Phantom

Phantom by Terry Goodkind Read Free Book Online

Book: Phantom by Terry Goodkind Read Free Book Online
Authors: Terry Goodkind
Tags: Fiction, Fantasy, Epic
“We’re trying to figure out precisely how a Chainfire event functions so that we can see if there is a way to reverse it.”
    Richard scratched his temple. “Oh.”
    He was liking the whole thing less and less. He desperately wanted to find Kahlan, yet he was deeply worried for what could happen to Nicci in such an attempt to unravel mysterious powers created by ancient wizards. As First Wizard, Zedd had abilities and talents that Richard could not begin to fathom, and yet those wizards in ancient times far surpassed Zedd’s gift. With as much as Zedd, Nathan, Ann, and Nicci knew, as powerful as they all were, they were still dabbling with things outside their experience, things beyond their ability, things that even those ancient wizards feared. Still, what choice did they have?
    Besides caring deeply for Nicci, Richard needed her to help him find Kahlan. While the others might in some areas be more powerful or more knowledgeable than Nicci, the sum of everything about her put her on a different plane. She was probably the most powerful sorceress ever to have drawn a breath. What others could do with a great effort, Nicci could do with a glance. As remarkable as that was, to Richard that was probably one of the least remarkable things about Nicci. Other than Kahlan, hedidn’t know anyone who could focus on a goal as tenaciously as Nicci. Cara could be just as unflinching about defending him, but Nicci was able to center that kind of tenacity on anything she set her mind to. Back when she had fought against him, her reckless determination made her not just brutally effective but profoundly dangerous.
    Richard was glad all that had changed. Since the search for Kahlan had begun, Nicci had become his closest and most steadfast friend. Nicci knew, though, that his heart belonged to Kahlan and that could never change.
    He raked his fingers back through his hair. “Well, why is she up there in the middle of the thing?”
    “She’s the only one of us who knows how to use Subtractive Magic,” Ann said in simple summary. “A Chainfire event needs Subtractive elements to ignite it and then to make it function. We’re trying to understand the whole spell—both the Additive and Subtractive components.”
    Richard supposed that made sense, but it still didn’t make him feel any better about it. “And Nicci agreed to this?”
    Nathan cleared his throat. “It was her idea.”
    Of course it was. Richard sometimes thought the woman had a death wish.
    It was times like this that he wished he knew more about such things. He was feeling ignorant again. He gestured up at the totality of everything floating above the table. “I never realized that verification webs used people. I mean, I never knew that such webs were cast around someone like that.”
    “Neither did we, exactly,” Nathan said in that deep, commanding voice of his.
    Richard felt uncomfortable under the prophet’s gaze, so he turned to Zedd. “What do you mean?”
    Zedd shrugged. “This is the first time any of us has ever done an aspect analysis of a verification web from an interior perspective. To do so requires Subtractive Magic, so casting a verification web in this manner probably hasn’t been done in perhaps thousands of years.”
    “Then how did you know how to do it?”
    “Just because none of us has ever done such a thing,” Ann said, “doesn’t mean we haven’t studied various accounts of it.”
    Zedd gestured to one of the other tables. “We’ve been reading the bookyou found— Chainfire . It’s more complex than anything any of us has ever seen before, so we wanted to try to understand everything about it. While we’ve never done an interior perspective before, it’s really just an extension of what we already know. As long as you know how to run a standard verification web, and you have the required elements of the gift, you can perform the aspect analysis from an interior perspective. That’s what Nicci is doing—that’s why she

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