Hannah Harbuckle
Mr. Deshane sent a letter to the Sinnenodel dorm confirming the details of the meeting with Hannah. She agreed to meet at 5am in study room 2 in the library. The library itself was a bit louder than usual as students scoured the bookshelves for research material and texts and tomes flew every which way. The study rooms were only on the ground floor, a single door set next to the entrance. Entering required a key that a librarian supplied when the reservation time approached and each set of keys would take students to a specific room despite the shared door.
The study rooms, in addition to being private and quiet, were themed for students who needed a relaxing space to work. Study room 2 in particular sat on an empty stretch of beach. A round table sat in the middle of a large pagoda, cushioned benches in the place of chairs. A projector on a mini fridge sat across from a drop down screen. Gulls cried in the distance and crystal blue waves rolled over golden sand, shimmering in the warm sunlight.
Hannah sat underneath the shade, sipping quietly at an iced coffee. She wore simple clothes, a bright t-shirt and jeans accompanied with a pair of garish flip flops. Her hair was tied back in a messy bun and a pair of silver framed glasses sat on tired eyes. She watched the gulls in the distance, seeming distracted.
When Aaron retrieved the study room key from one of the librarians, he’d been expecting to step into a small room with tables and chairs, not unlike the practice room back home. What he walked into was a shock to say the least; he wasn’t bothered by the sudden brightness of sunlight, eyes adjusting immediately, but rather by the jarring change. He had thought the magic in the rest of the library was extraordinary enough, with its warping of space and gravity, but this was above and beyond what he could have expected.
He took a moment to stare around at the beach and the ocean, stunned, before he found another figure in a nearby pagoda. He made his way over carefully, awkwardly stepping through the sand before gratefully reaching the pagoda, shaking sand off of his shoes before he turned his attention to the girl on the bench. Noticing she seemed distracted, he followed her gaze, finding nothing but birds in the distance. Good lord, did the room really extend out that far, or was it just an illusion?
In any case, they had something more important to do. Turning back to the girl, Aaron cleared his throat and offered a smile and a hand.
“Hannah? I’m Aaron, it’s nice to meet you.” “Oh, you're here!” Hannah startled from whatever she was thinking, a smile crossing her face as she shook his hand.
“Sorry, it's so quiet I kinda spaced. So, what's up? Mr. Deshane said you wanted to talk about the program? Oh and I brought some coffee in the fridge if you drink it.” Hannah gestured to the mini fridge. She watched him intently however and he could feel just the slightest brush against his mind before she blinked and it disappeared.
“Oops, sorry sorry. Habit and all that.” She laughed.
“Once you're used to getting in people's heads, it's just instinct.”Aaron shook her hand politely, though he recoiled a bit when he felt a sensation he couldn’t quite describe in his head. Luckily, it was gone as quickly as it came, with Hannah apologizing. That had been her? Aaron couldn’t say he was fond of it, but it was definitely more pleasant than what Lady Sinnenodel’s mages had done.
“Uh, no worries,” he replied a little uneasily, settling onto the bench a bit away from Hannah. Forcing a bit of a nervous laugh, he asked,
“See anything?”“Nerves and concern. I didn't delve deep enough.” She kicked off her sandals and put her feet up on the table, leaning back.
“Relax. I don't bite. Though I get it. This magic is pretty intense. Took me almost a year to stop randomly jumping into these weirdos’ heads. Gotta say, don't miss that phase. People think weird shit.” She laughed, gagging at a memory.
“So, talk to me. What's going on?”Nerves and concern? Sounded about right. That could have been an apt description of almost his entire Academy experience so far, Aaron mused. He laughed along with Hannah, mostly just to save face, before becoming a bit more businesslike.
“Well, you’re right, I was interested to hear from someone in the program,” he told her, shifting a little in his seat so that he could look at her face-on.
“Against my better judgement, I’m considering going into the mental program myself. I suppose I’m wondering what you could tell me about what I can expect.”“Well, I hope you don’t like secrets because after this you won’t have any. The first thing they work on is closing your mind off. And by closing it off, they repeatedly invade and violate all sense of personal boundaries until you learn to shut them out! It’s a horrifying ordeal but effective.” Hannah explained jovially as she counted ticks on her fingers.
“Then there is telepathy at the same time and that's a trip because you just start broadcasting and picking up thoughts willy nilly. Started more than one fight that way. Good thing my vampire knows how to fight!” She sipped a bit more at the coffee and snapped her fingers.
“Next step is trapping invaders and reversing the connection. Then telekinesis and man that’ll trigger all on its own too. I personally recommend tying everything to your body. Backpack, pencils, phone... If you want to keep it nearby, tie it down.” She finished counting and flashed him a thumbs up.
“And that’s all year one and two! They might mix it up here and there but they’ll work you like a dog at the beginning. And don’t worry, your instructor is legally bound to silence by the princess herself. Even if you were personally planning a rebellion against the Queen, they couldn’t say anything!” She leaned in really close and whispered,
“I hear the instructors are bound by dark magic. And when I say hear, I mean I saw.” She winked.
Aaron listened intently, doing his best not to recoil in his seat. Good lord, he was used to learning things the hard way, but that sounded like an
ordeal. No wonder this poor girl looked so tired. Nonetheless, it was morbidly fascinating, especially hearing that ‘closing off’ the mind was the first thing they taught. Horrifying as it sounded, was oddly comforting. After all, that was most of the reason he wanted to go into this school.
He eyed Hannah warily when she scooted closer, leaning a little away when he heard what she had to say. Alright, silence, great, but the rest sounded like something secret he definitely didn't want or need to know. She
did say secrets wouldn't be a luxury of his anymore, but good lord, he didn't need to be learning about possible dark magic in Princess Ryner’s ranks today.
Yet, despite the nightmarish contents of her speech, Hannah didn't seem the least disturbed. Eventually his curiosity got the better of him.
“You seem… Awfully cheerful about all that,” he stated, forcing a bit of a laugh,
“How did you handle it?”“I could tell you. Or I could…” She pointed a finger at Aaron and spoke,
“Relvelo Bombardum.” Images flashed flashed through Aaron’s head almost faster than he could comprehend them. Her sobbing in front of her instructor, her doubled over with her hands over her ears, her scratching at a wall as everything went black. Aaron felt despair and hopelessness and most of all, pain. Her most sacred place being violated over and over and over again. People laughing at her thoughts and kicking her around. People disturbed as she responded instinctively to their thoughts, slowly losing the ability to discern the difference between spoken word and thoughts. A phone flickered and died, untouched and unconnected as friends stopped contacting her.
The pain eased and vanished as a hand, pale and powerful, picked him up in every memory. The lingering feeling of a kiss on the temple when everything was too
loud. A strong presence when everyone else was
scared. Athena beamed and the heart beat faster. Determination and pride gradually replaced the fear and the loss. Friends returned and the voices quieted. Athena danced across the arena, looking more alive than any human, and the magic in the air sang with purpose. With determination. With strength. Hannah dropped her finger and Aaron snapped back to his senses.
“A purpose.” Hannah continued sipping at her coffee.
“I went in at first only wanting power. The risks intrigued me and the benefits outweighed the results at first. They warn you plenty about losing your affinity and how it could affect your life and all that. But no one warns you about the responsibility, about the loss, about the creep factor in the early days.” She laughed, but it was far from joyous.
“They don’t warn you how exhausting it is to know everyone better than they know themselves. White lies are truly a blessing, don’t let anyone tell you otherwise.”“It nearly ruined me. I wanted to die by the end of the first year but Athena wouldn’t let that happen. She picked me up over and over and over. She stood with me when no one else would. And so I decided she was why I wanted to learn. To help her for what little time I have in comparison. I wouldn’t have this power if she wasn’t here so it only seems fair to repay that.” She chuckled, this time much more nicely. She put her empty cup down on the table and let her head fall back.
“So find a purpose, an anchor, anything or anybody that’ll stick with you regardless of what happens. It’ll be miserable but at least you can justify it.” Aaron hadn't realized how hard he'd been gripping the edge of the bench cushion until he released it, the visions fading away. His first reaction was to bristle a bit at the intrusion; good lord, were all telepaths so obnoxious? Is that how he'd behave when he became one?
But he forced himself to relax, resisting the urge to glare at the girl as she spoke. Apparently it was something he’d have to get used to, and at least now it wouldn't be Lady Sinnenodel doing the digging. He gave himself pause, though, when he realized he'd been thinking of everything in certain terms:
when he became a telepath, he
would have to get used to it. As if the decision was made. He'd thought he was still deliberating, collecting all the advice he could before making a choice, but more and more he felt that despite every frightening thing he learned about the school of mental magic, he couldn't see himself doing anything else.
Still, he took Hannah's advice to heart. Find an anchor. Of course, his first thought was Lucan, but a hint of doubt crept in: Aaron had been elated that Lucan would be joining him at the Academy, but the vampire he considered a brother had all but disappeared without a trace on some assignment, and he had no idea when to expect a return. So who could he turn to? Hannah had her partner, but in Aaron's circumstances the very idea of such a thing seemed like a joke. He'd have to put more thought into it later.
Realizing he'd been quiet for a moment, Aaron nodded absently, eyes fixed on the table.
“Do you think that's what helped you hold on to your affinity?” he asked.
“Was there ever a time when you thought you'd lose it?”“I don't know honestly. I know my grades were slipping in most classes because of the stress but I couldn't say any of my issues were because of that.” She said apologetically.
“But I do honestly believe that it's because I have a purpose that I still have it. Some of the previous classes always mention feeling lost but since my decision, I've never felt that. I've never felt like I'm just going through the motions for the sake of it.”Aaron hummed some affirmative response, looking down at his hands. He rotated his ring on his finger, watching for a moment how the light bounced off the many facets on its surface. There she was, talking about purpose again. What was his? Protecting the people close to him? That was why he’d considered mind magic in the first place, to make sure that his loved ones couldn’t be leveraged by Lady Sinnenodel. Or maybe it was to spite her; he could only imagine how satisfying it would feel to block her out, to be able to stray from Varis’ side without fear. But that seemed pretty weak for a driving force to hedge his affinity on. What else did he have?
“You’re lucky,” he murmured, almost by accident. He looked up from his ring, blinking as he turned back to her.
“I mean, that’s great, that you have someone to excel for.” Hannah gestured lazily at Aaron with a muttered
“Ivderanus.” Nothing seemed to happen for a moment but she flicked absently, her eyes unfocused and distant. A warm presence, full of happy feelings and good intentions, slipped into the boy's mind.
“Wow, your life sucks doesn't it.” Disappointment underscored her words as she continued to flick. It was like she was flipping pages in a book and sometimes circled something here and there.
“Jeez, who’s that? You just played with that poor girl. Too busy looking at those legs hm?” Hannah cackled but suddenly she coughed, flicked the page, and coughed again, clutching at her throat. Her eyes grew wider and wider as she struggled against something and a dark bruise started forming around her neck. The presence vanished and she gasped, suddenly able to breathe again. Hannah slowly climbed back into her seat, winded, and stared at Aaron wide eyed.
“Who the fuck has been in your head?” She wheezed, still trembling. She made a shaky gesture and the mini fridge flew open, a bottle of water soaring into her outstretched hand.
“I've never even seen our instructors able to pull something like that off.”Hannah’s incantation rubbed Aaron the wrong way, figuring she was delving into his head again. But soon he felt more comfortable with it, satisfied in the knowledge that she meant him no harm as he watched her, somewhat fascinated.
Her comments didn’t bother him, though panic overcame his calm when Aaron saw her clutching at some invisible presence around her throat, jumping up when that bruise started forming, though he didn’t know what to do. He considered running and getting help, but he was hesitant to leave her.
Mercifully, Hannah’s fit was over almost as quickly as it came, though it did little to calm Aaron as he watched her recover, wide-eyed. Only when she spoke again did he finally take his seat, feeling behind him for the bench with eyes locked on Hannah, heart still jumping in his throat.
“Are you okay?” He asked urgently, ignoring her question,
“What the hell was that!?”“A very violent block in your head.” She groaned, rubbing her throat.
“Advanced mind magic can put wards against intrusions in your head, normally keyed to specific memories. They can cause psychic feedback, sometimes strong enough to knock out whoever is rooting around, but I've never even heard of one that can physically hurt someone.” A note of awe crept into her voice as she spoke. She eyed Aaron again but an excited glint replaced the panic from earlier.
“So, who was in your head? All I could get was some music, maybe a piano?” She leaned forward, practically vibrating with excitement.
“It was beautiful though. I've never encountered magic with that degree of sophistication. We have to go back in. We have to see what it is. Come on, I can take both of us.”For a moment, Aaron could only stare, looking at the girl like she had two heads. What the hell was she going on about? A piano? Lady Sinnenodel had dragged him kicking and screaming through his own memories, but nothing involving a piano. Although…
“Lady Sinnenodel was in my head,” Aaron replied, a little breathless in his lingering shock.
“Why on earth would you want to repeat that?” “Lady Sinn—” The woman launched herself at Aaron, hitting her knees and clinging to his.
“I got lost in someone's head for three days just to find a spell they couldn't remember. Something like this? It's a once in a lifetime experience. I’m begging you. I think it's the most beautiful thing I've seen since I started this. I've read most of the illegal material on mind magic.” Hannah's eyes were wide, in a comical attempt at puppy dog eyes.
“And I think it might actually kill me without your permission so please?!”Aaron shifted in his seat, shying a little away from Hannah as she dropped before him. Immediately he took her shoulders, gently guiding her back up to the bench with a muttered,
“Please don’t do that.”He watched her incredulously as she continued, practically manic at the thought of diving headfirst into what he was fairly sure would be a nightmare for all involved. But as he watched her, her excitement began reminding him of when he’d first started practicing his affinity, wanting to get his hands on techniques far beyond his skill level. Besides, if this was the world he was going into, he supposed he should start getting used to it now.
He searched Hannah’s face a moment longer, hoping he would think of something to change his mind, but nothing came.
“...Fine,” he conceded, inwardly groaning.
“Just... please be careful.” “Yeeees. I'll be as careful as can be!” Hannah promised cheerily. She placed her hand on Aaron's chest and pushed gently. The scene around them vanished, wisps of color fading into darkness and the forest outside Ryner's home appeared. Varis smoothed out Aaron's tie and stormed off into the darkness.
“What an asshole.” Hannah snorted.
“You should deck him one day. Bet he wouldn't even see it coming! Oh but this is as far as I got before something choked me out. Mind walking us down and we'll see what happens!” Hannah clapped her hands together eagerly, watching Aaron expectantly.
Aaron blinked around at the darkness when the scene changed, surprised nothing else seemed all that different. He was standing in his same clothes, and still next to Hannah, several steps down the path from… Aaron.
He peered through the darkness at the pair down the path, watching from an outside perspective as Varis fixed his tie after having grabbed it, right after he’d given his warning. He might have rolled his eyes at Hannah’s comment had he not been so transfixed on the bizarre view of watching himself hurry into the woods at Varis’ heel.
Looking suspiciously to Hannah, he began to lead them down the path after… himself.
“I could have just told you what happens next,” he informed her, a hint of sarcasm sneaking into his voice as some of the same nervousness from that night began to grip him anew.
They followed close enough behind to keep his other self and Varis in view, though that meant they couldn’t stray too far, lest the darkness swallow them. In fact, the trees on either side of the path were shrouded in it, an inky, featureless blackness that clashed with the slightly more illuminated path. Every now and then, though, a small patch of the forest to one side or another was a little more detailed; after watching his other self for a moment, Aaron realized that those detailed parts only appeared where he saw himself glancing. Apparently he hadn’t looked at the rest, having been wrapped up in his own nerves, so their features were missing from the memory.
Soon enough, the forest lightened and Aaron could see Ryner’s gate up ahead, the path of her drive extending beyond it.
As the pair approached the houses, Hannah gripped her head for a moment and Aaron could feel something tighten on his chest, the faintest outline of a hand gripping his shirt visible against the darkness. The familiar scene of the manor vanished and instead sunlight poured through the trees onto a manor covered artfully in vines and rose bushes. The fountain still ran, looking brand new, and the driveway was only partially completed. The faint sound of a piano playing caught their ear, seeming to echo across the scene, but no one could be seen.
“Wow.” Hannah's words seemed breathless as she reached her hand out. She plucked at the air and a thin golden line appeared in her fingers, humming along with the piano. It sparked and vanished.
“A crash course on memory blocks and improvised memories: Like cloth, fake memories are made of “threads”, bits and pieces of magic woven with emotions and sensory images and put together to make an image. Threads take on different colors based on how real a memory is. Real measures how much true memory is woven into it rather than magic or fragments. Our books say gold is impossible because it's pure magic, there is no part of real memory woven into it, and so it falls apart. But this,” Hannah spread her arms and laughed.
“This makes me think we don't know anything. Well, let's go see what this is all about! Have you ever seen this building?”Aaron was staring wide-eyed at the scene before them until Hannah started to speak, explaining the origin of what he was about to say; that this was not his memory. However, rather than being as terrified as he should have been that a false memory was in his head, what Hannah said about real memories and impossible threads, sounding giddy all the while, made him feel more inquisitive than afraid.
At her question, he turned back to the manor, examining it closely.
“It looks like… Princess Ryner’s manor…” He spoke slowly, combing through his memory. He remembered from his schooling that the manor was built ages ago, almost a millennium, and the rose bushes creeping along the outside confirmed for him that it was indeed hers. But the fountain was new…
“Wow,” he breathed, eyes widening as he let his shoulders fall.
“This is her manor right after the Treaty was signed.” He looked to Hannah, and this time, it was his turn to get excited. He pointed to the fountain.
“That was installed at my grandfather’s recommendation, it’s a defense measure. She had a few water mages with her at the time.” Looking back at the manor, it was hard to tear his eyes away.
“This happened within my grandfather’s lifetime,” he remarked, a little stunned. He ran a hand through his hair, gaping at the sight.
“Well, that shouldn't be right. Golden threads mean nothing should be based in reality.” Hannah walked forward, periodically plucking at a thread and
tsking at the gold colors, until she raised her hand and pounded against the memory. Threads rippled for a just a moment, gold rushing off into the distance, but a pattern was clearly visible. The threads wove together in interlocking diamonds and in each one, a black eye hovered. Hannah watched, her excitement shifting into caution.
“Black normally only shows up in those suffering enthrallment.” She muttered.
“But you don't have any of the other hallmarks. So why are there black threads in gold threads where neither mean what they should? This is…”Hannah stopped suddenly as man rounded the corner, arguing with himself as he tossed a ball of fire between his hands. A younger Landar Starag, looking no older than Aaron, approached the pair and sat on the edge of the fountain. The piano in the background flowed from one song to the next. Landar's fire went out and he looked up abruptly, eyes fixed on Hannah. He stood, scowling, and suddenly his skin cracked and shattered like porcelain. It shifted and changed, moving around until the man looked older, wiser, with no hint of a smile and he lunged at Hannah and wrapped his hands around her throat once more.
Aaron all but jumped back from the lattice of black and gold, moved to deep unrest that something so disturbing was lurking in his mind.
His mind. But none of it,
none of it lingered in his thoughts for long when he spotted a man rounding the corner. A young, blond, blue-eyed man, playing with fire.
Aaron actually gasped, one hand coming up to his mouth as he looked on, transfixed. That was him. That was
him. He was younger than he should have been, but it was unmistakably him. The man Aaron had spent his life looking up to in portraits, right there.
Crackling into pieces, and lunging at Hannah.
Coming to his senses with the sudden attack, Aaron reacted, lunging forward himself. He almost hesitated, confronted with the face that hung all over the walls of his home, but not for long. It wasn’t real, it was a false memory, but he knew the danger to Hannah wasn’t.
Wedging himself between the two, Aaron tried to wrench Landar’s arms away, but the second he touched the man, he exploded into— ravens?
Aaron threw his arms up instinctively as a raven flew at him, a few others flying out from where Landar had been. On the ground, several snakes slithered off of a pile of apples, over their feet and away into the grass.
Aaron could only stare at the apples for a second, breathing heavily. A rushing sound caught his attention, and he looked up to see the fountain running, spouting sand instead of water. He gaped for a second, before looking back to Hannah.
“What the hell is this?” he pressed darkly.
“Confirmation.” She wheezed but reverence seeped through as she fell to her knees.
“The original vampires and their close descendants had power magic only dreamed of. I read in one of the restricted books that mind magic was created to counter one of the originals’ power but they didn't have a source. But the threads, the lattice, the literal noble seals— This is a—” Hannah's face went slack and she vanished, turning into wisps of dark smoke. Aaron felt something lift off his chest as she did but the scene around him remained unchanged.
“Just like Landar.” A voice, deep and smooth, rolled out of the mouth of a snake nearby.
“Always getting in trouble without me watching. You're early, boy. And I bothered to give you my protection. Tsk, tsk, tsk.” As it spoke, the voice climbed an octave slowly. It stirred something in Aaron's head but the feeling wouldn't click.
“Since this will fade once you leave, you may as well take advantage child. Ask one question before the sand engulfs you.” Sand rapidly poured over the edge of the fountain but the music started up again, this tune bringing back the image of a strange place with blank sarcophagi.
On instinct, Aaron grasped at the smoke where Hannah had vanished, panic rising in his chest when the memory didn’t disappear with her. But before he could wonder if this had all been a very long fever dream after the Revel or something, a voice turned his head, a snake as its source. An adder.
There was no time to be confused over its words or the strange pitch of its voice before the scene changed again, piano music filling his ears and sand flooding the floor between rows of sarcophagi. Fourteen, to be exact. But he hadn’t counted.
It was more than deja vu that struck Aaron as sand pooled around his legs; no, he knew he’d been here before, and he knew exactly when. But this had taken him out of a nightmare last time, not played a part in it. So what was so different now?
There was certainly more than one question swirling in his head, but Aaron was biting down panic as the sand reached his waist, trying and failing to move his legs. There was no time. So he did all he could do, grasping at the question which had been gnawing at him since they entered the false memory.
“That was just going to be a normal memory,” he snapped at the snake, eyes burning as the sand approached his chest.
“So what the hell was in there that’s so important it needs to be protected like this?”With his question, the sand shimmered before exploding into thousands of glowing butterflies against a dark room. Muffled shouts of celebration rang from beneath the floorboards and the smell of stale ale and sweat permeated the air. A candle lit, followed by the rest, and the room glowed orange. Only a mirror sat in the middle, covered with a dusty cloth.
“There lies your answer. Look if you dare.” The voice whispered in his ear. A gloved hand hung off Aaron's right shoulder and a sudden weight along hung back suggested an arm may be there as well.
“I do love mindscapes. I can be tall in them.” The voice sighed dreamily.
“Being short was always a pain. You're lucky you know.”Aaron peered around through the dim light, eyes landing on the mirror in the centre of the room. He started a bit, shifting instinctively, when he felt a weight across his shoulders, that eerily familiar voice in his left ear.
Rather than make a beeline for the mirror, Aaron stepped out from under the arm, turning to face the owner of the voice. He was confronted with a figure about his height, but bulkier; upon closer inspection, it was clad in leather armour, candlelight bouncing off the familiar dark slick of blood. Under a mop of unruly red hair was a face—no, a mask—that Aaron recognized. One of Lucan’s distant relatives, she’d died in battle defending Princess Nox.
Narrowing his eyes at the figure, Aaron spoke more coolly than he might have expected from himself.
“Greta Bordeleaux wore obsidian plate, not leather,” he stated, examining the figure.
“All work and no play makes Aaron a dull boy.” The figure sang with a laugh.
“Very well, very well. Maybe you'll like something a bit more masculine.” The mask contorted and shifted, Greta's face melting off like wax. A new face pushed out of the blank space; Donovan Astorio sneered down at Aaron. The vampire was executed for nearly throwing the realm into civil war three hundred years ago.
“Are we going to stand here all day and play games to amuse you or would you like your prize? After all, the longer you stay in here, the more worried your little friend gets.”“Aaron? Aaron? Wake up!” Hannah's voice, desperate and frantic, rang through the room before more celebratory noise replaced it. The figure slipped over to the mirror and grabbed the cloth, ready for a dramatic unveiling.
“Of course if you're scared, that door behind you will wake you up just the same. But how disappointed would your dear grandpappy Landar be?” The figure taunted Aaron.
Aaron lifted his head at the sound of Hannah’s voice, though despite her frantic tone, he held firm, an eerie calm setting in.
“She’ll be fine,” he replied coldly, eyeing the figure as it moved to the mirror.
“This is all in my head, after all.”His gaze didn’t waver as the figure mocked him, his eyes trained on the mask of Donovan Astorio. Its offer was tempting, but something in the back of his mind was still gnawing at him as he approached, stopping him from reaching out.
“You seem awfully fond of the dead,” he remarked, crossing his arms and coming to a halt in front of the covered mirror.
“Is that why you like to taunt the living?” “Dead? They never lived.” The figure chuckled.
“Better yet, they never existed. They were only roles written in a game far older than civilization as you know it. And there are many more where they came from, surrounding you and your kind. Far too many for my liking.”“But,” the figure sighed as he leaned against the mirror,
“I do envy you. Enjoying the breeze on your skin, the moonlight on the water, the touch of a lover. All things I am destined to be without for far too long. But we do crazy things for vengeance don't we.” The room dimmed, the edges fuzzing.
“Seems like you've nearly ruined your memory of me. Quickly, make your choice or you may not get back at all.”Aaron stared at the figure, listening not to his words, but to his voice. His words were mostly gibberish to Aaron anyway; it was the
voice he’d been trying to hear. The pitch, the cadence, it was all so
familiar but for the tone. But Aaron had achieved his goal, it seemed, and gotten the figure talking long enough for it to
finally click in his brain who it was.
Except it was Varis.
A familiar spike of fear shot up through Aaron, and he stepped back at the realization, mind buzzing. The room was growing dim, and he was growing panicked, his former calm having burned away. He was done with this. He had to get out. But he’d come in for a reason, and like hell he’d be leaving without his answer. Urgently, he grabbed the cloth and tore it from the mirror, casting it aside.
He got barely a glimpse of himself in the mirror, Dawn shining at his side, before everything went dark.
“Ah!”Aaron shot upright, inadvertently banging his head into something before he even managed to open his eyes. When he did, he was greeted by sunlight, golden sand, and Hannah, who had apparently been sitting too close and whose head had been the victim of his collision. Leaning forward, he squeezed his eyes shut, groaning quietly and massaging the sore spot on his forehead.
Hannah recoiled when they collided, her back hitting the table with a loud thud. She groaned as she rubbed her forehead and stumbled into her seat. It took her a moment to collect herself.
“What a reaction to a little mind reading.” She grumbled.
“If you want to make it through mind classes, you'll have to get over this passing out defense mechanism. I know we're all a little squeamish at first but wow, you are extra aren't you?”Aaron glared sideways at Hannah, not sure whether to be angry or confused.
“What are you talking about?” He demanded, justifiably a little curt.
“You saw that, didn’t you?”“Saw what, a life of boring imprisonment and letting a fight go on so you could ogle a girl for the first time? Yes, I did.” Hannah looked confused and concerned.
“Look, I'm sorry I did that without permission but you gotta get used to it or get real good at making excuses. The hive is gonna want to connect or Dennis is going to cry and you'll make us all angry and it's just going to be a bad time.”Aaron stared at Hannah with that same combination of confusion and irritation, slowly straightening as she spoke. He didn't know what to address first: that little jab at his upbringing, whatever the ‘hive’ was, whoever Dennis was or why Hannah was acting like they hadn't just stumbled on something terrifying and incredible in his head.
“I gave you permission,” Aaron began, moving up to the bench without breaking his gaze,
“We both went in, remember? We— I— Hannah, you were strangled twice!” Aaron took out his phone and held it out so that Hannah could see her reflection in the screen, his own eyes locked on the dark bruise around her neck, a confirmation that
he wasn't the crazy one.
“That's from a nasty evocation spell gone wrong, Aaron.” Hannah spoke carefully, taking a few steps backwards.
“I never asked your permission to enter you mind. I was just trying to help you find some sort of purpose and then next thing I know you passed out. If you'd been under any longer, I was going to call for help.” She eyed him like a feral animal, keeping her distance.
“Are you sure you're okay. Maybe you should pick a different arcane major? You seem a little… unprepared,” Hannah suggested. Her hand lingered on the table as she sat back on a bench.
Aaron resisted the urge to throw up his hands and look to the sky for answers, instead pocketing his phone.
“Well, ‘okay’ is a relative term but yes, I think I'm okay,” he conceded with a slight huff. He looked at Hannah suspiciously.
“Just to be clear,” he asked,
“gold threads, black eyes, an apparently impossible false memory; none of that is ringing any bells?”“I mean, minus the black eyes yeah? I'm glad you've done some reading ahead but you don't need to know that for at least a semester.” Hannah sounded genuinely confused.
“What are these black eyes?”“‘Signs of enthrallment’?” Aaron replied indignantly,
“Except I'm not enthralled? Nothing?”“I wish I knew another language so I could tell you ‘no’ in that one too. Is this some weird way of asking me to get in your head because I'm not sure that's such a great idea right now. You know, with the hallucinating and shit.” The woman snapped, crossing her arms.
“Maybe you should get evaluated before joining. You've obviously got some shit going on in there.”“Well I'm obviously going to get evaluated, it's required,” Aaron snapped back, before exhaling heavily and leaning back, rubbing his eyes. Why was he bothering? Something obviously happened in there to wipe her memory, or… something.
“Sorry, I guess I respond poorly to mind reading,” he sighed, figuring it was best not to anger the girl who could be helping him and resolving to look into it on his own.
“Anyway, what's the hive? Who’s Dennis?”“Okay then.” Hannah settled down, drinking her water. She still seemed unconvinced.
“The hive is just all the students in the program. Once we've controlled our telepathy, we all just sort of link up. It's incredibly useful, cheating is ridiculously easy but you lose most of your privacy to the hive.” She shrugged at the mention.
“I remember Dennis tried to ask this girl out and half of us were whispering pick up lines and the other half of us were trying to shut them up. He did not get the date let's just say.” Hannah chuckled fondly.
“Dennis is a junior in the program. He's a bit insecure and cries really easy so he's the baby of the group and the hive is incredibly protective of him. If someone upsets him, we all flood the person's mind with nightmares for months. No one hurts Dennis.”Aaron quirked a brow, examining Hannah questioningly. Truth be told, that all sounded like a nightmare, not to mention it seemed like they were awfully mean to this ‘Dennis’ despite apparently wanting to protect him. But he supposed that was none of his business; not until they wanted him to wire into the ‘hive’, anyway.
“Ah,” was his reply as he finally tore his eyes away, staring down at the table as he prodded gingerly at the lump forming on his forehead. He was quiet for a second, wanting to interrogate Hannah further, but he was fairly sure he wouldn't get anything out of her. It really seemed like she forgot everything, all they'd seen having been pasted over somehow with mundane excuses.
“Is there anything else you think I should know?” He finally asked, looking over.
“Anything you wish you knew before you started all this?”“Hm, yes actually. Always bring a box of tissues to defensive practices. And new contacts if you wear them. And lots and lots of water. You're going to be bawling through every lesson for the first year.” Hannah cringed.
“Other than that, make sure you have a direction and meaning for going into this. It isn't for the faint of heart and it'll chew you up and spit you out.”“I’ll keep that in mind,” Aaron replied absently and nodded, standing and holding out a hand.
“You’ve been very helpful, thank you. Would it be alright if I contacted you again?”“Of course! Here, give me your phone so I can put my number in it.” Hannah held her hand out.
Aaron nodded, pulling up a blank contact on his phone before handing it over.
“Thanks, I'm sure I'll be using it.”She typed out her contact, chuckling at something, and tossed it back to him. Her own phone lit up, Janelle Moane's “Screwed” blasting at full volume.
“Wow where did the time go? I have to jet, sorry. Athena's got a match soon and I hate missing them. Send me a text so I have your number!” She waved and bolted towards the door, leaving a wake of swear words behind her.
“She's funny.” The figure's voice, though distant and weak, tickled Aaron’s ear.
“I wonder why she hid her mouth though.” And, like a veil being torn away, Aaron's memory shifted. Every image of Hannah changed and two of her overlapped perfectly. Neither image made sound even though her voice was clearly heard but only the top image's mouth moved.
Aaron whipped around at the voice, though all he saw was Hannah, seeing double, but not quite the same. Any former caution or composure was long gone, the man practically snarling at the voice and the vision.
“What is this!?” Aaron shouted, trying to back away from the images.
“Who are you!?”But of course, there was no answer. Instead, the voice went silent and the visions faded away, leaving him alone. Aaron simply stood there for a moment, breathing heavily and wanting to scream. Soon, though, the room felt cold and unsafe, the sunny warmth and gentle crashing of waves doing nothing to comfort him. So he simply stalked away, looking over his shoulder and lost in his head.