Chapter 9 – A Stay of Summary Exorcism
Caprifexia's portal from the void snapped shut behind her as she cluched her chest. What felt like icy fingers slowly tightened their grip on her core, worming their way into her inner furnace inch by agonising inch.
The nasty elf Arakno, who she had definitely always disliked, had possibly hurt her much worse than she had initially suspected. Although she was tougher than any mere mortal, her inner furnace was very magical, and very important, and the horrible elf's lightning had almost certainly disrupted it. And she was cold;
so cold. That, more than anything else perturbed her. Mildly. Being cold, like dying, was something mortal
s did. Not dragons. Not her.
The unpleasant stench of stagnant water and rot pressed themselves against her nostrils. Unsurprising, given that they seemed to have emerged in the middle of some kind of mortal settlement. Mortals, she had discovered, were pretty much multiversally disgusting.
Ramshackle mouldering buildings rose either side of a twisting cobbled street, and an immense silver moon dominated the sky. There were lanterns dotted along the street, but none were lit, and several of them looked broken.
The magic of the place was laden with a heavy, sickly feeling, a cloying charge that she associated with a site regularly used for dark magic: necromancy, umbramancy, and curse rituals. There was no wind to speak of, lending the entire place an oppressive, sluggish atmosphere.
The buildings were all boarded up, although here and there the wooden planks had been split open in great rents from what looked like claws, and whatever or whoever had been pulled back through the gaps had left smears of blood, now long dried. Typical poor quality mortal construction. If a dragon had made the defences, they would have been thick enchanted metal. With spikes.
"Help!" called out Einar into the darkness. "We need a healer!"
"They can't understand you," slurred Caprifexia, her head spinning as she attempted to keep up with not only her seemingly never ending task of educating her mortal charge, but also the increasingly difficult prospect of staying upright. She staggered, catching herself against one of the cold metal lamp-posts. "You're just a silly mortal."
"You're really hurt," said Einar in his most fussy tone.
"Nonsense. Just need to catch my breath," she said, sliding a bit further down the lamp and finding a more comfortable position near the bottom. "I am… dragon."
"And you can't heal at all?"
"I'm a wiz-" she began, trailing off as the energy around her shifted and her head lolled upward, her wobbly vision centring on a dark alley at a right angle to where they had arrived. Although Einar wouldn't have been able to see anything, limited creature that he was, dragons, in addition to their other virtually endless superior traits, had better eyesight than humans, and even in the darkness she could make out six humanoid figures drawing closer.
"Oh thank the divines," said Einar a few moments later, when even his inferior mortal eyes eventually noticed them. "Capri ask them for help-"
"Don't think they want to help us," said Capri, clumsily pushing past him as six sets of yellow eyes zeroed in on her, confirming that she had indeed felt a whisper of dark, necromantic magic marking their approach. Undead.
Without hearing or reading their language first, even a dragon couldn't address them in their likely filthy tongue. But equally, since she was a dragon, she also had a way around that particular problem. With far more effort than it would have usually took for what was a pretty simple spell she reached for some of the surrounding power, wove it somewhat clumsily into a spell, and used it to launch a bundle of thought towards the undead.
She wasn't exactly skilled with telepathy, and without touch couldn't do more than transmit simple impressions, but she did have at least something going for her in the present situation. Even as a whelp her mind was infinitely more complex with any mortal's. That mean that rather than just projecting a simple impression that could be missed or ignored, she could blast out a bundle of intent at the mental equivalent of ear-splitting volume.
<BACK OFF, I'M BIGGER AND SCARIER THAN YOU ARE! RAWR!>
The figures recoiled as her telepathic threat washed over them, whatever remained of their rotting prey-instincts recognising her for what she was. For a moment she thought they might turn and run, but then the leader rallied.
"Look and think you twits – she's just an exhausted elf," he said in an ugly language that featured a lot of 'V' and 'Z' sounds. "All bark, no
bite."
Several sharpened teeth flashed in amused grins, and if Caprifexia had had any doubts as to the character of the shambling corpses before, they were totally and utterly dispelled. She didn't need Einar's help to know that puns, and the appreciation thereof, were clearly signs of irredeemable villainy.
"Vampires," said Einar beside her
, once again demonstrating that while he was just a mortal, he had a mastery of at least one thing exceeding even the most gifted and powerful dragon: stating the obvious.
"Don't you
dare stab me again," said Caprifexia woozily, wobbling to the left as her vision flickered as she strained to draw more on the surrounding mana. She almost lost her mental grip on the energy, before with snarl she forced it into a fireball that burst into existence around her right hand.
The ghouls paused their advance once more, and Caprifexia smiled as toothily as they had. Yes, even at her most exhausted, a Scion of the Titans was in an utterly different league to a bunch of mangy, ugly, filthy bloodsuckers-
The fire around her hand gutted out, and her vision flickered again as a wave of exhaustion washed over her. Somehow she had also fallen to her knees, and there appeared to be blood dripping down from one of her nostrils. That wasn't ideal.
Perhaps, she considered, she should open another portal. After all, even a dragon couldn't really fight properly while face down on dirty cobblestones – something she couldn't really remember happening. Hadn't she been on her knees?
Yes, she'd open a way out in just a moment. After she'd had a chance to catch her breath. Maybe rest her eyes…
Caprifexia was vaguely aware that Einar was screaming her name, but the thing that took most of her rapidly diminishing focus was the sudden abrupt shift in the magic around her.
It was being drawn together somewhere to her right, and with a mighty force of will she turned her head from where she had fallen and opened her eyes, staying conscious just long enough to see a vortex of dark magic and a set of rather well made looking leather boots step out onto the filthy mortal road.
*********
Caprifexia opened her eyes slowly, wincing and closing them again a moment later as bright silver light seared its way into her retinas. Her chest ached terribly, and it felt like a wedge had been driven into her mind, but she was no longer cold, which was a good sign.
Wait? Cold? When was she ever cold? What had been going on? They'd been in Sarthaal, and…
Her head jerked upright as she remembered what had happened: the ghouls, Arakno's betrayal, and finally the vampires. She didn't seem to be still on the filthy street anymore, and instead was in a large workshop, lying on a desk in her true whelpling form – odd, since she definitely remembered having a nap in her humanoid guise.
Overflowing bookshelves dominated the curving room, punctuated only by windows and an immense blackboard filled with thaumic calculations and sketches. Back in Blackrock Spire her eldest brother, Nefarion, had had something similar. She and her brood had had the occasional class in there, and she could still recall the various laws and formulae for necromantic magic that had been scrawled across the slate.
In one corner near a window Einar was sleeping on a couch, his mortal chest rising and falling gently. He didn't look injured, which was good. The cat was there too, and didn't seem to be dying anymore. She supposed that was good too, in a more abstract sort of way: like the fact that somewhere, some-when, some dragon had made sure that the mortals understood how to make fire so they didn't freeze during the winter, or that greedy and shortsighted mortals hadn't yet bred enough to over-fish all the rivers, leaving none for dragons.
She her head turned further, freezing and baring her fangs when she spotted a white haired figure across the room. Silver moonlight framed an aristocratic face, within which burned the malevolent yellow eyes of an undead. Apparently Einar hadn't dealt with all of them like she'd trusted him to when she'd had her nap.
Typical.
"Stay back, fiend!" she said, taking to wing and summoning fire to her talons. Unlike when she had first arrived onto the plane the magic leapt effortlessly to her command, and huge gouts of flame erupted around her claws, billowing upward higher than her wings.
The vampire sighed, apparently unaware that he was mere moments from destruction. "Extinguish that before you hurt yourself, you foolish child."
"Your mind magic won't work on me, ghoul! Fear me, for I am greater than any hero you have ever faced! My teeth are daggers; my claws, blades; my mind, beyond your comprehension! I am an immortal being of cosmic power! I am Caprifexia, Herald of the Titans, last daughter of Deathwing the Destroyer, and the Greatest Hero in the Multiverse!"
The vampire sighed again.
"Well I have never heard of you," he said, before his ugly pallid face grew harder. "Your father, however…"
Caprifexia hesitated. How did this ghoul know her father? Was she back on Azeroth? No – no, the architecture in the Void had been wrong, and the sort of circular 'Y' symbols etched into almost everything had born no similarities to any of the humanoid symbols she knew. Also, as far as she was aware, vampires, or San'layn as they were properly called, had been exterminated when the mortal armies had crushed the undead Scourge. They were also usually ex-elves, not ex-humans. Someone could have remade them, she supposed, but that seemed unlikely to her given the time that had passed.
Which meant…
"You can travel the Void?" she said, pouring more magic into the fire churning around her talons. "Pah, if you think that will help you, you are mistaken!"
"My name is Sorin Markov," he said slowly, ignoring his increasingly impending doom. "I was the one who healed you, as well as your Khajiite friend. You are in my ancestral home, and safe here as my guests –
provided you do not try to set my laboratory on fire."
She flicked her eyes over to where Einar was sleeping, searching for any kind of mystical curses or enchantments. There was a small field of simple magic around him that seemed to be aimed at reducing sound from outside it, but nothing more than that.
"Why did you help them, abomination?" she said idiomatically after a few moments.
"To modify a proverb, 'dragons in glass houses shouldn't cause earthquakes,'" he blathered, his rotten brain apparently interpreting her demand to mean she was discussing the construction of some kind of indoor agriculture and tectonic magic. "I am told you are aware of the trans-planar nature of the Eldrazi?" he continued, the conversation swerving wildly away from plant cultivation. "'Old Gods' as your friend termed them."
"What about them?" said Caprifexia, slowly. "And when did you speak to Einar?"
"When we arrived. You are fortunate to have such a dedicated advocate, for I was going to slay you when I realised what you were," he said. "But let us return to topic at hand. The Eldrazi are a fundamental threat to not only your plane, but all planes of existence. You understand this?"
"I understand more than you can possibly conceive, you mouldering corpse," she said. "But that still doesn't explain why you offered your – nominal – assistance to my friends."
The vampire had the gall to glare at her. "And you! You would be dead if not for my intervention!"
"Pah. I am a dragon. It was merely a flesh wound-"
"You were unconscious and
barely breathing, you had utterly exhausted your spiritual reserves, and your soul was beginning to disintegrate you ridiculous,
arrogant lizard!
"
"I was just… having a nap," she said convincingly. It might have been stretching the truth a little, but this 'Sorbet Melon,' or whatever he called himself, didn't need to know that.
The vampire took a deep, useless breath and exhaled slowly, re-evaluating his flawed memory of the situation. Probably.
"I hate children," he muttered to himself, meanly. "And dragons. Why did she have to be a dragon
and a child?"
"I can hear you, you filthy dragonist!"
"I have travelled to Azeroth, and know what your people are," he said, picking up his goblet, which smelt of tasty blood, and taking a sip. He was, unsurprisingly, a poor host, however, and didn't offer her one. Undead were so rude. Revolting, and rude. And disgusting. And bigoted. Revolting, rude, disgusting and bigoted; yes, that pretty much summed up the state of undeath.
"Yes, I understand that – do keep up."
"Your friend said that you had managed to break the Eldrazi's hold over you," he continued, rubbing the bridge of his nose. "I was… sceptical to say the least. I have never known something they have twisted to be redeemed, but could find no hint of any foothold in your mind."
Caprifexia was more than a bit annoyed that someone had looked through her mind while she was napping, and her first impulse was to immediately destroy him. The only thing that stayed her talons was that she wasn't entirely sure that that would be heroic, since he had apparently helped her friend.
Einar had twittered on and on about how she should feel grateful if someone helped her. Which was pretty strange, since it was clearly the mortals who should be grateful for an opportunity to help their betters, dragons.
Unfortunately Einar was also asleep, which meant she couldn't check, so, after a moment of deliberation, she decided to give the
apparently friendly ghoul the benefit of he doubt and not immediately incinerate him.
Besides, she was actually quite interested to discuss the Old Gods and her change with someone. A dragon would have been better, obviously, but she supposed he would do as a poor substitute until a proper intellectual peer could be found.
And after all, she could always destroy him later.
"They stopped Whispering to me after the first time I travelled to another world," she explained, slowly letting the fire around her talons dissipate and landing back on the table.
"So the 'Whispers' ended, and presumably your corruption, when your Spark ignited?"
"My what? 'Spark?'"
"You've never met another of our kind? At all?"
Caprifexia scoffed at the idea that a vampire of all things was 'her kind.'
The Vampire gave her a withering look. "To put it simply, you and I are beings known as Planeswalkers. We are born with a Spark within us, which at some point, usually under stressful circumstances, ignites. It is what allows us to travel through the Blind Eternities – or 'Void' as you term it – to different planes of existence. For every other Planeswalker I have ever met this transit occurs, from their perspective at least, instantaneously. But your friend said you move physically through it yes? And can take others? Describe it – please."
Caprifexia didn't really like being interrogated. Dragons were repositories of near infinite wisdom, true, but they dispensed it on their own terms.
But the vampire had helped her friend, apparently, and asked nicely – which was admirable in some small way, she supposed. So trying to improve his limited understanding did seem to be fair, as well as heroic. And she
was a fair, heroic, amazing, kind, and benevolent dragon after all.
"The Void is full of platforms of mishmashed architecture strung together with bridges, floating amidst clouds of energy. Dimensions seem to be slightly unstable, and up and down aren't as consistent as they should be," she said in a lecturing tone. "To put my intricate current hypothesis in simple terms that even you might understand, I believe that the platforms are made by the Old Gods as an attempt to break their way into the various realities."
"And what was Innistrad – this plane – like?" he asked, sitting back and swirling his goblet as he reflected upon her immense wisdom.
"Mostly this sort of ugly architecture," she said, gesturing to the high ceiling inlaid with gothic details, snarling gargoyles, skulking ghouls, and writhing tentacles. "Although it was less decrepit than the other platforms I've seen."
"Perhaps that is a result of my defences …" he mused, apparently so egotistical and deluded that he thought that
he, a simple vampire, could affect something like the fabric of an entire reality. "And the others, they traverse these 'bridges' with you?"
"Yes," she nodded. "But since he is just a limited mortal, Einar doesn't see it as it really is, not properly. And I didn't either, not until we were attacked by an Old God."
"You gazed upon the face of a true Eldrazi and survived?" he said in a sceptical voice. "Are you entirely sure it was not merely some kind of inter-planar spirit or elemental?"
"I am a dragon."
The vampire blinked. "What?" he said after a few beats of silence.
"I am a dragon."
"I did not mishear you," he said in an exasperated tone – presumably annoyed that his own limited and possibly rotting cognitive capabilities couldn't grasp the sprawling didactic expanse of her concise statement. "But that is not an explanation!"
"
Pfft. Shows what you know.
"
"Why
– in terms that are not related to you being an irritating, flying, fire-breathing lizard – are you sure it was not another kind of inter-planar being?"
"You mort- err…
undead, are so rude," she sniffed, before beginning to explain the details very slowly in the hope he might understand. That was, after all, what a hero would do. "I am a
dragon – you're still following? OK. Now, the Old Gods are
bad. You know what 'bad' means, yes? Excellent, you're doing wonderfully
. They made my people who are, remember,
dragons, also
bad. This means that we,
the dragons, are experts on them.
"
The Vampire ran a trembling hand through his hair, clearly struggling and failing to understand even her hatchling level explanation.
"So I, and remember that I'm a
dragon, know what they are like," she continued slowly. "That is why I know how to
recognise – that big word means to understand what one sees – an Old God, who, again, are
bad, when I see one. Was that clear enough for you?"
"Like pulling teeth…" muttered the Vampire, rubbing his temples and closing his eyes. Caprifexia didn't really see how a clear explanation was like dentistry. But maybe it was a foolish vampire thing. They were pretty weird after all, and had a fetish for biting.
Sorbet fell silent, and while he dealt with whatever undead neurosis was bothering him at that moment Caprifexia took the time to look around.
In addition to thousands of books on what looked like magic, there were also all sorts of magical artefacts strewn about the place, several of which looked like they were halfway under construction.
Arteficing had always been an interest of hers – one she hadn't been able to really pursue since the fall of Blackrock Spire, so she flapped over to one of the in process of being built. It was a mess of runed plates of various thaumicaly conductive metals, several gemstones, and ugly, functionally un-necessary cladding.
From a cursory glance it it seemed to be some kind of device that would amplify magical signals, although it seemed to have several glaring errors in its receiver. As far as she could tell it was only going to be able to detect a very narrow band of magical energy, which seemed pretty silly. What if there were signals on other bands?
She fixed it.
"Get away from that!" said the vampire as she was just finishing carving her improvements into one of the runic arrays with her razor-sharp talons.
"I was helping," she sniffed as he moved towards her, shooing her away as he looked over her work.
"I do not need the help of a juvenile reptile," he snapped, meanly, as she flapped back.
"Of course," she said, rolling her eyes. "That's why your receiver could only detect a tiny band of magical energy.
Fool."
"What have you- oh you little pest, you've ruined it!"
"That's a funny way to say 'improved.'"
"No, not improved! You've made it so it's going to detect everything, which is going to absolutely ruin its range. Spirits, I'm going to have to go to Kaladesh again just to replace this
one part! Do not touch
anything else, understand?"
"Fine, have your silly broken artefacts, see if I care!"
"It was not broken; it was built to only detect white mana signals for a
reason!"
"'White mana?' Mana doesn't have colours, or shades," she chortled. "Silly vampire."
The ghoul roared inarticulately and bared his teeth. For a moment she thought he might make a lunge at her, and fire began to glow beneath her scales in her chest as she prepared to incinerate him. But then the moment passed as he balled his hands into fists, unaware of how close he had come to total anihillation.
"Yes. It. Does," he said, trying and failing to reign in his worryingly intense anger at the immense scope of his own inadequacy. "There are five different kinds of mana. The Azerothian and Nirnian wizarding traditions are anomalies in the multiverse, not the rule."
Caprifexia laughed. "That's ridiculous."
"No," growled the Vampire. "
It isn't. Red, Blue, Black, White, Green. Each reflects different aspects of the planes of the multiverse, and by virtue of their structure lend themselves to different forms of magic."
"Nonsense," scoffed Caprifexia. "The Twisting Nether-"
"-is an
artificial phenomenon," snapped Sorbet. "Something, I am not sure what, created that stellar phenomenon. It is not
normal. The place we are standing on, however, is a locus of Black mana: energy suited towards necromancy, umbramancy, sanguimancy, vlasfimancy, and offensive-telepathy."
"Then how am I using this 'Black' ambient mana to perform pyromancy you foolish corpse?" she chortled, drawing on the energy around her and shaping it into fire that danced around her talons as she wiggled them at him.
"By transmuting the energy through your soul, which is a rare, and
exhausting way of casting magic."
"For a
mortal perhaps."
Sorbet took several more deep breaths, before apparently losing the battle with his wild and erratic temper.
"Listen you horrible little reptile," he snarled, jabbing a finger at her. "I am attempting to help you, to educate you and give you access to more power in the hopes that you do not get yourself probably quite justifiably murdered before you can mature into a potentially useful ally. But you are not making it easy for me!"
"You're the horrible one," she said reasonably. "A horrible and nasty undead. I bet you don't have any friends!"
"In the multiverse there exist several different forms of mana," he said, ignoring her cutting jibe. "Mana which can be utilised either by drawing on the ambient energy around them, or by the wizard forming a bond between themselves and a place and calling on it across a distance. What
you do is a variation on the former, and is possible because you are Azerothian. What I do is the latter, and means that I have access to not only potentially vastly more power than you do, but also do not grow tired through spellcasting."
Caprifexia clicked her teeth before slowly landing on a bench. The undead might be moody, annoying, and have a very fragile ego, but she
did like the idea of accruing more power.
For strictly heroic purposes, of course.
"Very well… go on," she said.
"How
magnanimous of you
," said the vampire, finally locating his manners and addressing her properly. "As I was saying, this place, Markov Manor and it's surrounds, are a locus of Black mana. Because I possess the correct disposition to bond with it, and also have the skill to make a connection, I am able to draw on the power of this place, the energy of the land itself, wherever I am in the multiverse."
"That does sound quite useful…" she admitted. If she'd been able to cast magic without growing tired, there was no way those ghouls could have overwhelmed her in Sarthaal. Not that she had really been in any danger. She'd had it all under control. Definitely.
"As I said, there are also four other kinds of mana. Red reflects a passion. It is a fiery energy that usually can be found in mountains and badlands. Astrapmancy, pyromancy, cryomancy, terramancy and a few other forms of magic. I am not suited to it's… wild emotion myself-"
"Really? That's surprising. You seem to have a temper problem," she observed. "I've almost had to destroy you three times in this conversation alone."
"Normally I do not," he said in clipped tones. "Dragons, however, for some reason, I've
no idea why, seem to fill me with murderous rage."
"Your own inadequacy is most likely the root of those feelings. Have you tried accepting that we're better than you at everything? It shouldn't be too hard since, even to you, it must be obvious."
The took a shuddering breath and mimed strangling something around the size of Caprifexia's neck.
"Green is the magic of life and nature, it is formed by areas of the multiverse that embody unity and interdependent strength," he said, lowering his hands – clearly not willing to confront his small, limited nature. "Spells for strengthening, healing, and animation of nature are some of the domain of green magic. It is another of the forms I share little affinity for – for obvious reasons."
"Because you're a rotting corpse?"
"I'm not… never-mind," he said, shaking his head. "White is the magic of order and tradition. Hieromancy, fosomancy, healing, and various strengthening and bolstering enchantments are what it is typically suited for. It is rigid and unyielding, but also inflexible. I have some skill with it, although it is not my primary focus."
"Lastly there is Blue, which is an energy suited to the quick of wit. It is tricky, subtle, and while not as overwhelmingly powerful as Red or Black, as any warrior knows, even the strongest blow can be turned aside with a skilful parry. Illusion, counter-spells, chronomancy, all facets of telepathy, and to a degree astrapmancy are possible with Blue."
"And is it possible to gain connections with all of these different 'aspects of reality?'" asked Caprifexia.
"I have only met one such being, a dragon-"
"Of course," nodded Caprifexi smugly. It would obviously have been dragons that had taken the mastery of this convoluted sounding power to it's apex. That had been a given.
Sorbet massaged his temples again.
"But in many thousands of years they are the only being I have met capable of wielding the sum of creation," he said. "Normally a wizard will specialise with a single colour. Some will possess ability with a second, and occasionally even a third type of mana. It is also possible, as a person's personality changes, for them to find it more difficult to draw on one type of mana, and easier to draw on another."
"And your powers are 'Black' and 'White?'" she said. "Aren't they opposed?"
"All of us contain contradictions."
"Perhaps that is why you're so neurotic?"
"Oh yes,
I'm the neurotic one," admitted Sorbet flatly as Caprifexia clicked her teeth again and considered what he had said.
"What about Void Magic?" she said. "That doesn't seem to fall into any of those categories – despite some people, usually mortals, confusing it with umbramancy, it isn't – and the power for it doesn't come from
inside reality – least of all patches of dirt."
Sorbet's white eyebrows shot up, and he leaned forward with a hungry look in his eyes. "You are still capable of using the magic of the Eldrazi? Even now you are no longer corrupted?"
"Even I, a dragon, have to be careful, but yes," she nodded.
"Fascinating," said the Vampire, steeping his fingers once more and falling into a brooding silence.
Caprifexia went back to looking at his artefacts, although resisted the impulse to help fix them since apparently her genius wasn't appreciated. His loss, she supposed.
"Perhaps that is why you physically move through the Eternities, why you can bring others with you," he said eventually. "Despite the corruption, the 'Whispers' as you put it, being purged from your body and soul, you retain an instinctual and intuitive understanding of the Blind Eternities, or as you say, the 'Void.' I wonder…"
He brooded some more.
"All this silly sounding 'magical theory' does not explain why you are helping me," said Caprifexia. After being ever so slightly mistaken as to the intentions of the definitely-unfriendly elf Arakno – who had been put strait to the top of her, heroic, 'to kill list' – she was not particularly eager to take apparently helpful mortals, or undead, at their word.
"As I said, once I had ascertained you were no longer corrupted, there was no reason to kill you."
Caprifexia snorted disbelievingly, earning a smile from the vampire for the first time.
"Yes, there is more," he said, standing and turning dramatically to look out his window at the giant silver moon. "The Eldrazi are the greatest threat in the multiverse. There are other beings that can destroy Planes, but none that I know of, anymore at least, that can also move between them. I have spent hundreds of years reinforcing my home against them, but I am painfully aware that my defences are not foolproof.
"Long ago I laboured with two other Planeswalkers to seal away three Eldrazi manifestations. We succeeded, but we could not destroy, only trap them – and even then, only for a time. One day they will break free. I have searched for a more permanent method of destroying or rendering them inert. Century upon century, and yet I have found
nothing.
"You, however, represent something
new. You can not only move physically and consciously through the Blind Eternities – interesting enough to warrant my interest by itself – but if you can wield the Eldrazi's own power, then perhaps you are the key I have been searching for. It is in my interests to see you do not die prematurely, and there is seldom a surer reason to trust someone than because it is in their interests to help you. Think of my aid as an…
investment-"
"A what?" said Caprifexia.
"An investment-"
"Is that something like in-sor-ance?" she said. "A mortal money thing? I don't need that. I am a dragon."
"No you ridiculous little…" he said angrily, before sighing and moving to one of the bookshelves that ringed the room. Apparently he was getting better at containing his irrational bouts of anger. Commendable, for such a limited being. "A metaphor; it does not matter."
He spent a few minutes deliberating and taking down volumes, before bringing the pile over to her table. She flapped back away, still not entirely at ease with him as he set down the stack, but drew closer again as she started to examine the books. Even a quick gaze at the titles on the spines told her that they had been gathered from different planes, and the thought of so much
new magical knowledge almost made her salivate.
"These will teach you the basics of bonding with land magic, and about the different types of mana," he said, sifting through the books.
"And this energy will work with the spells I already know?" she said, hesitantly sliding off the table and taking her humanoid form, which was more suited to reading books made for mortals.
"Some, depending on what your actual affinity, or affinities are," he said, cocking his head to one side as he looked her over. "Your transformation spell is interesting magic – it is not immediately apparent, even to me, that you are not really an elf."
"Draconic magic is subtle, and far beyond your pathetic mortal flailing," she said, smoothing down her dark hair primly.
"I assume that is why you still have horns and glowing eyes?" he said with a chuckle.
"I would like to have seen you do better with fourteen months of magical instruction!" she said, smoke pouring from her nostrils in outrage. She had preferred him angry, rather than snarky. She got that enough from her ever impudent friend.
The vampire's lips quirked, but luckily for him, he didn't dare argue with her further.
"More general spells, such as teleportation, shielding, and arteficing are possible with all forms of magic – although the spells may need to be heavily modified from what you know, or re-learnt entirely, and blue is normally the type most suited to those magics."
Caprifexia decided not to tell him that she didn't,
yet, know how to teleport. It would only make him feel superior. Completely baselessly of course, but it still wasn't a good idea to nurture those sort of feelings in non-dragons, they'd only end up getting disappointed after all.
"And how will I know what my 'affinities' are?" she asked.
"You will have to discover that for yourself, no one can do it for you. Although I would suggest starting with red. Most dragon's personalities lend themselves to that mana – and you certainly seem…
sufficiently dragon-like to be a red wizard to me."
She preened at the compliment, glad that she still seemed like a proper dragon after so much time away from her own people. Some part of her had been worried that she'd been going soft after spending so much time around emotional mortals. It was good to know that she was still as flawless and imperious as ever.
"So how does one tap this power?" she asked, sifting through the books.
"There are a series of meditative exercises to master, some theory to understand, which is why I have given you the books, and then you must go to a place and become familiar with it. To begin with bonding to even a single area, assuming you are even the right temperament to tap it, could potentially take you months."
"And you are offering to teach me? This
'in-vest-ment?'"
"No," he said. "I am not a teacher, and I have business elsewhere. And I will want my books back,
in good condition. If you wanted direct instruction, there are a few colleges you could also attend on various planes, but it is not a simple matter to give directions in the multiverse – particularly since we experience it so fundamentally differently."
"I very much doubt that a bunch of mortals would have much to teach me. And besides, I have heroic duties on Nirn. I have to slay all the proto-drakes and stop the world ending. Or something like that – Einar's explanations are very boring. Regardless, it would clearly fall apart without my constant vigilance, and it shouldn't be too difficult for a being of my awesome power to master this trifle."
The vampire seemed about to ask a question, before he shrugged and moved towards the door, taking down a long black coat from a peg and throwing it over his shoulders.
"Put those in a bag," he said, gesturing to the stack of books as he belted a powerful feeling sword to his waist. "I need to go, and I'm not leaving you alone in my workshop."
"What about Einar?" said Caprifexia, looking back at her friend, who was still deeply asleep and looked to be snoring noisily behind the quiet ward. She needed to replicate – and improve, obviously – that spell. Einar's nasal noises had almost pushed her to mortalcide on more than one occasion.
"I trust that Einar,
and the khajiite, know better than to go 'fixing' things – and have left them a note detailing why exactly it is a bad idea to try and steal anything from this room.
You, however, might wreck years of labour out of sheer pique or bloody mindedness. Your friends can come and find you in a more…
child friendly area of the manor when they wake."