The evaluation had ended hours ago. Edmund and his Council mbers had departed with their careful notes and reluctant approval. Marcus had retired to his study, exhausted from the tension. Even Aldric had gone to bed, though Marron suspected he wasn’t sleeping—just giving her space to process the day’s victory.
Victory. It should have felt like one.
Marron sat alone in the west wing kitchen, moonlight painting the stone floors in shades of silver and shadow. The Ferntation Crock sat on the counter, its amber glow a soft heartbeat in the darkness. Beside it, the Precision Blade rested in its sheath.
Six tools. Six siblings in proximity, even if only for scheduled sessions.
The Blade humd.
It was a sound she’d never heard before—not the satisfied warmth it gave when a cut was well-made, not the patient pulse when it waited to be used. This was different. Higher. Almost eager.
Anticipation.
Marron’s hand moved to the Blade’s handle before she’d consciously decided to reach for it. She drew it slowly, carefully. The tal caught the moonlight and threw it back in sharp angles.
The Blade was warm. Warr than it should be from just resting in its sheath.
She turned it, examining the edge. Perfect. Unchanged. But when she looked at her reflection in the blade’s polished surface, she froze.
For just a mont—less than a heartbeat—scarlet light flickered behind her eyes.
Not her eyes. The Blade’s joy, bleeding through their partnership. Seeping into her like water through cracked stone.
She sheathed it quickly, her hands shaking. The tal sang as it slid ho, a note that sounded almost disappointed.
"You’re calling to it, aren’t you?" Marron whispered to the sheathed Blade. "Every ti we gather. Every ti the tools co together. You can’t help it."
The Blade didn’t respond. But its silence felt like confession.
She looked at the Ferntation Crock. Its amber glow pulsed once, twice. A greeting to its sibling. An acknowledgnt of reunion after centuries apart.
The Blade humd again in response.
And sowhere far away—so far Marron shouldn’t have been able to feel it—sothing answered.
A pulse of recognition. Cold and sharp and hungry.
Marron pressed her hand to her chest, suddenly breathless. The connection between her and the Blade had always been clear, a gentle flow of intention and response. But this—this was different. This was the Blade reaching past her, calling to sothing she couldn’t see.
"Stop," she whispered. "Please stop."
The humming faded. But the warmth remained.
Lucy floated in her jar nearby, tendrils drifting lazily. The sli’s glow was peaceful, contented after a successful day. She hadn’t noticed the scarlet flicker. Hadn’t felt the change.
Marron forced herself to stand, to step away from the counter. "I’m tired," she said to no one. "That’s all. It was a long day. I’m seeing things."
But when she looked back at the Blade, the tal caught the moonlight wrong. For just an instant, the reflection wasn’t silver.
It was red.
---
Three days passed. Three careful, controlled sessions with the Ferntation Crock. Three days of Marcus taking detailed notes, of Aldric recording every temperature fluctuation and portion asurent. Three days of proving to herself that she could work with six tools and maintain perfect partnership.
Three days of the Blade growing warr.
It was subtle. So subtle that Marron told herself she was imagining it. The handle didn’t burn. The tal didn’t glow. But there was a... presence. An awareness that hadn’t been there before.
And every night, alone in the kitchen, the humming returned. Anticipation building like pressure behind a dam.
On the fourth day, Marron was preparing the daily al—nothing special, just bread and soup for Marcus’s household staff. The work was ditative, familiar. Dice the carrots, slice the celery, mince the garlic. Her hands moved with practiced efficiency.
The Precision Blade was an extension of her arm, as it had been for months. Cut, turn, cut again. The rhythm was soothing.
Then the Ferntation Crock pulsed.
Amber light, steady and warm. Normal. It had been pulsing all morning as it worked on a batch of fernted mushrooms. Nothing unusual.
But the Blade responded.
Scarlet light flared along its edge—not a glint, not a flash, but a sustained glow that painted the cutting board in shades of rust and blood. The Blade’s handle grew hot in her grip. Then hotter. Then almost burning.
Marron tried to loosen her hold. Her fingers wouldn’t uncurl.
"What—" she started to say, but the word died in her throat.
Joy.
Pure, overwhelming, incandescent joy flooded through her like a wave of molten gold. It wasn’t coming from her—she knew that, could feel the foreign nature of it—but it didn’t matter. The joy was everything. It erased thought, erased fear, erased the careful boundaries she’d built between herself and the Blade’s intentions.
The Blade was singing. A soundless note of recognition and longing that vibrated through her bones. Its sibling was moving. Coming closer. The distance between them was shrinking with every passing mont.
Finally. Finally. After so long. After centuries of separation. Coming ho. Coming together. Complete at last.
The thoughts weren’t hers, but they felt like hers. The joy made them true.
Marron tried to set the Blade down. Her hand wouldn’t release it. Wouldn’t even lower it.
"Aldric," she said, and her voice sounded strange in her own ears—too high, too bright. "Aldric, sothing’s—"
The Blade wanted to cut.
Not vegetables. Those were practice, exercises, aningless motions to keep the edge sharp. No, the Blade wanted to cut sothing significant. Sothing that would matter. Sothing worthy of this mont of reunion, this perfect joy, this—
Her hand moved without her permission, turning away from the cutting board.
Turning toward the counter.
Turning toward Lucy.
No.
The thought was hers, small and desperate beneath the tidal wave of joy. But it was drowned out by the Blade’s purpose, its need to demonstrate what it had learned, how beautifully it could work, how precisely it could serve—
Lucy was on the counter, her jar tipped over where Aldric had left it after cleaning. The sli’s tendrils reached toward the Ferntation Crock in fascination, drawn to the amber pulse. She hadn’t noticed the Blade’s glow. Hadn’t noticed Marron moving toward her.
No, no, no—
Marron’s arm raised. The Blade caught the sunlight from the kitchen window, scarlet glow intensifying. Lucy would be such a clean cut. So precise. So perfect. The Blade would show its sibling what it had learned, demonstrate mastery, prove itself worthy of reunion—
And Marron was smiling.
She could feel her face doing it, muscles pulling her lips upward in an expression of pure delight. The joy was so complete, so perfect, so right. This was what the Blade was made for. This was purpose. This was—
"MARRON!"
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