Read The Wizard of Time (Book 1) Online

Authors: G.L. Breedon

Tags: #Fantasy

The Wizard of Time (Book 1) (27 page)

BOOK: The Wizard of Time (Book 1)
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“Enough,” Malik said, and Gabriel fell six feet to the ground. He managed to tuck himself into the fall and roll to avoid injury this time. “He doesn’t seem to know how to defend himself. Your previous instructors were very poor indeed.”

“Seventh True Mage, my ass,” Bob the fat American said.

Gabriel knew he needed to do something, anything, to fend them off for a little while. Pretending to struggle to his feet again, he reached for the magical power within and focused it through the dagger. A windstorm of sand erupted from the floor of the arena, a whirling tornado trapped in the circular stone walls. A bolt of lightning struck out for him, but he was no longer where he had been standing. He appeared behind Malawi and as he focused again, she flew through the air, smashing into Heinz. Another bolt of lightning struck near where he stood, but he already stood across the arena again, balls of fire erupting from his hands to join the vortex of sand spinning through the air. He felt Malik appear next to him, but he jumped again and again as Malik followed, swinging his fist at Gabriel’s head.

Gabriel focused the next time he jumped, and Malik flew into the wall of the arena. A lightning bolt from Jin’s hand burst toward him, and he caught it in his own hand, a blaze of light connecting them for a moment, then he flew backwards, falling in the sand. He jumped through space even as he fell, coming to stand behind Jin and focusing his Wind Magic to throw her through the air. Then his head split in two by the pain that suddenly tormented it, like a knife twisting deep into the frontal lobe of his brain.

“Pretty good, boy,” Bob the Soul Mage said, “but not good enough.” The wind storm collapsed, sand falling to the ground as the other mages got to their feet. Gabriel struggled against the pain in his head, but like the bolt of lightning that had been too strong for him, he couldn’t resist it, falling to his knees. The dagger he had been given simply wasn’t powerful enough. He noticed now that the bright spheres that each of the Dark Mages wore at their necks were not amulets. They all wore a concatenate crystal, each likely linked to one of Kumaradevi’s battlefields. They each had access to far more magical power than he could muster. As the pain ceased, he fell backward to sit on the ground.

“Better than I thought you could do,” Malik said, “but not well enough. On your feet. Let us see how you defend against simultaneous attack.”

The rest of the morning was more of the same. Gabriel being attacked by several vastly more knowledgeable mages with far more powerful talismans, trying to defend himself, or simply trying to evade their attacks. Lunch was a simple meal of meat, bread, and cheese served in a plaza above the training arena. Gabriel noticed that his meal looked considerably less appetizing that that of his
tutors
.

The afternoon was reserved for one-on-one instruction. He trained with Malik, who taught him how to slow his perception of time in battle. This mostly involved Malik entertaining himself by whacking Gabriel with a wooded staff while jumping from position to position around him. During the one-on-one sessions, Gabriel was forbidden from using any magic other than the one he was being taught. He was only allowed to use multiple magics when facing multiple opponents. Although he was tempted to violate this stricture, he refrained from doing so out of fear that the punishment for infraction might be worse than the training itself.

By dinner, he was more bruised and exhausted than he had ever been in his life. Most annoying, the dagger was taken from him each time he left the arena, so there was no chance for using his powers to heal himself, much less escape. Dinner that night was served in the main dining hall, where all evening meals were held. Although Gabriel sat at Kumaradevi’s side as usual, she did not speak to him. She carried on conversations with others at the table, but he was invisible to her. No one else spoke to him, either. He ate in silence, and was happy for it. He also noticed that the attendants served him the smallest, worst portions of everything at the table. Apparently, his performance in the arena dictated the quality and quantity of the food he might receive.

That night in his chamber, he rubbed his shoulder as he concentrated on imbuing the candleholder with positive imprints. He lasted only a few minutes before collapsing in the sheets, which were noticeably less soft. He dreamt of fighting shadow-clad warriors each with swords while he brandished a butter knife.

He woke to Pishara bringing him a bowl of cold porridge. He grimaced as he ate it, dressed, and followed her to the arena where the day unfolded very much like the day before. The day after that was similar, and the day after that and so on for week after week, the only variation being the quality of the food he earned and the artifact that he could use as a talisman. Some days it was the dagger, other days a sword, one day an axe, but they were never as powerfully imprinted as his pocket watch. If he performed well, his reward was an edible meal. If he did badly, he received some manner of indigestible gruel on his plate.

He took solace in the knowledge that after nearly six weeks, the imprints of the candleholder were nearly half as strong as the talismans he practiced with each day. He calculated that if he could manage to continue to imbue the candleholder for six months, it would be nearly powerful enough to use in an escape attempt. However, an escape looked less and less likely each day. As he had continued probing his chamber for possible flaws he could take advantage of, he had discovered that the walls, door, and windows were reinforced with magic. It would take a great deal of magical power to break out of his room. That meant attempting escape outside of his chamber and that would be very difficult as Pishara and his two guards followed him everywhere.

He lay in bed each night going over various options and possible plans. It helped buoy his spirits and keep his mind off the torments of the day. He made a strict rule with himself that he would never let the Dark Mages see him cry while he suffered at their hands. No matter what they did, he would not let them see a tear on his face.

However, alone at night in the darkness, he could not stop the tears from coming, could not hold them back. He felt helpless while in the arena, and he was just as helpless in the bed at night, but at least he could admit his fears for a few minutes. The strain of holding his fear at bay all through the day, day after day, felt like a balloon resting on the tip of a knife. Like he would burst and disintegrate at any moment. But the tears helped. They calmed him. And gave him enough clarity of mind to continue imbuing the candleholder.

The near impossibility of escape, and the steady daily abuse at the hands his instructors, left him in an almost constant state of depression. Pishara stayed with him one morning as he tried to force himself to eat the cold and hardened oatmeal she had brought him for breakfast. He had been knocked unconscious the day before, and this was his
reward
.

“You are no longer making progress,” Pishara said quietly. Gabriel raised his head as he smashed the tasteless oat paste into his mouth and swallowed. It was odd enough for her to have stayed, but even more unusual for her to speak of his training. She rarely said anything that was not an explanation or an order.

“I’m doing the best I can with the talismans they give me,” Gabriel said, his voice angry as he glared at her. How could she possibly understand what he faced every day in that infernal arena?

“You must try harder,” Pishara said, “or they will have no respect for you. And if they do not respect you…” She let the rest of the sentence fall away. He knew what the unspoken words implied. If he could not make them respect him, the abuse would only continue and likely worsen. He needed them to see him as the Seventh True Mage instead of an apprentice-pet to be bullied and beaten.

“They each have linked concatenate crystals,” Gabriel said, putting his spoon down forcefully. “If I had one of those, I could beat them.” It was true, he thought. If he had one of the crystals, he could best them. But he knew better than to ask Malik for one. And in a way, he was thankful not to have one. It unsettled him enough to touch the tainted imprints of the talismans Pishara gave him. He did not want to think about the wave of revulsion that would flood him if he linked his mind through a concatenate crystal to one of Kumaradevi’s battlefields.

“That is unfortunate for you,” Pishara said, almost sounding like she cared. “There are whispers that you are not what you have been said to be.”

“Hand me a talisman with grace imprints, and I’ll prove it,” Gabriel said, his voice as bitter as the taste in his mouth. Pishara said nothing in response. She smiled slightly and bowed her head toward the door, indicating for him to follow her to his lessons. Gabriel pushed the chair away from the table, stood, and followed her out the door.

It had taken him a few days to realize it at first, but Pishara never took him to the training arena the same way twice in a row. There were dozens of ways to navigate through the palace corridors from the tower to the arena, and she choose a different one each morning and each night. But after so many weeks, Gabriel was confident he knew where he was and how to get where he wanted to be in the palace if he needed to. He knew the way to the coliseum where he attended violent games with Kumaradevi twice a week and the paths to the temple where helpless villagers were sacrificed to the Empress, who Gabriel had discovered was worshiped like a god by the people of the Kumaradevi’s world. Naturally, she demanded sacrifices to bestow her
grace
.

He pushed away the thoughts of his mental map of the palace and his plans for escape as they came to the top of the arena stairs. As usual, Pishara handed him his talisman for the day. It was a sword again, but not one he had held before and he sensed something different about it at once. As she laid it in his hand, he knew immediately that this was a very unusual sword. It held imprints of both grace and malignancy. Pishara said nothing to him, only bowed her head, and walked away. As he walked down the stairs, Gabriel examined the sword. It had a leather-and-wood sheath and a leather-wrapped handle. Pulling it slightly from the scabbard, he examined the double-edged blade. As he stepped into the arena, he unsheathed the blade entirely, holding the sword up in the early morning sun, watching the light play along its polished surface. He knew what sword this was.

“The boy bares his steel today,” Heinz said with a laugh.

“He must mean to challenge us,” Malik said. “We have apparently been too easy on him.”

“Then we should show him the respect of honoring that challenge,” Jin said with a wicked laugh.

Gabriel looked up and for the first time in nearly two months of captivity and cruelty, he grinned. He reached into himself for his magical power and focused it into the sword, the sword once wielded by the man he had seen executed the first day of his confinement. The sword used to defend the innocent as well as to kill. The sword that was at once tainted and imbued.

A lightning bolt from Malee struck the wall behind him, but he already stood on the other side of the arena. He risked a quick glance at the balcony above before jumping through space again to another spot by the walls. The balcony was empty, as he had hoped. Kumaradevi had given up watching his training after the third day, and he did not want her to witness what he was planning to do for fear it might arouse her suspicions of him, if not outright jealousy.

As he jumped through space yet again, fireballs and a small sandstorm erupting where he had been standing, he felt Bob the Soul Mage’s assault. With the power of the sword’s dual imprints, he easily rebuffed the attack. In fact, the strength of the sword surprised him. The man killed for imbuing it with positive imprints must have been working at it for nearly as long as he had been killing people to give it tainted imprints. Because of the double imprints, the sword would have been nearly useless in the hands of either a Grace of Malignancy mage, but as Gabriel had suspected, he could wield both of the sword’s imprints simultaneously to focus and amplify his own magical energy.

He jumped through space yet again and felt Malik trying to impose a space-time seal. Gabriel had been shielded enough times to know what to do now that he had the power, and he found it easy to dissolve the space-time seal and jump again, this time to the exact center of the arena. For what he had in mind, it would be best to be in the middle of his opponents. The ones behind him would think they had an advantage because he could not see them, but weeks of practice had helped him hone his space-time sense to discern where someone was regardless of whether or not he could see them. And what he had in mind required his
tutors
to think they had the upper hand.

Of course, he could not do what he really wanted to do, even though the sword was clearly powerful enough to accomplish it. He needed to defeat the Dark Mages completely, to gain their respect through their own submission, but he could not defeat them so badly as to make Kumaradevi fear him. The more she feared his power and abilities, the less likely she was to leave him alive.

“You are finally learning a little,” Malik said, his voice betraying his annoyance at Gabriel having deflected his magic. “I think it is time for you to have a real lesson!”

Gabriel was expecting it, hoping for it, in fact, but the power of the simultaneous attack of all six mages focusing the full strength of their concatenate crystals upon him took him by surprise nonetheless. Focusing all of his will into the sword, he held the various magics at bay. The ground beneath his feet trembled, but did not move, regardless of how much Heinz cursed and swore.

The invisible force field of gravity Jin tried to use to throw him through the air instead flowed around him like water around a stone. The space-time seal that Malik attempted to place on him crumbled. Malik tried to jump behind Gabriel, only to find himself locked in a space-time seal. Gabriel easily deflected American Bob’s Soul Magic attempts to cause him pain and create hallucinations. He felt his body begin to weaken, but immediately it grew stronger as Malawi’s dark Heart-Tree Magic came undone.

BOOK: The Wizard of Time (Book 1)
4.06Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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