|  Curses, Inside-Out: Part Sixby schefflera
 
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 also by Dreagoddess
 The art of illusory magic lies as much in choosing 
  the balance of magical areas or spheres as in shaping them, as the art of painting 
  lies as much in choosing and mixing color as in form, and though ethereal is 
  by nature closer kin to the more mundane visual arts than most more material 
  magics.... Lisha sighed. The title Introduction to the Art of Illusions 
  had looked promising, but it seemed to hold very little practical information. 
  She was midway through the fourth chapter, and so far she had learned that illusions 
  were usually based on light, air, or dark, but not always. She had not learned 
  what difference the balance of spheres made, unless it was just about aesthetics. 
  Nor had she learned whether a curse invisible to its target actually qualified 
  as an illusion or not, which was what she really wanted to know. Unfortunately, 
  this was one of the more readable texts. Imry Infilson's Index of Illusions 
  had instructions on plenty of specific spells for casting and dispelling illusions, 
  but didn't really address design.
      "Somewhere," she said aloud, glaring at the bookshelves, 
  "someone has to have written down something about illusions in between how much 
  fun they are and a list of incantations."
      "I was required to once," said a voice that did 
  not belong in Meridell's Royal Library, and Lisha started and nearly fell out 
  of her chair. She turned it into a jump and somewhat awkward landing, then whirled. 
  Lord Darigan was standing just inside the doorway, looking very gray and black 
  against the warmer colors of the shelves and spines. He also appeared vaguely 
  uncomfortable about the ears, which Lisha supposed was why he seemed so remarkably 
  much more out of place than he had in the courtyard. He bowed. "My tutor assigned 
  it after I'd been studying magic for about four years."
      "Then what did you do before that? None 
  of these books are helpful at all. Aren't books supposed to be 
  helpful?" Lisha glared at the nearest text as if it was personally responsible 
  for the failings of all its kin.
      "Some of them are. Some of them are only intended 
  to be helpful to certain people, and not necessarily the reader." Darigan drifted 
  a few steps further into the library. "Illusions were hardly the first thing 
  I was taught. I only tried very simple, one-sphere spells in the beginning, 
  and I spent nearly all of the first two years and a fair amount of the later 
  ones being told about magic and asking questions."
      "You mean you didn't actually do any magic 
  for years?" Lisha asked, aghast at the very idea. "But doing things 
  makes so much more sense than just reading about them!"
      "But doing them makes much more sense if someone 
  has explained what you're supposed to be doing. May I sit down?" 
      "Oh, sorry. Yes, please do." Lisha regained her 
  own seat and gestured generally for Darigan to take one of the nearby ones. 
  "I don't know. I think some explanation is helpful, but just reading a bunch 
  of theory doesn't help you do anything."
      "Doesn't it?" Darigan peered over her shoulder 
  long enough to scan a paragraph or two on why it was absurd to compare illusions 
  to calligraphy. "All right, I suppose it depends on the theory. And on what 
  you want to do." He settled into the nearest chair. "Most people can operate 
  a variety of magical items without having or learning much magic themselves. 
  Many can learn specific spells by rote with little grasp of how they work; it's 
  actually possible to become fairly formidable that way, and you'll find some 
  who consider it cheating to explain and believe the best way to learn magic 
  is to learn more and more spells until you begin to discern patterns." A smile. 
  "My tutor didn't approve of that approach. It would have taken years longer 
  before I could begin to analyze and perhaps design spells myself, and that was 
  what I was expected to do, far more than performing them."
      "But when you need to use spells, not 
  design them, does it really matter?"
      "That depends on how many times you're willing 
  to risk getting them wrong."
      Lisha frowned. "But you spend just as much time, 
  or more even, studying the theory, so what's wrong with spending that time practicing 
  instead, even if you do get it wrong sometimes?"
      "That," Darigan said wryly, "depends on 
  what happens when you get it wrong."
      "...I guess so. It just seems like a waste to 
  not being doing spells you're perfectly capable of doing!"
      Darigan looked around the library. "Are you doing 
  spells in here?"
      "No. Well, one lamp spell when it starts getting 
  dark. But that's just because I don't even know where to start. And I 
  thought you'd probably get mad if I started casting more spells on the Citadel 
  without you knowing about it."
      "I'd really rather you didn't," Darigan allowed. 
  "It seems to have entirely too many on it at the moment anyway."
      "That's what I thought you'd say. So I have 
  to just read about it."
      He paused. "What is it you want to be 
  doing?"
      "...Fixing things."
      Darigan looked away from her for a moment. "Jeran 
  tells me you've been trying to find out how to remove the curses on the Citadel."
      "Of course. Why wouldn't I?"
      "I think more people might ask why you would." 
  He smiled ruefully. "I am grateful. But I think this is one of the cases 
  where there is no preexisting spell that will solve the problem, and... I would 
  not ask you to exhaust yourself in the search."
      "But there has to be some way to 
  fix it," Lisha protested earnestly. "And there may not be a way somebody's already 
  figured out to do it, but somebody might've already figured out part 
  of it that we can use. Or they might at least know what won't work."
      "I don't doubt that portions of the solution 
  exist, but... Lisha, they're more likely to be in the principles, in the background, 
  than to be spells themselves. Some existing spells will be useful, yes, and 
  have been already, but they'll have to be found for purposes, not purposes found 
  for them."
      "I can help," Lisha said stubbornly. "If this 
  won't help, tell me what will. I'm the only one who can even see the 
  spells. You need me."
      "I've been trying to find a way to see them for 
  myself--"
      "Is it working?" Lisha interrupted anxiously.
      "Not yet."
      "Then you still need me. What can I do if this 
  won't help?"
      "I can find a way," he said gently. "You don't 
  have to do this." A small smile. "But I am not quite too proud to welcome your 
  help if you truly want to give it."
      "You need my help," Lisha repeated stubbornly. 
  "It'll take you twice as long if you have to figure out all the stuff I've done 
  already before you can start actually working at it."
      His ears twitched back. "That doesn't make it 
  impossible," he said shortly, "and we have lived with it this long."
      "...But..." Lisha looked down at the table in 
  front of her, looking absolutely crestfallen.
      There was silence for the space of several breaths 
  before Darigan sighed. "I apologize," he said quietly. "Being reminded of what 
  I have not been able to do stings... but it's true that this would be easier 
  with your help."
      Lisha looked up hopefully. "Then you'll let me 
  help? I know I can."
      "If you can promise me one thing...."
      "Anything!"
      Darigan blinked, as if perhaps that had been 
  a little more enthusiasm than he was expecting. "Don't spend all your time researching. 
  I have a bad habit at times of burying myself too deeply in my work," he said, 
  mouth quirking up, "and at least one of us needs to be thinking clearly."
      Lisha grinned at him. "But you have General Galgarrath 
  to throw you out a window when you get too buried, so that shouldn't be a problem."
      "That's no excuse for you." Darigan smiled back. 
  "Promise me?"
      "All right. I promise I won't spend all my time 
  researching." Just most of it.
      "Good." Apparently Lord Darigan was not a mind-reader. 
  He drummed his fingers on the table, looking around the library. "Although you 
  may not be too pleased with what I say next, since you seem more inclined to 
  spellcasting itself than to studying it."
      "I've been studying it for two weeks straight," 
  Lisha pointed out.
      "No wonder Jeran complained about not seeing 
  you lately. Yet a few minutes ago you suggested it was a waste of time."
      "I didn't say it was always a waste of 
  time, just when you can be doing something else. Neither of us knows 
  what spells to use, so what would I be doing but researching?"
      Darigan leaned forward and peered into her eyes. 
  "I'd suggest a nap, myself. You look tired. More directly applicable... there 
  was a reason my early training was focused on understanding magic before doing 
  it," he said gently. "You seem to be thinking it was a restriction, and I suppose 
  I felt that way at times, but the purpose was to be able to work more 
  effectively later on. I can't say this specific situation was foreseen, but 
  it is still, in essence, exactly what I was trained for."
      "Then why haven't you fixed it yet? Don't say 
  I can help and then say I can't!"
      His wings rose. "Because it takes time to analyze 
  -- more, granted, when I can't see what I'm doing -- and will take time to work 
  out how to make the changes. I'm not telling you that you can't help. I'm trying 
  to tell you that stopping to understand what you're doing isn't a waste of time; 
  it's exactly what we need to do right now." He folded his wings again and smiled 
  wryly. "That said, there are established ways for one magician to share 
  or borrow another's perceptions. At least half a dozen, actually, and at least 
  one should work, depending on the exact reason I can't see the spells myself. 
  If you would allow me to use one, that alone would help immensely."
      "...If I let you use my perceptions, you're not 
  going to try to stop me from helping any more than that, are you?"
      Darigan gave her an odd look. "What is it you 
  want to do, exactly? I don't wish to be rude, but your enthusiasm is getting 
  a little disconcerting."
      "I want to help. I just don't want you 
  to decide that if you can use my perceptions to see the curse then you don't 
  need me to help for anything else." Lisha crossed her arms stubbornly in front 
  of her chest. "Because if you DO, I won't let you use them."
      Darigan recoiled slightly, ears flaring, and 
  stood rather abruptly. Lisha stared at him, baffled and a little alarmed, while 
  he looked down at her with arms folded. After a long moment, he shut his eyes 
  and drew a deep breath, then sat back down. "Lisha," he began slowly, "I think... 
  I believe that I have reason to trust you. If you will, remember that, and instead 
  of being offended, understand that this is why I'm going to explain instead 
  of leaving."
      "Of course you can trust me," Lisha protested, 
  wounded. "I just want to help."
      "I've been offered help before," Darigan said 
  wearily, "from sources that were not ultimately interested in anything but control. 
  This is not what I believe of you, but you... are... baffling me. You insist 
  you want to help, then say that you won't unless I involve you beyond what I 
  asked you to do -- but much of the rest of it is likely to involve things you 
  haven't been trained for, and for which you seem to find the training process 
  unappealing." He spread his hands on the table. "I am grateful for your assistance 
  so far. I cannot blame you for wanting to offer more of it only on your own 
  terms -- but I admit to being perplexed. What are they?"
      "I just...you want to do a spell that will let 
  you use my perceptions, then send me off to take a nap while you do everything 
  else. That's not helping, that's being used."
      Darigan's expression made Lisha consider checking 
  her head, just to make sure she hadn't unexpectedly sprouted a third pair of 
  ears. She restrained herself.
      "That wasn't my intention," he said after a moment. 
  "I don't think I quite understand your point, though. You would be helping, 
  with what you can do and I currently cannot. I don't mean to ask anything of 
  you that is outside your abilities or that you find distasteful. I didn't intend 
  this to be objectionable." He paused, looking thoughtful, and then focused on 
  her with an expression that was now more speculative than confused. "I do seem 
  to recall that you mentioned not having wanted to be 'sent off with the children' 
  during the war. I should probably clarify that none of the spells I referred 
  to would do any good if you were not looking, figuratively speaking, at the 
  magic I wanted to examine." A faint, rather tentative smile. "I also meant for 
  the nap to take place first. I haven't had occasion to use these spells 
  before, but they're likely to end in the magical equivalent of eyestrain, and 
  that's only going to be worse if either or both of us should be less than well 
  rested."
      "...Oh. It just sounded like...you'd do this 
  spell and then you wouldn't need me to do anything anymore. I don't want that. 
  I want to help. I know I can and...Meridell and Darigan are supposed 
  to be friends now, right? Friends help each other."
      "...For which I thank you. Still, most people 
  would not be relieved at discovering that what they intended to do was 
  going to be more arduous and uncomfortable than expected."
      "I don't mind," Lisha said quickly and earnestly. 
  "I want to help."
      "Yes," Darigan said, sounding a little bemused. 
  "So you've said."
      "...Well, I do." Lisha looked down at her feet.
      "You've been quite adamant on that point." Darigan 
  paused, then added gently, "is something wrong?"
      "Why is it wrong to want to help?"
      "...I don't believe I suggested it was."
      "You're acting like it is. I'm sorry. 
  I won't...push anymore or make you nervous."
      "I was forgetting how young you are, perhaps," 
  Darigan said quietly after a moment. Lisha looked up indignantly, but he waved 
  a hand low over the table. "Young enough to half-expect people to dismiss you, 
  assuming inexperience, rather than evaluating how capable you really are. And 
  perhaps genuinely inexperienced enough," he added with enough humor to take 
  a bit of the sting out of it, "not to have really intended the effect.... Reminding 
  someone repeatedly that they need something from you tends to give the impression 
  that you're trying to press an advantage."
      Lisha's face turned red. "Oh. I wasn't thinking 
  of it like that. I just...want to help. I didn't mean to...Sorry."
      "I didn't think you intended that. But... I did 
  have to stop and think." He seemed much more relaxed.
      "I'm sorry," she repeated. "I just...would 
  like to help. However you think I can."
      "The first and most definite thing is 
  to analyze the way the spells currently sit -- the curses, and whatever's still 
  intact from before, and whatever is laid over them. I gather things are a bit 
  tangled. After that... it will be working out how to get the curses loose without 
  doing further damage -- and then doing it. I think that will be possible, but 
  I don't know how it will be possible, or how long it will take." 
      Darigan regarded her thoughtfully. "You do seem 
  to have a certain feel already for adapting magic, but under the circumstances 
  I hope you'll understand that I'd rather you not try anything without 
  considerable planning. If you're interested in learning more of the background, 
  however, a fresh perspective can be very valuable."
      She wanted to do more than that. But she 
  didn't want to shake the Citadel again, and she didn't want Darigan to forbid 
  her to do anything. So she nodded carefully. "I'd like to learn, and 
  do whatever I can."
      "Thank you." He smiled suddenly. "It occurs to 
  me that no one seems to have thought to perform enchantments on paper 
  using the orb. I may still have some of the essays I had to write for my magic 
  tutor. I can't promise they'll be immediately applicable, but they do describe 
  some of the background material that rarely makes it into the spellbooks."
      "That would be great," Lisha said with 
  feeling.
      "I'll try to have them found by the next time 
  I see you, then. With luck, a little background will make reading about magic 
  seem less futile."
      Lisha privately doubted that, but just smiled 
  and said, "I hope so. At least it can't make it any worse."
      "Good." Darigan rose, then stopped for a moment 
  and smiled down at her. "May I ask you to try to be refreshed by then? There's 
  little point searching the texts until we've more idea what to look for, and 
  I think your brother would like to see more of you."
 To be continued...
					 
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