“Yes.”
“Mermaids?”
“Yes.”
“Fairies?”
“Yes.”
“Darnit. I hate Tinkerbell. Uh, Vampires?”
“Yes.”
“Zombies?”
“Yes.”
“Ew. Um, Bigfoot?”
“No.”
“Guess I asked for that one. Dwarves?”
“No.”
“What? So, wait, Legolas, but no Gimli? That's mean.”
“Ms Aisley.” Asque looked up from the newspaper he had been attempting to read. Shin'nen was perched in the chair in front of his desk, notebook and pen in hand. Brightheart Raccoon was balanced in her lap, having been traded for Grumpy Bear from her plushie collection. “There is a small library of literature in the basement which I am certain can answer all of your questions. I have work to do.”
“Sure, I could look it up,” she agreed, “but you won't seem to talk to me unless I ask you a direct question. So. I'm being an instigator. Now1, unicorns?”
The wizard sighed. “Yes.”
“Really? Can I see one sometime?”
He glowered at her a moment, glanced her over, and replied coldly, “Yes, I should expect so.”
It occurred to Shin'nen that she should feel both very offended and very embarrassed, and she quickly decided that blushing furiously was an appropriate response. “That was mean,” she said, “I think. I'm going to pretend it was somehow a compliment and spare you a good slap. For now.”
Leveling a gaze at her, Asque refolded his paper and laid it neatly down again. The gesture seemed somehow final to Shin'nen, and she had to fight the urge to sit at attention. “Ms Aisley. As much as I appreciate your apparent renewed interest in the world, let me remind you that although you are currently residing here out of my organization's goodwill, I do have actual tasks that must be completed.”
“Yeah, because reading the newspaper all afternoon is definitely a high-priority task.” Shin'nen reached out to finger through the impressive stack of newspapers piled upon Asque's desk. Besides the usual daily paper and a small collection of weeklies and bi-weeklies, there seemed to be at least twelve papers from cities whose names Shin'nen didn't even recognize. The collection formed a small tower, and Shin'nen had the urge to retrieve some action figures from upstairs and begin staging a mock battle. “What's with all these papers, anyway?”
Exhasperated, Asque removed another of the newspapers from the stack and unfolded it. “There are two Eidolon agents in this state, and as I am one of them, it is my job to know of events in this half of the state.”
“Have you ever heard of a little thing called 'the Internet'? I'm pretty sure it'd be a whole lot easier to peruse a couple news sites rather than flip through hundreds of articles on the high school play and how Jimmie Jones caught a super-huge fish.” As much as she appreciated small-town newspapers, which Shin'nen had immediately deemed much of the stack to be, she couldn't imagine how the usual human interest stories and farm reports that cluttered her newspaper back home could possibly have any significance for some magical agency.
The newspaper, which proudly declared itself to be the Ashland Daily Tidings, crinkled as Asque peered over its top. “Anything not printed is likely not worth reading.”
“First of all, that's totally untrue, and second of all, there's a whole lot of crap that is printed. You're more likely to find . . . paranormal mysterious stuff or whatever in some bloke's blog than in a daily newspaper.” Shin'nen considered that for a moment. “Actually, that's probably a good place to look. People post a ton of crap in blogs, so it'd suck to have to read through them all, but you could just search the page for . . . key words or something, and nobody expects anyone to actually read a blog, really, so you could find a bunch of stuff that would never actually get printed.”
Asque was pursing his lips at her over the newspaper, and Shin'nen realized that he had no idea what she was talking about. An irrational surge of embarrassment filled her at this, and, in defiance of it, she feigned innocence and waited for him to ask for her to “please explain” before giving explanation.
“A blog? Oh my God, you don't know what a blog is?” Okay, she was hamming it up a little much, but it was just so perfect to see confusion on that skinny face. “You're not much older than I am—even my parents know what a blog is. Someone needs to drag you kicking and screaming into the 21st century. It's like a diary, except people post it on the Internet.”
For a moment, Asque seemed to actually consider the notion, then frowned again. “I have no proof of the accuracy of these sources, and I believe I shall continue with methods I know.”
“Okay, fine, keep murdering a forest with breakfast.” Shin'nen leaned back in the black-backed office chair, intending to bother the wizard further by propping her feet on his desk, but the sudden over-tip of the wheel base had her gripping the arms. Pen, notebook, and raccoon fell to the floor in a clatter. “Ack! And get some better chairs, why don't you? This is a pathetic excuse for an office chair.”
“These chairs were here when I first arrived, Ms Aisley; I see no reason to replace them.”
“You sure are stuck in your ways, aren't you? Old Asque, already stuck in a rut.” She gathered up her fallen belongings and amused herself spinning the chair's seat, kicking her feet against Asque's desk. The painted metal made a satisfying thong as her sneakers hit it.
“Ms Aisley, would you kindly desist? I--”
“Have work to do, yeah, yeah. I'm just gonna keep bugging you until you actually tell me something. Or kick me out. Come to think of it, that would be just fine, too.”
“I have already made several inquiries as to an appropriate instructor for your abilities. I certainly have no intention of housing you any longer than necessary.”
It was Shin'nen's turn to level a gaze at Asque, propping her chin on a raised fist. “Then why aren't you teaching me anything? I'd be out of your face a lot sooner if you'd just tell me something.”
“I am not trained to instruct in the healing arts.”
“No, but you're trained enough to know if someone's injured I can't not heal them. Or maybe you just like stabbing yourself for fun.” And that might explain a lot. “So just teach me how stop doing that, and I can figure the rest out myself.”
“You can't,” Asque refuted, but either her logic or her persistence had swayed him, because he shook his head, then half-nodded, a half-hearted upward movement, that seemed almost eye-rolling in nature. He sighed. “Come to the basement in three hours and twelve minutes—that's after business hours—and I'll see what I can do. Until then, I do have work to do.”
--so get OUT, was the unspoken addition, and, victorious enough for her tastes, Shin'nen stood and shot off a sloppy salute. “Aye, aye, Captain Asque.” A thought struck her as she returned her chair and moved toward the stairwell. “Do you have a last name?” she asked, setting her hands on Asque's shoulders and peering at his paper.
“Ms Aisley--!” She felt the shoulders tighten under her fingers and danced off to the door, only half chastened and wholly grinning.
Despite the fluorescent lighting, the basement was somehow perennially gloomy. It fit Shin'nen's expectations for a wizard's library in that respect, but it wasn't something she appreciated. If anything, she wanted to dig a couple more windows in from street level, just to brighten the place up. The dank she recognized from her own basement back home, sneaking up from bare concrete floors and in from cement-block walls. Two sturdy tables blocked a view of empty floor on the far side of the room, but the rest was filled with books.
Thumbing through the stacks, Shin'nen felt almost as though she should have traded Bright Heart for Brave Heart Lion. But she was still on a search for knowledge, and Bright Heart had always had the knack for putting together the facts. She balanced him in the crook of her arm and plunged ahead.
She was beginning to think Asque's suggestion to look for information in the basement hadn't been made in the spirit of helpfulness. The books must in some sort of order—she couldn't imagine Asque allowing anything else—but she'd be damned before she could figure out what it was. Half of the books had titles so obscure she couldn't imagine what they might be about: things like Dissecting the Spirit of the Impenetrable; Concerning Esoteric Fluids; and A Brief Explanation of Interdimentional Color Schemes, which was by far the thickest book on its shelf. Most of what remained had no title at all, the binding old and worn-through, or were titled in various foreign scripts, of which Shin'nen could only identify a few.
“Figures,” Shin'nen muttered, “that he wouldn't have anything remotely useful to a beginner.” She began trailing her fingers along the stacks, skimming the titles with the same disinterest she'd found herself adopting at her university library before finally retreating to the children's section for her recreational reading selections. “Maybe I should just look online . . .”
Except that Asque was right—or at least, right enough—there was a lot online that was complete crap, and she certainly had no idea how to judge their accuracy. That, and she had yet to find a way to connect to the Internet in this backwards Old Town building, and she wasn't quite willing to break out the old AOL trial cds and a 26k modem to get online. She wasn't looking forward to checking her email after all this time, either.
Finally settling for several books with only reasonably cryptic titles, Shin'nen made her way back upstairs to the nearly-empty apartment. Next time, she thought, she'd bring a torch—maybe the books would make a little more sense in that archaic light.
If she piled all the empty Rubbermaids up in the bedroom, Shin'nen discovered, the clutter almost made it feel cozy. Piling the bed with all her twin-size sheets—too small to actually fit on the full-sized mattress—and random blankets helped, too, and by the time she'd finished she almost felt comfortable in the room, window shades open wide to let in as much light as possible.
This accomplished, Shin'nen spread out her small stack of reading and, after contemplating their titles, picked the smallest and most likely tome and paged it open. It was entitled A Person's Guide to Auraic Manipulation, and of all the books in the basement, it seemed to be the most recently published, as the inside cover mentioned a date of 1923. Shin'nen intended to ask Asque what was up with that as soon as possible. What sort of library didn't contain anything recent?
The author was Catherine May Susserfield, and it opened thus:
“I am writing this book as I have found no accurate and clear source on the title subject; and I felt to put in words a concise description of it. For the Aura is a thing both of a person and not of a person, which no book has yet explained, and only through proper oneness can a person properly identify the distinctive and indistinct qualities of such.”
The next several pages continued much in the same way, and Shin'nen was quite sure that nothing was actually said until the fourth page, where, following an almost reasonable explanation of the ways one ought to meditate with incense and coffee to properly appreciate one's aura, appeared the sentence: “It is my opinion that, contrary to such books as I have read, the Aura is a thing singly of a person and has no aspects not immediately relational to a person.”
“This is a load of crap!” She considered throwing the book across the room, but, recalling its age, settled for whacking it with Bright Heart, who she then sat upright on the text in an attempted victorious pose. “I don't see how I'm expected to learn anything from this if the author can't even get her points straight,” she confided to the raccoon. “Probably spent too much time meditating with incense and coffee.”
A glance at the three remaining books proved them to be of a similar vein; though A Dissertation on the Feminine Magicks at least seemed to maintain a solid thesis statement, even it danced around the subject to the point where Shin'nen wondered if the book would make more sense while ballroom dancing. After a brief test of this hypothesis, which quickly resulted in a tumble over and into several Rubbermaid tubs, she was about ready to try her luck the AOL cds turned coffee coasters. A few chocolate stains couldn't hurt their readability, right?
Several minutes and several half-empty tub searches later, Shin'nen was beginning to suspect that when Chelsea had directed the packing of her belongings, she'd neglected to include the disks. She could call her about them . . . but how pathetic would that be? Hi, Chelsea, hope you're enjoying that room all by yourself and by the way, could you please mail me my 700 free hours? Right. There'd probably be a stack of 'em in some cafe around the neighborhood—sans chocolate smears, too. Or she could just find the library. Unfortunately, both of those options meant leaving the building, and, much as Shin'nen disliked it, she had no urge to brave the streets and wind again that day.
Resigned to giving A Dissertation another go, Shin'nen made her dejected way back toward the bedroom—and paused, noticing a faint rasping sound, screeching slightly like nails on glass. Turning, she saw, one paw batting at the glass doors of the small terrace, the cat from her walk earlier that day. It was a dignified sort of pawing, as though, as much as it might want to enter, the cat would hardly degrade itself to actually scratching.
Shin'nen found herself watching the cat for a long moment. It seemed hardly prudent to open the door to a strange cat, especially when you weren't familiar with the neighborhood. Then again, for all its pose, the cat looked half-starved, and she was certain Asque wouldn't approve of it. She'd always wanted a cat.
When the cat finally dropped its paw, fixing Shin'nen with a look of contempt for, obviously, being so damn slow, she moved to let it in. It took a half-minute of fumbling to open the latch, and when she did, the pale Siamese surged into the warmth of the apartment. 'Took you long enough', said the twitch of its crooked tail.
“Well, sorry, guess I'm not enough of a philan--” She stopped, mind backpedaling as she realized she hadn't merely inferred the cat's meaning, but somehow felt it, not-heard it in the back of her mind. She stared.
'Philanthropist? Obviously.' The cat's ears folded back, and Shin'nen could see they were darkened more with grime than the usual Siamese point.
“You—I--?”
Noticing the girl's glance at her ears—for Shin'nen realized the cat was certainly female—the cat made a scowl, licked her paw, and drew it back across her head. She seemed to grimace. 'Well, what a mess I am. Don't just stand there stuttering, girl; go fetch me some food. I'm starved.'
Mutely, Shin'nen obeyed, walking to the fridge and burrowing through its sparse contents for something, anything the cat might deign to eat. “I . . . there isn't any meat,” she found herself apologizing. “There's a little cheese, if that's--”
'Yes, fine. Hurry it up.' The cat had leapt to the table and was methodically grooming herself, taking the time to gnaw dirt from the pads of her paws. “You're filthy,” Shin'nen blurted, and the cat gazed at her, amused. 'Well, yes, and you would be, too, if you'd been forced to hitchhike from Seattle. You are not an easy human to keep track of.'
Shin'nen returned to the table and sat, not entirely trusting gravity to cooperate, now that all the other laws of the universe seemed to be turning on end. 'American,' the cat noted in disgust, eying the cheese, but, with surprising deftness, removed the wrapper on one slice and began gnawing at it.
“You're . . . talking,” Shin'nen said astutely after a minute of watching the cat at her dinner, and she seemed to snort. 'Of course I'm not talking. Cats don't talk; everyone knows that.'
“Well, I'm obviously insane then. Which is actually kinda a relief,” Shin'nen had to admit, “because this all makes a lot more sense if I'm just insane.”
Oh, please. Having, albeit awkwardly, finished her first slice, the cat batted another from the pile and unwrapped it in kind. 'Insanity is such an easy way out. I just chose you, that's all. Though I'm beginning to change my mind.'
Shin'nen gnawed at her lip, pressing her feet against the floor as though trying to ground herself in some kind of reality. She wasn't sure it was working. “So . . . all cat's . . . don't talk like this?”
'I told you, cats don't talk. Are you daft? And of course not all cats will let you listen; you don't belong to them.' The cat got halfway through the second slice before deciding it was hardly worth eating, and she abandoned it for further preening. 'Do buy some decent food. I prefer canned Friskies, the seafood flavor. That's what Mrs. Teiman used to feed me, bless her soul.'
Mrs. Teiman? Shin'nen thought, and then: “Oh, my God! You're Mrs. Teiman's cat, from across the street in Garvin!” Vague memories of the lavender Siamese with the crooked tail sprung into her mind. “What—what are you doing here?”
'I've been asking myself much the same question.' She bared yellow teeth at the dirty state of her paw, then gnawed it clean again.
“But, I was just a little kid! You must be ancient!”
'How kind of you to notice.' The cat's tone seemed sarcastically dry, and Shin'nen glanced away in immediate embarrassment. God, she thought, I'm offending a cat. I'm worrying about offending a cat.
'In any case,' she continued, tongue busy across her side, 'I'm much too old to be tramping across the country after you. Before long I'll off and die and you'll have to find some childish kitten instead. You're just lucky I've lived long enough to save your sorry skin.'
“Wait, what?”
The cat eyed her crossly. 'Well, you don't think that wizard of yours just stumbled upon you in that hospital, do you? Out of his jurisdiction? Of course not. And you, innocently bleeding away your magic and life force for any tot with a skinned knee. I had to do something.' Here the cat seemed to become almost defensive, arching her bony back as though preparing to ward off a vocal blow. 'It was the elf that tipped him off. One of his area, and if one of those gets into the medical system, there's usually all sorts of mess to clean up. But you off and healed her up before they could even notice her ears were more than cosmetic surgery, and that, that got his attention.'
“Wait, you hurt someone?”
'Of course not.' Her tail bristled, offended. 'Do you really think I could have? I just made sure the humans found her before anyone else. It was a simple matter—though,' she added, determined to get her due in the matter, 'not for one of my advanced age. I hope you're grateful.'
“I am, of course I am,” Shin'nen reassured absently, drawing a hand through her hair. “Oh, God,” she realized again, “I'm talking to a cat! A cat!”
'I don't see what your deity has to do with anything. You talked to me when you were little, but you humans never seem to remember that, do you?'
A vague memory did lurk in her mind about that, like a dream she might have had that might have been real. But hadn't that just been her imagination? “Okay, okay, right. Suspension of disbelief.” Shin'nen stood, paced about the room. “Pretend you're a kid again. Pretend you're Dorothy over the rainbow or Alice down the rabbit hole.”
'At least you seem to have perked up again,' the cat was saying.
“How can you tell?” Shin'nen asked, partially to keep from babbling.
'Well,' said the cat dryly, 'you're not comatose, so I thought that might be a sign. But you've gone all pearly again, and that's what encourages me.'
Frowning, Shin'nen inspected her hands, searching for the color the cat mentioned. “What do you mean, pearly?”
'Your magic,' the cat explained. 'That's the color of it. But, oh, I suppose you can't see that, can you?' The cat went back to cleaning herself.
Oh, yeah, tell me more things I can't do, Shin'nen mentally muttered. Can't control my magic, can't read those damn books, can't see that, can't can't can't. “Can't. Cat. Oh! What—what was your name?”
Stretching grandly, the cat yawned, flesh drawing back to show a set of healthy, if yellowed teeth. 'I'm tired. Make me a bed.'
“What do I call you?” Shin'nen persisted, but obediently went to retrieve a throw blanket from the bedroom. “I—I don't remember your name.”
'Oh, no,' said the cat, 'those are two very different questions. You used to call me Ms Kitty-cat, if I recall. If you can't remember my name, I won't give it to you.'
Shin'nen piled the throw on the table, arranging its My Little Pony patterned folds into a makeshift basket. She hoped the cat wouldn't mind the design. “Oh, God. Ms Kitty-cat. I can't call you that now.”
'Call me whatever you like; if I don't appreciate it I won't answer.' The cat stepped into the blanket basket, stretched again, and curled herself within the folds. Glancing at Shin'nen out of the corner of her eye, she twitched her tail. 'Alright. You may call me “grimalkin”. That's what I am, in any case.'
“What's a grimalkin?” Shin'nen questioned, but the cat had already closed her eyes, and, asleep or not, she was now ignoring her. Shin'nen sighed. She was beginning to wonder if she had just wasted a half hour and two slices of cheese.
“Asque,” Shin'nen asked, carting the armload of books back down the basement stairs, “what do you know about cats?”
“That you shouldn't have let it in. Now that it's been invited, though I don't suppose I can keep it out.” The wizard was seated at one of the heavy, wood-topped tables, several books strewn open in front of him. He looked just as stiff as always, and Shin'nen wondered how he managed to stay so tense all the time without falling over. “Hopefully it will avoid causing trouble.”
She set her books down at the end of the table. “What do you have against cats?”
“They detest straight answers, and you can never discern what they're thinking.”
Sounds like someone I know, Shin'nen thought, and snorted. “Well, Grimalkin seems very . . .” she scoured for an appropriate adjective. Nice? Friendly? Concerned? “Old,” she finished. “I don't think she means any harm.”
“I'm sure she doesn't. Grimalkin, you say?” After a moment's consideration, his lips twitched. “Of course. Whatever have you been reading?” Reaching out, he commandeered Shin'nen's stack of returns and began sorting through them with a frown.
“Trying to read, you mean. These books are completely illegible, and they're even in English.” She pulled up a chair across the table from the wizard and propped her head on her hands. These chairs, she noticed, were deceptively much more comfortable than those in the office.
Asque seemed amused. “I don't understand it, but you seem to have managed to select what are possible the four most useless texts in this entire library. I have been meaning to remove them from the library, but I cannot find it in myself to either destroy them or subject someone else to their idiocy.” He tapped A Person's Guide in example. “I seem to remember Mrs. Susserfield wrote this entire book drunk.”
“Yeah, I got that impression.” Scowling, Shin'nen turned to sweep a gaze across the stacks behind them. “So if these are crap, where the heck was everything actually worth reading? I don't speak Latin or Russian or Elvish or whatever else half those books are written in, and I definitely don't speak wizard, which is what I'm pretty sure everything else is titled in.”
Asque sighed and lifted up one of the books in front of him so as to show Shin'nen its cover. The titled appeared in some archaic font, spelled out in a language that she could only describe as across between Arabic and Wingdings font. When he turned the book around, however, she saw it to be in plain, distinct English. The words shimmered slightly, and the strange text occasionally seemed to lurk behind its translation. “All non-English texts have been spell-translated, which, had you deigned to open them, you would have readily noticed.”
Well. Now she felt stupid. “But really, who does that? And next question—why isn't there anything recent? Don't tell me you magic people just decided anything written after that must be too easy to read for anyone to actually publish it.”
Folding his hands, Asque gazed coolly at her, and Shin'nen got the distinct feeling that, on some subatomic level, he was laughing at her. “Are you suggesting you haven't heard of a little thing called the Book?”2
“The Bible?” she replied sarcastically, deciding that turnabout really wasn't fair play after all.
“No, of course not.” Moving several of the open books, Asque uncovered what appeared to be a thin cloth-bound volume, all distinguishing marks—title, author, etc—suspiciously missing from its cover. Shin'nen had noticed several similar books while perusing the library, but had thought nothing of them; after a quick examination, they had proved to be entirely empty, and she had assumed they were intended to be journals or workbooks of some sort. “In the early twentieth century, it was concluded that magical literature could no longer be considered socially acceptable to the nonmagical community. A practitioner could not stock shelves with books pertaining to his or her art without arousing the suspicions of visitors and neighbors. Therefore, a new system of publication was devised.”
Withdrawing an ink pen from an unseen pocket, Asque opened the small tome to what would have been the titled page and wrote two words: “Search function.” The words vanished, and in their place, neat black type scrolled onto the page. “Search Function Activated,” the title page declared, then a checkbox list and the options “Browse by Subject,” “Browse by Decade,” “Search Keyword,” “Search Author,” and “Advanced Search.” Shin'nen was duly impressed.
“It's really very self explanatory.” Demonstration concluded, Asque shut the book and held it out to Shin'nen. “A call to a specific book references a copy in Eidolon archives. Those physical books still shelved here are as yet unavailable through the Book, for various reasons.”
Shin'nen ran her fingers down the book's deceivingly small spine. “This is kinda creepy. Like, Tom Riddle-ish. You sure you guys didn't steal this retroactively from J. K. Rowling?”
“I'm sure I don't know what you're talking about.”
“Of course not.”3 Shin'nen heaved a sigh, shifting her head to rest on a single fist. “Well, now that I feel sufficiently stupid, why don't you teach me something.”
Asque raised an eyebrow. “I was under the impression I just did.”
“How about something I couldn't have figured out by scribbling all over your books?”
The wizard's gaze shifted to the side briefly as though he hoped someone might have appeared to take over the unwanted task. When his glance revealed no one, however, he fixed his attentions back on Shin'nen with a frown. “There are certain things you ought to know,” he said, “to survive in this world. Magical talents are like any other talents: there are people who will want to take them or make you use them for their own benefit. It's possible these precautions will never be necessary for you, but there is always the off-chance that they will be. If you stay here long, they will be.”
Determined to learn whatever was offered, Shin'nen sat attentively, crossing her legs at the ankles as she found herself doing during particularly interesting and disturbing movies. It occurred to her she should have brought her notebook, but somehow Asque's instructions had a way of burning into the mind.
“Names are important. Names of things, names of people. Never give your full name to someone you wouldn't trust with your life. Your name has power, and although the names of humans are fluid enough that the effects wouldn't be as disastrous as stories might suggest, they can make all the difference. Anything of you—hair, nails, blood, particularly—can be used to locate or influence you. You should never donate hair, or especially blood--” He caught Shin'nen's look of incredulity and replied it with a frown. “--not only for your own safety, but for that of those who might receive it. With an ample infusion, a perfectly nonmagical human might be mistaken for you and receive the brunt of some magic intended for yourself.”
Shin'nen wasn't quite satisfied with that explanation, but it made enough sense that she had to believe it. Being told not to donate blood was secretly reassuring; the concept admittedly terrified her, and as yet she'd never been able to bring herself to attempt it. How she'd manage to avoid shedding hair all over creation, though, she hadn't the faintest idea.
Almost as an afterthought, Asque added, “You should avoid contact with magical creatures. They tend to have little patience for the uneducated.”
That was disappointing, but she nodded. No unicorns for her, then. “Okay. Don't give anyone my name or parts of me, and stay away from magical creatures. So there's some stuff I shouldn't do. Anything I can?”
Asque closed his eyes a moment, gathering his thoughts as to where to go next. “Come over here,” he said, and moved to the bare concrete floor. Shin'nen followed warily, sitting as he indicated her, then watched as, with a stubby piece of chalk, he drew a practiced circle about the two of them. Something seemed to flare unseen in the air as he brought it to a close, and although the room spanned widely around them, Shin'nen felt suddenly very enclosed and comfortable within the circle's confines. Asque sat. “A circle isn't necessary,” he began, “but it helps, especially when you're just beginning.”
Shin'nen nodded because it seemed like the right thing to do, then waited what she considered to be a long moment before asking, “Okay. Now what?”
The wizard frowned as though he had hoped that would have been enough, but answered her question with one of his own. “Can you feel your magic?”
A puzzled look crossed Shin'nen's face. “What . . . exactly do you mean?”
“Magic is merely another form of energy, another tool which can be used to accomplish tasks. A magic user's body produces it as it produces any other sort of fluid or energy. Consider it like another limb, extending throughout your body, that you can stretch out in any direction. Can you—no, I see you don't understand.” Glancing at his own hands, Asque's frown deepened, and Shin'nen was reminded of trying to explain her math homework to a very young cousin. To her, it had been impossible to consider life before she knew what a number was and how they added together, and trying to teach Leanna what she was doing had seemed like describing color to a blind person.
“You can't see it, either, can you?”
Startled by the question, Shin'nen shook her head. “Grimalkin said it was a pearly color—and that I couldn't see it.”
Asque nodded absently, glancing off to the side once more. “Humans don't see magic naturally, unless its point is to be seen. This has allowed those without magic to continue as if it doesn't exist—and makes it all the more difficult to explain. But it can be seen, and I dare say you've seen it before, even if you don't remember. You'll see it a bit after it leaves your body, when it's activated. You saw it, I'm sure, on my arm this morning?”
The memory slowly replayed in her head, and Shin'nen found herself nodding. “But . . . that doesn't really help me, does it, if I can't see it otherwise?”
Again the wizard nodded and turned his attention back to his impromptu pupil. “Look at your hand,” he instructed, “and refocus your eyes. Concentrate on seeing what you saw this morning. Think of it as a . . .” He fumbled for an analogy, and scowled at the only one he could find: “ . . . a Magic Eye puzzle. It may take some time, but you should see it.”
Biting her lip, Shin'nen made the attempt, peering at her hand intently while letting her eyes cross and uncross, then trying to catch glimpses out of the corner of her eye and glancing away, then quickly back as though trying to catch the magic by surprise. She had never been particularly good at Magic Eye puzzles, a failing which she'd never much cared about until now. After several minutes, she was about willing to admit defeat, when the room seemed to take a lurch, then blossomed into a billion lights. “Oh, God! So bright!” She squeezed her eyes shut, but the color seemed to bleed through her eyelids.
“Sunglasses,” Asque ordered. “Imagine you're wearing sunglasses,” and with the thought the lights dimmed. She reopened her eyes. The room was bathed in light of a thousand colors. Barely contained by her skin, an pearly opalescence clamored, a river with rapids spilling over her bones. It was an emerald color that filled Asque, flowing tamely and evenly throughout his body. Beyond, the same green tinted the air—the circle, Shin'nen realized—flavoring the colors that ebbed from shelves of books, jars, and the concrete walls themselves.
Shin'nen swallowed. “Wow,” was all she could think of to say.
“You will notice,” Asque mentioned dryly, “that your magic is entirely out of control.”
“Um,” she said, and tried smoothing down the unruly whiteness with a hand to no success.
“You have no self control.” By explanation, the emerald light began filing itself away, draining into his bones and circling his heart, then finally vanishing.
Shin'nen stared, somehow horrified. “Asque? Asque, are you alright?” She reached out a hand to touch him, afraid he might actually no longer be there, but he caught it at the wrist.
“Don't be stupid.” Like an exhaled breath, the green flooded back again. “Any minor spellcaster can see magic. It's hardly prudent to advertise your abilities in my position. At the very least, you need to learn to control yours enough to keep from leaking it all over the place.” He didn't release her wrist. Instead, a bit of the green light spilled down her arm, flattening the tendriling pearl beneath it. His magic felt odd, like when your foot falls asleep, and her arm felt strangely suffocated and full.
“That,” Asque said, “is what you need to do yourself. I can't teach you anything else until you manage it.” He drew his magic back and released her arm, and she rubbed at it impulsively.
Okay, she told herself, piece of cake. Right. She blinked several times, then began concentrating on tucking in the errant waves of her energy.
She wasn't sure how long it took before she finally managed to bring the rebelling tendrils to a semblance of Asque's placid coloration. It seemed like hours before she'd managed to affect even that single arm, and, though she'd never actually tried nailing Jell-O to a tree, she was fairly certain this was very similar. All she knew was that by the time she'd succeeded, she was exhausted, and it was only a matter of seconds before all her work collapsed and the pearly waters ran rapid again.
“That's quite enough,” Asque said sharply, and Shin'nen glanced at him, startled, having forgotten that he was still there. “I can see you won't get much farther tonight, and I have things to finish before I can leave. Turn off your magesight—you've probably strained your eyes with it already.”
It was easier said than done. Now that she'd found it, Shin'nen was reluctant to hide the colors away again, afraid she might not be able to achieve them again. In fact, it took her several tries just to figure out how it might be done, and once her vision had returned to normal, she found the magicless world a very dark, dreary place indeed.
As she hauled herself to rubbery, stiff legs, she saw Asque motion as though flicking off a switch, then scrub out a segment of the perfect chalk circle. It vanished. “We'll work more tomorrow, and I'll attempt to compile a list of relevant texts for you to read.” It seemed he considered this a dismissal, for when he looked up again from another chalk diagram on the floor, he seemed surprised to see her still standing there. “Well, go.”
Nodding in reply, Shin'nen returned to the stairwell—but paused at the bottom step, peering back into the basement where Asque, having again forgotten her presence, was laying out a circle far more complex than the simple geometric figure he'd earlier used. With a wave of his hand, the florescent lighting died and a half dozen candles flared about the circle. The magesight came surprisingly easy this time, and like a child sneaking a forbidden glimpse at her parents' lovemaking, she watched, terrified and transfixed as the air filled with colors and symbols and words she could never have explained with all languages of the world.

2 comments:
Your story sets up a lot of good tension right away – you had me wondering who “he” was, and the little details (like about the cleanliness probably being magic) led me to guess at what was happening, but kept me interested to find out what was really going on. Shin’nen is also a likeable character, and I think you’ve done a good job finding a balance between telling us everything she’s thinking and letting us feel like we know her as a character. Rebekka seemed almost too good to be true, though – I was sort of suspicious of how quickly she took to Shin’nen. :)
I was slightly confused about the apartment, however – the first sentences made me think she was seeing it for the first time, as she moved her things in. Later, when it comes out that she’s been there for almost three weeks, recovering, it didn’t seem to mix with her earlier feelings about the place, the way she described it as if she hadn’t seen it before. This also confused me when she says God, she didn’t even have sheets for the bed!, because a few lines later she mentions the bed with its institutional green sheets and fleecy blanket. I think making it more clear that she’s been living in this place for awhile, without being able to unpack, would be beneficial for the reader.
Similarly, I understand that you didn’t want to reveal the entire secret about Shin’nen’s powers at the beginning, but I was completely lost as to what was happening when she tried to leave and Asque cut his arm. Even later, with the explanation she gave Rebekka, I didn’t understand Asque’s comment about about a “well-meaning nurse inadvertently killing you while you’re unconscious” or the four words he mentioned. Maybe these will be explained later or I missed something, but either way, maybe a few more details could be included without giving away anything you want to keep from the reader until a later time.
I liked the perspective you chose, and I agree that your third-person narrator gives the reader enough of Shin’nen’s thoughts that a first-person POV would be almost overwhelming. When Shin’nen leaves the office for the bakery, however, the POV switches to Asque for one paragraph, and I think that could be eliminated. The paragraph is pretty cryptic anyway, and since Asque is meant to be a mysterious and difficult to read character, his thoughts aren’t necessary. What the reader needs to know can come from his actions and words, and you’ve done this well already, enough to make his thoughts here unnecessary unless there’s something vital the reader should know that Shin’nen doesn’t.
Also, two small nitpicks: I noticed you use the word ‘aught’ a couple times, when it should be ‘ought.’ And second, a lot of the tension at the beginning of the story involved the main character wanting to go back to the "real world," so I was confused as to why she has a name that's so different. Unless it's part of her heritage or symbolic, I wasn't sure why she'd have a name with an apostrophe, as that would conflict with her supposedly "normal" history.
I liked a lot of the humor in this section - the descriptively vague book titles, the book that was written drunk (apparently Mrs. Susserfield is a philosophic drunk) and the book that might make more sense while dancing. The cat also added a lot of humor, with her dry and sarcastic tone.
And speaking of the cat...I like her, but I'm not sure what her purpose is. You'd said earlier that you weren't sure if she fit, and I'm not sure either. The thing is, with a story like this one, the reader is anxiously awaiting the "moment of enlightenment," when everything becomes clear. You've set up a mystery here, with Shin'nen's mysterious powers and Asque's strange job and this weird building, and as a reader I'm still waiting for the reveal. If the cat is not going to contribute to this by giving us more information about the world, then maybe she needs to be cut or brought in at a different time. Shin'nen is an engaging heroine, so I'm willing to keep on reading to find the answers along with her, but at this point I'm a little concerned that you're (theoretically) nearly halfway through this novella and a lot is still unexplained.
I don't know what you plan to do with the plot, but my assumption would be that Shin'nen finds out how to control her magic (or more about the magical world she's stumbled into) and then takes some kind of journey, accomplishing something or saving someone with her magic, or even joining the organization. You could be going a totally different direction, but if Shin'nen is going to do something like what I mentioned, then I think the pacing of the novella would have to speed up. It almost feels like you're setting up a novel here, especially since (if I read this right) everything you've posted is still taking place on the very first day. Something to think about, anyway.
This section also seemed to have a few ominous moments. The suggestion that someone might want to hurt Shin'nen with magic made me pause - it sounded like being magical makes her a target for other bad magical people? And at the end, I wasn't sure why she was so terrified of what Asque was doing, but that didn't seem like a good sign either.
One other random question: do Shin'nen's parents know where she is? It sort of sounds like she was kidnapped straight from the hospital to this building, but she mentions having parents in the blog scene. I wondered if they were given some excuse as to why she's not in college anymore, or if they're allowed to be in contact with her – this popped into my head as Shin’nen remarked that she didn’t look forward to reading her email.
Anyway, overall I think you’ve got a good tone established and a good character voice, and the humorous bits are fun. The pacing might need some thought, though.
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