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⊱ 𝐍𝐲𝐨𝐭𝐚 “𝐍𝐨𝐫𝐚” 𝐆𝐫𝐚𝐯𝐞𝐬𝐞𝐧𝐝 ⊰
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Crickets. Fireflies. Owls hoots ping-ponging from branch to branch. The brushed cymbals from the canopy of leaves overhead, giggling at the whisper of winds. It was a crisp evening. The kind where the air feels brittle as bone. Nothing disturbed the ominous peace of these forests at this hour. Not a thing feels out of place… Yet should someone, hypothetically, be wandering the depths of the Winnow Forests at this hour, they may stumble across a young woman in nothing but a simple linen dress, muddied and creased at the waist. Should that someone get close enough to sharpen the image, they’d see this sparsely dressed young woman sat cross-legged beneath a fir tree, fallen needles poking through the linen and pricking her pillowed thighs. Dull white chalked markings are etched over her skin; A single brush stroke tracing from her hairline to her pointed chin. The swatch of chalked paint stretches down the bridge of her button nose, over her lips until finally disappearing down her neck. Symbols in the same shade, with the same artisan brush strokes, are scattered across her bare forearms like tattoos. Thanks to the stark contrast against the markings, Nora’s eyes only glowed brighter, two embers in the dusk-riddled forest. Her hushed tone bleeds into the crackle of wind-buffeted leaves, the Witch utters a series of undecipherable chants. They are spoken with hardly a whisper, barely there, a secret exclusively shared with the bark and the dirt and the mud and the stream…
Her almost-translucent eyes are fluttering as an animal does when dreaming, the dark brown eyes hidden beneath, flicking rapidly from side to side. Nora points an index finger and begins tracing symbols midair, slow curvatures and quick flicks, like calligraphy. Here, alone in the forest, the Witch practices her most truest magic undisturbed and alone. There is no interruption from her fellow Sisters, no Coven commitments, no intrusive background noise. It is just her, commanding the night, a thread of Magic pinpricked through her heart and pierced through the moon that shone unashamedly above her. That thread hums with relief as the Witch continues her spell, the chants increasing in volume gradually as she builds layer upon layer. Casting like this, truly connected, is a feeling most adjacent to lucid dreaming. There is a detachment from the physical planes, fractured from flesh and muscular tissue, yet a Witch will seldom experience such unadulterated connection as when she is in this state.
Nora’s nightly rituals ranged from strengthening the Waxing Circle’s protective Wards to blessings for the Sisterhood. Each night she challenged herself to focus more than the night before, feel the thread more viscerally and more purely, growing the Magic that inhabited every fibre of her. Submitting to her energetic self, that non-physical energy, Nora departed from the shell that sat cross-legged in the wet leaves. As she detached from herself, she felt the Earth around her breathe a sigh of relief. Forefinger and thumb pinching the magical thread, she too released a breath she hadn’t realised had been trapped within her. The air rippled around her, as if a stone had been dropped in a stream. Yet as that Magic pulsed outward from her core, spreading out into her forest entourage, Nora sensed a chink in the armour. She breathed again, exhaling, her breath and her power radiating outward in another ripple of energy. There it was again. An uneven heartbeat. A blank space in the sheet music. Something off-beat. The Forest was not the same tonight… And despite spending her evening reinforcing the Wards, something or someone had penetrated them.
Snapping back into her body, Nora reeled from her sudden return. She wiggled her fingers, arched her back, cracked her neck. Her bones tingled with the sudden resurgence of physical form. It felt like a rebirth every time. She doubted she’d ever get used to that feeling. Through her eyes, blinking away the fogged edges of her vision, the Forest seemed undisturbed at its surface. But Nora’s magic had told her otherwise. So she rose, slowly and shakily, to her feet. Bare soles crunching against the leaves beneath them, the daughter of Luna Gravesend - Mother of The Waxing Circle, crouched alert as a hunted fawn. Her widened eyes, pupils dilated like ink in water, scoured the tree-lines. Scanning the shadows, Nora postured her right hand to reconnect with her inner thread. Flashing a few consecutive symbols in an array of poses, fingers flicking through the night air, the Witch drew upon those shadows and commanded them to reveal its secrets. At first? The darkness resisted. Nora struggled to maintain her grip, the shadows slipping through her grasp like sand, thread thinning as her eyes narrowed in concentration. Then, she found it. Bending the Forest’s vision to her will, the Witch asked and the darkness answered. The Shadows showed her a figure in the distance, a few minutes out from where she stood frozen, travelling on horseback. The image swam through her mind, watery and faded, but clear enough to know the stranger in the woods was no Sister.
Nora cut the thread. Her hands dropped to her sides. For a moment there was nothing but the chirps of crickets and the Witches’ short breaths. Her chest beneath the wafered linen rose and fell in quick succession, heart knocking at the doors of her ribcage. Icy air hissed through her teeth. Skin frosting with fear. An intruder. How long had it been since someone had breezed through the Wards? Too long. Who rode through the Forests this deep at this hour? Someone tracking the Coven? Someone scoping out the efficiency of the Wards? Her mind was a busy highway, clogged with thoughts bumper to bumper, none of them sticking long enough to become wholly coherent. She tried and failed to quieten her mind. There was no volume dial. No off switch.
Then came the sound of hooves, wet and dull against the muddied path. From her vantage point on the mossy verge, Nora spotted the saddled figure. Auburn hair folded into a braid, spine straightened, hips rolling in sync with the horses steps. She could run. Flee. Naked soles could thunder across the Forest floor and Nora could return to the Coven. She could raise the alarm. Inform her Sisters. Shake her Mother awake from her slumber. Or? She could wait. Watch. As a precaution, the Witch summoned the shadows once more. This time, she drew them across the moonlit grasslands, weaving them toward her ready to weaponise them against the intruder. The shadows curled and intertwined, coiling and creeping at her command. These shadows could rise up. They could wrap themselves like chains around the neck of this rider. They could pierce skin. But for now they remained poised, flat against the Forest floor. Nora edged forward. From the path, the figure on horseback would certainly spot her. The Witch remained crouched and readied, eyes locked on to the moving target. One hastened move and she’d release the darkness. Until then? She waited.