31. The Waystone
When Liv had pictured a waystone in her mind, she’d imagined a sort of empty doorframe, made of mana-stone, standing out in the middle of nowhere. It would probably be carved with obscure Vædic sigils, the sort of thing scholars at Coral Bay had been studying for years in a fruitless effort to build new portals.
She’d never imagined just how big they were.
"That entire thing is the waystone?" Liv asked, again. They’d left the road up to the mine, and the carriage had turned off onto a rougher, more overgrown trail that led down toward the Aspen River. In fact, a section had been washed out by some past flood, and a bridge of timbers erected to bridge the gap. At the end of the trail, on a bluff overlooking the river, half a dozen wagons were crammed up against each other atop an enormous stretch of stone. If Liv had to guess, she would say it was at least fifty feet across.
"The old gods built waystones to transport goods, as well as travellers," Master Grenfell explained, leading her over to where the edge of the waystone gave way to moss. It was clear at a glance that much of the stone had only been cleared recently, and Liv guessed it had been done just for this expedition - probably when the Eld came down to help with the harvest.
"I was picturing a sort of door that you walked through," Liv admitted.
"Oh no," Master Reimis broke in, walking over from where he’d been seeing to the wagons. The teams of horses shuffled, flicking their tails to keep the flies away, while they waited. "They had things like that, of course; personal waystones to move from their homes to places like Godsgrave. But most of those were destroyed, or lost in the depths of a rift. What remains are waystones that existed to move goods. Aluthet’Staia from here, for instance. And there’s no good moving only as much stone as man on foot can carry through a door in his two hands. Here, come take a look, Livara."
Together, the four of them crouched down at the edge of the waystone, even Lady Julianne. "I expected it would be mana-stone, and there would be sigils," Liv said, shifting her staff into her left hand. "I’m glad that I got that right, at least."
"Master Norris actually has a theory that the stones are layered," Grenfell explained. "With entire networks of sigils on each layer. He believes there are just too many enchantments, all designed to interact with each other in complex ways, for what we see on the surface. Of course, there’s no way to know without breaking one of the waystones apart into pieces, and no one is going to do that."
"I suspect even making the attempt would be dangerous," Reimis added. "Look here, along the border, Livara. This is where the destinations are listed - in Vædic, of course. Do you see one that you recognize?"
Liv shook her head. "Master Grenfell hasn’t begun teaching me sigils, yet," she admitted.
"Then let me point a few out. Over here," Master Reimis said, rising to his feet and moving clockwise around the rim of the waystone, "is the inscription for Al’Fenthia - High Pass, in the Vædic tongue." Liv followed him around; though the Elden merchant only pointed a few sets of sigils out to her by name, picked out in gleaming silver, she saw dozens. "This is Coral Bay, here," he said. "One to remember, for when you’re ready to travel there. I would show you the sigils for Bald Peak, but no waystone carries the inscriptions for itself."
"The inscriptions are a fascinating subject for study, in and of themselves," Master Grenfell mused, trailing after them. "The names of particular locations are often slightly different - or we have dropped pieces, in the intervening years. Sometimes the information is obvious enough: Coral Bay Fishery, for instance. They still farm scallops and oysters there."
"Sometimes parts are entirely untranslatable. Bald Peak Power- something," Julianne remarked. "I don’t understand that one. Your home is listed as ’High Pass Crop Breeding, though again, the last piece I can’t catch. But it is like a window into another world, long in the past."
"So how does it work?" Liv asked. "Obviously you want this one." She nudged the butt of her staff against the inscriptions that marked the trading city of Al’Fenthia. "Mayor Cooper said this stone was broken, but I know Master Jurian used it to get here from Coral Bay."
"It isn’t broken," Master Reimis said. "It simply isn’t powered. Though even that is only partly true; this waystone absorbed quite a bit of mana from the recent eruption. We were able to use that to send the first group of wagons, three days ago."
This chapter upload first at NovelUsb.Com
"If the shoal were just a bit larger," Master Grenfell explained, "the stone would likely charge itself. We believe one of the enchantments in the lower layers is designed to draw in ambient mana."
"Without a shoal, however, it takes a substantial amount of magical power to activate," Reimis continued. "Most human mages can’t do it alone."
"But Eld can hold more mana, can’t they?" Liv said. She hoped no one noticed the hesitation; she’d almost said ’we,’ instead, and caught herself at the last moment.
"On average," Reimis agreed. "The other complication is that the amount of mana needed is based on the size of the stone, not the number of people or wagons you’re sending. When the waystone activates, everything standing here will go. It gives us an incentive to use the stones for large groups, rather than just a person or two."
"How much mana does this stone require?" Liv asked.
"Twenty rings," Master Grenfell answered. Liv blinked; that was not only more than he could handle, it was more than she could, as well. Together, however, they could make it happen. But it also put into perspective how much more powerful Master Jurian was.
"Can more than one person help?" she asked. As long as she had them here willing to explain, Liv wanted to learn as much as she could.
Reimis nodded. "That’s what we have to do at home. Our waystone is actually larger than this one; in the mages’ guild’s system of measurements, it would take about thirty rings to use. That’s more than I can do myself, but this one I can handle. Now, when I infuse the appropriate sigils with mana, watch what happens."
The merchant knelt down, placed his palm over the set of inscriptions for his home city, and closed his eyes. Liv could feel the waystone open up, like a flower drinking in sunlight. She’d gotten used to how her staff seemed to suck in mana, and this reminded her of that sensation, only much stronger. The waystone drank and drank, and began to shine with a bright blue light.
"That means the stone is activating," Master Reimis said, rising back to his feet. "Make sure that none of you are standing on it. The blue light is a warning that the stone is about to send us to our destination. If there was a group coming in, the light would be red."
"How long does it take?" Liv asked. She also took two big steps back off the stone onto the grass.
"I was taught to give a slow count of two-hundred," Lady Julianne said.
"Farewell, Livara," Airis Ka Reimis called. "I look forward to seeing you in a few years. You may write to me, if you wish, and I will respond."
"Goodbye!" Liv called, waving her hand. The blue light grew so bright that she had to raise her arm to shield her eyes, and then it was snuffed out, like a candle. When she had blinked away the dark spots in her vision, she saw that the waystone was entirely empty. "Is it safe now?" she asked Master Grenfell. When the mage nodded, she rushed out into the center of the rock, and turned around, looking at the dozens of sigils splayed out along the rim.
"Every one of these is a place we could go," she said, grinning. "Somewhere out in the world."
"Not all of them," Julianne cautioned her. "You see these, here?" She traced a set of sigils with the toe of her boot. Unlike the inscriptions for Coral Bay or Al’Fenthia, the silver within them had tarnished. "That means the waystone at the destination has been damaged or destroyed. Never use one of those."
"When it’s time to go to Coral Bay," Liv said, turning to Master Grenfell, "do you think I can use this to get there?"
Grenfell shrugged. "You can hold thirteen rings now, Liv. And you have a great deal of time to grow and develop your power. It is possible."
"Even if you can’t do it alone," Julianne offered, "the three of us together easily can. Now that you’ve come into your magic, and I’m here, Master Grenfell wouldn’t have to do it alone. Now, let’s get back. It’s a long ride."
"That reminds me," Liv said, scampering off the stone. "I wanted to ask you, Master, whether there was a word for something like a cage. I think the men on the wall would have had an easier time killing that fox if they could shoot through bars, instead of just down over the walls.
"I’m not aware of one," Grenfell admitted. Together, the three walked across the bluff down toward the carriage. "Which isn’t to say the Vædim didn’t have a word, of course; they must have. Whatever it was has been lost. Have you considered stelis? That would get you a pillar, and with enough of those, you’d form your own cage."
By the time they’d settled into their benches, and the team of horses was off, they were deep into a discussion of spell theory.
☙
At the end of harvest season, much of the town of Whitehill was surprised to find that Mayor Cooper, who’d served four terms already, was not planning to run for election a fifth time. He told anyone who asked that he was selling his manor to buy a home in Coral Bay, so that he could provide Mirabel a home during the years she would be attending the College of Vædic Grammar. In his place, Sheriff Porter stood for election, and won easily. The general sentiment was that he had more than proved himself capable during his command of the town walls during Lady Julianne’s labor.
"Don’t you miss the income?" Liv asked Master Grenfell, a few days after the election. Aldo and Mirabel Cooper had left town the day before, with a drovers’ train headed south out of the valley. She imagined they were trying to beat the snow, before it closed the passes. Left unsaid was the knowledge that they could have used the waystone, if anyone capable of using mana had wanted the slightest thing to do with them.
"No," Grenfell said. "I’ve been eager to be rid of the two of them for some while. It was a waste of my time to teach them anything; it’s clear neither will ever be mages. Again, and try integrating kap, this time."
Liv raised her staff. Below, they’d had James and Piers set up a half dozen straw archery targets. One had been thrown twenty feet back by a pillar of ice rising beneath it, while a second was crushed beneath three pillars that had risen around it, then toppled over. She pointed her staff at the third target, and began her incantation.
"Celent’he Encve Stelim Kapium," Liv sang, a smile curving her lips in spite of herself at the sensation of the mana surging through her, into the length of aspen-wood, and then out again. Around the base of the archery target, five pillars of ice erupted from the ground, closing around it like a fist. "Yes," she said, after catching her breath. "That does work better."
"Still too slow, though," Grenfell said. "You’ll need to add Veh back in."
"It’s already using three rings of mana, even with the staff," Liv protested. "That would push it to four, at least."
"Worth it, to ensure that you actually capture your target," Grenfell told her. "I feel like Jurian’s words are coming out of my mouth."
"He does a lot of fighting, I take it?" Liv asked. "I think I’ll call this ’Grasping Ice."
"As good a name as any," the master mage told her. "Be sure to record it properly in your book when we get back to the castle. Master Jurian and his team were one of the first groups to cull the wild rifts in Varuna," he explained. "It made them rather famous, and not a little wealthy. He even brought a word back to the guild, found in one of those ancient ruins. Of course, it didn’t help them in the end."
"What do you mean?" Liv asked.
"I mean they were fool enough to go into the shoals of Godsgrave," Master Grenfell explained. "I don’t know the whole story, but most of them died there. Only two came out alive - Jurian, and his betrothed."
"Master Jurian is married?" Liv asked.
"No." Grenfell shook his head. "She called it off, after that fiasco. Went to serve as court mage for the king. The whole thing was a mess, enough that I heard about it all the way out here."
Liv bit her lip, trying to imagine the strong, confident mage who’d saved her from Mayor Cooper and the guilds losing a fight. Not only losing a fight, but losing people who must have been his friends, and then being abandoned by the woman who should have been his wife. She couldn’t make the knowledge fit the man she’d met, so she changed the subject.
"Do you know the word for sword?" she asked.
"Eager to follow in your aunt’s footsteps, are you?" Grenfell asked her, with a smile. "Has it escaped your notice that, just like Jurian’s team, she died at the bottom of a rift?"
"I saw you all when you came back from Bald Peak," Liv said. "I know it’s dangerous. But it was dangerous to be left behind, too. And if no one went, all those monsters would spill out, wouldn’t they?"
"They would," Grenfell said. "I just want you to understand, that it is much safer to find a place as a court mage to a decent noble, and spend your time teaching children, than it is to go wandering around the western continent like he did. At Whitehill, I only need to go on a culling team every twenty years or so, when Bald Peak erupts."
"I’m not saying I enjoyed fighting those bats," Liv said. "But if I hadn’t known how, I’d be dead now - and so would Lady Julianne, Sophia, and baby Matthew. Learning the right spells kept us all alive."
"True enough," the older mage admitted. "You want sek. Observe." Grenfell held out his right hand, fingers open. "Aluthet’he Sekis." A shining blade of mana, shedding blue and gold wisps of power, extended from his palm. The moment it solidified, Master Grenfell closed his fingers about the hilt, grasping it, and then made a cut through the air.
"Not a spell I use often," he admitted. "Like a shield of raw mana, this construct continues to draw from me the longer I use it. That is why I generally find it more efficient to fling shards at a distance - as well as the fact that I am no swordsman, and have no business fighting up close in someone’s face. It does have a few advantages, however, and perhaps more for you than for me."
"Like what?" Liv asked.
"For one thing, maintaining the blade doesn’t require me to talk," Grenfell pointed out, whipping it around and then bringing the tip to a halt just in front of Liv’s chest. "That’s often a handy thing. It can be used for defense, as well as offense, if you are trained in swordplay. It’s also a rather contained display of power: notice I’m not shattering the ground or blowing apart doors."
Liv took a step back. "And I wouldn’t have to maintain it, would I?" she guessed. "Celet’he Sekis." Just like her teacher had done, she extended her right hand, leaving her staff in the left, and opened her fingers. A moment later, a sword of ice rested in her palm. Rather than grasp it, however, Liv yelped and let the weapon drop. It shattered into frozen chunks on the parapet.
"That’s colder than I thought it would be," Liv complained. "How did she do it? And how did she use five of them?"
Grenfell chuckled. "It actually relieves me, somewhat, to see that you don’t get every spell perfect the first time," he admitted. "That word comes so naturally to you that it is astonishing, Liv. But some things simply require experimentation - trial and error. I would suggest that perhaps you should commission a good set of gloves. With the nature of your magic, I think you will find them convenient on more than one occasion. Do you really want to learn to use a sword? Shall we add fencing lessons to your schedule?"
"I don’t know," Liv said, after a moment. "Probably not. I’m too small; even if I had a magical sword, I can’t see it preventing any of the guards from beating me into the ground. Let’s stick to things I can actually be good at."
"Come on," Master Grenfell said. "They’ll be serving the evening meal."
"I still want to know how she did it, though," Liv grumbled, following him down the stairs.