Lorcan had no desire to see anyone
else die because of him, much less do the killing personally. He froze the air
around Wexton’s hands and the fireballs that Wexton held winked out.
“Try
this,” Lord Cumberbatch suggested. Lorcan felt a bizarre tingle inside his
skull as one of Cumberbatch’s memories settled into Lorcan’s mind.
Lorcan sent a barrage of tiny round
ice pellets at Wexton. They no doubt hurt like hell, but did not piece his
skin. The other sorcerer stumbled backward, trying in vain to deflect the ice
with his arms.
“See
what happens when you let me guide you instead of ripping memories out of me?”
“I’ll thank you properly later. I’m
still a little busy,” Lorcan muttered under his breath so that no one else
could hear.
Lorcan hit Wexton right above his
eyebrow with one last extra-large pellet. Wexton wobbled and then toppled over
onto the wooden floor.
The entire room was staring at
Lorcan, waiting. Lorcan looked around, clueless.
“Isn’t anyone going to tie him up?”
Lorcan finally asked.
The Seafury side of the chamber let
out a sigh of relief almost in unison. Luciana stepped forward.
“The Duel is one of the Trials,”
she explained. “I don’t think anyone expected it to take place so soon, but
there is no specific order the Trials must be carried out in.”
“Um…okay.” Lorcan was still
confused. Senator Seafury’s men were all congratulating him and Senator
Torgough was scowling at Lorcan.
Luciana seemed to understand
Lorcan’s cluelessness. “The point of this Trial is to defeat your rival and
then show him mercy. You must demonstrate a certain level of control over your
abilities to use them non-lethally.”
Lorcan grinned. “You mean I did
something right?”
Luciana gave him a level look.
“Yes, but don’t let it go to your head. You’re still an idiot.”
A guttural roar preempted Lorcan’s
comeback. He spun around to see Wexton leap to his feet and hurl an enormous fireball
at Lorcan and Luciana. Lorcan stepped in front of Luciana and pushed her back
with his right hand while extending his left to freeze the oncoming fireball.
Lorcan’s eyes widened as he
realized that the blazing sphere hurtling at him was too hot to dissolve in
time. Pain seared the left half of Lorcan’s body as the flames consumed his
left arm up to the elbow before he managed to extinguish them. The soaking wet
jacket and shirt that Lorcan had been wearing were burned away, his skin was an
angry shade of red, and his left arm ended in a charred stump just above where
his elbow had been.
“You’ll
find this to be an appropriate response.” Cumberbatch sent another memory
to Lorcan.
Lorcan brought his remaining hand
around in a wide swooping gesture and a U-shaped ice crystal formed above
Wexton and slammed down on top of him, the points of the U piercing the floor
and knocking Wexton to his knees. He knelt, dazed underneath the arch of ice.
Ice crystals began to grow rapidly from the inside of the U until Wexton was
encased in a cocoon of ice. He struggled, but with only his nose and eyes
remaining uncovered he could not even scream.
The burns covering the left side of
his body finally overcame the temporary shock of his sudden injury and Lorcan’s
legs gave out on him as the pain overwhelmed him. Luciana caught him carefully.
“Easy there, sorcerer. Let’s set
you down gently.” She guided him over to a nearby table and got him lying down
on it. Luciana turned and began barking orders at her father’s people. “Get
someone to Weyrd Mountain immediately! Take the fastest horses and bring his great-grandmother
and the other witches here! Go!” Lorcan heard men running out of the Elder’s
Hall, but all he could see was Luciana’s dark red hair as she continued issuing
commands. “You three get buckets and bring cold water. You go get herbs for
burn wounds from the healer in town. You go with him and bring back as many
bandages as you can carry. Father, get Torgough and his cronies out of here, we
can’t have him trying to kill our sorcerer while he’s wounded.”
It was getting harder to breath and
the fringes of Lorcan’s vision began to fade to black.
Luciana snapped her fingers loudly
right in front of Lorcan’s eyes. “Hey! Stay with me, sorcerer! You aren’t dying
on us now!”
Lorcan tried valiantly to keep from
passing out, but the pain was too much. His body shut down and everything went
black.
Lorcan
stood in a beautiful garden. Bushes cut into the shape of animals and perfect
flowers could be seen in every direction. The sun was shining overhead and
birds chirped or sang from trees with leaves instead of needles – Lorcan had
only heard of such trees, but had never seen one before.
Luciana
shoved Vera to her knees in front of a man Lorcan did not recognize. Vera’s
hands were tied behind her back and she wore an ornate purple gown with
matching gems around her neck and on her fingers. Despite being bound and
having Luciana’s sword pointed at her throat, Vera looked amused, only barely
able to contain her laughter.
“Tell
me it isn’t true, Mason,” Luciana demanded of the young man standing in front
of her and Vera.
“Yes,
Mason, tell her it isn’t true.” Vera snickered.
“Shut
up!” Luciana snarled at Vera. She turned back to Mason. “Answer me! Tell me
it’s just another one of her lies.”
“Anna,
what’s going on? Do you know what the Emperor will do to you if he finds out
you’re treating Vera this way?” Mason tried to step forward, but Luciana
pressed her sword tighter against Vera’s neck.
“Tell
me you aren’t a warlock and I’ll let her go.” Luciana’s eyes were locked on
Mason.
“I—”
Mason stopped. He opened his mouth, closed it again, and then hung his head
dejectedly.
“No,”
Luciana whispered.
Vera
giggled. “Still can’t lie to her, can you, Mason dearie?”
“Anna,
please understand. I didn’t know what I was,” Mason pleaded.
“You
bastard! It’s true?” Luciana looked so betrayed and hurt that Lorcan wanted to
reach out and comfort her, but he knew it was pointless to try to interact with
someone else’s dream.
“I
only just found out. I…please don’t look at me that way, Anna.” Mason looked
away.
“You
used me to get close to the Emperor! How am I supposed to look at a traitor?”
Luciana shot back.
“I—no—well,
yes. But I swear, Anna, once I found out I wasn’t going to—”
“Enough
of your lies!” Luciana spat. “Mason Torgough, I am honor bound to end your life
in order to protect the Empire.”
“Anna,
please don’t do this,” Mason begged. “I love you!”
“Warlocks
don’t love.” Luciana brought her sword around in a wide arc that removed
Mason’s head.
A
single tear rolled down Luciana’s cheek.
Lorcan woke in a strange bed.
Luciana was asleep in a chair beside his bed. In looking around, Lorcan decided
that he was probably in the Old Fisherman Inn. No room on Weyrd Mountain was
this fancy.
Luciana’s pale green eyes snapped
open as soon as Lorcan sat up. “You need to rest,” she told him, stretching and
standing up to check his bandages.
“How bad is it?” Lorcan asked her.
Luciana smirked. “Bad enough that
you look better than you used to, you ugly idiot.”
Lorcan couldn’t help but laugh.
“You’re one charming asshole, you know that?”
“Your great-grandmother said almost
the exact same thing. She was very upset with me for letting you get your arm
burned off.”
“Where is she now?” Lorcan asked.
Great Grandmother did not like to leave her patients.
“She was exhausted after healing
you and so were your aunts. Evidently you should be dead. You’re a tough son of
a bitch to have survived.”
“We Moons are stubborn. We don’t
like to die until we’re good and ready, no matter how much we ought to go
sooner.”
Luciana smiled. “You saved my life
yesterday. And…you saved Evie’s life before that. She would have bled out if
you hadn’t found her in the forest.” Her smile faded. “Thank you.”
“But…” Lorcan began, though he did
not know what to say next. He had failed to save Evie the second time her life
had been threatened.
The door cracked open and Senator
Seafury entered when he saw Lorcan was awake. He stood stiff backed beside
Lorcan’s bed. “Son, I want to thank you for saving my…my only daughter’s life.” The senator was obviously not used to
displaying emotion of any kind, but losing Evie and then Luciana’s close call
shortly thereafter had – not rattled him of course, he was the unflappable
sort, but perhaps brought him within an inch of showing actual feelings.
“Sir, I just—” Lorcan started, but
Senator Seafury interrupted him.
“No, no. I won’t hear it. I owe you
a great debt, son. I’ll see that your family has enough gold to live
comfortably no matter what happens to you in the next few months. I wish that I
could do more, but way out here all I can do is give you some of what I already
have too much of.”
“Th-thank you, sir,” Lorcan
stammered. His family had never had any gold
unless you counted what Great-Grandpa had stolen and used to buy the land on
Weyrd Mountain for his still.
“Your great-grandmother says you
will live, but the burned flesh will never heal completely. I don’t know where
you got the rest of your scars, but it looks like our sorcerer has already been
through a hell of a lot. Yes, you’ll do just fine.” Senator Seafury clapped
Lorcan on his good shoulder and then left.
“My father, the great
sentimentalist.” Luciana chuckled when he was gone.
Lorcan scoffed. “Calling the pot
black, kettle?”
“Hush, you. At least I didn’t give
you money as repayment for one of your limbs. My father is a good man…but my
lack of interest in human connections surprises no one who knows him.”
“I…I didn’t mean to, but I saw…um…”
Lorcan trailed off, embarrassed to explain that he’d seen Luciana’s dream.
Luciana smiled sadly. “You read my
dreams while we slept. Yes, it is an old dream and one that haunts me often. I
have read a great deal about what sorcerers and warlocks are capable of. I
tried to stay awake, but as soon as I dozed I knew you would share what I
dreamt. I suppose you have questions.”
Lorcan shook his head emphatically.
“No! I…uh…I just wanted you to know that I knew.”
“Well, thank you for telling me.
You are turning out to be a decent sort of idiot.”
“You’re too kind.
“Now get some rest.” Luciana left
Lorcan in his dark room. His eyelids felt heavy and he found it easy to comply
with Luciana’s command.
“Oh my God!” Mandy whispered.
“So cool!” Errol and Earl gasped.
“Shut it, you two! He just needs
the love of a pretty girl to nurse him back to health,” Thomas chided his
cousins.
One or more of Uncle Cal’s girls
squealed and ran screaming from the room. Someone snickered at them until
someone else hit them for being inconsiderate.
Lorcan opened his eyes slowly. His
entire family was reluctantly filing into his room. With the exception of some
of his younger cousins, everyone looked terrified.
“Hi everybody.” Lorcan did his best
to smile without wincing, he doubted it worked well.
Mandy sat down on his bed and held
Lorcan’s hand. “Does it hurt?”
Lorcan nodded. “I’ll live, though.”
“Is Luciana going to nurse you back
to health?” Thomas asked hopefully.
Lorcan groaned. “Little bro, what
did I tell you about Luciana? She is off limits for your crazy fantasies.”
“But she stayed by your side and
changed your bandages and–” Thomas protested.
Lorcan cut him off. “No. Find some
other girl to have me marry in your imagination. I didn’t survive all this just
to get stabbed in my sleep.”
“I’m sure she’d wake you up first,”
Great Grandmother chimed in. “She’s the honorable type of girl.”
“Oh, now you like her too?” Lorcan
rolled his eyes.
“That insufferable ice queen with
the pompous attitude who looks at everyone else like insects crawling on her
fancy boots? Yes, actually. She’s good people. Keep her around, but don’t take
your eyes off her knife hand,” Great Grandma advised.
“I really think there are better
things to talk about than my love life right now,” Lorcan told them.
“You really don’t know us very
well, do you?” Mandy chuckled.
“Unfortunately, I know you too
well,” Lorcan answered.
“So, son, what happens next?”
Lorcan’s father asked in order to save him from Thomas and Great Grandmother.
Lorcan gave him a grateful look.
“He heals,” Luciana answered.
Lorcan’s relatives parted for her as she entered the room. “Wexton remains
imprisoned in Lorcan’s ice cocoon. By the time that the Divinatrix and the
Emperor’s emissary arrive he should be ready to continue the Trials.”
“You can’t intend to go on with
this lunacy after what happened to Lorcan already?” Mandy stared incredulously
at Luciana.
“I’m afraid we must,” Luciana
answered coolly. “Overly dramatic though it may seem, the fate of the world may
depend on us proving that Lorcan is the New Sorcerer and Wexton is a warlock.”
“He’s my brother,” Mandy glared
menacingly at Luciana. “I won’t let you get him killed.”
“Easy, Mandy.” Lorcan squeezed her
hand reassuringly. “I’m not going to get killed.”
“Fine,” Mandy growled. “What
happens after all the fancy-pants folks come to town?”
“Well, Lorcan gets to make a choice.
He can opt to see the Divinatrix immediately and receive what advice she will give
him about his future or he can choose to see the Imperial Emissary’s
description of each Trial that he is to face as he proves himself. The rest of
us only know a few vague aspects of what the Trials entail and will be of
little help. The Duel is done, but there will be many more yet to overcome,”
Luciana explained.
What does Lorcan choose?
1) Hear what the Divinatrix has to say about
his future.
2) Learn details about what he will face
during the Trials.
3) Set up a conference call between the three of them.
ReplyDeleteI'm voting 1. Either character might die while Lorcan talks to the other first. The Divinatrix's information is more valuable. The Emissary's information could come from anyone who's studied the Trials, should he meet his doom while Lorcan talks to her. The Divinatrix's information could not.