North of Lissen Carak – Thorn
Thorn grinned as he felt the dark sun – felt him surface to the world of power – and he sent all his power along the contact lines to bind him. No more hesitation. Men of power always tried a direct challenge. Thorn was ready.
Lissen Carak – The Abbess
The Abbess felt the rising tide of Wild power and stopped – she was feeding bits of chicken to her bird, and the plate of raw chicken fell to the marble floor. There couldn’t be
North of Lissen Carak – Thorn
Thorn felt her golden brilliance and he paused, licking at it to taste her, amazed at her potency. Delighted, saddened, angered, guilt-ridden-
Utterly distracted.
The Memory Palace – The Red Knight
The door slammed shut leaving him lying crumpled in the corner of his armoured balcony.
The old Magus stood over him, his staff still glowing, and wisps of fae-fire played along its length. ‘Well, well,’ the old man said. ‘That would be your mother in you, I suspect.’
The captain tried to get to his feet and found himself boneless and almost unable to move his arms. ‘You have the advantage of me,’ he said softly.
The old Magus offered him a hand. ‘So I do. I am Harmodius, Royal Magus, and you are Lord Gabriel Moderatus Murien – Anna’s son.’ He smiled grimly. ‘The Viscount Murien. Don’t try and deny it, you little imp. Your mother thinks you’re dead, but I knew who you were the moment I saw you.’ He got the captain to his feet, and led him across the room to a chair.
Jacques came in with a cocked and loaded arbalest. It was smoothly done – Harmodius had no chance to react.
‘Say the word, my lord, and he’s dead,’ Jacques said.
‘You heard,’ the captain said. He felt as if he had the worst hangover of his life.
‘I heard,’ Jacques said. The bolt-head on the trough of the crossbow didn’t waver.
The captain took in a shaky breath. ‘Why shouldn’t I have you killed?’ he asked the Magus.
‘Is your petty secret worth the lives of everyone in the castle?’ the Magus asked. ‘None of you will live through this without me. Even with me the odds are long. In the name of the Trinity, boy, you just felt his power.’
The captain wished he could think. The Magus’ use of his name – Gabriel – had hit him as hard as the green cage had. He didn’t even allow
‘Time to stop doing that, then,’ said the Magus.
Jacques didn’t move, and his voice was calm. ‘Why don’t you just shut up about it?’ He shrugged, but the shrug never reached the crossbow bolt’s tip. ‘You being the mighty King’s Magus, and all. You stop talking about some dead boy’s name, and we can all go on together?’
‘Three in a secret,’ the captain muttered.
The Magus pursed his lips. ‘I’ll give my word not to disclose what I know – if you give me yours to talk to me about it. When and if this is over.’