Short stories consume you faster.

Month: November 2020

For My First Trick…

“For my next trick, I’ll need a volunteer.”

Erika snorted. She had come along with her granddaughter in the vain hope that it would keep her entertained, but the little girl wasn’t having this nonsense either. She was proud of her for not being taken in. When charming gentlemen spoke this well, it was easy to let yourself listen. At least she didn’t take after her mother that way.

“You there, madam. Come on up here.”

The little devil was smiling at her now. His unsure grin belied his confident persona. He needed dental work, and he wasn’t as handsome or fit as a proper showman ought to be. He seemed startled when she heeded his command. Erika smiled, curtseying. It didn’t have the same effect now, when she was nearing 70 and dressed in pants, but the magician blushed all the same.

“Well, yes. Now if you would take this deck-”

Erika took the deck, shuffling it. The cards danced through the air as she gestured. It was like playing the piano. Erika’s talent had grown as she learned to use her fingers for delicate work. Knitting, sewing, and piano kept her deft. It was convenient that her family thought she was good for little else. The audience clapped at the display. Had quirks become that prosaic? She missed the days of secret institutes hidden deep in the mountains. It was something special, to share a secret like that with a select few. Erika wondered how many might be in the library with them.

“Wonderful, wonderful. Draw a card. Memorize it, please. Commit every detail to memory.”

Erika did. Playing cards disappointed those who were looking for details. They were too minimalistic. She kept the card longer than necessary. She thought it heightened the sense of drama, and she wasn’t going to be the one who made this show fall flat. She would leave that up to the boy on stage with her. She placed the card back into the deck, and pushed it through the air to the magician. His eyes were tightly shut to maintain the illusion. As if anyone cared about stage magic when quirks existed.

“Thank you, that was wonderful. Now, I, the Illuminating Mythmaker, will find your card.”

The magician placed a hand on the deck. Smiling, still with eyes closed shut, he drew the first card.

Instantly, Erika felt the sand in her toes. Warm from the sun and wet from the surf, it tickled a childish part of herself that she preferred not to indulge. Her daughter went to the beach every summer, but they never invited Erika. No one wanted grandma on those excursions. It wouldn’t be right to ask, either, and besides, she was busy. Days like this, with Katrina, those were special enough. Still, her toes curled up as she thought about years gone by.

They were back in the library, but only for a moment. The next card brought another vision, this time of a small room. It was full of cigar smoke and the sound of poker chips hitting the table. There was nothing familiar or nostalgic here, but Erika laughed as she realized. No wonder the magician had so much confidence in his act. He cheated. Before she even thought of examining the scene, they were back, and then gone again.

Each card changed the scenery, but Erika watched the performance. The magician furrowed his brow whenever he drew another card. This took more focus than her tricks. Was it just because he was young? He couldn’t be older than twenty five. Maybe his quirk worked differently. She had only met six others like her, and that had been decades ago. If she ever listened to Becca, she might have met more. It was a part of herself she still had time to explore. By the time he asked, Erika had stopped watching the kaleidoscopic room, and only looked at him.

“Is this your card?”

He held it out, grinning like a costumed kid on Halloween. He wanted a treat, or a trophy, and Erika didn’t have either.

“You got it,” she said dryly. The crowd didn’t care. They ate it right up. There was nearly a standing ovation, bar one or two senior citizens. Erika clapped politely. No need to stick out just because she didn’t like magic. Besides, Katrina was smiling more than she had all morning. Anything that made her granddaughter happy was worth putting up with.

The magician bowed, and the crowd dispersed. Erika returned to Katrina, sweeping her up in her arms. As long as she was still small enough to pick up, Erika was going to enjoy it. She carried her over to the stacks. She had only let her watch the show on a whim; they had come here to pick up new books for her to read. She was quickly moving up in reading level, and it was important to give her fresh material. Erika cared more about her granddaughter’s literacy than the child’s mother did, unfortunately. She had always tried her best with her, but children made their own decisions after a time.

It was as Katrina sat with one of those young adult novels about revolutions that Erika noticed the magician. He stood at a nearby bookshelf, pretending not to watch her. Erika raised an eyebrow at him. He bashfully turned away, feet unmoved by her judgement. What did he want now? Was he one of those quirk fans? Scaring them off was a full-time job sometimes. She marched over to him. Shrinking away from her, he placed the book he’d been holding on the shelf and began pumping his skinny legs to get away.

“I hope you’ve got a really good reason for this. Staring is rude, and stalking is illegal.”

Erika waited for an apology, or an escape attempt. Either would do, as long as he stayed away from them.

“I’m sorry for doing it this way- I just needed to make sure you wouldn’t tell.”

“I don’t have all day. Explain yourself in a way that I can actually understand.”

“I’m not licensed.”

“Is that all? Well, I won’t tell on you. Happy?”

The magician blinked, mouth agape. It was charmingly boyish on him. Erika revised her estimate on his popularity with the ladies.

“I thought you were- that was an impressive display if you’re not a quirk.”

She laughed.

“Of course I’m a quirk, dear. What does that have to do with me turning you in?”

“I’m unlicensed,” he repeated, more slowly, like she was a dumb animal. Maybe she would turn him in after all.

“I’m not with the licensing board. What do I care? Honestly, what bothers me is all this skulking around. It’s rude.”

The magician’s eyes flitted around the room nervously. If this was how he acted, no wonder he was worried about getting caught. The agency could sniff out guilt, and his stunk to high heaven.

“I’m sorry, ma’am. I’ll stay out of your way. Charmed to meet you.”

He doffed his top hat at her, and walked away. Erika watched him go. Before she’d fully committed to it, Erika ran towards him. She tapped him on the shoulder, and when he turned to her, she held out her hand. Reluctantly, he shook it.

“My name is Erika. You haven’t given me yours yet.”

“The Illuminating Mythmaker,” he ventured. Erika raised an eyebrow.

“Mithril Winter,” he sighed.

“Your parents didn’t think very far ahead. Good on you for adopting a stage name.”

“It seemed like the thing to do. ‘Mithril’ wasn’t a big hit, growing up.”

Erika nodded knowingly. She had considered, more than once, spelling her name differently, but bending to the will of other people wasn’t her style- hadn’t been, since she was young. Public opinion was worth less than public opinion held it to be.

“Nice meeting you, Mythmaker. Same time next week?”

He cracked a smile. She was beginning to appreciate it. Someone his age ought to smile more often.

“Same time next week.”

Graduated Cylinder

With all of its contents packed into boxes, his mentor’s workspace seemed larger. The blank walls and empty floor suggested untapped potential. Years of experimentation, practice, and study had been erased. Lomard chuckled roughly, voice still strained from his latest crying jag.

“I’ve cleaned up after her, but it hurts more, if anything. You said it would help. Some antidote to grief you have there.”

Cleo indulged his minor outburst. She had put up with too many snide remarks and teary confessions in the past several days to be bothered by a snippy comment: a woman of infinite patience. She approached the lab table. He had cleared the beakers and vials first, but heavier equipment would require four hands to remove. She wanted him to keep moving, but she wouldn’t say as much. She ushered him on gently. Whatever suggestion she had intended to make, though, was swallowed up by the chiming of the fifth bell.

Both of them looked to the grimy window. Wizards’ windows accumulated grime from puffs of smoke, potion fumes, ooze manifestations, and the like. He reflexively breathed in, treasuring the smell of a laboratory that had not been aired out recently enough. The uninitiated turned up their noses at the smell of magic, but Lomard wanted to sing its praises until it wore down his voice completely, irretrievably- Shada would never speak again, and he wanted to join her. Cleo placed a hand on his shoulder. He sighed, smiling tightly. No time to wish for death: Cleo was her to make sure this town had a wizard by the end of the day.

“A smile is the shortest distance-” he started, but couldn’t finish. Words fail. The lump in his throat rose, drowning out everything else he might have done- cast a spell, sung a hymnal, cursed the heavens- and demanded that he feel only his grief and his guilt. If he had been there- if only he could have- he wondered if Shada had felt the same lump in her throat as she drowned on the stairs of her tower. The signs of water damage had faded, now. It had taken three castings to do that much, and he had no interest in hiding it any further. The thing deserved to bear scars.

“A smile is the shortest distance between two people,” Cleo whispered, taking him by the hand and leading him down the tower stairs.

The Rediscovery of Groundworld, Chapter 3

When people referred to him later, they called him Icarus. If he had told anyone what he was planning, or if anyone had been able to report on his death, perhaps he might have been remembered in the lists of famous explorers, who changed human understanding forever. Instead, we have no idea who he may have been. Without a personal account, we can only guess at his motives. A man with his technical expertise most likely had some goal in mind, but what he accomplished was greater still. The discovery of the Skyworld changed everything.

The journey to diplomacy was slow. Centuries of tension and conflict broke out between Groundworld and Skyworld. Governments united in the face of a common enemy, one with so little in common with us. There was little thought given to peace. Looking back, we may disdain our ancestors for their choices just as they did theirs, but on the cusp of this age, we were still so young. We cannot blame them. If they had known a third of what we know now, they might have acted differently.

After Icarus, and after the War of Esau’s Ladder, things looked bleak for Groundworld forces. The remaining three nations came together (no matter how strange that might seem to a modern reader, it was the obvious choice at the time) and began their final assault on Skyworld. Most historians point to this as the turning point. When Groundworld forces successfully crossed Jacob’s ladder, the sight of a beriset encampment greeted them, and relations between the species were never the same.

Those of a more cynical bent have suggested that if human warriors had faced another species when we arrived in Skyworld, we would not have given up the fight. While any scholar can acknowledge the weight behind such a claim, I must respectfully disagree. Humanity has always checked itself. Even the worst of human behavior has found staunch opponents within our species, which is more than can be said of the akahaha, or hellworms.

None of this, of course, explains the current situation fully. It was when humanity discovered lost pieces of Groundworld that the ILAB formed to respond to such cases. Skyworld and Groundworld disagreed about how to handle these pockets of land that had crossed planes; ultimately, the choice was made by the respective inhabitants. Unfortunately, governments everywhere would regret such a lax approach to legislation when they discovered more.

If it was only that each world had somehow ceded land to the other, that would be one thing, but when the United Nations realized that the phenomenon continued, without any kind of explanation, scientists dedicated themselves to analyzing the process. With no live examples, given the lack of warning before a transfer, they used the first recorded modern transfer as a case study. Although the citizens of Zermatt cooperated, there was very little to go on.

Further study would require searching for more past cases, and gathering enough data points to build predictive models. Groundworld more or less mobilized to the task. Anthropologists, historians, and scientists of all stripes attempted to contribute their minds as humans tried to understand the connection between Groundworld and Skyworld. It was then that we discovered the akahaha.

The initial response was founded on skepticism, hostility, and confusion. Humans had long believed that, unlike Skyworld, Groundworld was free of other intelligent life. There were no signs of civilizations that could not be explained by human presence, or lost pieces of Skyworld. The akaha quickly disabused our ancestors of their close-minded beliefs, showing a vibrant society not defined by typically human markers of such. They had language and law, and the more they learned to communicate with humanity, the more complicated things became. Humans and akaha had shared Groundworld, but if they had anything like the technology we have now, such co-existence might have been impossible.

All of this came before humans discovered Deepworld. Those of you who have struggled to understand why the relationships with both planes are so complex but so different should remember that the time between our first interaction with Skyworld and our first interaction with Deepworld was 224 years. The change in perspective was not entirely for the better. Deepworld posed different problems, and no one was truly prepared for it.

By the time humanity discovered Deepworld, superstitition had faded into obscurity. As science improved, fewer people looked to religion to explain their reality. Day by day, our knowledge of the planes increased. Eventually, we concluded, there would be nothing left to learn. It was a point of hope for some folks. Those people, and those of a similar mindset, are where the Truthless come from. Their aims may be misguided, but it comes from a point of view that many of us can recognize.

Deepworld posed a problem for both planes. Most people had assumed that there was only one other plane, and for Skyworld, that remained the case. Deepworld only had a connection to Groundworld (as far as we know, see chapter 7 for the controversy surrounding the planar model), which reignited tensions. More than that, though, was how foreign it was. Deepworld had less in common with the other two planes than anyone could have expected.

It wasn’t until decades later that the C.A.N. established rules prohibiting transfer. In the early days, transfer was treated like a new, exciting natural resource. The corporations that initially began exploration lobbied against those changes until the first incursion.

Guarding Her Virtue

She had felt so lonely before she met her. The pricks of loneliness had sharpened over time into stabs, puncturing her heart as they pushed through her. She had been punished, she thought, for some crime in a previous life, or in her future. Providence did not punish the living lightly. She did not know what she had done (would do), but it must be horrendous to deserve the torture of isolation.

She had fallen in love, first. The thrill of the chase, the stolen glances, the late-night whispers…it had enthralled her. She was enraptured, soaking up the radiance of her woman. Her woman. She had won her, had impressed her over all of her suitors and her daddy’s friends and over anyone else who might have won her hand in marriage. She had shown just how little all of their worldly possessions mattered next to her devotion.

Triumph only sustained her for so long. The suitors did not stop, not a one. They kept coming, and her woman was not nearly as devoted. She never strayed far- so how could she call it a betrayal? There were moments- glances, whispers, but nothing more than that. She was no traitor. Nor was she faithful. That was the problem, that faith was something that hid on the inside of a woman’s heart, and not something she could trust.

Her wife was hers, won fair and square, but she was a free spirit. How could she bind something that beautiful without destroying its beauty? She couldn’t. Instead, she told her that she was free. She allowed her free reign, to associate with whichever suitor or seductress she sought to spend time with. She was not so jealous as to take away her lady’s freedom without a reason. Instead, she watched her, through the window, waiting for one.

(Photo by sandevil sandh on Unsplash)

Powered by WordPress & Theme by Anders Norén