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Calling Magic
Calling Magic
Calling Magic
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Calling Magic

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Tia, the most powerful young witch of her time, flees the Court of Wizards and the magicians determined to control her, seeking a new life in the prosperous city of Paiza. There, as the assistant to a flamboyant court magician, she finds friendship and comfort brewing potions, learning new spells and exploring the gadget-filled city. 

But the king of Paiza, with his captivating gray eyes and mysterious purple ring, holds an inexplicable sway over her. When Paiza comes under threat, will Tia’s identity and extraordinary powers remain hidden? 

An enchanting  tale of magic and adventure, with Tia, as outspokenly original as she is powerful, at its center.
LanguageEnglish
Release dateSep 20, 2021
ISBN9789927151668
Calling Magic

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    Book preview

    Calling Magic - Maadeed  Kummam Al

    CHAPTER 1

    Oh, bubbles!

    I’ll pay you double! Just drive! I shouted at the coachman as I clung to the side of his moving carriage.

    You got coin? he asked, glaring at me.

    Yes, amph! The wheel hit a bump, and I hugged the pole I was hanging onto tighter. The carriage drove over a creaking wooden bridge and I gasped at the sight of the crashing water beneath us.

    Show me or I’m stopping right now. I wanted to slap him, kick him or curse him for all eternity. My pulse raced faster with every shout coming from the guards behind us.

    With shaking hands, I pulled out my money sack and shook it so he’d hear the coins jingle.

    Alright, was all he said before yanking me up to sit beside him and cracking his whip.

    The horses reared up and I could hear shrieking noises inside the carriage, probably from the unsuspecting travelers. The coachman didn’t pay attention to them and with a rumbling sound sped across the bridge that led us away from the river and closer to the mountain and the city of Paiza.

    I dared to glance over my shoulder at the group of guards who had chased me through half the city. They stood at the curve of the bridge. A few shook their swords at me, and one had an arrow at the ready, but a guard next to him made him lower his bow.

    Don’t worry! I yelled at them as we moved away. I’m never coming back again! Uff, I huffed, crossing my arms.

    I had been traveling for almost a week now and I was being careful to hide my powers. But how could I have known that magic was not allowed in that hexing city and that they actually had spell sensors to alarm guards? They should’ve had signs or a warning or something. I was only trying to cut my sandwich, which was very big, and I didn’t have a knife. I didn’t even have the chance to eat it!

    I pouted as my stomach grumbled. I was close, I told myself. This was the final day of traveling and the moment I crossed the walls of Paiza, it would all be over.

    Somehow, though, the last few miles were the hardest. I fidgeted throughout the drive. Perhaps it was because I was still shaken by the fright of that chase, or maybe because in every story book I had read, this was usually the moment when things went bad.

    But I wasn’t in a story book and the day passed without incident, and by the time the sun was gliding down behind us, I saw it. A shimmering golden dot at the foot of a mountain, like a mirage that could disappoint me. But the closer we got, the surer I was. This was Paiza: a thriving walled city.

    My heart pounded and my hand slid into my pocket, my fingers longing for the calming feeling the smooth paper of the invitation brought me. The invitation that would get me through those massive stone walls and into a new beginning. Breathe, I reminded myself, but, oh boiling cauldron, how nervous I was!

    "Here I go." I bit my lip and tugged a tiny purple curl away from my face and hid it under my scarf.

    The driver pulled on the reins and, the moment the carriage stopped, he turned to me with his hand out. I rolled my eyes and pulled out my money sack. I handed him two silver coins.

    He still had his hand out. I gave him one more coin. He didn’t move.

    What? That’s more than double!

    It costs more than double to transport criminals, he shrugged.

    I gaped at him, but I still shoved one more coin into his hand.

    I’m not a criminal, I said as I climbed down.

    Then, maybe next time, don’t dress like one, the driver snorted and cracked his whip again.

    I looked down at my outfit, a short black dress and studded, also black, boots. I thought black would keep me out of sight, but during this week I realized I was wrong. Apparently, no one in the land wore that much black. Most people I met didn’t have a drop of black on their cloaks, or their clothes or their boots. Earthy colors, I noted to myself. Next time I’ll wear earthy colors.

    I’m hopeless, I sighed. I couldn’t change it now. I wasn’t going to risk doing magic again.

    I turned and walked along with a woman who was the only other traveler heading to Paiza from the carriage. She was holding a tiny child in her arms while another and slightly older kid, a boy, latched onto her skirt. A trunk as tall as the boy stood right by her side. I was about to offer to help her drag it up the hill, when the woman pushed a button on the trunk and four iron claws popped out from its sides. The boy gave the trunk a push and with a thud it stood up on its claws. The woman turned and with a melody of clicks the trunk, like a spider, followed her.

    How bizarre.

    I stood staring at them, but realizing she seemed to know where she was going, I followed her. We walked on a stone road that ran through the green moors circling the mountain and up the hill to the foot of the mountain where the city of Paiza awaited me, surrounded by thick ancient walls.

    The walls were famous back at the Court of Wizards, where I used to live. It was said that for hundreds, maybe thousands of years, the walls protected Paiza from all harm. Neither a herd of elephants nor an army of magicians could break through them. The impenetrable stone barrier was drenched in ancient spells of strength and protection. Paiza was the safest place in all the land, and because of that I had decided to make the city my new home.

    I could see the ancient carvings of those incantations on the walls as we neared the gates, but I didn’t anticipate the feeling that hit me when I stood right in front of them. My spine tingled with the power pulsing out of those majestic walls. My heart was elated by the combination of feelings they released: fear, calm and admiration.

    I was so stunned I didn’t notice the line of people before us, all waiting to enter. Many had the wheeled trunks, clicking like nervous ticks beside them. A man in front of me wore a leather hat with goggles strapped on it and the woman who was accompanying him wore a long leather coat with what appeared to be copper wheels pinned all over the fabric.

    A clink followed by a wheeze from my left made me turn around.

    A huge, horseless two-floor carriage with whirling and clicking wheels drove by me on a road parallel to ours. Copper pipes, coughing clouds of glittering white steam, covered the corners of the whale of a carriage. Wide open windows showed groups of people having tea and chatting on each floor. The carriage entered through a huge door that was cut inside the massive metal gate. My line took me to a smaller door that was for people on foot and as I walked closer, I wondered when was the last time the main gates were fully opened.

    This is going to be a weird city. Hopeful anticipation rose in my chest, and I could see another similar, yet smaller, carriage coming from the far west, clinking and huffing steam.

    Suddenly I felt a punch directed at my hip. Ouch! I screamed. Oh, bubbles! My scream was so loud that everyone turned to see why in all the lands I had released such a shrill.

    I turned to where the punch had come from and discovered a little child, no, a little monster, giggling at me. It took all that was left in me not to flick my fingers at him and turn him into an ugly toad or … I blinked.

    Somewhere behind the line of people, I glimpsed a shadow of a bird, an eagle. My throat closed on itself. I blinked once more. There wasn’t anything there. It was a glimpse, a passing moment.

    I was imagining it, I told myself as I took a deep breath. The invitation crumpled under my tight grip, and the need to get inside those walls overtook me.

    Your child is possessed! I hissed at the mother and walked away, moving between people to try and get to the gates faster. Maybe I shouldn’t have told her that, looking obviously like a witch. She’d probably even take the kid to a magician or two to verify whether it was true. But I didn’t care. I was too agitated, and my hip still hurt from that punch. From how strong the punch had been, he probably was demented.

    Rude, a man grumbled as I passed him. Many more shared his annoyance as I moved up the line, but I didn’t care. I had seen a shadow. Where I came from, shadows were never good. I needed to get inside those gates.

    I heard a few complaints whispered along the way, but no one dared to stop me. My criminal outfit was good for something after all.

    When I got to the head of the line, one man stood by the door and was talking to a … window?

    After saying a few words to it, the metal gate creaked open and he entered.

    I moved to follow, but then, Where do you think you’re going? a voice from the window said to me and I halted. No, not from the window, I realized, but from a pipe stuck to the side of the window, its lips flared out like an open mouth.

    A man sat behind the sealed window. The window was a bit dusty but I could see he wore what I assumed to be a guard’s uniform, all green and brown, the colors of the mountain, with a tiny copper wheel pinned to his chest. The energy I sensed from him felt tired and worn out, an energy someone that young shouldn’t have had. Probably being outside and dealing with hundreds of people every day took a toll on him.

    Magicians are not allowed in without permits, he said, tapping the glass in the direction of the black star tattoo under my left eye.

    I have an invitation! I shouted at the window.

    The man wrinkled his nose and sighed, I can hear you clearly. You don’t have to shout. He then slid open a tiny door in the window and added, Just hand it over.

    I got it out of my pocket and slid it inside. He took it and closed the tiny door.

    I knew Paiza took extra precautions in dealing with outsiders, but my invitation gave me royal permission to stay in the city for three days. I was sure of it, but he made me nervous as his fingers skimmed the paper over and over, examining it. Still, the gate remained closed.

    I could’ve screamed at him, asked him what the hex he was reading for so long, but I had promised myself to hold my tongue more often, as my bluntness brought me nothing but trouble. So I stood there, doing my best to relax my restless legs that wanted to run inside.

    I was about to explode at the guard when he opened the tiny glass door and pushed my invitation back out to me.

    Three days, witch. You better be gone before the fourth, he said, pulling a lever by his side. The gate finally cracked open.

    As if! This was going to be my fresh start, I thought, dashing inside.

    Inside the gates I was welcomed by narrow alleys that cut through brown brick buildings. Patches of green moss and pink flowers covered the buildings and shimmering waves danced across the windows, the sunlight catching their copper rims. Silver and golden birds flew from one building to the next and my soul sang with the vibrant sensation of this city.

    I wanted to shout, I’ve made it! I wanted to jump and dance. No shadows here! Finally, I could breathe!

    And the city was so beautiful I wanted to stand there all day, memorizing every detail. But since my interview for the magician’s assistant position wasn’t happening until tomorrow, I needed to find a place to stay for the night. I had come this far. I couldn’t ruin it now.

    Excuse me, I shouted, a bit louder than I intended, to an old man sitting on a second-floor balcony on the building to my right. He was smoking something from a metallic pipe. Everyone else was rushing about, so I thought it was better to talk to someone who was staying put.

    The man exhaled the smoke he had sucked in and leaned forward to find me waving at him from the road. He tipped his black hat, and I noticed a few of the copper wheels the guards wore as pins circled its rim.

    Yes? he said in a husky voice, emphasizing the e, before sucking in more smoke.

    Emm, I’m visiting the city and I need a place to stay, I said. As his eyes trailed my body I said with a snap, Like an inn or something.

    The Rose Inn. That’s where you need to go, he answered, leaning back into his chair.

    How can I find that?

    With a click, a path shall be revealed to the fair maiden. With a blink, she will find her way, the old man sang.

    What? I was getting annoyed. Seriously, a sonnet? Was I in a book?

    The old man laughed and a puff of smoke escaped his mouth, and I squinted my eyes at his pipe. I could have sworn that the handle whirled a bit with his laugh.

    The sign, love. He pointed the pipe at a random spot behind me.

    I turned and for the first time I noticed them: metal boards nailed to the corner of each building with signs naming a part of the city (central market, a place called a pharmacy, names of streets and other things I didn’t recognize) with an arrow pointing at the alley leading to those places. But none mentioned the inn.

    I rolled my eyes and was about to turn and really snap at the old man, when all the signs flickered at the same time and new places and arrows appeared on them.

    And there it was, a sign with the Rose Inn.

    You’re welcome! the old man called behind me as I sprinted toward the alley the sign pointed at.

    Thank you! I shouted back at him, as I took a turn right.

    Following the signs, I ended up in a narrow road, standing before a big wooden door, a golden rose carved in its center. Two boys dragged one of the wheeled trunks up the steps to get it inside.

    I smiled, happy to accomplish my first goal in this city. I opened the door and held it for the boys and waited for them to haul the trunk inside. I would’ve spelled the trunk to float, but I had learned my lesson and wouldn’t risk it.

    Thank ya, miss! one of the boys said to me with a smile.

    I winked at them as I closed the door, and then looked around the inn, which to my shock was a tiny room with a desk and a spiral staircase to the left. The whole place was wooden brown and a silver tube lined the walls. I couldn’t even see the boys there anymore.

    Setting aside my curiosity at where they had gone, I approached the woman standing behind the desk. She had her black hair tied up in a knot and her eyes focused on a paper in her hand.

    Hello, I said.

    How many rooms and how many nights? the lady asked, still focused on the paper.

    One and emm one.

    Any luggage? She picked up a feather pen from the desk and scribbled something on her paper. Like the old man’s pipe, the pen was partly metal.

    No. I shook my head and wondered how much Paiza depended on mechanics and metals.

    It’s three pieces of silver for the night and if you want dinner that’s an additional two pieces of copper. The lady placed her paper and feather on the desk and looked at me for the first time. Payment’s upfront, she added with pursed lips as she tucked an escaped lock back into her hair knot.

    I took out the money and handed it to her, happy she wasn’t fazed by my appearance. As an innkeeper, she must have met all sorts of people, even those weirder than me.

    She turned the coins in her hand, and I was afraid she wouldn’t accept them. They were not Paizan currency, but I was doing my best to keep exchanging coins to not leave a trail of Court of Wizards silvers. They dealt solely with silver and gold there for some reason. Probably because they thought copper was beneath them.

    The innkeeper placed the coins inside a wooden box on the table. She clicked a button on the side and a metallic claw appeared and tapped each coin. Satisfied by the clink she heard, the innkeeper nodded at me.

    This way, she said, as she took a key out from her desk drawer and walked toward the staircase. I followed.

    She stopped at the first step and signed for me to stand beside her. I did.

    She pulled a lever and clink, clink the stair beneath us screeched and, with a louder clink, moved us up the spiral staircase. I bit my lip, trying not to be too foreign and act all amazed.

    The first floor was a wide dining hall with round tables scattered around. It wasn’t a meal time, so the place was quiet and fairly empty except for a hooded man drinking and an inn worker sweeping the wooden floor. Sunlight seeped in through the gaps in between the windows’ copper braces, giving the place a golden hue. With the silence and the warmth coming from the iron stove in the corner, I felt so serene, like I could sit there with a cup of tea all day long.

    Why couldn’t I feel that back at the court? I thought with sorrow.

    Sorry, I breathed out, as the lady nudged me to take a step back. The mechanical stairs took us up to the next floor, where my room was located.

    And what a cute room it was, with its wooden furniture and flowery walls. I sat on the clean, rose-patterned bedsheets and my cheeks began to hurt from how wide I was smiling. I was so exhilarated by the fact that I had made it this far that I didn’t even hear the lady mumble something about dinner before she closed the door behind her. That was alright, I would go downstairs later and ask her.

    I was here. I was finally out of the Court of Wizards and I was really in Paiza to find a new home. I jumped off the bed and passed a small table with a water basin on it and stood by the window. Unlike the windows in the lower floors, my window didn’t have any copper braces, which gave me a clear view of the outside.

    Below me was a narrow alley, one of the many cutting the city into an illuminating maze. Metallic carts of various shapes and colors held a variety of wonderful products, from silk to vegetables, and one was even full of copper and iron trinkets. Behind each cart stood a man or woman, and some even had a young boy or girl manning it. It was a market.

    Maybe I’d venture into it the next morning.

    It’s not your home yet, a tiny voice in my head said. I sighed. Yes, I still had to go to the interview tomorrow and I had to compete with other magicians to get the job. There was also the chance that the court magician himself would be more dreadful than the high members of the Court of Wizards. I shook my head. I doubted it. I reminded myself that I had managed to receive an invitation to Paiza, to leave that morbid court and to travel all the way here.

    I should enjoy that accomplishment.

    I turned, and a glimpse of a shadow behind me made me flinch.

    Bubbles! I cursed. It was my reflection in the mirror. Was the mirror there all the time? Ah, I really need to pay more attention.

    After my nerves calmed from the fright of the apparent visitor, I faced my reflection. I really needed to change this total black-themed attire. I looked as grim as death.

    I removed my scarf and let my purple curls fall

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