"Who said anything about me being trained?" I yelped. "Maybe I don't want to
be trained."
"Rachel, listen to me," Numair began. I interuppted him.
"No, you listen. I am in a land that in my world shouldn't exist and I can't
get home and you just expect me to forget everything I knew, get trained in
magic I shouldn't have and just settle here? Are you crazy?" I yelled at
him.
"Rachel LISTEN!" Numair bellowed at me. "You can't go home because you don't
belong there!"
That got my attention. "What?" I asked, momentarily struck speechless.
"You belong here. Look, how can I explain this?" Nuamir sighed. "Magic is
passed down from family. Mother to daughter, father to son etc. You get the
idea. You have magic Rachel, you can't deny it. And as you say if magic
doesn't exist in your world, then that means..."
"Means what? What Numair?" I demanded.
He hesitated, then said, "The parents who brought you up aren't your real
parents. Your real parents are here somewhere in Tortall, people who have
the gift."
I was stunned speechless for exactly one moment. Then I blew up.
"HOW DARE YOU!" I screamed. "How dare you come in and make accusations about
my parents. How dare you! Get out!"
"Rachel- " Numair began.
"Get out!" I screamed.
He reluctantly went away. I turned and buried my face in the pillows. The
tears came and I drifted off into a dreamless sleep.
*****
Attention!
The narration is momentarily changed so that Numair is narrating the story,
so that a crucial point of the story is played out, while Rachel is asleep.
I just thought I'd let you know. After this the narriation goes back to
Rachel.
I slowly opened the doors and walked in, shutting them after me. All the
people inside turned and looked at me. "Well don't stand there gawping," I
snapped.
My wife Daine, smiled gently and said, her voice serious, "How did it go?"
"Not good," I sighed. "She blew up at me, refusing to see the logic of it
and screamed at me to get out."
"Well you can hardly blame her," Jonathan commented. He had got a certain
soft spot for Rachel. "I mean she is from a different world and well, this
would be hard for her."
"She has strong magic Numair," Alanna said seriously. "It takes a strong
gift to lift things in the air and as she has a strange combination, her
magic is even stronger. She must be trained."
"But she won't listen to me!" I cried, feeling defeated.
"Then someone else must convince her," Alanna said. "Someone her own age..."
She trailed off and we all looked at a young person, who was sitting beside
Jonathan at his right side.
"Oh no," Roald said. The young prince looked startled to be suddenly
included.
"Roald," Alanna said patiently. She was prepared to stay here all night to
convince him. "You are only a few years older than her. You might make her
trust you."
"Why me?!" Roald grumbled. At that moment he looked so much like Jonathan
that I had to blink to make sure it wasn't him.
"You might just make her realize that she must be trained in her magic. She
may be our greatest defence," Jonathan told his son.
Roald sighed, but obediently rose and asked, "Where is she?"
*****
The narration now goes back to Rachel.
The door opened. I groggily rubbed sleep from my eyes. I waited , expecting
to see Numair. I was actually kinda sorry I'd yelled at him. He was only
trying to help me after all.
Instead a guy, probably around six years older than me again. I knew
instantly that it was Roald, Jonathan's and Thayet's eldest son. Which was
pretty cool, considering I'd only ever read about him being nine years old.
"Um, Roald?" I asked, tentatively, not a 100% sure it was him. "Wait how do
you pronounce your name?"
Roald smiled gently and told me the right way. Then his expression turned to
surprise. "How did you know it was me?" he asked.
"Uh, you probably know," I told him.
"Not really," he replied and said on the chair beside my bed. I was
painfully aware of how awful I looked, and believe me when you're sitting
next to a guy who is totally gorgeous and immaculate looking, that is not a
good feeling. "No one else really knows either." He settled comfortably and
said, "Tell all."
Well, I couldn't exactely refuse the King's son could I?
So I told him everything. The fortune teller, the car, me awakening in
Tortall, Numair, meeting his father, my magic and now my decision to either
stay in Tortall and be trained or to go home and remain ignorant about my
magic for the rest of my life - if I could find a way home. Which if I
couldn't well remaining here was the only thing I could do.
"Wow. Even a bard couldn't tell a story like that," Roald said finally.
"What - what's your world like?"
"What do you want to know?" I asked. During my whole story, I'd become more
comfortable with him and now could talk easily with him.
"Have you got magic?" Roald asked immediately.
I shook my head. "No. We do things by thinking and then doing them
ourselves. We don't do it by magic, because we have none."
"That must be hard," Roald commented.
"Not really," I answered. "Your land had become too used to getting magic to
do things for you. We never had that comfort."
"We do a lot of things ourselves!" Roald cried indignantly.
"Maybe so, but your magic is always there as a last resort," I replied.
"You have magic too," Roald pointed out.
"True, but I only found out today. I've never had the luxury of magic
before," I pointed out.
"Will you... will you decide to be trained?" Roald asked quietly.
"Give me time to think about it," I told him honestly.
Roald nodded and rose, saying, "I look forward to hearing your answer." But
I think he knew what my answer was going to be as much as I did.


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