Stone, brass, and broken glass give way to bark, soil, and spotted
shadows. The window exits between two tall pines at the edge of a
grassy glade, and I reach back into the chapel to pull Helena
through.
Her fingers latch onto my arm, hands curling around like I'm a
particularly thick piece of rope. She's light enough that I can just
pull her straight up to standing, but I do have to step back so she
doesn't plant her boots on mine. My tail lifts, too, so it doesn't
become a tripping hazard.
Against all odds, she manages to plant her boots right on mine
anyways, and needs to use my arm as a brace. I suppose it's a little
late to ask her not to step on any toes... heh.
I stifle a chuckle, shaking my head. Focus, Ivy!
Helena's hands slide off me, and she backs away to massage her arms.
"More, um, pressure,” she explains, wincing. "It feels
like I'm being squeezed by, by a thick blanket..."
I nod, doing my best to look sympathetic; I can’t really tell the
difference between one hundred and two hundred without concentrating.
Still, I lean in a bit to take a look at her. Tails make for great
counterweights.
"Do you feel any different? Soreness on parts of the body, pain
in places that don't exist, and so on? I don't see anything." I
say, meeting her eyes. The irises are closer to turquoise, now,
shimmering slightly in the light filtering between the trees.
"Your eyes have changed a bit more, though." I add, looking
away.
Helena's lips curl. She pats herself down, muttering, and then shakes
her head. "No, nothing. That, um. I don't think I'm ready to
re-tailor my own clothes, so that's a good thing. H-ha. Oh! Right.
Crystal formation starts on the second layer, doesn't it?"
She glances about, eyes flitting around the grove.
"Technically, it starts at two hundred marches of depth," I
say, though she doesn't really react. Prodding at my magic a bit, I
shrug. "The second layer usually is deep enough, though, so-"
And just like that, she's off. She flits over to the trees, poking at
the bark and running her hands along the branches. I follow along at
a more leisurely pace, taking in the sights and sounds.
They're ordinary, for a leafy forest. Birds chirp in the distance,
leaves play in a gentle wind, the soft soil rustles with each
footstep. Despite the lack of the Sun, the shadows are long and dark
like those of a summer afternoon.
My Delver's instincts come to the fore, next. Those birds could be
monsters, if they aren't sourceless noise. Wind has to come from
somewhere, it could be important. The soil has too many distinct
leaves in it for summer, and not enough for autumn.
And those shadows...
I'm vindicated when Helena strides right into one, vanishing as if
she'd stepped through pitch-black ink.
Before I can really worry, though, she steps back through the shadows
holding a crystalline leaf, glittering dully in the dappled light.
She’s holding it delicately, carefully; probably wise, with a thin
Wind crystal like that.
“Fascinating!” Helena beams, running her fingers across the
crystal. A weak Wind swirls around her hand, glowing a faint green.
“I saw it growing on a low-hanging branch. Low quality, but even
those cost way too much for me, usually!”
“By all means, take ‘em.” I shrug, smiling as her enthusiasm
starts to infect me, too. “Stick close, got it? Those shadows get
unnaturally dark between the trees, so if you get lost... there’s
no telling what could happen.”
Helena hums, turning the leaf over in her hands. She isn’t paying
the slightest bit of attention to her surroundings— this is why I
don’t like working with rookies and novices. “This should work
perfectly! I can—”
“Helena.” I growl, stepping close enough to hear her breathing
hitch. My tail strikes against the ground, drawing a furrow in the
soft soil. “Stick close,?”
She slips the crystal leaf into a pouch, looking up at me with wide
eyes. “Um. Sorry, sorry. Yes, I’ll stick close.”
I sigh, moving away and doing my best not to grimace. Running a hand
through my hair, I say, “You’re excited; that’s fine. More than
fine, actually. Just be sensible.”
Helena fidgets with her hands, flushing. “Ah. Thanks. Ah, Priest
Dongbaek and my church family think this is too dangerous. I’m just
excited to actually be in a Delve, and, and, it’ll help me become a
mage!”
There it is again. She’s called the Restoration Church her family
before. Family isn’t really something I think about all that often.
“Dangerous is right,” I agree, nodding towards the trees, “I’d
put a few gold on this being where the wooden wolves came from. Tough
for second-layer monsters, but I can handle them.”
“But not too dangerous! How else am I going to learn, if I can’t
afford an apprenticeship?” Helena says, a bit indignant. “And,
um, how do you know which way is the right way to go?”
“Expert Delvers can sense the minor changes in depth and use that
for orientation. I can sort of do that, but it depends on if this is
actually a traversable forest, or a bunch of groves connected the
same way the chapel window linked to the trees. Speaking of...”
Striding back towards our entrance, I push magic into my hands to
call up my claws. I cut a quick X on both trees, imbuing the motion
with the faintest hint of Lightning to darken the mark. “There,
just in case. I’ll do that as we go, too.”
“Oh! Good idea. And... um, are you saying we should triangulate the
location? Fascinating! How would you keep a heading, then?”
An early skill for Delvers is orienteering. And, shortly after, Delve
orienteering, because sometimes a layer entrance isn’t obvious.
They don't like giving out hints, either.
“Generally, an actual compass, and I don’t think we’ll need to
triangulate. We aren’t deep enough for it to be too complicated.”
I say, patting myself down. Chest pocket, no, I would’ve felt that
when I changed. Check anyways. Pant pockets, no, these are regular
pants and I am not free from the curse of pocketless womens' pants.
Tailors are a menace. “Where did I—”
Helena giggles a bit. Ah, so I’ve done something foolish or funny.
At least it gets a good reaction?
She reaches into her bag and tosses the compass at me underhand. “You
put it in there when we were preparing, Ivy.”
I snatch it out of the air with a sigh, offering an embarrassed smile
in return. I guess rushing to Delve is making me a bit scattered.
“Apparently not! Anyways, navigation. This is mostly in case we
need to get around an object, and don’t have time for me to orient
myself by sensing Depth. That takes a bit. So, watch me while I do
this? I need to focus.”
“Um, of course!”
I can manage it on my own, and do so safely. I frequently do. But
here’s Helena, an apprentice mage with excellent control, so I can
risk closing my eyes and pushing away my senses for a minute. Plus, I
doubt anything native to the second layer can actually hurt me.
With my eyes closed, I take a long, steadying breath. “I just need
to sense where downhill is, Delvewise. There’s a term for them—”
“Abstract depth gradients?”
“—but that sounds dumb, so I call it Delve down,” I finish with
a huff. I nod in Helena’s direction without opening my eyes. Is my
soul getting tugged more in, uh, no, not that direction. A little bit
more to the left? “Whatever you call it, it’s not easy. It’s
like trying to find a... I don’t have a good comparison here.”
I’m hardly a poet or a writer, despite the best attempts of my
father. Pretty words, eh.
I wave it off, frowning as I force my focus further inward. There’s
the ripple of Helena’s Wind magic as she toys with some leaves,
there’s the tug of the World, and is Delve down. It’s
far off, if the gentle slope is anything to go by.
Something brushes my natural senses. An odd noise, barely audible;
the faintest hints of a strange scent. Maybe it’s nothing, sure,
but you don’t stay in this job long if you’re not a little
paranoid.
My eyes snap open, tail lashing behind me. I adjust the dial on the
compass, carefully twisting the point to line up with Delve down, and
twist the second dial to mark where North was when I set the
direction.
“So, Helena,” I say finally, checking the compass heading before
looking up to make eye contact with her. “Looks like we’re
heading sixty... four, degrees off North, pretty close to
East-North-East of whatever North is here. Let’s get going.”
She pushes a few stray waves of hair out of her face and nods,
banishing her Wind magic with the other hand. “It’s no, um, I’m
glad to watch out for you. I’m sure we’d be safe, between your
strength, my spells, and the enchanted clothes, but it’s important
to be careful!”
I arch an eyebrow, striding past her and to the edge of the glade,
letting my tail drag through the low grass. “There is no in
Delves, Helena. If we can go down, monsters can come up, got it?”
Helena mutters something about it being statistically unlikely. I
remember that book too; it’s practically required reading for
Delvers.
Correcting her, I decide, isn’t worth it. She’ll learn, and
ideally, she’ll stick around a bit longer.
Without comment, I check to see she’s following, then pass through
the trees— into the strange shadows, and into the forest itself.
Despite it all, I’m feeling the thrum of excitement edging in.
There’s something waiting for us, and I’d love to hit something
substantial.
Though, that’s inviting calamity, isn’t it? Feh. Nevermind.
The shadows, as it turns out, are another strange but harmless
abstraction. Dark, sometimes impenetrable, but not hiding any strange
portals or bending space in impossible ways. No risk of getting
horribly lost by way of implausible geometries.
It’s kind of disappointing. Safer for the both of us, though, and
quite useful.
I'm peering out from one of those impossible shadows, arm stuck out
in front of Helena in a silent gesture to hold. Wind swirls around
her hands, sharp and gleaming; the feel of it is so faint, so tightly
held that I can barely sense it.
I know that if I glance over at her, I'll see her eyes glittering
with anticipation and steely focus. She’s fallen into the rhythm of
hunting with surprising ease: slinging spells at wooden wolves,
slinking from shadow to shadow, and hanging back while I finish the
job. We’ve hunted three so far, all of them wandering alone, and
this one will make our fourth.
Our target stalks through a small clearing, silent save for the faint
creaking of wooden joints. It swings its head from side to side,
scanning its surroundings and sniffing at the air. Its head turns
towards us, tilting, and I hold my breath.
Helena twitches, her shoulder brushing my side. I flex my hand again
to remind her: hold.
Wooden eyes stare sightlessly into the shadows. I stare back,
answering some urge bubbling up from deep within.
So we wait.
The author's narrative has been misappropriated; report any instances of this story on Amazon.
And wait.
The monster turns away.
I exhale softly, wincing as Helena’s own attempt stutters and
rasps. It looks like the monster didn’t hear, fortunately. I allow
myself to smile, just a bit, and clench my hand. .
Helena brings her hands together, clapping loudly, and the greenish
light of Wind turns silver. My legs tense, and I step forward, claws
at the ready. Her palms slide against each other.
For a heartbeat, the air bends, curving the world around it like
thick glass. Our eyes meet, and she nods imperceptibly. The bent air
slices forwards, a half-crescent of Wind followed by the ear-stinging
noise of a whip crack.
I lunge after it, pushing a bit of my own Wind into my legs to try
and keep up. It’s not a one-two punch unless the hits come quickly,
after all.
Punch one happens when the ‘blade’ of air crashes into the
monster, carving a hunk of wood from a rear leg and scattering
splinters everywhere. The monster snarls, stumbling and twisting to
face this new threat...
And, now that it’s off balance, I come in with punch two. One of my
claws digs into the monster’s neck as it loses its footing, yanking
upwards in a Wind-boosted grab that lets me lift and slam it into a
tree. Bark joins the splinters on the forest floor, and I wrap my
other hand around the monster’s snout before it can bite at me. My
palm cups its chin, and my fingers sting under the strain of holding
the damned thing in place.
Its claws scrabble in the air uselessly, flailing and barely managing
to scrape at my clothes. Helena’s enchantments are holding up
pretty well, it seems.
This little trick took a few tries, but I think I have it down now.
My shoulder will ache tomorrow though, more than the rest of me will.
I use my underhand grip to pull the monster’s head to one side,
turning it bit by bit, pushing once its head has turned far enough—
Its neck creaks like a thick branch in a storm, and then snaps like
one, too.
And that’s punch three.
Dropping the wolf to the ground, I check my hands for splinters, and
use the splinter-free one to rub my chin. Wouldn’t it be a
one-two-three punch, then? I mean, none of them are actually punches,
but most one-two punches in fighting aren’t actually punches, even
for me.
“Ah, Ivy?”
I blink, changing tracks. “No three. One-two punch sounds better.
Yeah?”
Helena gives me a strange, baffled look, then visibly shakes it off.
“Um. What? I, are you okay? It looked like it got a few swipes at
you, I was worried your clothes might be damaged.”
Oh, whoops. I said that out loud. Looking down to hide the heat on my
cheeks, I do a full pat-down to make sure everything’s where it
should be. “I’m fine, thanks. The enchantments have been working
just fine, and I appreciate not having to waste magic healing
bruises... or money, replacing my nice clothes. Trousers with
tail-holes don't come cheap.”
I pause, running a bit of raw magic through my claw-tips and tugging
at my blouse’s collar. The enchantment hums in response, softly and
a bit chaotically. “But, you might need to redo them. Enchantments
without a base substance don’t stick around for too long, do they?”
Helena murmurs something in response, too quiet for me to catch. I
see her boots pace back and forth, but I only look up again once I’m
sure the blush is gone. Our eyes meet for a second before she walks
up beside me, dropping into a crouch.
“They should hold for another two hours. Three, maybe. Is, um, is
that enough time? I could refresh them, but I don’t...” She
gestures at her chest, using her other hand to very carefully prod at
the chunks of wood that were formerly a monster. “I don’t have
enough mana for that. The Delve is refreshing me faster, but not fast
enough. Hm.”
I mentally tally up everything she’s done, doing some quick mental
calculations. Unless you’re talking Alchemy or Runes, magic isn’t
done in discrete enough units for anything more than scrap-paper
mathematics— but those are more than enough for me to make some
estimates. And, quite honestly, I don’t like them very much.
Setting that math aside, I run some estimates on our travel. An hour
so far, and the slant of the Delve is increasing
With Adamantine as my witness, I thought the Restoration Church would
actually be smarter than to leave a potential Mage
undeveloped. I know Gods-damned well they have books on the subject,
given they took most of them from my family’s section of the
archives. It’s one thing to encourage someone to not be a Mage, and
another to let them bumble about and risk burning up their soul
trying to light a candle.
I wonder what they did with the books, then?
Whatever the case, I keep my thoughts to myself. I cross my arms,
leaning my shoulder against a nearby tree while I watch Helena. The
woman in question is delicately turning the head over with a stick
she’s found, peering over the stumps.
“I know it’s rare, but these monsters do seem tough enough that,
um, they might have a crystal we can use? The ones inside monsters
are amazing for setting physical enchantments.”
“You're very well read, huh,” I say the obvious, snorting. My
tail curls, swinging in the air before it latches onto the tree next
to me. “These things? Tough, but nothing special. Shallow-water
predators, I guess. There's far worse monsters out there, and they're
the kind you'd expect to find crystals in.”
“Aw,” Helena says quietly. I don't think I was supposed to hear
that. She stands up from her squat, wincing and groaning as she does.
“That's unfortunate. We'll just have to finish before the
enchantments run out, right?”
She flashes me a hesitant smile, and I reply with a shrug. Rushing
isn't particularly safe, but the enchantments...
Huh. I guess Helena's put us on a time limit, intentionally or not. I
don't like that at all, but I did let her talk me into this.
Not a productive path of thought, it's not like I could back out now.
I switch paths, gesturing forward and onward. “Let's get going
then. Keep your ears and eyes trained on our surroundings, got it?”
Helena nods dutifully, dusting herself off. “Of course. Onward!”
Onward ends up being quite boring. We kill one or two more wolves,
one of which Helena manages to almost decapitate with her initial
hit. Brief bursts of happening breaking up long, awkward silences.
Helena seems to be feeling it too: muttering to herself, meddling
with small spell structures, and occasionally dragging up dead leaves
with her Wind.
Curiosity sparks. An un-apprenticed mage, entirely untrained but
still well-read. Ambitious and fiery, too. Her control of the leaves
is pretty impressive, and those spells she's been tossing out are
made well. I don’t really know the whole story, though. Maybe it’s
time to ask, if only to fill the silence.
And, Gods, I'm going to get bored if I don't say something.
I clear my throat, and it rumbles out like a growl. “Helena.”
“Yes?” Helena's reply is instant. Her eyes glance up to mine,
even as her hand toys with Wind. A leaf escapes her magic's grip,
fluttering in the air.
“You're part of the Restoration Church,” I prompt, surprising
myself a bit. I morph that feeling into a lopsided grin. “I don't
actually know how it all works there. What do you get up to? How do
you, uh, worship?”
“Oh! Yes! I’d love to. Um.” Helena smiles, nodding vigorously.
The rest of her leaves flutter and droop, some drifting close enough
that I try to jab them with my tail. “And you're... a lot of
Delvers follow the Wanderer, right? Mireise? They don't have a formal
church, so... I bet it's quite different! Oh, where do I start?”
She hums, toying with a lock of hair.
Oh, that pronunciation brings back memories. I chuckle a bit, shaking
my head. “Mir as in Mirror, followed by ice, not Me-rice. My Delve
masters were emphatic about that. And no, I don't follow the
Wanderer. I follow Adamantine, though, so I have about the same
experience with formal worship.”
My parents would attend Restoration events constantly. Olivia and I
never went along— maybe we would've been clued in to my parents'
plans earlier if we did, but I can't exactly change the past.
Helena curls some hair around her finger, brow furrowed. “The Sun
Regent? Hm,” she murmurs, “Where do I start...”
I could wait. It wouldn’t be that bad. But why not have a proper
conversation?
“I can go while you think. Mind your head,” I warn, ducking under
a particularly low-hanging branch. The fringes of the leaves— which
are a close but weirdly smudged match for maple leaves,
interestingly— are curled in, shifting from green to vivid reds and
oranges.
Bit weird for leaves to be this low, and the colors are definitely
worth noting. Oh, right, I was saying something.
"It's not very interesting, though," I admit, rubbing the
back of my head with one hand. Adamantine has my faith, but she isn't
a very demanding goddess. "I wanted a distraction between wolf
kills, but this might be too boring.”
I turn and meet Helena's wide eyes, gleaming with excitement. Her
smile seems to be spreading onto my face, too.
"No, no." She says, brown hair flying as she shakes her
head. "The Church of Adamantine? I know nothing about it! So,
yes, please tell me?"
I’m taken aback by her enthusiasm, and it takes me a second to
shake free of it. The fervor of born scholars is ridiculous.
Where to start... oh, Gods, now I’m doing it too. I’ll go for the
semantics first.
“Adamantine doesn’t have an, uh, organized church, you know? It’s
all independent, linked up and supervised by paladins, but not much
more than that. So how we worship changes from place to place,” I
say, pausing for breath. It’s weird to talk about this stuff, for
some reason, and it’s making me feel awkward.
Moreso when I realize this is entirely my fault, since I started it.
Oops.
“I’m not a paladin, and I’m not a member of any specific
church. I don’t really worship, either, so much as...” I wave a
hand through the air, trying to hide the awkward vulnerability that
I'm suddenly feeling. “Justice is important, and injustice can't be
left around to rot. I like Delving, and it keeps people safe from
monsters, so that's my place in things.”
“So that’s why you hate the Restoration, then? Because you think
we’re unjust?”
I turn my head, freezing her with a one-eyed stare before I can catch
myself. It’s a visceral thing, a gut reaction that has my tail
whipping across the ground. Practically instinctual, and I feel only
a dreg of guilt.
Helena looks away, eyes trained on the ground.
“I don’t think you’re wrong to ask.” I shrug with more ease
than I feel. “But I’d rather not talk about it.”
“It’s not like you’re going to, um, hurt me. You only really
got mad when you thought I was invading your home, right?” Helena’s
reply is equally blunt, equally honest.
I huff in response. “Home invasion is unjust, usually. Water under
the bridge. Tell me about the Restoration Church, if you’ve worked
out what you want to say?”
She says something, but I don’t hear it. My instincts spin like a
compass near a lodestone, swirling and sharpening around a handful of
cues.
The ground shakes. The Delve deepens, just a hair. The wind shifts,
the light dims, and a low sound scratches at my ears.
And then... nothing. I keep my eyes scanning the surroundings, but I
open myself up enough to catch what Helena is saying. It’d be rude
to ignore her.
“...helping them, um, raise funds and distribute food. It’s an
important part of the Restoration’s goals to, ah,” she hesitates,
and I pick up immediately.
“Charity work, then. So what’s your part in that?” I nod along.
“Everywhere I’ve seen the Restoration, you’re running
way-stations or growing gardens.”
Never really understood the purple robes. They seem terrible for all
the very literally dirty work members seem to get up to.
“I. Ah. I sew. For my family. Priest Dongbaek assigned me as a
clothier and tailor, because that’s the skill that most benefits
the whole family.” The word is bitten out, hissing and
crisp. Her hands clench, and a flash of anger crosses her features
before vanishing entirely. “It’s what I’m best at, after all.
And, um, when we all work together, we can make Craumont a better
place, right? A safer one, too.”
They’d wanted my land. My parents had willed it to them, and
everything else. No doubt to build a shelter for the ill and the
homeless, or feed those who weren’t paid enough by businesses that
should know better. That’s what I’d stopped, hadn’t I?
Looks like they weren’t so kind to their own, either. At least, the
ones that don’t fit in. Or maybe I’m overthinking it, and Helena
is as rebellious with them as she is with me. That’d probably get
on their nerves after a while, when ‘ambition’ starts to sound
more like madcap schemes.
“To fill the gaps in the community, huh?” I can’t help but
chuckle, even knowing it’s rude. “That’s a bit pretentious.”
Helena huffs. “You’re right, but I don’t, ah. That’s not a
very nice way to say it.”
So much for a nice conversation. I’d gone and ruined it. My tail
digs itself into the ground, scraping along and digging a satisfying
furrow. “Yeah, sorry.”
A pause.
“We did pass the time, though.” Helena says awkwardly, “Even
if, um, it wasn't a great topic. But I learned something!”
“It was a bad topic, wasn't it? Gods, what was I thinking? Maybe
after a few glasses of wine, sure, but in a Delve, on high alert...”
I run a hand through my hair, and Helena hums in agreement. I'm not
sure if that's rude or just plain honest.
We walk in silence for a few minutes. I’m not sure of what to say,
and Helena clearly doesn’t know what to say either. I absently wish
for a distraction, and then regret that instantly. No, Ivy! Don’t
ask for that in a Delve, it always—
The world tenses around us, and I act on instinct. My arm shoots out,
wrapping itself around Helena’s waist, my tail curls around her
defensively, and I drag us deep into the darkest shadow I can find.
Her squeak is drowned out when the breeze raises to a howl, drowning
out all noise and thought. Sticks and leaves dash through the air,
clattering against us. I pull Helena closer to my chest. She’s far
too squishy, after all.
The light dims. The sunless sky shifts towards the afternoon, and the
air smells of ochre and fresh-dead leaves. Helena says something, and
I only know it because I feel the vibrations of her voice against my
chest. Sound is meaningless, caught and stolen away in the roaring
gale.
And, thank the Gods, it ends as suddenly as it began. All-consuming
wind is replaced with a dead silence I can hear my own heartbeat in.
I let out a sigh of relief, breaking the silence, and Helena’s own
sigh comes not long after. That would’ve been awful to try and push
through, I’m certain. We would arrive at the layer transition
battered and bruised, to say nothing of the challenge fighting in the
wind would bring. At least the monsters would have trouble too...
hopefully.
Oh, and Helena’s still pinned to my chest. She’s squirming, too,
and— well, it feels weird. Kinda tickles. I let her go with a
mumbled apology, and she replies with equally quiet acceptance.
Her face is nearly as red as the leaves, actually.
Wait, what?
“The leaves! Oh, this is fascinating!” Helena exclaims, mirroring
my own thoughts. Her eyes are gleaming with that inner fire again,
and she’s craning her neck to look at the tree canopy.
A tree canopy of brilliant reds, searing oranges, and muted browns,
all glowing in the afternoon light. Each tree is like a slow-moving
flame, rippling gently in a woody, earthy breeze.
“Delves are weird,” I pronounce, snatching a red leaf from the
air as it flutters down. I turn it over, inspecting it carefully.
Seems normal, no teeth, doesn’t seem to be made of metal or coated
in acid... it’s always important to be careful with Delves.
It’s also beautiful to look at.
“Gods, it’s pretty, isn’t it?” I admit, chuckling. The bubbly
sensation fills my chest before I tamp it down, and I spread my arms,
curling my tail around one leg. “Much better scenery to travel to.
But if the forest can turn from summer to autumn, I’d hazard that
it’ll be winter eventually. And I do not want to be here for that.”
Scales do not handle the cold very well. I can keep myself warm by
circulating magic throughout my body, but that leaves me hungry,
cranky, and stiff. No thank you, I’m already going to be cranky
from healing all the scratches I keep getting.
Helena winces, inspecting her own gear. “We’re not dressed for it
at all. Yes, um, let’s get going!”
“Yes, let’s.” I pause, then groan as she starts to run.
“Helena! Slow down! You don’t even know where we’re going!”
Her blush is rather amusing, though.