Divine Rivals: Part 2: News from Afar: Chapter 18
Divine Rivals (Letters of Enchantment #1)
Iris tried to fall asleep that night, in the cool darkness of her new room. But eventually, she became restless. The sorrow and guilt of her motherâs death was climbing up her bones again, and she had no choice but to light her candle with a gasp.
She rubbed her eyes with the heel of her hand, her shoulders hunched. She was so exhausted; why couldnât she sleep?
When she opened her eyes, her gaze fixed on the narrow wardrobe door on the other side of her room. She wondered if this threshold would work just like the one in her bedroom. If she typed on Nanâs typewriter, would her letters still reach the nameless boy she had been writing?
Iris wanted to find out how strong this magical bond was. If six hundred kilometers would break it. She slipped off her mattress and sat on the floor, opening her typewriter case.
This was familiar to her, even in a different place, surrounded by strangers who were becoming friends. This motion, her fingers striking words onto a blank page, cross-legged on a rug. It grounded her.
I know this is impossible.
I know this is a bloody long shot.
And yet here I am, writing to you again, sitting on the floor with a candle burning. Here I am reaching out to you and hoping youâll answer, even as Iâm in a different house and nearly six hundred kilometers away from Oath. And yet I canât help but wonder if my words will still be able to reach you.
If so, I have a request.
Iâm sure you remember the first true letter you wrote me. The one that detailed the myth of Dacre and Enva. It was only half complete, but do you think you could find the corresponding piece? I would like to know how it ends.
I should go. The last thing I want is for my typing to wake someone up, because this place is so quiet, so silent that I can hear my own heart, beating in my ears.
And I shouldnât hope. I shouldnât try to send this. I donât even know your name.
But I think there is a magical link between you and me. A bond that not even distance can break.
Iris gently removed the paper and folded it. She rose with a pop in her knees and approached the wardrobe door.
This will be wild if it works, she thought, proceeding to slip the letter beneath the door. She counted three breaths, and then opened the closet.
To her shock, the paper was gone.
It was wonderful and terrible, because now she had to wait. Perhaps he wouldnât write her back.
Iris paced her room, wrapping tendrils of hair around her fingers.
It took him two minutes to reply, the paper whispering over her floor.
She caught it up and read:
SIX HUNDRED KILOMETERS FROM OATH?!!! Answer me, and Iâll do my best to find the other half of the myth:
Did you go to war?
And before you ask, yes. Iâm relieved to discover more paper of yours on my floor.
P.S.âForgive my lack of manners. How are you these days?
She smiled.
She typed her reply and sent:
A war correspondent, actually. Donât worryâIâve seen no battle. At least not yet.
The first thing Iâve learned is to expect the unexpected, and to always be prepared for anything. But I only just arrived, and I think itâs going to take me some time to adjust to life this close to the front lines.
Itâs different. Like I said earlier, it feels quieter, in a strange way. You would think it would be loud and seething, full of gunpowder and explosions. But so far itâs been shadows, and silence, and locked doors, and whispers.
As for how Iâm doing these days ⦠the grief is still heavy within me, and I think it would be dragging me into a pit if I wasnât so distracted. Some moments, I feel okay. And then the next, Iâll be struck by a wave of sadness that makes it hard to breathe.
Iâm learning how to navigate it, though. Just like you once said to me.
I should go now. I should also probably think more about conserving my paper and ink ribbons. But if you do find the myth, Iâd love to read it. And you know where to find me.
He replied almost instantly:
I canât make you any promises that Iâll be able to find the other half. I found the first portion on a whim, handwritten and tucked away in one of my grandfatherâs old books. But Iâll scour the library for it. Iâm certain Enva outwitted Dacre in the realm below, and men have since then read and hidden that portion of the myth with wounded pride.
In the meantime, I hope you will find your place, wherever you are. Even in the silence, I hope you will find the words you need to share.
Be safe. Be well.
Iâll write soon.