Friday, June 21, 2019

The Gathering Storm - Chapter One (Magic Official Story)


 



The Gathering Storm, by Django Wexler
Chapter One

It was autumn in Ravnica, and so it rained, day after day.
       
          The sky was gray from horizon to horizon, the sun only a vague hint of a brighter glow behind the clouds. Rain marched down the boulevards in sheets like a conquering army, infiltrated the tiny, crooked alleyways, rattled the stained-glass windows in the places of worship, and pattered off the trees in the gardens. In the squares, fountains overflowed, and the drains bubbled and vomited up debris. In the underground kingdom of the Golgari, far below the city streets, drips became trickles became torrents, as all the water slowly drained down, through layer after layer of ancient architecture, back to the long-buried oceans.

          Any hint of sunshine was long gone for the day when Ral Zarek turned the corner of Frost Lane into the neighborhood known as Seven Swords. A few of the more upscale shops were lit by steady magical glows, but here most made do with cheaper oil lamps, which sputtered unhealthily in the damp. The few other passersby who shared the street moved quickly, heads down, huddled under umbrellas or clutching sodden coats.

          Ral didn't hurry, nor did he keep his head down. He walked with steady purpose, his long, dark coat flapping around his ankles. The rain caused him no hardship at all; it started to bend away from him about five feet above his head, splashing into a neat circle all around him that was wide enough not to dampen his boots.

          After all, he thought, with grim satisfaction, what's the point in being a "rain mage" if you have to get wet?

          While he scanned the doorways and storefronts, he kept half his attention on the people around him. Tonight could be a trap—in fact, it was almost certainly a trap—but while he thought he knew what kind of trap, one could never be certain.

          Not when you were dealing with Bolas.

          Fortunately—both for his peace of mind and for their own good health—no one seemed interested. Seven Swords was not a rowdy neighborhood, nor a particularly rich one. The origin of its name, like so much of Ravnica, was lost in the mists of time, but these days it was just a small block of streets lined with large stone townhouses that had seen better days. Originally built for the rich, back when the area had been fashionable, they were now subdivided into tiny apartments, so a family might sleep, eat, and work all in what had once been some aristocrat's ballroom or pantry. A few businesses operated at ground level, mostly taverns, eateries, and pawn shops, the latter identifiable by their iron-barred windows.

          Where Frost Lane met Green Street there was a small square, with a derelict fountain brought back to a semblance of life by the endless rain. It was lined by larger buildings, most of them in equally bad repair. Cast-iron benches were slowly dissolving into puddles of rust, leaving wide orange stains on the cobblestones. Ral turned, picking out the old signs, and finally found what he was looking for. On the corner, a worm-eaten wooden signboard covered in peeling white paint marked the entrance to The Silver Curtain. The doors below it had been boarded up long ago, and subsequently broken open. They hung half-open, revealing only gloom within.

          Well. Ral stared into the darkness, as though force of will could make it give up its secrets. I suppose there's only one thing to do.

          He felt a touch of nerves, a faint tightness in his throat, but he banished it at once. Instead he summoned his anger, the slow, hot rage that had powered him all these years.

          How dare he come to me now?

          Ral's hands tightened into fists. Distant thunder rumbled, and Ral could feel the lightning overhead flashing from cloud to cloud, as though the arcs were drawn across his skin. He stalked forward, pushing the doors wide, and stepped into darkness.
 

 
          At the same moment, across the Tenth District, a young woman was breaking into Nivix.

          Most people would have said this was, if not actually impossible, then at least suicidal. Nivix, rising like a spike above the lesser spires of the Ravnican skyline, was the headquarters of the Izzet League. The lower stories were packed with workshops, barracks, and laboratories, guarded by madmen with flamethrowers and tireless, watchful constructs. Above that were the quarters of the most senior members of the Izzet, home to some of the most dangerous mages and inventors in Ravnica. And above that was the Aerie, home to Niv-Mizzet himself. The Firemind, ancient dragon, parun of the guild and schemer beyond compare.

          The intruder was headed for the very top. Most people would have said she was not in her right mind, and if she'd been able to she would have agreed with them. There was something else in there with her, another mind, a slithering, scaled thing that looked out through her eyes and had snuffed out her will as easily as blowing out a candle.

          She was currently attached to a kite, a broad wood-and-canvas thing painted a dark gray, to be lost against the evening sky. Tame air elementals had borne her up, well above even the tip of Nivix's spire, but she'd dismissed them before making her approach. Niv-Mizzet and his minions had wrapped the Aerie in wards, and anything so crude as magical flight would be detected instantly.

          Indeed, Ral Zarek, who had ultimate responsibility for the innermost protections of the Firemind, had done an exemplary job. Deep inside Nivix, there was a control room, manned night and day by loyal Izzet watchmen. Any attempt to teleport, phase, or otherwise pass magically through the walls or windows would set alarm bells ringing. Any brute physical efforts, needless to say, would do the same. Ral himself checked the wards every evening, and made regular inspections to ensure they were properly maintained.

          Tonight, however, Ral Zarek was elsewhere.

          His responsibilities in this area passed to Watch Captain Neero Jak, an innocuous vedalken who had risen through the ranks of the Izzet's guards on the strength of his willingness to obey orders and display absolutely no imagination. Like Ral, he would do his duty with careful thoroughness. Unlike Ral, he was a fan of the comic opera. And last night, at a performance of Spirogne Goes Hunting, he'd had a chance encounter with a delightful young woman, and—

          —Well, Neero didn't remember much of the night after that. But the young woman, who was the same young woman strapped to the kite, was a Dimir thoughtstealer, so her dates often worked out that way.

          And now, if all had gone well—

          In her magically enhanced vision, Nivix's wards glowed in every color of the rainbow, a vicious spectrum of traps and alarms. At the very top of the tower, where a vast window of curved glass looked over the city, they blazed particularly brightly.

          Until, just at the appointed hour, they all went dark.

          Neero Jax would have some questions to answer in the morning.

          The intruder angled her kite, descending toward the tower.
 

 
          It was no longer evident what kind of theater The Silver Curtain had been, since it had clearly been playing only to audiences of rats for years now. Ral stepped carefully through the anteroom, where scraps of old posters still clung to the decaying plaster walls, and edged past the ticket-taker's stall. Another pair of double doors led into the theater itself, a wide semicircular room with rows of rotting wooden seats on either side of a central aisle. At the far end was the stage, the proscenium arch half-collapsed, the eponymous silver curtain in shredded tatters behind it.

          Ral was more interested in the man who sat at the edge of the stage. He was in middle age, with a lined, weathered face and long hair bound into ragged dreadlocks. Under his loose robe, much of his chest was replaced with smooth, flexible metal, and his right arm was a twisted cage of metal struts, ending in fingers like talons. He looked up as Ral entered, with a brief smile entirely devoid of humor.

          "Tezzeret," Ral said. He'd suspected as much, from the message he'd gotten. "Still running the old lizard's errands, I see?"

          "Ral Zarek." Tezzeret yawned with affected indifference. "Still killing time on this second-rate world."

          The old rage shifted in Ral's chest. His hands tightened, but he kept his tone casual.

          "I thought I made it clear last time that we had nothing left to say to each other."

          "You may have nothing left to say," Tezzeret said. "But for reasons that escape me, he has decided to make you an offer. A final offer."

          "Your master told me that once already," Ral said. Tezzeret's lip twitched, and Ral knew he'd scored. The prideful Planeswalker hated to be reminded of his subservience. "You should tell him his threats are less impressive when he doesn't follow through."

          "As I said, I don't understand why he extends his mercy, only that it rarely lasts." Tezzeret pushed himself down from the stage. "You owe him a debt, Zarek. You can pay it, and reap the benefits of service." He cocked his head, and crimson energy rippled down his metal arm. "Or you can continue your obstinacy, and burn with all the rest."

          "Tempting." Ral smiled thinly. "But I already have one arrogant dragon to deal with. I'd rather not swap him for another."

          "As I expected." Tezzeret shrugged. "In which case—"

          His slow, deliberate pace vanished. Tezzeret slashed his metal arm, launching a spray of white-hot metal in Ral's direction. Ral was equally quick to react. Power flowed down his arm, into the mizzium nodes in his bracer. A crackling shield of electrical energy sprang to life, sending the projectiles spinning away in all directions before curving back to rejoin their originator.

          Tezzeret had already hopped back up onto the stage. Beside him, something was rising out of the dust: a long-limbed, spider-like construct with a single glowing eye on a flexible stalk. Two more of the things shook themselves free of debris in the corner of the theater, and Ral could hear at least one more behind him, blocking the exit.

          "A nice trick," he said, then looked up at the ceiling. "But how long can a storm mage last away from the storm?" Tezzeret grinned again. "I suppose we'll find out."

          He ducked out of sight into the theater's backstage as the constructs charged. Ral spun, and the machine closing from behind crashed against his shield in a spray of sparks. He lashed out with his other hand, and a short burst of lightning crackled across the thing, sending it stumbling drunkenly backward to crash into a wall. Before he could finish it, the rest of them were on him, and Ral had to duck to one side as a clicking, hissing construct lashed out with scythe-like forelimbs. He gave ground, putting his back to the wall, and spread his arms.

          It was, indeed, a problem for a mage of the storm to be cut off from the sky. The amount of power Ral could store in his body was limited, and the process was exhausting. But that's the thing about the Izzet. We solve problems.

          Fortunately, he'd come expecting a trap. On his back, a bulge beneath his trench coat, was the Mizzium-Ion Electrostatic Accumulator, Mark IV, the very latest from the Laboratory of Storms and Electricity. It was fully charged, mizzium rings spinning rapidly in their crystal chambers. Long conduits linked it to the bracers on his forearms, where output nodes helped shape and channel the power.

          The original long-ago inventor had intended her device to produce harmless entertainment for children's parties. After the third fried clown, Ral had taken over the project for his own purposes.

          Electricity cracked down his right arm, forming into a crescent-shaped arc of white-hot plasma. When the construct closed, Ral sidestepped and unleashed plasma with a thunderclap. Hardened steel parting like wet plaster, and the construct died with a screech of grinding gears. One of its fellows climbed over its corpse, blades swinging down, and Ral ducked and chopped its legs out from under it with another blast, leaving it to flounder helplessly.

          The construct from the anteroom had joined its remaining fellow by now, and they squared up and came at him together, shoulder to mechanical shoulder. Ral let his shield vanish in a spray of sparks and raised both hands. Every hair on his body stood on end as the accumulator's energy flooded through him, crackling briefly over his fingertips before blasting out in a double bolt of lightning. Thunder shook The Silver Curtain, dislodging more plaster from the walls. The two constructs twitched like dying insects in the massive discharge, then sagged as soon as Ral lowered his arms, their delicate internals melted into so much slag.

          He cast an irritated glance over his shoulder at the stage, but there was no sign of Tezzeret. If he wanted me dead, this was a pretty poor attempt. Ral's frown deepened. Tezzeret might be arrogant, but he wasn't stupid. Which means he doesn't want me dead. And Bolas must have known I'd turn him down. So why call me here?

          A diversion. Which meant he was in exactly the wrong place.

          Flames were starting to lick at the walls of the old theater, rising from the super-heated metal corpses of the constructs. Ral was already running, out through the anteroom and into the rain, his coat flapping behind him.
 

 
          The intruder hit the side of Nivix, letting go of her kite, which whipped away in the wind before tumbling to crash somewhere in the city below. That left the young woman without an escape route, but the thing in her mind didn't care about that. A mind mage herself, she recognized the work of a master in the controlling presence. Somewhere deep inside she was screaming, but her body calmly climbed the pebbled stone of the outside of the tower until she reached the great window, a huge multi-paned circle like an insect's eye.

          She opened a belt pouch, clinging nonchalantly to the tower with one hand, and came up with a small metal device with a suction cup at one end. She'd acquired it from a black-market Izzet artificer—some irony there. When it was stuck fast against one pane of the window, she touched the end. The little thing gave a high-pitched whine that set her teeth on edge, and then the glass of the window sagged and melted, still cold but flowing as easily as water. It ran down the leading and out of the way, and the intruder slipped easily into Niv-Mizzet's inner sanctum.

          A half-dozen alarms ought to have been blaring at that point, but instead there was silence. The Aerie was a single massive room, sized for the convenience of an ancient dragon. A variety of telescopes and other optical instruments stood at the window, pointed variously at the sky or out across the city. Books were everywhere, piled in drifts or stacked on shelves until they were in danger of collapse. Presumably the prodigious intellect of the Firemind could make some sense of the confusion.

          There was surprisingly little of the machinery for which the Izzet were famous, no smelting vats or bins of spare parts, no steam-belching contraptions. Niv-Mizzet was beyond such things, experimenting in the realm of pure thought and magic. But even ancient dragons needed to sleep from time to time, and the parun of the Izzet was currently curled up in one corner of his stone-walled laboratory like a cat, the tip of his serpentine tail twitching lazily beneath his nose. The sound of his slow breath was as loud as a blacksmith's bellows.

          Even with the outer wards breached, Niv-Mizzet was far from helpless. The floor of his sanctum was layered in arcane traps, visible to the intruder's enhanced sight as lines of blue-white energy crisscrossing the floor, flanked by twisting columns of runes. An ordinary thief or assassin might have found these an impenetrable barrier, but the presence in the intruder's mind knew that no defense was truly impregnable. It calculated for a moment, then moved its host forward, stepping confidently through the barriers.

          The intruder stepped, waited a heartbeat, turned, sidestepped, sprinted forward, paused again. Magic pulsed and shimmered through the web of wards, searching for heat, for movement, for the spark of life. The young woman held her breath for so long her vision went gray at the edges as she shuffled backward in front of a bookcase, then spent a moment recovering before turning an easy cartwheel and walking on her hands through a section of densely interleaved runes.

          Not bad, the presence thought. But not good enough.

          Before long, its host stood at the side of the sleeping dragon, reaching a cautious black-gloved hand to lay on one of Niv-Mizzet's long, dark horns. The presence called on the young woman's power, her subtle magic reaching out toward the Firemind. Even here, at the center of his power, Niv-Mizzet was paranoid. Ever since Jace Beleren had touched his thoughts, prior to becoming the Living Guildpact, Niv-Mizzet had taken to warding his mind more carefully. Even with the guidance of the intrusive presence, no mind mage could extract any secrets from the dragon now, not without his noticing.

          But adding a secret . . . oh, yes.

          The intruder touched her temple, and when she pulled her finger away a blue glowing thought strand dangled from it, fragile as a spider's thread. She lowered her hand, letting the strand brush along the dragon's scaly skin. It fell from her finger and sank into Niv-Mizzet's head, merging with his thoughts. Just a very small addition, when all's said and done.

          Task accomplished, the intruder turned away. The innermost ring of magical traps was just in front of her, and the presence in her mind identified the one it wanted, and forced her to step forward.

          No! The Dimir mindmage struggled to fight back. You've done what you wanted. At least let me try to get out of here!

          Sorry, my dear. The presence took firmer hold of her mind. Your part isn't done yet.

          The presence unsheathed mental claws, and the young woman, in the depths of her own mind, screamed again. It flayed her memories, twisting, shifting, and destroying. Sculpting what it wanted.

          When it was satisfied, it nudged her forward another step. Her foot came down squarely in the middle of a stasis trap, and blue-white energy snapped into a taut sphere all around her, freezing her in place as firmly as if she'd been encased in ice. At the same time, magic pulsed a warning, both to Niv-Mizzet and the unfortunate guards down in the control room.

          Behind the intruder, the dragon opened one slitted eye.

          Perfect, the presence thought. It slipped away, leaving its host behind, trapped like a fly in a spider's web.

 
          That something had happened was obvious the moment Ral returned to Nivix, out of breath from his sprint across the district and wet through. He'd been too busy dodging traffic, once he'd returned to the busier neighborhoods, to keep up his rain-repelling spell. Even this late at night, the Tenth District bustled, the roads thick with carriages and pack animals while pedestrians spilled out of the taverns and theaters. Around Nivix, though, Izzet guards were out in force, cordoning off the tower's grounds. A squad of viashino scorchbringers prowled past, dragon-like humanoids in gleaming armor, pilot lights glowing on their low-slung flamethrowers.

          Ral avoided the main doors, heading for a more secure side entrance. Two uniformed guards there recognized him and cleared the way, and he stalked past them, rain dripping from his coat onto the scarred concrete floor. The Nivix was a maze, but one he'd worked in for decades, and it didn't take long to get to the control room on the second floor. There were more guards here, and through the open doors he could see a pair of chemisters with a horde of attendants tearing apart the spells and machinery. Before he could go inside and take charge, a goblin woman in the uniform of a guard captain stepped in his path.

          "Master Zarek," she said. "Ah . . . so glad you've returned. There's been an incident."

          "What kind of incident?" Ral growled.

          "We're . . . not sure, sir. Something happened up in the Aerie. The guildmaster has . . . not been forthcoming. Chamberlain Maree has ordered the tower locked down as a precaution, and we're checking all the defenses."

          Maree. Of course that jumped-up little goblin would take charge. I'll deal with her later. "I want a report on everything you find," Ral said. "In the meantime—"

          "In the meantime, sir," the captain interrupted, "the guildmaster has requested your presence. At once."

          "Ah." Ral paused for a moment, straightening his coat. "Send the reports to my office, then. I'll be in the Aerie."

          The captain nodded and rushed off, clearly glad to be out of his presence. Ral turned away from the arguing chemisters and walked toward the elevator, a little more slowly.

          While he was grateful not to have to climb the stairs to Niv-Mizzet's roost, it was hard not to escape a nervous thrill when he stepped into Nivix's elevator. It had been designed by Bogo Sternwhistle to hurl high-speed rocks at passing clouds, and only repurposed for transporting people up and down when the goblin inventor couldn't get it to go quickly enough. Today, though, Ral was lost in thought, and paid little heed to the jerk as the rockapult/vertical lift started upward.

          An incident in the Aerie? Did someone try to attack the guildmaster himself? That seemed more than a little mad, but assassins had targeted Niv-Mizzet before. A worm of fear turned in Ral's gut. He'd been away, which might bring suspicion in his direction; he'd served Niv-Mizzet loyally for decades, but the dragon was notoriously fickle when it came to his underlings. For a fleeting moment, he wished he'd stopped to charge his accumulator. Not that it would matter.

          The elevator reached the top floor with a quiet ding. Ral stepped out, glancing quickly around the Aerie. Nothing seemed immediately amiss. One pane of glass was missing from the great window, but there was none of the destruction he'd expect if Niv-Mizzet had fought off an attacker. So not assassination. What, then?

          The dragon himself was hunched over in the far corner, fussing with something Ral couldn't see. As always, Ral was amazed at how lightly and gracefully Niv-Mizzet moved, considering his size. His long, blue-fringed wings were tucked against his back, and the spined membranes around his head flexed, a sure sign that he was agitated. When he turned to Ral, long neck curving to face the Planeswalker, his huge paws made hardly a sound on the stone, like he was some enormous cat.

          "Ral." The dragon spoke in a soft whisper, but his words simultaneously echoed in Ral's mind in a deep, stentorian bass. He took another step forward, enormous eyes hooded. "Kind of you to join us."

          "Apologies, Guildmaster." Ral made a half-bow, the accumulator shifting on his back. His long, white-streaked hair, not standing on end for once, flopped against his cheek. "I was called away on urgent business."

          "What sort of urgent business?" the dragon snapped.

          Ral blinked in surprise. He'd expected Niv-Mizzet to be focused on whatever had happened here; the dragon was nothing if not self-centered. His mind raced. "I was investigating a potential threat."

          "Ral." Niv-Mizzet took another step closer, and Ral felt the hot wind of his breath. "The time for lies has passed."

          Damn. Ral had done a great deal of fast talking, over the years, to keep his secrets from the guildmaster. The existence of Planeswalkers, for a start, and the fact Ral was one, not to mention the true purpose of Project Lightning Bug—

          "Let me help you." For some reason, there was an edge of amusement in the dragon's voice. "You were meeting with an agent of Nicol Bolas."

          "I—" Ral froze. He knows. How much does he know? "Guildmaster . . ."

          "Ah, Ral. You really are very clever." Niv-Mizzet's enormous head swung close, jaws parted. "For a human. Tell me, do you know how long I have been guildmaster of the Izzet?"

          "Since the beginning," Ral managed. "You are the parun. Ten thousand years, at least."

          "Ten thousand years," the dragon agreed. "Can you even imagine that span of time? Ten thousand years watching this city and its people. Ten thousand years to contemplate the nature of the universe. And yet you presume me unaware of your little secrets." Niv-Mizzet's mental voice rose to a roar. "Do you think they call me the Firemind for nothing?"

          Ral took an involuntary step backward, bowing automatically. "No, Guildmaster. Of course not." He hesitated, then cautiously looked up. "How long have you known?"

          "That you are a Planeswalker? Since you first came here. The signs are not difficult to read, once you know the truth."

          "Then why pretend ignorance?"

          Niv-Mizzet gave a dry chuckle. "In ten thousand years, I have found no tactic more effective than knowing more than you let on. I had no reason to interrupt your little game. Until now." He ruffled his wings. "Who did you meet?"

          "Tezzeret," Ral said, deciding quickly that honesty was now the only way out. "He tried to convince me to serve Bolas, and then to kill me when I refused." He paused, then added, "I believe his intention may have been to make certain I was away from the tower."

          "Plans that serve more than one purpose are Bolas's hallmark." Niv-Mizzet raised a foreclaw, and a blue-white sphere of energy floated up from behind him. Inside was a young woman dressed all in black, frozen in place, her eyes wide with terror. "While you were away, we had a guest. One of Lazav's creatures."

          "Lazav." Ral grimaced. "The Dimir are working with Bolas?"

          "So it would seem. I have examined her mind." The dragon turned to stare at the spy, then made her float away with another lazy wave. "She was sent to extract certain information from me. Bolas knows my plan, at least in outline."

          "Tezzeret implied that Bolas is coming here, to Ravnica." Ral's head was still spinning with the idea that Niv-Mizzet knew all of this. "It could be a lie, of course."

          "He is coming. What do you think the Interlocus has been in preparation for?"

          Ral's breath caught. The Interlocus was Niv-Mizzet's mysterious personal project, which had consumed so much of the dragon's time and attention—to say nothing of guild resources—for months. He'd delegated more and more of the guild's day-to-day functioning to Ral. It had always rankled that, however much Niv-Mizzet seemed to trust him, he'd never explained the purpose of his plan.

          "Bolas is coming," the dragon repeated. "I have heard reports of the havoc he has wreaked on other planes, and I will not allow it happen here. He will come to Ravnica, and I will kill him.

          "Nicol Bolas is . . ." Ral hesitated again. "Very powerful, Guildmaster."

          "Your confidence is touching," Niv-Mizzet said dryly. "Rest assured, I will be prepared for him. But there is a problem which requires your attention."

          "A problem?"

          "The Guildpact." Niv-Mizzet settled back on his haunches with a yawn. "To defeat Bolas, I must become stronger. Much stronger. And the Guildpact will not allow it. It was created to prevent one guild from becoming much more powerful than the others, after all. To preserve the balance." The dragon sounded irritated. "To deal with this kind of threat is exactly why Azor created the position of the Living Guildpact."

          "Beleren?" Ral said. "But he—"
       
          "Is gone. And no one knows when or if he will return. Without him we are trapped." Niv-Mizzet's voice was a snarl. "Azor never anticipated a Planeswalker taking the position. It would have been better if it had remained in our control."

          Ral swallowed nervously. He'd been involved in that debacle, substituting himself for Niv-Mizzet's carefully designed artificial challenger for the Implicit Maze. He hadn't thought the dragon cared about that, but at this point he no longer wanted to assume anything.

          "There is a final failsafe," Niv-Mizzet went on. "The Guildpact can be altered."

          "Altered? Is that possible?"

          "With the agreement of all ten guild leaders." Another humorless chuckle. "You can see why it has never been done."

          It was certainly hard to imagine getting all ten of Ravnica's feuding guilds to agree on anything, much less changing the basic laws underlying their competition. "So what do you need me to do?"

          "Get them to agree, of course."

          "That's . . ." Ral shook his head. "I don't think that's possible, Guildmaster."

          "It is the task I have assigned you," Niv-Mizzet snapped. "You will perform it to the best of your ability, or I will find someone who can." His tone softened. "When the Interlocus is complete, I will no longer be master of the Izzet. I will be apart from the guilds, above them. Our guild will require a new guildmaster, for the first time in ten thousand years." The dragon's eyes narrowed. "Consider this a graduation exam, of sorts."

          "I . . ."

          Ral straightened up. Get a hold of yourself. Niv-Mizzet had shaken him, no doubt exactly as the dragon had intended. But what he offered  . . . It's what I've wanted since the beginning. A position commensurate with his talents. Guildmaster of the Izzet. He felt a universe of possibilities opening in front of him. And all I have to do is convince ten mortal enemies to grant one ancient dragon enough power to stop another.

          He cleared his throat.

          "Understood, Guildmaster. I will begin immediately."

          "Excellent." Niv-Mizzet sounded genuinely pleased. "I have some connections that will be of assistance. You'll receive their reports."

          "Thank you," Ral said. "What of the Dimir? If they're already working for Bolas --"

          "Leave the Dimir to me. If Lazav has thrown in his lot with Bolas, then we will simply need to replace him. No doubt one of his lieutenants will be unhappy with his guildmaster's choice of loyalty."

          "As you say." Ral bowed again. "With your permission, I'll go and get started."

          "One more thing."

          Ral straightened up as a thick roll of draft paper floated over to him from one of the dragon's work tables. He picked it out of the air and unrolled it, frowning. The sheets were blueprints, fabulously complex, but still somehow familiar.

          "What is this?" he said.

          "A backup plan," Niv-Mizzet said. "A crossplanar beacon, based on the design of your Project Lightning Bug."

          Recalling the lengths to which he'd gone to keep that project's true significance from the guildmaster, Ral winced. There was a hint of amusement in the dragon's voice.

          "When activated, it will make Ravnica shine in the sight of Planeswalkers throughout the Multiverse. How many will come, I cannot say, but it may be that they will gather in sufficient power to defeat Bolas, in the event my own efforts are insufficient."

          "Calling a horde of Planeswalkers whose intentions we don't know to Ravnica seems . . . extreme."

          "Indeed," Niv-Mizzet said. "But better to have the option and not need it than the other way around. See that it is constructed according to my specifications."

          "Of course, Guildmaster. I'll put our best chemisters on it."

          "You may go." Niv-Mizzet settled down, pillowing his head on his paws. "I look forward to hearing reports of your progress."

             
          In the elevators, Ral took a few moments to calm his breathing.

          Get the guilds to agree to change the Guildpact. It still seemed impossible, but half of Ral's life had been spent doing the impossible. You find the first step, and then you keep going. He grinned, and ran his fingers through his hair, a crackle of electricity restoring it to normal frizzy state.

          He could already see what the first step had to be. When he emerged from the elevator, he sent messengers racing in the direction of the Azorius Senate, bearing notes under the official Izzet League guild seal.

          After all, how do you get started arranging an impossible meeting? He grinned to himself. You start with the people who love meetings.

This story was sent by Penguin Random House Books to subscribers.  This is official magic story, posted here under the fan use policy by Wizads of the Coast, LLC.  All content is owned by authors or company, respectively, and re-posted here just for availability. 

The Gathering Storm - Chapter Three (Official Magic Story)

 
The Gathering Storm - by Django Wexler
Chapter Three
          The closer Ral got to New Prahv, the more he could feel his skin crawl.

          The Azorius had always been officious and overbearing, but something had changed. I've spent too much time locked in my workshop of late. The streets around the great citadel of the Senate were as neat and orderly as ever, but now the soldiers of Azorius' Lyev Column were everywhere, standing guard at the entrance to every important building and patrolling the street in their glossy white armor. Hussars trotted past, lances at the ready. In the skies overhead, for once free of rain, winged constructs circled lazily, staring down with multi-faceted, gem-like eyes.

          They're running scared. Ral smiled tightly. The military presence was supposed to be a show of strength, but to Ral it tasted more like weakness. They know there's nothing more useless then a senate nobody listens to.

          New Prahv itself was as impressive as ever, three titanic towers that dominated the Tenth District skyline arranged equidistant around a central courtyard, flanked by the domes and spires of lesser buildings. The borders of the enormous compound were marked by tall, spiked fences, and at the gate a dozen white-armored soldiers manned a checkpoint, processing a long queue of pedestrians. Ral ignored them and walked directly to the gate, where a blue-skinned vedalken sergeant glared at him through the narrow slit in his helmet.
      
          "All non-guildmembers must have their papers processed before entry," the sergeant said. "Please wait your turn."
      
          Ral gave the queue a contemptuous look. "I'm in a hurry."
      
          "No exceptions," the sergeant growled. Two more soldiers stepped forward to flank him. "Please don't cause trouble, citizen."
      
          Definitely running scared. Ral put on a haughty smile. "My name is Ral Zarek, personal representative of Guildmaster Niv-Mizzet. I'm here to see Supreme Judge Isperia on a matter of utmost importance."
      
          "No exceptions—" The sergeant paused as one of the other soldiers whispered urgently in his ear. His blue lips curled into a sour expression. "Very well. Wait here."
      
          "Not for long, I hope," Ral said.
      
          It was, in fact, nearly a quarter of an hour before the sergeant returned, with a captain in tow. The young man, in a uniform but unarmored, gave Ral a slight bow.
      
          "Welcome, Master Zarek. I am Captain Pytr Liosh. Come with me, please."
      
          Ral favored the sergeant with one last superior smile as he followed the captain through the checkpoint. Liosh led him rapidly across the central square, past the three great monoliths, and into the maze of subsidiary buildings that housed the administrative apparatus of the senate. Ral was struck by how different it was from the halls of Nivix—not just that the walls and floor were covered with cracks and scorch-marks, of course, but the silence. The floors were polished marble, with no carpets or hangings to muffle the echoes, and every footstep echoed like a thunderclap. Clerks shuffled past, heads down, not looking either at Ral or the guards who stood like ceramic statues at regular intervals. There was a steady stream of homunculi as well, small, wizened-looking creatures who performed menial administrative tasks, hurrying back and forth with their small arms piled high with scrolls.
      
          Captain Liosh stopped in front of a grand double door, inlaid with the Azorius guild crest in silver. From inside, Ral could hear the faint sound of voices raised in anger. The captain coughed.
      
          "The delegation from the Boros Legion has already arrived," he said. "I understand that the guildmaster will be a few moments longer. Please wait inside."
      
          He opened the door, bowing again. Beyond, Ral found an oval conference chamber, with a long, highly polished table down the center. One side of the table was lined with high-ranking Azorius functionaries, in the white robes of senators or military uniforms.
      
          On the other were more soldiers, but of a very different cut. Where the Azorius military was all chilly precision and gleaming ceramic armor, the Boros Legion delegation wore brushed steel, well-polished but with the nicks and scars that spoke of actual combat. There were five of them, ranging from two young captains up to an older minotaur woman wearing a lieutenant's insignia. She sat in silence, arms folded, while her subordinates engaged in a shouting match with the gaggle of politicians.
      
          Against the rear wall, watching, was an angel.
      
          Aurelia. Ral couldn't help but stare. He didn't know much about the angelic hierarchy that dominated the upper ranks of the Boros, but Aurelia had become guildmaster after she ousted Feather. She was a head taller than him, but gave an impression of delicate grace that belied her size. Her features were striking, androgynous and beautiful, and her bright crimson hair flowed down over her shoulder like a river of blood dripping across her well-worn armor. Her great wings were folded behind her. She surveyed the ongoing argument with a faintly amused expression, like a parent watching children in fierce debate.
      
          "If we are weak," one of the Boros lieutenants was saying, "it is your doing. The Legion and the Senate are intended to work together, for the good of Ravnica, but you have taken it upon yourselves to usurp our function."
      
          "Only because you refuse to perform it," a pot-bellied senator shot back. "If the Legion would enforce the laws—"
      
          "How are we supposed to enforce the laws when they change every day?" another soldier said. "The Senate has lost its grip."
      
          "The Legion has become a dangerous rogue element," snapped an Azorius vedalken.
      
          "Dangerous?" The minotaur woman leaned forward, silencing the others for a moment. One of her long horns gleamed dangerously, while the other had broken off, and was now capped by a silver stopper. "The Boros are dangerous only to those who would transgress against justice. Is that you, senator?"
      
          "Of course not," the vedalken shot back. "We are the law. How can we break it?"
      
          "Justice and the law are not the same." Aurelia's voice was surprisingly high and musical. "The Azorius would do well to remember that." She turned her glowing eyes on Ral. "Greetings, Master Zarek. We have been anxiously awaiting your arrival."
      
          "Send your complaints to the sergeant at the gates," Ral said. "Or whoever designed this maze of a building." He bowed toward Aurelia, and inclined his head to the Azorius side of the table. "Guildmaster Aurelia. Masters. Thank you for coming."
      
          "Zarek," the pot-bellied senator said. "Good. I, for one, have some questions for you. Who exactly is this threat you claim is nearly upon us?"
      
          "And what can you tell us about its capabilities?" the minotaur said. "How many men can it field, and with what equipment?"
      
          "I think," Aurelia said, "that it would be best to wait until Guildmaster Isperia and I have had a chance to discuss the matter."
      
          "I agree," Ral said. The last thing he wanted was to get bogged down trying to convince these squabbling subordinates of the depth of the problem. "Will she be ready for us soon?"
      
          "She is ready now," said a cold voice from the other end of the room. A door there had opened, and a tall, thin-limbed vedalken stood beside it. "The guildmaster requests that Master Zarek and Guildmaster Aurelia join her alone."
      
          "It could be a trap," the minotaur woman said at once. "Let her see us all together."
      
          "The honor of the Azorius would never allow such a thing," the senator said. "But I agree that we should all—"
      
          "The guildmaster has made her decision clear," the vedalken said.
      
          "I appreciate your concern," Aurelia said. "But I will be fine." The angel nodded to Ral. "Shall we?"

          The next room was much larger, out of necessity.

          Isperia, Supreme Judge of the Azorius Senate, was a sphinx. Her long, leonine body was bigger than a cart, made even bulkier by broad, feathered wings. Her enormous forepaws were folded in front of her. Her face and head looked more human, framed by long purple hair, her features as famously inscrutable as all her kind.
          One chair stood beside her, and two more were set up opposite. Ral, already feeling at something of a disadvantage in conversation with this enormous creature, chose to stand, and Aurelia did likewise. The vedalken took the other chair, settling in with precise movements and folding his hands in front of him.
          "Welcome," Isperia said. Her deep voice had a trace of a lion's roar in the bottom registers. "Aurelia. It has been too long."

          "It has," the angel said. "I regret the recent . . . tension between our guilds."

          "And I don't believe we have met, Master Zarek," the sphinx went on. "I am, of course, well-acquainted with your master."

          "The Firemind sends his greetings," Ral said. He glanced at the vedalken, curiously.

          "Ah, yes." Isperia nodded in his direction. "This is Grand Arbiter Dovin Baan. He is my second, and may have some expertise in the matter before us."

          "Greetings," Baan said, his blue features emotionless.

          "Your master called this meeting, Zarek," Aurelia said. "I must say when I received his message, it seemed far-fetched. A dragon from another world? I've always dismissed such myths." She smiled.

          "It would explain much about Azor. And the Firemind must never be discounted entirely," Isperia said. "At the same time, we have grown used to ignoring his . . . flights of fancy. However." She glanced at Dovin, who cleared his throat.

          "Nicol Bolas is quite real," the vedalken said. "I crossed path with him, or his agents, on my home plane of Kaladesh. My subsequent investigations led me here, where I believe he will make his next move."

          "You claim to be from another world, then?" Aurelia said.

          "Yes," Baan said. "I am a Planeswalker."

          Ral cleared his throat. "I realize the idea seems absurd at first," he said. "But I can give you my personal assurance that such people exist."

          It felt strange to say it so baldly. Not long ago, Ral had been working desperately to prevent the secret of Planeswalkers and other worlds from becoming widely known. He'd assumed that if those without the Spark became aware of the strangers in their midst, the paranoid reaction would be dangerous for all of them. Every Planeswalker he'd met over the years had the same policy, an unwritten rule that kept their abilities hidden from most of the Multiverse.

          Now he was breaking that taboo, to two of the most powerful and influential creatures in Ravnica. But there's no way around it. He'd never convince anyone that Nicol Bolas was a threat if he couldn't explain where the dragon was coming from.

          "I have received documentation from Niv-Mizzet on the subject," Aurelia said. "I assume you have as will?"

          Isperia nodded. "I am prepared to accept his word, for the moment."

          "Let us proceed on that assumption." Aurelia turned back to Ral. "This Nicol Bolas is coming to Ravnica, then, from parts unknown. He is powerful?"

          "Significantly more powerful than my master," Ral said. "At present."

          "And yet that is hardly an insurmountable obstacle," Aurelia said. "Forgive me for being blunt, but if it came to a confrontation, I would certainly hazard the combined might of the Legion against Niv-Mizzet alone. I cannot see why this Bolas would be any different."

          "I agree," Isperia said. "One dragon is much like another."

          "Bolas won't be alone," Ral said. "He has allies."

          "Who?" Aurelia said. "How many? In what strength?"

          "At least some Ravnicans," Ral said. "We know that Lazav and the Dimir are working with him."

          "Hardly unexpected," Isperia said. "You have no other information?"

          "I have my personal experience," Ral said. "Bolas is no simple threat. What he wants, he usually gets."

          "I concur," Baan said, his tone still neutral. "If he is coming to Ravnica, it is because he believes himself strong enough to rule."

          "For the moment," Isperia said, "let us move on. What is Niv-Mizzet's proposal?"

          "He wants to amend the Guildpact," Ral said. "To make himself into a force capable of defeating Bolas. He pledges to leave the Izzet behind, and to take no further part in the conflicts of the guilds."

          "A lofty appeal," Aurelia said. "But not one I have a great deal of confidence in."

          "Who would lead the Izzet afterward?" Isperia said.

          Ral gave a slight bow. "I would."

          The sphinx regarded him curiously. "And do you believe the Firemind would remain neutral, as he claims?"

          "I do." Ral didn't add that it was damned hard to get the dragon to care about anything now if it didn't bear directly on his studies. "I think this is our best chance."

          There was a long pause.

          "I am not convinced," Aurelia said slowly, "that this Bolas is as dire a threat as you claim. However . . ."

          She looked at Isperia, and the sphinx nodded slowly.

          "There is a sickness in the guilds," the angel said. "The Living Guildpact was intended to keep them in check, but Jace Beleren is gone. I suppose he is also one of these Planeswalkers?"

          "Yes," Ral said. "Niv-Mizzet believes he may be dead."

          "He was on Kaladesh," Baan said mildly. "Where he went from there, I do not know."

          He knows Beleren? Ral shot the vedalken a sharp look, and resolved to question him further later.

          "In any event," Isperia went on. "The Living Guildpact is not performing his function. It may be that further amendments are required." The sphinx's huge body shifted in a shrug. "At the very least, it will do no harm to assemble a guild summit."

          "Getting agreement will not be easy," Aurelia said. "The Gruul will object on principle, and the Orzhov will consider only their own private advantage. As for Dimir, who knows?

          "Niv-Mizzet has his own plans in motion," Ral said, with a lot more confidence then he truly felt. If he can bring the Gruul to the table, he truly deserves to be called the Firemind. "But you agree, in principle?"

          The angel nodded. "Yes. The present situation cannot go on, and this threat must be addressed. The Boros Legion will negotiate in good faith."

          "We will handle the particulars," Isperia said. "But convincing the other guilds to attend at all will still be your responsibility, Master Zarek. I hope you are equal to it."

          "Leave it to me," Ral said, forcing a grin.
 

 
          In spite of his misgivings, Ral had to admit as he left New Prahv that things were looking, if not actually up, then at least less than completely hopeless. For all that the other guilds protested against the authority of the Azorius, the Senate commanded a vestige of respect. Isperia's endorsement went a long way toward making this look less like an Izzet power play, especially with Aurelia and the Boros also on board.

          Gruul is still going to be a problem, though. Not only were the chaotic tribes constitutionally opposed to anything like cooperation with the other guilds, their rivalry with Boros ran deep. And Dimir is already against us. I hope the Niv-Mizzet really does have something up his sleeve.

          He walked out through the market square that fronted New Prahv, outside the Azorius checkpoints but still well within their jurisdiction. It was bustling with the break in the rain, thick with sentient creatures of a dozen different races and a hundred varieties of beasts of burden. Above the heads of the humanoids, faeries flitted back and forth on colorful trails of magic, mixed with the buzz of insects and the whirr of small constructs. Stalls around the edges of the square sold food and drink: spitted potatoes, fried mushrooms in fantastic varieties from the depths of the undercity, roasted meat of dubious origin, and wine that might or might not have come anywhere near a grape.

          "Master Zarek?" a small voice said, while Ral was contemplating a haunch of something green and scaly. He looked around, frowning, and then glanced down to find a small elven girl tugging at his sleeve.

          "I don't want to buy anything," he growled.

          "Someone wants to talk to you," the girl said, looking shyly at the cobblestones. "Says it's important."

          "I don't—"

          "Says it's about bowl-uhs. Dunno what that means."

          Ral froze. His eyes searched the market.

          "Where did he want me to go?" he said.

          "Was a lady," the girl said. "Sit on the bench and wait, she said."

          Before he could stop her, the elf slipped away, darting nimbly through the crowd. In the center of the square were a set of stone benches ranged around a central fountain, in which a statue of Azor was surrounding by water-spouting nymphs. Many of them were occupied, but Ral couldn't see anyone who seemed threatening.

          Even Tezzeret would hesitate before trying something this publicly. Not only was the square full of shoppers and merchants, but Azorius guards were much in evidence, patrolling in small groups or standing at intervals in their glossy white armor. If it's a trap, it's a subtle one.

          He made his way over to the bench, found a clear spot, and sat down. It gave him a good view of half the square, but the back of his neck itched, wary of what might be hiding out of his line of vision. He felt half-naked without his accumulator and mizzium bracers, left behind out of respect for his Azorius hosts. When he reached out with his power, only a few crackles of lightning in the brooding clouds overhead were close enough to tap.

          Across the way, a troop of Rakdos puppeteers were performing, to the delight of a crowd of watching children. Under the stern eye of the Azorius guards, they settled for biting satire instead of setting things on fire, much to the disappointment of their audience. One of the puppets had a shock of wild hair with a white streak down the center. I wonder what they're saying about me now.

          "Zarek," said a woman's voice behind him. "Don't look around."

          Ral put his chin in his hands, pretending to be absorbed in the puppet show. "And you are?" he murmured.

          "Lavinia," the woman said. "Formerly of the Azorius."

          Lavinia. He knew her by reputation. She had been one of the Senate's most notorious investigators, dogged in her pursuit of anything that looked like wrongdoing or corruption, prior to working with Beleren as Steward of the Guildpact. Her resignation from the guild had caused a minor scandal, though it had been quickly swallowed up by all the other strange news of late.

          "I have an office, you know," Ral said. "You're always welcome to make an appointment."

          "They're watching you."

          "A lot of people are watching me. It comes with the territory."

          "Don't play dumb. You know who I mean."

          "Bolas." Ral grimaced. "Care to tell me how you know that name?"

          "I still have my sources inside the Senate," Lavinia said. "That place leaks like a sieve. By tomorrow morning, everyone in the district will know what you and the sphinx are up to."

          Ral shrugged. "We were planning to announce it in any event. So what's your angle? I thought you left the guild."

          "I left the guild," Lavinia grated, "because I started pulling on a thread, and they didn't like what I found."

          "What thread would that be?"

          "There are agents of a foreign power in the Tenth District," Lavinia said. "I've been tracking them for months, intercepting their communications, trying to understand their purpose and who they work for. Now I have the answer to at least one of those questions."

          "You think they work for Bolas."

          "It's the only thing that makes sense."

          "So why are you telling me about it?"

          "Because you're far too trusting."

          Ral laughed. "I like to think I'm appropriately paranoid."

          "Listen," Lavinia said, lowering her voice. "This is an organized network, spread through all the guilds. I don't know what their goal is, not yet, but if you're working against Bolas, they're going to try to stop you. And I don't know how many more agents there are that I haven't identified. You can't trust anyone."

          "Except you, I assume."

          "You'd be a fool if you did."
       
          "What do you want, Lavinia?"
          "I want to help you. Whatever Bolas has planned, it's not going to be good for Ravnica. But you have to be careful."

          "I'm second in command of a guild of mad geniuses," Ral said. "I haven't gotten there by being careless."

          "Even if you manage to bring the guilds together, it's likely that Bolas will have already sunk his claws into them." Lavinia sighed. "I hope you know what you're doing, I really do."

          "Knowing who is already on his side would be nice, if you really want to be helpful."

          "I'll do what I can," Lavinia said. "I don't want to spook them, not yet. I'll contact you again when I have something."

          "Thanks." Ral waited for a response, and when none came he looked over his shoulder. The bench behind him was empty.

          Well. That was . . . odd.
 

 
          Lavinia's not wrong, Ral thought as he walked across the Tenth District. A little paranoid, maybe, but not wrong. Bolas was a born schemer and knew better then to put all his bets on one throw of the dice. If he has one agent among the guilds, he'll have many. Somehow, they'd have to figure out who was on the dragon's payroll before the guild summit convened.

          He did his best to put it out of his mind, at least for the moment. As always, coming here brought a little surge of guilt—not that he was doing anything wrong, but that he was stealing time that might have been put to use at Nivix, studying reports or checking up on his projects. As always, Ral assured himself that everything was on track. It will take time for Isperia to send her messages and receive replies. We won't have any new information until morning, at the earliest. The brief respite from the autumn rains had ended, and Ral put up his deflection spell and kept his head down as the gutters once again gurgled and splashed.

          The apartment was in the Dogsrun neighborhood, a genteel rectangle of quiet streets tucked away from the major thoroughfares. It was close enough to Nivix for convenience, but far enough that it wasn't part of Izzet territory. Renting it had been an odd experience—it had been a long time since Ral had any cause for handling money, and he'd been surprised to discover that he was, if not rich, at least comfortably well off. He'd spent decades living in the Izzet laboratories, while the guild's bean-counters had dutifully credited his account with regular contributions. Apparently Niv-Mizzet was generous to his most successful underlings. No wonder Chamberlain Maree is so eager to maintain her position.

          Belatedly realizing he was on the hook for dinner, he stopped in at a viashino eatery on the way there. The old lizard-woman behind the counter grinned to see him, showing a mouthful of sharp teeth, and barked a laugh at his usual request to "hit him with her best shot." Two curries in waxed paper packages secured, he made his way up the streets of Dogsrun, past brick-faced apartment buildings with window-box gardens and wrought-iron fences. His key let him into one, safely anonymous in the center of a row, and he climbed three flights of stairs.

          He was running late. No sooner had he shrugged out of his coat and put the food on the table then there was the sound of another key in the lock. Ral opened the door and raised an eyebrow at the sight of Tomik Vrona, his hair soaked through and his glasses splattered with raindrops.

          "You look like a wet rat," Ral said.

          "I feel like a wet rat," Tomik said. "Left my coat at the cathedral. I thought I could make it here before the skies opened up again." He pulled off his glasses and wiped them on his shirt, which didn't actually help much. "This one your fault, too?"

          "You cause one thunderstorm, and they never let you hear the end of it," Ral said. "I brought curry."

          "Hmm. I suppose I can forgive you, then."

          Tomik stepped forward, and Ral leaned in and kissed him thoroughly. Finally Tomik broke away, shoved past Ral in spite of his mock complaints, and headed straight for the table.

          "I see where your priorities are," Ral said.

          "Damned right," Tomik said, sitting down. "I missed lunch."

          "I think the brown one is yours."

          "I can tell by the fact that breathing near it doesn't sear my nasal passages," Tomik said. "Honestly, I don't understand how you can eat that stuff."

          "Spend half a year stuck on campaign with a bunch of scorchbringers, and you'll learn." The viashino had a habit of seasoning their food with whatever spice, vegetable, or fungus would burn hottest. Ral's curry was an angry crimson, full of chunks of seared meat like bloody icebergs. He speared one, savoring the heat of it.

          Tomik, watching, rolled his eyes and attacked his considerably milder curry. For a while they ate in comfortable silence, but it slowly transitioned into uncomfortable silence. Ral polished off his food and found Tomik only halfway through his, staring absently down into the depths of his curry as though it contained some dangerous secret.

          "Something wrong?" Ral said, after some hesitation.

          "Oh." Tomik laid down his fork and looked up. "You know. Guild business."

          "Guild business." They said it almost simultaneously, and Tomik smiled a little.

          It was a joke, sort of. He and Tomik had met when the young secretary was pursuing Teysa Karlov's agenda of greater ties between the Orzhov and the other guilds. Tomik's quick mind (and the way he fiddled with his glasses when he was flustered) had intrigued Ral, and he had taken the unusual step of suggesting they meet privately once the negotiations had concluded. After that, one thing had somehow led to another.

          But it was clear to both of them that this—whatever this was, and frankly Ral didn't want to think too hard about that—was only going to work if they kept their respective positions out of it. Ral had rented the apartment to have a private place to meet while keeping a low profile. It wasn't that Izzet officials didn't have lovers or partners, of course. Just that if it became widely known that the second-in-command of the Izzet was spending time with the personal secretary of the Karlov heir apparent, questions would be asked on Ral's side, and he assumed the same was true of Tomik.

          Given how much time and attention each of them committed to their guilds, it was a hard line to walk. Sometimes, Ral wondered if he was fooling himself if he thought this was more than a brief interlude, like a dozen others that had come and gone over the years. But Tomik . . .

          He shook his head. Not the time. Worrying about it wasn't going to help.

          "Guild business," he said again, and sighed. "I know the feeling, believe me."

          Tomik looked as though he wanted to say something, but he only bit his lip and shook his head. Ral yawned, ostentatiously, and got up from the table.

          "I, for one, have had enough of guild business for the day." He gave Tomik a cocky grin. "What about you?"

          Tomik grinned back.
 

 
          In the broad, soft bed, with Tomik curled against his back like a comfortable cat, Ral Zarek dreamed. Or remembered.
 

 
          In his dream, he was seventeen again.

          The Tenth District, with its guildhalls and great markets, was the center of Ravnica, if a city that stretched on forever could really be said to have a center. By the same token, Tovrna was the outskirts, a backwater in the endless city. Once a power in its own right, it had slipped into somnolence over the centuries, ruled by a handful of petty oligarch families who owned the vast factory rows where the rest of the population labored. The downtown of Tovrna was a few blocks of elegant apartments and townhouses, surrounded by a thin ring of dilapidated buildings for the servants, scribes, and other hangers-on.

          Beyond that were the crumbling tenements of the poor, and the long, low sheds of the factories themselves, powered by superheated gas rising from underground caverns. The machines inside whirred day and night, turning thread into cloth, pig iron into neat rods, or creating any one of a hundred other products Tovrna exported to the wealthier districts. It would have been easier and safer to use magic, of course, but mages were expensive. Tenement dwellers with nothing to lose were cheap, and easy to replace.

          Ral's mother had been one such, working in a cloth factory until she'd been mangled in an accident when Ral was eleven. She'd lived a cripple for another two years, never really healing, with Ral doing everything he could to help her. After she'd finally died, it had only taken a few months for the thirteen-year-old to abandon his drunken lout of a father and strike out on his own.

          Four years later, he'd managed a precarious existence. A place to live, a job of sorts. And, to his great surprise, love.       
          "You're off?" Elias said, spying Ral changing through the open bedroom door.

          Ral nodded, pulling on a shirt that was slightly less threadbare than the rest and examining himself in the cracked mirror propped against the pockmarked plaster wall. It'll do, he decided, if I keep my coat on. It's not like the count ever pays much attention to me anyway. His client had a great-grandfather in the Orzhov and pretensions to nobility.

          Their apartment was in that precarious ring, too far from the center of the district to be respectable, but not quite part of the slum. It had once been fashionable, with high ceilings and faded gilt wallpaper in the hall, but most of the furnishings had long ago been stripped. Ral and Elias had replaced them with their own eclectic collection, mostly scavenged from oligarch castoffs. A few rickety shelves held small paintings and sculptures, courtesy of Elias's bohemian friends, who were always gifting one another with their latest artistic efforts. Privately, Ral thought that most of these looked like little more than lumpy trolls or blots of spilled paint, but his lover seemed to adore them, so he held his tongue.

          Elias himself was at work in the main room, lying on his stomach in front of their ratty old sofa, pencil in hand. A stack of the clean white paper—one of the few indulgences Ral's meager earnings would stretch to—sat in front of him, the top sheet bearing a single word repeatedly crossed out.

          "Tough morning?" Ral said.

          Elias rolled over and threw one arm across his forehead with a theatrical sigh. Ral laughed, and Elias stuck out his tongue. He was a year older than Ral, but smaller and slighter, with dark brown skin and long hair dyed a deep green in the imitation of elven fashion, a look that was apparently the done thing at the moment.

          "I'll have you know that I'm in the midst of wrestling my muse to the ground," Elias said. He lay back and carefully balanced the pencil on his nose, staring at the ceiling. "Aaaaany minute now. I'll be churning out the pages."

          "Well." Ral wanted to jump on him, knock the pencil away and kiss the smirk off his face. But I can't be late, not after last time. "I won't distract you, then."

          "No? Not even for a little while?"

          Ral laughed, waved, and walked out the door.

          It was high summer, and the sun baked the mud between the cobblestones into a fine dust that coated everything. Ral skirted the center of the district, sticking to back streets without much carriage traffic, until he came to the count's townhouse. It was enormous, at least four stories high, and had long ago swallowed the buildings behind it to extend further back from the streets. That was where the terraced gardens were, four levels of riotous green, producing fruits and herbs for the count's table.

          Ral bypassed the front doors and went around the side to the tradesman's entrance—he'd only made that mistake once. A sour-faced butler greeted him when he rapped at the door. His expression as he looked over Ral's weather-beaten coat and patched trousers could have curdled milk.

          "Ah," he said. "The rain mage."

          Rain mage, rain mage. The man's voice echoed in Ral's head, taunting him. He swallowed a knot in his throat and nodded.

          "You'll have to wait," the butler said. "The master is entertaining in the garden now."

          "He told me this morning would be all right," Ral said. "I have appointments—"

          "The count has changed his plans," the butler said, slowly and carefully as if speaking to an idiot. "You will have to wait."

          And so Ral ended up cooling his heels for the better part of an hour in the kitchen, while the servants gave him curious looks and the life of the great house went on around him. When a maid finally summoned him to the gardens, he got a brief glimpse of the count and his guests leaving through the main door, like a herd of brilliant peacocks compared to the drab attire of the servants.

          They'd left the gardens a mess, plants trampled and discarded plates and cutlery everywhere. That, at least, wasn't Ral's problem. He sat in the garden's highest tier, cross-legged, and focused.

          Rain mage. They'd hung that name on him in the streets when he was a boy, shouted it at him in mockery. He had a talent for magecraft, he'd discovered, but not for fire or mind magic or healing or anything truly impressive. Just . . . rain. What can you do with rain?

          Overhead, there was a tiny crash of thunder, and then heavy drops began to land on the leaves of the garden. The parched, thirsty earth drank in the water, which curved politely around Ral himself.

          This is what you could do with rain. The trick wasn't calling the rain, something Ral had been able to do when he was ten. The trick was getting it to rain here but not anywhere else; the count and his neighbors would not be pleased if he soaked their party guests. It had taken Ral years to learn that kind of control, not that it had earned him much respect.

          Each tier had to be watered in turn, so it was well after noon before Ral was finished. He accepted the lunch the butler had, with bad grace, offered him, plain bread and leftover stew, and the small bag of zinos that had come along with it. Enough to pay the rent and keep himself and Elias fed for another few days, until the next job came along. Until Elias finally found an audience for his poetry, and made good on all his promises. Just a little longer.

          He'd just emerged from the house, shrugging into his coat, when he heard the call.

          "Hey, rain mage!"

          Ral looked up, and swore, very quietly.

          Gunther was the count's oldest son, Ral's age, though you wouldn't know it under the layers of silk and cosmetics. Ral thought it made him look like a performer at the circus, but Gunther clearly thought himself the height of fashion, and his entourage seemed to agree, aping the boy's overdressed style. There were half a dozen of them, young men from respectable families, and one slightly older, slightly shabbier-looking fellow with the look of a hired hand. They blocked the way back onto the street.

          Ral kept his head down as he walked toward them.

          "Rain mage!" Gunther said. "I'm talking to you."

          There was nothing to do but answer, if he didn't want to actually walk over the boy. Ral sighed and looked up.

          "Yes?"

          "What are you going to do," Gunther said, "about my hat?"

          His hat was large, green, and fringed with silk. As he tipped it toward Ral, a wet streak down one side was visible.

          "It's absolutely ruined," Gunther said.

          "I'm sorry to hear that," Ral said. "But I was only doing as your father instructed."

          And I'm sure the garden was empty. Gunther had to have noticed the rainstorm and gone into it on purpose.

          "My father did not instruct you to butcher my wardrobe!" Gunther said. "Would you like to come with me and ask him about it?"

          "No," Ral said tightly. "I'm sorry."

          "You're simply going to have to pay for it." Gunther stepped forward. "Let's see your purse."

          The entourage tittered, except for the hired hand. Ral fists clenched.

          "No," he said quietly. "I won't."

          "Excuse me?" Gunther bent forward. "You will. Or else you'll be disciplined."

          "I won't," Ral said again.

          Gunther's fist hit him in the gut, hard and fast. Given the way he looked, it seemed unfair that Gunther could throw a decent punch, but his father had apparently not skimped on his physical training, and there were muscles under the frippery. Ral doubled over, then straightened up slowly.

          "Now there's a dangerous look," Gunther said. "What are you going to do, rain mage? Moisten me?"

          "No," Ral grated. "Sir. I'd just like to go."

          "Varo," Gunther said airily. "Show this fellow what a real mage can do."

          The hired hand stepped forward. He caught Ral's eye, and shrugged.

          "Sorry, kid."

          Ral had time to throw up his hands before Varo made a complicated gesture, and a wave of raw force picked Ral up and tossed him against the side of the alley. The air went out of him in a rush, and he felt his nose break with a crunch and a spike of pain. A moment later he was lying on his back, spitting blood, while Gunther and his friends laughed.

          "Very well done, Varo," Gunther said.

          "Yessir."

          "I think that's vengeance for my hat taken," the boy announced. "Who's for darts?"
 


          An indeterminate amount of time passed. Ral had to work just to breath, and he could feel his nose swelling. He closed his eyes to slits against the sun.

          A shape swam into view. A man, with his hand extended.

          "Do you need help, boy?" The voice sounded friendly, amused.

          Ral hesitated only a moment before taking the hand. A strong grip returned him to his feet. He blinked, eyes watering, and then winced as the stranger's fingers pressed against his face.

          "That's a bad break," the man said. "I can do something about it, if you'd like."

          "What'll it cost me?" Ral said, his voice blocked and nasal.

          "Let's say . . . a moment of your time. I'd like it if you joined me for a cup of coffee."

          Ral gave a cautious nod. The man pressed two fingers carefully against his broken nose, and Ral felt the weird sensation of flesh twisting against itself as it straightened. Healing magic tingled gently, then faded.

          "Here." The man handed him a handkerchief. "You might want to clean yourself up a bit. You look like you've been in the wars."

          "Thank you," Ral said, relieved to breathe easily. He mopped at the blood on his face. "I'm not sure a cup of coffee is enough to repay you."

          "Well." Now that Ral could see him clearly, the stranger was a tall, handsome older man, with his graying hair tied back in a queue. He was immaculately dressed, though in a style that Ral found vaguely foreign. "Perhaps you could further oblige me by considering an offer. I think that you show promise."

          "What, at getting my teeth kicked in?"

          "I admit I have been watching you." The stranger cocked his head. "Am I correct that you might be amenable to additional employment?"

          Ral nodded.

          "And further, that you would not mind performing tasks that are counter to the interests of the highest echelons of society? Such as, for example, the count and his charming son."

          Ral, once he'd followed the circumlocutions of the man's speech, found himself laughing.

          "No," he said. "I wouldn't mind that at all."

          "Excellent," the stranger said. "Then we have much to discuss."

          He extended a hand, and Ral shook it.

          "Ral Zarek," Ral said.

          "Bolas," the stranger said. He grinned, his smile showing very white, slightly pointed teeth. "Nicol Bolas."


***
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