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Bookbinder stopped him with a wave. Twenty-one hundred kilometers was around thirteen hundred miles. Over hostile terrain, with no roads and no ability to resupply.

Help was out there, and so far away that it might as well be in another world.

Chapter XVI
Boots on the Ground

When you look at the Etymologiae and Physiologus of Pliny the Elder and Isidore of Seville, you get a bestiary of fabulous creatures from manticores and goblins to the fish and birds we see every day. Before the Great Reawakening, these writers were dismissed as primitive fantasists. But they wrote roughly a millennium before our own time, which fits with planar orbital theory and the notion of a “Source” plane where magic exists as an elemental force. If that force could bleed into the Home Plane, then it stands to reason that the fauna of that place could find ways to cross over as well.

—Avery Whiting

Modern Arcana: Theory and Practice

“You’re not going.” There was an edge of emotion to Crucible’s voice that weakened Bookbinder’s resolve. Crucible was competent, careful, kind. He trusted the man implicitly. Maybe he was right?
No. This is your task. You have to do this.

“I don’t recall asking you for your opinion,” Bookbinder said, trying to sound authoritative and failing utterly.

“You can’t have it both ways,
Alan
,” Crucible said. “You can’t be all buddy-buddy with me one second, then try to order me around the next. You wanted a friend and confidant. Well, you’ve got one. And I say you’re not going.”

Bookbinder rolled his eyes. “I don’t suppose we can go back to me being the stern and imposing CO for this part, can we?”

Crucible snorted.

“Rick, I’m serious here. I have to do this. Me.”

“No, you don’t. You are in command here. You can send a team.”

“To go out into that wilderness? It’s practically a suicide mission, and you know it.”

Crucible spread his hands. “I do know it. And since when is it a good idea to send the post CO out to die?”

Bookbinder pounded the desk. “Since that CO has been a CO for all of fifteen minutes. Hell, Rick, we both know you can run this base a hundred times better than I can. The troops know and respect you. Rank isn’t the issue. Fuck, I’ll brevet you to full bird if that makes a difference.”

“Now is not the time to have a crisis of confidence, sir! You should have seen their faces when you gave that speech. You’ve made a good impression, and they’re coming around. Those austerity measures were smart. You trust your people, you delegate. You’re firm without being overbearing. You’re a natural.”

Bookbinder shook his head. “I’ll admit that part went well. But it was one speech, Rick. I’ll even give myself the credit you’re extending to me. But the fact remains that even a natural talent still has to learn his trade. That’s what’s missing here. I don’t have the track record. I don’t know the right people. You, at least, ran the SAOLCC. Christ, look at the whole thing with the protocol officer! I had no clue whom to go to. If you hadn’t known about Constance and her propensity for preening over labor, we would have been well and truly screwed.”

He leaned over the desk and softened his voice. “You believe in me. I get it. But there isn’t enough time for me to learn as I go here. This has to be done right the first time.”

“And somehow you’ll have the time to learn as you go leading a scout/ recon mission?”

“It’s more than that. It’s an envoy to a foreign government’s FOB, one that we’re not supposed to know about.” He tapped the eagle sewn on his uniform, signifying his colonel’s rank.

“The full bird will help some there.”

“Christ, Alan. You’re a Latent Grenade. What if you go off out there?”

Bookbinder paused. “Yes, well. About that.”

“What?”

“I already went off.”

Crucible’s mouth fell open. He stood for a long moment before he closed it. “You’re fucking kidding me.”

“Nope.”

“But, nobody even noticed! I mean, you never Manifested! What school are you?”

“No school. At least, none I’ve ever heard of. Jesus, sit down.”

Bookbinder gestured at the chair in the corner of the office.

Crucible kicked it. “Hell, no. What are you talking about?”

“Okay, don’t freak out. All right?”

Crucible only stared.

“I may have to abort this, I don’t have a lot of practice.”

Bookbinder Drew his current, reached out for the foreign flow of Crucible’s magic and Bound it. He began to draw it into himself.

Crucible’s eyes shot wide. “What the hell is going on?”

“I’m not sure,” Bookbinder said through gritted teeth. “It’s some kind of parasitic thing. I’m a magic thief.” He began to feel his veins flush with Crucible’s magic, beginning to overwhelm his senses. The current was caustic, hot. Bookbinder glanced around his office, trying to look for a place to shunt the magic off to. There was no convenient chunk of blast barricade to use as a focus. He tamped down on the current, rolling his own magic back. For a moment, he worried that he would be unable, and would have to beg Crucible to Suppress him, but then he felt his magic obey him, releasing Crucible’s current to flow back into him. A sheen of sweat broke out on Bookbinder’s forehead as he slumped in his chair. “Damn it. I forgot that you’re a Pyromancer. I don’t want to set anything in this office on fire.”

“Holy crap, Alan. I felt you . . . yanking my magic out of me.”

“I know. I pull it into myself. It’s like I have magic for two people inside me. I can only hold it for a short time, then I have to project it out into something else.”

“Like what?”

“Like anything, I guess. I’ve only done it once before during a goblin attack. I pulled one of their sorcerer’s Pyromancy and Bound it to a chunk of concrete. The thing was on fire. We’re talking concrete. Burning.”

Crucible changed his mind and sat down. “Holy cow.”

“I know.”

“So not only are you . . . some kind of magic vampire, but you can create . . . magic stuff?”

Bookbinder shrugged. “That’s what it looks like. I haven’t had a lot of time to practice.”

“Holy cow,” Crucible said again.

“I know,” Bookbinder said again.

“Sir, I’ve been with this program since its inception. I’ve never even heard of something like that.”

“Well, we haven’t been out in the Source long, maybe that’s got something to do with it?”

“This has to be studied. Why the hell didn’t you tell anyone?”

“I only found out once we’d already been cut off, and the attacks had started stepping up. You’ll forgive me if the timing didn’t seem exactly auspicious.”

“But, if you don’t know how to use it . . .”

Bookbinder raised a hand. “I’ve thought that over. If anything, I see it as an advantage. At a minimum, this power is stable. At best, it’s the most diverse form of magic out there. If I can master it, it’ll bring us every advantage once we’re out there trying to reach the Indian FOB.”

“Are you sure you know that’s what this is? You can drain other people’s magic and Bind it to inanimate objects? Maybe the stress of combat confused you.”

Bookbinder pounded the desk, then uncurled his fist, extending a finger toward Crucible. “Damn it, Rick. Don’t patronize me! I know what I’m talking about here. I’m a smart guy, and I’m handling things, so don’t treat me like a fucking invalid.”

Crucible patted the air. “You’re right, sir. I’m sorry.”

“It’s okay,” Bookbinder said, willing the color out of his face.

“How the hell do you plan to master it?” Crucible finally broke the silence. “I mean, even in SAOLCC we couldn’t . . .”

“You couldn’t help me in SAOLCC anyway. This is new. You don’t know any more about it than I do. I’ll either figure it out on my own, or I won’t. I’ll make sure I have someone along who can Suppress, just in case.”

“You’ve already decided on a team?”

Bookbinder nodded. “More or less. I’ve been thinking about it. This base needs all hands on deck to weather the coming storm until either we find help or the government finds a way to reach us. I’m going to take as little as I can. I’m assuming a base like this doesn’t have in–flight refueling capability?”

Crucible shook his head. “I’ll double-check with the air boss, but I highly doubt it. That’s a big air force thing. We never needed it out here. There’s some fixed-wing capability on the flight line, but it’s single-seater combat stuff. It’s primarily a helo flight.”

“I thought so. So, air-dropping us is not a real option. And I’m not sparing a helo, even a Little Bird, just to have it go bingo-fuel halfway to our destination, then ground it for the enemy to rip apart. Air cover is the one of the bigger advantages we have over the Defender clans. The rocs and wyverns they throw at us don’t really hold up. I need every swinging dick in the air, so to speak.”

Crucible nodded. “Concur. Dhatri said their FOB doesn’t have a runway, so there’s no place for a fixed-wing to land anyway.”

“And my guess is that the terrain between here and the Indian FOB doesn’t even have unimproved dirt roads. It’s broken by rivers, uneven ground, woods. Even a Stryker couldn’t handle it.”

Crucible kept nodding.

“So we’re going to have to walk.”

Crucible swore under his breath. “That’s one hell of a walk.”

“And we’re going to need to move fast. We’ve got a lot of ground to cover. So, I want to keep the team small, light, and able to handle anything we come across. Now, I’m assuming that Sorcerers are at as much of a premium as aircraft?”

“More,” Crucible said. “With supply cut off, magic is the only renewable resource this base has. Every Sorcerer you take lowers the survivability by an order of magnitude.”

“Which is why I’ll only take one. Well, apart from me. That’ll be the heart of the team.”

“And that would be?”

“Myself, Vasuki-Kai, and Dhatri. One Terramancer. Four enlisted. One medic, One NCO, two scout/ snipers. I want you to pick ’em, Rick. The best we’ve got.”

“Jesus. That’s not even a platoon.”

“It doesn’t need to be. You’ve seen what I can do. I don’t know about Dhatri, but Vasuki-Kai is probably good for ten to twenty goblins on his own. A Terramancer can make sure we’re fed and have eyes around us. Rick, I know some of our people practice Whispering on their own. Find me one of those. They get amnesty. I don’t care if it’s illegal, I’m making the call. Find someone who understands that.”

Crucible crossed his arms over his chest. “This is stupid, Alan. “

“Fine, but it’s also an order, and you’re going to see to it. I am going to fix this, Rick. I am going to fucking fix this, or I am going to die trying. And you’re going to help me.”

Crucible met his eyes and held them. “Yes, sir.”

“Um . . . there’s one other thing,” Bookbinder said into the silence that followed. He reached into his desk drawer, removed an envelope, and handed it across the desk to Crucible.

The Pyromancer made no move to take it. “What’s that?”

“You know what it is. I’d save an email in my drafts folder if I thought there was a chance in hell we’d have comms back home anytime soon. It’s for my wife and kids. If I don’t make it back, see that they get this when you get reconnected to the Home Plane.”

Crucible nodded, took the letter, and folded it in half, tucking it into a pocket on his cargo pants. “You’re making it back, sir. You owe me.”

Bookbinder cocked an eyebrow at him. “I owe you?”

“You want me to run this place so you can run off and play some combo game of diplomat-hero? Well, you drive the big car, and I drive the little car. But this is a shit job, and you’re just sticking me with it so you can have an adventure. The least you can do is write me a weekend pass and put me in for a commendation.

Hell, maybe a letter to the promotion board. If you’re dead, you won’t be able to put in the paperwork. That would just be wrong.”

Bookbinder snorted. “Yeah, I guess it would.

“I’ll see what I can do.”

Crucible found Bookbinder standing beside one of the new Terramantic gardens that Woon had ordered set up, his head craned skyward. A roc circled overhead. A quarter klick away by the perimeter, booms sounded, indicating the start of another attack.

The lieutenant colonel jogged forward but stopped short of Bookbinder. “Sir! The air defenses . . .”

“I ordered them shut off here.”

“Wha . . . why?”

“I’m practicing.”

A goblin Terramancer snugged to the back of the roc’s neck.

The basket on its back held three goblins. One of them was painted fully white, his hands extended above his head, bursting into flame. As Crucible watched, the goblin Pyromancer extended his hands and a gout of fire arced earthward, scouring the garden, turning most of it to ash. The roc swept past and began to circle back for another pass. Soldiers gathered around them, pointing weapons skyward, clearly itching to shoot but under orders not to. Bookbinder could feel the tension in their trigger fingers as clearly as any magical current.

“Sir!” Crucible said again.

“One more pass,” Bookbinder said. “Almost got it.”

The roc came back around, descending. The Pyromancer leaned over the basket’s edge, sighting down at Bookbinder and the growing knot of people around him. He pumped a fist, fire swirling about his head and shoulders.

“Christ!” Crucible shouted. “Incoming! Scatter!”

The Pyromancer reached forward, the flames forming another deadly pillar.

And then winked out.

Bookbinder threw his head back, the muscles in his back clenching. “Fuuuuuuck,” he said, then threw his doubled current outward.

The roc, the basket, the goblins all burst into flame. The huge bird screamed in agony. One of the goblins jumped from the basket, beating at the flames, plummeting to the ground.

The roc flapped madly, trying to gain altitude, trailing greasy smoke from its wing tips, throwing the Terramancer from its back. He followed his fellows to the ground, screaming all the way down.

“All right, that’s enough,” Bookbinder said, bending over, hands on his knees, panting. “Put ’em out of their misery.” At least twenty carbines opened up, followed by the howling torrents of the air-defense systems. Within moments, the roc and its passengers were wet ribbons, slowly drifting earthward.

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