Evenacht: Snake's Den by Kwyn Marie | World Anvil Manuscripts | World Anvil

Chapter 22: Reform

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Floating in calm Darkness, with enough pinpricks of light to cast all in a softly glowing, ashen haze. Where was she? She did not know. She felt ethereal, more so than when she employed Ether Touch, as if she lay in a swimming pool’s water, eyes closed, dipping and swaying to the minute waves that struck the sides and dissipated into nothing.

She broadened her perception, a hesitant prod of essence into her dark surroundings, but failed to sense anything other than energy winking in and out with the sparkle of the light. Nothing but the Darkness surrounded her; nothing to see, nothing to hear. She rested alone, in an odd void. How did she get there? Why was she there?

Who was she?

She pondered the question as disquiet rose. Flicks of memory lurched from behind fuzzy thoughts, a jumble at first, but after concentrating, they formed a timeline.

She froze. Her death! But recollection continued. Finders. Nolaris. Laken. Her flight from Evening, the mini-Joyful. Forest travel and meeting Verryn. The Shades enclave, Greyshen and Lorgan. A small, so-ugly-he’s-cute avian. Fyrij. Yes. A rush commenced, the remembrances stepping on one another and yelling for attention. Pirates, a beach, nomads . . .

The vi-van’s attack. Had she . . . discorporated? She must have. How else could she explain this Darkness?

She had never discorporated before. How could she return to her whole self? How was she going to get enough energy in a desert to do so? The tiny lights?

She timidly reached for the sparkles, but they remained out of reach, pretty, useless.

Useless? No, there had to be a way for her to absorb them and reform. Ghosts discorporated, more often than the Evenacht admitted. She had read about feeding an unlucky spirit’s depleted energy pool, concentrating on ways to help another being, rather than what to do when she was the affected entity. She never thought it could happen to her because her caution normally convinced her rowdier self to hide rather than act. How stupid, considering the dangers inherent in a Finder’s work, that she neglected it.

If the attack took her form, what happened to Laken? Had it harmed him? Could it harm him? Heads were notorious for being difficult to physically hurt. Death meant for them to experience their punishment, and too many would attempt to find the Final Death if given the chance, avoiding recompense. As they were relegated to Physical Form, so, too, were they Gifted with a type of immortality that prevented them from realizing the Final Death.

She reached again; she sensed energy flickering within the sparkles, but could not touch them to absorb it.

“Easy, Vantra.”

She wanted to look wildly about, but could not. Panic pricked her before the ashen fog coalesced, becoming a discernable if still transparent image. Katta. She recognized Katta.

He settled his fingertips above her core. A calm warmth infused her, as if he wrapped her within a fire-heated blanket. “Did the Finders not teach you about reforming? It is a skill useful to those battling the dangers of a Redemption.”

“No.” Her voice sounded wispy, echoey, not herself. “I read about it, though.”

“Hmm. It’s not as frightening as the depictions say, but only if you understand what’s going on,” he said. “Written words rarely prevent the terror it causes, especially if, under duress, the ghost can’t recall what they read.”

“I can’t touch any energy.”

“It surrounds you. You’re instinctively absorbing it, so no worries there.”                                                                            

How was she doing that? “But I reached for it and could not touch it.”

“You are within it, so you are touching it, I suppose, just not as you expect.”

That made no sense. “What about Laken? Was he hurt?”

“Don’t worry about Laken. You need to focus on re-energizing.”

His wording concerned her. “He’s all right?”

“He’s a Condemned. Yes, he’s all right. No attack will harm him, even when a syimlin performs it, because Death and Darkness’s Touch protects him.” He pulled back and raised his hands to the sides. “Do you perceive the Light?”

“The little sparkles? Yes.”

He smiled. “Good. Darkness cradles, and Light sings the lullaby. It is not one or the other, but both. If you wish to reach the sparkles, concentrate on sucking them in, as you first learned to eat the mists.”

“So I’ll be absorbing both Darkness and Light?”

“That more closely resembles your innate essence leaning. So yes, if you can, that would be best.”

She reverted to her first experiences with mist, and sucked in, mimicking breathing. She did not know if she had any sort of form, but her essence responded, expanding. The sparkles coated themselves in the touch of Darkness before rushing to her, and she drank them in, energy dancing through her. The sensation of floating on water dwindled into an impression of lying on the beach, half-dosing, as the midday Sun warmed her skin. A buzz came from everywhere, incremental in increasing volume, as if someone asked her to listen to a wondrous song but teased her by not turning it up loud enough for her to clearly hear it.

Katta’s form slid to her as she breathed in. Oh, no! She stopped; he shook his head and lowered his hands. “What’s wrong?”

“I’m sucking you in.”

“Oh. I’m projecting through the energy. You’re sucking in power, not me. I’ll be here if you need help, I promise.”

She had no reason to think he lied, but doubt crept through her. Too many other experiences had ended poorly for her because she trusted the wrong person. But Katta was not the wrong person, she knew that.

“When you’ve gained enough energy, I’ll help you reform. Being discorporated can be a little confusing, especially the first time.”

“I don’t want this to happen again!”

He laughed, sultry-smooth as decadent icing. “No, I bet you don’t. And Lorgan has plans for that, too.”

Her metaphysical stomach dropped at the declaration.

“You are going to get a crash course in offensive spells by a man trained at one of the finest academies on Tails.”

Her stomach dropped further. Even in the Evenacht, when she pressed her nose into a book, she never considered herself much of a scholar, especially when it came to her lackluster magic ability. Lorgan might give up in frustration once he realized her mediocrity.

An agitated cheep broke through the buzz. She frowned. “That sounded like Fyrij.”

“It is. I haven’t been able to calm him down. His attachment to you is absolute, and until you awaken, he will stay upset.”

While tempted to remain wherever she was, cradled in Darkness and hiding from Lorgan’s assessments and training, Fyrij needed her. Laken needed her. She could not wallow in distress when she had others who depended on her being whole.

“How can I re-energize faster?”

He regarded her, then glanced about at the dancing sparkles shining bright against the ashen Darkness. “I can show you. It isn’t comfortable, though. It’s less frightening to slowly absorb than gulp down.”

Fear already trickled through her essence, so that was not an issue. “I’d like to gulp.”

“Alright. We’ll intone it. That should smooth things a tad. We’ll start with ‘Onpueplom fin nanfla, no los quif fe’, and suck in deep and fast afterwards.”

Vantra repeated after the ancient ghost, then sucked in a phantom breath. The sparkles rushed to her, too many, too quick, stuffing her with Light. She fought not to explode; Katta’s Darkness infused her, lessening the rush, guiding the energy into a useful flare rather than a destructive burst.

Uncomfortable, he said.

That did not describe the zipping of energy into her essence, that crackled and sparked and lit every bit of her on fire. Had she absorbed the energy, or had it eaten her? The tingle remained, running stinging laps around her form.

Her perception broadened. She lay on a wide bed in a darkened room, propped up by a fluffy pillow. Fyrij paced next to her, scolding and cheeping and flapping his wings. Katta sat in a chair squeezed against the bed frame, her hand in his. He covered hers with his other palm, then withdrew as the dark dwindled under a growing brightness.

Kjaelle rushed up, hands over her mouth and nose, eyes gleaming as if holding back unshed tears. “Vantra.”

She smiled, though she doubted that assuaged the worry. Fyrij jumped onto her chest and anxiously tweeted until she sank her fingers into his soft black feathers. She had asked Katta to help her into Physical form, but maybe she should have attempted Ether first. That required less energy on her part, and, perhaps, she would not feel so stiff. Unresponsive.

“She is well, little one,” Katta told the avian.

A relative word, well. She thanked Sun she no longer lived because the pain and aches that would accompany her recovery would drive her back into the ashen Darkness. How did ghosts recover without outside help? Practice? Without Katta guiding her, she would have remained in the dark, endlessly reaching for the Light and failing to brush against the sparkling energy.

Fyrij turned on the ancient ghost and tweeted and sang a piercing note that made them wince.

“I left nothing of him to linger,” Katta said. “Rezenarza tried but failed. He could not touch her as he wished, and he never will. Sun shines too strong within her for the dire depths of Darkness to take hold.”

Vantra regarded him warily. “What do you mean?”

He raised an eyebrow as Kjaelle slipped her arm around his shoulders and leaned into him. “Rezenarza knows deep Darkness. He is the prowler hiding in night’s shadows, the sunless cave, the darkness concealed by darkness. Through the vi-van, he thought to infiltrate you, taint your essence. He couldn’t.”

He placed a comforting hand on her forearm as she worked through the terrifying news. What might have happened to her, had he succeeded? Why target her in the first place? Why not a member of the mini-Joyful that Katta and Qira cared about?

“He misjudged you. He assumed your Light was a fake platitude meant to convince others of your sincerity. A lie, and one easily exploited. His power discorporated you, but it could do nothing else.”

His power. Had he failed because he acted through an intermediary? The honorable touch of Darkness Kenosera spoke so highly about did not guide his people, as he claimed. No, a trick of shadows led them, and unless they checked their step, they would plummet into unrelenting night, with no obvious escape from the void.

Vesh claimed Rezenarza looked at Darkness differently and did not consider it a bad thing. Maybe he should.

Her eyes flicked around. Two beds nestled against adjacent walls, each large enough to sleep two people, and tall, dark-stained wardrobes carved with ocean creatures stood regally at the feet. A curved blue sofa and two plump lounge chairs sat around a tiled coffee table containing an ocean-blue ceramic vase and a pile of thick books in various states of tatter. A brown-curtained window illuminated a writing desk with a hutch on one side, and an empty side table on the other. A counter with swirly blue and brown, shimmery marble patterns jutted from the wall, sectioning the sleeping area from the dining area. Pirate-themed décor hung adorned the walls, from large paintings of sea battles to ship-shaped sconces, to a replica of a ship’s wheel.

“Where are we?”

“Dough has multiple guest rooms at his place,” Kjaelle said. “He said he entertains enough dignitaries, he needed a space that reflected wealth rather than the rough and tumble pirate life.” Coarse laughter erupted from her. “His personal rooms are more . . . bawdy.”

“Did they recapture Lesanova and Dedari?”

“No,” the elfine soothed. “Fyrij led them to the cliff before it completely collapsed. Trevel and his people got the non-ghosts to safety.”

“Collapsed?”

Katta looked as unamused as a sodden cat, while a despondent Kjaelle withheld her laughter by shoving her face into his hair. “Let’s just say there’s a canyon instead of a hollow there now,” the ancient ghost grumbled. “Don’t look at me like that! Dough’s already planning to monetize the thing, a miracle creation of Passion to get rid of the Nevemere scourge. Don’t look at me like that!”

Vantra covered her eyes with her palms, as if the pads would shove the shock back into her head. Monetize a miracle? How dare he! Of course, she doubted Verryn would say much on the subject, as he preferred to get along and not cause storm waves.

“I’ve been stared at enough,” he continued, defensive.

“It’s expected, that the crowd would stare at one who is so trusted by a syimlin,” Kjaelle reminded him.

“Qira likes the attention. They should shower it upon him.”

“Did you save us from the canyon?” Vantra asked, focusing on Kjaelle.

“Yes,” she said. “By that time, a lot of the hollow had collapsed, and whoever attacked you had vanished.” The elfine’s dead tone when speaking of the nomads sent a shudder through her. The beings would not escape her wrath a second time.

“Thank you for saving us. I need to speak with Laken.” He would know exactly what happened to the shard after she discorporated, and whether the nomads took it. If it fell into a fissure and Verryn’s power had not destroyed it, Qira, as an acolyte of Light, should be able to sense it, even buried under mounds of rock.

Katta and Kjaelle glanced at each other, and dread returned, in force.

“You can’t,” Kjaelle said quietly.

“But Katta said he wasn’t hurt!”

“He’s not. He’s a Condemned, and no native can harm him. But he’s not here. Vantra, the Nevemere looted you after they discorporated you. They kidnapped Laken.”

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