Inside the Arena, the air was still. The barrier protected it from the wind, but not the cold. Sonea resisted the desire to wrap her arms around herself and press the layers of woollen underclothes closer to her body. Lord Vorel had ordered them to drop any existing shields, including any shield for warmth.
“Remember these laws of magic,” he called. “One: a shield under attack takes more effort to hold against a strike, than the strike used against it. Two: a curved or altered strike path takes more effort than a straight one. Three: light and heat travel faster and easier than force, so a forcestrike takes more effort than a firestrike.”
Lord Vorel stood in front of the class with his legs braced and his arms akimbo. He looked at Sonea.
“Strikes are easy. That’s why it’s so common for magicians to overdo them. That’s also why shields are the most important skill of a Warrior, and why novices spend most of their time practicing them. Remember the rules of the Arena. Once your outer shield has fallen you have lost the battle. We don’t need any more proof than that.”
Sonea shivered, and knew it was not entirely from the cold. This would be the first lesson in which the novices would fight each other. All the warnings Vorel had issued ran through her mind. She looked at the faces of the other novices.
Most looked flushed and excited, but Poril was as white as snow. Since she and Poril always paired off for class exercises, Lord Vorel would probably put them against each other. She resolved to be careful and to take it easy on her former friend.
“You will be paired off initially according to strength,” Vorel told them. “Regin, you will be fighting Sonea. Benon, you will be fighting Yalend. Narron will fight Trassia. Hal, Seno and Poril will take turns.”
Sonea felt her blood turn to ice. He paired me with Regin!
But it made sense. They were the two strongest novices in the class. Suddenly she wished she had seen this coming and had pretended to be weaker than she really was.
No, I must not think this way. Vorel had told them many times that a battle was already lost if a magician began it convinced of defeat. I will defeat Regin, she told herself. I am stronger. It will be my revenge for Poril’s injuries.
It wasn’t easy to hold onto that determination as Lord Vorel called her forward to stand next to Regin. He placed a hand on her shoulder and she felt his magic surround her as he created an inner shield. A second Warrior, Lord Makin, shielded Regin.
“The rest of you move outside,” he ordered. As the novices obediently filed through the passage, Sonea forced herself to meet Regin’s gaze. His eyes were bright and the edge of his lips curled up into a sly smile.
“Now,” Vorel said as the novices sat down on the stairs outside the Arena. “Take your positions.”
Swallowing hard, Sonea moved to one side of the Arena. Regin strolled to the other and turned to face her. Vorel and Makin backed away to the edge and Sonea sensed them creating shields around themselves. Her heart was beating quickly.
Vorel looked from her to Regin, then made a quick gesture.
“Begin.”
Sonea threw up a strong shield and braced herself, but the barrage of strikes she expected didn’t come. Regin stood with his weight resting on one leg and his arms crossed. Waiting.
Sonea narrowed her eyes. There was supposed to be some significance to the first strike, and what it revealed of the character of the combatant. Looking closer, she realized that Regin didn’t even have a shield raised. He shifted his weight, drummed the fingers of one hand against his arm, tapped his foot, then looked at the teacher questioningly.
Sonea risked a glance at Lord Vorel. The Warrior was watching intently, apparently unperturbed by the lack of fighting.
Regin sighed loud enough that even the novices outside the Arena could hear it. Then he yawned. Sonea smothered a smile. This wasn’t a battle of magic, it was a battle to see who lost patience first.
She placed her hands on her hips, then looked up at the novices, no longer concerned about keeping her attention on Regin. Some were watching intently, others looked puzzled or bored. She looked at the teacher again. Lord Vorel met her gaze with a cold stare.
Perhaps she could lure Regin into striking first. Perhaps if I drop my shield…
Cautiously, she let her protective outer barrier dissolve. Immediately the world was ablaze with white fire. The hasty shield she threw up to repel the strikes held for a few seconds, then wavered and collapsed. Heat prickled her skin where Regin’s magic met Vorel’s inner shield.
“Halt!”
The strikes vanished, leaving dark spots in Sonea’s vision. She blinked at Lord Vorel as he strode forward to stand in the center of the Arena.
“Regin is victor,” he announced. A weak cheer came from the other novices. Sonea felt her face warming as Regin bowed graciously.
“Sonea.” Lord Vorel turned to her. “Dropping your shield is inadvisable unless you are skilled at raising it again quickly. If you intend to use this strategy again you should practice your defense more. You may both leave. Benon and Yalend will be next.”
Sonea bowed, then strode toward the portal as quickly as she could. As she entered the passage a gloom settled over her. It’s only the first battle, she told herself. She couldn’t expect to win all the time, especially not against Regin, whose guardian was, after all, a Warrior.
If they were always paired by strength, she would have to fight Regin in every lesson. It was clear already that Regin preferred the Warrior Skills discipline, and she’d heard Hal saying something about Regin having private lessons. Since she had no real desire to become a Warrior or have extra lessons, she was sure he was always going to be better at it than her.
Vorel had said they’d be paired off by strength initially, however. If pairings changed according to skill and talent, and she proved less skilled than Regin, Vorel would match her against one of the other novices.
That meant she had two choices: try to do well and eventually end up fighting Regin all the time, or let herself fail so she could avoid him.
Sighing, Sonea clomped up the stairs and joined the novices sitting on the steps surrounding the Arena. Either way, she was probably going to suffer many more humiliating defeats. Wistfully, she thought of the Dome, the old ball-like stone structure next to the Novices’ Quarters. Before the Arena was constructed, novices had been trained within it. The thick walls had protected outsiders from stray strikes loosed by the combatants within, yet had restricted the view of the battle to teacher and student. While it was an airless, oppressive room, at least it had been private.
Watching Benon and Yalend start their bout, Sonea quickly grew bored. She couldn’t see how these lessons, with all their rules, could prepare magicians for real war. No, these Warriors spent their entire lives indulging in a dangerous game when their magic could be put to better uses—like Healing.
She shook her head. When the time came to choose a discipline, she knew she would not be taking the red robes.
15
A Surprise Attack
As soon as Sonea stepped into the classroom she felt a difference, like a strange current of magic in the air. She hesitated in the doorway, her relief at having evaded Regin’s gang evaporating.
Lord Kiano looked up, his attention snapping to her with a peculiar eagerness as if she was a welcome distraction.
“There will be no classes today, Sonea.”
She stared at the teacher in surprise.
“No classes, my lord?”
Kiano hesitated. A hiss brought her attention to the center of the room. Only four novices had arrived before her. Benon was holding his head in his hands. Trassia and Narron had moved their chairs beside him. Regin sat quietly behind them, his eyes flat and expressionless for once. Trassia was staring at Sonea with accusing eyes.
“A novice has died,” Kiano explained. “Shern.”
Sonea frowned, remembering the novice from the summer class whose powers had felt so strange. Died? Questions sprang into her
mind. How? When?
“Oh, just go away,” Trassia growled. Startled by the girl’s outburst, Sonea stared at her.
“He was Benon’s cousin,” Kiano told her in a low voice.
Trassia glared back. Slowly, understanding came. By asking why the class had been cancelled, Lord Kiano had been forced to speak of Shern’s death in front of Benon. Sonea felt her face heating. As Narron looked up at her and scowled, she backed out of the room and fled.
She stopped running after only a few steps as anger and frustration caught up with her. How could she possibly have known that Shern was dead, or that Benon was his cousin? Asking why the class had been cancelled was a perfectly reasonable question.
Wasn’t it?
Her thoughts returned to Shern. When she searched her feelings she could find no more than a mild sadness. Shern had never even spoken to her, or anyone. In fact, the entire summer class had ignored him during the few weeks he had attended the University.
As she reached the end of the staircase she saw that Rothen was climbing toward her, and felt a surge of relief.
“There you are,” he said. “You’ve heard?”
“They cancelled classes.”
“Yes.” He nodded. “They always do when this happens. I went to find you in your room, but you weren’t there. Come and have a hot drink with me.”
Walking beside him, Sonea remained silent. It seemed remarkable that the Guild would close the University because of the death of a novice who had barely spent more than a few weeks there. But since all of the novices, apart from her, were from the Houses, the boy had probably been related to several novices and magicians.
“Shern was in your first class, wasn’t he?” Rothen asked as they entered his guestroom.
“Yes.” Sonea hesitated. “Can I ask what happened to him?”
“Of course.” Rothen collected a pot and cups from a side table, then brought out two jars from a cupboard. “Do you remember what I told you about Control failing when a magician dies?”
“Any unused magic is let loose, and consumes the body.”
Rothen nodded. He set down the crockery and jars. “Shern lost Control of his magic.”
Sonea felt a chill run down her spine. “But he passed the Second Level.”
“He did, but not well or completely. His mind was never stable enough.” Rothen shook his head. “Such a state is rare, but it does sometimes occur. You see, when children are found to have the potential for magic we also test them for problems like this. Sometimes they simply don’t have the mental strength or stability to Control magic.”
“I see,” Sonea said, nodding. Rothen poured water from a jug into the pot, and added sumi leaves from one of the jars. Reaching for the other jar, Sonea mixed raka powder with water and heated the mix with a little magic.
“Unfortunately, some people develop mental instability when they grow older,” Rothen continued, “or when their magic is released. By then it is too late. Sooner or later they lose the Control they have been taught—usually in their first few years. Shern started to show signs of instability months ago. The Guild took him away from the city to a place we had built for such novices. We try to keep them calm and happy, and they are treated by Healers who are well versed in the problem. But no one has ever found a cure, and any binding we place on their powers doesn’t seem to hold for long.”
Sonea shivered. “When I first saw him I thought his presence was strange.”
Rothen frowned. “You sensed the instability that early? No one else did. I must tell this to—”
“No!” Sonea’s heart lurched. If Rothen told anyone that she had sensed something wrong with Shern, the other novices would have something else to blame her for. “Don’t. Please.”
Rothen regarded her speculatively. “Nobody is going to look on you badly for not saying anything. You couldn’t possibly have understood what you were sensing.”
She held his eyes. Rothen sighed. “All right. I suppose it doesn’t matter now.” He placed his hands around the pot. At once steam began to drift from the funnel. “How do you feel about all of this, Sonea?”
She shrugged. “I didn’t know him.” She then told him what had happened when she walked into the classroom. “It’s as if it was all my fault.”
Rothen frowned as he poured himself a cup of the brewed sumi. “They probably snapped at you because you interrupted at a bad time. Don’t worry about what they said. By tomorrow they will have forgotten about it.”
“So what am I going to do today?” she wondered aloud.
Rothen paused to sip his drink, then smiled. “I thought we might make a few plans for Dorrien’s visit.”
The captain of the Anyi had been delighted when Dannyl asked if he was headed for the Vin Islands. At first Dannyl had assumed the man was eager to see his homeland, but grew suspicious when the captain insisted that Dannyl and Tayend move into his own cabin. From what he knew of Vindo sailors, it should take more than homesickness or respect for the Guild to motivate a captain to give up his own space.
The evening after they left, Dannyl had discovered the true reason for the captain’s enthusiasm.
“Most ships to Kiko Town go to Capia first,” the captain told them, over a generous meal. “This way much faster.”
“Why don’t they sail straight to Kiko Town?” Tayend asked.
“Bad men live on Upper Islands of Vin.” The captain scowled. “They rob ships, kill crew. Dangerous people.”
“Oh.” Tayend looked at Dannyl. “And we’re going to sail past these islands?”
“No danger this time.” The captain smiled at Dannyl. “We have magician on board. Show Guild flag. They no dare rob us!”
Remembering the conversation, Dannyl smiled to himself. He suspected that merchants occasionally risked this route anyway, protecting themselves by displaying the Guild flag even when they didn’t have a magician on board. The pirates might have worked this out, too, and he wouldn’t have been surprised if a Guild uniform, real or copied, was kept in a chest somewhere for the days when a flag wasn’t enough to keep pirates away.
He had been too relieved to be leaving Lonmar to care. The dispute with the Council of Elders had taken over a month of fussing and arguing to settle. While the duties he would attend to in Vin were minor, he wondered if they, too, would turn out to be more trying than they appeared.
As the distance from Lonmar lengthened and the crew had grown increasingly tense and watchful, Dannyl had realized the threat of pirates was real. From the overheard conversations that Tayend translated, Dannyl guessed that an encounter with pirates was not a risk, but a certainty. It was a little disconcerting to know that these men believed their lives depended on his presence on the ship.
He looked at Tayend, lying on the second narrow bed. The scholar was pale and thin. Bouts of seasickness had taken their toll on his health. Despite weakness and obvious discomfort, Tayend still refused to let Dannyl heal him.
So far, their journey had not been the pleasant adventure Tayend had hoped for. Dannyl knew the scholar had been relieved to leave Lonmar, too. When they reached Kiko Town, he decided, they would spend a week or two resting. The Vindo were known for their warmth and hospitality. Hopefully they would make up for the heat and strangeness of Lonmar, and Tayend would regain his strength and enthusiasm for travelling.
Two small windows offered a glimpse of the sea on either side. The sky was a dusky late-afternoon blue, clear of clouds. Moving closer, Dannyl saw the distant shadow of islands dotting the horizon on one side—and two large boats.
Hearing a yawn, he glanced at Tayend. The scholar was sitting up, stretching.
“How are you feeling?” Dannyl asked.
“Better. What’s it like outside?”
“Quite pleasant, from the looks.” The boats were smaller than the Anyi. They skimmed over the waves, coming closer rapidly. “I think we’ll have some company before dinner.”
Tayend braced himself against the cabin wall and made
his way to Dannyl’s side. He peered through the window.
“Pirates?”
Hasty footsteps approached the door of the cabin, followed by several rapid knocks.
“I see them,” Dannyl called.
Tayend slapped him on the shoulder. “Time to be the hero, my magician friend.”
Dannyl gave Tayend a withering look before opening the door and stepping into the corridor beyond. The youngest of the sailors, a boy of perhaps fourteen years, beckoned wildly.
“Come out! Be quick!” he said, his eyes wide.
Following the boy, Dannyl made his way through the common room and stepped out onto the deck. Locating the captain at the stern of the ship, he made his way across ropes and up a short flight of stairs to join the man.
“Bad men,” the captain said, pointing.
The boats were less than two hundred paces away. Dannyl glanced up at the Anyi’s mast to see the Guild flag snapping in the wind. Looking around the deck, he saw that all of the crew, even the boy, carried knives or short, crudely made swords. A few held bows, all loaded and already aimed at the approaching ships.
Tayend made a small noise of disgust. “The crew doesn’t seem to have much confidence in you,” he murmured.
“They’re not taking any chances,” Dannyl replied. “Would you?”
“You’re our hero and protector. I know you’ll save us.”
“Must you keep saying that?”
Tayend chuckled. “I only want you to feel needed and appreciated.”
The lead boat did not slow as it neared the Anyi. Concerned that the pirates intended to ram the ship, Dannyl moved to the railing, ready to turn the boat’s bow. It swung about at the last moment, sails suddenly turning so that the boat was sailing alongside the Anyi.
Stocky, muscular men crowded these smaller vessels. Large shields were held up toward the ship, ready for a rain of missiles. Between them, Dannyl caught the glint of sunlight on blades. Two men held coiled ropes, weighted at one end with grappling hooks.