Mind of the Magic (Arhel Book 3)

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Authors: Holly Lisle

Tags: #Holly Lisle, #fantasy, #magic, #Arhel, #trilogy, #high fantasy, #archeology, #jungle, #First Folk, #Delmuirie Barrier

BOOK: Mind of the Magic (Arhel Book 3)
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Arhel Book 3

MIND
OF THE
MAGIC

Holly Lisle

Contents

Title Page

Chapter 1

Chapter 2

Chapter 3

Chapter 4

Chapter 5

Chapter 6

Chapter 7

Chapter 8

Chapter 9

Chapter 10

Chapter 11

Chapter 12

Chapter 13

Chapter 14

Chapter 15

Chapter 16

Chapter 17

Chapter 18

Chapter 19

Chapter 20

Chapter 21

Chapter 22

Chapter 23

Chapter 24

Chapter 25

Chapter 26

Chapter 27

Chapter 28

Chapter 29

Chapter 30

Chapter 31

Chapter 32

Chapter 33

Chapter 34

Chapter 35

Chapter 36

Chapter 37

Chapter 38

Chapter 39

Chapter 40

Glossary

Afterword

About the Author

More by Holly Lisle

Copyright Page

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Chapter 1

THE old sign on the massive, carved wooden gate read:

Qualified. Certified-Safe Magics—

Guarding.
Transporting
and Livestock Our Specialties

Also Historical Research

We Buy Books!

Private and Group Lessons Watterdaes

NO LOVE SPELLS!!!

Faia Rissedote finished nailing up the new sign beneath it.

Rede-Flute Lessons Fueredaes and Wuendaes

Hiller-Crafted Weaving, Inquire Within

Herbals and Healing Extracts

Reasonable Rates

She might as well have put up a sign that said, “Give me something to keep me busy… please.” She made a face and stepped back from her handiwork to get a better look at it—and saw Matron Magdar Netweaver strolling up the walkway from the marketplace, her acquisitions floating in front of her. Magdar nodded politely. “Pleasant daymeet, Faia.”

“And to you, Magdar.”

Faia’s neighbor stopped to study the sign. Faia watched one eyebrow slide upward. “Rede-flute lessons and weaving?”

Faia nodded.

“I suppose the new magic is cutting into your other business, eh?”

“You could say that.”

Magdar gave her a purse-lipped little smile. “Thought I did.” She smiled again, and said, “You really ought to see the new tower Gammitch Leech is for magicking up—over to the corner of Warren and Fancy, it is. Thin as a needle and tall as the heavens, eyah—sparkles in the daylight like a big block of southern ice. He plans to go hunting another missus soon as he finishes it. Reckon he’ll be for stopping at your doorstep, same as the rest, eyah?”

Faia ignored the last remark. She looked southwest and discovered that she could see Gammitch’s magic-built tower rising over Omwimmee Trade—a thin green line that stretched skyward like a thread stiffened and stood on end. “Doesn’t look very stable,” she offered at last.

“Don’t reckon it needs to be, do you? Plenty of magic to go round nowadays—not just for you big-city magickers like it used to be.”

Faia didn’t argue with her neighbor, although she disagreed vehemently with what Magdar had said. She’d been the most vocal naysayer in the town meetings that followed the sudden, inexplicable rise in the accessibility of magic four months ago, and no one in town had forgotten that fact. Or forgiven, either. Her neighbors figured that she was jealous of their sudden good luck, or worse, that she was trying to take advantage of them by preventing them from using the mysterious magical power they suddenly all had.

That wasn’t the case at all, of course. Faia knew what power without knowledge could do—she had argued from the standpoint of a woman who had once accidentally melted a town; they argued from the standpoints of people who not only had not melted any towns, but who had never seen it done either, and who figured it could not have been as bad as it sounded. They were determined that they were going to do things magically, whether they knew what they were doing or not—and when that fact became apparent, Faia shut up. She had the chore of putting back together two of the three idiot-wizards who blew themselves up, and she had given the widow of the third a nice jar for his ashes. Meanwhile, she kept her opinions to herself.

“Speaking of men looking for a missus,” Magdar said, interrupting Faia’s gloomy ruminations, “I heard you turned away Geltie’s son Ludd when he came asking for you to wed him.”

Faia sighed. She’d
known
that story would get around. “You heard true.”

Magdar shook her head and put her hands on her hips. “So what’s that now?… Ludd, and Wicker’s boy Nait, and the other butcher’s youngest… I can’t rightly recall his name…”

“Stord.” Faia supplied the name. Magdar would have remembered it sooner or later anyway.

Magdar snapped her fingers. “Stord. Exactly.” The older woman frowned. “A girl like you shouldn’t be so picky. They won’t keep coming forever, you know. Once you lose your looks, there’s not a one of them will give you good daymeet.”

“That’s hardly a recommendation to marry them now,” Faia murmured dryly.

Magdar seemed not to have heard her. “You having that child and all, you’re lucky there’s any who come courting anyway. When I was young, the men of Omwimmee Trade would never have looked twice at a girl who’d been…” Magdar glanced up and down the street and her voice dropped to a loud whisper. “…with men.” Her neighbor nodded at Faia’s five-year-old daughter, Kirtha, who was at that moment sprawled on her stomach on the raised walkway, studying the bugs that crawled along the cracks. “The proof that you have done
that
is sitting over there for all to see. She’s hardly something that you can flaunt—bit of an embarrassment to your character, truth be known. You really ought to get another man while one is still willing to look at you, eyah.”

Faia looked at Kirtha, who was kicking her feet in the air, and giving every impression of being engrossed by the insect world below her—but Faia would have bet her house her daughter hadn’t missed a word. “She’s no embarrassment to me.”

Magdar sniffed. “No. You wouldn’t be ashamed of yourself. But then, you’re outlander, and citified, too. Not a one of us in Omwimmee Trade doesn’t know about city morals—you could find more morals in a tomcat than a city girl.” She shook her head and gave Faia a pitying smile, as if what she’d said was not an insult, but simply a fact of life. Faia was used to both the assumptions and the expression. “By anysuch, you’d get invited to events if you were respectably married, you know. Everyone wants to be polite, but, Faia… the town has to have some standards.”

They were stupid standards, Faia thought, but they were standards… and the town had them. By the bucketload.

She sighed and imagined marrying dull Ludd, who had never been beyond Omwimmee Trade and had no desire to see anyplace else, who had spent his whole life cleaning and gutting and drying fish, and who had no other interests. She couldn’t imagine marrying him just so she could get invited to the exciting social events of Omwimmee Trade. The weaving-gathers, the house-raisings, the sitting-ins for births and deaths—and for all of that, she would only have to put up for the rest of her life—or his—with the sullen company of a man who talked almost not at all, and who, when he did deign to speak, spoke of fish.

“When I find someone I want to take public bond with, I will,” Faia said. “But I have never been in love, and I won’t choose a bondmate until I am.”

Magdar shrugged. “I wouldn’t waste love on a husband, girl. I couldn’t stand either of mine—the one I have now is a loathsome toad. Husbands are to give you a place in society. If you want love, that’s what backlight lads are for. Get married, get some respectability, and you can have all the love you want then, can’t you?”

Faia bit her lip and nodded, not saying a word. The town had its standards, all right.

Magdar looked at the sign again. “Rede-flute, eh? Maybe my youngest three would be interested in lessons. Would get them off my hearth for a bit, any case.” She snorted. “Eyah. You think about what I said.” Then she sauntered away, her groceries once again floating in front of her. Magdar was nearly to her own front door when Faia realized the back of her neighbor’s long, full skirt was smoking. Faia stared down at her daughter, who was glaring after the departing busybody; she looked back up just in time to see the first flames lick along the hem of the fabric.

“Kirtha!” Faia sent a fire-smothering spell racing after Magdar. The neighbor’s skirt sizzled and the flames died. Magdar appeared not to have noticed at all. But if she hadn’t yet, she would soon, and would come back with another lecture—the one about children who didn’t feel the switch often enough. Faia picked up her daughter and dragged her into the house. “Kirtha, you can’t do things like that!”

“I don’t like her, Mama.” Kirtha looked unrepentant.

Faia understood exactly how her daughter felt. She wasn’t fond of Magdar Netweaver either. That didn’t change anything. “The Lady’s Gift of magic is something you never misuse, Kirtha. You never make a spell in anger, or out of greed, or for frivolous or wasteful reasons.”

“Hmp!” Kirtha was unimpressed.

Faia put her down in the walled courtyard to play. “We are going to discuss this again later—but I want you to think about what you did. If I hadn’t seen Matron’s skirt catch fire, she could have been hurt. That would have been very bad, Kirtha. Very, very bad.”

Bad to a five-year-old was a meaningless term, and Faia knew it. And teaching a five-year-old with too much power and not enough self-control the ethics of magic was nearly impossible. But I’ll manage, Faia promised herself. Somehow, I’ll make her understand.

Just then, a castle sailed into view over the west roof of the house, chasing clouds eastward; gaudy pennants flew from its graceful whitestone turrets, and its roofs flashed silver in the sunlight. The sound of music and laughter drifted down to Faia and Kirtha. Faia stared upward while the castle floated overhead, and listened to the happy sounds that came from it.

The world was full of the insane, she thought. Those people in the castle were proof of it. True, magic in inconceivable amounts had recently become available to almost everyone in Arhel. And true, there now seemed to be almost no limits to what some people could do magically. But a sudden unexplained jump in the availability of strong ley fines seemed to her to be a reason for caution, not for building castles in the air, of all things.

A fair-haired woman leaned over the parapet and fluttered a gaudy silk flag in greeting. Faia gave her only polite acknowledgment, the sort of greeting that seemed appropriate for an insane stranger one couldn’t simply ignore. Kirtha, however, waved her arms wildly and shouted, “Bye, castle,” until it drifted over the east roof and vanished from sight.

When it was gone, Kirtha quit waving, and her back stiffened.

Now it comes, Faia thought.

Kirtha turned to face her, with brows furrowed and lower lip stuck out. “I want a flyin’ castle,” she demanded, her voice pitched shrill and loud.

Insanity was to be the order of the day, then, Faia reflected She missed the world of four months ago, when life and its occurrences still made some sense. She told her daughter, “No,” keeping her voice calm and reasonable.

Kirtha tossed her red hair and stamped her foot. “I want a flyin’
castle!”

Faia rubbed her fingertips against her forehead. They’d had this argument several times a day since the first such castle had appeared, perhaps two months earlier—and Kirtha never, ever listened to reason. “Those castles are dangerous,” she said at last. “And no matter how much you want one, you cannot have one!”

“You’re mean! You could make me one, but you’re jus’ mean! I want to fly in the sky an’ live on a cloud. An’ you won’t let me!” Kirtha closed her eyes and held her breath, and her pale, freckled face turned as red as her hair. She pulled in threads of magic from the earth and air and in an instant built thunderclouds that appeared suddenly, filling the tiny patch of sky just above the garden; the clouds crackled with energy and rumbled as they bumped against each other. Little bolts of lightning shot from cloud to cloud.

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