Aakuta: the Dark Mage Read Online Free Page A

Aakuta: the Dark Mage
Book: Aakuta: the Dark Mage Read Online Free
Author: Richard S. Tuttle
Tags: Fantasy, Science Fiction & Fantasy, Young Adult
Pages:
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appealing.”
    “I suppose they would not accept it very well,” Marak conceded. “Do you like looking that way?”
    “I do,” grinned Ukaro. “It is a constant reminder of who I am, but I do understand how others could find it discomforting.”
    “Perhaps when I am finished doing whatever it is that I must do,” posed Marak, “I will live with the Chula and learn the ways of my ancestors.”
    “If you survive,” frowned Ukaro. “Do not make light of what the Torak must endure. Your task will be fraught with danger.”
    “What is my task, father?” asked Lord Marak. “Tell me about the Torak.”
    “I think you already know much more than you let on,” declared Ukaro. “The painting you saw in Angragar must have made you think about what god will require from you.”
    “God,” mused Marak. “I grew up with the flatlanders, father. They speak of many gods, but value none of them.”
    “I understand,” nodded the shaman, “but you have learned from your Sakovan friends that the one true god is Kaltara. Have you not?”
    “Yes,” agreed Marak, “but I know little about him. Why does this god put his favor on me? What makes him think that I can change the world?”
    “He has chosen you, my son” Ukaro smiled proudly. “Do not question his motives. As to why he thinks you can change the world, he will endow you with what is necessary, and he will guide you. This you must believe with all your heart.”
    “So he will just make everything turn out all right?” questioned Marak.
    “No, no,” Ukaro shook his head vigorously, causing his mane to sway from side to side. “You must work hard to achieve his goals. By choosing you to be the Torak, he is giving all of humanity a chance to redeem itself, but only a chance. You must strive to make sure that you do not fail us. Another Torak may not come for thousands of years.”
    “So I can fail,” pondered Marak. “What exactly is prophesized about this Torak?”
    “Our scrolls state that the Torak will rise to reclaim our lands,” stated the shaman. “Most people believe that means that you will reclaim the land of the Chula from the flatlanders. It is said that you will destroy their armies and chase these invaders from our shores.”
    “Most people believe that,” puzzled Marak. “I know you well enough to understand by your choice of words that you do not share that interpretation. What do you believe?”
    “I used to believe as the others do,” explained Ukaro, “but hearing about your journeys to Sakova and Fakara has changed my perception of what must be done.”
    “How has the telling of my travels changed your thinking?” inquired Marak.
    “The painting in Angragar for one causes me to see things from a different perspective,” Ukaro continued. “It is clear that your future is tied to the Star of Sakova and the Astor of Qubari as they are pictured by your side in the painting.”
    “I agree with that,” nodded Marak. “I have seen that painting many times in my dreams. It causes me to wonder what is to come.”
    “I have spent many days since your return from Angragar going through the oldest of our archives,” stated Ukaro. “The invaders that came to our shores were fleeing from some great evil. There is nothing in our records to indicate what they were fleeing from, but I cannot help thinking that whatever was chasing them is what you must truly battle.”
    Lord Marak nodded slowly as his mind drifted back to his short time in Angragar. They had found a scroll in the old temple that spoke of burning ships and searing minds.
    “I believe you are correct,” declared Marak. “An old prophecy spoke of a great evil. It was an evil that defied Kaltara thousands of years before the invaders came. The evil was banished from the land to a new land. I suspect the invaders came from that new land. I think they were fleeing from that evil.”
    “That would explain the great fear that pervaded the invaders,” mused Ukaro. “The
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