CHAPTER
TWENTY-TWO

“You can read all of these books,” Master Faye said, when he escorted Dacron into his private study. “You may not take any of them outside the room.”

“Thank you,” Dacron said, politely. Humans were still a mystery to him in many ways, yet Master Faye was definitely very strange, even by humans standards. On one hand, he was being very cooperative – and well he might, given what he stood to gain – and on the other he seemed reluctant to do anything remotely helpful. It had taken hours of waiting in his house, drinking something called Kava, before Master Faye had finally taken him to the study. “I am sure they will be most enlightening.”

He looked at the bookshelf and found it hard to suppress a human urge to rub his hands together with glee. There was genuinely original knowledge contained within those tomes, as primitive as they were, knowledge the AIs couldn’t obtain for themselves. Whatever interfered with technology on Darius prevented anything from working inside Master Faye’s house. Master Faye reached for the bookshelf, produced the first book and passed it to Dacron, who took it gingerly. It felt as if it were on the verge of falling to pieces.

“This could be duplicated,” he pointed out. Darius had the printing press, and ways of making better paper. “Why don’t you have it copied?”

“Because then the knowledge would spread wider afield,” Master Faye pointed out, sarcastically. “This sort of knowledge is only traded for equal or greater value in return.”

Dacron nodded, sat down at the small wooden table, and opened the tome with care. The first page was covered in spidery handwriting he found difficult to read, forcing him to puzzle out each word individually. Eventually, he managed to decipher the text enough to read that a Master Hawthorne had written it, although he wasn’t sure exactly when. There was no date under the written words. Master Hawthorne bragged of his success in cataloguing the most important set of magic words and spells, noting that it should improve the use of magic immeasurably. A note written underneath in different handwriting stated that Master Hawthorne had been murdered by his apprentice the following year and his book had never entered general circulation.

Taking one final glance at the page – storing the memory for the AIs to access later – he carefully picked up the sheet of paper and turned the page. The paper seemed brittle and faded, but it was clear enough for him to realise that it had turned into a dictionary, of sorts. Certain words were linked to their meanings in Darius’s language, followed by instructions on how to pronounce them properly. Dacron memorised them absently as he tried to work out what some of the words had to do with magic. It struck him a moment later; the magic words that the magicians used came from a very different language. The book in front of him taught magicians how to shape their spells prior to casting them.

If there was some other agent doing the hard work – like an RI – it had to be told what to do, he decided. It probably wouldn’t respond to Darius’s standard tongue, or everyone would be using magic. Only those who learned the magical language would be able to cast spells... logically, if Dacron could master it, he would not only be able to cast spells, but improve on them as well. Or devise protections for Confederation technology that would allow it to work perfectly in the Dead Zones.

Carefully, he worked out a spell that should generate a ball of light and then said it, out loud. There was a faint tingle running down his skin, seconds before a ball of light manifested just above his fingertips. Dacron stared at it in honest disbelief. It cast a pearly-white radiance over the study, illuminating the room with an eerie shine. There was, he could feel, a very faint link between himself and the light. It was easy to issue mental commands to direct it into the air.

“You...” Master Faye stared in disbelief. “You did that on your first try!”

“Yes,” Dacron said. He hesitated, trying to understand how to terminate the spell. “How do you end the magic?”

Master Faye said a single word and the light vanished. “Do you have any idea,” Master Faye said, “just how long it takes an apprentice to master that spell? Months! And you did it instantly!”

Dacron shrugged. “It is merely a question of using the right word,” he said, seriously. “I imagine that apprentices have problems pronouncing them properly.”

“That’s one of their problems,” Master Faye said. “It can take them time to muster the energy needed to produce a spell too.”

That made no sense, Dacron decided. If there was something behind the magic, doing the actual hard work for the magicians, why would it cost them any energy at all? Speaking wasn’t really an energy-intensive action. And if they were doing something themselves, without an outside agent, the results should have been a great deal more chaotic. Maybe the real problem was interacting with the outside agent, he decided, and his clone body had simply interacted better than a standard human.

Or maybe it was his health. Or maybe it was his memories of being part of the Gestalt.

He opened the next page and skimmed down it, memorising the spells carefully before moving to the third page. Slowly, he was starting to see how the spells went together, something that the locals would probably be unable to match for years, if at all. In fact, it seemed to operate more as a primitive computer language than anything more human. The AIs would snigger at machines that ran such a system – they wouldn’t even be RIs – but they would work. They certainly wouldn’t get bored with serving humanity if they didn’t have the self-awareness to realise that they even existed.

But that raised a puzzling question. Darius’s magic worked by interacting with the quantum foam, something the AIs – vastly more intelligent than any human – couldn’t do. They couldn’t even devise a way to access the foam, let alone interact with it. Whoever had designed Darius was vastly more advanced than the Confederation, so why had they given the humans such a primitive user interface? Or maybe they wanted to see if the humans on Darius would overcome its limitations on their own. The whole planet was starting to look more and more like a very strange experiment.

Master Faye broke into his thoughts. “Do you really memorise things so quickly?”

“Yes,” Dacron said. His memory was perfect, at least when it came to his human existence. The memories of being part of the Gestalt were strangely incomprehensible. There had been vast and powerful thoughts and... he pushed them away, irritated. “I remember everything.”

“A good magician must learn to memorise magic words before they start composing their own spells,” Master Faye said, grudgingly. “Try another spell.”

Dacron hesitated, skimming through his memory. There were two hundred spells in his mind, some with clearly-defined results, others that didn’t seem to have an explanation written beside them. Master Hawthorne hadn’t been able to bring himself to share everything, he decided, as he picked one of the unknown spells. A moment later, he cast it into the air... and the entire room flared with blue light.

“The spell reveals the presence of other magic,” Master Faye said, into the silence. “You’ll notice, as your eyes adapt to the light, that some places are brighter than others. That’s where the really powerful defensive spells are placed.”

Dacron looked around, feeling an odd pressure on his eyes. They’d been modified to be better than perfect; he could see into the infrared and ultraviolet spectrum. But the strange light made them ache; he found himself blinking as he sighted knots of blue light around the doors, windows and drawers, before he managed to banish the spell.

“You’re very sensitive,” Master Faye said, carefully. “Does your society really not have magic?”

“No,” Dacron said. Could it be that the enhancements spliced into his body had also enhanced his magical abilities, abilities no one had known he had? But if it was that easy to manipulate the quantum foam, the AIs would have done it long ago. “This is a complete surprise to us.”

Master Faye frowned. “You should know to be careful when you cast spells,” he said, finally. “Too much magic in one day can cause damage beyond repair.”

Dacron nodded inwardly as he reached for the next book. It described how spells could actually be constructed from a series of instructions, although it warned that magicians experimenting with magic for the first time often produced mixed results. Dacron could understand it; primitive computers often had problems when inexperienced programmers had tried to produce new programs for them. On the other hand, once the AIs had downloaded the contents of his memory, he would have been surprised if they couldn’t produce more powerful and capable spells than the locals. They understood computers from the inside.

The third book talked about magical injuries healing. One spell was meant to cure almost anything, apart from damage inflicted by magic. They required more specialist spells; one to detect the presence of magic, one to undo it and one to prevent it recurring. Some spells were targeted on one specific person – identified by their name, or a mental image – and had to be rewritten rather than simply removed. Others could be banished with a single word. A number created mental compulsions that needed complex spells to identify and remove without causing more damage. One such spell included a warning that excessive use would turn someone into a giggling moron.

He looked over at Master Faye and frowned. “How often do you use such spells?”

“Very rarely,” Master Faye said. “I am not so insecure as to need people to keep telling me I’m wonderful. Besides, it wouldn’t be real.”

Dacron could understand that point. “Why can’t some of the spells be removed?”

“Because they’re bound to a specific person,” Master Faye said, patiently, “and cannot be removed without killing their target. You need to refocus them on something else, if you want to cancel the effects. A love or obedience spell can have other effects when removed, even if it doesn’t kill someone.”

He looked down at the floor for a long moment. “It is the task of the Pillar to protect his Minors from other magicians,” he added. “I wasn’t always successful.”

“No one expects complete success,” Dacron said, more because he knew he had to say something than out of any real conviction. “You tried...”

“Your society is more forgiving than mine,” Master Faye said, slyly. “A Pillar who can’t protect his citizens is one who is weakening, an easy target for a Scion who wants to move up the ladder to become a Pillar. My failures led to challenges against my authority.”

He grinned at Dacron. “What will happen to the impossibly old girl for her failure?”

“She will be judged; if found to have been careless, she will be reprimanded,” Dacron informed him. Looking at the evidence, it was obvious that they simply hadn’t known enough about Darius to have slipped inside the society without being noticed. “How did you know that we were spying on you?”

“The spells detected your efforts,” Master Faye said. “They worked.”

That wasn’t in question, Dacron knew. The real question was why the spells had worked, because Master Faye had clearly suspected another magician rather than a spacefaring civilisation from several thousand light years away. Looking at the spellbooks, Dacron suspected that the spells had simply been designed to watch for intruding spies, without actually being targeted on magicians specifically. They’d picked up and blocked the snoops without ever realising what they actually were. It would have been galling, if there had been no other things to be galled about on Darius.

He returned the book to the bookshelf and picked up the next one. This one seemed younger than the others, produced by a printing press rather than hand-made by a master craftsman. It was an atlas, describing Darius’s cities and the Pillars responsible for ruling them, as well as providing a list of known Scions. Dacron narrowed his eyes as he realised that several Scions lived alarmingly close to the base. It was possible that they might be detected at any moment.

“There are copies of that one in the bookseller’s cart,” Master Faye said. “You may wish to buy them, now that your gold has been verified.”

Dacron nodded. Master Faye had taken the gold and replaced it with some from his own bank, all marked to avoid further charges of counterfeiting. Several gold coins had been sent back to the base, where they would be moved to the space station for heavy analysis; the remainder had been stored at the building Master Faye had allowed them to use. Dacron intended, in fact, to buy a copy of everything the bookseller had, as well as attempt to determine where they could buy more books. There had to be some centre of learning where the library books were produced before they were shipped out to the cities.

He put the book down and reached for the last one, before Master Faye stopped him. “That one is very old,” he said. “It may even be unique. You can see that after you give me the rejuvenation treatments.”

“You still need to provide us with some of your blood,” Dacron said, dryly. “A treatment that isn’t tailored specifically to you is unlikely to work.”

“I will need you to be careful with it,” Master Faye warned. “It is dangerous for a magician to allow strangers to handle his blood.”

“We cannot produce the treatment without it,” Dacron informed him. “At best, it would have no effect on you. At worst, it would kill you instantly.”

He waited to see what Master Faye would say to that. “I need to consider carefully,” Master Faye said, finally. “It is not something I wish to do.”

“Your attitude makes no sense,” Dacron said, bluntly. “You agreed to the bargain. We told you that we would need a blood sample from you to make it work. And now you are reluctant to give us the sample, let alone samples from other people you wish to rejuvenate.”

Master Faye gave him an icy look. “I am the Pillar of Warlock’s Bane,” he said, sharply. “If I make myself vulnerable, I am not the only one who will suffer.”

Dacron hesitated, unsure of how to proceed. The Confederation had no shortage of ways to deal with Warlock’s Bane, or the entire planet, if it came down to a fight. And he was certain that there were already contingency plans to destroy the entire planet as a final resort. A handful of rocks from orbit would vaporise the city, no matter what happened to more advanced technology like hypermissiles, nanostorms or quantum disintegrators. They didn’t need Master Faye’s blood to attack him.

But that wasn’t true for other magicians on Darius.

“We will take good care of it,” he assured Master Faye. “And we can proceed whenever you are ready to begin.”

Master Faye nodded. “I’ll make my decision soon,” he said. “Until then, we can proceed with your magical studies at a later date.”

It was a dismissal and Dacron recognised it as such. Wondering absently what, if anything, he’d done to offend, he headed downstairs and out of the building, walking through the strangely ramshackle streets. According to the snoops, they were fairly solid, but many of them looked as if the designers had no way to go, but up. Earth had done that, once upon a time, before gaining access to the boundless universe beyond the planet’s atmosphere. It was hard to resist the feeling that they were going to tumble down at any moment.

A number of people glanced at him oddly as he walked through the streets. The snoops had reported that rumours were already spreading, although none of them seemed to be close to the truth. They were apparently friends of Master Faye, if not magicians themselves, and as such had to be treated gingerly. Adam had reported that most of the merchants had pulled back, leaving him unable to haggle properly for their trade goods. Dacron wasn’t too bothered about that, but he could understand why it was a problem. The more waves they made in the local pond, the greater the effect they’d have upon the locals after they were gone.

A hand shot out of nowhere and pulled him into an alleyway. Dacron was surprised to discover that he recognised the bookseller, the same one who had frozen and kidnapped Elyria. He reached for his sword before hesitating, suspecting that it wasn’t an attack.

“I need to speak with you later, in my cart,” the bookseller said. “Can you visit me after dark?”

Dacron hesitated. There was no reason why he couldn’t, apart from simple paranoia. And the bookseller would have to be insane to take risks with Master Faye’s guests. Everything they knew about Darius confirmed that the Pillars were in charge and challenging them could lead to an unfortunate and humiliating end.

“Very well,” he said, finally. “I will be happy to attend. Can I bring friends?”

“You don’t want to be noticed,” the bookseller said. There was an intensity in his voice that surprised Dacron. They didn’t want to be noticed by whom? “Come alone if you can; if not, bring one person.”

He walked off down the alleyway before Dacron could respond. Dacron considered as he opened a channel back to orbit. He’d report on the odd request first and then detail what he’d learned of magic. And then they could see if they could work out just what was going on.

It was funny, but every time they solved one mystery another appeared right in front of them.