The tentacles writhed about her, becoming scaly limbs like those of a giant insect or perhaps young dragons, and then thickets of thorns. Surely power had brought madness? Thaile struggled against the occult delusions, striving to see her companions in their familiar forms. A flash of sorcery dazzled her, transporting all three of them to the steps of the Chancery. Its bulk loomed dark against the sky, thick ancient stone promising sanctuary and coolness and a blessed shielding to shut out the clamor of the overbright world. As she was guided to the doors, she saw the tiny cracks in the grain of the wood, the rust on the hinges, little silver spiderwebs. She sensed the millions of feet that had trodden the granite of the steps, and the weight of years.
Then she was within; there was peace and cool twilight. She let her companions guide her to a bench and sank down thankfully, shivering in the sudden chill held captive by the walls. There was no one else in the Chancery except a couple of trainees poring over documents on the topmost floor. A beaker was thrust into her hands, and she drank, her teeth chattering on the rim.
She sat then for a moment, huddled over and staring miserably at the flagstones, and yet well aware of the two sorcerers lurking alongside. Slowly she became aware of a low sea-sound rising out of the silence, a soft rumble like distant surf, or wind playing with a forest. Or a murmur of thousands of voices. Growing.
“The old fool has told her two words, “ Teal said furiously, but he had not spoken aloud, and he had intended the message only for the sorceress.
“I fear not. I think just one.”
“A mage so strong? It is impossible!”
The background voices were growing more insistent, an uncounted multitude muttering, trying to speak to her, Thaile.
She looked up in alarm, realizing that she was hearing the books themselves, the myriad volumes that filled gallery upon gallery in the Chancery. The most sacred and ancient records the College possessed were stored here, and she was hearing them. Teal and Shole stood over her, pulsating phantoms of terror and jealousy obscuring their mundane selves. Why were they so frightened?
Out of the sibilant muttering of the books, one voice was starting to emerge . . . It alone was speaking her name. “Are you feeling any better now, dear?” Shole asked. Hatred and fear burned in green fire about her.
“A little, thank you,” Thaile said weakly. Where and when had she seen this woman before? Before she came to the College. Deep anger stirred, fighting for memory.
Her Feeling had returned. She had almost forgotten her talent in the last few weeks, because it worked only on her fellow novices and trainees, and not even on all of them. As an adept she had learned how to suppress it, and had taken to doing so out of respect for others’ privacy. Now she could read her companions’ emotions as easily as mundanes’. She could not ignore their feelings, for they bore a rank smell of danger. They were as repellent as their owners: apprehension, jealousy, resentment, and a seething desire to dominate and use.
“Do you see that chair?” the sorceress asked. “Can you lift it? From here, I mean?”
Startled, Thaile looked where the woman pointed. Some distance away along the hallway a massive throne of carved oak stood against the wall, old and dusty, abandoned there ages ago, serving no especial purpose.
“Work magic, you mean?”
“Of course. Try it.”
Thaile thought, and wished, and the chair wobbled, then began to rise.
“Well done,” Shole said, but her cheerful tone hid an angry, frightened hiss. “Keep lifting.”
The chair grew heavier. The sorceress was pushing downward. Thaile resisted, lifting harder. The hall began to pulsate with power. Shole’s withered form glowed with effort, and yet the chair continued to rise.
“Help me!”
Teal joined in. A deep throb seemed to permeate the whole building. Anger and fear grew stronger, and provoked anger in Thaile also. The battle of power was hurting her. Resenting the unequal odds, she summoned all her will—
With an echoing crash, the chair exploded into dust. Power dissipated in a flash like a lightning stroke. Thaile fell back against the wall, and the two sorcerers staggered. God of Mercy! On the topmost floor, the two students raised their heads, startled by the noise.
“Incredible!” Teal thought to Shole, but Shole was too stunned to reply. The contest had pained her.
In the occult silence that followed, the multitude of voices became audible again, most just clamoring impersonally for Thaile’s attention, but that single voice still rising out of them, one book calling out to her by name. She could not distinguish the words. It spoke in an unfamiliar accent, an antique dialect.
“Well, you are a mage of uncommon power, Novice,” Teal said with a heartiness belied by the envy that writhed over him in snakes of fire. “I must stop calling you by that name! You need no tutors now.”
“I don’t?” Thaile said, looking up at him in alarm. These new abilities overwhelmed her. She wanted guidance and support and reassurance—and yet she would trust nothing these two twisted antiquities told her.
“Look!” He snapped his fingers and a thick leatherbound volume appeared in his hand.
It could not have come from outside, because the building was shielded. Somehow Thaile traced it back and found the shelf he had taken it from, and the gap. How had he done that?
With a smirk, Teal blew dust from the book. Then he held it out to her, unopened. “Read it!”
She did not need to take it from him. It was a catalogue of all the men and women who had known the word Istik in the last seven hundred years—analysts, archons, and even a couple of Keepers. Their lives and deeds were listed, and some notes on their powers. Many of them had been especially gifted at foreseeing trouble, as if that were a characteristic of that particular word. They included Archon Foor, one of her own ancestors, a distinguished member of her Gifted family.
“Try,” Teal said.
“I don’t need to. I can see what it says. But there is another . . .” She listened, seeking to isolate that one insistent voice from all the thousands of others. She dampened those others, and then the One gleamed more brightly. It was on the topmost gallery, on a high shelf, coated in webs. She reached for it and it jumped easily into her hands, solid and heavy and slightly warm.
She sneezed at the dust that came with it. Her eyes watered, but she did not need eyes in this dark hall.
“This one,” she said. “The writing is strange. Why, it is full of prophecies! I can’t—”
“Give me that!” Shole screamed, and the book vanished. Thaile jumped to her feet in fury. “How dare you! Where did you put it?” It must still be in the building. “Ah! Down there!” In the cellar. Again she reached.
Shole blocked her, Thaile shoved her aside, yet neither had moved.
“Stop!” the sorceress cried, her panic brightening the corridor. ”That one is not for you, not yet!” She hurled a shielding over the littered, cobwebby table where the book lay. The occult noise was another clap of thunder, louder even than the chair had made.
Of course creating a shield was always a very conspicuous use of sorcery—how did Thaile know that? The book’s voice had stopped. She wondered if she could break a shielding now. It was just a matter of strength, she saw . . .
“Thaile!” Shole said in violet and gold urgency. “Please! Do not meddle with that book! That one needs authorization from the Keeper.”
“I think we should go now,” Teal said shrilly. “You must go home, Thaile, and rest awhile. Use your new powers sparingly at first, won’t you?” He was very worried, planning to report to the archons and unload his responsibility as soon as possible.
Thaile,looked at his sweaty, bulbous, white-furred image and shuddered. ”Yes, I shall go home,” she muttered. Home? What Place? Again old memories stirred under the tumult of the day, but she could not reach them.
3
A pixie in trouble went to her place and shut the door on the world. If the trouble was serious enough, she curled up on the bed. Perhaps a married pixie needed her goodman there, also—that aspect Thaile did not know, not having a man. Silence and solitude were enough. After a while she felt calmer and could begin to explore the new powers she had gained from Oopan.
By evening she was feeling better. She was feeling hungry, too. She would have to face people again eventually. She decided she must seek out some company—after all, occult promotion was cause for celebration, usually. Lying on the bed, sucking the end of a curl, she ran through her mental list of acquaintances. Rather to her surprise, she discovered that the women on it had much less appeal at the moment than the men. Reassurance from a deep-pitched voice would be more convincing, a male smile more gratifying—something to do with the chin? She laughed at herself and decided it must be the bed making her feel that way. She rolled off, straightened up, and ran to the bathroom.