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Chapter Eight: Prayer in the Storm New

I woke up, still leaning against Mom. Outside, the wind howled, barely muffled by the thick walls. I couldn't tell how much time had passed. It could've been evening or morning out there. I shivered. My breath didn't mist, but it was colder than it had been last night.

Mom hadn't moved.

I shook Mom, but it was to no avail. I placed my ear to her chest and barely noticed any warmth, but the burst of panic I felt stilled as I noticed her chest moving with small breaths, if only slightly. I nearly tripped as I stood and hurriedly checked the fire.

The fire had died sometime during the night while I was asleep, but to my relief I saw some faint coals lingered. I hadn't actually made a fire from scratch despite Mom showing me how, but I had stoked the fire plenty of times before, so I could at least do this much. Moving stiffly, I scrutinized our wood stocks with numb concern. We kept two, one further outdoors a ways from the apartment we lived in and a much smaller pile indoors for convenience.

The indoor wood box was mostly depleted, with only a log and some small branches left. Mom usually filled it up each morning with a little bit of my help, but she couldn't exactly handle that now. I tossed the last few logs from the nearby pile into the hearth and absently wondered if it was time for breakfast. Or lunch. I had no idea what time it actually was.

My stomach growled.

"Oh," I said aloud. I was hungry. That was a problem. Last night's feast was only one comparatively. It still wasn't huge by my old life's standards. I doubt it was huge for anyone who wasn't a small child.

Making blue rice should not be difficult. At least, I didn't think so. I helped Mom chop foraged greens and set seaweed up to dry. I also had a wealth of experience from my old life that fortunately went to actual recipes and not just…romen? Or was it ramen? That didn't sound right. I couldn't remember.

I shook my head. I just hadn't cooked using Mom's stove before.

The portable stove was easy enough to identify. It only had a few buttons with sigils for cold and hot going from left to right. It really seemed designed for simplicity's sake. For all I knew, it was designed to be so simple exactly for this sort of situation. Although unlike the silver battery on the lights, this one had a canister of some liquid at the base, about half full. It heated up in a few minutes, and I was able to draw some water from a nearby jug without issue. I grabbed two handfuls of dry rice, and awkwardly plopped them in; one handful for me, and one for Mom when she woke up. I then waited for it to come to a boil.

I felt like there should have been more fanfare, but there really wasn't. It felt a bit odd intruding on an act Mom had always handled, but it wasn't entirely unfamiliar. I could cook well enough to feed myself in my old life. I might have even been better than my peers given my father had been useless in the kitchen. Even the stove would've been similar to some things in my old life given its dial that could be alternated between a blue and red symbol for hot and cold.

The stove top chose that moment to promptly turn off for no apparent reason. I stared and pretended it would come back on. I checked the liquid container and saw still had some. I even tapped the buttons some more. It didn't work. A few minutes of fruitlessly tinkering and I gave up with the rice barely half cooked. Crunchy rice wasn't nice, but it was still better than smellyweed soup.

My standards for this world might be low.

It was at that moment I realized the winds hadn't stopped since I'd woken up. If anything, they'd gotten louder. Uneased yet curious, I made sure my Mom was still covered in her blanket and tucked in before I left. I made my way to a more distant we'd kept some non-food forage from the island's interior in and I knew had a window to glance outside.

My first thought was, sadly, not that eloquent. "Holy shit those clouds are dark" is not something I think would get me anything but dry looks if I said it aloud in any time period or world. Secondly, I shrieked as a gust of arctic air rushed through the opened gap in the window to freeze me out of nowhere. I fell over but was back on my not quite feet in a second and hurriedly pushing the wood blinds closed. They barely helped as wind slipped between thick wood blinds and still stung my skin. Only closing the door had an impact and I could still very much hear and feel the cold wind.

I panted and shivered as I leaned against the door

This wasn't good. Storms were bad. Mom wasn't up to close the fort down.

I hurried back to the main room and closed every door I could along the way. Most days, even in Winter, it didn't get as bad as it could inside here given how thick the walls were, but storms were another matter. Last time Mom kept the hearth going the entire time and we were still shivering by the time it was over.

I briefly contemplated braving the storm outdoors to try and get some more wood from the wood pile, but I ran into an issue. I was still too damn small. I could reach the handle just fine, but shifting the massive fucking door was a no go. I could climb out one of the windows in another room, but I doubted I'd be able to get back in and lug back wood to last us. Besides, it'd likely be soaked and near useless for the fire anyway.

Would you even be able to make it back to Mom if you did go out?

I froze in the middle of closing a door, shuddered, and promptly ignored that fearful voice.

I settled for gathering every single sheet I could from adjacent rooms, and draped them over Mom. I stoked the flames and threw everything left into the hearth and hoped for the best. I hesitated a second, darted to grab the bowl of half-finished rice I'd made for Mom, then wiggled underneath the covers with her, and waited.

The chill wasn't an immediate thing. If anything, it was cozy and I could pretend we were just having a lazy morning. Yet, even with the fire still fueled, it felt oppressive. Bit by bit, the warmth faded. I couldn't tell the time of day here, and didn't dare leave to check a distant window in another room. All I could do was wait and feel as goosebumps slowly formed on my skin as tiny air currents wafted ever colder air in through cracks while the fire and light slowly burned and occasionally cackled with a shifting log. I hugged tighter around one of mom's arms as I pressed my back into her.

For once, I didn't want to move. I just wanted to snuggle closer to Mom, an instinctual feeling I could practically hear saying, "mom will protect, mom will help" but she wasn't. Mom was listless. She wasn't quite cold, but she wasn't quite warm.

I wished she would wake up. I wanted her to wake up. She didn't. I could only wait and hope for the best.

Slowly, the fire faded. I know it was just running low on fuel as time went by, but I felt like it was losing a battle. With every moment the fire dimmed, I felt the cold more viscerally, like it was a skeletal hand reaching out to grip me, sinking deeper and deeper beneath my skin. My tail was furred but it already felt cold, colder than my arms and legs. All of which were under blankets and sheets.

Mom didn't feel remotely warm anymore.

It was just cold. I told myself that. It didn't help. Everything seemed awful. I didn't want to panic, but everything seemed to be getting worse. A little voice in the back of my head kept bringing up the worst case scenarios.

"What if Mom doesn't wake up? What if she's already stopped breathing and you're just pretending she hasn't? What if it's only you all alone on this island? Will anyone ever find you? Maybe an archeologist in a few centuries would find you two huddled and buried in the ruins. Will you just be left as a sad footnote to history, nameless even in a second life?"

I wished the voice in my head would shut up, but he wouldn't. He sounded just like my old self, nothing like my current voice. Pessimistic, realistic, and so fucking certain of the uselessness of trying.

I shivered. This was worse than anything I'd experienced before. Alternatively, maybe it was just Mom not able to help. She always did so much prep and I could do almost nothing. For once, I felt as small as I actually was.

Storms were usually bad and the winds awful, but the speed with which I could feel the air getting colder filled me with oily dread. It was only Autumn. It shouldn't be this bad. You'd think a large, stone structure like the citadel we camped out in would hold in heat. Sure, the insulation had long since rotted, but Mom had done what she could, and the stone was thick. Yet, it felt as if heat poured out of this place like a sieve.

I hugged Mom's arm close, staring at the fading fire with just the tip of my head out of the blankets. Embers shifted and light faded. Even through the sealed room and front door, buried beneath sheets and blankets huddling against Mom's still form, I felt cold creeping in, like skeletal hands sneaking in to snatch warmth from me.

I lingered a while longer and hoped to outlast the cold. But the light faded. The winds grew stronger and shook the entire structure. Distantly, I heard one door slam open, then another, and another as the wind raged through the building. I instantly knew I hadn't secured the locks like Mom would have.

Or maybe it wouldn't have made no difference. I didn't know.

The heavy apartment doors, but it was cold comfort. The fire was back to embers once more.

This was worse than before. Where had this cold even come from? It'd been fine yesterday! I wanted help. Mom couldn't. There was no one else, and I couldn't even rely on myself. I simply couldn't do anything on my own, not like I am.

I tried doing something I hadn't done in a long time, not since I was a child in my old life.

"Please," I prayed, voice barely a whisper. "Anyone. I'll do anything. Don't…don't let us die here. Please."

The omnipresent howling wind outside abruptly stopped as though its vocal chords were cut. My ears rang in the abrupt quiet. I turned sharply towards the door as something in the door shifted with a metallic clang and—

I blinked. I then blinked seven more times for good measure, not quite comprehending where I was or what I was doing. It felt like I'd just woken up but I hadn't been sleeping, had I?

Wait. The cold was gone. Wait, was it ever cold? But then, why was I shivering? Disoriented, I wiggled out of my mom's grasp and looked around. Everything seemed normal. Something flared in the corner of my eye.

A sense of unease shot through me like an avalanche.

The front door was ajar. Small, faintly fading golden tracks of what looked an awful lot like a cat's paws made their way to the improvised bed I'd made for Mom. Except they were huge, easily three times as big if not bigger than my own hands. In seconds they were gone.

I heard a new sound that made my heart jolt.

"Gwen?" Mom's voice, weak but awake, turned me back around. She was halfway to sitting, holding up her weight with one elbow.

"Mama!" With a cry, I dove into her arms and did not fall apart or shed any tears at all. I held onto more of my dignity than that. "Mama, you're okay!"

"Of course I'm okay. The ritual just took a bit more out of me than I expected, that's all," Mom pressed her lips gently to my forehead. They weren't cold anymore. "I'm here for you. It's okay."

Despite her brave face, the strain and faintness in her voice made it obvious how tired she was. I did not cry for too long, or hard enough that I couldn't speak. The right words just didn't come to me right away, so I just let Mom hold me for a while. She didn't stroke my hair or back, and it definitely wasn't super comforting; I was a catgirl, not a cat.

Then our bellies grumbled together, and Mom winced.

"I'm so sorry, kitten, that must have been frightening. Let's go find something to eat."

"Oh," I eloquently said, and then perked up. I'd made rice! It was bad rice, but it would be something to munch on and—

The bowl was foul. If anything, it was a blackened sludge whose smell just now hit me.

That…how long had we been out? It couldn't have gone that bad without me noticing. How long had we been out, I'd just lied down, hadn't I? It was…

I shot up. I remembered. What had just happened? What the flying fuck had happened?

Mom raised an eyebrow. "What's wrong, sweetie, and what's that smell?" she trailed off, seeing the same bowl. She sighed. "Let's get some proper food, sweetie, not… whatever that is."

I felt some embarrassment as she must have assumed I'd somehow made a bowl of sludge.

Eventually, we got moving again. There was a lot I wanted to ask Mom, about what had happened, why she'd collapsed and whatever I'd seen. Yet, something made me hold my tongue. I wasn't even sure it hadn't even been a nightmare.

Yet, as the day wore on through lessons I saw little to no evidence of a storm or even cold of any sort, my unease grew.

It couldn't have been a dream. It felt way too real, and if I dismissed it as one, I might as well dismiss my old life while I'm at it.

Later that night, I set my bowl of rice soup with fishbone stock down. "Mom? I have something to tell you," I began. I paused a long time as her own ears perked up attentatively.

"You fell asleep." I didn't know how to say "fell unconscious" yet.

Mom slowly gulped down her own thinner soup. "That wasn't sleeping, Gwen. It was [geimhreadh]," she said. I tasted the word. "It's like a deep sleep. I was very drained, and I needed rest. More rest than I thought I'd need, sweetie, but, well, normally there's others, and… Well, it was all worth it," she said, reaching out to pat my shoulder.

There were more questions there, but I restrained myself.

"I was scared." I paused, searching for words. Mom was already reaching out to comfort me. Again. I tried to find the word and realized I didn't know it. I knew the English term, but the one for here? I blanked. "I…I asked for help," I finally said.

Mom froze. "Asked for help?" she repeated, with a sudden tension.

"You were asleep so long a storm blew in," I said.

"Storm? How long was I—"

"I was so scared," I raced, voice breaking even more than it usually does. "You weren't waking up and was getting so cold and I tried to raise the fire but it just couldn't keep up and was dying so I asked for help even though no one was there and—"

"Wait, wait, Gwen, did you [pray] for help?" Mom asked me, fear mixed with incredulousness in her tone.

"I think so?" I said, vaguely recognizing the word from an earlier language lesson. She'd taught the word's meaning but little else before moving onto other grammar.

Mom's spoon was shaking. She took a deep breath. "Kitten. I never taught you to pray because there's no one left to answer."

I shuddered violently, finally grasping the significance of what I'd done. My ears lay back.

"Oh, [fuck]," I whispered.


Chapter Eight Author's Note





I'm reminded of a certain meme I saw way back in which someone in a D&D game insulted the moon and Selene later showed up in their dreams to slap them upside the head. Moral of the story to be cautious when offering prayers in a new world. Something might just answer them





Chapter came out somewhat easier than the last one. Chapter was at least partly inspired by the time I was leaving a wedding and saw a number of 5-6 year olds all collectively fail to push back a heavy glass door that was closing that someone forgot to hold for them.





Which leads to my current thought. Being a child in an isekai is unlikely to be particularly easy. Add in a survival situation and it's worse. But as usual, many such stories I've seen usually gloss over vulnerability, whether it's physical or emotional. Hopefully I'm getting that aspect down.





ALSO! First ever story rec. Got contacted from hidingfromyou (which surprisingly is not an alias of mine but is a great name), and they've been posting their own gender bender isekai story called They Call Me Princess Cayce (isekai, becoming a princess, kingdom and military building)!





Read up to chapter 5 so far and gotta say, I'm liking what I'm seeing with how the author is handling a very unfortunate isekai into a medieval fantasy princess's life and all the unfortunate realities of doing so in the middle of a warzone. So yeah, I heartily endorse it.


image








:3





Obligatory author plugin because I'd love to write more but society sadly says I need monies to keep living:





Support me on Patreon, Ko Fi, or Subscribe Star. Check them out for advance chapters, up to 13.5. Or check out my website for links to my other author accounts, contact, socials, etc.


Also I have a discord now! Check it out. I would love to chat with fans. :3






 
You definitely got the fear and helplessness of being a small child down. Great chapter!
I'm glad to hear that, and appreciate the compliment. Big goal in this fic was to work with the Isekai at all stages, to at least some extent, and childhood is definitely one of them I wanted to tackle in a compelling way, so nice to hear I am on track. :3
 
Mom's spoon was shaking. She took a deep breath. "Kitten. I never taught you to pray because there's no one left to answer."
Dun Dun Dun ! big reveal. So Who did she pray to and did anyone answer or is this still just a dream. And if there is no one left to answer. Who made the gods leave.

This is definitely a post-apocalypse situation.
 
I shuddered violently, finally grasping the significance of what I'd done. My ears lay back.

"Oh, [fuck]," I whispered.
Very nice chapter, glad to see the mother survived. So were things not as gone as the mother believed, or did something else answer?
ALSO! First ever story rec. Got contacted from hidingfromyou (which surprisingly is not an alias of mine but is a great name), and they've been posting their own gender bender isekai story called They Call Me Princess Cayce (isekai, becoming a princess, kingdom and military building)!
Thanks for the rec, while people ignoring the MC and dismissing her and her desires/concerns because she's young and female is certainly realistic, it's not something I'd enjoy reading a lot about. Is that a consistent theme the MC keeps having to deal with?
 
Very nice chapter, glad to see the mother survived. So were things not as gone as the mother believed, or did something else answer?
Thanks for the rec, while people ignoring the MC and dismissing her and her desires/concerns because she's young and female is certainly realistic, it's not something I'd enjoy reading a lot about. Is that a consistent theme the MC keeps having to deal with?
To your first question, Gwen's mom is definitely wrong in that something is clearly present to answer, but as to what, I'll just say this:

:3

As for your second question regarding the rec, It does seem prevalent in the bits I have read up to chapter 10 so far, but I suppose I have a certain tolerance for it until she breaks out the real Joan of Arc vibes and the satisfaction of such a turning point, but I can understand if that's not something you'd want to read.

That said, she does seem to have points where people she's connected with actually listen to her. The armorer having a breakthrough thanks to her comments comes to mind.
 
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Chapter Nine: Magic! Lessons New

Chapter Nine: Magic! Lessons


The clamshell lay still: offensively inert.

I stared at it, lying in the dead grass like it was mocking me. It was a pretty shell, threaded with streaks of blue with the faintest rainbow hue. A single, circular sigil was lightly scraped into it with an old iron nail.

I was rather proud of the sigil, too. It had some asymmetric flourishes on the right which would have been easy to get with something like a charcoal stick, but this had to be in the shell itself. Trying to get that down without the lines going all wiggly or jagged was hard with a nail and a little craftsman's hammer Mom gave me. I'd screwed the sigil time and time again, which prompted Mom to point out the exact issues with the sigil and how it strayed from the one in her book. Mom accepted nothing less than perfection with the project, so any flaws, no matter how minor, meant starting over. Given what we were trying to do, I suspect Mom was probably right to make such demands, but it didn't make it any less annoying.

I ended up ruining three much less pretty shells before I'd gotten it right with this one. It didn't even detract from the shell's beauty and instead gave a little mystique, kinda like a rare find in an antique store, or maybe an oddity displayed in a museum from an old archaeological expedition.

Pretty or not, it also wasn't doing what it was supposed to be doing.

A part of me wanted to blame the faint scent that'd been bugging me all day. It was a bit like freshly cut mint leaves yet not quite, like something was just ever so slightly different even if I couldn't identify why it was different no matter how much I sniffed around like a mutt. It'd also been driving me nuts since I woke up trying to figure out what I was smelling.

I'd already asked Mom, and she couldn't smell it. She claimed her sense of smell had been a bit deadened in her youth by an accident. Heck, she sometimes relied on my sense of smell when foraging for plants as it was, so it wasn't like she was a ton of help there. All I knew was that it felt like the scent was seemingly everywhere around the sea fort we called home, but no specific plant I checked, and I checked a lot today, smelled like it.

This was all doubly frustrating given I would have liked to make some tea. I think Mom would have liked some tea as well. I caught her sometimes wistfully looking at a tin mug she sipped water out of in the mornings with a shake of the head.

Still, though, at this point I could tune it out. It was still there, but I could focus on other issues. Like breakfast, sewing with Mom, or helping her clean rust of gear and doodads. But all of that only brought me back to the present issue driving me crazy: the sigil carved into a clam shell and how frustratingly inert it was.

I looked back at Mom's own clam shell. It was similar, although she'd gone for a more plain shell with a lesser blue. I'd asked why we were using shells and she'd shrugged, saying it was as good as any lesser material and, lacking alchemical metals or gold, we might as well use "organic resonance", whatever that meant.

The startling thing about it, her technobabble aside, was that the sigil itself; it was glowing under her hand. I definitely hadn't gasped aloud and squeed at seeing real magic stuff in action, nor had I grumbled later as I failed repeatedly to get my own sigil right. It wasn't a steady glow, nor was it all that bright. I Instead, it was ever so slightly visible in the daylight, pulsing to an unknown beat

Mine wasn't.

I did my best to scowl knowing it was just a pout.

"Mama, it's not working," I said, staring back and forth between my hand, the shell, and noting the conspicuous lack of glowing magic goodness.

Mom sighed. She didn't quite pinch the bridge of her nose, but she looked like she wanted to. "Gwen, you have to focus. It's a simple exercise. Breathe in, out, and try to project your will through your crest and into the shell." She proceeded to do just that. She breathed in, dimming the sigil to almost nothing, before exhaling, causing the sigil to suddenly brighten.

This exercise was supposed to be simple. "Simply channel your will into a sigil carved onto a shell functioning as a catalyst, supply mana, and boom. Magic lights." Except, I didn't even know how to begin! I might as well be told it's easy to fly, just use your nonexistent wings!

To say I had been excited to learn about magic was an understatement. With my birthday over a week in the past and Mom mostly recovered from the…incident, Mom had announced one morning she was going to teach me the fundamentals of Thaumaturgy. It was one thing to know that magic of some form was real in this world and could be put into items, but to know I could learn about it was so utterly exhilarating that I wanted to jump and bounce in excitement. In fact, I may have done just that when Mom had let me know.

My anticipation of learning actual magic was only further because of everything that had happened in the aftermath of my birthday. I think Mom may have just thought I was excited to learn, which wasn't incorrect, but the thought of learning actual magic after a life where magic was equated with scams or parlor tricks? The excitement wasn't so much palpable as it was a physical force driving me forward.

Given all of that, I'd looked forward to today. Then Mom started talking.
"Okay, maybe a refresher is in order?" Mom said. She didn't sound certain. I groaned. "Don't be difficult. This should be easy. Now focus on my words. Try not to think, only feel. I'm going to start over." Mom leaned closer and held up her left hand, the one with her crest.
"First, I will gather mana in my hand, and channel it into the light sigil on the shell. Take my hand so you can get a feel for the flow here." I did so, and took her hand. Her skin felt warm to the touch, but that was about it. "Good, now close your eyes, and don't open them. Keep your hand on my crest, and focus on the feel of mana flowing through my hand as I cycle mana," Mom commanded.
I moved into a cross legged position before Mom and closed my eyes. I tensed and waited. I tried to just focus on Mom's hand and "feeling", but it was hard. My ears twitched at every sound from the wind, an occasional bug, the waves hitting the shore, and a nearby seagull my mom hadn't shot yet.
"Okay, Gwen, do you feel that?" Mom asked.
"No, Mama," I said, keeping my eyes closed. "Are you doing it yet?"
I could feel her pause afterward. I peeked my eyes open to see Mom moving her lips but no words coming out. Finally, she shook her head. "Gwen, you are focusing on your senses, right? Not just daydreaming?".
"But I didn't feel anything?"
Mom leaned forward, flicking her hair out of her eyes."Gwen,be honest. Are you sure you didn't feel anything?. I know this exercise well, and it's not that hard. You should have felt something, at least a little bit?" Mom asked with a depressing amount of hope in her voice.

I had a sudden urge to stomp until I couldn't feel my paws anymore. I didn't, but the fact that I was sitting explained more of my restraint than I was fully comfortable with. "I. Didn't. Feel. Anything," I stated. If I was a touch more indignant and childish than I meant to sound, well, I was like five years old in this world. I had an excuse.

"Maybe the crest isn't really integrated yet?" she mumbled, more to herself than to me. "Okay, I think instead a bit of theory might be in order." She counted off on her fingers, ignoring me for a moment, then snapped her fuzzy fingers. "Aha! Okay, so I already gave you the basics-magic is"

"-the act of utilizing thaumaturgy to enact a change in the world based on the use mana as a thaumaturgical energy source," I recited.

Thank fucking God I had at least some college education and, more importantly for this situation, theoretical context courtesy of countless fantasy novels, games, manga, anime, and other media from my previous life to piece together concepts here. I liked my Mom in this world, I truly did, but the moment she opened her mouth to speak about Thaumic Particles when I wasn't even six with almost no context, I'd realized she was going to be a terrible teacher. I had to remind myself at times that she really was trying to explain magic with the complexity of higher level mathematics like she was to someone who, as far as she knew, was five.

When I said I didn't understand the formulas she tried to show, she'd sheepishly paused, and pivoted to this entire exercise. Which I was also failing at for completely different reasons.

Mom didn't say anything, although her ears stood up. "Yes, that's right!" she smiled brightly. "Tools are the best way to conduct thaumaturgy, and our primary tools for thaumaturgy are runes. Your crest is, effectively, just a really complicated, multilayered rune, see?" Mom said, taking my hand and tracing her finger along her own crest. "Your crest is a little complicated right now to discuss, though," Mom said sadly. Her ears even drooped.

I was moderately concerned about what she considered complicated if her opening lecture on magic was to talk about Thaumaturgy like an intro to calculus meets ancient Latin with almost no context.

"But, runes can be really simple. The one here, on your rock, is one of the most basic ones. Remember?"

I did my best not to roll my eyes because I hadn't hit the teenage phase yet, I didn't want to be an angsty little shit, and because my Mom was being painfully genuine to the point I felt saying no would be equivalent to punching an old lady asking for help to cross the street. "Glow, I think?"

"Right! Derived from the divine word radiance, it's a lot less powerful and complicated, but it can still emit a fun and useful little glow when fed mana, which our ancestors used as a replacement for more expensive candles way back and-"

"Mom?" I asked as a problem occurred to me.

"-and while magic is present in the atmosphere, known as thaumic energy or the ambient thaumic field if we're really getting into the physics of it, it's generally thin unless you can draw a lot of it in at once, so we instead rely upon a condensed form made prior known as mana which is a far more reliable for thaumaturgy, and-" Mom continued

"Mom!" I said.

"Oh? What is it, Kitten?"

"Why are we doing this outside on a bright, sunny day when we can barely see the glow?"

Mom said nothing. She said nothing for a painfully long time even as the wind rustled past us.

"Mama?"

Mom bolted upward, startling me into a minor shriek. "Well, would you look at that, I think we have some other work to do today so we better get going. We can try again late tonight, yes, tonight. We, uh, just have other work to do today."

I fell in line with Mom and tried not to be disappointed at my failure to instantly master magic beyond my wildest dreams whilst simultaneously tamping down giggles at Mom's firm insistence on changing the subject. "What are we doing today?"

"Today, we're going to work on Sandy."

Chapter Nine Author's Note


Learning the first bits of magic is always a fun part of any story, and there's rarely a single 'right' way to do this, but this chapter was inspired by a particular professor I ran into in college.


She was brilliant at her subject, knew what she was talking about, could talk for hours on the intricacies of genetics and DNA, but had no idea how to talk to first year newbies to her subject who didn't have a decade of experience and context to follow her ramblings. It made her class, which should have been a breeze, about five times more difficult simply because we often had to collaborate to figure out what the heck she was talking about.

ALSO!!!!!

I finally have Arc One finished and uploaded to my Patreon, Ko Fi, and subscribe star for core supporters!



Obligatory author plug because I'd love to write more but society sadly says I need monies to keep living:

Support me on Patreon, Ko Fi, or Subscribe Star. Check them out for advance chapters including the entire remainder of Arc One! Or check out my website for links to my other author accounts, contact, socials, etc.

Also I have a discord now! Check it out. I would love to chat with fans. :3

 
So the mc might have even got it first try, but the glow was too weak to actually notice in the daytime.

While I have doubts, since there was no sensation of the mana flow, there's hope yet.

Still the moms reaction was great.

I kinda wanted a continuation of last chapter tbh.
 
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Chapter Ten: The Sandcutter New

Chapter Ten: The Sandcutter



The first time I sincerely realized my new life was abnormal in this world occurred while climbing a small hill on the center of the island, although calling it a hill was still being very generous. Heck, the island itself wasn't all that much, given I didn't think the island could be more than forty acres at most in total surface area, although I was heavily estimating there and likely off.

The limestone hill was the tallest point on the island, for a definition of "tall". I don't remember why I decided I wanted to climb it beyond that it was there. Maybe it was some nascent instinct in this new body, or maybe it was innate to want to climb the highest point. Under Mom's supervision, of course.

At that point, I was still a little uncertain in my new body just walking around and prone to tripping over my own long tail, but Mom was finally letting me outside and was taking me around the island for exercise and "play". In this case, "play" mostly involved games of hide & seek and surprisingly acrobatic chases through the dead woods. I remember thinking maybe I would finally meet other people, maybe at some local village, cousins, something.

I can't say I was looking forward to engaging with other kids my apparent age given my memories of an old life. I had no confidence in being able to act right around them, yet I couldn't deny a fundamental curiosity to learn more about what was out there. The society Mom and I were a part of remained a near total mystery to me. Up to that point, I'd thought Mom was single and living on her own. It fit as well as any other explanation I could think of given my fragmentary grasp of language at that point. Even that thought was straining as it got progressively weirder. I never saw anyone else.

That day had only just begun as I took on the island. I observed the dead woods around, their trunks sticking up among otherwise green foliage. To the west I'd seen the ruins of the sea fort we called home, yet those two sights paled in comparison to the thing that caught my eye. I'd climbed hoping to get a good view of the sea, but something in the mist shrouded estuary glinted, so I'd paused in my explorations. Intrigued, I'd sat still as the wind blew away the fog and had my tail go stiff and hair stand on end.

From the mist, a shape took form. A sleek, pointed bow almost like a blade's edge pierced the fog as gentle waves lapped its sides. Rising from the water like an iron castle, the superstructure stood defiant to the ravages of the elements or time itself. Its superstructure bristled with great batteries of what looked an awful lot like naval artillery pointed to the sky proudly like spears held at the ready.

Yet, for all its might, the ship was wounded and aged. Rust spotted her hull, and great bits of metal looked bent or even torn or blown apart like she'd left a fierce battle only yesterday.

I don't know how long I stared at the iron giant resting in the estuary's calm waters on that day. I don't think my brain wanted to accept that I was seeing a warship that looked straight out of a World War documentary or archive practically on my doorstep.

Maybe it was that in a previous life I'd never seen any watercraft bigger than a motorboat, or maybe it was the discrepancy between the ancient feeling citadel Mom and I called home vs a small mountain of iron grounded in the estuary. At some point Mom had closed my gaping mouth with a smirk. I hadn't even huffed at her for the audacity. I'd barely managed to ask one question, and as always, it was the obvious one.

"What is that?" I'd asked.

Mom sighed wistfully. "That, Gwen? That's the ICM Sandcuter, although we always called her Sandy."

"So big," I muttered.

My comment made Mom snicker. My look just made her snicker more. "Sorry, just… Sandy's not that big. She's just a [scriostóir]," Mom said, making me frown at another word I didn't know yet. Something relating to destructors as a class of ship? "Compared to the big girls in her majesty's navy, she's teeny-tiny," Mom said as she settled beside me on the limestone and pulled me into her lap.

Afterward, we'd spent a while longer just watching the waves lapping against the grounded warship as the remaining morning fog was blown away.

Up to that point, I'd suspected things weren't right. I was just a child and admittedly young, but the only person I'd ever seen was Mom. I never even heard other voices than hers and what my imagination cooked up.

I never saw my father in this world, nor a doting grandmother. I never saw a sibling, aunt, uncle, cousin. There were no neighbors, no babysitters, no landlady checking up on us. Heck, I never even saw someone so much as pass by on an errand.

I never saw anyone but Mom.

It might be one thing to be born to a single mother without much family in her life, but for there to be absolutely no one else to ever make an appearance, even briefly? Something was deeply wrong. Seeing the proud ship grounded in the estuary and wounded confirmed the truth for me.

Mom and I were alone, shipwrecked survivors. I could only guess I'd been teeny tiny when we ended up here, if I wasn't outright born here. Where the other people such a vessel would've had were, I didn't want to even say. The possibilities were many and uniformly dark.

It'd been too long. No help was coming. The latter realization took a bit longer to percolate in my brain, but it made sense. Normally shipwrecked survivors were picked up — especially in an age of steel warships like Sandy — but nobody came for us. We were on our own.

Yet, Mom had a plan and Sandy was the key.

~~~​

That afternoon found Mom and I in a secondary room in the citadel directly across from our bedroom that functioned as a half storage space for random supplies and half workshop for everything from carpentry to machinery. There used to be some sort of fresco on the surface of the otherwise uniform sandstone, but it was long worn away.

"Torque wrench?" Mom asked.

My slightly fuzzy fingers danced over the dizzying array of assorted tools and what Mom assured me was not junk before finding the tool in question with a little "ha!".

"Offset screwdriver with adjustable heads?" This one took even less time, and yes, I did make a different sound; instead, it was a, "a—ha!" after finding it.

"Here's a tricky one. Tethia Type One-Mana reader?" This one took me a moment to find as it was an odd little square box with an adjustable cable with a ring cap coming out of the bottom that had something akin to a voltage gauge but on a system I didn't recognize yet. Yet, it got a 'Ha!" all the same.

My tail may have been a touch more energetic than normal as I helped.

"Lubricant, Type B?" So it went, with Mom steadily refilling a beaten blue-gray toolbox. It was her fault, honestly. I remember the last time she just dumped the whole thing over the table and called that organized. The stupid part was that it worked for her. Yet, she was careful in putting everything back in its place until the box was efficiently packed. I really did wonder what went through my mom's brain sometimes.

No matter how endless Mom's toolbox seemed or her supernatural ability to find more places to shove parts and tools, there was an end to things as she eventually finished packing with my assistance. Mom patted my head and gave my ears a pet. I resisted the urge to lean into the headpats but accepted them graciously. "Good job, Kitten. You've gotten better at this."

For a second, I saw both my mom retracting her hand, but it overlaid another memory, a double image like two old time film stripes laid over each other. I saw Mom smiling at me in the blue tinged storeroom of the Citadel lit by blue light strips, but I also saw gray concrete and a lazily spinning fan with a beat-up Volkswagen as the backdrop. My father mirrored Mom's movements. I heard his achingly familiar voice say, "Good job, kiddo. You're a bit better at this."

I blinked. The vivid memory was gone. Mom didn't seem to notice my space out, for which I was grateful. I did my best not to grimace. That was increasingly freaky when it happened.

I hadn't forgotten my old world. At least, I didn't think I had. I still remembered all 53 states, knew where I grew up in a rusting central town surrounded by nothing but corn and ruined industry, my study of art design in college, my best friend and his undying hatred of eggs, and fond memories of my dad trying as a father despite not really being cut out for it. Yet, each passing day here meant those memories didn't have much of a place or even relevance right up until something, a reminder, thrust them to the forefront of my brain. They almost felt like flashbacks; except I was fully aware of what was happening as a memory.

I looked at my hand. Correlation did not equal causation, but it was really freaking weird that this started happening after I gained my crest.

"Mom?" I hesitated for a second, before continuing. "Does the crest do things? Like, to memories and stuff?"

Mom paused her own work. "It can," she said, carefully. "Why?"

"Just wondering," I lied instantly.

Mom stared at me. "You can tell me when you're ready, sweetie," she said.

I was struck by wanting to hug her for understanding of my reluctance and utter embarrassment for how shitty my excuse was. I settled for looking away as Mom continued working.

In between fetching various tools for Mom, I had packed up my portion of the work: lunch. More specifically, I had packed up leftover food from our last meal into bowls covered with fabric more to keep out flies than anything else. My contribution wasn't much and it galled me a little bit. Unfortunately, I was well aware I was a child here, and I physically couldn't even carry that much without being overwhelmed. Hell, I had trouble with the heavy front door most days, although half of that was terrible hinges in need of oiling.

Feeling just a touch sneaky, I snuck a smaller lantern we didn't use very much and wax pencil in as well. I didn't know if I'd have a chance to use these, but if I did, I don't think Mom would blame me too much. Hopefully.

A few minutes later, and we were at the door ready to go. Yet, Mom paused. My ears perked up, but she didn't say anything. She entered the bedroom and returned a few moments later with a long thing that could be mistaken for a rifle slung over her shoulder.

"Oh," was all I could muster as I tracked the weapon she'd told me was called a shard thrower.

The weapon looked as if a bolt-action rifle had a night of passion with a crossbow and the resulting offspring was fought over in a bitter custody battle that tore it between sleek military utilitarian aesthetics and a Norse rune maker's wet dream. The front curved risers of the thrower were plastered in complex interlinking runes studded with dull bits of blue glass, as well as strange geometric lines carved into the long barrel that led back to a purely functional wood stock, trigger, and iron sights.

"Can't be too careful," Mom said, patting me before shoving the door open with her usual strength.

I tried to smile back at her, but I knew it wasn't one of my best smiles. The sight of the weapon brought back some bitter memories of my old life, ones I would rather wish were left buried.

Chapter Ten Author's Note


We finally discover the truth of their status. I've known since the beginning, albeit I did have a big change at one point. Originally, I'd had them be fully native to the island with Eliza being a member of a hunted clan hiding out here, but I ultimately changed things to this backstory and I think that was for the better overall. It flowed way more smoothly, at least.

Also and in other related news, I'm starting to consider taking commissions. Still deciding on details/rates, but if people are interested, don't hesitate to message me on any of my sites, email, or hey, pop into my discord server. :3





Obligatory author plug because I'd love to write more but society sadly says I need monies to keep living (and support my growing addiction to commissioning catgirl art)

Support me on Patreon, Ko Fi, or Subscribe Star. Check them advance chapters uploaded every weekend, too. Or check out my website for links to my other author accounts, contact, socials, etc. Anything is appreciated.

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A world war looking military ship. So is this like Youjo Senki where magic exists but only as a means to an end rather than it's own thing ?

Somewhat. It's different insofar as magic is far more interwoven into the tech and culture here. Won't get too into details because massive spoilers, but I will say Eliza's civ, the Illiana Constitutional Monarchy, treated magic less as a mystic art and more as an added branch of the sciences. That and vastly different settings (I mean, this is an original world, so a character from there would look at a world map and go 'Wtf?") mean things are fundamentally different.
 
Chapter Eleven: Little White Lie New

Chapter Eleven: Little White Lie


The Sandcutter lay on nearly the opposite side of the island, so we took a route through the dead woods in the center of the island. None of the trees were particularly massive as far as trees or old growth forests would go but were remarkable for the fact that to date I had not seen one living tree. Smaller shrubs, grasses, and other brush flourished on the island in warmer months, but something had well and truly killed off the trees long ago, leaving most of their gray trunks straining towards the sky like gravestones.

I shuddered a little as we walked through the thickest portion of the trees, feeling almost like I was violating some sacred ground.

It really said something about how small our island home was that between helping Mom pack up her tools and walking across the island to reach her place grounded in the estuary only took about half an hour, give or take. I trailed behind Mom, helping as much as I could by carrying our lunch for the day.

Actually getting to the Sandcutter at its grounded position in the shallow part of the estuary was something of an endeavor. While most of the interior of the island was lightly wooded with dead trees and light vegetation, the estuary the Sandcutter had grounded in was absolutely piled high with jagged rocks and even boulders whose origin I couldn't even begin to identify. They looked as if they'd just been dumped there, but beyond that I would hesitate to even try to guess an explanation. Regardless, the combination of boulders, the huge rocks forming the estuary, the loose sandy soil everywhere else, and of course having to drudge through the water made getting to the ship a pain. However, aside from a bit of exercise, we weren't delayed too long before we got to the ship.

Up close, the Sandcutter cut a different image than when viewed from afar. She was still by far the biggest ship I'd ever been close to in person and reminded me of a deadly dagger with her sleek profile and pointed bow, but when viewed at up close I saw clear signs for why she was grounded and abandoned.

While she still stood strong and recognizable, the elements had clearly continued their eternal siege. Time meant an accumulation of dirt and smudges over the ship, yet despite the lack of cleaning or even just a good new layer of paint, most of her metal was, if not gleaming, at least tolerable. Unmistakable patches of rust were beginning to dot her.

Most of her hull looked intact, yet there were definite tears in some areas of the ship's skin, exposing further metal beneath. Yet even these were surprisingly small given she must have been here for years, since I was born at the least. I knew very little about seakeeping in my old world, but even I knew a ship not maintained for years by an active crew in anything but a dry-dock, nevertheless grounded on a seabed and exposed to the elements would likely be far worse. Yet, the rust was the least of Sandy's worries.

Scattered across the ship were huge gouges and massive indentations in the metal of Sandy's hull and superstructure. Sometimes multiple meters across and trailing along the ship as if something had grappled with the ship, although I had no idea what. They reminded me of the time in my old life I'd watched a bulldozer systematically break down an old, run-down building coated in rusted sheet metal. The bulldozer's blade had first merely dented the slides before they split, tearing and screaming jagged arcs of metal echoing a cursing operator as he slowly but surely tore the building down.

The ship had five turrets, technically. I had no idea what these turrets were called, their caliber, or even if that term would apply to them given they seemed like a fusion of naval artillery meets metal ballistas given the large, bow-like apparatus at the end of each barrel, but I was pretty sure the jagged mess of scrap metal making up the foremost turret of the ship wasn't normal. Two others looked knocked out of place, as if something had wrenched them upward or otherwise smashed into them like the fist of an angry giant. This left only two seemingly intact, although I would be shocked if they could remotely turn after so long or would even be safe to fire.

I remember asking, "Mama? What happened to the ship to do all, that?" I asked, gesturing vaguely and at a loss to describe the damage I saw.

Her little white lie stayed with me. "It was a bad storm."

As my father in my old life would have said, "As-fucking-if."

We sloshed across the sandy banks of the estuary toward the midships, where a precarious composite rope ladder had been thrown off the side. I paused, and couldn't help lifting my head, sniffing the air. Something permeated the air now that I'd gotten closer to Sandy's wreck, and for the life of me I had no idea what the heck it even was. It even overpowered the omnipresent mint smell!

Every time I'd come here before, the ship always smelled vaguely of rust, oils, and the omnipresent waft of sulfur from all the smellyweed growing around around the island's shores. Yet now, I smelled something I struggled to define and hadn't been here before. It wasn't any scent I recognized, artificial or otherwise. The only real description that came to mind was that it reminded me of the charged feeling of stepping into an old classmate's machine shop with a distinct oily tone, but even there it was off in the same way someone saying a plastic sandwich from a toy set is identical to a real sandwich sold in a cafe.

My inability to accurately pin down what I could smell was seriously perplexing. "Mom? What's that smell?"

Mom paused in her ascent. "What scent? Everything's normal to me. Sea, salt, seaweed, the usual."

"Never mind," I muttered. Mom looked around despite my comment, clearly trying to find what had my attention before shrugging. The scent only grew stronger as we got closer to the hull but seemed to peak at a tolerable level around the ship.

"Okay, I'm going to climb up first with the supplies, then I'll come back to get you. Sit tight, alright?" she said, before leaping up and scaling the ladder alarmingly fast with an oversized toolbox, pack, and shard thrower over her shoulder.

I waited patiently, idly kicking at a patch of water weeds nearby. At first, Mom would always keep me locked up at home when she came out here, but I eventually got confident enough about moving again to escape through the windows. Evidently, my escape was enough to make her reconsider, as she took me with her ever since. Although, while I think I could climb the ladder with difficulty now, Mom had a different method to get me aboard.

Soon enough, Mom was blazing back down the ladder. She knelt before me. "Hop on!" she said, looking over her shoulder with a bright smile.

I knew better than to hesitate. She might take that as cause for concern and take things hideously slowly instead. First time she'd slowed her climbing down, I thought she was trying to defeat my fear of heights through sheer unrelenting boredom. I was wrong, but at least I knew better now.

I made my best impression of a monkey and grabbed onto my mom with all my might. I even wrapped my tail around her belly to try and anchor myself more firmly.. kinda. My tail wasn't fully flexible enough for that, but, well, the attempt was made. Once Mom further secured me with a rope harness binding between herself and me, she then proceeded to race again as if the time away from the ship had personally insulted her.

I did my best not to think about the experience as it was simultaneously exhilarating and utterly terrifying bouncing on my mom's back with wind rushing through my curls as she ascended at an insane speed. I don't think a marine could have gone faster if he'd tried.

One mildly terrifying climb later, and we were on board. The most immediate thing to first take in were the guns. One was right near our position, still aimed into the far distance. Up close, I could see its barrel actually cut off at the tip, revealing a deep groove something would travel through. Thick metal with deep scratches marred the turret casing's surface, while the turning wheel was an orange red with rust. The runes on the gun's bow were similar to what I'd seen on Mom's shard thrower, albeit just as incomprehensible.

I breathed out, trying to calm my nerves as my tail swished side to side. It was one thing to see them from the island, but to see them up close was oddly exhilarating and terrifying in their disused state. They almost looked like ramped up models of Mom's thrower but scaled to be bigger than multiple grown people. What really got me was that Sandy was small, apparently. Just how big did these guns get?

Outside the rusting bridge and numerous, only mildly terrifying turrets bigger than Mom and I put together, the main deck was dominated by two enormous chains traveling much the length of the ship. Here and there the deck was littered with places for machinery. Some reminded me a bit of what almost looked like clockwork binoculars and others were vaguely antenna like, but still more I couldn't begin to say.

Yet, a certain feeling remained. This was far from my first time on board. We came out here multiple times per week so Mom could work on the ship. Yet, while I'd gained more and more familiarity with the ship, the feeling of emptiness never left.

It would be one thing if the ship was covered in coral and sea life, if everything was crumbling away to dust with the harsh passage of time. Yet, that is not what was happening here. To be clear, the ship was not in a good state. Just from our place in the midships, it was very evident to see rust everywhere, some debris littering the decks and superstructure, obvious and severe damage, and of course ubiquitous amounts of peeling paint. Yet, that, at least, just made the ship feel rundown.

What struck me about the ship was the sheer feeling of emptiness about it. Everywhere I looked, whether it was the conning tower, the half bent and shattered cable wrench, or the scattered other bits of machinery everywhere. In some ways, it looked like everything had just been abandoned, rather than this being some old decrepit wreck from a war my grandparents hadn't even lived through.

In spite of this haunting feeling, I felt a deep rooted, nigh instinctual need bordering on biological right to go snooping around the ship. It was a nearly abandoned ship straight out of an adventure novel — it was my right as a child to go snooping! "What are you doing today?" I asked, innocently as I edged toward a hatch left slightly open courtesy of the metal frame being bent out of place.

Mom gave an unimpressed stare. "We," Mom said in emphasis, "are going to be patching up some of the piping system, and I expect you to stay with me to hand parts and tools."

I didn't give her the privilege of a pout, but some of my disappointment must've been evident because Mom rolled her eyes. "Maybe if there's time today, we can go into a deeper part of the ship, but I really need to do some repairs. We're running behind as is."

That caught my attention. If there's anything we've had an abundance of on this island, it's time. "Why?" I asked.

"It's nothing," Mom obviously lied. I gave Mom my own unimpressed stare, which only resulted in her patting my head and petting my fuzzy ears which made them twitch.

Mom wrenched open an entry hatch, revealing a dark passageway beyond. A draft of faintly musty air with a slight undercurrent of rot came from the passageway, but it was no worse than wandering a shoreline covered in smellyweed. Light strips lined the ceiling but they were fainter than the ones back at the citadel. Mom looked at the faint strips and frowned. She tapped one, to little avail. "Looks like lighting's failed. Will have to redirect mana flows again," Mom said, which I think I understood but was absolutely not sure of at all. She pulled a lantern out of her pack and flooded the passageway with light.

"This way," Mom said, stepping into the ship's confines. As always, I felt a brief surge of trepidation mixed with curious excitement. In this life, I saw better in the dark than I ever did in life, but if Sandy's lights were off-and they usually were-then her interior was shrouded in absolute darkness.

Yet, I was used to the feeling by now. It was hardly the first time I'd been here, after all. I easily shrugged it off and padded after Mom deeper into the Sandcutter's depths.

Chapter 11 Author's Note

There's a certain appeal to the abandoned places that you know and feel should be busy, active, that clearly had people there living, laughing, struggling, loving, etc., and yet just aren't anymore. Sometimes it can be as simple as a place being closed like a major store and the lack of people being unnerving, and other times it can be more like this, a place that should be a bastion of ordered chaos instead being disturbingly still.

This chapter, incidentally, got me to chat with a guy who spent time in the navy and on warships and he politely informed me that there was no way in Hell a steel ship would be doing this good under these conditions. His conclusion was it'd be a 'heaping pile of unusable rust' by this point, so I am taking artistic liberties with a healthy dose of 'magic!' here. So there's that.




Obligatory author plug because I'd love to write more but society sadly says I need monies to keep living (and support my growing addiction to commissioning catgirl art)

Support me on Patreon, Ko Fi, or Subscribe Star. Check them advance chapters uploaded every weekend, too. Or check out my website for links to my other author accounts, contact, socials, etc. Anything is appreciated :3
Also I have a discord now! Check it out. I would love to chat with fans. :3



If you've paid for this anywhere outside of Patreon, subscribestar, or Ko-Fi, then you've been scammed and someone is ripping you off as it is stolen.

If you're reading this on any other site than RoyalRoad, SufficientVelocity,Spacebattles, QuestionableQuesting, or Wattpad or it's by anyone other than HiddenMaster, it's been plagiarized and stolen.


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Chapter Twelve: The Smell of Magic New
Chapter Twelve: The Smell of Magic
Note: I wasn't too happy with leaving the last chapter as it was, so throwing next one in here as a bonus. Can't say how often I will do these given I need to maintain a back-stock of chapters, but once in a while can't hurt.

In some ways, the ship reminded me of a labyrinth. In theory I knew there were designated areas for given work or activities, crew quarters, machinery shops, galley, wardrooms, and esoteric things I had no names for at all because my education just hadn't broached the fundamental vocabulary of naval ship design and use, but in practice the ship felt like a gray-blue metal maze. Fortunately, Mom was always there to guide me.

"So Gwen," Mom began, and I immediately recognized her lilting tone. It was quiz time. "Tell me, what's the best way to navigate back topside from where we are right now?" Mom asked me as we walked through passageway after passageway. Most of the ship's interior was filled with instruments, piping systems, and more I couldn't identify.

"I think I could follow the red markings on the ceiling because they always lead to an exit?" I asked, thinking.

"If you don't have a light source?" she continued, righting a turned over bin set aside that had numerous small tools that had been left at a cluster of pipeworks.

I gave her a glare. "You're tricking me," I said, twitching my tail back and forth.

"Oh?" she said with a smirk I could see.

"The lines glow in the dark."

"Absolutely right," she said. "Ground up alchemical moon-silver in the paint means it glows when lights are out."

"That one was way too easy," I told her. Seriously, that was a beginner's question. Never mind that I was only five, that was one of the first things she told me before she'd even let me step on the ship with her.

"True enough, so let's ramp it up a little. What if you can't find the red lines?"

"Oh! You would then try to follow the direction of moving air."

"Correct. If we're onboard, we've opened a hatchway so you should be able to find a way out by following the movement of air, and most vents are positioned such that they could direct air throughout the ship toward entrances and exits."

"Good thinking, Kitten. Here's another one: what do you do if you see tools or machines that you aren't familiar with?"

"That one's easy, Mama," I said, rolling my eyes. "Don't touch it."

"Ha, fair enough. Let me give you a real challenge, then. What do you do if you walk into a big empty room and start getting a headache and struggle to breathe?"

"Um…" I flagged. That one was new. Has mom talked about that before? She often tried to teach me about the ship while aboard, but I couldn't recall this. I hoped it was, at least.

Taking my silence as an answer, Mom spoke, "You head up, as fast as you can. Dead air can settle in low areas when trapped, but living air rises, so upper levels would be safer."

I nodded, staying quiet. It wasn't quite the same, but I remembered similar speeches from my old life about being really careful about old structures, mineshafts, and such which, given I'd lived in a rusting midwest town, there was no shortage of abandoned or sitting structures slowly decaying with time.

"Here we go," Mom said, pausing to examine a wall panel that frankly looked identical to the past ten we'd walked by at an intersecting passageway.

"What's wrong?" I asked.

Mom hummed. "See this dial here?" she said, pointing to a particular dial atop a terminal section with multiple intersecting pipes. "Mana is pumped through here, but dial reading is at zero so mana pressure is down, meaning everything's shut down. Well…what was working, anyway. I'm guessing there was an overload caused by a blockage, contamination, or just the storm wrecking something," she said absently. "Hold this light for me. Fixing this will take a few minutes." She knelt to set her toolbox and handing me the lantern before rummaging through her tools.

I nodded, only partly understanding. Something nagged at me, and it was at that moment that I was slapped upside the head by a stray thought. "Wait, earlier you said magic was in the air, right? So why is it going through the pipes?"

That brought Mom up short. She looked up at me, her red curls hanging to cast her face in deep shadows but for the green glint of her eyes in the lantern light. "Good observation. It's complicated, but a really basic explanation is that there's not enough in the air for everything. So ambient thaumic particles — er, magic, that is, are condensed down for use in pipeworks and we call this condensed version mana. Hold the lantern up higher, please," she said.

I did as she told and strained on my tiptoes to hold the lantern higher for her. She made a soft "a ha!"and promptly pulled out a wrench and screwdriver and set to work. I watched intently, trying to discern what she was doing and promptly failed.

Generally, I knew what was going on. The machinery here was some sort of pumping node meant to circulate concentrated mana throughout the ship to power assorted arcane machinery, not terribly different to a power station transformer meets distribution line for electricity. This machinery would then theoretically function to let the ship function as, well, a ship.

The difference was in how much I didn't know. I didn't know how much of my old world's science was integrated into this ship's design and by extension Mom's work. Did this ship even utilize electricity at all? How was it driven? The light strips preferred on this ship weren't active, so were they entirely mana dependent? Was electricity even known in this world or had it been discovered and mana focused on instead? Why was mom twisting a pipe in between tapping a series of runic markings? Why did I smell something faintly oily but in such a notably separate sense from the ship's actual oils?

The last one had me sniffing the air again which caught a look from Mom, but nothing else. Truly, everything was bothering me. My memories from my old life and what was normal there vs here just made things more confusing. I felt as if I was missing out on huge amounts of context that were just expected here.

Alternatively, I was five. I still had a lot of growing to do, Mom was trying to teach me as best she could, so maybe I was the weirdo for having enough self awareness courtesy of a previous life's memories of an old world to question all of this.

Mom was fast. Adjusting a pipe here, adjusting a valve here, suddenly exposing silver runes on a panel I hadn't even seen she tapped before closing it again, checking dials before flipping through a manual she pulled from somewhere — I couldn't keep up.

Then it was over. Mom tapped one final rune and smacked a pipe. The pump node hummed, and a single crystalline light lit up red at the top, but nothing else happened. The light strips connecting to the node flickered to life briefly only for a clang from deeper in the ship to echo and then flicker off again. Mom frowned as she dusted her hands off. I felt like I had blinked. "There we go," Mom said.

"Did something break?" I asked, looking back and forth at the dormant light strips.

Mom shook her head. "This node's fixed now, see the indicator gem?" she said, pointing to the top of the machine with an inset little red gem the size of a bead. "Thing is, it was jammed as a side effect — the real problem is elsewhere. Come, follow me."

I scrambled after her as she tore down a passageway at seemingly random but with confidence in her steps as she referenced a book again.

At this point, as strange as it may seem on a magical warship infused with Thaumaturgy and God knows what else, things became really boring. I knew Mom was working on some bit of machinery meant to keep mana pumping throughout the ship, and that was about it. It reminded me in a strange mirror-like way of standing around my father's garage in my old life while he worked on the incomprehensible mass of metal known as an combustion engine and he asked for me to pass supplies while he worked on something that may as well have been eldritch mysteries to me. Just like then, I'd had little idea how the engine worked beyond that it did, and here it was more of the same.

Sure, I knew what Mom said machinery did, but how did it work? How did it interact with physical laws? Did magic obey, or modify them? What was magic's place in relation to the law of thermodynamics? Did it even have one?

I didn't know — no wait, I should amend that. I really didn't freaking know. Actual magic was beyond me right now, but I couldn't wait to learn more… provided Mom got better at it.

I really hoped not all her lessons were like the last one.

This process repeated three times throughout the ship. I would follow Mom with the lantern while she slunk through the ship at a fast pace, although she always slowed down for me. Then, we would find a node that was somehow not working. Mom would perform a combination of actual diagnostic, fiddling, and in one instance a combination of percussive maintenance alongside some small amount of whispered cursing she thought I couldn't hear but I took careful note of. Afterward, we would continue. I tried to follow what she was doing, and mostly failed, especially when it came to messing with the runes at each node. The lights in the vicinity would briefly flicker, and then another distant clang echoed throughout the ship and we'd follow it. Rinse and repeat.

Naturally, the last node had a metallic screech echo throughout the ship that had me leaping behind Mom's legs.

"Shi-cra — er, drat. That's really not good," Mom said awkwardly while I tried to calm my heart from going ballistic and get my fur to settle down. It was galling that Mom's calming pats did more to calm me down than just telling myself it was a noise.

Despite horror movie logic strongly suggesting otherwise, we followed the screech and came to a very impressive hatch. I tried to read the label above the door and promptly realized the characters, while individually familiar, were far more complicated than I was used to. Yet, they were familiar enough from the language lessons Mom gave that I thought I could pick it out. The first word was composed of three sigils whose collective was similar to extra, or maybe secondary, and the second was—

"It says auxiliary engineering room, Gwen." Mom said absently, ruining my fun. I tried not to glare as Mom casually tried the hatch only for it to not budge. "I can already tell this hatch this is not going to cooperate," she huffed.

With that, her tail twitched. he took off her jacket and tied it around her waist, leaving her in a gray-blue tank top. Mom braced herself with a wide legged stance. Mom's shoulder and biceps bulged as she tensed her muscles, and with a groan, she twisted. For a moment nothing happened, then Mom growled. Pressure built up, muscles strained, and just as suddenly, the resistance broke. A scream of agonized metal echoed through the chamber as the handle moved, and long-unoiled hinges gave way. I cringed, ears folding even as rust rained down around the hatchway as Mom stepped back to admire her handiwork and dusted her hands off.

The moment the hatch opened, a flood of faintly shimmering mist flowed out. I immediately gagged as oil coated my throat and iron flooded my nose.

Mom was by my side in an instant.

"What's wrong, Gwen?"

"The smell, it's way too strong," I managed to gasp out before coughing and hacking my lungs out only for no relief to come. It felt as if I'd tried to make out with an exhaust pipe and all its contents had settled in my chest.

This got a worried frown from Mom before epiphany overtook her eyes. She jumped up and slammed the door shut. What blue mist had been in the room rapidly began to disperse. The scent rapidly faded to more tolerable levels. I stopped gagging and I just tried to breathe normally.

"Hurts," I whispered, because darnit it felt like my brain and sinuses had both been simultaneously sucker punched and I needed to say something. I'd been smelling something ever since we came aboard and that room was more the same except concentrated ten-fold.

Soon my breathing steadied, and I found myself in Mom's lap as she dabbed at my eyes and cleaned my nose with a cloth. To my surprise I saw a bit of blood on it. Once more, I was hit with an urge to cuddle and seek comfort, a desire I freely indulged in for a bit as I buried my face into Mom's stomach and let her fuss over me.

Eventually, my curiosity beat back the desire to just be pampered. I rolled over and looked up at her. "What happened?"

"I think I've figured it out. Would like to see a professional to confirm, but," Mom shrugged helplessly. "I don't think you feel thaumaturgy lke I do, Gwen. You mentioned smelling something?"

I nodded. "Really oily, like iron," I said. It wasn't quite like the fumes of a mechanic shop, but that was the closest comparison I had.

"Interesting, as I smell nothing that intense," Mom nodded and brought a hand through the back of my hair in a long pet. The only reason I didn't melt is because my lungs still felt achy and sinuses burned. "When did you first notice these 'smells'?" she said.

I gave it some thought, but only one incident came to mind. "After you gave me your crest," I said.

Mom nodded. "Just like I thought. Congratulations, Gwenny. It's official. You can smell magic," she said with a proud, if amused smile.

I gave my most eloquent "Huh?" in response.

This would be the part where my Mom would explain what the heck she meant by that, but instead I was betrayed.

Mom burst into laughter.

"Mama!" I shouted and batted at her. This, unfortunately, only made her giggles intensify.

"Sorry, sorry, just your face is amazing. Wish I had a recording lens," she said, after a long moment. Her tail softly waved back and forth letting me know she was still giggling on the inside.

My glare should've been enough to kill, but Mom was entirely unrepentant. I huffed. "What does that even mean?" I said in what was absolutely not a whine.

Mom smiled good naturedly as she took on her distinctive teacher tone. "Your nose is a little more sensitive, but I'm sure you'll build up resistance with time," she rambled. "But, the thing is, most magic in the world isn't seen readily, especially if it's not actively a part of spell or other thaumaturgy, outside some special situations. But, some people are born with the ability to sense the passive flow of magic, thanks to having awoken what are called mana channels naturally, although it depends, what with—" Mom trailed off, saying half a dozen words I didn't know. I really wish I had that darn translator now.

"—anyway, got sidetracked. In the old days, most people who could sense thaumic fields were only born into it and were called mages, but some forms of thaumaturgy can awaken the ability. When I gave you your crest, some of your channels opened up and with them you awoke to the ability to sense the ambient energies around us." She tapped the crest on my hand. "For me and most people, it's a little bit of everything-sight, a little pressure sometimes, although if enough gets concentrated like that mist or if it's intentional and it can be seen by anyone. But some people are really specialized. My mama, she felt it like air pressure and always complained about her ears popping in the city. I've heard of others hearing it like a song. But I think you smell it, Kitten," she said. "So—"

"When you opened the door, I smelled a lot of magic?"

"Atta girl. Technically ambient thaumic energy, but close enough. The room's leaking it from one of the big tanks and since you've never experienced so much at once, it hits you hard."

I nodded, but internally I was trying to process that my magic sense was the smell of all things. That was just going to be awkward, I knew it. "What are we going to do?" I asked.

Mom chewed her lip before answering. "I have to get those pump stations fixed if this thing is going to run, so I'll have to head in there, and I don't think it's going to be an easy fix, but," she trailed off and her own ears drooped. "I think you'll have to wait out here, Kitten, or even in another room while I work on it. Moment I open those doors again you'll be overwhelmed."

There was a lot I could say, but the distress in her tone was palpable. We were always together. I chose to lean into her in a hug. "I'll be okay, Mama."

Mom smiled. "Well, if you're feeling brave, then I'll trust in you." She helped me up with an easy pull.. "You stay out here," she said, handing me a lantern while she pulled another from her pack. "Don't go anywhere, and if you need anything, just bang on the door and I'll be out in a second. If you get hungry, you can eat your lunch. Oh, and—"

"Go, Mama!" I said, pushing her before she could fuss over me anymore. Mom laughed and headed to the door. She waited for me to plug my nose, before slamming it open and closed in a heartbeat. I still got a strong whiff from the room, but its cloying oiliness was nowhere near as strong as the first time around given, I'd distanced myself and how quickly Mom slammed the hatch shut.

I waited a few minutes after the hatch shut to make sure she wasn't going to step right back out. I put my ear to the hatch and listened and heard faint clangs and hissing noises as if air was escaping from something, but little else. Satisfied, I picked up my lantern, adjusted its settings to focus on a broader beam of light over the focused setting, and promptly took off into the ship to explore.


Chapter Twelve Author's Note


Gwen is going to indulge in the gods given right of all children and especially all kittens to wander where they're not supposed.

The ability to 'smell' magic isn't anything particularly new, but I've always been fond of it as a method of 'magic sense' because it pens up interesting descriptions and can just be a bit awkward all around, so double the fun to write about.




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Mc proceeds to pull a Bruno Bucciarati and lick the clearly glowing liquid

*Mouth mildly glowing* "Yup, tastes like magic."
 
Chapter Thirteen: A Surprise Awakening New

Chapter Thirteen: A Surprise Awakening (Edited)


In my defense, I waited a few minutes before wandering off.

I was well aware what I was doing wasn't exactly the peak of caution and Mom would not be happy with me, but it was fine. I would be a liar if I said I knew everything about the ship, but I knew enough basics to probably keep myself out of trouble and I only intended to explore a few rooms away. Besides, there was a strangely enticing quality to the ship.

The ship was long empty, yet walking past bulkhead after bulkhead, beams of light from my lantern illuminating passing rooms in stark shadows made me feel as if I could hear echoes of the past. Here, I saw a mop carefully set aside and wedged between more piping so that it wouldn't bang around on high seas or intense maneuvers when a crewman long ago had to suddenly leave but was still conscientious. There, a pile of tools like what Mom had carried in, notably more degraded than her own lying on the ground as if the sailor working here had to step away.

Scenes like this were all over the place. It was beyond clear the ship had been lived in, and up to the minute it was abandoned, work was being done until everyone just stepped away. Mom had only told pieces of the story and left me to pick up the fragments.

I wandered on, my steps echoing across the steel deck and across bulkheads. My lantern cut swathes of light through the dark, revealing more and more of the Sandcutter's guts. More often than not, things were left in a mess, either from people's sudden departure, leaking water and humidity damage, or something else, but given the current situation, I suppose it should have been far worse. For one, the place didn't smell like absolute death. To be clear, it certainly didn't smell good. This far in, the smell of mold in some places was more than present, but it felt far more muted, especially with the faint scent of oily magic I knew to be circulating about the ship now. I knew there were lots of things on board that, when combined with no maintenance and leaking water, should have made this place an active biohazard of pure rot to navigate in and—

I stopped. I really thought about biohazards for a second, and especially old timey construction that this ship vaguely reminded me of when it wasn't doing magical stuff. I promptly shuddered as I realized it was entirely possible a magical equivalent to asbestos was everywhere in here. It might have explained why everything was in as good a condition as it was, but it also might have given me a magic tumor. A few moments later I worked it out of my system as I reminded myself that I was living on an isolated island away from any society with my mother. I had bigger problems to worry about than future potential cancer.

Keeping an eye on overhead lines, I eventually found myself wandering into a helpfully labeled "Crew Quarters" by a utilitarian sign on a wall. I soon found myself at a moral quandary: right or left?

Deciding to take the ubiquitous rule of mazes and always going left, I chose to be a rebel and went right and promptly found myself in a break room of some sort.

The room before me wouldn't have looked out of place as a lounge in my old world. A somewhat sparse lounge, admittedly, but I'd seen worse designated break rooms working retail in my old life. A central table dominated the room with surrounding chairs bolted to the deck. Along the wall, some enterprising sailors had elected to make the room more "homey" by painting a fireplace along the wall, complete with an equally two-dimensional adjacent log pile. I traced my fingers along the still smooth paint before taking in the rest of the room.

While the furniture remained intact and in place, everything not bolted down clearly wasn't. Remnants of a hastily abandoned card game were obvious to see with scattered cards and cups everywhere. Most of the cards were degraded heavily from moisture, but a few remained loosely legible. One portrayed a winged sun. Another card held a moon grasped by skeletal hands. Most of the other cards were illegible, but what little remained all seemed to depict great figures, landscapes, or the stars. How it was played, I had absolutely no idea. It could be something like Magic the Gathering, or it could be blackjack for all I knew.

I did wonder if Mom played this game and what she'd say if I showed her these cards I probably shouldn't have.

Glancing at the card as dust fell in the lantern's light, I let my mind wonder. I imagined late nights and bored sailors killing time before shuteye, betting anything from work details to wages they couldn't even spend at sea. I imagined conversations big and small, ranging from complaining about the night's dinner, disputes over games and national past times, even talks about what books were in the ship's limited library. Did they have comics, or did they prefer more nuanced literature? At the end of a long night when the ship was quiet and no one spoke above whispers unless they had to, I listened to what they missed from back home, who they wanted to see again, and what they'd do after service was over.

I calmly put the cards I was holding down and left the break room to its quiet solitude.

Glancing into the other room, I saw a long, thin area with just enough space for a grown man to walk through with built in cubbies for beds on the sides. Berths, I think they were called. It'd be cramped for an adult, but for me it was fine.

My nose scrunched up at the mildew smell coming from the room and its blue gray sheets but could tolerate it as long as I plugged my nose. Accommodation here seemed sparse, although in peak conditions I imagine the bedding was comfy enough. I idly glanced through the footlockers stationed periodically through the room, also bolted down, not expecting to find much. Most things had been cleared long before.

The first three lockers were a bust or just had old clothes in them, while the third had me flushing before I slammed it shut. That was not something a girl my age should be seeing. Some enterprising sailor had clearly had a talent for art and decided the interior of their locker was a great place to practice his or her promising future as a pornographic pinup artist. Stepping away as quickly as I could with an embarrassed flush, I couldn't help noting that I now knew G-strings were a known commodity in this world.

Fortunately, the last locker was nowhere near as scandalous. I even lucked out with a fruit bar hidden beneath a technical manual titled "Technicalities of Quantized Mana Chromatics in Micro Scale Thaumic Workings Volume 6". I spent far longer than I like to admit just trying to decipher the complex characters of the title and gave up as there was even more in the subtitle. A glance inside revealed pages with words I understood by themselves, but when grouped together made about as much sense as my first time reading a calculus book in my old life.

To appease my frustration, I gobbled my fruit bar find on the spot. It wasn't Magister Monty's Mint Drops but instead had a sweet raspberry filling that inexplicably popped with cinnamon that left me wanting more. Sadly, I found no more candy stashed anywhere.

Having explored the bit of crew quarters I returned to the entry area and promptly saw the hatch I used to get into this area shut.

I hadn't heard a single thing.

I closed my eyes, and very deliberately took a breath. I opened them again and calmly tried the hatch wheel. It did not budge. When I put more force onto it, it still did not budge. The only thing that did happen was that I dislodged a very faint cloud of dark reddish dust that made me leap back as my heart clenched and ice climbed up my spine.

"Don't panic," I breathed out to myself. I knew Mom was on the ship. She would eventually notice I'd left, rip the ship apart to find me, and then never trust me alone again.

I decided yelling out as loud as I could was the best course of action as surely that would get Mom's attention. Sadly, the only result of that action was my own ears folding as my own echo came back warped and scary sounding. I also realized that this ship may be full of hollow spaces, but many of the bulkheads in here were extremely sturdy to outright armored. I had no idea how well the sound would transmit.

With "Plan A" a failure, I elected to wait in place until Mom found me. At this point, my lantern flickered and died. I screamed. In this world, I saw better in low light, but low light did not mean I could do with no light. Whatever powered the Sandcutter's lights was well and truly shut off or minimal enough in this area that I was entombed in shadows.

Trembling, I blindly reached for my pack and pulled out the second lantern I'd snuck in. I toggled it on, only for it to flicker and die. If anything, it felt as if the shadows thickened in outrage at my actions. I felt as if I was choking in the dark, like the shadows were constricting my chest.

I cannot say why the dark encapsulating me affected me as it did. I'd had moments in my old life when the power was out, where I was in a room totally cut off from the sun and artificial lighting. It hadn't remotely affected me like this then. It felt less like I was in the dark and more like the dark was trying to sink into me, like if my attention wavered for a second something would grab and slither into my eyes.

I was, in a word, frantic. Cold metal was beneath me, above me, on my cheek, to my sides, anywhere and everywhere as claustrophobia zeroed in on my mind.

I thought I kept hearing something in the dark, but it was always my own breathing, my own movements causing echoes. The frantic and primal part of me tried to find some visual reference but of course there was nothing no matter how hard I looked. Meanwhile, my rational mind kept coming back to how this couldn't have just happened and that something had followed me here, something I'd accidentally called.

I tried in fits of rationality to look for glowing strips of paint overhead, to fiddle with my lanterns, to even scrape rough bits of metal to futilely create sparks, but every time I saw absolutely nothing. This prompted a greater feeling of something behind me and no matter what I did, no matter how I practically embedded myself into a bulkhead to make sure nothing could be there, I could not get rid of the feeling.

I cannot say when I truly opened my eyes again or had any form of rationality that wasn't calling for my mom. All I know is that I blinked, and I saw once more.

A passage much like others I'd seen on the ship lay before me, and this one did have a faint glow. Yet, it wasn't one from any of the light strips usually preferred, or the glowing paint meant to help sailors in the dark find their way. If anything, shadows had devoured the light sources I knew should be above.

Instead, I saw feline paw prints etched in glowing gold leading into the passageway.

There were many horror scenarios that came to mind. Heck, some of them were from the stories Mom told in this world, even if I knew she kept them mild. Stories of lost ships on high seas being rediscovered by curious children and facing mischievous ghosts with just a hint of danger to them. This wasn't even to mention the ones mass produced to jaded audiences in my old world.

I knew it was a bad idea to follow them. I knew just as well I couldn't handle the true dark, either. That feeling alone overrode everything else. Shivering and shaking, I followed the prints. When I looked back, I just saw an enclosing tomb of shadows visibly encroaching upon the prints of light and smothering them, bit by bit. I twisted and hurried to follow the light.

Much like before, I do not know how long I walked. My only goal was to follow the light and stay out of the cloying darkness. I clutched the lantern Mom had given to my chest like it was a lifeline and tried mostly in vain to stay calm. I didn't look back again.

Then, the last paw print before me faded and I found an opened hatchway. Stepping in, my lantern flickered back to life with an odd hum and burst of oily magic that had my nostrils flare while my hand, no, my crest, itched.

I peeked in.

The room I saw seemed important. I saw charts lining the walls, a table dominated by an unfamiliar ocean with a central eastern landmass and associated islands. The good quality of the charts surprised me before I realized the room felt much drier than anywhere else on board, like the mysterious effect keeping out the rot was even stronger here. Chairs lined the walls with some form of complex equipment dotted with large crystals and copper runic spinners connected with wiring, to create unknown workstations and more. It screamed "command center", although I wasn't sure.

However, for all that I expected to see a captain charting a course through hostile waters here with his officers, that wasn't what caught my attention. Rather, at the far corner of the room, almost in its own alcove like an altar, was a sphere.

It was large, nearly the size of a basketball, and looked to be made of a silvery metal crisscrossed with copper banding. Snaking all along the walls were more piping like what Mom had been working on that all connected to the sphere at various ports surrounded with yet more runes I didn't know or understand. The sphere had a glass port that reminded me of those seen on old, bulky diving suits.

I was still utterly unnerved, if not quite terrified, but a spark of curiosity remained inside me and refused to listen to reason. So, I poked it.

At my touch, the murky, near opaque, glass view into the sphere shifted. Internal, cloud-like formations begin moving. They almost fell into distinct geometric states before just as rapidly shifting. Gradually, a gentle, humming light began to fill the sphere, first from the core and moving outward. With its spread, the crystalline opacity changed in a wave of spreading amethyst. The formations again shifted in near comprehensible formations, yet every time I thought I had them pinned down in my mind they slipped away.

"Awakening procedure at 11% and climbing." A neutral, near mechanical voice spoke. "Please wait for the awakening procedures to finish."

I whirled and looked around with my ears twitching every which way until I realized the voice came from the sphere.

Curious, my ears perked to listen as I watched.

The glow built up, going through internal formation faster and faster until...

It yawned.

It took me ten seconds to process that. By that point, the voice had spoken up again with notably more emotion and a clearly feminine voice that made me think of a Lady for some reason.

"Awakening procedure finished, ICM Lady Sandra Spirit Core 2.22 is online and — oh sweet goddess what happened to my body? I can't feel everything, there's rust everywhere, and — and are those holes in my hull? Engineering, what is going on — oh my goddess, where is everyone, what is happening?" a youthful woman's voice spoke in a rapidly rising panic.

"Is my aft turret g—gone? I just had that fixed and-and—" the woman's voice broke into sobs at that point.

I was left awkwardly standing there as someone I didn't know or even know what she was sobbed. I eventually settled for patting the sphere.

That got a reaction. The light inside flared.

"What? Who's there?" The voice said, but with a suddenly wary tone.

"Um…" I said, really not sure where this was going. "I'm Gwen?" I tried. I tried waving, and the light inside the sphere… narrowed in brightness?

"Hi Gwen, I'm afraid I can't quite see you, some of my resonance points seem to be…gone," she said. For a second I thought she was going to start crying again. "Let me see…" she trailed off.

The view port on the sphere seemed to narrow before suddenly what looked like an iris formed and stared at me. I gulped, backing away. The iris flared at me in almost what seemed like surprise before it focused once more.

"I'm sorry! I didn't mean to scare you, just I had to reactivate a very old function that I hadn't had to use since…well, it doesn't matter, just a long time and wait, are you a little girl?" the voice asked incredulously.

"Um…yes?" I said, not denying it. "I'm five. Who are you?" I asked, settling on being direct because I didn't know what else I could even try. "I mean, I heard you waking up, but…"

"I suppose you did. Well, formal introductions, then? I am the spirit core of the ICM Lady Sandra, but you can call me Sandy, young lady." With the way her voice sounded, so polite if somewhat wavering, I almost expected to hear rustling skirts and see her curtsy if she wasn't an armored sphere mounted on a wall.

I nodded. That had a lot of implications, and this whole conversation did, really, but I needed to focus on the present. "Okay Sandy, I'm Gwen," I said once more, before realizing I did have a clan name now. "Gwen Mor," I amended.

"Oh, Mor? Lieutenant Eliza didn't have a child… I think? Anyway, I don't think you're supposed to be here, but, uh, I think a lot of things are a bit off right now. Do you know where your mommy and daddy are? I would very dearly like to speak with them, or some of the crew, if that's possible," Sandy spoke.

"I don't know my daddy," I said, honestly. I had never met him in this life. "I got separated from Mama earlier and ended up here by accident. I don't think the crew have been here in years."
Accident was one way to put it, but I'd just met Sandy. I didn't need to tell someone I didn't know about my experience in the dark.

"Oh," was all Sandy could say.

"What… what are you?" I finally asked.

This made the eye in the porthole widen. "Well, I'm the spirit core of the ship? I already told you this."

"But what does that mean?" I pressed.

The eye seemed to focus on me once more. "Oh," she said in surprise. "You're younger than I thought. It might help to think of me as the ship itself. Where the ship goes, I go. When the ship turns, I turn. I served in her majesty's grand fleet and… well, did a lot of important grownup stuff," she amended.

"Oh, what about—" I began, only to be interrupted.

"Gweeeeen!" I shrieked as a warm body swept me up, only to immediately relax as I recognized Mom. She rained kisses upon my forehead and nuzzled close, wrapping both arms tightly around me in an iron hold. "Where did you go? I finished up and you were just gone, and—"

I did nothing to stop her. If anything I leaned in to hug her. Everything about Mom comforted me from her touch to her smell and I couldn't help shaking a bit. I didn't trust myself to speak, not now, and not after what I'd seen. I think Mom noticed my shaking but kept me close and stroked my hair.

Eventually, Sandy's voice hesitantly spoke up. "Lieutenant Mor? Is that you? What — what is going on here? Where is Captain Cutters? Where is everyone and why am I so damaged? Please tell me just what happened while I was asleep?" she asked, her voice warbling.

Mom stiffened. "Sandy," she whispered. "That's a very long story," she said. "I promise, I'll tell you everything as soon as I can, but I have to see to my daughter right now. For now, you need to preserve power. The mana reactor is offline, and battery power is irreplaceable right now."

"I see," Sandy said, shaken. "When will we be able to talk?" she asked.

"Soon, just…not now." Mom said.

"Okay…I'll set myself to standby mode, then." Sandy said quietly. "Please don't forget me," she said.

"I promise, I would never forget. You have my word."

"Thank you, Lieutenant Mor," Sandy said. "I will see you soon, then."

With that, the light on Sandy's core dimmed to almost nothing. The amethyst interior faded back to crystal opacity barring a tiny dot of purple in the center.

Mom flicked her hair back and let out a long breath. She'd never stopped petting my hair.

"Mom? Who was that?" I trailed off. I didn't even know what to say at this point. My brain felt like mush and I think I just wanted to sleep and be held.

"Sandy is a friend, Kitten. I don't know how she activated or what you were doing here," she said with a curious look, "But… I think Sandy just being awake makes it possible for us to finally get off this rock," Mom said.

With that, she let me down and held out her hand. "Come, Gwen, I think this day has been long enough for both of us. Let's go home," she said.

I didn't hesitate to take her hand and step back into the darkened depths of the ship. I tried to ignore the ways the shadows felt, but they seemed inexplicably different now, more physical than I remember.

Later, after we both had a chance to calm down, I told Mom everything. I told how I wandered off, how the hatch closed, my time in the dark, and the cat prints that guided me to Sandy. It would have been so easy to bury it, to pretend I was just imagining things. I thought Mom would doubt me, think I'd just goofed off. Instead, she simply said, "Oh Gwen," and hugged me tight.

There could have been much more said, but that was all that was needed.




If you've paid to this anywhere outside of Patreon, Subscribestar, or Ko-Fi, then you've been scammed and someone is ripping you off as it is stolen.

If you're reading this on any other site than RoyalRoad, SufficientVelocity,Spacebattles, QuestionableQuesting,MZNovels or Wattpad or it's by anyone other than HiddenMaster, it's been plagiarized and stolen.





Chapter Thirteen: Author's Note


Fun fact: This chapter and the past few really held up my writing for a bit back when I was first writing this.

I think what actually held me up the most was describing the Sandcutter's interior and how Gwen even got to Sandy. I ended up talking with someone with actual experience onboard ships and how they can feel "lived in" before I was able to really get this down.

Also, if Gwen didn't have a fear of the dark prior to this chapter, she sure does now.

I would share art of of a very spoilerific future Sandy but that commission is both incomplete (WIP posted on Discord though), and also she is currently a ball that looks like this:

amethyst-ball-11656069.jpg


Until next time.




Obligatory author plug because I'd love to write more but society sadly says I need monies to keep living (and support my growing addiction to commissioning catgirl art)

Support me on Patreon, Ko Fi, or Subscribe Star. Check them advance chapters uploaded every weekend, too. Or check out my website for links to my other author accounts, contact, socials, etc. Anything is appreciated :3

Also I have a discord now! Check it out. I would love to chat with fans. :3
 
So I have read through what is posted so far and I like it okay. It's fairly interesting but there are some things that seem a bit off to me. This is all meant to be constructive. None of these points were really major, they just seemed off and I wanted to comment.

First thing I was going to comment was that it felt rather slow. Then I thought about it and realized that it's not slow, there is stuff happening. The issue is that you choose to start very early. There is a reason most Isakai stories don't start as a baby, or if they do they power through it almost instantly. I know you commented you didn't like that, but there is a reason they do that. The main one being that it's boring reading about a character with no agency. I just want to bring up the point because by choosing to start so young, and not gloss over it, there are problems you have to take into account.

Which leads to my second point. We have progressed past being a baby, but the character still basically has no agency. They are a vehicle for you to show us stuff and not really a character. This is kind of required because they are 5 at this point, but that doesn't change the fact that the MC has no agency and so isn't really a character yet. They don't question anything, they barely do anything. This exploration in the latest chapter is the most character we've seen so far.

My last point is about information and communication in the story. There are things you want us a readers to find out slowly or as a surprise or to be a mystery. But because of this, the mother in the story is a horrible mother who explains nothing to her child and teaches her nothing and should have died in chapter 7 except some kind of being took pity and saved them. She explains nothing about people, or the MCs father or the situation they are in, or how she plans to fix it or anything at all. The problem is that makes no sense. The mother has no reason to not tell the MC everything. There is literally nobody she could give away secrets to. There is no danger that needs to be hidden from her. So it just reads weird and forced that the MC knows nothing and doesn't care.

I do find the story interesting so far. I'm curious how it's going to go and what kind of story you plan to tell. It's hard to see it at this point because it's currently a weird kind of shipwreck story, which is fine I guess, but really kind of an odd thing to use an Isekai for, and especially as a child.
 

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