Showing posts with label Wizard101. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Wizard101. Show all posts

Wednesday, 20 July 2011

*grin*

Guess what? I finally finished that edited part six! I stuck it on ff.net, so you can click here to see the story there, or on that tab at the top that says “The Story So Far…”.

Yeah, so part 6 is my longest part so far. It’s 20 pages long. Part 7 is only fifteen.

Yep, you read that right.

The Tale of Alexandra Stormrider
Part 7
Jake took a breath.
“Well, basically,” interrupted Liam, clearly eager to get this over with. “This thing happened a few years ago and it really—”
Jake frowned. “I think we owe them a better explanation. You know what level Reed is, right?”
I shook my head.
“He’s level twenty one,” Jake explained. “Remember when you first met him and he was level fourteen when you were level twelve or something?”
“Yeah, and now he’s still a level above us. So what?” I was confused as to how this made any difference to the situation whatsoever.
“He’s four years older than us. And level twenty one.”
“That’s why he’s so tall!” exclaimed Matt.
I sighed. “I still don’t see why that makes a difference.”
“He started at Ravenwood when he was, maybe, eight?” Liam glanced at Jake, who nodded.
“Yup, eight.”
“So he’s a slow learner?” I asked, still a little confused as to how it mattered at all.
“He was a magus – level thirty three– when he was… What, ten?”
“That’s not possible!” Matt exclaimed.
“Reed was smart,” Liam shrugged. “Super smart. They thought he’d be like, the new Cyrus Drake.”
“That wouldn’t be too hard for a jerkface like him,” I muttered.
“So what happened?” asked Matt. “He’s level twenty one. You can’t go down levels!”
Liam and Jake exchanged a glance. “Malistaire happened,” Liam said, darkly. I groaned.
“Stop dragging this out like some super important pivotal plot point in a book and tell us what happened to your stupid brother, drama queen,” I complained. What can I say? I’m not a patient person.
“Malistaire decided that Reed was too powerful and captured him,” Jake explained hastily.
“Must be a family thing,” Matt grinned. “Got any other brothers who were captured by him?”
“Jessie accidentally walked into his castle once, didn’t she?” sniggered Liam. “That was pretty funny.” He noticed the shocked looks on our faces. “She got out real quick. She just saw a draconian and teleported before she was seen.” He shrugged again. “These things happen.”
“Jessie? Jessica Frosthaven? In the master ice class?” I asked.
“Yeah, that’s her.”
“Any other siblings you forgot to mention?” Matt joked.
“That’s it. Except Calamity – Calamity Sandweaver? Grandmaster balance.”
“Didn’t know you had such a big family,” I frowned.
“Yeah, well, we don’t like to mention it too much,” Jake said.
“Anyway, you were telling us about Reed,” Matt pointed out.
“Yeah, right, so. Malistaire took him to his creepy house and told him that he wanted him on his side, because, well, he was pretty powerful for a ten-year-old,” Liam continued.
“Reed declined, obviously,” added Jake.
“Really? Bit of a shock there!” I scoffed.
Jake frowned at me. “Reed’s a good guy, deep down. He was great before all that happened to him.”
“Well, actually, he always was a bit of a jerk. He treated us like dirt even before all this happened.” Liam looked thoughtful.
“So his nasty comments aren’t anything to do with the curse?” I asked.
“No, he’s just a bit… stuck up. Thinks he’s better than us. Special.”
“Carry on with the story,” pressed Matt.
“Malistaire got angry and decided to get rid of Reed once and for all. They had a fight. Reed got out of the castle and teleported to the Basilica, but not without getting his head bashed in by a few nasty minions.”
“He lost his memory!” Matt exclaimed.
I was pretty pleased to have finally understood where this was going. Then my excitement deflated. “I don’t get it,” I said. “He lost his memory, he went back to normal, started learning again. That doesn’t give him an excuse to bully you.”
“That’s not the entire story,” offered Jake.
“We think that Malistaire put some sort of curse on Reed,” explained Liam. “He’s perfectly normal most of the time, but he has his… moments.”
“He acts like an arrogant moron most of the time. Is that normal?” I demanded.
“Well, yeah. He always was a bit up himself,” pondered Liam. “Guess that’s a side effect of being a super duper whizz-kid like he is. Well,” Liam corrected himself. “Like he was.”
“His moments are, though?”
“Sometimes he forgets who we are. Who everyone is,” Jake clarified. “It’s scary, but mom and dad usually know the right sorts of magic to stop it.”
“Fine. He’s insane. But why don’t you find out what spell makes him better and use that on him when he starts to let loose a Cyclops?”
Jake smiled sadly. “Even if we knew the magic, we’re not powerful enough. Besides, too much of it can hurt him. It makes his head go all fuzzy for a while, until the spell wears off.”
“Why don’t you just tell someone that he lets trolls loose?”
“Everyone – all the teachers know what happened to him, and they all feel sorry for him. It’s true, though, he can’t help it. It’s a curse, like I said.”
I shook my head, defeated.
“That’s insane,” Matt said, quietly.
“Yeah, things can get tough,” said Liam. “But we manage. So, who’s up for some quests?”
I looked at him pointedly. “We have a detention today. All of us. And even if we didn’t we’re grounded, remember? For a month!”
So nearly in Marleybone,” said Matt, bitterly. “So close.”
Liam and I laughed. Jake was, of course, being his typical quiet self. Maybe too quiet.
“Come on Jakey-boy,” I said. “We’ve got a detention for being naughty.”
********
Ambrose did not look particularly pleased to see us. It was almost as though he’d aged another couple of hundred years since we’d last seen him. He had huge, dark circles underneath his eyes and his beard seemed to be a shade whiter. He cleared his throat disapprovingly.
“I suppose you’re all here for your detentions,” he said. “Well, from now on, you’ll be going to the library on Mondays at four, for two hours, until further notice. Harold Argleston can instruct you from there. Off you go, now.”
We left the room in silence. When we were out in the open air, Nat grabbed my sleeve. “Is he always this angry at detentions?” Nat wasn’t one to break the rules, so he was a bit shocked by Ambrose’s dismissive tone.
“Yeah,” I said, perhaps too quickly. “It happens all the time.”
********
“This could be done by magic,” I grumbled “so much quicker.”
“It’s a punishment, Alex,” explained Matt, shaking his head. “They know we know that and that knowing that makes it even more painful.”
Liam stopped piling his section of books. “Matt. That made no sense.”
“It did!” Matt argued, indignant. I laughed. Detention wasn’t so bad, even if the books did weigh about as much as an overweight Helephant.
We spent a few minutes stacking books in silence.“Help me out here, Jakey,” grumbled Matt. “What in the Spiral is a firewyrm?”
“They live in Dragonspyre,” Jake replied. “They’re like lizards, but they breathe fire. And fly, I think. They have wings, anyway. And they eat—”
“Our walking encyclopedia, you are,” Matt proclaimed, proudly, as Jake continued piling books neatly on a chair.
“Don’t be stupid, Matt. I’m not that smart. I just happened to see one when I was over there.”
“What’s Dragonspyre like?” asked Nat.
“It’s pretty scary,” Jake answered. “You can tell it must have been totally awesome at one point, but now it’s just massive mess.”
“It’s hot there, all right,” added Liam. “Almost as bad as Krokotopia.”
“Really?” asked Matt. “I didn’t notice.”
Somehow I found my mind wandering back to the whole Reed deal. I glanced over at him. He was making a deliberate effort to stay as far away from us as possible. I’d never heard of curses. Well, I didn’t doubt that Harold Argleston had probably mentioned them at some point in his long-winded explanations of magical theory - which I would never understand anyway – but I must have missed it. Or perhaps curses were just something Malistaire specialized in? They wouldn’t teach classes like that in Wizard City, would they?
Malistaire. The entire Spiral had been under a dark shadow since before I’d even known it existed. What was it like before he was here? I couldn’t even imagine the Spiral that way. Almost everything I’d known here was about saving the Spiral, getting rid of him. It seemed like something completely unfeasible.
And the prophecy – what was all that about? Were Jake and Liam – and possibly Matt, and three others –meant to be the ones who would finally defeat him once and for all? Would that make me the one who was left out? Why couldn’t they have just got him when we were back at the fort? There were so many questions! I groaned and threw several books towards the nearest pile without even glancing at them.
How was Wizard City meant to get out of this mess?
“Alex,” sighed Liam, “I hate to break it to you, but you just put the entire collection of Wyrmblood’s potion theory under ‘D.’”
“Great,” I mumbled. Those books had weighed a ton.
“Come on; let’s put them over there for now.” Liam grabbed the first volume and threw it into a corner.
Jake frowned, and was probably about to give him a good telling off for mistreating a precious book, when a familiar hooting interrupted.
“Less chatter, more sorting!” Gamma swooped over our heads with a letter in his claws, and flew out of the window.
********
It was more than a month’s worth of detentions before we found it.  Lavender Starteller’s Prophecies and Predictions, a heavy, dusty, and apparently mind-numbingly dull book, was set to be stuck next to her previous novel, Foreseeing Fates. I’d picked it up hastily; eager to finish early and go study for the history test we had tomorrow, and saw a scrappy piece of yellow parchment flutter slowly to the floor.
Well, it couldn’t just be a random bit of paper for once, could it?
Jake picked it up and scanned it quickly. He didn’t even need to say anything.
“The prophecy?” asked Matt, in a whisper. Jake nodded.
“Didn’t Ambrose show you two all of it before?” I asked, frowning at them.
Jake shook his head. “If only. I think he thought it was better not to scare us, or something…”
“How bad can it be?” I asked. “I mean—”
“Shh!” Jake hissed urgently. My voice had subconsciously risen to its normal noisy tone. “Do you still have the other part?”
Matt took out an even more crumpled – if that was possible – piece of parchment. “Ok,” he said, and began to read in a low voice
Several young wizards will follow the path,
Become the defense from powers dark,
Three from each side of the Magical Arts,
Balanced enough will they depart… What the hell is that meant to mean?”
“Shh!” I glanced around furtively. Nat and Reed were still stacking books on the other side of the room.
“Keep reading.”
They'll walk streets unknown to wizards before,
To find powers of ancient and mystical lore,
To assist in their quest – on which the Spiral will depend –
But not until they find the sacred Quest’s end.”
“So no one gets these powers until the end of the quest? How does that work out?”
“Shut UP! We can’t have anyone finding out about this! Alex and I aren’t even supposed to know about this--” 
“What’s that?”
Nat had noticed our conversation and had crept up on us almost silently. Stupid necromancers. They always do that.
“Um,” I said.
“Erm,” Jake added.
“Well…” Liam began.
“It’s…” Matt started. “It’s nothing very important. It’s a piece of paper we found in one of the books.”
“What’s written on it?” Nat asked.
“It’s just notes,” Liam invented.
“Why are you arguing over it?”
“Um…”
“Can I see?”
Liam, Jake, and Matt all looked at me. Three whisper chats were in my head all at once and I didn’t hesitate before nodding. Nat was my little brother. We could trust him.
“It’s a prophecy,” I explained, “and it involves Liam and Jake.”
“Oh, that’s cool! Can I see now?”
“It’s basically the ultimate fate of the entire Spiral.”
“… Oh. Not so cool.”
“So, anyway – read it, Matt!”
“The next bit’s kind of half on the page that came out of the book and half on the one we f—”
“Give it here,” I interrupted.
Matt passed the paper to me quickly. I was getting impatient.
“It says,” I began, trying to piece the pages together, “something about girls. Two, I think. So let’s just say that line says that there are two girls in the prophecy.” I paused.
“Go on,” Jake urged.
But all will face darkness; no doubt there’s a lot
It shall be a long road but they must persevere
For their destinies lie somewhere shrouded in fear.
Alas, Spiral saviors, your fates are tied
You cannot succeed until one has died.”
“When you hear it out loud, it sounds kinda lame,” Liam said, clearly unimpressed. “I mean, Ambrose said that prophecies are epic poetry… That sounds like Alex wrote it.”
I glared at him. “I’m not THAT bad at writing.”
“Stop talking about how rubbish it is – someone’s going to die!” Jake sounded panicked.
“Yeah, well… Prophecies always just say stuff like that, don’t they?”
“Yes, but that’s because those things actually happen!” Jake’s voice had risen to almost a shriek.
“What are you losers all huddled in the corner for?”
“Go away, butt-face. The last thing we need around here is your ugly—”
“I don’t think that’s appropriate in front of the kid,” Reed excused smoothly, pointing at Nat.
“I’ve heard worse,” Nat said.
Reed gave him a condescending sneer and turned back to Jake. “So what are you so upset about, dweeb?”
“He’s not a dweeb,” I said, coldly. Even after hearing his story, I found it difficult to be sympathetic in the slightest.
“Right, and you’re not a nutty storm wizard.” He snatched the paper in my hand.
“What’s this?” he frowned, glancing over it. “Several young wizards will follow a path… Been writing fairy stories, wickle Jakey?”
“No,” I growled. “He hasn’t. That’s called a prophecy, butt-head. And it’s not just a story.”
Reed looked at me like I would look at a pyromancer in Colossus Boulevard. “You’re having me on, kid. They don’t have prophecies any more. Level ones know that the most significant prophecies were fulfilled hundreds and hundreds of years ago.” He rolled his eyes emphatically. “Besides, prophecies aren’t written that badly. Balanced enough will they depart… What the heckhound is that?”
He paused for a few more seconds, probably to read the rest of the page, while we five glanced at each other dubiously.
“So, which one of you wrote this rubbish?” he sneered.
I suppose him knowing about it wouldn’t be a problem if he thought it was fictional. I glanced at Matt, who shrugged, apparently unconcerned about this new development.
Reed took one more glance at the paper, scoffed, then shoved it back towards Jake and wandered off with a pile of ancient-looking books.
I swear that at that point we all literally sighed out loud in relief.
“That,” said Liam, with great relish, “was close.”
********
Merle Ambrose sat at his desk, frowning over a piece of paper.
“Any developments, professor?” Gamma had swooped in almost silently through an open window.
Ambrose shook his head in apparent puzzlement. It was a rare occasion that one of the Spiral’s greatest wizarding minds was completely and utterly stumped by something, but on that seemingly unremarkable , cloudy day in Wizard City, something had done exactly that. The something was a neatly copied edition of a poem which lay in front of him.
Several young wizards will follow the path,
Become the defense from powers dark,
Three from each side of the Magical Arts,
Balanced enough will they depart.
They'll walk streets unknown to wizards before,
To find objects of ancient lore,
To help them fight fights on which the Spiral will depend -
but these only upon reaching the Questend.
Two are young girls and the rest are not
But all will face darkness; no doubt there's a lot
It shall be a long road but they must persevere
For their destinies lie somewhere shrouded in fear.
Alas, Spiral saviors, your fates are tied
You cannot succeed until one has died.
It didn’t make sense! Ambrose knew who the six in the prophecy were – after some deliberation – but the numbers didn’t add up. He was certain he had chosen the correct six. They radiated the clear aura that all those well-versed in prophetics were taught about in their very first instruction, and yet the prophecy seemed not to take into account that there were five boys in the prophecy, and only one girl.
Gamma hooted sympathetically. “Would yo-oo-ou like me to take a lo-ook at it, Headmaster?”
Ambrose looked at Gamma. “It doesn’t make sense, Gamma. You agree that the six students—”
“Of course. They are quite clearly those in the prophecy.”
“And yet…”
“Could there be mo-o-ore, Headmaster?”
“Don’t be ridiculous Gamma – it clearly says three from each half…”
“You are right, professor… It is unusual for prophecies to quantify their subjects… Do you recall the Firemancer prophecy?”
“Only too well… I suppose it can’t be the same case here, could it?”
“I doubt it, professor.”
There were three from each half of the magical arts – meaning three from the three elemental schools and three from the three spiritual schools. That made sense, at least. There was no balance mage, he had determined that much. Could there be any other students? The poem clearly stated that three from each half of the arts would be selected… Or did it? Ambrose read it again.
Three from each side of the Magical Arts
Each side, not each half. Ambrose shook his head. As if that made any difference! There couldn’t be any more students. If there were three from each side, and there were two sides—
Two sides?
“Merlin’s beard!”
********
“FREEDOM!” yelled Matt, running over to give Liam a hi-five.
“We’re out of here!” exclaimed Liam.
“No more Krokotopia!” I cried, over the moon. Even Jake gave a happy grin when I ran over to hug him.
After finally being released from our quest ban, one torturous month later, we had defeated the last boss in Krokotopia, which was a relief, since by this time if I saw one more grain of sand I would be perfectly prepared the blow up the entire planet, manders and all.
“We’re in Marleybone, guys!” I shouted, running to report back to… erm… the ghost Krok, whose name I had conveniently forgotten…
Liam was already handing in the quest. “What?” said Matt. “You marked it? No wonder you nearly run out of mana, you idiot!”
Liam simply grinned. “Well I get to level up first, guys…”
“Not fair!” I grumbled, trying to get in front of Matt to talk to the ghost first.
“Calm yourselves, wizards. You will all get into Marleybone eventually,” the ghost explained. “You will need to understand the value of patience before you proceed any further, though.”
“Yes, Krokhotep” – so that was his name! – “We understand,” nodded Jake, demurely.
Krokhotep smiled in a slightly creepy Krokotilian way as he handed Jake another quest scroll and an athame, along with – to our surprise – a training card.
“What is it?” I asked frantically, trying to get a better look. “Is it good? Do I get one?” I turned to the ghost again.
“Not if your erratic behavior continues,” he frowned, looking more than slightly menacing. Jake, meanwhile, took this opportunity to get the spell card further away from me and tuck it carefully into his deck, out of harm’s way.
“I’m sorry,” I muttered. “I’m just over-excited.”
“Pyromancer,” Krokhotep growled, taking Matt’s quest scroll and handing him a new one, with his shiny new dagger and spell card. Matt looked at it for a good few seconds before nodding approvingly and stuffing it into his pocket.
“What spells are we getting, exactly?” I asked. Krokhotep glared at me and shoved a quest scroll, athame, and card my way. “Thank you.” I looked at them.
“Cleanse Charm?” I asked. “What does that do?”
“Gets rid of negative charms on yourself. Like Weakness. That one can be a right pain,” said Liam, rolling his eyes. “Sometimes I really hate balance.”
Krokhotep glared at us again. “Don’t you have somewhere to be?”
“Oh, right, yeah,” said Matt. “Race to Ambrose’s!” We began running towards the exit.
“You need to talk to Sergeant Major Talbot first!” growled Krokhotep after us, shaking his oversized snout in disapproval. “These wizards…”
********
“It’s dark,” muttered Jake.
“That’s because it’s night time!” Liam yelled, earning us a few strange looks from a group of dogs over the street.
“Keep your voice down, mate,” said Matt. “It’s really quiet here. It’s not as busy as Krokotopia.”
Well, that was one thing he had right. Marleybone was definitely not as busy as Krokotopia. They were – quite literally – worlds apart. Marleybone was as chilly as Krokotopia was hot, windy as it was still, quiet as it was noisy… In fact, the only thing that remained the same was the undeniable appearance of numerous talking animals. It was a bit spooky, actually.
“Hey guys,” Matt said; “my sister wants me to go help her – back in Krokotopia. She can’t defeat Krokenkahmen, or whatever he is, y’know, the one in the dungeon? I’d probably better go. Anyone else wanna come?”
“Back to Krokotopia? Are you mad?” exclaimed Liam in disgust.
“One of you? Please? I can’t stand my sister’s snobby little friend on my own!”
“Who’s that again?”
“That Kymma girl that my mom doesn’t like. She’s so annoying. Seriously.”
I remembered I had met Kymma a while ago, helping Matt’s sister, Saffy, with Firecat Alley. And Matt was right – no one in their right mind could put up with her on their own.
“I’ll come,” I said.
“Aw, thanks Alex,” grinned Matt. “You guys – don’t get too far ahead, okay?”
“We won’t,” sighed Liam.
“Cool. See you later, guys.” Matt turned to me. “Port in a few seconds.” He disappeared in a shower of fiery sparks. One hit me in the face.
“Ow,” I grumbled, wincing, to snorts of laughter. I glared at the twins and teleported to Matt, scowling.
I was sucked immediately into a battle, with the familiar tiny blue-haired thaumaturge and her grinning brother. In first position was Kymma Frosthaven, sneering as she cast a snow serpent.
“Hey Alex!” cried Saffron. I waved in response. “Nice snake, Kymma,” she continued happily. Kymma nodded. I recognized her dark hair and skinny frame from the last time I’d met her, which hadn’t been that long ago. Since, she’d grown even taller than me, I realized. I quickly sorted out my deck before the next turn started.
“Oh, here comes another Nirini,” Saffy groaned. “There are so many of them – and we’d only just defeated one as well!”
“At least we’ve got them outnumbered now, Saff,” said Matt reassuringly. He had this big brother thing worked out alright.
Kymma cast an ice blade, Saffy a well-placed snow serpent, Matt cast a fire prism on a Nirini, and I stuck with my trademark storm blade. I saw a look of puzzlement cross Matt’s face and asked him what was wrong. He shook his head. “Oh, nothing.” I shrugged. I was, soon enough, distracted by a Nirini casting a particularly noisy squawking sun bird on me, singing the edges of my brand new Marleybone hat.
Honestly, my luck was awful sometimes.
The battle continued into the next round of attack. On Saffy’s right, snotty Kymma cast a spell I didn’t recognize.
“Was that a Frostbite?” asked Matt, frowning.
“Yes,” she replied, curtly.
“What level are you?”
“Eighteen.”
“Then how—”
“It was… a treasure card.” Her story didn’t sound convincing.
“Are you sure? I thought treasure cards had a special effect, but that looked like an—”
“I’m certain it was.” Her tone indicated the conversation was finished. I looked at Matt, puzzled.
“Frostbite is the spell you get when you defeat Krokopatra, for thaumaturges!” his whisper chat voice sounded startled.
“Well, she said it was a treasure card,” I reasoned, waving my wand to cast a storm shark on Krokenhamen himself. I could not wait until I got an attack-all-enemies spell – more specifically, Tempest. Imagine the time it would save!
“Alex, I know a treasure card when I see one.”
“You made a mistake, maybe?”
“It wasn’t just that! She cast ice blade earlier – ice wizards don’t get their blade until they’re in the master class.” He sounded unusually confused.
“Relax. That was probably just a treasure card too.”
“Can you get blade treasure cards?”
I thought about it. “I’m pretty sure Nat had one once.”
Matt huffed. “Something isn’t right here, Alex.”
“Don’t worry. Nothing’s wrong. It’s not like you to be paranoid. Relax, Matt.”
Matt didn’t say anything else, but continued to look disgruntled for the rest of the fight. Even 0nce we’d finished off Krokopatra he gave his sister a brief smile and ported away without a word.
I couldn’t work out what was wrong. It was only a couple of treasure cards, right?
I teleported back to Jake and Liam and told them what had happened.
“Weird, huh?” I finished, collapsing on the Marleybonian bench in Regent’s Square.
“Actually, Alex, it’s not so weird,” Jake frowned, sitting next to me. “People who can do magic that they’re not supposed to be doing… Well, it generally means there’s something weird about them.”
“So you don’t think they could just be treasure card spells?”
“I wasn’t there, obviously, so I can’t be certain whether they were, but if Matt thinks they were…”
“How can you tell the difference?”
“Treasure cards have a sort of… gold glowy thing. Surely you’ve noticed?” I shook my head.
“I don’t use treasures very often actually…” I mumbled, shrugging.
“Anyway, if they weren’t treasure cards, then she’s lying about her level – or…” Jake shook his head. “No, she can’t be.”
“Or what?” Liam suddenly asked.
Jake sighed. “Well, she could be doing spells without magic, but that is really, really rare… No pupil has been recorded doing it in years! You have to do special training and everything, and get a licence to be allowed to… And you have to be really, really talented. Not just anyone can do it.”
I pondered this for a moment, looking at both of them. All of a sudden Liam’s eyes lit up.
“Say she was doing magic without the cards…” he began. “Could she – just maybe – be a part of the prophecy?”
Jake rolled his eyes. “Great. Just what we need. Another jerk to be part of the team.”
“Another jerk?” I said. “I thought the only two people who were in it for certain were you two?”
“Um…” Jake looked like a rabbit caught in headlights.
“Hey, don’t be mean, bro!” shouted Liam, unnecessarily loudly. “I am not a jerk!”
Jake shot Liam a look of gratitude, then immediately tried to twist his face into “cheeky apologetic.” It came out as “laughing with a bad stomach ache”.
Lucky for me, Jakey is a really bad actor.
“Who else is in the prophecy?” I demanded.
“Okay. Okay.” Jake took a breath. “Well, Matt’s the fire one, obviously. He doesn’t know yet. None of the others know yet. Ambrose thought it was best to keep it quiet before everyone finds out.”
“Who else?”
“Well, Reed is the myth person. I’m storm, and Liam is life. Ambrose thinks the death is a guy called Tom something. We don’t know him,” he shrugged. “And now I think this Kymma girl has to be the ice one.”
“What about balance?” I frowned.
They exchanged a glance. “Ambrose doesn’t think there is a balance,” Liam said, “which makes sense after reading that line in the prophecy… What does it say? ‘They are balanced already and go?’”
“Balanced enough will they depart,” Jake corrected.
“Yeah, that. It means we don’t need balance!” he said, perhaps a bit too loudly, judging by the face of a magus sorcerer who took the silence after that to glare at us.
“No offence,” he added, lamely.
********
I got back to my dorm late that night. You don’t really notice the time passing when it’s constantly night time. You can’t see the sun moving across the sky – and the moon isn’t really the same. It’s the weirdest feeling.
Even so, I found that when I did finally get into bed, I couldn’t sleep. It happened sometimes, I supposed. My mind was just too busy to switch itself off late at night. Usually I could never find a particular reason for my aversion to rest but that night I knew exactly what was bothering me.
I tried to quench the uncomfortable squirming in my stomach as I tossed and turned for hours. It was stupid, I told myself, to be jealous. Even more stupid because they’re in a prophecy which predicts death and generally totally rubbish stuff for pretty much everyone. I grumbled to myself and turned over, listening to Nat’s peaceful little snorts and every now and then, the occasional murmur.
“Pie,” he mumbled unconsciously. “Mmrphsah. Mrff.”
“Yeah, exactly,” I muttered, sitting up. There was no use trying to sleep. I decided to go for a walk. Perhaps that would make me a little more tired.
Ravenwood was cold and hauntingly empty at night. Usually you couldn’t even glance around without seeing several students strolling or sprinting around the rooms, going from class to class, back to their dorms after a hard day’s questing, or to another world through Bartleby. I stared up at the great tree, who appeared to be sleeping, just like the rest of Wizard City probably was. A wind rustled his leaves. Was that the tree equivalent of snoring?
I crept quietly through the tunnel to the commons. The tunnel itself was darker than I’d seen it before, and despite the knowledge that it was totally irrational to be scared of the dark, I couldn’t help but feel a little intimidated. Perhaps I should have turned back, but I continued through the tunnel resolutely. I could see the dim light at the end of the tunnel from the perpetually glowing statue in the commons lake.
I noticed a sudden flicker of movement.
“Hello?” I probed, tentative. “Is anyone there?”
Silence, broken only by the whisper of what I assumed was simply the wind.
I continued walking, unperturbed. If I was going to go back, now would be a really neat time to start running, but I reassured myself that at the very worst it would just be a little stray Firecat. And those little guys wouldn’t harm a fly… Well, for the most part, anyway.
I had no idea where I intended to go, deciding that I’d probably just walk around the lake and go straight back. I was a little drowsy now, anyway, and while I was fully conscious I realized the thoughts I’d had earlier lying in bed were completely ridiculous. It was just my subconscious nagging at me insistently. That, at least, was much clearer in daylight – or nightlight, or whatever the light I was walking around in was.
All of a sudden I felt a cold breeze tickle. The hairs on the back of my neck stood up on end and I felt even colder than I had when I first entered Colossus Boulevard all those months ago. I shivered. Perhaps I should just teleport back. Of course, that would have the downside of waking Nat, which was never a good idea, in any situation. Instead, I turned around and started to head back to the tunnel, but not before the Commons appeared to darken before my eyes, and I looked up to see dark clouds gathering overhead.
Back on Earth, this was the sign of a thunderstorm, and I would be delighted to stay outside and feel the rain against my face, and listen to the thunder.
In the Spiral, however, dark clouds gathering made me want to hide under a table and curl up into a ball. Or run away as fast as possible.
I turned on the spot, concentrating on where I wanted to go and ignoring the concern of grumpy little brothers waking up. I had to get out of here. But when I opened my eyes I wasn’t back in my dorm room. In fact, I hadn’t moved at all. Nothing had happened, other than me now feeling a bit nauseous. I closed my eyes and bent over, putting my head between my knees. Eurgh – I hadn’t felt this awful since I was back on Earth with flu. I straightened up, with my eyes still closed, and felt blazing heat on the back of my neck. My eyes opened and I snapped around.
A house was on fire.
I had to tell someone! I instinctively turned to Ambrose’s office and began to run. The fire continued to crackle behind me and I stared up to the sky. Huge balls of fire were falling all over the commons. Meteor Strike. One of my favorite spells when I was fighting possessed manders or Nirinis with Matt, but not so much in PvP situations, or when a boss used it against us.
Or when it appeared in the Commons in the middle of the night, meaning it was probably the handiwork of the only person in the Spiral vindictive and powerful enough to consider destroying Wizard City.
I barged into the heavy wooden door that lead to the headmaster’s office, which, rather inconveniently, refused to budge, then began hammering on it insistently, yelling at the top of my voice.
“Professor! Professor Ambrose, you have to come and help! There’s a meteor strike in the Commons! HEADMASTER AMBROSE! GAMMA! SOMEONE HELP!”
“They can’t hear you,” said a calm voice from behind me. I refused to look around, instead continuing to hammer on the door like I couldn’t hear.
“There’s a spell on that door. No sound can pass through it. And the door itself is impenetrable.” I heard a small, harsh laugh. “Well, it is for weaklings like you.” I continued to ignore it, though I couldn’t deny that my hammering must have seemed a little less insistent.
“Maybe there’s a reason night time strolls are against the rules, here, Stormrider.” I tried not to let my concern that my name had come into this show. “Maybe you should start to follow them!”
A fireball landed right next to me, scorching a disturbingly large portion of the wall next to me. I could pretend to ignore this for no longer.
I sprinted through the Commons, barely aware of my feet thudding against the ground one after the other and the way in which I was inhaling air in huge, gasping gulps. My heart was racing. I ran over the Rainbow Bridge, glancing over my shoulder. My hand grasped my wand tighter as I pushed myself on. I knew I wouldn’t last much longer. I could see him over my shoulder, dark and tall and ridiculously intimidating, wielding his mighty staff. My legs felt like jelly. I had no control over them and I c0uld feel myself about to fall. I didn’t make any effort to protect myself. I tried to crawl, but my knees stung. My robes were torn and I had no energy left with which to move. My knees were bleeding.
I had a strange sense of déjà vu. Of course! I had dreamed – well, had a nasty nightmare – about this when I was just an initiate. I looked up at Malistaire.
“You will not get away, Stormrider, mark my words. Too many times you have escaped! But not this time. No one’s here to come and save you this time. Not your friends, not your professors, not even some idiotic traitor of a servant! And now, you’re going to die.”
I almost thought that he was going to kill me right there, but Malistaire just continued with his evil-guy-conquering-the-world-monologue. I decided not to listen, instead focusing my efforts on whisper chatting to Ambrose.
Malistaire’s here! In the commons! Malistaire! Here! Right now!” I repeated it in my head like some peculiar sort of mantra. “Malistaire! Commons! Malistaire!” I felt sick to the stomach and willed my body to move, while Malistaire was still distracted with his big speech thing. I honestly never understood why evil people always did that. Why don’t they just kill people before they have the chance to get away? Seriously, guys. Ego!
“And once every nasty little wizard like you is out of the way, Wizard City will be destroyed!” He raised his staff.
“There will be no more harm done tonight.”
I passed out.
What? I was tired.
 

Pheew. Sorry it's all blocky. Blogger went and messed it up. I recommend you go see it on ff.net, where it's a bit nicer, though still not paragraphed right. Grrr, frustration.

That took a long time. Expect part eight in… Well, probably next year, hahaha. I am sporadicacal. Hopefully I should actually get part eight done. I think that’s where it starts to get interesting… It’s pretty clear where this is going, I think. Yeah. Well, there you go! That’s all for today!

Diviner OUT!

Tuesday, 12 July 2011

A wild diviner appears!

Go! Oshawott!

Oshawott uses Tackle!

The diviner uses Lame Excuse!

Oshawott uses Tackle!

You throw a Pokéball!

You captured the wild diviner! Yaaaaaaay!


...
...
...


Okay guys, you got me. I'm sorry. I've been playing too much Pokémon, haven't I? I'm sorry. Honest. I have been busy. Those little guys aren't gonna train themselves now, are they?

On a serious note, I actually have been super super busy. So much stuff has happened since we last spoke, blog-buddies. I've had three concerts, two music exams, a solid week of school exams, and a trip to Florida. To the Wizarding World of Harry Potter, nonetheless! I got back about an hour ago. I tried to write this when I was there, but my 3DS died and I forgot the charger... I'm an idiot, yes I am. And I haven't really played W101 for ages. As far as I remember, I'm still mucking around in Crab Alley. Ha.

Anyway! Enough excusing. You got me. Now, to a Pokémon Centre! Quickly. I'm gonna faint. Come on! Hurry up!

...
...
...


Ahhhh. That's better. So, where was I? Excuses over. Cool? It's summer now, anyway, so I'll have more time to play and post, which will be *clears throat* TOTALLY AWESOME! Similarly is the newly revamped creative writing section, which I am honestly wonderfully delightedly hopelessly ecstatic about. Well, something like that anyway. But yay stories yay!

As for my story, well... It's getting there. I'm gonna merge parts seven and eight because they're a bit boring. And I think it's starting to get a bit convoluted. Erk. Well, I'm working on it, and shall we say I'll have it done by the end of the month? I think that sounds okay. I'll just be off playing Po-- um, finishing the next part of my story! Of course!

Diviner OUT!

Friday, 29 April 2011

Wintertusk! Test realm! Mounts! Music!

General:
I'm home from Egypt, and had an ear infection, which was a bit rubbish, and then I went back to school for two days and now I have no school for another four days because of... something... (I'm really not particularly interested in the royal wedding. It's great for them and everything but there sure is a lot of fuss over it.)


Wintertusk:
So I can't get to Wintertusk, because I have done about... Hm, three quests in Grizzleheim? Maybe? I should probably work on that actually. Nat has decided that Wintertusk should be based on Russia, which would be (quote) "AWESOME." ("It would be!")

Test realm:
Took a long time to load but yay it's here yay yay! Also, we all know what the most important update is, here.


YAY :-D ;D :P :D XD ;-P ;-D :-P ;P Now we can all express our need to stick out tongues when something amusing happens!

Mounts:
So, it was... a draw between the Starshine and Moonlight ponies. So I think I will make a personal choice here... Starshine! (I like stars ;-D ... also the moonlight one has a beard, which I find a little odd.)

Also, roaming mounts.

You can't see it too well but I have a pair of flying wings there.


Music:
I for one was at first quite excited about the mystery composer... Then I looked at some of the guesses on the facebook page and my excitement was a little... dampened? Well, at least the initials aren't J.B. We're saved in that respect! (thank you KI)

Ok, is all.

Diviner OUT!

Saturday, 16 April 2011

When I say sporadic, I mean sporadic.

So I'm posting twice in one day, for some reason.

I just got a ton of crowns (in Egypt, what is life?) and I think I want to get me one of those shiny new ponies. The problem? THEY ARE ALL TOO AWESOME. Now I've narrowed it down - admittedly just by eliminating one, but it was a tough one to get rid of - and I've decided to stick up a poll to ask for your opinions on my pony predicament.

So feel free to take the time to vote telling me which of the ponies to pick. DO IT. NOW. No pressure or anything. *glares*

In other news, thoughts on these new magic amulets you might have heard about? I don't really think I'll be getting one myself. I generally just use storm magic anyway. I've got all the life spells up to satyr, and I plan to get tower shield as well, but I don't use them. So pretty much useless for me, as exciting as they are...

I want to buy another pet but I don't think I'd have the time left over to train it, what with the other five I have. Oh life is hard. /sarcasm.

Right, that's all I've got today, unless I decide to surprise you with a post later... No, don't worry. I won't.

Evening, folks! Well, it probably isn't evening where you're reading this. But... you know what

Diviner OUT

IRL Krokotopia?

These are terrible pictures; I used my 3DS because I forgot my piccy-camera.



....I went to Egypt. (Haven't met any kroks or manders yet. One can hope though.) Should I have told you that before I left?

Yes.

Did I?

No.

Why not?
1) I was only told the day before we left. And I had to pack.
2) I'm a terrible blogger. *cries*

Well, sporadic, if anything. (sorry Emma.)

I've been sitting in my hotel room waiting for W101 to load for what feels like forever now, and it's here:


(The patch launcher is too big for my computer screen, as shown. Dearie me. 10.1" = awesome but too small, for future reference)

So, that is pretty much all I have to say today. Well, I bought nintendogs and cats for aforementioned 3DS, so this is pretty much mandatory:

(I'm so childish :D)

Diviner OUT!

Sunday, 3 April 2011

Posting things in sections is easier and better.

Part One:
Hey everyone! This is a post which, similarly to Voldermort's soul, comes in 8 kind of destroyed and lame parts. :D Yes, I just did that.

Part Two:
HEADARGH! Am I glad it is no longer Christmas themed? Yes. Yes I am.

Part Three:
I decided to trade in my shiny green DSi XL at GAME... in order to buy a shinier blue 3DS! I can guarantee it is one of the most fantastic things in the world and if possible get one get one get one. Ocarina of time. In a month. This is the win. Alas, my eyes hurt muchly.

Part Four:
It was mother's day on this side today, so I've been busy... Should have posted earlier, alas... Me fail. That is my (lame) excuse as to why this is so disjointed and nasty.

Part Five:
I have been level forty two for weeks now.

I still haven't got stormzilla. WHAT HAVE I DONE?!

Part Six:
I got a sunbird pet!


And I called him Dexter. I have been maze-ing and cannon-ing and dance-ing (wait...) him all day long! ... Well not all day long exactly. But long enough to make me feel as though that is the case. -_-



Part Seven:
I have school tomorrow, but I'm going to try to post anyway... Wish me luck on that one. In related news...

Part Eight:
This is my second day. Pretty neat by my standards. On that note,

Diviner OUT!

Friday, 29 October 2010

Wait for it… Wait for it… EVEN MORE news!

(I used Windows Live Writer for this. Sorry if the pictures don’t click or look weird or something.)
Well…
eek! eek!
Yeah. You see that? That was my experience bar. Yeah. So, after I finished the next quest…
OH YES
OH YES. I AM A MASTER!!!!!!!!!!!!! I simply cannot convey my excitement through text alone, so I won’t waste the screen with needless exclamation marks. I might just have a few more, though.
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Aah. That’s better.
Anyway, if that isn’t awesome enough…
DOUBLE YES
Both Nat and I have reached Dragonspyre! (This would be infinitely more exciting if it was the current last world. However, it is not. Any more. Dang, just a few days too late.)
Also, I didn’t like that robe, despite the storm symbols, so I blew the rest of my crowns on a little stitchwork.
DS
Yeah. Dragonspyrey.
Okay, so awesomely happy diviner OUT! (for now)

EDIT: Also, I should probably warn you... If I post at all next month, you'll be really lucky, what with my piano exam, NaNoWriMo, AND all the homework... I apologise for laziness in advance.

Wednesday, 27 October 2010

MORE News!

This is another listy thing:

1) I signed up for the NaNoWriMo Young Writers Program thing! Look to the sidey to see my badge! >>>>

On the not-so-bright side, I kinda don't know what to write about. But I'll figure something out. However... Only four days left! O_O

2) I leveled up! I got Triton! I did the Shirataki Temple! I still haven't used Triton, though. I'm so used to Tempest. :/

3) I leveled up again! So not only am I an awesome level 39 and super super SUPER close to master - which is completely completely excitingful - I am a higher level than Nat! I'm happy, but I won't gloat too much, because I've already been slightly frustrating in Nat's opinion today.

I think that's all for today. Yup.

Diviner OUT!

News!

Ok, I’m going to give you some news.
1) I like lists so this will be in list form.
2) Downtime! Maintenance! CELESTIA!!!! Woot! LIVE!
3) NAT POSTED. O_O
4) This is a word that begins with s and ends with y. No, not stupidity. STORY! STORY DONE! No, not completely finished, but Part 6 is. I feel like I’ve been working on it forever. (This is scarily near to the truth.)
Anyway…
~The Tale of Alexandra Stormrider (Part 6)~
Have you ever been in a situation where time feels like it’s dragging itself out particularly slowly just to torture you?
Multiply that feeling by about a hundred thousand.
Then you’ll understand how I felt stuck in Malistaire’s dungeon, or cage, or prison, or whatever it was –we still hadn’t worked it out, because we still hadn’t gotten our bearings.
I’d woken up at a time I assumed was the next morning, but naturally, Malistaire had conveniently refrained from giving us a clock, so we really didn’t know. I also noticed he hadn’t supplied us with a light source – though that was easily solved, what with the pyromancer I was locked in with – and, most importantly, food or water, which, frankly, sucked.
Suddenly a little flame leapt into life, startling me for a moment before I saw that it was just Matt, quite literally playing with fire. I supposed that was just something that happened when you were a pyromancer, just like Jacob Ravencloud, my friend and fellow diviner (who was thankfully not here in Malistaire’s dungeon place with us), and I could make the air crackle with static electricity, and Liam Dawnbreeze, Jake’s twin, and a theurgist, could make almost anything grow, no matter how sick or wilted it was.
“Okay,” said Matt cheerfully. “Let’s work on a plan to get out of here.”
“Great!” I mimicked his annoyingly positive attitude. “Any ideas?”
“Well, erm… Seeing as we don’t know our way around this place, or how to get out, we need to find someone who does.”
“Of course! What a brilliant idea! Hey, Mr Dragon dude who probably works for Malistaire – could you show us out?!”
Matt looked a bit put out. “We could put them under some sort of spell?”
“You can do mind control spells now?”
Matt sighed. “Maybe not, then.”
“What we need is someone we can trust.”
“Like Autumn?”
“Who else? She’s our only chance to get out of here. It’s not like we know anyone else who can help us in this situation. We have to find her. I mean, she has to be somewhere around here.” I hesitated. “Unless she’s…” I didn’t want to even think of that possibility, let alone voice it.
“OI!” a voice grumbled from outside of our prison. We both jumped and turned to face a skeletal warrior who seemed pretty miserable. “You two. Small yous. Yes. You.” He seemed to want to make it clear that it was us he was talking to.
“Okay,” I said, rolling my eyes. “We get it. Us. Carry on.”
“You want food? Here. Take food. Nourish you.” He threw a parcel on the icy stone floor and left quickly.
“Great grammar,” I mumbled as he walked away.
********
“Where the heckhound are we?” Liam complained to his twin.
Jake studied the map. “I know,” he said, hesitantly. “Um. I think I do, anyway. See that little corner, there?”
“Nope.”
He sighed and pointed to the map. “That one. That leads to—“
What corner?” Liam cried, exasperated.
Jake rolled his eyes. “Just forget it, and follow me.”
“How do I know we’re going the right way?”
“Well, obviously, I’m smarter than you.”
“How?”
“You can’t read the map.”
“So?”
“If I can read the map, and you can’t…”
Liam scowled. “Map-reading is pointless. We should just use our Quest Trackers.”
“Oh, nice one. Remind me what quest we’re on?”
“Saving Matt and Alex.”
“Is that in our quest logs?”
Liam groaned. “Fine,” he said, miserably. “Lead the way. But don’t blame me if we get lost.”
********
Other than the visit from the somewhat pathetically ineloquent skeletal warrior, our time passed uneventfully. The bleak hours – or what felt like hours – stretched by punctuated by half-hearted plans to break out.
“We could burn down the bars,” suggested Matt hopefully.
“Might as well try,” I grumbled, moving as far away from the bars as possible. Matt gave the door to our cell a long hard look and the lock burst into flames. I could feel the heat from the back of the cell, and any normal padlock would have melted in seconds. When the relentless flames did die, though, the lock remained unscathed. Even Matt’s fire didn’t work, and everyone knew that he was undoubtedly the best pyromancer in the adept class by miles.
He sighed and retreated back into the corner, where I was still sweating.
“Well, at least we don’t have to worry about being cold,” I said, a little grudgingly. Naturally, Matt didn’t look concerned by the heat at all.
“Was that too much for you?” he asked, raising an eyebrow.
“I’m a diviner. We don’t like hot weather. We like rain. And storms.” I pushed him over and heard a little crack of electricity.
“Ouch,” he said, pretending to be hurt. “That was mean.” He pulled a face, and then made a little ball of fire appear. I retaliated with a splash of water. Soon we were having a full scale fight throwing fire and water at each other and hearing the hiss of steam when they collided.
I finally got the better of him with a mini-torrent of water, leaving him dripping. I wasn’t much better. In fact, most of the room was covered in water. The room? The cell. I’d forgotten.
“I think we need to dry off,” said Matt, happily. He closed his eyes and concentrated for a few seconds. In an instant he was bone dry.
“How did you do that?” I marveled. One of the best things about having talented friends was discovering all the cool things they could do.
“Pyromancer skills,” he said, tapping his nose. I’d noticed the water on the floor around him was drying up as well.
“You’re amazing,” I said, “for someone who’s such a jerk.”
“Well, if that’s how you feel, you can stay soaking,” he grinned.
“Sorry.”
“Hmph.”
Suddenly I heard a familiar voice in my head.
“You two done now?”
********
Liam sighed. “How much further do we have to go?”
“Stop whining.” Jake frowned at the map, and turned it around. “This way,” he said.
“There’s so much walking. Can’t we just teleport to them?”
“You’re kidding, right? You can’t just teleport into Malistaire’s secret dungeon! It’s near impossible to get there by foot!”
“Then why are we doing this? We should have told Ambrose.”
“I’m beginning to wish you hadn’t come.”
“Yeah, well, me too. This isn’t exactly a picnic.”
“Go back to Wizard City, then!”
Liam was silent. “But—”
“Did you hear that?” Jake whispered.
“The whisper chat?”
“Yeah.”
“The one which told us to go back to Wizard City.”
“No, the one that told us to go eat some ice-cream.” Jake rolled his eyes. “What do you think?”
“Alright, calm down. Well?”
“Well what?”
“What should we do?”
Jake sighed. He closed his eyes. Who are you?
I can’t tell you. But honestly, both of you need to get back to Wizard City. You can’t stay there. It isn’t safe. You aren’t safe.
That’s not an issue. We’re not here to be ‘safe’.
Wizard City needs your help!
Prove it.
What do you want me to say? I’m here, and you need to come.
Then tell us who you are!
I can’t. You need to come back.
Jake opened his eyes to find a concerned Liam staring at him.
“Dude, did you just, like fall asleep?”
“You’ve lived in Wizard City all your life and you still don’t know how people whisper chat?”
“Not all people whisper chat like psychos.”
Jake thought for a second. “That wasn’t a normal whisper chat.”
“No duh.”
“We have to keep going.”
“Go on then. Where next, little bro?”
“We’re twins. I’m not your ‘little bro’.”
“Say what you like. I was born before you.”
Jake sighed again. “Sometimes I wish you weren’t born at all. Follow me.”
They headed around the corner, Jake looking concerned and Liam tired.
“This is sooo boring,” he complained.
“You said to come here,” Jake reasoned.
“So? I didn’t realize it would be this long.”
“You’re saying that if you knew how big Dragonspyre was you wouldn’t have come.”
“No…”
“Well, yeah you are.”
“Stop twisting my words! I didn’t say that!”
“You implied it,” Jake stressed.
“Ugh. Fine. I’m going back.”
“Fine.”
Liam turned around quickly and began to walk away before Jake could change his mind about letting him wander off. He turned a corner, and came face to face with a draconian.
“Surprissssse,” it hissed.
Liam took a step back.
“Thought you wanted to go home. It’s thissss way.” The draconian flicked its tail to point behind it and slightly to the right.
Liam changed his mind.
“JAKE!” he yelled.
“What? Thought you were going home.”
“There’s a draconian here!”
“Seriously, Liam? You’ve told me that one over and over again. When will you stop pulling that trick?”
“No, really!”
“Sure.”
“Jake, you know I wouldn’t say it if there wasn’t. I first thought up that trick six years ago.”
The draconian hissed again and stepped forward. Liam turned on his heel and sprinted back to Jake, who turned around as Liam slammed into him.
“Changed your mind now, have you?”
“No. It’s just that there’s sort of this draconian chasing us.”
“Right.”
The draconian hissed.
Jake’s eyes widened. Liam glared at him. “Told you I wasn’t joking!”
“Ok,” said Jake. “So…”
“There’s another one!” yelled Liam.
“Come on, Liam! This is—“
“Yes! It is serious!”
Another draconian was ducking behind the first, but unlike the latter, it wasn’t sneering or snarling.
Suddenly, it pounced – but not on the twins. It attacked the other draconian.
“Go!” it screeched, frantically. Shocked as they were, Jake and Liam didn’t hesitate to obey.
********
I stood up quickly. Matt looked a bit puzzled. “Autumn?” I said, hesitantly.
“Well, it took you a while!” Autumn was sitting in the cell opposite us.
“What are you…?” I stuttered, confused, as glad as I was to see her. “How did you…? Why didn’t you…?”
“Save the babble already. We have talking to do.”
Matt was still looking slightly confused. “Autumn?” he asked. “Since when were you there? We didn’t know you were just over there…”
“Well, I didn’t know it was you two until you started throwing fireballs and stuff. But let’s start with the basics. Why are you here?”
“We came here to save you,” I said, feeling slightly uncomfortable. This wasn’t how I’d imagined this would pan out.
“You two? But… you’re only level… what, twenty? You’re hardly ready for this. Do you have no common sense?” She looked almost annoyed.
“Um, no?”
“Well, that’s reassuring,” she said sarcastically. “Any plans on getting out?”
“Not yet. You?”
“Well, if I did, I wouldn’t still be stuck in here, would I?”
“Okay, okay. We have been trying to come up with something.”
Autumn raised an eyebrow.
“We’ve only been here for a day, or something. Give us a chance. Why didn’t you say something earlier?”
“I only just noticed. I just thought Malistaire had taken some novices or something. I tried to call you out loud, and I guess you didn’t hear. Did you find anything in there?”
“Nah,” Matt said. “It’s empty.”
“Oh. I was just saying because I did find something, at least. A scrap of paper. Might mean something.”
Matt and I looked at each other before turning to Autumn simultaneously. “The prophecy!” we cried, at the same time.
“I can’t make out the first line,” she said, regretfully, “but it says something like… Two are young girls… I can’t see the rest. It’s too dark.”
Matt made a spark, and the corridor lit up.
“Hm. Nice. You’re Falmea’s son, aren’t you? That would explain a lot—”
“What. Does. It. Say.”
“It’s a bit of a rubbish poem… I’ll read the next bits.

“But all will face darkness; no doubt there's a lot
It shall be a long road but they must persevere
For their destinies lie somewhere shrouded in fear.

“Alas, Spiral saviors, your fates are tied
You cannot succeed until one has died.

“Not very positive, is it? All that stuff about fear and dying.”
“Autumn, that prophecy’s about Jake and Liam.”
“They’re not two young girls.”
“Forget it. Pass it to us.”
“That would be a great plan if you weren’t across the corridor from me.”
I sighed. “Well, when we get out, then.”
“Great. You guys can—”
“YOUS!”
“Great,” I muttered.
“Bonehead’s back,” mumbled Matt, miserably.
“OVERCRAMPING. YOU.” The skeletal warrior pointed to Autumn. “YOU GO TO WITH YOUS.” He pointed at Matt and I. He slammed Autumn’s cage door open and dragged her over to ours, opening our door with a massive key and shoving her in with us. Autumn winced as he relocked the door.
The warrior started to clunk down the hallway again, but not before Matt had sent a small flame shooting straight at the hand he was holding the keys in.
“GRAH.” The stupid thing shook his hand briefly and carried on walking. The keys were lying on the floor, just outside Autumn’s old cell.
“Heckhounds,” said Matt. “Bit late.”
“You were brilliant! We practically have it now!”
“Yeah, but we don’t,” he frowned.
“We’ll find a way, don’t worry.”
Matt smiled at me appreciatively. “Thanks.”
“YOUS! QUIET!” The skeletal warrior came back, dragging a limp form of a draconian behind him. It crooned painfully.
“QUIET, TRAITOR.” He tossed the poor thing in a cell, where it began to whimper mournfully, and lumbered off, almost stepping on the keys he’d dropped not a minute before. It surprised me that he didn’t even think to lock the cell again. I suppose there must be a few issues when you don’t have a brain, though.
The draconian lifted its head sadly. Despite being a dangerous animal and probably an evil minion of one of the most powerful and terrifying wizards of all time, I couldn’t help but feel a little sorry for it. I opened my mouth to speak but suddenly, to all of our surprise, it interrupted.
“Yes. I am a traitor.” Her – she was definitely female – voice was croaky and weak.
Matt, Autumn, and I exchanged confused glances.
“I posed as Malistaire’s minion. I’m a spy.”
We continued glancing at each other before Matt decided to speak up. “Who for?”
“I couldn’t say, hatchlings.”
Hatchlings? “Ambrose?” suggested Autumn.
“No, no, hatchlings. A world a little further away than Wizard City, but I help your kind.”
“Like who?”
“Some wizards just down… I doubt you know Dragonspyre, but my brethren were about to attack them, and worse… take them here.”
Matt and I looked at each other. “How many were there?” I asked eagerly.
“Two. No more than hatchlings, like yourselves.”
“What did they look like?” I pressed.
“I didn’t have a chance to look at them more than briefly. I’m sorry, hatchlings.” She lay her head down on her front claws
“It has to be Jake and Liam,” Matt whisper chatted to me. “They’re the only people who know we wanted to save Autumn.”
“They might have told someone,” I replied, uncertainly.
“She said they were hatchlings. Plus, they wouldn’t have done that.”
“I hope they’re okay.”
“They’ll be fine.”
Autumn’s voice came into my head at the same time. “You know who she means?”
“We think it might be Jake and Liam,” I replied hastily. “You know. The twins.” I could almost see Autumn groaning. I sighed.
“How come you can whisper chat in here anyway?” I demanded, out loud.
“I dunno. I didn’t try it until I whisper chatted to you.”
“Maybe we can whisper chat to Liam and Jake. Tell them where we are.”
Matt nodded and I saw him concentrate. A few seconds later, he focused on me again. “Nothing.”
I made a sympathetic face. “Maybe not. Sorry.”
“It’s okay.” Matt smiled at me. “Like you said, we practically have a way out now!” I grinned back.
********
I can’t remember how long it was after that that Matt fell asleep. Autumn, however, was still very much awake and couldn’t stop talking, making sleep a bit of a non-option for me.
“I’ve been sooo bored in here. Honestly Alex, I’m really glad that someone came that I can talk to. I swear, if it had been one more day, I would have gone crazy. I mean, I can’t even describe how boring it was, what with all those boneheads. Only having them for company – do you see what I mean? I mean, it’s alright for some, isn’t it. You two are really lucky; at least you had each other when you came here. You can keep each other company, whereas I’ve been on my own for days, with no one to talk to at all. It’s totally depressing, but—”
“Autumn.”
“—you guys are—”
“Autumn! Can you please shut up? One, you were kidnapped so of course you wouldn’t have any company; two, you talk way too much and three: I’m tired. I want to sleep.”
“Okay. Okay. Calm down.”
“Can you just be quiet for once?”
“Whatever.”
“You really wind me up.”
“It’s funny when I wind you up.”
Matt stirred in his sleep.
“Right. Well, I’m tired, so ‘night,’” yawned Autumn.
“’Night.”
I curled up in a corner and tried to fall asleep.
********
Liam yawned. “I’m tired. Can we just teleport?”
“How many times do I have to tell you that that won’t work?” Jake asked. “Look, there it is. We don’t have that far to go.”
Liam stared at him.
“What?”
“Race ya.”
The twins began to sprint towards what appeared to be the entrance. Jake began to get slightly ahead.
He tripped and disappeared.
Liam skidded to a halt. “Jake?” he yelled, looking around in confusion.
“Down here,” echoed his twin’s voice from what seemed to be below the ground. Liam turned his gaze to the floor and saw the hole which Jake had fallen into. He saw a rope ladder hanging from the side and began to descend. When he’d reached the bottom he saw Jake sitting uncomfortably on the floor.
“You okay?” asked Liam.
“I think…” Jake screwed up his face. “I think I hurt my ankle.”
Liam crouched down and got out his wand, murmuring something under his breath. A magnificent unicorn erupted from the leaves that were swirling around his wand. It touched its horn to Jake’s foot and Jake’s face lightened. Liam nodded at the unicorn gratefully and it disappeared as suddenly as it had come.
“Better?” grinned Liam.
“Better,” Jake smiled. “Now, let’s go.”
********
I woke up in a matter of hours, which would matter if we had any concept of time, but we didn’t, so our mental clocks were completely messed up. The first thing I noticed was that the other two were still sleeping. Secondly, I noticed that the key was still lying on the floor of the corridor. I rolled up the filthy – though I’d only just noticed it – sleeve of my robe, stretched my arm through the bars of our cell, and reached as far as I could, but I still couldn’t quite touch it.
“It’s a pain, isn’t it?” said Matt quietly, startling me. I turned around and he grinned. I couldn’t help but smile back.
“I didn’t know you were awake,” I replied, similarly quiet. I went over to join him in the corner.
“Well, I am. Unlike sleepy over there.” He nodded towards Autumn, who was still sleeping, and smiled. There was an awkward silence. “Um, last night…”
“It might not have been night. You can never tell when it’s always dark.”
Matt gri nned. “True. But, erm, what Autumn… Erm.” He seemed to rethink it. “Do you have any ideas about getting out?”
I shook my head. “Not a clue. If only we had our wands. Then we could summon a Firecat or something to go fetch it.”
“Wouldn’t the fire cat burn the key?”
“If this metal’s resistant to your fire, the thing wouldn’t have a chance.”
“You never know. Can’t be too careful, can you? For all you know, I could just be a fire cat in disguise.”
“Meow. But seriously, what’s gonna happen to us if we don’t get out?”
Matt didn’t say anything.
“What if Malistaire decides he doesn’t need us anymore?”
“If that was the case, he would have gotten rid of us by now.”
“Maybe. Maybe not.”
“Oh, you two,” Autumn grumbled, tiredly. “Wake up. We. Need. To. Get. Out.”
“We were just discussing that, actually,” Matt explained.
“Sure,” Autumn smirked. “So, now you are actually listening to me—” Another voice cut in, making me jump.
“Oh, get up, you idiot. We don’t have time for this. We need to find them!”
“Who the heckhound is that?” I asked nervously.
“I dunno,” said Matt, “but they don’t sound too evil.”
“Huh,” mumbled Autumn.
“Um, can you let go of my arm now?” Matt whispered. I released my grip apologetically. I hadn’t even realized I’d grabbed his arm in shock.
“Sorry,” I said quietly.
Two familiarly identical shapes emerged from the darkness.
“JAKE! LIAM!” I yelled before I could stop myself.
There was a silence.
Oops.
“Okay,” said Matt softly. “I’d say we have about ninety seconds before they get here to see what’s wrong.”
“Sorry,” I added. “We need to get out of here. Grab that key.”
A bemused Jake took the key and unlocked our cell, and we scrambled out.
“Which way now?” asked Liam.
“You tell me!” said Autumn, indignantly. “And we need our wands – and our decks!”
“I hate to break it to you, but those things can wait,” said Jake quickly. “You guys need to get out of here.”
“Wait!” I broke in, suddenly. I grabbed the scrap of paper on the floor and held it out to Jake. “We think this is the second part of the prophecy!”
He barely even glanced at it before pocketing it. “Ambrose did say that…”
“What’s the whole deal with this prophecy, anyway?” Autumn interrupted.
“We’ll explain later,” I excused.
“We don’t have time for this stuff, anyway. This way!” Liam darted off into a tunnel, followed by Jake, then Matt, then a still puzzled Autumn. I followed them as fast as I could.
We’d barely got three turns into the corridor when I heard a frustrated cry of anger from behind us.
“YOU FOOLS!”
All of us seemed to use that as an incentive to speed up. Jake sprinted ahead.
“Call yourselves guards!”
He dashed around a corner and we followed unquestioningly. How the heckhound did he know where to go? I jumped over a rock on the floor.
“You LET them escape?”
WHAM. Autumn had tripped. I skidded to a halt and grabbed her, pulling her up and dragging her forwards.
“How? How did they ‘trick’ you?”
Autumn quickly regained her footing and ran after me, limping slightly. Matt turned around to see what had happened and I shoved him forward.
“Well what are you waiting for? Go after them!”
I pressed forward.
“Which way? Which way do you think they went, you brainless idiots? To the exit corridor!”
There was an unsteady thudding of footsteps following us. We turned another sharp corner and there was a rope ladder in front of us. Jake clambered up it quickly, followed by Liam. Matt followed them and I climbed up after him, followed by Autumn.
“YOUS!”
Autumn and I finally scrambled onto the dry scrubland above the tunnel. “What do we do now?” asked Autumn.
“TELEPORT!” yelled Liam at the top of his voice.
In a mix of red, purple, and green, we disappeared.
********
“I cannot stress how disappointed I am in all of you.” Ambrose addressed us – as in, me, Matt, Jake, and Liam – the only people who were bothered enough to try and help Autumn.
Liam looked bored. Jake was trembling. Matt rolled his eyes at me.
“You have broken several rules. Stealing.” Ambrose looked at Matt. “Going to a world you haven’t reached yet.” He looked at me. “And going to Dragonspyre after you were specifically instructed not to.” He looked at Liam. Gamma hooted haughtily.
“It was for a good cause,” I pleaded.
“You should have left this to the staff. You were not ready for a quest like this.” Ambrose looked away and shook his head. Gamma hooted sympathetically. “That said, you managed to get back safely.”
Jake looked a little more relieved.
“And… I have decided that I will not punish you, for now. Besides, what you did was brave, if reckless.”
I grinned, and was about to run out of the office excitedly when Ambrose spoke again.
“But if I hear one more thing about you…” he shook his head. Gamma hooted disapprovingly. Gamma’s hooting was starting to get annoying.
Well, we hopefully wouldn’t be in a situation like that again. I made up my mind about it there and then. From then on, I was going to obey the rules.
“That means no stealing, no disobeying your teachers, no disrespect, no running off and NO fighting. Understood?”
We all nodded.
Ambrose hesitated before Gamma cut in. “Yo-oo-oo-ou are dismissed.”
Jake suddenly spoke up.
“Sir, can I give something to you?”
Ambrose frowned, but then nodded. Jake gave him the scrap of paper which the prophecy must have been on. Ambrose’s expressions went from suspicious to confused to shocked.
“Mr Ravencloud, is this…?”
“Yes, it is, professor.”
“Where did you get it, my boy?”
“We’ll explain everything later, professor.”
Ambrose hesitated. “Very well. Off you go now,” he said, reluctantly.
********
I was trying to do my Life homework in my dorm room, but I was a bit distracted. I stared blankly at my textbook. I needed to revise the theory of healing spells for a test tomorrow.
The magic of the song is based on a form of energy, called Spiritus Incrementa – literally meaning “the growth of spirit” in Latin.
“Think we got off lightly there,” Liam had commented as we walked out of the door.
“Must be because we have Jakey-boy with us!” Matt had tried to joke. “They wouldn’t want to sacrifice such a talented student!”
“Shut up,” mumbled Jake, looking embarrassed. I didn’t really know what to say.
Also simply known as life force, it is so named because it allows the particles that create living things to work in harmony to provide the key processes of life – namely, growth and spirit.

“I guess you do have a point,” Liam had said. “After all, I’m one of the most talented theurgists I know!”
“How arrogant can you get?” I asked, laughing.
“Big head,” said Matt. “We can’t all get plants to start tripping up moody conjurers!” he added, referencing the time when Liam had set a tree’s roots the task of tripping up the truly arrogant Reed Mythstrider, who had a superiority complex.
It is present in all living creatures’ souls, and is the reason behind life itself. At its creation, a living thing has a set amount of life force, and it is depleted through illness, physical harm, and magical harm. It can also fade as a creature loses the will to live.

“You should be careful around him, you know,” warned Jake, cautiously. “He’s a lot more trouble than he looks, honestly.”
“Really? How can he be any more trouble than he looks?” I asked, raising an eyebrow.
Jake sighed and shook his head. “Oh, just forget it.”

Without Spiritus Incrementa, everything that exists would fall apart and disappear into the Darkness (the empty space below the Spiral which contains everything that has ceased to exist).

I’d wondered what was wrong with him, and was still wondering. The Mythstrider kid was always a touchy topic with him. Who could blame him? After all, he had been beating him up with a troll for as long as I could remember.

The songs that all life spells utilize send this growth energy into the spirit of the living creature it is directed towards. This replenishes depleted force and therefore—

BAM.
I leapt to my feet and rushed down the corridor into the cold open air of Ravenwood. As soon as I stepped out, I saw… Well, I didn’t see anything, apart from a huge green mass in front of my face. I smelt vomit. And slime.
A humongofrog.
A sneering voice came from behind it. “I don’t think you’ve seen this one yet, have you?”
“No, but I-I-I really don’t think you need to, erm… demonstrate, Reed.”
I was going to kill the Mythstrider kid.
Before I’d even thought about what I was doing, I’d pulled out my wand and begun to wave it. A storm symbol formed and the air crackled with static electricity, and suddenly a wall of water had appeared and was ready to crash down on the frog.
“JAKE!” I yelled. “MOVE!”
Jake’s blonde head bobbed around the huge green mass quickly, and he sprinted towards me, grinning gratefully.
WHOOSH.
“You are going to pay, noobs!”
I bit my lip to try and stop myself from laughing when I saw him. Reed was dripping, from his blue hair to the toes of his expensive Marleybone boots. On the other hand, he looked absolutely furious, his wand was out, and a bunch of Myth cronies were behind him. They stormed over.
“What in the Spiral,” he spat, hatefully, “do you think you’re doing?!”
“Defending a loser,” snarled Blaze Dragonrunner, a similarly arrogant conjurer, “like him?”
I tried to think of a catty response. “What do you think you’re doing, setting a Humongofrog on him? It could have killed him!”
“Actually, Alex, Humongofrogs can’t kill people. They just vomit all over you until you become nauseous,” Jake corrected. I gave him a look which I intended to mean ‘You’re not helping me here’, but he just smiled pleasantly.
“I think the little nerds need teaching a lesson,” Reed sneered. Before I could even open my mouth to tell him that it was better to be a nerd than a low-life bully, he’d given me and Jake a shove so hard that we ended up sprawled on the floor a few feet away.
I sat up, absolutely fuming, when a black and white ball of anger hurled past me.
“Go away!” it screeched, furiously. “You’re a big butthead and I hate you and leave my sister alone!”
I hadn’t expected that from my little brother. Still a little disorientated, all I really wanted to do was congratulate Nat on his bravery before realizing that there was something stomping behind us. I turned around.
“CYCLOPS!” I yelled.
Jake and I scrambled up as quickly as we could. I grabbed Nat, and ducked behind the stone steps of the boys’ dormitory, pulling Jake along with me. At that precise moment, and rather inconveniently, the door flung open and out came – would you believe it? Matt and Liam.
“What the heckhound--?” Matt asked. They both looked dumbfounded. Then they realized that if they didn’t move they were probably going to be flattened by the hammer of an angry Cyclops. They hopped over the side of the steps and joined us ducking.
“What is going on?” whispered Liam, frantically.
“Jakey-boy here was being beaten up by Myth-face and his pet froggy. Not good combo. Smells like sick,” I replied in a hushed tone.
“Too right,” said Matt. “On three, you guys.”
“One,” he said. I checked my deck quickly. Kraken. Storm Shark. Lightning Bats. Leprechaun. I discarded all my non-attacking cards. They weren’t going to help outside of a dueling circle.
“Two.” I drew my wand and tensed up. Liam, Jake, and Nat were doing the same.
“Three!”
We leapt up, and stood awkwardly for a moment, unsure of what to do. Then Liam waved his wand and summoned a leprechaun. It slid down its rainbow and giggled, then grabbed its pot and smashed it on the floor near the Mythstrider kid’s feet. Matt summoned another, which threw its gold around viciously before starting to climb up Blaze’s robe, kicking and biting on the way. Blaze whipped out his wand and summoned a trio of angry, screeching lightning bats before you could say ‘fail’.
From then on it was a flurry of spells. I didn’t know who had summoned what, and more and more people were joining in the fight and attacking whoever they saw. I don’t even think that anyone ‘took sides’. By the time I’d noticed that passers-by were getting involved it had just become a free-for-all.
I waved my staff. Fizzle. Frustrated, I waved it again, harder, and it flew out of my hand as a sunbird flew past my head, singing my hat. I lunged for the staff which was rolling towards the yellowish feet of a conjurer, but then the Mythstrider kid picked it up and held it out of my reach.
“Not so smart now, are you, diviner?” he sneered contemptuously.
I didn’t bother to try to respond. I gave him a solid shove, making his hair stand on end from the static, and he stumbled, winded. Before he could react properly I snatched my staff and summoned a Kraken. Water flooded the area around us, and a conjurer to my left sent a blood bat at me. I ducked quickly as it aimed for my head, and turned around, only to bump into a somewhat disheveled Autumn.
“Autumn?” I asked, confused.
“Some myth loser attacked me out of nowhere!” she told me, indignant. “So I asked him what he was doing, and he cast a blood bat! So I summoned a treant, and—”
“I get the idea,” I interrupted. Since when had the fight got so big? Suddenly, a minotaur appeared behind Autumn. “Um…” I said, slightly shocked.
She whipped around, and, with a quick wave of her wand, formed a fire symbol. I frowned. Didn’t Autumn second in Myth? To my surprise, she cast a Phoenix, which swooped down over the minotaur. The lumbering beast fell to the floor, defeated.
“Where did you learn that?” I asked, in awe.
Autumn smiled. “Treasure card.”
“Lucky,” I said enviously, before hastily ducking to avoid a meteor which was zoning in on my head. By the time I looked up, Autumn was off dueling a thaumaturge.
“Sorry!” yelled Matt, rushing up behind me. “I was aiming for—”
“Don’t worry,” I butted in. “Are you okay?”
“I’m fine – are you okay?”
“Yeah, sure.”
“This has gotten out of hand.”
I glanced around. “Obviously.”
“I think we should go back to our dorms.”
“Yeah. That way, we can’t get blamed for all of this.”
“Let’s go, qui—duck!” We crouched down as a Cyclops nearly tripped over us. Matt grabbed my hand and pulled me towards the dorm rooms.
We made it to the steps. It’s a bit weird to think that if that Cyclops hadn’t come, then everything after that wouldn’t have happened.
“STOP AT ONCE!” cried a dominating voice over the chaos.
Slowly, everyone fell silent.
“The instigators are to come to my office. I know who you are.”
We looked at each other and sighed. Heckhounds.
********
“I can’t believe this has happened.”
I looked around. There I was, just this morning, swearing I’d never make trouble again. Now look at the mess I was in! I’d made everything go wrong. If only I’d just ignored the stupid Mythstrider kid. I glared at him. He was standing at the end of the line looking nonchalant, as though he’d done nothing wrong. I wanted to hit something.
All of us – me, Matt, Jake, Liam, Reed, and Nat – had been guided in here by a troll, which Cyrus Drake had conjured as the battle collapsed in on itself. As for Reed’s cronies, however… It looked like they’d got out of it pretty easily.
“I want you all to know that nothing – absolutely nothing - in all my time at Ravenwood has ever amounted to an event like this. I am disgusted by this misconduct. And with family involved, as well! I will be informing your parents.” He gave the twins a furious stare.
“All six of you will be punished. Heaven knows, the only thing I can think of at the moment is permanent exclusion, and I doubt that will change. You have all disappointed me hugely. To think that all of you had excelled in your classes throughout your time here! I cannot express my horror at the situation.”
Jake looked like he might pass out. Even Liam and Matt looked a little pale.
“Everyone knows he won’t actually expel us,” whisper chatted Matt into my head.
“Really?”
“Yeah, they haven’t done that since they opened the school. Mom told me.”
“Good to know.”
“Aren’t you glad to have me?”
“I guess, moron.”
“Who are you calling moron?”
“Who do you think, imbecile?”
“Who are you calling imbecile?”
I giggled in my head.
Ambrose sighed. “After my many years of teaching here, I know when students are whisper chatting to each other. And I will expel you, if that is what it will come to.”
Could Ambrose see everyone’s private conversations? I suddenly felt extremely embarrassed and began to stare at the floor. Matt looked similarly uncomfortable.
“I can assure you that I am in doubt that any of you will be here for much longer.”
There was a long and awkward pause, where all of us were too scared, worried, or uncomfortable to even look at each other, let alone communicate. Suddenly, Gamma gave a loud hoot.
“Professor, can I consult with yo-ou for a moment?”
“Lead the way, Gamma.” The professor followed a strangely excited Gamma into a small room at the back of the office where students usually aren’t allowed.
As soon as the door closed behind them, Matt whispered, “How does he know when we’re whisper chatting?”
I shook my head in confusion. “No idea,” I replied.
“Mind reading?” suggested Liam.
“Oh, be quiet, you idiots.”
We all looked at the only myth kid in the room.
“What happened to all your buddies, Mr Cool?” asked Matt. “Are they hiding? Have they cast an invisibility spell?”
Reed turned away, clearly thinking he was too important to be bothered with losers like us.
Ambrose swung open the door and marched into the room, and the silence became less awkward and more terrifying. I think we were all holding our breath. Jake now looked close to tears, and I swear that
“We have decided…” Ambrose said, hesitantly, “that exclusion… may not be the only option.” He gave us all intimidating stares. “You will remain here to continue your studies.”
Not one of us could speak. When had Ambrose ever taken back anything he’d said ever before? This had to be a first. All we managed to be able to do was stare at him in shock.
“We have conclu-u-uded that exclu-usion would be a waste of valuable magical potent, what with the entire Spiral being in danger,” added Gamma, insistently. “Malistaire’s forces are gathering, and we need all the wizards we can get to assist in overcoming his powers.”
That didn’t seem like a great explanation. I looked at the others. They were all either still in shock or didn’t seem to have noticed the lousy justification of that argument, with the exception of the myth kid, who still had a haughty sneer on his face.
“This incident cannot go completely unpunished, however,” Ambrose began. “You will attend detentions every week for two months—” I suppose it was only fair, but I couldn’t help being a little annoyed “—and you are all banned from doing any quests for a month. Don’t even try to. I’ll have your Spiral keys taken away until I deem fit to return them, and I’d like you to know that all denizens of the Spiral do report to me who has been completing quests each day.”
I stifled a groan. I supposed we had it coming, after starting a massive free-for all. Still, we were so close to getting into Marleybone! And now we’d be behind in levels and never get through the Tomb of Storms.
“And as for you three,” he continued, seriously, looking pointedly at the twins and Reed. “Your mother and father will be informed. And you too, Mr Fireshard.”
Hold on.
You three?
I was going to say something there but I managed to keep my mouth shut until we were dismissed, at which point I near-exploded.
“What did he mean when he said “you three”?!” I demanded.
Liam and Jake glanced at each other. Reed sniffed.
“Well, he was addressing us two and Reed, obviously,” Liam explained.
I blinked. “Your mother and father. Singular. You three have one mother and one father between you, so…”
“Yeah, Reed’s our older brother.” Jake looked at the floor.
Matt looked about as confused as I was – which is to say, very much so. “Why didn’t you say?” he asked.
“We didn’t say he wasn’t,” countered Liam.
“And like I’d want to be associated with these losers,” sneered the Mythstrider kid. “Now, if you midgets will excuse me, I’ll be going.”
“No way. You’re staying here,” I said. “They’re your brothers. Why do you always beat up Jake?! You don’t just beat up your brother for no reason!”
Nat, who had been strangely quiet up until now, spoke up. “But Alex…”
I turned to him. “You’re annoying, but I wouldn’t set a imp on you, let alone a humongofrog.”
He looked a bit embarrassed. “Thanks, Alex.”
“So, on that note, why do you do it?!” I asked Reed.
“Alex…” began Jake.
“No! You can’t just let your brother keep trying to kill you! Don’t your mom and dad know?”
“No, but…” he started again.
“See? This isn’t fair! He shouldn’t be allowed to just keep getting away with this!”
Liam broke in. “Alex, we’ll explain in a minute. Just let Reed go about his business,” he whispered. He gave me a this-is-going-to­-be-bad-if-we-don’t-leave-him-alone look.
Matt, who was being uncharacteristically awkward, suddenly decided to support them. “Alex, I guess that’s a family issue. You don’t want to interfere too much.”
I sighed and turned my back on the Mythstrider kid, still angry. When I heard his footsteps fade I turned back.
“So what’s the deal?” I asked.
“It doesn’t really matter that much. It’s nothing big.” said Jake.
“Go on. We’ll go sit in the life tower while we explain.” Liam practically pushed us in there.
“This had better be a good story,” added Matt. “Got any popcorn?”
“Only pet snacks,” said Liam. “You know, for animals. So only you could eat them.”
Matt prodded him with his wand.
“Right. Let’s start at the beginning.”