The Final Redemption Michael Manning (best motivational books of all time .TXT) đ
- Author: Michael Manning
Book online «The Final Redemption Michael Manning (best motivational books of all time .TXT) đ». Author Michael Manning
I reviewed some of my ancestorsâmemories of Gareth and they agreed with what she had said. Havingnear limitless knowledge was a flawed gift in many ways. I oftenhad to know what I wanted to know before I could remember it. Itresulted in a number of blind spots.
âYou were a genius even among theGaelyn family,â I muttered without thinking.
âI find your odd comments verydisconcerting,â replied Gareth. âAt one moment you seem ignorant,and at another you seem to know things that shouldnât bepossible.â
Moira nodded her head, âIt would helpif you explained where your information comes from.â
âToo bad.â
She wasnât enthused by my response. Iignored the glare she gave me and uttered the words that wouldcause the stones to form my mostly transparent airship. The stonedisc flew apart into its twenty eight separate pieces, six formed ahexagon above, and six formed an identical hexagon beneath. Thatwas the âtopâ and âbottomâ of my flying device, and they wereseparated by six feet to enable most people to stand upright withinit. Twelve pieces formed a dodecagon midway between them, muchlarger than the hexagons, giving the overall airship a disc-likeshape that, had it been more visible, would have looked somethinglike a jewelerâs diamond cut, if both sides looked like the top.The four remaining pieces helped round out the top and bottom,giving my device a more aerodynamic shape.
Gareth didnât look impressed, but Isuspected his semi-reptilian face wasnât capable of such subtleexpressions. At least thatâs how I chose to interpret hisnonchalance as he stepped aboard. For Moiraâs part, she lookedwistful, almost sad.
âSomething wrong with it?â I askedher.
She shook her head as she entered.âNo, not at all, it just reminds me of the past. The world that waslost when we fought Balinthor. It gives me hope that perhapsmankind can rise again. Perhaps we can rebuild the wonders of thepast.â
Her words touched something within me,but the only reaction that reached me was a spark of bitterness.âYou mean âtheyâ,â I corrected her. âYou and I are not part ofhumankind.â
âYouâre right of course, but I havehad a lot of time to dwell on my existence. I like to think thatour actions are more important than the truth of our origins. Wecan have meaning, even if we are ultimately fictitious,â she statedwith a certain conviction.
I filed that away under things tothink about as I activated my second set of stones. These were myenchanted shield stones. While the flying airship created a sort offorce-field around us, it wasnât meant to be protective. My shieldstones on the other hand, could be set to protect us from almostany type of external force. More particularly, it should preventthe SheâHar spellweave from affecting Gareth and Moiraâs minds. Itwould protect mine as well, but with my armor on, it wasnât reallynecessary.
Once I had finished, we were encasedin a sort of double walled shield, the outer one provided theaerodynamic shape, while the inner would keep our minds free fromexternal magic. Using my magic, I shaped the air around us andlifted us into the sky, propelling us forward with thewind.
The experience should have been asexhilarating as it had been the first time I had done it, ferryingRoland to see Marc, but it wasnât. My emotions had become muchduller over the past two days, and consequently I felt only a faintthrill. Based upon what I knew, I figured I had only a couple moredays before my emotional level became what I considered dangerouslyânumbâ.
And considering how muchpower Iâm holding now, that wouldnât be wise.
I flew us close to the surface,staying only about twenty feet above the rolling ocean, followingthe proper course now. There was a sensation of almost intangiblepressure against my shield stones, and while I couldnât yet seeanything; that pressure told me we were getting closer to ourgoal.
âI really canât tell any difference inthe direction youâre taking,â offered Gareth. âI was heading duewest before.â
Since he wasnât connected to myshield, he couldnât feel the magic it was keeping at bay. âJustwait,â I told him. âIt wonât be much longer.â
âUntil what?â
That was when we finally passedthrough the illusion that had shielded the island from both oureyes and minds. Where only a moment before there had been nothingbut endless waves in every direction, we now faced a truly enormousisland. It was thirty miles across, judging from our currentperspective, and the central region rose with several snowcappedpeaks. The island was formed around those few mountains, withsweeping and deeply forested lowland reaching out to surround them.It was easily the size of the Lancaster and Cameron estatescombined, with Arundelâs thrown in for good measure.
âWhat the hell!?â shouted Gareth inalarm. Moiraâs reaction was more subdued, but I could tell she wassurprised as well. âWhere did that come from?â
âIt was there all along,â I suppliedblandly. âWell, for the last two thousand years in anycase.â
âItâs huge! I should have been able tosee something that size from fifty miles away.â
âTheir magic was concealingit.â
âTheir magic?â Moira had chosen thatmoment to speak up.
âThe SheâHar.â
She kept her calm demeanor. âI wastaught to believe that they were all gone.â
âWell, yes, and no. As you have seenalready, one of them lay in stasis within my familyâs home. Hermate, the last remaining father-tree, dwells here,â I said,beginning my explanation.
âSo thereâs only oneâbesides her,âsaid Gareth hoping to clarify.
I nodded.
âThen how in the world did he manageto cloak that entire island and hundreds of miles of ocean aroundit? Never mind the fact that Iâm not even certain an enchantmentcould accomplish such a thingâŠâ
It could,I started to say, but that was another topic. âItwas done with a massive spellweaving. Thatâs the term used to referto the SheâHar magic, which is similar in many ways to ourenchanting, except for its rather more spontaneous attributes. Mostspellweavings can be created as rapidly as you or I might cast asimple spell, but their nature is much more immutableâŠâ
âWe learned about that as children,âinterrupted Gareth. âThey used to tell us about it in our historylessons. I just never expected to ever encounter them.â
âYouâre about to encounter a lot morethan illusions once we land,â I informed them both.
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