Storm Warning - Mercedes Lackey [159]
But maybe it isn’t just temper; maybe it’s worry. Worry and fear made people sometimes act in ways that you wouldn’t expect. Ulrich just got more clever when he was worried. Maybe Master Levy had fits of bad temper when he was concerned about something.
Never mind, he told himself, as he reached up to knock on the door to the gryphons’ rooms. Temper-fits are hardly our worst problems at the moment.
As the door opened, Karal recognized the voice just beyond as belonging to Elspeth, which meant that the single most important person they needed to convince was still here. He waved the others inside first, and wondered for a moment if he just might possibly be able to get away and let the Masters do all the explaining.
No, he told himself sternly. That would be cowardice. And, reluctantly, he followed them inside.
Karal listened to Master Levy speak about mathematics and theory with great envy for Natoli, who had such a good teacher. If he’d had teachers as good as this man, he might have had more understanding of and love for mathematics. Instead, math was as arcane a subject for him as magic; and he remembered his mathematics lessons as being ordeals.
“... so you see,” Master Levy said, with a certain grim satisfaction, “by using this mathematical model, I was able to predict the size and location of all of the areas of disturbance from this last wave. We will have parties out in the countryside verifying my predictions, of course, but the ones we were able to reach before darkness fell were all where I predicted they would be and the size I expected they would be.”
“So these storms are really waves; they act like real waves?” Elspeth asked, weariness warring with the need to understand, both emotions mirrored in the set of her mouth and the tense lines around her eyes. Darkwind looked over her shoulder at the charts and maps, his brow creased with exhaustion and anxiety.
“In many ways,” Master Levy told her and raised a sardonic eyebrow. “I take it that I have convinced you?”
“Just by virtue of the animal you found. I’ve seen the creatures in the Uncleansed Lands for myself,” she replied. “This rabbit-thing you found sounds much too like them for me to disbelieve you.”
“And I must agree, at least that the waves are growing stronger, not weaker,” Firesong said with extreme reluctance. “They must be growing stronger to have had the effect of warping an animal in such a manner. But—still—mathematical models? Magic does not work that way!”
To Karal’s surprise, the look that Master Levy bestowed on Firesong was one of understanding and sympathy. “Sir, I comprehend your feelings. Yours is an intuitive nature, and your understanding so deep that you intuit the formulas and laws. So must an artist feel when he picks up a shell, paints a sunflower or creates an image of a snowstorm—yet I can reproduce that sunflower in precise mathematical terms, and every snowflake is a mathematically exact shape. If I show you in such a way that you can understand me, will you believe that your magic does answer to predictable laws?”
Numbly, Firesong nodded. Master Levy had a force of personality—when he cared to exert it—that was easily the equal of Firesong’s. This must have been a rare experience for the Hawkbrother Adept, to find someone who was his equal in personality and intellect.
“Look. This was your original Cataclysm,” Master Levy said, pulling out a clean sheet of paper and a pen and drawing concentric circles on it. Karal marveled at that—there were not many people in his experience who could draw an even circle without the use of tools. Master Levy must be something of an artist in his own right.
“There were two centers of disruption,” the mathematician continued. “One here, where the Dhorisha Plains are now, and one here, where Lake Evendim is. The force spread outward, in waves—each of these circles represents the apex of the wave—you see where they meet and touch as