.
.
.
12th of Fall, 514 AV "What is this?" Dra-Nelsa held a piece of paper in front of Cantillion's face for him to see, empty and blank. "Paper, Sera?" he answered, not entirely sure what his patron was getting at. "Are you asking me a question or answering mine?" she retorted harshly, eyes forming into an angry squint. Cantillion winced slightly at the glare. "Paper, Sera," he answered again, making sure not to raise his voice into a question again. When he had been accepted as a Mage-Squire, he was no less than ecstatic. His life was finally changing for the better, or so he believed. Sera Dra-Nelsa was quick to shatter those delusions. "And what's on the paper?" she asked. Cantillion hesitated to answer such an obvious question with an obvious answer. He had learned yesterday that her questions were intentionally misleading, usually to prove some point or another. She reminded him of her. "Nothing, Sera," he gambled. "There's nothing there...Sera," he quickly added, just barely catching himself before she reminded him. When they met for the first time yesterday, she laid out the most basic of rules for him. She made it clear that she was not a nice lady. Dra-Nelsa was a strict teacher, because, according to Dra-Nelsa, magic requires discipline. She reminded him of Mistress. Dra-Nelsa took the paper away from his face, setting it back down on her table."But the paper isn't nothing," she told him. "The paper is paper. Answer this," she prompted him, crossing her arms and looking down upon him like a god from atop a mountain. "What's between us, right now?" "Nothi..?" Cantillion answered, catching his inflection before he finished. "Nothing, Sera." "No," she answered. The way she said it made him feel not just wrong, but stupidly wrong. "There is air between us. Air is not nothing. Air allows you to live. Air allows you to think." Dra-Nelsa turned away from him, just for a moment, snatching up a small piece of charcoal and scribbling something quickly on the piece of paper she had set down just moments ago. When she finished, she held up the paper in front of him again, a single sentence written down in common. "Everything is something," she emphasized for him, her stupid, know-nothing Squire. "Does this make sense to you, Squire?" "Yes, Sera," he answered. And so appeared the secret lesson he had expected. Dra-Nelsa nodded, turning back to her table and deftly snatching up another piece of paper -- this one covered in strange markings -- and centering it on the table's surface. He realized here that despite her strictness and her demands for discipline, she was nothing like Mistress. His former captor would have punished him regardless of his answers by this point. Dra-Nelsa was actually teaching him something. "Your second lesson," she announced, extending slender arms out in front of her and snapping her fingers in unison. From nowhere, a speck of dust seemed to grow above the strange paper. Within seconds, the dust became a hole, the size of a marble, then the size of a bowl. Cantillion's eyes blended green and gold as he realized he was seeing magic occur right before his eyes. "That is what nothing looks like," she explained to him in a somber tone. "No light, and no heat. It is the Void. Stand there, and look," she demanded, noting Cantillion taking a slow step forward. He instantly stood still at her order. "When you think of nothing, you will think of this." As she finished, the hole leading into the Void began to shrink and collapse, until there was nothing left to ever suggest it was there to begin with. The paper with the markings on it now sat sad and blank on the table. "Will you teach me how to do that, Sera?" Cantillion asked in a daze. Dra-Nelsa couldn't help but smirk at his wonderment. "The question is, can you learn how, Squire?" Cantillion nodded, enthusiastic. "Yes, Sera!" He had expected the magic from the stories he knew. Bolts of lightning, spikes of ice, raining fire. Perhaps the type of magic that gave a man the strength to fight ten men at once without growing tired. But to him, this was more than he had hoped for. "Starting from tomorrow, I will be changing patrols," she spoke plainly, taking her seat at her table. "You will be outside my quarters at the 14th bell. You will remain here until the 20th bell." She paused to look him in the eyes, face entirely serious. "Until you have opened your first portal to the Void, there is nothing else for you to learn from me. If you cannot do this, you will not remain my Squire. Do you understand?" Cantillion nodded slowly, eyes green once more. "Yes, Sera." |
.