Magnus
The Academy loomed before me—a fortress of
knowledge hewn from obsidian, its towering walls veined with glowing moonstone
inlays. The pulsing light traced spectral patterns across polished marble
floors, casting shifting silver sigils that seemed to breathe with the building
itself. Beauty was not merely an adornment here; it had been woven into the
very foundation. Clusters of enchanted crystals hung like frozen stars from the
vaulted ceiling, refracting light into cascading hues of violet, cerulean, and
gold. Magic did not just reside within these halls—it lived in the stones,
whispered through the corridors, and thrummed beneath every step, as though the
Academy itself were alive.
The moment Merlin entered, the hush was near
tangible. Conversations faltered, footsteps stilled—reverence sweeping through
students and faculty alike like a silent wave. Backs straightened, eyes
widened, and the air thickened with unspoken awe.
She was not merely a mage. She was a legend, a
name spoken in equal parts admiration and fear. Her presence was a storm on the
horizon—inevitable, commanding, impossible to ignore.
Yet for all the admiration she inspired, it was
not Merlin that held the room in check.
It was Enoux.
If Merlin was legend, then Enoux was law. Where
one evoked awe, the other instilled something sharper—respect, edged with
wariness. Authority clung to her like a second skin, effortless and absolute.
The space around them was no accident; it was a boundary, an unspoken line that
none dared cross.
And I, standing between them, could not shake the
feeling that I had just stepped into something far greater than myself.
We ascended the spiraling staircase, our
footsteps swallowed by the vastness of the towering halls. The air thickened
around us, laced with the scent of aged parchment, burning incense, and the
lingering crackle of residual magic—an unseen current that coiled along the
walls like something sentient. Ornate sconces lined the corridors, their flames
flickering with strange intelligence, casting elongated shadows that writhed
and curled against the high-arched ceilings.
Banners embroidered with the sigils of ancient
houses draped solemnly between towering bookshelves, their fabric whispering
against unseen drafts. Every passage led us deeper into the Academy’s heart—a
place where knowledge bore the weight of iron and power pulsed beneath the
polished stone floors. It felt as though the very walls were listening,
hoarding centuries of whispered secrets and forgotten spells.
Then, we stopped.
Before us loomed a set of massive double
doors—dark mahogany, their surface carved with intricate runes that pulsed in
slow, rhythmic intervals, like a slumbering heartbeat. Gold filigree traced the
sigil of the Magistrate in delicate, twisting patterns, veins of frozen
lightning locked within the grain.
A plaque was embedded seamlessly into the stone,
as if the walls themselves had grown around it, unwilling to relinquish the
name it bore.
Magnus: Head-Master Pocket.
The words sent a shiver through me. It was not
just a name. It was a proclamation.
Magnus stood second only to Primus, reigning
above Omni—the three pillars of the Magistrate, whose word shaped laws,
dictated power, and wove the fates of nations as if they were mere threads in
an eternal tapestry. To stand before this door was to stand before authority
itself.
These were not just titles. They were
legacies—names that carried the weight of history, inspired reverence, and cast
shadows long enough to swallow generations whole.
Enoux raised her hand toward the towering doors,
her fingers hovering just above the dark mahogany surface, poised to knock. The
air around us thickened with anticipation, the wood itself seeming to hum with
an ancient, latent power. But before her fingers could make contact, a
voice—thin, wiry, and unmistakably sharp—cut through the charged silence.
“Enoux?”
The name was laced with surprise, tinged with
amusement, and followed by a pause that seemed to stretch too long. Then, a
mock gasp of disbelief broke the stillness. “By the Great Gear… what brings the
Primus to my sanctuary?”
From the dimly lit corridor, an elder Gnome
stepped into view, his silhouette framed by the warm glow of flickering
torches. His silver hair was combed back meticulously, though a few unruly
strands had escaped, stubbornly defying order. His pale blue eyes gleamed
behind thin, wire-rimmed glasses perched precariously at the tip of his nose,
as if they might slip off with every tilt of his head. He peered over them, his
gaze a calculating one, as though he had seen much and judged even more.
His robes, cut in the same intricate design as
Enoux’s, shimmered faintly in the dim light. The embroidery along the hems
pulsed rhythmically, as though the fabric itself contained secrets woven with
masterful precision—arcane threads that only a true scholar might unravel.
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Behind him, a steam-powered golem let out a
rhythmic hiss, its brass-plated frame venting small bursts of vapor with every
movement. It was an impressive construct—its three wheel-like legs gliding
effortlessly across the stone floor, despite the towering stack of ancient
tomes it bore in its massive, gear-driven arms. The books—bound in cracked
leather and coated in dust—held the weight of centuries. Their titles, barely
legible beneath layers of grime, whispered of forgotten knowledge. With each
slow turn of the golem’s joints, a soft whir echoed, a delicate symphony of
gears and pistons working in flawless unison.
Atop the golem’s broad shoulders, like a knight
astride his steed, sat a younger Gnome. His expression was steeped in profound
boredom, his tousled blond hair falling haphazardly around his face. Thick
goggles rested atop his head, their lenses catching the firelight in a faint
amber glow. His sharp green eyes, heavy-lidded with disinterest, flicked
between Enoux and the elder, though a trace of mild curiosity lingered there.
He wore the same academy uniform as I, though his collar was sloppily loosened
and his sleeves rolled up—his attire a clear testament to his preference for
comfort over conformity.
Enoux inclined her head, just slightly—an almost
imperceptible gesture—but there was weight in it, a gravity that seemed to
shift the very air around us. Her voice, soft yet imbued with reverence,
drifted through the room like a whisper from another time. “Ah… Master.”
The word hung in the air, a sound as heavy as a
bell’s toll, its echo reverberating through the stillness. In that moment, as
if drawn by some invisible thread, Selene, the gnome, and I all gasped in
unison. The shock, the disbelief, poured from us in a tidal wave, our voices
colliding together.
“MASTER?!”
The words exploded from our throats—sharp,
sudden, and so loud that they seemed to tear through the very air. In my arms,
the baby stirred violently, her tiny body jerking as though struck by the force
of our exclamation. She squealed in protest, a piercing cry that shattered the
fragile silence. Her little limbs stiffened, hands clenching into trembling
fists. A wail followed swiftly—urgent and raw, demanding all attention. It was
as though time itself had halted, and nothing existed but her desperate cries.
Across from us, Garik and the ogres erupted in
laughter—deep, rumbling, too loud. The sound reverberated through the walls,
shaking the floor beneath us. It was a rich, thunderous thing, filling every
corner of the room. Yet the laughter was short-lived.
Enoux turned sharply, eyes flashing with a heat
that seemed to crackle through the air. Her glare was a force in itself—so
intense, so laden with command, that Garik’s laughter faltered and died in an
instant. The amusement drained from his face as though it had been stolen by an
unseen hand. The ogres’ gazes fell, mouths sealed shut, their expressions
frozen in disbelief.
She didn’t need to speak.
Without a moment’s hesitation, Enoux pivoted back
to us. Her arms stretched toward the baby with a calm authority. “Give her
here.”
The tone of her voice brooked no argument.
I knew better than to resist.
Selene’s ears flicked, a trace of annoyance
flickering across her features as she tugged at my sleeve. Her hesitation
pressed into me, her fingers tight against my arm. Her lips parted, but no
words emerged. I caught her wrist and gently shook my head, offering a silent
warning. She understood. Enoux’s word was not to be defied.
For a long moment, Selene’s ears drooped in
reluctant surrender. Her lips pressed into a thin line, and with a sigh, I
handed the baby to Enoux’s waiting arms.
With graceful care, Enoux cradled the infant,
drawing her close against her chest. The folds of her robes enveloped the baby
like a soft cocoon, the warmth of her presence slowly soothing the child’s
frazzled nerves. The infant’s cries softened into quiet, hiccuping sobs,
eventually melting into the stillness. Enoux rocked her gently, her movements
fluid, fingers moving in hypnotic, rhythmic motions.
Then, in a voice barely above a whisper, she
began to sing. The melody was low, rich, and ancient, a cadence older than the
stone walls that encircled us.
“Rock-a-bye baby, on the treetop, When the wind
blows, the cradle will rock. When the bough breaks, the cradle will fall, And
down will come baby, cradle and all…”
A shiver crept up my spine, slow and insistent,
as the lullaby wove through the air. It was tender, yes, but there was
something more—something alive in the melody, something that stirred deep
within me. The feeling was familiar, as if I had heard it a thousand times, and
yet utterly new.
At first, the song was faint, like a dream
slipping through my fingers. But then, something inside me stirred—a foreign
sensation, vivid and undeniable. A warmth bloomed in my chest, and before I
realized it, I was humming along.
The melody poured from my lips, as though it had
always been there, hidden beneath the surface, waiting for the right moment to
emerge. I couldn’t explain it—this was the first time I had ever heard the
song. And yet, it felt like mine, as if it were woven into the very fabric of
my being.
The room fell into a charged stillness—not
peaceful, but heavy with an unspoken weight.
Merlin and the Magnus exchanged a glance, eyes
wide, mouths parted in stunned disbelief. I felt their gaze—piercing,
intense—prickling my skin. It wasn’t curiosity. No, it was something
darker—fear? Recognition?
Merlin spoke first, her voice trembling with a
tremor I couldn’t quite place. “How… how do you know that song?”
The weight of her words settled in my gut like a
stone sinking into the earth. My voice came, distant, like I was answering
through a fog. “I… I don’t know.”
The Magnus’s eyes never left me, studying me with
such a penetrating gaze that my pulse quickened. His voice was slow,
deliberate, each word carefully weighed. “Child…” he began, drawing out the
word as if tasting it. “Have you ever heard that song before?”
The question hung in the air, heavy and pressing.
The atmosphere thickened, the room suddenly feeling far smaller. My throat
tightened, and for a moment, I couldn’t speak. Finally, I managed a shaky
breath and murmured, “No.”
A flicker of something—understanding?—flashed in
the Magnus’s eyes, but it was gone before I could grasp it. He lifted a hand
slowly, deliberately, and with a single motion, gestured toward the great doors
at the far end of the room.
A deep, mechanical clunk reverberated through the
chamber as though an ancient mechanism had stirred to life. The sound was
followed by the hiss of shifting metal, and one by one, the locks on the door
unlatched. The door groaned open, revealing a shadowed passage beyond.
The Magnus turned to face me, his expression
unreadable. His voice, low and urgent, cut through the silence. “Quickly…
inside.” He gestured with his staff, the command undeniable. “We have much to
discuss, lost child of the Great Tree.”