shelter, in the
town square. Kron chose a secluded, shaded spot next to a low stone
wall. Customers would find him once the word spread, and he could
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keep a better eye on Sal-thaath in a quiet area. Together, they spread
their wares on the dusty ground, then Kron boosted Sal-thaath to a seat
on the wall. He sat next to him.
“Now what happens?” Sal-thaath asked.
“Now we wait for people to come talk to us,” Kron replied.
He had been worried that Sal-thaath would find this part of the mar-
ket boring, but for all the boy’s spying, he didn’t know much about
towns. Obediently remaining on the wall while craning his neck in all
directions, he asked about everything from the types of buildings sur-
rounding them to the horses and donkeys pulling wagonloads of goods.
Kron patiently answered each string of questions as best as he could
before Sal-thaath found something else to distract him.
A few customers stopped by, more of them browsing than buying.
Still, Kron managed to sell two finders before he spotted a pair of fa-
miliar faces: Phebe and Bella. Bella was just as pretty as before, her hair
escaping from her head covering as if it knew life was too short to spend
it under restraint. His heart beat faster at the sight, then sped up even