Chapter 36: Through the Gatehouse
T closed the item creation primer and looked up, just in time to see a group of caravan guards returning from the city gates, which were now only a few hundred yards away.
Adam was in the group, and while the others moved on to the wagons further back, Adam paused to speak to Den, turning his horse to ride alongside their wagon.
T moved closer, and Adam smiled before speaking loudly enough to include her. Were going to have to surrender to an inspection.
Den groaned. Why? That is not the standard, Guardsman. Youre dying my delivery of goods.
T blinked in surprise. Shed never heard Den take that tone with anyone. Additionally, it conveyed to her that Adam was somehow subordinate to Den. <em>WaitDen always chose the campsites. He directed our paths of travel</em>
She found herself dumbstruck. <em>Den is in charge of the caravan. He just doesnt bother with minutia.</em>
She remembered the Mages looking her way when deciding how to change their path on the first day.<em> No, not my way. They were checking if Den was going toment.</em>
That actually made a lot of sense.
She returned her mind to the conversation in time to hear Adams calm, if deferring, response.
I understand, First Driver, but it seems that a particrly mischievous magical entity attempted to breach the city in thest week, by disguising itself as a caravan.
Den seemed taken aback at that, as he took a moment to respond. It disguised itself as a caravan wagon?
Adam shook his head. No, as an entire caravan. Wagons, oxen, drivers, even outriders.
Somany working together.
Again, Adam shook his head. Apparently, the Prime of this citys defenses verified it for herself. It was one entity.
Huh Den scratched his head. Well, I suppose that would make them a bit jumpy He grunted. Fine, fine. Whats the process?
Each wagon will need to stop within the gatehouse for a minute, while two Mages sweep it for deviation. Everyone not on a wagon will be separately inspected. It is encouraged that anyone who can, should go through the personal inspection, rather than being included in the general wagon scan.
T barked augh. Ill pass, thank you.
Den nced back at her and smiled. Youre wee to stay with the wagon, Mistress.
Adam opened his mouth, likely to object, then seemed to think better of it, shrugging instead. They didnt mandate it. Youre lead wagon, so just stop within the gatehouse.
Den sighed. So, if were at all suspect, they can drop the portcullis on both sides, locking us in.
It is what it is, First Driver.
And it will be as it will be.
Adam grinned, bowed slightly to Den, then T, and wheeled his horse around to carry the information further back.
Den eyed T. You ever heard of something like that, Mistress? An entity taking multiple separate forms?
She shook her head, then paused. Well, Im still ratherinexperienced, but I believe it is possible that such could be faked, if each form were linked somehow that wasnt easily noticed Shadows? Invisible tendrils? She shrugged. Just a shot in the dark, though. As she considered she smiled slightly. Expect them to drop the portcullis.
He looked at her in rm. Theyd only do that to trap us.
Or, to put iron between us and the rest of the caravan.
He looked confused.
She sighed. Iron can interfere with most types of magic. If we are of one being with the rest of the caravan, dropping iron between us could sever that connection, revealing a fake.
Could?
Im just guessing, but I thought Id let you know, so you dont panic if the irones down.
He still looked nervous, as they approached the gatehouse, but he didnt waver.
The gatehouse was a massive monument of strength and power. It had been crafted with skill and had been maintained with care. It didnt look like it had survived more than three hundred years. As she considered it, T realized that it had probably been built when this became the outer wall. <em>More efficient than maintaining gatehouses for every circle for the full life of the city, I suppose.</em>
The archway was wide enough for two of Dens wagons to pass side by side, reminding her of the pass theyd just gone through. As they entered the first arch, the wagon sliding into the building''s shadowed interior, T looked up at the thick iron portcullis, held ready to descend.
Each iron strip in the basket weave was close to an inch thick and the bottoms were wedged into spikes and des. They werent razor sharp, but with what must be at least two tons of iron behind it, they didnt need to be.
Den was eyeing the inside of the gatehouse as he slowed the oxen to a stop.
There were arrow slits to either side, and murder holes above. They both knew that magically facilitated death could be poured out upon them in apocalyptic quantities through those openings, and likely through the solid stone of the walls, themselves.
The oxen came to a stop in very nearly the exact center of the darkened interior. Den had not allowed his trepidation to hamper his performance.
The wagon behind theirs had stopped just outside the gatehouse and was awaiting instruction. T could clearly hear a guard inside the second level of the gate, shouting down to the secondary wagon, but before she could focus in on that conversation, she felt magical senses sweep over them. There was a brief hesitation, then the portcullises dropped.
T saw them begin to fall, and quickly sped her hands over Dens ears, shielding them from the deafening racket.
The oxen were not so lucky, and Den had to fight them back into stillness after the sudden noise.
T, for her part, had trusted in the noise suppression inscriptions around her ears, and they had not failed her.
Any noise which came close to her ears was scaled down and suppressed until it was no longer of a harmful level. <em>Thank you, again, Holly.</em>
Rust me to g. Den nced at T, even as her hands moved away. Thank you. I couldnt let go of the reins, and that was <em>loud.</em>
She smiled back. Happy to help.
One of the murder holes opened, almost directly above them, and a Mage looked out.
T focused on him, and instantly could see him in his entirety, though only with her mage-sight. <em>Material Creator. He specializes in water? No</em> She looked closer. It wasnt ice. <em>Acid? There are Mages who specialize in the creation of incredibly caustic acid?</em> She did <em>not</em> like the idea of that. Her iron salve would do nothing against acid created above and dropped on her head, and her protective inscriptions might be overwhelmed by a constant acid burn. She had no way to negate it, and that made her quite unhappy.
She met the mans gaze, knowing his mage-sight was active, and knowing that she would look quite odd to him. Well?
He flinched back just slightly. What are you?
Im a <em>very</em> cranky Mage, whom you are keeping from her destination.
How are you doing that? Its not like an Archons veil at all He gestured through the hole, vaguely in her direction. Den nced her way, cocking an eyebrow.
How do I exist? How am I standing? How am I talking? You really need to be more specific. <em>Really, T? Antagonizing the person who can kill you?</em>
How are you invisible to my mage-sight, except your eyesand palms?
Do Mages not have secrets in this city? Were clearly human, and you are dying this shipment from entering. On what grounds are you dying?
The man narrowed his eyes. Based on the fact that an unknown humanoid entity is on the lead wagon.
Youre joking.
A voice drifted from behind the man. Hes not.
T followed the second voice with her eyes and her mage-sight showed her another Mage, waiting out of normal sight. <em>Material Creator, again</em> She couldnt figure out what he focused on, though. It was someplex bio-chemical, which was definitely not acid, but<em>Venom? Poison?</em> Probably both. <em>Great. Yet another Mage whom I couldnt easily survive.</em> She frowned. Those were incredibly violent specialties, with virtually no use outside of overwhelmingly bringing death.
<em>Well, mister acid could be on garbage disposal, or some such</em>
Sowhat now?
You tell me what you are.
I already have.
If you were a human Mage, your spell-lines would be glowing like the sun to my mage-sight. They just look like someone drew on you.
Peeking is rude, without permission.
Then grant permission.
I cant; Im passively defended from mage-sight.
That truly seemed to stump the acid Mage. The sound of a shifting chair came from above and the second voice murmured to the first, though loud enough for T to catch it. Is the guy human?
Well, yes.
And are the big things oxen?
Yes.
And the wagon?
Checks out.
So?
She still doesnt look right.
Rude! T called out. The two men, above, stopped talking, and Den gave her an aghast look.
Mistress T? What are you doing? His voice came out as a harsh whisper.
The acid Mages face reappeared. So, superhuman hearing, eh? Not really giving credence to your im.
T rubbed one hand across her face in frustrated irritation. This is going nowhere. Listen to your friend, and let us through. If Im not human, the citys defenses will fry me anyways, right? She tilted her head to the side, showing her neck, free of any cor.
Again, poison man spoke quietly to acid. She has a point.
Shut up, she can probably still hear you. She might have a cor! Or something simr... He sounded quite irritated.
And a reasonable sounding gentleman he is, T interjected. <em>You just cant shut up, can you</em>
There was a long pause as another person, non-Mage, came in to demand an exnation for the hold-up. Acid argued with the man, who turned out to be the gatehousemander, but poison didnt back him up. So, it ended with acid beingmanded to let them through.
T smiled, patting Den on the shoulder. Were good.
Den looked uncertain but nodded his thanks. I hope so He nced her way. Did you have to antagonize them?
They were being rude.
They were doing their job.
After a moment, she grunted irritably. Fine Youre right. Sorry about that.
The irontticework began to lift slowly back out of the way, both in front and behind them.
Acid spoke onest time. Head on through to the work-yard. Its to the right once you exit the gatehouse.
Thank you! Den called up, waving to the man as he flicked the reins, ushering the oxen into movement once more. As they came back out into sunlight, he nced at her. Next time, if there is a next time, would you mind doing the personalized inspection instead? He seemed a bit hesitant as he said it.
She huffed augh and shook her head. Fairs fair. Ill try not to be a source of your stress, again.
He snorted. Dont make pretty, false promises, girl. Youll be a source of my stress for years. I can feel it.
He continued to watch her out of the corner of his eye, and she turned to fully face Den. That is one of the nicest things anyone has ever said to me.
He barked augh. You remind me of my brothers youngest daughter. He shook his head. Too smart for her own good, that one, and she wants everyone to know it.
That is hurtfully urate. She flopped down on the drivers bench beside him, even as he guided the oxen through the muster yard behind the gatehouse, and over to what was clearly the work-yard, lined by stone warehouses. <em>A bit foolish to put the warehouses right up against the wall, but I suppose if anything could reach over the wall to harm the city, the defenses are as good as breached, so convenience takes precedence.</em>
The other wagons were not dyed nearly as long, and the portcullis stayed up.
Even so, it was almost an hour before all the wagons joined Dens in the work-yard, and a contingent of city guards came out with a group of officials to greet them.
Den exchanged pleasantries with one of the men as T dropped off the wagon to store her things in the box and face the Mage who came to inspect the cargo-slots. <em>Immaterial Creator, dimensionally focused.</em>
The Mage ran her hand over each of the hand-shaped charging panels and looked closely at the indicators. She flicked at the wood of the cargo-slots themselves and poked around the edges of the wagon.
T, eventually, cleared her throat. So is everything in order?
The Mage stuck out a stone te in one hand. Blood here.
T took the te and read over it. It was a testament that she was Mage T, and that the cargo had not beenpromised on the trip; that she had kept the cargo-slots charged, would continue to do so for the next two days, and was now passing responsibility of the contents over to the waning city of Alefast.
T nodded along as she read the document. Finally, she pulled a small bit of power into her finger, while moving her defenses away, and pricked it on the sharpened nub of stone in one corner, moving to allow a drop of blood to fall onto the magical device.
The blood vanished on contact, and the stone flickered with light. After the flicker passed, new text at the bottom simply stated that her identity was confirmed, and the contract had been epted.
T smiled, handing the te back.
The Mage nced at it, then nodded. Very good. Would you like payment to be credited to your ount, or would you like waning notes for the value of your payment.
T frowned. Not coins?
Oh no, dear. She nced at T, again. Youve not been to a waning city before, Id wager.
T shook her head.
The precious metals are in much too high a demand to be used as coinage, here. Theyd simply be melted down and sold as raw materials She hesitated. Id be happy to take any coins off your hands and ce their value into your ount, with a ten percent increase, of course.
Ts eyes bulged. <em>I can make ten percent on my currency, just by bringing it here?</em>
Den cleared his throat, as he finished his own conversation and moved to join T. Ten percent? Is that really what you are offering?
The Mage colored slightly. It was meant as an opening offer.
Denughed. Mistress T. It is standard for gold, silver, and copper to be worth at least a quarter more than their stamped value in a waning city, at this stage. As I understand it, that is one reason Mages <em>try</em> to avoid being inscribed in such cities, whenever possible. It is just too expensive.
That made a lot of sense. It also exined why Trent had estimated his expenses for inscription refreshment to be so high. <em>Well, that makes my decision easier. No reinscribing for me.</em> It does make sense that metal would be at a premium in thest years of the city. She looked back to the Mage. I think Ill keep my coinage and use it to trade for goods and services. My payment may be ced directly into my ount. Every person in all the human cities had an ount linked to their blood. Only Mages could use it easily, but it was effectively an unbreakable medium of exchange. Hers had many debts linked to it, but they wouldnt draw on her bnce unless she fell drastically behind on her payments.
The Mage bowed. As you will. The Master Moneychanger will see to it that you are paid. She gestured towards a table off to the side, where a line of caravan workers was already queuing up.
As T walked across the hard packed earth of the work-yard, she saw thest of the passengers departing, carrying their bags into the city, or loading them onto waiting transport, which would do the same.
Workers were already wheeling out a great crane to pull the cargo-slots free of the wagon, and T found herself somewhat sad to see them actively disassembling the top of the vehicle to get ess to the magically maintained cargo. <em>Its been a fun few days.</em> She had the trip back, which woulde sooner than she likely realized, but it still felt like an ending. <em> Ill get over it.</em>
She walked with Den over to the payment line and took a position at the end.
Several of the servants and drivers who were waiting ahead of her looked back in confusion, seeming to expect her to have walked to the front. When she didnt move, they turned back towards their destination and their pay.
The line moved quickly, and it wasnt long before T approached the head of the line.
The only wrinkle came when Trent, Renix, and Atrexia had walked over, and Trent, along with Renix, joined T in waiting. Atrexia huffed a bit but didnt end up contesting the issue.
Renix, for his part, looked markedly better, seemingly mostly recovered from his concussion. <em>Rest does wonders, I suppose.</em>
T let the three go ahead of her and did her best not to listen in while they discussed things with the payment officer.
Her efforts were aided by Brand, who had already spoken to the man, and who came over to stand with her.
Mistress T! Were here. He smiled as he walked up to her.
Seems so. She returned the smile.
I heard there was some issue in the gatehouse?
She shrugged. Nothing major.
After a moments pause, Brand turned to regard her more fully. Really? Not going to tell me any more than that?
She gestured to Den, who waved farewell in their direction as he walked off. You could always ask him.
Brand grunted. Fair enough. Ill have the whole trip back for that, however, and Ive promises to keep!
She quirked a smile. Sounds good. After I deal with this.
Trent, Atrexia, and Renix all moved off to the side, where they settled in to discuss the next few days.
T stepped forward.
Name and position.
T, Dimensional Storage Mage.
The man grunted. Youre the source of all thisplexity, then.
T frowned. What?
He spun a te around, showing her an itemization:
5.5 oz gold for services rendered as a Dimensional Mage. 1 oz gold for helping to deal with two threats to the caravan. Less 2 oz silver for services rendered by Mage Trent. Less 1 oz silver for equipment requisitioned from Head Cook Brand.
Does that look correct?
She frowned, thinking back. Yeah. I believe so.
You authorize the funds mentioned to pay the debts described, and youd like the bnce deposited into your ount?
Yes, please.
He took the tablet back and made a couple of notes on it. Very good. Blood here.
She took the tablet back and pricked her finger, letting a lightly infused drop vanish into the stone.
Very good. 6 oz gold, 47 oz silver has been credited to your ount. Is there anything else I can assist you with, today?
Actually, yes. I need to add an addendum to my field log to inform my Guild contact of a few things.
Such as?
One is amunication for the Wainwrights Guild, who are currently building out a set of Cargo-slots for me.
The man grunted. Very well. He handed her a nk te and a stone cylinder that was simr in size and shape to a pencil.
T quickly used them to scribe a note to Lyn, asking her to deliver messages to both the Wainwrights guild, and to Holly, and quickly wrote out those missives. As the stone pen moved across the te, it was as if darker rock bled up through the tablet, leaving her words incorporated into the very nature of the stone. Thank you. She held it out to him.
He touched it to another tablet that hed been working on, and a new square darkened. Blood here.
She repeated the confirmation process and the te faded back to nk.
Now, if that is all?
It is, thank you. She bowed slightly, walking to the side, where Brand was patiently waiting. Shall we?