Subject: General Theories, Ch. 2: The Art of Noises
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Posted on: 2018-04-13 15:50:00 UTC

Siobhan kept reading. And reading. The Oath she'd taken hadn't affected her thought patterns, not exactly; rather, everything seemed heightened somehow, as if the world had suddenly come into focus. She still didn't entirely believe, though. So what do you do when you don't believe a claim? You test it.

She flicked through the chapters for something basic, something that would deliver demonstrable effects with no other explanation. Extraordinary claims required extraordinary evidence and all that.

The book responded almost as soon as she had the thought. A diagram caught her eye, purporting to be an inscription on a gold dish from the La Tene culture. It was a simple little spell, insofar as anything involving magic was simple, to make an object glow. Perfect for her purposes. Siobhan grabbed a felt-tip whiteboard marker and a T-shirt she never wore any more and got to work.

The marker scratched and caught in the fabric, and Siobhan's arm twitched sometimes, but the result was a very rough approximation of the design on the golden dish. The circle containing the spell's wording was thick and dark as a gathering storm. It also seemed too small and too big at the same time; perhaps an artifact of the inexact transcription of the spell. Oh well, she thought, Here goes nothing.

She drew the final twisting shape, the Wizard's Knot that tied it all together. She was suddenly reminded of Gordius and his Knot; was he a wizard, and the beautiful Alexander some avatar or servant of the Lo- It, she corrected herself- with that idea of breaking knots as a simple, effective solution to unsolvable problems being an end goal of It, affecting the ability of humanity to practice magic...

Or maybe she was talking bollocks. It could quite easily be that.

Her musings on the nature of long-dead kings and emperors was interrupted by the beginning of the spell. True to form, the shirt began to glow a soft orange colour... and then it began to get brighter. A lot brighter. Siobhan yelped and ran to shove the incandescent shirt in a suitcase and zip it up tight. Then she sat down on the edge of her bed and shivered for a few minutes.

This Speech, the source code of the universe, was magic. Real, honest to God magic. Okay, so she knew how it was done, but that never stopped anything being magic. And it worked, as the shirt proved. Smegging hell. She looked out of the window, at the kind old sun casting shadows through the trees, at the green parakeet sat on the window ledge, at the sea and the burnt-blue sky.

Siobhan opened the window and leaned out, letting the sea wind fill her world. She looked at the parakeet. It looked back.

"Dai stiho, cousin," she said, largely out of curiosity.

"Dai stiho," replied the bird. "Always nice to meet another servant of the Primal Scream, even one whose accent is atrocious."

"What." Siobhan jerked up and bashed her head on the window. "Ow. Smeg. What? I'm talking to a parakeet. Who is also a wizard. What?"

"Skree, you must be newly hatched. How long have you heard the Noise?"

"What year is this?"

"Twelfth Soar of the Twenty-eighth Great Turning."

"About... half an hour then."

"Skree," said the parakeet. "Name's Eats-The-Purple-Fruits. You got one, cousin?"

"Siobhan. Er. Siobhan Jones. Nice to meet you. Er. How long have you been a wizard?"

"Three flights. Years. I'm a bit of an oldie."

"Well, I've lucked out then. Can you... teach me? Is teaching a thing? My book of magic is being a bit obtuse."

"Old wizards don't teach so much as guide, Siobhan Er Siobhan Jones. We trade power for experience and finesse. Besides, magic doesn't work the same for everyone. Starlings work spells with their own bodies, crows write them in fields, seagulls... well, seagulls is where it gets a bit distressing, if I'm honest. Parakeets like me? We scream at the air. We call to the world and the High Shadows and work the Noise into art. We read magic from the currents and thermals, and we call to echo the Primal Scream. That's our book of magic, Siobhan Er Siobhan Jones. And it won't work for you."

"Then, er. Can you guide me?"

"Sure. What's in it for me?"

"I can get you a pretty ready supply of fat balls from the local garden centre-"

"Sold. Right. You don't have to, by the by, I was just trying it on."

"No no, a deal's a deal. I'm not a thief. And just call me Siobhan."

"Call me Purple then."

Siobhan backed up and let Purple fly in through the window. The parakeet flew around a bit before perching on the radiator on the back wall. He poked experimentally at the orange suitcase, then took to the air again.

"Okay then, Siobhan. Where do you want to start?"

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hS has Kaitlyn, Scapegrace has... a small green bird. Hurrah. =]

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