The Floodgate (3 page)

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Authors: Elaine Cunningham

BOOK: The Floodgate
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“That has never entered my mind, and I would wager a queen’s dowry that it never entered hers! Tzigone is a friend, nothing more.”

Andris looked unaccountably relieved. “She will be a wizard one day. The jordaini are supposed to serve Halruaa’s wizards, not befriend them.”

A young student jogged toward them, saving Matteo from acknowledging this disturbing truth. The boy’s gaze touched upon Andris and slid away.

“Andris has permission to depart the college,” he announced, “and the headmaster wishes to see Matteo.”

“I’ll come directly,” Matteo assured the boy. He waited until the messenger was beyond earshot before continuing. “It’s unfortunate the college’s wizards couldn’t test you, and save you the trip north.”

Andris grimaced. “One of the hazards of being a jordain. Only the magehounds’ magic has much effect on us. An important safeguard, of course.”

Matteo did not comment on the obvious irony: Andris had been condemned as a rogue jordain-falsely condemned-by a magehound from the Azuthan order. Once again, his life was in their hands.

He could not leave his friend to face this ordeal alone. “When do you leave?”

Andris turned away and began to collect his gear. “Tomorrow morning will be soon enough.”

“I’ll ride with you.” When Andris glanced back inquiringly, Matteo added, “When Kiva revives, I have questions for her that I’d rather not entrust to a magehound.”

“A compelling argument.” Andris rose and placed a translucent hand on Matteo’s shoulder. “You’d better see what the headmaster wants. The rest will wait patiently until tomorrow; Ferris Grail will not”

Matteo snickered at his friend’s all-too-apt jest, then set a brisk pace for the headmaster’s tower.

The ghostly jordain watched him go. With a sigh, he shouldered his gear and walked across the blazing soil to the guest quarters. It seemed odd to be a guest in the only home he’d ever known. On the other hand, after just a few months away, his life at the Jordaini College seemed like a distant dream.

Andris was not looking forward to the coming inquisition, but despite his experience with Kiva, he did not believe all magehounds were false and corrupt. No doubt the Azuthans had vigorously scoured their ranks in the aftermath of Kiva’s treachery. The inquisition would not be pleasant, but it would end. And then what? A return to the jordaini order? Service to a wizard too insignificant to sneer at the jordain’s translucent form and dubious fame?

An image came unbidden to mind: Kiva’s rapt and joyous face as she shattered the crystal globe retrieved from the Kilmaruu Swamp, freeing the spirits of long-dead elves trapped by the evil Akhlaur.

That image, Andris decided, mattered.

He had followed Kiva at first because he had believed she spoke for King Zalathorm. That fancy swiftly faded, but other reasons followed, reasons powerful enough to keep him at the elf woman’s side.

According to everything Andris knew and believed, according to the laws of the land and the decree of the Council of Elders, Kiva was a traitor to Halruaa. Was it possible that she followed some deeper, hidden truth? Was her cause worthy, even if the pathways she took toward it were sometimes twisted and dark?

Deep in thought, Andris pushed open the door to the guest chamber. He was greeted by a raucous little squawk and the flutter of bright wings.

His lips curved as he noted the parrot perched on the windowsill. No bigger than Andris’s fist, it was feathered in an almost floral pattern of pink and yellow. The bird stood tamely as the jordain edged forward. Its bright head tipped to one side, lending it a curious mien.

“Greetings, little fellow,” Andris said. “I suppose you’re a wandering pet. Congratulations on your escape. Never will I understand the impulse to cage birds for the sake of their songs!”

“I quite agree,” the bird said in a clear, approving tone. “Fortunately, this enlightened opinion seems to be common hereabouts. I come and go as I like.”

Andris fell back a step. Many of Halruaa’s birds could chatter like small, feathered echoes. Even sentient birds were not all that rare. He’d just never expected anyone at the Jordaini College might keep such a retainer.

“This is an unexpected pleasure, my small friend. Might I ask what brings you here?”

The bird sidled several steps closer. Its head craned this way and that, as if to reassure itself that no one might overhear. “A message.”

“A message? From whom?”

“Just read the books.”

“The books?” Andris said blankly.

Pink and yellow wings rustled impatiently. “Hidden under the mattress. Read them, put them back.”

The bird was gone. It didn’t fly away; it was simply… gone.

Consternation filled Andris. This was a wizard’s work, and serious work at that! Stern laws forbade the jordaini to use magic, or to have any magic used on their behalf. A blink bird might be either a natural beast or a conjured image, but both were forbidden.

That knowledge didn’t stop him from looking under the mattress. He picked up an ancient tome bound in thin, yellowed leather. The pages within were fine parchments aged to pale sepia and covered with faded writing. Andris took the book over to the window and began to read.

With each page he turned, he crept farther from the window, as if he could distance himself from the horrors revealed. He held in his hands the journal of Akhlaur! The deathwizard’s own hand had written these runes, turned these pages.

Andris’s skin crawled. His sick feeling intensified as he considered the book’s bindings. No animal yielded leather so thin and delicate. The skin had once been human, or more likely, elf.

Suspicion passed into certainty as he read on. Precise little runes and neat, detailed drawings related with matter-of-fact detachment atrocities beyond Andris’s darkest dreams. Elves had been the necromancer’s favorite test subjects, and none had endured so much as the girl-child Akivaria, more conveniently known as Kiva.

Andris felt like a man gripped by the mosquito fever-burning with wrath, yet racked with numbing indecision. This book held secrets that could destroy the jordaini order if they became known. Now, he knew.

As he had told Matteo, with knowledge comes responsibility.

With shaking hands, Andris took up the second book, which proved to be a detailed genealogy of the early jordaini order. As he read, he prayed that Matteo’s friend Tzigone did not know the details of his elf heritage, or realize that one of his forebears was still alive and currently a “guest” of the Azuthan temple.

He exploded into motion, snatching up his few belongings and stuffing them into his travel bag. After a moment’s hesitation, he added the books to his gear.

His eyes stung with unshed tears as he slipped away, using the route that his friend Themo employed for clandestine trips to the port of Khaerbaal. No one noticed the shadowy figure leave. For the first time, Andris was grateful the jordaini had become so adept at averting their eyes. He could move among them as if he were indeed a ghost.

So he was, by any measure that mattered. His future was gone, snatched away by the lingering madness of the wizard Akhlaur and by the jordaini masters who had first suppressed this knowledge, then spilled it over him in one scalding enlightenment. The only life Andris knew was that of a jordain. His future was gone.

On swift and silent feet, Andris went to claim his past.

Chapter Two

Matteo followed the jordaini lad who headed for the headmaster’s tower like a hunting hound hard on a trail.

“I know the way,” he pointed out. “If you’ve other duties to attend, don’t let me keep you from them.”

The boy shot an incredulous look over his shoulder. “Headmaster said to bring you.” And that, as far as he was concerned, was the beginning and end of the matter.

Matteo sighed, envying the lad his certainty. Life had been simpler when the credo of jordaini service-truth, Halruaa, and the wizard-lords-were three seamless aspects of a sacred whole.

The headmaster’s tower rose in a stately curve of white marble, resembling a slender stalk crowned by a budding lotus flower. The immense scale did not distort the sense of grace and serenity this blossom exuded. A lush garden surrounded the tower, and servants clad in simple green garments went about their tasks.

Despite the prohibitions on magic use, the wizard’s tower did not look out of place. The jordaini were taught to know magic nearly as well as any wizard. Matteo could recognize hundreds of spells just from the gesture of a wizard’s hand or from the combined scent of the spell components.

Having wizards for masters had always seemed normal and natural to him.

“Normal and natural,” Matteo muttered, with more bitterness than he’d realized he harbored. But there was nothing natural about the image that haunted him daily-an aging woman with a wan face and vacant eyes. He did not know her name. He knew nothing about her, except that she had given him life.

Oddly enough, if Tzigone’s hints proved true, his father’s name was well known to him. Most likely he had heard it his whole life without knowing its significance.

Since his return to the Jordaini College, Matteo often found himself searching his former masters’ faces in search of his own reflection. Of all the masters, Ferris Grail was most like him in appearance. This added an unsettling edge to the coming interview.

A green-robed servant admitted Matteo and led him to a small antechamber to await the headmaster’s summons. Here Matteo sat, and when he could no longer sit, he paced. He had ample time for both, for the sun rose to its zenith and sank a distance more than three times its diameter before the servant appeared again. By then Matteo was quietly seething. Why would Ferris Grail call him to the tower and then keep him waiting?

He schooled his face to calm and entered the headmaster’s study. Two wizards awaited him. Ferris Grail was a tall man in late middle life, thickly muscled and clad in the simple white garments of a jordain. He might have been mistaken for one of the warrior-scholars but for his neatly trimmed black beard and the gold talisman bearing his wizard’s sigil. Had he been jordaini he would have gone clean-shaven, and worn a medallion enameled with the jordaini emblem: semicircles of green and yellow, divided by a lightning bolt of cobalt blue. The second wizard was older, wizened by the passage of time and the casting of powerful magic. Vishna, Matteo’s favorite master, had been a battle wizard before he’d retired to teach at the Jordaini College.

Ferns Grail waved Matteo in. “There is a message for you,” he said without preamble, gesturing to a moonstone globe mounted on a pedestal.

Matteo glanced at it, and his brow furrowed in consternation. Reflected in the globe was a woman’s face, pale as porcelain and preternaturally serene. Her dark eyes were expressionless, skillfully painted with kohl, and enormous in her unnaturally white face. It was a beautiful face, framed by an elaborate wig of white and silver curls, upon which rested a silver crown.

“Queen Beatrix is waiting,” urged the headmaster.

The young jordain shot him an incredulous look. Ferris Grail cleared his throat. “The queen knows the restriction upon her jordaini counselors. She would not summon you through magic if the need were not great. Service to Halruaa’s wizards is the first rule you must follow.”

Matteo was not certain of that, but upon reflection he decided there was no real harm in the scrying globe. Just that morning, he and Andris had practiced with swords rather than matched daggers, the traditional jordaini weapons. Truth was not flexible. The length of weapons and the means of communicating with one’s patron were.

His conscience accepted this reasoning, yet Matteo’s feet felt leaden as he moved before the globe and into his patron’s line of vision.

Nothing in the queen’s expression indicated recognition, but after a moment she said his name in an even, almost toneless voice. “I am ready for my walk upon the Promenade. You may come for me.”

Matteo suppressed a sigh. “Your Majesty, you gave me leave to attend urgent business. I have been absent from the palace for a moon-cycle and more.”

The queen’s expression did not alter in the slightest. She did not appear chagrined to have forgotten, or peeved by Matteo’s absence. “Is this business finished?”

The expansion of the Swamp of Akhlaur had been halted, the laraken driven away. Kiva was in the hands of the Azuthan priests. The jordaini falsely condemned by Kiva and conscripted to fight in her personal army had been cleared of all wrongdoing. By any measure but his own, Matteo had met and surpassed his obligations as a counselor.

“It is not, my queen,” he said at last “There are matters yet to attend.”

“Very well.” She spoke as if his answer, or indeed his presence, was of no consequence to her. Her image winked out of the globe, leaving nothing but faintly glowing moonstone.

“Matters to attend?” demanded Ferris Grail. “What might these be?”

Matteo gave the older man a respectful bow. “Personal matters, my lord. If you have questions, please address them to my patron.”

This was as close to falsehood as Matteo had ever come. He did not actually claim that he did the queen’s business, but his words could be interpreted as such. Ferris Grail raised one black eyebrow into a skeptical arch.

Vishna leaped from his chair and seized Matteo’s arm. “Well, then, you’d best be off,” he said heartily. “You’ve lazed about here long enough.”

Matteo allowed the old wizard to hustle him out of the tower. When they reached the courtyard, he disengaged himself from Vishna’s grasp and inclined his head in a grateful bow. “That was kind of you. I had no wish to prolong that meeting.”

Vishna sent him a wistful smile. “First listen to some advice, my son, then decide whether to thank me or not. You’ve many gifts, but lying isn’t among them! If you’re set upon learning this art, I’d suggest you’d practice before a mirror until you can school the guilt from your face!”

The wizard’s tone was light and teasing, but Matteo could think of no response. What did one say when a trusted master spoke of competent falsehood as if it were a good and worthy goal?

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