Page 54 of The Quiet Side


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But it’s a start.

Seeds start small, too.

And then they grow.

I slip a tiny dragon scale inside its inner workings.

“Stabilize,” I pronounce in a low voice made rich and resonant with the power I channel.

The device flares bright gold, with veins of sparkling white mixed in.

Sage and dragon magic, working together. Not a sight I ever thought to see.

What else have I never imagined?

When the glow fades, I hand it back to Tasa. “Can you seal it so the dragon scale inside can’t be seen?”

“Hm? Oh yeah, sure. I can do that when I install it.”

She’s staring at me like she’s seeing me for the first time.

In a way she is; being sage is a part of me, and I imagine the glowing makes it visibly real in a way it previously wasn’t to her.

But I have never been a sage like this before.

And I find that it matters to me that this one person sees me as more than a divine vessel.

It’s greedy. I’ve already been chosen by a god.

But I want to be chosen by her.

“You can fix us,” Tasa whispers.

I shake my head sharply. “There’s nothing to fix. Nothing is broken.”

“Actually quite a lot is literally broken—”

“Tasa.”

“Yes, okay, this isn’t broken exactly, its magic just doesn’t work—”

I grip her shoulders. “You’re not broken. All of this is the pieces for a new beginning. I can merely strengthen what is already here.Youare the one who builds.”

She blinks.

And a smile spreads across her face, like dawn breaking across the sky.

“And now I won’t have to worry that the roof will fall down!” Tasa exclaims. “No no I get it, I still have to pay attention to physics, but—”

“You can build more houses,” I say intently. “You can buildwhatever you want. And each will be different, because you’ll always be working with different pieces, different needs—”

“And I won’t get bored,” Tasa whispers. “But—”

I place a finger on her lips. “No buts. This will work. For you, and for Crystal Hollow. My word as a sage.”

Tasa was right. I can start with something small that matters and build up.

Now I have to convince her that she already matters.