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It slid out into the room, then rose into the air. He lifted it to a height of four feet or so, then slowly lowered it back to the floor. Isia, struggling into her satin tunic, didn’t see a thing.

A moment later Isia blew him a kiss and slipped out of the room, closing the door gently behind her.

Lord Faran lay in the bed, but did not put out the lamp or go back to sleep. Instead he mostly stared at the ceiling thinking, his thoughts interrupted only by brief experiments with his newfound ability.

He could lift or slide anything he could see, he discovered, though only up to roughly the size and weight of a grown man— the wardrobe against the far wall did not budge. He could see the shape of the space between himself and the wardrobe, but could not force it to change as he could with smaller objects. He could also, he found, control the size, brightness, and temperature of the lamp’s flame.

This was magic, beyond question.

But what kind of magic? And how had he acquired it?

It wasn’t anything he immediately recognized, and he had been studying magic for years. It bore a resemblance to witchcraft, in that witches could also move small objects without touching them, but it somehow didn’t feel like the witchcraft he had observed in the past.

The Wizards’ Guild forbade any use of wizardry by any nobleman and frowned upon the idea ofany sort of magic in the hands of nobles-or for that matter, any part of the city government of Ethshar of the Spices or any other government. No ruler or administrator or magistrate, hereditary or otherwise, was permitted to learn magic, and no one who had served an apprenticeship in magic was permitted to hold any governmental position of authority. Magicians hired as magicians were allowed, such as the wizards who purified the canals or the theurgists who made certain that witnesses told the truth in criminal proceedings, but not magicians who made decisions about the city’s workings. The Wizards’ Guild was quite unreasonably insistent on these rules. People who defied the edicts of the Wizards’ Guild had a tendency to die suddenly and horribly. Even if they acquiesced quickly, they suffered lesser, though still unpleasant, fates.

But what about this magic? Azrad VI, overlord of Ethshar of the Spices and triumvir of the Hegemony of Ethshar, had named Lord Faran as his senior counselor, and as such Faran was forbidden to work any magic himself, and instead hired magicians as he might need them in the course of his duties — but now Faran seemed to have come into possession of a mysterious magical power through no act of his own. How would the Wizards’ Guild react to that? Surely, they could not blame him for this accident!

It was so very appropriate that he had received this, after all the years of studying magic he was forbidden to use. He had looked for loopholes in the Guild’s rules, and now a loophole had foundhim. The Guild couldn’t blame him for that!

Then he frowned. No, they wouldn’t blame him. They would acknowledge he hadn’t done anything to cause it.

But they might well kill him anyway.

The Wizards’ Guild had never shown any great interest in fairness, after all-they wanted their edicts obeyed, and they really weren’t especially interested in equity or justice or motivation, just obedience. Faran knew that well. He had his own theories about what the Wizards’ Guilddid want, but he was quite certain it wasn’t justice. He would keep his abilities secret, then. That would make it more difficult to learn exactly what they were or where they came from...

Faran had gotten that far in his thoughts when the noises from beyond his window finally penetrated his consciousness-shouting, screaming, thumpings, and hangings.

It was the middle of the night, he thought; what was going on out there beyond the canal? Curious, he rose and crossed to the window, opened the curtains, and looked out.

“Gods and demons,” he muttered as he took in the scene.

His room was on the third floor of the overlord’s Palace, at the east end, with a view across the East Branch of the Grand Canal into the tangled streets of the Old City. Since most of the structures in that ancient warren were only one or two stories, and some were half-sunken into the mud, he could look out across the entire Old City into Fishertown.

Now, as he looked out at that panorama, he could see a dozen buildings ablaze, scattered across the city. He could see figures in the streets, standing, running-and flying, and the airborne figures were not wearing wizards’ robes, nor carrying any visible magical apparatus, not even the traditional wizard’s dagger.

Most of the flying shapes seemed to be moving northward, high and very fast, out across the Gulf of the East, but others were down near street level and were going in various directions about the city.

He could see other things floating or flying as well-wagons, silver plate, gold coins. Broken glass was strewn all over the streets of the Old City.

And he was fairly certain he saw at least one corpse lying in the street amid the glass.

This was unquestionably serious trouble. He would be needed soon in his official capacity; reports would be reaching the Palace. The city guards would want instructions; the overlord would probably be awakened and want an explanation. He had to get downstairs at once.

And why, he asked himself as he hurried to his dressing room, had he ever thoughtonly he had received this mysterious magical power?

Chapter Four

At the same instant that Lord Hanner stumbled on the streets of Newmarket, and the same instant that Lord Faran sat up in bed and began coughing, Varrin the Weaver awoke suddenly in his third-floor bedchamber atop his workshop-home in the Seacorner district of Ethshar of the Spices. He awoke gasping for air. He had dreamed he was wrapped in his own cloth, buried in thick, heavy wool, trapped under tons of material after falling through a hundred miles of impossibly fine lace that had shredded as he fell through it, shredded and burned around him.

He awoke in darkness as complete and black as in his dream and he pushed out in all directions, with arms and legs-and with something that had never been there before, something that let him see and feel the walls of his little garret despite the darkness, something that let him push at those walls...

And burst them outward, snapping oaken beams like sticks of kindling, shattering plaster into white powder. Its support removed, the roof fell in on him and his wife.

And he caught it, before it reached his upraised hands, caught it and held it.

Then he froze, finally awake enough to realize what was happening. He could feel the night air blowing in where the walls had been; he could hear the distant rattle of wreckage and broken furniture bouncing from the awnings and overhangs and falling to the street. He could hear distant screams. He could feel the mass of the roof, pressing down harmlessly on something he couldn’t describe, and even over the screams and falling debris he could hear his wife’s ragged breathing. She was awake, beside him in the darkness, not moving.

“Annis?” he said.

“Varrin?” she replied. “What’s happening?”

“I don’t know,” he said. “I had a dream that I was being crushed, and... and the walls are gone, and I’m holding up the roof, but I don’t knowhow.”

“You’reholding it?” Annis rolled out of the bed and fell to the floor, then got to her knees and stared at Varrin. He couldn’t see her clearly in the dark-even with the walls gone, the dim glow of the lesser moon and the city’s fires didn’t provide much light— but he could sense her, just as he could sense the roof hanging over him, pressing into his awareness.

She was terrified, and part of that terror was directed athim.

“Go downstairs,” he told her. “Then I can put this down and make a light and see what’s going on.”