No, the shadow of the former Marc would have nothing to do with him, not without an unhealthy dose of hypnotism, he thought, and he was already dancing dangerously close to the edges of his self-imposed ethics as it was. Perhaps it were better to learn what he could from the books and charts and graphs, as well as the impressions Eyris helped him find, and he could broker a deal with one of the denizens of Fyrden another day, with better preparations.
It was hardly possible to trust a Familiar who imprisoned its own bonded wizard in a bespelled closet like that. Hadrian had no wish to be incarcerated, and he hoped to find a true soulmate from the other world, a helper whose dreams would align with his own, but perhaps that was too much to ask. Eyris help me make the right decision, he silently prayed, because the Familiar was plying him with pretty words again.
"I don't even know your name," he said quietly. Names held power, according to some texts. Certainly, Caelum said names held all power, if one knew them in the Celestial Language. But Hadrian did not. "I don't know that I should persuade him to help. I would like to trust you, but now I have no way of knowing whether you truly seek to help me or whether you have some cousin in mind who would seek to similarly subdue me. You are made of the stuff of his soul now..."
He glanced at the circle-making things, the space; this was a wonderful place, though it held terrible secrets. Truth be told, he was slightly overwhelmed between the knowledge in the books, the impressions of his Lykata, and the shifting realities of who was who and what they wanted. Marc wanted nothing to do with him, and Marc's familiar wanted something from him.
"I can raise a gate to Fyrden," he said, "and allow you to communicate with the people there, but I will not promise to form a bond with any of them. I cannot in good conscience do so, unless you would like to sign a Grand Oath that would allow me to trust you beyond the shadow of a doubt." Such an oath was within his powers to inscribe in ink and aura, for eyes and gods to see, but even a crafty familiar would know that such an oath was utterly binding. |