Reversed
Reversed
A Fortunes of Fate Story
By
Alexa Grave
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Haunted Unicorn Publishing
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REVERSED
Copyright © 2016 by Alexa Grave
ASIN B01ENYSFDM
Cover Art “The Magus” by Alexa Grave and Emily Bartle
Cover Design and Formatting by Haunted Unicorn Publishing
Edited by J. Gunnar Grey
All rights reserved. This ebook is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. It may not be re-sold or given away. No part of this publication may be reproduced in any form or by any means without the permission of the author.
This story is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are either products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, or persons, living or dead, is coincidental and not intended by the author.
Reversed
Darney pressed his hands to his ears. The screaming continued in his mind, though. The cards howled. And the heat from them in his pocket throbbed against his hip – seventy-eight tiny hearts, skipping beats from their wounds.
That rotten child had done this.
Many people didn’t like what the cards told them, but the little girl had been the first to react so violently. The poor Fool card whimpered, creases refusing to even out after she crumpled it. At least half of the other cards were singed. Fire. Of all things, she had to use fire.
Delilah, his mother, had warned him, told him to protect the cards with enchantments. Such magic would have kept them safe for the most part. The fire wouldn’t have touched them. But he didn’t know how, couldn’t find the magic she claimed he had.
The magic he yearned to find.
He traveled from town to town in hopes that the next reading would be the trigger, the one that would spark the glow inside of him. And then he could truly bond with his cards – they’d be an extension of him, not just a deck of friends he kept close.
Curse Delilah. Some mother. She wouldn’t even help him enchant them, but had told him these cards were his responsibility when she gave them to him.
And then she had abandoned him, left him to wander Fate while she disappeared to who knew where. Probably wherever his father was from. The only information he had ever gotten out of her about that was some cryptic answer about another world.
The woman had raised him with cryptic answers, intent on him finding his own way, even when young. He’d always wished she’d been warmer, more loving. Perhaps he would have found his magic already if she had.
But if he could find Delilah now, she’d know how to mend the cards. Last time he saw her, she’d told him it was time for a change, for her to shift from purple to green. Whatever that meant.
So, that didn’t leave him with many options. Either he discovered whatever magic he was supposed to have, or he needed the help of another, someone who knew the power of the cards and how to heal them.
The only person Darney thought of made him wish he had burned up in the village fire. He might just as well burn alive, asking for his help.
The clamoring of the cards refused to abate, though, which was why Darney headed west, forcing one foot in front of the other on the wooded path. He couldn’t abandon them, not like Delilah had abandoned him.
He ventured into the trees, gathering some kindling, then set up a small fire, pattern-perfect so as to burn evenly. Not too big, or the cards would shiver in fear – he had made that mistake a couple nights ago. They were traumatized.
After nibbling on some hard cheese and stale bread from his worn leather pack, Darney pulled the cards out of his pocket and spread them far enough away from the fire so that no sparks would jump on them, but close enough so he could see part of the images on their faces.
Per usual, the Magus card stalked him at the center of the heap, reversed, staring up at him, accusing him of not being who he was supposed to be – labeling him a charlatan. The confidence of the mage on the card was wiped when reversed, like something had drained the vibrant colors surrounding him. And the Magus held items from all four suits: sword, staff, cup, and pentacle, and a snake in the shape of an infinity sign twined around the staff, biting its tail.
No, the mage didn’t hold those objects. They were a part of him. They belonged. Unlike Darney. The blue cat eyes that glinted in the backdrop looked woeful upside down, a perfect reflection of how Darney felt.
The mage had escaped the fire, and it seemed to call the damaged cards to it, so it could protect them. What Darney should have done.
He scooped the cards up and stuffed them back in his pocket. His own guilt was enough – he didn’t need it from the Magus, too.
Darney shut his eyes, yearning for sleep, to forget what had happened. But the screams wouldn’t let him.
* * * * *
Darney didn’t see another soul on the path. Few traveled it, with good reason. The man at the end of it drove people to preserve their lives, and to do that they avoided him.
But he had magic. Great magic. Magic Darney needed. And wished he had.
He pressed his hand to his pocket – the screams and whimpers hushed for a moment, comforted by his touch. Then they returned with fresh vigor when they realized his touch couldn’t heal them. Caring wasn’t enough.
Darney eventually crossed into the mage’s territory. Gnarled, leafless trees twined their branches toward the sky. That part of the forest was dead, yet alive at the same time. Darney felt the heat and heartbeats of every single tree, just like from the cards in his pocket. He shuddered. Not a place he’d rather linger.
The path finally ended. Two ancient trees stood sentinel at a wrought-iron gate, so old that it was more rust than metal. Beyond the gate, steps led up the side of a large hill, disappearing around a bend. He couldn’t see the house from there, a fog hanging low, but he’d heard tales about it from those who had escaped the mage’s wrath.
No use prolonging the inevitable. He stepped up to the gate, which swung open on its own accord. Unsettling – clearly its intention. One step at a time, just one step at a time. Ask for help, then leave. Or flee. The gate clanged shut behind him.
Darney climbed and climbed – no end in sight, no house in the distance. The stairs spiraled up the hill and hours passed, the sun plunging below the horizon. Would he ever reach the man he’d come to see? It was a mountain, no mere hill.
He paused, the fog dancing around him, stuck his hand in his pocket, then pulled out a card. The Tower, its facade cracked. Several voices muttered in his mind – the cards seemed confused.
Darney wouldn’t fail, no matter what the card implied. He slipped the Tower back in his pocket and continued walking. Magic had to be behind this endless mountain. Strong magic.
He’d come to the right place.
No matter how long he had to walk, he wouldn’t stop until he found the mage. Seventy-eight little lives depended on him. He plodded on, his determination growing inside.
And the fog cleared, perhaps from his pure focus, his unwillingness to relent, revealing a three-story mansion towering in front of him.
Two even more ancient trees marked the left and right corners of the house. Something rattled in their branches. At one time, the mansion had been white; he saw that under the dirt and grime and peeling paint. Now it stood gray and dreary. Pillars decorated the outer ramparts, and gargoyles, tongues sticking out in comical positions, dotted the roof.
One of the gargoyles moved.
Darney stepped back. Wait, no, it was only a bit of debris stuck to a wing and flapping in the wind. He wouldn’t let the house deter him.
Well, he was there; time to face the monster. He stepped up to the door, took hold of the heavy knocker
, and banged it against the wood. The door creaked open, darkness revealing nothing within.
The cards stopped their wailing, unsure of where their master was taking them.
Darney nearly turned around to rush back down the stairs, but the Fool card sobbed, reminding him why he was there. He propelled himself over the threshold.
The door thundered closed and candles came to life all around him, lighting the entire foyer. A large candelabra hung above him, the metal as rusted as the gate. The entryway was tidy enough – artwork of purple vistas of Fate on the walls and a fancy table surrounded by a couple of chairs, a pile of moth-eaten books on one of the cushions. The embroidered rugs were worn, and dust covered everything. Nothing too sinister, just wealth fallen on hard times.
Two gargoyles perched on the newel posts on either side of a set of spiral stairs leading up. Weren’t those things ugly enough outside? One seemed to wink at him. It had to be a trick of the candlelight.
Past the stairs, and at the end of a long stretch of rug, wooden double doors stood, beautiful carvings etched in the cherry-brown. Darney squinted at the etchings – they were familiar. He pulled out one of the cards from his pocket. The Hanged Man. He flipped it over, not wanting to consider the implications of his draw. Sure enough, the pattern on the back matched the carvings in the doors.
The doors slid open, disappearing into the walls. Movement rippled in the shadows through the opening.
Darney shoved the card in his pocket and took a step back.
A small man stepped out. The top of his head was as high as Darney’s armpits, at most, and Darney was no giant. His long hair glinted white in the flickering flames, and a tattered once-purple robe hung on his slim frame. He clasped his hands together and beamed a smile. “Welcome.”
Was that the mage everyone feared and fled from? No, it had to be a servant. But by the disarray of the house, no servant tended to the place.
Darney looked closer and saw the hardness in the man’s black eyes. Not black; a deep purple that almost seemed as dark as a moonless night sky. Welcome, indeed.
Darney flourished a bow, even as acid from his stomach burned up his throat. “Good evening, Mage Jasp.”
Jasp wiggled a bony finger. “Ah, a smart boy. I don’t get many visitors here because most of the people who seek me out are dumb as dirt. Can’t get past the magic.”
Dumb or not, Darney was sure there weren’t many seeking him out in the first place. But managing to get past the magic gave him hope that one day he’d kindle some of his own.
“What can I help you with, boy?”
It was time to deliver his plea, beg for aid, but he couldn’t produce words from his mouth, his tongue stuck behind his teeth. The warmth of the cards on his hip turned cold, as if he were too late and they had all perished due to his dalliance. He reached for them, desperate to make sure life still coursed through them. In his haste, they spilled out of his pocket, scattering across the dusty rug. The Magus card, again reversed, glared up at him.
The cards whimpered and moaned, then screamed.
That coldness had been all in his head – they were just as before, no worse.
“Tarot cards,” Jasp said. “Are you Delilah’s boy?”
Darney nodded, still struck dumb. He hoped Jasp wasn’t the father Delilah had hinted at, but a hunch in his gut told him that probably wasn’t the case.
“They’re wounded.”
Darney didn’t think nodding in agreement would do much good.
“Why did you come to me? You should be able to heal them yourself. Actually, where are their protective enchantments? I sense none.” Jasp plucked at his robe, and his smile turned to tight-lipped sternness.
Finally Darney found his voice, but it was a shade of his true one. “I can’t.”
“Not as smart as I thought, then. Eh?” He slid closer, peering down at the cards, then waved his hand over them, long fingernails clicking together.
The cards vanished. The screams ceased.
No. An emptiness immediately filled Darney, the instant loss scoring him deep. “What have you done with my cards? Where are they?” He grabbed the little man by his threadbare robe and pulled him close before he considered what he was actually doing. No one manhandled a mage, especially one such as Jasp.
“Kindly unhand me, boy. They are safe. More than I can say for their status when they were with you. If you can’t protect them, you don’t deserve them.”
Darney released his grip, and Jasp stumbled and fell on his backside. The mage’s words stung, even though Darney knew they were true. What a failure he was.
“I said kindly.”
“Give me my cards back, and I’ll consider being kind.” The missing feeling of the seventy-eight tiny hearts broke him, enough that he was still being stupid. He knew he acted an idiot, but he didn’t care. Without his cards, he was nothing. He could read them like no other, even Delilah. The fortunes he told were flawless – it was all he had to be proud of.
Jasp righted himself and brushed off some dust, which didn’t make his attire look any better. “Oh, look, some backbone. Perhaps there’s some hope for you yet. You can earn them back, boy. Prove your worth, and I’ll even heal them for you. But I don’t do anything for free.” He swirled his hand in the air and the two gargoyles on the banister sprang to life, flapping around Darney’s head.
Darney stumbled backward into the front door.
“Nope, not as smart as I thought. Nowhere near.” Jasp shook his head. “They’re harmless. Not much help around the mansion, as you can tell, but they can take you up to your room for the night. It’s late. We’ll talk in the morning.” He exited through the open double doors, which slammed shut behind him.
“Come with me,” one of the gargoyles said, its voice harsh and gravelly. Both bolted up the stairs, faster than stone wings ought to carry them.
Darney hated the idea of spending even one night in a house with gargoyles that didn’t stay put. But he mostly feared the empty feeling of his cards’ absence, the only things in life he had. No screams tonight keeping him awake, but he still wouldn’t sleep any better.
* * * * *
Dust wafted out of the open door, clinging to Darney’s skin. The gargoyles led him into the dark. Before he could dig out his tinderbox from his pack and hope to find any candles, the ugly little beasts knocked into his back. He fell face-first onto the bed, the dust on the bedspread traveling up his nose and down his throat.
Darney coughed and swatted at the stone pests. A candle at the bedside flared to life, revealing that a four-poster bed filled most of the room. A mansion like that, one would think every room was large and lavish. Unless he’d been shown to a room in the servants’ quarters.
The gargoyles hovered around the candle. Purple flecks glinted in their living stone. He wasn’t sure how they’d lit the candle, and it was probably best not knowing. Both stuck their tongues out at him, dashed out of the room, and slammed the door.
Darney sat on the edge of the bed and ate what was left in his pack. Hopefully Mage Jasp would deem him worthy enough for a meal or two tomorrow, or he’d have to start eating the dust bunnies.
He left the candle burning and lay down, but he couldn’t bring himself to close his eyes. The quiet was too much – the cards’ absence overwhelming, even the accusing stare of the reversed Magus. Proof he had failed them – his cards taken from him.
He’d be better off walking out the front door, cutting his losses. If he stayed there, Jasp was bound to make his life even more miserable, if that were possible.
Abandoned by his mother, now stripped of his profession – there wasn’t much of anything left aside from the breath in his body. And that wasn’t worth much.
He couldn’t leave, though.
Darney closed his eyes and breathed in the dust around him.
“Murr-ow.”
He sat up and gripped the nearest bedpost. A pair of blue eyes sparkled up at him from the floor. A cat, just a cat. Its
black fur nearly blended in with the shadows. The cat licked its paw, a diamond shivering at its neck. It placed its paw back on the floor and stretched its neck so it looked like a statue, immobile like the gargoyles had seemed at first. “Murr-ow.”
“Nice kitty. Where did you come from?” The door remained closed, and Darney hadn’t seen it when the candle was first lit. Perhaps it had hid under the bed.
“Murr-ow.” It licked its other paw.
That was a mage’s cat, so it couldn’t be normal. “What do you want, furball?”
It jumped onto the bed beside him, a vexed look dotting the feline features.
And then Darney remembered the cat that had been with that wretched child. It had jumped up on his table during the card reading. If it hadn’t been for the girl setting fire to his precious cards, he wouldn’t be begging a crazy mage for help.
But that cat had been gray.
Sisters. The word slithered into his mind, a whisper, as if carried on a draft. He looked about, hoping to see one of his cards – they always spoke in whispers.
“That wasn’t you, was it?” He brushed away the cat’s tail, which was insistent on whipping against his leg.
“Murr-ow?”
Never trust a mage’s cat, especially one with a rather expensive diamond around its neck.
Better to ignore it. Darney lay back and forced his eyes shut.
The cat curled up next to him, a warm ball against his side, against his hip. Where he kept his cards.
It purred.
And for the first time in days, Darney got a good night’s sleep.
* * * * *
Darney searched for the cat in the morning, even under the bed where the dust bunnies rolled toward him as if to attack, but he couldn’t find her. For some reason, he was sure it was female. It wouldn’t have surprised him if the mage had cast some spell allowing her to walk through walls.
She had acted as surrogate for his missing cards. He only wanted to thank her.
The door burst open, two gargoyles spilling through it. “Come with me,” one said, sounding grumpier than the day before. Their vocabulary must have been limited.