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The Memory of Water
The Memory of Water Read online
SPECIAL OFFER – FREE URBAN FANTASY
A drought-ridden Arizona town hires a very special kind of rainmaker: A siren.
But when it comes time to pay for her services, Mayor Archer Bertrand has a change of heart. After all, the old races are legally non-people and can’t sign contracts.
That was just his first mistake.
This short story is set in the old races-inhabited world of Magorian & Jones, written by Taylen Carver. It is not commercially released, but provided free to readers and fans of the series.
Check the details once you have finished this book!
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Special Offer – Free Urban Fantasy
About The Memory of Water
The Memory of Water Title Page
One man’s “magic” is another man’s engineering.—Robert Heinlein
RIGHT NOW
Toledo, Spain.
BOOK ONE
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
INTERREGNUM
Chapter Ten
Chapter Eleven
Chapter Twelve
BOOK TWO
Chapter Thirteen
Chapter Fourteen
Chapter Fifteen
Chapter Sixteen
Chapter Seventeen
Chapter Eighteen
Chapter Nineteen
Chapter Twenty
BOOK THREE
Chapter Twenty-One
Chapter Twenty-Two
Chapter Twenty-Three
Chapter Twenty-Four
Chapter Twenty-Five
Chapter Twenty-Six
Chapter Twenty-Seven
Chapter Twenty-Eight
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About the Author
Other books by Taylen Carver
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ABOUT THE MEMORY OF WATER
When a sceptical doctor teams up with an honest-to-god wizard on a quest for an ancient and powerful manuscript, enemies lurk around every corner.
Dr. Radford Michael Jones has dedicated his life to the treatment of the goblyns, fae, dragons, sirens and even more races which humans call the Errata.
Frustrated in his attempts to treat the newest race to emerge, Jones consults Magorian, whom the Errata call the first and only wizard of the millennium, his scepticism at full throttle.
Benjamin Magorian III has no time for the Errata, who did not spend a lifetime learning magic as he has done. He has even less time for Dr. Jones, who doesn’t respect his work. Yet his healing skills are needed.
Magorian and Jones’ combined talents embroil them in the search for an ancient manuscript, the Book of Morcant, which may hold the answers both of them so desperately need.
But they are not the only ones who seek the records of the last great wizard to walk upon the world…
The Memory of Water is part of the urban fantasy series, Magorian & Jones, by Taylen Carver.
1.0: The Memory of Water
2.0: The Triumph of Felix
3.0: The Shield of Agrona
4.0: The Rivers Ran Red
5.0: The Divine and Deadly
…and more to come.
Urban Fantasy Novel
One man’s “magic” is another man’s engineering.—Robert Heinlein
And yet, unless my senses deceive me, the old centuries had, and have, powers of their own which mere “modernity” cannot kill.—Bram Stoker, Dracula
Choose warily your wish.—Benjamin Magorian III
RIGHT NOW
Toledo, Spain.
Drust tripped, grunted and sprawled upon the footpath. At the same time, something brushed past my face. I lurched to one side, my arm up, and spun to see what it was.
A water leaper drove up into the sky with rapid beat of his wings.
At the same time, four—no, eight…no, make that eleven—dark figures dropped over the side of the wall lining the road. The long drop didn’t seem to bother them, but I could feel the impact of their landing.
Goblyns and dwarves, I guessed.
They came up to us, forming a loose semi-circle around us, as Ketill helped Drust back onto his feet.
Magorian took a long step forward and to the side. It put him in front of all of us. I saw his hand reach back into his jeans pocket. He was reaching for his cards.
I was feeling a high degree of anxiety myself.
“Move out of the way,” Magorian said, his voice flat.
“We are not interested in you,” the goblyn facing Magorian said, with rich Russian accent. “Give us the professor and we will let you go.”
He was one of two goblyns. Three dwarves were amongst them. Plus a hobgoblin, not yet in the air, three salamanders and a dragon, still in human form. And, astonishingly, an angel. He had his wings up, so he could take flight at the first hint of trouble. But he held a field hockey stick in his hands, too. He stood out like a beacon among them, glowing in the night air.
How many of the winged races were already above us, hovering and ready to dive?
“You’re talking about Dr. Jones?” Magorian asked them, sounding merely curious. His left hand cut and recut the deck, held behind his hip.
“The goblyn. That one there in the hood.”
“Which one? There are two with hoods,” Magorian pointed out.
“Wotch yoo got behind you?” the dragon demanded suspiciously.
Magorian brought his arm around in front of him and held up the deck.
“Cards!” They all laughed.
Magorian snapped his right arm down, so fast I couldn’t see what he did. But suddenly, the goblyn standing in front of us had a card half-buried in his cheek. The edge of the card had sliced through his hide. He howled, as Magorian made the same whipping motion with his arm three more times. This time, I saw him pluck the cards from the deck in his left hand.
One of the dwarves staggered backward, his hands to his face. The angel snapped his head back. The hockey stick dropped and he leapt into the air, his wings beating downward as he strove for height.
The dragon hissed as a card buried itself in his neck and blood spurted. He wheeled away, his hand to his neck.
Then Magorian threw the deck with his left hand at those still ranged in front of us. They’d be cued by the injuries of the others and they ducked, staggered and flapped out of the way of the falling confetti.
“Down to the river!” Magorian shouted.
We ran.
I had the yawara stick out, now, and tapped an arm, a knee and a conveniently upraised elbow as I passed by. We all ran for the gates while the bus driver stood with his mouth open, his broom held up, forgotten.
Magorian snatched the broom from his hands as he passed. “Thanks!” he shouted over his shoulder.
We clattered down the first flight of stairs, taking them two and three at a time.
Water blasted in my face and I reared back, my feet slipping on the steps. I fell hard. A weight landed on my chest, driving my breath from me. It was a water leaper. The leaper was lifted and tossed aside. Ketill pulled me back onto my feet, whirled and leapt for the bottom of the steps.
I staggered after them, my breath coming in hard gasps.
A rock whizzed past my ear and exploded into fragments on the concrete. I leapt over it and kept going. More rocks zipped past us. I heard Drust cry out as one struck his head. He was the target, the one they wanted.
Only the winged races couldn’t carry more than one
or two rocks and not large ones, either. As far as I knew, none of them except angels could carry the weight of another man, so we wouldn’t have boulders dropped on us.
Yet even pebbles thrown with enough force and from a high enough elevation could do damage. I’d just seen a piece of cardstock tear open a goblyn’s cheek. I wasn’t discounting anything, now.
I began to dodge and change directions, so that those tossing rocks at us from above couldn’t anticipate my movements.
Fire belched past me from behind, a rolling ball of it, making the night light up, and the air to sizzle. The stink of sulfur was strong.
“Fire!” I shouted, to warn the others.
Magorian instantly wheeled back and sprinted toward me. He still had the broom in his hand, but he’d broken the head off it and held it in his left hand. The handle was a four-foot-long, useless stick.
Magorian rocketed past me.
I spun, alarmed. I’ve seen dragons belching their fumes and fire before. They were unstoppable.
The dragon had inverted to his other form. The bulk of the horned red dragon crouched at the bottom of the steps, his back hunching as he prepared to bellow another ball of flame. His eye wheeled yellow and red and angry.
Magorian threw the broom head in a powerful overarm throw that a first-class cricket bowler would have been proud of. The badly balanced broom head spun, moving fast, and hit the dragon on the snout.
He coughed back his mouthful of fire and brimstone and reared, his stubby wings flapping to keep him balanced. Then he hunched and bellowed flame.
Magorian leapt over the flame, using the broomstick as leverage. The splintered end of the stick burned as he arced in the air and came down on top of the dragon. He swung the burning broomstick around, grasped it with both hands. The rounded end of the stick drove into the top of the dragon’s head, between the stumpy, pointed horns.
The dragon sprawled, its eyes closed, the flames extinguishing, except for those climbing up a sapling, ten yards away, lighting up the night.
Magorian whirled back to face me. “Protect Drust!” he said breathlessly and sprinted past me again. As he ran toward the stairs that led down to the next level of the observation deck, he bent and scooped up one of the rocks the winged ones had been tossing at us.
They would rearm themselves soon, if they hadn’t already.
I ran for the stairs and followed Magorian down them. I could hear the thud of heavy feet behind me, giving chase.
“He killed Leonard!” someone cried.
“Get him!”
They thought I had killed their dragon friend.
I sprinted, and wondered how I had come to this. I was supposed to be a doctor who healed people. Two weeks ago, I had been. Two years before that, I had been a family man. How times had changed…!
BOOK ONE
CHAPTER ONE
Cornwall, Britain. Two Years Ago.
A group of Errata crouched at the far end of the beach, out of speaking distance of the humans soaking up the sun, including my family, which was closest. I measured the Errata as I flapped the blanket and spread it across the sand under the postage stamp-sized piece of shade the cliff provided. Soon, even that would be gone, for the sun was swinging around to the midday peak. As I laid out the blanket to maximize the shade, I watched the Errata from the corner of my eye.
They ignored us, their heads together in a tight little group, which was normal. But I would still monitor them. I, more than anyone else in the world, knew what they were capable of.
Ffraid had volunteered to fight with the umbrella. As she is at least twice as smart as me, I didn’t argue when she grabbed the dusty thing out of the boot and tucked it under her arm like a Sergeant Major’s swagger stick.
The children jumped about, both because of the hot sand and because of the beckoning water.
“I want to go in!” Gwen said impatiently. “It’s my birthday.”
“It’s your father’s birthday, too, Gwendolyn,” Ffraid reminded her. “Stop nagging him.”
“It was an observation of my state of mind,” Gwen shot back. She had turned nine today, and I was already wondering how we would keep her adequately occupied with normal schooling, or if we should find an advanced program for her.
“Da, want to swim,” Owen lisped. He had the sweetest nature of the three of them, but even he was impatient.
“Very well,” I told them, and held up a finger. “The rule, please?”
“Only up to my knees,” Heulwen parroted. Gwen nodded. Owen just looked grave. The waves were tiny, but they were his first.
“Go, go!” Ffraid told them and shooed them toward the water. “Gwen, hold Owen’s hand, please!”
Gwen took Owen’s pudgy hand and the three ran toward the water with shrieks and little leaps.
“It’s far too hot for such energy,” I said, lowering myself to the tartan blanket.
Ffraid dropped onto the blanket beside me and glared up at the umbrella, daring it to close upon us.
I mentally urged it to behave itself. The consequences of defying my wife weren’t worth it.
Ffraid shaded her eyes against the glare of the sun on the water and looked at me, her eyes narrowed a little. “Are they dangerous, Michael?” She had switched to Welsh, which was unlikely to be understood by anyone around us. The closest humans was the family of three to my right, ten yards away.
I glanced at the Errata, away to the left, close by the curving end of the bay, where the beach narrowed to a short point of salt and brown seaweed encrusted rocks, before turning into the next bay. “They’re enjoying a day on the beach, too,” I said. “There’s humans among them,” I added, spotting the ghostly flesh of the arms of a typical Englishman without his pullover.
Ffraid studied them, making it look casual. She wasn’t the only human on the narrow beach sending them furtive glances. “Aren’t those…the ones with the dragonfly wings…what do you call them?”
“Water leapers,” I said. “Don’t call them dragonflies to their faces.”
“I won’t,” she murmured, turning her gaze back to the children. They were still shrieking, splashing each other and kicking up spray. Her mouth softened into a near-smile.
Then she glanced at me and lowered her hand. “Would it help if we found another beach?”
I jumped, guilt touching me. “No…no, we’re here now.”
“Godrevy is a humans-only beach,” she said. Her expression was nonjudgmental. “It’s not far from here.”
Her perfectly reasonable tone made me squirm. It always did. I shook my head. “That would be…” I hunched my shoulders. “Rude,” I finished.
“You mean, they’d notice us leaving,” Ffraid interpreted.
That made me even more uncomfortable. “Let’s change the subject.”
“Very well.” She crossed her legs, displaying shapely thighs and far too much midriff between the open front of her shirt. With her hair loose, she looked like a twenty-year-old. Anyone seeing her now in cheesecloth and a bikini would be taken aback to know she was Dame Ffraid Hyledd-Jones OBE, Oxford Professor, theoretical physicist and mother of three. My three.
I glanced at the three in the water. “We should put sunscreen lotion on them. They’ll burn far too quickly, today.”
“Skin burns more quickly when it’s overcast,” Ffraid replied, reaching for the big bag that held lunch, among other things. “And you’re changing the subject.”
“You agreed we should.”
“I agreed we should stop talking about moving to another beach. I did not agree we should stop talking about the subject which came next.”
“You didn’t say anything.”
“But you know what I was about to say.”
I did. But to admit it would draw us even closer to the bloody subject.
“You’re watching them even now,” Ffraid added softly, making me jump once more. Because, damn it all, I had been studying them over her shoulder. “Dr. Jones, you need to take the day
off. It is your birthday.”
“Yes,” I said, making my tone firm.
“Yes?” She said it flatly, confirming that she had heard me correctly.
“Yes, I’m still thinking about the offer.”
“It would be honorable work, Michael.”
“But it is in Spain,” I objected. “I would be uprooting—”
She held up her hand. “You must go where the work takes you.”
“And your work is here.”
“I can think about dark matter anywhere. That’s what ‘theoretical’ means.”
I knew—just as she did—that it wasn’t nearly as simple as that. But for some reason, Ffraid was pressing me to take the United Nations contract to run the refugee camp that was being formed in Toledo. I’d be working with the Errata there and directing the management of the camp.
“You were the first doctor to deal with a phasing Errata—”
“It is called entering an active phase,” I corrected her stiffly. “It appalls me that everyone uses such slang—especially you. It would be like me talking about hyperspace.”
Ffraid didn’t apologize. She didn’t flinch at my mention of science fiction jargon, as she normally did. Her jaw flexed. That should have warned me, but it didn’t. “You keep telling me no one knows very much about the Errata, or the Tutu virus, or how it all works. Only, if there was a list of international experts on the Errata, you would be on it, Michael. You must continue your work. You must learn everything you can about the virus.”
There was a strange note in her voice I had never heard before. “I think I’ve missed something,” I said, puzzled. “I thought we were talking about me.”
Ffraid’s gaze flittered away from mine and my surprise increased. She was never unable to look me directly in the eye.
“Ffraid?” I coaxed, keeping my voice down.
She closed her eyes and drew in a breath. I watched her gather her usual super-human courage together. Her gaze came back to me once more. “You don’t understand—how could you? You are always hip-deep among them, immersed in the facts as they are discovered, right on the very edge of the event-horizon.”