Read Trial By Fire (Schooled in Magic Book 7) Online
Authors: Christopher Nuttall
Tags: #Fantasy, #magicians, #Magic, #sorcerers, #alternate world, #Young Adult
And then Frieda’s body jerked one final time, then lay still.
Emily opened her eyes. Frieda was lying there, dead. For a long moment, she just stared, unable to quite believe her eyes. Master Grey couldn’t have killed her friend, could he? He couldn’t have...
She spun around, fists balled. “You
bastard
!”
Master Grey looked oddly amused. “And why are you insulting a teacher to his face?”
“You
killed
her,” Emily shouted. “You...”
“You failed her,” Master Grey said.
“You
cursed
her,” Emily said. Magic crackled over her fingertips, demanding escape. It would be so easy to just throw a curse at him, even if she was expelled - or worse. “You...”
Master Grey pointed a finger at the body. Emily turned back, just in time to see Frieda’s features melt into a homunculus. He would have taken some of her hair or blood, perhaps, to make the illusion terrifyingly realistic, but...she swallowed hard, feeling faint. He’d forced her into a position where she’d thought, where she’d
believed
, her friend was on the verge of death. It had been so realistic she hadn’t even thought to
question
it.
“You will face worse, if you go on to be a Mediator,” Master Grey said. His voice dripped fake sympathy, too exaggerated to fool her for an instant. “It’s for your own good.”
“You’re a fucking sadist,” Emily swore at him. “You can’t just do that and expect me to be
happy
!”
“Of course not,” Master Grey agreed. “I expect you to learn how to handle yourself.”
Emily opened her mouth, but she was cut off by the door opening. Lady Barb stepped into the room, looking grim.
“Emily,” she said. “The Grandmaster requests your presence and that of Master Grey, immediately. Come with me.”
I swore at a tutor
, Emily thought, feeling her rage draining away.
I swore at a tutor and...
She gathered herself as best as she could. It wasn’t real. It had never been real.
“I’m coming,” she said. Her entire body was trembling, but somehow she managed to bring it under control. “Where are we going?”
“The infirmary,” Lady Barb said. At least it wasn’t his office. “The Grandmaster has had an idea.”
T
HEY’D MOVED ALASSA INTO A SIDEROOM
, Emily noted, as she followed Lady Barb into the infirmary. The Grandmaster was standing by her bed, leaning on a staff; he turned to face Emily and gave her a tight smile before waving her into a chair. It didn’t look as though she was in trouble, Emily thought, but that would change. Master Grey would report she’d sworn at him, that she’d shouted at him, and do his level best to get her expelled.
Or simply refuse to teach me any longer
, Emily thought, as she sat.
The man makes no sense
.
The Grandmaster cast a privacy ward in the air, and leaned forward. “Emily,” he said. “I am given to understand that you touched Alassa’s mind once before.”
Emily hesitated. Blood magic wasn’t exactly illegal, but it wasn’t regarded as something anyone should do. Shadye had used blood magic to control her, years ago; she’d barely touched Alassa’s mind, yet she knew her friend had had every reason to be angry about it.
“Yes, sir,” she said, finally.
“I would like you to try touching her mind again,” the Grandmaster said. “She seems to be one of the few students still fighting against...against whatever has gripped their minds.”
Master Grey stepped forward. “Grandmaster,” he said, “that would be incredibly dangerous.”
As if you care
, Emily thought. She was damned if she would forgive him for scaring her so badly.
You’d probably be happy if I lost myself in Alassa’s mind
.
“Yes, it would be,” the Grandmaster agreed. “However, I don’t see any other options.”
“We may have to seal the school again,” Lady Barb said. “The White Council won’t let the epidemic, whatever it is, spread.”
Which would be a waste of time if someone has come up with a magical biological weapon
, Emily thought.
Now that they know it worked, they can introduce it somewhere else
.
She pushed the thought aside and looked at the Grandmaster.
“I’ll do it,” she said. Alassa would be furious when she woke up, but at least she would be
alive
. “If I did it once before, I have a better chance of actually succeeding.”
“Yes,” the Grandmaster said. “But you might be infected yourself. Or you might be unable to break contact and escape. People have
died
because they were unable to drag themselves out of someone’s mind.”
Emily swallowed. It wasn’t a pleasant thought. The books she’d read at Mountaintop had talked about blood magic...and possible ways to turn it into a weapon. One magician had planted a seed of his own mind in his victim, which had eventually flowered into a split personality; another, perhaps with darker intentions, had used it to bind his family to him as slaves. Magic was terrifyingly easy to abuse and, without a comprehensive knowledge of every branch of magic, even the most experienced magicians could be caught out.
“I know, sir,” she said. Alassa was her friend. “I’ll take the risk.”
“You may go mad,” Lady Barb warned. “Or you may die in there, leaving your body uninhabited.”
Emily nodded, not trusting herself to speak. She feared mental harm far more than physical harm, if only because anything that didn’t kill her outright could be cured through magic. But a mental problem? She’d be lucky if she were locked up in the Halfway House for study, rather than simply killed out of hand as a potential danger. Necromancers were mad, after all, and embracing necromancy might seem the sane option if she were already mad.
“Very well,” the Grandmaster said. “We shall make the preparations.”
Lady Barb cleared her throat. “Do you want to rest first? Or eat something?”
“No, thank you,” Emily said. The longer she delayed, the harder it would be to take the plunge into Alassa’s mind. “Can we just get on with it?”
Master Grey gave her an odd look, but said nothing. Emily couldn’t help feeling heartened; he’d probably meant to make a cutting remark, then remembered where he was. The Grandmaster wouldn’t have tolerated him snapping at Emily, not in front of him and Lady Barb. Oddly, it made Emily feel better. Master Grey might be intimidating, but he could be intimidated himself.
The Grandmaster produced a silver knife from his belt and carefully cut Alassa’s hand. Blood welled up; Emily swallowed, unable to keep herself from feeling nervous. All of the horror stories she’d read, the ones intended to dissuade magicians from experimenting with blood magic, suddenly felt very real. Jumping into a person’s mind could be dangerous; hell, one book had likened it to jumping off a cliff, without any real idea of what was below. The Grandmaster passed her the knife, then waited.
“You don’t have to do this,” Lady Barb said, as Emily stood and knelt beside Alassa. “Emily, there are other people who can touch minds.”
Emily shook her head. She was, as far as she knew, the
only
person who had ever touched Alassa’s mind. It wasn’t
that
much experience, but it was better than anyone else. Hell, she’d managed to reach Alassa and bring her out, back into the real world. If she could do that again, Alassa would be alive...and then they could start rescuing the others, one by one.
“I do,” she said. She slashed her own palm, then deliberately gripped Alassa’s hand, allowing their blood to mingle. “Someone has to do it.”
She muttered the incantation under her breath and waited. For a long moment, nothing happened; Alassa’s body felt warm but empty. Emily didn’t want to think about the possibilities, yet she knew they had to be faced. Could Alassa’s soul have fled a long time ago?
And then
something
reached out for her.
Emily plummeted forward, into Alassa’s mind. Everything went black...
...And then she was standing in a grey mist, looking around helplessly. She couldn’t see anything but the mist; it floated around her like a physical thing, close enough to touch and yet completely out of reach. Emily lifted her hand and watched as the mist fell back, refusing to allow her to touch it. The air felt damp and cold.
This isn’t right
, she thought. Last time, she’d been bombarded with memories and sensations; now, there was just the grey mist.
Is she dead? Is this a dead mind
?
She refused to consider the thought. “Alassa,” she called. Her voice faded into the nothingness surrounding her. “Alassa!”
There was no response. She looked down, wondering what she was standing on, but saw nothing. It was quite possible she was still plummeting, she thought; maybe she was still falling and had yet to reach bottom. But there was no sense of falling, no sensation at all apart from the cold. It seemed to reach through her skin and into her very soul.
She closed her eyes, then opened them again. Nothing changed.
“Alassa,” she called, again. “Where
are
you?”
A chuckle, cruel and evil, echoed through the mist.
Emily jumped.
That
hadn’t been Alassa. She’d heard her friend laugh, or giggle, or even snicker at someone’s misfortune...and it hadn’t sounded anything but feminine. She looked from side to side, bracing herself for an attack that could come from anywhere, yet there was nothing but the mist. And then she heard a second chuckle, so loud it seemed to be coming from all around her. She would have sworn it was masculine, except there was something about it that was inhuman. Utterly inhuman.
Something moved, above her. She looked up and froze. A giant face peered down at her, so utterly inhuman that it was hard to pick out any details. It leered, one hand reaching down towards her; Emily cringed back, reaching desperately for her magic, but it refused to work. The mist seemed to spin around her...
...And, when it cleared, she stood facing the creature. It held a puppet on strings dangling from one hand. Emily was somehow unsurprised to realize the puppet was Alassa, frozen in a moment of time.
She forced herself to look at the creature. It was humanoid, but clearly far less human than the Gorgon. It’s arms and legs were long and gangly, bending in ways no human could match; it’s face was angular and sharp, with long pointy ears that reached to the sky. And its eyes were bright, and sharp, and so very cruel.
“Well,” it said. “Welcome.”
“You’re a demon,” Emily said. It was hard to even
look
at the demon, but she forced herself to stand her ground. “Aren’t you?”
“In a manner of speaking,” it agreed.
Emily thought, fast. The one time she’d met a demon, she’d raised it herself, within a protective circle. It might have been able to pick its words to harm her, but it wouldn’t have been able to hurt her physically.
This
demon, however, was loose within Alassa’s mind; it might not be under any restraints at all. It might well be able to hurt both of them.
“Alassa didn’t summon you,” she said, flatly. “How are you even here?”
“Now
there’s
an interesting story,” the demon said. “And I will even tell it to you for free.”
Emily’s eyes narrowed. Demons
never
did anything for free. And they couldn’t lie...
But was that true of a demon that
hadn’t
been raised with the proper rites? Even the DemonMasters of old hadn’t dared to tamper with the rites, not when losing control could easily lead to a horrible death. Maybe it
could
lie to her.
And even if it couldn’t, she knew better than to take everything it said on faith. It might not be able to lie, but it certainly could bend the truth until it was completely unrecognizable.
“Once upon a time,” the demon said, “there was a magician with more power than sense. He reached into the Darkness, demanding a warden for his fortress, and dragged me out into the light. I was bound to his fortress, bound so tightly that even his death didn’t free me.”
Its voice burned at Emily’s mind, each word tearing into her thoughts. She wanted to cover her ears, but she knew it would be pointless. The demon wasn’t speaking into her ears; it was speaking directly into her mind. And it was trying to make it hard for her to think clearly.
“Shadye,” Emily said. “He summoned you as a guard dog?”
The demon’s eyes flashed with brilliant malice. “None dared approach his fortress,” it said, with a hint of pride. “Those who
did
became my prey. They were
mine
to play with as I willed. He wished me to keep his domain free of intruders and I did as I was bid.”
As the terms of enslavement bound you
, Emily thought. Some of the DemonMasters had done the same thing, according to the books, but it had almost always ended badly. The demons had broken free as soon as their master died.
And yet, Shadye managed to bind you so thoroughly you remained trapped even after he died
.
“And then his heir arrived,” the demon added. “It was
such
a surprise to discover that the person who’d killed him was a young, innocent girl.”
Emily winced. She had a nasty feeling she knew where this was going.
“You took the object that bound me out of the Dark Fortress and,
quite
by accident, granted me permission to enter Whitehall,” it said. “Your Grandmaster, alack for him, is blind; we took his eyes.”
Emily stared. “
You
took his eyes?”
“He raised a demon long ago,” the demon said. It made a show of rubbing its clawed hands together in glee. “The experience blinded him to us. He could no more see demonic influence than the spots on your face. It was beyond him to realize that you had picked up my container, or that I rode you back to Whitehall.”
It clicked its fingers. Emily recalled suddenly, with a clarity that startled her, picking up a ring from among Shadye’s possessions. It hadn’t struck her as anything special at the time; the Grandmaster had simply added it to the collection for later study. But if the demon had been bound to the ring...