Ch328- History and Possibility
Ch328- History and Possibility
The spirit turned her head slightly, as if she were looking through the stone and seeing the past."The Crown's servants never stop with one name. They went after every witch, every wizard, every keeper, every guardian who tried to protect the light. Anyone who tried to bury the rot. Anyone who tried to warn the next age. They erased them."
Her mouth tightened.
"They stripped names from records. They burned archives. They broke lineages where they could. They turned protectors into monsters in the telling. They made fools of those who remembered and saints of those who betrayed. Whole legacies were unmade, not because the dead frightened them, but because memory does more than honour. Remembering gives power."
Something in Cassian's chest tightened.
"That is what your world forgot. A legacy isn't ornament. Memory isn't sentiment. When a name is carried, when a deed is spoken, when a life is remembered truthfully, the magic tied to it endures. It thins over time. It changes shape. But it remains. If enough people remember, the light holds. If no one does, it weakens. If a name is erased completely, what that person built begins to starve."
Bathsheda's fingers pressed harder into his hand.
"That was how the light was diminished," the spirit said. "Not all at once. Not in one grand fall. It was done slowly. A shrine buried. A ward neglected. A story twisted. A guardian locked away. A sovereign turned into myth. A lady turned into silence. Piece by piece, until the world no longer knew what it had lost."
Cassian's mind moved before he could stop it.
Coming to this world. The body. The panic. The void. Waking in Rosier's skin with another boy's life pouring into his head like a badly shelved archive collapsing all at once. Then the interface appearing in his mind with all the charm of a cruel joke. He'd thought that was the strangest thing that would ever happen to him.
He'd been spectacularly wrong.
The first true awakening he ever had. Dark light. Twisted Lumos. The oldest variant perhaps, coming with a twisted memory, showing him Crawlers moving through the vision like the dark itself had learned hunger. Back then, he'd looked at them and seen exactly what anyone would see if they had any sense at all.
Monsters.
Ugly things in the dark. Creatures that drained and crawled and moved with all the grace of a bad dream. It had been easy to make the leap. Darkness meant evil. Strange meant dangerous. Anything that looked like that belonged behind six locks and a prayer.
And now here he was, years later, standing in a cave while a dead servant of a forgotten lady calmly explained that he and half the magical world had helped chain the Valley's own hounds because they'd been too stupid, too frightened, or too smug to ask the right question.
His jaw clenched. He felt danger at the time. Something being wrong. Something holding him back from using Lumos Noctis, and up until today, up until Night Crawlers called from his mind, calling him Lord, asking to be released, asking to be useful, asking to help him, he'd thought the danger was them.
Only now he understood. No, it wasn't the Night Crawlers causing the feeling, not at all. It was the realisation that once they appeared, everything else would be so fucked. That was the danger he was feeling.
Then Norway. First summer. Cold rock. Salt in the air. The spiral in the cave walls. Touching the wrong stone and seeing the woman on the cliff in the storm, runes cut into her body, men climbing toward her with only murder in their eyes.
Yrsa.
The name had fallen into his mouth as if it had been waiting there all along. Remembered.
And then there was Bathsheda. He turned slightly and looked at her now. He knew what he'd seen a few minutes ago when they walked in. He'd known it the first time too, even while he was busy convincing himself about lantern-light and nerves. In that cave, all those years ago, he'd looked at her and seen the marks on her face and neck for a heartbeat, and because he hadn't known what else to do with it, he'd shoved it aside and called it a trick of the shadows.
But it hadn't been that. His mind had been doing what it always did when it touched something old. It had recognised first and explained later. It had taken the image of Yrsa and laid it over Bathsheda because somewhere under the panic and confusion and all the rubbish excuses he gave himself at the time, something in him already understood that the two things belonged to the same line.
Third summer. Greece.
That one came back like a fist to the ribs. The temple. The thing below it. The first real brush with the Crown. Not fully risen. Thank Gods for that. But enough. More than enough to scare the life out of him.
And Bathsheda had stood there and drawn those spiralling runes so easily, like writing in a language her hands had always known, even if her mind hadn't yet caught up, as though she'd been born with them.
He remembered the look on Nicolas's face then. Perenelle's too. He remembered the way the Old Masters had gone quiet.
Then Nicolas had done the only thing left to do. He'd stripped the memory out. Temple. Seal. Crown. Gone from all of them, because that thing fed on remembrance and no one was daft enough to hand it a feast.
Cassian had woken up with every bloody bit of it still there. At the time, that had frightened him more than the creature itself. If the Crown drew strength from memory, then him remembering should've mattered. It should've broken something. It should've fed it.
But it hadn't. The thing hadn't surged. The world hadn't cracked. The seal hadn't failed because of him.
That had left only one answer, and he hadn't liked it then either. His mind stood outside whatever old law governed the rest of them. Shielded. Insulated. Walled off from the same chain the others were caught in.
He'd treated it like a nasty little anomaly. Part of the interface maybe.
Now it sat in front of him as part of the design.
He dragged a breath through his nose.
Then his sixth year. Losing his magic.
The tree. Bare feet in dark soil. A woman moving around a white trunk, dancing. Bark pale as moonlit bone. Branches rising farther than his eyes could hold. The whole thing alive in a way no ordinary tree had ever been.
And the word.
Remember.
At first he'd thought it was about his magic. He'd just lost the bloody thing. It was the sort of answer a frightened man grabbed because it was close at hand and selfish enough to feel true. Remember your power. Remember what you are. Hold onto it and maybe you won't lose it again.
But the word had kept coming.
In later visions. In the tree. At the Veil. In the strange turns of conversation with the Flamels. It had followed him until the first explanation gave up and crumbled.
He looked at the spirit again.
He could see things differently now. The interface. The memory insulation. The way ancient magic appeared to him. The tree Patronus. Fawkes circling it with recognition. The Veil stirring. The Flamels waiting for something they themselves only half understood. All of it had been pressing toward this for years while he stumbled after it swearing under his breath and pretending the next clue would somehow be less deranged than the last.
Beside him, Bathsheda had gone very still.
He didn't need Legilimency or prophecy or another cursed cave to know where her mind had gone. He could feel the same pattern moving through her, fitting itself together from the other side.
Bathsheda's thumb moved against the back of his hand.
"So that's what they were killing," he said.
The spirit raised her head. "The order that kept the rot at bay."
He stared into the glowing pit.
History always pretended ruin arrived in grand moments. One war. One traitor. One fire. One perfect fall scholars could circle in red ink and build a curriculum around. Real destruction was uglier than that. It happened over generations. It happened when enough people repeated the same lie until it sounded like tradition. It happened when fear got dressed up as common sense. When a protector became a monster because monsters were easier to cage. When a name stopped being said because saying it became dangerous, or embarrassing, or difficult to prove.
He'd spent his old life teaching students that records lied.
He'd spent this one walking through the proof.
Bathsheda looked from the spirit to the walls of the chamber and then back again. "If they erased this much," she said, "how did any of it survive?"
The spirit looked at Cassian, and for the first time, smiled. "Because," she said, "magic never forgets."
The words hit him so hard he nearly swayed.
For a moment the cave fell away. The pale glow in the pit, the stone under his boots, Bathsheda's hand in his, all of it vanished.
The tree had said it.
The Veil had pressed it into him.
The Flamels had circled it again and again, always looking at him as though he was one breath away from catching up.
And now this.
Cassian stared at the spirit, but his mind had already gone elsewhere, hauling old moments up so quickly they almost collided.
Greece.
Bathsheda standing with chalk dust on her fingers and those spiralling runes still fresh around her, the seal forced shut, the thing below quiet again for the time being. Nicolas preparing to erase the memory out of every mind in reach because leaving it there was too dangerous. Bathsheda had asked the obvious question. If he wiped it all, if he stripped the temple and the creature and the runes from their heads, what would happen to them? Wouldn't the runes weaken if she forgot them?
Nicolas had smiled.
Cassian's breath caught.
"Bloody Gods," he said quietly.
Bathsheda looked at him at once. "What?"
He dragged a hand over his mouth, eyes wide.
"That's it," he said. "That's what he meant. That's what all of them meant."
Cassian laughed under his breath, not because anything was funny, but because the answer had been standing in front of him for so long it was almost insulting.
"My interface," he murmured. "Gods, of course."
Bathsheda's brow drew together. "Cass?"
He turned to her, speaking faster now, thought piling on thought. "When I first woke up here, it looked like a list. A ridiculous list in my head, every spell marked incomplete, waiting for mastery. I thought it was built around teaching because that was the one thing that fit me. Useful. Neat. Horribly convenient." He shook his head. "But that's not all it is. It never was."
The light in the pit moved across Bathsheda's face as she watched him.
"I don't invent those ancient variations," he said. "I don't pull them out of nowhere. I remember them. Or magic remembers them through me."
His throat tightened.
"They were never gone in the first place. They were buried. Left behind. The world forgot them. Books forgot them. Teachers stopped passing them on. But the magic itself didn't."
He could feel the whole thing turning now.
The tree of origin. The first source. Life and magic springing from the same root. If that tree sat at the beginning of it all, then of course it remembered. A thing like that wouldn't think in dates and chapters and shelf marks the way people did. It would remember in current, in structure, in resonance. Every spell ever grown from it would still belong to it, however far removed. Every variation. Every old branch lopped off and called lost.
That was what the tree had been trying to tell him from the start.
Not remember your wand. Not remember your power. Not remember yourself in the narrow, frightened way he'd first assumed when his magic was ripped away and panic made everything smaller and more personal.
Remember what the magic already knows.
His throat went dry.
His mind didn't forget either.
Other minds could be cut open, cleaned out, reset, made safe. His couldn't. His thoughts sat outside whatever old chain bound the rest of them. He remembered when no one else did. He held what should have vanished. He carried spell-echoes, visions, names, patterns, whole fragments of buried history that refused to leave him even when they left everyone else.
"That's why Greece didn't feed on you." She mumbled.
He looked at her sharply.
She took a breath. "The Crown drew power from memory, from fear, from being carried in the wrong kind of mind. But you remembering didn't strengthen it, because your mind doesn't work like that. It's sealed off. It holds the truth without handing it over."
"Yes," he said, and the word came out rough. "Yes, that's it."
"The tree remembers," the spirit said. "The world built from it remembers. Even when people do not."
Cassian stared at her. The interface had never been a trick. Never a random blessing. Never some convenient mechanism to stop a confused reincarnated teacher from getting himself killed in a wand duel.
It was memory.
It was the tree's memory reaching him in the only way his mind could bear.
He taught a spell, and magic answered because it recognised the act. Teaching. Passing on. Carrying forward. That was what memory did when it refused to die. Pass. Root. Branch. Bloom again in another hand.
That was why the ancient variations came through teaching and not power. Why mastery arrived when others learned. Why the list in his head only moved when knowledge was shared.
It wasn't rewarding him.
It was responding to the oldest law there was.
Magic lived by being carried.
His breath shook. He laughed, then looked down at his hand as though he might find bark under the skin.
"Bloody hell," he murmured. "I thought I was dragging history out of the dark." He looked back up, the full force of it landing at last. "It's the other way round. The magic's been dragging me."
Bathsheda was too busy following the same line, and he could see it in her face now, in the stillness behind her eyes.
"The runes," she said. "That's why they come so easily when they shouldn't. Not because I learned them somewhere and forgot. Because the magic still knows them, even when I don't."
"Yes."
"The mark..." Her free hand rose to her own throat. "The mark didn't need my mind to carry it. It was already there. In the magic."
Cassian nodded slowly.
"And the Valley," she said.
The Valley wasn't gone in the simple way ruins were gone. It hadn't vanished. It had been starved, buried, cut out of records, names, bloodlines, songs, stone, everything people could reach. But if magic never forgot, then the Valley had never truly disappeared. Its memory still lived in the world that had grown from it. In spells. In creatures. In wards. In old branches people called dead because they no longer knew the tree they came from.
And him...
The thought came down hard enough to hollow him out.
His mind was isolated.
He never forgot.
He remembered what the rest of the world lost.
The interface translated magic's buried memory into something he could carry, something he could teach, something he could restore to the world.
He had spent years thinking he was the odd man out. A foreign soul in the wrong body, clinging to scraps of history and broken visions, trying to make sense of a world that kept opening under his feet.
Now it looked different.
Not outside it.
Part of the mechanism itself.
His voice came almost disbelieving.
"Mind forgets. Magic doesn't. And I..." He stopped, because the thought was too large and too strange and still somehow exactly right.
The spirit's eyes held his.
"Yes," she said.
The cave went very quiet.
Cassian stood there with the old cold pressing through the stone and Bathsheda's hand warm in his, and for the first time since the tree had spoken, since the Veil had stirred, since the Flamels had looked at him as though they were waiting for him to say the one sentence they could not say for him, the word remember stopped feeling like an order and became what it had always been.
An identity.
A state of being.
He could carry what the world had lost because it had lodged itself in him and refused to die.
The thought should have terrified him. Perhaps later it would. Right now it only felt immense.
Bathsheda drew a slow breath. Her gaze held his. "You're the way back to it."
Cassian swallowed.
Maybe.
Or maybe he wasn't the way back on his own. Maybe that was the part he'd still been too thick to see until now.
Because the spirit hadn't said he carried the Valley alone.
He held continuity. Memory. The buried line of what had been.
Bathsheda held variation, fracture, mark, the impossible overlap of what was and what might have been. Where his interface pulled old roots through time, her gift held incompatible branches in the same mind without snapping.
The tree remembered.
He remembered.
And standing beside him, Bathsheda gave that memory shape enough to enter the world again.
A tree didn't think like people did. That hit him next. Hard enough to leave him almost laughing at himself again.
A tree didn't care for the neat little boxes people built to survive their own lives. Past. Present. Future. Before. After. Then. Now. That was human thinking. Human panic. Human bookkeeping. A tree carried its whole life in one body. Seed in the wood. Spring in the root. Winter in the bark. Every ring it had ever grown still there inside it. Held. Nothing truly lost, only covered by what came after.
For a tree, time didn't move in a straight line.
It remembered by continuing to be.
That was why the visions never came to him like books being read in order. They came sideways. In fragments. In flashes. A druid in one age. A seal in another. A woman by the white tree. A buried chamber. Ancient variants turning up through modern spells like old roots breaking through stone. He'd thought for years that he was collecting pieces from dead history.
Cassian looked at Bathsheda and understood in one clean, awful, beautiful rush that the spirit had not been speaking in metaphor to make old truths sound impressive.
He was time. Not in the grand, ridiculous sense of ruling it. Nothing so dramatic. But he carried its memory. Its depth. Its continuity. The old branches. The buried rings. The things magic refused to lose even when minds and empires did their best.
And Bathsheda....
Bathsheda was space. Not empty distance. Not cold abstraction. The room around the moment. The other paths. The hidden openings. The places where one truth sat beside another and reality had to widen to hold both. She carried variation the way he carried continuity. Where he remembered what had been, she held what else the world could contain.
Together.
His breath came short.
"We're not carrying separate things," she said.
"No," he replied.
Her eyes held his. "We were never separate in the first place."
The spirit lowered her head, like a servant in the presence of something finally recognised.
"Lord!"
"Her Highness!"
Not a Spoiler, Just an image! ↓
Spoiler
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Author Rant ↓
Spoiler
This chapter has developed self-awareness and is now refusing to continue without tribute. I warned it against unionizing.
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