
Location: the Library
Grimoire: N/A
Skills: N/A
Wild Magic Build Up: triggers on a 1, 2, or 3
Jake startled slightly, as the Barty approached him after his history lesson, eyeing him up and down. Something about the gaze made Jake shiver. He felt strangely warm in odd places. He asked him odd questions. How did he know that the statue was alive? How did he know about protection? Jake stared back at him blankly, reaching for words and concepts, and instead just finding inevitability, simplicity. He knew because he felt it. Couldn't they feel it? When he had fed the statue some of his magic, he felt it. It just was.
"I just... I just know," he answered. He didn't know any of the fancy names people had given to the rules or principles of magic. He didn't know how to explain this in a way that made sense. "I felt it. I felt him. Just like... Just like how you can feel the dirt in the greenhouse as you work with the plants, or how I could taste the horrible candy last night. Can you... can you not feel him?" He tilted his head, confused. Barty had given the statue some of his magic. Surely he would have been able to too? He was so much smarter and prettier and better than Jake, it didn't make sense that he could do something that Barty couldn't.
And then, Croan admonished him for what he had done. His eyes widened slightly. It was much like what Nicholas had said. He hadn't thought too deeply about it then - it hadn't made any sense to him, why would a protector need protecting? His role was to prevent danger. Danger couldn't then be a threat to him, too? But having it repeated, it forced him to slow down and consider it. Maybe putting himself in danger was bad. If he was in danger, he could get hurt. And if he were hurt, he couldn't protect people. His mouth opened into a small 'o' as it all clicked into place. If he was going to protect others, he had to protect himself. And the best way to protect himself from danger was to never give it an opportunity in the first place. Danger had to be pulled out by the root, cut down before it could grow and fester.
But Croan had a question too - he asked it oddly, though, as if it was a sentence instead. Croan said they didn't know what the source of the magic was. Jake tilted his head again, this time to the opposite side. He concentrated on the experience he'd just had moments prior. He'd felt the magic - the magic the man had crafted. It was powered by what the statue was holding. His stomach rumbled. And as he stared at the statue again, focusing on the artifact, he realized something else. There was more magic there. He could smell the hints of Croan on it. The professor must have been trying to help the statue man! Relief flooded him. "That's the source. Your magic is there, too," Jake then said, pointing at the artifact - and not, this time, touching it.










