The Fire and the Storm - Metric Pro Edition: Fiction, Dragons, Elves, Unicorns, Magic (66 page)

BOOK: The Fire and the Storm - Metric Pro Edition: Fiction, Dragons, Elves, Unicorns, Magic
8.11Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

After a few minutes more, Mark Retrieved his power stone and Moved it’s collecting stone back into the upper cone of power.  He gritted his teeth as the extra energy flowed into him, and he added most of it to the heat he was venting above them, but he managed to increase what he was holding by an intuitive process that none of the others could grasp.

Soon he was keeping up with his children again, and contributing to the discussion.  Karz fell behind, while the others were rapidly reaching a state of complete confusion.

“Look, you seven are not helping us, and this is becoming unpleasant for you.”
Val stated. 
“I propose that you concentrate on monitoring our well-being, and let us use the rest of your intellectual capacity.  I have a nice spell set for that now.”

Val, Six, Fire, and Mark deepened their Link to a greater extent than they ever had before, and became a single mind.

The rest gave Val their agreement and did as she asked.

A few moments later Fire had a big breakthrough, and Six and Val started helping her with it.

But her breakthrough triggered Mark to have a sudden inspiration that was a completely different solution to the same problem, so he politely co-opted the excess mental capacity of Talia, Alilia, Povon, and Equemev, and carefully withdrew them from his children’s Link while keeping only a trace of that Link active between the young warlocks and himself.  Then he let his awareness encompass the observers, and invited Yazadril, Nemia, Somonik, and Gran to gather as much power as they could hold, join his Link, and allow him to use some of their intellectual capacity.

They agreed, and did so.

Inspired by this, Val reached out to the observers Linked through the unicorns, and similarly added Tithian and nine of her people’s researchers to her Link.

That was all the minds they could maintain in both Links at that level of psionic intensity, but it was all they needed.  The two loosely-Linked groups continued to develop what they were working on, then moved on to related problems.

High above them, the FireStorm they’d created with their excess power was a blazing hurricane almost three kilometers wide.

Almost forty minutes later, Val announced to all: 
“We haven’t come up with anything really new for the last six minutes.  We’re only still doing this because it’s so beautiful.  This is the most beautiful experience I’ve ever had.”

“Same here.”
Mark agreed as he fully re-opened the Link with his children. 
“On both those points.  But some of us are getting to be mentally fatigued, and we’ll have to get ready for the meeting soon.”

“Yes, but before we end it, let’s all have a big hug!”
Val giggled, and everyone agreed.

A moment later there were five dragons, twelve unicorns, four elves, Mark, and his children, all clumped together in mid-air, all carefully hugging, nuzzling, and caressing each other while deeply Linked, all of their minds fairly sizzling with power and intelligence and a thousand thoughts every second, all of their senses and awareness heightened as they gloried in the experience.

Finally Povon was the first to withdraw her touch and her Link, and she vented much of the power she was holding in a mighty explosion amidst the FireStorm overhead.  One by one, the others did the same, and the FireStorm dissipated.

“Ahh, I hated to let that go, but I’m burnt.” she said as she did a long, slow stretch in mid-air.  “We got what we wanted though, didn’t we?  All we wanted and more.”

“A
lot
more.” Mark nodded.

“But we don’t have time to do anything with it now, or to implement anything in Serminak.” Talia noted.  “This took a lot longer than we anticipated.  We have to get ready for the meeting of the Assembly.”

“Hah.” Val said, and in the time it took her to speak the syllable she’d cast spells to clean herself, style her hair, Retrieve her finest armor and weapons, and don it all.  “I’m ready, let’s go early.  There’s a lot of people I’d like to meet before the business gets started.”

“I’m with you there.” Fire said as she duplicated her sister’s preparations.

“Now hold on!” Yazadril insisted, even as Nemia took care of his preparations for him.  “You must at least give us a summary of what you…  Of what we…  Damn.”

“A harsh realization, isn’t it?” Somonik chuckled.  “We’ve already lost what we had when we were Linked and held the power.  We knew what they’d done, if not exactly how they’d done it, and now we either can’t remember it or can’t comprehend it.”

“Please tell me that it’s not lost completely!” Yazadril said as he turned to Mark in exasperation.

“My stuff’s not.” Mark said as he considered the warlock’s power stone.  “I reduced everything we came up with in my side of the Link to fourteen spells, and put castable versions of them into this stone.  Along with a whole bunch of locked personal keys and fail-safes.  I don’t understand it anymore either, but it’s all ready to go.”

Val giggled.  “We did a little better than that, I think.  We figured out that only a very small part of all the power we were holding was actually helping us think better.  Then we figured out exactly how it worked.  Then we figured out how to cast a power field on our own brains and nervous systems that does the same thing.  It doesn’t actually take much power.”

“So right now, your thinking is as advanced as it was when we were all Linked and holding all that power?!” Yazadril asked, flabbergasted at the thought.

“No.” Val responded with a shake of her head.  “For one thing, even with all the safety measures we came up with, I think it’s too dangerous to keep that much extra energy in your brain all the time.  But it’s all automated, so if I’m trying to figure something out and I’m not smart enough to get it, the spell will charge my brain up until I get it done, then release the extra charge when I don’t need it anymore.  It works really fast too, so we won’t notice it happening, we’ll just be as smart as we need to be whenever we need it.   The other thing is; the benefits of the Link can’t be duplicated.  No one can be as smart by themselves as we all were together, not with the kinds of brains we’ve got.

“So.  Can we go?” she finished.

“There’s only twenty minutes left until the Assembly will be called to order.” Nemia said as she soothed Yazadril’s impatience.  “There’s no use having these young ones make all their big announcements twice, is there?”

“I suppose.” he admitted.  “Somonik, if you’d be so kind?”

“Certainly.” The ancient white dragon nodded as he clicked his claws together, and then they were all elsewhere.

The space they arrived in appeared in many ways to be the Hall of The Just Alliance.  It was constructed of the same white marble, they’d arrived beside the same low, round podium at the center with the Truthstone of Falgaroth embedded in it, the floor sloped gently upward from the center of the room in all directions, and it was lit by the same sourceless white light.  But this was much larger.

“Damn, this is big.” Mark quietly muttered as they all looked around.

He’d seen some big rooms, including the one in Kraka where the council of dragons had met before they’d abandoned the city, and The Stadium of The Empire in Verzaclon City, which was built to seat eighty thousand giants plus thrice that number of gnomes.  Zarkog’s Hall in Serminak had been most of a kilometer wide, before it was destroyed.  But this dwarfed them all.  It was so big, none there could even estimate it’s size without measuring.  Mark thought it might be less than a kilometer wide and less than three hundred meters high, but he wouldn’t have bet so much as a copper on it.

There were several renovations beyond the increase in size.

About a sixth of the room appeared to be walled off with glass and two-thirds filled with water, both of which were supernaturally transparent.  At first glance it seemed the same as the rest of the room, and only the slightest reflection on the clear wall’s surface, the rippling line at the water’s surface, and the sight of Selkies, Mer, and other beings swimming around in it showed it for what it was.

There were glowing blue Translocation circles of every size scattered about all over the vast floor space.  They were marked with glowing blue letters in Trade Common in the air above them; either Incoming, Outgoing, Privacies, or Facility Staff Only.  The latter were busy with a constant stream of Xervians carrying trays or pushing carts laden with food and drink for the attendees.

An area along a third of the room’s vast perimeter and a hundred or so meters deep appeared to be filled with dense tropical forest.

“May holy Amirgath preserve me.” Kragorram softly marveled.

“Why yes, I may, since you asked.” Amirgath stated as he appeared beside them, then chuckled like an avalanche at his own joke.  After a moment to adapt to the surprise and the novelty of the situation, his joke got them too, and they chuckled along with him.

“So, you like the improvements we’ve made here?” he asked as he looked around.

“It’s very impressive, thank you.” Somonik nodded, and indicated the forested part of the perimeter.  “I take it that the woodland area was provided for the comfort of the representatives of The Hidden Nation.  Very considerate of you.”

“All of us gods co-operated on it.” Amirgath explained.  “It didn’t require us all to do it, of course, but it’s meant as a tangible gift from the Pantheon of Kellaran to the rest of The Just Alliance, so we all helped a bit.”

“And we all thank all of you for it.” Mark smiled.

Fire nudged Six and nodded towards her left.  “Here comes Emperor Osbald’s group.” she said as that monarch approached with Empress Emeroth, Overlord Senchak, and various associates.

“Why call it Osbald’s group?” Karz asked.  “The other two are his equal in power and ability, by any measure.  I’d actually put Senchak ahead of him in power, and Emeroth ahead of him in ability.”

“Any measure but initiative in international affairs; the quality by which he leads them.” Fire explained.  “He initiated the diplomacies that led to their bilateral alliances before the war, he called for their formal three-way alliance and then helped bring them into The Just Alliance, which he was largely responsible for initiating.  Emeroth and Senchak actually show more initiative than him in domestic affairs as well, but not internationally.”

“Ah.” Karz nodded.

“It seems that everyone is arriving early.” Somonik noted as the influx of dozens of Translocations per second accelerated all around them, and the colossal room filled rapidly from the center outward.  “All the national leaders are already here with their senior advisers and commanders.  Those arriving now are leaders of populous provinces and large cities, and mid-level officers.  Also several dozen professional news-mongers and criers.  And a surprising number of what seem to be random citizens from everywhere on Kellaran in groups of four to eight.”

“And why not, since we have the room?” Mark laughed as Osbald’s group arrived within speaking distance.

“I’m pleased to see you again, Prince Mark.” Osbald declared as he extended his hand with a wide smile.  “I trust your vacation was pleasant?”

“Quite pleasant indeed!” Mark agreed as he shook the man’s hand and returned his smile.  He introduced the human Emperor, the giant Empress, and the dwarf Overlord to his children, then introduced his children to the monarchs, including their parentage, full names with titles, nicknames, and major achievements, and finished by adding that he, Talia, and Alilia were now a bonded trio.

“Congratulations on your amazing family!” Emeroth laughed as she returned their bows.

“Thank you!” Mark laughed.

“Somonik, I wonder if you’re on duty?” Senchak asked.  “It appears that you’re not, but with your breadth of concentration, it’s sometimes hard to tell!  And there’s a great deal being done here tonight.”

“For once, I am as relaxed as I appear to be.” Somonik chuckled.  “Tonight the vouching of attendees, their Translocations, and apparently a great many of their invitations, are all being handled by the gods.  I’m unsure how many of them are co-operating on it, but I do know that Amirgath here, among others, is not as unoccupied as he appears.”

“It’s going to be a big night, in every way.” Amirgath stated as he looked over the crowd with a bit of a mischievous smile.  “We wanted to do something appropriate to the occasion.”

“A big night?” Senchak inquired with a raised eyebrow.

Amirgath fixed his gaze on the dwarf, and the Overlord of over a billion Kleti had to gird his loins to calmly return the first dragon-god’s inspection.  “The spell of Falgaroth’s stone gives an interesting sensation when it forces me to do something, or to refrain from doing something, like Reading your life from your day of birth as a reflex action.” Amirgath commented.

“At any rate.  Are you aware that we are gathered here to hear what Prince Mark and his companions have achieved in the time-bubble?”

“No.” Senchak replied.  “I only know we would gather to welcome him and his family back to the world, knowing that it’s been a long time, for them.  I imagined he would speak, and explain why they had emerged early.”

“That much is true.” Amirgath nodded.  “First to announce shall be the Healer Hilsith.  Then Prince Mark and his mates will discuss what he discovered today.  Then these children will address us.”

Though everyone expected him to continue, he said no more.

“You didn’t decide that.” Fire suddenly stated.  “Who’ll do what when, that is.  You precogged it just now, along with knowing that it’ll be a big night, right?”

Amirgath cocked an eyebrow at her.  “If by ‘precogged’, you mean precognition, including foreseeing, soothsaying, and prophesy, then yes, you’re right.  How did you know?”

She shrugged. “I just got a feeling off you like I get when Six does it.”

“Interesting.” Amirgath nodded, then turned and looked at something to his left. 

“Excuse me, my protégé arrives.” he announced, and appeared three hundred meters away beside a vast Translocation circle just as Zarkog appeared within it.

The space Amirgath had vacated was filled almost immediately by Grakonexikaldoron, and the gold dragon exchanged greetings with the group as she gave Somonik a hug with one arm and her tail.

Other books

Faasp Hospital by Thadd Evans
Chasing Cassidy by D. Kelly
Imaginary Men by Anjali Banerjee
Dearest Cousin Jane by Jill Pitkeathley
Teenage Mermaid by Ellen Schreiber
Set Sail for Murder by R. T. Jordan
All In by Kate Willoughby