Read The Weaving of Wells (Osric's Wand, Book Four) Online
Authors: Jack D. Albrecht Jr.,Ashley Delay
Tags: #The Osric's Wand Series: Book 4
“And Pendres, you believe, has information that could help us in defeating Dredek?” he asked, casting a quick glance at the hermit across the table.
After taking a few moments to gather his thoughts, Aridis said, “I believe he can give us a great deal more than just information.” His answer was slow to the point of timid, and his old bones cracked as he squeezed his hands into fists. Serha’s face was still fresh in his memory. Her large, watery eyes still haunted him as he remembered their last stroll into the woods outside Stanton. Focusing on the here and now was difficult, but somehow he managed it.
“I still don’t understand what he thinks I can do, or if I will truly stay for long enough to offer my aid, but some of the words he said to me have me curious enough to see if what he says holds promise.” Pendres folded his arms across his chest—a defensive gesture, but harmless to those around him. His posture was a way to comfort himself in the presence of uncertainty; even Aridis could sense that without the Empath gift.
“And I’m at a loss as to how you could have been trusted in if you have no interest in helping us,” Osric stated without malice. His implied question was sincere; he was genuinely curious.
“I have no interest in betraying anyone, so long as you are honorable in intent. Everything I have seen while I have been here suggests that you are all honorable, good people. My only issue is with your conflict—battle has done nothing but bring me misery and a very long life.” His eyes were distant as he spoke. “A very long life to look forward to, and too many things haunt a mind when one is alone for that long.”
“The Trust can attest to the fact that he would not betray us in any foreseeable situation. But I’ve brought him to you to attempt to persuade him to join our cause. I thought if you could tell him of what we have managed to accomplish, as well as what we are up against, he might see why it is so important for him to help us.” Aridis’s lip shook. It went nearly unnoticed, but almost nothing got by Osric these days. “If you could just start with the time you spent with the eagles, I believe that is far enough back to be useful.
“Okay.” Osric shifted uncomfortably in his chair. “After the palace was attacked, we pursued the irua that left Stanton, thinking they were the ones responsible. While en route, the dragon we chose for transportation was mistakenly attacked by a young eagle.”
“Mistakenly?” Pendres leaned in with a questioning gaze.
“Yes,” Osric replied. “Eagles teach their young not to attack walkers.” He looked up and sighed. “
Walkers
is the term they use for all land animals. They teach them to avoid hunting us because they want to avoid the tradition behind the hunt.”
“Why would they avoid it?” Pendres asked.
“Well.” Osric’s brow creased. “They didn’t tell us, but from what we witnessed, the only meat they eat is fish. I’m assuming they don’t want to track down someone’s loved ones after the hunt is complete.” He winced and turned to Aridis with an apologetic expression. “Anyway,” he continued, “we were brought to the cliffs where they live while we waited for Greyback to heal.”
“Greyback was the dragon’s name?” Pendres inclined his head questioningly.
“Yes.” Osric nodded. “While we were there, the eagles told us about how wands were invented and about how the dragons were enslaved shortly after the caldereth were wiped out.”
Pendres looked down at his hands with a mournful cast. Osric looked the hermit over. There was a great deal of regret in Pendres’s outward shift. Aridis wondered if something in the story touched at some point in his past life, and he felt that Osric had the same thought.
“At that time,” Osric continued, “it was decided that freeing the dragons would do more for the cause of avoiding a war than continuing to the Irua Realm. The irua were just too far ahead of us, and we had to wait for Greyback to heal after the eagle attacked us and wounded her.
“Through a great deal of planning, even more luck, the timely intervention of the eagles, and some courage from an enslaved race of dragons, we managed to free them from their captors.” Osric shook his head slowly, remembering the day. “After that, we returned home to try to make sense of everything. We needed to get our bearings and figure out what to do next. Unfortunately, the Kallegian took an interest in Stanton due to our investigation.” He drew in a long, slow breath as he related the story.
“The Kallegian took interest in you and you survived?” Pendres narrowed his eyes and his lips pressed close with distaste. He didn’t believe what he was being told, and this was obvious to anyone close enough to witness his gaze.
“Oh, yeah.” Osric turned his hands out to ward off any argument, showing that he understood the lack of acceptance. “But while they patrolled our streets, trying to find me”—one hand pointed back at himself—“Kenneth and I had been captured by Dredek and his men in Rowain.”
“Dredek?” Pendres stiffened in his chair. “His name was Dredek?”
Osric looked up at the interruption. “Yes. Why?”
Aridis leaned forward, listening to the exchange. Something about the way Pendres held himself told him that there must be a connection between the two men. Though, why the name meant something to him was unclear.
“It’s just”—Pendres shrugged—“Dredek was a common caldereth name.” He looked suspiciously at Aridis.
“That’s because he’s a caldereth.” Osric joined Pendres in questioning Aridis. “What did you tell him?”
“I told him nothing. I left everything for you to reveal.” Aridis looked innocently between the two large men.
“Well, that’s one of the things we learned about him in Rowain. I don’t know how he survived, but somehow he has modified his appearance enough to appear human.” Osric turned his attention back to the hermit. “Well, at least he is close enough in appearance to human to fool anyone who hasn’t seen a caldereth. But he hasn’t only modified his appearance; he has taken gifts from the living to give himself more power, all in an attempt to bring the caldereth back from the dead.”
Pendres’s eyes went wide and traced the grain in the table. He raised his right hand to his mouth and stroked the braid along the side of his blond beard.
Osric continued with a casual but somewhat cautious tone as he gazed across the table at the newcomer. “Since then, we defeated the Kallegian and very nearly stopped Dredek from capturing Angmar.”
“A caldereth captured Angmar?” Pendres stood up with such gusto that his chair slid backwards, nearly tipping over when it caught the edge of the stone floor. He held a panicked expression as he breathed rapidly, looking to Osric for confirmation. There was genuine despair in every aspect of his stance. Pendres glared over at Aridis. “Your dragon told me the Turgent took the city.”
Before Osric could confirm Pendres’s fears, Gus burst through the door, followed by a very flustered-looking Eublin. Gus pointed a furry paw at Pendres, but his shouting was directed at Aridis.
“This guy can’t be killed?! You’re telling me we have been wracking our brains and training hundreds of men to die in the deserts of the Irua Realm and this guy can’t die? Why don’t we just send him over there to take on the entire army and wipe out Dredek for us? All our problems can be solved with one man, and you are in here sipping on your mugs and swapping stories!”
Eublin shuffled in, nearly bowing and alternating between adjusting his spectacles and tugging on his tunic. “Please note that I have no intention of requesting any such thing of our guest. Gus is misconstruing everything that I said. I take no credit for his assumptions about Pendres, nor for his terribly rude and misguided outburst.”
“By the strands, you old bookworm! You said this guy can’t be killed. How could I possibly misconstrue that?” Gus screamed at him.
“You may have heard the words, but you are certainly misunderstanding their meaning,” Aridis interrupted Gus’s rant. “It is not that he cannot be killed; it is that he cannot die until the war is over.”
“Yes, because there is so much difference between those two statements. Everything is clear now.” Gus’s sarcasm impressed no one.
“A great deal of difference, actually. Killing is an action that you engage in; being killed is that action taken against you. Dying is a finality, but not something that can be inflicted upon you. Would you ask Pendres to be killed, over and over, simply for his lack of dying?” Aridis asked, his voice gruff and strained by the threat of tears. Speaking of death was no easier just because the reference was to someone other than Serha.
Gus glanced over at Pendres a bit sheepishly. “I hadn’t thought about it like that.”
“That’s because you didn’t consider the burdensome implications of such a supposed gift. I did not bring Pendres here to ask him to suffer for us. I brought him here because he is the only man alive who is likely to understand why Dredek is seeking the Well of Strands, and maybe even how he intends to use it to raise his people. Maybe, if you stop yelling for a moment and listen, you will learn something too.”
“The rat has a point.” Everyone in the room turned to Pendres in surprise, though Gus’s annoyance at the term
rat
was more apparent in his expression than his shock at being scolding by Aridis. “Maybe I should just go kill Dredek before he accomplishes his goal.” Pendres was serious; the Empath ability was enough to convince Osric of that, but that didn’t explain how he thought he might accomplish it.
“Is it true that you cannot be killed?” Osric’s voice was low and hesitant.
“It is true that I have taken many fatal injuries in my very long lifetime. I should have died, I have died many times, but I didn’t die. Aridis seems to think he understands why.” Pendres paused, but it was clear he wanted to say more. “I am just as susceptible to injury as any other man, though I am better than most at avoiding it. I feel every ache and pain, every blade and arrow tip, every tooth and claw of the beast as it tears into my flesh. As Aridis says, I can be killed, I just don’t die.”
“In that case, I will not send you to Angmar to suffer the blows that Dredek will surely deliver. To answer your earlier question, Dredek has also usurped the Turgency of the Human Realm. The whole city of Angmar is overrun by the his army, by great hulking beasts that tunnel through sand and stone like garden worms and kill indiscriminately like paun, and by Dredek’s very advanced and effective magic. I wish I didn’t have to send anyone back there, but I certainly won’t send only one man.” Osric watched Pendres, using his abilities to determine the effects of his words. Though the recluse from a distant land seemed little impressed by the danger, the mention of the sand creatures had given him pause, and Pendres’s level of respect for Osric increased significantly by the end of his little speech. Osric glanced away, feeling his cheeks burn slightly, as if he had overheard his own praises while using his gifts to spy on a private conversation. He needed to know if he could trust Pendres, but he didn’t think he would ever be comfortable using his abilities to pry into the minds and hearts of others.
“I admire your commitment to your people, and your resolution to not put any one person in harm’s way as a means to an end, but I fear you may not be able to make the hard calls necessary to win a war,” Pendres said. “Still, I believe it will be worthwhile to aid you in your mission. Perhaps, if Aridis is correct, it will bring me some peace as well.”
“It seems I will be bringing about your death either way. It is not a position I take lightly,” Osric said, and Pendres nodded once in acknowledgment of the concern for his life. “Will you tell us what you know about the wells?”
Pendres thought back to his conversation with Aridis when he had first arrived in Stanton, about the spell that was cast upon him and his painful memories of who had likely cast it. “It is quite possible that the wells are why I am still here to speak with you today.” He glanced over at Aridis. “No one could have cast the spell you spoke of without the aid of the well’s power. But it was not the well in Angmar that she used.” Memories haunted his eyes.
“Do you know how many there are?” Osric asked.
“No, I can’t be certain, but there must be at least twenty. The one that Dredek seeks is the largest and most powerful. It is the center of the network, a direct line into the source of Archana’s magic.”
“What?” Gus interrupted. “What does that mean?”
“All of life, all magic, comes from Archana. Not only in a generative way, but literally from within Archana. Beneath the ground, perhaps at the core, I’m not sure exactly how it works. Just as our magic can be harvested from Archana, as any Wand-Maker would understand, so too our life strands and all the potential magic the world has to offer is stored within the ground beneath our feet.” Gus glared at the man, as if this information wasn’t obvious to him as a world-renowned Wand-Maker. “It is a closed system. When a creature dies, or a spell diminishes, the magic returns to the soil and to the source within Archana. The wells, for lack of a clearer description, are taps into that system. They open a vein into the heart of Archana’s magic stores, and they allow the wizard to draw on the unlimited source of strands all at once. It is probably far more dangerous and terrifying than any of you have considered.” All eyes were riveted on Pendres, staring silently at the implications of his words. Osric could not even formulate a question as he considered what it would mean for Dredek to have access to that much power. “Are you sure you don’t want him assassinated?” Pendres could see Osric’s fears written on his face.
“While I understand your desire to end the threat quickly, I do not yet believe that one man could manage such a thing. And I can’t help but suspect that Dredek is motivated more by a devotion to the kin that he lost than by evil inclinations in grabbing for power and world domination.” Osric thought back to the pain he had seen in Dredek’s eyes, though he feared he was misleading himself in giving the caldereth such credit.
“You don’t really think that a man who intends to bring an entire race back from the dead will relinquish the power that allows him to do so, do you?” Aridis was eyeing Osric like a specimen in an experiment.