
World had changed much in only twenty years, but it was arguable whether it was for the better
or worse. The way. Mervyn thought, the position on that question depended on just what you
wanted.
Cass had broken the grip of the old Church by splitting it in two, and uniting opportunistic
Fluxlords and Anchors chafing at the old system to create an empire that had at its height spanned
more than half of World. In the end, though, the Empire spread itself too thin. Internal jealousies
and love of power cracked the empire in various places. While Mervyn and others of the most
powerful wizards attempted a unified governmental authority, in the end the glue that held the
Empire together and drove it onward had been the will of one woman: Cass, Sister Kasdi the
warrior-saint. And so the enemies of Empire, led by Coydt van Haas, had set a trap for her, a trap
she escaped—but at a great price.
Coydt had been stronger; he had, in fact, defeated her in a test of wills, and only a shotgun blast
from a cynical stringer seeking revenge had allowed her to triumph, her self-confidence shaken.
But in his death throes, Coydt had achieved his aim, for he removed from her all of the spells that
bound her, that made her the saintly leader, leaving her open to more human feelings, desires, and
needs. Already wilting under the enormous weight of her responsibilities, she had taken her drive
from the fact that she could enjoy no alternatives. With those spells removed, the choice of going
back to that miserable life was impossible. She had retreated to a Fluxland with her daughter,
Spirit, who had been cursed to neither speak nor understand, and to be forever forbidden all tools
and artifacts.
With them had gone her grandson, Jeffron, whom Cass and the agents of Mervyn would raise.
And with the "death" of Sister Kasdi and the withdrawal of Cass, the Empire had quickly
crumbled. The conciliatory leader of the old, original Church met with the highest priestesses of
the Reformed Church, and after much argument and tribulation they hammered out a concordat
which reestablished a single Church once more under a single set of doctrines that incorporated
the fundamental changes of the Reformers with the basics for which the old Church had fought.
None could lead the Church, or become a High Priestess of a temple, or minister directly to the
people, without the Vows of Sanctity undertaken by binding spell. Those involved in other
aspects of the Church, such as administration and research, were not so encumbered unless they
wished to be. The Church had become far less corrupt, but had strengthened its grip, for it ex-
tended to parts of Flux as well as to Anchor.
Hope, the Fluxland created by Kasdi as the source of the Reformed Church, had slowly
dissolved without her force of will. Work on compiling all of the ancient writings and attempting
to interpret them, a project called the Codex, had been moved to Holy Anchor, where a Queen of
Heaven elected by the temple High Priestesses ruled as chief administrator.
Much had been learned from the Codex, but researchers were bound by spells to reveal nothing
except through the Church, which kept tight controls. Much of the work was suppressed, either as
heretical or as too dangerous and disruptive. Science, however, began to be encouraged in
Anchor, where understanding of the devices that maintained them was now deemed crucial.
Many of the key scientific works, though, were missing from the Codex, and scientists who went
off on tangents not approved by the Church found themselves stepped on rather hard. The Church
was interested in the practical. Still, the last twenty years had brought revolutionary changes.
With the understanding of Flux energy as just one form of all other energy, a form that could be
modified, redirected, and controlled, many of the Anchors were in the process of being wired for
full electrical power, not just the capital cities as in the old days. Wireless telecommunication
based on the temple intercoms was also under development, linking all parts of an Anchor
instantaneously. But no one had yet discovered a way to communicate Anchor to Anchor, for the
Flux squashed and suppressed all forms of electronic broadcast signal. The standard of living for