by Julius Aldoid on April 11th, 2011, 5:19 am
Julius had firmly believed, since he was but a little boy, that when least expected, wonder would find itself upon one’s doorstep. What was particularly unexpected however, when it breaks into your house and opens up a portal though time (and space and reality and existence and all those sensible things he never thought he took for granted) in the middle of your living room.
“My god,” his eyes so absolutely wide, in such a state of awe, the petty trickery seemed to fade in him, replaced with a gentle contemplation as he sat his head upon his knee. It was a singular experience for which he had no words, no means to even respond.
“So, um,” looking down at the ground only to hop his gaze up before sliding back down again. At first, he thought to say, “I can’t give you my house, though I am having a very hard time thinking up a better compensation.” However, he caught himself, breaking the space of his silence with another “um.”
“To stay here. Here. No. No--yes. Yes,” nodding quite rapidly, smiling so brightly, “I think so. Would you like my bed as you stay here? I’ll sleep on the floor for something like that. Well, maybe right not there. I was unaware my floor could do that. Hmm,”
For the first time in a long age, Julius was a touch befuddled.
And then a thought struck him.
“Circles,” he yelled, and ran over to his table, writing “Circles are the key” on a spare scrap of parchment. It referred to a small thought of his, noticing that gears liked circular shapes. One could meter out time with the tick of a spring and a catch, and he thought there was perhaps some other relation. He had then noticed that Dramiana had used a circle to bend her way though time. There had to be some relation between time and circles—he could feel it in his bones.
“Where were we,” walking past, making sure not to step on any stones. He looked down at them for a long second. “Ah yes,” he caught himself, picking one up.
“Memo-cites, you say? And they are mine? On loan of course. And I can—put memories into them? Freely? Is there a game to them,” asking more to do with the rules of these strange, exciting, and utterly alien rocks. He sniffed it suspect, trying just to see if there was anything distinct to them that eyes alone might not yield.
“So you are a magician. I am a magician too! I can’t do all that of course. But illusions. Watch.”
He carefully sat her down, and stepped back, picking up a berry from the ground.
“I am only a first-mark. Most other firstmarks I know, they think they the deck is stacked against them. ‘Julius’ they say ‘how do stand only being a first mark. We can only do so little compared to those with greater power’. I say ‘power is a crock. Besides, if you can’t have fun with one mark, what makes you ever think you will get the second?’”
He held the berry plainly in his hand.
“Are you watching closely,” he asked, in a tone that sounded so serious, it hardly sounded like Julius at all.
He waved his hand in front of the berry, and when sight was returned, a baby chicken sat in his hand. Not flimsy either- for if one were blessed with a sight that saw only truth, they would know that where stood one illusion, stood ten interposed over it.
It twaddle and waddled, walking over his fingers, walking over his hands. “Wait, he has something to say.”
Julius very delicately wrapped his hands, covering over the chick, and a very clear and distinct tweeting could be heard.
“He’s telling secrets about you,” Juli laughs.
“But it is a real chicken, really,” it sounding so obviously a lie, his skill at lying so weak. But still he walked forward and opened his hands just a little. Not enough for her to see inside, but enough that she could fit her finger in. And should she dare be so bold, she would feel the soft, downy fluff of a baby chicken, it gently stumbling about, her fingers drawing over its head.
But ever so quickly, he snatched it away.
“You look hungry. Are you hungry. Here, how about some fresh cooked chicken.”
And just like that there was a crackling of a fire within Juli’s hands, and just as it did so, a puff of smoke escaped just as the sound of fire died down. And then, just as the smoke faded to nothing, there was a scent upon the air, the deliciousness of freshly cooked chicken filling the air.
“Now I know what you are thinking, I must be a very vicious man for hiding a chicken up my sleeve all the time, all to just cook it alive before you. I know, callous vicious bastard that I am. But I ask you to bid heed dear audience, because there was no chicken.”
“It was simply,” drawing open his hands again, “just a berry all along.”
And just as he said it was, there was just a berry there. But still, that mischievous grin played out upon his face. There was still a game afoot.
“Do you wish to taste it? I did slave over a hot palm all day just to cook it. I turned my hands into an oven after all,” again, a coy lie, easily seen though. And yet… the gambit did not end. Always that smile of his, ever played at just the right moment to give doubt to his own words. The smile was always the lie. And he was deft in his interplay.
And so, he handed her the simple berry. Still smelled like a berry- still looked like a berry. Should she place it in her mouth, the skin of it would taste of berry, and yet when she chomped on it- the texture would be berry, but the taste? A delicious bite of chicken, the juice of it a savory gravy, well seasoned and freshly cooked. It would be a physical impossibility. Yet the power of illusion, and a strong imagination.
“Wonder is the goal of all magic. Imagination is the key. It has taken me my entire life to figure that out. And you Dra-miana I think are the first person I have met to realize that.”
There was a still repose in him. He was being very serious again, but his smile was soft, kind.
“Wanna’ study magic together?”