Copyright (c) 2018 James Miehoff, All Rights Reserved.
This work may not be published whether for fee or free without this copyright.
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This is one of a series of stories set in the Land of Etherium, a place out of time where wizards channeled mana and a host of creatures we call fairy tales roamed the lands. It is said these tales occurred almost 27,000 years ago before a set of cataclysms shaped the face of the earth and the fairy folk retreated or we in our smugness, no longer saw them.
In any case, they are just stories after all, aren't they?
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This is part four of the journey of Muddle to find a new Master to continue his magical education. If you haven't read the first three parts, please do, things may make more sense if you are caught up. I'll wait.
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Muddle woke to the sound of rain. Eager as he was to continue his journey, he was reluctant to trudge through the rain again, so he rolled over and went back to sleep.
An hour later, he woke again and this time he had to piss. So he walked to what was left of the doorway and peed out into the rain. Feeling better he walked over to the fire and coaxed it back to life by feeding it some small pieces of wood and then a larger chunk.
While the fire built up, he took his cookpot out to the door and set it down to collect some rainwater. A few minutes in the rain was all it took to get enough water for his breakfast.
"It was that kind of day," he thought.
While his breakfast cooked, he pulled out the staff and looked at it in the gloomy light. It was as he remembered it. Three dryads stood equally spaced around the head of the staff. Each of the three was holding a globe upon their shoulders, their arms reaching back behind their heads helping to hold the globe up.
As he spun the staff slowly in his hands past the first two figures, he stopped and looked closely at the third figure. It was not a dryad but a human male holding up his part of the globe. "Curious," he thought.
He looked very closely at the figures of the dryads. One was a mature woman, strong and in her prime. The other was a young maiden full of the beauty of youth with a hint of a smile playing on her lips. "Amazing detail," he thought.
Then it hit him, "The Triad," he said softly.
"The woman is the tree, strong and in her prime. The maiden is the dryad, the lady of the tree, forever young and nubile. The third figure is man who gave his seed," he thought.
Then another thought struck him, "The man is me!" And he marveled at the amazing detail of the figure. It even had the small scar on his cheek where Mudpaul had cut him when they played with the swords they had found.
As he made that revelation, the staff grew warm in his hand and thrummed like a string instrument being plucked. "Curious," he thought.
He set the staff aside to keep his breakfast from burning.
After eating, he again picked up the staff. He continued his examination of it but didn't see any other markings, just the smooth grain one only finds in an oak.
"My master said that he could store mana in his wand to be retrieved when he needed it," Muddle said to himself. "But he never said how he did it. I know how to pull mana from the world around me and I know how to push it out to form spells, I wonder if I can push the mana out to the staff."
He concentrated and began to visualize pushing mana from himself to the staff. Nothing happened at first. But as he concentrated more he could feel the staff begin to soak up the mana and store it within.
Exhausted from his efforts, Muddle again put down the staff and took his cookpot out to get some rain to clean it.
Coming back and seating himself on the floor, he again took up the staff. He again visualized pushing mana from himself to the staff and this time it was a flood of mana that left him and stored itself into the staff.
Muddle put down the staff and headed for the door to retrieve his cookpot. When he got there he saw that the rain had stopped and he stepped out to get a better look at his temporary home. He saw a rainbow over the meadow behind the house. It almost looked like the end of the rainbow was touching the part of the roof that had survived.
He stood amazed and began the first few lines of the Blessings of the Rainbow he had learned so long ago at the orphanage,
"Rainbow, rainbow shining bright,
you show the colors to our sight.
After storm and after rain,
you give us hope till we see you again."
Shaking his head, Muddle picked up the cookpot and sloshed the contents a couple times before tossing them out into the forest.