Lord of Ashes (Steelhaven: Book Three)

Lord of Ashes (Steelhaven: Book Three) Read Free Page B

Book: Lord of Ashes (Steelhaven: Book Three) Read Free
Author: Richard Ford
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perils of tapping the Veil untrained then they had long been dispelled. The Veil held all the magicks of the world within its confines, and harnessing it was dangerous, even for experienced magisters. For an apprentice it could often lead to catastrophe.
    Waylian had heard tell one lad named Mikael had choked on his own vomit after attempting a particularly tricky incantation. Another girl, he didn’t know her name, had died screaming and clawing at her head, pulling out hair in huge knots until she had finally expired. Little wonder then that Waylian was out of favour with his fellows since he had managed to avoid being put at such risk.
    Not that it was his fault. Magistra Gelredida had insisted he be spared the danger of premature training. There was no use trying to explain that to Drennan and his trainees, though. To them he was unfairly favoured. It mattered little to them that Waylian
wanted
to learn his Art,
wanted
to train alongside them so he might face the Khurtas with all the raging magicks he could muster and send them fleeing in terror back to their northern steppes.
    It doesn’t matter. They all hate you anyway. You have no friends here, Grimmy. But then, you never had any friends here in the first place.
    When he knew he could wait no longer, Waylian stepped into the dim morning light and glanced out onto the courtyard. Gelredida would be waiting, and he knew he shouldn’t be late.
    His attention was drawn by the row of robed apprentices, each one standing and looking on as Archmaster Folds gave them their instruction. A line of mannequins stood opposite, their blank faces daubed with war paint to represent the savage Khurtas. To the far left one mannequin was burned and blackened.
    Drennan held a block of charcoal, the dust of it having dirtied his robe at the front. ‘You’ll feel it grow hot,’ he said, glaring at his students with one blue eye, the other as milky as the overcast sky. ‘But don’t worry, it won’t burn your flesh. Just that of your target,’ with a thick-fingered hand he gestured to the row of mannequins, smoke rising from the one on the left as though confirming the Archmaster’s words. ‘So who’s first?’
    Drennan looked expectantly at his charges but none of them seemed too keen to take him up on his offer. The silence wore on as Drennan regarded each of the apprentices with his mismatched eyes, one seeming to glare in disdain, the other peering right through them.
    ‘I will,’ said a girl Waylian didn’t recognise. She took a step forward as confidently as she could but it was obvious for all to see she was afraid. She must have been older than Waylian, and better trained in the Art –
and who isn’t
– but she looked tiny, her short cropped hair giving a boyish look to her face.
    Drennan held out the block of charcoal and she took it from him, stepping forward to face the row of mannequins.
    ‘Concentrate,’ said the Archmaster. ‘When you invoke, don’t just say the words but feel them. Don’t just focus your power but will it. Break the Veil. Take the magicks and make them yours.’
    The girl nodded, staring ahead at the mannequins, grasping the charcoal so tight her knuckles went white. She closed her eyes for a moment, taking in several deep and calming breaths before she looked at the mannequins once more. Waylian could see the steely determination in her eyes, the strength in her boyish little face, the maturity, the knowledge that she would not, could not, fail.
    As she spoke the invocation she closed her eyes and held out the block of charcoal. Waylian had no idea what the words meant, they were alien to him and sounded odd on the girl’s lips, but as she spoke them the charcoal began to glow white. There was a hissing as smoke rose from her clenched fist but she didn’t react to any pain. Her eyes flicked open and Waylian felt his heart skip a beat as he saw they burned as white as the charcoal in her fist, all the colour washed away by the powers

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