The wielders' support group t in a small room above a bakery in Luria's rchant quarter. Eight chairs arranged in a circle. Windows that let in afternoon light. The sll of bread baking below, warm and comforting.
Marron arrived early, the Blade at her hip, Aldric beside her. They were the first ones there aside from the facilitator—a middle-aged woman nad Helena who wore simple clothes and had kind, tired eyes.
"Miss Louvel," Helena said, standing to greet them. "Welco. I'm Helena Thatch, retired wielder. I carried a Lesser Legendary Compass for three years before it was confiscated. I've been running these sessions for about a month now—Edmund's idea, though he'd never admit he borrowed it from ."
"You proposed this?" Marron sat in one of the chairs, feeling the wood creak beneath her.
"Suggested it, years ago. Edmund dismissed it as unnecessary sentint." Helena's smile was wry. "But after your case, after he realized isolation was the common factor in most corruptions—suddenly it beca his idea. I don't care about credit. I'm just glad it's happening."
She settled into her own chair. "We have six regular mbers. Yourself makes seven. All of us wielders—current, forr, or attempting to beco. All of us struggling with tools that are more than just objects. So have Lesser Legendary artifacts. One has a Greater Legendary. Most have been through attempted confiscation or restriction."
The door opened. A young man entered, maybe nineteen, with nervous hands and a leather satchel that pulsed faintly with magic. He saw Marron and froze.
"You're the one from the Council hearing. The one who was possessed by the Blade."
"Yes," Marron said simply. "I'm Marron."
"I'm Finn." He sat quickly, clutching his satchel. "I have Legendary asuring Cups. Lesser artifact, but still—they promised perfect proportions. Perfect recipes. I've been using them for six months and I can't bake without them anymore. Can't even crack an egg without checking if the cups approve."
"That's why you're here," Helena said gently. "To process that dependence. To learn to cook with and without the tools. To maintain yourself alongside partnership."
More people filtered in. An elderly woman with a Legendary Spinning Wheel that taught perfect thread tension. A middle-aged rchant with Legendary Scales that promised fair trades. A teenager with Legendary Paints that supposedly captured true colors. Each one carrying tools that were changing them in small, insidious ways.
And then, last through the door: a young woman with hollow eyes and shaking hands. No tool visible. She sat in the remaining chair and stared at the floor.
"That's Elise," Helena said quietly to Marron. "Councilor Vess's daughter. The compass wielder from Case Seven. She doesn't have the compass anymore—it was confiscated eight years ago. But she still cos. Still processes what it did to her."
Marron's chest tightened. This was what happened when you survived tool corruption but never fully recovered. When the damage ran too deep to heal completely.
Helena called the session to order. "Welco, everyone. We have a new mber today—Marron Louvel. Many of you know her case from recent news. She's partnered with the Precision Blade, one of the seven Greater Legendary Tools, and recently experienced full possession during an encounter with the Perfection Slicer."
All eyes turned to Marron. So curious. So afraid. So—like Finn—desperately hopeful.
"I'm not here as an expert," Marron said carefully. "I'm here because I need help. Because I almost beca what Greaves beca—a monster who couldn't distinguish between right and wrong because a tool had hollowed out. I had intervention. Community. Support. That's why I'm still functional. And that's why Edmund mandated I attend these sessions—to remind that I can't do this alone."
"How did you resist?" Finn blurted out. "The possession. How did you fight back when the tool took control?"
Marron thought carefully. "I didn't, at first. The joy overwheld completely. But I'd spent months learning to maintain a small piece of myself separate from the Blade's influence. Not much—just enough to rember who I was underneath the tool's desires. When possession happened, that piece stayed intact. Buried, but there. And when my community intervened—tied up, stopped from giving the Blade away—that piece had space to grow back."
"So you can't resist alone," the elderly woman with the Spinning Wheel said. Her voice was sad. "You need others to save you."
"Yes," Marron said honestly. "I can't do this alone. None of us can. That's the lesson Greaves taught—seven years of isolation with a Legendary Tool led to complete corruption. But community makes the difference between corruption and partnership."
"Easy to say when you have community," Elise said. Her voice was flat, emotionless. "So of us don't. So of us—" She looked at her empty hands. "So of us lost everything when the tools were taken. Lost ourselves. Can't find our way back."
The room went quiet.
"Tell us about the compass," Helena prompted gently. "When you're ready."
Elise was silent for a long mont. Then: "It promised direction. Perfect navigation. I'd always been uncertain—about everything. Career, relationships, decisions big and small. The compass made everything clear. Just ask it a question, and it would point the way. North for yes. South for no. East for caution. West for action."
Her hands twisted in her lap.
"Within months, I couldn't make any choice without it. Where to eat. What to wear. Whether to speak or stay silent. The compass had the answers. I just had to follow. And following was so much easier than deciding for myself."
"When did your mother intervene?" Helena asked.
"Month eight. I'd stopped sleeping properly—kept waking up to check if the compass approved of my sleeping position. Stopped eating foods it said were 'inefficient.' Stopped seeing friends it indicated were 'poor directions for my life path.' Mother noticed. Tried to talk to . I couldn't hear her—the compass said she was 'emotionally biased' and I should maintain distance."
Elise's voice was completely flat, like she was reading a report instead of describing her own tragedy.
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