Dream Magic (3 page)

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Authors: B. V. Larson

Tags: #Literature & Fiction, #Genre Fiction, #Horror, #Dark Fantasy, #Science Fiction & Fantasy, #Fantasy, #Magic & Wizards, #Mythology & Folk Tales, #Fairy Tales, #Arthurian, #Superhero, #Sword & Sorcery

BOOK: Dream Magic
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“You don’t have to seek forever. Just for a year and a day. That’s all, and if you tried your best and failed, you will be released from your bargain.”

Trev considered. He had never bedded a woman before and was as curious about the process as any young man his age might be. He’d always thought he would end up going to the Twilight lands to find a nice elf girl, or falling in love with a Haven girl the way his father Puck had done. Marriage had been drummed into him as a clear first step. But this way—this way seemed quicker and infinitely simpler. Better still, if he gave into this woman’s advances, he would not be breaking any vow to his mother.

On the second point, he was less interested. To him, a year was still a long time. His lifespan would measure many centuries, possibly even millennia. But he didn’t want to waste an entire year on a fool’s errand.

“A year is too long,” he said. “I’ll seek the Jewel until Midsummer’s Eve—no longer.”

Morgana’s mood shifted with startling rapidity.
She made a hissing sound, ripped her hands from his and slapped him with the same fingers that had been caressing his a moment before.

“Such impudence!” she said.

Trev touched his cheek, finding three bleeding lines there. Her nails were amazingly sharp. “I take it you reject my offer? A pity. I was looking forward to the first part.”

She looked him up and down hotly. Finally, she sighed and nodded her head. “You intrigue me more than I do you. I find the situation disturbing. Knowing you are at least part Faerie, I hope you take your vows seriously.”

“I do.”

“Very well, let us consummate this deal now. The blood-color is already gone. The purple has faded to umber as well. Let’s make love in the heart of the green, where the light still shines the brightest.”

And so Trev took her into the green light. He laid with her there upon the moldering leaves with the brilliance of the rainbow shining down on his bare back. Morgana left many bleeding lines on his skin, but he didn’t feel the razor-like cuts until later when he put his tunic back on and they chafed and burned at the touch of cloth.

Trev found the entire experience exhilarating, and no longer regretted that he had chased down the rainbow to its termination.

“Now,” he said as they lay entwined. “Tell me how you summoned the rainbow. Do you possess Lavatis?”

“No,” she said. “That Jewel calls upon an elemental form of the rainbow—a mindless living creature. My power over it is not so great. I can only call the light and place it where I will.”

“But how?”

“With this,” she said, tapping the Jewel on her breast.

Trev looked at it, and nodded. “Is it a Jewel of Power then? If so, which one?”

She laughed and pushed him away from her. “That was not part of our bargain. Now, you must go and seek for me, until Midsummer’s Eve.”

He pressed himself close to her and kissed her again. She resisted at first, but then allowed the contact.

When he had parted company with Morgana, he was stricken by a single thought: Had he found the good
face of the rainbow—or the evil hind end of it?

He could not be certain if
the witch he’d met qualified as a blessing, or a curse.

 

* * *

 

Mari, hearing his tale, was quite certain that her innocent son had found a terror rather than a treasure. She was horrified that he’d lost his virginity to some unknown beastly woman of power. She raged in turns at the temptress Morgana and then at silly Trev. She lectured him on a dozen points at great length, until Trev found his attention wandering again.

“How could you get yourself into something like this, Trev?”
she demanded.

“Pardon me,
Mother,” Trev said, leaning his cheek upon his fist. “But didn’t you fall for Dad in a similar fashion?”

Mari’s eyes narrowed. Trev knew this sort of talk was certain to annoy her, but he’d become annoyed himself.

“When I fell prey to your father, the Faerie were new to the Haven. At that point, never in my entire life did I really expect to meet them. They seemed exciting and different. But the situation was entirely different in your case. You’ve met the Faerie many times—you’ve lived with them. You knew what you were getting into. You knew the dangers of chasing a rainbow, but you did it anyway.”

Trev heaved a sigh. “I suppose. But we both know
why
I did it. You have to understand the urge I feel to play with them, to seek them out. You did the same with Father, even after the first time you met a strange elf in wood. You went back for him. You did your best to find him again.”

Mari’s face became purple. Trev thought it was interesting when
she did that. In this case, he marked it up to a volatile mixture of rage and embarrassment.

She cuffed him then, and he didn’t bother to duck. She’d only rarely struck him, but fortunately, it no longer hurt when she did it. He was too big now to care much.

“Do you feel better now?” he asked her gently.

Her sides heaved and tears ran down her face.

“No,” she said. “I feel terrible. I feel like I’m not getting through to you. I don’t want you to go off adventuring in the woods like your father did. He’s dead because of it.”

“Nonsense,” Trev replied. “He rambled for centuries without being killed. He died defending the Haven and all of us, not doing something foolhardy. He fought the Dead, and lost his battle. Could have happened to anyone.”

Mari calmed down. She nodded. “You’re right about that. I’m sorry to imply otherwise. But I just don’t want to lose you. You understand that, don’t you?”

“To a point. You see, this world we live in is much bigger than the Haven. When the Dead came, I learned that staying quiet as mice in Riverton doesn’t guarantee anything. It’s strength that wins the day
when events take a bad turn.”

Mari gave him an entirely different appraising look. “What are you on about?”

“Just as I said: I seek strength.”

“By bounding around in the woods like a Wee One? By fornicating with random women met in strange places?”

Trev smiled slightly. “By having experiences. By interacting with beings of power and besting them.”

“To defeat the powerful when they become aggressive, you must have power of your own. Quick feet and quick wits won’t save you then.”

“Exactly. That’s where we agree.”

Mari’s eyes narrowed. “So you seek power of you
r own?”

“Like Brand’s, yes.”

“There’s only one Axe.”

“But there are
nine Jewels. I mean to have one. Preferably one that doesn’t have a defending owner at the moment.”

“You can’t mean—oh, Trev—you can’t
intend to take the Black!”

Trev’s eyes widened in surprise. He shook his head seriously. “No mother. I’m not mad
! I touched the Black once, and that was enough for a lifetime. I don’t want a Jewel of such evil power.”

“They’re all evil,”
Mari said. “I touched the Red, and I recall it well. I know what I’m talking about. Trev, tell me you’ll drop this folly. I know you promised that witch, but you don’t have to do it. Seek and fail. Search for months in all the wrong places, that’s all you have to do. Then you will be released from your bargain.”

He shook his head. “No, that isn’t my plan. I’m leaving tonight, in fact. I’ll reach the Deepwood by nightfall and I’ll leave the Haven behind.”

“Trev,” said Mari, sounding a trifle desperate, “I know I can’t talk you out of this. I know you too well—you’re just like your father. But I want you to speak to someone before you leave.”

“Who?”

“Brand. He’s the only man I know who has mastered his Jewel and not the other way around. Talk to him before you go. And listen to what he says. Will you do that for me?”

Trev thought about it.

“Yes,” he said at last. “And now I must leave to seek my fortune, dear mother.”

They embraced, and Trev left soon after. Mari gazed after him, and he could feel her eyes on his back and
he knew that hot tears ran down her face.

Before he’d gone a hundred steps, h
e felt like going back to her. He felt homesick already. This was different from wandering alone in the woods and on the mounds at twilight. This was so much more serious.

But he kept his resolve firm. He waved once over his shoulder as he reached a copse of rowan trees before vanishing beneath them. Then his childhood home was lost to view, and he began to run lightly down the trail toward the Berrywine River.

Feeling happy, he whistled a lively tune. Birds squawked down at him, voicing their irritation.

 

Chapter Two

Old Hob’s Warning

 

Brand came down the steps of his castle, his slippers slapping on each flat plane of stone. The place was newly built but seemed a thousand years old already. The Kindred builders had used the old scattered stones from centuries past, but it wasn’t just that. He guessed that one could not erase ages of history, all those ghostly memories, with a decade of rebuilding.

Rabing Castle
had finally become what he’d dreamed it could be all along. Since he’d first laid eyes on the ruins in the swampy lands North of North End, he’d wanted to restore the glory of the castle. Now that he’d managed it, on most days he felt content.

He’d drained the swamp by diverting the river to a new course around his lands. It ran clear and clean, and no longer flooded the
flatlands in spring. Thousands of acres of fertile fields had been left behind. Irrigation was a simple matter, and ditches ran in networks everywhere.

Soon, the very necessary next element to his plan had gathered
almost by magic: the people. Seeing that he offered protection and land to any capable farmer, taking only a lord’s payment each season and a vow to man the walls when trouble came, the people migrated to his banner steadily.

They’d come in a
trickle at first. Men up from Riverton seeking work; women seeking husbands and a fresh start. Most of them were Haven people—good workers, clear-eyed and honest.

But soon others had gathered around his settlement, and he hadn’t the heart to turn them away. These were w
ilder folk, people of the woods and even some who’d wandered in the eastern plains living a nomadic life in wagons. These nomads had suffered much in recent years as the powerful battled around them, and they had spent their lives fleeing one safe spot for another. They’d come to Brand’s castle with hope in their dark, gaunt eyes.

H
e gave them that hope freely, offering them land and help in trade for fealty and hard work. Sometimes, they’d bitten the hand that fed them. Not all could be broken so easily of their old ways. After all, many were nothing more than wandering bandits. But with a stern and fair constabulary and an iron jail, he’d soon taught the worst of them the error of their ways. After serving out their punishment, he tried to offer them jobs as hunters, miners or quarrymen. The few that could not be tamed he sent back to the wilds with the sure knowledge that returning would mean death to them.

Fortunately, these irredeemable bandits were few in number. The majority became passable citizens in time.

Brand left his keep and walked the walls, welcoming the dawn. He wore a robe of fine-woven red cloth and slippers of silk on his feet. Both these had been fashioned by the tiny hands of Wee Folk, and the weave was so tight and the cloth so smooth no human hand could duplicate it. When he wasn’t doing anything official, he liked to wander his echoing castle in these soft clothes. He felt he deserved the break.

When the
sun rose higher over the battlements outside, he watched it with squinting eyes and a faint smile. The swamp was gone from the region, and the land smelled fresh and rich.

There were lingering reminders of the past, however.
There was almost always a morning mist hanging around the place, and today was no exception. Seen through the haze, the sun was a gray white disk and provided only wan light until later in the day, when it burned through the clouds and made everything warm again.

It was there, standing alone on his walls, that Brand saw a
strange ripple in the air. He frowned up at it in instant concern. The Axe on his back knew the truth as well—it shivered in his pack, wanting to be freed. It had sensed something unnatural, and was instantly suspicious.

Brand peered at the sky. What had it been? It
was as if a shadow had crossed the face of the sun—which was only a white disk now, seen hanging in the mist. Something was moving up there, he supposed. Possibly, an unusually large, low-flying bird had passed between him and the sun. It must have been inside the fog that shrouded the land. He decided the effect was odd, but nothing to sound the alarm about.

He turned his attention back to the growing town within his castle walls. The area enclosed was so great that he was sure he could house everyone in Riverton should they ever come here seeking safety. That had always been part of his secret plan: to build a fortress to protect his people in time of need. He did not want to impose his rule upon them, but if they needed him, the only lord of the River Folk, he’d be here, waiting.

What was
that
? The Axe was quivering again, and he knew it was in a high state of agitation. The handle had broken free of his pack and the blades were rasping on the leather walls of its prison. Soon, it might even have the ill-mannered impudence to thump him on the back of the head.

And for once, he could not blame
the Axe, because he’d also sensed something very strange.

The clouds out to the east where the river ran by had finally broken. A shadow had flown there—right through the yawning hole in the fog. He’d seen it
, but the figure was a colorless blur. It looked as might a bucket of thrown water, or a sheet of flying glass. The thing, whatever it was, had been transparent, he was sure of that. And it had come through that growing hole in the cloud cover.

I
t had flown from above to below, from outside, to inside. He could still see the edges of the hole in the cloud vapor moving, as if disturbed by something that had passed near.

But what was it?
And what was it doing out there over his fresh-hewn stone walls?

Brand took a deep breath and came to a harsh decision.
This might all be harmless—one of the Fae having a bit of fun. Or it might be something deadly, like the tail of an invisible dragon, caught sneaking into his castle unseen.

Whatever it was, he was not content to allow it to make itself at home here unannounced. He
grabbed the haft of Ambros the Golden and lifted the weapon high. A moment later he caused the Eye of the Amber Dragon to wink.

All over the courtyard and the town beyond, people winced and ducked. To them, it appeared as if the sun had burned through the morning mists all at once and shone down upon their faces with blinding intensity. Everyone was provided with an instant headache and blinking, squinching eyes. They shielded themselves with upraised arms and cried aloud in surprise and fright.

There stood a figure upon the battlements of the castle, looking down upon them all and every one of those who saw him knew who this man must be, and what he must be holding aloft in his hands.

The Axe had been drawn, and at such moments, bloodshed was very likely to soon follow.
The streets emptied as people first gawked, then ran for cover. Women shrieked for their children and men shouted for their sons to bring them arms.

Brand
was aware of all this, but only barely. He was a new man. He had not drawn the Axe in anger for more than two long years. For this very reason, it was more powerful than usual, more like a tiger unchained at long last. Brand himself was comparatively weak against its will. The longer he went without drawing it, the greater its urgency became and the less disciplined he was when the time came to control it.

As always, drawing the Axe initiated a struggle within Brand’s mind. Today it was an
uneven contest. He’d had no time to practice with the Jewel and steel himself. He had pulled the Axe from its worn pack and lifted it high, and now that it was free, it was the will of Ambros that drove his actions.

When Brand tried, and failed, to control the Axe, it
blazed again with a second tremendous flash of light. One of the powers of the Amber Jewel was to fire rays so bright they could burn the eyes from a man’s blackened sockets at close range. It could also be used to produce less focused light which illuminated the region around it. When used this way, the light was brighter than the sun, but not so bright as to burn whatever it touched.

Today, the Axe released a flash like lightning that illuminated the castle all the way to the surrounding walls.
Brand ignored the cries of fear from below him. His people were scuttling insects, beneath concern. His eyes stared toward the limits of his territory.

There!
A shadow hovered over the northeast tower. Something hung there—something that flew and wished to remain unseen.

“Foul phantom!” roared Brand, his lips
writhing of their own accord. They soon spread away from his teeth in a grimace of sudden intensity. His mind was not his own, and neither were his words. “I will see what dares to slink so close to me this morn!”

So saying, he fired an intense, focused beam toward the
shadow over the north tower. Screams erupted from the network of roadways below the keep, those who had not yet found shelter were burned by the heat of the ray. It was not so powerful as to injure them seriously, but it stung, and filled them with terror. Horses reared and galloped, carrying away riders and carts. People were bowled over and rammed face down upon the cobbles. Doors and shutters slammed in every crooked street. Mothers grabbed up their babes and stumbled for their huts, arms thrown over their faces. Soon, the streets emptied and were lined with silent houses and shops.

Brand gave
all this no heed. His staring eyes were locked upon the region of space directly above the tower. He knew it had to be there, the intruder he’d detected. He knew
something
was there—and he wanted nothing less than to burn it from the skies and slash it to pieces when he found its smoldering, flopping corpse.

The very idea of this caused a most hideous grin to stretch his lips wide.

Seeing nothing fall after his ray scorched the sky, he caused the Axe to fire more rays. Beam after beam lanced toward the tower. The watchmen inside and atop the tower fumbled with their bows, then seeing the attack was coming from the direction of the keep itself and that it must be their lord launching it, they huddled inside their loopholes and shivered, praying for salvation.

While he cast burning rays toward the sky, Brand simultaneously began running along the walls. A bridge of sorts connected the inner keep to the outer walls with a gatehouse placed upon the top to prevent attackers from easily gaining entrance to the center of the fortress. The bridge itself had a series of arches underneath through which traffic could pass from one section of the surrounding town to the other. It was over this bridge that he did charge.

When the gatekeepers fumbled with the chains of the portcullis, Brand decided their response to his roared commands to open it were taking entirely too long. He lifted the Axe and slashed with it repeatedly. The iron slats of the portcullis were cloven like so many sticks. He quickly destroyed the iron grate, heedless of the fact he’d personally had it installed only two months earlier. The twisted wreckage fell in a ruin and he charged through, passing his own startled, wide-eyed guardsmen.

His fine slippers slapped rhythmically on the flagstones as he ran at full tilt to the outer wall and then along the crenulated battlements toward the northeastern tower. There, he felt
certain, he would find the intruder at last.

When he reached the tower
his pikemen and archers fled in alarm. The word was out: Lord Rabing had finally gone mad and was killing anyone who got in his way with spittle flying and robes flapping. And so they ran from the charging madman, even as he raged at them and shot beams of brilliant heat into the sky beyond the castle’s northeast corner.

It wasn’t until he smelled a foul, burnt smell that he turned to look behind him.

He lifted the Axe and aimed it.

“Hold
, Axeman!” came a shout from the thin air over the ramparts. “Control yourself, Lord Rabing! I’ve come for a peaceful visit. I’ve come to warn you of dangers unknown and unknowable.”

Brand’s sides heaved with exertion. Sweat ran from his pores,
and had turned his fine red robes sodden and lank. The stink of something burnt increased, and he realized with pleasure that whoever it was that addressed him must have been touched with the flashing beams of his Axe.

His eyes
did not blink as they intensely searched the air before him for the source of the voice. He still held Ambros in his hand, and he wanted to urge the Axe to burn that foul-smelling, speaking patch of air before him. The thought gripped his mind and tore at him.

Burn it! Kill the voice! Kill the invader that flies!

At last, after a long moment, he finally blinked. Some part of his rationality returned. He was surprised by the voice in his head. The Axe rarely spoke to his mind directly. It was a bad sign, he knew, for he had experienced episodes of madness when it did so.

He tried to think. He opened his mouth and a croaking sound issued.

Something laughed. This made Brand burn with a fresh rage. But he willed himself to calm down. He had to
think
.

What was it that flew in the air
before him? Who might it be? Someone who liked to talk and flit about unseen? Who did he know who would dare to tease the Axeman, imperiling his own life by doing so?

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