Read Storm Glass Online

Authors: Maria V. Snyder

Tags: #Fantasy, #Fiction, #General, #Magic, #Fantasy - General, #American Science Fiction And Fantasy, #Fantasy fiction, #Fiction - Fantasy, #Paranormal, #Romance, #Glass

Storm Glass (7 page)

BOOK: Storm Glass
2.96Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
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  “Must have been some nightmare,” he said.

  I shuddered. “You have no idea.”

  A haunted expression gripped him. “I know all about nightmares.”

  “I’m sorry, I didn’t mean-”

  “I know.” He straightened. “It’s your shift.”

  Nodin stole my cot as soon as I vacated it. He was probably asleep by the time I left the cave.

  The cold drove out the last vestiges of sleep from my mind. I glanced at the sky. No stars. No moon. A heavy presence pushed down from above, adding to the moisture in the air. Probably clouds filled with rain, although I couldn’t smell anything besides the salty air.

  The sea moved like a living being. Its chest rose and fell; waves crashed and drew back as it breathed, the rough surf a testament to its displeasure.

  Protected by the wind, the kiln’s fire burned hot. I poked the sand mixture inside with a rod. It needed a few more hours to melt into the required consistency. I added a handful of coals to the fire.

  Now what? I hiked down to the beach and checked on the horses. Quartz nickered in greeting. The small stables had been constructed from bamboo stalks lashed together. The three stalls smelled clean and the walls protected the horses from the wind. Tal snored in an empty bay. His long arms hung off the edge of his cot.

  I returned to the kiln’s cave. The fire warmed me and its familiar roar masked the alien sounds from the sea. I squirmed into a comfortable position at the entrance and rested my back against the wall. The perfect spot to see both the sea and the kiln.

  It wasn’t long before a weak light diluted the black sky to a charcoal gray, which weakened into a drab gray. Clouds boiled on the horizon. The water underneath the sky churned the color of a two-day-old bruise. I stepped closer to the edge of the cave. Lightning snaked from the clouds followed by the rumble of thunder. It would be a bleak day. Depressed, I huddled in my cloak as I descended the trail and walked onto the beach, thinking to feed the horses their morning grain.

  A spark of joy touched my soul. Startled, I looked around for Zitora. Had she uncovered her glass unicorn? Instead Kade strode toward me, holding a ball of fire.

  As he drew closer, the song in my heart expanded. It buzzed along my skin, vibrated in my blood. He stopped and held out the sphere to me. His orb.

  I grasped the ball. Energy sizzled and popped up my arms and down my spine. Light swirled inside, changing colors at an amazing speed. The sweet harmony of pure magic sang in my ears. Overwhelmed, I sank to the sand and cradled the orb in my lap.

  Kade knelt next to me. “What’s the matter?”

  “It…” Words to describe it died in my throat.

  “What?” he prompted.

  “It calls…no, sings to me. Silly, I know.”

  “Not silly at all. It sings to me, too.” His gaze met mine.

  It was the first time I had a chance to see him in the daylight. His amber-colored eyes held flecks of gold. Even though he radiated the air of someone much older, he had to be close to Zitora’s age. Straight hair fell to his shoulders, but the color reminded me of the sand from the Jewelrose Clan-a mixture of golds, browns and reds. Small droplets of mist clung to his long eyelashes, thin mustache and anchor-shaped goatee underneath his bottom lip.

  “Full orbs sing to Stormdancers, but I’ve never heard it call to anyone else.” Kade touched the orb. “Is it the energy inside or the glass that sings to you?”

  I concentrated on the sphere, running my fingers along the surface. It was smaller than the one Nodin showed me. About eight inches wide it was the size of a cantaloupe. I ignored the swirling light and focused on the glass.

  No marks. No flaws. Thick glass. Thicker than the empty spheres? No. Denser. The glass had absorbed the magic used to trap the storm’s energy. The vibrations felt different, so I thought magic hadn’t been used to form the glass.

  “Have any of these orbs shattered?” I asked.

  “A few over the years.”

  “Do you know why?”

  “Young fools trying to stuff too much energy into one sphere. Or they can shatter when a Stormdancer loses control of the waves and wind around him.” Chagrin tainted his voice. “In that case, the sphere is dashed to pieces on the rocks and if the Stormdancer is lucky, he’ll be rescued before his head meets the same fate.”

  “Talking from experience?”

  “Unfortunately. It’s a hard skill to learn, keeping a bubble of calm around you while the storm rages.”

  “Kade! What are you doing?” Raiden’s voice called. He and the others stopped about twenty feet from us.

  Kade stood. “She wanted to see the orb.”

  “Are you crazy? What if she drops it? You both could be killed.”

  I gained my feet and scanned their faces. They truly didn’t know. Not a clue among them. Even the glassmakers.

  I dropped the orb.

6

THE ORB BOUNCED
on the sand and rolled a few feet. Horrified cries filled the air until the onlookers realized the orb hadn’t shattered.

  Kade blanched, but he hadn’t thrown his hands up in protection as Tal and Varun had done.

  “Heck of a demonstration. Did you know it wouldn’t break or are you just suicidal?” Kade asked with a touch of sarcasm.

  “Glass is an amazing material. Versatile, malleable and very strong.”

  “But not indestructible.”

  “No. I wouldn’t spike it on the hard ground, but no need to handle it like a delicate seashell.”

  “Point taken.” Kade retrieved the orb.

  “Nodin, can you get me one of your new orbs?”

  “Sure.” Nodin’s voice sounded thin as if he had forgotten to breathe. He hurried away.

  Zitora looked thoughtful and I wondered if she would reprimand me later. I wasn’t quite sure what had come over me. Perhaps it was in response to their reaction.

  Nodin returned with an empty sphere. I flung it hard to the sand. Again everyone flinched. This time the orb cracked into three large pieces. I picked up a shard and examined the inside of the glass.

  I wiped the sand from my hands. “Is the melt ready?”

  Varun nodded.

  “Okay. Let’s see how you make one of these.”

  The entire group hiked up to the kiln’s cave to watch as the siblings worked in perfect unison. As the oldest, Indra sat at the gaffer’s bench while Nodin gathered the molten glass on the end of a blowing pipe and placed it in the holders on the bench. Varun handed tools to his sister as she worked.

  During the process, Indra blew through the pipe and the ball expanded. Moving with a practiced quickness, Indra shaped the sphere. After multiple reheatings and blowings, she increased the size. When she was satisfied with the roundness, she signaled Nodin. He gathered a small dollop of melt onto the end of a pontil iron, making a punty. Attaching the punty onto the end of the sphere, Indra then dipped her tweezers into the bucket and dripped water onto the end of the blowpipe.

  Cracks webbed and, with a hard tap of the tweezers, the glass sphere cracked off the pipe and was now held by the pontil iron. Nodin inserted the sphere back into the kiln to soften the glass. Indra expanded the little hole left by cracking off the pipe, and formed the sphere’s lip.

  The piece was soon done and into the annealing oven. They did nothing wrong while crafting the piece. No actions that rendered it flawed. No magic, either.

  “Make another one, but this time I want to blow into the pipe,” I said.

  When Indra nodded to me, I bent, pursed my lips and blew through the pipe. Power from the source and not air from my lungs flowed through me and into the orb. It didn’t expand. The sphere stayed a fist-sized ball. Indra finished the piece and cracked it off into a heat resistant box.

  “That didn’t work,” I said into the silence.

  “But it glows,” Kade said. “You drew power.”

  Except Zitora, everyone stared at my piece in confusion.

  “Are you sure?” Nodin asked. “No offense, but it looks like a beginner’s effort.”

  “I’ve trapped a thread of magic inside the ball,” I explained. “Only magicians can see the glow.”

  “No.” Tal tensed and scowled. “That can’t be right.
I
can’t see the glow.”

  “It’s been tested,” Zitora said. “And we’ve been using Opal’s glass animals to evaluate potential students for the Keep. If they can see the glow, we know they possess magical power.”

  “No.” A stubborn line formed along Tal’s jaw. His eyes held fear.

  “Tal.” Raiden placed a hand on the young man’s shoulders. “You tried to call the wind with no success. You’re past puberty-”

  “No!” Tal shrugged Raiden’s hand off. “My father…My sister…”

  “Strong Stormdancers, I know. Stormdancing is a rare gift, be thankful your sister-”

  “I have it, too. It’s just…late. It’s just like the stubble on my chin, I don’t have enough power right now, but it’ll come. I know.” He left in a huff.

  Raiden stared after him. We stood in an uncomfortable silence until an earsplitting crack of thunder announced the storm’s impending arrival. Donning thick leather gloves, Nodin picked up my orb and placed it into the annealer. Indra and Varun reorganized their tools.

  Another rumble sounded. “The horses?” I asked.

  “I’ll get them,” Raiden said. “Go down to the third level. That’s the storm cave where we keep all the necessary provisions.”

  Zitora hurried to help Raiden.

  I turned to go when Kade stopped me. He handed me his orb. The energy within it intensified. It pulsed and quivered, sending shooting pains along my arms.

  “Keep it safe,” he said.

  “Where are you going?”

  “Out.” He gestured to the sea.

  “Why? You don’t have an orb.”

  “I can still bleed off energy from the storm.”

  “To where?”

  He huffed with impatience. “Into the rocks.”

  Before I could question him further, Kade said, “Ask Raiden, he’ll explain it.” He jogged down the trail.

  The sea heaved and thrashed around the rocks all but obscuring them. Foamy spray whipped through the air. Yet wherever Kade stepped, the water smoothed and his hair stayed in place, not even bothered by a faint breeze.

  Zitora’s voice cut through the storm’s rage, calling me. I rushed to catch up to her as she led Sudi into a low cave. Although the horse ducked her head, it was a tight fit. The top of the opening scraped along Sudi’s back.

  Once inside, the cavern’s ceiling rose to twelve feet. The area was roomy, with horse stalls near the back and torches blazing along the walls. Cots and chairs had been set up, Zitora helped start a fire, and Raiden filled a pot with water.

  “You shouldn’t bring that in here,” Raiden said, pointing at the orb in my hands.

  “It would take a lot more than dropping it on the ground to break,” I said.

  “I know it takes a hard blow to shatter it, but I don’t want my people to start being careless with them. Every Stormdance Clan member knows to handle the orbs with the utmost care and I want to keep it that way. Would you want to risk losing a life?” When I didn’t answer, he said, “There is a reason for the fear.”

  Chagrined, I said, “I hadn’t thought about it that way.”

  “Next time, you might want to think before you act.”

  Chastised, I stared at the floor.

  “There is a reason for everything, Opal. You might not be able to figure it out, and time might have made us all forget it, but the reason is there all the same.” Raiden hung his pot over the fire. “Who’s hungry for clam stew?”

  Raiden gave everyone who said, “me” a bucket of clams to open. I carried the orb to a safe spot in the back, setting it down on a pile of blankets. My hands and arms were numb from holding it. I covered it with another blanket to muffle its song. Between the roar of the storm and the trill of the orb, I would soon have a headache.

  I checked on Quartz before returning to the fire. She munched her hay, appearing to be unconcerned about the weather. I scratched behind her left ear and she groaned in contentment.

  When I sat down, Raiden handed me a dull knife and a handful of clams. I wouldn’t be allowed to partake in the meal without helping. I fumbled for a while, trying to pry open a shell. It didn’t take me long to find a rhythm, discovering another use for my strong hands.

  Tal arrived soaking wet and sullen. He popped open a few clams without looking or speaking to anyone. The rest just ignored him.

  Conversation focused on the orbs. I had been reluctant to state my theories before seeing how the glass was made, but when I examined the new orb in the firelight I felt more confident.

  “Something is wrong with the mix,” I said, holding up my hand to stop the protest perched on Indra’s lips. “The recipe is right, but the sand, soda ash or lime isn’t.”

  “What’s wrong with them?” Nodin asked.

  “You could have gotten a bad batch.”

BOOK: Storm Glass
2.96Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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