Chapter 6: The Celler Test
The Fellborn Healer
I woke to the scent of woodsmoke and roasting squash, my limbs heavy with the kind of soreness that meant Iâd worked hard the day before. The light filtering through the loft window was soft and golden, the air cool against my skin. I stretched under the blanket, fingers aching slightly from too many hours gripping chalk and scribbling notes.
Downstairs, I heard the familiar clatter of a pan and Naerelâs quiet footsteps as she moved about the kitchen.
I climbed down the ladder and was greeted with a mug of barley tea and a warm plate of roasted squash, eggs, and bacon already waiting at the table. She gave a short nod in greeting but said nothing else until I was halfway through my meal.
âToday youâre getting your quiz,â she said evenly, slicing her own bread.
I paused with a forkful of squash halfway to my mouth. âAlready?â
âYouâve copied runes, drawn them on slate, pushed magic into them. Now we see whatâs stuck.â
She didnât sound impatient, just matter-of-fact, as if we were discussing the weather.
After breakfast, she cleared the dishes while I wiped chalk dust from my journal and tried to settle my nerves. When she returned, she handed me a fresh slate and a new stick of chalk.
âNo notes. Just memory. Draw the ones you know. Name them. Write their function.â
I sat at the workbench, palms a little damp, and got to work.
Some flowed easilyâEmberhold, Repelkin, Aetherbind. I wrote them down with practiced care. Others I remembered only halfway, their lines fuzzy or their names just out of reach. I pushed on, drawing until the slate was nearly full.
Naerel reviewed it with a slow nod. âTwenty-two remembered. Eighteen correct. Seventeen fully understood.â
I frowned. âThatâs not⦠great.â
âItâs your second day,â she said. âYouâre not being graded. Youâre being assessed.â
Then she handed me a neatly folded cloth bundle and a small jar of rune paste that shimmered faintly in the light.
âPack your things. Time to use them.â
I blinked at her. âUse them where?â
She turned toward the door, tying her long outer wrap over her tunic. âThe Oakhearth Inn. Miraâs cellar needs wardingâmold, pests, storage problems. Youâre going to set the runes.â
I straightened from the bench, alarm prickling at the edge of my throat. âMe? But IâIâve barely practiced. Shouldnât I wait until Iâve studied longer?â
Naerelâs tone didnât change. âYouâve learned the forms. You know the effects. Either the magic will hold, or it wonât.â
âBut what if I do it wrong?â
âThen weâll fix it. But you wonât know until you try. A healer who only studies never learns to act. This is simple magic, Elara. Practical and quiet. Thereâs no danger hereâonly proof of learning.â
I hesitated, clutching the cloth bundle tighter. I wanted to believe her. I wanted to feel ready.
But instead, I nodded, slowly. âAll right.â
âGood,â she said. âGet your boots.â
We walked through the village in a hush of early light, dew still clinging to the grass and rooftops. The bundle of tools felt heavy under my arm, though it weighed next to nothing. My fingers tightened around it as we approached the Oakhearth Inn.
Mira Talgren stood at the front stoop in her usual flour-dusted apron, wiping her hands on a cloth as we approached. Her greying braid was wrapped around her crown like a practical circlet, and her smile was quick and warm.
âMorning, Naerel,â she said, then her gaze landed on me. âAnd Elara. Youâve got the serious look of someone about to attempt magic before their tea.â
âSheâs ready to try her first warding,â Naerel said. âIâm just observing.â
Miraâs smile softened into something kinder. âYouâll do just fine, dear. The cellarâs yours. I lit a lantern and cleared the back wall. Let me know if you need anything.â
The trapdoor creaked as I opened it, revealing the stone steps down into the cool, earthy dark. I glanced back once more at Naerel.
She didnât speak. Didnât nod. Just watched.
I took a breath and descended into the cellar.
The air changed instantlyâdamp and heavy, tinged with the scent of root vegetables, old earth, and something faintly sour. Shelves lined the walls, packed with jars and baskets, and a few hanging garlic ropes swayed slightly in the draft. A low hum of gnats gathered near the far corner where moisture darkened the stones.
I set down my bundle on a crate and unrolled it slowly. Parchment slips, soft brushes, the small jar of rune paste. Iâd practiced each component, drawn every sigil on slate and in my journal, but this was different. This was real. My heart thudded in my ribs. I looked up toward the stairwell againâNaerel stood silhouetted at the top, her arms folded across her chest.
She didnât say a word. Right. No help. I took a steadying breath and knelt near the first corner. Repelkin was the first sigilâsimple spiral within a square frame, used to keep pests at bay. I dipped the brush into the paste and let my magic rise just enough to feel the warmth in my fingers.
The spiral smeared on the second curve. I hissed quietly and wiped it clean. Focus. No oneâs rushing you. I drew it againâslower, smoother. The strokes held. I whispered the runeâs name under my breath and pushed a thread of magic into the paste as it dried. The mark hummed softly. It held. One down.
I moved to the second corner. Dampbind. This one had a longer curve and sharp downward strokes, like a breaking wave. I remembered how my hand needed to turn just slightly to keep the angle right. This time the rune came easilyâclean and whole. The infusion settled with a gentle pulse, like a drying breeze through stone. By the third corner, my hands had stopped trembling.
Stasismarkâthe rune to slow time in small pockets, to keep stored food from spoiling. It was the most complex of the three: a triskelion pattern ending in a closed circle. I drew it with care, not rushing the final lines. The moment I infused it, the entire rune gave off a steady vibrationâlight, but complete. Balanced.
I stood and stepped back, breath still shallow, and looked around. The cellar felt⦠different. Less musty. Calmer. The gnats had vanished. A soft stillness hung in the air, like a held breath finally released. I turned toward the stairs. Naerel descended silently, her gaze sweeping the corners, then lingering on the sigils.
âTheyâll hold,â she said simply.
Just that. No praise. No critique. But something in her tone settled the nerves still coiled in my belly.
Mira leaned down through the trapdoor. âEverything all right down there?â
I smiled up at her. âI think so. The runes are in place.â
Mira grinned. âWell then. Youâve earned this.â She passed me a bundle wrapped in warm cloth. âFresh apple bread. Still hot.â
I cradled it with both hands, the warmth seeping into my fingers like thanks.
As I stepped out into the morning light beside Naerel, I allowed myself a quiet exhale. Iâd stumbled, yes. But Iâd done the work. And the work had held.
Back at the cottage, the air was still and cool, the hearth down to its resting embers. Naerel hung her wrap by the door and moved without a word to stir the fire back to life. A few deft motions with kindling and tinder, a whisper of heat magic from her fingertips, and the flames caught again with a quiet crackle. She fetched the blackened kettle from its hook and filled it from the pitcher on the sideboard before settling it back onto the hearthâs swing-arm bracket. The clunk of iron against iron echoed softly through the room. I sank into my usual seat at the table, the apple bread bundle still warm in my hands. The scent had deepened on the walk homeâcinnamon, cooked fruit, and a hint of sweet glaze that stuck to the cloth.
Naerel moved around me, adding dried orange peel, mint, and a pinch of chopped root to the pot with quiet familiarity. She didnât speak until the kettle began its slow, soft whistle.
Finally, she poured two mugs and set one in front of me. âYou did better than expected.â
I blinked. âReally?â
âYou stumbled. Corrected. Finished. Thatâs the work. Precision mattersâbut so does recovery.â
I let that settle. âIt wasnât⦠perfect.â
âIt doesnât have to be. It has to hold.â She took a long sip. âAnd it did.â
We sat for a while in companionable silence, sipping tea. I let the warmth seep into my hands and chest. I hadnât realized how much Iâd needed itâsomething still, something grounding.
Then Naerel stood and went to the shelves. âNext job.â
I looked up warily. âAlready?â
She gave me a sidelong glance. âWards donât care if youâre tired. They expire when theyâre ready.â
She handed me a thick leather-bound ledger. The spine was cracked from use, and the pages inside were dense with diagrams, annotations, and tidy script.
âThis is the ward register for the cottage and the grounds. Youâll find where they are, what they do, and when they were last renewed. Most are overdue.â
I flipped through the pages. Each ward was described in methodical detail: function, location, rune configuration, reinforcement notes. Many entries were marked refresh within seasonâand a few had been crossed through and rewritten with urgent notations.
âYouâll check each one,â she continued. âWalk the perimeter. The garden. The shed. The interior corners. See if they hold. If not, redo them.â
âAll of them?â I asked.
She nodded once. âAll of them.â
âYouâre not going to help?â
She gave me a thin smile. âNo. But Iâll know if you missed one.â
I glanced toward the door, then back at the register. The pages crackled faintly in my hands.
Naerel pointed toward the window. âStart with the herb garden. Thereâs a small pest-repelling sigil set in the ground near the rosemary. Youâll feel if itâs still strong.â
I drained the last of my tea and tucked the journal under my arm. The morning mist had lifted by the time I stepped outside, replaced with soft sun and birdsong. The scent of mint and thyme drifted on the breeze as I made my way to the garden, the register pressed close to my chest. This was more than practice now. This was someoneâs home. No more slate. No more chalk dust. Just the real thing.
I stepped into the herb garden with the ward ledger tucked under my arm, the early sun warm on my shoulders. Bees buzzed lazily around the lavender, and the rosemary bush rustled softly in the breeze. I turned the pages until I found the first entry. Pest repellentâRepelkin. Set in slate. Buried near base of rosemary. Refresh every three months. Status: 9 days overdue.
I knelt by the bush and brushed my fingers through the soil until I felt the flat, cool surface of the stone. It had sunk slightly over time, and a mat of old roots clung to the top edge. I dug it free and held it up to the light. The rune etched into the slate was barely visibleâchalk-thin lines faded to little more than scratches, no hum of magic left in them. I pulled a cloth from my kit and carefully wiped the stone clean, then laid it across my knee.
Drawing the rune came easier now. I had memorized the spiral-square pattern, and the slate offered a smoother surface than bark or soil. I etched the lines with my chalk, then placed my hand over the center and pushed a slow, steady thread of magic into the stone. The rune shimmered faintly, then settledâanchored, humming with quiet strength. I buried it again, flush with the roots, and jotted a quick note in the margin of the ledger: Fully refreshed. Magic held clean. Roots didnât interfere. One down.
Behind the cottage, by the stone wall of the shed, the next entry waited. DampbindâMoisture barrier. Set upright behind the rain barrel. Slate cracked. Redraw on replacement stone if needed. I found the old slate leaning awkwardly against a patch of moss. The crack through its center was clean but deepâprobably from last winterâs frost. The rune had flaked off almost entirely, no more than ghosted lines now. I tried to lift it, and the whole thing split in two in my hands.
âWell,â I muttered, âguess thatâs a clear answer.â
I reached into my satchel and pulled out a fresh blank slate. This one was rounder, a little heavier. I placed it on the edge of the path and crouched beside it. I redrew the layered ripple shapes of Dampbind, adjusted slightly to curve with the stoneâs surface. It took me two triesâthe first time, the arc wobbled too far inward and collapsed the symmetry. I erased it with my cloth and started over, breathing slowly, steadying my hand. The second time it held. When I pressed magic into it, the stone warmed faintly beneath my palm. I slid it upright behind the barrel and checked it with a slow pass of magic. It pulsed back: gentle, sure.
I spent the better part of the day this way. One by one, I found the old runestonesâwedged under eaves, behind pantry shelves, tucked beneath loose stones in the garden wall. Most were worn but intact. A few were broken or sunken, or had grown moss so thick that I had to scrape them clean with a brush. Some still held a faint hum of old magic, clinging to the stone like the smell of smoke in old fabric. Others were long gone, their runes nothing more than weathered grooves.
The pantry Stasismark was the hardest. The rune on that one had faded unevenly, and when I tried to refresh it, my magic pulled too sharply. The spell snapped back, inert. I had to scrub the slate, recenter my lines, and try againâthis time slower, with more intention. When it clicked into place, the air around the stone felt cooler, more stable.
Each ward taught me somethingâabout line weight, or how much magic to use, or how texture and curve could affect spellbinding. I updated the ledger with every change, adding small notes like shifted angle for better drainage or replaced with smaller stone, reinforcement added.
By late afternoon, I reached the final stoneâset along the garden path, near the old tree stump. Boundary deterrentâRepelkin layered under Sensebind. Set flat beneath the moss stone. Refresh both. Priority: High. The moss had grown thick over the boundary stone, and I had to carefully peel it back, revealing a flat oval of slate buried nearly flush with the earth. The runes were completely washed awayâonly the faintest dips in the stone remained. I wiped it clean and sat cross-legged beside it. Repelkin first, clean and simple, then Sensebind, nested above in a triplet arc that curled in toward itself. I redrew both, whispering the names under my breath as I pressed magic into the stone in two slow waves.
The air shifted. Not a sound, but a sensationâlike the soft thrum of alertness in the back of the mind. A signal waiting quietly for something to cross its line. I exhaled and leaned back on my hands, blinking up at the sky. The sun had shifted, low and golden now. My legs were sore, fingers stained with chalk and earth. But the wards were in place. My wards. My work. When I stepped back inside, dusty and tired, Naerel looked up from where she was chopping roots at the counter.
âWell?â
âSeven stones found. Five replaced. Two refreshed.â
âFailures?â
âTwo false starts. One broken slate. I made notes.â
She nodded. âAny surprises?â
âA few. But nothing I couldnât fix.â
Naerel gestured to the kettle, already waiting for heat. âThen put water on and clean your hands. Youâve earned your evening.â
You could be reading stolen content. Head to the original site for the genuine story.
I smiled and moved to the hearth. The fire had gone low again, but a little spark and breath brought it back to life. I set the kettle in place and rinsed my hands in the basin, watching the streaks of chalk and moss run off like river water.
Behind me, the cottage was quiet, the walls solid, the air calm. Everything was holding. The stew was thick with lentils, garlic, and carrots pulled from the garden that morning. I tore off a piece of bread and dipped it absently, watching the way the candlelight flickered across the inside of my journal, still open between us. Naerel didnât speak at first. She ate slowly, carefully, like she did everythingâwith a kind of deliberate attention that made silence feel natural.
After a while, she set her spoon down and reached for her tea. âYou handled the wards well. Clean lines, good layering. You didnât rush.â
I nodded, but didnât smile. âIt helped, having something solid to follow. But itâs not the only thing I came here to learn.â
Her eyes flicked toward me over the rim of her mug. âGo on.â
âI want more herbal lore. Deeper knowledge.â I leaned forward, resting my elbows on the table. âI stayed a few weeks with Rennet. Just long enough to learn how to keep someone breathing in the woods, how to stop a fever with pine bark and hope, how to guess at a wound by the way someone winces.â
Naerel gave a knowing grunt. âSounds like him.â
"He taught me to be resourceful,â I said. âTo treat with whatâs on hand. But it was all so fast, and we were always moving. I didnât get to stay anywhere and learn how things grow through a full season. Or how to prepare remedies the right way, not just⦠smash and steep and pray.â
Naerel tore off a piece of bread, thoughtful. âSo you want refinement.â
I nodded. âAnd depth. I want to know the plants Iâve seen, and the ones I havenât. What to gather, when to harvest. The difference between something that soothes and something that masks.â
She reached for my journal and flipped to the herbal section without asking. Sheâd seen it earlier, but this time she really read. Her fingertip traced a page where Iâd sketched bloodleaf and scribbled three different ratios for burn salve, trying to remember which had stung the least.
âSome good instincts,â she said. âSome Rennet shortcuts, too.â
âI know.â I smiled faintly. âIâve learned to ask, âIs this safe?â Now I want to learn to ask, âIs this best?ââ
She nodded once, a slow, considered movement. Then handed the journal back. âWeâll start with the stillroom tomorrow. Youâll label what you know from sight. Weâll talk through what you think you know. Then weâll brew a few basicsâdigestive tonic, bruise balm, maybe a calming oil if we have time.â
I folded the journal closed and cradled my tea. âIâd like that.â
Naerel rose to refill the kettle. âAnd youâll keep notes. Proper ones. No more shorthand from half a trail lesson.â
I gave a mock salute. âYes, healer.â
She gave a rare smirk. âSmart mouth. Thatâs how I know youâre still awake.â
We cleaned the table together, moving quietly around each other in the practiced rhythm of people who both preferred silence to small talk. The fire settled low behind the hearth grate, and outside, the wind carried the scent of mint and loam through the cracked window. As I crawled into bed in the loft later, I kept the journal beside me, open to a blank page. Tomorrow, Iâd start writing everything I wanted to remember.
The scent of lemon balm and dried nettle hit me the moment I stirred. Not sharp or overpowering, just presentâa hint of sunlight trapped in green leaves, mingled with something earthy and faintly sweet. Morning had come quietly. The soft warmth of the hearth's lingering embers still clung to the air, and a faint draft stirred the hanging bundles overhead. My legs were sore in a satisfying way, not from strain, but from steady use. Practice and repetition. Iâd forgotten how good that could feel.
Naerel was already at the table, sipping something from a clay cup, her silver hair plaited neatly down her back. She didnât look up as I came downstairs, just gestured to the kettle and a set of herb tins left open beside it.
âMix your own this morning,â she said. âWhat you think your body needs.â
I rubbed the sleep from my eyes and padded over to the hearth. The kettle was hot but not boiling. I selected lemon balm, nettle, and a pinch of dried raspberry leafâsomething gentle and balancing. The scent rose as I steeped the mixture, coaxing a quiet comfort into the day. We didnât speak as we drank. The silence wasnât awkward. It just was.
When I finished my cup, Naerel finally glanced at me. âTime to return to your roots,â she said with the faintest quirk of a smile. âBefore you lose yourself in slates and symbols. Come.â
She led me into the stillroomâa narrow side room filled with shelves, baskets, jars, bundles, and the dusty scent of hundreds of dried things. My fingers tingled just stepping into it.
âYouâve been collecting. Sketching. Naming. Time to see what you actually remember.â
My stomach gave a small flip.
Naerel handed me a leather-bound journalâblank pages, no labelsâand a charcoal pencil.
âYour task is to identify everything on these two shelves by name and purpose. One morningâs work. No books. No labels. Use your senses. Sight, scent, touch.â
âWhat if I get something wrong?â I asked.
âThen we correct it,â she said. âYou canât hurt anyone with dry leaves and caution.â
With that, she stepped back, arms folded, and gave me space.
I started slow. My fingers hovered over the first jarâa curled-up set of yellowed leaves that smelled faintly of cloves and pine. I turned the jar carefully, feeling the brittle texture. Comfrey? No, too sharp. Goldbrush. I wrote it down: Goldbrush. Wound binder. Apply as poultice, especially with heat.
One down.
The next few came more easily. Dried yarrow, with its feathered white blooms and faintly sweet scent. Spiderleaf, leathery and curled. Nettle, unmistakable in its sting that lingered even when dried. But then came a row of seeds I didnât know. Small, dark purple, smooth. I turned the jar slowly and sniffedâsomething bitter and clean. My gut whispered bitternut, but I wasnât certain. I wrote: Unknown seed. Possibly bitternut. Digestive or purgative? Ask. I moved on.
Hour passed quietly. I crouched, stood, leaned. My hands dusted with herbs. My fingertips tingled from contact. I surprised myself with how much I did remember. But more than once, I stared at a bundle or a jar and felt blank. Not ignorant. Just aware of how vast this work really was. By midday, Naerel brought me a slice of seedcake and a mug of broth. She didnât ask how it was going. Just set them down beside me and walked away again. I munched and scribbled. The act of writing seemed to helpâputting each piece into a shape I could carry forward.
By the end of the second shelf, my legs were sore again. My mind buzzed with half-remembered notes and lessons Iâd overheard in Rennelâs kitchen. It had only been a few weeks with him, but the rhythm of his work had clearly settled in me. I remembered how he talked to plants before cutting them. How he never used the same knife twice in a row. How he tested tinctures by smell before taste.
I finished with one last jar of dried mushroom capsâdeep brown, shriveled, with a cinnamon-wood scent. Oakcap. Used for grounding teas and body restoration. Donât mix with cloudwort. When I finally looked up, Naerel had returned. She said nothing at first, just picked up the journal and flipped through. A single nod.
âYou remember more than I thought.â
I smiled, tired and content. âI remember enough to want to remember better.â
âGood,â she said. âBefore we dive into blending, we eat.â
She turned toward the kitchen and began pulling down plates. âThereâs leftover squash in the larder, and I refuse to go hungry just because youâre eager.â
Grinning, I stood and stretched. My mind was still full of herbs and guesses, but the thought of warm food was grounding.
âGo out to the garden,â Naerel added. âGather something bright for seasoning. Nothing bitter. Think of what pairs well with squash.â
I took a basket and stepped out into the garden. The sun had risen high, warming the soil and sending the scent of herbs into the air. Bees hovered lazily over lavender and sage, and the gentle breeze stirred the tops of marjoram and mint.
After a thoughtful circuit, I clipped sprigs of lemon thyme, a few broad leaves of sweet sage, and petals from the marigolds by the fence. Their soft honey scent would round the squashâs sweetness nicely. Back inside, Naerel was slicing the squash and setting it to roast over the hearth in a cast-iron pan. I set my herbs down on a wooden board beside her.
âGood choices,â she said, eyeing the marigold with particular approval. âStarting to think like a cook. Or a healer who likes her food.â
We ate in companionable quiet, the roasted squash buttery and fragrant, lifted by the brightness of herbs and served with slices of flatbread to soak up the oil. When we were finished, Naerel stood, wiped her hands, and gestured toward the stillroom again.
âNow,â she said. âLetâs see what you can make of all that knowledge. Weâre starting simple. Salves and tinctures.â
The afternoon sunlight angled through the windows as we returned to the stillroom. She laid out a tray of ingredients and pointed to a set of labeled drawers containing dried herbs.
âYour task: prepare three remedies. One balm for bruises, one tincture for digestion, and one salve for minor burns. No step-by-step guidance. You choose the herbs, the base, the method. Iâll watch.â
My heart beat faster, but I nodded. I could do this. As I worked, Naerel asked quiet questions now and then. What happens to arnica root when boiled too long? How does mint behave differently in alcohol versus honey infusions? What binds better with beeswax: plantain or comfrey? I answered where I could and took careful notes where I couldnât. The room filled with scentâsweet, sharp, pungent, warm. Oil melted in the double boiler as I stirred in crushed leaves. Alcohol tinctures caught the light in glinting amber. The beeswax smelled faintly of smoke and flowers as I folded it into the balm. By the time we finished, the light was beginning to fade. Naerel inspected each preparation, said nothing for a long while, and then finally nodded.
âGood foundation,â she said. âYouâve more instinct than I expected. But instinct only takes you so far. Tomorrow, we begin refining. Side effects. Interactions. Shelf life. Ratios.â
I looked down at the soft green balm Iâd poured into a jar, proud and already itching to do better.
âYes,â I said quietly. âI want to know it all.â
That night, I barely slept. Not from nerves or restlessness, but from anticipation. My dreams were a drifting haze of herbs and formulas, colors and textures dancing behind my eyes. When the light of morning finally reached the stillroom window, I was already up and washing my hands in the cold basin by the hearth. Naerel met me with a quiet nod and a steaming cup of the same herb blend Iâd made the day before. We drank in silence, and then she gestured to the bench where Iâd left my journal.
âToday, we begin refinement. Itâs one thing to know what a plant can do. Itâs another to understand what it might also do if you arenât careful.â
She cleared a space on the table and laid out a series of jars. Each held something familiarânettle, yarrow, elderflower, mint, plantainâbut beside each was a second jar, smaller, labeled in Naerelâs careful hand. I leaned in and read:
Nettle â Infusion: Restorative / Overuse: Fluid retention
Yarrow â Poultice: Clotting aid / Ingestion: Stomach upset in sensitive individuals
Elderflower â Steam: Fever relief / Tincture: Risky for children under 6
Mint â Tincture: Digestive / Oversteeped: Heartburn
Plantain â Salve: Skin healing / Spoils fast if base isnât hot enough
She handed me my journal. âYouâll add your own notes beside these. Youâll brew, test, steep, stirâand weâll talk. Itâs not about memorizing lists. Itâs about pattern. Understanding why something works, and when it might stop working.â
So I did. One herb at a time, I took what I knew, then layered in what I hadnât. With Naerel watching and prompting gently, I steeped a concentrated mint tincture, tasted it, and felt the burn creep up my throatâtoo long. I compared a quick-heat plantain salve with a cold-blended version and watched the latter spoil before sunset. I cataloged not just uses but thresholds, tolerances, shelf life, and reactions.
By midday, my pages were a patchwork of tidy writing and frantic corrections. Arrows pointed to âdouble-check this with honey base?â and âtoo strong for small children?â and âcombine with marshroot to offset bitterness.â
We paused only for a short lunchâfresh bread, dried tomatoes in oil, and water with muddled citrus peel and sage.
As I chewed, Naerel asked, âWhat did Rennel teach you about this part?â
I swallowed and smiled a little. âHe was careful. Measured. I think he saw too many people rush to help and cause more harm.â
She nodded. âHe wasnât wrong.â
After lunch, we returned to the stillroom. I spent the rest of the afternoon drawing side-by-side entries for each herb I knew. On one side, my original notes. On the other, new observations. We made test batchesâsome under different heat, some with different infusions. I was encouraged to fail and then reflect. By sundown, the stillroom smelled of layered herbs, alcohol, beeswax, and scorched lemon balm. My hands were stained, and my hair had bits of dried yarrow in it. But I had learned. And tomorrow, Iâd learn more.
The next morning, I woke to the creak of the cottage settling and the quiet clink of crockery in the kitchen. Naerel was already awake, steam curling from the cup in her hands. She glanced at me over the rim and gave a small nod.
âUp, are you? Good. No stillroom today.â
I blinked, mid-stretch. âNo?â
âYouâre going for a walk,â she said. âA long one.â
That got my attention. She turned toward the shelf and tapped an almost-empty jar.
âPurplecaps. Weâre nearly out.â
I padded over to look. Inside were the remnants of a few curled, dusky mushrooms, their caps a faint dusty violet. I knew the name, but Iâd never foraged them myself.
âTheyâre edible, right?â I asked.
âPerfectly,â Naerel replied. âMost townsfolk stew them when theyâre fresh. But when dried and rehydrated, they release a gentle compound that settles the stomach. Excellent for those recovering from illness, or for travel-weary bellies. Not flashy, but useful. Thatâs the kind of remedy worth knowing.â
She handed me a foragerâs basket lined with soft cloth and a narrow-bladed knife. âYouâll find them in deep shade. Only under fallen trees or near rotting logs, where the light barely reaches. They bruise easily, so pack with care.â
I grinned. After so many days in the stillroom, I couldnât deny how much I missed the hush of the woods.
âIâll be back before supper,â I promised, slinging my satchel over one shoulder.
âTake your time,â she said, already returning to her notes. âItâs not about speed. Itâs about the right ones.â
Outside, the air was cool and damp, full of birdsong and the scent of wet bark. I wandered deep into the forest behind the cottage, skirting brambles and climbing over mossy stones. I looked for the dim placesâthe hollows beneath leaning trunks, the dark side of fallen branches. The kind of places where things softened and grew quietly.
It was nearly midday when I found the first one. Nestled under the curved root of a toppled cedar, a small cluster of violet caps peeked through the loam. Their edges were ruffled like tiny skirts, the color richer where the soil was damp. I knelt, cutting them free with care, and laid them gently in the basket.
From there, I found moreânever many in one place, but enough. Each discovery gave me a small pulse of satisfaction. There was something deeply grounding about itâbeing alone in the green, hands in the earth, seeking something both humble and healing.
By the time the sun began to slip behind the trees, the basket was nearly full. I made my way home slowly, the familiar path taking on a golden glow as dusk settled in.
Naerel looked up when I entered, covered in leaf mold and carrying the basket like a prize.
âDidnât expect you back with that many,â she said, pulling back the cloth. âThese are excellent. No bruises, no rot.â
âThey were growing like little secrets under every other log,â I said, setting the basket down with a pleased sigh.
She nodded once, approving. âWeâll dry them in the morning. Good to have them back in stock. Youâll be glad you did when someone comes in with belly trouble and no appetite.â
I sat, poured myself a glass of water, and stretched out my sore legs. It felt good to have earned the ache. Dinner that evening was quiet but warmâroasted root vegetables drizzled with herb oil, slices of flatbread, and a thick stew full of beans and dried squash. We didnât talk much at first. My muscles hummed pleasantly from the dayâs foraging, and the scent of the meal filled the cottage like a comforting blanket. Naerel finally broke the silence as she set down her bowl and leaned back in her chair.
âYouâve come far in a short time,â she said.
I looked up, caught off guard by the softness in her tone.
âYouâve got instincts, a good hand, and better sense than most apprentices Iâve had. But I think Iâve taken you as far as I can.â
I blinked. âAlready?â
She gave a small shrug, more resigned than surprised. âYou donât need another week of repeating what you already know. What you need now are new challenges. New plants. New people. Different landscapes to learn from.â
She stood, crossed the room, and returned with a small bundle wrapped in oilcloth. She placed it gently on the table.
âSome of my old journals. Notes from when I was younger. Most of them are from this region, and I donât need them anymore. But donât rely on them too muchâreference, not gospel. Youâve already started your own, and thatâs where your true learning lives.â
I ran my fingers along the edge of the bundle, both honored and a little overwhelmed.
Naerel smiled faintly. âDonât look like that. Iâm not kicking you out tonight. But tomorrow, you should begin planning. Thereâs a village south of here, deep in the old forests. Takes weeks by foot, but there are local carriages that travel between villagesâyou can pay to ride part of the way.â
âWhatâs the village called?â I asked.
She hesitated, then chuckled to herself. âDoesnât really have one name. Locals just call it the Deeproot Crossing, or Old Hollow. Doesnât matter. Itâs... unique.â
âUnique how?â I asked warily.
Naerelâs eyes gleamed. âMulticultural. Mixed. Not like the towns up here, where everyoneâs got the same face and the same assumptions. Youâll see elves, dwarves, humans, gnomes, fellborn. People who wanted to leave city life behind and found their own way. Youâll learn a lot if you keep your ears open and your mouth closed.â
She went quiet for a moment, then reached for a piece of parchment from a nearby shelf and began writing. Her hand moved with steady grace, the tip of her charcoal scratching across the page.
âIâll give you a letter of introduction. Thereâs someone there I trust. An old friend.â Her mouth twisted in a wry smile. âOld Bitty. Lives just past the market square in a green stone cottage with a copper weathervane. Youâll know it when you see it.â
I grinned. âOld Bitty?â
Naerel didnât bother to hide her amusement. âIt started as a joke. She liked it. It stuck.â
She folded the letter neatly, sealed it with a pressed wax stamp of a fern, and handed it to me.
âWe donât travel anymore. Neither of us wants to leave our gardens for fear something will happen while weâre gone. But we still exchange letters now and then. Recipes. Remedies. Rants. Sheâll teach you if you show her youâre worth the time.â
I held the letter with both hands, the weight of it sinking in. âThank you,â I said quietly.
Naerel nodded. âYouâve earned it. Finish the drying tomorrow. Rest. Then you go.â
The thought of leaving brought a strange ache to my chestâpart fear, part excitement. But even as the fire crackled low in the hearth and shadows lengthened across the beams above, I knew it was time. The world was wide, and I had so much more to learn. Later that night, I found myself curled in the chair by the hearth, a mug of steeped chamomile and fennel cradled in my hands. The fire had been banked low, its soft glow flickering across the stone walls, casting slow-moving shadows that made the stillroom beyond look deeper than it was. Naerel had gone to bed already, leaving me to my thoughts. The letter sat on the table beside me, wax seal still unbroken. The journals, too, wrapped neatly in their cloth. They hadnât moved since dinner, but I felt their presence like gravityâsteady, quiet, pulling me forward.
I let out a slow breath, staring into the fire. I wasnât ready. That was the first thing that surfacedâsharp and defensive. I hadnât learned everything yet. There were still side effects to memorize, recipes to practice, tinctures to refine. But then the other truth rose to meet it. I had learned a great deal. More than I thought I could in just a short time. I could identify herbs by scent and feel. Iâd prepared salves, layered wards, harvested in moonlight and silence. Iâd felt the rhythm of healing in my hands. And I wanted more. Not just more practice, but more depth. More variety. More understanding. I wasnât finished. But I was ready to keep going.
I sipped the tea, letting its warmth root me in the moment. Outside, the wind stirred faintly through the trees, rustling the eaves like a whisper. The garden would still be there in the morning. So would Naerel, quietly brewing tea and pretending not to watch me pack. I smiled to myself, a small curve of the lips, and leaned back in the chair. Tomorrow, Iâd begin again. New soil. New herbs. New questions. But for tonight, I let myself be still, steeped in all I had learnedâand all I was becoming.
ð FIELD JOURNAL NOTES
Purplecap Mushrooms
Location: Shaded hollows beneath fallen trees in dense forest.
Description: Smooth caps with a dusky violet hue, thick white stems, and a faint nutty scent.
Use: Edible. When dried and later rehydrated, aids digestion and soothes upset stomachs. Commonly added to stews or teas.
Notes: Must be harvested carefully to avoid damaging the gills. Prefer cool, moist conditions. Often overlooked due to their camouflaged appearance.
Goldbrush Leaves
Location: Collected, dried, and stored in the stillroom.
Description: Yellowed, slightly curled leaves with a clove-pine aroma.
Use: Wound binding when applied warm as a poultice. Speeds clotting and eases bruising.
Notes: Easily confused with comfrey at first glanceâuse scent to confirm identity.
Oakcap Mushrooms
Location: Dried and stored; origin unknown.
Description: Deep brown shriveled caps, earthy cinnamon scent.
Use: Grounding tea ingredient, restorative for fatigue and magical depletion.
Notes: Do not mix with cloudwort. Interaction causes disorientation.
Marigold Petals
Location: Garden, along the southern fence.
Description: Bright golden-orange flowers with soft, rounded petals and a honeyed scent.
Use: Digestive and anti-inflammatory properties. Used in salves and to brighten dishes.
Notes: Excellent pairing with squash. Attracts bees and beneficial insects.
Lemon Thyme & Sweet Sage
Location: Herb garden, western patch.
Description: Small-leaved thyme with citrus overtones; broad, soft sage leaves with a mild, sweet aroma.
Use: Culinary and medicinal. Soothe the stomach and boost appetite.
Notes: Sage pairs well with root vegetables. Thyme best used fresh.