The Magehound (4 page)

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Authors: Elaine Cunningham

BOOK: The Magehound
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Chapter Two

The battle wizard smirked and made a circular open-handed gesture. A miniature sun appeared in the air above his upturned palm. It promptly exploded, sending an arrow of brilliant liquid fire racing toward Matteo.

The young man shifted his stance wider to absorb the impact and lifted his matched daggers into a gleaming X. The bolt of magic hurled itself against the crux of gleaming silver, then skittered along the daggers, dissipating in scattered motes that sparkled off the razor-sharp edges of the blades.

Matteo followed the classic parry with the recommended attack. With one smooth, practiced movement he flipped one dagger into the air, caught it by the tip, and hurled it toward his opponent.

The older man’s eyes widened as the blade whirled toward him, but he stood his ground and began to gesture frantically. Matteo kicked into a run, not waiting to see the outcome of either attack or counter spell. He heard the metallic click of steel upon stone and shielded his eyes against the quick flare of sparks, but still he came on.

At the last moment, he dropped to the ground and spun, sweeping one leg out wide and hard at the wizard’s ankles. Matteo grimaced as his shin met seemingly solid stone, but he sucked up the pain and quickly got his throbbing leg back under him. He leaped toward the fallen wizard and seized one of the man’s stone-hard ankles. With his remaining dagger, he slashed at the sole of the wizard’s foot. The silver blade sliced through the leather and drew a yelp of surprise from the downed man.

The stoneskin spell was a common defense, but like most spells it was not invulnerable. Its creator had overlooked a common manifestation of the natural magical world: like repels like. The natural stone beneath the wizard’s feet rebuffed the flattery of the stoneskin spell’s imitation, leaving the soles of the caster’s feet vulnerable. Learning the weaknesses of each spell, parrying and countering close-in magical attacks-these were some of the most important fighting strategies a jordain learned in his training. Matteo couldn’t help feeling a surge of satisfaction as he rose to his feet and held out a hand to his fallen master.

But the wizard sat cross-legged on the packed earth of the training field, holding his insulted foot and regarding his sliced shoe dolefully.

“Was that last bit truly necessary, lad? You can make your point without actually using it.”

“Always wield the sword of truth, for it is the keenest weapon,” Matteo quoted blithely.

“And the leg of stone is the hardest one,” said a wry voice behind him.

With a grin, Matteo whirled to face his closest friend. Andris was a fifth-level jordain, a student in the same form as Matteo. They were both due to graduate at summer’s end. Classmates and friends since infancy, they competed in all things like fond and contentious brothers.

No observer would take the two men as natural brothers, however, for they were as unlike physically as two men could be. Andris was tall and lean and exceedingly fair for a Halruaan. His narrow eyes were a greenish hazel, and his long, braided hair a dark auburn. No amount of sun could turn his skin the rich golden brown common to the dozen or so other jordaini who practiced on the training field, shirtless and sweating and gleaming like chiseled bronze in the hot sun.

Matteo was more like the other men in appearance. He stood perhaps a finger’s width below the six-foot mark, and he possessed the olive skin and dark chestnut hair common to Halruaans of good blood. His eyes were nearly black, his features strong, and his fine, narrow nose was curved like a scimitar’s blade. Despite the more than a handspan’s difference in their height, the two young men balanced each other in mass. For this reason, they were frequent sparring partners on the teeter boards and cloudcarts, two devices that taught the jordaini to fight under magically imposed circumstances. Wizards were known to drag themselves and their opponents into the sky for aerial combat, thinking to thus gain the advantage. The jordaini might be utterly devoid of magical ability, but they did not cede a single pace of battleground to wizardry tactics.

Matteo folded his arms and sent a cocky grin at his friend. “A stone leg is a hard weapon, that much is true. But you notice that good master Vishna has found himself a comfortable seat and a sudden need for new shoes.”

“I’ve also noticed that your shin is turning an unbecoming shade of purple,” Andris returned dryly. “There’s a better way.”

Instantly Matteo lost interest in their repartee. “Show me.”

The tall jordain sent an inquiring look at Vishna. The master nodded and rose to his feet. Andris ran at the wizard, dropping to the ground as Matteo had done and executing the leg sweep in much the same fashion. But when Andris dropped into the crouch, he did not face Vishna as the attack pattern prescribed, but instead presented his right side. When his leg struck the wizard, he hit with the hardened muscle of his calf rather than the poorly padded bone of his shin.

Matteo could see the sense of it. There would be less pain, and the modified attack virtually eliminated the risk of broken bones, a not uncommon hazard of this particular sequence. At this very moment, there were two second-form students in the infirmary, wearing plasters and glumly enduring the ministrations of Mystra’s clergy. They would be back on the field in days, but in the meantime, they would have to suffer many sly comments from their fellows.

“There is a problem,” Matteo observed. “The initial attack is vastly improved, that I readily concede. But once the wizard is down, you are out of position for the knife thrust.”

“Not so,” Andris countered. “I’ll show you.”

“Not with my help, you won’t,” protested Vishna as he struggled to his feet. “Stoneskin or flesh, my bones are sufficiently rattled from clanging about on the ground. I’m for the baths.”

“May you walk in truth’s light,” both students said in unison, speaking the formal leave-taking between jordaini. The wizard flapped a hand in their direction in a less than formal gesture of acknowledgment as he walked gingerly away.

“I’ll be your wizard,” Matteo offered, speaking with the recklessness that only a jordain could understand.

Andris made a small involuntary sign of warding. “Mind your tongue, fool!” he said with quiet urgency. “You’ve more brass than brains.”

“A metaphor,” protested Matteo. “It was only a metaphor. An occasional borrowing from bardic style enhances a jordain’s discourse.”

“That may be, but metaphors can be risky things. There are many among us who consider truth a grim and literal matter, and some that might take you amiss if they overheard such claims.”

Matteo sighed. “Just do the attack.”

His friend nodded and burst toward him in a running charge. Before Matteo could brace himself, he felt the ground slam into him and saw stars dance in the morning sky. He blinked away the sparkles of light and watched as Andris continued his spin. But the red-haired jordain seized Matteo’s ankle, using the hold to come to an abrupt stop. He pulled hard, reversing his direction and swinging his free hand toward Matteo’s foot.

Andris slammed his fist into the ball of his opponent’s foot. In real battle, he would hold a knife. There were points of power and pain on the sole of the foot, and a jordain knew them well. Even without the weapon, the precisely placed attack sent icy lightning coursing up Matteo’s leg. He gritted his teeth to hold back a howl of pain.

“That works,” he conceded in a gritty whisper.

Andris rose to his feet and extended a hand. Matteo grasped his friend’s wrist and hauled himself up. His leg was numb nearly to the waist, and he hobbled around in small, pained circles as he awaited the return of blood to the offended member.

“Reminds me of the time I failed to dodge the aura of Vishna’s cone of ice,” Matteo said ruefully. He looked at his friend with great admiration. “You have improved the attack.”

The tall jordain shrugged. “This tactic would not work for everyone. Speed is needed, and it does not hurt that I am built more like a snake than a bull. A man with more muscle couldn’t halt his momentum quickly enough.”

“Not without ripping off the wizard’s leg at the hip,” Matteo said dryly. He snapped his fingers and grinned. “There’s an interesting variation. Why couldn’t Themo execute your attack, then use the wizard’s stone leg as a bludgeon?”

They both smirked at the image this painted of their classmate. Themo was taller even than Andris, and as thick-bodied and strong as the huge, hairy Northmen who occasionally came to the port cities for trade or adventure. At heart, Themo was less a scholar than a warrior, and he’d gotten in trouble more than once for sneaking away to the taverns to provoke battles.

“He could have used just such a weapon at the Falling Star,” Andris agreed, his eyes twinkling at the memory.

But Matteo turned sober. “Indeed. Had you not been there to devise a battle tactic, the fool might have died that night, and his friends with him.”

The jordain gave another diffident shrug. “I cannot match you in feats of memory or debate,” he said frankly. “Strategy is the thing that interests me.”

“Obsesses you,” his friend corrected him heartily. “Have you made much headway with the Kilmaruu Paradox?”

It was meant as a rhetorical question. Matteo chose his words to express Andris’s fascination with even the most difficult and obscure military puzzles. He was therefore surprised and intrigued by the light that leaped into his friend’s hazel eyes.

A studiously casual expression settled over Andris’s face. “It is a classic dilemma,” he said. “The Halruaan navy has been occupied with it for many years. Not only does this question absorb the best minds stationed at the naval base at Zalasuu, but also the two thousand troops who hold the fort beyond.”

“Not to mention the dozen or so adventurers and wizards who disappear into the swamp each year,” Matteo added. “As the proverb goes, the Swamp of Kilmaruu keeps the numbers of fools in Zalasuu low.”

“Ah, but therein lies the paradox,” his friend said slyly. “It is written that the mages and adventures who disappear into the swamp only seem to whet the appetite of the undead who haunt it, drawing them out into the surrounding countryside. Massive attacks into the swamp have proven disastrous to the city and its outlying villages. Yet if the military does nothing, the undead will slip into the Bay of Azuth and bedevil the ships. Disaster lies at the end of either course, action or restraint.”

Matteo nodded. History, particularly military history, had been part of their studies for years. But at the moment, he was more interested in the subtle implication in his friend’s words than in this old puzzle.

“The paradox has always been understood as the futility of either action or restraint. Your words imply a different interpretation.”

The tall jordain clasped his hands behind his back, absently watching a winged lizard crawl across the sky as he chose his next words. “Suppose that someone devised a formula for attack. Suppose he researched it extensively, worked out the strategy from every conceivable variation fate could present. Suppose that someone proposed this solution to his masters as his fifth-form thesis. Do you suppose that such a man might get an appointment as counselor to a battle wizard? Perhaps,” he added wistfully, “such a man might flout tradition and gain not just a counselor’s role, but his own command.”

Matteo’s jaw dropped. For a long moment he struggled to take in this revelation. “Is it true? You have solved the Kilmaruu Paradox?”

“I think so,” Andris said modestly.

“You think so?” Matteo echoed reprovingly. This matter could determine the entire course of his friend’s life. It was too important for light words and imprecise speech. “A jordain thinks first, and only then speaks.”

It was a familiar proverb, one that had guided their training for over twenty years. The words had the desired effect The young man’s chin lifted confidently.

“Yes. Yes, I have devised a battle strategy that will clear the swamp of undead.”

Matteo let out a whoop and threw his arms around his friend, spinning him around and off the ground. They fell into a tangled heap and began to wrestle like puppies at play.

After quite some time, they tired of this sport and broke apart, sprawling out on the ground and panting with contented exhaustion. Andris sent a wistful look at his friend. “You really think that this will earn me a position with a patron of note?”

Matteo linked his hands behind his head and smiled. “I wouldn’t be surprised if Grozalum himself demanded your hire,” he said, naming the powerful illusionist who ruled the port city of Khaerbaal, Halruaa’s most important naval base.

“Jordaini at alert,” demanded a deep, sonorous voice from the gatehouse. “First honors. Wizards in the house.”

The two young men scrambled to their feet and hurried into position at the edge of the training field. Their fellow students gathered there, standing at respectful attention, feet at precise shoulder width, hands clasped behind their backs, and eyes level as they awaited the arrival of the visiting dignitary.

Life in Halruaa was orderly, governed by laws and customs that were detailed and precise. Protocol was an important part of any higher education, for each stratum of society was afforded certain privileges and honors. Wizards enjoyed the highest position, hence first honors. The posture assumed by the jordaini showed the respect that propriety demanded, but it also bespoke their own high status. Second in class only to the wizards, they were a highly trained elite. After all, they represented truth, a power quite different from magic but just as powerful in its sphere. Law and custom decreed that only a jordain could meet a wizard’s eyes at all times. Those of lesser rank lowered their gaze respectfully before addressing a strange magic-wielder.

Matteo’s eyes widened as the wizardly entourage swept into the compound. Quickly he schooled his face into a more seemly composure, but he couldn’t help but stare at the unusual visitors.

A score of well-armed men marched into the field, following each other in two lines that framed two extraordinary creatures. The larger of these was a wemic, a centaurlike creature that appeared to be half man, half lion. The beast’s body was massive, nearly the size of a small horse, and his golden-skinned torso was as thick and muscular as Themo’s. Matteo made a note to compose a satire for his classmate on this theme at first opportunity.

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