Sonea lifted a hand and concentrated on it. Making it glow was easy - Rothen had already taught her how to create a light cool enough that it wouldn’t burn anything. Focusing on her skin, she sought a sense of it as a border to the influence of her magic, then pushed outward.
At first the glow expanded in erratic bursts, but after several minutes she managed to control its growth so it spread in all directions at once. Eventually a glowing sphere surrounded her hand.
“Good,” Rothen said. “Now try it for your whole arm.”
Slowly, with a few hesitations, the globe elongated to her shoulder, then bloated to a larger sphere.
“Now your upper body.”
It was the strangest feeling. She felt as if she had spread herself out to fill a bigger space. As she enlarged the sphere to include her head her scalp tingled.
“Very good. Now all of you.”
Bits of the sphere collapsed inward as she concentrated on her legs, but after attending to them she found herself surrounded entirely within a glowing ball. Looking down, she realized that it extended below her feet, into the floor.
“Excellent!” Rothen said. “Now draw it back inward from all directions at once.”
Slowly, and not without a few parts collapsing sooner than others, she pulled the sphere back inward until it sat against her skin. Rothen nodded thoughtfully.
“You’ve got the idea,” he said. “You just need some practice. Once you have it right, we’ll work on changing the shield to basic repelling and containing ones. Now, let’s see that again.”
As the door closed behind Sonea, Rothen gathered his books and papers. From what he had heard, Garrel’s novice was a natural leader. It was unfortunate, but not unexpected, that the boy chose to strengthen his hold on the class by turning them against another novice. Sonea had been the obvious victim. Unfortunately, it had dashed all hopes of her being accepted by the rest.
He sighed and shook his head. Had he worked at stamping out her slum vocabulary and schooling her habits and mannerisms for nothing? He had assured Sonea so many times that she had only to make a friend or two and her past would be forgotten. But he had been wrong. Her classmates had not only rejected her, but had turned on her.
The teachers had not taken a liking to her, either, despite her exceptional abilities. Tales of knifings and childhood thieving were circulating, according to Rothen’s elderly friend, Yaldin. The teachers could not neglect her education, however. He could make sure of that.
Stopping, Rothen concentrated on the voice in his mind.
As Rothen focused his mind on the voice it became clearer and a sense of its personality grew. He also perceived the presence of other magicians, their attention drawn by the call, fading away as they turned their minds from the conversation.
Rothen restrained himself from asking if the First Guild Ambassador to Elyne had become as portly as was rumored. Mental communication was not completely private, and it was always possible that another magician might hear.
A sense of smugness followed the words, and Rothen knew his friend was thinking of all the scandal, rumor and gossip he had dug up about the people of the Elyne court before leaving Kyralia.
Rothen gathered his books and started for the guestroom door. Remembering the unpopular, sullen novice that Dannyl had been, he felt a little better. The situation might be tough for Sonea now, but it would work itself out in the end.
“Tayend of Tremmelin, eh?” Errend, the First Guild Ambassador to Elyne, shifted in his seat, his impressive stomach cinched by the sash over his robes. “He’s the youngest son of Dem Tremmelin. A scholar of the Great Library, I believe. Don’t see him in court much - though I have seen him with Dem Agerralin. Now there’s a man of dubious associations.”
Dubious associations? Dannyl opened his mouth to ask the Ambassador to elaborate, but the big man was distracted as the carriage swung about.
“The Palace!” he exclaimed, gesturing to the window. “I will introduce you to the King, then it is up to you to socialize as you please. I have an appointment that will fill most of the afternoon, so feel free to take the carriage back when you’ve had enough. Just remind the driver to return at dusk for me.”
The carriage door opened and Dannyl followed Errend out. They stood at one side of a large courtyard. Before them was the Palace, a sprawling structure of domes and balconies standing at the top of a long, wide staircase. Grandly dressed people were making their way up the stairs, or resting on stone seats placed at intervals for this purpose.
Turning back to his companion, Dannyl found Errend floating just above the ground beside him. The First Ambassador smiled at Dannyl’s expression of astonishment.
“No sense in walking if you don’t have to!”
As the man floated up the stairs, Dannyl examined the faces of the courtiers and servants about him. They did not appear surprised by this use of magic, though some glanced at the Ambassador and smiled. While a man of bulk and cheerful character, Errend was obviously also a strong and skilled magician. Impressed, yet reluctant to draw attention to himself in such a flamboyant manner, Dannyl decided to use his legs instead.
He found Errend waiting at the top. The man gestured expansively away from the Palace.
“Look at that view! Isn’t it wonderful?”
Still breathing deeply from the climb, Dannyl turned around. The entire bay spread before him. The pale yellow buildings shone in the sunlight, and the water was a lustrous blue.
“ ‘A necklace for a King,’ the poet Lorend once said.”
“It is a beautiful city,” Dannyl agreed.
“Full of beautiful people,” Errend added. “Come inside. I will introduce them to you.”
Another arched facade stood before them, the grandest Dannyl had yet seen. The arches were several times the height of a man, low at each side, and soaring high at the center. Behind the tallest arch a doorless entrance offered access to the Palace.