The Howling Delve - Jaleigh Johnson
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"We're in a testing chamber," she said, for Dantane's benefit. "Varan designated one for each apprentice, arranged like the points of a star. When I was here, these caves could only be reached through Varan. He teleported us down."
"You didn't know the portal led down here?" asked Dantane.
"No. I didn't know Varan knew of the portal," she admitted. "The markings on it don't match his sigils. Perhaps that was how he discovered the secret tunnels," she murmured, half to herself, "through the portal."
"There are more caverns?" Dantane prompted. "Do you know where?"
"Varan said they adjoined the testing chambers somehow. We looked, as apprentices, but the entrance was magically concealed. I suppose it's possible, now his other magics are breaking down, that the connecting passage has been revealed."
"So we'll have to explore each chamber," Dantane said. "Our companions might be there, or in the other tunnels." He looked at her. "Do you know what they contained?"
Meisha laughed humorlessly. "Whatever great Art the Howlings saw fit to store. You were deposited in the wrong place, Dantane, if you seek treasure down here."
The wizard grimaced. "Such seems to be the course of my life," he said.
Meisha stood up, her eyes drawn back to the phantom image atop the pedestal. She watched, fascinated, as the air in front of her double seemed to split in two. Out of the breach came the head of a being that only vaguely resembled a human. Hairless, outlined in white flame, it stared at its summoner curiously. Though she felt no heat, Meisha recalled well how the air around the creature rippled with burning. It was the first time she'd ever interacted with a fire elemental.
The scene blurred and faded, leaving them alone in the chamber.
"What was that?" asked Dantane.
"A memory," answered Meisha, "from soon after I came to the Delve. I was a Wraith—half-feral—in Keczulla, when Varan found me. He took me on as an apprentice because he sensed my talent. I remember when he brought me down here to converse with the fire elemental. I could feel it burning, just like I burned inside. It's part of every savant's training, to recognize how their spirit matches the element they've chosen. With proper training, eventually, the spirit melds with that force and becomes part of it," Meisha said, her voice oddly hushed.
"Is that what you aspire to?" Dantane asked, "to join with the fire and become as an elemental creature?"
She glanced at him. "It's what every savant wants."
"But do you?"
Without answering, Meisha stood up, her eyes scanning the floor where the phantom images had been. "There." She bent down, lifting a small piece of glittering crystal from the floor. "The source of the memories," she explained.
"Your master's work," Dantane said, impressed. "He has great power."
"Obviously, not enough," Meisha said, "or he failed to follow his own teachings."
Had Varan recorded all his past sessions with his apprentices? she wondered, and if so, how many crystals, how much Art would be required for such a task?
"Why do you despise him so much?" Dantane asked. "He awoke the power in you. Without it, you might have died a Wraith."
"I know," Meisha said. "He cared about me, as much as he was capable of such feelings. He offered me magic and a place in his world, but I couldn't accept it."
"Why not?"
"Because if I hadn't possessed that power and if Varan hadn't sensed it, he would have passed me by on that street without looking twice. It was the power that fascinated him most, not any of us. And yet, I still wanted to love him."
"Then why did you come back?" Dantane asked. "Why help him now?"
"Because he was right. He was the only one who understood me, and I still love him for that," Meisha said bleakly. "That bond—the one I see reflected in Kall's group—I've known nothing like it, not since the night Shaera left the candle in my room."
"Shaera?"
"It doesn't matter." Meisha waved the memories away. "She's gone now—they're all dead—and Varan is not the master I knew."
"What about the boy," Dantane persisted, "the one who followed you?"
"Talal," Meisha said, and something inside her constricted. She'd avoided thinking about the boy. "Talal is ... he has no scrap of magical power in him, and yet I find myself wanting to mentor him, in life, if not in the Art. It's strange. Then, in the next breath, I remember what I am and what I could do. When I remember, I want to put him as far from myself as I possibly can."
"It seems he would choose otherwise," Dantane observed.
Meisha shook her head grimly. "I pray that choice doesn't bring about his doom," she said, "if it has not already."
She touched the crystal, and the phantom Varan appeared again, drawing Meisha's attention back to the pedestals. This time the apprentice was not Meisha, but a young man with short blond hair cropped in a bowl shape.
"Prieces," Meisha said. "The earth savant. I've never seen this."
The young man appeared pale and drawn, even by the blurry magic illuminating the memory. His gestures were not as crisp as the child-Meisha's had been. His arms weighed heavily with fatigue, but he pressed on under Varan's encouraging gaze.
The earth elemental crawled up from the ground opposite Varan, but it was bigger—twice as broad as the creature Meisha had helped to summon. The force of its arrival shook the cavern, knocking Prieces from the pedestal. Varan reacted instantly, throwing out a spell to keep the apprentice from injuring himself. He didn't see the earth elemental smash the pedestal Prieces was standing on in half. Stone shards flew, striking Varan in the back. The wizard turned, intending to banish the creature, Meisha thought, but the thing rose up, crashing headfirst into the ceiling. Cracks fissured through the stone, and the chamber, unstable from all the tunnels carved in one place, began to come apart.
The elemental thrashed wildly, seeking release. It picked up the shattered pieces of the pedestals and threw them. The flat portion hit the wall and fell back, crushing Prieces beneath it.
Meisha cried out and ran forward. Dantane caught her arm. "It is an illusion. It isn't real," he hissed in her ear.
"But it did happen," Meisha whispered. She watched helplessly as Varan shouted an incantation that blew the stone aside, into the earth elemental. The force of the spell knocked the creature backward off its massive feet, giving Varan time to levitate Prieces to safety, but it was too late. The body of the unfortunate apprentice hung limply in the air, his neck broken.
Varan turned, chanting a spell that finally banished the elemental. The wizard collapsed to his knees next to Prieces. Stone continued to fall, but he erected a magical barrier that deflected the falling rock.
"Look there," said Dantane, pointing across the chamber.
The back wall of the cavern had completely caved in, revealing another set of passages that curved and split off in the darkness. Within them, a light burned, but Varan was oblivious to it.
"Is that another testing chamber?" asked Dantane.
Meisha shook her head. "There should be nothing behind that wall but solid rock."
They watched the strange light grow brighter, and as the rumbling gradually ceased, another sound filled the silence—the tap-tap of what sounded like rain on a campfire.
The light flickered and went out, but only because an object had passed in front of it, a swift, blurry movement not unlike the fire elemental.
Not rain, Meisha thought, as the thing coalesced, taking on shape and substance, but claws.
Dantane gasped when he saw what the walls had imprisoned. "Impossible," he said.
* * * * *
Laerin hauled Morgan to his feet. The rogue's boots skidded on a pile of bones. Morgan regained his footing and cursed a loud, long streak that echoed down the tunnel.
"See how you corrupt the children," Laerin tutted, shooting a wink at Talal.
Talal didn't share the humor. He was still on the ground, shards of broken bone digging into his knees.
"Where are we?" he asked. He dislodged an oblong skull from a pile. "What are all these?"
"Animal remains," Laerin surmised, taking the skull from him. "Wolves of great size. They all died here together."
"In pieces," Morgan said. His head perked up. "Quiet."
Talal listened and heard the echo of footsteps. Swiftly, Morgan picked up the remains of a battered rib cage and smashed it into the face of a Shadow Thief as he came around the corner.
The thief went down, and Morgan put his boot on the man's neck.
"Brittle pieces." Morgan sniffed. He cast away the shredded bone cage.
"Is he harmless?" Laerin asked. The squirming thief was trying to reach a dagger clipped in his boot.
Morgan pressed harder, until the man choked. "As kitten teats." he grinned.
"Let me talk to him." Laerin squatted next to the thief. "Where are the others?" he asked calmly.
"Your friends or mine?" the thief rasped. He spat blood in Laerin's face.
The half-elf wiped the dripping red trails. "This one's as lost as we are," he told Morgan. "Have you ever been down here before?" he asked the man.
"No," the thief said, for he couldn't shake his head under the weight of Morgan's boot. "We've never been in these tunnels."
"Think Meisha knows about this place?" Talal asked hopefully.
"Maybe, but I wouldn't wager on finding her soon," Morgan said, "if this place's as vast as it seems." He pointed to three tunnels splitting off the cavern, all stretching an indeterminate distance before branching again.
"We'd better start looking," Laerin said. "Let me scout ahead."
"What do we do with him?" Talal asked, indicating the thief.
"Trap trigger," Morgan said cheerfully. "We'll move faster that way, with him testing the path ahead of us."
"Clear," Laerin declared, trotting back up the passage. "Narrow, but more likely to be free of traps. These caves are buried too deep to be heavily protected."
"Cheerful thought for this one," said Morgan, dragging the Shadow Thief to his feet. He shone his last torch over the walls. "Not one of these tunnels looks to be sloping up. They're all going deeper underground. Anything look familiar?" he asked, nudging Talal.
Talal shook his head. "Where do you think the others are?" he asked, though he feared the answer. He'd seen Meisha fall down the chasm.
"Portals malfunction," said Laerin. "When that happens, they can deposit a person off the mark from where they intended to appear—a few feet, a mile . .."
"Into a wall," Morgan muttered, and Talal's heart wrenched.
Laerin squeezed his shoulder and sent Morgan a quelling glance. "The portal is old," he said, "but I believe it to be sound. We'll find them."
"I suppose more of them damn shadow mongrels got scattered about, too," said Morgan.
"That might be a blessing," said Laerin. "If they followed us and are separated, we may have a better chance of overcoming them. Speaking of which . . ." The half-elf drew his dagger and prodded the Shadow Thief in the back. "Hearty congratulations," he told the man, "you're taking point. Stray too far ahead and you'll find my blade between your shoulders."
The thief nodded curtly, and the group set off with him and Laerin leading.
The first tunnel bent to the right, then bent back on itself so sharply that the way was impassable for even Talal; they had to backtrack to the second tunnel.
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