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Chapter 22 - Fen

Chapter 22

Fen

She found him in the garden on the seventh night.

He heard her coming â€" she was quiet but not as quiet as she thought she

was, and he'd been developing an involuntary awareness of people's mana

signatures that made approaching him undetected increasingly difficult.

Her signature was unusual: faint on the surface, the dim Bronze of her

official rank, but with something underneath it that was different.

Denser. Like an ember covered in ash.

She sat down on the low wall beside where he was sitting on the ground

and looked at the faint scorch marks from two nights ago that the

groundskeeping construct hadn't quite fully erased.

'That was you,' she said.

'Yes.'

'Discharge?'

He looked at her. 'You know what that is.'

'Involuntary mana release. Happens when you're holding too much.' She

was quiet for a moment. 'I had a similar problem my first week. Mine was

smaller. Different quality.'

He waited.

'I've been coming out here at night since the third day,' she said. 'I

noticed you'd started coming out too. I gave you a few nights to see if

you'd bring it up yourself.' A pause. 'You didn't.'

'No.'

'So I'm bringing it up.' She turned to look at him directly. 'I told you

my result was complicated. This is part of the complication. I don't

generate mana the way a normal Bronze-rank should. I absorb ambient mana

and convert it. Slowly, inefficiently, in a way that keeps my reserves

technically full but isn't the same as actual mana generation.' She said

it flatly, like reciting a diagnosis. 'My family thought I was broken.

They may have been right about that. But I've been managing it for four

years and I can tell you that the discharge problem gets better if you

practice releasing in small amounts deliberately rather than waiting

until you overflow.'

Cyan looked at her for a moment.

'You could have led with that,' he said.

'I didn't know if I could trust you yet.'

'And now?'

'You've been keeping my secret for a week without being asked to, which

means you identified what I was doing and decided not to use it.' She

shrugged. 'That's good enough for provisional trust.'

He thought about that. 'What do you want?' he said. Not suspiciously â€"

practically. She'd come with a reason.

'What I said before. To survive the semester.' She looked at the garden.

'I've been watching the other provisionals. Most of them aren't going to

make it â€" not because they're not trying, because they don't understand

what they're actually being evaluated on. It's not rank. It's potential.

They're looking for students who can develop, not students who already

have.' A pause. 'You have potential. Whatever you are, you have a lot of

it. I have potential but no one to corroborate it. If we're seen as

allied, my standing improves and your unusual behavior has a partial

explanation.'

'I act strange around mana,' he said. 'Your explanation is?'

'My absorption-type ability interferes with standard mana output

readings. It's documented in the Umbros school literature, which nobody

reads.' She said it matter-of-factly. 'If we're asked, that's the

explanation for both of us. Absorption-type anomalies present similarly

on standard instruments.'

He looked at her. She'd clearly thought about this considerably more

than a week warranted.

'You had this planned before you came to my room the first night,' he

said.

'I had the outline. The details needed to wait until I knew what you

were.'

'And what am I?'

She studied him for a moment. 'Something I don't have a category for

yet. But something that's on the same side of the line I'm on.' She

stood. 'Do we have an arrangement?'

He thought about it for about four seconds.

'Yes,' he said.

She nodded once and went back inside.

He sat in the garden for another hour and practiced releasing small

amounts of what he was holding, carefully and deliberately, into the

ground beneath him.

It was harder than the burst had been. Control always was.

But by the end of the hour he could feel the difference. Just slightly.

Just enough to be worth continuing.

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