The room that welcomed her was full of quaint, unrecognizable things. Wooden walls were packed with shelves of weathered books and pocket scraps and eclectic tools, and in the center of the room stood a large table, broad and sturdy and lofted over stacks of crates and drawers. Compared to the rest of the room, the table was kept quite orderly. Several strange contraptions lay half-finished on its surface as wooden wireframes and golden joints, sheets of paper laid in neat stacks at their bases. Azalea caught sight of concept sketches etched in charcoal. They were visions of the future: gliders like butterfly wings, a beautifully retrofitted compass that detected mana quartz, a talking parrot made of wood that could convey messages without risking Storm corruption.
She smiled as she drew further into the house. “Wes,” she called. Her throat sounded sandy and hoarse. She cleared it and tried again. “I’m here.”
From behind the jutting wall, a young man emerged, a splash of forest green adding fresh color to his otherwise earthy workman’s uniform. He pulled up his gold-rimmed goggles, face lighting up at the sight of her.
“’Zalie!” he said. He hurriedly set down his wrench and wiped his hand on a tattered rag. “You’re back!”
His sunshine smile eased the tension in Azalea’s shoulders, calming her nerves like a gentle balm. The soft breeze through the far window, the glow of the forge, the warm welcome. This was as close to a home as she’d ever get.
“Hi,” she said shyly. “Am I interrupting anything?”
Wes shook his head. “Actually, you came just in time,” he said eagerly. “Want to try out my new firing cylinder? I promise it won’t explode! This time. Probably.”
The hesitation dropping into his tone didn’t faze Azalea. Testing. Testing was always exciting, at least for her. Wes’s ideas were so strange and inventive that testing his creations was like going on an adventure every time. Even when the trials resulted in failure, the process was always loads of fun.
Azalea eagerly rushed into the workshop, completely forgetting about the state of her body.
Her legs did not.
She barely made it three steps before her feet gave out under her, sending her sprawling to the ground in an unseemly heap.
“’Zalie!” Wes cried, bolting to her side.
Azalea quickly pushed herself upright, wincing at the burning pain in her arms. “I’m alright,” she said. “Just tired.”
“Tired?” Wes shifted his goggles down and frowned at her from behind their colored lenses. “Tired is when you go to bed at four in the morning. This is—your manawell is totally shot. That’s way beyond tired.”
“It’s not so bad.”
“It’s very bad.” He sighed and pulled the goggles up. “Mission?”
“A simple one,” Azalea said. “Just Class One wolves. It should have been easy.” There was a tingle of shame blooming in her chest, and she shrunk a little. A Royal Hunter, overwhelmed by a basic evacuation. Disgraceful.
“Nothing is simple with the Hunter’s Guild,” Wes muttered. “Just varying levels of fatal.”
Azalea pushed her feet against the floor, but her legs refused to move. Apparently, her body had given out. She bit her lip. “Give me a hand?”
“Oh, you,” Wes said resignedly, and he scooped up Azalea without pause, letting her link her fingers around his neck. The added bulk of her accoutrements, with all her strapped sheaths and pauldrons and tassets, couldn’t have made it easy—but at least he was used to working with metal and wood all day. Perhaps this was no different.
He made his way across the room and settled her in a large, plushy chair in the corner of the workshop. Azalea liked this chair. She often nestled in it when she was practicing manacraft, studying a Hunter’s duties, or just keeping Wes company. Maybe that was why he consistently kept it free of ragtag parts, unlike every other surface in the workshop.
Azalea eased into the chair’s plush cushion, watching as Wes stooped down to rummage in the shelving installed under his worktable.
“So how many wolves were there?” he called over his shoulder. “Three? Four?”
Azalea counted in her head. “About twenty, I think.”
Wes fumbled. A small leather case in his hands dropped to the floor with a dull thud. “Twenty?!”
“Yes. Oh, but the Garrison assisted. Seven were dead by the time the evacuation concluded.”
“Oh, yes, thirteen wolves by yourself,” Wes muttered. “Piece of cake.”
Azalea frowned. Thirteen was hardly a significant number. She imagined that it was the bare minimum required of a Royal Hunter. They were the top fifty soldiers in the entire country, after all; disposing of Class One corruptions should be akin to disposing of vermin.
“I’ll get better,” she promised. “I’m just a little too weak.”
Wes’s expression cleared for a moment. He leaned down and scooped up the leather case. “It’s not a matter of skill,” he said. “Thirteen wolves for, what, your third mission? They’re insane.”
Azalea didn’t say what she thought—not right then. The Guild wasn’t insane; they were desperate. The kingdom was desperate, barely welded together. And as a Hunter, it was her duty to protect the ones who could not protect themselves. She had an overpowering legacy to live up to.
Wes returned to her and popped open the leather case. It was full of various small appliances like sterile wrappings, a cauterizing iron, and vials full of dried herbs and flowers. He retrieved a pair of light silver bracelets and held them out towards Azalea.
“Wear this,” he said.
Azalea recognized them at once as resistance inhibitors—specially made accessories that lowered a human’s natural resistance to external manacraft. Several creatures, including beasts touched by the Storm and humans, repelled external mana influence. That was why it was nearly impossible to reach into a person and boil the water mana in their blood, detonate the light mana in their eyes, or crush the earth mana in their bones—the fact that those were all war crimes aside. Resistance inhibitors removed that obstacle, and were most often used in the medical field to treat patients.
These inhibitors looked like an expensive model, constructed to be especially slim and elegant. Their price point was accessible only by noble families. She wouldn’t mention that to Wes, though; not when it brought up such sour memories.
Azalea accepted the inhibitors, snapping them lightly over her wrists. She nudged them with her manawell and felt them resonate in response, syncing with her unique manaflow. Good; now they were active.
“Ready,” she said.
Wes knelt in front of her, took her hands, and closed his eyes. Azalea felt a thread of mana pass from the tips of his fingers up her arm, knitting her flesh together with a warm, refreshing touch, like sunshine on mint. She felt the tension bleed out of her shoulders and eased into the chair with a languid sigh.
Her injuries were far from life-threatening, but she hadn’t realized how much they’d hurt until the pain was leeched away.
Wes moved on, soothing the pounding ache in her shoulders. He was thorough and patient as he proceeded down, easing a bruised rib, sealing a bleeding scrape on her knee, then warming her legs, relieving the knots of pain up her calves and thighs. It was blissful, it was lovely, and it was using far too much mana.
“Wes, your manawell,” Azalea urged.
Wes didn’t respond, but his fingers squeezed hers reassuringly as the mana continued to flow. Azalea frowned.
Accelerated regeneration was no simple matter, nor was it mana-efficient. It was an advanced form of Threading—a manacraft known to imbue and manipulate certain objects with magical behaviors. Azalea wasn’t too familiar with Threading. It was by far her weakest craft. And the Academy had breezed over the subject, as was their right; Threading was a preparatory skill and saw very little use in active combat. But they had briefly mentioned the complexities of accelerated regeneration, often referred to simply as regen.
Mainly, Azalea knew that regen involved manually altering the human body with mana. When Wes was closing her wounds, he was, essentially, using his manawell to control her body’s cells in a localized area and magically stimulate the healing process. With the wrong touch, her body would reject the invading mana and throw up a manaimmune response, causing her to seize up, cough, or retch until the corruption had disappeared. And it was far too easy to apply the wrong touch; every human body was unique, carrying different properties, different affinities, and different reactions. All Academy officers had been strictly warned against attempting untrained regen for that exact reason.
Wes, of course, had always been an exception. As a son of the influential Geppett family and a talented Threader, he’d easily earned his emergency care license during their Academy days. He’d been kind enough to patch up Azalea more times than she could count.
“Alright,” Wes murmured, and he finally stepped away. Azalea felt the mana trail in her body dissipate. “I’m no physician, but that’s the best I can do.”
Azalea experimentally rolled her shoulders. It wasn’t really necessary, but she knew that the motion would put Wes at ease. Sure enough, there was no pain. Not even an aching soreness. Wes had been very thorough at the cost of a great deal of mana.
“Thank you,” she said, beaming at him. “It’s perfect. Your practice is paying off.”
A light flush of pleasure bloomed over Wes’s cheeks and crawled up to his ears, which Azalea had always considered rather endearing.
“Well,” he said, “good. Very good.” He cleared his throat. “I’m glad. But don’t get hurt. It seems, uh. Painful.”
Azalea’s mouth pulled upward as Wes released the mana inhibitors and slid them back into the leather case. “I’ll do my best,” she promised.
Wes shouldn’t have been wasting his mana on patching her up, anyway. He wasn’t a physician. His mana was better spent on ingeniment, the science of enchanted engineering. Using Threading to imbue mana quartz with parameters, ingeniators could design just about anything: mana weapons like Azalea’s starshooter, glowing lamps and light bridges, wind-powered galleons. It was the perfect occupation for a brilliant, patient boy like Wes.
“Now that I’m a Hunter, I have access to the Guild’s physician,” Azalea offered. “I don’t have to bother you anymore.”
Then she almost jumped. The Guild. The guildmaster would be expecting her report. She was already terribly late.
“Oh, you don’t have to worry about”—Wes was saying, but Azalea was already on her feet, digging into her pockets until she found the squashy milk buns, and—
“Here, from Granny Mabel!” she called, flinging two buns at Wes. The last one she kept for herself.
“Oh! Thanks,” Wes blurted, catching one of the buns against his chest. The other hit him squarely in the face. “Wait, two? Did she scam you agai—”
“Sorry, Wes, I have to go! See you later!”
A red blur tore out of the workshop. The door slammed shut, rattling the books on his shelves and the wireframes on his worktable. Wes stood there alone, still clutching a milk bun to his chest.
“Have a nice day,” he mumbled. He pressed a palm to his cheek with a sigh. It was still flushed warm.
ꕥ
When Azalea stepped back into Gallows Square, dark clouds were gathering overhead. The traces were small—lazy little wisps bundling up like dust bunnies above the hazy glow of the mana lamps—but she still frowned. The sight made her skin prickle in a way that ordinary rain clouds never did.
Something’s strange with those clouds, whispered her mind, a ghost, a memory. Do you feel it, ’Zalie?
Azalea adjusted the starshooter’s strap on her shoulder and walked on, melting into the bustling streets of Mythaven.
The Guild awaited her.
WES
Geppetto / Pinocchio
An earnest inventor with a heart of gold, Wes pulls out all the stops to keep his dearest childhood friend Azalea alive.

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