Etherwalker
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Synopsis
The world is broken. The powerful machines that once ruled over land and sky fought and died, leaving humanity in a primitive age of swords and monsters. But that was long ago, and only legends of the Schism remain.
Enoch has never been frightened by these tales. He sees things differently than the other youth in Rewn's Fork, and that makes him an outcast. Where others see crops and weather and flocks of sheep, Enoch sees numbers and patterns.
When he accidentally awakens a powerful Artificial Intelligence, he discovers the truth behind his peculiarity-Enoch is an Etherwalker, the last in a long line of powerful technopaths who can control machines with their minds.
Without knowing it, he has triggered the ancient Hunt, and now legendary monsters are hungry for his blood and bent on his extinction. They know he has seen the truth behind the broken world, and, if he survives, he may have the power to shatter it . . . or to make it whole again.
Release date: January 4, 2022
Publisher: Future House Publishing
Print pages: 366
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Etherwalker
Cameron Dayton
Red soaked the skies of Babel,
Those who ruled and clove the world
Death’s tattered wind did travel.
—Lodoroi song
“Found any more soil under all those rocks in your field?”
Grinning and bobbing and shaking his tangle of oily orange hair, Mishael Keddrik slapped the tall soldier on the back. Once again, the grocer was attempting to wear down Master Gershom with an onslaught of bad jokes—a siege of limp humor flung at a pale and unappreciative target.
Enoch tried to hide his smile, lifting his wrist over his mouth while pretending to cough.
Stepping around the trader’s wares, Enoch found a spot behind a bin of seeds where he could listen—and smile—without being noticed. Master Gershom stared at the grocer, weathering the storm of bad breath and sarcasm like he did every spring: with tight-lipped stoicism. Loudly clearing his throat, Master Gershom repeated his request for salve.
Unperturbed, the round little grocer smiled and reached into one of the cupboards behind the counter. With a theatrical gasp of joy, he pulled out a little clay pot.
“And now, boy,” said the trader, calling across the shop toward Enoch, “if the good Master Gershom will promise to apply this to his palsied humor twice daily, I shall give it to him for free.”
Enoch pressed his wrist so hard against his grin that it hurt. Not wanting to ignore the trader, or to anger his master, he nodded mutely. Master Gershom mumbled something that was partially a growl and then shook his head, long, white military braids waggling in counterpoint to his fierce countenance. He then placed a stack of coins on the barrel in front of him—more than enough for the medicine—and stormed out. Enoch followed, past the protesting Mishael Keddrik and out into the afternoon sun.
Master Gershom strode swiftly across the shallow wagon path that counted as Main Street—or, as Enoch called it, Only Street. A century ago, Rewn’s Fork had been a crossroads shared by two shepherd families, and it had grown just barely enough since that time to be considered a village.
Enoch trotted after his master. The two stood out in this shepherds’ town: a pale and scar-crossed scarecrow soldier and his silent, mouse-eyed acolyte.
As he walked, Master Gershom placed the ointment in his satchel. “Wait by the well,” he said as Enoch drew near. “I want to see if Shyde has some iron pins at his forge; we need to reinforce the south gate.”
Enoch nodded as a nervous feeling twisted through his stomach. He did not feel good here, in town. He felt like everybody was looking at him, and there were just . . . too many eyes. Blue eyes, green eyes, eyes that stared and stared and only looked away a second after Enoch noticed them. It was a second of judgment, disapproval, and even a little fear. The people of Rewn’s Fork had never welcomed these strangers into their town—not fully. Enoch and Master Gershom presented a discomfort that could only be tolerated as long as the two didn’t stay in town for long.
Enoch frowned and brushed a thick lock of black hair past his eyes. He looked at his arm in the sunlight, brown skin that darkened in the summer instead of turning red. He felt like he was a blemish here, a smudge of charcoal dragged across the rosy cheek of Rewn’s Fork.
I’m a break in the pattern.
Carefully crossing his arms, Enoch leaned back against the potter’s shack, which butted up against the well. The potter’s daughter, Lyse, had just arrived from the other direction to gather water, and Enoch could tell that she was studiously avoiding his gaze.
I guess that’s better than staring.
He watched her discomfort curiously and tried to be more aware of his feelings. Mindful, as Master Gershom put it. Should he feel hurt that this girl with the pretty blue eyes didn’t say hello to him like she had to the two boys over by the fence? He’d seen other boys bothered by things like that. Enoch frowned a bit and shifted against the wall.
Master Gershom said that Enoch was a different sort of person than the townsfolk, and that he kept his feelings in a different sort of way. Enoch supposed it was all right, this ability to not be bothered by hurtful things.
Lyse collected her sloshing buckets and walked past Enoch. He watched her go, noticing that her normally pale cheeks were bright red. Was that a sign of her anger or disgust with him? He gave up trying to figure it out and instead focused on the boys near the fence.
They were about his age, the taller one maybe a year older at fifteen. He was already sprouting a thin tuft of red hair from his chin.
Jason? Jaron?
Enoch never forgot a name, but he realized that he had never actually heard this boy’s name spoken clearly. The other was Ben, a broad-shouldered lad covered in freckles. Ben had taken to calling Enoch names whenever they crossed paths but had never actually spoken with him. Enoch found that odd.
The two were playing some sort of game on a wooden plank. The plank had a series of holes drilled into it in a regular pattern, and the boys were moving various stones from one side of the board to another. In a few short moments, Enoch deciphered the rules of the game. It was fairly simple: gray stones could only move a distance of three holes, black stones could move five, and the two white stones seemed to be able to jump across any unbroken line of grays.
With a cry of victory, Ben jumped his white stone into a hole occupied by a black one. The other boy—Jason, as it turned out—grumbled as his friend took the black stone from its spot and placed it in line with several other black and gray stones on the left side of the board. Ben then moved the white stone forward two holes.
Enoch recognized what was happening here—it was a duel. The stones represented different actions: a thrust, a parry, or a feint. Gray stones were quick actions; four of them could be moved per turn, or two black stones could be moved per turn, or one black and two grays. The white stone was a finishing move, a coup de grâce that ended each turn. If the duelist had been able to string together a series of actions that landed the white stone on an occupied hole, he got to keep the stone and take another turn.
But it was obvious that Ben was going to lose. In six more turns, Jason would be able to trap Ben’s white stone between four blacks and easily take the rest. Enoch was stunned when the tall boy instead chose to timidly move four grays into a line in front of his own white. It didn’t make any sense. Didn’t he know that his opponent could jump past that supposed “defense” with at least five of the black stones arrayed around the table?
Without thinking, Enoch stepped forward and pointed to the board. “You shouldn’t waste your advantage like that.”
Jason looked up at Enoch, his eyes going wide when he saw who had addressed him. “Huh?”
Enoch knelt down next to the board, tracing his finger along the four gray stones. “You are leaving yourself wide open for—”
Jason’s expression went from a look of surprise to a scowl. He smacked Enoch’s hand away from the board. “Don’t touch my toads, orphan. Who asked you?”
Enoch held his hands up, surprised by Jason’s anger. “Toads? I . . . I’m just trying to show you where to put your guard so you can turn your opponent’s stroke.”
“You don’t know what you’re talking about, idiot.” Jason rolled his eyes and nodded to his friend. “Hey, look at the runt—he couldn’t talk until he was five, and suddenly he’s an expert at jedrez?”
Ben had a smirk on his face and seemed to be glad Enoch had joined the conversation. He swatted at Enoch’s shoulder with a freckled fist, chuckling. Enoch frowned. Runt? He was not as tall as any of the boys—or girls—his age in town, but he wasn’t that much smaller.
“This is a man’s game,” said Ben. “It’s complicated. These stones are part of an army from the Rain Age—venom toads, coldmen, and Alaphim. The board is a battlefield. And it’s none of your pitmilking business.”
Now Ben hit his shoulder again, only hard. Enoch fell back on the gravel, instinctively bending his legs as he fell so that he rolled to his feet a second later. He had been so focused on the patterns in the game that he hadn’t noticed the other boys who had gathered around as Ben spoke. There were three more of them: Jason’s older brother and two of Ben’s cousins.
“Scales, that was a pretty little dance,” said Ben, eyebrow raised. “Maybe the orphan’s albino uncle has been teaching him how to spin like the girls down at Cavernsway?”
The other boys laughed while Enoch rubbed his sore shoulder. He looked over at Jason for some understanding.
“I was just trying to help.”
Jason stood up to his full height.
“I don’t need your help. I don’t want your help. Nobody asked for your advice, you little—”
He swung at Enoch, his fist whistling through the air. Enoch ducked under the blow, now understanding that this conversation had turned into a fight. Somehow. He took a quick step back, turning aside into the semprelisto. This was the best stance for unexpected attacks, and Enoch felt it most appropriate. Master Gershom had been drilling Enoch on stances just this morning.
“You did need my help,” continued Enoch, trying to help them understand.
Why are they so angry? Maybe if I explain better.
“You had just set yourself up for five easy attacks, which would’ve guaranteed a loss.”
Jason swung at him again—only this time, dodging brought Enoch up against Ben’s sturdy frame. The thicker boy had snuck up behind him, and now he wrapped his arms around Enoch’s and lifted him into the air.
“See if you can hit the runt now, Jason. You need me to piss an X on his face?”
The taller boy cussed and swung, his heavy farm-boy fist slamming into Enoch’s ribs with a thud. All the breath went from his lungs with a gasp. Enoch looked around, frantically searching for his master. He didn’t understand why they were doing this. It hurt.
“Don’t . . . I was just . . .”
The next hit cracked across his jaw, and Enoch tasted blood. He struggled to get free, but Ben only tightened his grip.
“Scales! Wiggly little weasel, aren’t you?”
And then Enoch saw Master Gershom. He had just come out of the blacksmith’s shop across the road and—and he was just standing there. Watching.
Enoch tried to call out to him, but his voice was weak and there was no air in his lungs.
“Please . . .”
Another blow to the side of his face, and Enoch’s vision went black. There was a ringing followed by muffled silence, and Enoch instinctively moved into that silence.
He paused. Everything slowed around him.
Enoch had learned this—this pausing—all by himself over the past couple of weeks. He could turn his mind inside and still the motion of the world around him. He couldn’t actually stop the world, or even slow it, but he could affect his pace through it—allow his mind to quietly take its time to think. To plan.
Now seems like a good time.
In his pause, Enoch saw Jason’s anger and Master Gershom standing impassively. Even with his mind racing, he still didn’t understand how this happened.
From his pause, Enoch slipped into the afila nubla—the dream mind. He recited the incantation silently.
The mind is a world, the consciousness its light.
As day turns to night, so shall my mind;
afila lumin setting as the nubla rises,
and so my mindworld revolves.
Master Gershom faded away. All thoughts of the game, of Jason’s poor strategy, faded. There were just the hands holding him in place and the fists coming to hurt him.
Dodge, direct, divide. The three simple mind commands freed his body into instinct.
Leaning back into Ben as though to avoid Jason’s next swing, Enoch suddenly lunged forward and brought his captor’s face in front of the blow. Jason’s fist smashed into a freckled nose with a crack, and Enoch felt his arms suddenly free. Using his forward momentum, he grabbed one of the arms that had held him, twisting it as he swung around Ben’s falling body. Ben fell limp to the ground, and his own weight pulled his arm from its socket. Enoch stepped away from the body and faced Jason, bending his knees back into the semprelisto.
Jason stared down at his fallen friend with his mouth open. “Ben! I’m . . . I didn’t mean to—”
Enoch’s kick swept Jason’s left leg out from under him, and the taller boy landed with a cry. The others backed away.
Enoch stayed in his fighting stance until they had all slunk away. He looked at the two boys on the ground, calculating. He delivered another vicious kick into Jason’s side, and one to Ben. Only one of the boys groaned.
This was not vindictive; it was how he had been trained, to make sure your opponent was not only beaten, but broken. Master Gershom nodded and waved Enoch over to leave.
By this time, several townsfolk had gathered. They whispered among each other and stared. Here stood that scrawny orphan boy from the other end of the valley, thin and wiry and silent. And at his feet lay two much larger boys—one whimpering, and the other out cold. They were still murmuring as Master Gershom led his charge out of Rewn’s Fork.
Enoch rose out of his trance state and into his waking mind—afila lumin—slowly, hesitant to enter back into the confusion of what had just happened.
Why did they attack me?
Master Gershom was silent, as usual, but as soon as they were out of sight of the town, he motioned for Enoch to stop. He then brought out the pot of salve and proceeded to apply the ointment to Enoch’s side and bloodied lip.
“You will need to learn how to better read coming violence, Enoch. Not just in a telegraphed blow, but in your opponent’s words. His expressions.”
Enoch was angry, and not just because his master had stood and watched his beating. “I wouldn’t have had to fight them if we came to town more often. Then I could talk to them and . . . maybe figure out why they treat us like this!”
Enoch wasn’t angry at the boys who had attacked him. He was angry at his master, angry with an intensity that surprised him as it all came spilling out. “I don’t know why they did this,” he grumbled, “or why nobody will talk to me, or why Lyse can’t even look at me!”
Gershom’s hands had gone still, and he looked down at Enoch with those winter eyes. “You aren’t upset because they avoid you, Enoch. Or even because they hate you. That is what you may think you are feeling, but it is not what is truly troubling you.”
Enoch met his master’s eyes, waiting.
“You are upset because you can’t understand their reactions. Their emotions. You are upset because this is a pattern you cannot understand.” Pulling a clean rag from his satchel, Master Gershom dabbed at the salve on Enoch’s lip.
Enoch wanted to pull away, wanted to shout, wanted to call his master wrong. But he felt the truth of those words.
“That is why I have to keep you isolated from the others, Enoch. Because you do not feel as they do. Or see as they do. You were not meant to.”
“But why? Why am I different?”
There was no response, and Enoch could tell that Master Gershom was done talking. No amount of pleading would change that.
Enoch had learned that he could not always depend on his master for clarity, or for help. Eight years ago, Enoch had climbed too far up into the ironwood tree behind the stable. Master Gershom had come out at Enoch’s cries and then stood under that tree all night, quietly. Eventually Enoch had fallen, hands numb from keeping such a frightened grip on that branch, and Master Gershom had let him fall. He then picked up the sobbing boy from the ground, carried him inside, and bound his broken arm. Enoch remembered the only words his master had for him that night: “You found your way down.”
The shadows lengthened as the two neared home, the dark trees seeming to absorb the night as it soaked down from the mountainside. Enoch went to check on the sheep as his master took the iron he had purchased into the tool shed.
They had a silent dinner of stew and toasted bread, sweetened with a dollop of red berry preserves that Master Gershom kept at the top of the pantry. Enoch supposed that the rare treat was some sort of unspoken sympathy for the earlier trauma. It certainly wasn’t an apology.
Enoch went to his bed near the stove, tired and aching. Sadly, his mind would not let him sleep, replaying too-clear images and sounds, the memory of hard fists against his jaw. Enoch decided these thoughts wouldn’t take him anywhere, so he pushed his mind back to the game he had seen Ben and Jason playing. It was a simple pattern, but it held so much potential for complexity.
Enoch played through the game again in his mind, trying to discover if there had been some hidden trap in the four-gray-stone defense. As the full moon rose over the cottage, Enoch concluded that the strategy was as useless as it had seemed—in fact, it was one of fifteen possible formations that guaranteed a loss. Enoch began to devise different strings of action that would have granted Jason a victory in fewer than ten turns. The patterns and their subsequent responses were just as fascinating as a duel, and Enoch lost all track of time.
By the time the sky began to grow bright, Enoch had constructed a rolling unit of black and gray stones in his mind; the unit could be arrayed in five turns and could sweep the board clean in three more looping “super turns,” after which it would fold in on itself until only one white stone was left in the center hole.
Enoch sat up in bed, rubbing his head as Master Gershom began to stir in his bed across the kitchen.
What a foolish game—if you get the first turn, it is almost twice as likely you will win.
He puzzled over it until his master had started cooking breakfast, thin strips of mutton sizzling in an iron pan.
“Couldn’t sleep?” Master Gershom asked, gesturing to Enoch’s red, puffy eyes.
Enoch blinked a few times and shook his head. “No . . . I’m just . . . I just can’t stop thinking about that game they were playing. I keep going over different ways they each could have moved their pieces for victory, and then finding new ways to counter each—”
His master was frowning. “I should have warned you about getting your thoughts caught in that sort of thing. It can be dangerous for you, Enoch.”
Enoch was not sure what he meant. “You mean I can’t play games like that?”
“No, no—you can certainly play them. In fact, they can be powerful tools for sharpening your . . . your talents. You just need to learn how to moderate your fascination.
“This particular game is called jedrez demonyos and has been around in one form or another for ages. Your dear young friends were right about one thing: the stones represent beasts and warriors from ages past. The object of the game is to collect prey for your angels while denying the demons of your opponent.”
“Except there is no use in pretending the pieces are living things, Master,” said Enoch. “They don’t vary in strength, and they don’t tire or grow hungry. They always move exactly like they are supposed to. They are more like a series of actions.”
“Of course you see it that way, Enoch. You see patterns and sequences where others see the pieces as tiny replicas of the creatures they were named after, unable to look beyond symbolic individuality and into the actual workings of the game. Their moves will always be reactive and shortsighted against an opponent who understands the variability of sequence.” Master Gershom smiled, in a warm mood for some reason this morning. He went on to describe the jedrez tables he had seen in his youth, obsidian and marble pieces carved to the exacting detail of every wart and feather.
Enoch yawned and tried to listen, even though he was still upset; his master rarely spoke of the time before. Before Rewn’s Fork and sheep and the endless woods. The quiet boy kept even more still in these occasions, afraid to startle the rare bird that was his master’s lucidity.
* * * *
The dull metal of the hoe bit into the soil, slicing a root in half and ringing as it encountered another rock beneath. There were always rocks in the east garden—at least, it seemed there were wherever Enoch was tilling.
Mishael Keddrik had called their valley Old Snake’s Pisspot once during a visit to the town. He had laughed about how the lovely spring-fed pools, which watered the land along the foothills, were just a cruel trick to farmers: bounteous clear water wasted on such thin, stony soil. His laughter, however, had withered the second he caught Master Gershom’s scowl. Enoch’s master did not like blasphemous talk. Or talk in general.
The memory made Enoch grind his teeth. Lifting the hoe, he swung it down into the soil with a grunt, sweat dripping from the long strands of hair at his forehead. Angry thoughts flashed through his mind.
The fight at Rewn’s Fork was part of a pattern. A stupid pattern of loneliness. I’ll never have friends; I’ll never have anybody to talk with. Not as long as I’m trapped here.
Enoch knew that he wasn’t trapped, not technically. He really had no idea what he would do elsewhere, and people confused him. He had a routine here, a comfortable order to daily life. Master Gershom said that routine was important to people who were like Enoch and that he wouldn’t do well with the unpredictable.
Then why does the unpredictable seem so interesting?
He set to hoeing with the single-mindedness that Master Gershom had taught him to use when performing the pensa spada exercises, clearing all other thoughts and feelings from his consciousness and programming his mind with simple, powerful commands.
Strike. Pull. Step.
Body moving in smooth obedience, his motions soon became a fluid pattern. The hoe arching through the air, the weeds yanked from the soil, and another step along the row.
Strike. Pull. Step.
His breathing soon matched the rhythm, and his heart slowed a pace to synchronize itself with the motion of the swinging hoe. Face focused, eyes transfixed on nothing more than the ground in front of him, Enoch moved swiftly through the sunbaked rows. A dull, familiar pain began to throb at his forehead, something which his subconscious mind duly informed him of when he came out of the pensa spada trance. For now, there was only focus.
Strike. Pull. Step.
Soon he approached the end of the last row, and the trance subsided. It was just as Master Gershom taught him: the afila nubla of the sleeping mind canceled subconscious commands and aroused the waking afila lumin as it, in turn, shut down. Blinking his eyes like he had just woken up, Enoch turned to look at the garden. Piles of knotted weeds lay strewn across neat rows of tilled earth, pale and naked in the bright sun. He rubbed the heel of his hand on his forehead, where icy pain still needled. That had been happening recently when he went into pensa spada—ever since he’d learned to pause, actually. He intended to mention the strange aches to his master sooner or later, but it wasn’t urgent.
Just a little pain.
If there was one thing that childhood on the edge of the wild had taught Enoch, it was that pain could be ignored. That had been one of the first lessons his master had taught him. Not that Enoch had ever been beaten—Levi Gershom wouldn’t raise his hand in anger. He believed in a different sort of discipline.
Enoch frowned. His master was the kind of man who could say enough in a few words to make you wish for the kick in the pants you deserved. Enoch remembered a few years ago when he had been caught hunting rockfinches with a sling. Master Gershom had looked down at the still cluster of gray-plumed bodies at Enoch’s feet and sighed.
“They are so small, boy. Does it please you to bring pain to these tiny things?”
Then he had put his heavy hand on Enoch’s shoulder, softly repeating the song he intoned when a new lamb was born to the flock, an ancient poem called The Prayer of the Beasts:
Men are made for the Law of God,
but the beasts and birds obey Him.
Men sing hymns upon the altar of God,
but the beasts and birds are His song.
Enoch’s sling lay untouched ever since.
Still rubbing at his brow, Enoch walked from the garden and set the hoe at one side of the utility shed. The windmill poking out from the roof of the shed stood motionless in the slight breeze. He would need to fix that.
Enoch unlatched the rough pine door—tightly fitted to keep moisture and vermin from damaging the more delicate machinery inside—and reached for the sturdy pole, which stuck out perpendicular to the side of the tall center post. He pulled it, angling the blades up into the wind, and then grabbed the worn wooden handle of the crank at the base of the mill.
Slowly at first and then steadily faster, he began to spin the crank, watching the blades through the thick glass window in the roof. He kept at it until the blades caught the wind and spun on their own, and then he released the handle to thumb the switch on his left. The light above it glowed green weakly but shone stronger as a gust of wind rattled the shed.
Head still aching, Enoch trotted back to the house, anxious to get his recitings done in what little time the late afternoon breeze would afford him.
Closing his eyes so that they could adjust, Enoch strode into the darkness. Even without light, he could see the room in his mind. A stout pine table dominated the center of the room, paired with two stools cut from the same tree. To his right, a large hearth of smooth river stones cemented together covered the wall, and the mantle was adorned with a thick beeswax candle—left unlit now that it was summer. Above the mantle would be two crossed practice swords, the wooden blades stained black with the soot his master used to teach him target strikes and edge awareness. Herbs and sage peppers hung from the roof beams, giving off a sharp, simple smell. Enoch could describe this room down to the last dust mote if asked. It was part of the discipline that Master Gershom had taught him:
“Absorb the image into your eyes, into your dream mind—the afila nubla—and it will be branded there to be seen by your waking mind—the afila lumin—when it is needed. A good warrior can dance through his fortress blindfolded.”
Master Gershom was always talking about what a good warrior did. Enoch thought it was kind of silly. For all of his master’s nostalgic military past, it really didn’t serve any purpose here. Enoch would grow up to be a shepherd, just like everyone else in the borderlands of Midian. Here, a sword was a rare sight, and a man who knew how to use one even more so. The only weapons ever seen were bows for hunting and the occasional sling or staff for protecting the flock. Enoch studied and listened and danced through the pensa spada exercises because Levi Gershom was his master. It was the order of things. A comfortable pattern.
What Enoch wanted . . . well, that had nothing to do with what happened. Sure, he was curious about his parents. About where he came from. Master Gershom said that they were good people, and that they had loved their son dearly. But now they were dead, and Enoch . . . he had to be content with that. This place was all he knew. This farm was a comfortable and finite whole, circumscribed by trees, sheep, and the atonal breezes which wound down the valley from the white-capped Edrei.
Lately though . . .
It was only lately that some questions had begun to take on a life of their own. Enoch had tried to quiet them, but the odd contradictions of his life were starting to stand out in relief against the uniformly predictable nature of the whole. Enoch felt . . . unease. It was somewhere in between curiosity and anxiety. And rather than answering his questions, Master Gershom had instructed him to take the mental turmoil and bridle it—turn the tension into a focus for his lessons and recitings. The odd thing was that it had worked, but Enoch wasn’t sure that he wanted it to. The questions felt important.
Enoch reached the far corner of the room and pulled the screen aside. Oblong and blocky, the Unit squatted in the niche like a rusty dwarf, the light from its small screen bathing the room in blue. Sitting at his stool, Enoch keyed his name into the pad in front of him. The words flashed onto the screen, as they always had:
>>Welcome Enoch.
>>What shall we do today?
The low throb of pain in Enoch’s head surged again, blurring his vision before subsiding. Shaking his head, Enoch wondered if he should lie down until the headache went away.
And have Master Gershom come home to find me napping?
Gritting his teeth at the dull ache, he typed in the code for his recitings and leaned back as a list of ballads filled the screen.
Stories of heroes and their adventures were much less exciting when you had to memorize them in heraldic verse. And the excerpts from The Book of Prophets were even worse; translating from godspeech to commonspeech was boring enough without it all being senseless metaphors entirely unrelated to anything in Enoch’s experience. What use did a shepherd have for flowery words from men who had died back before the world had been broken?
With a groan, Enoch rubbed his forehead. The pain was getting worse. Out of frustration, out of desperation, he closed his eyes and paused—on the off chance that his new trick might help the aching su
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