Episode 16:This stays between us
The child was burning upâfever blazing beneath icy sweat. His breathing came in ragged, broken gasps, and every tremor in his slight body screamed that something deep inside him was going terribly wrong.
His mana was awakening.
But an awakening like thisâwild, uncontrolled, with undeveloped mana pathwaysâcould kill him. A surge this strong could stop the heart. Or the brain.
She brushed his forehead, then clasped his small hand with both of hers.
âThis shouldnât be happening yet⌠youâll die if your body canât withstand it.â
The room around him was filled with booksâpicture albums of places heâd never seen, wildlife guides about forests and swamps beyond these walls. Every page hinted at a wish heâd never spoken aloud: I want to go outside.
Even with fever-clouded eyes, when she asked if he wanted to wander the world⌠he nodded.
That was enough.
She leaned close and murmured, barely above a breath:
âThen weâll keep this a secret.â
Her mana flaredâsoft pink, warm and alive. Mana that had not moved in ages stirred in her chest like something waking from sleep. She guided a thin thread of it into the childâs hand.
It hurt himâbreaking a path where his own mana had never flowedâbut she kept going. Slowly, she created a circuit inside him. His expression, twisted with agony at first, gradually smoothed.
âYouâve been hurting this badly⌠all this time.â
Round after round, she drove her mana through the childâs bodyâdown the arms, through the heart, up to the head, then back to the hands. When she pulled her mana away, his remainedâfinally able to follow the path sheâd carved.
He was breathing freely. Color returned to his cheeks.
Meanwhile, her vision dimmed. Her heart pounded painfully.
Only when everything was finished did she collapse beside him.
âStay alive⌠and keep this secretâŚâ
Her consciousness slipped away.
The boy awoke later to a clarity he hadnât felt in years.
No pain. No dizziness. No crushing weight inside his chest.
The girl was gone.
No trace of her remained.
But he could still feel her warmth in his palmâlike petals of a soft, spring flower.
âA secretâŚâ
He whispered the word to himself.
When his brother entered the room later, the boy simply stared at his hand, unable to voice the truth.
âDid someone come while I was sleeping?â he asked, trying to sound casual.
âYes,â his brother said. âLady Nasia.â
Nasia.
The girl who had said his eyes were beautiful.
The boy asked what she looked like. His brother opened a landscape bookâa page showing a tree covered in fleeting pink blossoms, the kind that bloom only for a heartbeat before vanishing. The same image the boy had seen in a dreamlike haze when she held his hand.
He knew then.
It was her.
The girl who gave him hope.
âI want to go see her,â he murmured. For the first time in his short life, his words held certainty. âNext time⌠Iâll go to her.â
And his brother, stunned by the sudden determination that hadnât existed before, could only nod.
For the first time in years, the boy had a dream worth reaching for.