As she left with the Lady Marna, Kulgan and Fannon simply let their amusement show, as did Lyam and Arutha. Roland shot Pug an angry, envious look, then turned and headed off toward his own quarters. Lord Borric said to Kulgan, âTake this boy to his room. He looks exhausted. Iâll order food sent to him. Have him come to the great hall after tomorrowâs morning meal.â He turned to Pug. âAgain, I thank you.â The Duke motioned for his sons to follow and walked away. Fannon gripped Tomas by the elbow, for the sandy-haired boy had started to speak with his friend. The old Swordmaster motioned with his head that the boy should come with him, leaving Pug in peace. Tomas nodded, though he was burning with a thousand questions.
When they had all left, Kulgan placed his arm around the boyâs shoulder. âCome, Pug. Youâre tired, and there is much to speak of.â
Pug lay back on his pallet, the remains of his meal lying on a platter next to him. He couldnât remember ever having been this tired before. Kulgan paced back and forth across the room. âItâs absolutely incredible.â He waved a hand in the air, his red robe surging over his heavy frame like water flowing over a boulder. âYou close your eyes, and the image of a scroll you saw weeks before appears. You incant the spell, as if you were holding the scroll in your hand before you, and the trolls fall. Absolutely incredible.â Sitting down on the stool near the window, he continued. âPug, nothing like this has ever been done before. Do you know what youâve done?â
Pug started from the edge of a warm, soft sleep and looked at the magician. âOnly what I said I did, Kulgan.â
âYes, but do you have any idea what it means?â
âNo.â
âNeither do I.â The magician seemed to collapse inside as his excitement left, replaced by complete uncertainty. âI donât have the slightest idea what it all means. Magicians donât toss spells off the top of their heads. Clerics can, but they have a different focus and different magic. Do you remember what I taught you about focuses, Pug?â
Pug winced, not being in the mood to recite a lesson, but forced himself to sit up. âAnyone who employs magic must have a focus for the power he uses. Priests have power to focus their magic through prayer; their incantations are a form of prayer. Magicians use their bodies, or devices, or books and scrolls.â
âCorrect,â said Kulgan, âbut you have just violated that truism.â He took out his long pipe and absently stuffed tabac into the bowl. âThe spell you incanted cannot use the casterâs body as a focus. It has been developed to inflict great pain upon another. It can be a very terrible weapon. But it can be cast only by reading from a scroll that it is written upon,
at the time itâs cast
. Why is this?â
Pug forced leaden eyelids open. âThe scroll itself is magic.â
âTrue. Some magic is intrinsic to the magician, such as taking on the shape of an animal or smelling weather. But casting spells outside the body, upon something else, needs an external focus. Trying to incant the spell you used from memory should have produced terrible pain in
you
, not the trolls, if it would have worked at all!
That
is why magicians developed scrolls, books, and other devices, to focus that sort of magic in a way that will not harm the caster. And until today, I would have sworn that no one alive could have made that spell work without the scroll in hand.â
Leaning against the windowsill, Kulgan puffed on his pipe for a moment, gazing out into space. âItâs as if you have discovered a completely new form of magic,â he said softly. Hearing no response, Kulgan looked down at the boy, who was deeply asleep. Shaking his head in wonder, the magician pulled a cover over the exhausted boy. He put out the lantern that
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