Friday, March 18, 2016

The Seer (part 2)

Part 1 is here

Karina sat on the end of her bed, staring into the open doorway at the wood panelling that lined the hall. She hadn't had a vision for a few weeks now
 not even in her dreams  and so spent a lot of time contemplating the meaning of what she had seen so far. She'd seen a man fighting a dragon, the birth of a baby, a boy leaving his home with tears in his eyes, a massive tavern brawl ...


    They were all pieces of a puzzle, lengths of a story she had to put together. It was important somehow. Karina had always been plagued by her blackouts, a problem she had always tried to hide, lest anyone see her as a defective orphan, not worth taking on as a worker. But ever since she was a child, she had never been able to stop her best friend, Dee, from seeing that she sometimes went away for a time. It was the blackouts that had somehow sparked off the visions, a fact that had only made her all the more determined to find meaning behind her peculiarities.

    Dee appeared in the open doorway, a black bag slung over her shoulder. "You ready?" she asked.

    Dee had only breached the surface of Karina's contemplation with her appearance, and Karina looked to her own bag at her side to bring herself back to reality. The bag was full of everything she owned; she was never coming back to this farm, and the thought of making her own way in the world was scary. "I guess so." She mumbled.

    She must have stared at the bag for a little too long, or answered in the wrong tone of voice because when Dee sat beside her and put a hand on her shoulder, her voice was concerned. "What's wrong?"

    Karina didn't look back at her. She shook her head. "It's just ... so strange. We're going out there, into the world, to live a real life. Our own lives. Freedom." She continued to stare at the bag. "I hope we're ready."

    "You know ..." Dee said thoughtfully, shifting her position on the bed and dropping her bag. "I think we've been ready for a long time."

    "It all reminds me of my visions," Karina sighed wistfully. "That boy was leaving home in one of them."

    Dee took her hand away and pulled Karina around to face her. "You're not still dwelling on that." Her voice was cracking slightly. "I thought you hadn't had one of your episodes for weeks now?"

    Karina looked calmly into her panicked gaze. "Yes, that's right." She paused, letting the words sink in and smother Dee's fears of a lack of honesty and trust between them. "But they're important. I think–"

    "No." Dee hardened her look. "Don't think about them, you'll just bring them back. It was all just a consequence of stressing about our final exams, and that's all there is to it."  She turned her eyes away.

    Karina gave a questioning look to the side of Dee's head. She wanted her friend to understand. "Why would I see a boy I've never met in my visions?"

    "I don't know." Dee sounded agitated, and she stood up abruptly, standing over Karina as if the extra height would bring Karina around to her point of view. "Anyway, didn't you see me being born the first time this happened? What does that have to do with a boy? They're all disconnected, and you have to stop thinking about them."

    Karina looked down at her hands. "I wish it was that easy."

    Taking on her gentle air again, Dee fell back down into position next to her. "It will be. Like you said, we're going to have new lives. It won't be a problem any more."

    "Yeah." Karina sighed and finally looked back to Dee. She gave a tentative smile. "Who knows what we'll meet out there in the world? There's no point in worrying about the things in my head."

    "That's right." Dee patted Karina on the shoulder and stood back up, looking pointedly between her friend and the full bag beside her.

    Karina grinned and slung it onto her shoulder, Dee mimicking the action.
     "Besides," Dee said. "We'll always have each other."



The two friends had made an agreement with a trade caravan on its way to Mana, the capital of magic. The journey was to take a week, as they stopped at smaller towns and villages along the way. It wasn't strange for young people with no place in life to head to the city of magic, because it was the best way to find a place, whether in academics like Karina and Dee, or in labour or services. Trade caravans to Mana usually had an entire cart reserved for travellers, and while it hadn't had many passengers when they first departed Gaville, it was full by the time they had their last pick up before approaching Mana.

    They were still a few days' travel from Mana when the city was visible on the horizon. The road sharply inclined for quite some distance, and when it levelled, the view of the city from so far away was truly breathtaking. Buildings reached up as if they were trying to touch the sky. All of the young travellers were mesmerized, Karina and Dee included. How was it even possible for a city to be so huge? They started chatting excitedly amongst themselves.

    The excitement died down when the city in the distance became a staple on the horizon and they had to stop for the night again. What had been energetic chatter was murmured awe in the late afternoon when they finally reached the outskirts of Mana, the passengers crowding the side of the road in front of a station building.

    As the caravan finally left their large group behind, they all took their first proper look from inside the city of Mana. As an orphan, Karina knew she had been in the city before – all children were taken to Mana before being re-homed – but she no longer had a child's eyes, and her grown-up eyes were excited at what she saw.

    The station building they were dropped at was as big as the Academy building, the biggest landmark in Gaville, but where all the buildings of her home town were dwarfed by the school, the station was tiny in a sea of giants. The huge but sturdy shining structures blocked direct sunlight and cast a massive shadow over the old stone building she stood in front of.
      Dee stood beside her, looking just as awestruck.

     The two girls stood and stared for longer than was strictly necessary, and it was Karina who finally broke their trance. "Well, I guess we'd better get started." She checked their map and nudged Dee with her shoulder to get her going and they started walking.

    The city was like the future compared to Gaville. Or maybe Gaville was just stuck in the past. Alongside the horses and carts on the streets, driverless machines whizzed by, delivering people and goods to their destinations. Karina found it hard to keep her mind on her own destination with so many things to look at.

    She saw it coming up: from a school in the country, to a school in the city. The university was the centre of this bustling city: a place where the magic that made this all possible was studied. Karina and Dee would have to prove their magical proficiency in order to attend the school, but Dee was amazingly intelligent, and Karina ... she was talented, at least.

    In the same way that the Academy towered over Gaville, shockingly, the university did the same with the city. It didn't seem possible to dwarf the already enormous buildings, but the university did it with ease. Karina and Dee stood in front of the massive front doors, open-mouthed and once again in awe.

    As the two girls stood staring, the giant wooden doors opened of their own accord, inviting them inside. This was magic, this city was the pinnacle of the world according to magic. The invitation for entry given, Karina and Dee had no more time to stare in wonderment, they entered the most gigantic building they had ever seen to embark on the biggest enterprise of their lives.

Thursday, March 17, 2016

Animal Spirits (1)

Raine was on holiday with her four friends. They’d toured and trekked and played, and now they stood in a bustling marketplace, eating food from a street vendor and wondering where to go next. Zane pointed to a storefront down the street. There was a sign board out the front. Find your spirit animal.
“I want to find my spirit animal!” he said.
The five friends strolled towards the tiny shop. It seemed to sell crystals and power stones, incense and other spirit-inclined goods. The sign at the front seemed to be a temporary promotion. They all looked at one another. There was certainly no harm.
Tory shrugged. “Depends on how much it costs, I guess,” she said indifferently.
The others nodded in agreement.
“As long as it doesn’t break the bank, I don’t care how much it is, I’m finding my spirit animal!” Zane was really pumped, and his enthusiasm was infectious. The five of them squeezed into the shop, brushing past wind chimes and bells, creating an accompaniment for their movement.
When all five had somehow manoeuvred themselves into the space in front of the counter, a smiling woman appeared through the beaded curtain to the back of the store.
“Can I help you?” she asked.
Despite his enthusiasm, Zane didn’t take the lead, and Raine stepped forward. “We’re here about finding our spirit animals.”
The woman gave a glance back at the beaded curtain. As though he had been listening and waiting for this, a man made his way out. He didn’t look at them or say anything, but gestured for them to go through to the back room.
Raine hesitated for a moment when Tory gave her a meaningful look. “About the cost …”
The man looked straight into her eyes and gave a wry smile. “For a group? There will only be one cost.”
“Sounds good to me.” Zane was the first one to go through the beaded curtain. Dave and Adam followed behind him, then Tory. Raine was transfixed by the eyes of the man. They seemed to glow. Tory pulled on her hand to drag her along behind them, and Raine managed to tear her gaze away.
The back room contained a table and two chairs, and they all filed in and stood in a semicircle around them. The man came in last. He stood in front of them all.
“I am a shaman, from a long line of shamans. I shall unlock your spirit animals, but you won’t find out what they are here today.”
“Unlock? The sign said we’d find our spirit animals,” Zane said.
“And find them you shall. It’s not an instant process, though.”
“Then what are we paying you for today, then?” Tory asked.
“Today is a spirit ceremony allowing your animal guide to find you,” the shaman said solemnly. “If you would prefer to come back and pay me once the results have appeared, I wouldn’t object ...”
“No, it’s fine,” Raine said. “We’ll pay you to conduct the ceremony, it doesn’t matter about the results for now.”
The shaman met her eyes again and gave another of his small smiles. “Then the subject of payment? I would say four dollars for each of you who I manage to unlock a spirit animal for.”
“Four dollars? You’re not in this for the money, are you?”
“It’s a group discount. I only need to complete one ceremony for all of you, and that brings the total to twenty dollars. Unless some of you do not possess a spirit animal, then I might lose out.”
“How will you know if we do or not?” Adam asked.
“The ceremony will reveal it.” He bowed his head solemnly. “I will get things ready.” He opened the back door and walked out, leaving the five friends in the room.
“Well, he’s creepy, isn’t he?” Dave shrugged. “Looks like we’re paying for the whole experience.”
“I was kind of just expecting to sit down at the table and for him to give us an animal each, but this is better.” Tory said.
“Yeah.” Raine looked over to the beaded curtain. Something about the whole situation was making her nervous, and she wasn’t sure she wanted to go through with it. She opened her mouth to say so, but a cloud of pink smoke billowed in from the open back door.
“Nice!” Zane said.
The shaman walked back into the room through the smoke, waving a stick of incense and chanting something softly.
He approached Raine first. “Breathe in the incense, and it will attract your spirit guide to you,” he whispered, waving the stick in front of her face. He didn’t need to tell her, she had no choice but to breathe it in. It smelled sweet, and left a sweet taste in her mouth, too. The shaman moved onto Tory and whispered something to her as well, waving the stick in her face, too.
He went to each of the five crowded in a semi-circle, and then stepped on one of the chairs to get onto the table, chanting again. The room filled with the incense and the pink smoke, clouding everything. Raine felt a slight twinge in her chest, and suddenly the room was clear. The shaman was sitting at the table now.
“All of you had spirit animals to unlock,” he informed them.
“Surprise, surprise,” Tory muttered.
The shaman’s gaze moved over to Raine again. “Your spirit animal is special, though.”
“What does that mean?”
He tilted his head in a shrug-like manner. “I’m not sure. It is something I haven’t felt before. It should be amazing.”
The five friends paid the shaman and exited the shop, excitement buzzing around them.
“Well, that was an experience,” Adam said.
“Yeah, and that shaman was totally hitting on Raine.” Tory nudged Raine.
Raine felt her face get hot. “No, he wasn’t. It was totally creepy.”
Zane stepped out in front of her. “You’re the chosen one,” he said, wriggling his fingers in front of her face.
Raine smacked his hands away. “I am not.” She looked up into the sky. It had been around midday when they’d entered the store, and now the sun was low in the sky. “How long were we in there for, anyway?”
“Longer than we thought,” David said with a frown. “He shrugged. “Oh well, back to the hotel. It’s time to drink away our last night here!”
There was a cheer of agreement. Raine cheered to, letting the whole shaman experience sink to the back of her mind.


Three months later, Raine sat on the beach beside Tory, reminiscing about their trip.
“Remember that shaman?” she said, and laughed. “He was totally hitting on you.”
“He was not!” Raine laughed and slapped her shoulder.
“Hey.” Tory suddenly stopped laughing and looked into the distance. “What’s that?”
Raine looked over in the direction Tory was looking, confused as to what would change her mood so abruptly. The beach wasn’t busy, there were a few sunbathers and a couple of surfers in the waves, but Tory was looking over at the rocks to the side. Raine couldn’t see anything.
“I can’t see what you’re seeing. What’s what?”
Tory got to her feet and started walking over to the rocks. Raine jumped up to follow her. Tory had set a fast pace, and Raine almost had to run to keep up.
“Hey, hey, what is it?” Raine asked, worried.
Tory just stared straight ahead, driven by something Raine couldn’t see. Once they got to the rocks, Raine was already a few steps behind, and Tory managed to pick up her pace.
“Tory, be careful!” Raine had to slow down, trying to find footing on the uneven rocks, and her friend pulled even further ahead. Tory reached the water’s edge and bent down. Raine sighed, relieved that she was finally still, but Tory jumped into the water. She disappeared from view, and Raine scrambled to get to the edge as quickly as she could. Her friend was no longer visible, and Raine frantically searched the water’s surface for any sign of her.
“Tory! Tory!” Raine didn’t know if she should get in the water after her. If Tory had been taken by something, wouldn’t she be caught, too? Panicked, she could only look around. Minutes passed, and it felt like forever. Then Raine saw someone surface quite a distance away from the shore, on the other side of the breaking waves.
Tory waved at her, completely calm despite the situation. Raine jumped into the sea after her, feeling a strong motivation to slap her friend, or at least yell at her.
“What do you think you’re doing!” Raine demanded as she approached her friend. She would have grabbed Tory’s shoulders, but they were both swimming at the moment, and it wasn’t exactly the smartest decision right now.
Tory tilted her head slightly. “I’m following the seal,” she said, as if it were obvious.
“Following … you’re … what?”
In the face of Wen’s confusion, Tory just got excited. “My spirit animal guide, Raine. It’s a seal!”
Raine didn’t know what to do with the friend who was clearly having an episode while floating in the ocean. She spoke in a calm voice. “Tory, I think we should go back to shore. Then we can talk a little about the –”
“The seal!” Tory giggled like a child as the marine mammal she was just talking about made its appearance. Raine was dumbfounded. Where did a seal come from? The seal brushed its head against Tory’s arm.
“He told me you were scared and looking for me, so I thought we should meet up so you won’t worry when I go.”
“Go?” Raine was on the verge of screaming again. “Where could you possibly go? Don’t follow the seal, come back to shore with me.”
“But he’s my spirit animal guide, Raine. I need to follow him.”
“How could you possibly know that?”
“Because he told me. I’ve never been able to understand a seal before now, so it seems logical.”
“None of this seems logical. What if you’re having a mental break?”
Tory gave this some thought for a moment. “That’s possible …”
This comment threw Raine off again. Did people having breakdowns seriously consider the fact that they might be having one? She shook her head and held out her hand to Tory. “Let’s go back to shore.”
Tory shook her head. “We let that shaman do the ritual for a reason. So I’m going to believe that this seal speaking to me is the real deal, and I’ll follow him.”
The seal seemed to give an imperceptible nod, and stared at Raine. She had to admit, the seal was acting in a very strange manner for a wild animal. This was either an elaborate prank, or it was the real deal. Raine gazed sternly at the seal.
“You’d better bring her back safely,” she told him. Then she looked at Tory. “Be careful?”
“Of course!”
With that, the seal dived down into the water and Tory followed. Raine sighed. Was she crazy for going along with this? She looked back to shore. This wasn’t exactly a safe place to be, it was a good thing she hadn’t been caught in a rip while she’d been floating out here. Exhausted, she swam back to shore, trying not to dwell on strange things.
On the beach, Raine had a new dilemma: was she supposed to wait for Tory, or just go home?