Page 60
Story: Blood Over Bright Haven
“I must make clear my strong objection that female mages be allowed into this, our holiest order. Leon himself explains that logic is an intrinsically masculine characteristic. Women, being governed by emotions, have no place in positions of political or magical power. It is fine and good to have them trained in magic as educators, as fits their nurturing nature, and it is my personal belief that such pursuits should be encouraged. But to have a woman take the masculine role of innovator is not right or natural. To entertain the notion disrespects our forefathers as well as endangering our wives, sisters, and daughters. On these grounds, I reject Miss Trethellyn’s application to the High Magistry. ”
T HE
CEILING
OF Leon’s Hall had been repaired since Sciona punched a hole in it.
An artist had painted Archmage Stravos’s face back in, and Sciona noted that he looked more like the other founding mages now.
Perhaps the artist had used the figures on the rest of the ceiling for reference.
Perhaps he had simply thought Stravos ought to better represent the Tiranish ideal of manhood.
His nose was more pronounced now and slightly turned up at the end, his brow a little flatter, his hair more brown than copper.
“I see Stravos got more handsome,” someone commented appreciatively as the highmages filed to their seats. And Sciona wondered if this was how the mutual history of Tiran and the Kwen had fallen so far out of public consciousness, washed out a little more with each coat of paint.
The last time Sciona had sat in this hall, the highmage hopefuls and their relatives had filled only a small section of the chamber. This morning, the benches were packed with white-robed mages, the entire High Magistry, gathered as they only did a few times a year.
Mages of a department sat together, with presenters to one side—which meant that Sciona ended up elbow-to-elbow with Cleon Renthorn.
The proximity—the smell of the grease in his hair—made her stomach turn and her heartbeat pound straight to her head.
But she couldn’t let the rat man see any of that, so she gave him a cordial smile.
“You’re looking sharp today, Highmage Renthorn.” She flicked her gaze pointedly to the bruise Thomil’s fist had left around his left eye. If the blow had upset him, wait until she got her shot in.
“You know that assaulting a highmage is a capital offense,” he hissed, “you little slut.”
“Ha,” Sciona said as she realized that Thomil must have knocked a few moments of memory out of the spellweb specialist when he hit him.
If Renthorn thought Sciona was the one who had assaulted him—and if he didn’t compare accounts with his colleagues too closely—maybe no one would think to look for Thomil.
Yes, Thomil and Carra were in the widow’s house, where the authorities weren’t likely to search, but in an ideal scenario, no one would be looking.
“I don’t know what kind of silly impact conduit you used against me,” Renthorn continued under his breath, “but if this was all an attempt to throw me off before the presentation, you’re out of luck.”
I attempted to throw you off? Sciona scoffed internally. Ultimately, she opted for maximum damage and smiled instead of scoffing. “That implies that I care how your presentation goes—which I might if your material was competition for mine, but we both know it’s not.”
Renthorn looked like he wanted to put his hands around her neck and strangle her right in front of the Council. “You—”
“Shh.” Sciona pressed a finger to her lips. “The archmages are starting.”
With the hundred members of the High Magistry seated, there were opening words from Archmage Orynhel, followed by a brief presentation of the planned action spells for the barrier expansion—brief because these spells had been all but finalized years ago.
Sciona already knew from her foray into Orynhel’s office that the distinctions between proposed spells were incredibly minor, not taking long to cover before the Council moved on to the meat of the matter: mapping and siphoning.
Renthorn the Younger was called to present his sourcing plan first, with Tanrel assisting.
The work the two of them had put together was masterful—although not revolutionary.
Everyone already knew Tanrel could compose a decent base mapping spell, and he had.
Everyone already knew that Renthorn could write an excellent spellweb, and he had.
Overall, they had completed the best possible work any pair of mages could within the parameters they were given.
It made Sciona glad that she had spent her time pushing the parameters themselves instead of diddling around within them.
She waited with her hands clutched tight on her folio after Renthorn and Tanrel had finished presenting, but the archmages didn’t call her to the floor.
They asked Renthorn a dozen follow-up questions, then a dozen more on irrelevant details—well, not irrelevant, Sciona supposed, but nothing that would ensure that the spellweb produced sufficient energy to power the barrier expansion.
No matter how Renthorn, Tanrel, Mordra the Tenth, and their many assistants fiddled with individual lines of spellwork, the archmages were not going to tease out what they wanted—and what Sciona could actually deliver: a guarantee of success.
As the Archmages argued over the particulars of Renthorn’s proposal, Sciona itched, her stomach in knots. Eventually, just as she worried that she might run out of time before noon, Archmage Gamwen murmured something to Bringham, who leaned over and whispered to Archmage Orynhel.
“Oh, yes, of course. Miss Freynan.” Archmage Orynhel peered over his spectacles at her. “Did you have anything to add to Highmage Cleon Renthorn’s demonstration? I hear that you were recently taken ill, so it’s quite alright if you have nothing to present.”
“No, Archmage.” Sciona stood. “That is—I don’t have anything to add to my colleagues’ presentation, but I do have my own.”
“Do you have copies of your spellweb for us?” Archmage Gamwen asked. “I don’t think I received any.”
“Apologies, Archmage. I, unfortunately, had to dismiss my assistant this week and haven’t had time to make copies myself.
Suffice it to say the web is serviceable, but nothing you haven’t seen before—not as good as Highmage Renthorn’s.
But I expect that once you’ve seen the mapping spells I’ve composed for the expansion, you’ll find that the differences between my spellweb and Highmage Renthorn’s do not matter. ”
Renthorn the Third looked like he had just swallowed a rotting lemon. Meanwhile, a few other archmages muttered to each other in bewilderment and disapproval at her unwomanly confidence.
“That is a decision for the Council to make, Miss Freynan,” Duris said coolly. “Make your demonstration, and we will judge whether your proposal warrants consideration.”
A week ago, the admonishment would have made Sciona shrink and possibly vomit from nerves. It was oddly freeing that Archmage Duris’ scorn was the least of her worries now. Drawing her shoulders, she faced the archmages with a smile.
“Gladly, Archmage Duris. Apologies.” She had to stop herself from jogging down from the seating to the presentation desk in her eagerness.
“If I may, what I have to present for you today are two new mapping spell compositions, one we might call the Stravos-Kaedor”—because Thomil was right; Stravdor really didn’t roll off the tongue—“and the other I’m calling the Freynan Mirror.
Both have the potential to increase our siphoning accuracy by a significant margin. ”
On all sides, Sciona’s fellow mages looked bored, and someone made a show of covering a yawn. She didn’t blame them. This was a claim mages had made before—including Highmage Tanrel in the presentation just before hers.
“With your permission, I will now demonstrate a mapping spell I composed using the Stravos-Kaedor Method.”
At Archmage Orynhel’s nod, Sciona placed her folio on the demonstration desk and opened it.
Unlike the exam, where spells were written on the spot, presenters brought their spells to this demonstration pre-written to save time and technical difficulties.
Under the eyes of the Council and her peers, Sciona fed her first sheaf into the spellograph and hit the activation key.
“The visual you see here represents the space between mapping coordinates 334.44 H, 334.63 H, 242.9 V, and 243.13 V,” she said as white shapes glowed to life before the assembly.
This spellograph was built for presentations, with a comically large mapping coil three times as tall as Sciona herself.
As the Stravos-Kaedor visual lit up, despite everything, she allowed herself a moment of pride.
Even expanded to the size of a house, every grayscale energy source was bright, every edge crisp as type set.
It might not be the Freynan Mirror, but it was as clear as any mapping visual these mages had ever seen.
Gratifyingly, several of the Council gasped as wondering chatter rippled through the chamber. Archmage Scywin leaned forward with intense interest. Archmage Thelanra’s jaw hung open, and the elder mapping specialist kept blinking through his spectacles as though unable to believe what he beheld.
“This is impossible!” Archmage Duris exclaimed, more in anger than awe.
“Of course, it’s possible , Duris,” Archmage Gamwen said. “It’s just that no one’s ever done it with a Kaedor mapping spell.” He turned to Sciona in fascination. “How did you achieve this, Highmage Freynan?”
“Well, I didn’t use a Kaedor mapping spell, per se. The spell is Kaedor in structure, but some of the lines are pulled from Stravos’s writings, with my own modifications to adapt his work to the spellograph.”
“Of course the Leonite modified a Kaedor spell,” Archmage Mordra the Ninth said in disgust.
Table of Contents
- Page 1
- Page 2
- Page 3
- Page 4
- Page 5
- Page 6
- Page 7
- Page 8
- Page 9
- Page 10
- Page 11
- Page 12
- Page 13
- Page 14
- Page 15
- Page 16
- Page 17
- Page 18
- Page 19
- Page 20
- Page 21
- Page 22
- Page 23
- Page 24
- Page 25
- Page 26
- Page 27
- Page 28
- Page 29
- Page 30
- Page 31
- Page 32
- Page 33
- Page 34
- Page 35
- Page 36
- Page 37
- Page 38
- Page 39
- Page 40
- Page 41
- Page 42
- Page 43
- Page 44
- Page 45
- Page 46
- Page 47
- Page 48
- Page 49
- Page 50
- Page 51
- Page 52
- Page 53
- Page 54
- Page 55
- Page 56
- Page 57
- Page 58
- Page 59
- Page 60 (Reading here)
- Page 61
- Page 62
- Page 63
- Page 64
- Page 65
- Page 66
- Page 67
- Page 68
- Page 69
- Page 70
- Page 71
- Page 72
- Page 73
- Page 74
- Page 75