Chapter One
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Within the next half-hour,
Warren Oldham thought, he would either be successful or dismembered. At the thought,
all the worries that had romped through his mind ever since he opened his eyes that
morning froze or dove for cover, and Warren stood up taller. He felt his bones balancing
on each other and the muscles that held them in place, the nerves that sent messages
to them with pinpoint accuracy, the brain that generated the messages, the mind
that thought them up, the soul that determined what the mind would come up with,
what defined him as Warren and nobody else. Warren had called up a demon every weekday
morning for almost twenty-eight years, and every time he did the preparatory inventory
he felt this satisfaction and confidence. It was a sign of having chosen the right
career.
He shut his eyes for a
moment, swaying backwards and forwards a little, and thought that anyone who looked
at him would have seen a stout pink-and-white man with a little tonsure and a large
mustache-a man with no worries.
“Well?” James Kalin said.
“Ready,” Warren answered,
opening his eyes, and took a half-step forward toward the golden chain inside the
pentarium.
“Too far!” James warned,
from his left.
“Not far enough,” Russell
Cinea said, from his right.
Warren concluded that
he was just right. He raised his voice in the first syllables of the summoning charm,
and the rest of the Demonology Department joined in.
“Inquiring spirit,” they
intoned. “Adventurer in the arcane realms, Lord of Darkness, seeker of knowledge,
hear us! Teach us!”
Warren was invoking his
colleagues as much as the demons with these epithets, and he mentally divided them
into those who knew this and those who didn't. The senior faculty nearest him-Russell
Cinea, James Kalin, the herbalist Anders Regan and Cham Ligalla the exorcist-knew
it. Their powers, more subtle and self-aware than their colleagues', made the foundation
of the circle of magic beginning to fill the pentarium.
The pentarium at the Royal
Academy of the Arcane Arts and Sciences lay belowground in a cavern under the Magic
Building, dug into the ley-line itself and humming with power. A circular room,
plated with gold and almost featureless except for the door and the safety switch
in the wall behind Warren, it shone with a pale yellow light. The thirteen magicians
of the Demonology Department stood outside a gold safety chain that stretched, knee-height,
between five gold posts set a meter in from the chamber's edge. Within the chain
lay the pentacle itself, drawn in blood.
Warren stood at the side
furthest from the pentarium door, where he could look across at the junior faculty
who stood by it. That was the only perk of heading the Demonology Department. He
got to stand furthest from the door, so if anything went wrong the demon would have
more time to dismember him. That was how one got out of heading the department,
Warren had said, but it wasn't true. Only two administrators had left that way.
The demonologists wore
blue paper smocks, belted with gold chains from which hung the Academy's ward and
other protective charms, and all had gold chains around their necks. Warren's chain
was a gift from his wife Lilian and his mother Bosie, made of square medallions
so heavy they needed a counterweight at the back of his neck. James Kalin wore a
thinner necklace, decorated with gold roses. Some of the roses had fallen off, leaving
unsightly lumps of solder, but it was a gift from Kalin's daughter and he wore it,
nevertheless. Cinea, a bachelor, wore the standard chain available from any lab
supplies catalog.
When they began the second
verse of the charm, Warren always took what might be a last look at his colleagues.
They stood in a lopsided circle and a row of reflected magicians stood behind them,
with their backs to the circle as if they were uninterested in their fellows.
“Spirit of knowledge,
enlighten us,” they chanted, flattering the demons and themselves. “Join our discourse.
We open our minds to your wisdom; we invite you.”
This was Theodora Whin's
language, and her magic glowed warmer with every word. Even though she had pulled
back to lean casually against the wall, and Warren could only see her nail-bitten
hand reaching around the curve of the circle, her power stretched across the room
as if she were willing to define the entire project, if invited to.
The same language enraged
Linus Ukadnian, the geomancer who towered over the other side of the circle. Linus
was the only person wearing anything around his neck except a gold chain; he had
on a bow tie, but he was so fierce that nobody dared smile at it. The next clauses
were more to his taste. “Sages of the nether realm,” he chanted, as if every word
were a reproach to his colleagues. “Seekers after truth, hear us!” Linus and Teddy
between them sent an arc of clashing magics right across the pentarium, and their
colleagues' powers-cold and warm, crisp and relaxed-filled in the chinks around
it.
The junior demonologists
in front of the door kept up the chant without adding much of their own personalities
to it. Neil Torecki spoke with the most energy, his red curls bobbing. He cheated
every few minutes, reading from crib notes written on his arm. Isaac Graham's face
was screwed up as he concentrated on remembering the spell. And Hiram Rho, the natural
philosopher standing right in front of the door, odd man out at this, his first
conjuration-Rho was a mess.
Rho was in his twenties,
a little, wiry, tree-climbing sort of man, with blond hair that stood out horizontally
over his ears and pale blue eyes. His hands were small and filthy. His expression
was sour. His stance was belligerent. What would
happen, Warren wondered, if Rho were
so grubby as to not make skin contact with the colleagues holding his hands?
He looked the kind to be wearing a broken chain, mended with old twist ties... Warren
shivered, imagining the circle broken and his faculty disemboweled. 'How did this
happen?' the dean would ask. 'Did you know the man was incompetent? Did you suspect
it?'
He felt himself go cold
and then a comforting thought burst on him like sunlight. He was the one furthest
from the door. He'd be the one disemboweled, not the one answering questions. Warren
gave a sigh of relief and noticed that he was even colder, shivering harder, and
the other magicians were all looking to him. They all felt the cauld grue that meant a demon stood among them,
lured into the pentarium by the summoning charm.
Warren stepped forward
another half-pace and raised his voice in the final verse of the incantation, the
others chiming in at each word, and he felt his magicians come back from wherever
they had been. All their attention was on him and on the words they were speaking,
words about themselves and how much they wanted to meet and talk with one of the
most powerful arcane creatures. With every word, Warren felt pleasure and anticipation
rise warm through his whole body and out into the circle, his magic meeting, clashing
and harmonizing with his colleagues' until they formed one thing greater and more
complex than any one of them, something any self-respecting demon must investigate.
Red smoke began to rise in the inner pentacle, whirling like a distracted tornado,
and its cold hit against the circle as if it were feeling for places it could pry
apart, and finding none.
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***
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Rho had no opinion about
the words of the invocation. His sour look was based more on seeing that Neil Torecki
had written the charm on his arm, instead of wasting time memorizing it. Not that
Rho wanted to do anything so unprofessional-it was bad enough working at this second-rate
institution, without lowering his standards to meet theirs-but the fact that Neil
had a trick and had not shared it confirmed Rho's opinions about the other faculty.
About humans in general.
Hiram Rho, natural philosopher
and misanthrope, discovered he could understand birds at the age of eight, while
watching the neighbor's pigeons. The neighbor came home two days later, and had
squab for dinner.
By ten, Rho could hear
all the creatures in the barnyard. He ate his own severest critic, picking her out
of the crowd around the chicken coop, and after that they watched their tongues
around him, but the gift had already gone too far. From sunrise to sunset Rho heard
the clamor of wild birds and beasts, from sundown to dawn the arguments of frogs
and crickets. When the cries of insects his father poisoned in the fields started
drowning out his own family, Rho bolted.
The first bad things that
happened to Rho on the streets of Kasidora were his own fault, for listening to
the first people he met. The rest were his own fault for not listening to any other
people. They were the sort of things animals couldn't warn him about. The tips he
picked up on the street did keep him out of some kinds of trouble, though-the kinds
of trouble alley cats wanted to avoid, the kinds that involved being shut up and
bathed, fed nice food, being flea-combed and having their balls cut off. The kinds
that kept them away from casual sex and violence.
Rho lived eight months
on the streets of Kasidora without taking advice from a single human being, until
he heard a human speaking cat. By that time he had combined street urchin hygiene
with alley cat manners. His mentor was later to say that Rho's true talent lay in
making the worst of whatever was offered. Certainly, he had never been able to make
understanding animals into any kind of communication. The cats ignored his attempts
to sound out their language. So he had listened to the person who could speak with
cats. He had followed through alleys, farther and farther from his familiar lairs
each time, finally up to an old house by the gates of the university where a plate
of scraps sat just inside the open door. The cat-speaker, Baristes, watched in the
window, letting strays make their way into the warm rooms in their own time.
In the dark house, Rho
learned to speak cat and pigeon. He learned about wine and fabric and the manners
of the gentry, but none of it struck home. No more capable of luxury than an alley
cat and treated as a curio rather than a servant, Rho learned to endure civilization
but not to construct it, and when he transferred from Baristes' mansion to the college
barracks he relapsed into squalor as easily as any of the other boys. By then, though,
Rho could talk to the animals. He knew his talent was called natural philosophy,
and was shared by few. He knew that human rule and human reasoning were arbitrary,
designed by people who didn't believe that other creatures truly existed, and that
natural philosophers were no more beholden to their own species than to any other.
Small wonder that Warren
looked at Rho with carefully concealed dismay and sought his wife's sympathy. Knowledgeable
as the mages of Osyth were, as acquainted as they were with interview protocols,
with courtly Kasidora and with the oversweet image of natural philosophy, they could
not have guessed that the young man who had acquitted himself so respectably in
seminars and job interviews would revert to a filthy, hostile scavenger as soon
as he was established at the Royal Academy.
The cauld grue swept through the pentarium and
Rho, who had been half-lost in thoughts of how unsatisfactory his colleagues were,
jumped. Those same colleagues were all that stood between him and the demon materializing
in the pentacle. Rho hoped he had been wrong about them.
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***
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Far above the pentarium,
sunrise lit the Magic Building, a white castle set on the middle of the ley-line
that cut across the northern corner of the Osyth Plateau. It shone on the squat
Wizardry Building at the east end of the ley-line, on the Sorcery Complex and hospital
between Magic and Wizardry, and on the Alchemy Building sitting in the middle of
the isolated triangle of land north of the ley-line.
The sun shone on the city
of Osyth, that had spread from the southern edge of the plateau up toward the Academy
as far as it dared and then had built a high wall to keep the magic out. That wall
and the ley-line bounded a no-man's-land containing Academy administrators, faculty
housing, and maintenance workshops. Just behind the wall lay the slums of Osyth.
The tall buildings and elegant apartments that Warren had helped build during his
wizarding years, before he joined the Magic faculty, rose from the center of the
city. Factories and businesses lay to the south, near the cliffs down which pollution
could be dumped into the magic-filled canyons below.
At the north edge of the
industrial belt, bordering on the classy residential part of the city, stood the
large respectable businesses: banks, hotels, and office buildings. On the tallest
of these buildings, best warded against malignant strays from north and south, a
sign in golden letters glinted back toward the nine o'clock sun. It read 'Salvation
Insurance.' Inside this building, Lilian Oldham had just entered her cubicle and
opened her e-mail.
Lilian Oldham had grown
to resemble her husband over thirty-five years of marriage. Rounded and cheerful,
she shared his pink-and-white coloring, though she had hair in bountiful foamy white
curls. Like many people who worked in insurance, Lilian maintained a sunny manner.
Whatever happened, her smile assured the viewer that Salvation would save its clients.
This manner had been ingrained into her years ago when she sold insurance, and her
shift into the scrying department had not entirely erased it. This morning, however,
the cheerful smile was not in evidence. Lilian looked at her computer screen with
a suspicious expression and a feeling that she might be growing tired of bad luck,
even though she had made a living from it for over forty years.
Bad luck. Jinxing it.
Letting the gods hear how much a person wanted to keep out of the briar patch...
the more someone bet on something, the less likely it was to happen. The more likely
the misfortune, the higher the premium had to be to fool bad luck into taking it
away. In order to set rates, Salvation Insurance hired professional scryers like
Lilian to find out just how likely a misfortune was. Her specialty was life insurance.
The computer's screen
showed an online application for life insurance, a standard document. Lilian turned
on her printer and got herself a cup of coffee while it rattled. Some of the scryers
used direct download attachments, specialized soft drives that let the computer
copy these data from the forms right onto the tarot cards or bones the scryer preferred.
Some were even experimenting with virtual scrying, using computerized images of
the cards, but Lilian thought that was going too far. Magic was physical, not just
a matter of information in bits and bytes.
She tore the printed application
off and ripped it into strips, which she put into the soft green bag that held her
scrying bones. The bones were from the only blood sacrifice Lilian had ever made,
in her senior year at the Academy; the bag a crooked oblong, its velvet trim sewn
on with clumsy stitches. Lilian rubbed her thumb across the velvet and smiled. This
had been her daughter Joan's first handwork and she liked to think it added something
to the augury, some element of loving care, some understanding of what a family
and its well-being meant. She rolled the bag between her hands, losing herself in
the feel of it and of the papers and bones rustling inside, and then opened it wide
and poured them out in a tangle on the mousepad.
The bones were light and
dry, the color of yellowed ivory, covered over with a scrimshaw of scratches. Some
lay trapped in the curls of paper, others bounced aside as if they would take wing
again and fly. The longest bone, the tibiotarsus, lay wrapped around with paper
strips, as usual in Lilian's cases; the life bone of someone who had a good reason
to apply for insurance. When she'd begun with Salvation, doing group policies, she'd
seen life bones fall free of the paperwork, but it had been a long time since she
last dealt with anything so simple. Now all her cases fell out as a snarl of worry
and fear, the papers obscuring the markings on the long bone. The paper coils caught
up over half the bones, tying them into a tangle.
Lilian teased the mass
apart with a delicate stylus, the position of each bone appearing on the computer
screen as she marked it, until only a pattern of notations remained to indicate
illness, genetic weaknesses, accident and folly ahead. The computer was silent as
it did its work, transmitting the scratch of figures to the mainframe for analysis,
and Lilian looked at what it couldn't transmit. The strips of paper with the man's
wife's name, his children's ages, wrapped around the fragile bones as if to keep
them safe.
The next three applications
were easier, their results more cheerful. Then came one that needed re-reading,
and re-reading again, though it had looked like a standard application; there was
no life to the bones or papers, as if she were scrying for someone already dead,
and the next two files were no better. Lilian typed in an e-mail.
Another
three dead accounts, she wrote to the other scryers, informally. What's going on?
No idea, came an answer. They're all Academy accounts, though. We have two.
“Damn!” Lilian said, hastily
deleting the last message. Some people had no idea of what should and shouldn't
be sent over the Salvation network. Still, she rechecked the three dead applications.
They were from the Academy, and now Lilian recognized at least one of the names.
It was the new man, the one Warren complained about at night. Rho.
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***
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Warren's first sentence
had caught the spirit's attention. It chose a position a little to the right of
him in the circle, hovering nearest to Patsy Hoth, who studied incubi, and Linus
Ukadnian. It was attracted by their fierceness, but unwilling to approach Susan
Teale's more benign aura between them. Warren saw Patsy Hoth's face through the
smoke, framed by golden curls and with a look of controlled irritation on her features
as she spoke to the cloud and told it a few truths about itself.
“How shall we speak to
you?” she challenged the cloud. “As an individual? Hardly, for an individual exists
in itself, rather than being defined by those around it.”
The cloud hovered, listening,
and Linus confirmed Patsy's words with enough arrogance to convince even a demon.
“Spirit, penetrated by all around it, is defined only by those points at which its
neighbors choose to stop,” he chanted. “A being without boundaries is no more than
a construction of the stronger beings around it. Matter, alone, exists as itself;
matter alone creates its own boundaries.”
The cloud retreated a
little from this uninvited commentary, but only a little. As fast as the smoke darted,
side to side, the magicians were faster. Each line they chanted, each argument,
was a new piece of the reasoning that trapped the demon within the pentacle. Each
followed from the previous assumptions and the spirit, having paused long enough
to admit itself intrigued by those assumptions, was now led by logic into a solid
form, a truthful habit, that were alien to it. James Kalin, Russell Cinea, and Teddy
Whin wrote these charms of discourse, in consult with a group of theoretical demonologists
across three continents, but it was a touchy business. Theoretical magicians got
carried away. They were likely to refute one another just for the practice, and
a charm would only hold until the demons learned how to refute it. They were always
listening.
Warren could hear the
magicians by the door reciting the charm of discourse in a steady drone that kept
the demon away from them and left it darting between the more experienced magicians.
A demon always began by exploring the powers it resembled, fought its way back and
forth through the mesh of the magicians' interests and ambitions, and then seized
on the neutral powers as a possible escape. It would make its final incorporeal
charge toward Warren or Cham Ligalla; this was another reason for placing the senior
magicians at the inner end of the room, to draw the near-solid demon away from the
door.
The smoke gathered itself
together, changing from red to gray. Warren felt its power like the one clear thing
in the confusion of the circle. He began the last part of the charm, the words about
the meaning of embodiment, and the smoke swarmed toward him as if it rode up a path
of his and Cham's attention. Her voice and his, her power and his, met, and where
they met, the smoke stood irresolute while the circle of magicians told it about
what an individual-a solid individual-was. It curdled in on itself, roiled and solidified,
and its pressure against the circle began to fade as it accepted their reasoning
and became the solid creature they had invoked. Warren stopped chanting, took a
breath, and had the leisure to realize success. Another morning's work was done,
and nobody had been disemboweled.
The demon stood solid
now, a hulking gray figure with three legs. It balanced on two, waggling the third
at the magicians by the door, and then leaned over to suck its own toes while, on
the other side, it broke foul wind into Warren's face. The echo filled the room.
“By the logic of your
nature I charge you,” Warren said. “Make your name known to us.”
The demon snarled and
spit in frustration, but could find no way to deny the logic of its nature as laid
out in the charm. For as long as it remembered to believe the arguments it had just
heard, it would speak the truth.
“Nezumia,” it finally
muttered in a rasping voice as gray as its hide, and Warren saw his magicians' faces
light up.
A major demon indeed!
A malign power, one of the greatest of the demon lords of Osyth. They almost capered,
these magicians who for months in the first semester had been too few to trap any
but minor spirits in their pentacle, and Nezumia spun around to look at all of them
with loathing. So fast it spun that it lofted itself into the air, and lunged toward
the door with a shriek. But the wall of words held, and although the demon frightened
those before it, it could do them no harm. Warren cast the last charm, one that
set the room as it was against any eddies in the ley-line, and the magicians let
go of each other's hands. They had to take themselves and their magic out for the
setting-charm to establish itself. The circle dissociated and mages trailed out
into the shower room, male and female together. The room was filled with high-fives
and bodies capering among the steam, laughter and cries of triumph... but when Warren
looked for Rho, the newest magician had disappeared.
“He's probably glad to
get out of here,” Neil Torecki said, and shook water out of his red hair like a
dog. “The big N gave him a scare with that last lunge! I thought he'd break my hand,
he held on so tight. Good instinct, that. I like a guy who holds to the circle.”
Yes,” Warren said. “That's
good to hear.” He leaned back into the hot water, feeling it beat down on his bare
scalp, and laughed. They had done it again, all these magicians he worried and stewed
about, sometimes admired and other times hated. All their disagreements had been
set aside for one half-hour, and the very force of their desire had called a major
demon to speak with them for four hours, five, maybe ten-until it forgot to believe
the arguments it had just heard, or stopped wanting to be a creature of reason.
All the problems of the day to come seemed far away in another man's future.
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Rho laughed at himself,
stopping on the third-floor landing to pant. Why had he run? Up three flights from
the pentarium, now halfway to his tower lab, and already out of breath! More from
elation than from exercise, gasping with laughter instead of exhaustion-his heart
still racing, shaking his whole chest, his legs full of a trembling that said 'run!'
Rho bent double on the stairs and gasped and shook. His blue paper gown rustled
like leaves in a windstorm.
The way it had jerked
and hit the side of the charm, like a shark in a net, the monster! The way he'd
felt it pressing up against his words, the logic he'd been afraid he wouldn't understand
or take seriously enough to hold against a demon, and then when it had come at him,
that scream! And he'd held so tight, he'd remembered not to break the circle, it
had been like steering into a skid or exhaling when he came up from a dive. He'd
known it was asinine, if he didn't run he'd be killed, and he'd still held on!
“Yes!” Rho said and slapped
the wall, high-fiving the stones. No more being looked down on by magicians who
had bound their own demons. No more being just the little man who talked with animals.
He, Rho, had trapped a demon! He'd done it! He hadn't fouled it up, and already
the feeling was slipping away and out of his mind, he was losing how gray and foul
and big and loud it had been-the smell of it, the rot dripping out of those vile
teeth, its breath. He shut his eyes, trying to call it back.
We'll
do it again tomorrow! he thought, with a thrill. Every morning, as long as they had enough demonologists
on campus and a charm that would work, the magicians of Osyth would trap a demon
for the day. It was their duty, to pay the International Demonological Association
for maintaining the pentarium. Magicians from all over the world would come in today
to study Nezumia, and Rho had helped trap it! Every article they wrote would list
him in the acknowledgments, because he had done the dangerous work. He ran up the
last three flights thinking he'd attend his next conference as a full-fledged demonologist,
a master of the trade, and it wasn't until he got to the tower door that he realized
his clothing was still down in the pentarium shower room.
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Theodora Whin used the
open showers rather than the private booths, and scrubbed herself more carefully
than anyone else in the room. She rubbed shampoo through her brown curls and used
herbal-scented soap to chase away the last smells of bittersmoke and demon. Before
drying off, she spread a scented oil over her body and let it trap the clean moisture
in her skin, and then she put on the most beautiful silk underwear in the entire
department. Teddy Whin did not consider it a problem that her colleagues knew what
she looked like naked, or that they knew she wore outstanding silk underwear. She
was setting a good example in both categories.
“There was another sexist
assumption in your third precept,” she told Russell Cinea. She had found that Russell
was less superior and confident when he was unclothed. “Your imagery was positively
phallic. No wonder all our demons manifest as male.”
“That's all very well
in theory,” Russell answered in a peevish tone. “The fact is, if we use your language
none of us believe the charm enough to make it work. You have to use the metaphors
people were brought up with.”
“We could use a different
set of the metaphors they were brought up with,” James Kalin put in. He sat on the
bench near Russell, stretching out his legs and wiggling his toes to dry them. James
did not use towels. He believed in taking his time in the morning, and this was
another reason that the three theorists had many of their discussions in the shower
room. “There's no reason to avoid metaphors of solidarity and unity. Especially
solidarity.”
“Those are usually as
sexist as Russell's discourse,” Teddy said.
“But at least they're
not classist.”
“Who cares what '-ist'
they're not, if they're not convincing? If your pet causes were convincing, they
wouldn't be pet causes. They'd be part of the dominant culture, and I'd be using
them,” Russell Cinea said. He had put on his clothes and with them, his assurance.
“When you have a major demon in the circle it is not the time to try reforming society.
Besides, you can't say my charms are classist! The demons aren't manifesting as
effete aristocrats.”
“Yes they are,” James
Kalin said. “They're sure of their inborn superiority. There's no bigger snob than
a demon. But do they have to be that way, or have we assumed it into existence?”
“Get dressed,” Teddy told
him. “Gird up your loins to fight the good fight. We have a conference call from
Selanto in ten minutes-my office.”
“Fine, I'll meet you there,”
James said. “No incense this time, please.”
Teddy and Russell went
out of the shower room together. They were actually good friends, and by the time
they reached the second floor their argument had been replaced by a discussion of
the coffee shops in town and the latest movies.
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Warren's computer screen
glowed at him and he glowed back at it as he added Nezumia's name to the International
Demonological Association's database. When he hit save, computers all over the world
changed their displays. Magicians from Kasidora to Selanto, from Sio to Macoma,
were looking at what he had entered. They were checking the demon's name against
their grants or research proposals, trying to decide whether it merited the cost
of an instantaneous visit to Osyth, and typing their answers back in the form of
e-mails to the department secretary. There would be a flurry of requests for a demon
like this one, more than Osyth could fill, for Nezumia was too powerful a demon
for any single magician to bind. It was for things like this that the Royal Academy
operated the pentarium-for things like this, and the added pleasure of knowing that
none of them were bound to the demon. To work
with the malign powers without becoming malignant ourselves, Warren thought
happily as he stared at the screen. That was the real accomplishment. That was what
had turned just another construction job into a life's calling, and it had been
Russell's idea, he admitted freely. Russell was the brains behind it all.
If not for Russell, Warren
Oldham would never have thought of becoming a magician. He had been successful as
a wizard, a specialist in basements and foundations, places from which a person
could not fall. Heights made him nervous. Besides, the arcana were found under Osyth,
deep in the ley-line, and sometimes wondrous things came up into Warren's basements...
maybe he had been interested in magic, even back then. But not in the College of
Magic. Not in Demonology, where every faculty member kept a stable of bound demons,
full of hate and murder. Definitely not Demonology. Warren would never have set
foot in the building if he hadn't been sent there by the Wizardry Department as
a matter of professional courtesy, to help fix the pentarium.
Everyone had known why
the pentarium had a great hole in it. Everyone had shaken their heads over the latest
fatal incident in Demonology, and the way the Academy let those idiots and their
demons tear up the facilities. Warren couldn't have agreed more when he saw that
beautiful golden room desecrated and felt the remnants of conflict filling it like
a bad smell. “What a shame,” he had said, shaking his head, and a light voice had
answered him from behind in an arrogant Selanto accent.
“It's not a shame, it's
a scandal!” That had been Russell Cinea, as tall and slender as he was today, but
with butter-yellow hair back then. He had been new to the department, a reformer
full of grand talk who never seemed to doubt himself. Demonologists should stop
fighting one another, Russell said. They should forget the old ways, the competition
over who could bind the most powerful demons, and work together like-like wizards!
They should move out of the department and into the city of Osyth. Vampires, ghouls
and incubi roamed the city, just on the other side of the ley-line, and where was
Demonology? Here, fighting over prestige and ruining their own building in the process.
While wizards built the skyscrapers of the new city and sorcerers cured its businessmen
of their ailments, magicians sulked in their castle as if the very existence of
a mundane world insulted them. “Which it should,” Russell said. “Someone may have
bound a hundred demons, but if he doesn't do anything worth doing with them, to
the mundanes he's just another shabby, useless old man who smells. Whose fault is
that?”
Russell was a language
magician, with the gift of making other people accept his dreams, but Warren had
never minded that. Perhaps he had wanted a dream too badly to worry about its provenance-and
he had never regretted it. Except that it only seemed real, any more, when he was
actually in the pentarium. When he stepped out into the department, the dream started
to wisp away at the edges; when he stopped being busy, he could see it disappearing.
The thought made Warren uneasy. He sat up in his chair and looked at the computer
screen again, but someone knocked on his door.
“C'mon in!” Warren yelled,
and a thin young woman with dark hair and an Academy sweatshirt stuck her head in.
“Nezumia, hey!” she said
happily. “Did you get me a spot with it?”
“Oh, hi, Marcie. You've
got a choice,” said Warren. “I booked from eleven till one for the grad students.
Don't let anyone tell you they have those hours.” The magicians weren't all above
snatching students' time with an important demon, especially magicians from some
of the schools where students were still treated as servants.
“All right!” Marcie said,
grinning. “D'you want to see what I got from Nograptus last week? I added what it
told me into the model and it looks like there's a whole branch of the ley-line
we never knew about. So I thought I'd go down to geomancy and see what Linus can
tell me about the rock formations in that region.”
“That sounds good,” Warren
said, making his way across the lab to her computer. A three-dimensional model of
the ley-line sprawled across it, with the Osyth Plateau an insignificant blip on
top. Every time Warren saw this, it thrilled him. The size of it: the depth of power
he lived on top of, like a flea on a rhinoceros. “What did Nograptus tell you about
the inhabitants?” he asked, and his student looked surprised.
“I didn't ask,” she said.
“Sorry. I was just working on the map.”
“Of course,” Warren said.
“I ought to have talked to it myself.”
“Do you have time with
Nezumia?”
“Not today. I have meetings
all afternoon.”
“Well, write down what
you want to know and I'll ask it for you.”
“That'd be nice,” Warren
said. “Only after you get what you need for the thesis, though. And give Tom and
Lisa a call, will you? This ought to just about finish off their work.” He sat on
a lab stool and began to make out a list. He imagined himself sinking into the ley-line,
passing through layers inhabited by different spirits. What did a demon see as it
came from the netherworld to the ley-line's surface in Osyth? Who did it pass on
the way, and what were their lives like, these subterranean arcana? He worked for
about ten minutes, trying to pick the best questions to ask the demon, and for that
time he was completely happy. He hardly heard the phone ring.
“It's the dean,” Marcie
said, holding her hand over the receiver.
Warren sighed and pointed
toward his office. He went back to his desk.
“Demonology, Warren Oldham
here,” he said, picking up the phone.
“I know who you are, Warren,”
the dean said. “I've got your signature all over these papers. Why are we paying
to send someone to the Demonological Congress meetings in Selanto? He can't be a
Congress member without having bound a demon. You know that's illegal here in Osyth.”
“It's a joint meeting,”
Warren said. “The Society for Veterinary Lechery and the Congress. Rho's giving
a paper on incubi in ducks.”
“He's registered for both
meetings,” the dean said.
“He's still a student
member at the Congress. This is his last chance to present there. You didn't think
I'd hire someone with a demon, did you?”
“I don't know,” the dean
said. “You bitched enough about how hard it was to find anyone. Well, I'll sign
this, but I'm not sure how much I like sending brand-new faculty to scope out the
competition. He hasn't been on campus a month, and we're sending him off to talk
with head-hunters from Selanto and Kasidora?”
“Oh, I think we'll stand
up pretty well against anything Rho sees in Selanto,” Warren said, leaning back
in his chair with a prosperous feeling. “We called up Nezumia this morning. That's
pretty impressive for his first day in the pentarium.”
“Is it? That's good,”
the dean said, in tones of incomprehension.
Warren felt his triumph
shrink.
He said the nothings that
ended a conversation, looked at his calendar and the list of meetings on it, and
sighed. Trying to explain a triumph to an administrator... Well, he thought, I acted the same way when he told me about that educational
grant. Nobody cares about anything except their own work.
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