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The Runic Artist: Blank Canvas, page 1

 

The Runic Artist: Blank Canvas
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The Runic Artist: Blank Canvas


  The Runic Artist

  Blank Canvas

  Ellake

  Mango Media LLC

  Copyright © Ellake 2024 produced by Mango Media LLC

  All rights reserved.

  No part of this publication may be reproduced, distributed, or transmitted in any form or by any means, including photocopying, recording, or other electronic or mechanical methods, without the prior written permission of the publisher, except as permitted by U.S. copyright law. For permission requests, contact the publisher at admin@mangomediapublishing.com.

  The story, all names, characters, and incidents portrayed in this production are fictitious. No identification with actual persons (living or deceased), places, buildings, and products is intended or should be inferred.

  Book cover by Kart studios. Typesetting by Miblart.

  Blurb

  Some are born great, some achieve greatness, and some have greatness thrust upon them… when they stumble haphazardly into a foreign realm’ In a world where runes hold unimaginable power, mere mortal and gifted artisan Nate must harness arcane magic to navigate treacherous paths, reveal the hidden truths of his own past, and discover the workings of the illusive ‘System’. No big deal. Emboldened by only his penknife and a weirdly profound understanding of runic sorcery, Nate must uncover if the path he has been thrust upon may spare his earthly existence. After all, why only leave your mark on one world…when you might leave it on two?

  Dedication

  To my wife, without whom none of this would've been possible.

  Contents

  Prologue - Banksy was Right

  1. A New Universe

  2. The Wanderer

  3. Cat got your Tongue

  4. Dungeonbound

  5. Explosive Dreams

  6. Bacons on the Menu

  7. A Lost Wanderer

  8. Survival Skills Lacking

  9. Bricks and Mortar

  10. Production Line

  11. Foremans Fury

  12. Better off Alone

  13. A Brilliant Idea

  14. Bonus Round

  15. Fancy Clothes

  16. Two Down, Two to Go!

  17. Colour Coded

  18. A Full Set

  19. A Fitting Punishment

  20. Hard Choices

  21. Revenge best Served by Others

  22. Inn Selection

  23. Meet my Dad

  24. Joining the Guild

  25. The Oaken Ring

  26. The Guildmaster

  27. The Unseen

  28. Goblin on Goblin Crime

  29. Acid Burn

  30. Not So Subtle

  31. Skill Synergy

  32. Making Art

  33. Missed Connections

  34. Blushing Admirers

  35. Nightly Visitations

  36. These aren’t my Badgers

  37. Cynicism 101

  38. Titular Art

  39. Friendly Hunting

  40. Get Creative

  41. Stalking the Night

  42. Storm Brewing

  43. Suggested Limits

  44. A Thousand Cuts

  45. Footloose

  46. Hated Mysteries

  47. A Class Act

  48. Classless

  49. Spaced Out

  50. Secrets Laid Bare

  51. Paint and Planning

  Prologue - Banksy was Right

  Banksy was right. That was Nate’s first thought as he jumped the fence onto the railway tracks. It wasn’t the first time he’d done so. But it was the first time he’d almost landed in a pile of shit. So, Banksy was right, tramps really did shit everywhere. Carefully stepping away from the hopefully cold pile of excrement, Nate adjusted his black hoodie and took in a deep breath. It smelled, of course, but it felt like teenage rebellion, like a small slice of freedom.

  The noises of the city in the background served to highlight the separation he now felt, being somewhere he wasn’t supposed to be. It made him smile. Nate started walking carefully over the tracks, extra vigilant now. Not for other people, though maybe he should’ve been. He just didn’t want to step on something gross or twist his ankle. Trying to drag himself over the fence with a twisted ankle was nothing but pain and frustration. A lesson he had learned in a previous foray and an experience that he wasn’t keen to revisit. Say what you would about Nate, he tried to learn from his mistakes.

  Thankfully, it was a short walk to the train carriage he intended to decorate. Nate didn’t consider himself a vandal, though he was confident others would disagree. He’d read a quote once by Banksy that basically said that graffiti was a rational response to the in-your-face advertising of the modern world. Trying to remember the details he thought it was something along the lines of billboards, logos, and adverts were forced upon people without their consent and that turning it into something beautiful or thought provoking was art. Perhaps it was a bit hypocritical of him since graffiti was the same, but he could comfort himself with the fact he wasn’t trying to sell anyone anything. Maybe he was just a vandal after all.

  His musings were cut short as his target loomed in front of him. The train carriage was one of the newer models with a giant strip down the middle of what Nate thought was a Tic Tac advert. It was hard to tell as someone had already graffitied over a large portion. Not an art piece, though. They’d just half-assed some letters that he figured was a tag. Tagging was a bit different from graffiti as a form art, so he didn’t feel bad about painting over the top of it.

  As he spent a moment putting down his backpack and tools of the trade, he saw himself reflected in the window of the train with the ever-present city lights shining behind him. Nate liked how he looked, and based on a few of the girls from his school, he wasn’t the only one. Standing at around a hundred and eighty-five centimetres, he was fairly tall, sporting a lean build, with shaggy shoulder-length blonde hair and dark green eyes. He looked a lot like a surfer, though he’d never tried. Maybe if he lived closer to Sydney’s beaches, but he was just a poor kid from Sydney’s southwest.

  Smiling at himself, he stepped back to take in the graffiti on the train and go over his plan. He’d spent most of the last three weeks at school refining the image he intended to overlay on top of the existing art. Painstakingly redrawing lines and links to achieve what he wanted. He’d love to have told people that it meant something. That there was a message in the image he intended to create. But there wasn’t. He just thought that it was beautiful and that beauty was its own reward. It was also a challenge. The lines had to be clean, the image clear. He wanted it to look like it had been printed onto the side of the train, not painted. To that end, he’d worked on a bunch of stencils that he was confident would create the image he had in mind.

  Nate didn’t sign most of his work. Thinking about it like that made it sound like he was prolific in his graffiti. He wasn’t. He only added graffiti where he thought it would be beautiful or thought-provoking. That meant that he had maybe ten or so artworks around the city. He thought that was a decent effort for only having been in the game for two years. If he signed this piece, it would be the third that made the cut. The deciding factor wasn’t the quality of the work. It came down to how personal the piece was. He snorted as he felt himself growing pensive. He had a habit of doing so before starting a new piece. He tried to convince himself it was an opportunity of who he was and why he did what he did. An attempt to try to keep it all in perspective. But he had to admit he was probably just being moody because standing alone at night on the train tracks was a reminder that he was actually rather lonely.

  Nate was an orphan. There, he said it. You would think that after knowing it for more than half of his life, he’d finally be okay with it, but the truth was, even after all this time, it still hurt. An ache in his heart that had gotten less over time but had never left. He didn’t think it ever would. He’d read somewhere that when you were emotionally scarred like him, the pain never truly left. That the hurt it caused remained the same for the rest of your life and that you just experienced it less because you thought about it less.

  That was how he felt. He’d been raw and in pain after his parents died in a car accident when he was eight. A drunk driver had run a red light and t-boned them. He could still remember their faces, thankfully. He had photos of them, and he’d even worked them into one of his artworks. Small enough that they weren’t the focus, and it was one of the more out-of-the-way pieces, being around his suburb of Punchbowl. You would think that would be risky, to shit where you eat, as they put it. But no one in Punchbowl cared about that sort of thing. His work had ended up defaced a few months later anyway.

  So, he was an orphan. Where had that left him? With his aunt, of course. A singularly selfish woman who had taken him in but never failed to remind him of all the sacrifices she was forced to make by having him sleeping under her roof. All the while, she was collecting extra welfare money from the government, which he supposed at least some of went towards feeding and clothing him. He’d heard worse horror stories from others in the government housing he lived in. At least his aunt didn’t beat him. Just berated him till he made himself scarce. So, he’d gotten used to being out late from an early age just to avoid the verbal abuse.

  Nate rolled his shoulders. That was enough of that. Enough about the past. It was time for the present. Nate had long since learned that you couldn’t dwell only on the negative. Yes, his past had been painful. But his now, well, his now was alright. He thou

ght about the day he’d had. His two best friends, Michael and Jung, had made plans to catch up tomorrow at Michael’s place. It was always Michael’s place, just because he had the most room.

  That was for tomorrow, though. It was time to get to work before someone stumbled upon him or, worse, called the cops. He opened his backpack and pulled out his stencils before carefully unrolling them. Maybe some graffiti artists could rush their work and still achieve what they wanted, but that wasn’t his style. Swallowing the ever-present fear of being somewhere he wasn’t supposed to be, he carefully laid out his stencils. Next came the masking tape and, finally, his cans of spray paint. Four in total, two white and two black. He doubted he’d need all of them, but he didn’t want to run out before he was done and be left with a half-finished artwork. He wouldn’t get a chance to come back and fix it. As an afterthought, he grabbed his pocket knife from the bottom of his backpack and put it in the pocket of his hoodie. He mostly used it for cutting the masking tape, but on a couple of occasions, he’d used it to make last-minute changes to his stencils. Australia was pretty safe, and he’d never needed to use it for self-defence.

  All prepared, he took a deep breath and got to work, tapping his stencils over the existing graffiti. It took him almost three hours of prep work to get it just right. All the stencils in the exact right spot. Double and triple-checked. That was something most people didn’t seem to realize about a lot of art. Like everything else worth doing, you spent a lot of time planning and preparing so that when you finally got around to doing it, you did it right. That was how Nate felt as he started shaking the spray paint cans. He’d done this right.

  It ended up taking him another hour to finish. He’d been careful not to apply too much paint as he didn’t want it to run, and he had waited to let it dry a bit before carefully removing the stencils. Remove the tape too soon, and you run the risk of the paint running. Pull too late, when the paint has fully dried, and you risk tearing off some of the paint. Like a lot of things in life, it was all about timing. But now that it was done, he stood with a proud smile in front of his artwork. It was exactly what he had imagined. He’d changed it from a single white circle with an upside-down triangle inside, to six concentric circles, with the two outer circles being close together, and that same pattern mirrored as the circles got smaller. The final two circles had roughly one-tenth of the diameter of the outer circles, making it look like a distorted bullseye. The upside-down triangle remained in the third circle from the outermost ring, and he’d overlaid that entire section with a hexagon. Then, in the gaps between the outer and middle circles, he’d drawn some little icons he’d found online. With a few semi-circles added and a six-spoke cross within the hexagon, the entire artwork looked like some arcane ritual circle. He loved it.

  Nate pulled his phone out of his pocket to take a few pictures. Watching his artwork through his phone, his eyes narrowed. He swore it looked brighter than it should. The white on black stood out clearly, and he didn’t think there was enough light from the moon above or the city lights behind him for it to be that clear. He walked closer to the finished artwork to get a closer look. As he did so, he felt it. The night was warm, as they tended to be during Spring in Sydney. But he could literally feel the temperature differential as he approached the train carriage. Had it been that hot today, and the metal was still cooling?

  But, no, he’d felt the train himself while putting on the stencils, and while not cold, he was absolutely certain it hadn’t been hot. Staring at the artwork, he could swear it was getting brighter. As if that wasn’t weird enough on its own, it wasn’t getting brighter evenly. Some of the runes and geometric shapes glowed brighter than others, making his artwork look almost three-dimensional. His sense of danger spiked, and just as he was about to step back, the whole image melted away. Not like he’d seen in online videos of hot metal being poured like a liquid. No, the whole image just rippled like it was water before vanishing.

  In its place, a yawning circle of perfect black was left. Nate turned to run, but he could already feel the hole in space where his artwork had been pulling him toward it. With one last desperate leap he tried to throw himself toward his backpack and the train rails they were sitting beside. As he got horizontal, the pull from the black hole increased, and he felt himself drawn into it. As he vanished into its shadowy depths, his last words were, “Oh shit!”

  Chapter one

  A New Universe

  At first, Nate wondered if he was dead. Was this all his life was going to amount to? A few pieces of art before dying shortly after he turned eighteen? These thoughts plagued his mind for an unknown amount of time before feeling and sight returned to him. As they did, his jaw dropped in awe, and he sucked in a breath.

  He was inside something like a bubble, suspended in the middle. The reason sight was returning to him was obvious now. The bubble itself was slowly becoming translucent, revealing the bubble’s surroundings. And what a vision that was. It was like an artist had decided to paint the universe in all its glory in every colour of the spectrum. A rainbow of planets and misty swirls that somehow seemed to connect everything with a backdrop of space and the stars.

  Nate could barely breathe, but slowly, he felt a prickling on his arms. He glanced down, expecting to see some substance stuck to his skin causing the irritation, but found nothing there. Looking himself over repeatedly, he kept expecting something to change, but as the minutes ticked by, the prickling remained, and he could see no reaction from his skin anywhere. It was uncomfortable but not truly painful. Like an itch he couldn’t scratch.

  The feeling held his attention so long that he almost didn’t notice the white light approaching. At the last moment, he looked up as it appeared in his peripheral vision and realised he was hurtling toward one of the white stars. Nate had a moment of realisation right before his bubble reached the fast-approaching white light. Despite the speed at which he was obviously moving, he didn’t feel any pressure. That was his last thought before his bubble collided with what he thought might be a star, unceremoniously catapulting him into its blinding light.

  Flying out of the other side of the white light, Nate landed badly on his forearms, the impact sending a blast of electricity up his arms and to his shoulders as his nerves screamed. He rolled onto his back, letting out a pained moan. Blinking through tears from the pain, Nate glanced around and took in his surroundings.

  The only thing he could compare it to was the interior of a spaceship, though that wasn’t quite right. Smooth, curved metallic walls encircled the room. However, the walls were covered in weird symbols instead of computers and electronics. The symbols looked like geometric shapes crossed with hieroglyphs, and interspersed between them were brightly glowing gems in every colour of the rainbow. Through the haze of pain, Nate had thought that he’d somehow survived the black hole only to land on a spaceship disco rave. That made him laugh, which helped the pain fade a little faster.

  Sitting up, he prepared to take in his surroundings, but he felt the prickling on his skin again, only this time much worse. He looked down at his arms, trying to find the cause as the prickling grew stronger, becoming painful. As he was about to scream, a creature entered the room through a side door. He tried to take in its appearance, but he couldn’t think of anything else as the pain became more intense until his body felt like it was burning, and he began to scream.

  His skin looked fine, but he felt like his whole body was on fire, cooking him from the inside out. Rolling back and forth, he knew he was dying. Whatever this was, his body couldn’t handle it. He kept thrashing back and forth for what was probably a minute or two, but felt like hours before the burning sensation began to subside. As the pain decreased, all he could do was cry from relief until he finally stopped sobbing and lay still on the metallic floor, drenched in sweat.

  “Vic darr unte gor misc xeralla voif?”

  Nate, groaning, had no idea what the noise was before it came again.

 

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