CHAPTER FORTY

FARID

“There you are.” Moreth shuffled into the library, walking past the pattern that shifted bright upon the wall and looked over the table, his eyes stony but showing grief nevertheless. The warding-symbol Farid had drawn on his forehead glowed blue and yellow. “Mura has been in your rooms and up and down the stairs looking for you.”

Farid had been searching the ancient patterns for anything they could use against Yrkmir, but his understanding of them was coming too slowly. He put his work aside and looked up at the rock-sworn. “I am always in the library. Hasn’t she noticed?”

“Always? You have not been here so long as that,” Moreth said. “Rock and wind measure time on a different scale, and even on the human one, you are new.” He went to the window and looked out over the northern quarter. “Have you seen Govnan’s fires?”

“How could I not?” Farid had watched them all night: Govnan had not slept, and neither had he. Both of them bore magic requiring more control than dreams allowed. His greatest fear was waking to find he had cast a spell upon the Tower.

He cleared his throat. “If you see the fires it means the high mage is still alive and the northern wall stands safe.” We will see about the western wall. Farid felt a cold dread. The truce had yet two more days, but the Yrkmen soldiers and their pale austere filled his mind. He did not believe the truce would end peacefully—the emperor would not convert to Mogyrk; that was unthinkable.

And that meant only one thing: war, blood, death. He spoke to Moreth again, speaking bravely for himself as much as for the rock-sworn. “The way I see it, we’re all soldiers, of a magical kind, and we have to work together to keep the city safe. I think Govnan knew this.”

Moreth turned his head away. “Yes. He did. He does.”

Farid stood. “Why were you looking for me?”

“Your magic is different from ours. We have a problem our elementals cannot fix. Will you look?”

“Of course.” Before leaving the room he stopped and said, “Can you see anything different in this room?”

Farid could see the colourful pattern on the wall, but Moreth looked around and shrugged. “Only the normal things.” They left the library and began a slow descent. Moreth’s steps were solid and sure but Farid held on to the wall with one hand, noticing the cracks between the carvings, the cobwebs in the corners, the dust that lay over everything. They reached the rock-sworn statues and Moreth showed him yet another stairway, this one going below. Here Mura joined them. She smelled of roses, and he could see her own warding symbol glowing from her skin.

This new stairway was underground and unlit. Moreth lifted a lantern from a hook on the wall and lit it before proceeding. Farid took the first step downwards and felt a prickling along his arms. He peered down past the lantern but saw only darkness. He willed himself to be patient as they continued, Moreth moving with consistent, plodding steps, Farid struggling with his robes and Mura coming up behind them, too fast to follow comfortably, always needing to stop and wait for them to move ahead.

At last they reached the bottom, and Farid drew in his breath. He had a sense of great distance, as if he had dived from a great height and was still falling. This was how he had felt in his dream, walking upon the endless road, and he knew that he could remain in freefall or keep walking for twenty years and never reach whatever it was at the end of it. As in the dream, he kept moving, reaching out with his hand, no longer caring about his robes tangling around his feet. The wall consisted of smooth, magic-worked stone that curved into a perfect circle, but here it parted, allowing magic to seep into the Tower like water through a crack. He pushed his fingers into the rent and felt a frisson of excitement.

“Can you fix it?” asked Moreth.

“Why do you want to fix it?” Farid’s hands played over the jagged edges. He now had a sense of what it was that he would never reach, and it was sweet and bright.

“Because if it continues to spread, the whole Tower will fall!” Moreth exclaimed in impatience. “And it’s letting the magic out.”

“It’s letting the magic in,” Farid corrected him. “Can’t you feel it?”

“I did feel it and I almost lost control of Rorswan.”

“Maybe it gave him too much strength—that’s what it does.” Farid could feel the magic against his fingers. If only he could widen the rent and allow more of it through, he was sure it could help them fight Yrkmir. He glanced at Mura. “Touch it—you’ll see.”

“I will not, if it means Yomawa—”

The great bell sounded high above them and Mura made a sound of impatience. “I will get the door,” she said. “I am faster than either of you.”

She left them, and Farid let go of the wall at last and looked around the lowest floor of the Tower. Something else was pulling at him here—not another rent, but a doorway. He could feel it, but he looked at the curved stone and saw nothing.

“The portals to the other realms are here,” said Moreth. “Can you sense them?”

“Yes.” Farid turned towards the stairs. He could have stayed next to the crack all day, like a drunk with a bottle of wine, but he did not want Mura answering the door alone. Too many things were possible in Nooria now. He took the stairs at a run and realised the magic had invigorated him. Though he had not slept, he no longer felt tired. His muscles were not fatigued. He hurried after Mura and reached the hall of statues just as she opened the door. He slowed, knowing that the dignity of the Tower did not allow for mages rushing about in the entryway. More soldiers stood at the door—not the same men who had brought him here.

Mura finished talking to them and turned around, a scroll-tube in one hand. She raised her eyebrows at him. “A communication from the grand vizier.”

Farid was gratified to know that even someone who had been at the Tower for years could still feel impressed and honoured by the palace.

To Farid’s surprise Moreth spoke behind him. He had not known the rock-sworn could move so fast. “Open it.”

They gathered around the scroll-tube like children around cake on a festival day. Mura removed the gleaming cap and pulled out the parchment. She unrolled it and said, “Ah. We are called to guard the wall, in shifts.” She frowned. Perhaps she had not expected such a simple and obvious order.

“Of course.” He should have thought of that himself. Govnan would have instructed them to do so, but the high mage was gone. With a shock he realised he was the eldest mage remaining.

“I will be first.” Mura rolled the scroll back up and looked for a place to deposit the scroll-case, but found nothing and ended up holding it awkwardly in her left hand.

“I’ll walk with you.” It was a long way to the western wall. Farid looked down at his robes; he carried no weapon. If they met with any Mogyrks—

“Our reputation protects us.” Mura must have sensed his disquiet. “Our reputation, and the spirits we carry. But of course the grand vizier has sent a carriage.”

“Oh,” said Farid, embarrassed because he had no bound spirit, and also because he had not thought of a carriage. Mura handed the scroll to Moreth and Yomawa opened the door for her. Farid squinted into the bright sunlight. The courtyard was empty today—no stray mages being delivered, and no soldiers preparing for a desert expedition. They passed two statues of Meksha, and Farid wondered what the courtyard had looked like two hundred years ago when the Tower was full of mages who could tend to it. Had there been gardens? Fish in these greenish ponds?

His foot fell on a glimmering path-stone and he stopped, lifting his foot. “Mura.” To either side of his shoe pattern-shapes arced away, tracing a circle around the courtyard. “Get Moreth,” he told Mura, “hurry.” He crouched to examine the pattern lines. It was a destruction spell, but a symbol he did not understand. Hiss-nick. Adam had taught it to him—likely it meant stone. Did I do this?

“There’s a pattern here,” he said when the mages rejoined him. He showed them where to step in order to remain safe. “It’s of Mogyrk.”

Moreth knelt and put a hand to the ground. “There are five people close by,” he said, “two with the carriage and …” He fell silent, then whispered, “Two more just jumped down from a wall. Running—”

“Can you catch them?” Mura laid a hand on Moreth’s shoulder, her eyes wide.

“—away from us.”

Farid jerked his head up and looked around the courtyard. “Where?”

“To my right.” The stone buckled around Moreth’s hand and rippled away in a liquid, shifting stream of sand and pebble. It flowed against the high wall, which billowed like a sail in the wind, shimmering a moment before returning to its rigid form. “Caught them,” he said through gritted teeth.

Mura was already running towards the gate and Farid followed. Though the stone had caught them, they might still have weapons that could put her in danger. As he passed the carriage, not looking at the drivers who turned and called after him, he realised he was the one at risk—he had neither bound spirit nor weapons. He would be useless in a fight, while Mura had her wind. He was a fool to think he could protect her—neither would he have been able to protect Rushes had those Mogyrks attacked them in the alley. He remembered how Grada had fought the pale folk and his feet slowed. If he was not useful in a fight, he would be useful in some other way. To begin with, he could try to keep a level head.

Moreth’s captives were further away than he expected and by the time he got there he was tired again. He bent, held his knees, and caught his breath. The two men wore dark cloaks; they were struggling against the stone which had risen over their feet, trapping them where they stood. Mura stood a man’s length away and raised her hands. A strong wind blew along the wall and forced back their cloak-hoods, revealing Cerani faces, dark hair.

“Men of Yrkmir,” said Mura, her voice loud and threatening, “you do not belong here.”

The men looked at one another. “‘Men of Yrkmir’?” said one. “We were just running—” The other one punched his arm and he stopped talking.

“Rebels, then.” Mura faced them, her arms held wide, ready to counter any attack.

But Farid frowned. This did not seem right. The men were too well-dressed for Mogyrk rebels and not well-dressed enough to be austeres—at least, he imagined all austeres dressed as well as Adam. He would guess these men were thieves, successful thieves. Who else would have remained in the city this long? Only someone who wanted to loot the empty houses.

Moreth ran up beside him, balancing himself against the wall as if he felt dizzy. When he saw the two men he fell to his knees. “No, no, no …” His hands went to the ground.

“It’s all right, Moreth. Let them go; they’re not our men.”

Mura turned and frowned at him. “You’re sure?”

But Moreth made a high, keening noise and arched his back, then rolled to his side and curled into a ball, gasping.

“Moreth—Moreth, are you well?” Farid put a hand on his shoulder.

Mura screamed and he jumped up, his hands in fists, but she was not under attack. She was looking at the spot where the two men had been, but nothing remained there other than a pool of blood on the stone, reflecting the light of the sun.

Farid looked up and down the street, but he could not see the men, either dead or alive. He turned to Moreth, his hands shaking. “What happened? Where did they go?”

“Moreth is newly sworn,” said Mura, breathing hard. “He lost control of Rorswan and let him swallow those men. He never should have been—”

Farid looked at Moreth. “You murdered them?”

“His spirit took them. Govnan trained him too quickly; he does not yet have enough control.” She walked towards Moreth, her eyes on the stone beneath her feet. Farid realised the danger and stepped back, though he too was still standing on the paving.

Mura put a hand on the rock-sworn’s shoulder and spoke in a calming tone. “Do you have control now?”

Moreth nodded and Mura rubbed her forehead, leaving a red mark beneath her ward. “There is nothing to be done about it. Moreth, I cannot leave you alone. You and I will go to the wall together. Farid will go to the palace and report about the pattern.”

“I will need help to get rid of it.” Farid could not take his eyes from the pool of blood in the street.

“Then do that.” Mura tried to pull Moreth to standing, but he was twice her height and weight. As she struggled with the rock-sworn she glanced back at Farid. “Well, go!”

Farid ran.