Chapter Forty-Six
When the girl is laid down in front of me, I look at her, locking in my resolve. I put my hand on her forehead as I take her hand in my injured one. I close my eyes, pushing my very rarely used of late magic through my body, and out through the ground, using the earthâs filtered magic with mine. I double it back over my magical center as I loop it up, trying to keep my magic from touching my magical core. Thatâs the part that will kill me immediately if it does touch while Iâm like this.
Cautiously, but strongly, I push my magic towards the little girl, my mind picturing her bodyâs layout. Her injuries light up in my mind. When I move towards her back injury I hiss, pulling back immediately. Itâs a healing block and it burns like I had just stepped into a lit firepit.
Yeah, thatâs not going to work for me. I push my magic at it, picturing daggers, pickaxes, anything sharp to break it. âGordon, I will beat you to a pulp if you do not let go,â I hiss my threat to him in my magical sense, putting more strength into my spell. In response, he strengthens his spell.
I chuckle darkly. âSo you want to play, I take it.â I attack with nearly a fourth of my strength, conserving my energy for the guaranteed battles I have ahead of me. I feel his spell recoil seconds before breaking around the girls spine. Wasting no time, I knit her bones, nerves, spinal column, tendons, muscles, veins, and reduce as much of her swelling as I can before moving on.
Each wound is blocked, Gordon putting more and more strength into each and every one, making me increase each level of my attack. Heâs purposely trying to drain me and force me into overload. Good. I can kill him that much faster. Heâs even blocking her superficial wounds, but heâs also losing strength.
Nearing completion, I have to figure out how to force Gordon from her body. Iâll stick to what I know best. âHow proud are you of yourself, Gordon? Using a six year old girl as a pawn is such a pathetic thing to do.â I smirk, feeling his anger. âThe real one your masters are angry at is me. Iâm the one thatâs already injured here. Attack me. Itâs what they want, isnât it? For me to be one of you. Well now is your chance. Iâm still weaker than ever.â Not technically a lie. I still havenât fully recovered my magic, but Iâve gotten almost half of my full strength back. I feel his magic waver, angered by my taunts. I take that opportunity and break another healing block, fully healing the little girl. I dislodge the spell from me, breaking away from it before it transfers her injuries to me.
In a desperate attempt, Gordon goes for a direct attack on me. I put more than half of my remaining strength into my spell, sending a raven image towards him. An overwhelming sense of pain touches my magical senses, while I hear my raven give a victorious cry the exact moment I feel Gordon retreat.
Once heâs gone, I pull away from the little girl, but still remain locked in my magical state while I slowly pull my magic back into a dormant state, looping it through the earthâs filter, hopefully cleansing it of anything that might trigger an overload.
Once my magic had left the little girl, I had felt her body relax as she gasps. When I finally open my eyes, sheâs staring at me with wide grey eyes. I give her a calm look while I settle my magic before letting the filter drop from me. It is then that I notice the ground I have her resting on has water flowing in my drawn lines, and the ground stained green with my magic.
âMaya!â The mother yells, seeing the little girl awake.
The little girl gives me a confused look as she sits up, the end of her curls in her hair touching the dirt. âThe man said you were going to die.â
Those rotten Fates. âWell the man lied.â I inform her, dropping my hands from her.
Her eyes hold a bit of fear while her shoulders slightly raise. âHeâs really mad at you.â
âI know,â I tell her in a soothing tone, âbut I donât let bullies win.â In response the little girl reaches over and hugs me, wrapping her arms around my neck in a tight embrace. My eyes nearly pop out of their sockets from the pain this brings my shoulder, but Iâll allow it. Mostly because the little girl, Maya, is crying.
I gently pat her back while nearing my threshold for pain. âItâs okay Maya. The bad man is gone.â
âBut he was so angry,â she sobs.
âLet me handle him, and you can worry about getting better,â I tell her, keeping my tone light and warm.
âBut heâs scary.â
âI kicked his butt today, didnât I?â I say confidently as I pull her away so I can look at her. âHeâs nothing more than a bully, and I donât like bullies, so Iâll keep fighting him.â
She wipes her nose. âBut what if he comes back? I donât want to see him again.â She starts crying all over again. âPlease never let me go. I donât want to see him again. Please!â She starts sobbing harder at her last word before throwing herself at me, wrapping her arms around my neck and burying her face in my hair.
Reluctantly, I sigh. This little girl is going to go through hell for something that was meant to hurt me. I canât allow this. I donât want her to go through what I have. âCan you do me a favor?â I ask her sweetly.
She nods into my hair, her cries turning into broken gasps as she fights through her growing fear. I grit my teeth, trying to resist doing something that I know is horribly wrong. However, I wish someone could take my nightmares away from when I was six. Again, I use the earthâs filter as I touch the little girls mind.
âClose your eyes, and think of the happiest thing you can,â I tell her, seeing the image of a rainbow butterfly enter my mind, leaving glittered sparkles behind in a trail as it flies away. I use that image, wrapping it into a dream, and removing her memory of what happened after she fell from the tree from her mind. All she will remember is falling and thinking of her happy memory as a dream. She slumps in my arms as she falls asleep.
Cradling her gently, I stand and look to her mother. âSheâs just exhausted, but sheâll be just fine.â
âWhat was she crying about?â The mother asks, taking her from my arms.
âShe remembered her fall, and she was scared the panther would come back.â I say, lying smoothly. âWhen I calmed her back down, she fell asleep.â
I step out of the circle and hand her over to her mother. âIâd keep her with Healer Andrew for the night. There is some swelling that will need to be resolved before sheâs fully back to scaling trees, but I believe sheâs thoroughly healed.â After her mother takes her, I feel lightheaded. Yep, Iâm drained. Itâs been awhile since I felt like this.
âThank you,â Mayaâs mother says, pulling me into a tight hug. Itâs at this moment, I realize sheâs half a foot shorter than I am. I have to bite my lip to keep in a pained cry. âThank you, thank you, thank you.â
âYouâre very welcome,â I tell her with genuine affection. I really need to make sure Healers visit here regularly. This, and the other Forest Folk locations.
âNatasha,â Gedric yells in the crowd, making me wince. Iâm so going to get yelled at.
âIâm alive,â I say, waving my good arm in the air so he can see me. Iâm still in a death grip with the mother.
âAlright Minda, you can let Elder Natasha go,â Drewâs soothing voice comes from behind me. âLetâs get Maya back inside, and I can look her over.â
âSheâs got some swelling on her spine, but thatâll go down with some ice and rest.â I tell him quickly. âI got what I could, but I moved on to her other injuries instead of fully removing her swelling. It was a severe injury.â
âWas it broken?â
âFractured,â I answer through gritted teeth.
âCome on Minda,â That voice belongs to Angela. She pulls Minda away from me gently and starts walking towards the steps.
âThank you,â I mouth to her as I straighten.
âHow are you not in overload right now?â Gedric demands.
âI donât know, but Iâm not questioning it,â I tell him, walking towards the building, I lean back against the wall as I slide down.
âNatasha,â Gedric warns while Drew comes over to examine me.
âI used the earthâs filter around my core. I was expecting an overload, so I was just wanting to hold it off long enough to get that despicable Servant Gordan out of that little girl.â
âServant?â Gedric demands while Drew pulls my leg out to look at it.
âYouâre going to need stitches.â Drew tells me, looking up. âWhat happened to it?â
At this moment, Iâm grateful of where Drewâs priorities are. I never expected this to be the easiest question to answer tonight. âSilva told me that Gedric believes Iâm his chosen one, and I got scared and ran out of the room. I tripped over a downed log while I was running.â I answer honestly, still feeling dirty because I had chosen to remove a part of Mayaâs memory. I fully believe it was for the best, but it still feels wrong. I hate moral grey areas.
âThatâll do it,â Drew says, letting out a long whistle while he further inspects my leg. âIâll get my kit. Gedric, help her inside. I want her to spend the night here so I can make sure she doesnât have a delayed reaction. Also, you have a few sticks in your hair dear,â he informs me before leaving, making me flush.
âWhat was a Servant doing trying to kill a six year old girl?â Gedric demands, helping me to my feet.
âCan you go get my sling,â I ask him, grimacing at the weight gravity is adding. âThe Fates were using her to send me a message. Iâm assuming my little trick deal pissed them off. My guess is that theyâre wanting me to nearly kill myself, trying to save a girl who is the exact age I was when the Fates intended for me to die. I guess they wanted me to feel helpless or something. Either way, Iâm going to be drained for a few days.â
Within seconds heâs back, watching me carefully while I pant, feeling very winded at the moment. Itâs been awhile since I drained myself this much. He helps me into the sling before speaking. âThatâs a bit of a long message, with a lot of trouble.â
âThen why would Gordon heal block every single one of her injuries? The force behind the spell was too much for Stanya to attack. They purposely made it so I would have to be the one to heal the little girl. I guess another angle they could use, was for this to keep me weak. That way I canât help you fight Ari.â
âBut if Halthin and Stanya help me, they still lose the bet.â
Thatâs when I realize something Maya had said. Ohâ¦I fucked up. âI know, and thatâs what concerns me. This wasnât random. I was meant to treat that little girl. There is no doubt about that. What I donât understand is, why did they tell her I was going to die?â
âWhat?â Gedric demands, looking at me while I look towards the infirmary, my head working through the events.
I speak carefully, more to myself than him. âThey told her that. They wanted me to fail. They want to sideline me.â I look at Gedric with actual concern. âTheyâre planning something, and theyâve set it in motion.â
âWhat do you mean,â Gedric asks, stepping towards me.
âIt means Stanyaâs worries are completely valid.â I run my fingers through my hair. âTheyâre not going to wait for a fight with Ari before attacking me.â