Read Knights Magi (Book 4) Online

Authors: Terry Mancour

Knights Magi (Book 4) (10 page)

BOOK: Knights Magi (Book 4)
4.32Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

“So, my lords,” the wizard continued, flopping the scroll onto the table, “I am recommending that young Sir Rondal, here, be given two more weeks of advanced study with the lecturers in Thaumaturgy, Enchantment, and Lesser Elemental Theory. 

“Sir Tyndal shall spend the next
four
weeks in training.  When he has satisfied the faculty of his basic competence in his deficient areas, then he will be sent after you.”


Four
weeks?” Tyndal almost shrieked.  “I’m going to be—”


Studying,
my lord,” Alwyn said, sharply.  “Studying every waking moment.  Taking every opportunity to improve your knowledge of our Art.”


That’s not fair!”
Tyndal almost shouted.  He struggled to keep himself under control.  “It’s not my fault that I didn’t get started until a few years ago!”

“And this is not a punishment, young man,” Alwyn riposted.  “It is an
opportunity
. An opportunity hundreds of magi across the Duchies would give a limb for, and you should keep that in mind.”

Tyndal opened his mouth to speak, and then closed it.  He knew the man was right.  Inarion Academy was the largest and most renowned school of magic in the western Duchies.  And one of only three in the new Kingdom. 

“I understand, Master Alwyn,” Tyndal sighed.  “I’m just not used to such . . . inactivity.”

“Nor should you be,” Alwyn chuckled.  “I was a young man once – even did a stint as a warmage, believe it or not, before I caught a flux.  I have heard that you occasionally practice in the guard’s yard – I encourage you to continue.  It will help keep you focused and your mind on your studies if you exercise an hour a day.”

“But both of you can count on a full course load for the next few weeks.  I suggest you take advantage of it.  From what I understand, your opportunities to study will likely be limited in the future. 

“This is a new world your Master has forged for us, and it appears you are destined to become his agents in it.  Whether that is a good thing or a bad thing remains to be seen . . . there are many of us who are suspicious of the consequences of overturning the Bans.

“But regardless of what happens, you are to be warmagi . . . Knights Magi, they’re calling it.  A blend of chivalry and sorcery – the very idea is novel.  And dangerous.”

“But Master,” Rondal objected, “we are faithful servants of the Spellmonger, and loyal to the King!”

“It isn’t your loyalty – or your dedication – that is at issue, Sir Rondal.  Young men are by nature hot-headed and foolish.  Such power in young hands is inherently dangerous.”  The old man looked out the window wistfully.  “Part of me dreads the trials ahead of us.  For good or ill, your master has smashed the old way of doing things.” 

He looked back at them sharply.  “And part of me is envious that I am not myself
young enough to enjoy the changes.  I do not blame you for your enthusiasm and eagerness,” he said, amused, “I merely urge you to temper it with education, caution . . . and wisdom.”

*
                            *                            *

*
                            *                            *

“I bet you’re
elated!
” Tyndal said accusingly as they left the Master’s Hall.  “Two more endless weeks of studying everything you want!”

“Are you kidding?  You’re the one who should be thrilled,” Rondal said, angrily.  “You get to read in peace for four weeks!  I’ve got to go to bloody
military school
in a fortnight!”

“How is
that
fair?” Tyndal agreed, disgusted.  “Why should you get to go first?”


Get
to go?” Rondal shrieked.  “I feel like I’ve been condemned . . . for being
better
than you!”

“What?” Tyndal whirled around to face his fellow apprentice.  “
Better
than me?”

“You know what I mean!” Rondal said, sourly.  “I know more than you.  I’m a better wizard than you.  I—”

Tyndal stared at him in disbelief.  “
Better
wizard?  Just how do you figure
that?
  You know more than I do . . .
on parchment
.  Did
you
defeat two Censors on your own?”

“If you remember correctly, Lady Pentandra and I were there to help out!”

“I was doing fine without you!”

“You were about to get
blasted
without us!”

“Without
her
, maybe. 
You
were pretty much useless!” Tyndal snorted.

“I was
following her orders!
” Rondal said, his nostrils flaring.


I
was saving Master Min’s family!” Tyndal stated triumphantly.

“And that makes you a better wizard?” Rondal asked in amazement?  “That speaks to your motivations, not to your skill.  Someday maybe we’ll settle who the better wizard is . . . but based on those marks you’d better hope it’s not any time soon!” his fellow apprentice nearly bellowed as he stomped away.

Tyndal seethed as he watched him go, but he didn’t have a ready retort.  Mostly because he couldn’t really argue with Rondal’s reasoning.  Tyndal had outstanding motivations . . . but even in the scrap he’d just bragged about he hadn’t used anything much classier than a cantrip.

Rondal was, Tyndal realized, the
better
wizard.  And for some reason that
infuriated
him.

Tyndal considered heading to the library to study, as he had been bidden . . . but his mind was not on scholarship, after his argument.  Instead he sought out the gatehouse guards and managed to work out some of his emotions with wooden swords and padded armor.

He’d been fortunate enough to arrive just as the duty shifts were changing, so he was able to spar with four guards each in turn.  One after the other they fell to his blade – or at least gave him a challenging fight.  Only Ancient Galdan had any success in keeping the lad’s swift strikes and well-delivered blows from bruising him.

“What’s gotten into you today, boy?” the older man said, after their third pass with the wooden practice swords.  “You seem driven by demons!”

“Just working out some tension,” Tyndal said, tight-lipped. 

“That’s more than mere examination stress,” the old veteran said, quietly.  “I’ve seen enough students come through here to tell.  Nay, lad . . . someone’s
gotten
to you.”

“I’m just not nearly as good a mage as I am a warmage,” snorted Tyndal as he strapped on the practice armor. 

Galdan shrugged as he traded his steel sword for a wooden one.  “That’s to be expected.  Takes years to become a good mage.”

“Well, I didn’t
get
years,” Tyndal complained, sourly as he came into guard.  “I got
months
.  And now everyone is expecting everything from me!”

Galdan chuckled as he returned Tyndal’s off-handed salute.  “Lay on!  Welcome to manhood, boy.  You’re going to spend the rest of your life chasing after your own inadequacies, no matter if you’re a mage or a miller.”  He rocked back and forth as he and Tyndal circled around a common axis, seeking advantage of their opponent.

“That’s hardly a comforting thought,” Tyndal said acidly as he threw a vicious combination of blows to head, torso and leg. 

“Nor was it meant to be,” the soldier said, philosophically, after neatly blocking them.  “There’s damn little comforting in manhood.  First we fail the expectations of our fathers,” he said, striking quickly each new point, “then of our masters, then our wives, and then our children.”

“So why even bother?” the younger man asked as he spun and struck at the man’s opposite shoulder.

“That’s what
you
have to figure out,” Galdan said, parrying the strike.  “Every man gets a different answer.  For some it’s duty,” he said, breaking away and resuming the fight, “or honor, or the pursuit of a craft or a vision.  For some it’s a woman . . . or
all
women.  For some they struggle and seek their entire lives and die before they figure it out.  For you?” he continued, looking at the apprentice with an appraising eye before rushing to attack.  “For you, I’d suggest you figure it out
quickly
.  Before it burns a passionate lad like you to cinders,” he said, as Tyndal blocked his blows.

“What if all I can come up with is ‘disappointment’?” asked Tyndal.  “That’s hardly a worthy aspiration.”

“Then you’d be doing as well as many a man,” the old Ancient agreed, stepping away and saluting after the rigorous session.  “Although I doubt you’ll do anything so uninteresting, Sir Tyndal.  I’d offer you another bout, but I think I see fresher victims approaching . . . “

He was not mistaken – a small group of students was approaching, four or five of the seniors, boys about his own age – Kaffin and Stanal, leading them.  He recognized a few, from brief introductions here and there and the occasional lecture.  Bandran of Gars was one, one of those boys who talked far too much, and the shifty-eyed Daris of Hoden’s Mead was there, too, a lad from the Castali Wilderlands whose reputation for being an asshole was greater than Tyndal’s.

“We heard you were practicing, Sir Tyndal” Kaffin said with a broad grin, when he got to the edge of the yard.  “Some of the lads wanted to watch . . . mayhap get in a little sparring, if you’re agreeable,” he added, casually.  “And not too winded.”

Tyndal surveyed the group and grinned.  “As long as you don’t accuse me of cheating again,” he agreed.

“Of course not,” Stanal said, hurriedly.  “You’re just . . . anyway, you said you weren’t even
using
warmagic.”

“I wasn’t, I swear,” Tyndal said, adjusting his helmet.

“So . . . what if you did?”

“What?” Tyndal asked, not understanding what the boy was asking.

“What if you used warmagic when you fought,” Kaffin explained.  “How many of us could you fight?  At one time?”

“And
win?
” Tyndal asked.  “You know, I have no idea.”

And so it was decided that Tyndal would try to fight four of the boys at the same time, much to the amusement of the guards and their captain.  They scraped together enough armor – with Tyndal promising not to hit any exposed bits – and outfitted four of the boys enough for the bout.  While they were armoring, another half-dozen had gathered from across the campus.

“I really haven’t tried this before,” Tyndal said, almost apologetically.  He suddenly realized that just beating them without a lesson wasn’t exactly . . . chivalrous.  He felt obligated to turn it into a demonstration, to remove the dishonor.

“The spell I’m about to use is a standard warmagi perception augmentation.  It burns power like cheap wood.  But it speeds your perceptions, as if time were slowing down around you.  A
psychomantic
charm,” he added, proudly displaying his new knowlege as he strapped his helmet on.  “It acts only on yourself, on your own mind . . . but it can make seconds seem to pass like minutes.”

He tapped into his witchstone around his neck and invoked the proper symbols in his mind, whispering the mnemonic that triggered the spell.  It had become second nature by now.  He had it hung almost all the time, now, thanks to the possibility of sudden attack by Censors or goblins or angry fathers and it got easier and easier with each use. “Lay on!” he shouted, and encouraged his fellow students to attack him as the spell took hold.

Suddenly everything around him was moving as if through a cloud of thick, cold honey.

It was during moments like this that Tyndal’s mind was the clearest.  When he could stop and consider his options and their consequences, carefully weigh his best course of action, and then proceed with confidence and commitment.  Augmented, he commanded his universe.  It was when he got rushed that he made clumsy mistakes. 

Within the first few seconds in his augmented state he had evaluated the strengths and weaknesses of each boy facing him.  None of them were particularly noteworthy – of them all, only Kaffin seemed to understand how to hold and wield a sword.  The rest had a litany of problems, from shoddy footwork to poor posture to embarrassingly weak grips.  They may have studied arms in their youth, but these scions of nobility hadn’t held a sword in earnest in years.

It was almost too easy.  Taking his wooden mageblade in hand, he carefully moved between his first two opponents while they were still lunging clumsily at him, and without otherwise touching them he smacked them both solidly in their helmets.  Bandran of Gars and Daris of Holden’s Mead fell like toy soldiers.  Not enough to injure, but enough to ring their chimes and knock them off-balance.

Stanal was being more cautious in his approach this time, but Tyndal couldn’t help but note how loosely he held his blade as he tried to direct the attack.  Smirking to himself at incredible speed, he plucked the wooden greatsword out of the big student’s hands, reversed it, and used the hilt to clunk the boy in the back of his helmet.  Once he was sure Stanal was going to end up face-down in the sand, Tyndal could turn his attention to the last boy, Kaffin.

BOOK: Knights Magi (Book 4)
4.32Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Energized by Edward M. Lerner
Point Blank by Catherine Coulter
El libro de los portales by Laura Gallego
Lust - 1 by Robin Wasserman