Tales of the Apprentice - Book 1
Chapter 1
The land of Avendia is a beautiful country of green, rolling hills, well tilled soil and lush forests. It knows neither king nor lord, but once, long ago, it was a realm of powerful sorcery, or so the legends say. But the great wizards are long gone, if they ever existed at all. These days farmers work their fields by the sweat of their brows, craftsmen toil in their workshops to make their goods, and tradesmen ply their wares to nobles and commoners alike. Some say that magic still lingers in the land of Avendia, but there are not many who believe that.
The roads in and around Avendia are usually in good repair, and it was on one of these roads that a young man traveled one morning, as spring was dotting the trees with shades of fresh green and with the whites and pinks of countless delicate, fragrant blossoms. He was on foot, not being able to afford a horse, and he carried only a bedroll and a small knapsack with some provisions. Having been on the road for many days, he was relieved to finally put eyes on his destination. Relieved, but also more than somewhat apprehensive. One does not, after all, approach a sorceress lightly.
In all fairness, the cottage for which he was headed didn't really look like anything special. It was modest in size, with a thatched roof and ivy-covered walls. A few chickens were pecking around beside a neatly tended vegetable garden at the back. Yet this was the abode of a sorceress. Or at least so he had been told. Perhaps he had been told wrong.
The woman who looked up from the vegetable patch that she had been weeding certainly didn't look like a great sorceress. While she was by no means a crone, her best years were definitely behind her. Her hair was still thick and glossy but it was touched with gray, and although her skin was still reasonably fair, it did show the weathered lines of one who has been out in the sun tending the field for years on end. The look in her eyes was a similar mixture of contradictions: both friendly and wary at the same time.
"Can I help you?" she said.
"I hope so," he replied. "I am looking for a sorceress. I was told to speak with you."
She rose from her carrot patch, a grim look in her eyes.
"I see," she said curtly. "Another one of those."
"Oh?"
"What is it that you want, boy? Do you want me to make you rich? Do you want your enemies destroyed? Or is it perhaps some girl you desperately need to fall in love with you?"
"Ehm... No..."
"Good," she said, smiling bleakly. "Because I can't help you with any of that. Go home, boy. I don't know what you want, and I don't care. Whatever it is, you won't find it here."
She put down the spade she had been using and wiped her hands on her apron.
"Who sent you here, anyway?"
"Well, I, ehm... I've been asking around..."
"For what?"
"Well, I..."
"Speak up, will you? I don't have all day."
With some effort he got hold of himself. Here he was, having traveled the entire distance, and now he was stammering like a schoolboy who hasn't done his homework!
"I want to learn about sorcery," he finally blurted out.
She looked at him for a few long moments, then sighed.
"What's your name, boy?"
"Galen, ma'am."
"Alright. Whatever you do, Galen, don't call me that. It makes me feel my age. Call me Serana. Most people do. Those who don't refer to me as "that old hag" or "the witch", that is."
She pointed at the bench in front of the cottage.
"Come. Sit down."
"Thank you," Galen said, a little intimidated by her brusque manner. "I'm sorry to bother you, ma-... Mrs. Serana."
Her stern frown faded. She wasn't exactly smiling, but at least some of the grimness in her expression disappeared before his open, honest-faced look.
"At least you have good manners. Drop the Mrs. and we just might get along," she said, sitting down on the bench next to him. "So. You want to be a great and powerful sorcerer?"
He shook his head. "No. Not really. Well, maybe, but..."
"Forget it, boy. There are no great and powerful sorcerers anymore, and there never will be again. Sorcery is a thing of the dim and distant past."
"That's what the legends say," Galen admitted.
"The legends are true," she said with a note of authority in her voice. "Well, not all of them, of course, but enough of them. Yes, sorcery did exist, long ago. Wizards lived in great castles floating between the clouds. The skies were full of dragons borne on great leathery wings, and mighty battles were fought by armies conjured up out of thin air. And more than that. Much more. The world was young then, Galen, so young... And so beautiful. It sparkled with colors of green and gold and blue, so much brighter in those days then they are now. The grasses on the rolling hills were cool and soft, and the trees grew so high that their tops disappeared into the clouds. The sun blazed with the glory of the gods themselves, and the heavens were clear and crisp and full of life."
She sighed, looking a little forlorn.
"You should have seen it, boy," she continued, her voice very soft. "You should have been there."
For a long moment the look on her face was one of indescribable loss, and her eyes gazed into the distance at something that only she could see.
"But that age is gone,""she continued. "And many more ages have passed since. The world is mundane now, Galen. Do you see that spade over there by the kitchen door? That's what I use to feed myself. There is nothing to be had for free, neither from me nor from anyone else. Believe me."
"I'm not looking for anything free, ma-.. Serana. I want to learn. About sorcery, I mean, How it works... Or worked. And why."
"Why indeed," she said, raising her eyebrows at him. "I just said there is no sorcery anymore. Or weren't you listening?"
"I was. I am, I mean. It's just that... I want to know how things work. All things. Why is sunlight warm but moonlight is cold? Why does grain only grow in summer? And why did sorcery work long ago but not anymore? I want to know these things. I've always wanted to know. I want to learn. I want to understand."
She gave him a long, thoughtful look.
"Hm. At least you seem to have got the right mind for it, boy, I'll give you that."
Her face had turned pensive and she was no longer frowning, but neither was she smiling. Galen felt slightly uncomfortable under her gaze. It also irritated him that she kept calling him "boy". He was older than that! Surely he deserved something more respectful. But he had learned long ago that there were times when it was best to keep quiet, and this definitely seemed to be one of them.
"Sorcery is nothing but a way to do things other than with your hands and your back," she continued after a while. "That's all it is, really. Or all it was, to be more precise. And it takes just as much to do something that way as it would if you did it by hand."
She sighed.