Subject: Second Circles ch. 9: Necessary Questions
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Posted on: 2018-04-15 16:59:00 UTC

“You can talk,” Julia said, too stunned to make it anything other than a flat statement of fact.

(Everything that has life can speak,) the tree said. (As long as you have the patience to listen.)

“I-” Julia said, shame flashing across her face as she realized she hadn’t taken the time, not once in an entire week, to listen. “I’m sorry. I haven’t been listening.”

(You probably want to change that,) the tree said. (In something less than the second we have left.)

“I will,” Julia promised. “Hi- for what good it’s done me, my name is-”

The girl who had thought her name was James sighed, into the frozen last moment of day.

“They call me James,” she said, softly. “I think I’m failing my Ordeal.”

The tree sighed, a long rustle of wind through its leaves.

(I am Naldross,) it-he, the suffix made clear, said. (I am sorry, wizard-who-others-call-James. You were sent here not knowing how to listen and not knowing your own name, and that is a hard place to win a battle from.)

“What do you know of battle?” Julia asked. “You’re a tree-”

(Have you not yet read of the Battle of the Trees, young wizardling?) Naldross asked. (We fought the darkness for you, wizard-who-others-call-James, before your kind walked your world. And I was there. I was scarcely more than a sapling, in my wandering years, but I was there and I fought in the greatest battle of the age.)

“You’re- you’re ancient!” Julia said, feeling the tree echo just how true it was. “And- and I was just going to leave you, to face my mistake.”

Hot tears ran down her face, dropped to the earth below her.

“What should I do?” Julia asked, after. “How do I fix this?”

(You start by listening,) Naldross said. (What does the cloud want?)

“What do you mean?” Julia asked. “It’s a pyroclastic flow, it wants to burn-”

She stopped herself. “Hang on. Are clouds alive?”

(Why don’t you ask it?) Naldross said, a hint of amusement in his voice.

Julia thought for a second and then realized that it was a suggestion. She stood, looked up at the looming cloud, the dragons-breath blast that technically was still racing to consume her and Naldross and everything else.

Climbing the mountain was the hardest thing Julia had ever done. She’d hiked at twelve thousand feet, where the air was a ghostly shadow of itself. She’d climbed ropes at the end of gym class, arms and lungs burning with every inch climbed. She’d hiked the last of a fifteen-mile day, limbs leaden and will sapped.

This was something else entirely. She could feel the heat pouring off the cloud, the breath of the dragon, and knew that every step was a step closer to annihilation. She had nothing- no plans, no backup, no name, just a hastily-spoken spell holding death at bay.

And then she was there, smelling the sulfur, smelling the smoke, an arm’s length from a wall of death.

“Hi,” Julia said. “I thought my name was James. I think I’m failing my Ordeal. Can you… hear me?”

And then she waited. And then she listened.

When the cloud spoke, it was faint- a thousand tiny voices, yelling as one to be heard at all.

(Hello,) the cloud said. (We hear you, child of Life.)

“What… do you want?” Julia asked. She already knew the answer, it was obvious, it was an assumption and she pushed the thought down, tried to clear her mind, tried to hear the answer.

(To fly,) the voices of the cloud said, and at the same time (to carry) and (to give).

“You carry fire and bring death,” Julia said, softly.

(We know,) the cloud said, sadly, as one. (We are not as we should be. Same as you, wizard-who-thought-her-name-was-James. Can you help us?)

The request waited, unanswered, for a long second.

“I’ll try,” Julia promised.

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