《Secrets of Multorum: Season 1》 The First Omen Prologue The air in the cavern was thick. Not with dust, nor damp, but something unknown. Something that coiled unseen through the lungs, pressed against the skin like an unseen tide. Even the torches, enchanted to burn in the void-black tunnels beneath Varthan¡¯s Descent, flickered like dying stars. Archmagus Veylor Adrastis felt the weight of it in his very bones. He had spent decades among the greatest scholars of the Basilisk Consortium, charting the unknown, threading the past into the present. And yet, as he stood before the door, a monolithic slab of obsidian-veined stone, humming with a resonance that had no source, he felt something foreign crawl up his spine. It was a door, but not merely so. It was a thing meant to be shut. ¡°Magus Adrastis,¡± one of the attendants¡ªa Noscari scribe, ink still drying on his fingers¡ªspoke with hesitance. ¡°The sigils¡they resist translation. They do not match any known lexicon, not even the Pre-Imperial Tongues of the First Myrian Dynasties.¡± Veylor did not answer at first. He ran his hands over the deep etchings, tracing the curves and lines with the familiarity of a man who had spent his life pursuing the unknown. And yet, even the most obscure runic matrices of the Szannite Weavers paled in comparison to this. This was not meant to be read so simply. It was not language as mortals understood it. It was a command, a truth written into stone and time. One did not open doors such as these lightly. The narrative has been illicitly obtained; should you discover it on Amazon, report the violation. But the Emperor had given his will, and the Taraxian Empire did not yield to the past. ¡°Prepare the ritual.¡± A rustle of movement¡ªscholars retreating, tethered stepping forward, the scent of burning oils and incantation-laced smoke filling the chamber. The Circle of Unmaking was inscribed, silver-threaded sand forming an elaborate lattice beneath their feet. A dozen voices rose in harmony, reciting the spellwork that had sundered the Sky Vaults of Ysmir, that had silenced the Star-Caller¡¯s Tomb. The seals began to break. The stone groaned. Not cracked, not shattered, but screamed, as if in pain. The runes upon its surface began to shift, writhing like serpents, unraveling and rewriting themselves even as the spellwork forced them apart. The torches guttered, their flames twisting unnaturally, bending as if drawn toward the door. Then, sudden silence. A hush so complete that the world itself seemed to hold its breath. The door began to open. A breath of air, colder than any winter in history, older than any time mortal hands could measure, spilled forth. The tethered staggered, some collapsing to their knees, hands pressed to their heads as if their skulls would split. Veylor clenched his teeth against the sound. The sound that was not a sound, but a weight pressing into the air itself. He had experienced worse in the past and would in the future. Or so he thought. And then, from the darkness beyond the threshold, a voice. ¡°Fresh meat. Suitable¡± And the cavern was swallowed in black. The Sorcerer In Flight The night air burned electric, charged with the scent of ozone and spellfire. Over the twisting rooftops of Mirrakar, a large city in the east of the Drao Szann Confederacy, Aravior Dynaton ran like a comet loosed from the firmament. His crimson hair whipped behind him in the wind, wild and unbound, a streak of fire against the deep indigo sky. His azure eyes shimmered with delight. Gods, this was fun. A bolt of arcane energy shrieked past his ear, searing the air. Aravior laughed and vaulted over a gap between buildings, twisting midair with a flick of his wrist. A thin wand of obsidian and sunwood snapped up in his fingers, tracing a sigil that coalesced in an instant. A gust of wind roared beneath him, catching his fall and hurling him forward like an arrow loosed from a bow. He landed in a roll atop a gilded dome, boots skidding across enchanted bronze that pulsed with runes of reinforcement. Below him, the streets of Mirrakar unfurled like veins of molten light, glowing with spell-lamps and leyline conduits that pulsed beneath cobblestone streets. ¡°Dynaton!¡± A voice bellowed from behind. ¡°Surrender at once!¡± Aravior smirked. Not a chance. The Bureau of Magical Enforcement was relentless, their officers clad in robes of woven sigil-thread, marked with the golden hexagonal insignia of the Arcane Authority. They moved with trained precision, their boots flashing with bursts of propulsion magick as they soared after him. Spells howled through the air. Bolts of concussive force, ensnaring vines of liquid mana, shimmering glyphs meant to paralyze. Aravior wove through them like a dancer in a storm. A downward flick of his wand and a tongue of flame curled beneath his feet, launching him skyward just as an arresting sigil burst where he had stood. He somersaulted midair and lashed out, causing his wand to trace a cutting arc, sending a crescent of blue-white fire whipping toward his pursuers. One officer swerved, his protective glyphs holding against the strike. Another wasn¡¯t so lucky. He yelped as the spell clipped his shoulder, sending him spiraling downward before a levitation charm snapped him upright. ¡°Watch your flames, lad!¡± one of the senior officers snarled. ¡°Resisting arrest only makes it worse!¡± Aravior rolled his eyes. Resisting? No, this was more of a performance. He reached the edge of a sprawling skybridge, its archways sculpted from fused amethyst and silverweave, glowing softly with imbued stasis magick. The bridge spanned the Grand Bazaar far below, a chaotic wonder of floating market-stalls, illusion-crafted billboards, and merchant automata hawking wares in twenty different tongues. The air shimmered with protective sigils designed to deter thieves and rogue sorcery. Naturally, Aravior ignored them. He vaulted off the skybridge, plunging toward the chaos below. An instant before hitting the ground, his wand flared. A vortex of air cushioned his descent, and he landed light as a feather atop a merchant¡¯s floating platform. The elderly gnome tending the stall yelped in alarm, sending crystal vials of alchemical tinctures scattering. Aravior shot him a disarming grin before springing off the edge, hitting the ground running, his boots barely making a sound against the shimmering mosaic tiles as he began to weave through the throng of spellbound crowds. Above, the officers hesitated. No reckless spells in the Bazaar. Too many witnesses, too many important people. Aravior could feel their frustration, their unspoken curses. And he felt alive. Around him, the market pulsed with light and movement. Floating lanterns of bottled stardust, enchanted carpets drifting between stalls, street magicians performing cantrips for coin. The scent of spiced fruit, burning incense, and smoldering mana filled the air, thick as the murmur of a hundred different languages overlapping in a symphony. Gotta blend in. Gotta move fast. He yanked up the hood of his ash-gray cloak, ruffling his wild hair and tucking it away from sight. His wand slipped back into the inner folds of his sleeve. Out of sight, but always at the ready. Aravior slouched his shoulders, adjusted his gait, and slipped into the flow of bodies with practiced ease. Behind him, the officers of the BME landed on the outskirts of the Bazaar, their expressions sharp beneath their sigil-threaded hoods. Aravior didn¡¯t have to look back to know they were scanning the crowd, eyes burning with divinatory sight, searching for traces of his magic. He dipped his hands into his pockets, keeping his breathing even. No sudden movements. No obvious spellwork. A merchant, a thick-bellied minotaur draped in violet silks, gestured toward him with a hand of solid brass, his other fingers adorned with rings that flickered with arcane runes. ¡°Aha! Young master! You have the look of a man in need of a disguise, yes? A new face? A shadow-cloak, perhaps? Special discount for sorcerers on the run.¡± Aravior flashed him a sharp grin. ¡°Tempting, but I¡¯ll pass.¡± The minotaur chuckled, tapping his metallic fingers together. ¡°Your loss, lad. But mind your step. The Consortium¡¯s eyes are everywhere tonight.¡± Aravior stiffened slightly. The Basilisk Consortium. He could feel their presence now, small and subtle. Glimmers of divination magick curled through the air, barely noticeable unless you knew what to look for. They weren¡¯t there for him. Not yet, at least. But the moment the Bureau made too much noise, that would change. He weaved through the Bazaar, slipping between a troupe of veiled dancers weaving illusions into the air, past a group of merchants from the Republic haggling over a crate of floating gemstones, and under the gaze of a six-armed automaton scribbling magickal contracts onto floating parchment. A side alley caught his eye. A narrow passage between a potion shop carved into the ribs of a long-dead beast and a tattoo parlor whose ink pulsed with bottled starlight. Perfect. With one last glance toward the officers now questioning a bewildered vendor, Aravior ducked into the alley. But as he did, he hesitated, one foot already in the shadows. The merchants words lingered in his mind¡ª¡°The Consortium¡¯s eyes are everywhere tonight.¡± He knew better than to ignore a warning like that, especially from someone savvy enough to recognize a sorcerer on the run. With a sharp breath, he turned back towards the heavy stall. The minotaur grinned wide, showing teeth like polished ivory. ¡°Ah! Changed your mind, have you?¡± ¡°Maybe,¡± Aravior admitted, lowering his hood just enough to meet the merchant¡¯s gaze. ¡°Depends on what you¡¯re offering.¡± The minotaur chuckled, shifting his bulk as he waved him closer. Around them, the Bazaar swirled in an endless current of voices and light, but something about this space, this little pocket of shadow between reality and trickery, felt strangely still. The minotaur extended his brass hand in a sweeping gesture toward his wares. If you come across this story on Amazon, it''s taken without permission from the author. Report it. ¡°You run fast, boy, but you seem to burn bright.¡± His fingers tapped against the edge of his stall, setting off a faint ripple of magick. ¡°And bright flames catch many eyes. You want something to dim that glow, yes?¡± Aravior crossed his arms. ¡°You tell me.¡± The minotaur snorted, then reached under his counter, producing a small lacquered box bound in strands of silver wire. He flicked a claw against the latch, and the threads unraveled, releasing a faint pulse. Inside, three items rested on a bed of soft velvet. A pendant of blackened glass, its surface rippling like liquid night. ¡°Swallow the light around you,¡± the minotaur murmured. ¡°A shadowcloak in truth, woven from the void itself. Not invisibility, but close enough.¡± A small vial of shifting mist, sealed with a sigil that whispered against the mind. ¡°The breath of a forgotten god,¡± he said, eyes gleaming. ¡°Drink, and your presence becomes a half-truth. Harder to track, harder to pin down. The Bureau¡¯s seers will find only a blur.¡± A ring of tarnished gold, almost unremarkable, save for the faint flicker of a rune etched within. ¡°Old sorcery. Worn by a man who walked where he pleased, unseen and unremembered. A thief¡¯s charm, a liar¡¯s boon.¡± Aravior studied them, resisting the urge to reach out just yet. He was a sorcerer, not a fool. ¡°And how much?¡± The minotaur¡¯s grin widened. ¡°Ah, now that is the question, isn¡¯t it? Coin is fine, but a favor is better.¡± Aravior¡¯s lips curled into a smirk. ¡°A favor, huh? You don¡¯t even know my name.¡± The minotaur leaned in slightly, brass fingers glinting under the lantern light. ¡°Boy, I don¡¯t need your name to know trouble when I see it. And trouble is always worth investing in.¡± Aravior tapped his fingers against his arm, thinking fast. He could feel the Bureau closing in. Not yet here, but close enough to make his skin prickle. He needed to move. ¡°Fine,¡± he said, tilting his head. ¡°Let¡¯s talk business.¡±