Intermagia — Part 5

Shiny black leather shoes covered in dust swung like a pendulum in the air. A hanged man spoke to Arche, “Our noble house wanes. Peace is failing. A time of catastrophe is upon us. What will you do?”

A child gripped tightly onto her mother’s hand. She wanted to hide but there was nowhere to go. She looked up at her mother, her face, multitudes, warped into a melting mask of fury. “It has to be you! You’re all that’s left!”

She wanted to cry, but she couldn’t. She wanted to run, but there was no where to go. The hanged man and the enraged woman of many faces were all she could see. She held tightly onto her mother’s hand. “Stop being angry with me. I’ll do whatever you say. Please don’t be angry. Please don’t leave me with them.”

“It has to be you!” the mother screeched as the masks fell, all of them clattering onto the floor where they stared up at the child, laughing, resembling young, feminine faces. They began to hop and clatter, chomping and gnashing, taking chunks of her flesh as they ate her piece by piece. The laughter rang in her ears.

Arche’s eyes flickered. She was once again back in her tent. No crystals had formed during her slumber; she remembered her dream vividly this time. With a groan she stepped off her cot, her stomach ringing silent alarms of hunger. The clamor of returning soldiers echoed around the room instead. She recognized at once the low, powerful voice of General Porfyrian giving urgent commands, wondering if she might at last have an opportunity to meet her.

She peeked outside only to find Rania waiting, as if guarding her tent, cast in the golden hue of a setting sun. Their eyes met. Rania smiled as she bowed and said, “Are you well? Lord Hadler wishes to speak with you.”

Arche scowled instinctively. A beat too late, she replied weakly, “What are you, a messenger? Then tell him I shall be in my quarters.”

Rania had already begun walking away holding an empty bucket as she taunted, “Unlike you, we are both busy. Seek him in his tent.”

Arche gave another tired groan before disappearing back inside, already exhausted from the brief encounter. Seeing Rania only drained her of whatever motivation she could muster for the moment, but she realized something. If the soldiers had returned from battle, most of them would likely make their way to the rear market in order to purchase provisions. It had long been the case that caravans of merchants would follow the Imperial Army to trade spoils and loot for various goods and services, but she herself had nothing she was willing to part with for food. Perhaps it would be best to pay him a visit after all, she thought to herself, since he had all of their coin to purchase food, and she had no desire to go there by herself.

The mages were cordoned off in a separate part of the army campus, so neither was very far from the other. However, as she walked along the empty beaten paths, she wondered to herself where the other mage cavalrymen were. There were at least nine others besides the aged Lord Hadler, who wasn’t meant to enter the front lines regardless, but perhaps they were elsewhere. Announcing her arrival, she entered the only illuminated tent there. General Porfyrian was huddled onto the ground staring, her scarred face twisted into a grimace, her large, masculine body completely covered by her draping, crimson cloak. They had both been inspecting the body, an air of absolute quiet dread having fallen over the two mages. Arche stammered, “What is that? I’m not responsible for that, too, am I?”

“No, this is not the reason why you were called,” Hadler answered, rising to his feet and stretching his back. “I’m afraid the battle turned sour. According to the general here, the Cybelean counterattack was quite effective. This is the body of one of our cavalrymen.”

As if offering a prayer, Porfyrian muttered, “The only mage we could recover in our retreat, hewn like dry wood by a barbarian’s axe. I saw them myself, those Cybelean lords. They fall but rise again, undying. They move as swiftly as the horses they ride with an uncanny strength in their blows. They are bound by a far more dangerous esoteric than we could have known.” She too stood and continued, “It has become a top priority to understand and undo their magic. They are completely impervious otherwise.”

“Impervious?” Hadler said almost taken aback, “Could it be that the body we recovered is not then one of the immortal lords? We truly knew nothing of the Cybeleans, did we? For instance, the fact that the boy and I could communicate in the same langauge is nothing short of a mystery.”

“There is naught to know. The only thing of value in Cybele is their magic, which has rotted their culture and their people. They have no achievements or monuments. They engage in no diplomacy. Every messenger was turned away and they have abandoned themselves to isolation. The only knowledge that could be attained was to strike them with an iron and see how they react.”

“In such a scenario, oft it is the iron that reverberates.”

“None could have imagined the legends of their immortality to have been underplaying their power. Ask the Cybelean you captured what he knows. It appears we knew and still know next to nothing.”

“I’m afraid he is unavailable for the moment,” Hadler said with a quiet glance at Arche, “And we must act fast to restore his trust or what knowledge we acquire may not ring true.”

Arche spoke at last, “Why do we need his trust? We can wring the information out of him with magic.”

“There is no such magic which can be relied on,” Hadler continued, “Unless you mean to say we torture the information from him.”

The general nodded, “If that is what it takes.”

“No,” Hadler shook his head, “In my youth, working with my predecessor, I have witnessed the futility of coerced interrogation.” He froze, struck by a dark thought. “There is another method of inquiry, but it still requires Nils to cooperate of his own free will.”

“Again, whatever it will take. I must tend to other matters. You and your apprentice are to get this done as soon as possible. You have full access to the reserves in order to do so, but you must be discreet. I will inform the guard captain.”

“He will certainly not like that,” Hadler chuckled, “But yes, thank you again for the visit, commander. I hope to offer a report worthy of your confidence.” He gave a half-hearted salute. She returned it and left in a hurry with the rustling sound of chainmail.

Arche hunched down to inspect the body, too. This was not her first time seeing a corpse. She fought the urge to run. Her chest felt heavy as she scanned the body. The cause of death was immediately obvious; there was a gaping hole where the heart should have been. “What are we to do, Lord Hadler?” she said trembling, barely hiding her terror, “Truly will the fate of this entire affair rest on our shoulders?”

“Firstly, Arche, you are to apologize to Nils. Rania has already informed me that he is conscious and unscathed; nevertheless, you have wronged him, and you must repay your debt to him in kind.”

“What debt do I owe a prisoner?” she said with an intense glare, her chest still heaving, “Why do I have to apologize?”

“Because you nearly killed him. It was a miracle that he survived, considering the amount of energy that was expensed. Imperial law dictates that a captive is the property of the captor, and he is my captive, so I believe a fair punishment for the crime of private vandalism is for you to ensure he still trusts in the mission.”

Her breathing seemed to worsen as she listened. “What if I fail? Will I have to return to the Academy?” she panicked, “Is there no enchantment that will bind him under our control?”

Hadler’s expression was stony, his eyes tired, “That is a far more ancient magic that intermagia shall perhaps some day replicate, but for now, the best you have is to say sorry. Now, I must find a vacant tent to retire for the night. It has been a long day. We shall resume in the morning.”

“But-“

Hadler stopped just as he reached the exit and added as his expression loosened, “The mention of punishment was in jest.” He drew a deep breath. Then he sighed. “But it is only right for a lady of Concordie to make amends, not enemies.”

She fell silent, her heart still pounding as she was left alone with the corpse, the heart once buried in his chest exhumed. She knew already who he was. He had a reputation as a cruel and vicious soldier, adept at a particularly gruesome form of intermagia that would create thin blades of highly pressurized air. She had no fondness for him, but to see his lifeless body filled her with foreboding. This kind of mage on the battlefield should have been unstoppable. For someone to have gotten close enough to scoop out his heart so precisely was unimaginable.

“Oh, I had nearly forgotten,” she heard Hadler from outside, snapping her out of her trance. “You’ve probably not eaten all day. Fortuitously, the best way to apologize is over a meal. Seek out Nils in Rania’s quarters and buy yourselves something from the market. She should be familiar with the vendors there and can tell you which stalls won’t upset your stomachs.” Her mentor held a silver coin between his fingers. “A milligram should cover the three of you. Prices are higher here than you might expect.”

“You want me to dine with them now? How much further must I humiliate myself?”

With a frown, the man took her hand and opened it himself, placing the silver coin called a milligram into her palm before he gently closed it like a locket. “Pay close attention, Arche. This is no place for pride. I have long since cast mine aside joining this endeavor. The magic there is to be learned from Cybele will far outweigh what personal concerns you may have. It may alter the course of the Empire itself.”

She took the coin and pocketed it without complaint, merely asking, “When should I return with the prisoner?”

“I’ll have Rania fetch you tomorrow morning an hour after sunrise.”

Without another word, she did an abrupt about-face and left, her rapid gait overflowing with nervous energy. Her thoughts raced as she approached the tent she would usually go out of her way to avoid. “It is only right to make amends,” she muttered to herself, a short mantra as if to persuade herself. “As a lady of Concordie.”

She announced herself as she entered, seeing Nils alone, stunned by her presence. He leapt out of the low cot and scrambled back. Arche hardly knew how to react, simply watching as he glared from the corner of the tent, his body arched and tense like a wary housecat. It would have been humorous had she not felt so awful about it. Everything felt awful about this.

“I’m not here to attack you,” she said firmly, “Relax.”

He did not yet speak. He lowered his shoulders and stood upright, still on guard. “For what have you come?”

She swallowed, unsure how to word her response, her mouth opening to form them before she shut her eyes. Her hand gripped the single silver coin her mentor had given her as she found herself holding it out in front of her. “This.”

The boy flinched, “What is it?”

“It’s enough to buy food. You will accompany me to the market.”

He stared at her hand, not knowing what to do, only able to muster up, “I’ve never actually handled coin before.”

She cocked an eyebrow, almost smugly, “See? I knew you were nobility. I’ve never had to touch something as base as metal coinage until I got here, too, but this is all the market deals in. The rations given out to the soldiers taste like dust and sweat, so we must make do.”

“Why should I accompany you…?” he asked warily, meeting her gaze.

“Do you have no sense of duty? A lady is requesting an escort, and you’d deny her?”

“I am under no such obligation to you. You attacked me,” he said bluntly, lowering his guard at last, “You belittled me, and now you are pressing me into your service. It is just as Rania said about you.”

At her name, Arche threw down the coin in her hand. She could feel heat and tears rising to her eyes as if a mental dam had broken. “It’s because of her… that I can’t go to the market by myself…” She stood there, her arms stiff. “She spread malicious lies about me to the other merchants so they won’t do business with me. Don’t ever listen to Rania. She pretends to be sweet and compliant, but she’s a liar!”

Nils lowered his gaze, “Is it proper for me to waste time like this?”

The two stood in silence.

Suddenly, she shouted, “Fine! I have given you ample opportunity! I’ll go by myself!” However, her legs remained rooted to the ground as tears streamed down her cheeks. “I’ll go! I’ll go!” she stamped her feet.

The tantrum stunned the young knight. If Rania was a liar, she hadn’t lied about Arche’s fragility thus far. Nils shook his head, knowing full well what his master would think in this situation. With a strained effort, he let out, “Very well, I shall escort you.” He stepped forward and picked up the fallen coin. “I apologize for the hesitation,” he said as he bent down, as if not to Arche but to his late master.

“What?” Arche said, rubbing an eye, “Don’t apologize. Please. Just be quiet and come with me. And you do all of the talking.”

“Verily, which is it then?” Nils complained under his breath, shuffling behind her driven almost entirely by hunger rather than honor.

They navigated across camp together towards the rear market, which to Arche seemed livelier than usual, although it appeared that many of them had started to tear down their stalls. She had expected the smell of roasting meats and fried dough, but there seemed only to be the sight and sound of furious movements. “That’s strange…” Arche noted, “Night time is when it is most active. Why are so many of them packing up?” Her voice was somewhat muffled by the scarf she had wrapped to keep her face concealed, although anyone could tell from her outfit that this out-of-place girl could only have been Arche of Concordie.

“Do you know where a food merchant might be?”

“It was harder not to run into someone hawking grilled meat on a stick or baked goods here,” Arche said at a loss.

They continued to meander where they could until they had finally found one food vendor still willing to do business. The two eagerly approached, dodging in and out of the crowd, only to find vegetables brined in clay pots. “Surely we cannot just eat pickles,” Arche groaned, holding her nose.

Nils, however, was beaming, “I happen to relish pickled food. My mother would pickle eggs in a sweet vinegar for my sister and I. Radishes as well. And carrots. If we can find cheese and bread, this would be more than a feast.”

“Your mother did all of that?”

The old merchant finally noticed the two as he peeked up from under a wide brimmed hat. He rasped with a smile, “None of those, I’m afraid. Just cucumber and cabbage left.”

“Will this coin be sufficient?” Nils asked boldly, holding up the coin that Arche had thrown between his fingers.

Arche forced his hand down with her own, “Are you crazy or just stupid? That coin could buy almost five whole giant pots of pickles!”

“Oh,” the old merchant reacted, “I recognize you. You’re famous.”

Arche wrapped her face back up and turned away in silence.

“Sir, if I may ask, does she hold some disrepute at the market?”

“She stole something that wasn’t hers. Ain’t no bigger taboo among merchants, my boy.”

“It wasn’t like that! That wasn’t what happened at all!”

The old man grinned, showing off a smile of several missing teeth, “Gossip travels faster than sickness. When one of us is hurt we all react quick.”

“And if I may ask one more thing,” Nils continued, “What has caused the market to stir in such strange ways? It appears many are closing earlier than expected.”

“Ah,” the old man stood up, stretching his back, “Well, I answered your last question for free, but any more will be for paying customers only.”

“Let’s go,” Arche said, tugging on his shoulder, “I don’t even want any dumb pickles.”

“Then I shall purchase a pot, sir,” Nils said.

“What?!”

“Heh,” the merchant smiled toothily, receiving the silver coin from Nils, “Take whichever one you want. Take two in fact. The market is shutting down as of today anyway so it won’t matter none if I sell to a thief or not. I’d rather not carry these back home anyhow.”

“It is shutting down?”

“The Empire has never lost a battle for as long as I have been alive, my boy. Until today. We’re not sticking around to see what will happen in a retreat. Our livelihood is trade, not war. We profit off of it, but we don’t engage in it.” He, too, started to put away the small blankets and goods into a cart. “You look surprised.”

“The Empire… lost?” Nils said, stunned into a wide-eyed stare, “I had thought with our vanguard decimated it would only be a matter of time before the rest would fall. Were the other Lords truly so powerful?”

Arche looked at him quizzically, “You mean you didn’t know? Aren’t you Cybelean?”

“Our people have not engaged in conflict in over a century. There is not a person alive save for the Lords themselves who would have seen battle. They were keen to ensure our martial prowess was honed for such a day, but the mages of the Empire wiped out Lord Labroaig’s unit before we could even realize what had happened. I had thought intermagia invincible.”

“It seems like it’s the opposite. The other Lords launched a counterattack that wiped out all of the other mages. Lord Hadler, Lady Porfyrian, and myself are the only mages left in the camp for now. I’m sure they’ll send reinforcements at once though.”

The once carefree old merchant’s grin had loosened into a frown as he heard the two children speak, “You are both far too young to be speaking such words.”

“I am old enough, although perhaps not as old as you,” Arche spat.

“Do you dislike our manner of speech?” Nils inquired.

“You two are both looking for food, right? Haul up those pickles for me, boy. I’ll take you to my tent where I can feed the both of you some dinner and some wisdom.”

“Wisdom? I need no lecturing from some common pickle peddler,” Arche scoffed, “Come, Lord Nils.”

“We are invited as honored guests, Lady Arche. Is this not the opportunity you so desired to soothe your hunger and restore your reputation?”

She was silent, the tension in her arms causing the scarf she held to her face to shake. “It is only right as a lady of Concordie,” she relented, “You make a fine advisor, Lord Nils. I shall humbly accept.” Despite all of this, a confident smile returned to her face. The prospect of food must have driven away all other thoughts of humiliation, or so Nils thought. He picked up the pots of pickles the old merchant indicated and followed behind Arche, who had already begun trailing the old merchant and his cart.

It wasn’t a long way before the backroad lead them to a series of large circles of exotic tents, where the clamor of a communal dinner ritual was taking place. “Do you not purchase food among yourselves here?” Nils asked, taking in the sights and smells of frying oil, meal preparation, and children squealing and running in play.

“It’s all based on promises organized by the women of the caravan. Coin is used for dealings with the Empire, but among our group, it’s a matter of trust. Makes it easier to survive that way when times are tough. What you’re looking at ain’t usual, though. Looks like we have to start preparing enough rations for the trip back home now that it’s dangerous to stay. We’ll likely leave first thing in the morn.”

Both Nils and Arche remained unfazed by the chaos of the languages and movement at the merchant camp, both doing their best to hide their overwhelmed senses. They entered a smaller tent towards the center where a lively old woman with braided hair was perched on a stool over a pile of unusual root vegetables amassed on a woven mat, peeling them. She greeted the old man first with a wave, “Hurry up and sit. We’re gonna be up all night if we don’t get to it,” she paused, peering past him at the children, “Good, tell them to get cracking, too.”

The odor rising from the tent hit Arche first like a slap. “What is that?” she coughed nasally, holding her nose and turning away.

“It’s dinner, and if we don’t hurry, there won’t be none for us, little thief girl.”

“Wha-” she started, “Does every one of you people know who I am?”

“There’s only one other Helikan girl in camp besides little Rania, right?” the old woman guffawed, her deep voice far mightier than her age would suggest. “My baby brother brought you here to make amends, I’m guessing.”

“That’s me,” the old man grinned, “I’m her baby brother.”

“I gathered,” Arche said flatly, still holding her nose aloft in the air.

He ushered the two of them inside, “We’ll make sure the two of you get fed, but nothing in this life is free.”

Arche recoiled at the very thought, “You want me to do this? Peeling vegetables? No. I’ll be waiting outside. Alert me when dinner is ready.”

“There is no dinner if you don’t do your part, young’un,” the old woman chided.

Nils sighed, sitting at the mat and crossing his legs, “I shall do her part then,” he said, “It would be sooner done myself than convincing her to cooperate.”

“You’re wrong there,” the old woman said as she bounded to her feet, stomping towards Arche with a paralyzing glare, “If you care about someone, you’ll make sure they participate and do their share. You’re doing them no good by abandoning them like that, you know?” She grabbed Arche by the arm and started to drag her back inside. The girl flinched at first shocked at the sheer strength of the old woman, unable to peel her thick, worn fingers wrapped like deciduous vines around her slender wrist.

Her feet scrambled as she plead, “Wait! Wait! We can negotiate! He’ll do the peeling and I’ll do anything else! I have a very sensitive sense of smell!”

“You can cry all you want, but working with your hands will make you forget all about the smell soon enough.”

“I’m going to gag! I’m going to throw up!”

“Stop your wailing!”

As soon as Nils looked up, Arche tumbled to the ground, wheezing and dry-heaving, her eyes watering as her chlorine hair seemed to shudder, draping her face. Everyone watched quietly, stunned as she picked herself back up, involuntarily sniffling. Just as she was about to say something, she turned and ran from the entrance, wiping her face with her open palms.

“I shall return not long hence,” Nils said, rising to his feet.

Arche did not make it far, and the figure of her hunched over, retching, stood out enough for him to spot her at a distance. He hesitated for a moment just to see her whispering something. As he approached, she looked up and seemed almost relieved to see him. “I told them that the smell was too much. They didn’t even bother listening to me,” she rasped.

Nils noticed her eyes glittering, illuminated by the large bonfire at the center of the encampment where people were congregating, the setting sun causing them to sparkle like gems. She was doing something strange he did not immediately understand. It appeared as if she was gathering her tears into her hands, gently sifting her finger across her palm.

“I shall acquire food enough for us both,” Nils said. “Despite what happened, I cannot believe that they mean harm.”

“I don’t feel like eating anymore,” she muttered, moving to sit on the trunk of a recent felled tree, “You must think I overreacted, too, don’t you? That I’m being too dramatic?” Her chest slumped into her knees as she caught her breath.

He thought about it for a moment and said firmly, “I do not. My lord did always say that individuals have unique weaknesses that must be compensated for with mutual cooperation.”

“Cooperation?” she stared up in disbelief, “The way of this world is domination. It is ridiculous that your lord of all people should say such things. The weak obey the powerful; the powerful do not cooperate with the weak. It is eat or be eaten, and the more weakness I show, the more likely I’ll be no more than food.” She spoke as if those words were being spoken by someone else, her stiffened composure nothing like the frightened girl from earlier. “Therefore, I must be powerful, too.”

Nils wished to disagree but remained still. Certainly it was true that there were people like that, but Lord Labroaig was never domineering. To Nils, he was a good lord. “Is that why you have become a mage? For the sake of power?”

“Is that not why anyone would pursue intermagia? There doesn’t exist a person alive who studies magic for the pure love of it. You study for wealth, fame, power, and success. Anything else will get you trampled underfoot in the Empire. Isn’t that why you chose to become a knight?”

“I wished only to serve my lord.”

“What could this lord possibly have done to earn such loyalty…?”

“I believe it impossible to become powerful when weakened by starvation. Shall we return?”

“Were you not listening? I’m not going there. Find some food and bring it back,” she said.

“How are you so certain I will return?”

“What?”

“I am under no obligation to fetch your food for you. Escorting a lady is one thing, but this is another. Is it not possible for me to abandon you here and acquire food merely for myself? After all, as you claim, it is eat or be eaten, is it not?”

“You…!” she gasped, flabbergasted, “You’re right… What was I thinking trusting you? We’re not friends. We’re supposed to be enemies.”

“Was this how you treat friends, Lady Arche?”

“I know! If you get me food, I’ll give you this in exchange,” she said confidently, hopping back to her feet and holding out her palms. There, where Nils had expected the wetness of tears, were tiny glimmering pebbles.

“I have no need for dirt,” he replied dismissively, baffled at this gesture.

“This is mnemos! My mnemos!” she yelled, pulling her hand back, “Dirt? Dirt?!” she nearly laughed, “This is a precious part of my very soul! I shouldn’t even be trading this to you, but I did it as a show of good will.”

“If this is of worth, why not offer this to the merchants for food instead?”

“I could never trade my mnemos with mere merchants. The fact that I was willing to give you some at all is an honor, Lord Nils. I’ll give you one last chance since you’re a Cybelean, and you may not have understood the extent of my generosity.” She held out her hand.

Her embarrassed expression drilled holes into Nils’s eyes. He mulled the idea over in his head before he finally responded, “Can I trust you? Rania told me something of great interest. She claimed that you were a liar. That I should not heed your words at face value.”

“So? You trust her then? She lies all the time, too.”

“We are all liars. Myself included,” he could not meet her eyes as he continued, “I am uncertain as to how to proceed. If only my lord were here to guide me. In truth, I have never been as alone as I am now, and so despite everything, I would rather not stay alone.”

“For a liar, you’re stupidly honest,” she sighed, taking in his words as if they were a breath of air. “That kind of behavior can get you killed. I suppose I was almost the one to do it.” Stepping forward, she pushed the single small crystal that had conglomerated from the glittering pebbles to his face. Softly, yet incandescent with a youthful awkwardness, she muttered, “I apologize for that.”

Nils took her hand with his own and shook it, the crystal clasped between hers and his. “I accept. My lord would approve of peacemaking over conflict. That is the kind of man he is.”

“Enough about your lord already. What do we do about dinner then? I have no intention of going there and doing as they demand. They have no such authority over someone like me.”

“I do not believe it is necessary to do anything that you do not wish to do. We have already acquired two pots of pickles, in any case. It would be best, however, if we could be in their good graces so as to find some common ground.”

“We could trade those for different food with someone else,” she mulled, her hand to her chin, ignoring everything that he had been saying.

“Oh, you don’t need to do that,” came the voice of the old merchant now approaching the two, “Truthfully, you overpaid for those. I’ll find a way to get you some food with the silver you already paid with.”

“See?” Arche glared, hands on her hips, “That is how things should have been done in the first place.”

“Well, no,” the old man added, “I’m being generous because you’re children, but the world is a cruel place even to young, little nobles like yourselves. Do you think we follow the army because we want to, miss?”

“Aren’t you? Aren’t there plenty of ways to earn money in the Empire?”

“For most of us here, we have to. This is a group of exiles, criminals, and displaced. Orphans too frightened to sell their bodies. The hungry seeking opportunity. The spoils of the wars they wage make their way to us. Soldiers seeking the comforts of food, drink, and women and we purveyors of such things don’t have a lot to offer children. You should leave while you still can.”

Nils responded, “I thank you for your kindness, but there is no leaving so long as my lord rests here. I must find a way to wake him from his slumber, and if I cannot, to bury him. There is a mage lord here who is inspired to unravel the secrets of my lord’s immortality.”

Arche stared in disbelief, “Why did you tell him all of that? Have you no sense of privacy?” She hadn’t known what Nils had been promised by her mentor, but she had to wonder if he had been deceived. There was no possible way that Lord Hadler would allow an enemy lord to be revived in the middle of their camp.”

“I was taught to use dialogue to find consensus. Deception has no place in diplomacy.”

“Diplomacy is to turn information into daggers, Lord Nils. Keep it to yourself until it’s necessary.”

“Kids like you shouldn’t be touching knives or diplomacy,” the old man muttered, his hoarse voice steeped in lament, “The world’s cruel enough as it is. The least I can do is deal fairly with children.”

“Fairly… Yes, your sister would have Lady Arche work for her food,” Nils added, “But peeling vegetables is something that disagrees with her sense of smell. I believe compromise is possible and other work can be done.”

“He already said that he’ll give us dinner, Lord Nils. The matter is settled.”

“I shall not dishonor my lord by dishonoring our hosts. When visiting another clan, we are to abide by their rules. Accepting exceptions would be no different from admitting we are incapable of becoming peers.”

“Merchants are not our peers. We do not do things here the way that they are done where you are from. They are lessers.”

“Their customs are no less worthy of honoring.”

“I don’t understand you. Why are you making things difficult for me? I thought we’re friends now.”

“This is what is best for both of us.”

“Enough, enough,” the old man waved, interrupting the children, “The boy’s right. The girl’s right. Chirping in circles like call birds. Listen, I’m telling the two of you to come with us when we leave first thing tomorrow. I don’t think this is any place for children to stay.”

The two glanced at each other and back at the old man, almost simultaneously replying. “That cannot be done,” the boy said. “Absolutely, no,” said the girl.

“What’s possessed the two of you to stay on a battlefield…?”

“The same thing that made me come in the first place,” Arche scoffed, “I plan on becoming the most powerful mage to have ever and will ever live. No one will be able to defeat me in matters physical, intellectual, or social.”

Nils stared at her in disbelief, his mind unable to complete its next thought. What she had said was as absurd as confidently declaring that she would one day become a tree. “For in truth, what has possessed you to say such a mad thing?”

“As if your reason is any better!” she shouted, “You want to revive someone who is already turning into food for worms! What you say doesn’t make sense to me, either!”

“Is of food all you can think?” Nils slung back, “We could have already been eating if you had cooperated.”

“Silence! As my friend, you have to be on my side!”

“That is not how I have perceived it.”

As the two bickered, the old woman approached, balancing three bowls of a fragrant stew on her arms.

Intermagia — Part 4

Within a tent, far from the throes of battle, far from her homeland, a young girl awoke from a midday nap, discovering fragments of dark violet crystals forming around her eyes. During her slumber, she had forgotten. Pinching the powder between her fingers, she inspected it; the color and hue told her that it must have been a painful memory. Good riddance, she thought to herself, storing it neatly in a glass vial with a cork stopper next to her cot, thinking on it no further.

She peered past the entrance flap, searching for her boots, when to her immediate right was a boy sitting underneath the front canopy on a makeshift log stool. Their eyes met, and she grimaced. He was wearing a foreign armor she could not recognize, his expression blank, and his face unremarkable. He was so covered in dried mud, blood, and dust that she could scarcely tell what his original hair color was. Their eyes met.

“Are you the one under Lord Hadler?” he asked in a refined dialect, standing. He at least seemed to be noble born like herself, regardless of his appearance.

Proudly, she responded, “I am. Are you a messenger? Have you news from the front?”

“No, not a messenger in any official capacity. My name is Nils. Lord Hadler is being interrogated by the Imperial Army Commander at the moment, and I was told to wait here in the mage quarter until his return. I had thought being a prisoner of war would receive greater security, but-“

She stopped him there with a hand, “Hold it. Did you say prisoner of war? You’re a Cybelean? Left unguarded in a Helikan camp?”

“Not unguarded, I’m sure, but Lord Hadler did inform me that guards are forbidden from approaching the tents of mages. Do I have it true that you are Rania?”

“Rani-” she gasped, “No, I am not! Laughable! Is that who you’re looking for?”

“I am not looking for anyone. I was told to wait here.”

“I see. Then I have no other option it seems, prisoner of war. I’ll have to guard you myself. That’s obviously why you were sent here,” she said retrieving her boots at last and beginning to put them on within the tent.

Nils responded as he returned to his seat on an upturned log. “That should not be necessary.”

She poked her head back out and barked, “You’re telling me that Lord Hadler mentioned Rania to a prisoner but said nothing of me? I am insulted. Insulted!”

“Who are you to Lord Hadler then?”

She stepped out, having fixed her long, green-blonde hair, wearing an elegant dress brought from far away. “I am his apprentice and intermagia intern, Arche, a lady of House Concordie,” she said proudly, puffing her chest dramatically, “I imagine you must have heard of us, as our house has long served as diplomats, ambassadors, and emissaries even before the founding of the Empire. I do not know what he’s said, but Rania is just a lowborn slave. You and I need not associate with her at all.”

“How old are you, Lady Arche?”

“Me? I am thirteen years of age.”

“I do not know my age. I am of no house and have nothing to offer as lineage. I too am of low birth. My childhood was spent threshing wheat and tending to sheep before I came to serve my lord. Am I still not to associate with her?”

“Then why were you taken as prisoner if you claim to hold no value? I am no fool, Lord Nils. Whatever it is you seek to hide cannot be hidden from someone like myself.”

Weary, he dropped his head, “I do not hide and I shall speak it plainly. My only value is in relation to my lord, Sir Glenn of Labroaig. He took a peasant boy like me as his squire, and I am no more than that.”

Arche scoffed, crossing her arms, “Some lord. A shame that he failed to protect his apprentice from capture.”

As if pulled up by strings, Nils returned to his feet, taking a firm step towards her, “I care not what you say of me, but I will defend his honor lest you sully it.”

She shrieked, “Stay away!” as she hobbled backwards. With clenched fists, she caught herself, cursing under her breath. She brought her face to his with a snarl, “I meant to say stay down! I am not cowed by the likes of you!” The two stared tensely at each other. His face was that of a boy, but his dark eyes were trained on her like a soldier’s. No, she felt it was more like a hound’s. A chill slithered across her skin. “Are Cybelean men so barbaric as to harm a woman and call it honor?”

He faltered backwards. Her words were a stake piercing the sole of his foot. “You are right. My lord would not see threats against an unarmed woman as any worthy defense of his honor.” The boy seemed to deflate, his shoulders slackening. “I know not what I do.”

“No one threatens me and assumes no consequence,” she seethed through her teeth, her fingers stiffening into claws, taking another step towards Nils. Her eyes focused and her vision sharpened as power seemed to leap through her veins.

“I have no quarrel with you,” Nils responded, raising his hands, “But if you will insist upon-“

Crackling branches of light surged across her fingertips. “Quarrel? This is judgment.”

Within the Office of the Commanders at the center of camp, two men sat across from each other, separated by a small wooden desk covered in maps. “You gave him this whole thing, Lord Hadler?” The seated man said, unamused, turning in his hand a small vial filled with glittering iridescence, “And if I had not confiscated it, truly you would have been happy to let him keep it?”

“Yes, General Tener,” the mage said in stoic tones, composed but stiff, “I pray, a fair bargain in order to prove my conviction on the matter.”

“The amount that the guard captain can expect to be paid for this Cybelean excursion would be dwarfed by a vial of mnemos. You of all people should know this.” He placed the vial back on his desk and began tapping it against the wood. “Do not make a habit of bribing my men. Mercenary and cowardly though they may be, their obedience is required. And although I do not have direct authority over the mages, your obedience is requested as well.”

“Yes, and I would not resort to such means unless it was something worth bringing to your attention. I imagine the Empire had every means to subdue Cybele through violent conquest, and yet myself and those like myself are on the front line. The abuse of intermagia has well-documented but poorly understood results, so for the Emperor to go so far…”

“In military communications, we say the bottom line up front. Get to the point, Lord Hadler.”

The mage furrowed his heavy brow, “There must have been something about the Cybelean esoteric that would give cause for concern. I have brought back a body of one of their Lords, which, as we speak, is in a state of rapid decomposition. Therefore, I request the resources to conduct immediate research in order to hasten victory to the Empire. I require a tent, more mnemos, and information. Specifically, I would like to know what the military has deemed so dangerous regarding the Cybeleans. You see, I actually know quite little about our enemy and the briefings have been rather brief.”

The general placed the vial down with a final thud, the sound of his fist hitting the surface of his desk, sliding it forward to the mage. “You may have your mnemos back, and that is all. You may use your personal tent, and that is all. I cannot tell you military secrets, and that is all. Would that I could have you under arrest, I already would have done so, and if you believe this is to help further our cause, I only ask that you move with the utmost discretion. You are to report to General Porfyrian once she returns.”

“I see,” the mage said, somewhat crestfallen. “I may have had better luck if I recruited the other mages to serve as a united front,” Hadler said under his breath, loud enough for his commander to hear, “You know how we can be, an ungovernable flock of carrion-eaters burdened with power.”

“Captain,” the general called to the man standing guard by the entrance to the tent, having witnessed the entire conversation. His eyes had not left the vial still upright on the general’s desk. “You are to escort Lord Hadler back to his tent and have two men keep watch.”

“Hold, I have only one more thing to say,” the mage said with a hand in the air, “All the water in the ocean can never turn the swan’s black legs to white. Hm, that is not quite what I meant to say.” With a whimsical glance across the tent, he retrieved the vial from the desk and stood to leave. “I shall bring proof of my progress, and then we can continue this discussion, General.”

“Dismissed, both of you,” the general said, exasperated.

“By your leave,” the captain saluted, stiff as if the tension of a wire held his arm in place.

In that moment, the snap of thunder echoed through the camp, causing all three men in the tent to turn their heads in unison. They raced outside to see the young Arche standing over a body on the ground, faintly smoking. She was panting heavily before she too fell to the ground.

When Nils awoke, he found himself bleary eyed and numb, setting himself upright from a low cot with a groan. There was no one to be seen within this tent. It felt as if a mule had kicked him in the back of the head, the stomach, and the knees simultaneously and a wave of nausea washed over and through him. Frankly, he was surprised to have been alive.

“Are you awake, my lord?” a dreamy, quiet voice said. A young girl with skin like copper and graying hair entered, heaving a bucket of water. She set it down beside him and held one of her small hands to his forehead. “You were sweating and feverish, but you appear better.”

“I am well. I am grateful for your care,” he responded. She smiled weakly as if holding back, and he noticed that she would not meet his gaze. In many ways, she reminded him of his younger sister. “Are you Rania?”

“How do you know my name?” she said, a glancing eye meeting his at last.

Nils sat up, noticing at last that she was wearing fine clothes as well, not that of a servant as he had expected. “I had met Lord Hadler. He mentioned you, and I have guessed well.”

“He brought you here himself after Lady Arche attacked you. She is being reprimanded,” Rania said, almost gleefully, clasping her fingers together loosely, “And I hope she is sent away at last.”

“Has she been cruel to you?”

“She considers me her lesser, but I am not hers to command. At first I would do as she asked out of my own kindness, but when it became burdensome, I refused. She hit me, but that is not cruelty.”

“What is it then?”

“Weakness. Her mind is sharp but delicate like a needle made of ice. It snaps. She pushes herself into freezing wastes to remake it.” She stopped for a moment, standing to leave as she placed a small metal cup of water in the boy’s hands. “But I cannot win against a mage in violence. They are incarnations of violence.” Rania adorned herself with another gentle smile, looking into his eyes at last, and said, “Pray, rest. Lord Hadler needs your help.”

Intermagia — Part 3

Fifty years before the invasion of Cybele, there was a youth dressed in Helikan Academy garbs, warming his hands by a kettle. The rustle and noise of life happening all around the capital city of Helix entered through the open windows of the small studio office situated on the second floor. The whistle of the kettle seemed to indicate the start of his autumn work day. He fetched it from the stovetop and began to pour. He grunted like an old man and complained to nobody, “These menial chores could have been done already…”

“With magic?” interrupted the other man in the room, a small smirk lining his thin, symmetrical face. He was bundled in a fuzzy blanket and peering down his sharp nose as he flipped through a book. He leaned in his chair, balancing with his feet up against his desk.

“Yes,” the boy sighed, “I’m preparing your tea, just the way you indicated.”

“Be sure to give it time to rest a little or you’ll burn the leaves, Alam,” the man warned, his eyes still focused on the pages of the book. His voice was deep and full of authority, but still gentle enough to not be intimidating. It was a nearly grandfatherly tone coming from a man who must be no older than thirty.

“It wouldn’t be a problem if you would consider at least using one of those magic stoves rather than one that must rely on wood. A sprinkle of mnemos and the temperature is set perfectly.”

At this, the man closed the book and returned to a proper sitting position, pointing the spine of the book at the boy, “Ah, but consider if I did. You would never have learned even the basics of brewing tea. You would never have imagined the subtle flavors that can arise from imperfection. Tea would no longer have been a mystery, but something you take for granted. You would sacrifice discovery for the sake of convenience.”

Alam was quiet. This was the reason why he chose to work in this office after all. The man’s philosophy on magic was unlike any of the stuffy, career-minded professors at the Academy. “I just didn’t think my job would be cleaning and cooking… I thought becoming your assistant would be a bit more glamorous.”

“I’m afraid if you are to apprentice under me, you must become like me,” the man said almost apologetically, “Magic is a phenomenon that yet still exists winking from behind a veil, thus it does not fully sit well with me. There is a process to all things, and magic eschews that necessary process for immediacy. I have learned over the course of my scant few years in this world that patience is indeed a virtue.”

To the boy, it seemed the man was always like this — eager to soliloquy but difficult to follow and wished he would never grow up to become an adult like him. Alam responded, “I understand to an extent, but isn’t there wisdom in spending less time on chores and more time on important things like researching intermagia?”

“My chief work is not as such,” the man laughed in baritone, “My work is to teach others to be quick to deny the magic presented to them to witness the magic hidden from them. It is a quirk of circumstance that this should manifest as researching magic. On my morning walk, however, I did take notice of something which I might ask you to refrain from.”

The man stood, shuffling through a cabinet in his desk, “Please do not litter around town.” He gently placed a stack of dirty paper on the desk, all of them printed with a picture of himself emblazoned with “Private Investigator Hadler, Mundane Specialist.” The profile view of his face stared boldly ahead as the man stared down at it.

Alam started to pour the hot water into the tea cup and noted, “I thought you might like that I went through the trouble of using mundane paper. Is it the title? Should I have had it say ‘Specialist of the Mundane’?”

“I merely do not see the need to advertise, Alam.”

“I disagree, Lord Hadler. There are people out there who need the expertise of someone who does not resort to magic immediately and can think in the mundane. Do you remember the Serpent’s Curse incident? Who else but you would have figured out that this so-called curse was actually a murder by strangling and poison? And were it not for your reputation, they would never have thought to recruit your services to discover the truth.”

“Such is the nature of magic,” Hadler waxed poetically, “Ignorance traded for power, but a tax is always collected. If only one could use magic to discover truth, one might find that magic itself offers less than what it costs.”

Alam placed a small tea cup in front of the man, using a sheet of advertising poster as a coaster. “I have much to learn from you, but you certainly do not make it easy.”

“If I were to simplify it, magic and truth are antithetical to one another. Seeking the truth is like illuminating a room. Magic is inert sand formed into a crystal glass lens. It alone can do nothing, but it can manipulate external light into the room. Yet the more one uses it, the more the lens warps until the light begins to play tricks on your mind. The appearance of the room no longer reflects the truth of the room.”

Alam froze in place before he asked, “How does that simplify it?”

At that time, two knocks came from the door downstairs.

“Alam, would you kindly?”

“You mean go downstairs and open the door with my own hands?”

“Thank you.”

Alam sighed and made his way down, but emanating from outside he could hear the muffled complaints of a young girl. He peered outside from the door hole and indeed saw a diminutive, well-dressed figure.

He opened the door, but before he could speak, she barged her way in, “It’s absurd how backwards and unsophisticated this all is. For someone to live in Helix and still resort to such vulgar means.” She pointed a wand at Alam, “This must surely be the correct place.”

The assistant realized what had happened. She was obviously flustered. “Were you attempting to communicate with us through-“

She tossed her long blonde hair behind her shoulder with a gloved hand, her blue eyes like crackling lightning, “Obviously! How can he still not have a listener? I was standing outside your door speaking to myself like a lunatic for minutes with no reply. Such a waste of my time.”

“Well, do you have an appointment, miss? This is the office of Lord Hans Hadler.”

“No, and I would like to speak with him at once. It is of the utmost urgency,” she declared as she placed a her hand gingerly on the railing of the stairs, “The most dangerous man in Helix shouldn’t need appointments like a common physician.” The two locked eyes for a brief instant. That instant lengthened into a few seconds before she sighed, gripped the railing, and started to trudge upwards with a growl, “Of course, I should have expected this.”

“You never quite get used to it, I’m afraid,” Alam laughed politely.

She arrived upstairs only to find the man she was looking for waiting at the top. The investigator bowed, sweeping his blanket across his body like a majestic cape, “To what do I owe the pleasure?”

She huffed, deeply wishing not to show her physical discomfort, “So you recognize me even like this?”

Alam noticed the air shimmer around her as the once young blonde girl evaporated, leaving behind a small, middle-aged woman with silver hair. The expression she had on her face remained the same — unhappy and impatient.

The researcher nodded, “I fear time has done little to eliminate you from the mind. Alam, this is Lady Concordie. She was a client of mine from before you joined. It was the case about the fraudulent psychic,” he directed an open hand to his assistant, “And this is Alam, my apprentice and… distantly related nephew?”

“My grandfather was Lord Hadler’s mother’s brother,” he said proudly.

The woman remained unreactive. “And I am a client before you had this accursed office of yours.” She pointed her wand like a dagger, “I should have paid you less, Lord Hadler. Or perhaps more so you could afford somewhere less… regressive.”

“Regardless, you sought me out. Come into my office, I’ll have Alam prepare tea.”

As Alam turned to leave, her other hand shot out like a viper and snatched his wrist without even turning to face him. She turned to Hadler, “You do not need to trouble the poor boy. This is precisely why we have magic. Why harm his dignity with such trivial tasks?”

Alam was stunned, glancing between the woman and his master, who seemed to be considering something quietly to himself. Before he could say anything, Hadler spoke, “I believe humans are dignified when we face the unknown. For instance, could it be that you simply do not trust that Alam can brew a finer tea than you could produce with your magic? Perhaps you’d prefer to keep that a mystery.”

“What nonsense is this?” she scoffed, releasing Alam’s now tender wrist with the same ferocity. “I came here in need of help, not to compete with your baffling philosophy. Have him prepare whatever if it will make you listen.”

“Come then, to my office,” the investigator said, welcoming the annoyed woman with a flourish of his blanket cape. “Alam, you can eschew the tea in favor of some of the butter biscuits we have.”

The noblewoman noted, “If you are so cold as to need a blanket, why is your window open, Hadler?”

“My roommate prefers it as such,” he responded airily, sitting himself down and placing the blanket over his lap in a heap.

“The boy?” the woman said, cocking an eyebrow over a concerned look.

“Heavens, no,” Hadler rebuffed, mirroring her concern. “She is much like myself, preferring to do things the old way.”

As if summoned on command, the supposed roommate appeared from the windowsill, a tussle of long, curly, white fur and two perfectly black marbles for eyes, meowing with her entrance as if to announce herself. With a weightless leap, she perfectly snuggled itself within the blanket on Hadler’s legs.

“That’s one mystery solved. How about you try this next one?” she said with a frown that spread to her cheeks.

“By all means,” he said with a small sip of his now cool tea.

The woman leaned in, “Do you remember my foolish son?”

“Foolish is hardly the word I would use to describe the male scion of House Concordie. He is an accomplished mage.”

“Houses and magic are of no concern when it comes to children. Truly, I do not know who he takes after, but my son has caused my lord husband and I no small amount of trouble. His studies were subpar, his etiquette leaves much to be desired, and his rebelliousness has not waned with age. The boy is nearly thirty and he still-“

“Is referred to as a boy,” Hadler interrupted, tenting his hands, “Our time is precious both, so if you’re done ranting?”

She rolled her eyes, “I had forgotten you two were acquainted. Well, there is a supposed murder. My son is the suspect, and he claims to not have done it, and for all of his many faults, I do not believe he is capable of killing somebody, especially his wife.”

“Where is he now?”

“Detained, and speedily. That is why I have come here as soon as possible before he says something else to incriminate himself.”

“More specifically, where is he held? We shall go to him at once. Alam! Cancel the butter biscuits! There is work to be done!”

He was ready for this moment, speeding out of the pantry and nearly leaping down the stairs, the incandescent glow of magic softening his fall. His mentor seemed to take his time however, finishing his conversation with the Lady of Concordie and fishing for his house keys at a leisurely pace.

La Vie Est Drôle, Non?

Lady Viona de Gaspar, the young heiress of House Gaspar, descended from her gilded, shimmering carriage onto the dawn-lit cobblestone of Cuvier Street. This was not meant to be her destination, and the old carriage driver knew.

“Are you certain, miss?” he asked in a high tone, adjusting his cap, his voice as wispy as what remained of his beard. “This is not the sort of street for a lady to traipse around in, especially not now with the Plague.”

She patted down her dress with one hand, wielding her parasol like a soldier over her shoulder. “Utterly positive. Now be on your way and tell no one of this as we’ve agreed. I’ve left the rest of your payment in the seat.”

“As you say. Farewell, miss,” he replied with another adjustment of his cap and the snap of reins. The horses heeded their master and clopped on to their next stop, leaving Lady Viona unattended. For the first time in what felt like months, she was finally able to slip away from the manse without someone surveilling her.

She had never been in this part of the city before. Her mother and father would never let her, and her younger brother had no interest in ever leaving the house, and until now, she had no need to. However she heard rumors from the servants of something quite special hidden away here. The empty streets did perplex her. Her image of the town square of the Workman’s District was quite a bit more populated and bustling with life. Ever since the Babbling Plague had re-emerged a few months ago, she was ordered to never leave, which she understood was for good reason.

She wondered if this would affect her prospects of finding what she came for.

Nonetheless, she started her journey down a tight alleyway that reeked of something sickly sweet and pungent, pinching her nose with her free hand.

On Gustave Street, at around the hour for lunch, an adolescent boy hopped off from his stool behind a counter and unwrapped a small piece of bread from a checkered cloth, placing both back on the counter. With another motion, he placed a jar of grape jam next to it.

This was the routine he had established every day for as long as he could remember. In the morning he would open the store. And at night he would close it. On a good day, a few shady types might come in and buy something. On a bad day, he would not interact with another human being at all, and lately, the bad days had become more and more frequent after city life shut down due to fears of the spreading Babbling Plague. He had a thought as he searched for a utensil. The person who delivered his food this morning was different. Does that mean the usual old lady was sick? He made a mental note to ask tomorrow if she didn’t come by.

A small bell rang through the dimly lit, underground shop, indicating a prospective customer had just walked in. With a startle, he fell to the side, knocking down the stool and himself with it. It had actually been a long time since there was a customer, no less a sale.

“Oh!” said a feminine, refined voice, “My apologies. Are you the proprietor?”

He leaned up from the freshly broomed, wooden floor and saw the source of the question, a lady dressed in white, perhaps a few years older than himself, holding a brilliantly white parasol with both hands. Her long, auburn-red hair struck him as particularly unusual and familiar. She had the aura of someone who did not grow up knowing what hunger ever felt like.

That’s when he realized it. “Ah!” the boy scrambled to his feet, bowing deeply, “A lady of House Gaspar! The apologies are all mine! What is someone of your pre-eminence doing in our humble establishment?”

There was a bit of disappointment that she had been recognized already. Covertness was already out of the question then for the Lady Gaspar. “You’re well spoken for someone so young,” she grinned awkwardly, her eyes wandering across the many various items contained within the store, “But it is unnecessary to be so formal. Please, speak with me as you would any other customer.” She started to approach one of them, “Am I correct in having found the Shop of Intrigue and Curiosities?”

“The very same,” the young shopkeeper said, “My name is Antoine, and I can try to help you find what you’re looking for.”

“Yes… and you can call me Viona.” She returned the bow that he had given her, “Antoine, I’m looking for something I believe may be quite rare…”

The boy straightened up the stool and wrapped up the bread back into its cloth. “Do tell!” he said excitedly, “The magical items you find here have all been fully tested to be safe for use, and as such they can be a bit pricier than what you might find in less reputable shops, but I’m sure you’re good for your money, Lady Viona.”

“Just Viona is fine. And money is no matter. If I am satisfied, you have my word that you will be fully compensated.”

Antoine perked up at the words like a fox hearing the squeak of a mouse in the field. Perhaps his next meal might be more substantial than bread and jam. “Of course!” his words practically became song, “Now, please, what is troubling you?”

Viona paused, suddenly feeling her heart take an extra few beats, “Perhaps I shall more describe what I need. A… gift for my lord father. Something to dazzle even the mayor of our city.”

Antoine scratched his head, “That’s rather vague. Can you describe what he likes?”

“I… cannot say I know of his interests beyond the superficial. He is a scholar of history and languages. He enjoys collecting foreign currency. Some books perhaps.”

Antoine moved on to scratching his hairless chin, something that he had often seen his grandpa do. “We have nothing like that, but if it’s history he likes, there is a book here,” the boy approached a small journal in a case of glass, “That records whatever the speaker is saying as he holds it. See?” He opened to the first page and in perfectly legible print was exactly as he described. “Intriguing, no?”

She barely took a look, replying, “It is, but it’s not quite what I am looking for. It’s far too rudimentary.”

The boy’s mood shifted perceptibly, “Rudimentary? The person who made this notebook sacrificed everything to do so.” As he said this, ink appeared on the open page of the book, quoting him perfectly.

“How do you mean?” she asked, her own tone matching the darkening of the boy’s.

He placed the book back in its glass case, as if returning a baby bird to its nest. “The practice of magic is a practice of obsession. The human soul is burned like firewood in order to do the impossible. The man who sold this book to us was its creator. His name, Broca, is etched here on the back cover. He was singularly focused on creating a notebook that could reveal its holder’s thoughts to help his mute son communicate, and in so doing sacrificed his own ability to speak. It didn’t work. He had made an object that requires one to verbally speak in order for it to function. Since it proved to be useless to him, he sold it to my grandpa.”

Viona stared at the book, and then at her surroundings. Shelves lined with seemingly ordinary items. Each one, regardless of the shape, was something that contained the unwritten record of someone’s life.

Antoine said stiffly, “The sale and creation of items that require human sacrifice is illegal outside of the control of the nobility, Lady Viona, nevertheless these items were made and sold to us. What desperate circumstances would have lead to so many of these items being gathered here?

“Just Viona is fine,” she muttered, “I did not mean to impugn the dignity of its creator. I am sorry.”

He shook his head, “I’m sorry for making you uncomfortable. It’s just that people would come in without the respect these items deserve, and that irks me a little.” He pointed to her left, “Take that water jug for example. Every night, it slowly refills with water. A man named Belanger lost his life to make this. We don’t actually know the details, but my father and mother strive to do their best to find out the history of each and every one of these items.”

“And you remember them all?”

“I have lots of free time here. And I find it intriguing.”

“Very well, what else can you show me?” She decided to politely ignore the hypocrisy of treating these objects with respect and still choosing to sell them in a storefront. Money was still money after all.

“This item,” he said, gingerly holding a toy horse as if it were a live animal, “Is quite special. Anybody, including your father would think it quite delightful.”

“Allow me to surmise that it moves on its own,” she guessed with conviction.

He smirked, “Not exactly. This was crafted by a toymaker as his greatest creation. If it is ever lost or destroyed, it will return to its owner the next day as good as new. You need only write your name along its belly and it will return to you.”

Viona frowned, shifting her weight from one leg to the other as she thought. “That’s fascinating, but not particularly as impressive as I would have hoped… Oh, not to disrespect the creator!” she threw a hand up to her mouth as she realized what she had done yet again. “But I am looking for more. Something quite powerful, though it might not appear that way.”

The boy noticed her pale blue eyes glinting like deep set gems, dissatisfied and hidden among the vines of red hair that curtained her face glancing to and fro. Nothing here would be enough. Neither the Shield of Tresca’s Section nor the Hauy Crystal, perhaps the most interesting items on display.

She sighed, running her fingers along a shelf, “You said these out front were all tested to be safe for use. Where are the other items?”

Antoine gazed back  “I am starting to think perhaps you’re not telling the whole truth. What are you really after,” he placed the toy horse back on the shelf, somewhat needlessly, “Viona?” It felt as strange to say as he thought it might.

“These contraband items found only in the armpit of the city… There’s a reason I am here but I cannot say.”

“Then I’m afraid there’s little I can do to assist you. We are quite cautious of anybody who mean ill towards us considering our line of work.”

“Fine,” she spat, “You’re right. I haven’t thought this through. To be perfectly honest, I am looking for a very specific book. But much bigger than this notebook you have there, and I don’t see anything of the sort out here.”

“If you want a magical book, there are libraries outside of the city…”

“I have heard that the book I’m looking for was sold to your family. You must have a… another chamber or a cellar where you store them, am I right?”

“We have a store of artifacts underground, but how long ago was this?”

“Years ago. Before either you or I were born.”

“What is the title? Who is the author?”

“I do not know the title, but the author was a man by the name of Justus Regnault.”

“I’ve heard the name Regnault before…”

“You’re perceptive, Antoine. Regnault was my mother’s maiden name. Justus Regnault is my maternal grandfather.”

“I see! And what magic was cast over this book of your grandfather’s?”

“I… still cannot say, because I am not certain. I am just curious if you could take a look in the back and find the book for me. It is the only book that my grandfather has written that has magical properties. If you just look for something with his name on it…”

“I see! I think I’m starting to get it! I thought it was strange that you came all the way here even with this Plague quarantine in effect. You must be here on a secret mission from your father to retrieve this magical item in order to ward off the Babbling Plague and save the city, but there’s no way he could order someone he cannot trust to secure something so valuable from a place like this, so he sent his eldest child. The one person he trusts the most!”

Viona did not say a word, but her eyes could not meet his.

“I bet I don’t have the full picture yet. Perhaps he did not send you. You’re doing this yourself all alone in order to save us. Wow, you might be a hero in the making… The story you are writing, Viona, will be told for generations to come! In that case, I can’t just leave you here.” Antoine took out a shiny, silvery key. “You and I can head down there ourselves. I never thought that my life here holding down the store could amount to much, but this might change everything!”

He locked up the front door and bid her to follow him. She obliged with an audible gulp as he lead her down a winding staircase even further underground. She held onto his shoulder, other hand tightly gripping her now purposeless parasol. It served as a comforting totem.

In the darkness, Viona asked, “Is there not a single source of light down here…? How are we to find this book?” Her voice echoed across the stone corridor. “Antoine?”

“You’re the type to worry a lot, aren’t you?” he replied without turning his head. Or if he had, she could not tell except by his unflinching descent down the stairs. “Can you tell me what you need this book for if you don’t even know what it does?”

Viona gripped his shoulder tighter, “And I shall say it in words perhaps you’ll finally heed. I’d rather not divulge anything that would harm the dignity of my father.”

“You said before that this would be a gift for him.”

“And that it shall.”

Antoine smiled invisibly, “I don’t even know the birthdays of my mom and dad. They are always off saving the world, or exploring ancient crypts, or whatever else catches their fancy.”

“Are they not the proprietors of your store?”

The boy continued, “No, my grandpa owned the store before he passed. It was his obsession. My father had no interest in taking it up after him, but he just could not keep away from the study of magical items. He met my mom while on an expedition and they really hit it off. The two returned home briefly and left me with my dad’s parents before shoving off for their next adventure together. It’s pretty romantic if you lean back and squint at it.”

“I see,” she said glumly, “I never knew either of my grandparents. My father did not share many stories about his parents, and neither my mother.”

“Hmm, you also seem to make a habit of making everything about yourself,” he teased. “I thought I was telling the story.”

“E-excuse me,” she stuttered, clearing her throat, “I did not mean to.”

“Have you ever used a sentence without the words ‘I’ or ‘me’?”

“Well, most certainly I hav- I meant… Oh!” she caught herself, and then felt heat rise into her face, “I can feel you laughing you know! There’s no point in hiding it!”

“Hey, there’s a sentence! Nice work, Viona. Don’t worry, we’re already at the bottom.” Antoine tried to clear the air of any of her nervousness, but he wasn’t sure if that worked in the least.

Regardless, with one more step, Viona found herself against flat ground as two rows of fires began appearing from thin air ahead of them. “Magic torches?” she asked, already expecting the affirmative.

“The least of the mad things we have down here… There are some dangerous items in this cellar so please keep your hands on my shoulders.”

“Very well.”

Antoine lead her on a slow walk through the dry tunnels, walls lined with far stranger, more foreboding items than she had seen in the store front. Some looked like weapons or gnarled branches of discolored trees, others human body parts or grotesque dolls. She was certain she had seen some of them following her with their eyes. In the dancing shadows of the magical torches, everything looked to be writhing and alive.

“I don’t see any books…” she whispered, finding her own voice to be trembling like the flashing fires surrounding them.

“They are stored towards the end,” Antoine reassured her, “As long as you don’t touch anything, nothing will happen. We wouldn’t transport anything that has a mind of its own down here.”

“Are there truly objects like that?”

“There are. All of them originate accidentally from people with unhealthy attachments to certain objects. Sometimes the object is given a sense of purpose that it must fulfill and seems to be conscious or alive, but it’s actually behaving by a simple set of rules. Other times it mimics the person who gave it life as if they had transferred their mind over to it, but everything seems to point to that not truly being the case. Their stories are probably the most interesting, but often times they are the most isolated. With no one else around them, it’s hard to find a source that can tell us more about who they were.”

“I see…”

“How much do you know about magic?” he asked casually.

She offered a long “um” before responding, “The Regnault family is rather famous for having studied the fundamental principles of magic for four generations. I’ve always been interested, but my father forbade me from ever studying it in earnest as my mother had. He’s not the biggest proponent of anything magical. In fact, sometimes I wonder why they ever got married.”

“So, nothing?”

“I know about as much as you’ve told me. That souls serve as the active force that fuels all magic. Magic spells and the like are incantations that focus the ambiguous uncertainty within the soul into impossible certainties.”

“You got the fundamentals, as far as I know. Something doesn’t add up about your story though. If your father hates magic so much, why marry someone so closely tied to it and then sell such an important book to us? Doesn’t make sense.”

“Parents rarely make sense. From what you’ve told me, you’re probably already aware of that fact.”

Antoine stopped.

“Oh, I hope I did not-”

“This is where all of the books are,” he said, an arm outstretched over a small table with merely two books and a lit candle.

Viona let go of his shoulder, approaching the table. “This is truly all?”

“We don’t come across a lot of magical books. They tend to be either too dangerous to sell, not useful to anyone but the writer, or whatever other problem that comes with someone’s obsession involving books and knowledge.”

Viona scanned the two books but they were both devoid of any title or authorship on the cover.

“May I open them?”

“Better if I do that. Let’s see…” Antoine opened the first book, “I remember now. This one is apparently a cookbook. I don’t think this is what you’re looking for.”

“A recipe book? Sounds innocent enough.”

“Ah, right, but there’s more. Any dish made by using this book as a reference is highly addictive. To the point of utter obsession. This thing completely ruined a family or two before it fell into my mother’s possession, and she’s kept it hidden ever since. The original author was actually a mother who wanted her children to enjoy the food of her original homeland… And I suppose she took it too far.” Antoine shook his head in the faint candlelight, “Thank the heavens that my mom’s never been interested in cooking.”

“That’s awful… She gave her life to make such a terrible thing?”

“In this case, yes. It was a conceptual sacrifice of her ability to eat, and therefore, she starved to death. May I ask what your grandfather lost in the process of making his book? It might give us some warning before I take a peek at this next one.”

“I’m afraid I do not know…”

“Fair enough. Here I go.” Antoine plucked the cover with his thumb and index finger.

“Wait!” Viona cried, placing the parasol between him and the next book, “Aren’t you being too incautious? What if it kills you?”

“Will it kill me?” he asked nonchalantly. Almost eagerly.

“I don’t know! I just know that I need the book my grandfather wrote. If you can confirm that he wrote it, I don’t actually need to know what it does! There’s no need to draw a curse onto yourself or anything!”

“A cursed book? Now this is getting interesting! My grandpa used to say that cursed objects are actually extremely rare. When people hate other people enough to curse them, objects are not created to carry the curse, because magical objects require a powerful obsession centered around the object itself. Curses against arbitrary people are usually very weak, like you might find yourself getting caught in the rain or forget an important event.”

“I understand. My grandfather was not the type to carry any sort of grudge… but perhaps this book isn’t my grandfather’s. What then?”

“I’m saying it’s probably not cursed. You have every right to be cautious because you’re an important lady, Viona. Me? I’m just a bored kid minding a shop. My story isn’t as important as yours. You’re gonna save our town from the Babbling Plague with this thing, right?”

“I’m doing no such thing, Antoine. You have the wrong idea of me. I’m not seeking out this book as part of some noble quest.”

“You still haven’t told me why you need your grandfather’s book. I’m just assuming because you’ve given me nothing to work with.”

“If I tell you, I’m afraid it will be unavoidable, so I can’t! I don’t want to believe that it’s happening, but I’ll stake my life on making sure that it doesn’t! That’s why I defied the quarantine and ended up here in this awful place looking for a book that might not exist!”

Antoine flipped back the front cover with a nonchalant toss of his hand. Viona gasped, and the two fell completely silent. Time crawled as they exhaled, both realizing that they had been holding their breath.

Viona spoke first, “This is definitely the book written by Justus Regnault. His name is written on the bottom corner on the back of the front cover. I think this must be it…”

Antoine’s open mouth parted to form a happy grin. “Amazing… to be quite honest I have no idea what this book can do… There are only a few things in our collection in that category. Let us take it upstairs at once!”

“It doesn’t do anything.”

“What?” Antoine took his finger off the cover of the book. “Now I’m confused.”

Viona’s lip shuddered imperceptibly before she spoke, “As I mentioned before, years ago, before I was born, my father sold a book to your family. But the truth was… this book had no magic properties whatsoever. He tricked your family into paying more than it was worth, but it was still written by my grandfather Justus Regnault. My father then used the money as collateral to secure a loan, which is how he started his business. My grandfather was livid when he found out that his apprentice would do such a thing, but my mother at the time was deeply in love with my father, so my grandfather relented and allowed the two to get wed.”

Antoine scratched his chin. “No, this can’t be a fake. That’s impossible. There’s no way your family sold us something like that. Tons of people try to do the same thing, and my grandpa had too keen of an eye to accept such a thing.”

“How can you be so sure?” Viona said, “That was the story I overheard from my father himself.”

“Could he not have been lying to whoever he was speaking to? But what doesn’t make sense to me is… if you believe this book is a fake… why do you want it back? And what meaning is there in lying to me if you don’t believe it? Just what kind of power is contained in this book that your family would go to such lengths…?”

Viona bit her lip and tensed her arms. “You’re not listening to me! You keep assuming that there’s a conspiracy here, but there isn’t! I need this book because it’s a family heirloom that was wrongfully sold to you! Are there any records of how much we received for this book? I’ll double it and ensure you all are compensated, but I need to take this book home with me this instant.”

“You don’t have the money with you upfront?”

“Does it look like I do?” Viona seemed almost on the verge of tears, “I don’t have anything but my word. Consider that even in such circumstances, I have come here, and I am not someone foolish enough to come so ill-equipped if it can be avoided. That is how desperate I am.”

“But help me understand why.”

“You really want to know my story that badly? Even if it hurts me to tell it?”

“I do, right now more than anything. I’ll give you this book for free if you tell me the truth.”

“Do not mock me or-”

“I’m serious. I love a good story more than anything else. If I could read or write, I would be consumed by the books that are out there, but unfortunately, I don’t have that privilege.”

Viona searched for the words but found herself grimacing in silence. She did not know why she said the things she did earlier. It was as if a wild animal caught in her embrace was struggling to let itself loose, scratching and biting in the thrashing. As if she was no longer able to be the only one to know.

“Would it help if I told you something first? The reason I was so sure is because my grandpa loved stories, too. He would tell me countless stories… some impossible fictions and some real life tales he had heard from others… and stories from his own life. I would sit in the upstairs storefront with him, waiting for my mom and dad to return from their trips with more artifacts, all the while listening to his stories.”

“That explains your love of them,” she said dryly.

“Oh, I surely did. More than anything. You might say that I was obsessed with hearing more stories to the point of mania. As a child, I would go out and ask townspeople all sorts of things, which frustrated my grandpa greatly. I garnered quite a reputation for myself in this neighborhood, and every time my grandfather had to cover for my indiscretions. There came a point when I hated, absolutely hated to be stuck inside the store and I would venture off on my own, causing mayhem wherever I went. My friends and I were horrible troublemakers. That was when the Plague first struck the city.”

“The Plague struck about… a few months ago?”

Antoine’s eyes closed as he heaved a deep sigh, “The Babbling Plague first struck the city almost twenty years ago.”

“How old are you, Antoine…?” Viona whispered as she took a step back.

“By now, if I have counted correctly, I should be thirty four years old,” the boy said, his youthful face having put on the expression of a weary workman. “I contracted the Babbling Plague and returned home, rapidly deteriorating. I couldn’t form words by the end of the night. By the next day, I was chanting madly, raving in a trance, slowly losing all rationality. My grandpa was deaf by this time, and immune to the Babbling Plague’s effects, so he did not contract it, and he did his best to take care of me until I might overcome it, but my condition grew worse and worse. A week had passed before he disappeared, and…”

“What happened to him?”

“I don’t know the details. The intricacies of magic are beyond my understanding. What I know are the effects. He died so that I can still exist inside the store. If I take a step outside of the store, I will disappear and reappear inside the store, much like that toy horse. I don’t know this for sure, but I think I actually did die that night, and my grandpa used an artifact to bring me back at great cost to himself. When my mom and dad returned, they found his body… and they found me. Now in their old age they are still out there searching for a way to liberate me, so that I’m no longer bound to the store. Perhaps so I can die.”

He expected her to run upstairs in fear. He expected her to laugh in his face. Any other reaction than the steely gaze she returned. Viona’s lips pursed, until it parted to form the words, “My mother and father are getting a divorce.”

Dreadful quiet filled the room like noxious fumes. Viona’s irises glistened in the magical candle light as her nose seemed to tremble. Antoine didn’t know what else to add, and so he said nothing at all.

She continued, “I’m not here to save the city. Or unlock the mysteries of my grandfather’s magic. My problems don’t even come close to rivaling yours. I never thought I might meet someone who was unbound from life and death here in my life, and yet here you are in front of me. Your story is so utterly incredible, I’m not sure I fully believe it. What I deal with is nothing compared to yours.”

“It’s okay. It’s not a competition, Viona.”

“I just need that book so my mother won’t hate my father anymore. I’ll say I found it in the library and that he didn’t sell it. That this was a misunderstanding. I know they have other problems to work through, but I don’t know what else to do, and if it’s in my power to do anything, at least it’s this.”

Antoine shrugged, “I see. I don’t think you’re lying, but I don’t have any memory of your father coming to our store, but this is proof enough isn’t it? My grandpa must have accepted it just because it was actually written by the great Justus Regnault, even if it isn’t magical on its own.”

Viona stared at the book, “Antoine, do you think it’s okay to lie in order to save my parents’ marriage?”

The boy pondered this for only a moment, “I suppose all stories are lies. There’s always something that doesn’t go told in a story. The exclusion of some truth is what makes it a story one can tell, which makes it a lie by omission. Even still, should they find out the truth…”

“If they find out the truth, I might end up making things worse. In fact, even with this, they might still get a divorce.”

“Then the least you could do is be honest with the way you feel. It took a lot to wrangle the truth of you, Viona. I’m guessing you’re not the most expressive person even at home.”

“Hmph,” she grunted, “Why am I even asking a ghost trapped in a cave? What life experience do you have that could possibly help me?”

He shrugged, taking no offense, “I know what stories are, and I know that you are a character in your story. You cannot control the other characters in this story of yours, but the way that you tell your story ten, twenty, thirty years from now… that you can control. How is it that you want your side of the story to end?” Antoine picked up the cook book once more, “All of these stories trapped in these magical artifacts ended in tragedy and drama. People who were willing to give up everything in order to pursue a single-minded goal, but I think for most of them, it wasn’t necessary. People who focus their lives onto material objects to solve their problems aren’t thinking straight. It makes for fascinating stories, but… it makes also for tales to learn from. In the end, I think it’s better to live life without the ability to control so much of it.”

Viona picked up her grandfather’s book. “I don’t know what else to do. Will our family be split apart? I feel so unsafe, as if I’m teetering on a tightrope with nothing to catch me below. Every time I think about it, it becomes hard to breathe and my chest tightens as my mind races for a solution, to the point where I would do anything to prevent it from happening.”

“Your story doesn’t come to a halt with your parent’s divorce. Heaven forbid, even if it does happen, you’ll wake up the next morning and the sun will still rise. And you’ll find yourself still in your bed, feeling the same pang of hunger and wondering what jam to put on your bread today.”

“…Are you telling me to just accept it? To not do whatever I can to fight it?”

“Or fight it. It’s up to you, but whatever comes to pass, life goes on because… life just isn’t like stories. Even after you die, your story continues in the lives of those who knew you. Trust me, from someone who just can’t seem to die.”

“Antoine,” Viona said resolutely, “You’ve given me some things to think about.” She carefully placed the book down onto the table, “I don’t think I’ll be taking this book after all.”

He groaned, adding, “Fine, that’s just as good. I wasn’t going to sell you this book in the first place.”

“What?! And why not? You said you would give it to me for free.”

“You don’t have any money,” Antoine winked. She laughed. For the first time in recent memory, she laughed very honestly.

With that, Viona departed from the store. As Antoine waved her farewell, a little disappointed that he failed to make a sale, he took the book up with him to the front counter, ready to sell it to the young lady should she ever decide to return for it.

One day, a day like any other, years after the Babbling Plague swept through the city and vanished, Antoine was preparing for his usual lunch in his shop on Gustave Street. Faluche bread and cherry jam with a little bit of butter. Business has been better lately, and so he’d taken to trying some of life’s luxuries, such as butter. Delicious butter. He thought to himself that luxuries would soon become necessities, and it might be dangerous to proceed down this path before long.

It was then that she returned, as he had expected, but she was taller now. More refined. Her auburn hair no longer draped her shoulders but was tied up into a neatly decorated bun. As she passed through the jingling door of that curious shop, she was holding the shoulders of a young girl — dressed much the same as herself — who looked to be even younger than the boy shopkeeper.

“Ah, good day, Antoine…” she greeted him, a sprinkle of melancholy flaked her words as it left her, “So you are still here, just as you always were.”

The boy shopkeeper greeted her in return, “Good day, Lady Viona de Gaspar. Could this be your daughter? I’ve heard rumors, so I wondered when I might have the pleasure of meeting her.

“Indeed,” she said, stroking the hair of her daughter who seemed to be overwhelmed by the outside, despite being safely inside of a store, “She’s quite shy, but her name is Vestrea. She’s been begging me to help her learn more about magic, so I brought her to meet you.” The girl nodded in agreement. “Have you learned to read yet, Antoine? I thought if you hadn’t, I could tutor you and my daughter simultaneously.”

“I have been trying, but without someone to tell me if I have been doing it correctly or not, it has been more or less impossible,” he laughed.

“Yes, I can quite imagine. The storefront is covered in new items since last. So many more stories written on these shelves…” The nostalgia in her voice nearly made her sound like the adolescent girl that first walked into those doors.

“You are correct, and you must also have a decade’s worth of stories to catch me up on since we last met.” Antoine said with an eager grin, “What’s been new with you?”

Viona gave a hollow, rehearsed laugh, “So many, many stories,” and with a pained smile said, “Most recently, it seems I’ve gotten a divorce…”