Chapter Twenty-Five
Gedric sits like this for an hour while I meditate. I have to be careful not to head into mastery steps, which is odd for me. Iâm sliding to just before my center, and each time I have to stop it before Iâm fully there. It looks like Iâm progressing, and I have a sense itâs because of my new additions. Itâs uncomfortable for me at the moment. I can feel my raven mark humming, and itâs driving me insane. It wants to connect, but I canât let it. Stupid overload. Stupid Fates.
âI feel a heartbeat,â Gedric says, breaking my concentration.
I open my eyes, and smile. âYouâve found the lifeline inside of the earth.â
His brow furrows. âThere are so many smaller ones near me. Four that are larger than the other three.â
I lift my brows, honestly a little impressed. âThat is us, and the horses.â
âWhy am I noticing this?â He asks, his voice a little higher than normal.
âOnce you notice the earthâs magic, you can start to see what it does; in a sense.â
âIs this what you feel?â He asks, his voice going higher.
âWhat are you feeling?â
âYouâre in so much pain. I can feel your wounds.â He grimaces. âI wanted to explore your heartline more. Itâs terrifying. Youâre so weak physically right now, but there is so much strength in you. Itâs like Iâm just staring into an empty ocean. Your magic is drained, but itâs there.â
âGedric,â I tell him, my voice calm. âDo not touch someoneâs line unless you want to see this. There is a reason I am the strongest Sheik in history. My power is strong enough that it rivals the earthâs. Ari is the same. Do not look at his line, ever. His magic is so dark, itâll be like being in a void, and youâll never escape.â
âI see your injuries.â Gedric gasps as he flinches. âTheyâre so painful. Youâve been lying. Youâre not okay. Your shoulder is broken, and you have torn your tendons.â
âDo not touch them!â I nearly yell that order.
âIt hurts!â He cries.
Having no choice, I kick him, breaking his contact with the earth as he launches across the cavern, hitting the wall. He opens his eyes as he whimpers. âWhy did you do that?â
âYou were about to transfer my injuries to you. I would have been sent into overload again, and youâd be severely injured. Sorry about the kick though. Iâm wearing boots so it was my only option. If any of my skin touched you, Iâd be at risk of overload.â
âFair,â he grimaces. âHow do you know what to avoid?â
âExperience,â I say, going to help him up. âYou got a little overwhelmed there, didnât you?â
âI donât know what happened.â He tells me, standing up. âThe second I noticed that heartbeat, everything opened. All I had to do was mentally touch it, and I was in it.â
âThatâs pretty impressive.â I tell him. âNot a lot of first timers can do that.â
âI also felt this weird burning sensation.â
I cock my head. âWhere?â
âI donât know.â
âWas it bitter?â
He gives me a bewildered look. âYes, how did you know?â
âMagicnite. We need to wake Stanya.â
âSheâs going to kill me,â Gedric groans.
âItâs better than Ari,â I tell him, walking towards Stanya. I touch her gently to wake her.
Stanya bolts up, âIs it Ari?â she yells, making me wince.
âThat was my ear,â I whine, rubbing them. âNo, Gedric sensed some Magicnite.â
âRewind,â she says, looking at me. âGedric? Nat, you gotta get better at lying.â
I roll my eyes, âIâm not chancing an overload after the last one. Iâm not lying. He asked me to teach him some magic, and turns out heâs pretty good with earth magic. Now please check.â
She closes her eyes as she waves her hand. âHold it. Teach him?â She opens her eyes, still clearly overtired. âYou taught him without using it yourself?â
âWould you just put your hand to the earth and see where the Magicnite are; or am I dragging you out in that blizzard to look normally?â
She puts her hand on the ground while looking at me with a dumbfound expression. Her eyes widen. âShit,â she hisses, getting to her feet. She grabs my raven statue and dives towards the cave entrance, concealing it like it was another part of the mountain. âEveryone shut up, and put that fire out.â
Gedric smothers the fire in dirt, bringing darkness but stopping the smoke. I hold my breath and crawl over to hear, trying to hear what she senses. The blizzard has settled outside, making everything visible in light. Within minutes, we watch a Magicnite patrol pass us. Theyâre riding horses and have balls of light following them. Theyâre looking closely at everything.
When they pass, I take Stanyaâs hand and pull her with me, stepping outside into the cold air. She masks our sounds, and spreads her concealment to still cover us. When the Magicnite get to the end of the pass, they look around.
âDo you see anything,â The more muscular one of the two asks. Theyâre both dressed warmly and are on horseback. Their horses look cold, but the men do not.
âNo, nothing. Do you think those idiots thought they saw a Sheik?â
âI donât know, but I doubt there is a Sheik out in this weather. Even a nomad would have hunkered down for that blizzard. No one is stupid enough to descend a mountain at night either.â The other one answers while he looks behind him. Seeing nothing, he returns to looking out at the pass. âAriâs going to kill someone if he was called for nothing.â
âWell we really donât have a choice. The storm is going to pick up again soon, so weâll need to head back. I think heâll be nice in his punishment since it was a male Sheik that was spotted.â
Male? I look at Stanya. She looks just as confused as I do. We do not know of any nomad Sheiks that live this far up the mountain, and all of them have been called into the Sheika Clans for safety.
âCould it have been Ari?â
âI doubt it. You know Ari when you see him. Besides, he wasnât even here.â
âWhat if itâs one of those stupid training drills?â
âI donât think so. This one didnât feel human.â
âAn illusion then? There was an illusionist that was spotted earlier.â
âNo idea. Letâs get back though.â
Stanya and I hold still, watching them go. We donât want to risk moving and accidently exposing our tracks. After weâre sure they have traveled far enough, we return back to the dark cave.
I run into the cave shivering. âMale sheik?â I ask Stanya, trying to rub my arms to warm myself back up. âI donât know of any nomads living up here. Do you?â
âNone. Itâs too cold to live up here without shelter.â Stanya says, while making blowing sounds. I assume sheâs trying to warm her hands. âItâs freezing.â
âLetâs get that fire started again,â I agree while grabbing my blanket out of the saddle bag.
âNot a good idea.â Gedric says, putting his arm on my shoulder then immediately dropping it. I assume it was him. Stanyaâs hand is not that big. Itâs too dark to see anything.
âWhy not,â Stanya whines, fully shivering.
âThe smoke might attract the Magicnite.â
âIâll chance it.â I tell them. âThere is another storm coming, and weâll freeze to death if we donât.â
âFine, but someone should keep watch.â
âIâll stay up, since I can sleep on the horses. The rest of you get some sleep.â
After a moment of silence, Gedric speaks. âIâll only agree to that if you actually sleep.â
âIf I fail, you can push me into the snow.â I reason, flinching a little from the sudden spark from the fire. Once my eyes adjust I sit next to the fire and smile up at Gedric; who is watching me like Iâm not someone who should be unsupervised.
âWhat if the Fates show up?â Gedric hesitates.
âIâll scream, what else can I do?â I give him a measured look. âThey wonât kill me until I make a deal with them. The worst they can do is threaten me right now. Iâm already hurt, so itâs not like theyâre going to make it worse. Now sleep. Youâre almost as stubborn as I am.â
That derails his resolve and makes him smile. âThatâs insulting if you think Iâm close to being that bad. Fine, Iâll go to bed. Wake us after the storm passes.â
I nod and watch as they lay down. Stanya crawls over to me, and rests her head in my lap. âNight Nat. Wake me if you need help.â
I put my hand on her head as she closes her eyes. âAlways. Thanks for not punching me when I woke you this time.â
âWell this time you had a reason to wake me.â
âLast time was because there was a snake on your blanket.â I argue.
She smirks. âYou should have let it bit me.â
âIâll remember that next time.â I chuckle. âNight Sta.â
âNight Nat,â she says, trailing off. I smile and listen to her breathing. Itâs deep and itâs not long until a soft snore starts up.
âNatasha,â Gedric starts, lifting his head from his bedroll. âWhy were the Magicnite here?â
âThey saw a male Sheik.â I shake my head. âThat poor man is going to be cold. We have another storm heading this way, so itâs best if we be careful tomorrow.â
âShould we go look for him?â
I shake my head. âItâs too dark to safely search for him, and also because of the snow. There are too many things hidden under the snow, we could get hurt. Also, weâre forced to stay here because of the brewing storm. Besides, if heâs aware the Magicnite are tracking him, heâll likely attack us; but most likely heâs long gone. If it wasnât for my overload, weâd have teleported down the mountain. Weâre stuck going the long way, heâs not.â
Gedric rolls his eyes. âIâm so sorry youâve been humbled to the abilities of a normal person.â
I stick my tongue out at him, making him laugh. âGo to sleep. Itâll be morning in a few hours. With any luck the storm will have passed by then.â
âAnd if it doesnât?â
âWeâre going to have a very smelly cave then. I didnât bring anything to clean up after the horses.â I say, nodding towards the still passed out horses in the corner.
âPlease let the storm pass.â Gedric says while putting his head down. âNight Nat.â
âNight. Iâll wake you if anything interesting happens.â
For the rest of the night, I keep my eye on the fire and meditate, listening to everything I can. I canât touch my magic, but I can increase my awareness. What is calming to me, is listening to the howling wind rip through the trees in violently whooshed motions. It starts to rain first, but snow follows minutes after it. Itâs going to be icy in the morning, thatâs for sure. I hate that weâre forced to move so slowly because of me. Maybe I can think of a shortcut.
Stanya turns in my lap, making me open my eyes. There is still a light snowfall, but the storm has passed. Itâs a few hours after sunrise, so it should be safe to travel. Carefully, I bunch my blanket under Stanyaâs head and take the horses out so they can stretch, and get warmed up.
Once weâve returned to the cave, I take off their blankets and get them saddled and ready to go. Iâd let them wear their blankets, but if they start sweating, itâll trap the cold in and cause skin irritation. My only goal with them is to make the trip as comfortable as possible. Especially for Macy. Sheâs going to be carrying me forty percent of the trip without me walking. After my knee is healed enough, we can go back to alternating.
After I have changed, and I heated up some biscuits, I walk over to Gedric and partially kneel by him. I touch his shoulder. âGedric, the storm has passed, and you need to wake up.â
He groans as he pushes his face into his bedroll. âNo. I donât want to.â
âIâll do what I do with Stanya, and sit on you.â I warn.
That makes him lift his head with a very groggy expression on his face. âYou sit on her?â
âAfter how many times weâve been attacked, she wakes up swinging. Itâs safer to sit on her.â I stand up and walk over to Halthin. âYour turn Halthin. Time to get up.â
Halthin grimaces, but sits up. âWhy is it so cold?â
âBecause of snow,â I tell him. âNow you can either eat, or help me wake up Stanya.â
âHow is that hard?â
âOh yeah. You havenât woken her while weâre traveling.â I say, standing up.
Carefully, I walk over to her unconscious form and touch her shoulder. Immediately she bolts up and I plop myself on her lap. âTime to get up,â I tell her, leaning into her.
Stanya groans. âI nearly hit you.â
âWhich is why I sat on you.â I laugh. âLetâs get going. The storm has passed, but itâs a few hours into the new day, so weâre behind.â