Chapter 27: A Little Village by the Sea
A Little Village by the Sea
Unable to come up with a solution for his latest alarming problem, Kalen spent the afternoon sitting in that one spot under the slowly dying tree.
It had occurred to him that he could spread his toxic magic around by staying on the move, thus reducing its impact on any single living thing. But he was already a mass murderer of trees. What was one more?
And since he couldnt go home and be around other humans in his present state, he might as well stiffen his spine and see just how bad the damage would be if he let the magic leak in one location. He ate dried fish and an apple for his supper, prayed to all the gods whose names he could recall that the leak would resolve itself in the night, and went to sleep.
When morning came, the tree was well and truly dead. The little branch that had given Kalen his first clue about the effect he was having on the world around him was crispy and brown.
He stared at it gloomily.
It was having another of those strange rustling moments, as if it was being shaken gently by an unseen force. Only now its needles were falling to the ground like rain.
Kalen wondered if there was such a thing as a practitioner who was naturally gifted at destroying things.
Since the damage hadnt repaired itself as quickly as hed hoped, he decided to try what hed been too nervous to do yesterday. He would cast a couple of cantrips to empty his pathways, and he wouldnt draw new magic into them to replace what hed used.
He couldnt bleed magic if he didnt have any to bleed, he reasoned. And if the spells themselves were toxic in the same way the leakage was, at least he was still far enough from home to avoid disaster.
Kalen didnt even bother to stand. He stayed slumped against the tree and formed the pattern for the water-cooling cantrip while he chanted it. It was the easiest one, and he knew it by heart. His pathways bent to make the shape for him.
Are they a little easier to work with than they used to be? Maybe they were, but he couldnt bring himself to exult in it at the moment.
He aimed the casting at nothing in particular since he was cold and didnt actually want his drinking water chilled. A minute later, as his head started to ring, he realized he wasnt breathing. Even though hed told himself nothing bad should happen, he hadnt really believed it wouldnt.This chapter is updated by nov(e)(l)biin.com
Hed expected the tree across from him to fall over in a blast of wind or dry up into a husk.
But the magic hadnt done anything like that. The air around Kalen might have been a touch cooler, but that was all.
So when I cast spells they behave properly, he thought with relief. Its only the leaking magic itself that does strange things.
He fought off the instinctive urge to draw in more power. The aurora was weakening now, but it was still there, offering him plenty of mana. Instead, he cast the cantrip one more time.
He sat waiting, pushing away the tingle of raw power that seemed to press against him from every direction. He remembered doing this when he was younger, before he knew he was a practitioner. He must have been crazy.
It was so hard not to allow his pathways to refill. When they were really, truly empty, as they were now, it was disquieting. Kalen didnt think hed ever actually had them in this state for more than a few seconds.
Years ago, when hed pushed back the atmospheric mana and magic offered by the aurora, he hadnt even been aware of his pathways. He hadnt ever used them so they were never truly empty. They just werent stuffed to bursting.
Examining them now, he thought it was less like looking at empty stream beds and more like looking at a mapmakers sketch of those stream beds. The pathways seemed strangely two-dimensional like this.
I dont care if it feels awful, Kalen thought defiantly. You can just stay empty until you start behaving normally! I can hold out forever if I need to.
He gritted his teeth, determined to weather the trial with nobility and courage for as long as it took. But his plan fell apart within a few minutes.
Apparently, Kalen didnt have as much say in the matter as hed assumed he did. Slowly but surely, the leak he was trying to stop reversed itself. Now, Kalens pathways were allowing mana in without his permission.
Whats this? he thought, startled and dismayed. It goes both ways?
How in the world was he supposed to fix it, then?
#
With nothing else to do, Kalen spent the rest of the day walking back and forth between his rock and his tree. The pine was his now, hed decided. Since hed killed it.
There was no purpose to the walk except for his pressing need to clear his own mind. Hed been too quick to panic yesterday. The situation was urgent, but it wasnt a true emergency. Yet.
He had a little time to think, and he needed to use it.
There was a way for him to go back home right now. With the leak working in reverse, he wasnt spreading dangerous magic around anymore. He could return if he wanted and just steadily keep his pathways empty with spells.
And as the sun set and the forest darkened around him, Kalen finally found an answer.
#
Late the next evening, Kalen crouched at the edge of the forest behind a thatch of plants and looked down toward the little village by the sea that had been his home for all his life. He watched as the lanterns were lit in every house.
He could make out the shapes of Clem and Ogro working on a project outside Clems longcabin. They were building something. Maybe it was a sled for winter? They were called inside as the sky darkened.
From his own house, the sound of his father banging a wooden spoon against an iron pot rang out. It was the signal for any wandering pigs to find their way back to the barn for supper.
That was good. Sleepynerth, no doubt scenting him on the breeze, had been meandering in Kalens direction at her usual leisurely pace. At the sound of the pan, she turned back toward the more certain joys of her trough.
Once it was full dark, Kalen crept out of the forest and secreted himself behind the massive woodpile his anxious father had built over the past weeks. He waited until his target appeared, checking his pathways to make sure they were still nearly empty.
When his cousin finally exited the cabin and approached the outhouse, humming a familiar tune, Kalen stepped out from behind the woodpile and whispered, Lander, I need your help.
Gah! Shit! Lander cried, leaping back and waving his arms as if to fend off an attacker.
Shhhhh! Kalen hissed, jumping forward to slap a hand over his mouth. The others cant know Im here.
Kalen? Lander knocked his hand away easily. What are you doing creeping around the privy in the middle of the night? Do you want to frighten people to death? Thats it, isnt it? You needed a fresh corpse for your wizarn spells, and you thought this would do it!
Hush, Kalen said. This is serious, Lander. I need your help with something important. IveIve made a mistake.
Landers eyes narrowed in the moonlight. Are you all right?
Im okay. He wasnt, but the words came automatically. Can you meet me in the woods tonight? Without anyone knowing? Or tomorrows fine, I guess, if you can get away. It just needs to be soon.
Dont you want to come inside and have something to eat? Lander said slowly. Theres soup, and its hot still.
Im not hungry. Kalen became aware that he wasnt meeting his cousins eyes and forced himself to do it. Really, Im fine. But Ive done something dangerous and stupid, and I cant make it right without your help.
He smiled.
If anything, that made Lander look even more concerned.
ThenIll come soon, he said. Ive been sleeping in your room while youre away anyway, so they probably wont notice me missing.
Kalen felt immediately nervous when they parted, fearing against reason that Lander would tell the adults he was here.
He shouldnt have worried. Lander had never been one to tell tales on his younger siblings or Kalen. And sure enough, he appeared not long after, carrying a small bundle under his arm.
Kalen stepped out from where hed been hiding and waved him over. Landers long legs carried him quickly. When they were face to face, neither of them spoke for an awkwardly long period of time.
Well, youre the one who demanded a moonlight tryst, Lander said finally. And here I am even though youre not a pretty girl.
Kalen sighed. Right. Sorry. Its just hard to know how to start.
Lander shoved the bundle toward him. It turned out to be a set of clean clothes and a small seeded loaf smeared with salted lard.
Start by changing into this, Lander said. You stink.
I havent bathed in a while. Ive been busy thinking.
Next time think while you scrub your pits, Lander advised. Now, what are you so upset about? I dont see how you could have committed any really good crimes while you were all alone in the woods.
Kalen had planned out what to say and the best way to make his cousin believe him. And it was early enough still that Lander could make it back home if they went quietly. Come with me to my rock. I need to show you something. On the way there, Ill tell you a scary story.
Even in the dimness, Kalen could see his cousin rolling his eyes.
No story youve got is going to persuade me to hike in the woods all night long. Just tell me what youve done so I can help.
Its a story about me, said Kalen. He licked his lips nervously and then whispered, Its a story about how I ended up in the ocean that day. And who I was before that.