. . .
The Headmaster stood over a cliff, as waves upon waves of ocean water smashed against its surface. His back was turned to a wizened and gnarled woman, who it seemed stood only because of the staff she leaned on. The skies overhead were a dark gray, heralding the approach of a mighty storm. Indeed, a few droplets of rain begun to fall around them, though mysteriously they remained untouched.
"Thank you for informing me of this, Andromeda, but I'm afraid this changes nothing. The school will open as it always has, and I will repel the other Archemages as I have always done."
The old woman shook her head, her wrinkled face stared at Niccolo with contempt only the wise could manage. "That is naught but arrogance speaking, Niccolo. The Archetypes will not lift a finger to defend you and yours - your plight will be beneath their notice, not even a dot on the portrait of their schemes." She took shaky, uneasy steps forward and joined him at the cliffs edge. "For all your power, even you cannot triumph if forces are arrayed against you from all sides. Something must be sacrificed if you wish to guarantee your survival."
He said nothing in response, merely staring off into the distance. As the silence between them thickened, the storm began increasing in its intensity. Thunder roared as streaks of lightning danced in the clouds above them.
Shaking his head, the Headmaster spoke.
"If need be, I will sacrifice my own life. If it comes to that, my school will outlive me."
Suddenly, an errant bolt of lighting flashed towards him, only for it to bounce of a magical barrier and into the ocean below. The Headmaster turned his head and looked at Andromeda.
"What was
that for?"
"If you value your life so little, then I will gladly end it for you."
Niccolo chuckled. "I will only give it up
if need be. Do you really think me eager to die? No, I will exhaust all other options before it comes to that."
The old lady huffed. "You will find those options exhausted faster than you realize, I assure you."
"Maybe, maybe not. Then again, perhaps arguing with you isn't the best choice."
"So he
can learn! I am impressed."
The both of them looked each other in the eye, before bursting into laughter. The whatever remained of the tense air between them evaporated, and as though responding to their mood, the storm that promised to flood the land with rain, and the sky that earlier was brimming with electricity, abruptly faded, giving way for a beautiful blue sky.
"It was good seeing you again, my cute little sister."
The old woman made a disgusted face. "Ugh. I'm over seven hundred years old now Niccolo, and I look like a raisin,
please do not call me that."
"Hahaha! You should just hurry up and become and Archemage, Andromeda. That way you can return to your young and perky self."
"Guh. Would that I could, but this curse is proving more and more difficult to break. Two hundred years and I don't even know if I'm any closer to solving it or not."
"I warned you about making a deal with her."
"She was a
fire mage! A rather infamous one for burning down her workshops accidentally, I might add! How could I suspect she could also curse like a goddamn Zoroastrian deity?!"
"Whatever she was then, she's an Archetype now. That really should have tipped you off to how
bad an idea that was."
"Ugh, in any case," she said, looking up at the sky, and narrowing her eyes as though she were searching for something, "it looks like it's almost time for breakfast."
Niccolo imitated her, looking up, and smiled.
"Ah, that it is."