A • L O V I N G • F A T H E R
Ash 2, 115 Age of Steel
The scheme was wildly illegal, carrying the death penalty if they were caught, but the lords of House Michaelis did not care. Laws were for commoners. Enough wealth to make or break the fortunes of lesser families had flowed from its coffers in pursuit of this goal, this most important of tasks. They were beyond caring about the dictates of mere men, having already resolved themselves to spite the cruelties of the gods and the vagaries of fate. None could stand before a father's earnest wish and honest love for his son, not when partnered with the immense resources at his command.
General Franz Michaelis knew he would hang for this if he was lucky, and burn if he was not. That was why he had made sure to hire only the best for this insanity, this audacity, this heresy, this treason. He had set into motion events that did not only fly in the face of New Atheism, but flaunted the authority of the State itself, the old family asserting itself above and beyond the reach of the relatively new Order of Reconciliation. For he belonged to an old family, one that had known many glories, and brooked few limits to its wishes. Oh, the State claimed dominion over Zaichaer, and his House had long supported it with fire and sword, but that did not mean he felt bound to follow its orders or seek its blessing for family matters.
And the fate of his son was the most intimate of such matters there could be. Anton had had to fight for his life, and the price the boy had paid for it had been great. Robbed of sight by the same hand that had saved him, the quiet if excitable child had been confined to a miserable existence for years, dwelling in a city and with a family that had little concern for those who did not fit the mold of a mighty son of Zaichaer. His opinion was not asked when his father had set his plans into motion, for this was not his decision. It was his obligation. His duty. His curse.
Despite his youth, Anton knew enough to be aware of what would happen this night. He waited for the appointed hour in silence, sitting by himself in his bed, dressed in nothing but a shift and a plain white linen band about his sightless eyes. If all went well, then by the dawn he would be able to see, after a fashion. And he would be marked forever as that most horrid caste of humanity, a mage. This was his father's decree, and this he would see done at his word. Understanding was not required of him, only obedience. And so he obeyed, blankly staring into nothingness as the minutes slowly passed by.
The clock struck the hour, and Anton stirred. Things would begin shortly, if they had not already done so. The smugglers would go about their business, bringing a foreign mage into the city and then to the manor. And then his room. Where the mage would ink the same rune they bore upon their body upon his in turn. It would not be long now.