Tree Rings & Fire

As I shimmied along the ledge with my bare toes feeling out the best stone, my canvas bag bounced on my knee, tempting the thundering shower of water to soak it. It took a little finesse to get under the falls without getting soaked and not every trip was positive; I used to keep a few slightly-damp towels on the other side in case of mishaps and missteps. Ducking under the last little bit, I was greeted by a warm fire and the strong scent of burning herbs. Holding my hand up, I did a short incantation and wiggled my fingers. There is no less ridiculous way to describe some steps in magical casting. An inhuman, chortling sound came across my lips as I blew out, echoing like a flock of birds were unsettled somewhere in the cave. Dropping my hand, the sound stopped and I stood rolling on my heels.

“Took you long enough,” muttered a tall woman in a deep, creaking voice as she stepped out from behind a towering stalagmite of solid quartz. As she came into the light, I could make out the weathered bark of her dark face; she was like a tree come to life. Her eyes were drops of amber set in front of a flame and her fingers clasped a long, green staff with leaves sprouting from it. Covering her wooden body were layers of moss and leaves draping like a living dress.

Smiling, I replied with a slight bend of my knee, “Elowen. Good to see you again. You’re growing well.”

She pursed her lips and sighed, “I still don’t know why I’m here, Aster. I don’t appreciate being summoned without cause, especially to this side of the portal. And in particular when it’s by a-”

“-a human. I know,” I cut her off smoothly. The Lady of the Trees and I had a, well, at times contentious relationship. Most of the time, though, it was very cordial; the key was not asking her for anything, which I was about to do.

“As the Keeper of the Gate, you ought to know better than to just lollygag around,” she continued in her older-than-dirt tone, “and what’s this spellwork here for?” She held her fingers near the bowls of fire I’d set up and glared into the light.

Clearing my throat, I replied, “Well, I have been at this for three centuries and sometimes I want a little vacation.” At that, she turned to set me with a look that would melt most mortals. “And since no one ever comes to relieve me, I thought I’d try out a little alert system,” I explained, trying to keep the childish whine out of my voice, “so if anyone tried to get through the portal, this circle would trap them and I would be alerted.” Still, the piercing look. “Look, I have left this cave for very brief periods to, you know, look out at the stars and enjoy life a little, but this spell could make it possible for me to have a real life,” I concluded.

Elowen put her hand on her hip and sighed, “Well, you know why you’re here. You know what you did to find yourself the Keeper out in the land of mortals.” In all the time we’d known one another, all the way back to my birth, Elowen had been like a second mother to me; she did the whole real-talk thing better than anyone I knew.

“Yeah, I did one stupid thing and I’m cursed to live forever out here, unable to leave,” I snapped, dropping my bag on a stone I used as a table. Turning, I waved my hand to part the waterfall. With a glance back at the tree woman, I made a running jump through the hole in the water. I soared through the air and a tinkling sound echoed in my mind and between the trees; it was horribly loud and everything around me sparkled like it was about to burst into flames.

Having stepped to the edge of the falls, Elowen called, “I meant to ask how you got out into the world!” Her voice boomed and made the nearby trees shiver with terror.

“Oh!” I gasped and turned. Taking a breath, I did the long incantation to break out of the containment spell, I moved my fingers and, one by one, the web of intricate and delicate spellwork fell off. When I stood there, free from its bonds, I turned my hand to create a tiny flame and dropped it into a nearby bush. Catching immediately, it spread into a ball of fire before I trounced it with another wave of my hand. I looked back at Elowen and shouted, “If memory serves me, the enchantment stopped me from doing damage to anything, magical or not.” She stayed silent. I chuckled and closed the hole in the falls before making the short journey back up the side of the cliff.

When I returned, she was standing with her back to me. “When did you create that spell?” she asked, sounding nervous. The only other time I’d heard that tiny waver in Elowen’s voice was the day I was exiled to this shitty job. It was like she couldn’t look at me.

I chuckled mirthlessly. Touching my mouth, I replied, “Hundred years ago, maybe. Perhaps a little longer.” Suddenly, she turned, uncertainty clear on her features. “You guys didn’t want me so why would I come back? I just use it to go out into the mortal world,” I sighed. Once, it had been painful; staying here. Now, this was home, kinda. This was pretty well all I’d ever known. “I’ve seen warriors and hunters and creatures of every claw and tooth come through here, even queens and knights. I’ve done the job you asked of me and requested nothing from any of you,” I continued, feeling the anger I’d felt centuries ago bubbling up again.

“Your sister came through when she was queen?” Elowen asked quietly. I’d found that tree folk tended to not, excuse the pun, beat around the bush, so this indirectness put me off a little.

Tempering the anger, I snapped, “I saw her once while she was queen, then I saw my great-niece, and then my great-grandniece. Neither of them knew who I was.” The Lady of the Trees was staring at her hands. “Do you know what that’s like? I was erased. They, you maybe, erased me,” I murmured, sitting down on a large rocky outcrop and trying very hard not to cry or throw something.

We stayed in a state of tension for ages before Elowen finally asked sheepishly, “Perhaps you’ve been erased as the princess, but I’ve heard a tale several times perpetuated by people I would largely rely on for such information of a monster at the end of the world.” She was staring at me now, the vine-y tendrils flowing from her head swayed gently. “They made it sound like there was a horrifying, destructive beast in a dark castle, but I saw no such thing,” she continued, watching my expression, “and I certainly wasn’t caught up in something’s web.”

Nodding, I stood up and stretched my arms. I smiled at the tree woman and threw my right fist into my open left palm. The world shook, thunder cracked, and the cave around us dissolved into a jagged black obsidian castle. Where there had been a tiny room, there was a huge, cavernous throne room fit for a queen. Above our heads, a charred bone chandelier swayed lightly with candles burning. Candelabras all over the room cast bright light as gaping, organic holes punched through the stone let in natural light. I moved my hand and the doors behind me opened on a sharp outcropping of a balcony and I turned to face the sun.

“How did you-?” Elowen began, but I was taking a run toward the edge of the tower and didn’t hear her.

As my toes left the ground, I whispered the familiar, transformative words and took the leap. Spreading my arms out, my skin turned to stone-hard scales and webbing stretched into wings across my arms. Claws and teeth grew sharper and longer, and suddenly everything was fiery and hard. I flexed my wings just before I touched the ground and dove up into the air before Elowen’s shocked face. Touching down just inside the door, I padded thunderously to the middle of the room and blew a few fire rings at my chandelier. I could see the tree woman was sufficiently terrified so I smiled with sword-sized teeth and took a deep breath. The journey back was a little more painful, but I was always happy to have fingers and fully-functioning vocal cords; using telepathy to speak to people was annoying.

“I recognize that I wasn’t the right choice for queen, I really do, but I will not concede that I am far more powerful than my sister ever was,” I murmured as I shut the doors again and walked barefoot into a smaller room. This one had several expansive windows that made Elowen gasp. On the left was a view from the cliff on the other side of the portal; it was a stunning view of a large swath of the kingdom. The middle was inside the actual throne room. The right was of the ocean back home. It sparkled in the fading sunlight. Because of the twelve-hour time difference, it was morning here and soon-to-be night there. Sighing, I explained, “The mortals can only see the falls; they’re in the basement, basically.” The woman was just staring out into the world. “The containment spell only works on me when I’m there, but I don’t go out of my way to cause destruction. I may have stopped a few adventurers from getting through, but I think I was doing this world a service,” I added, sitting down on the bench in the middle of the room.

For a long while, we remained stationary. Elowen seemed in shock. I was trying to forget about everything I’d been so mad about; I’d pushed it down for so long that when it did pop up, it was almost explosive. Centuries later, the scars were still pretty fresh. I forgot them sometimes, hid them from the world and myself.

Finally, I felt calm enough to stand next to Elowen and, together, we watched a lone knight crossing the throne room with a large iron lantern. Sometimes I missed normal, boring stuff like that; it was nostalgic.

Clearing my throat, I changed the subject for us both, “To get back to the issue at hand, Elowen, as the Keeper of the Gate, I have to inform your side of the portal that it’s in danger.”

She looked at me and frowned. “What do you mean?” she asked, cobwebs of home falling from her mind.

“Mortal development, I’m afraid,” I replied, heading back to my throne room and leading the tree woman down the winding staircase and out the front door. The black obsidian rose up and around the original waterfall, encasing it entirely but leaving the entire surrounding intact; I didn’t dare alter it. Instead of a simple cliff face, it was now a cliff with a large stalagmite protruding out from the front of it, engulfing a large portion of the front like a dragon. We wandered down the long trail on the edge, taking sudden switchbacks every few minutes.

“Not very wagon-friendly,” Elowen commented when we finally arrived at the base. She was staring up at the massive, obtrusive building.

Chuckling, I replied, “I don’t get many visitors, anyway. And, even if I did, I probably wouldn’t get them from that side of the Gate.” I headed off between two trees and plucked my way along, ducking branches and jumping bushes. “It’s about two hours south,” I called back to the tree woman, pulling a phone out of my pocket. When I turned back, she was gone so I stopped and searched for good, mortal road trip music. I put on some Hendrix and slid the phone back into my pocket, working a small, powerful spell. After a few seconds, the guitar riff rippled through the trees and the world was alight with screaming strings, crashing drums, and deep beats.

Elowen finally caught up to me and we headed out as she stared around, searching for musicians. I let her be confused for a good half hour before finally explaining, “Transference and amplification charm, if you’re wondering.”

“Of your own device?” she asked, staring at me as I hummed along with a rocking Tragically Hip ballad. I nodded and kept on walking. She struggled to catch up to me and gasped, a little out of breath for a tree, “Have you written any of your custom spells down? In a book, perhaps?”

I stopped and she almost ran into me. Shaking my head, I snapped, “What? You wanna take my genius back with you? Tell everyone there that I should have had the throne? That I would have had the power to prevent three wars and hundreds of casualties over the years?” My anger was bubbling up again.

“Well, I mean, maybe it could be-” she started before fading away, uncertain what to say.

I cut her off as she found her voice, “Could be a bargaining chip? For my freedom?” For a moment, I was too angry to speak. “Or servitude? You could let them know who’s been protecting them all these years,” I growled, wanting to hurt her and the whole damn world I left behind. But I had a new job, so I just added, “I don’t serve you anymore. I protect this place from you, from your side.”


The next hour and a half, neither of us spoke. Birds and squirrels chatted with one another overhead as the music I was playing echoed around us; this was like my heaven. Sunlight dripped from overhead leaves in intricate, organic patterns on the mossy forest floor. Trees swayed here and there to the natural rhythm of the world.

When we reached the point where I could just barely hear the construction, I stopped and turned off the music. I stood staring up into the trees expectantly until Elowen asked, “What?”

Chuckling, I stepped up to a tree and placed my hand on the rough bark, shutting my eyes. “Oh, Lady of the Trees, can you not hear them screaming?” I purred, opening my eyes and looking at the woman.

She shook her head and replied, “No, Aster, I can’t. They aren’t alive, not like they are back home.” Frowning, she added, “There’s energy, but not that kind of life.”

I straightened and grabbed her wrist, pulling her towards the tree. “That’s where you’re wrong. Come, put your hand here,” I commanded, pressing her fingers against the trunk and taking a step backward.

For a few seconds, she stood listening, feeling. “No, all I can hear is your heartbeat. You’re stressed, worried,” she finally murmured.

“That’s not me. That’s the trees. But, yeah, I am worried. About this world,” I sighed, listening for anything larger than a raccoon amongst the underbrush; I didn’t have an invisibility charm that would definitely work on Elowen so we needed to steer clear of construction workers. “But really feel it, Elowen,” I pleaded, “Tap into that, these trees are all connected.” I couldn’t figure out a better way to help her understand this place, this world. “Look, they speak to each other, just in a different way than the ones back home. Even I can hear it sometimes,” I continued, trying to convince her with everything I had.

She shut her eyes and put both hands on the trunk, her fingers entwining across the surface as she listened. “They’re humming?” she murmured with uncertainty.

I smiled. I’d finally gotten through to her. Nodding though I knew she was focusing still, I replied, “Talking, that’s talking.”

As she continued to link with the towering tree, she spoke in a sort of trance, “It’s not in a language I can comprehend.” Breaking free, she looked around at the trees as though she expected to see a familiar face but didn’t. Suddenly, she furrowed her brow and looked at me. “That’s how you feel here? Like you’re speaking a different language?” She was the maternal woman I’d known for so long again, caring, forgiving.

“It was,” I replied, breathing around the lump in my throat, “But then I started listening to the music. The music is just fantastic. Stunning.” Emotions were roiling; not just anger, but love and peace and good things, deep things.

Smiling, she prompted, “Like that, what we were listening to?”

I nodded and continued, letting the emotions left over from the music sparkle in my words like sea glass left on the beach after high tide, “Yeah, but there’s also music with so much heart you can’t stand it. You can feel the pain and the exultation and the horror, the sadness, the joy. Through their music, the mortals have immortalized their deepest emotions, encased them in the fragile plastic of CDs and records. It’s like life everlasting, music.” Before I was entirely overtaken by the mere memories of music, I cleared my throat and pointed through the trees. “It’s uh, it’s just over there. The trees are talking about destruction, they’re pleading for it to stop,” I murmured, trying to block out the noise.

“What are the mortals doing?” Elowen asked in her official tone.

Holding my arms out, I replied, “They’re building housing through this whole area.” When she blinked at me with her eyebrows raised, I tried a different tactic. “They’re expanding their territory and creating a new settlement,” I tried in colloquial terms, “Generally, they cut everything down and then build their little buildings and streets before putting in a few new, manicured trees and shrubs.”

Nodding, she asked, “But they can’t see the castle?”

I chuckled and replied, “True, but they can destroy it and the waterfall. They want to, in their plans, use the river as part of the design of a kind of creekside oasis. But that means segmenting it behind the waterfall to have better control and flow down the way.” Elowen was trying to picture a modern mortal settlement without ever seeing one so I cut to the punchline, “They’re going to stop the flow of water from our world because the falls won’t go through the cave anymore. Actually, there probably won’t be a cave anymore”

“Oh,” she murmured, understanding the issue now, “So?”

I cleared my throat and sighed, “Well, we don’t know what would happen if magic stopped flowing here.”

Rolling her eyes, she explained in her most condescending tone, “Dear, the magic coming through is just overflow and it only affects the direct vicinity.”

I shook my head. “No, it doesn’t. I took a trip across the world and, guess what? Magic worked, in full,” I snapped, feeling hot again. Taking a deep breath, I added, “This world is saturated with a low level of magic. I have no idea what would happen if that stopped. Or if the portal were destroyed.”

Elowen started to walk back and I followed, trying to force the anger to ebb by expending energy; it worked, to a degree. “Then we would keep all the magic, Aster,” she finally sighed as though it were the most obvious and correct option. “Who’s side are you even on?” she muttered under her breath.

Running up in front of her, I threw my hands up to stop her. “Again, Elowen, our worlds are intertwined. I think this world acts as a kind of filter,” I explained. When she glared at my hands, I dropped them and continued, “The magic is unstable on the cliff back home above where the waterfall is, right?” She nodded. “Well, this world skims just enough off the top to allow the magic our world has to be useful. We have to do something.”

“Fine, what would you like me to do?” she asked, centuries of rings in her eyes. I shut my eyes and cast us both back into the throne room of my castle so we could speak more freely than that close to the mortals. Chuckling as she stared around us, she snapped, “You could have done that to get us there instead of walking two hours?”

I laughed and nodded before getting back on track. “Send someone, Elowen. Tell someone. Do something,” I pleaded, taking her rough hands in mine. Nodding, I muttered, “I can’t protect both worlds all by myself anymore. And I shouldn’t have been asked to.” I dropped her hands and stared at the throne I’d built for myself out of stone.

After a minute of consideration, Elowen suddenly commented, “You won’t become queen.”

Scratching my head, I turned back to her with a fire trying to burn through me. “I don’t want the throne, the real one. I don’t want to be anything or beholden to anyone,” I replied quietly. I chuckled and noted, “If I wanted the throne, I’m pretty sure I could have just taken it, you tree. I could have burned through your forest and killed anyone that didn’t want to bow.” The dragon in me was rearing its head in those words; I didn’t let it out much for that reason. It could protect us all, but it could also destroy everything if I didn’t keep a handle on it. “Really, I want someone, anyone, to help me fix this and then I would be happy to never speak to any of you again,” I stated, pushing the monster in me down again.

“Why me?” she gasped, still looking shocked from my well-mannered outburst.

Growling, I asked, “What do you mean?”

She searched for the right words and clarified, “Why summon me, specifically? You know lots of people over there, still. You know who’s alive with this window spell.”

I smiled. “The trees,” I murmured. Throwing the doors open to the balcony, I continued, “I thought you’d be the most receptive because, even if they aren’t in the same world or speak the same language, the trees here are your responsibility, too. It’s all one forest, Elowen.” I stepped out onto the jagged stone to survey my pseudo kingdom. When I turned back, I let the dragon’s eyes and claws come out to solidify my unspoken threat. “Even if you don’t care, you need to go back and make a big issue out of it, Elowen. Mountain out of a molehill,” I demanded, letting anger flow through. Tilting my head, I chuckled and made a pun, “Make a castle out of a cave, maybe.”

It, Itself and I – Part 1

Sleeping in the back of her father’s truck in the college parking lot was not how she expected things to go. Let alone with classes failing and impossible expectations thrusted upon her shoulders. A few moments of shut eye in a parking lot is perhaps not the biggest loss. 

The ratty carpet of the folded over backseat itched at her. The wool blanket did not help either. She pulled out her phone, checking the time. Her head rested against a bundle of jackets and clothing. Pushing herself up, she started tying her hair into a ponytail to keep it out of her face. The first class was in thirty minutes across campus. At least she’s going to be on time. 

A stubborn strand of hair kept falling into her face. Determined to blind her. Shuffling through her school bag, she plucked her wool toque on and stuffed the rebel hair away. It was a cute toque, with that maple leaf seen in and delightfully warm and covered her ears.

A cramped back and shoulder are a decent trade off in that case. She reasoned. Slumping out of her Dad’s crummy old chevy blazer, she tucked at the edge of her hoodie and scarf. The cold spring air piercing her ears and cheeks like pine needles. Parking for the college was full during the day. With the rows upon rows of vehicles. It was near impossible to find a spot. Unless of course, you arrived early at three in the morning. When even the sun hasn’t even broken dawn yet. That was what most of them could only do to even barely qualify as being early for classes. Barely.

The city college was unimpressive. Five main buildings large enough to house the numerous students that flood during the day. All of the grouchy and underfed without something glazed and cappuccino from the quaint but overpriced college coffee shop. 

The glass doors to the main atrium of the technology building opened for her. The large wooden dome that always reminded her of an apple with the top and bottom sliced cleanly off. Glass windows lining the sides where snobbish business students would galavant to for meetings. She made the mistake of going to one of those and was fortunate enough to have been never contacted by them again. They gave her odd looks and comments anyways. Especially with her hair being so long. 

First class room on the left, third floor. Across from the computer room. She stepped into the elevator, clicking the button for the third floor. As the doors almost closed when he showed up. He barged in just before the door shut. “Hey! Sorry Sorry Sorry” he muttered. Shuffling in, he stood at the otherside of the elevator as it began to go up. He was kinda cute. Clean shave with a light shadow starting to creep in with a neatly cropped buzz cut of hair that reminded her of the earthy oaks back in her suburban wasteland of a neighborhood. She averted her gaze; suddenly becoming very interested in the grainy texture of the floor. 

Yawning, the man stuffed hands into his jacket. Content to just watch the little digital display tick further upwards. He wasn’t really paying her any attention. The door opened and he walked out, leaving her to continue staring at the floor in silence. She didn’t move for a while before finally stepping off the elevator. The door quietly slid shut behind her.

Only another student was there for their literature class. A lanky young man with a green hoodie and blue jeans. His eyes emerald and ruffled brown hair. His nose almost against the glow of his cell phone and earbuds stuffed a little deeply. She could hear the little squeak and beeps of music escaping from them as well.

Sighing, she looked over to the classroom door and the hastily written note saying the teacher will be back later. Even the ink on the paper still looked fresh and sticky from a big red marker pen. She tried opening the door and to no surprise, it was locked. The key was even still clicked into place. She rattled the key absently before twisting it; the door making a satisfying clunk before swaying open. 

Slipping into the class room and sitting down at her desk, she barely felt herself collapsing on the desk in boredom. Minutes passed before the rest of the class showed up and sat down. Murmuring and gossiping while she rested with her face planted on the desk undeterred. Another day of college and wondering what the point of it all was. For a future undetermined as of yet. 

You’d figure it out” her parents would say with noses up against their phones. Snapping selfies of themselves and gawking at their social media threads. It was conspiracy theories last week, now it was cat videos. She felt empty just being around them. The essence of her joy and will being sapped by her parents as they paraded her around as their golden miracle child. (She wasn’t. She just wished to be a normal woman.)

“Hey” She looked over to her side to see the young man with the green hoodie sitting at the desk next to her. He had one earbud still blasting out music as he woke her up. “You look tired man, did you have another late night?”

“Uh…yeah.” She groaned leaning her head back onto the table. A migraine still hitting her like a blown back storm. She’ll remember his name. Eventually.

The teacher finally walked in. Swaggering into the classroom with dollar store bravado and wearing a blue suit and red bow tie. His hair was short trimmed and greased back. A cheap million dollar smile spread across his face. “Good Morning Class!” Strolling past the students and lounging onto his comfy spinning chair and turning to face the class. “How is everyone doing this fine morning?” 

The class all murmured in unison a collective “good” or “I’m doing alright”; generally positive. 

She lifted her head up from her desk and mimed the others. “I’m okay” She was okay supposedly. Glumly pulling out her homework, she flipped to the page where she was working on this week’s math. She should have been able to do this. Why hasn’t this basic fundamental skill failed to stick. Already half the class have their cellphones out. One was playing videos on their switch they brought from home. She couldn’t focus. There was too much happening. The numbers on the pages of her homework refused to click inside her head as the classroom fell into more and more disorderly distraction.

When class had finished, she had gotten nothing done. Just a binder filled with sketchy doodles and half finished algebra. 

Her phone vibrated with an incoming text. The bell chimes of wind pipes alerting her. She struggled to pull her phone out of her pocket; the phone cover getting caught and tattered from the repeated mishandling over the years. She opened incoming text with a swipe of her thumb.

Want to hang out? – The sender, of course, was her friend. Sammy.

Nick is thinking of going pun crawling tonight. 

*pub

She wasn’t that much of a fan of pubs. Or drinking. Couldn’t we just hang out online? She asked. I think it’s just Nick and Alex who are into that. She also omitted the occasion when she had went out with Alex and he had made comments that made her rather cringe and share concerned awkward glances with everyone else.

Your weird – why can’t you be like everyone else you goof? 😉 

I’ll be online tonight

A smile crept across her lips. Warframe? She texted.

Sure, We’ll do that Warframe pet thing 

She texted back. Awesome! Kavats here we come!

Space ninjas and Killer Kitty Cats 😸

“Mr.Colterson!” She winced, hearing Colterson being called out always made her itch in all the wrong ways. Like a scratchy wool sweater that couldn’t even stop a light breeze. By the voice It was her computer science teacher.

She drudged the words out as best she could. “Mr.Desterhan?” She turned up from her phone and looked up at the jolly old man with a scraggly beard and wide brim cowboy hat. His belly a little more round due to his peckish habit for bringing chocolates into class to loudly munch down on. “Wha-what seems to be the problem?” She asked wearily.

“Colter…” Mr.Desterhan rubbed the bridge of his nose. His nostrils bellowing and whiskering his long droopy mustache. “You have your assignment done? Right?”

That assignment, shit. She felt a knot twist in her stomach. “That was today wasn’t it?

Camp Nano – Short Story #4

Lost

*For Camp Nanowrimo this April, I plan on writing 10 short stories that fall into different genres & elicit different emotions. Because I’m planning on editing them as I go, I’ll be posting a whole short story every ~3 days.*

The tavern was practically shaking as the werewolf, furry ears poking through her short auburn hair, and dwarf, his facial hair twisted and braided ornately, danced a drunken jig on the bar’s stone counter. Spinning and swinging as he deftly plucked at a dented lute, the bard led a triad of tavern minstrels through a lively ballad; he wouldn’t tell anyone, but he was utilizing an enchantment so the backup band would be in tune with him. Only a well-practiced mage would recognize the sigils carved into the side of his instrument. In the far corner, beyond a veil of magical mist meant to obscure the most unsavoury of backroom deals, I could see just the sheath protecting the elf’s sword where it hung on the coatrack and the tip of the archer’s bow as it rested against the wall. Beside me, a tracker named Wren was blithering on about how she found a lost hedgehog yesterday.

To be fair, it wasn’t the most inexperienced troupe I’d been on a quest with, but they were the least congruent by a long shot. Resting my head against the edge of my cold mug of iced ginger tea, I turned to stare at my companion; she hadn’t appeared to notice that, throughout the whole evening of pre-quest revelry, I hadn’t spoken a single word to her.

“I’m heading to my chambers. Tell them I’ll see them just before sunrise at the entrance to town,” I murmured to Wren as she continued to chatter like a squirrel. Perhaps she’d admitted she was part-squirrel and I’d missed it in all the inane chatter.

When I got up to leave, resting a single bronze coin on the counter and taking my mug with me, Wren stared with big, doe eyes. “What? You can’t go yet. The celebrations are just starting,” she whined, gesturing at the drunken members of our party still engaging in the merrymaking of hired hands. Live fast, die young was the motto of these chartered questing types.

Chuckling, I touched her shoulder in the hopes of performing a nonverbal illusion charm. When it didn’t work and the awkward time staring at her grew too long, I dropped my hand and left. Lately, I’d been really struggling with my enchantments; even ritualistic, verbal ones were fizzling out, which was concerning with a big mission in the offing. I skillfully ducked behind a couple splitting a sundae so my colleagues wouldn’t spot me and left the tavern. Draining my tea as I wandered out into the chilly night air, I threw the container into a bush.

Instead of going up to the lodging I had booked for the night, I left the warm light and garbled noises of the pub for the shadowy, subdued solitude inside the town’s quaint magical sanctuary. For such a small town on the outskirts, I was mildly surprised that they had a place of worship for those of us in the magical arts; it was humble but welcomed me with a swell of comforting energy as I stepped foot inside the doors. Unlike churches, these dedicated refuges were created so anyone from any line of learning could access protection and power. Their basic shapes were specific to the township, as well as their material properties, but they all pulled from sacred geometry to create convergences of energy. Back home, we had a series of them posted all over the metropolis with various magical properties and dedications. Most of the mages I knew tended to frequent one for their entire lives, while druids and other nature-minded folk went where they felt the draw of energy at any time.

Unbuckling my cloak, I cast the heavy fabric across a hand-carved wooden chair to the side of the cathedral. In all my time as a mage, I’d found it nearly impossible to do any big casting with long sleeves hanging around my hands, so I was forever ridding myself of my cloak. In the same vein, I despised the superfluous material of flowing skirts, but found people didn’t take me seriously if I presented too manly; something about feminism that I would willfully never understand. As such, I bunched up the skirts of my dress and knelt at the alter, shutting my eyes and attempting to channel the energies housed within the building. Meditation came easily, but the gentle tinkle of power never did.


“I’ve procured us five horses,” the archer, Sirpa, explained, pointing to the row of sturdy quarter horses hitched outside the building between the town’s entrance and the bar everyone appeared to have spent all night at. His thin leather armour shifted as he opened the coin pouch given to our party by our middleman and counted out the remainder. Slipping it back into the inside pocket of his vest, he added, “As usual, they gave us a small stipend and the rest will come upon delivery of the uh, well, completion of the quest.” Seeming a man of few words, with was perfect for a leader, he let loose the first horse and skillfully swung himself onto the saddle. He adjusted the blanket under the tight leather and started towards the main road.

Looking around at the company, our bard, Ozan, asked, “Uh, not to bring up a sore spot, boss, but there are seven of us, not five. And, uh, I ain’t walkin’ to the mountain.” He was inching closer and closer to the horses with every second, prepared to commandeer one of the steeds if there was a fight.

Chuckling, Sirpa growled, “Well, if I say you will, you will, bard.” Clearly, they knew each other in a negative capacity.

“Me and Pippi are gonna go it on foot,” replied the werewolf as she elbowed the dwarf in the shoulder and adjusted her canvas backpack. When she glanced at the horses, their eyes widened and she chuckled, “It’ll be faster that way, anyhow.” Conall was a well-known and generous pack leader around my own township, but we’d never actually crossed paths. Even in fully human form, she had a wild look in her eyes and her hair was scruffy and matted. But the most intriguing part of her, to a lot of people, was that she could shift at a moment’s notice; she was the only natural werewolf anyone knew of with that gene. One of my apprentices had even created a talisman using her blood that completely irradicated involuntary transformations. It had done wonders for the werewolf populations the kingdom over. Though still defined as a curse and ridiculed widely, it was easier for them to hide their affliction if they so chose.

Fiore, an elven warrior I was sure I’d met on several occasions, got on the next horse gracefully; she draped herself over the back and appeared to fall asleep as her mount followed Sirpa’s.

As the others took their horses, I hung back, focusing on the knot tied tightly around the hitching post. Glaring at the rope, I held my hand out and willed it to loosen. I wasn’t even trying to convince it to fall off, just to slacken the knot a little.

“Are you coming, Nua?” Wren asked excitedly as she held her horse back from joining the group. No one else had noticed my lagging behind, which suited me just fine. Our tracker couldn’t spend all her time at the back of the pack, though, or we’d never get where we needed to go. I was about to point this out when she whispered, “Sorry, Nua, but I really have to get going,” and hurried on down the dirt road, bouncing in the saddle like a child on their first ride.

I groaned, tore the rope from the post, and slid my boot into the stirrup. As I swung up into the saddle, I pulled half of my dress and cloak around so they weren’t hanging off the side; normally, I used a simple reduction charm to temporarily slice off the ends of my clothing to make riding easier. Nudging the horse, I followed far enough behind the group that no one felt the need to drop to my speed so I could be alone with my thoughts, dark as they were.


For several hours, we went along the main thoroughfare, trudging through the occasional swampland or weaving through mazes of grass. Wren led the way, dropping to the ground and wandering in concentric circles when we needed to make a decision about direction. Strumming his lute, Ozan sang long ballads about great warriors and epic quests; he danced like a fool in his saddle during Wren’s impromptu breaks. Whenever I caught a glimpse of Fiore, she appeared to be sleeping. From what I knew of elves, that didn’t mean she couldn’t kill someone without a second’s thought, so I decided to keep my distance. Honestly, Conall and Pippi could have been eaten by a bear and I would have seen them the same amount over the first stretch of the journey.

When we finally stopped on the first night, the sun had been gone for about ten minutes and the creatures hiding in the woods around us were making their presence well known. Beyond the ditch was a flat spot where we lashed the horses to a few trees and Pippi looked expectantly at me. “Can you get the fire going while I cut a tree for kindling, Grand Mage?” he asked, addressing me respectfully.

Biting my lip, I croaked, “Uh, I’m preserving my energy in case we’re attacked. I could use my knife to start one, though.” I’d been afraid of them requesting a spell for hours.

“Oh, of course, Grand Mage,” he replied, smiling at me. Clearly, Pippi’s clan of dwarves had a better relationship with the magical community than the one in our kingdom did; they would never have addressed me like that or taken my word for anything. “I offer you my flintstone and freshly-sharpened blade,” he added, bowing as he passed the materials over before hefting his axe over his shoulder and examining the nearby trees. When he’d hewn a large tree into small enough pieces, the dwarf sat beside the firepit and waited to be fed as the rest of us tried to cobble together a campsite. It took me a couple of minutes to manage a spark, but he said nothing of my wretched analog skills. While I got the fire going, Wren took Fiore to hunt game and gather herbs for dinner. Lying on his back looking up at the stars as he plucked a sombre tune, Ozan glanced at me sideways.

Conall and Sirpa were dragging logs into the light to form a protective barrier around us when Ozan asked, “So, what’s a Grand Mage doing on a for-hire quest? Is it more important than it seems? Is there a plot happening? I mean, this is hardly the kind of place someone of your caste should find herself?” Thankfully, he didn’t question why I hadn’t offered to magic a fire or cast any protections around our troupe. Perhaps he thought I was doing everything I needed to, but still.

“I don’t know. I guess I was just tired of doing easy stuff. I mean, being a Grand Mage is great and I get to teach all kinds of people all houses of magic, but it’s gotten boring,” I mused, standing at the edge of the firepit. I wasn’t lying, exactly, but that wasn’t the whole truth and the bard seemed to realize that. Sighing, I added, “I am six-hundred and eighty-nine years old. I’ve had centuries to learn and grow and now, I don’t know. I’m just really tired. I guess I just wanted to have some fun.”

He grinned toothily, whistled, and murmured, “Wow, that’s some kind of spell to keep you alive that long.” Chuckling, he raised his eyebrow and glanced around to make sure no one was listening; the dwarf was snoring, and the lumberjacks were out of earshot. “Is it true that immortality spells like that require virgin sacrifices all the time?” he asked pointedly. In all my years, I’d met a lot of people who’d do anything for a taste of immortality. At least this one would be easy to vanquish, if the need arose, even without my powers.

“Well, it isn’t exactly an immortality spell,” I replied, shifting the conversation slightly, “But, yeah, the common ones require a lot of life energy and they’re really messy; hardly worth the few years you can manage to scrape out. You have to be very committed if you want to last more than a decade and make it worth it.” I had many friends who lacked the stomach to perform those kinds of rituals more than a few times in a lifetime.

“Wow. Guess that’s why you don’t have magicians like you living for centuries all the time, huh?” he joked, lying back and staring into the sky. As I thought I’d gotten out of explaining the whole truth, he turned over again and demanded, “So, if your spell isn’t like that, how was it done?”

Not many people knew the answer to that; not many who’d been alive in the last five centuries, anyway. Sighing, I started, “I spent decades trying to create a spell of immortality to cure my sister.” As I spoke, everyone arrived back at camp carrying heavy logs, bloodied rabbits, and piles of leaves. “Guess it’s rabbit for dinner, huh?” I changed the subject, happy for the distraction.

After a surprisingly great dinner of roasted rabbit and wilted greens cooked by Wren, we all took our corners of the campsite and tried to get comfortable under the heavy woollen saddle blankets. Ozan had the first watch and had been instructed not to fall asleep; his solution to this was to have a bucket of cold water beside him to throw on himself if he so much as yawned. It took a while, but everyone fell asleep eventually and even the fire drew quieter.

“Nua?” he asked, his tone polite and calm. Sniffing, I rolled over and tried to see him through the fire and smoke. He cleared his throat and asked, “Can you continue telling me about your immortality? My brother is a Fourth-Level Wizard and he’s been trying to crack that nut for longer than he’d like me to tell you. You don’t have to give me any of the gory details; I’d just like to be able to tell him it’s possible.”

I liked to keep my story to myself, but this experience was supposed to push me. Nodding, I pulled myself up and sat down on one of the logs, careful not to rouse any of the others. “My sister had a blood disease and I had to continually save her life. I thought that if I could create that spell, she could live and be happy,” I started again, thinking back to those painful years. The way she degraded and her eyes hollowed, the moments when she smiled, and when we danced in the field behind our house; they nearly took my breath away to recall. “I spent years learning magic and trying out spells and creating powerful enchantments and then, just like that, she died,” I continued as the bard stared at me.

Taking a sip from the bucket of water beside him, the bard inquired, “How long did you, you know, manage with her condition?”

For a moment, I struggled to remember that far back. It was centuries ago, and my memory wasn’t what it used to be. Nodding to myself, I replied, “Thirty-two years.” It seemed like a blink to me now, but three decades was a long time. “I kept at it after her passing. I just needed to prove that it couldn’t be done; I had to know absolutely that there was nothing more we could have tried,” I added, smiling sadly at the minstrel with his fingers just brushing the strings of his instrument; he appeared to have forgotten about it being there, swept up in my tragic tale.

“I’m really sorry,” he murmured quietly as the flames crackled between us.

Chuckling, I sighed, “It’s been centuries.” The pain could still be raw sometimes, but my wounds would heal one day.

“Obviously, you didn’t prove immortality was impossible,” Ozan commented, rolling onto his back again. He plucked a quiet lullaby as he hummed in a way a mother does to soothe her child in the deep, dark night.

“No, I didn’t; I proved it was very possible and very terrible,” I groaned. The only people I’d spoken candidly about my immortality were other magic users and they all had their theories on my methods; Ozan was naïve to the universe and it was easier to talk to him, knowing he wouldn’t really understand. Picking up a stick and poking at the edge of the fire, I continued, “It was another decade before I made a real breakthrough. I’d started dating this girl, Fiona, and her family owned part of a massive dwarf mine. Don’t ask.” Really, they got it through a relatively fair trade of property, but no one took my word for it; I probably wouldn’t, either, given the time period.

“During that time, I had come up with a mishmash enchantment and I was just trying every ingredient I could in this blank space I couldn’t figure out. I knew it was some kind of metal or ore, or maybe viscera, but nothing I was trying worked. I’d even spent months testing the blood of different species I could get my hands on to see if it would work,” I continued as I remembered the piercing taste of tin on my tongue after ages trying known metals. Ozan was watching me with interest as I resumed, “Anyway, one day we were sitting chatting about family heirlooms when she grinned sheepishly at me and gave me this ring.” Here, I showed him the simple band; at one point I’d considered having a stone set on it, but I enjoyed the simplicity compared to my other myriad of bejewelled ornaments. “Her father had made it out of slag from the gold mine. It had no worth and it was plain, but it gave me pause,” I added, “because no one used gold in alchemy. It was the pinnacle of material and so you had no use for it, magically. But, I tried it. The ring, anyway, with almost no real gold in it.

“I was able to reanimate a squirrel momentarily. I was stunned,” I chuckled, remembering the poor creature’s short-lived return from the dead. “I took a bit of gold, melted it into a pendant, and tried my enchantment on myself. I know you’re not supposed to do that, but I was at a kind of low point, so it seemed worth it,” I explained, feeling my cheeks flush. When I’d composed myself, I continued, “It was awesome, the power that flowed through me. Just amazing. I was going to tell the other mages in my sanctuary, but when you feel that kind of power, it takes hold, kinda.” From one low point to another. “I offered it to Fiona, and she didn’t want to. I respected her decision, which was probably the right one, and I started bracing for the day I had to say goodbye to her. I always knew it would be painful, but you can’t force your lover to live forever unless they actually want to. Not if you really love them,” I murmured, sinking into a reverie.

When I pulled myself out of it, I chuckled wryly, “It wasn’t until the moment Fiona actually died that I realized just how huge a mistake I’d made.”

There was a long silence where only the distant caws of nightshade birds and the cheerful, dying crackle of the fire pierced the night. When I was thinking about turning back over and going to sleep, or at least shutting my eyes, Ozan asked, “So, what makes this enchantment so special?”

“Well,” I began quietly, “I am impervious to any kind of death, not just old age. Most of those blood sacrifice ones are only good to help you live longer if you don’t go running into burning barns; I can withstand any kind of death.” Hearing it out loud somehow made it even more real, even after all this time. “I cannot die, which is why I hid the spell and destroyed the sigils I created for it,” I whispered, barely louder than the wind.

This quiet seemed deeper, as though the true horrors of that statement were appearing to the whole world and it was trembling under the weight. Immortality, true immortality, was a curse, not a gift.

“Obviously you’ve uh, you’ve you know?” Ozan broached the uncomfortable subject in a tone I knew well, and I realized this must be the real, deep him; that the overexcited, cheerful man I’d met the day before was nothing but a mask he wore. When I didn’t respond, he cleared his throat and reiterated, this time as a statement, “Uh, you’ve tried many ways to stop living.”

Chuckling to keep from crying, I replied, “Uh, yeah, I tried. But it didn’t work. Nothing worked. Nothing has ever worked. I’ve spent the last few decades trying to die and nothing works. I can’t watch anyone else die. I will not.” I took a breath as emotion began to overwhelm me. “I am lost because I’ve done everything I wanted to do and now I don’t know what to do. I’ve lost that, that innate pull to life. I haven’t felt it in decades, but it feels worse right now,” I murmured, feeling anger seep through the gloom. As it built, I snapped, “And right now my magic isn’t even working so what use am I, anyway?”

“You don’t have magic?” Ozan asked, staring at me as though he’d been able to see it shimmering in the air around me. Sitting up straight, he set his lute down and murmured, “I’m sorry for your loss. It’s hard when the one thing you use to keep the demons at bay is suddenly gone.”

After a long minute of staring into the flames, feeling a sense of commiseration with the smiling bard, I whispered, “I’m heading to sleep. I think Sirpa’s turn is soon.” I turned over and pretended to sleep until the sun rose, shutting my eyes whenever someone was spelled off.

When the sun finally broached the tops of the trees, our troupe was relatively quiet, packing up in near silence before setting off towards the mountains. Just before midday, we started heading up a steep trail winding around the mountain, and within a couple of hours, we were trudging through snow. Sirpa asked if I could help with the cold, to which Pippi replied that I was already protecting us all and couldn’t afford to waste energy on trivial magic; clearly, he’d been sound asleep during my conversation with Ozan.

We stopped in a cave before the path veered out and around the other side of the mountain, where our mission would end. Starting a fire to warm up and reheat some leftover rabbit, our little party shivered in the inclement weather. After I’d taken my piece of meat, I stepped out into the chill wind to stabilize my emotions before the final leg of our journey.

“So, you want to kill yourself? That’s why you’re doing this? You have no magic, so you may as well die?” a hearty female voice asked. Conall stood a step or two inside the cave, but far enough from the group to keep our conversation private; she was chewing on a legbone with abnormally large canines. “And you’re willing to take all of us along with you, what, out of spite?” she spat.

Shaking my head, I replied, “I just, I don’t know what to do.”

“Well, you need to tell us if you can’t handle this because a dragon will burn us all to a crisp before you can speak a spell. Or, I suppose, wave your hands at it?” Conall growled, whining as she sucked the marrow from the bone. Nodding at my shaking fingers, she asked, “You gonna finish the marrow?”

Again, I shook my head and passed her the bone. As she headed back inside, I steadied myself to confront Sirpa. I cleared my throat and was about to ask for a word when he turned and grinned at me.

“Ah! I wanted to give you this sword, just in case,” he stated as he handed me a heavy longsword in a gilded sheath. Looking around at the rest of our group, he asked, “Does anyone else want an extra weapon? I brought a few just in case, so, take what you want.” Wren took him up on the offer, winking at me as she hooked a small sword onto her belt beside a series of insanely sharp knives.

I decided that I would do whatever I could to protect the group, even if that meant using the energy of a spectacular death to do it. Hefting the blade in my hand, I admired the glint of the metal and smiled across at Ozan. He’d picked out an axe that had once been enchanted to cut through dragonhide, but was now almost useless; it wouldn’t do him much good in that form. Beside him, Fiore was looking at Sirpa’s once-spelled arrows that wouldn’t deal a death blow to anything with armour now.

Something came over me like a spell; energy that hadn’t flowed through me for ages rippled through my veins. I felt warm again. I’d never realized that I was cold. Cold and alone and now, now I wasn’t. Now, I had a purpose again. I had to live to protect my comrades.

“I need to respell all your weapons,” I stated as the group started back out into the blowing snow. For a moment, as I had their full attention, I added, “I’d also like to try a more dangerous strategy before we actually go after the dragon.”


We crouched along the wall, listening to the dragon’s rhythmic breathing vibrating through the mountainside. Though I had spelled the weapons in case we needed them, I was hoping I could convince the dragon we weren’t there, so I stepped out onto the ledge in front of the nest. Curled up around a clutch of eggs was a massive beast with shimmering scales, claws that could crush a large elephant, and a pair of stunning leather wings.

Motioning to Ozan, I started to chant a powerful telepathy spell towards the dragon as the bard began to play a lullaby on his lute. As the gentle melody flowed through me and into the dragon’s sleeping mind, its breathing slowed even more.

Fiore, Conall, and Pippi climbed around us as Sirpa stood with his arrow aimed at the dragon’s heart, prepared to let it loose if the beast woke up. As they searched through the piles of gold and jewels, plucking items here and there for their own pouches, I felt the dragon pulling gently on my spell. It was difficult to keep my focus on the music as I struggled to keep the creature’s mind calm and blank. My mind kept wanting to drift to the object of our quest: a huge bag of raw-hewn gems worth more than our entire kingdom put together.

Finally, Conall touched my shoulder on the way back around the bend and I slowly released the dragon’s mind. I instinctively shoved Ozan away from me and into the cover of the ice wall just in time; the great lizard opened its fiery eyes and I found myself engulfed in flames.

For a few seconds, I thought I’d died. Honestly, I wasn’t that unhappy about it. I opened my eyes to the whole troupe staring down at me.

Grinning, Ozan exclaimed, “She lives! She lives!” and broke into an impromptu ballad about my immortality. Perhaps I have a few adventures still in me. And maybe I’m not as lost as I thought.

It, Itself and I – Prologue

She walked this path many times before to not get lost. So when the pathway swerved to a trail not yet crossed before she had nearly frozen in place. Her breath baited on her lips against the frosted February air. Fangs of cold and snap against her throat as she shivered against it’s touch. The sun was setting at this point, the sky an artist’s turmoil of pearl and sapphire. A ray of light refracted upon the icy shards that hung upon the branches above. Chromatic beams slowly arching down and across this errant path she had never found.

“Maybe I took a wrong turn at the old flume?” She thought, checking behind her to ensure she hadn’t somehow taken a wrong turn. She unplugged her earphones, Donatella being played over her phone a little too loud. She listened to the silence of the woods and the weeping of melting snow. The pathway was the same familiar road she had traveled since she was a kid. She took a drag out of her vape, the sour taste coming to her lips as she allowed the smoky vapor to poison her with the sweet toxins.

Spinning on her heels, sport shoes crunching on the frozen dirt underneath and started back the other way. She had made several paces the way she came, the path unfamiliar. The rotten fallen over trunk she had jumped over and the mushy ice puddle she danced around; where had they gone? 

She kept walking, hoping she had simply passed the leaning stone on her afternoon stroll when she inexplicably found herself on the same unfamiliar trail she stumbled upon. She whispered a baffled curse beneath her breath. 

The swirling pink and blue of the sky collapsed; deep purple of fading twilight falling upon the isolated woodland trail. The whistle of a breeze played between the pine needles and a lost song bird chirped a mating call.

She pulled out her phone, tapping away the lock screen and quickly bringing up the dial. The number of her friend from work was the first one she tried. “Kyla? Um, can you uh…” She tried to scrounge for the words she wanted to say. Maybe she ought to have called for an emergency instead? “I’ve gotten lost in the woods just outside my neighbor block. Near Timber Creek. If you’re hearing this, please call for 911. I…I feel like I’m losing sense of what’s going on. Just…just-“

A nasally electronic woman interrupted her. “We’re sorry, your call can not be completed as dialed. Would you like to try again?”

She resisted the urge to scream, panic surging. Her face ruby red from the terrified frustration. By now the deep shade of purple twilight was growing to abyssal dark as the sun finally set and the forests plunged into shadows. The untrodden path beckoned her, it’s icy trail veiled with shallow shadows.

Without any reprieve, she tried calling emergency service. A tone dial of death greeted her as the phone failed to make any connection. The glow of the screen brushing across her face at odd angles as the last wandering rays of light left. The woods plunged into suffocating shadows. The battery icon in the top right corner only at fourteen percent. She fumbled with the screen, bringing down the options tab and tapping on the flashlight icon. Her phone’s light turned on as it became a bright torch in darkness.

So without recourse, she walked the unfamiliar path. The branches iced and the road cold. A canopy of branches too thick, with the snow heaped on top thick and heavy. Caverns of frost and pines. The trunks were so tightly packed together that they formed walls. The ceiling now brushed up against her head as she now started crawling forward. Her hands and legs soaked in mud and snow. Keeping one hand clean to hold her cellphone to guide the way, the light dimming.

The path behind her had changed entirely. Where there used to be an open path and clear canopies, now only exist the same spiraling veins she found herself creeping through.

A carving on a wall caught her attention. It seemed to have been written with a knife of some kind, the bark still raw from the wound. She shined her dying light to see.

‘Don’t look into the reflections’

She tried to look closer at the carving, reading it again. Tracing her finger along the letters in some hopes it would magically make sense. The words were cut out in a panicked, crooked fashion. Letters crossed over another sloppily and a long scar trailing away as the carver lost their strength.

The battery percentage ticked lower. Already down to seven percent, the screen flicking on to announce it’s low on power. 

A scurried skitter echoed from up ahead. The tunnel is becoming tighter. She shines her flashlight forwards, the imprint of a tiny tail with four sets of wings darting away.

She kept crawling, her chest compressed as she felt herself squeezed. She couldn’t move anymore, she thought. Somehow she did though, feeling constrained in this tunneling root. Having had to put her phone away and climb in the dark blindly.

Without warning she found herself climbing out of the narrow vein, the idle midnight breeze against her face. The sound of chimes ringing distantly and bristled dry branches creaking. The scent of junipers afloat in the breeze. The silhouette of a colossal tree branch stretched across the eldritch night sky. Tendrils of unknown constellations; glimmering gems of solar gravitas. The outline of the moon closer than it should have been. Like a pearl in the shade.

Royal Occasion – Part 3

Read Royal Occasion – Part 1 here

Read Royal Occasion – Part 2 here

            Finally, I knocked on the door and Kiana yelled for me to come in.

            “Guess you knew it was me, huh?” I asked, stepping inside and shutting the door behind me. Across the room, my little sister was staring out the window at the crowds beginning to gather; she was smiling.

            Turning, she beamed and replied, “Well, I feel like everyone else in the entire kingdom has come in to ask if they can help me with anything.” Her hair was piled atop her head in a messy braid and her dressing gown was hanging off one shoulder. Neither of us was exactly graceful when we didn’t have eyes on us; I’ll admit I had trouble being dignified even then.

            I chuckled and replied as I took a seat on the floor in front of the smouldering fireplace, “I guess they feel bad or something.”

            “I think that’s what royal staff are supposed to do, Lil,” she murmured as she turned back to the window. She had a point; I never really understood how much servants were supposed to be doing for us. That was certainly our mother’s fault. But it was a good fault to have. “So, have there been many issues?” Kiana asked as she eyed something of interest.

            Laughing, I leaned back on the warm brick and considered my answer. In my silence, Kiana looked over, so I replied, “Nope, not many at all.” I could barely make it through the sentence without smiling. “And certainly no levitating tables or anything so peculiar,” I added with a wide grin.

            “Oh! I’d forgotten about the tables,” she sighed, sitting back in her chair, likely to consider a solution to the problem.

            Not waiting for her to think of one, I continued, “Me, too. But it’s been dealt with in a way I think you’ll appreciate.” Feeling a nervous energy welling up, I took the knife from my boot and started to sharpen it as quietly as I could. “While we figured out what to do about the banquet, I discovered the tables move when you shove them; like they’re sliding across ice,” I remarked, thinking how much fun it would have been if we’d known that when we were a little younger.

            “We could do a kinda bumper car thing!” Kiana squealed, rising from her chair. “Do you wanna go do that now?” she asked excitedly.

            Chuckling, I replaced my knife and replied, “Maybe after you get married, and you come visit.” That seemed to put a damper on the idea; Kiana slumped back in the chair and looked away as her eyes glimmered with tears. “I cannot believe you’re getting married, Kiana. I mean, just yesterday I was teaching you how to ride a horse and now you’re, you’re gonna be living in another kingdom and, and living with a really nice prince,” I whispered as I, took, held back tears. Neither of us was great with emotional situations; I always failed to be strong.

            “I know. I just wish mom were here for us both,” she replied quietly. Sniffling, she turned away.

            I took a breath and shook my head. “Well, she’s here in spirit. Dad, too. They’d be so proud of the woman you’ve become,” I comforted her. Looking at Kiana, I realized she was full-on crying and jumped up to embrace her. For a long minute, we remained there trying to hold each other together. When I pulled back, Kiana was still crying. I wiped the tears from her eyes and asked, “Why are you looking at me with those big, sad eyes? Today is a good day.”

            She sniffled and pulled away so she could use her handkerchief. “I know, I know,” she muttered, looking at me with the same sorrow in her eyes. “Well, it’s just, I just wish you weren’t gonna be alone,” she stammered between light sobs, “and I, I wish you have, you know. I wish you had someone.”

            Nodding, I smiled and shook my head. I wiped a tear away and replied, “It’s okay. It would be too complicated right now. Maybe one day I’ll find a woman who I want to share my life with, but, for now, I’m okay.” I took a moment and added, “It wouldn’t be right, anyway. I mean, I’ve been making some progress with things, but you know how the church is right now. You know, I can’t be with someone I love if other people can’t. It just wouldn’t be right.” Generally, I attempted to stay clear of the politically-charged field, but I had been pushing some groups on that issue in the last few years.

            “But you’re gonna be all alone; I won’t be here to be with you,” she cried, dissolving into sobs on the end of her bed.

            Chuckling lightly, I sat down beside her and put my arm around her shoulders. “You know I was around for, like, ten years before you came along, right? I will seriously miss you like crazy, but I will be okay,” I whispered, trying to keep it light.

            Laughing, she snorted and murmured, “I know, I know. I just, you know.” She buried her face in her blanket and I rubbed her shoulder.

            “Yeah, I know,” I replied.

            For a while, we stayed relatively silent until Kiana suddenly sat up and asked, “Did you get the Earthian ritual thing figured out?”

            Nodding, I replied, “Oh, yeah. I have the items you need. I’ll bring them in when you’re in your dress and everything.”

            Someone knocked on the door and Kiana yelled something unintelligible at them. Cracking it open, Mirabel asked, “Are you ready to get started, Princess?” When she spotted me, she bowed and exclaimed, “Oh, my Queen. Do you need a hand with anything?”

            I jumped up and strode to the door, “I’m good, thanks, Mirabel. Kiana, I’ll see you when she’s done!” With that, I headed down the hallway to the queen’s chambers and stood in front of my door. It was still weird to be sleeping in the room I considered my parents, but I had been hoping that seeing my sister off would help solidify it as mine.

To be continued…

Royal Occasion – Part 2

Read Royal Occasion – Part 1 here

            Finally, I managed to enter the castle before I was, again, accosted by issues.

            “My Queen,” murmured our head footman as he bowed so low his cap nearly fell on the floor, “we’ve run into a slight issue with the reception setup. I am so sorry to be bringing it directly-” He stopped when I held up a hand.

            “No need to apologize, just show me to the problem,” I explained swiftly. I’d been hoping, as queen, my subjects and staff alike would see fit to bring problems right to me, but everyone attempted to solve things without “bothering” me as though it wasn’t my job to keep things running smoothly. And this was a special circumstance; my little sister was getting married.

            We strode into the ballroom, where we’d been planning to host the post-ceremony reception for the highborn guests, royal staff, and distinguished guests from other kingdoms, and I immediately saw the problem. In all my life, there had been some issues and negative enchantments in the castle that cannot be solved with magic. One such problem was a mild curse placed on the banquet tables; they tended to levitate a couple of feet off the ground whenever they were in the ballroom. The usual plan was to simply not bring them in there. When we made our plans, that hadn’t been a consideration as I’d completely forgotten.

            “Right, forgot about the tables,” I murmured. Glancing around, I asked, “How many of these do you think we could fit in the dining hall?”

            He thought about this for a moment and replied, “Perhaps half of them, my Queen.”

            Nodding at him, I pulled the scroll from my pocket and went down to the list of distinguished guests; it was long and included mainly leaders from other kingdoms and groups. “Think we can cut this in half? The rest could go out to the main festivities in the courtyard,” I suggested, handing the scroll over and stepping down towards one of the tables. Crouching a little, I took a run at it, and used a bit of magic, to leap on top of the nearest table. Expectedly, it continued to hover where it was.

            If Kiana had been here, she would have asked if I seriously thought no one, in all the years this had been an issue, had attempted to put weight on the tables. Unfortunately, no staff member would disrespect me like that.

            “Uh, my Queen, I don’t think we could pare this down at all,” he muttered, trying to avoid my gaze.

            I tried jumping on the table before sitting on the edge and dangling my feet. “Hmm, what if we relocated the whole thing into the foyer?” I asked, swinging down to the floor gracefully. As the footman was peering out the open doors at the entranceway, I pushed the table and it started moving as though it were on an invisible sheet of ice. Grinning widely, I gave it a massive shove and used a little magic to get onto the moving furniture. I careened into a table at the opposite end and bounced off; it was exhilarating.

            “Well, I’m sure-” the man started as I zoomed past on the runaway table. I hopped off and stopped the table with my hands so he could continue. Clearing his throat, he gave me a look before resuming his train of thought, “I’m sure we could fit them in the foyer, but then where would the procession go?”

            That was a fair point. I leaned on the table, trying not to move it, and replied, “I’m sure Kiana wouldn’t be averse to the precession being out in the courtyard. We could have subjects there for it, too, which she’d love.” My little sister had always been a woman of the people; she was so full of wonder and appreciation. Pulling the pen out of my pocket, I threw it to the footman and strode past him. “I’m off to see my sister. If you need anything, I’ll be back in a while,” I called as I ran up the side staircase. It was so much easier to go up and down stairs in pants than long, flowy dresses.

            When I was standing outside the door to Kiana’s chambers, I took a moment to calm myself. I’d been feeling so many different emotions over the last few months while planning took place; I was so proud of Kiana, sad that our parents couldn’t be here, and honoured that I was given the responsibility to have the whole thing go well.

            Raising my hand to knock, Mirabel, one of the royal housekeepers, came running down the hallway. “Oh, my Queen,” she gasped, coming to a halt and bowing to me, “you’re just the woman I needed to see.” She leaned on her knees for a few seconds to catch her breath before explaining, “You chose the gown you wanted to wear last week, and we’ve been working very hard to fix a few of the holes in it.” To say it had a few holes was an understatement; when I wore it the day of my wedding, I slogged through mud in it, climbed up a tree in the Grey Forest, and tore it off when it became tangled in some brambles.

            I chuckled and replied, “I didn’t think it was fixable, but thank you so much for trying. I’ll go pick out another outfit in a little bit. Just checking on Kiana right now.”

            With another deep bow, Mirabel left, and I was alone in the hall again.

To be continued…

Hidden Caves – Part 1

            The sun beat down on the craggy pond as college students enjoyed their spring break in its cool water; they’d been coming for years, decades maybe. Lying under the warm shade of an oak tree that had wound its way up through the stone and was now strangling the same rock that once threatened to suffocate it. It was the eternal struggle played out over centuries.

Open to a page on thistles, the magical remedies book I’d been scouring was now leaning on my knees as I shut my eyes. Normally, I would have hidden the book from the crowd, but no one had so much as glanced at me all day. It wasn’t imperative that I commit the magical properties of the thistle to memory for the night’s excursion, but I’d recently discovered that a lot of plants crossed realms and I may one day need to know that I could patch a poisoned wound with thistle viscera.

“Hey, what are you looking at, witch?” a boy yelled as I felt myself drifting off.

Groaning, I sat up to face my accuser. He was in one of my classes, I was sure, but I didn’t remember which. Dyed blond hair and a tan this early in the season gave him the obvious appearance of someone who cared deeply about their looks. Because he was already picking his way up the stone path to the jumping-off point, I knew he’d been holding his tongue for a while. Even I couldn’t have read the cover of a book from that distance.

“Oh, I’m planning to poison the whole campus,” I replied loudly. People glanced over at me with interest and concern, but they knew I was joking, probably.

The kid smirked and spat, “Why not just use your powers to do it? Are you as poor a witch as you are a physics student?” Ah, he was from my physics class. To be fair, I was excellent at that course; I just didn’t want people to think I was too good since everyone already knew I was into occult stuff. For normal people, it was a short leap from that to putting spells on my tests.

“Because I’m trying to keep a low profile, you idiot,” I shouted as loudly as I could while lying down.

“Freak!” he called, stepping up to the edge of the topmost outcrops and making a show of preparing for his dive. I sucked in a breath, pulled a shard of slate from the dirt to my right, and whispered a spell to it. High above the pool, the boy’s brows furrowed, and he hopped between his feet as though the stone were on fire. “Freak! Knock it off!” he cried as he was forced to step back and lose his audience.

Grinning up at him, I asked, “What, exactly, do you think I’ve done now?” I leaned back and shut my eyes again.

“You made the stone too hot to stand on!” he replied, his voice higher than he wanted.

“Hmm, I think you’re confusing me with the sun,” I murmured drowsily.

The sun was completely gone from the sky by the time I was alone. On their way by, a few people had made derogatory comments at me, but most people were used to ignoring the witch. Stretching my back, I put the book into my bag and took the flashlight from the outside pocket. I made my way down to the water’s edge and let the beam of light travel to the very bottom of the pond as I set my bag in a safe spot. Carefully tying one of a pair of identical charms around the strap of the backpack, I slipped the other into my pocket and took a few deep breaths.

I’d been working on using an oxygen bubble charm, but it wasn’t quite working for me yet so this would have to be a free dive. Blinking in the darkness, I muttered a spell and pressed my hands to my eyes. For a second, they felt white-hot. When I opened them again, I could make out the shapes of the outcrops around me; this spell worked almost every time I used it. I pulled a pair of goggles out and strapped them on before standing right at the edge of the water.

“You can do this. You can do this,” I mumbled to myself, sucking in gulps of air and getting ready to dive into the freezing water.

As soon as I broke the surface, my joints began to freeze; I struggled against the pull to let the water take me. Moving constantly, I was propelled through the water and right at the base of the rocky mountain. I gripped the slate with my hands and squeezed through a tiny gap and into a larger cavern. Above my head, I could see the water surface breaking and swam up to it.

Breaking through the surface, I sucked in breath after breath of air as I got my bearings. Though the secret cave was underground, there was a lot of light streaming from the far corner. I swam up to the outcropping and carefully hoisted myself up onto it with my elbows. The whole endeavour was proving far easier than I could have imagined; I had been expecting traps or maybe poisonous plants to be protecting the cave from intruders.

For a couple of minutes, I sat just out of the water, shivering and soaking wet, and caught my breath. When I was sure I could stand up without my head spinning, I rose and pictured the spell I wanted to use in my head. Shutting my eyes, I whispered it and warmth filling me and instantly drying my clothing. With that done, I searched my pockets for the charm and read the inscription on the back aloud.

In a blinding flash of light, my backpack appeared out of thin air. Unfortunately, so did the boy who’d been calling me a witch. He sputtered when he realized I was standing in front of him and pointed at the bag in his hands.

“What did you do?” I snapped, ripping the bag from his grip, and placing it at my feet protectively. I glared at the boy and reiterated, this time louder, “What did you do!?”

For a full twenty seconds, he continued to flounder soundlessly. “I uh, I uh, but, I was, I, I, was, what?” he stammered, leaning against the cold stone wall to steady himself. I dropped the medallion inside the bag and hiked it up on my shoulder as I waited for him to put together an entire sentence. “I was looking for you. Your bag was there. I was there. Where am I?” he asked, staring at the bag as though it might bite him.

“Okay, just swim under there, then through the opening near the bottom of the cave, then up through the bottom of the pond you were standing beside,” I explained plainly.

When I moved to step around him, he grabbed my wrist and stared wide-eyed. “You can’t leave me here,” he demanded.

Tearing my arm away, I snapped, “I’m meeting someone here, and I don’t have time to bring you back through. Stay here and I’ll be back sometime in the next couple of days.” With that, I darted past him and stood at the crack in the wall where the light was pouring through. It wasn’t normal sunlight; it had a pale blue tinge to it and felt ethereal somehow.

“You can’t just leave me here,” the boy demanded, following behind me like an impertinent shadow.

Stepping through the hole, I realized we were just in another cave. This one was massive and full of crystalline stone. Every surface was more than covered in reflective surfaces that bounced like to every corner.

“What me,” I muttered under my breath. I walked carefully around the edge of a small pool of what might have been water and started down the tunnel on the opposite edge. Forgoing my flashlight, I let my night vision spell lead me.

“Help! Help!” screamed the boy as I reached a fork in the path. Turning, I considered leaving him; who was gonna miss a dick, anyway? “Pu-lease! Somebody help me!” he cried, his voice echoed a hundred times over in the cavern. It was like there were hundreds of idiots trapped in the cave with me.

Finally, I ran back up the tunnel and found him with one foot firmly stuck in the undulating liquid I had assumed was water. “What happened?” I asked quickly, kneeling down and opening my bag; that was about as far as the rescue could get without knowing what he’d done.

He stared at me as though I’d grown a second head and screamed, “What does that matter!? Just get me out, witch!”

Aside from the derogatory term, I could understand what he meant. “If I don’t know what the enchantment is, what happened, I can’t figure out the right spell to undo it,” I explained calmly. I was going to go into detail about how wrong reversals could go, but that would be getting into a terrifying territory I didn’t think he could take.

“I just stepped around the water and it attacked me,” he groaned, trying in vain to pull his foot out of the pool. As we’d been speaking, the ‘water’ had been slowly sucking him down; soon, he’d be kneeling beside it.

While I couldn’t remember a specific spell to fix the problem, I was pretty sure I had something that would do the trick. Delving into my bag, I pulled a tiny, worn vial out of the very bottom and uncorked it.

“Wait. What is that?” the boy asked suspiciously.

I shook my head and replied, “It freezes things. I use it on tea when I want instant iced tea.” That was true. Without waiting for a reply, I dumped a small quantity of the powder into the liquid and it instantly froze. “At least you’re not getting sucked further down now,” I murmured, opening the beginner spellbook I brought and flipping through to a page on ice and ice management.

After a couple of minutes, I touched the boy’s leg and confidently said the spell. Instantly, he nearly fell forward into the ice and I had to catch his arm to stop him from disappearing. “What did you do?” he asked as I read through to find the reversal.

“I made it so your body will go through ice,” I muttered. When I found the reversal, I warned, “This is gonna feel like you’re on fire for a few seconds. Just keep calm.”

Before he could say anything, I did the spell and he shouted in agony. It subsided a few seconds later and he grumbled, “Thank you for saving me after you put me in mortal peril.” That was probably all I could hope for. “You can’t possibly be thinking about leaving me here, now,” he added as I put everything back into my bag.

“I was, but you have a point,” I murmured. Sighing, I stated, “Don’t touch anything and stay right behind me. And, here,” I added, handing him the flashlight I didn’t need.

We walked down the tunnel and stopped at the fork in the road. Pulling out my dowsing rods, I shut my eyes and started to go right. Something stopped me and I tried the other way, which felt right.

“You’re like a water witch,” he chuckled as I slipped the rods into the belt loop on my jeans.

Turning, I asked, “What’s your name? If we’re gonna be stuck together, I may as well know what to call you.”

“Jeff. You?” he replied as we came to a turn.

“Isabell. And I am a witch, so, yeah,” I murmured as we reached another turn and sunlight shone through the rest of the tunnel. Finally, we reached the entrance of the cave and I paused to reverse the night vision because it was daytime.

We both squinted as we stepped out into the light and Jeff sighed, “I can’t believe magic is real.”

To be continued…

Golden Flecks – Part 1

            “You’re not human,” the regent stated as she sat down in the High Priestess’s chair and set me with a look of something akin to envy. I could feel her wishing to be like me so desperately that it nearly hurt. When I remained silent, uncertain what to say when someone accuses me of not being human, she motioned towards the uncomfortable chair opposite her. “I know that’s going to come as a bit of a shock, Delia. Please, have a seat,” she crooned as she ducked behind the desk and pulled a large, heavy tome out of her carpetbag.

            “Uh, I don’t know that you need to waste your time on me, Your Excellency,” I murmured, feeling my face turning crimson at the attention. Ever since I was inducted into the magical society, I had managed to keep my head down and keep out of trouble; this seemed like a lot of trouble to me.

            Smiling with only her lips, the woman cleared her throat and continued, “I really must insist, Delia.” I felt something come over me when she looked into my eyes, and I sat immediately. “We humans have this innate ability to take something abnormal or special and turn it into something commonplace so we can be comfortable with it,” she explained as she flipped through the large book. Each page was handwritten in tiny, perfect script; the pages themselves appeared very old but were in near-perfect condition. Upside down, I couldn’t make out a single letter of the fine print.

            I pushed past the lump that had formed in my throat and asked, “Look, Your Excellency, I have duties to perform with an important ritual tonight and I really do need to get going.” When I spoke, there was a calmness that I didn’t think I could manage at this moment; being an empath, I found I was in a unique position to lie to people using their own signs of truth against them. In most cases, it was a simple tick they considered truthful, but with the regent, the whole sentence felt foreign in my mouth.

            “So, not a fey, then,” she murmured, pursing her lips as she read pages in a blink.

            “S-sorry?” I asked, unsure why she might even consider that I was a member of the fey; I would know if that were the case.

            She looked up from the book and explained, “You just lied to me, very well, I might add, which means you can’t be even half-fey.” Back to the book, she went to pour over page after page of minuscule print. After a minute of careful consideration, she stared at me with an air of uncertainty spiked with the seed of anger. I’d found that most people in power felt that way when they didn’t know or understand something. “Oftentimes, I have found that a rare blemish or aberration is a sign of great power or importance; your eyes are nothing different from that,” she continued as she turned the book on the desk so I could see it.

            Pointing to a line halfway down, she lit up the text with her finger and the words glowed like liquid gold in the sunshine. “Here, they state that grey eyes are very rarely seen in humans,” she explained, translating from the Latin of the text. I suppose I might have let her know I was fluent, but she was excited about what she read. Without her eyes leaving my face, she continued as the gold flowed into the next words, “They used to believe it was some kind of curse of the family to have the absence of colour; like it was some sort of cruel punishment. Nowadays, they say it’s simply different levels of melanin in the iris.” Only the first part was written, which confirmed that the tome was old.

            “Yeah, that’s what we learned in school,” I replied, wishing the regent would stop staring at me. Sitting up straighter in the chair, I added, “I only started learning magic a few years ago. Before that, I was in normal school.”

            She softened in appearance and emotion; the realization that I wasn’t indoctrinated into magic until later seemed to be a clue and solidified her assumption. “Which is why I am sure I’m correct in saying that you are not a normal human or even sorceress,” she continued as she turned the book to face her once again and gently stroked the page. “That golden fleck in the very center of your iris is the final piece of the puzzle; you are an angel’s soul in a mortal body,” she explained as the book closed of its own accord.

            For a full three minutes, neither of us spoke or moved. The regent stared at me with a strained concern brewing. I, on the other hand, was in a full-on panic within.

            “I uh, no, I uh, I’m just not that,” I stammered finally, sitting awkwardly at the edge of my chair and begged the universe to create an emergency to make this meeting end. When the woman didn’t say anything, I babbled, “No, I mean, I didn’t even know about this and, no, I mean, come on. That’s just, that isn’t remotely, just, no.” Finally, the nervous energy forced me to my feet, and I began to pace behind the chair.

            “I understand that this is a shock, but I am quite positive on the matter,” the regent replied, remaining calm. Holding out a hand, she stopped my pacing and continued, “I’m sure you hide a lot from your peers, even here, and your empath class is likely more than a little confusing.” When she dropped her hand, I stayed standing.

            I nodded and sighed, “None of them can understand each other. It’s like a feedback loop so an empath can never read another empath. Can never really understand one another like they can understand someone else.” We both knew what the next part of that statement was.

            “And you can,” she added quietly. When I didn’t reply, she persisted, “The only way they can understand the reason behind someone’s emotion is to be focusing on that person completely, to block everyone else out, yet you instinctually can understand the meaning of emotions as you’re in a crowd.” It was like she knew exactly what I was feeling; like she’d met someone like me before.

            Touching the solid wood of the chair in front of me for stability, I asked, “Have you met someone like that before? Someone like me? Or are you just assuming from some book and you could be completely wrong?”

            Honestly, I don’t know what answer I was hoping for, but when she spoke, it really hit me, “When I was in school, there was a mage’s daughter who was like you. She had a completely different power, but it was heightened just like yours. She could alter people’s minds and implant and destroy memories. She was amazing.”

            I wanted to meet this woman, but a sadness had come over the regent and she was staring down at the book. “What happened to her?” I whispered.

            “The society destroyed her because they were afraid,” she murmured, melancholy dripping from her words. Taking a breath, she forced a smile and stated in earnest, “This will be our secret for now. I won’t let that happen to you, Delia.”

To be continued…

Fairie Deal

            When I woke up, the world was a dark, blurry place. Tilting my head to the side, I was forced to shut my eyes as the world spun ferociously. I groaned and tried to remember what happened; all I was getting were flashes of a cave and a fire. Finally, I managed to lean my back against a cold stone wall and squinted into the room. It was upright, there was only one of them, and it wasn’t making me sick to look at it.

            Sitting up, I realized I was in a dungeon of some sort. Stone walls and floor, heavy iron bars on the front, a deep-set window with iron webbing, and I could see the sputtering sparks of magic running through the air between the metal. Clearly, this place was designed to keep fey at bay. I rolled my eyes, which was a mistake, and slowly got to my feet. Rolling my shoulders to work out a stiff kink, I felt my left wing thump limply against my back. When I reached around, the delicate membrane seemed to be intact, but the joints wouldn’t respond; I couldn’t even feel it. I flexed the other, which was fine.

            Feeling anger welling up, I shouted, “Where am I?” through the bars, careful not to actually touch the iron with my hands. I was putting all my effort into not crying or panicking about my wing because it wouldn’t do any good, but I feared the worst.

            “You don’t qualify for that answer,” a man muttered, standing just beyond the shadow in the open hallway. After a few seconds of awkward silence, he shuffled out into the light of a single torch and I could see claw marks raked across the old man’s face. Haggard, grey hands gripped a gnarly wooden staff with all their might to keep the ma upright. Grinning, his face twisted and rippled like water. “Have we met before?” he asked in a gravelly voice.

            I wished to lie, but I’d been caught before; tricks didn’t help in these situations. “You seem familiar,” I murmured as he stepped forward. Instinctively, I stepped back and bumped my numb wing against the cell wall.

            “Now, now, don’t be afraid. I only want a few vials of blood for something I’m working on,” he explained, holding a hand out.

            When he said that, I realized where I knew him from and shivered. In my youth, I had made a deal with a young man and had promised him a little of my blood in exchange for his firstborn child; this was that young man.

            Again, he grinned that horrible grin and whispered, “You don’t look any older than the day we first met, though I have aged beyond my years.” Turning away from me, he picked up a needle from a table and came to the cell. He rested the cane against the bars and eyed me warily. “You promised me six vials, but only gave five,” he stated, knowing that bound me.

            “You fell ill and I thought you died,” I replied, wishing I was anywhere but here. Chuckling, I snapped, “You never held up your end of the bargain, anyway.” It bound me to him, but also him to me.

            Snickering, he offered the needle to me and suggested, “How about you do the honours and I’ll honour my side of the deal?” When I stared at the needle, he explained, “I’m not strong enough to do it myself.” I remained apprehensive. “You were out cold when I found you; if I wanted to kill you, that would have been the moment,” he added.

            Still eyeing him, I took the needle and carefully extracted the blood and placed the vial on his hand again. “Alright, now where is your firstborn?” I asked. Honestly, even back then I didn’t have a use for a child, but it was a fey’s rite of passage to negotiate that deal.

            “Oh, well,” he murmured, putting down the blood and returning to the cell, “I suppose I outsmarted a fairie with that one.” I stared at him with my arms crossed. “I never fell in love, never married, remained celibate throughout my life to ensure I never sired a child,” he explained. “I’ll be back for more blood later. And maybe that wing, as you have no use for it,” he cackled as he shuffled back down the hallway.

            When he’d gone, I carefully slid down the wall and sat on the floor, watching dust motes dancing in the first shards of sunlight through the window.

Royal Occasion – Part 1

            The roses bloomed before my eyes on the arbour, their soft petals deepening to red as they stretched up towards the sun. Grinning as a few fey worked their magic on the edges of the intricate benches lining the aisle, I commented, “These are spectacular. Thank you so much.”

            Nodding, they continued their work in near silence.

            Suddenly realizing I’d forgotten to have a cottage ready for the groom’s parents, I took out the enchanted scroll I’d been using for planning and found the still-to-do portion. Scribbling with my pen for my assistant to have a cottage prepared, I headed off towards the castle once more. I felt like I hadn’t seen my sister in days with all this planning and implementation going on.

            As I crossed the courtyard, which was being washed so it was shining, the horses were being led out for the final time before the ceremony. My two best Clydesdales were following the royal horsemen around like puppies, not realizing he was taking two carriage horses to be haltered. “Hey, Jason?” I called, hurrying over in my comfortable pants and with my hair in a messy braid.

            When he spotted me, he stopped and did a low bow, “My liege. I didn’t recognize you before, I’m so sorry.”

            Chuckling, I sighed, “You’ll remember that I don’t care if you bow. That’s part of the plainclothes thing,” I added, pulling at my loose-fitting pants. “Uh, I think I want you to use Darlene and Finnigan instead of the usual horses for the carriage,” I explained, checking where horses were on the list. When I found it, I looked up and continued, “Kiana loves them, and they can pull the carriage that short distance. Plus, they’re gonna be in the carriage house anyway.” Nodding at the enormous horses standing behind Jason, I smiled.

            “Oh, anything you please, my liege,” he replied, bowing again. With a nod, he continued across the courtyard with all four horses. I’d been queen for nearly five years now telling everyone not to pay any special mind to me and everyone was still bowing when I looked at them. I vowed to one day do something about that.

            Glancing at the scroll, I noticed the cottage request had been crossed off and smiled; things were running more smoothly than I could have hoped for a royal wedding. As I headed off to the castle again, the second-in-command of the centaurs in our region cantered up to me. “Queen Lily, we’ve run into some issues while clearing the royal highway,” he stated, nodding respectfully and pawing lightly at the paving stones.

            “Um, alright. What seems to be the problem, Canus?” I asked, feeling the first prickle of concern for the wedding.

            He leaned forward so we wouldn’t be overheard and explained, “Well, the portion leading through the Grey Forest has been overrun by dwarves who claim you didn’t invite them to the wedding.” Careful not to touch me, he turned around to point out the direction the road curved into the forest.

            Rerolling the scroll, I stuffed it into the ample pockets in my pants, and replied quietly, “We actually didn’t invite them.” Canus stared at me as though I’d grown another head. “You recall that some farmers from the outer edges of my kingdom went just before the last harvest and we had to perform magic to stop the crops from withering while replacement pickers worked the fields?” I asked, frustrated that my no politics wedding was starting off like this. When he nodded curtly, I continued in a low voice, “Well, it turned out that the dwarf mines in that area were understaffed so they were periodically kidnapping farmers from their fields. I couldn’t, in good conscience, invite them to a royal event like this.” I shrugged my shoulders but kept up a more powerful stance than I usually held.

            “Okay, I understand,” he replied slowly, considering.

            “What if we concede that part of the forest around the mines, where we’ve been gathering wood for years?” I suggested after thinking about options. When Canus’s eyes narrowed, I explained, “It’s right at the edge of their territory and none of our protected trees are there. Obviously, we’ll reforest it first, then they can have the new growth as penance for not inviting them.” Still, he stared. “Look, Canus, I cannot deal with this diplomatically today. I have way too much to deal with, but I will bring up some kind of reparation for our farmers and a promise to not do it again at the next meeting,” I stated, putting my foot down.

            He bowed his head and cantered back down through town.

With that emergency solved, I turned back to the castle again, now very concerned about what would happen next.

To be continued…