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Kulgan lit his pipe with a flame on the end of his finger and exhaled a cloud of smoke. "What is in a name? They practice magic for reasons I do not understand, men have at least become somewhat tolerated for practicing magic in many places, while women have been driven from nearly every community where they are discovered to have power."
Dominic said, "But it is held that witches gain their powers by serving dark forces."
Kulgan waved the notion aside. "Nonsense. That is superst.i.tion, if you'll forgive my being blunt. The source of their power is no more dark than your own, and their behavior is usually a great deal kinder than that of some of the more enthusiastic, if misguided, servants of some temples."
Dominic said, "True, but you are speaking of a recognized member of a legitimate temple."
Kulgan looked directly at Dominic. "Forgive the observation, but in spite of the Ishapian reputation for a more worldly view than that of other orders, your remarks are profoundly provincial. So what if these poor wretches do not toil within a temple?
"If a woman serves in a temple she is holy, and if she comes to her power in a hut in the woods she is a witch? Even my old friend Father Tully wouldn't swallow that piece of dogmatic tripe. You are not speaking of any inherent question of good or evil; you're talking about who's got a better guild."
Dominic smiled. "You, then, seek to build a better guild?"
Kulgan blew out a cloud of smoke. "In a sense, yes, though that is less the reason for what we do than is trying to codify as much magic lore as possible."
Dominic said, "Forgive my harsh questions, but one of my charges was to determine the source of your motivation. The King is your powerful ally, and our temple was concerned that there might be some hidden purpose behind our activities. It was thought, as long as I was coming here . . ."
Pug finished, "You might as well challenge what we do and see what we say?
Kasumi said, "As long as I have known Pug, he has acted with honor."
Dominic went on, "Had I a single doubt, I would have said nothing now. That your purposes are only the highest is not in doubt. Just . . ."
Pug and Kulgan both said, "What?"
"It is clear you seek to establish a community of scholars, more than anything else. That, in and of itself, is laudable. But you will not always be here. Someday this academy could be a powerful tool in the wrong hands."
Pug said, "We are taking every precaution to avoid that pitfall, believe me."
Dominic said, "I do."
Pug's expression changed, as if he had heard something. "They are coming," he said.
Kulgan watched with rapt attention. "Gamina?" he asked in a whisper.
Pug nodded, and Kulgan made a satisfied "Ah" sound. "The contact was better than ever. She grows in power each week."
Pug explained to the others, "I read the reports you brought last night and have summoned here one who I think may help. With him comes another."
Kulgan said, "The other is . . . one able to send thoughts and receive them with remarkable clarity. At present she is the only one we have found able to do so. Pug has told of a similar ability on Kelewan, used during his training, but it required preparation of the subject."
Pug said, "It is like the mind touch used by some priests, but there is no need for physical contact, or even proximity, it seems. Nor is there the attendant danger of being caught up in the mind of the one touched. Gamina is a rare talent." Dominic was impressed. Pug continued, "She touches the mind and it is as if she speaks. We have hopes of someday understanding this wild talent and learning a way to train others to it."
Kulgan said, "I hear them approaching." He rose. "Please, gentlemen, Gamina is something of a timid soul, one who has undergone difficult times. Remember that and be gentle with her."
Kulgan opened the door and two people entered. The man was ancient, with a few stray wisps of hair, like white smoke, falling to his shoulders. His hand was on the other's shoulder and he walked stooped over, showing some slight deformity under his red robe. From the milky orbs that stared blankly ahead it was obvious the old man was blind.
But it was the girl who commanded their attention. She wore homespun and appeared about seven years old, a tiny thing who clutched at the hand upon her shoulder. Her blue eyes were enormous, illuminating a pale face of delicate features. Her hair was almost as white as the old man's, holding only a hint of gold. What struck Dominic, Gardan, and Kasumi was an overwhelming feeling that this child was perhaps the most beautiful they had ever seen. Already they could see in those childish features the promise of a woman of unsurpa.s.sed beauty.
Kulgan guided the old man to a chair next to his own. The girl did not sit, but chose to stand beside the man, both hands on his shoulder, fingers flexing nervously, as if she feared to lose contact with him. She looked at the three strangers with the expression of a cornered wild thing. She took no pains to disguise her distrust.
Pug said, "This is Rogen."
The blind man leaned forward. "Whom do I meet?" His face, despite the age it showed, was alive and smiling, uptilted as if to hear better. It was evident that he, unlike the girl, enjoyed the prospect of meeting newcomers.
Pug introduced the three men, who sat opposite Kulgan and Rogen. The blind man's smile broadened. "I am pleased to meet you, worthy gentlemen."
Then Pug said, "This is Gamina."
Dominic and the others were startled when the girl's voice sounded in their heads. h.e.l.lo h.e.l.lo.
The girl's mouth had not moved. She was motionless, her enormous blue eyes fixed upon them.
Gardan said, "Did she speak?"
Kulgan answered, "With her mind. She has no other power of speech."
Rogen reached up to pat the girl's hands. "Gamina was born with this gift, though she nearly drove her mother crazy with her silent crying." The old man's face became solemn. "Gamina's mother and father were stoned to death by the people of her village, for having birthed a demon. Poor, superst.i.tious people they were. They feared to kill the baby, thinking she would revert to her 'natural' form and slay them all, so they left her in the forest to die of exposure. She was not yet three years old."
Gamina looked at the old man with penetrating eyes. He turned to face her, as if he could see her, and said, "Yes, that is when I found you."
To the others he said, "I was living in the forest, in an abandoned hunter's lodge I had discovered. I also was driven from my home village, but that was years earlier. I foretold the death of the town miller and was blamed for it. I was branded a warlock."
Pug said, "Rogen has the power of second sight, perhaps to compensate for his blindness. He has been without sight since birth."
Rogen smiled broadly and patted the girl's hands. "We are alike, we two, in many ways. I had grown to fear what would become of the girl when I die." He interrupted himself to speak to the girl, who had become agitated at his words. She stood shaking, her eyes welling up with tears. "Hush," he scolded gently. "I will, too-everyone does. I hope not too soon, though," he added with a chuckle. He returned to his narrative. "We came from a village near Salador. When word reached us of this wondrous place, we started our journey. It took six months to walk here, mostly because I am so old. Now we have found people like ourselves, who view us as a source of knowledge, not a source of fear. We are home."
Dominic shook his head, amazed that a man his age and a child had walked hundreds of miles. He was obviously moved. "I am beginning to understand another part of what it is you do here. Are there many more like these two?"
Pug said, "Not as many as I would like. Some of the more established magicians refuse to join us. Others fear us. They will not reveal their abilities. Others simply do not yet know we exist. But some, like Rogen, seek us out. We have nearly fifty pract.i.tioners of magic here."
"That is a great many," said Gardan.
Kasumi said, "In the a.s.sembly there were two thousand Great Ones."
Pug nodded. "We also had nearly that number who followed the Lesser Path. And of those who rose to the black robe, the sign of the Greater Magician, each was but one in five who began training, under conditions more rigorous than we are capable of here or would desire."
Dominic looked at Pug. "What of the others, those who failed their training?"
"They were killed," Pug answered flatly.
Dominic judged it a topic Pug did not wish to pursue. A flicker of fear crossed the girl's face and Rogen said, "Hush, hush. No one will hurt you here. He was speaking of a faraway place. Someday you will be a great teacher."
The girl relaxed, and a faint flicker of pride in her expression could be seen. It was obvious she doted upon the old man.
Pug said, "Rogen, there is something taking place that your powers may aid us in understanding. Will you help?"
"Is it that important?"
"I would not ask if it were not vital. Princess Anita lies in peril and Prince Arutha is at constant risk from some unknown enemy."
The girl became worried, or at least that was how Gardan and Dominic read her expression. Rogen c.o.c.ked his head, as if listening, then said, "I know it is dangerous, but we owe Pug a great deal. He and Kulgan are the only hope for people like ourselves." Both men appeared embarra.s.sed by this but said nothing. "Besides, Arutha is the King's brother, and it was their father who gave us all this wonderful island to live on. How would people feel if they knew we could have helped but didn't?"
Pug spoke softly to Dominic. "Rogen's second sight . . . is different from any I've heard of. Your order is reputed to have some knowledge of prophecy." Dominic nodded. "He sees . . . probabilities is the best way I can describe it. What may happen. It seems to require a great deal of his energies, and though he is tougher than he looks, he is still quite old. It is easier if only one person speaks to him, and as you have the best understanding of the nature of the magic that has occurred, I think it would be better for you to tell him all you know Dominic agreed. Pug said, "If everyone else will please remain silent."
Rogen reached across the table and took the cleric's hands. Dominic was surprised at the strength remaining in those withered old fingers. While not able to foretell himself, Dominic was familiar with the process as performed by those of his order. He cleared his mind, then began to tell his story from when Jimmy first ran afoul of the Nighthawk upon the rooftop to when Arutha left Sarth. Rogen remained silent. Gamina did not move. When Dominic spoke of the prophecy naming Arutha "Bane of Darkness, the old man shuddered and his lips moved silently.
The mood m the room became ominous as the monk spoke. Even the fire seemed to dim. Gardan found he was hugging himself as he sat.
When the monk halted, Rogen continued to clutch his hand, not allowing the other to pull away. His head was raised, neck arched slightly backward, as if he were listening to something distant. His lips worked without sound for a while, then slowly words were forming, though so quietly they were not distinguishable. All at once he spoke clearly, his voice firm. "There is a . . . presence . . . a being. I see a city, a mighty bastion of towers and walls. Upon its walls stand proud men willing to defend it to the end. Now . . . it's a city under siege. I see it overwhelmed, with its towers ablaze . . . It's a city being murdered. A great savage host runs in its streets as it falls. Those who fight are sorely pressed and withdraw to a keep. Those who rape and loot . . . all are not human. I see those of the Dark Path and their goblin servants. They roam the streets, their weapons dripping blood. I see strange ladders being raised to storm the keep, and strange bridges of blackness. Now it burns, all burns, all is in flames . . . it is over."
There was a moment of silence, then Rogen continued. "I see a host, gathered on a plain, with strange banners flying. Black-armored figures sit silently on horseback, showing twisted shapes on shields and tabards. Above them stand a moredhel . . ." The old man's eyes teared. "He is . . . beautiful . . . He . . . is evil. He wears the mark of the dragon. He stands upon a hill while below him armies march past singing battle songs. Great machines of war are pulled by miserable human slaves."
Again there was silence. Then: "I see another city. The image shifts and wavers, for its future is less certain. Its walls lie breached, and its streets are stained red. The sun hides its face behind grey clouds . . . and the city cries out in anguish. Men and women are chained in lines without end. They are . . . whipped by creatures who taunt and torment them. They are being herded to a great square, where they face their conqueror. A throne is erected atop a mound . . . a mound of bodies. Upon it sits . . . the beautiful one, the evil one. At his side stands another, a black robe hides his features. Behind them both is another something . . . I cannot see it, but it is real, it exists, it is . . . dark . . . It is insubstantial, without being, not truly there, but . . . it is also there. It touches the one on the throne." Rogen tightly clutched Dominic's hands. "Wait . . ." he said, then hesitated. His hands began to tremble, then in piteous tones, nearly a sob, he cried, "Oh G.o.ds of mercy! It can see me! It can see me! It can see me!" The old man's lips trembled, while Gamina clutched at his shoulder, eyes wide, holding him closely, terror written upon her little face Suddenly Rogen's lips parted to emit a terrible groan, a sound of the purest agony and despair, and his body went rigid.
Without warning a lance of fire, a stab of pure pain, erupted in the minds of all who sat in the room. Gamina screamed in silence.
Gardan clutched at his head, nearly fainting from the white-hot flash of searing agony. Dominic's face went ashen and he reeled back in his chair under the onslaught of the cry as if struck a physical blow. Kasumi's eyes screwed closed as he fought to rise. Kulgan's pipe fell from slack lips as he clutched his temples. Pug staggered to his feet, using every shred of his magic power to erect some sort of mental barrier against the tearing in his mind. He pushed back the blackness that sought to overwhelm him, reaching out to touch the girl. "Gamina, he croaked.
The girl's mental screaming continued unabated and she tore frantically at the old man's tunic, a mindless act, as if she sought somehow to s.n.a.t.c.h him back from whatever horror he faced. Her large eyes were wide and her voiceless hysterics nearly drove those around her to madness. Pug lunged forward and grabbed her shoulder. Gamina ignored the touch, continuing to scream for Rogen. Mustering his powers, Pug forced aside the terror and pain in the girl's projected thoughts for a brief moment.
Gardan's head fell forward onto the table, as did Kasumi's. Kulgan lurched upright, then fell back into his chair, stunned. Besides Pug and Gamina, only Dominic had managed to retain consciousness. Something inside him had struggled to reach out to the girl, no matter how much he wished to retreat from the pain being visited upon him by her.
The girl's primitive terror nearly brought Pug to his knees, but he forced himself on. He cast a spell, and the girl fell forward. At once the pain ceased. Pug caught her, but the effort drove him back and he staggered into his chair. He sat cradling the unconscious girl, stupefied by the onslaught.
Dominic felt as if his head would burst but hung on to consciousness. The old man's body was still rigid, nearly bowed back with pain, his lips working feebly. Dominic incanted a spell of healing, one used to cease pain. Finally Rogen went limp, seeming to collapse into his chair. But his face was still a mask of terror and pain, and he cried out in a hoa.r.s.e whisper words the monk could not understand, before he lapsed into unconsciousness.
Pug and the monk exchanged confused looks. Dominic felt blackness overtake him and, before he pa.s.sed out, wondered why the magician suddenly looked so frightened.
Gardan paced the room where they had dined the night before. Next to the fire, Kulgan said, "You'll wear a furrow in the stones of the floor if you don't sit down."
Kasumi rested quietly on a cushion beside the magician. Gardan lowered himself next to the Tsurani and said, "It's this infernal waiting." Dominic and Pug, with the aid of some healers in the community, were tending to Rogen. The old man had lain near death since he had been carried from the meeting house. Gamina's mental scream had touched all within a mile of her, though striking those at a distance with less force. Still, several people near the building had been rendered senseless for a time. When the cries had stopped, those with their wits about them had rushed to see what had occurred. They had found all in the meeting house unconscious.
Katala was soon on the scene and ordered them all carried to the quarters where she could oversee their care. The others had recovered in a few hours, but Rogen had not. The vision had begun in midmorning, and now it was after supper.
Gardan struck hand with fist and said, "d.a.m.n! I was never meant for this sort of business. I am a soldier. These monsters of magic, these nameless powers . . . Oh for an enemy of flesh and blood!"
"Too well do I know what you can do to a flesh-and-blood enemy," Kasumi said Kulgan looked interested, and Kasumi said, "In the early years of the war, the captain and I faced one another at the siege of Crydee. It wasn't until we were exchanging histories that I discovered he was second to Prince Arutha during the siege, or he that I led the a.s.sault."
The door opened and a large man entered, removing a great cloak. He was bearded and weather-beaten in appearance, looking like a hunter or woodcutter. He smiled slightly and said, "I go away for a few days and look who wanders in."
Gardan's dark face broke into a broad smile and he rose, extending his hand. "Meecham!"
They shook and the man called Meecham said, "Well met, Captain." Kasumi followed suit, for Meecham was an old acquaintance. He was a franklin, a free man with his own land in service to Kulgan, though he was more a friend to the magician than any sort of servant.
Kulgan said, "Any luck?"
The forester absently stroked the scar on his left cheek as he said, "No. All fakes."
Kulgan said to the others, "We heard of a traveling caravan of fortunetellers and gypsies, camped a few days this side of Landreth. I sent Meecham to discover if any of them were true talents."
"There was one," said Meecham. "Might have been what he seemed, but he quieted down when I told him where I was from. Maybe he'll show up on his own hook." He looked around the room. "All right, isn't anyone going to tell me what's going on here?"
As Kulgan finished recounting everything to Meecham, the door opened and further conversation was interrupted. William entered leading Gamina by the hand. The old man's ward looked even more pale than when Gardan had seen her the day before. She looked at Kulgan, Kasumi, and Gardan and her voice entered their minds. I am sorry I caused so much pain. I was frightened. I am sorry I caused so much pain. I was frightened.
Kulgan slowly extended his arms, and the girl gingerly allowed him to gather her up onto his ample lap. With a gentle hug, he said, "It is all right, la.s.s. We understand."
The others smiled at the girl rea.s.suringly and she seemed to relax. Fantus came padding into the room. William threw him a quick look and said, "Fantus is hungry."
Meecham said, "That beast was born hungry."
No, came the thought. He said he was hungry. No one remembered to feed him today. I heard.
Kulgan gently held the little girl away from him so he could look at her. "What do you mean?"
He told William he was hungry. Just now. I heard him.
Kulgan looked at William. "William, can you hear Fantus?"
William looked at Kulgan with a curious expression. "Of course. Can't you?"
They talk to each other all the time.
Kulgan's face became animated. "This is wonderful! I had no idea. No wonder you two have been so close. William, how long have you been able to speak to Fantus this way?"
The boy shrugged. "Ever since I can remember. Fantus has always talked to me."
"And you could hear them speak to each other?" Gamina nodded. "Can you speak to Fantus?"
No. But I can hear him when he talks to William. He thinks funny. It is hard.
Gardan was astonished by the conversation. He could hear Gamina's answers in his head, as if he were listening. From observing the girl's private remarks to Rogen the day before, he realized that she obviously was able to speak with whomever she chose in a selective way.
William turned toward the drake. "All right!" he said in aggravated tones. He said to Kulgan, "I'd better go to the kitchen and get him something. Can Gamina stay here?"
Kulgan gave the girl a gentle hug and she nestled deeply into his lap. "Of course."
William dashed from the room, and Fantus hurried after, the prospect of a meal motivating him to an atypical display of speed. When they were gone, Kulgan said, "Gamina, can William speak to other creatures beside Fantus?"
I don't know. I'll ask him.
They watched in fascination as the girl's head c.o.c.ked to one side, as if she were listening to something. After a moment she nodded. He said only sometimes. Most animals aren't very interesting. They think a lot about food and other animals, is all. He said only sometimes. Most animals aren't very interesting. They think a lot about food and other animals, is all.
Kulgan looked as though he had been given a present. "This is wonderful! Such a talent. We have never heard of a case of a human communicating directly with animals. Certain magicians have hinted at such an ability in the past, but never like this. We shall have to investigate this fully."