Read season avatars 01 - seasons beginnings Online
Authors: sandra ulbrich almazan
Magic Institute. He had to do more here than defend himself; he also
had to sabotage the sight-enhancer without letting Salth realize what he
was doing. His body burned with pain as Salth shrank it several inches
and he forced it back to its normal size.
Maybe I don’t need to defend against this spell; I can use it.
Kron
reached into his pouch and grasped a chunk of porous stone.
Perfect.
As Salth’s spell continued to work, he allowed its magic to flow through
him into the stone. The stone absorbed most of it, then started to shrink
itself. That alone was proof that Salth already controlled more magic
than all the other magicians Kron knew.
When the stone was so tiny he could conceal it by pinching his fin-
gers around it, Kron pulled it out of his pouch, along with a more-
impressive but unpowered crystal. He raised it over his head with both
hands, taking the opportunity to transfer the pebble to his other hand,
closer to the sight-enhancer. “Prepare to feel your own spell, Salth!”
His voice was higher-pitched than normal. He lunged forward, but he
must have shrank more than he’d realized, for he fell short of the sight-
enhancer. Kron clenched his hand into a fist so he wouldn’t lose the
pebble. Salth cowered for an instant before spreading her hands as wide
as she could. Guessing she had cast a shield over herself, Kron didn’t
press his attack. Instead, he touched his hand to the sight-enhancer, al-
lowing the pebble to melt inside. Then he turned and bolted out of the
house, not stopping until he was winded. He staggered to a tree and
leaned on it, panting. If Salth wanted to send another attack after him,
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now would be a good time to do it. When no fantastic animals or blasts
of power erupted from her house, he backed away, keeping a magic-
finder out in case she decided he was a threat after all.
He’d never thought of Salth as a threat before, even if she was too
obsessed with power. But if she wanted to use it against others—that
was another matter. As for the golden haze she found so fascinating,
was that her own desire speaking, or the truth? How could she be so
sure something so far away was so powerful, or that it would ever come
within anyone’s reach? This haze was too insubstantial to bother Pagli
with. Kron had to focus on finding some way to make Salth and Sal-
thaath leave others alone. He couldn’t return to Delns knowing that
Bella—and Vistichia—were at risk.
* * *
When Kron returned to Bella’s house late the next morning to check
on Phebe, he found himself greeted by a crowd of people so thick he
had trouble pushing through them. As he attempted to maneuver around
a bulky matron, she grabbed his arm. “I found him! It’s the magician
who turned Phebe back into a person!”
“I thought he’d turned her into a chicken,” a man said. “Didn’t the
city-king’s magician change her back?”
Kron gritted his teeth. He’d hoped they could avoid this kind of at-
tention, but more people must have noticed them than he’d realized.
Poor Phebe and Bella must be embarrassed by all the attention. Then he
spotted a city guard blocking the entrance to the house. What if more
people believed the man’s story instead of the woman’s? What if the
official magician of Vistichia wanted Kron out of the city, or wanted to
cause trouble? He wasn’t equipped to make up more defensive artifacts
on the spot. Maybe he could bluff his way through.
“Let me go,” Kron said in his gruffest voice. “I need to check on
Phebe.”
“Check on her, or cast another curse on her?” another man asked.
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“I never cast a curse on anyone!”
“Your boy did,” the first man said, “and that’s the same thing.”
“He’s not my boy, not my son or apprentice,” Kron declared in his
loudest voice. He scanned everywhere he could see, from the flat roof-
tops to the barrels of rainwater beneath the houses, searching for Sal-
thaath. If he should appear now and hear him, it could be complete dis-
aster for everyone here. But perhaps that could be a way to disperse the
crowd.... “In fact, Sal-thaath is under no one’s control. If I were you,
I’d get away from here in case he returns. He might want to create more
chickens....”
The woman holding his arm, shrieked, released him, and bumped
into several people as she fled. Others copied her, and soon Kron was
alone. Well, almost alone. The guard hadn’t deserted his position, and
a second man, tall, rail-thin, and ornately dressed and jeweled, stood
next to him, scowling at Kron.
“We don’t need more magicians in Vistichia,” he said. “The king
will tolerate none who oppose him.”
Kron shrugged. “I’m not here to oppose him or do anything more
than pay his fees with the artifacts I sell. I’m simply traveling home and
need to earn passage back.”
The man sniffed and stepped away from Bella’s door. “Then see that
you do so quickly, stranger.”
Kron waited until the guard and the king’s magician departed before
knocking on the door. He had to wait for an agony of heartbeats before
Bella finally opened it. Dark circles under her eyes showed she must
have had trouble sleeping. Kron wished there was more he could do for
her to ease her worries.
“Is everything all right?” he asked. “How’s your sister? Noth-
ing...else has happened, has it?”
“Not yet.” She opened the door a little wider. “But she had poor
dreams all night. No one slept well.”
“But she’s acting human now, isn’t she? Do you want me to check
her?”
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“Troge won’t like it. He thinks you changed her in the first place,
even though I explained you were the one who changed her back.” She
glanced around. “His head’s as thick as the wood he chops. Come on
in, just for a few heartbeats. Phebe can’t complain after all you did for
her.”
And Bella couldn’t help her family. Kron slipped in to find Phebe
huddled near the fireplace, grinding corn so furiously kernels flew eve-
rywhere. She started as Kron approached.
“Good morning to you, Dame. How are you today?”
She glanced everywhere before replying, “He’s not with you, is he?”
“Sal—the boy?” Kron didn’t want to say Sal-thaath’s name out loud
in case the child was listening in magically. “No, I haven’t seen him
since the marketplace yesterday. He comes and goes as he pleases. I
can’t stop him.”
“But you must, Kron!” Bella said. “What if he comes back? What if
he does something worse next time?”
“That’s what I want to prevent.” He sighed. “I’ll talk to the boy—
once I find him.”
Phebe looked up from her grinding to glare at him. “Just talk to him,
magician? Can’t you do more than that?”
“Dame, he’s just a boy. A very powerful boy, but not taught
properly. If I can correct him—”
“Boys do need a firm hand,” Phebe said. “I could never get my sons
to listen to me half as well as Troge does.”
Bella frowned. “That’s because he beats them senseless.”
“Wait until you have your own, Bella. Then you’ll understand how
hard it is to keep them out of trouble. Speaking of trouble, magician,
you should leave before more of it follows you.” Phebe finally looked
at him. Her expression still wasn’t welcoming compared to her sister’s,
but the hostility had melted away. “And ... for your trouble before...I
thank you. You’re welcome to stop by any time my husband’s working
for a quick meal.”
Bella’s expression brightened, as if she was being rewarded too.
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“Show him out, sister, before more gossips stop by. There’s much
work to be done to make up for yesterday.”
Bella pressed a cooked flatcake filled with pickled vegetables into
his hand as she led him to the door. “She is grateful to you, even if she
doesn’t show it,” she whispered. “She’s just fearful of saying too
much.”
“She has reason to be frightened of Sal-thaath,” he replied. “His
mother has no respect for anyone who can’t perform magic, and I’m
afraid he feels the same way. If you see him, try to make sure he doesn’t
see you.”
“What will you do if you can’t change him?” she asked.
Kron gazed at her face for a few heartbeats before replying, “Then
I’ll have to find some way to keep you, your family, and everyone else
safe from him.”
She smiled at that, but when he reached for her hand, she ducked
away and closed the door. He tried not to take her rejection personally.
Of course a maiden would avoid contact with a strange man. But they
shouldn’t be strangers to each other by now, should they? What would
it take to make her more comfortable with him, a betrothal? Would she
be willing to leave her family behind and come to Delns with him?
Bemused, Kron shook his head. He needed to avoid crowds until
people forgot about him, so he headed for the city gates. If he wandered
by the banks of the Chikasi River, he would find materials, like
branches, stones, and various items dropped from boats, he could use
later in artifacts. And if Sal-thaath sought him out—though Kron sus-
pected he might have to hunt for the child this time—no one would be
around to suffer another of his spells.
Kron passed fishermen and washerwomen standing on the rocky
banks of the river. Other people gathered driftwood or birds’ eggs. The
sun was close to the zenith by the time he found a small curve in the
river, obscured by willow trees, where he was certain he was the only
other person within shouting distance. Using an enchanted thread from
his tunic, Kron lured in a pair of fish for lunch. He cleaned them, stuffed
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them with wild herbs, and set them on a thin flat rock over a fire to
roast.
While the meal cooked, he found a few snail shells and feathers that
might be useful. Kron braided a grass rope, but he knew no matter how
much enchantment he poured into it, it wouldn’t last a heartbeat against
Sal-thaath’s magic. He’d studied magic for nearly twenty years, and a
child young enough to be his own easily mastered him. Kron let the
rope fall apart. Toys weren’t the way to make Sal-thaath treat others
with respect, and threats would be useless, since both of them knew
Kron wasn’t powerful enough to take action against Sal-thaath. What
else could he do?
“I’m hungry,” Sal-thaath said from behind him. “When do we eat?”
“How did you know I was expecting you for lunch?” Kron asked.
“I was watching you, and you caught two fish.”
“Can’t you feed yourself with your magic?”
“I like it better when someone else cooks. Sometimes I take sweet
bread or fruit tarts from a baker. Or sometimes when Mother is busy
studying, I bring her back a meat pie.”
No need to ask if the boy paid for the food. Kron simply nodded and
prodded one of the fish with a stick. “They’re done. Help yourself.”
Sal-thaath reached out with his bare hands for the closest fish,
yelped, and snatched up a pair of sticks to hold his meal. Kron claimed
the second fish before the boy ate both. He was definitely hungry;
maybe Kron could use that to reach him.
“Does your mother ever cook?” he asked.
“She never learned how. She said when she was growing up, they
had servants and slaves to cook and make their clothes.”
“She’s the daughter of a city-king, isn’t she?”
Sal-thaath shifted as if the ground had become uncomfortable.
“Mother says she’d rather be on her own, owing nothing to anyone, than
be a city-queen.”
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“But people need each other,” Kron said. “How can you grow crops
and build a house and cook your meals and weave cloth all by your-
self?”
“With magic, of course.”
“But someone had to figure out how to do those things without
magic first before magician could create spells and artifacts to warm
food or keep it from spoiling. And what would you do if your spell
failed?”
Sal-thaath glared contemptuously at him as though he were the
teacher and Kron the student about to be forced out of the Magic Insti-
tute. “Magic doesn’t fail any more than the sun does, or the rivers. In
fact, Mother says soon we’ll have a brand new source of magic to draw
on.”
“The golden haze in the sky?” Kron asked.
Surprise broke out on Sal-thaath’s face. “How did you know about
that? You must be more double-clever than Mother says you are.”
“I did create the sight-enhancer she’s using.”
Sal-thaath frowned. “But it broke. Maybe you should come fix it.
Then Mother would respect you, and you could live with us forever.”
“But I don’t want to.” At Sal-thaath’s stricken expression, Kron
quickly added, “I mean, I like your company, Sal-thaath, but I need to
return home to Delns and visit my family. It’s been a long time since
I’ve seen them, and I don’t know how they’re faring.”