There was something that one could do with it, could will, could wish...
It quivered and went out.
Ibrahimâs voice came soft in the darkness. âBring it back.â
âBut I donât â â Gerbert broke off, began again. âI donât know how.â
I can name every one of the Jinn, he wanted to say. I can recite the rolls of all the orders of angels. You never taught me to make a light that sleeps in my hands.
He did not say it. âYou know how,â said Ibrahim.
How? With names? None of them seemed to fit, except for Lucifer, and Gerbert was not minded to invoke that one. Not quite yet.
With will? He strained until the sweat broke out on his brow. He willed until his ears buzzed and his eyes went dark. Nothing.
With words? Which ones? They ran through his head, all tangled, all useless.
He slumped, exhausted, growing angry. This was all nonsense, all of it. â Fiat ,â he said, âdamn it. Fiat lux .â
Inside him, something shifted. Something swelled; something bloomed. He stared dumbfounded at his fingertips. To every one clung a spark of light.
The moment he thought about them, they flickered. He pulled his mind away from them, and they flared up. They coalesced; they settled, round and cool and blinding-bright, in his trembling palm.
Master Ibrahimâs smile gleamed out of the night. Gerbert blinked at him, half dazzled, half bewildered. âWas that an incantation?â
Ibrahim laughed. âHardly! And yet it served its purpose. Now do you see?â
âI see...â Gerbert found that he could close his fingers about the light, and it would shrink; then it would swell again, if he not quite willed it to. It was delicately improbable, like walking a tightrope with an egg balanced on oneâs nose. âBut if this is what it is, what are all the rites and rituals?â
âGuides,â the magus answered. âProtections. Defenses against the ignorant.â
Gerbertâs head had begun to ache. The light pulsed. It wanted to float free. He did not want to know what it would do if it escaped. He willed it to go out.
It only swelled larger.
His brows knit. âWords and will are simple. This is hard.â
âIt is,â said Ibrahim.
Gerbert glared at the magic he had made. It had grown again. The ache in his head was fiercer. He had lost the way of it; he could not do it.
Half out of temper, half out of despair, he willed it to grow larger still. It quivered and sighed and dwindled to nothing.
Somehow Gerbert had lain down on the carpet. Perhaps he had fallen over. He was not interested, much. âI know children like that,â he said. âContrary.â
âIt is a child,â said Ibrahim, âbut it will grow.â He seemed pleased; God knew why. He cradled Gerbertâs head with serene and physicianly competence, and poured into him something cool and bitter-sweet.
Gerbert was too far gone to be wary. He merely blinked at the magus and tried to decide whether he liked the taste. He thought that perhaps he did.
âHere is the secret,â Ibrahim said, âand the price. Magic is not wrought without consequence. The greater the working, the greater the cost.â
âThis was great?â
âFor you, yes. Were letters easy, when first you learned them?â
âArabic isnât,â Gerbert muttered.
âSurely,â said Ibrahim. âNow, sleep, and be content. You have power; you have it in you to master it. I shall take joy in teaching you.â
You havenât till now? Gerbert would have asked. But his body was far away, and sleep was near, and sweet. He fell into its arms.
5.
There was more to it than that, of course. If Gerbert had not been aware of it, Maryam would have been sure to remind him. Having proven her fitness as a trial to his soul, she advanced to an eminence even more alarming: that of his teacher.
She was skilled, he had to grant her that. She
Warren Simons, Rose Curtis