He scowled and stood up, straightening his jacket. Styliann. He strode briskly to the western end of the town.
‘I need a scout,’ he demanded of the duty watch Captain.
‘My Lord.’ The brown-bearded Captain hollered a name, the sound booming from the nearby buildings. A man came running from a working party digging a channel for a set of stakes outside the stockade. ‘Kessarin, my Lord.’
Tessaya nodded and turned to the athletically built Wesman who wore pale brown leggings, a shirt and lightweight boots and carried a small single-bladed axe in his belt. He was young and clean-cut, a product of a lesser noble village, no doubt.
‘Can you run?’ asked Tessaya.
‘Yes, my Lord.’ Kessarin nodded vigorously, fear of Tessaya overcome by his eagerness to please.
‘Then go into the pass. Take a hooded lantern but use it sparingly. I need you to find the fools I sent in this afternoon. Do not make contact with anyone. Report directly back to me on your return.’
‘Yes, my Lord.’
‘Go now.’ Tessaya looked towards the black maw of the pass blending into the deepening shadows. He was loath to stand against Styliann and his dread force but dawn’s first light would force his hand. Kessarin needed to return quickly and the thought that he might not scared Tessaya more than it should.
Styliann, with his close guard around him, relaxed and formed the mana shape for a Communion he would either enjoy immensely or curse forever. The shape, narrow and twisted like a plaited deep blue rope, spiralled away through the rock of the Blackthorne Mountains, seeking one particular mind in Xetesk, a mind which, while suddenly powerful, would be unable to resist Styliann’s casting pressure.
The Communion bridged the divide to Xetesk in an instant, a little smile playing around Styliann’s lips as the spell drifted over the resting minds of hundreds of mages inside the College. They appeared like small ripples in an otherwise still pond, a map of minds that, with care, the skilled and knowledgeable could read.
Styliann searched the random thoughts of sleep for one who would be active, spiking the ripples like splashes from falling rain. He was not hard to find. A man whose rise to power had been respectably swift, his opportunity grasped with both hands on the back of a spectacular spell success and, critically, the absence of the incumbent Lord of the Mount.
Styliann admired the courage of the man but he hated the humiliation and was enraged by the weakness of his own circle. When his rightful position was regained, he would need answers to a great many questions.
The Communion arrowed in, jerking the slumbering mage to a sudden and intensely uncomfortable wakefulness. A token resistance was broken almost immediately.
‘My apologies for the lateness of the hour. My Lord.’ Styliann’s mind-voice was laden with bile.
‘St-Styliann?’ gasped the befuddled mage.
‘Yes, Dystran, Styliann. And close enough to sweep away your poorly formed shield. You should train harder in self-preservation. It might come in useful.’ Styliann had never been forced to take a Communion against his will.
‘Where are you?’ Dystran was fully awake now.
Styliann could feel the anxiety and imagined him fighting to sit upright to look about him, though the Communion held him prone.
‘No need to WardLock your doors,’ said Styliann, voice mocking. ‘Not yet.’
‘What do you want?’ asked the new Lord of the Mount.
‘Apart from the obvious? A little assistance to ensure our inevitable meeting is more amicable than it is likely to be at present.’
‘You’re coming back?’
‘Xetesk is my home,’ Styliann said sharply, comforted by the knowledge that Dystran and his team had given little thought to the possible consequences of their usurpation.
There was a pause. Styliann could feel Dystran’s thoughts roiling in his uneasy mind. How he must wish his advisers could help him now.
‘What is it you want?’ he asked again.
‘Muscle,’ said Styliann. ‘A lot of muscle. To leave Xetesk immediately and head south towards Understone. I will meet them en route.’
‘You’re talking about Protectors?’ Dystran’s thought was disbelieving.
‘Naturally,’ replied Styliann. ‘Calling the Protector army is a right of the Lord of the Mount.’
‘But you are not the Lord of the Mount,’ Dystran’s mind-voice sneered. ‘I am.’
Styliann chuckled. At least the man had some backbone if no conception of what he had done. Following his success with the DimensionConnect, he had been correctly made a Master. But his ill-advised leap to ultimate power would suit no one but his advisers who were no doubt using him as a stalking-horse to gauge College mood and opinion. It was a shame that he couldn’t see it but then they never did. Styliann’s stalking-horse hadn’t.
‘But you will grant me the Protector army nonetheless,’ said Styliann, his tone full of certainty. ‘Perhaps then we can sort out the Mount sensibly when I return.’
‘And if I don’t grant them, perhaps you will not return. Then the situation will have sorted itself out.’
‘Fool.’ Styliann spiked the thought, feeling Dystran’s mind recoil. ‘Do you really think that I have remained Lord for so long just to let an upstart mage like you take my Tower?’ He breathed deep to calm himself. There was something he needed to know. ‘You have been studying the texts of the Stewardship, no doubt?’
‘When there has been time,’ said Dystran.
‘Yes. The pressures are great, are they not?’
Dystran relaxed, Styliann could feel it. ‘Yes. I hope we can discuss them in a civilised manner.’
‘Hmm.’ Styliann paused. ‘You have rescinded the Act of Giving and appropriated it yourself, I trust?’ he asked.
‘The Act of . . . ? No, that text is not known to me.’
‘Ah.’ Styliann felt a surge of pleasure and triumph. ‘And nor, apparently, to your ill-chosen advisers. But let me assure you that you will all feel its effects.’ Styliann terminated the Communion abruptly, shaking off the momentary disorientation.
Not rescinding the Act of Giving was an unsurprising error. Normally, there was no living former Lord from whom to remove the Act and the discovery of its power could be discovered at leisure. Normally.
Styliann smiled and tuned his mind to summon the entire Protector army as was, unfortunately for Dystran, still his right.
Kessarin was a proud man. Selected by his Captain and trusted by his Lord with a task of importance and secrecy. One that would end with a report direct to Tessaya himself.
He ran into the pass with enough oil in the small lantern for a good four hours. The wick was trimmed low and the shutter was clipped across to hide all but the merest chink of light and allow sufficient ventilation. Using the failing light of the sun which shone directly along his path, he moved quickly into the first section of the pass which angled very slightly downwards.
His padded leather shoes made little sound, his small axe was strapped hard to his back and his hands were free to trace the outline of the pass, areas of which he could navigate by touch alone - as any good Paleon scout could. Silence was paramount. Lord Tessaya wanted the guard found without their knowing it, and that was exactly what he would do.
Kessarin smirked as he imagined the march, if it could be termed such, of the guard dispatched into the pass five hours previously. Obviously, there had been some delay in the Xeteskian reaching them but they should have been closing in on the western end of the pass by now, if not actually sitting with Riasu.
Kessarin somehow doubted they had travelled that far. Under the leadership of the disagreeable Pelassar, he expected to find them no further than half an hour in, at their stated meeting point. This was despite very specific instructions to move into the centre of the pass if it proved necessary. In choosing Pelassar to lead the relief guard, Tessaya had made, in Kessarin’s estimation, his only mistake so far. Hardly a grave error and Kessarin would be only too pleased to report back on Pelassar’s slovenly conduct and see him whipped or strung. Either would do fine.