Part 5
Daneera stepped confidently through the portal and unto the light blue, polished marble floor of the Mirrored City's citadel on Galanos. Moments earlier, as she stood in the mirror room of the Dual-Walkers' fortress on Anissem, she had feared that her trip through this portal would be the same sort of chaotic tumbling that her attempts at 'walking had been. Fortunately, it was nothing like that. It felt only mildly different from walking through an open doorway, perhaps with just a little more resistance. Lem had showed her where the mirror room was, and the conveniently color-coded frames of the giant mirrors made it clear which of the planes of the Wheel they were connected to. She had the beginnings of a plan to get herself away from here finally, but in order to complete that plan, she needed information.
Mere moments after Daneera emerged from the mirror portal, she was accosted by the portal's guardian. On Lefkos, according to Lem, that guardian was some sort of living enchantment. Here on Galanos, it was apparently a human wizard, likely one of the Dual-Walkers' Maguvs. He approached Daneera cautiously, but she could feel the blue mana he controlled begin to gather. As he spoke, that power grew. "Who are you?" he asked curtly.
Daneera smiled. Here we go, she thought. "My name is Lowa. I'm being trained to become a Maguv on Lefkos."
The wizard's eyes narrowed. "Then what are you doing on Galanos? This is highly irregular."
Daneera nodded. "Unheard of, really," she agreed. "But where the Rulus order you, you go. That planeswalker they caught said something that sparked the Rulus's interest, and I was sent here to research it in the library."
"Why would Lady Syl not come herself?"
"She and…" she hesitated, briefly, "Lord Chardis had a pressing engagement elsewhere."
"I see," the wizard said, still clearly hesitant. Nonetheless, he allowed his reserve of mana to drop. "Very well, I will not question it. You are either who you say you are, or your punishment will be severe when the Rulus learn of you. Either way, it effects me not."
"Thank you. Now, could you direct me to the Library?"
"Of course. Descend through this tower, out the front door, and you will see it directly across the street. Here, you will need this." He turned around and, from a nearby table, he grabbed a small, rectangular piece of azure glass and handed it to Daneera. "If detained by the Tower guards, simply show them this."
Daneera nodded and quickly headed out of the room. She was stopped and questioned by no less than a dozen denizens of the Tower, and she had to ask for directions from four of them, before she finally found her way outside. As she strode into the wide street, Daneera couldn't help but be amazed. This Mirrored City must have been massive, and all of the buildings she could see seemed to have a façade of blue-tinted glass, the same material that the wizard had given her, although hers had some sort of writing on it. She had been to Ravnica once, but hadn't cared for it. Somehow, she liked Galanos even less.
The grand Library was quite literally directly across the street. In all likelihood, Syl had intentionally placed the Mirror Tower as close by as possible. Just looking at the massive structure made Daneera's head hurt. She had never really cared for cities, and so her experience in them was hardly overarching, but she was still certain this Library was the biggest building she had ever seen. So huge was it, in fact, that Daneera began to question her plan, such as it was. How was she supposed to find anything in a place like this, especially when she did not truly know what to look for?
Her answer greeted her as she stepped through the Library's door. Some sort of metal construct, silver by the look of it, stood up from behind a tiny desk and took two steps toward her. The golem clearly noticed the glass tablet in Daneera's had, hesitated a moment as though thinking to itself, and then spoke in a grinding, mechanical voice.
"Greetings, distinguished visitor, to the Galanos Library. We are the storehouse of the wisdom of worlds. If you require assistance, please let me know."
He started step a step backwards, as if to return to his desk, but Daneera stopped him with a question. "How can I find what I'm looking for? I've never been here before."
The mechanical man said nothing at first, instead simply bobbing his head from one side to the other. Finally, he seemed to process her words. "Simply step through here," he said, indicating to his right. "There you will find the Pedestal. Stand there, think about what you seek, and you will be brought there."
The golem backed up into its seat once more and Daneera, with a simple shrug, followed its direction. She had no idea how such a thing could work, but this was the only solution she had, and so she simply set to work. It took her several days just to get a feel for the system, but as she did, she found she liked it. The Library, and whatever enchantments might have been placed on it thousands of years earlier, seemed to anticipate both her desires and her needs. She slept at the whatever table was closest to the books she was currently scanning, and food was brought to her, seemingly whenever she was getting hungry, by the same golem at the door, or one identical to it. All in all, her stay was surprisingly comfortable.
After she had the Library system pretty well figured out, she had the new problem of finding the correct information. At first, she looked for anything that talked directly and specifically about the Rulus, but these works were mostly religious in nature, and contained information that Daneera already knew or was an out-right lie. After a few days, she shifted her study from the Rulus to the history of the planes, but this yielded equally unsuccessful results. Most of these tomes were histories of Galanos, and the other shards were mostly never mentioned. She gave up on these about half-way through the giant stack that was found.
She had been searching through the Library for more than a week when she hit on a new idea. Time was running out, as the Dual-Walkers might return at any moment, expecting to see her safely confined in her chair. If that happened, it would take them little time to learn where she went, considering their network of loyalists and informants. She had no way of reliably leaving the Wheel unless she could access green mana, and there was apparently no way to do that anywhere within the planes of the Dual-Walkers. It was this thought that gave her the idea to search for any references to mana, green or otherwise.
Much of what she found was generic information on the natures of magic, dozens of volumes of information on things she either already knew or didn't care about. It wasn't until she starting looking in the books that predated the arrival of the Dual-Walkers that she found any reference to green mana. Shockingly, the most useful book she found had also been in her previous stack, she simply hadn't gotten to it before changing tactics. It mentioned the four shards of the Wheel and the color of mana each produced, but it also mentioned Anissem, the central plane, and described it as a massive hub of green mana. This shocked Daneera, as even after being freed from her bindings on Anissem, she had sensed none there, though this tome had been written centuries before the Rulus had arrived.
Finally, after over two weeks of exhaustive, and exhausting, research, Daneera had put together not only a key understanding of the planes of the Dual-Walkers, but also a solid plan to defeat them. Ironically, the two books that proved the most useful to her were one of the oldest books in the Library, the one discussing green mana and the shards of the Wheel, and one of the newest, one describing the Mirrored Cities of all four planes, written by Syl herself. It spoke of their construction by the Rulus before the Mending, and of the guardians of the Mirror portals themselves. It verified Lem's belief that the guardian on Lefkos was a living enchantment, and discussed the formation of the order of wizards who guarded Galanos's gate. It's descriptions of the elemental guardian of the Kokkinos portal and the tentacled creature on Mavros, she hoped, would prove invaluable.
Daneera's journey back up the Mirror Tower of Galanos was just as tedious as her journey down. She was stopped almost constantly, but a simple flashing of the glass object the wizard had given her was enough to allow her to continue. When she reached the top, the wizard regarded her coolly, but politely. "Welcome back, Lowa, was it? Did you find what you were looking for?"
Daneera smiled broadly and feigned excitement. "What the Rulus were looking for, and yes! That planeswalker they caught wasn't lying after all! Did you know that there is actually a fifth color of mana?"
The wizard's eyebrows lifted in surprise, but he quickly tried to hide his natural curiosity. "Interesting. I can see why the Rulus might be interested in this information."
"More than interested," Daneera exclaimed. "They want access to this new power. I was sent here to learn if that planeswalker was lying about it or not, and if not, to find a way to access it for the Rulus."
Now the wizard could no longer hide his desire for knowledge, or for power. "Did you find it, did you find a way to harness this power?" He caught himself, "For the Rulus, I mean."
This was going well. Daneera just had to remind herself not to appear too relieved. "Yes, I found an enchantment. The inscription in the tome claims it can transform a portion of Galanos' native blue mana into green. Unfortunately, I lack the ability to cast such an enchantment. I was hoping to return to Anissem with the answer already in place. Can you imagine how pleased the Rulus would have been with me?"
Daneera could see the greed and ambition begin to shine in the wizard's eyes. "Well, perhaps we could help one another out. Let me see the enchantment." Daneera gladly showed him the copy she had made of the page in the tome. The wizard smiled brightly. "Ah, yes, I see how this would be beyond someone of your experience. And anyway, this enchantment should be strengthened regularly for best effect. I could do this for you, if you would tell the Rulus of my assistance."
Daneera beamed. "You would do that for me? Oh, thank you. I will be sure to tell the Rulus that I would not have succeeded without your help!"
The wizard smiled so honestly that Daneera actually felt a bit guilty. But it was either this or death, and years in the forest had taught her that with those choices, you always choose 'this.' The wizard walked her over to the portal mirror, but then led her behind it. There, she saw a massive crystal, about the size of her torso, which would have surprised her immensely had she not read about them in Syl's book. The wizard grinned.
"This is Galanos's transference crystal. It gathers the blue mana and the other energies the Rulus desire from the plane, and sends a constant stream of the same to Anissem, to the Rulus's receptor crystal." He caught himself. "I suppose it is quite similar to the one on Lefkos."
Daneera shrugged. "The Maguv showed it to me briefly there, but mostly I was just passing through the portal to Anissem," she lied.
"Ah, of course," the wizard stated. "In any case, from what you've brought me, I surmise this crystal is the perfect place for the Rulus's new enchantment. Please stand still as I prepare to cast it."
Daneera said nothing, but instead just watched and waited and tried to repress her smile. The wizard's process took several minutes, and he referred back to the Daneera's copy several times as he wove the enchantment, but eventually, with a brief burst of green light, the spell was cast. The wizard smiled.
"Excellent! It seems to have worked! I will make sure to strengthen the enchantment each day, but for now, success."
Daneera did not have to be told it had worked. The moment the enchantment had been cast, she could feel the green mana begin to trickle from the crystal. It was a strange sensation; the mana was not nearly so pure or powerful as it was when she drew from natural sources, but it was green mana, nonetheless. Daneera could barely resist the urge to 'walk away at that moment, but she could not allow the Dual-Walkers to continue their deceitful dominance of these planes. She had a plan now, and it was time to enact it.
"Thank you," she said to the wizard as she realized she had never bothered to ask his name. "I should return to Anissem, and I promise, the Rulus will hear of your gift."
The wizard bowed. "I thank you."
The moment Daneera stepped back through the portal, her link to the green mana within the Galanos crystal weakened severely, but it was still there. The native blue mana of the plane and the flow of life energy both overwhelmed the amount of green mana coming through, but she could still feel it, slowly filling her precious reserves which had, for weeks now, been almost completely empty. As she emerged in the Mirror room on Anissem, she found she had to fight against her own natural curiosity. Everything she had learned on Galanos had been spectacularly interesting, especially the crystals that sustained the Dual-Walkers.
Based on everything she had read and everything Syl and Chardis had told her, she had pieced together how the siblings had crafted these five planes to their will. It was an interesting lattice of magics at work, and although Daneera despised their effect, even she had to admit to the genius of the design. Each of the crystals on the planes of the Wheel carried a powerful enchantment designed to gather that plane's mana and send it to Anissem, creating the core of the Rulus's power. The receiver crystal had its own enchantment, sending out a gathering wave of magic that sucked the life from the planes. This life energy was carried back through the mana links, and it constantly rejuvenated the Dual-Walker's youth, which was how they managed to live so long. As a final effect, the crystal here also repressed the natural mana of Anissem, a massive enchantment fueled by the collective mana of the other four planes.
Daneera forced herself out of her musings. This was no time to be reflecting on the scale of power or ingenuity of her adversaries. There was far too much to do, and she doubted the guardians of Mavros or Kokkinos would be nearly as easy to fool as the wizard on Galanos had been. Daneera took a deep breath and stepped through the red mirror portal leading to Kokkinos. She had a plan for the guardian there, a trick she stole from the Library of Galanos, but she still needed help with the enchantment. Her admission to the wizard that she could not cast it had been a stretching of the truth, but unfortunately not an outright lie. She could cast the enchantment herself, even on the crystals on the remaining three planes, but she doubted it would be enough. She needed someone there who could maintain and strengthen them. She knew no one who could on Mavros or Lefkos, but maybe Dyllyg could help.
As she stepped out of the portal, the heat from the room beyond was oppressive. The floor looked as though it were made of barely cooled lava, and the air seemed to flicker and glow at random intervals. It was as if she were standing within the flames of a giant torch. The guardian, a fire elemental that seemed to ride the floor like a wave, rushed up to meet her. It opened its mouth to speak, but Daneera spoke first. "The Rulus have sent me to capture the traitor Dyllyg. Direct me to his lair."
The fire elemental glared. As it spoke, its voice crackled and echoed as if it were far away. "Do not speak to me like that, fleshling. I serve the Rulus, not you, and they have said nothing of your coming. Besides, if they want Dyllyg, they have but to ask. The Fire Flight captured him weeks ago. He rots downstairs in his cell as we speak."
Daneera smiled "A stroke of luck, then!" She withdrew a scroll and casually handed it to the elemental, who grabbed the paper without thinking. The parchment burst into flames, but a moment later, a freezing wind rose up and put the fire out. A few chilling moments later, and all that stood there was a charred husk of what looked like a statue. The planeswalker withdrew the scroll and quickly made her way through this Mirror Tower, which on Kokkinos seemed less a tower than a stronghold. She had to freeze three more elementals with her scroll before she stumbled upon the dungeon, and there her luck seemed to hold, as Dyllyg was the only prisoner there, or at least, the only one still alive. Dyllyg looked up as she entered, and the shock on his face was visible through his wrinkles, which seemed much deeper than before.
"Daneera?" Dyllyg coughed. "What by the hells are you doing here? You're a planeswalker, Daneera, forget about the Rulus and their damned planes! Forget about me!"
"It's not that simple, Dyllyg," she countered. "Even if I had the ability to simply 'walk away, I can't allow the Dual-Walkers to use these planes this way. They're not gods, and they have no right claiming to be. And I can stop them, Dyllyg, but I need your help."
For several moments, the older man said nothing. Then he looked into her eyes and said "What can I do?"
It took several hours to get Dyllyg out of his cell and recovered enough to cast the enchantment on the Kokkinos crystal that would begin to filter some of its surging red mana into green. Dyllyg was also able to fill in some gaps in Daneera's knowledge about Mavros from things he had learned during his training with the Rulus. It seemed Mavros was the least tamed of all the planes of the Wheel, and an ancient confederacy of witches still resisted the control of the Dual-Walkers. If Daneera could get in touch with them, she would have the mages she needed to cast and maintain the enchantment. Before she left, she gave the frost scroll to Dyllyg and wished him luck. She knew they would both need it.
This time, Daneera barely paused as she emerged from the portal into the Mirror Room on Anissem. Time as no ally to her, and she needed as much of it as she could get, especially since she needed to find the witches first, and then somehow convince them to help her against the Rulus. Also, the guardian of the Mavros portal was going to prove a problem. She had found the magic scroll to freeze the fire elemental, but nothing had indicated a good way to stop the tentacled monster of Mavros. Still, she had to try, because any showdown she might have with the Dual-Walkers would be hopeless if she couldn't gather enough green mana to battle them, or save enough to navigate an escape, should things go against her.
She took a deep breath, stepped through the black-rimmed mirror portal and found herself in the middle of a battlefield. Bodies were strewn everywhere, and Daneera could hear the crackling of magical energy being summoned and discharged. Some ten feet away from her, the lifeless carcass of a large, tentacled creature was still oozing thick, greenish-black blood. It looked like a large, misshapen octopus, although it had horns and a clearly visible mouth. Whatever it was, Daneera was certainly glad it was dead.
Suddenly, from behind a pillar covered in moss and slime, a group of about five small, mangled creatures emerged. Their hands glowed in a variety of colors, from sickly purple to yellow and red to an eerie green, and they looked from one direction to another, watching for any enemies. As they spotted Daneera and took one or two steps in her direction, a small man, the same sort of creature she had seen on her last trip to Mavros, lurched out of the mud-covered floor at the group, a twisted, primitive spear in his hand. Almost casually, the foremost of the other group waved her hands at the attacker. The purple glow of that creature's hands flared into a bright violet flame, and Daneera watched in horror as the small man's body just seemed to evaporate. Once he was gone, the group continued to advance on the planeswalker.
They were all female from the look of them, but wrinkled and distorted almost beyond recognition. They were making a bizarre chattering noise that Daneera assumed was a language, but she was finding it impossible to follow what, if anything, they were saying. She could certainly tell, however, that it was not good, not only by the increasing pitch and volume of the noise, but also because the glow on each of their hands were becoming, as the first one had, flaring flames. Before they could attack, however, another figure came running up from behind them, another of their kind, by her look, shouting something in the strange language. The others hesitated, then stood down, allowing their hands to return to normal.
The creature that had run up took two cautious steps toward the towering Daneera, who was at least twice the height of the native of Mavros. She seemed to say something in the frantic language the others had been using, but when that got no response, she took a deep breath and spoke again, this time in a language Daneera could comprehend. "You are the one who released me from the cage."
Daneera stared at her for a moment, trying to recognize a person she had seen only once. Truthfully, she could not have said with certainty that this was the same creature, but if the other said so, she had no reason to question it. "Yes."
The woman cocked her head to one side. "You are also the one the Rulus were hunting for, the one captured and given to them by Frenok?"
Daneera simply nodded.
"Are you an enemy of the Rulus?"
Again, she nodded. "I escaped their captivity. If they catch me again, they will try to kill me. I'm hoping to beat them to it."
A collective gasp escaped from the others of the group, but the one Daneera had rescued smirked. "Brave words. We oppose them, as well, but always Frenok or those like him have stopped us. Your arrive distracted him long enough for my sisters to crack the seals to the Mirrored City. We stormed the Tower and fought our way here. We killed the guardian, but Frenok is nowhere to be found. We were going to press through the mirror and attack the Rulus directly."
"You're the confederacy of witches opposing the Rulus, aren't you?"
"The Covus, yes. Hundreds of years ago they stole our world. We want it back."
"I can help you," Daneera said with a smile. "But marching into their keep would be suicide, and would accomplish nothing. They are too strong. But I believe I can defeat them."
"You?" The old woman said skeptically. "Meaning no offense, but you were defeated by Frenok after a single spell, and I cannot believe he is stronger than the Rulus."
Daneera nodded. "True, but I couldn't fight Frenok because I had no green mana." This was met with a wide array of confused looks from the witches before her. "It's not native to any of these planes, but that's where I need your help." She withdrew a scrap of parchment and held it up. "How are you with enchantments?"
* * *
The mirror portals, both the ones found in the Anissem mirror room and the corresponding ones on the planes of the Wheel, emitted a constant, low humming sound while they were active. Daneera only really became aware of this as she stepped into the Dual-Walker's keep on Anissem and that noise suddenly stopped. Daneera's heart seemed to do likewise as she realized she was very much not alone in the room.
"You have been a busy little child, I see," came the cold, calculating voice of Syl to her left.
To her right, came the harder, heavier voice of her brother Chardis. "Surrender to us now. Accept your fate and be done with it. If you do not…" he hesitated, stepping into view.
Syl, also coming closer, finished his sentence. "Then we shall make these final moments of your life exceedingly uncomfortable."
For a few moments, Daneera said nothing. She made a show of looking scared of the Dual-Walkers, which was not far from the truth, but really she was reaching out to the pools of green mana flowing into the Dual-Walker's crystal. There was not much, certainly not as much as she had hoped for, but there was at least enough to make a stand. She gathered what she could while she debated her immediate response. Unfortunately, the Rulus did not seem inclined to wait for her.
"As you wish," Chardis said, his words sharp and spiteful. "Live your last moments in foolishness."
He thrust his hands toward her, and Daneera had a mere blink of an eye to cast a simple protection spell before the concussive force of his attack reached her. The spell did little against the pain of the impact, but it likely saved her life as she was thrown clear across the room, through the doorway and into the great, cavernous hall. She scrambled to her feet and tried to gather as much green mana as she possibly could before the next assault came. She failed. A strong blast of frozen wind erupted from the doorway, slamming hard into Daneera's shoulder and sending her reeling to the side. As she looked up, she saw the Dual-Walkers advancing on her, gloating.
"It would seem, dear brother, that the fledgling planeswalker is more durable than we had imagined."
Chardis exhaled sharply through his nose. "Yes, Syl. We must be careful."
Syl looked over at her brother. "Careful? She is strong, to be sure, but hardly a threat to us, especially here."
Her brother smirked in what seemed to be honest amusement. "We need to be careful, dear sister, that after we are finished playing with her, there is enough left to drain."
Syl's laugh was both demure and wicked. Her sudden screech at the unexpected appearance of Daneera's enraged baloth, on the other hand, was uncharacteristically unsophisticated. Daneera could not suppress her exhalation of laughter. The baloth charged through the cavernous hall, and the Dual-Walkers had to dive to either side to avoid being trampled by its mighty frame. It was only a yearling baloth, one of the smallest Daneera had as an ally, but she needed to use her green mana judiciously if she were going to survive. Using the distraction of her summoning, Daneera moved toward the center of the gargantuan hall, where the massive receiver crystal stood. The green mana being created on Galanos, Kokkinos and Mavros would be strongest at that point.
Apparently, the Dual-Walkers had not had a proper summoner's duel in a very long time, because the creatures they were bringing to bear against Daneera's baloth were a sad lot indeed. Chardis summoned a lion, who fearlessly, and recklessly, charged directly into the larger beast's path. The baloth barely seemed to notice as it swatted the lion away in mid-leap. Syl responded by summoning some sort of hawk or crow, but the baloth snatched it out of the air and swallowed it whole with only a minor twitch of the neck. Neither Chardis's wild boar nor Syl's swarm of bats proved the least bit effective against the angry forest creature. Daneera felt her spirits lift for the first time since arriving on the planes of the Dual-Walkers.
Her optimism was short-lived. Syl and Chardis found one another on the battlefield and joined hands. A dark red mist formed quickly around them, and the baloth nearly stopped dead in its tracks, confused and scared by the strange event. Suddenly, a large frame materialized from the mist, a form basically human in shape, but with horns on its head and giant batwings protruding from its back. Daneera cursed as she saw it advance on her poor baloth. She had always hated demons. This one seemed particularly menacing as it gripped an ebony-hued blade, took three giant steps forward, and stabbed her baloth. The weapon seemed to burn the beast, and from the wound spread a vicious infection which consumed the baloth in a matter of seconds.
Daneera felt a sharp twinge of pain and guilt, as she always did when one of her allies was killed in battle. But she knew that each of the beasts she commanded had bonded with her. She would never force another creature to fight for her; they had all chosen to fight alongside her after she had proven her strength and her love of the forests to them. Still, though, it saddened Daneera, and made her all the more determined to defeat these arrogant Dual-Walkers. The first step, though, was to destroy their demon, and she knew just the creature to do it. Briefly Daneera closed her eyes and pictured a tranquil glen she had once visited, and the noble denizen she had befriended within. Drawing on whatever thin lines of green mana she could, Daneera brought that beautiful creature into being.
Chardis and Syl, and even their giant demon, seemed to stare in surprise at Daneera's choice of an answer, a large but simple stag that at first stood and did nothing. Chardis even laughed at the thought that such a peaceful creature would be brought in to battle the flames and darkness of their infernal champion. The demon raised its sword high and brought it down with incredible force, and when the blade connected with the stag, the sword shattered into innumerable pieces. The stag seemed to consider the demon for a second or two, and then leapt forward, impaling its foe with its massive antlers. The demon sputtered, coughed, fell over and died. The stag barely seemed to notice.
Daneera was nearly to the crystal now, but even at this distance, she could see the rage building in the faces of both Dual-Walkers. Chardis was especially infuriated, and with one exaggerated motion, he thrust his hand toward the noble forest creature. Instantly, a blinding flash of lightning jumped from the Rulus to his victim, and the poor stag fell over dead. As the Dual-Walkers once again set their angry sights on Daneera, she reached into the nearby crystal, trying to draw whatever green mana she could, while simultaneously trying to decide what creature she knew had the best chance against these dangerous enemies. She quickly decided on a mammoth, but as she tried to bring the hairy beast into existence, the summoning was abruptly cut short. Across the hall, Syl smirked as the crackling blue energy of her counterspell still sizzled around her body.
"A valiant attempt, child," Syl taunted as both Dual-Walkers approached. Daneera worked her way backwards towards the crystal, but she knew there was nowhere near enough green mana flowing through it to allow her to survive. "I cannot speak for Chardis, but you have at least earned my respect. Now please, do not shame your own memory by continuing this pointless struggle."
"Enough of this," Chardis bellowed. "I do not think I even want her drained anymore. I simply want her dead. Come, dear sister. Let us end this in a truly grand fashion."
"Very well, if you wish, dear brother, but I still think we should…" Syl stopped, both in her words and in her tracks. Daneera had seen that look before in countless animals of the forest, the look when they suddenly catch the scent of something deadly. "Brother, stop!" Her breathing was heavy, her face set in an expression of actual terror. "The crystal! It's tainted!"
Chardis looked at his sister, confused, but then closed his eyes for a fraction of a moment. They shot open again almost immediately, and they were blazing as if on fire. "Curse you! What have you done?"
Daneera could feel his intense anger, but she still forced herself to smile. Her gamble, it seems, had paid off. "I have infused the mana of your crystals with a very special, very ancient enchantment. Now, the mana you draw from your planes is laced…"she hesitated, grinning wider, "with green mana."
"No," whispered Syl. "You do not know what you have done."
"Actually," Daneera corrected, "I know exactly what I've done. I admit, it took me a while to figure out, even with the wealth of knowledge in that Galanos Library, why you two hated green mana so much. But then I realized you had all-but told me. You said you have crafted a world that works for you, that sustains the order you've created. You hate green mana because it introduces an element you can't deal with. Death."
Syl scoffed, but nervously. "I deal with death all the time, whelp. Mavros is a plane of living death. You have no idea what you are saying."
But Daneera simply shook her head. "Don't presume to lie to me, Syl," she said, stealing the Dual-Walker's phrase from weeks earlier. "You just said it, Mavros is a plane of living death. Eternal unlife, a favorite of black mana. Green mana is about life, but not just life. It's about the life cycle. Life, growth, and eventually death. Final, permanent death, that leads to the birth of other life. That's why you two have cut all ties to green mana on your planes. Because you needed to keep yourself young, and alive. But you've both drawn mana from your crystal today. Whether you like it or not, the process of your death has already begun."
Suddenly, Syl's terror melted away, and her smirk returned. "Do you truly think us as weak as that, child? It is true, I can feel the venom of your green-mana poison tugging at my veins, but the damage you have done is minimal, and temporary."
"Then draw more mana from your crystal, Dual-Walker," Daneera challenged. "The more mana you draw, the closer you come to death. And the longer you wait, the more green mana floods in, making me stronger. You can't defeat me without killing yourselves."
"She is right, dear sister," Chardis said, though in a surprisingly calm tone of voice. "We cannot draw mana from Galanos, Mavros or Kokkinos until we have removed her meddlesome enchantments. However, Syl, do you not sense Lefkos?"
Syl closed her eyes and took a deep breath, then opened them again, smirking as before. "Untainted."
"It would seem we returned home sooner than our miscreant child here had planned. So much the better for us."
Daneera quickly latched on to every shred of green mana she could, and made a point of gathering it about her. "If you're going to fight me with only white mana," she cautioned the Dual-Walkers, "Then I'll be more than a match for you. Remember, I've got the mana of three planes flowing into me now."
"Destroy her, brother."
Without another word, Chardis charged toward Daneera. Surprised by the straight-forward, physical attack, Daneera dove to one side, but Chardis kept running. Before Daneera realized what he was doing, the Dual-Walker had reached the giant crystal. He looked over to the planeswalker and grinned, his eyes bulging like a madman. "With the mana I have now, you may have been right. But there is plenty more where that came from!"
With both hands, Chardis grasped the crystal, and his entire body began to glow with the white mana of Lefkos. Daneera stared as she realized what he was doing, forcing several times the normal amount of mana through the crystal, hoping to overcharge his supply enough to finally and completely destroy her. She smiled at the sight.
Chardis continued to pull harder and harder, forcing every bit of magic through from Lefkos to Anissem. So maddened was he at the prospect of destroying his hated enemy that he failed to notice the change that was falling over the crystal. Syl sensed it first, but her scream of warning to her brother came only half a second before the massive explosion that sent all three planeswalkers careening to the ground.
Daneera, having expected what was coming, was the only one of the three to have shielded herself from the blast, and was the first to her feet. Chardis and Syl were both still alive, but hurt, and struggling to catch their breath. Chardis, having been much closer to the explosion, flew further, and the two Dual-Walkers, by happenstance, landed quite near one another. Daneera walked up to them and crouched between their prone bodies.
"A little friend I met on Lefkos has been piling disenchant spells onto your crystal there for weeks. I guess pulling them into your crystal here all at once wasn't such a good idea."
Both Dual-Walkers struggled to look around. Syl, in a dull, weak voice, managed, "What have you done?"
"I've ended it. If that spell did what I hope it did, it should have shattered every enchantment tied to your crystal. And if what I found in your book on Galanos is true, that includes your damnable life siphon. The Wheel is free, now. They are no longer the planes of the Dual-Walkers. The Rulus is a thing of the past."
With considerable effort, Chardis raised his head to glare at Daneera. "We will find you. We will hunt you down, and so help us, we will destroy you."
Daneera stood up and smirked. "I'll be waiting." She turned around, viewing the destruction she could already see within the massive hall. The struggles of people like Dyllyg and witches of Mavros, and the unknown oppression visited upon the simple people of Lefkos, good and kind people like Ilo, Lowa and little Lem, all were finally and suddenly vindicated in this one, glorious moment. The Dual-Walkers lay defeated, and now, finally, Daneera could settle her old score, and she knew a few Poacher-mages on Arbagoth who needed to face a Stomper stampede. Smiling to herself, gathering what remained of the green mana as an anchor, Daneera finally prepared to 'walk off the planes of the Dual-Walkers, hopefully for good. Just before she disappeared into the AEther, Daneera turned her head to the side to look back at Syl and Chardis.
"Welcome to mortality."
The End