squeal of pressure brakes, shouting, the hoverdrone rebroadcasting orders.
Then gunfire. The
And the note changing as they penetrated the plating.
He was untouched by enhancement – he’d spent his career treating too many messed-up fashion-icon wannabes. In that split second before the tank went, he’d just had time to wish –
Mind and metal and flesh. He’d been trying to create, to
The intensity of his abandonment, the shuddering, osmotic feedback of pleasure... The alchemical fusion he’d been busting his balls to find wasn’t flesh and metal – it was flesh and
...had attuned herself to the Powerflux...?
No, that couldn’t be right.
Tightly controlling his thinking, he kicked at an old spray can. It was empty. It skittered across the floor scattering washers as it went.
He had to focus!
Maugrim had uncovered the long-forgotten lore – the Elementalists, the priests of the people, were no more, their skills forgotten and abandoned like everything else. A few of them still lurked, way out in the farmlands and the ribbon-towns, but they wielded little more than herb lore and trickery. The Powerflux, the flowing of the elements through the grass and across the world’s surface, once the quintessential lifeblood, revered and trusted, had long since passed into humorous folklore – like fairies.
But he, Maugrim, knew it was there. He knew that he could reach it, and he knew he could channel the sheer glory of what he found.
This was the nexus, the Flux’s central point – the plug socket, if you like. Down here, beneath the Monument,
If he were strong enough to be a living capacitor – to stand the charge that surged in his blood.
With sudden insight, he realised something fundamental.
Maugrim was the world’s only Elementalist, as far as he was aware, the only true wielder of this forgotten and unseen might. He could attune himself to the great, electrical web of the Powerflux, the cyclic flow of the four compass-elements that controlled wave and weather and growth and season – the flow and balance of light and darkness, ice and fire. The energy he drew was a rush – heat and chill and lightning and thunderclouds. He’d always thought of the Powerflux like a matrix of taser wires, shocks constantly running from end to end...
But this world was metal-poor, ferrous metal almost non-existent.
As far as he could tell, the Powerflux existed in the very
He picked up a washer, held it on the tip of one dirt-ingrained index finger. The rocklights gleamed from the surface.
The Powerflux’s energy was constant. It moved continuously between the four compass directions – the anchor points, the elements’ “souls”. In spite of the loss of lore, the knowledge was deep rooted – that everything from sunrise to weather to personal illness was caused by elemental cycling or imbalance.
And so he’d begun to study.
Flesh could harbour energy, like a capacitor – a properly trained Elementalist could attune himself to the Flux and he could, literally, charge himself up. The term “Elementalism” described the pure, raw energy – fire, darkness, light, cold... There were varying degrees of potence and skill that were largely encompassed by the word “focus”. The better your attunement, the more power you could absorb; the better your focus, the more discipline you had when throwing it about.
His eyes went to the rocklight, gleaming smugly in the corner.
Its illumination laughed at him. Like flesh, it was a capacitor – it absorbed and held sunlight, then slowly released it when in darkness.
He couldn’t believe he’d never realised something so simple.
Stone and flesh; flesh and stone. Both capacitor, both conductor.
And it had answered him.
Amethea had been his fuse – his dead man switch. She’d absorbed and taken the damage of the supercharge he’d summoned.
Saved his arse. Shown him the glaring bloody truth.
Elementalism was emotional – rage and glory like throwing an electrical paddy. Alchemy – putting those elements to scientific use – now that was a different and far more clinical matter. Creations like the centaurs – that took a huge amount of skill and learning.
The Kartian must’ve heard him – but the chamber remained still.
Maugrim flicked the washer onto the floor.
And he needed a new subject – a conductor, a dead man switch he could afford to sacrifice for the increased might they would bring. There’d been a woman, strange blooded, not bloody Range Patrol. Vice had brought her in – said something about a Kartian half-blood.
He had to recreate the experiment. Once he understood what he’d done, he could to take control. If he could summon that kind of power, he could
And that was what he really wanted, why he had been recruited, why he had been given the centaurs as his guardians, why he had been taught the lore of this world in which he’d found himself...
This world was stagnating, just like his own. It was in stasis; it learned nothing new, had forgotten its own legends. Its population wasn’t growing, either in number or in enlightenment. In short, it had its collective head up its arse. Like a patient in his old life, he needed to make it wake up, change, kick over – that’s what his teacher wanted, why he’d been trained and taught. Why he’d been working so hard to make that timeless vision manifest...
Remembering what the half-Kartian woman had looked like, Maugrim began to grin.
This time, there would be no half measures. He was going to understand this new power he’d awakened – the skill it had brought him. And then he was going to let it blaze across the Varchinde.
* * *
Amethea looked at a pair of stone feet.
They were beautiful, perfect, the most exquisite carved stone feet she’d ever seen.
But they were hers.
She was lost, still trembling with the aftermath of extreme passion. She felt strange, empty, abandoned – not only by Maugrim, but by the stone.
The memory of her exultation was bizarre – frightening.