Chapter 8: Sigul
Deklos walked down the street toward the
university. It was the beginning of the day, so the lamps that
lit the streets were still a bit dim. Normally, he wouldn't dare
be up at such an unholy hour of the day, but today would be his first
day back on the job as a university professor since that fateful
experiment.
He had been unconscious for months after the
experiment had damaged his mind. During that time, the doctors
had barely kept him alive with some experimental artifacts that put the
body into a form of hibernation. Once he had woken, they
discovered that the months of sleep had healed his mind, but caused his
body to become weak. His hands and arms couldn't handle
complicated tasks, and his legs almost didn't work at all. This
resulted in him spending a few additional months at the hospital,
re-teaching his body how to perform basic functions.
During this time, Deklos took the time to read up on
history. Since he had no desire to go return to the hospital to
sleep for a few more months, Deklos
decided to give up his attempts to create an antipodal elemental fusion
spell
experimentally. Instead, he looked through the history books,
seeking any evidence of an unusual or unknown spell causing
upheaval. Unfortunately, most of the books he read tended to be
less than
helpful. One text, however, gave him a direction for his
research. In an old book about the lives and crimes of infamous
criminals, Deklos found a reference to someone known as 'Relos the
Fugitive.' This man, it turned out, had stolen a manuscript
describing the casting of a dangerous spell, and led the police on a
chase all over the Dark Lands. When they had finally cornered
him, Relos managed to get away by casting a form of a teleportation
spell. The part about the lost spell manuscript caught Deklos'
eye, so he began to study this incident. This study consumed his
free time for the rest of his stay at the hospital.
Finally, after months of extreme frustration, Deklos
finally managed to become barely self-sufficient again. The
hospital bills were waived in exchange for him refining and producing a
quantity of the artifacts for inducing hibernation. After
completing this task for the hospital, Deklos found himself once again
a free man, capable of returning to the life he had lived before the
accident. Fortunately, Deklos' irrational desire for revenge
against Lideus Magus had cooled, leaving behind a simple desire to be
accepted. As a result, he found himself able to research the
concept of antipodal
elemental fusion at his leisure, though he still intended to try to
acquire it in order to realize his dream of receiving the title of
Magus so that he would be accepted on account of his strength.
Looking up, Deklos found that he was already at the
entrance to the university. He walked through the garden toward
the main entrance, appreciating the green while he could before finally
entering the main building of the university. He found the
interior almost completely empty, no
students or professors roamed the halls yet, and only a few of the
secretaries and administrators were present. A few of them saw
him and recognized him, so Deklos found himself already having to deal
with explaining what he had been doing for nearly half a year.
Unfortunately, a few of the secretaries that decided to ask about the
last few months happened to be some of the more inquisitive and
talkative of the bunch, so it ended up taking him quite a bit of time
to end the conversations. A few hours later, the crowds began to
arrive, and Deklos found himself able to withdraw to his office without
attracting too much attention.
In his office, Deklos found a box and a folder
sitting on his desk. Looking into the box, he found a pile of
papers and projects that his students had completed in his
absence. A note was attached to it that simply read "For future
reference." The teachers' aide that had taken over some of his
classes was apparently the sadistic sort. He placed the box on
the floor, taking care not to break any improperly constructed
artifacts in the process, and then sat down at his desk. The
folder still lay there, so he picked it up and opened it. Within,
he found a small ream of papers summarizing in the lengthiest form
possible the results of his classes during his absence, complete with a
listing of the professors and teachers' aides that were currently
teaching his classes.
After filing away these papers, mostly into the
circular filing cabinet, he found another note from one of the
administrators. The note hinted at the fact that he was expected
to return to his classes as soon as possible, and that the construction
of his class schedule would be completely up to him. Also
politely hinted
at in the note was a threat of loss of employment should he not take
back most of his classes, no matter how inconvenient the scheduling
might be. Deklos merely rolled his eyes at this and went to work
at arranging his schedule. He ended up having fewer classes than
usual, mainly due to scheduling conflicts that he had not been present
to change, but easily had "most" of his classes back.
For the remainder of his day, Deklos went back and
reviewed the lessons that he would be teaching in his classes for the
next few weeks. He had been away for almost half a year, so he
figured that one day more wouldn't hurt anyone since there were already
people teaching his classes for him. He worked through the normal
lunch break, eating some food he had brought from home while continuing
to review the lectures that he was scheduled to present in the
following weeks. The material was certainly not new to him, but
he had somewhat forgotten how to explain the techniques of various
fields of applied magic to students.
Finally, it came to the end of the day, when all the
classes were finished up and the students had returned to their
apartments and dormitories to cause havoc until the early morning
hours. Deklos was exhausted, but at least he was prepared for
actually teaching his classes again. He left the books and papers
on his desk where they were, and took care not to trip over any
particularly volatile artifacts that his students had produced as
"class projects" in his absence. He closed up his office, and
walked down the mostly vacant hallways toward the entrance. On
his way out, he smelled a faint trace of smoke coming from the magic
labs, but did nothing about it. After all, he had caused the
worst magical accident that the university had seen in a century, so
who was he to criticize a student that let a fire spell get somewhat
out of control.
The empty hallways gave way to a sparsely populated
street, and the bright lighting of the university became the dim light
of the night lamps. Deklos trudged on down the streets toward the
building his apartment was in. The outlines of the building
blurred in the dim lighting, though Deklos could see every detail of
the buildings in his memory. He had walked this street many
times, both in the bright light of the day lamps and the dim light of
the night lamps, and he knew the form of this street as well as the
techniques of artificing. He continued on toward his home, fading
away into the shadows of the street at night.
* * *
The stone walls were damp to the touch. He
knew that the cavern he was in was close to a source of water, and that
he'd have to be careful using spells in here. One misplaced
spell, and he might either cause a cave-in or a flood, depending on how
unlucky he was. He checked his backpack, just to make sure that
the book was still intact. After all, it just wouldn't do to
destroy such a valuable book. No, he had to get rid of it by
hiding it where no one will find it for hundreds of years.
Someone will need the information in this book someday, but it's too
dangerous to let just anyone have it.
He continued to walk down the dark corridor, a
simple light spell illuminating the way in front of him. Shadows
writhed and twisted along the walls, brought to life by the wizard's
spell. In the distance, he heard water dripping, slowly forming
stalagmites and stalactites like the ones he could see all around
him. The tunnel stretched out as far as his light allowed him too
see, so he continued on toward his destination.
The tunnel was long, but not endless. Before
long, he found himself at the mouth of the cave, and peered out into
the darkness. He concentrated on his light spell, adding power to
it so that he could see his surroundings. The area outside the
cave seemed to be a barren wasteland, but in the distance, he thought
he could see the shadows of some unusual rock formations.
Curiosity got the better of him, so he walked toward the structure to
see what it was.
To his surprise, the thing he thought was a rock
formation was actually a building, a guardhouse on the perimeter of a
town. The style looked very similar to that of the city he had
come from, but with some marked differences. Instead of being
perfectly smooth and unadorned, the structure seemed to be quite a bit
more jagged. Sharp corners and engravings distinguished this
building from the ones he knew so well. Lifting his light source
up, he examined the engravings. To his surprise, the art was a
depiction of a battle. On one side, there were men in the robes
of mages. They seemed to be shooting or throwing something toward
the men on the other side, who were for the most part adorned in the
simple clothes of peasants.
This artwork puzzled him, so he sat down to think
about what it meant. Then he heard footsteps behind him, the soft
tap of feet against the ground. He turned around, and held forth
his light spell. What he saw before him froze him where he
stood. Before him was a man wearing chain mail and wielding a
pike. The man's appearance was fairly normal, pale skin and dark
hair. What truly distinguished him, however, was his eyes.
His eyes were red. Then he grinned, revealing a pair of fangs.
* * *
Deklos awoke with a start. The dream he just
awoke from was fresh on his mind, and images of the monstrous man
consumed his thoughts. A few minutes later, he recovered his
rationality, and realized that the dream was probably due to his
endless study of Relos had created the dream. Turning his mind
toward the reality of the day, Deklos pulled himself out of bed, and
began to go through his morning ritual of dressing and taking care of
hygiene. He walked into the kitchen, and began to prepare some
food to eat.
As he ate, Deklos thought about the events of the
past few days. Ever since that first day back to work, classes
and research had consumed every waking moment of the day. If he
wasn't giving a lecture on the practical application of darkness-based
spells, he was poring over history books, searching for any little clue
that might help him track down the book that Relos had stolen all those
years ago. Day in and day out for four days the teaching and
researching had continued on unabated, and now Deklos found himself
completely worn out. Worse, the activities of his days were
creeping into his nights, giving him disturbing dreams like the one he
had last night.
Luckily, there were no classes today, so he decided
to use his day off to relax for a change. He was not going to
research history today, instead he'd go through his spell book
library. Learning new spells always relaxed him, and it would
engage his mind enough that he wouldn't become bored. Walking
over to his bookshelves, he took down a few books. He carried
them over to his desk, and sat down to read. He looked at the
titles, and found that he had chosen mainly books on the subject of
time-activated spells. He was surprised about how much he didn't
remember about spells that would only reveal themselves after a set
period of time. He considered using these in some of his classes,
using the technique to hide questions on the tests until half of the
allotted time was up. Shaking his head at the notion, Deklos
returned to his reading.
An hour or so later, he returned to the bookshelf in
search of different books. Replacing the books he already had on
the shelf, Deklos looked at the titles in search of something that
might interest him. He was considering looking at a book on the
application of wind-based spells to the construction industry, when a
strange title caught his eye. It read simply, "The Journal of
Relos the Archwizard." Wondering why a journal was on his spell
book shelf, as well as if the Relos mentioned in the title was Relos
the Fugitive, he pulled the book down and began to read.
He flipped through the book first, and found in the
very back a small essay that described the theoretical foundation for
teleportation magic, and went on to describe a spell for teleporting a
person to a specific location. Reading that small section, he
remembered why it was on the spell book shelf. A number of years
ago, he was going through the things that his late parents'
possessions, and found the journal under a pile of his mother's old
clothes. He read parts of it, and found it mostly boring.
The section on teleportation magic, however, made it well worth
keeping. He had decided to surprise his students one day by
teleporting directly from class to his office and back again, and the
look on his students' faces were priceless. Of course, that was
before he realized how expensive it was to teleport himself
places. He hadn't touched the spell in years because he didn't
have a need to teleport himself anywhere.
Deklos turned back to the journal section, and began
to read. After all, he was curious about who this Relos character
was, and why he had researched teleportation magic. The first
half of the journal described a man much like himself. Relos was
apparently a scholar at the university, specializing in research while
doing teaching occasionally if the need arose. The man had been
particularly skilled with dark elemental spells, but was actually
interested in refining past research. He had taken an ancient
work about teleportation magic, reproduced it in the laboratory, and
refined the technique into a general-use spell. Of course, the
massive element requirements were still present, but he was unable to
pursue this particular branch of research.
The second part of the journal certainly got more
interesting. Around the time that Relos was working on cutting
the energy cost of teleportation, a friend of his asked him to keep a
certain spell book from the university's archives safe. A few
days after
receiving the spell book, Relos began to experience visions, where a
man shrouded in shadows pleaded with him to hide the spell book in a
particular place. This kept up for a few weeks, until Relos
agreed to hide the book. That's when he met the man from the
vision. The man talked with Relos in person only once, but gave
him instructions as to how to hide the spell.
The spell was supposed to be hidden away by
teleporting to a particular sealed chamber and leaving it there.
The teleportation spell was nearly identical to the one that Relos had
worked on, but used three siguls to position the end target of the
spell instead of using a pair of markers. The man had prepared
the three siguls ahead of time, and left them scattered across the dark
lands so that no one else could use the spell. Relos found the
first sigul in the dusty archives. The second sigul he found in
his
desk at home. He had recorded the design of both of these siguls
in the journal. The journal never said if he found the third
sigul. The last journal said that he was going to go through
"those caves" the next day, and hopefully he would find the third sigul
there. The next few pages were blank, and then the treatise on
teleportation began.
Posted at 12:00 am by RedMage
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