Origin of Evil, Part 3

Editor's Note: This entry was submitted by contributing writer Mauricio Wan. It is the third in a series exploring the origins of A Knight Adrift's antagonist, Archwizard Ixiel. To read previous entries, visit The Archive. Enjoy!


Ixiel the Wanderer. Ixiel the Lost. What songs do they sing of thee? What ballads are recalled in the eerie shriek of every owl, what rumbles in the lightning-split heavens? What do they call out to thee from tear streaked memories? What reveries echo in the hushed gloom?

Kerlan was waiting for him. At the end of a morning fog at a wend in the road, a hooded figure sat thoughtfully on a rock. Ixiel recognized his fellow traveller, browless and bald as he was, and called out to him.

"I am Ixiel, learned of Xiomendes," he said proudly.

"And what does that mean?" the Walker replied, "We're all someone trained of some dusty old man or woman. You won't impress any Walker addressing yourself like that. Not unless you're an archwizard. No, none of us is impressed unless you're sleeping in velvet sheets and cavorting with royalty."

The stranger looked at the crimson-cheeked, proud young man who drew himself up before him. "The name's Kerlan. I also once had my head shaved by some old fart." The man drew back his hood and smoothed a palm over his bald skull, grinning inscrutably. And so the traditional formalism of his magical education ended for Ixiel.

Kerlan was a man of middle age and bearing. Medium height, earthy complexion, and slightly childish features. It was not entirely clear he needed a razor to tend his hairlessness. Beneath his gaunt frame, however, was a man of wit and learning and a daring countenance that encouraged Ixiel to explore.

Where Xiomendes had been strict, Kerlan was relaxed. Where his former master was solemn, his new companion was flippant. Yet side-by-side the two were equal in their knowledge of the old ways. Kerlan may have explored a different path from Xiomendes, but he arrived at the same places.

Whether he and Kerlan had met by chance or design was unclear to Ixiel. Though he had meandered since his late master's death, Ixiel was not entirely unguided. Here and there a helpful whisper came, a feeling of great intuition, a sense of direction in an otherwise senseless world. Fated or coincidental, he and Kerlan strode the wilderness for some years. No other Walkers crossed their path.

Despite his relative youth, his companion had traveled wide across Valerius. He regaled Ixiel with tales of long lost cities and deep caverns in which the Sages of old hid their knowledge away for safe keeping. Like Ixiel, Kerlan was a prolific collector of old artifacts.

"See these?" he said, holding up a set of rune-inscribed beads. "Focus stones. Old magic. Casters used to wear them to augment their bonds to veil and void. Lost a lot of their charge, been well used. Take 'em. They'll come in handy." Over the campfire, Kerlan tossed the beads to his companion.

Ixiel marveled at the first gift he had ever received. Fatherless Isidore had been taken from everything he had known. The memories of that boy, his mother's face, the shape of her smile, the penetrating sadness of her weary eyes, were more residue than memory, details from disparate instances rearranged by his mind to give it substance. His surrogate Xiomendes had returned from the dust he had come from. Delia... had left, quiet as a ghost, barely even haunting his dreams. The necklace he held in his hands felt to him like an anchor, its old runes tying him to a long lineage and great purpose that was bigger than the loneliness of self.

He tried to thank Kerlan, but the man turned in to sleep without so much as a goodnight.

"These here are words of binding," he showed Ixiel months later, running his hands reverently along the stiff parchment. "Powerful magics. Used to echant items--weapons, armor, beads like your own--and also to make marks to bind people. They say that lovers used to mark themselves so they always knew where the other was, so they could die at just the same instant. Far away, but together. Or some such nonsense." Kerlan chuckled.

Ixiel dreamed of Delia that night, thoughts turning to her despite any distraction he might forcefully imagine. The dark was cold and wet. Wrapped in his dirty robes, he found himself wishing from the foundation of his being to return to those chaste moments of adolescence when he and she would huddle together for warmth in the night. How cruel he thought it then, to be so close yet far. But still Ixiel knew he preferred that binding torture to the rain-soaked freedom of the night.

You can have her. I can give her to you. The whisper came.

Ixiel’s eyes jolted awake. He put the thought out of his head. Delia was Isidore's dream. That boy was gone. Ixiel was a seeker – a keeper of lost things. Surely, he was that and that alone. Never could he be more… Could he?

* * *

Kerlan started every day the same: he found a decent-sized rock and just before sunrise sat on it until inspiration struck him. Together, he and Ixiel crisscrossed all of Valerius from rock to rock, going south one day, then east the next, before taking a northwest tack to catch a trail they did not seek. They never traveled the same direction. They never turned back.

"Ixiel, come," Kerlan shouted giddily in a dark dank cave. Ixiel appeared over his companion’s shoulder. "Have you ever seen anything so beautiful?" Clutched in Kerlan’s hand was an onyx crystal, so impenetrable a black that it seemed to suck the light from their meager lanterns and exist in a darkness deeper than shadow. 

"What is it?"

"A battery. Ancient magics. As old as the Sages themselves. This one’s been lost to us for... hundreds of years? More, maybe.” Kerlan turned the crystal over in his hand. He never took his eyes off it. “Incredible."

Ixiel was perplexed. Battery was something done to another with fists, or to the door of a keep with a ram.

"Come," Kerlan beckoned. "I will explain."

At their campsite, Ixiel’s companion was anything but forthcoming, staring deep into the dancing firelight. Ixiel was deeply curious, but respected the need for silence. He busied himself with a stew made from a winter rabbit coaxed from its burrow by a gesture and his will. While much of "Isidore" had been discarded, it was difficult to resist eating well. Ixiel ate heartily, watching the other man tinker. After leaving his stew untouched for a near quarter of an hour, Kerlan finally spoke.

"You remember the rhyme they taught you?"

Ixiel nodded and began to recite. "In the beginning there was--"

Kerlan waved him off.

"I remember it, gods how I remember it. I know it better than my own name. That's how hard it was beaten into me. No, you remember the part about the Sages’ battle with Tyrannus?"

Ixiel nodded.

"You ever wonder how the old ones were able to channel such powerful magics? The primordial demon is fueled by generations of hatred for man. It draws strength from our blood, our suffering, from our very souls. Today you can light a fire or snare a rabbit with your tricks, but you could not face such a foe."

Kerlan leveled a stare at his friend. He held up the crystal and continued.

"Not without a battery. In deep caves in the southwest there grows a crystal, reddish pink in color. The people of that land call it ‘heart crystal,’ a corruption of an old name. It is something closer to 'soul house' in our tongue. It is deeply magical, receptive to being imbued with even the most minor properties. Walkers who find it usually turn it into a light, or if they have talent with fire a sort of crystal flame they carry with them on cold nights.

"But with powerful magic, there are great uses. I know you have felt it, when you are drawing on your power. You are standing at the edge of a great reservoir. Taking your finger you draw a small rivulet in the sand, just enough for you to taste and call forth whatever you need. You fear that if you draw too great a stream your soul will drown in its power…" The fire’s orange light flickered in the mage’s eyes.

Indeed, that was how it felt to Ixiel to call forth magic. When he first did it, he did not know how. He scooped into a well just enough to recreate a symbol he admired. It was only under Xiomendes' tutelage that he understood just how dangerous it could be to conjure magics by whim.

"That power, that thread, it fuels Tyrannus as well. He drinks from the same trough. For a man to fight him, he'd be killed trying to draw a fraction of that power. But many men together, drawing forth at the same time, could access a power at least equal to that of the demon. So, the Sages took all the heart crystal they could find and they imbued it with a thirst for magic. Each Sage carried a piece with him on the field of battle. As he fell, his essence filled the crystal and trapped his soul, so that a surviving comrade could draw from not only his own power, but that of his former allies as well.”

Kerlan smiled ruefully.

"You ever wonder why the Sages just disappeared after the battle against Tyrannus? It's because hardly any survived. They kept harvesting from one another until one of the last – who knows who that was – drew enough strength to overwhelm the demon and obliterate everything near. You been to the Avendar Wastes in the East? That place is still blighted from the magics used that day.

"While it's true that magic allowed Tyrannus access to this world, it was also the only thing that could send it back. The wizards that saved Valerius should have taught the survivors that study and meditation and knowledge – not endless, pointless, barbaric duels – are the means of salvation. But only a few Sages remained; apprentices and those too weak for battle. They were hailed as heroes for a time, but never strong enough to ascend to true power. Even though we mended the veil of shadow between human and demon, we're consigned to wander like hermits and beggars, searching desperately for the old knowledge to make us fearsome again. Only a few are lucky enough to set up shop somewhere, and only then if they bow and scrape their way into a lord's court, paying flattery to the king and those of noble egos. The lauded chair of the Archwizard is but a joke. An empty ‘honor.’ This," he said, holding the crystal aloft, "is one of the few things I've ever seen that proves it wasn't always like this."

"So, there's a dead wizard inside?" Ixiel asked.

Kerlan looked at the crystal and pursed his lips.

"I'm not really sure, Ix. Could be any one, I guess. The only difference between a wizard and a commoner is that a wizard knows how to tap the reservoir. Some people can be taught the way, most cannot, but everyone can drink. It could be anyone in here, or maybe no one anymore. This could be all that's left of some used up someone."

* * *

For years the two scoured Valerius for more evidence of the crystal and how it was made. Though he was naturally wary of crowds, Kerlan led his companion through more and more towns, buying up the heart crystals that were sold as mundane love charms. Ixiel watched and absorbed, eager to glean what he could.

Kerlan grew obsessive. He read daily on the words of binding, trying to unlock just which combination might make a crystal receptive. At first he experimented with small game, plants that had deep roots and little feeling. Finding their essence insufficient, he quickly graduated to domestic breeds, catching cats and dogs and telling Ixiel in turns of the accidental nature of their death and then the righteousness of their sacrifice. Ixiel grew wary of his comrade, whose deep knowledge and offhand brilliance was increasingly tinged by the madness of his quest.

The madness ended ungracefully in a secluded barn. Kerlan stood over a small girl, holding a heart crystal and her father's hand axe. He was coaxing her with gentle words, promising immortality, when Ixiel found them. 

Ixiel was not aware just when the decision was made. Barely had he recalled a hiss and tremor of surprised laughter. He wasn't even sure he had acted until he felt warm blood pooling around the knife hilt thrust into Kerlan’s back. Ixiel collapsed forward with his friend, whose last rasping soliloquy filled the room with unintelligible lyrics. 

The knife that had culled so many rabbits had taken the life of a man. Ixiel crouched next to the corpse, dumbstruck with grief and disbelief. 

His vision swam and his stomach churned. His mouth hanged agape. For too long the air was thick and empty of thought. Finally, he looked up at the girl, who trembled visibly, but had yet to move. "You should leave," Ixiel told her quietly. He did not watch her go as he began to collect the remains of Kerlan.

Ixiel lit the pyre for his companion on a rock at the bend of a road. With firm resolve, he gathered the belongings that the mad wanderer had accumulated and pitched them into the fire. He picked up the heart crystal, the one Kerlan had held in his hand when he died. It was black and pulsing with vibrant energy. Ixiel could feel a soul stirring within. In that moment he felt it too cruel to condemn his friend to a second death. 

You can use these things. Better than him, a small voice promised from the dark.

Ixiel gathered up the remaining scrolls and artifacts. Where his friend had sought power he would seek peace...

Origin of Evil, Part 2

Editor's Note: This entry was submitted by contributing writer Mauricio Wan. It is the second in a series exploring the origins of A Knight Adrift's antagonist, Archwizard Ixiel. To read previous entries, visit The Archive. Enjoy! 


Ixiel the Savant. Ixiel the Callow. What songs do they sing of thee? What hymns are carried in the shriek of every whippoorwill, what is cried out under the baleful moon? What do they intone of thee before mournful pyres? What glimpse is shared among the shadows?

"Once more," Xiomendes commanded, "No mistakes."

"In the beginning, there was the void," the boy began, "Then the sun came and the world of light was made. From the ocean, Valerius emerged, the land of earth and fire and wind. From the clay, man was sculpted, hardened in the kiln, and given breath. He was made to see and walk the world of light.” The boy hesitated, then continued, “His shadow was cast into the void and became demons."

"Good," the old man affirmed, nodding gravely.

"The worlds of light and dark were forever joined by magic. It is the thread that binds and the veil that keeps them apart. In the world of light, man was forged in the crucible of combat. The best sons of Valerius rose and fell in trial by arms and the land was soaked in blood. In the void, demons bided their time."

"And of the veil?" the old man inquired.

"In their arrogance man tore the veil. From the other side Tyrannus rose. Soaked in the blood of the fallen and seething with man's hatred he came to break their will and consume their spirit. The Kingdom of Valerius rallied its army. The fiercest warriors met Tyrannus with hearts full and steel bared. But in field and siege he smote them all."

"And what saved mankind when their brutish warriors were bested?"

The boy wanted to clear his throat. His mouth was dry. The ground he knelt on was stony and uneven. His back ached. Sweat rolled untrammeled down his shaven brow and burned his eyes. He continued.

"In the darkest hours the king and knights of Valerius turned to the Sages of the Order. Channeling the world's thread, they repelled the demon with great sorcery. Where steel failed, the Order found victory. Where knight was broken, they prevailed and the riven veil was sealed."

"What of the Sages, boy?" the old man warned, "Look smart now."

"In the years after the banishment, man forgot. Where once there was bravery, now there was intrigue. Where once there was fellowship, now there was war. The sages...” The boy’s focus faded. He could feel the old man's eyes bore into him. "The sages...”

He could hear the tapping of a foot.

“The sages... left. The Order was broken."

The stick came down with a blinding thud. Skin stinging and head ringing, Isidore looked up at the once kindly old man. His unveiled face, so often home to a smile, was barren and cragged with years. Sky blue eyes frosted over with the imminence of age.

"The sages gone, the order was broken!"

The boy struggled back to his knees. One prod from Xiomendes staff sent him back on his side.

"Repeat it, ward."

"The sages gone, the order was broken."

Tears mingled with sweat trickling down a bruised face.

"Who remains, Isidore?"

"The Cowled remain. In courts the Archwizard gives counsel and the Walkers trace forgotten paths. They keep the old ways. They watch the veil."

"And keep the thread mended," he barked, "Where is your head, boy? Get up. Again."

The boy scrambled to his knees and bowed his head. In unsteady voice he repeated the recitation. More blows landed and Isidore of Elea was cut above the eye. It mattered not. His mind was elsewhere, with another.

Delia was strong. Delia was clever. Delia was favored. Sable-haired and chocolate-eyed with tears like dew drops on a spring day, her voice like a warm breeze through river reeds. On the day they found her it was as if she emerged splendid from a golden tinged dream and that moment became a piece of forever that would be carried on and on until the sun burned out and all was darkness and nothing once more.

Isidore struggled. To be a pupil of the Walkers was to be dust swept from the pathways and kicked down every open road. Valerius is unkind. Far from his distant homeland, Isidore found the weather frightful, the days long beneath the burning sun. Shorn of all hair and soaked in the sweat of toil, he was told that a true wizard never sweats and rebuked for lack of control. The trees and fields that had once meant freedom were now thickets within which lurked the predatory and depraved. Knowledge was the quest. Only companionship was solace. Maxims were daily. Discipline was rigid.

“Where there is light a shadow is cast. What is a gift is also a curse.”

The rod struck the idle child.

“There is strength in conviction but strength is not a conviction.”

The night was cold and lonely.

“Ambition, pride, talent—these are excuses for corruption.”

Their path the one least trodden, the Walkers were reduced over centuries from an exalted order to an amorphous collective. Where there were four that took Isidore from his village, by the year's end eight walked. In the following summer, he and Xiomendes were but two. By winter their number had doubled again. In a field conversing with spirits they found Delia and were five. From that day forth, they were never less than three.

Over the trails the boy grew but never lost his smooth faced youth. Between shaves he appeared fair-haired with high-boned cheeks, gray eyes brooding like a cloudy day far from storm but free of sun. Isidore grew long, but remained quill thin and feather light, something of a bird among men, ethereal and soaring and hollow. Yet he was in his manfulnes all the same when he noticed Delia.

His studies suffered. The child of spare conditions who had wanted for nothing in the poverty of his life found himself suddenly consumed by desire. Where he had once been precocious he was forgetful and distracted. The welts of Xiomendes’ displeasure painted his skin a tapestry of bruises, like the hide of a mangy animal. Delia was not without eyes. Nor was she without sympathy.

She was, however, without interest.

Spurned in all love, Isidore grew rebellious. Where he was instructed to lift a stick, he chose to uproot a tree. When a stone were to be broken in two, he ground boulders to dust. Unaware of the motives of his pupil's renewed interest in the Fifth Art, Xiomendes was at once awed and concerned by the boundless power wielded by the inexperienced boy. In turns he offered praise and counseled control.

“Control,” Isidore mused, “Is indeed the best course of action.”

And so the willful boy began to appreciate what “will” truly meant. The moths that had once chased a figure crafted of fire now danced to the direction of his fingers. His companions were delighted at how easily dinner fell in their snares, though never sure of the cause of their good fortune. In nightly whispers he visited his darling and coaxed her attention. His intense stares of longing became intoxicating provocations.

But his victory, assured as the seasons, was hollow.

In the winter of his sixteenth year, Isidore's tutor took ill with fever and died by a campfire while being tended by his ward. In the last mournful moments before Xiomendes closed his eyes forevermore, Isidore recollected the kindly old man who had rescued him from obscurity and given him purpose. In exchanged glances and frowns the two said more than words could imagine. Thus it was that Xiomendes passed from this world.

In the morning, Delia was gone. Where the three had been inseparable there was left the matter of Isidore. He thought back to his home village, caught in the shadow of Monticolus, and found he could not recall its name. Nor could he remember the paths that would take him there again. Even so, would his mother recognize the hairless face? Was she even alive? Was he?

No. Isidore son of Elea passed from this world the day he left his own village. The man that remained was something else, though within him were pieces of what had come before. Isidore. Xiomendes. Elea. Ixiel of the Cowl was born. A lone figure abandoned the funeral pyre of his mentor to walk the forgotten paths of Valerius, to wander in search of what was lost.

Yet he walked not alone. A new teacher had found Ixiel, one that came in whispers on the night with promises of things greater than what he had been denied. It told of ancient pathways and of artifacts that were older than mankind itself. In the fire’s shadow on the edge darkness, young Ixiel smiled.

Origin of Evil, Part 1

Editor's Note: This entry was submitted by contributing writer Mauricio Wan.  It is the first in a series exploring the origins of A Knight Adrift's antagonist, Archwizard Ixiel. Enjoy!


Ixiel the Great. Ixiel the Betrayer. What songs do they sing of thee? What notes are carried in the caws of every murder, what is whistled in the howl of the fell south winds? What do they chant of thee in the lowing of the battle broken and mortal wounded? What tale is spun in the whispers of the darkness?

Isidore son of Elea was born in the hinterlands under the shadow of Old Monticolus. A full league from the coast, his mother made her living as a spinner and occasional wet nurse for wealthier peasants in the village. He was born a jaundiced and mewling thing and, having been conceived roughly in an attack by marauders during Leogriff's campaign to pacify the south, the midwife did not hold out hope for the child to survive a fortnight.

Yet the child endured.

Isidore was a precocious thing. He walked early for his age, spoke before his peers, and showed uncanny mastery at deft tasks where even long time journeymen in the trade struggled. But the child was over-small for his age and though clever, never well liked by the other boys and girls. By his tenth year it became clear that he would always be weak of frame. Never would he be a soldier, nor a lumberman, nor even a farmhand. Worse yet he was a child of an unknown father, lower in station than even the poorest of peasants and thus unlikely to be suitable to wed.

By the time he reached his adolescence, Isidore took a melancholy turn. He became quiet and brooding and did not get on well with the other boys who plowed their fathers' field and hunted small game for leisure. Instead he would wander the mountains alone and wend his way through the abandoned ruins of Old Monticolus, imagining the dead folk whose home was erased to make way for the new. Only the tender love of his mother and the few words he had learned to read from the monthly catechism of the holy texts brought him pleasure. Indeed the child seemed to grasp before anyone else how lonely and spare his life would be.

And then it all changed one golden red day flush with new autumn.

The Walkers came through the village. Dressed head to toe in their rich purple and gold raiment, masked with the scarves of the seers, there were four in total. With no proper inn to stay at, they came to the mayor's house to ask for lodging and fare. Having only just returned from one of his walkabouts, Isidore rushed as all the other youths did to see the once in a lifetime visit from the magic folk. In the cooling dusk of a waning day his life changed forever.

It started with simple tricks. The Walkers entertained the children by making the leaves dance in winds that came from their fingers. Then they made seeds sprout from the ground and flower though it was the season of dying. Finally, someone brought a burning log from a hearth and they crafted from it little fire moths that made their powder and flesh fellows follow them in feats of aerial acrobatics.

For Isidore it was the loveliest day of his life. He had never seen anything so fantastical. And he was allowed to join the others, boy and girls and adults alike, without the mocking and aversion that he had come to know in their looks and quiet avoidance. He wished it could go on forever. If only they could make from the fire the flying snake he had found inscribed on the walls of the old city.

Suddenly, the fire did just that.

The fire moths puffed out of existence. The newly sprouted flowers wilted and blackened. The leaves no longer danced in the wind but floated gravely towards the ground. The Walkers stared at him.

It was the oldest, with a creaking walk but a steady purpose to his gait, who approached him.

“What's your name, boy?”

 “Isidore.”

“And where did you learn to do that, Isidore?”

“Do what?” The boy asked, shamed face and tremulous, not knowing how but knowing very surely that he had ruined the spectacle of the best day of his life. He could feel the hate and mortification of his neighbors burning on the nape of his neck.

“Make the sign of Old Monticolus.”

“I—I didn't make it,” he stammered.

The old man put his hand on Isidore's head and the crow's lines next to his eyes furrowed with a secret smile hidden by the seer's scarf.

“It is not a bad thing you have done, Isidore. In fact, it is wonderful. I've never seen any boy your age do it.”

Isidore was united with his neighbors in astonishment.

“Now, where is your father? I should like to speak with him.”

“I have no father, sir.”

The old man put his hand on the boy's shoulder.

“I see. And your mother?”

Isidore pointed.

“She lives over that hill, sir.”

“Very well then, let us go to her.”

The next morning was the last day Elea saw her son. As he walked away from the village without a wave or smile, she thought she saw him walk a little straighter and a little prouder. Though she had lost a son she knew it was for the better, for he had gained a life.

As Isidore left the town in a white robe that was too large for his frame he could not comprehend how greatly his life would change with the Walkers. He knew somehow, however, that the name of the place he was leaving would soon be as forgotten as the name "Isidore, son of Elea."