Deadsweep by Beca Lewis

Deadsweep by Beca Lewis

Author:Beca Lewis [Lewis, Beca]
Language: eng
Format: epub
Publisher: Perception Publishing
Published: 2019-08-11T16:00:00+00:00


She was referring to the bracelet that Link had given me before we went out to fight the Shrieks and Shatterskin. I looked at it on my left arm. It fit as if it had always been there. It was so much a part of me that I rarely thought of it. When I did, I loved the picture-jasper stone set in the center. The veins of the stone formed a tree, and it had been in a beautiful wood box with a tree on it. I kept the box in my room at the Castle.

“Only what Link said to me when he gave it to me. He said he was returning it. But I didn’t understand then, and I still don’t.”

“It’s time, then,” Sarah said.

She took my hand, and we went into the meditation room where I had first gone to meet with the Oracle. Then it was a little blue light inside of a tree trunk. Later I realized that the Oracle had been Sarah all along. It made sense to me. She was the wise woman everyone went to back in the Earth Realm. But in Erda, she was more than that. She had restored most of my magic abilities or at least opened the door for me to find them again.

I knew that there were still some hidden from me.

I was hoping that perhaps Sarah would be opening doors to more of my skills. The thought that I would learn more about the bracelet that I wore got me moving. Instead of shuffling along, I almost flew to the room with her.

The door with the wolf head knocker was there, and I still had to duck to get inside. This time I knew that the different size door was there to make me aware I was entering a different kind of space. If someone walked into the room as if it was a standard size door, they would whack their head. Needing to duck broke the spell of being unconscious about entering a new place.

Inside, Sarah motioned for me to sit on one of the pads on the floor. It was dark as it had been before. There was still a blue light in a tree trunk, but now Sarah sat opposite me. I realized that she had probably done the same thing the last time that I had been here, I just hadn’t seen her.



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