Huwebes, Mayo 17, 2012

"The Lay of Sir Berkley of Fairdale (Part One)"

"The Lay of Sir Berkley of Fairdale (Part One)"
By;fernand jiro

Sir Berkley of Fairdale strode from the stables with two horses, a pony, and his dwarf in tow. Baggage was slung over the sumpter, an ugly horse with a sturdy back, including a bundle of lances that wobbled back and forth with every step. The dwarf waddled after his master, with a tasseled hat that bobbed on his head. His malformed body was awkward, but he managed to keep up with the knight’s longer strides despite. 


A noblewoman waited for them at the postern gate. Her plaited hair was bundled around her head in a great ball, reminiscent of the turbans worn by the followers of the Termagant. It was held together by a gold-spun net that sparkled in the new sun of the morning. She had a scarf of blue silk, the same cornflower hue of her gown, in one white hand, and was flicking it through the air idly. She smiled as Berkley approached. 




“Sir Berkley!” Her lips parted around white teeth, kept immaculate by lengthy rituals every morning and eve. Berkley answered her shallow curtsey with a stiff bow, his face carefully composed to serenity. 




“Lady Claire,” he said, halting on the cobblestones. His courser halted behind him, the clop-clop of its horseshoes on the stone ceasing. It snorted and shook its mane. 




Gathering her long skirts up in one hand to avoid the dust on the ground, Lady Claire stepped forward to stand before Berkley. With her mousy hair piled on top of her head, her height was increased to reach just over the man’s broad shoulders, which were, at the moment, hung with his heavy white mantle. “I came to bid you farewell,” the lady began. “And to wish you luck on your quest; and here is a token of my goodwill, if you would have it.” She brandished the scarf, and, letting her skirts drop, reached for Berkley’s hand. 






But the knight recoiled, politely. “Lady, I bid you remember that my heart is promised to another. I cannot in good faith wear your favor—though I appreciate the thought of it.” He bowed again. Pouting, Lady Claire retreated a step, hands clasped in front of her. “Now, I beg your pardon, but I would be on my way.” 




“Quite so,” she said, disappointment breaking into her voice. Biting her lip, she looked up again. Berkley brushed past her, avoiding her eyes, only guiding his courser, and his dwarf and pony and sumpter to the postern. Lady Claire turned and headed for the inner bailey, and, thence, her chambers. Her blue dress shimmered in the sunlight as she retreated, reflecting the azure heavens above. 




The postern gate was a small door set into the base of the curtain walls, to the north east of the gate proper. It was a modest portal, for peaceful egress and surprise sorties in the midst of a siege. For the latter use it was glamered from without, just another length of dark stone blocks indistinguishable from the wall; a little trick of the court magician. From within, however, it was perfectly obvious, an oaken door bound with iron for strength. It was unattended, and Berkley handily swung it open. He let the dwarf and the pony and sumpter past, and then slapped the courser through before entering himself, and shutting the door after himself. 




Thus, they stood on the outskirts of the High King’s castle, Cayr Carron. This was the easy slope side, which melded seamlessly with the green fields surrounding, and the serf’s hovels and mills. The western slope was composed simply of craggy stone thrust up from the earth in a naturally sheer wall. Cayr Carron’s own man-made walls of hewn stone rose from the jagged craig that rose in the midst of the valley, and cut off the gentle slope that provided entrance to its high keep. 




Berkley mounted his courser, setting one foot in a stirrup and swinging the other over. Secure in the saddle, he was less seated than standing with the support of his posterior fast in the saddle, as the stirrups ran the length of his legs. It provided extra support when jousting that way. Behind him, his dwarf climbed into the pony’s saddle, with a seeming clumsiness that belied the true dexterity he possessed. As his dwarf gathered the sumpter’s lead, Berkley turned his courser for the fields below, and the broad kingdom beyond. 




They set out under the morning sun, making good time across the open fields and circling around the edge of the forest until the old road ran beneath the hooves of their mounts. Fellow travelers were common at this time of year, in the early summer. Pilgrims gathered in great bands to wander the land, seeking the myriad shrines of the Threefold King and reveling in the entertainment of wandering minstrels who plucked at many-stringed zithers and let their voices rise through the air. Merchants journeyed also, bearing carts of expensive wears. Sometimes Berkley caught a glimpse of silky fabrics and exotic spices under the tarpaulins protecting their cartfuls. 




Once, Berkley passed another knight, headed back to Cayr Carron with a train of retainers. He rode with his basinet unhinged, and when he came within hailing distance, Berkley recognized him as Sir Garon the Heavy-Handed. One of his fists, the right one, was nigh half again the size of his other hand. It rested solidly on the saddle horn, while his other lightly trapped his destrier’s fringed reins. They saluted each other as they passed, and then turned their eyes onward, toward whatever goals lay before them. 




Berkley set a stiff pace. They traveled the roads and byways of the country at a trot, only stopping to camp when the sun had set, and rising with its first gleaming rays. There was little respite, and the countryside rolled by in a blur of several days. Three weeks vanished into the idyllic pastures. Farmers fields from Callishire melded into the rolling knolls of Hillshire, and both fell away as Berkley plunged into the forests of the Greatwood. The goal lay across that thick patch of trees that sprawled across the eastern edge of the kingdom for dozens of leagues in any direction. 




Choosing one of the small paths that broke from the main thoroughfare, Berkley and his dwarf proceeded into the Greatwood. The dirt trail was thin and winding. At many points, foliage covered it over, hiding the narrow path from a casual glance, and Berkley watched carefully from his seat on the back of his courser for its course. Huntsmen’s posts were scattered amid the trees, many leagues between. Sometimes they were manned, and Berkley and his dwarf received directions or succulent venison from the green-coated men who sat at firesides stroking their beards. 




After eleven days, the trail had long since vanished, and all that remained to guide them were the vague directions offered by the hunters, and the sun that peeked intermittently through the heavy canopy. 




Berkley broke camp on the twelfth as the sun’s rays lanced through the trees. Rising from his armor, he slung the cloak that had kept him warm through the night over his shoulders. After pissing in the stream that bisected their little clearing, he strode over to the tiny bundle of his dwarf still curled on the ground and gave the fellow a nudge with his foot. While his dwarf collected their things, Berkley saddled his courser, and dwarf’s the pony, and set the saddlebags across the sumpter. 




All around, the sounds of the forest waking rose in crescendo. Birds whistled from their high perches, and the trees sighed. The brook in the middle of the glade, babbled plaintively as it rushed over its rounded rocks of its bed. 




The knight and his servant worked silently, bent to their tasks. Once the preliminary jobs had been finished—the horses saddled, the coals buried—Berkley stepped over to his armor, dwarf in tow. The small fellow, barely the height of his master’s waist, waddled awkwardly across the grassy glade, tasseled hat bobbing back and forth. His livery was stained from the forest floor and the weeks of travel, and Berkley avoided looking at it. 




Despite his size, the dwarf was quick with his hands; once Berkley had shrugged into his aketon, the dwarf began immediately lacing up chausses and greaves. After that, it was a short matter until Berkley was fully armed; his mail hung heavily upon his shoulders, and his surcoat over that, and his sword was girded at his waist. Slinging his shield over his back like a turtle, the knight climbed into the saddle of his courser. He had to bend far over to receive his greathelm from the dwarf, who raised himself on his toes to hand it off. 


Then the dwarf scurried for his pony, collecting the sumpter’s reins as he did so. And they set forth once more, led by the position of the sun through the leafy green above, and sometimes by a deer track or a woodsman’s path. The forest rose all around them. Mighty oaks spread their branches to the sky, and maples struggled to find the breaks beneath their greater cousins’ reaching limbs. 




A fox darted across the path, starting Berkley’s courser. Its red coat flashed in the underbrush, a moment of brilliance in the all-pervasive green. The knight patted his horse comfortingly and they moved on as the mischievous squirrels chattered above them in agitation. Sometimes an acorn would fall from on high and glance off Berkley’s sturdy mail, much to the chagrin of the offending rodent. 
Behind, the dwarf on his pony bobbed back and forth, ungainly in his seat. His hat, shapeless and tasseled, seemed ever on the verge of falling, to reveal the tousled brown rat’s nest beneath—yet, whenever the formless thing was sure to fall, a malformed hand was there to replace it. 






He spat into the underbrush to his left, and Berkley admonished him. “Be civil, Davin.” The man’s voice was possessed of powerful timbre, even when so quiet and firm. It cut through the forest noise easily, and the dwarf nodded, though Berkley could not see the gesture. 




“Yes, sire.” 




The sun continued to rise, away from the occluded horizon to blaze from the azure firmament. Its light, through the canopy, took on a distinctly green glow, turning the dappled forest into a haze of emerald that danced in the traveler’s eyes. The shadows of leaves fell across their path, forever tossed by the ceaseless breath that carried through the trees and teased their branches. Berkley’s sword bounced against his thigh with the canter of his courser; sometimes he laid a mail-gloved hand against it and held it secure while the other clutched the reins. 




Suddenly, the ground fell away before them. The forest ran up against a deep gash in the earth, stretching west to east for miles. Its rocky edges were sheer and treacherous, and cluttered with protruding boulders and jagged edges. At the bottom wound a silver thread, broken at myriad intervals by rough water as white as the clouds that hung in the blue sky dome. 




Berkley reined in his horse as the treeline ended, leaving several paces between the cliff face and the nearest oak. Dead wood littered this shelf, though a path could be seen picked out amid the rubble, winding back and forth to the north. His dwarf rode up beside him, level only with the knight’s shining greaves on his pony. Doffing his cap, he whistled, staring out across the valley with the tassels hanging down his breast. Behind, the sumpter whinnied nervously. 


Opposite their perch and to the north was seated, on the edge of the canyon wall like a heavyset beast, a grey castle. The keep, a tall black spike of a tower that stood like a dark nail, was girded round by high walls studded with turrets. As a fastness, it looked impregnable—armies might spend themselves against the walls for years and never crack the outer shell. The only visible egress was a narrow bridge that spanned the gap from cliff face to cliff face. 




With a nod to himself, Berkley spurred his courser on, through the tree corpses littering the shelf at the forest’s edge. His dwarf followed, and behind him the sumpter, looking drab and agitated with its head bowed and wide eyes staring. The saddlebags bulged around its midriff, and it followed the yank of its leads from the dwarf’s stubby arms. 




The path wended along the cliff’s edge, sometimes pressing in so close that Berkley could see to the bottom of the canyon and the raging river far below. In those moments he leaned far away from the drop in his saddle, and looked steadily forward to the bridge. At other times, the trail circled back into the forest for some minutes, passing under the twisted trunks of ancient oaks; sometimes, peering out into the growing gloom of the forest, Berkley caught a glimpse of a narrow mast-straight pine rising in the depths. 




Above, the cloud cover was growing swiftly. Where before a few white splashes had crept across the blue heavens, there was suddenly lead weighing in the distance. Swollen clouds, pregnant with rain, inched across the darkening sky, ready to drown out the sun’s golden light. 




As the pair drew against the foot of the bridge, a tree spoke to them. “Travelers! Stay a moment, hear my lament.” Berkley started, and his dwarf nearly fell from the seat of his pony. They looked around wildly, eyes straining against the greying light for the source of the noise. “Here I am,” the voice sounded again, and both pairs of eyes lighted on a young sapling rising from the soil beside the path, not twenty paces from the bridge. 




Berkley set his helm on the horn of his saddle and gazed long upon the vociferous vegetation. “How now, spirit of the woods? What lament is yours?” His left hand fell carefully against his sheathed sword, wrapping around the scabbard uneasily. 
“I’m not a spirit—I have been cursed.” Behind the wind sigh quality of the voice rose the wail of a young woman. The tree shuddered as if tossed by the wind, but no breeze tugged at Berkley’s mantle. 




Seconds passed in silence as the knight and his dwarf regarded the sapling, until finally Berkley spoke. “By whom?” 


“The lady of yon castle, good sir. She is an enchantress, and I was her servant girl.” Berkley nodded sagely as he listened to this report, and the tree-woman continued. “While she slept, I used to put on her carcanets and diadems and imagine I also was a great lady. One morning I was too slow to return them, and I was discovered. The lady cast me out and bound me here, swearing that I should never be uprooted.” 




“I seek the lady of this castle, this enchantress Genevieve. She has kidnapped one of the High King’s court, whom I was sent to retrieve.” Rain began to fall lightly from the heavy clouds, even while the sun’s warm rays pierced the trees. The patter of it on the leaves filled the forest, and Berkley shook water from his hair. 




“Oh, knight, she will ruin you. Don’t enter that cursed place, please; just break my curse and we can flee.” She must have known the futility of her argument in the face of a knight of the realm, for her voice held a tremulous note that quavered in the drumming of the rain. Berkley didn’t grace her with a reply, but lifted up his reins and snapped them, setting his horse again to canter forward. The tree-woman’s voice cut through the twofold clatter of rain and hooves. “If you must go, at least let me forewarn you of the dangers within!” 




At this, Berkley jerked around the reins and guided his mount back to the tree’s side. It shivered again in a ghostly wind before continuing. “The bridge is enchanted. When you step onto it, flames will rise around your feet. The lady consumes essence of salamander to cross the fires unharmed. 




“Within the courtyard lies a dragon, coiled in a black tarn. Its breath is a potent venom, and its eyes will turn you to stone. You must not breathe its air or touch its poison, nor meet the beast’s dread gaze. 




“The lady keeps but one champion in her defense, for he is an elfin knight of prowess unmatched. He is clad in bronze skin and is invulnerable. 




“And the lady herself—Genevieve is irresistible to any man. Her carcanets cloak her in glamers of beauty, and her perfumes intoxicate even the most iron wills. 




“Sir knight . . . please, this task is impossible. Just break my curse and we can escape—flee to the far shores of Samark. I swear to you, beneath this fell mantle I am beautiful.” A cloud passed before the sun, and all was cast into shadow as the rain pelted from on high, and the tree shook her leaves in a strange echo of a keening women. Sir Berkley turned his head to the battlements beyond, grey eyes dancing across its stolid surface. 




He turned back finally and spoke, “Thank you for your aid. When I have retrieved my charge, I shall convince the lady to remove the spell laid over you.” And then he spurred the courser forward along the path, followed by his dwarf, who swayed on the back of his pony, tassels damped in the rain. Twenty paces fell away beneath the cantering hooves, and they found themselves looking across the narrow span into the distant bailey. No gate blocked the way at the rising of the castle walls. 




The bridge itself was no more than a pace wide, with guards but two handspans tall. It was of the same stone as the castle distant, a smooth, dark grey material that blended well with the surrounding rock formations. The patter of rain darkened it; the middle was slightly raised, and there were runnels that ran the length of it behind the tiny guards. Water ran through the runnels and into spouts that sprayed the water out over the abyssal drop, from the gaping mouths of fantastic gargoyles, to the river far below. 




Sir Berkley looked to his dwarf. The little man shook his head, and the tassel whipped back and forth, spraying rain in a wide arc. Tossing his own head, Berkley threw the water from his hair. Reaching to his right shoulder, he unfastened the silver clasp that kept his cloak around him and tossed the garment to his servant. 
“A lance, Davin,” he said, keeping straight the hand that had doffed his mantle. Rain began to soak into his surcoat as he sat his mount before the bridge, unmoving. Several spears were slung on the sumpter’s sturdy back, tied in a bundle for ease of carriage and strapped crosswise. With awkward adroitness, the small one turned to it and began unbinding one haft. Moments passed, and the rain fell, and Berkley stared across the bridge into the dark courtyard beyond. 




The wooden haft of a lance was placed into Berkley’s gloved hand, and his mailed fingers wrapped around it, beneath the iron vamplate. Setting the butt into his stirrup, the knight lifted the greathelm from his saddle horn and placed the heavy iron upon his crown. Suddenly, his vision was nothing more than a pair of slits bounded on either side by the darkness within the helm. His breath echoed within the close chamber, and rain drummed against it, pounding in his ears. Finally, he lifted the shield from his back, arm slipping with familiar ease into the straps that secured it against him. 




He took a deep breath, air whistling through the holes punched into the iron around his mouth. His dwarf looked on with wide eyes as Berkley visibly set himself for the charge against the spell-laced bridge. High above, in the windows of the distant fastness, another pair of eyes peered forth, invisible to those below. 




And then Sir Berkley of Fairdale spurred his mount, digging gold needles into the sides of his courser. The horse reared briefly, nose flared, eyes wide, and it whinnied loudly in defiance as its hooves flailed at the air. A toss of its head sent rain spinning from its uncut mane. It leapt onto the bridge, and the moment its iron-shod hooves rang against the stonework, flames leapt up along the length of the span, a brilliant sheet of flame. A blanket of steam hung over the conflagration, from the accumulated water and the rain. 




The fires wreathed the courser’s legs and licked at Berkley’s chausses, caressing his knee-length surcoat until it charred at the hems, while the horse’s hair was singed. It stank at once of wet horse and burning hair and flesh. The courser screamed in pain as its belly was licked with agonizing fire, and it fought its reins and struggled to retreat. But Berkley spurred it forward again, digging heels deep into the horse’s flanks, immune to its piercing cries. 




His sword banged loosely against his hip, but he gripped shield and lance with steady hands, and the helmed head never swerved from its ultimate goal at the end of the bridge. The courser leaped forward, keening wildly. The ringing of its galloping bounds was nearly drowned by the roar of the flames as they danced across the bridge. 






Shielding his eyes against the brilliance of the fire, the dwarf watched from the edge of the cliff as his master was carried through the inferno. He could barely see the man’s shape, lost as it was to the radiance surrounding him; but the steady lance tip, gleaming like a drop of molten sunlight, hung against the leaden sky and marked his progress. And then he was gone, across the bridge and into the courtyard, and Davin retreated to the cursed servant woman to wait. 




The courser leapt the final paces, its belly almost clearing the licking flames beneath. As soon as they were over the bridge, the flames died down, a slow dissipation that contrasted with the suddenness of the blaze when first triggered. The horse’s eyes rolled wildly, huge and frightened, and it screamed without end. Its hair, once mottled white and grey, had been seared black, and much of it fell away in ashy powder, leaving behind patches of blistering red flesh. 




Berkley’s mail was hot against his legs, and surely pained his mount almost as much, even through the saddle blanket. His surcoat had caught, but in the steady rain beyond the heated halo of the bridge, the tiny flames at its hems guttered out and left behind black smears of ash. 




Peering through the slits of his vision, Berkley observed the courtyard. As the tree had said, a tarn lay in the center, between the curtain walls and the tower of the keep. Its surface was black like pitch, and rippled with rings under the caress of the rain. Trees lined the walls on either side, white barked aspens, their leaves quivering characteristically beneath the high turrets. 




As the rain battered down the raw scent of smoke, Berkley became aware of a foul stench that hung in the air like oil on water, thick and stomach-turning. Trying to calm his steed and guide it forward to the tarn with firm knees, Berkley could not gain control of the wild animal. It staggered back and forth, screaming still and turning circles on the cobblestone floor. 




Behind the knight and his mount, a swell rose in the midst of the tarn, black water running in rivulets from its rounded back. Its dark scales shed water easily as the grotesque head was raised high into the air. 




Turning, horse and rider beheld the monstrosity from the lake in combined horror. Paralyzed with fear, the courser finally ceased its struggle against its reins, but would no more respond to Berkley’s commands and spurring than would a rocking horse. He looked upon the thing that heaved itself from the black pool before him through the narrowed slits of his helm. 




It was a vast wyrm, serpent body rolling in great coils from its watery abode. The tepid stuff splashed over the shore, seeming to boil over as the monster reared itself against the sky. A hood hung around its neck like a wizard’s cowl, with staring eyes emblazoned on the inner surface. Too late he remembered the tree’s advice, and his muscles locked up as stiff as stone, lance couched beneath his arm, shield raised against any assault. 




The beast struck first with its killing venom, a spout of yellow bile that it thrust from a cotton-white mouth in a jet of death. It splashed off of Berkley’s shield, and ran all over the frozen body of his horse, smoking poisonously. Berkley fought his lungs, refusing to breathe the fatal yellow vapors that boiled around him. His steed screamed a final death-keen and convulsed, throwing its rider from his seat as it bucked and collapsed in a heap of broken horseflesh. 




Falling to the cobblestone, Berkley was jolted from the dragon awe, the violence of contact forcing his vision away from its terrible eyes. Leaping to his feet, he saw the beast claw its way out of the tarn with two muscle-bound legs tipped with dagger claws. They clicked as they scrabbled on the cobblestones, and the beast roared its challenge to the knight as he collected himself, shield raised against anticipated onslaught. 




Another gout of foul yellow bile streamed from the pale, fang-filled mouth, and Berkley raised his shield before him. The noxious stuff blasted around him and steamed on the ground, its miasma coiling through the air like ephemeral serpents. Exhaling sharply, Berkley charged, spear couched, shield raised, feet pounding against the ground. The monster roared and reared its horned head until it reached almost to the heights of the walls surrounding. Its hood was flared to full width beneath its crown of horns, but Berkley bowed his head against the enscorcelling eyes. 




His lance shivered against the massive serpent, and a mighty cry rent the air. Berkley’s mailed fist rammed up against the vamplate as the point of his spear plunged into the beast’s belly; it lurched, and the violence of its whipping agony snapped the lance and threw Berkley to the ground. What remained of the spear’s haft was thrown from his hand, and his helmet rang around his head as the monster roared above him, disorienting the knight with partial deafness. 




The dragon’s tail snapped out of the pool and slammed into Berkley’s breast before he could reach for his sword. Its spaded point burst several links of mail and bloodied him, and the man found himself once more upon the ground. He cried out in pain and fought to his feet, suddenly aware of the wildly roiling tail and wary of it. He found the wound on his chest to be shallow, though it soaked his surcoat crimson. 




Stumbling backward, out of the way of the flailing tail, Berkley scrabbled for his sword. His mailed fist closed around the leather bound hilt, and in one smooth motion the brand was out, naked iron forged into a deadly point. The knight’s opponent managed to settle somewhat, enough to glare at the man who dared oppose its primordial power. The spear was embedded deep within its side, and thick blood oozed out of the jagged wound and onto the cobblestones, smearing them black as the vacated tarn, and mixing with the heavy rain. 




Carefully keeping his visors low to avoid the beast’s eyes, Sir Berkley charged. He ran straight toward the massive stalk of the wyrm, heart pounding, feet throwing up a splash of water at every step. The thing’s tail swept toward him, and he angled himself against it so that when the stinger thrust again at his breast, his shield deflected it handily, casting aside the deadly tip and continuing in toward the foul heart. 




It roared, and Berkley’s ears rang in his iron helm. His breath was hoarse in the close space, whistling in and out of the tiny holes. Rainwater dripped in the visor, distorting his vision as it drummed in his ears. 




The monster struck, then, with its fell maw. With the unholy speed of a viper, and the same unhinged, gaping jaw, it fell upon Berkley. Fangs closed around his shield, the size of longknives and dripping with yellow bile that stank. He was lifted bodily into the air by the colossal muscles of the beast, feet dangling as the monster whipped back its head to snap down its prize. His sword beat against the curved horns around its face uselessly, barely cleaving the thick bone. Its breath reeked of rot and sour death. 




Berkley heard his shield begin to splinter in the dragon’s powerful jaws. Hanging at the height of its head, the knight caught brief glimpses around him; the walls of the tower equal to his eyes, and the quavering aspens below; the inner keep of Genevieve’s fastness, and what seemed a pale face peering out of the upper storey windows; the dragon’s burning eyes, deep set in its ugly skull. 




With the powerful grace of his long years’ training, Berkley suddenly rammed home his blade into the dragon’s black oculus. It plunged through the soft tissue, iron sliding easily into the skull until the quillons halted further progress. Blood oozed around his fist, and the beast shuddered beneath him. The grip of the jaw around his shield slackened, and with it, the serpentine neck collapsed. 




Berkley broke his fall on the wyrm’s long body, its thick flesh providing some cushioning. Nevertheless, he wrenched his ankle, and was severely winded by the power of contact with the earth. For long minutes he lay upon the ground, breathing thickly the dragon stench that still permeated the air as he sought to regain his stamina. His muscles were sore from the struggle against the dragon’s rending maw, and his ankle throbbed. 




Finally, the knight pushed himself from the ground, soaked in rain, his blood, and the blood of his fallen foe. Leaning back, he stared up against the walls of the tower before him, perceiving its great height and breathing stiffly. Blowing air from his lungs in a final moment before he plunged onward, he leapt up the stairs to the heavy oaken door that led to the keep interior. 




It swung open before he could lay a hand upon it. Revealed before him was an open hall with high vaulted ceilings, and brightly colored carpets, and walls hung with variegated tapestries. He stepped inside warily, helmed head turning every way in suspicious attention. His sword was still out, and slicked with the dragon’s thick blood; it dripped on the carpet as he strode forward, leaving behind a trail of black smears. 




Immediately to his right, Berkley found stairs headed up, into the higher chambers where Genevieve must reside, and her prisoner lie. They spiraled up to the right, around a central pillar that would stop Berkley’s sword if he tried to swing it against any defender; so he held his blade behind his shield, point forward and prepared to thrust into the belly of any who stood before him. But none opposed his passage, and he bounded ever upward, following the curve of the stairs until nearly dizzy. 




Windows were set fairly evenly in the wall, arrow loops that were wide within but narrow without. They let in little light or air, and with only slits for vision, Berkley could barely see out of them; still, he saw the grey sky, and the rocky cliff walls, and the vast green forests stretching into the distance. The figure of his dwarf was indiscernible, but sometimes he could see the horse and pony, huddled under the trees. 




He came upon a landing to another floor. It opened into corridors that led away, likely to servants’ quarters or the like. But they were empty; and when Berkley called his challenge into the lonely space, he heard an answer from above echo faintly down the stairwell; so he continued his climb. 




At the terminus of the stairs opened a final storey. Here was a sort of parlor, with a fire raging in an ornate mantle graved with figures of dragons and centaurs. There were sofas covered in silken sheets, and gay tapestries that masked the drab rock walls. A scent hung in the air, faint but alluring; it was sweet like ambrosia. 


A man stood a pace from the stair’s head, sword in hand. He bore no shield, for he needed none. His skin was bronze—or bronze had been molded around his skin to such perfection that there was no seam, not even at his joints. A smile was worked on his face in metal, and pointed ears graved on the sides of that peculiar mask-helm to announce his elfin nature. A crest of horsehair rose from the helmet’s pate, rising like a black fountain that shone in the glittering lamplight. 




Berkley halted at the stair terminus, one foot firmly on the landing, the other still resting on a step. He stared at the bronze man, shield high, sword still aimed for a thrust behind it, peering from the depths of his enclosing helmet. The other man’s faced helm was similarly slit with two small visors, his eyes glittering in the shadows behind. 




“Sir Knight, my mistress is not pleased. You have murdered her guardian.” The other’s voice was pure, soothing to the ears. It rang clearly, even though his mouth was muffled by the bronze over his face. He cocked his head, the metal at his throat seeming to bend in accord. “I am afraid I must kill you now, for trespassing, though I commend your bravery.” 




Sir Berkley raised his shield as the elf man brought his sword up and around in a broad arc. The wood shivered over his arm, and splinters rained upon the stair. The blow was wild and fervent, and left the elf open for a quick riposte; so Berkley thrust, point aimed at the other man’s belly. The stroke rang wildly through the chamber, and Berkley felt his hand vibrate painfully on the sword’s hilt. His foe only laughed and raised his sword again. 




They traded blows, and every attack from Berkley glanced from the elf’s bronze skin impotently. The knight slammed his splintering shield into the other, momentarily unbalancing him and gaining Berkley the open territory of the room at large. For an instant, peering past his foe and into the chamber proper, he glimpsed eyes and a pale face peering from a cracked doorway; but then it was shut again, and his attention was sealed on the bronze man bearing down upon him with sword raised high. 




Berkley’s shield was quickly being pared down by the other’s fierce onslaught. Kindling littered the floor, the remnants of much of the wooden device. Impervious in his metal skin, the elf cared nothing for personal defense and wielded his full strength on every stroke. His sword was grasped two handed, one fist closed properly around the hilt, the other wrapping itself about the pommel to add extra force; and it was working. 
Laughing with every ring of Berkley’s sword against him, the elf drove his foe through the room mercilessly, striking with the fury and impunity of a berserk. Berkley’s breath grew more and more ragged. He simply could not cut through the man’s metal skin. Thus, he reversed his grip on his sword, grasping the blade in his fist and employing the heavy pommel as a mace head. 


Whenever the elfin knight left himself open after a tremendous blow against Berkley’s shield, the desperate man would lay a stroke against the man’s head with the weight of his sword-butt. The response to the first stroke was a laugh, and a jab: “I thought you knew your swordsmanship, sir Knight.” 


Yet, as the blows continued to fall upon the bronze face, he laughed less and began to stagger, as the constant concussions took their toll. The metal around his head caved after several strikes; and then, after a particularly weak blow against Berkley’s shield, the elf collapsed under his foe’s final stroke to his bronze pate. Like a puppet cut from its strings, he fell in a heap upon the carpeted floor, metal costume bending around his joints as easily as if it were his skin itself. 


Berkley fell back against the wall, letting what remained of his shield drop to the ground. It broke as it struck the floor, falling into pieces beneath his feet, but he didn’t care, only fought for breath. The wound on his chest began to sting as the power of adrenaline wore off, and his muscles ached mightily—and his left arm was a massive sprain, driven to near uselessness by the endless onslaught of the elf’s heavy sword. 

"Mage: The Awakening; chapter 6"

"Mage: The Awakening; chapter 6" 
By;fernand jiro
Free Mage
The ritual was the most complicated thing Quinn had ever seen. She was amazed at the amount of power required, though she wasn’t really surprised — separating a body and putting it back together was complicated, and the human body, being the most complex physical structure, was very difficult to separate or join.
“Use my power,” she offered. “If this Free Magic creature is going to break free soon, and is as powerful as you say it is, you’ll need all of your strength. I don’t have the training to fight something that powerful. I learned that when I captured Silk.”
“Well, I’m glad you realize it,” Zephyr told her. “And we accept your offer, but we will leave you enough power to defend yourself if something goes wrong.”
“We’re ready,” Mikaze declared.
Ken pulled Quinn aside. “I don’t know how much influence I’ll have when I’m joined with the others, so I might not get this chance again.” He paused, then he pulled her tightly into his arms and kissed her long and sweetly. For once, Mikaze didn’t protest.
“Are you ready?” Quinn asked, feeling a twinge of fear for the four of them. In his own way, each man held a kind of charm; even Arashi, whose violence appealed one’s the more animalistic side, the side that always wished it could be as uncaring.
The four looked at her for the last time as separate beings. Clearly, none of them wanted to disappear, but their bodies longed to be one, to be as they were before.
Quinn stood several feet away from them, her feet just touching the complex pattern they had traced into the ground. They symbols would help concentrate her powers and amplify them as well, making sure that she remained in control.
“Oh spirits that govern all life, hear me,” Quinn chanted, spreading her magic around in a great circle around the four through the symbols under her feet. “Lend me your power. Here stand four parts of the same whole. Let them be as they were meant to be.”
Her magic poured out of her in a great rush as she continued to chant, her magic streaming through the characters on the ground. Zephyr yelled for her to stop it, to reign in her power before she was consumed by it, but she didn’t seem to hear him. She dropped her barriers, letting all of her magic flow. The four men cried out, fearing for her, but were unable to move as they were drawn irresistibly toward one another.
Just at that moment, there was a terrible rumbling sound. Quinn’s magic stopped on its own, drawing back within her like a frightened dog. The four were surrounded by an intense darkness.
“What’s going on?” Quinn yelled over the roaring wind and grinding stone.
“It’s the creature,” Arashi yelled back. “It’s breaking free! Run, Quinn! Get out of here!”
The darkness swallowed them. All trace of them — their aura, their thoughts,everything — disappeared. But they were still alive. Quinn could feel them, somewhere in the darkness.
Determinedly, she strode forward.
“Mistress, no!” Silk yelled, springing from the crystal to block her path. “They are fine. They do not need you. They are only using you. Do not throw your life away.”
“I don’t believe you, Silk,” Quinn said harshly. “They can’t beat it while they are separated. They need to be joined. And I won’t abandon them!” She threw herself into the darkness.
*****
For a long time, Quinn felt the cold pressure of the shadows squeezing all around her. She couldn’t feel her hands or her feet or her face. She felt as though her body had been destroyed and all that was left was her mind, floating in an endless void. Slowly, she became aware of someone calling her from far away. She opened her eyes.
She was lying on her stomach in a field of magenta grass. The sky was of a sick red, and the clouds were khaki green. Five men were standing in its centre.
Zephyr, Hariken, Mikaze and Arashi faced the fifth man, all four of them looking fierce and grim. The ritual had failed. They had not joined. They couldn’t win.
“Foolish mortals,” said a strange voice, velvety like a lover’s caress, and harsh like a gunshot. “Did you really think you could defeat me? I have enough power in one cell to destroy the entire planet!”
In a blur of unreality, the man who was a Free Magic creature attacked. He hadn’t moved from where he stood, but his soul, or his spirit, or whatever it was, lashed out at the humans while its body crouched, becoming an animal. The four men went sprawling in the odd grass, and did not get up. Quinn felt the intolerable pressure of magic pressing down on them, choking them.
“No!” she screamed, throwing her magic out to try and help them. Normally, when she released her magical barriers, her powers would go wild, often causing major damage; at this point in time, that was what she wanted to happen. However, the Free Magic creature’s power was immovable. It was as though she was just a breath of wind that wasn’t even worth paying attention to. It also didn’t help that she was already extremely weakened from the ritual.
“Silk!” Quinn yelled, crying bitterly. “Do something!”
“What would you have me do, Mistress? While I am locked in this crystal, my powers are contained. I cannot do anything for your friends. They will die.”
“No! I won’t let that happen! I know they said you would kill me as soon as you got the chance, but it’s a risk I’m willing to take! I know you’re stronger than him! I don’t care what happens to me, but save them!”
Zephyr shouted a warning, but Quinn didn’t listen. She grasped the crystal tightly in her hand and threw it at the Free Magic creature with all her might, releasing a surge of power that shattered the orb into a thousand pieces. Power flared triumphantly from Silk as he materialized in all his glory. Power sizzled along his long, slender limbs. For a terrifying moment, he stared at Quinn with a hungry expression on his face.
“Silk, please,” she whispered.
Whether from the lingering effects of his seal or from some form of affection for his former Mistress, Silk turned his attention to the Free Magic creature.
It towered over Silk like a lion over a mouse. It looked more like a beast than a man. The one who had created it had probably thought of it as more of an animal companion than a human companion like Silk’s creator had. It snarled at Silk, showing its fangs, raising the massive spikes and quills on its back, its eyes glowing menacingly red.
Silk was unimpressed. With the power he had built up in his crystal prison thanks to Quinn, Silk vaporized the creature instantly. Just a brilliant flash and it was gone. Poof! Without a trace.
Quinn sighed with relief, falling to her knees.
But it wasn’t over. Now they had a second, more powerful and spiteful Free Magic creature to contend with. Menacingly, Silk advanced on Quinn.
The girl watched him in fear but didn’t try to run. She knew it would be no good; she would never be able to outrun him, and she was too drained to fight back. She looked helplessly up at him as he stopped in front of her.
“Dear, sweet Harlequinn,” he said silkily, touching her face, fingering a bead in her hair.“I always knew you would set me free.” He yanked viciously on the braid, forcing Quinn to her feet, bracing her hands on his chest. “And once I get rid of the competition, you will be mine,” he hissed.
Quinn stared up at him in fear and confusion. With a wicked grin, Silk pulled her against him and kissed her hard. Quinn made a muffled protest and tried to push him away, but to no avail. Silk’s magical body was as unyielding as iron.
Silk threw her away from him, sending her tumbling head over heels in the sharp grass. He watched her warily and possessively for a moment, then turned to the four men who were still lying on the ground.
“Silk, no!” Quinn called. “Please, leave them alone!”
“Not this time, Harlequinn,” Silk replied softly, cruelly. “This time, they all die. And there’s nothing you can do to stop me. They do not understand you as I do. They do not know why you only wear boys’ clothing with long sleeves. They have not seen the scars covering your entire body from where you were brutally tortured by your own family. They will never know you as I know you.”
He had almost reached them. Quinn’s mind reeled in panic. What could she do? She had to seal him again. But how? She didn’t have a crystal. She didn’t have the skill. And at the moment, she didn’t have the power.
Silk reached out to Mikaze.
“Varsh koran thrymu shlosc!” Quinn shrieked suddenly,desperately.
Silk laughed in disdain. “Foolish human! Do you really think you have the power to—” He faltered. In her hand, Quinn held a simple stone she had picked up from the ground. She didn’t have the power and she didn’t have the right equipment. But her eyes were glowing.
Power spilled form her every pore, snaking around her arms, billowing through her suddenly pitch black hair. Her true heritage as a Free Mage — as the last Free Mage — was finally surfacing. Silk knew he was doomed.
He shrieked with disbelief. He was so close! He had almost had her! How could a mere child defeat him so easily?
With one final cry of a condemned creature, Silk was locked away once more, this time in a vulgar pebble.
Quinn’s hand closed loosely around it as the alternate dimension they had been in evaporated, leaving them on the front lawn of the school, right where they had been before.
Zephyr, Mikaze, Hariken and Arashi watched, dazed, as Quinn spoke the words of the ritual once more. There was a great flash of light and a roaring of power as they merged together.
Quinn’s flow of magic was cut off abruptly as her eyes stopped glowing. She managed to catch a glimpse of a man running toward her before she lost consciousness.
*****
When Quinn woke up, it was nearly dark. She was still outside, lying in the tall grass she had been in when she first met Mikaze. She sat up a little groggily, putting a hand to her forehead, trying to steady the whirling she felt in her mind.
“Mistress, are you all right?” came Silk’s misty voice. He was trying to get back into her good graces. But at the present moment, with the heavy pounding in her head and the aching of every muscle in her body, Quinn didn’t think she had any.
“Yes, I think so,” she told him, looking around. “Where is he? The joined form of the four?”
“He has left you here, Mistress,” Silk said greasily. “He didn’t need you. He used you.”
“I don’t believe you, Silk,” Quinn said for the second time in only a few minutes. She somehow managed to get shakily to her feet. “I’ve heard enough from you. Be silent.”
Grudgingly, it seemed, Silk obeyed. Quinn walked steadily toward the school. That was the only place she could think of where he would be.
I don’t evenknow his name, she thought ruefully.
“Kaze,” said a strange yet familiar voice from behind her. “You can call me Kaze.”
Slowly, Quinn turned around. Before her stood the man. He was tall, with a slender figure, and highly toned muscles. He had long black hair that he had tied back in an elegant horsetail; his face was the exact shape shared by his four quarters. His eyes were captivating, swirls of royal blue and emerald green, the two colors blending together perfectly to create the most breathtaking eyes imaginable. Little did Quinn know, that was the exact same impression people got when they looked into her eyes.
“You can read my mind as well?” Quinn asked breathlessly. She had never been so dumbfounded before. She hastily emptied her mind so that Kaze wouldn’t see her shock.
“Yes,” Kaze replied, smiling as though he knew exactly what Quinn felt. “It would seem that unnatural beauty and telepathy are the norm for Free Mages. They all had it, it would seem; just look at Silk, who was created to be the mirror image of his master.”
“I’ll be happy if I never have to look at Silk again,” Quinn said softly. “I knew he would turn on me, but I can never forgive that he would take it out on you.” Glaring at the pebble she still held, Quinn’s eyes flashed briefly gold. The pebble vanished suddenly, spirited away deep within the cave in which she had originally caught the creature.
“It’s over now,” Kaze told her gently. “The students and the teachers can come back.”
“They won’t be too happy about that, I think,” Quinn said with mild humor.
Kaze smiled. “If that creature had been allowed to roam free, it doubtlessly would have destroyed the planet. But thanks to you, the world is safe.”
“Me?I almost got it destroyed, remember? Silk would have been no less dangerous.”
“That’s true, but it all worked out in the end. Either way, if you hadn’t released Silk, we would have been done for anyway. You took a chance. Luckily, it all worked out fine.”
“Still.”
“I know. But you still saved the planet.”
She turned toward the school. “Yeah, well, it’s not like anyone will know about it.”
“I will know about it.”
Quinn started a sa pair of strong arms firmly circled her waist. She practically melted against the hard chest as Kaze rested his chin on her shoulder. His breath tickled her cheek.
“I will never forget it,” he whispered.
“So, which part of you do you think is the most prominent?” Quinn asked somewhat slyly.
“Right now?” Kaze asked, a mischievous grin on his lips and a mysterious twinkle in his eyes. He turned her in his arms to face him. “I would have to say Hariken.”
“I’m glad,” Quinn murmured, wrapping her arms around his neck as he tenderly pressed his lips to hers.

"Mage: The Awakening; chapters 3 and 4"

"Mage: The Awakening;chapters 3 and 4"
By;fernand jiro 
Silirenkath
Quinn leveled her sword, wary, runes glowing on its blade. She walked on, sword held at the ready, circling, lest something sneak up on her from behind. The only sounds were her footsteps and a constant drip-drip-drip from somewhere deep within the cave. Carefully, she sent out a wave of magic, sensing for her prey. There! A tang of FreeMagic.
There were several creatures in the world, most of them unfriendly, that were made in part or entirely of Free Magic. Free Mages of old had experimented with their powers, unwillingly unleashing several creatures with terrifying power. The lesser of these creatures could be destroyed by a Free Mage. The stronger ones could not. They could only be bound, and even that took a great amount of magic.
Quinn was hunting one of these. It had taken refuge under the school, in one of the uncharted caves, and Quinn was determined to get it out. Of course, the teachers didn’t know what she was doing. She would probably be expelled if they knew. And Zephyr would tell her that she wasn’t strong enough yet, that she wasn’t in control enough. And did she even know how to bind such a creature?
As a matter of fact, she did know how. She had been listening particularly attentively in binding class since she heard of this creature beneath the school, and had done some research in one of the school’s library books that was forbidden to all students, save her — she was a Free Mage, and therefore had the power to cast a number of the very dangerous spells within. One such spell was the one she needed to bind a Free Magic creature. She had studied it in great depth, making sure there was no way she could fail. Of course, she knew that there was a very high chance that she might fail anyway, but she was determined to try.
A noise. Rocks falling. She spun swiftly, raising her sword once again, searching for the source of the noise. In her free hand, she held a clear crystal orb. It was within the orb that she planned on binding the creature. She relaxed when she saw a rat scuttle away from her light. So it wasn’t the creature after all.
Suddenly, she heard a high-pitched whooshing sound, closely followed by a loud shriek. Trying to ignore the pain in her ears, Quinn desperately searched for the creature, for she knew it had come. She saw it a split second before it rammed into her. She just managed to get her sword between herself and it, before it bowled her over. She had enough sense to keep her grip on the orb, even with the searing pain on her back, neck and head as the fall threw her against several sharp rocks. She kicked the creature off her, seeing it open its huge maw to bite her neck. It had long, white hair and pasty white skin. Its teeth were yellow and as long as her hand. Its arms were twice as long as a man’s and ended in mantis-like claws instead of hands. When it stood, it was taller than Quinn by a foot, despite its posture, hunched almost in half.
Quinn scrambled to her feet. As she raised her sword, the creature hissed and fled. Quinn knew it wasn’t over. It was hiding, slinking around her to strike unexpectedly somewhere else. Calmly, Quinn closed her eyes, spreading out her magic. She caught its presence and followed it. It was behind her. Before it could spring anew, she faced it, pointing her sword at it and yelled a word of power. It flew from her throat, tearing the muscles there, and at the creature.
It struck the creature head-on. Shrieking, the creature tumbled from the rocky cliff on which it stood and landed at Quinn’s feet. As Quinn rubbed her sore throat, the creature began to change. It was reverting back to its true form, the one it had held when it was originally created, before becoming wild.
Its skin and hair remained white, but it became more pure, like snow. Its arms shortened, and hands replaced the claws. When its change was complete, it resembled a young man, clothed in a very pale silver robe. It glared at her with silver eyes.
“Free Mage,” it spat, eyes filled with hatred. It now knew that she could seal it, and it was becoming afraid.
But when Quinn pointed at it with her sword, holding out the orb, its fear faded. Quinn couldn’t speak, as hard as she tried. The spell she had used to reveal its true form had torn her vocal cords. She was powerless.
The creature grinned evilly. It sprang at her once again. In panic, Quinn somehow managed to cry out the binding spell. “Mann rack shai loch!” The words flew from her throat, burning her lips as they passed.
The creature screamed in disbelief as it was dragged irresistibly toward the crystal orb. Its form was absorbed by the crystal, and Quinn sealed it with another word of power that sent fire streaming through her lungs. She coughed violently, blood staining her hand over her mouth. When the coughing stilled, she held up the orb. She had done it!
*****
Zephyr was livid with fury when Quinn ran into him in the Entrance Hall. She had come from the forest, he believed, and she had been practicing words of power. She tried to deny it, but when she couldn’t speak, he knew.
“There is a reason I don’t want you to be using words of power,” he said with strained calm. “They’re dangerous! If you’d been a hair less powerful, they would have consumed you! Now promise me you won’t use any again, until I say you can.”
Unable to speak, Quinn nodded.
Back in her room, she examined the orb. It had become a cold silver-white, and was no longer clear. It was heavy and as cold as ice.
Come out, she told the creature in her mind.
To her shock, it obeyed. A smoke-like substance billowed from the crystal and materialized into the man she had sealed.
“You have called, and I have come,” he said, his voice haunting. “What do you wish of me, Mistress?”
Who are you? Quinn found herself asking.
“I am Silirenkath. I was created by the first Free Mage, and am several thousand years old. You may call me Silk.”
Why were you created?
“My creator wanted a companion. Since he felt that human beings were beneath him, he created me. Of course, I had to be as powerful as he, to keep up when he cast his many and various spells. Unfortunately for him, I was stronger than he anticipated.”
You killed him.
“I did.”
Will you kill me too?
“As long as I am bound by the crystal, I am your servant.” Silk bowed. Quinn couldn’t sense any malice in him now.
And how long will that be?
“As long as thecrystal lasts.”
*****
It was several weeks before Quinn could speak again. The words of power she had used had thoroughly torn her throat and vocal cords. The healers in the Infirmary had, at first, believed that she would never be able to speak again, as the wounds were beyond their level to heal. But as a Free Mage, Quinn could do what they could not. Still, she didn’t speak much, as her throat was still very sore. During her weeks of silence, Quinn had thoroughly questioned Silk: where he had come from, how he had been created, why he killed his maker and how.
So, how old did you say you were? Quinn asked, still telepathically to soothe her throat.
“I do not fully understand your mortal ways of monitoring the passing of time, but as far as I can tell, I am several thousand human years old.”
Do you know why you were created? I know you said it was because the Free Mage who created you wanted a worthy companion, but is there anything else?
“Not that I am aware of. I recall him saying something about my serving a higher purpose, but as of yet, I have not done much that will change the world.”
Why did you kill him?
“He was unworthy of me.” Quinn had noticed that Silk was very vain. “He thought he was still my master, but I surpassed him in power and skill.”
Your powers can grow? I thought that when a Free Magic creature was created, it would stay that way forever. Or at least until it was destroyed.
“That is true for the regular ones, but so much magic went into my creation, that I was unwittingly given the ability to improve. Furthermore, my master wished for me to be able to keep up with him. I believe that I did well on that account.” He grinned nastily.
And you will kill me as well once you are free of the crystal, am I right?
“I am your servant.”
No matter how many times Quinn asked him that question, Silk would always evade having to answer. No amount of insisting could get a straight answer out of him.
“Oh, Mistress, don’t worry yourself over the future,” Silk said sleekly, draping his arms around her shoulders from behind. He leaned his chin on her shoulder. “All that matters now is that I am bound to you,” he whispered in her ear.
Quinn gently extricated herself from his embrace. She really didn’t like Silk. He gave her the creeps, particularly when he touched her. But he might have his uses, though she didn’t quite know what they might be yet. And he didn’t judge her like everyone else at MWSI; she could talk to him without him thinking rude things about her. He was the closest thing to a friend that she had.
*****
Hard as she tried to keep Silk’s existence a secret from Zephyr, he found out nonetheless. He was furious. He even tried to confiscate the orb.
“I can’t give it to you,” she said, horrified, clutching the orb. “Silk is dangerous. If he isn’t contained, he’ll break free.”
“Which is precisely why I want you to give it to me.”
“No.”
“Harlequinn, I’m serious. This is not a game.”
“I know it’s not. Besides, he won’t listen to anyone else but me. What would you do with him?”
She froze suddenly. She cursed herself inwardly for failing to notice Zephyr casting his immobilization spell. She couldn’t move, no matter how hard she tried to counter the spell. “Using magic against a student can get you fired, you know,” she said coldly.
“And facing a Free Magic creature and using illegal words of power can get you expelled, not to mention arrested,” Zephyr replied calmly, reaching behind her and taking the crystal orb. He seemed surprised at its weight and coldness.
The crystal suddenly flared with light and power. The shape of Silk burst from the orb, looming menacingly over Zephyr, grabbing him by the throat. “How dare you,” he boomed in a voice that made both humans’ noses bleed. “You will return me to my mistress at once, and you will release her from your spell.”
“Silk!” Quinn yelled. “Get back in the orb!”
“But, Mistress—”
“Now!”
He grudgingly obeyed, giving Zephyr a final glare, and, pushing his luck, pressed his claw-like nails into his neck.
“Silk!”
He vanished.
Quinn finally managed to free herself from Zephyr’s spell. The first thing she did was take the orb back and put it in her belt purse. Next, she tended to Zephyr’s neck.
“Sorry about that,” she told him, running her fingers over the small wounds, healing them instantly. “But I did warn you. Zephyr?”
Her teacher was trembling. “We have to find a way to destroy him,” he said, his voice shaking as much as he was. “He’s dangerous. More so than I ever imagined. He has a hatred within him that is stronger than any I’ve ever known. Quinn, you are never to call on him. Ever. He would destroy you as soon as look at you. As long as he is sealed in the crystal, you’re safe, but we don’t know how long it will last. Do not call on him again. Do you understand?”
“I understand, Zephyr,” she said. But that doesn’t mean I’ll obey.

Chapter Four
Summer Holidays
“All right, everyone, enjoy your summer holidays,” Zephyr told his class as the final bell rang. “And remember, no magic during the holidays, unless you have a license. And those of you who do, be careful, and don’t exceed your limit.” He glanced pointedly at Quinn when he said this.
The girl pretended not to notice. She had no intention of exceeding her limit. She had seen her limit and had tried to rise above it when she had captured Silk, and she had not liked the consequences. Even now, several months after, her throat still hurt from where the words of power had burned her.
“So, what are your plans for the next two months?” Zephyr asked her once everyone had left. He suspected her of ignoring his orders.
“Training,” she replied simply. “I thought I’d go to a hidden mountain temple.”
“What kind of training?”
Her eyes shone.“That is a secret.”
Quinn gave him a cheeky little wave and dashed from the classroom. She wanted to pack right away. She couldn’t wait to be on her way. The students had been less bitchy than usual, which was a nice change,but she still wanted to get away from the school, to go somewhere quiet where people wouldn’t judge her, or if they did, they had enough meditation training to veil their thoughts from her.
That was one of the major reasons she wanted to go to a mountain temple. She had heard of the exceptional meditation training they offered, and had immediately jumped at the idea. If they could teach her to block out other people’s thoughts — she could hardly imagine it!
Suddenly, as she walked briskly down the hall, a hand reached out, and she was yanked behind a statue.
She reacted immediately and effectively. A blade of pure energy shot out of her hand and pressed against her attacker’s throat before he could even breathe.
Quinn recognized him in an instant.
“Ken!” she exclaimed with a laugh, releasing him. “What are you doing here?”
“Keeping an eye on you, little mage,” he said, pressing her against the back of the statue and kissing her deeply.
Quinn let him do it. She didn’t react at all, but smiled when he stepped back.
“Keeping an eye out for me, you mean,” she retorted. “I don’t need looking after when I’m simply walking down the hall. What are you really doing here?”
He tapped the side of his head. “You can read my thoughts, you tell me.”
She started. “How did you know about that?” she demanded. She had gone white as a sheet. No one knew about it. Not even Zephyr.
“I thought it was rather obvious,” Ken replied, surprised. “But don’t worry. I don’t think anyone else is as immaculately perceptive as I am.”
“I sure hope not,” Quinn muttered under her breath. Against her will, she picked up his thoughts. He had come at Zephyr’s request, to teach a class. “You? Teach a class?” she said incredulously before she could stop herself.
Ken smiled knowingly. “Fighting Arts and Dueling,” he told her. “It seems you’re running low on teachers.”
It was true; teachers had been quitting left and right for some strange reason. Quinn became suspicious. She scanned his mind quickly.
“You’re partially lying to me,” she chided. “You really are here to keep an eye on me. Zephyr asked you to follow me around this summer. Teaching is just an excuse come autumn.”
Ken winced. “Annoying little trick, ain’t it?” he murmured, referring to her mind reading.
“You have no idea,” Quinn replied, though she knew Ken hadn’t expected her to answer. “Look, I can take care of myself. I don’t want anyone following me. I need to be alone for a while. You can understand that, can’t you?”
“I can. But I don’t think Zeph can.”
“Well, if you won’t stay here of your own accord, I might just have to cast a spell on you.”
“You don’t have the power, you know that.”
“I don’t. But Silk does.” She pulled the white crystal from her pocket. As Ken watched, a wisp of silver rose from the orb, solidifying into a human shape.
“You called, Mistress?” an ethereal voice asked. A pair of silver eyes opened, watching Ken with a look of malice and hatred that was gone before Quinn could see it.
“This is your last chance, Ken,” Quinn warned him. “Either leave me alone for two months, or I’ll be forced to make you.” She pleaded with her eyes for him to stay.
“You’re in more danger if that thing stays with you than you realize, Quinn,” Ken told her. He was trembling slightly. “I can’t stay idly here now.”
Quinn looked devastated for a moment. “So be it,” she said sadly. The crystal flashed, and Ken knew no more.
*****
“You’re sure didn’t hurt him?” Quinn asked.
“For the millionth time, Mistress, yes,” Silk replied wearily. She had asked him that already, too many times than he could count. If she hadn’t been so damned strong, he would gladly have killed the man. That a lowly human would dare to come between Silk and his mistress was unforgivable. But Quinn had an iron will, and Silk had been unable to kill.
“He is bound to the school for two months,” Silk assured his mistress. “He won’t be able to break the spell. Not even if he were in his true form.”
“What is his true form?” Quinn wanted to know.
“I know not. Only that he was split into four. I suspect that you know more than I do about it, Mistress.”
Right after Silk had sealed Ken, Quinn had packed her things and left before anyone knew she was gone. She had brought very few things. She would not need much up in the mountain temple. She had been walking for about nine hours now. The mountains towered over her.
“I hope they can help me,” she said aloud.
*****
Zephyr was frantic when school started. For two months he had worried ceaselessly about Quinn. And now, school had started a week ago, and she still hadn’t come back. At first, he had been furious with Ken, but he came to his senses after a while. There was nothing he could’ve done against the Free Magic creature. It was more powerful than any of them could guess. How Quinn had managed to capture it in the first place, Zephyr couldn’t say.
Ken had begun teaching the Fighting Arts. His students worshiped him. The boys were absolutely amazed at his skills and prowess with any weapon. The girls were madly in love with him. They all remembered him from their excursion to the desert, and each girl was determined to make him forget Quinn and think of her instead.
But nothing could make Ken forget about Quinn. He was distant in his class. His absentmindedness had caused one of the students to be sent to the infirmary with a broken foot after Ken’s horse had stepped on it.
He desperately wanted to search for her. But he had his teaching duties to attend to. And besides, that goddamn curse was still in place, even though two months had gone by. He, much like Zephyr, was angry with Quinn for using the creature’s powers, even though they told her that it was dangerous.
“Quinn, where are you?
“I’m here!” cried a familiar voice.
Quinn came running into the practice hall, her clothes dirty and travel-worn. She skidded to a stop in front of Ken, and bent over, resting her hands on her knees, as she gasped for breath.
“Sorry I’m late,” she managed to say. “I lost track of time in the mountains, and when I realized how late I was, I ran all the way back as fast as I could.”
“You ran all the way here?” Ken repeated, impressed. “How far away were you?”
“Rockshan mountains,” Quinn gasped.
“Rockshan? That’s three days’ gallop from here! When did you leave?”
“This morning.”
Ken was so impressed, words failed him. He stared at Quinn as she fought for breath. Even more shocking than her speedy return, however, was her hair. While before it had been midnight black with blood red bangs, reaching down to her waist, it was now pure white, tied in a myriad of tiny braids that only reached her shoulders, each of them tipped with a tiny white crystal bead.
“It’s a long story,” she muttered before Ken could comment. Immediately, she heard her classmates’ complaining in her mind. Great, she thought. I’m not back two minutes, and already they’re picking on me.
“You have to go to the principal’s and tell him you’re back,” Ken told her, trying to sound imposing and teacher-like. All he managed to do was make Quinn look at him strangely and laugh. But she nodded nonetheless and trotted off.
It felt good to be back at school. MWSI had been more of a home to her than her own house with her family. The stone halls were drafty and echo-y, too cold in winter and too warm in the summer, but they were as familiar as her bedroom. Everything always looked exactly the same when she came back, and feeling as she never would with her family, she sighed, “I’m home.”
She dropped her travel-bag next to her closed, and began to rummage for some clean clothes. She had learned from the other students that they would be in FA all morning, so she chose some loose, comfortable clothing. Feeling uncomfortably bare in her T-shirt, she wrapped bandages around each of her arms, making sure that no skin was visible above her wrists.
She paused to take an extremely long drink of water. She hadn’t lied to Hariken: she really had left the mountains that very morning and run all the way. Of course, she had been helped along by her magic, but it was thanks to her training that she hadn’t collapsed along the way.
The monks in the mountain temple were incredible! There was nothing they could not do with their bodies: their daily schedule was wake up at three a.m., meditate until four, purification and worship until six, a simple breakfast of rice and fish, then almost non-stop martial arts until noon, then a hearty meal of vegetables, meat, rice and fruits, then another two hours of worship and purification, then more meditation, then more martial arts until six in the evening, then more worship and purification, and more meditation until how ever late one could stay awake. More often than not, several of them were up until passed midnight.
Although Quinn had found it very difficult to keep up in the beginning, she had gotten into the rhythm surprisingly fast. The monks considered her one of their best students, because she could already hold her own against the average monk in martial arts, and she was patient and attentive in meditation. She purified herself when they did, and she meditated while they worshiped — they didn’t expecther to worship as well, because she was not a holy woman. But she respected their ways, and had done everything to accommodate herself to their lifestyle as much as she could.
After such a fierce and strict physical curriculum for the past two months, she was hardly tired from her day long run.
Quinn strolled casually down the hall, thinking of all the things she had learned that summer, and how useful they would be in her everyday life, when suddenly—
“Harlequinn, where the hell have you been?”
Quinn winced when she heard the yell. She turned very slowly to face a furious, seething Zephyr. The principal had taken an extended leave of vacation, she gleaned from his mind, and had left Zephyr in charge. At this point, Quinn wasn’t sure that was a good thing.
“Zephyr, I’m sorry, I lost track of time. The mountain temple was so peaceful, and they have no need to monitor the passing of time, so I forgot.”
“Do you have any idea how much I’ve been worried about you?” he demanded.
“Why? You know perfectly well that I can take care of myself. You saw to that on our fieldtrip to the desert.” Quinn had long suspected that the sandstorm that had taken her and Hariken away had been a set up of some sort; but the deepest recesses of Zephyr’s mind were barred to Quinn’s probing mind.
“That is beside the point, Harlequinn! You used that Free Magic creature on Hariken!” Zephyr yelled. Quinn had never seen him so upset before. “Do you realize that every time you call on it, it gets more powerful? At the rate you’re calling on it, it’ll break free in no time.”
Quinn said nothing. She stared at the wall directly behind Zephyr’s head, not trusting herself to speak. She knew what she was doing. Silk wasn’t going to overpower her.
“Can I go back to class now?” she said finally.
“Yes, you may. Goddess knows you’ve missed enough classes already.”

"Mage: The Awakening; chapter 2"

           "Mage: The Awakening; chapter 2" 

                                                             By;fernand jiro marantal  

The Hurricane Prince ofthe Desert
“Gods, it’s so hot!” the students complained loudly.
“Ow! Mr. Kaze, my shoulders are all red!”
“Mr. Kaze, Charlie just fainted! I think it’s the heat.”
“I warned you!” Zephyr said, brutally cheerful. “When you’re in the sun for a long time like this, you should wear a hat and completely cover your skin. If you’re worried about being hot, you have to wear light clothes that permit your skin to breathe, and keep the sun off.”
Mercifully, he didn’t mention Quinn. She wore pale blue clothes with long sleeves. Around her head was a sort of scarf that served her as a hat, and a means to veil her face from the sun and the sand. She heard the students curse her in their minds.They still believed that Zephyr favored her and gave her tips and hints that he didn’t give them.
It was almost dark when they stopped to set up camp. One of the students had found a spring, so they all filled their water canteens and drank deeply. The students on supper duty filled pots to boil on the roaring fire. Many students complained about the heat it gave off.
“Haven’t we had enough for one day?” someone said.
“You’ll be begging for that heat soon enough,” Zephyr said, still as cruelly cheerful as ever, looking out at the setting sun. “It gets very cold at night in the desert.” The students laughed, disbelieving.
Quinn sat on the outskirts of their camp, already dressed warmly for the night ahead, a sketchbook on her knees and piece of charcoal in her hand. Facing the sunset, she drew all that she could see: the clouds, the sun on the horizon, the black trees silhouetted against the setting sun, the sand dunes, even their own footprints vanishing into the distance, undulating like a large serpent. Then, closing her eyes and putting her hands over the sketch, she let her magic flow from her fingers into the paper. She watched the image grow darker as her sun, now in full color, sank below the dunes at the same time as the real sun.
“Very nice,” said Zephyr. He had come up behind her while she drew.
“You know the students think there’s something between us, don’t you?” Quinn asked bluntly,hearing their roaring discontentment in her mind.
“Do they now?” he asked absently.
Quinn knew full well that he knew. He just didn’t care.
*****
Quinn found it hard to sleep that night. The complaints of the other students continued to flood her mind, and she couldn’t clear it long enough to fall asleep. She was comfortable, sleeping on the sand, but she felt trapped in the tent. Several times, she went outsideto try to relax her mind. But nothing helped. She sensed something was wrong, but she didn’t know what it was.
Finally, hours later, she began to nod off. She closed her eyes, feeling sleep come at last, when her tent flap swung open. Mentally cursing whoever it was, she called a ball of light into her palm. It flared for an instant before the intruder grabbed her hand, smothering the light.
“Ah, ah, ah, none of that,” he whispered. Quinn recognized the rough male voice from somewhere, but she couldn’t quite remember where at the moment. The man pressed her hand down to the sand over her head. Resting his free hand by her ear, he leaned down and kissed her.
Quinn couldn’t move. Normally, she would have shoved him off her, punched him, cursed him, sworn at him, or all of the above. But she just lay there, her free hand limp at her side, as his lips caressed hers. Her eyes slid shut of their own accord.
When next she opened them, the man was gone, and the sun was on the verge of rising. Quinn shook her head to clear it. Had it all been a dream? She touched her lips. No.
Briskly, she went outside and dunked her head in the spring. It was shockingly cold. Letting her hair soak up water, she wrung it out and wove it into a tight braid, then coiled it at the back of her head, leaving the blood-red bangs free. She had packed her tent and gear long before any of the other students emerged.
*****
The day wore on. The sun beat down, stronger and hotter than before. Several students cast spells on themselves to stay cool. The teachers said nothing, but marked that fact down in the small notebooks they seemed to pull out of nowhere. No one could tell if this was a good or a bad thing.
Quinn said nothing. She didn’t mind the heat, nor did she mind the light. She had, after all, spent several months here after running away from home, and was a very resourceful girl. She kept her hood on, kept her veil off her face so that the light breeze could cool her face, took a small sip of water every few minutes, just enough to quench her slowly drying throat. But more importantly, she just didn’t think about it. The more you tell yourself “I’m hot,” the hotter youw ill feel. She didn’t need magic at all right now.
Very suddenly, out of nowhere, the wind went into a rage, swirling, screaming as it tore at their hair and clothes. A few students screamed and flung themselves from their horses, or were even thrown off by the winds or their panicking mounts.
Quinn easily calmed her horse and waited. The students had been warned that things like this would happen. Sandstorms like this one were rare in this particular desert — which was one of the reasons the teachers had taken them there, so that they would be in no real danger.But seeing as the point of this field trip was to force the students to use their powers in the real world, and to test their nerves, the teachers had a series of natural disasters and occurrences up their sleeves.
Zephyr has strictly forbidden Quinn to react unless none of the other students could control the situation. He knew what she was capable of, and had another quiz in store for the others.
So she waited. The wind blew sand into her face, and she wrapped her veil around her head. She cast a small barrier around her horse’s face as well. She may not be allowed to do anything about the storm nor her comfort, but Zephyr couldn’t tell her how to take care of her horse.
In a sense, the students at MWSI were right about Quinn. She was the daughter of a rich family who wanted to brag that their child went to the most prestigious magic school in the country. Her parents had paid for her full tuition, they gave her every comfort a girl could ever want; they had even bought her a horse that she kept in the private stables on campus that her family had also bought. But Quinn herself was not a rich-kid. She didn’t need money or material possessions to be happy. She had cut off all ties with her family and had to rely on herself now.
But she loved her roan gelding. He had been her only friend for a long time. She rode him almost every day before sunrise. Quinn would never stand for him to be pelted by sand and stones because a few students didn’t have enough compassion cast a barrier around her as well.
Because that was Zephyr’s plan. The students were being trained to protect themselves and everyone around them. He wanted to make sure they would use their magic indiscriminately. When giving them their instructions before leaving, he had included the teachers in that category, conveniently forgetting to mention Quinn.
“It doesn’t matter if we can protect ourselves,” Zephyr had said when someone questioned his logic. “What if one day you’re traveling with people who can’t use magic? You’ll need to be able to protect them. If anything goes wrong, luckily enough we teachers do have magic and can do what needs to be done. You have to protect yourself, and anyone around you, that includes other students who maybe have difficulty doing it themselves.”
Quinn shaded her eyes against the sand. I knew it, she thought bitterly. No one is going to put a barrier around me. They know I can do it myself, and that will be their excuse when Zephyr yells at them. Through the swirling sand, Quinn saw Zephyr waving to her. Oh, finally! It was as simple as breathing: the wind around her vanished and she was encased in a bubble of clear air. Quinn thought she felt her horse sigh in relief.
Although Quinn could easily take care of the entire storm, she hesitated.
Some of the students can sense where magic comes from. If I stop the storm, they’ll know it’s me, and, as usual, they’ll think I’m showing off. She glanced up. But if I don’t, Zephyr will think I’m like all of them. She let out an irritated breath and made up her mind.
She released her magic, calming the winds and guiding the sand harmlessly back on the ground without landing on the other students. The thing that had decided her was that the others were clearly having a hard time dealing with the storm. As much as she disliked the majority of them, she didn’t like it when people around her were suffering.
Zephyr gave her a brief, proud smile and gathered everyone up to continue the ride.
As Quinn followed the teachers, the students had already started spreading her success and her supposed “connections” around.
*****
A couple hours before noon, they halted again. It was time to look for an oasis or a spring to refill their canteens. Zephyr nodded to Quinn. It was her turn. She didn’t particularly want to show her powers so soon after her last exploit, but they needed water, and Zephyr would not let her do it later. He had a schedule and stuck to it. She tied her reins to her saddle horn, ready to dismount.
“Wait,” Zephyr said suddenly, voice tight.
Surprised, Quinn stopped and looked up. There, before the group, was a rider. His face was hidden by a brown hood. Only his mischievous smile was visible from the shadows. His cloak billowed dramatically in the wind.
“Well, well,well,” said the man. Quinn started. She recognized the voice of the man from last night. “What do we have here?” His eyes swept the company and fell of Zephyr. “Why, if it isn’t Zephyr!” He threw off his hood to reveal long, coal-black hair, and a royal blue right eye, and an emerald green left one. His tanned face was identical to Zephyr’s paler one; they could almost be twins.
“Hariken, what are you doing here?” Zephyr demanded. “Go away. Leave them alone. They’re students.”
“So I see,” the man called Hariken said, eyes sweeping the company once more. They fell on Quinn. His lips slid into a broad grin, and he winked at her. “I don’t believe we’ve been introduced,” he said silkily. “Hariken Kaze, prince of the desert.”He bowed, hardly taking his eyes off Quinn. “Call me Ken.”
In his mind, Quinn saw his thoughts on last night, his reasons for doing what he had done. He loved adventure, and danger thrilled him. To meet a beautiful woman in the dead of night in the middle of a camp of witches and sorcerers, what could be more thrilling? Besides make love to her in the dead of night in the middle of a camp of witches and sorcerers, of course.
Quinn ignored her female companions’ inevitable jealous uproar of the attention she was being paid — what did Quinn have that they didn’t? — as well as the man’s thoughts. She didn’t even blush. She swung from the horse’s saddle at last and made her way to the top of the dune, walking calmly and coldly past him without looking at him. When she reached her destination, she pulled off her hood and faced the wind.
Closing her eyes, she let her magic flow, searching for water. She found the spring they had left that morning. She turned her back to it — and the company of students, teachers, and a thief — and immediately found an oasis at about half a day’s ride. That was no good. She would tell Zephyr about it for that night. Between it and them, not too far from where they now stood, there was a small river. With the ease of practice, she drew her power back into herself and turned to tell Zephyr her news.
Just as she opened her mouth, she was suddenly struck from behind by a terrible wind. It swirled around her, catching her in a funnel of wind and sand.
“Quinn!” Zephyr yelled, running toward her. What was going on? She had done everything perfectly, nothing that could have called a sandstorm. And no one nearby had done anything either. He couldn’t reach her. Already he felt the storm pulling her far away, and dwindling. Slowly, the sand cleared. Only a smooth expanse ofsand remained, all footprints erased where Quinn had gone and Hariken had come from.
Quinn was gone.
And so was Hariken.
*****
Quinn let the wind carry her. It would do no good to fight it; it was a lot more powerful than the one the teachers had cast. She couldn’t sense its origin, but she felt its oppressing power. She let it swirl around her, tearing her hair from its braid and whipping it around her face. Strong arms gripped her, pulling her against a hard chest. This, she fought. She shoved Hariken away, pushing with her magic as well as her hands. She glared at him through the sand.
Finally, the tornado slowed, depositing them gently near a stream. Quinn’s hair settled around her shoulders as if nothing had happened. She continued to glare coldly at Ken.
“Don’t look at me like that,” he said, smile still firmly in place. “You know you liked it.”
Magic sizzled around her. She was angry. Gods, but she was angry. Truthfully, she didn’t know why; his nighttime visit hadn’t really bothered her; neither did his presence now. So why was she so mad? Taking a deep breath, she got herself back into control. She sent out her magic again, searching for her companions. There they were. But they were on the opposite side of the desert!
Now she was faced with another problem. How was she supposed to get back to them? Her horse had followed her into the tornado, still loyal to his mistress, but she didn’t know how long it would take to meet up with the others, or how long they would wait for her. And who the hell had created that tornado? Suspiciously, she glanced at Ken. No, it wasn’t him. The power had come from very far off.
Ken looked up from stroking his horse’s nose. Seeing her watching, he grinned roguishly and blew her a kiss.
Quinn rolled her eyes. “Why did you follow me?” she demanded.
“You think I would pass up the chance to be alone with you?” he said with a wink. “Zephyr would never give me a chance to get near you, never mind being alone with you.”
That got a blush out of her. She turned away.
“Well,” he said suddenly, swinging into his saddle. “Shall we go?”
“Go where?”
“To find your friends.”
“First of all,there’s no we. And second, you’re not coming with me.” She mounted her horse and turned him in the direction she had sensed the others. “And they’re not my friends,” she added as an afterthought.
“You can’t stop me, beautiful little mage,” Ken said, following her. If he had heard her final comment, he gave no sign. “Just pretend you don’t know you if you want, pretend that we’re not companions, but I’m coming with you.”
Quinn ignored him once more. He was right, curse him. She couldn’t force him to go away. He had magic as well, as much as Zephyr, and she wasn’t in control enough to force him to do anything against his will.
“You want to know how I know Zeph, right?” Ken said suddenly.
“You’re a part of him,” she said immediately, surprising him. “Originally, you were a single being. And you were broken into pieces — four, I think — each with a different personality. Zephyr is knowledge and tradition. You are adventure and passion. The other two must be love and gentleness, and violence and hatred.” She glanced at him. He stared at her, openmouthed. “I’m a Free mage,” she told him. What she didn’t tell him was that she had seen all this in Zephyr’s mind the moment he had seen Ken. A great sense of unease had crept into her teacher’s mind at that moment, but Quinn didn’t know why; Ken wasn’t radiating any menace, outwardly or inwardly.
“Well, I’m impressed,” he said earnestly. But she saw his suspicion in his mind. He knew there was something she wasn’t telling him. She refused to say more than that.
*****
They rode for hours. Quinn deprived herself of water to give it to her horse. Often, she dismounted and walked along side him to give him a chance to rest. But it wasn’t enough. Half an hour after noon, her horse collapsed. She couldn’t make him get up. They were too far from any oasis. Sadly, to ease his pain, she slit his throat with her dagger, set him on fire and whispered a prayer. Her greatest friend at MWSI was gone.
She refused Ken’s offer to ride with him and walked stubbornly on. By that time, both their canteens were empty. Quinn trudged on, sensing an oasis not far away, and determined to reach it. Her mouth was paper dry, her throat sore and parched.
“Are you sure you don’t want some water?” Ken asked, falling into step beside her and holding out his canteen. “I have about a mouthful left.”
“I told you, I don’t need your help. Nor do I want it.”
Ken shrugged. He poured the last of the water in his mouth. Suddenly, he grabbed her arm and pulled her toward him. He pressed his lips to hers, holding tightly to her arms so that she couldn’t get away.
Quinn made a noise when liquid flowed into her mouth. A hand against her throat forced her to swallow. Angrily, she shoved him away.
“Bastard,” she said, dragging the back of her hand over her mouth where a bit of water had escaped.
“You’ll thank me later,” he said with a wink.
Quinn walked on.
A long time later, she reached the top of a dune with tremendous effort. She saw the oasis. It wasn’t a mirage: she could smell the trees, hear a small waterfall. She lurched forward, hope coming back in a great surge. But she was more exhausted than she had thought. Her head began to spin, her legs turned to water. She fell. She tumbled down the dune, stopping at its base on her back. Stubbornly,she rolled over with a moan and tried to push herself to her feet. Her arms gave way. She had been using her magic all along just like she had previously, but she was weakening fast: her powers weren’t used to being used so much for so long.
“Easy there, little one,” Ken said softly. He had rushed down after her, and picked her up, cradling her gently.
“Let go, I’m fine,” she croaked. Her mouth was so dry; it was hard to speak at all. Half-heartedly, she pushed at his chest, trying to squirm out of his grasp.
His grip tightened. “Oh, no you don’t,” he warned. “This time, you’re going to shut up and do as you’re told. You’re dead on your feet. Now be quiet, and I’ll get you some shade and some water.”
Quinn let herself go. She was too weak to resist. In a matter of seconds, she was among the trees, their leaves blocking the heat of the sun. Cool air blew over her, and she could feel a light mist from the waterfall.
Ken lay her down in the grass against a tree, and took both of their canteens to the waterfall. Quinn lay back, eyes closed, listening to the gentle roaring of the water, feeling cooler and refreshed already. Something cold was pressed to her lips. She grasped her canteen and drank deeply. When it was about half empty, she poured the rest over her face.
Ken touched her cheek. “You’re really hot,” he remarked. “Do you have a fever?” His hands roamed over her face.
“I’m fine,” she told him, pushing his hands away. “It’s the heat that’s making my face hot.”
“Either way, I want you to take this, to prevent a fever.” He started rummaging in his bag.
“How many times do I have to tell you that I don’t want your help?” she demanded. He ignored her, taking a swig of water. Then, he turned to her and, with his hands on her shoulders to keep her from moving, he pressed her against the tree and kissed her again. He forced his mouthful of water and medicine into her mouth.
“Stop that,” she demanded, pushing him away yet again. “Do you have to kiss me every time you want me to shut up?”
He winked. “I don’t need an excuse to kiss you, little mage. It just keeps you from frying me if you think I have a reason, other than your beauty.”
She turned away. “Please go away,” she whispered.
Such was the pain in her voice that Ken left her alone. Keeping to where he could see her, he left her in peace.
Memories of her brother were flooding her mind. She couldn’t have heard Ken’s thoughts if she tried, her mind was so saturated with pain and sorrow. She was much too warm. Getting to her feet, she staggered over to the waterfall and stuck her head in it. She gasped at the cold, but it made her feel a bit better. When she needed to breathe, she pulled her head out of the water and made her way back to the tree, ignoring the water from her hair dripping down her back.
She was shivering by the time she sat down. That wasn’t right; she was still far too warm; she was sweating and shivering at the same time.
“Ken?” she called weakly, desperately.
Something in her voice caught behind Ken’s heart. He rushed over, eyes full of concern. Quinn grasped his arm like a lifeline as her shivering got worse. Her entire world was spinning. She felt like she was in a dream. Only Ken’s arm assured her that she was awake.
“Help me,” she whispered, her voice shaking as much as she was. She was afraid.
“What do you think I’ve been trying to do since we got stuck out here?” he said, feigning exasperation to keep his own fear out of his voice. She had a very bad fever.The medicines he had given her hadn’t worked.
Must bebecause of her magic, he thought. Using magic of his own, he cast a light-healing spell. “Listen to me,” he told her.“I’ve cast a healing spell, but it won’t work right away. This kind of illness has to be healed gradually, or you could die. You have to trust me. I won’t let anything happen to you.”
With great difficulty, Quinn nodded. She still clutched his arm, afraid he would leave her, even though he had told her that he would not. She felt him settle down beside her, wrapping his arms fully around her, to keep her warm or to comforther, she couldn’t tell. She relaxed her hold on his arm. He wasn’t going anywhere.
Ken smiled when he felt Quinn relax. Good, now she’ll heal faster. His arms tightened around her. He wanted nothing more than to protect her. It was something he’d never felt before, not even when he had been a single being. And I think Zephyr would agree. Quinn sure is something special.
*****
It took three days, but Quinn’s fever broke. After another two days to rest and regain her strength, she was fit to ride. Ken sat her in front of him on his horse.
“Won’t it be hard on him, if we both ride?” she asked as Ken got up behind her.
“Not at all,” was the airy reply. “He’s magicked. Raised him myself and infused him with every endurance, speed and strength spell I knew at the time. That’s why he kept going when yours gave out.”
“I hope you realize that this does not give you permission to touch me in any other way than to keep me from falling,” she said pointedly as his arms wrapped around her waist, pulling her back against his chest.
“I realize no such thing,” he said with a grin, his eyes twinkling mischievously. “Sleep,” he told her. “You’re not well yet.”
“Can you sense Zephyr?” she asked, covering a yawn. “Because if you can’t, how do you know where to go?”
“You’ve got a point, little mage. Sadly, I can sense him, so you have no excuse not to sleep.”
Twisting so that she sat sidesaddle, Quinn rested her right side on Ken’s chest, trusting him not to let her fall. She was asleep in seconds, and didn’t see Ken’s mouth split into a huge grin. He kicked his horse into a gallop, holding Quinn tighter.
*****
“They’re just beyond those dunes,” Quinn said, feeling her classmates’ presences. She swung her leg over the horse’s neck and slid from his back.
“What’re you doing?” Ken asked.
“Walking,” Quinn replied. “The students spread enough rumors about me as it is; the last thing I want to do is give them a reason to think something is between us.”
“What’s wrong with that?” Ken asked in a would-be innocent voice. He had constantly been trying to get closer to her, but couldn’t get past the emotional wall she had erected around her heart.
“There’s nothing wrong with it,” she said, surprising him, “except nothing happened. They’ll think we’ve been sleeping together all this time, whether I ride with you or not—”
“Then there’s no need for you to walk.”
“But if I do, then Zephyr will believe it too. It’s not that I like him better than you or anything, but I don’t want to lose his confidence and respect. He’s the best teacher I have, and he’s the only one who understands my magic.”
“All right,” Ken conceded. “Then I’m walking too.” He dismounted and walked on the other side of his horse than Quinn, for which she was grateful. “I am a gentleman, after all.”
Just before they topped the dune that would bring the MWSI group into view, Ken stopped Quinn.“This may be the last chance I get to be alone with you,” he said, but didn’t move after that.
Quinn watched him for a minute. Then, slowly, almost hesitantly, she rose on her toes and lightly brushed her lips against his. She gave him a small smile and freed her arm from his grip. She turned and walked to the top of the dune.
“QUINN!”
Zephyr leapt off his horse and ran toward her.
“Never do that again,” he ordered, grabbing her arms and shaking her. “It’s been almost a week! I would hate to have to tell your parents that we lost you in the desert.”
Quinn looked away. “As if they would care,” she said bitterly. “Anyway, it’s not like I did it on purpose, you know.”
“I know. I’m just glad Ken didn’t take advantage of you.” He glared at the thief, who had just come into view. Knowing full well what Zephyr was glaring about, Ken grinned and bowed deeply, exaggerating the move in order to irritate the teacher.
“He didn’t even think about it,” Quinn said in Ken’s defense. It wasn’t entirely a lie. He had thought about it, but never about doing the things he thought of, beyond kissing her.
“And you know this how?” Zephyr asked. “He may have said he didn’t think about it, but he’s a man. Trust me, men think about that kind of thing all the time.”
“Even you?” she asked slyly, to prove him wrong. She knew he didn’t think of her that way.
“All right,” he admitted, blushing. “Not all men do. But knowing Ken the way I do, he was trying to figure out if he could get away with it. If he could, he would have been all over you.”
“Damn straight,” Ken said. Zephyr jumped. He hadn’t heard the thief step up behind him. “Unfortunately, I knew that you would blow a fuse. And as much as I would have loved to see that, out of respect for Quinn, I didn’t even try to touch her.” He winked at Quinn.
When Zephyr looked at her, she shrugged.
“All right, everyone,” he said, raising his voice so that everyone could hear. “I think we’ve been in this desert long enough. Time to go back to school.”
“Slut!”
“Whore!”
“Why do girls always go for the bad boys?”
Stubbornly, Quinn ignored the thoughts she knew she would hear. She mounted one of the spare horses, taking her time to let everyone go before her. As she followed the train of students, she turned in the saddle. Ken was still on the dune, astride his horse, watching her go. His horse reared, creating a classic picture in the setting sun.
“So long, little mage,” he thought. “For now.”
Quinn waved.