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The Phoenix Ring(7)

By:Alexander Brockman


But it was already too late.

The second ten year period began when Malcommer hired an assassin to  kill one council member. In the first five years, ten of the twenty  council members and their phoenixes were killed, as well as every  phoenix outside of the council. Only one council member was initiated at  this time, Marcus Thunderheart.

Over the next four years every council member was slaughtered except for  Marcus, and Malcommer built an army that he used to almost take  Sortiledge, but was stopped at a crucial point by Thunderheart. He  retreated to the Nefarious Lands where he prepared another, much larger  army. While the army was on the voyage to Sortiledge, Thunderheart's  Phoenix, by unknown means, managed to expend all of its power to create a  line of mountains in the ocean. Tragically, Thunderheart and his  phoenix died in the resulting wave of power. The mountains that the  phoenix created are now known as DragonBack Range. They form the most  solid barrier between the Nefarious Lands and Sortiledge, and are also  the home of the last known dragon clans.

There are rumors, however, that Thunderheart may have transferred his  Arror, or life magic, to his ring, which currently resides at Fort  Phoenix.                       
       
           



       

Malcommer himself was killed in the resulting inferno. There are rumors,  however, that he had friends that will one day come back to take  Sortiledge.



Aidan looked up from the book, the rest of the section was a detailed  account of what he had already read. Timothy was snoring on top of his  bed, with drool hanging out of his mouth. Aidan closed the book and blew  out the candle.

He fell asleep dreaming of his mother, surrounded in flames.



The next three weeks were a blur for Aidan. He and Timothy spent most of  their time in the library, and the rest of it in the training area.

Aidan also found that Timothy was extremely superstitious. He would  throw a pinch of salt over his shoulder every morning, and Aidan even  caught him laying coins around his bed at night so that he could "find"  them in the morning.

Aidan began to realize that magic was far more complex than it looked  when a village bard performed it as a show. Timothy, however, seemed to  have no problem grasping the idea of magic.

The smaller boy mainly helped Aidan work on his coming evaluation. "I  already have a master that has picked me, so I do not need to worry  about it. You, on the other hand, need to impress. Every adult wizard  and warlock is allowed to have three apprentices. Master Edwin already  has three, but my master only has me, so maybe he will pick you too."

The most memorable event of that time occurred two weeks after Aidan arrived.

The two boys were going on one of their many walks through the camp when Timothy stopped short.

"You haven't seen Marcus Thunderheart's ring yet, have you?"

"No," Aidan replied, looking up from his book.

"Oh, you're going to love this," Timothy said, turning left.

The ring was in the center of the camp, on a pedestal with a huge glass  bubble covering it. The Soulrock inside was a pulsating white, and the  metal in the ring appeared to be red. The image of a phoenix was etched  faintly across the top.

"Nine of the most powerful wizards and one warlock have tried to put  this on since Marcus died. None of them made it. They finally put it  here to end the temptation. This glass is enchanted not to be broken  from the outside, but the inside is fairly fragile. If someone were to  call the ring and it responded strongly enough, it would break the  glass."

They just stared at the ring for a half hour until the sun started to set.

As they left, Aidan could have sworn the ring tilted a little towards him.



The week before the evaluation the two boys were sitting in room thirty-seven when Timothy sat up.

"I found it!" he yelled, falling off his bed.

"What?" Aidan said, more than a little startled.

"I've been looking for a spell that will really blow them away for you,  and I have a perfect one. Actually, this is a curse, but it will work."

"Wait, I'm not cursing anybody, that's evil!" Aidan said, thinking of  the way elders would mumble about curses when a child died or milk went  sour too early.

"No, no, no," Timothy replied. "Curses and spells are just the opposite  of each other. Spells add magic to an object or person, curses take  magic away. Curses often have negative effects, and so myths have  started to spread about them. Neither are good or bad.

"This particular curse is the base of all curses. It just takes away one  person's magic. Normally it's very easy to block, but with enough power  the user can take away another sorcerer's magic for a few hours. If you  could manage to take away a wizard's or even warlock's magic with this  curse, then there's no telling how many powerful sorcerers would want to  take you on."

Aidan stood up and looked at the page Timothy was talking about.

It was called the leeching curse, and was very simple, just three words long. Mahor yok wenne. Magic come out.

"The stronger the curse the better the effect. It normally does not suck  all the magic out of someone, but you might be strong enough to make  every single spell useless. Here, try it on me," Timothy said, pulling a  rowan wand out from under his bed and throwing it to Aidan.

Aidan pointed the wood at Timothy and closed his eyes.

"Mahor yok wenne," he said a little nervously.

He felt the power leave him in a torrent. Somewhere along the way there  was some resistance, like a pile of dirt swept away in a raging flood.

Aidan opened his eyes. Timothy was on the floor.

The taller boy dropped to his knees.

"Are you all right?" he asked.

"Yeah, I'm fine." Timothy said, rolling over. "I just never thought I  could miss magic so bad. I guess this is what being an amogh feels like.  Hand me that rowan if you haven't burned it yet."

Aidan passed over the wand, and Timothy pointed it at the fireplace.

"Ingo. Ingo!" he said.                       
       
           



       

There wasn't even a spark.

"Well, you can do that spell. But I'm not going through that again, if  you wanna practice we're going to have to find some other idiots who  think they can fight you and win. Shouldn't be too hard, most of the  mages have big heads."

Aidan stared at his hands.

"Congratulations mate, you're a mage!" Timothy said with a forced smile.

But Aidan couldn't help wondering if he was a mage or a monster.





Over the next six days Aidan managed to find three different mages that  thought they could withstand his "Leeching Curse." All of them ended up  on the floor, completely drained.

Timothy was not much help to Aidan after his overly successful attempt  at the Leeching Curse. He would disappear for an hour at a time and then  show up for five minutes, only to get called away by his master. Aidan  really didn't have a problem with it though, it gave him time to think.

He had been debating what to tell his mother since he arrived, but it  was not until the day before his evaluation that he realized he could  write her.

He wrote a simple letter describing, in short, angry, words, a little  about where he was and what he was doing. He then took the letter to the  adult dormitories.

Unlike the mages and apprentices that had to stay in dormitories in  groups of two to four, the adults each had their own set of rooms within  an odd pyramid shaped building. The inside of the building was a long  hallway that opened up on either side to different quarters for each  adult wizard or warlock.

Malachi's quarters were third from the end of the hall. Aidan knocked lightly and stepped in.

The inside of the office was unlike anything Aidan had expected. The  walls were completely lined with shelves, on top of which sat cages that  held every type of creature imaginable. The center of the room held a  small desk with a stack of paper on it and a quill that seemed to be  writing by itself. Malachi was standing to the left, dropping what  appeared to be little bits of chicken into a glass cage.

"Marvelous, aren't they," he asked without turning around.

When Aidan stepped closer he saw that the inhabitants of the cage were  little lizards just a few inches long. Every time a piece of chicken  would touch the floor one would run forward and spew flame from its  mouth until the meat was charred. Then it would take the chicken to a  corner of the cage and ravenously devour it.

"Are they baby dragons?" Aidan asked, backing away a little.

"No, nothing so amazing as that," Malachi answered. "They are fire  salamanders, some of the few left in this kingdom. The dwarves keep a  few in volcanoes, but they don't do so well here without heat. Ingo!"