quote:
“It doesn’t matter whether or not you’re a magus, boy,” the High One said to Alak. “They’d kill you just as quickly as they would me. They saw the water listen to your command.” She looked him up and down with her bright blue eyes. Magi eyes.
Alak’s eyes were good and brown. Had been since the day he was born. His mother had told him the Valanian doctor didn’t even look him over when he’d come to check for magi blood.
“But they already marked me clean.” He held up his left arm so she could see the brand the Valanians had put on him when he was an infant.
“And yet the water froze when you told it to.”
“I didn’t tell the water to do anything.” He hung his head. All he had been doing was playing pegs with Bensi.
Second attempt:
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quote:
Alak withered under the High One’s glare, eager to be anywhere else.
“It doesn’t matter whether or not you’re a magus, boy,” the High One said. “The masters would kill you just as quickly as they would me. They saw the water listen to your command.” She looked him up and down with bright blue eyes. Magi eyes.
Alak’s eyes were good and brown. Had been since the day he was born. His mother had told him the Valanian doctor didn’t even look him over when he’d come to check for magi blood.
“But they already marked me clean.” He held up his left arm so she could see the brand the Valanians had put on him when he was an infant.
“And yet the water froze when you told it to.”
[This message has been edited by micmcd (edited August 16, 2011).]
[This message has been edited by micmcd (edited August 16, 2011).]
Mainly I'm wondering why, if mages are "unclean" and she's a mage, is she called the High One?
I have a slight sense we're maybe wanting a little scene-setting before the dialogue, but that may be partly because I usually feel a little mentally confused in stories where magic-users are a "special breed" or outcast. It flows pretty well apart from that I'm trying to figure out what the deal is with mages in this world, but I think a lot of that is me.
I'll reconfigure.
I also think it's interesting that you came away with the impression that they're outcasts... I hadn't thought of that.
When I say "outcasts" I'm just refering to the fact there is mention of mages being killed and that children are apparently tested for it in the context of it being a stigma of some kind. I've never written a story wherein magic was outlawed, stigmatized, look down upon or inherently feared, and while it would be incorrect to say I dislike such stories, it sort of clashes with my usual mindset.
I like the flow of the second version slightly better. That "said to Alak" just felt stumbly to me.
I like the current version. It flows well and has various points of interest (which is my version of a "hook"; I like interesting, I dislike being "hooked.")
Send me a copy if you like. I could do with a break from editing
[This message has been edited by pdblake (edited August 19, 2011).]