The enemies

You might think the bullies and the creeps at school would be enough enemies for anybody, in the normal course of things. But they're actually the least of your worries. Whether they know it or not, when they're on your case, they're really working for someone else...

The Lone Power: Once upon a time, when the Powers that Be were building the universe to the One's specifications, a single Power -- possibly the greatest of them, certainly the most honored and glorious -- went off by itself and came up with something that wasn't in the plan. It invented Death, and turned it loose in the worlds. Horrified, the other Powers went to war against the Lone One and threw It down from Its former exalted position, but the damage was already done. Now every wizard spends at least some time dealing with the Lone Power personally -- first during the wizard's own Ordeal, while he or she tries to survive the test -- and then later, during the course of normal work, trying to derail one or another of Its nasty plans. Sometimes this works. Sometimes it doesn't. You never know which way the fight will go.

How wizardry works


The Manual says it best:

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Wizards love words. Most of them read a good deal, and indeed one strong sign of a potential wizard is the inability to get to sleep without reading something first. But their love for and fluency with words is what makes wizards a force to be reckoned with. Their ability to convince a piece of the world - a tree, say, or a stone - that it's not what it thinks it is, that it's something else, is the very heart of wizardry.

...Because wizardly people tend to be good with language, they can also become skillful with the Speech, the magical tongue in which objects and living creatures can be described with more accuracy than in any human language. And what you can describe, you can change. With the Speech, a wizard can freeze fire, burn rain, stop time - even (locally) slow down the death of the universe.

That being why there are wizards...