The smooth river stone felt cool against William's palm. His fingers, usually steady enough to manipulate complex data interfaces or assemble delicate components, trembled almost imperceptibly. A buzz of anticipation, of sheer, illogical excitement, shivered through him, warring with a nervous flutter deep in his stomach. The familiar pre-execution jitters, magnified tenfold. Okay. Task: Basic spell execution. Spell: 'Light'. Components: Mana Output rune, Luminosity rune, vocal trigger 'Light'. Objective: Generate illumination. Expected ease: Theoretically high. User confidence: Subjectively moderate, statistically questionable. He took a breath. "Right. Summon light. Simple. Like compiling perfectly clean code on the first try… which is to say, statistically improbable."
He closed his eyes, trying to recall the calm focus Julia radiated. He visualized the runic shapes she had traced, the circle-and-line of Mana Output, the starburst-in-circle of Luminosity. He reached inward, searching for that faint, nascent warmth he'd discovered, his mana. Found it. Now, gently push it, guide it towards the stone, following the mental pathways of the runes… He brought his fingertip to the stone, tracing the first symbol, then the second, feeling a faint resistance, an alien texture to the flow of… something. He focused his will, picturing a soft glow, and whispered the incantation, trying to match Julia's resonant tone: "Light."
He held his breath, waiting.
Nothing.
The stone remained stubbornly dark, cool, unchanged. Disappointment, sharp and immediate, pricked him. Execution attempt 1: Failed. Output: Null. Error message: None. He'd expected… something. A flicker. A spark. A puff of smoke, even. Anything but this utter inertness. "Okay. Initial hypothesis: User possesses functional magic capability. Current result: Insufficient supporting data. Perhaps sensing mana is merely read-access, not write-access?" He tried again, concentrating harder, visualizing the brilliant midday sun of Earth, pouring intent into the word: "Light!"
Still nothing. The stone was just a stone.
He opened his eyes, a frustrated sigh escaping his lips. His jaw clenched. He'd picked up the basics of Averian Common with surprising speed. He'd even, through sheer pattern recognition and luck, managed to disarm Edward once. Why was this, this supposedly fundamental manipulation of energy, proving so impossible? "Apparently, sensing the internal power source doesn't automatically grant user privileges to operate it. Wonderful. Stuck in debug mode." This was deeply embarrassing.
Again, he tried. And again. He focused on the runes, tracing them onto the stone with his mind's eye, then his finger. The lines felt wrong, the shapes subtly eluding his mental grasp. He tried pushing more mana, the warmth within felt like it hit an invisible wall. He tried less, it dissipated uselessly. He varied the incantation, louder, softer, different intonations, the word catching in his throat, sounding clumsy, flat, devoid of the resonance Julia had achieved. He could feel the mana, that tingling warmth, like static electricity waiting for a conductor, but it refused his command, mocking his efforts. His perfect mental replication of Julia's instructions yielded only absolute, consistent failure. Failure analysis ongoing. Potential causes: Incorrect runic visualization (~40% probability). Insufficient/improper mana channeling (~30%). Improper vocal frequency/resonance (~20%). Fundamental user incompatibility with magic system (~10%, margin of error increasing with frustration)."One hundred percent failure rate," he thought grimly. "Maintaining perfect consistency, at least. Textbook incompetence."
From her seat across the small fire, Julia watched him, her expression carefully neutral, offering quiet suggestions. "Breathe, William. Relax your focus slightly. Feel the mana flow, don't try to shove it." She guided his finger once, showing the precise angle for tracing the Luminosity rune again. "Patience is the first lesson."
Internally, however, a complex mix of emotions warred beneath Julia's calm exterior. A part of her felt a strange, almost guilty relief. Good, this part whispered. Let him struggle. It's normal. It's right. His initial, instantaneous sensing of mana had been… unsettling. Too fast. Too easy. It hinted at a potential that deviated wildly from known parameters, and frankly, that unnerved her slightly. This struggle, this frustration, it grounded him, made him seem less like an anomaly and more like any other determined novice. Yet, another part of her felt a genuine pang of sympathy for his mounting frustration, coupled with that persistent, bewildering question. Why could he sense the potential so readily, yet fail so completely at this simple execution? She found herself admiring his tenacity, the way his brow furrowed in intense concentration, the analytical mind clearly trying to determine the issue of what went wrong as quickly as possible. This level of intensity is rare, and rarer still for someone with talent. She needed to guide him and make sure he doesn't stray from the right path.
After what felt like an eternity to William, but was perhaps closer to an hour, with the moon climbing high above the forest canopy, Julia gently placed a hand on his arm, interrupting another failed attempt. "Enough for tonight, William," she said softly but firmly. "You're exhausted, and frustration is a barrier to mana flow. Magic cannot be forced, especially not at the beginning. Rest now. We have a long journey tomorrow, and many more opportunities for lessons."
William nodded, letting out a long, weary sigh, his shoulders slumping. The stone felt heavy and useless in his hand. Disappointment was a bitter taste, but overriding it now was a profound, bone-deep exhaustion. He needed sleep. He needed to stop thinking about the stubborn stone and the elusive spell. "Right. Powering down primary cognitive functions. Maybe the background processes will defragment the mana subroutine overnight. Or maybe it just needs a hard reboot."
The next few days fell into that established rhythm. Travel, language practice, bruising sword drills with Edward, and frustratingly futile attempts at the Light spell during breaks and evenings. On the estimated sixth day since leaving Sharwood, the stone remained stubbornly dark. Six days. Zero lumens."My magical progress chart is a perfect flat line," William griped internally. "The absolute worst kind of data trend. Come on, Shard, optimize the process!" The small victory of landing another glancing blow on Edward during sparring that evening (a lucky parry that went slightly wrong for Edward) did little to soothe the persistent, nagging failure of his magic practice. "Well, at least my swordsmanship error rate is merely 'catastrophically high', whereas my magic execution error rate remains a statistically perfect 100%."
That night, camped in a small, sheltered clearing, the setting sun bled fiery colour across the western sky. An unusual twilight hush fell over the forest. After a simple meal of the smoked wolf meat and dried fruit, William lay on his bedroll, staring up past the leaves at the scatter of unfamiliar stars, burning cold and distant in the darkening violet sky. Everything was different here. Alien constellations, alien flora, alien physics… He mentally replayed the Light spell sequence yet again, visualizing the runes, the feel of the mana, the sound of the incantation. Analyzing every step. Where was the fault tolerance? Where was the critical error?
I will figure this out, he vowed silently. It's a system. Systems have rules. They can be understood.
Just as weariness began to pull him towards sleep, a stubborn thought sparked. One more try. What was the actual downside? Confirming the 100% failure rate? "Might as well maintain consistency in the dataset."
He reached for the smooth stone he now carried in a pouch, retrieved from it by Edward earlier that day. His body ached, muscles protesting even the small movement. His mind felt numb, rubbed raw by repeated failure. But that ember of analytical curiosity, that refusal to accept an unsolved problem, still glowed faintly. He wouldn't force it this time. He wouldn't push. He would just… execute the sequence. Observe the result.
He closed his eyes. Didn't strain to visualize the runes, but let their shapes form naturally in his mind's eye. The Output circle/line, the Luminosity starburst. He felt for the mana within, that faint warmth, and instead of trying to shove it, he simply… invited it. He imagined it flowing gently along the runic pathways he pictured on the stone held loosely in his palm. He traced the symbols lightly with his fingertip, feeling the faint inner warmth seem to resonate, hum faintly in time with the movement. He drew a slow, deep breath, filling his lungs with the cool night air, and then, with minimal effort, almost conversational, whispered the incantation into the stillness: "Light."
Warmth bloomed against his palm. Real warmth. He opened his eyes, heart suddenly pounding, almost afraid to look.
The stone glowed.
A soft, hesitant, golden light pulsed from within it, pushing back the immediate darkness around his hand. It wasn't the steady, confident light Julia had produced, but a flickering, uncertain radiance, like a captured firefly testing its wings. It cast faint, dancing shadows across his hand, his arm, the rough fabric of his bedroll. It was weak. It was unstable. But it was light. Generated by him.
A wide, disbelieving grin stretched across William's face, feeling unfamiliar on his own skin. A choked laugh bubbled up from his chest, pure, untainted relief and dawning wonder. He lifted the glowing stone slightly, holding it up as if presenting evidence to the silent, watchful stars. Magic. His magic. SUCCESS! Output achieved! Light_Spell executed! Mana cost: Minimal? Duration: TBD. Replication potential: Needs testing."Okay," he amended his earlier assessment, the grin widening. "Hypothesis: User is slightly less magically inept than an inanimate rock. Further empirical testing required, but initial results are promising!"
He was so focused on the small, precious glow in his hand, analysing its flicker rate, assessing its lumen output (minimal), that he almost missed it.
A flicker of movement at the edge of his vision, down towards the darker end of the clearing. Then, another glow. Not warm gold like his own spell, but a faint, translucent sky-blue light, pulsing softly in the darkness from behind a thick patch of ferns. It wasn't casting strong shadows. It was more like a soft, see-through haze of colour.
William frowned, his own golden light wavering slightly as his focus snapped away. The elation evaporated instantly, replaced by analytical caution. What was that? It didn't look like any natural bioluminescence he'd encountered so far. Anomaly detected: Unidentified localized energy emission. Spectrum: Blue, translucent, pulsing. Source: Obscured. Threat level: Unknown. His mind snapped back to high alert. "Potential environmental rendering glitch? Or… something else entirely?" Gripping his own glowing stone, his first successful spell, now primarily a data-gathering tool (aka a flashlight), he pushed himself quietly to his feet and took a tentative, cautious step towards the strange, sky-blue light.