Two years earlierâ¦
Shavala laughed as Lele took the pine nut sheâd given him and buried it in the ground.
âYouâre not going to find it here, silly,â she said. âWeâre four days away from the outpost.â
He ignored her as he finished covering it back up. Then he came back and waited, staring at her expectantly, so she pulled another of the nuts from the pocket of the human-style coat she wore against the autumn chill. This time, he cracked the nut open and ate it.
Meritia returned from her exploration, holding a cloth wrap full of mushrooms. âI think this is a good spot for tonight. Thereâs no sign of hunters and plenty of plants and herbs to harvest. There arenât any streams nearby, though.â The other woman was never bothered by the cold, and wore only her thin tunic and leggings.
They were traveling outside the border zone, which meant visitors were allowed in to hunt or forage, but Meritia had been trying to avoid outsiders so Shavala could focus on her training and the harvest. Theyâd made a dozen trips like this as the weather grew colder, and this was to be the last one.
âWhen will we be returning?â Shavala asked.
âTomorrowâ¦but if you wish, itâs a straight line to Terrillia from here. It would be faster to head to the city directly than to return to the camp first.â
âMust I return? My studies are going so well.â
âAnd they will continue going well whether you are here or there. Surely you wish to visit your family?â
Shavalaâs parents had asked her to come home for the winter since she hadnât returned since spring, and that had only been a brief stop.
âI suppose.â
In truth, her parentsâher father a painter and her mother a weaverâwere still disappointed she hadnât followed in their footsteps. The elder magic hadnât given her much of a choice in the matter, but they didnât see it that way, so the visits were always uncomfortable. It would be nice to see her older brother and his wife, though, and meet their new baby.
âIn any case,â Meritia said, âyou certainly know enough to practice on your own, and there are other druids in the city. It may be useful for you to seek out a different perspective.â
âBut what about Lele?â
âNow youâre just making excuses. Lele will come back to the camp with me. He can amuse himself just fine on his own.â
Shavala nodded, accepting the inevitable. Plus, it might be interesting to speak to some of the other druids. Sheâd chosen Meritia as her teacher simply because the woman lived outside the city, but each of the druids had their own skills. The last time sheâd been home, old Arvillin had promised to teach her how to work with fire.
âAll right, Iâll leave tomorrow morning, then. If there are no streams nearby, would you like me to call up water?â
âYes,â Meritia said, âbut I want to do something different this time. Come sit with me.â
Meritia sat cross-legged on the ground and Shavala joined her, folding the bottom of her long coat under her.
âWhat would you like me to do?â Shavala asked.
âYouâre very good at calling water from underground streams, and there are plenty around here,â Meritia said. âHowever, that isnât always the case. When you need to, you can call water from the soil itself.â
âHow?â There was moisture in the ground, certainly, but how could she call water when there was just damp soil?
âIt takes longer, and you must concentrate harder, but the process is exactly the same. Go ahead and try. Youâll need to reach farther, and in more places.â
Shavala dug a little hole in the ground before her, then closed her eyes and reached out with her elder senses. There was an underground stream not far away, but Meritia would be able to tell if she used it. Instead, she tried pulling the moisture from the earth below the hole sheâd dug, but nothing happened.
âSeparate it first,â Meritia said. âAs if you were purifying the water. It canât move if itâs still attached to the soil.â
Shavala added the extra step. This time, she was able to call a small trickle from the earth around her. It seeped back into the ground immediately, but now it was closer so sheâd be able to reach it more easily.
Meritia spoke again. âItâs more efficient to start at a distance, and finish closer. That way youâre not trying to pull water through soil thatâs already dry.â
Shavala extended her senses farther out and continued her task. After twenty minutes, she was sweating and breathing heavily, but the hole sheâd dug was half full of water, and the ground below it was wet enough that it didnât immediately seep out.
âGood,â Meritia said. âNow put it all back where you got it from.â
Shavala looked at her in disbelief.
âThe plants and creatures in the earth need that moisture,â Meritia said, âso you should only call the water this way when you have no other choice. Now that you know how to do it, weâll use the underground stream instead.â
âYes, Meritia.â Shavala took a deep breath and returned to her task. She found it easier to replenish the water in the soil by using the stream, rather than returning the little bit sheâd managed to pull. Once that was done, she called more from the stream, enough to completely fill the little hole sheâd dug. It would gradually drain back into the soil, but now that sheâd made the connection, she could renew it easily whenever they needed.
âThat wasnât bad for your first attempt. But tell me, what would you do in a dry and barren land with no water in the soil at all?â
âAre there places like that?â
This story originates from Royal Road. Ensure the author gets the support they deserve by reading it there.
âNot many, but some. Certain deserts.â
âI donât know what Iâd do,â Shavala admitted. Sheâd never been outside the forest.
âThereâs always moisture in the air,â Meritia said. âNo matter how dry it seems.â
âThe air? But how? Itâs always moving. How can you pull on it? How can you pull something out of it?â
âA complicated lesson, and one for another day, I think.â
Shavala nodded.
âDonât worry about being away for a few months,â Meritia said. âYouâre coming along quickly. Youâll be ready for your travels soonâa few years, maybe less.â
When her teacher deemed her worthy, it would be time for Shavala to leave the forest and go out into the world. The thought was scary but exciting at the same time. Sheâd be able to see humans and stoneborn outside of the caravans and hunting parties they sent into the forest. Perhaps sheâd see some of the more exotic races, tooâthe seaborn, or demonborn, or one of the others. And sheâd get to visit the massive human cities sheâd heard about from others whoâd left the forest.
âOh,â Meritia said, âbut before the time comes, remind me to teach you about human money.â
#
âI donât know why you donât go to Presentation ceremonies,â Renny said. âYouâve got the body for it, and youâve taken all the same classes as the concubines, except for the secret ones.â
Treya laughed at her roommate. âTheyâre not exactly a secret since you immediately come back and tell me all about them.â
âI canât help it. Itâs all soâ¦fascinating. I canât wait to be chosen!â Renny had begun concubine training four years earlier, but she hadnât actually been a resident of the orphanage before that. She was the daughter of a fisherman, but sheâd wanted to become something more than the wife of a fisherman. Her parents had allowed it, hoping to give her a better future.
Back when Treya was still at the Four Roads chapter house, theyâd only accepted orphan girls, but the much larger house in Tyrsall sometimes made exceptions. That happened more often with the Order of Scholars, but Renny was pretty enough that the Order of Concubines had allowed her to join.
âI only took the other classes because Mother Ola insisted I have something to fall back on in case training as a mystic doesnât work out,â Treya said. âArenât you scared of being matched up with some ugly old man?â
âWe have right of refusal.â
âOnly to a limited extent. I was in all the same lectures as you, remember? Not all the men who can afford concubines are young and attractive. You saw who picked Kirla last month. He was twenty years her senior!â
âYou mean the dukeâs seneschal?â Renny asked. âYes, Iâm sure Kirla is just devastated that she has to live in the palace now. Besides, maybe thereâll be multiple men bidding for me, and then I can choose whoever I like best!â
Treya shook her head ruefully. She simply didnât understand the mindset of the concubine trainees, but she and Renny had had the same argument a dozen times and neither had ever managed to change the otherâs opinion.
âWell, Iâll wish for the best for you,â Treya said. âDo you know when the next Presentation will be?â
âNo, but one could happen at any time. You know, if you joined the concubines, you could wear dresses instead ofâ¦that.â
Treya laughed again. The mystic traineesâthere were only three of themâwore plain, loose-fitting tunics and pants. âI like wearing this, and besides, Iâm four years into my studies. Iâm not going to switch now.â
âOh, fah, youâre no fun! And here I was, all set to help you sew a Presentation dress.â
âSorry. Maybe next time. Iâd better get down to the practice yard. Sister Shana has returned to the city, so weâll probably go late today.â
âDoes that mean youâre going to come back all sweaty again tonight?â Renny asked.
âOh, relax. Iâll get a bath first.â
The two girls split up to go their separate ways, and Treya left the building through the back door to look for her teachers. She found them waiting for her, but the other trainees were missing.
âWhere is everyone?â she asked, without honorifics. She no longer felt the need to stand on ceremony around these two Sisters. Kelis had been her teacher for the past four years. Shana was a journeying troubleshooter who roamed between chapter houses, but Treya had known her for even longer.
âAs of this morning, Enna has graduated,â Kelis said. âSheâs out shopping, trying to figure out what she needs to bring on her journeying.â
âYouâre not going to make her live off the land?â
Kelis grinned. âEnnaâs a city girl, and itâll be winter soon. Weâll build up to that gradually. As for Ninaââ
âNinaâs too young,â Shana put in. âWeâre going to do some full-on sparring today, and I donât want her to get excited and hurt herself.â
Treya nodded, then knelt down to remove the soft boots she wore laced up to her knees. Soon she was barefoot like the two Sisters.
Once ready, she moved into position, facing Kelis. When Shana gave the signal, Kelis feinted toward Treyaâs head. Treya ducked down, sweeping her left leg around to kick toward Kelisâs knee. Kelis sidestepped the kick, then they rushed toward each other, striking in a blur of motion, dodging and blocking each otherâs attacks.
After a few minutes of that, Shana shouted, âStop!â
They paused, breathing heavily.
âGood, both of you,â Shana said.
Treya smiled at the praise, and noticed her teacher doing the same. Kelis and Shana were the same age, but there were stories told about Shanaâs exploits throughout the Three Orders.
âBut, Kelis, youâre not going full out,â Shana continued. âI know Treyaâs your student, but sheâs good enough that she wonât be hurt too badly if you hit her. Better to learn now than when sheâs facing a group of armed men.â
Treyaâs smile slipped. She hadnât realized Kelis was holding back.
Kelis nodded and Treya faced her once more, indicating when she was ready. Shana gave the signal and they began again. This time, Treya had little opportunity to attack, spending all of her time just trying not to get hit. Finally, Shana let them stop again.
âTreya, have you been doing your meditation exercises?â Shana asked.
Treya bit her lip. Shana was the last person she wanted to lie to. âSometimes.â
âYouâre thinking too muchâthere are too many things going on inside your head. You need to learn to let go of all your distractions. For the next few weeks, try meditating after you come out to the practice yard, but before you start sparring. But only do it for a few weeksâdonât make it a habit. A large fellow with a sword isnât likely to let you sit down and clear your mind before he fights you.â
Treya nodded. Sheâd always had trouble letting go of the world around her.
âShall we have a go?â Shana asked, turning to Kelis.
Kelis reached back over her shoulder. âI think I pulled something.â
âLet me see.â Shana carefully felt Kelisâs back through her tunic. âA muscle spasm. You should have someone massage it out. Treya, come here and feel the knot, so you know what to look for.â
Treya let Shana guide her hands along Kelisâs shoulder blade to find the problem.
It feltâ¦odd, as if there was a wrongness to the muscle, something that needed to be set right.
âTreya?â Shana said. âYou can let go now.â
There was a roar in Treyaâs earsâthough nobody else seemed to hear itâand then her hands glowed with a pale white light. She stepped back in shock as the light faded.
âHey, thatâs great,â Kelis said, rotating her shoulder before turning to face them. âWhatever you did took care of it.â
âWhat did you do?â Shana asked.
âIâ¦donât know. Were my hands glowing?â
âYou healed her,â Shana said. âTreya, have you sworn vows to The Lady?â
âVows? No. Why?â
âTo Allosur? Arodisis? Any of the gods?â
The Three Orders were most closely associated with three of the godsâAllosur for the scholars, Arodisis for the concubines, and The Lady watched over them all. The mystics didnât follow any of the three in particular.
âNo! Never. Iâm not even religious.â
âWell, vows or no, one of them has chosen you as a priestess. That was divine magic; Iâve seen it before.â
Treya had no idea how to respond to that. She wasnât a priestess, and had never thought about becoming one. âThat doesnât make any sense. Iâve never even been to one of the temples, just the little shrines we have here for our three.â
âWell, I suppose some higher power could be working through you, insteadâ¦but to heal a muscle spasm? That seems unlikely.â
Kelis stared at them both, concerned. âIf sheâs a priestess, do we need to send her to a temple? What are we supposed to do?â
âWe donât even know which temple,â Shana said. âIf some god has chosen her, he or she doesnât seem too concerned about following convention, so I think you should just continue training her as you have been. But we should experiment. Healing isnât the only type of divine magic.â