Chapter Eleven
IN GOOD COMPANY
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âTo open oneâs house to a guest is to embrace the life and company of another. There is happiness to be found in both their presence and their absence.â
â Vorryn Silvers, Owner of the Wealthfire Inn
~*~
âI did it,â Liv said with a shaky smile.
Her heart was still racing, but opening her book and confirming her advancement had taken the edge off the sudden rush. Warmth radiated through her chest and somewhere deep, she felt her connection to the arcane spring grow a little stronger. Her reserve expanded as well, but only just. If what she had sensed before was comparable to a teacup, she now had access to something closer to the kettle.
âCongratulations on your first advancement,â Kaedric said, offering her his first full grin. The expression was so unrestrained, it almost appeared out of place.
âThanks,â she said, âI have to say, I wasnât expecting so many selections. I had four to start, one at what Iâm assuming was the midpoint between orders and now I have another. Is that normal?â
âFor your first three orders, yes. However, after your third, you receive four selections for every skill tier you achieve and one for the orders in between.â
She tilted her head in thought, âDoes that mean Iâll gain another selection halfway through my second and third?â
He nodded.
âSeven selections for seven skills,â she hummed, âSeems these gods of yours wanted everyone to have a solid foundation.â
âIâve known plenty of people who chose to ignore the base skills in favor of holding off for the more flashy ones down the line, but theyâre often the most important regardless of your order. Some of them may not sound all that impressive now, but they build over time. Remember that.â
âMy spiritbook mentioned something to that effect before in relation to my read energy skill. Something about being able to determine aspects? You wouldnât happen to know what it meant, would you?â
âIâm assuming youâd be able to read the energyâs alignment. If it was associated with fire or earth, for instance,â he said, âaspect typically refers to the nature of something.â
âHuh. And it builds passively?â
âMost skills do as you advance.â
âWell, thatâs good to know,â she said, tapping a finger along the edge of her book in thought, âLet me see my skill tree again.â
Kaedric leaned over as the chart flowed across the page.
You have one selection available.
âThe skills with the little flowers blooming along the edges are the ones youâve already selected, right?â He asked.
âSo far, yeah. Theyâre a neat little touch, right?â
âMore exciting than mine,â he said, studying what options she had left.
At her current skill tier, she had one remaining skill and one prerequisite to choose from. She briefly considered banking the selection for later, but was more inclined to take Kaedricâs advice and fill out her first order in its entirety. The only question was, did she choose detect decay or energy transduction this time around?
âWould you say a skill is more important than a prerequisite?â
âAt your current stage? The skill. Are you looking at detect decay?â He asked.
âIâve considered it before,â she said with an absent nod.
âUnlocking another skill like that gives you access to another ability for you to train.â
âAnd another means of progressing toward the next order,â she said, following his line of thought.
âExactly. Thereâs nothing you can do with energy transduction, right now. Save it for your next selection.â
âDetect decay it is,â she said, admiring the way the tiny purple flowers bloomed around the skill as she made her choice.
All available selections have been made.
Livâs skin prickled, though she didnât feel all that different with the introduction of the ability. Which she decided to take as a good thing. After all, there was no decay. That might change, given time, but for now, everything within her little sphere of detection was healthy.
She sat back, rather pleased as she dismissed her book, until her stomach gave an audible growl. She pressed a hand to it in an effort to quell the rumbling, but her attempt only seemed to antagonize her appetite. Her cheeks burned as she looked to Kaedric.
âSorry.â
He chuckled as he rose, âIâd say itâs time for breakfast. Are you all right with something simple?â
âSimpleâs often best,â she said, watching him pluck the edibles sheâd sorted from the table, âWhat would you like me to do with the medicinals?â
âYou can move them to the other side of the table, for now. Iâll show you how to prepare and store them later.â
âAs in after breakfast?â She asked hopefully.
âThereâs someone I wanted you to meet first, but we can start after, if you like,â he said, going about his business in the kitchen.
âIs it the new horse?â She asked.
This tale has been pilfered from Royal Road. If found on Amazon, kindly file a report.
âSaw that, did you? I was hoping you were still asleep when I got back.â
She grimaced, âDid I ruin the surprise?â
âI didnât think it would be much of a shock, given we discussed the matter last night, but I thought it would be nice for you to have someone to talk to that isnât Kelsa or myself.â
âI canât say Iâve ever considered having a conversation with a horse,â she said.
âYou might try it sometime. They understand more than most people give them credit for. Sheâs yours, at the very least. I think youâll find sheâs good company.â
Maybe she would.
âDoes she have a name?â She wondered.
âEmber,â he said, âBut you can change it to whatever you like.â
âI wouldnât say it's a bad name, but I suppose Iâll see if it suits her once I meet her,â she said, glancing through one of the windows as if she might see the mare.
âDo you think you can make the walk?â He asked as he distributed a set of bowls and silverware.
âSo long as Iâm not barefoot, I should be fine.â
The jar of mixed grains and seeds he set upon the table next reminded her of the muesli her foster father always insisted on buying in place of the usual sugar-packed cereal everyone else ate. Were those dried blueberries she spied? He set a glass milk bottle beside it as well as a small bowl of honey. As far as breakfast went, she hadnât been expecting this.
âThe fit might be off, but I have a spare set of boots you can borrow until we find you something more suitable in the city,â he said, finally taking his seat after he set a final plate of sliced wild plums upon the table.
âBetween the bandage wrap and the socks, I donât think the extra room will be an issue,â she said.
Kaedric glanced toward the pair of boots heâd left by the door, âYou may be right, on that account.â
âYouâre not planning on having me ride, are you?â
âNot for a few days, at least.â
She relaxed a little as she reached for the cereal, âSomething tells me Iâll have plenty of saddle time in my future.â
âYou wanted me to teach you what I know. Are you sure youâre up for the commitment?â
âAre you sure youâre willing to teach me?â
âIâve humored you this long, havenât I?â
âYou have,â she said, âIâm not pressuring you, though, am I?â
âWhat makes you think you are?â He asked.
âWell, youâve only known me for about a day and youâve already bought me a horse and from what I can tell, a new saddle. Those arenât exactly small things, you know?â
âI know it was quite some time ago, at this point, but I was raised to respect my guests, not bow to them, Miss Lockhard. Youâre not pressuring me, as you say,â he said, âIf it helps put your mind at ease, though, Iâve been considering buying a companion for Kelsa for the past few months. Your arrival gave me the excuse I was looking for. As for the saddle, itâs a necessity, in your case. You have no business riding bareback.â
In a way, it did help.
âYou do your parents proud,â she said thoughtfully, âare they . . . still around? What with the whole immortal thing?â
âThey both passed a few years before the surgence.â
âOh. Shit, Iâm sorry. Had I knownââ
âThereâs no need to apologize. I came to terms with everything decades ago, but I appreciate the sentiment.â
A part of her still felt guilty, so she offered, âIâm not sure if it counts, but my foster father passed away a few years ago. He was my only real family.â
His brow furrowed, âFoster? May I ask what happened to your parents?â
âThey gave me up for adoption when I was a few days old. I couldnât really tell you anything about them even if I wanted to.â
âMy condolences. I . . . my wife and I had been trying for a babe for years before the surgence. I canât imagine giving them up willingly,â he said.
Her lips thinned as she stared into her bowl, but sheâd been down this road of what-ifs before and always ended up disappointed. The absence of her parents was an old wound. One sheâd rather not reopen. She had more than enough to deal with at present.
âEveryone has their reasons, I suppose,â she said, though stopped when she took a moment to think about what heâd said.
She could only imagine what could have transpired after two hundred years, yet her gut told her . . .
âWhere are they now?â She wondered, though feared she already knew the answer, to some extent.
âMy wife and I went our separate ways a long time ago,â he said evenly.
Liv watched him for a moment, but knew when to stop prodding at a particular topic. She wasnât the only one with old wounds. She was surprised heâd shared as much as he had, really. However, the same could be said of her. She rarely, if ever, talked about her parents. They hadnât crossed her mind in years.
Perhaps for good reason.
What was the point in missing someone youâd never met or couldnât remember?
Mentally, she checked herself before she travelled any further down that particular path.
âYou did it again, you know,â she said, deciding they were both looking for an excuse to change topics.
âWhat?â
âYou called me Miss Lockhard,â she hummed.
He cracked a smile, âMy apologies, Liv.â
âApology accepted. Just donât let it happen again, yeah?â She said with a wink.
âNo promises.â
She shrugged, âOne day, youâll get it right. Save the formalities for the city.â
âI intend to.â
âMmm. Good. Whatâs it like, anyway?â She asked.
âRalencia?
She nodded.
âItâs a port city and the largest for several hundred miles. Prior to the surgence and the reunification, it was the capital of Ilythia. Though these days, itâs more a trade city than anything. Thereâs plenty to see and buy, but there are far too many people, if you ask me. I only ever go there if I have to, these days.â
A trade city sounded promising. There had to be more than a few people willing to buy tempered arcana, right? If they could find the more discreet buyers Kaedric had alluded to knowing, sheâd at least be able to earn some stable funds of her own.
âIf I had a home in a place like this, I imagine Iâd be much the same,â she said.
âLike I told you before, no one bothers me here.â
She held her hands up, âHey, I get it. I support the whole mountain man schtick. Iâve considered disappearing to go live in the middle of nowhere a time or two myself.â
âYou have? Where is it you live now, then?â
âSan Fransisco,â she said, âI wouldnât say it's anything special, but it has its fair share of beaches. And tourists, unfortunately. It had a pretty diverse food scene, though.â
âThat reminds me, you mentioned working for a catering company. Were you a chef of some sort?â He asked.
âMe? No. I may have had my aspirations, but I was just one of the waitresses. Hence the sequin nightmare of a dress you found me in.â
He gave a soft snort, âI still find it hard to believe that was a dress.â
âItâs a cocktail dress. Itâs meant to reveal that much skin. Helped with the tips.â
âTips?â
She pursed her lips, wondering how to explain it to someone who had never heard the term before.
âI guess it's a reward, of sorts. If you enjoy someoneâs service, you give them a small monetary token of your appreciation. At least, that used to be how tipping worked. These days, youâre expected to tip for just about everything. Iâm surprised it hasnât been implemented into the self check-out lines at the store,â she admitted.
He chuckled, âI see. Even if I donât quite understand about half of what you said.â
âInstead of paying for your groceries in person, most people pay a machine,â she offered.
He shuddered.
âRemind me never to visit,â he said.
âDonât worry, I wouldnât recommend it.â
The irony of her statement was not lost to her. Here she was, trying to find a way to return. And for what, exactly? Her plants? She had no family to return to. No friends, outside her coworkers. For better or worse, sheâd always been on her own. Not aimless, but solitary. Was that life really something she wanted to go back to?
In a way, this . . . this could be a fresh start.