CH855 · Rewrite
☕ Support

Chapter 855: Power and Responsibility

He underestimated Garcia’s diligence.

She was already in the corridor when he arrived — leaning against the wall near Room 0825, phone at her ear, watching the street below. Gray-and-white shirt, loose dark trousers, low skate shoes. She looked, at this distance, like any lively young woman, the kind who appeared on television advertising ordinary things. If he had not known her, he might have thought exactly that.

Her face, though, still held the residue of irritation. Not the cold, flat disapproval he remembered from Queen of Clearwater Garcia Wimbledon — something warmer than that, which he decided not to examine too closely.

She saw him as he reached the door.

“—I’ve got something to deal with. I’m hanging up. Don’t call back to argue.” She pocketed the phone. “Where were you? Didn’t you say shower?”

“There are multiple ways to address an odor problem.” He kept his expression neutral. “One is cleaning. Another is masking. The girl living with me — the young tenant — needed the bathroom before school. I couldn’t fight her for it. So I went for a run instead, thinking that would cover the issue. This body sweats very little, as it turns out. But here I am, standing in front of you.” He spread his hands. “I didn’t sneak away.”

Garcia studied him at length. ”…I don’t want to involve myself in your private life. But it isn’t good to be dissolute, and there’s a child in that apartment.”

“I’m sorry?”

“Those women coming out of your apartment.” She frowned. “Whatever else you do — why bring them home? The girl sees.”

He nearly choked. He had timed the Taquila witches’ departures to coincide with Zero leaving for school, but apparently the building’s other residents had their own schedules and conclusions. Garcia had constructed an entirely coherent and entirely wrong theory from what she’d observed.

“The Force of Nature is a gift,” she continued, her tone settling into the register of someone who had given this speech before and believed it. “It’s for protection, not for exploitation. If the Erosion isn’t stopped, the world ends. Too many awakened ones treat their ability as a license. They forget the responsibility that comes with it.” She paused. “And overindulgence slows your reactions.”

“Understood,” he said quickly, before she could find her momentum again. “Could I please change clothes first? I don’t want to be late.”

She closed her mouth. Glared. ”…Be quick.”


He put on the new suit, ate a fried egg sandwich under Zero’s curious gaze, and walked out.

Garcia looked at him in the doorway. Blinked.

“First visit to headquarters,” Roland said. “It seemed worth dressing for. Casual felt disrespectful.” He shrugged. “What do you think?”

”…Whatever you want.” She shook her head. “You look surprisingly decent in that.”

Custom-tailored, and I paid for it, he thought. Gray hair, lean build, and the right cut — I’d pass for an elf prince in a different genre of story. He said none of this aloud and fell into step beside her.

They waited outside the complex. A large bus pulled up — no license plate, windows blacked out with curtains, impossible to see inside.

“Get on,” Garcia said quietly, something in her posture shifting. More careful, suddenly. More watchful.

He stepped on, glanced back at the street. Phyllis had already flagged a taxi.

Inside the bus: bright, all aisle lights running, seats occupied by people who looked like they belonged to several different worlds simultaneously. Performance artists. Ordinary-seeming people. A few who watched him with the fixed attention of people deciding something about you.

Garcia, without comment, took his hand — unusual, not her usual manner — and led him to the back.

“Are these your colleagues?”

“The Association isn’t a company.” She sat. “Most of them are newly awakened, just like you. This is my first time meeting them too.”

He counted. Over twenty people. “That’s quite a lot.”

“It’s increasing.” She kept her voice low. “Ordinary people can’t feel the world changing, but anyone who’s awakened can sense it. Not all of them join us — the centrists aren’t few. But as the Erosion gets worse and the Fallen Evils multiply, centrists become more exposed. They’ll keep arriving.”

“You mean self-trained, independently operating awakened ones?”

She gave him an approving look with a hint of amusement in it. “More appropriate than what I usually say. Keep it between us — they don’t respond well to being categorized. Strength inflates the ego. It makes them resistant to anything that looks like structure.” A beat. “There was an incident, before you joined. A newly affiliated wild martialist killed several members during a hunt. The Defenders dealt with it. Don’t antagonize any of them — the Association punishes it severely, but it’s better not to reach that point.”

“They’re that capable?”

“More field experience than newly awakened ones. Better instincts, faster reactions. But they’re usually entangled in the world in ways that slow them down.” She sighed. “If you’d stop — indulging yourself — and train consistently, you’d advance quickly.”

She looked out the blacked window. “The Force of Nature is a gift from something greater than us. Not a tool for personal use. If we fail to stop the Erosion, everything ends. But many awakened ones only see what the power gives them, never what it asks.”

He turned this over.

It was not so different, in structure, from what had made the old Witch Union necessary — the recognition, eight hundred years ago, that witches who knew about the demons still had to choose to organize against them rather than simply survive in their own corners.

Power without direction always found its own shape. It was rarely a good shape.

Outside, the street noise died. The wheels’ sound changed — deeper, smoother, as though the bus were moving through something that swallowed ordinary friction.

Half an hour later: stillness.

Then the bus shifted. The sensation of weight leaving his legs, returning, leaving again in a slow rhythm.

The floor was dropping. The bus was sinking into the ground.

Discussion

Suggest a change