Spellwright - BestLightNovel.com
You’re reading novel Spellwright Part 18 online at BestLightNovel.com. Please use the follow button to get notification about the latest chapter next time when you visit BestLightNovel.com. Use F11 button to read novel in full-screen(PC only). Drop by anytime you want to read free – fast – latest novel. It’s great if you could leave a comment, share your opinion about the new chapters, new novel with others on the internet. We’ll do our best to bring you the finest, latest novel everyday. Enjoy
The thing collapsed with a whistling shriek, but she could tell that the kick had not done lasting damage.
Somehow the creature had known she had no magic or blade. Being made of clay, the monster faced no danger from blunt weapons no matter how powerfully wielded. Only if she could find the author's true body could she kill the creature.
Wasting no time renewing her attack, Deirdre struggled to her feet and ran up the stairs.
"DEAD?" NICODEMUS SAID. "Magister, why would you be dead?"
"Follow me onto the Spindle Bridge," Shannon said wearily. They walked side by side. The clicking of their boot heels on the bridge echoed loudly.
Far below them stretched the alpine forest; ahead, the sheer mountain face. As they went, Shannon related everything he knew about Nora Finn's murder, his encounter with the inhuman murderer, Amadi's suspicions, the counter-prophecy, and Eric's and Adan's deaths.
"Sweet heaven!" Nicodemus exclaimed, stopping. "Little Eric Everson with the long brown hair, he's dead? Adan too?"
He hadn't known either boy well, but their deaths still came as a shock.
"Magister! During my nap, I dreamt of a monster attacking a neophytein the glen." He described the pale monster and then the cavern filled with the strange turtles.
Shannon made no immediate reply. A gust of cold wind set Nicodemus's robes flapping and his hair fluttering. They were halfway across the bridge.
At last Shannon spoke: "This new nightmare-when you were both yourself and the figure on the table-also sounds to be a form of quaternary thought. What do you know about the levels of cognition?"
"Only that humans have tertiary cognition," Nicodemus answered. "And that constructs can have secondary or primary cognition, which are like tertiary but with restrictions on what they can think or want or remember."
"And quaternary?" Shannon asked.
Nicodemus hesitated. "Are thoughts that are unthinkable without certain texts cast about one's mind."
"Quite right, but do you know what that means?"
"Haven't the faintest," Nicodemus admitted with a laugh. "An unthinkable thought sounds like a silent noise or illuminating darkness."
Shannon smiled. "But you've already thought unthinkable thoughts. In your nightmares, you thought as both yourself and as other creatures. That phenomenon, what we call shared consciousness, is the simplest form of quaternary cognition. At its most basic level, quaternary cognition involves thinking with at least two minds-one inside your head, another made of magical text."
"So the murderer cast a spell on my sleeping mind that allowed me to think with that spell?"
"Yes, but perhaps it was not the murderer who cast it," Shannon replied slowly. "Given what the villain told me, it's likely he manipulated the dreams of Adan and Eric to lure them out of Starhaven's walls. But your nightmares seem to warn rather than lure. The vision of the glen must have been a vision of poor Eric's fate. The fiend wouldn't want you to know how and where he's attacking cacographers."
"But then where are the dreams coming from?"
"We've no way of knowing," Shannon said, scratching his beard. "But we might ask how the nightmares are related. You dreamed of the dragon attacking Trillinon and the murderer attacking Eric while both events were happening. Whoever or whatever is sending you these dreams wants you to know about these events. The dream-sender must want us to find a connection between them. Perhaps the murderer is connected to the dragon."
"And what of the turtles underground?"
"That one is the strangest of all. Perhaps future dreams will reveal more." Another gust of wind set the old man's white dreadlocks swaying.
"But why send these dreams to me?" Nicodemus asked, his voice growing strained. "And Eric and Adan, what do their deaths..."
Shannon placed a hand on his shoulder. "It is horrifying, I know, but we've no time to panic or grieve. We have to think logically."
The old man blew out a breath, his cheeks bulging. "We know the murderer seeks you so that you might replenish some artifact, an emerald. I'm unsure what he meant by 'replenish,' but I'm positive that he will attack the Drum Tower boys in an attempt to find you. We must protect you and the other cacographers. That's why we're here."
"Magister, the druid spoke of a demon-wors.h.i.+per being nearby. Perhaps we should consult her."
"Not until we know more about her and the murderer." The wizard grimaced. "And we know almost nothing for fact."
Nicodemus blinked. "We know the murderer stole my ability to spell."
"That is the druid's explanation."
A strange heat stirred in Nicodemus's chest. "But you said the creature needs me to replenish some artifact. You said the monster claimed his master has been using a gem on me when I was sleeping. That must be why I'm a cacographer."
Nicodemus's hands began to tremble. That had to be it! He was being crippled by magic; therefore, he might yet be made whole by magic.
"Magister! If I could escape this creature, or maybe recover this gem, I would lose my cacography! Maybe I truly am the Halcyon."
"Nicodemus, I do not like to hear you talk like this."
"You think I'm the one of the counter-prophecy? The Storm Petrel?"
The wizard shook his head. "Given what has happened, you likely are connected to the prophecy in some way, but it is too early to say how you-"
"But in Magistra Finn's library, the monster said the emerald gave him power in Language Prime. Magister, what is Language Prime?"
A golden Numinous arc leaped between Azure and Shannon. The parrot raised her head to examine Nicodemus.
"My boy, listen carefully. Language Prime is a very dangerous, very blasphemous idea. You must never mention it in public hearing."
"But why?" Nicodemus asked. He had to make the old man see that he wasn't supposed to be crippled.
"Only grand wizards may know of it."
"But Magister, given the situation-"
The old man held up a hand. "You don't need to convince me. But promise to keep what I am about to tell you in the strictest secrecy."
Nicodemus swore on every demiG.o.d in the Celestial Canon.
With a solemn nod, the wizard began: "Perhaps you've learned that when time began, there was only lifeless dust. Into this barren world the Creator spoke the first words. These words were in Language Prime, the first magical language, the language from which all other languages come."
Another gust of cold wind set Shannon's silvery locks swaying again. "The first words created this living world and every creature upon it. Modern scholars believe that after that point Language Prime ceased to exist. But long ago, immediately after the Exodus, when the deities awoke on the new continent, they had no memory and little sense. Many claimed to know the Creator's own language. Some claimed to speak directly to the Creator. In their efforts to master Language Prime and rule all of humanity, the awoken deities began the Blood Crusades. The resulting chaos and war nearly destroyed humanity. That is why the pursuit of Language Prime is deemed blasphemy."
Shannon paused and took in a long breath. "That is why it is so easy for modern scholars to believe that Language Prime no longer exists. If they thought otherwise, it would spark religious wars that would destroy what peace the landfall kingdoms have known."
Nicodemus nodded eagerly. "But you think differently, Magister? You believe Language Prime exists?"
"I don't believe it exists; I know it does."
"But how?"
Shannon pinched the bridge of his nose. "Because the last sight I ever saw-the image that burned all mundane vision from my eyes-was of two sentences written in Language Prime."
DEIRDRE MADE IT halfway around the tower before something hit her from behind. halfway around the tower before something hit her from behind.
Pain exploded across her left shoulder and sent her sprawling onto the dusty floor. Next to her clattered the steel bar she had struck into the creature's forearm. The thing must have thrown it.
She rolled over and regained her feet just in time to meet the creature's overhead slash with her remaining bar. She countered with a quick thrust.
The creature, still wrapped in white, leaped back. His greatsword flicked out in a two-handed slash. Deirdre batted down the blade with the bar and stepped in to slam her elbow into the thing's face.
Something that felt like a nose flattened under her blow.
The thing cried out and fell. A dust cloud exploded from under his back as he hit the floor.
Deirdre dove for the thing's sword.
But the monster was still too quick; he squirmed back and away, holding the weapon above her short reach. With a hiss, the thing slashed with the sword across her side.
As the blade rasped against her rib bones, the world exploded into blackness. Deirdre leaped away onto her back. The creature tried to stand, but she kicked her boot toe into his neck. With a strangled cry, the thing toppled backward. Deirdre regained her feet and slammed the bar down on the creature's s.h.i.+n.
She fled.
NICODEMUS BLINKED. "You were blinded by Language Prime?"
The grand wizard rubbed his eyes wearily. "The story starts in Astroph.e.l.l. I was a player in the game of factions then and a little arrogant. I fell in love with the magically illiterate grandniece of Astroph.e.l.l's provost. When I got her with child, we married in secret."
Nicodemus nodded mutely.
The old man continued. "My enemies discovered my pregnant wife and used her to create scandal. It became a rallying point for the malcontent factions-mostly those that wanted the Order to exert more influence over the kingdoms. Hoping to hide the scandal, the provost announced his plan to send my wife and child away to different clandestine locations where neither I nor the malcontents could find them. I was terrified. I had to act before my wife gave birth, before the Provost could separate them. And so...I sought divine intervention."
"You found our G.o.d? You spoke to Hakeem?"
Shannon nodded.
"But no one...you..." Nicodemus stammered. "How?"
A slight smile stole across the wizard's lips. "It's something of a legend among those that seek to break into literary strongholds. My research into textual intelligence gave me an advantage. I wrote a quaternary cognition spell that allowed me to think as the stronghold."
"As the stronghold?"
The old man tapped his forehead. "Impossible, I know, but remember quaternary cognition allows one to think the unthinkable. I couldn't explain it to you better without casting the spell on you. But regardless, the important part was that armed with this text, I snuck into the stronghold and fought its defensive language. For half a mile, I cut and slashed and edited to reach our G.o.d's temple."
Shannon's smile grew. "Hakeem was reading at a desk when I reached him. He manifests himself as a thin, tawny-skinned man with silver hair and a long beard. It was the most mundane scene imaginable, and there Iwas stumbling into his temple, bristling with attack spells and soaked in my own blood. Without even looking up, Hakeem raises a hand and says, 'A moment, my son, I'm near the end of a chapter.'"
Nicodemus's eyes widened. "And then?"
"Then he finished the chapter, of course." Shannon laughed. "And I threw myself at his feet and begged for mercy. I told him I would do anything for my family-I'd undertake any task, perform any labor; I'd die for them...and Hakeem did indeed have a task for me."
The wizard's smile fell into a grim line. "A malicious G.o.dspell from one of Hakeem's enemies had penetrated his defenses and burrowed into his ark, the physical seat of his soul. All attempts to disspell this traplike curse had failed. So, because the trap could not be disarmed, it had to be sprung."
"Hakeem made you take on the curse?"
"Made me? I embraced it. It was written to destroy a G.o.d, not a man. There was a chance it would do nothing at all to me; there was a chance it would kill me outright. I didn't care. Without my wife or son, I couldn't live."
"And the curse was written in Language Prime? Is that how you know it exists?"
The old wizard grimaced. "The divine curse imbued knowledge into its victim's mind and then tried to use that knowledge to harm the victim. Hakeem told me plainly that if I survived, he would use his G.o.dspell to remove all my memories of the text."
Shannon narrowed his white eyes. "I remember walking into a small, dark room. I remember Hakeem's ark-a tall crystal obelisk covered with moving runes. Then the world became a blur; I was moving at a tremendous speed but not moving at all. Two sentences appeared. Each one twisted around the other, like two snakes mating. The runes exploded and pain lanced through my eyes. Then, nothing. No image, no vision, only...blindness."
Nicodemus held his breath.
Shannon sighed. "I woke in a caravan wagon headed for Besh-Lo. Hakeem had caused every Astroph.e.l.l wizard to become terrified by the idea of harming my wife and son. He even compelled the merchants employed by the Order to give my wife a comfortable position in one of their trading houses. However, perhaps threatened by my infiltration of his temple, he did not extend such protection to me. He had allowed the provost to seize my research texts and exile me to Starhaven."
Nicodemus paused for what he hoped was a sympathetic moment before pus.h.i.+ng on. "But the divine curse, Magister, it taught you Language Prime?"
"It did, and Hakeem erased all my memories of it, except for the image of the two sentences. Until now, I've never told a single soul, living or textual, about that memory. I was always too afraid of what Hakeem might have to do to remove it."
Nicodemus felt his heart begin to kick. "So it's true then: Language Prime is real. Then there might be some connection between me and it. The monster must be after me because of that. Magister, don't you see? I'm not supposed to be a cacographer."
Shannon held up a hand. "Nicodemus, you're jumping to conclusions. The creature said he needed you to replenish an emerald. He did not connect you to Language Prime. You must understand that no human could comprehend Language Prime."
"But how do you know that?"
"Because," Shannon said, "Language Prime has only four runes."
A GUST OF GUST OF wind swept across the bridge. It sent Nicodemus's long black hair flying and blew Azure from Shannon's shoulder. The poor bird had to flap hard just to stay over the bridge. wind swept across the bridge. It sent Nicodemus's long black hair flying and blew Azure from Shannon's shoulder. The poor bird had to flap hard just to stay over the bridge.
"Four runes!" Nicodemus said while struggling to tame his hair. "The language from which all other languages come has only four runes?"
Shannon held his arm up as a perch for Azure. "Strange but simple geometric runes. Two were hexagons with a few radial strokes; the other two were pentagons attached to similar hexagons."
"But, Magister, that can't be right."