Wizard’s Bane by Rick Cook

In fact Moira had been so far from adept she had barely survived the months she had spent studying with the old wizard. She knew Patrius remembered that time perfectly. But if one of the Mighty asks for aid he or she can not be gainsaid.

“Lord,” suggested Moira timidly, “might not one of your apprentices . . . ?”

“What? My apprentices, oh no, no, no. They don’t know, you see. They can’t know yet. Besides,” he added as an afterthought, “they’re all male.”

“Yes, Lord,” Moira said as if that explained everything.

The wizard straightened. “Now come along, child. The place is near and we haven’t much time. And you must tell me how you have been getting along. It’s been such an age since I saw you last. You never come to the Capital, you know,” he added in mild reproach.

“For those of us who cannot walk the Wizard’s Way it is a long journey, Lord.”

“Ah yes, you’re right, of course,” the old man chuckled. “But tell me, how do things go on in your village?”

Moira warmed. Studying under Patrius had nearly killed her several times, but of all her teachers she liked him the best. His absentminded, grandfatherly manner might be assumed, but no one who knew him doubted his kindness. She remembered sitting in the wizard’s study of an afternoon drinking mulled cider and talking of nothing that mattered while dust motes danced in the sunbeams.

If Patrius was perhaps not the mightiest of the Mighty, he was certainly the best, the nicest and far and away the most human of that fraternity of powerful wizards. Walking with him Moira felt warm and secure, as if she were out on a picnic with a favorite uncle instead of abroad on the Fringe of the Wild Wood on one of the most dangerous days of the year.

Patrius took her straight into the forest, ignoring the potential danger spots all around. At length they came to a grassy clearing marked only by a rock off to one side.

“Now my child,” he said, easing himself down on the stone and resting his staff beside him, “you’re probably wondering what I’m up to, eh?”

“Yes, Lord.” Moira stood a respectful distance away.

“Oh, come here my girl,” he motioned her over. “Come, come, come. Be comfortable.” Moira smiled and sat on the grass at his feet, spreading her skirt around her.

“To business then. I intend to perform a Great Summoning and I want your help.”

Moira gasped. She had never seen even a Lesser Summoning, the materializing of a person or object from elsewhere in the World. It was solely the province of the Mighty and so fraught with danger that they did it rarely. A Great Summoning brought something from beyond the World and was far riskier. Of all the Mighty living, only Patrius, Bal-Simba and perhaps one or two others had ever participated in a Great Summoning.

“But Lord, you need several of the Mighty for that!”

Patrius frowned. “Do you presume to teach me magic, girl?”

“No, Lord,” Moira dropped her eyes to the grass.

The wizard’s face softened. “It is true that a Great Summoning is usually done by several of us acting in consort, but there is no need, really. Not if the place of Summoning is quiet.”

So that was why Patrius had come to the Fringe, Moira thought. Here, away from the bustle and disturbance of competing magics, it would be easier for him to bend the fundamental forces of the World to his will.

“Isn’t it dangerous, Lord?”

Patrius sighed, looking suddenly like a careworn old man rather than a mighty wizard or someone’s grandfather.

“Yes Moira, it is. But sometimes the dangerous road is the safest.” He shook his head. “These are evil times, child. As well you know.”

“Yes, Lord,” said Moira, with a sudden pang.

“Evil times,” Patrius repeated. “Desperate times. They call for desperate measures.

“You know our plight, Moira. None know better than the hedge witches and the other lesser orders. We of the Mighty are isolated in our keeps and cities, but you have to deal with the World every day. The Wild Wood presses ever closer and to the south the Dark League waxes strong to make chaos of what little order there is in the World.”

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