The crystaline chandeliers, each encircled with several layers of candles, hanged over the ceiling. Patterns of tree-like branches were etched along its fine marbles which intertwined and grew more complex as they lead to the back of the throne room, where the queen patiently waited.
Curtains of royal purple enveloped her throne like a cloak. Its rich fabrics reflected the glow of the hundreds or so candles flickering along the slow passage of time and the silence it brought.
Queen Milena drew a deep breath. Then at long last, the doors to her throne room opened. Two men stood behind their towering panels, Hemios—The High Mage—and Barnabas—The High Scientist. The scientist wore a heavy white coat, and the other pitch black robes.
The two men walked into the room and gave their due bows to the queen. “Your Majesty!” they greeted her in unison. “We have returned with news about the incident at The Wooden Ladle.”
“Do go on,” the queen, unimpressed, played around with her dark curls.
Hemios took the lead. “It’s as we feared. The incident was no ordinary one.”
“He speaks the truth,” added Barnabas. “Roman Demid was most unusual.”
The queen continued to wrap her curls around her fingers. She straighned her posture and looked straight ahead to the two men. “Is a malicious third party involved?”
Barnabas, firmly standing at his feet, answered. “We believe so. Roman was an ordinary mage. Yet his power far surpassed that of his class.”
“Blue fire,” said Hemios. “It’s a highly advanced fire-style spell. The most devastating of its kind. The likes of Roman could not achieve it. Not on their own.”
“And that takes doing. I am still studying concepts of amplification. Whoever backed Roman far surpasses our understanding on that domain, Your Majesty. It could be revolutionary technology, even. Something yet to be seen. For that to be demonstrated in the soil of our kingdom”—Barnabas paused for one long, unbearable second—“must mean malice.”
Silence followed the conclusion. The queen, staring outward her vast throne room, remained still. So did Barnabas, Hemios, and the two guards always by her side. Guards that she hardly made use of.
Queen Melina smiled. Then, that smiled burst into a short laugh. “Very well…” she stood up. “If it is war they want,” the ground beneath her feet started to shake, “it is war they’ll get.”
Hemios and Barnabas did not dare to move. The queen’s smile grew into a wide smirk, and the stairs before her cracked as the seismic waves intensified. “I am afraid of no soul,” she declared. “And we, as a kingdom, will crush anyone who dares interfere with our affairs. Lands will be sunk!” she swiped her palm, tearing a rift across the ground. “And nothing will remain standing.”
She lowered her arms. The shaking subsided. Splinters of ceiling and clouds of dust rained around her.
Hemios spoke up. “What are your orders?”
Melina walked down the fragmented stairs and came closer to the two men. She glared them straight in the eye. “Find them,” she said, “and bring them to me alive. I care not about how as long as it is achieved. Failure is not an option.”
The two men bowed and said in union, “Yes, Your Majesty.”
“Very good.” she walked past them and onwards the doorway. “I will be in the training grounds. Do not disturb me, for I might mistake you for a target.”
Barnabas and Hemios didn’t look behind. They stared onto the rubble and the cracks as their queen made her loud exit—by destroying the door. Its pieces crashed on the ground and thunderous laughter echoed from the halls.
As soon as that laughter grew sufficiently fade, the two men turned to each other.
“It’s your turn,” said Hemios.
Barnabas pointed a finger straight to his nose. “No, it’s
your turn. I fixed the throne room last time!”
“What are you talking about?” he raised a brow. “Besides idiocy, do you also have memory problems?”
“Idiocy!” laughed Barnabas. “Watch who you are talking to. I am the High Scientist.”
“And I am the High Mage.”
“You can’t even fix a broken throne room. Some high mage you are! High is only your ego.”
Hemios clenched his palm. “You’re fortunate that the situation doesn’t permit for much time, otherwise, I’d put you in your place. I’ll fix the cursed room. You have Roman in your labs. Try to gather more info.”
Barnabas’s coat waved as he turned sharply for the broken door. “I have some ideas already.”
“Oh? And those are?”
Still on his way out, he spun one eighty degrees and said, “Let’s say that I like to… start from the root of things.” Barnabas smiled. “You’ll hear soon enough from me.”
He spun back around and exited the throne room, hand waving up in the air. Hemios, meanwhile, analyzed his words. “The roof of things…” he whispered. “He must mean the tavern.”
Then he thought more of it and realized that little in this life is a coincidence.