About the Author
----------------
Greg Weisman’s career in television and comic books
spans decades. After starting as an editor for DC Comics, where
he also wrote Captain Atom, he created and developed Disney’s
original series Gargoyles, later writing the Gargoyles and
Gargoyles: Bad Guys comic books for SLG Publishing. He has worked
as a writer, producer, story editor, and voice actor on Sony’s
The Spectacular Spider-Man and Warner Bros.’s Young Justice, and
as a writer and executive producer on the first season of Star
Wars Rebels. His comic book writing credits include DC’s Young
Justice and Star Wars: Kanan, and Marvel’s Starbrand and
Night. Weisman also wrote the original novels Rain of the
Ghosts and Spirits of Ash and Foam, as well as the World of
Warcroft novels World of Warcraft: Traveler and World of
Warcraft: Traveler: The Spiral Path. He is blessed to have an
amazing wife and two fantastic (grownup) kids.
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Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
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Chandra Nalaar, Planeswalker and pyromancer, sank
deeper into the over-soft armchair in her mother’s new apartment
in the city of Ghirapur on the plane of Kaladesh. She was
anxious, frustrated, angry, frightened and more than a little
bored.
Pia Nalaar had prepared a tray of dark, rich hot chocolate for
her daughter and her daughter’s friends and had then departed for
a council meeting, saying her goodbyes to Chandra—as she always
did—as if she might never see her again.
Only this time, she might be right.
Now Chandra, cup of chocolate untouched on a side table,
slouched with her chin practically touching her chest as she
glanced around at her companions. Over on the sofa, the mind-mage
Jace Beleren, looking weary and haggard, stared into his own cup
of brown liquid, as if somehow it might reveal the true secret of
defeating the Elder Dragon, Nicol Bolas. Beside him, the
time-master, Teferi, leaned back, resting his eyes and breathing
deeply. Perched on stools at the kitchen counter, the lion-headed
healer, Ajani Goldmane, chatted pleasantly with Chandra’s
sometimes pyromantic mentor, Jaya Ballard, about bird-watching,
of all things. The silver golem Karn stood motionless in the
corner, seemingly engrossed in perfecting his already phenomenal
resemblance to a statue. Planeswalkers all, they were the
Gatewatch, the supposed saviors of the Multiverse. Well,
technically, Jaya and Karn hadn’t actually joined the ’watch,
which is to say they had declined to take the Oath. But they were
here to fight beside the rest against the dragon Bolas. To fight
and probably to die.
In a hurried motion, Jace put his cup down on the coffee table,
as if the hot chocolate suddenly frightened him. “He’s taking too
long,” Jace said.
“He” was Gideon Jura, the soul of the Gatewatch—or so Chandra
had come to believe. Gids had planeswalked back to Dominaria to
find yet another member of the ’watch, the necromancer Liliana
Vess, who should have met them here on Kaladesh but had failed to
show. Jace had already made it abundantly clear he thought Gideon
was on a fool’s errand, that Liliana had never had any intention
of joining them in their fight against Bolas, that she had
exploited the Gatewatch as a tool to slay her own personal
demons, literally, and that now that those demons were dead and
gone, her use for her so-called friends had likewise come to an
end.
But Gids had refused to believe that, and Chandra had agreed
with him, as had Jaya, Karn and Teferi. All five of them felt
strongly that Liliana—despite her own well-manicured façade of
selfishness—was indeed their true friend and ally. That she cared
about them, even Jace. Maybe especially Jace.
They had slept together, right?
But Liliana definitely cared about Gideon, whom she mocked
unceasingly but with affection. And Chandra didn’t think she was
flattering herself believing that Liliana cared about her, too.
Chandra thought of Liliana as an older sister.
A way older sister. A centuries-older sister.
But a sister nonetheless. Chandra was confident Gideon would
return at any moment with Liliana in tow, ready to join the
conflict—the final conflict—against the evil dragon mastermind.
But Chandra had to agree Gideon was taking too long. She wasn’t
exactly worried about him. Gideon’s powers made him nigh-on
invulnerable. The rest might fall—Chandra might fall—yet Gids
would fight on. And on, and on, and on . . .
It’s just who he is, she thought.
The indomitable warrior, the unrelenting juggernaut with that
unerring sense of justice and those washboard abs. Once upon a
time, Chandra had sported a major crush on Gids. She was over
that now, but he pretty much remained her best friend in the
world. On any world. In the Multiverse.
Whatever.
She sighed. She had been a Planeswalker since she was a preteen,
but it was still occasionally difficult to adjust her vocabulary
to what that meant. Chandra Nalaar was one of a select group of
individuals who could travel—planeswalk— between dimensions,
passing from one plane to the next, from one world to another.
Every world she had ever ’walked to had its own set of troubles
and turmoil. So none of them needed new dangers arriving from
planes unknown. That’s why the Gatewatch had been formed. So that
Planeswalkers who gave a damn would be there to fight, to
safeguard worlds from interplanar threats like Nicol Bolas.
Well, not like Bolas. From Bolas.
It had become clear over the last few weeks that every single
threat they had faced had been generated, initiated, concocted by
the dragon himself. And that’s not even counting their encounter
on the Plane of Amonkhet, where Bolas had flat-out kicked their
collective asses. Of course, the Gatewatch hadn’t had Jaya or
Teferi or Karn with them then. Just Chandra, Jace, Gids, Liliana
and . . .
She sank still deeper into her chair. Gideon was taking too
long. If the seven (or hopefully eight) of them were going to
arrive at their destination ahead of Bolas and prepare for the
coming battle, they needed to get planeswalking already. Frankly,
the suspense was killing her.
Chandra stuck out her lower lip and blew upward, a lazy attempt
to move one of her wild red tresses out of the way of her left
eye. It had literally no effect. She tried again. And a third
time.
And then she to her feet, galvanized by a call from across
the planes. The others reacted with less motion but no less
concern.
“You feel that?” Chandra asked, knowing they had.
All of them nodded silently. She looked upward, toward the sky,
and of course saw only the roof of her mother’s apartment. But
between her and the roof were lights that sparkled like gemstones
and called out to her to follow them to . . . to . . . to
Ravnica!
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