It was that moment that Jed realized he had misjudged something about Joshua. He had assumed that with all his talk of Fibonnacci ratios that he was one of those damned University mages who believed that mana had to be constrained by formulas and that everything had to be standardized and quantified. But watching him now, Jed realized that if he had lost his memory, and couldn't even admit to himself that he was a Mage, there was no way he could be doing what he was doing. This magic came from his heart, from his very soul. All this other talk may just be some kind of Feng Shui techniques passed on by his mentor. Jed stood there in open wonder, admiring the magic that poured from him and suffused the plants in front of him. For once, Jed opened himself up and allowed his soul to feel.
It was a moment of perfect peace. Both of them stood there and sang back and forth. Joshua teaching her the song. And the room was filled with life and then the shopkeeper turned and handed Joshua a cup of tea and still singing he turned to a blossoming white flower and gently tapping it’s stamen, he allowed the pollen to fall into the cup. He finished the song and then said, “You sing very well. The plants are very healthy. It shows how much you love them. But, adding more dream dust isn’t really going to compensate for the lack of brain juice. But, if you sing a bit of morel with ginseng and dried blue fish brain it’ll work without the expense.” The shopkeeper had tapped a bit of pollen into her own cup and had sipped it carefully listening to Joshua. She nodded and said, “I’ll try that with the next batch. I’ll have to get the mushroom. Is it the same song?” Joshua shook his head, “No, things that grow in the dark need the Moon’s Luster song. I can teach it to you.” The shopkeeper’s eyes had brightened when she tasted the tea. “Mmmmh, this is as good as in the Tir! Now I know how those damned elves did it. Harvested under a full winter moon my ass!” She laughs then and says, “I’d love to have you teach me. And in exchange I can teach you what I know since we share the same tradition.”
“Hey bud, that was beautiful. Are some of the pieces fitting back together?” Jed wanted to ask him directly about being a Mage, but felt he was wise to be more discreet. He had not asked him directly since the first time he had denied it. Jed accepted the cup of coffee. Oh wow, it was from real beans. “Oh, wow that's good. I haven't had anything but the extract concentrate in so long. He held the cup to his face and inhaled. Not the sniffing smelling kind of inhale, but the same kind of inhale you did when a woman's head was on your shoulder and you just breathed in the essence of her. easy buddy, it's coffee.
Joshua looks over at Jed sipping his tea. “Pieces? Is something broken?”
Jed just smiles and shakes his head dismissively. “Just a poor attempt at wit”. He sips the coffee, savoring it. “My name is Jedediah Early. I would be honored if you called me Jed, as that's what my friends call me. This is my friend Joshua.” Smiling, he sits back, holding the cup with both hands. The shopkeeper smiles and says, “I’m Samia Soleymaini. Joshua and I have already met.” she smiles at him. He smiles back at her and says, “Jed and I have to eat dinner later. Would you like to come with us?” Samia smiles back at him and says, “I think that would be nice. We could discuss the applications of plant essences in pharmacology and the adaptations of single, double and triple step distillation methods as they apply to end product applications.” Samia turns and looks at you and says, “Joshua tells me that you’ve been helping him and that you’ve been taking him to different gardens and that he’s been working on ways to make your garden more efficient to make room for more specimens. I’ve promised him some of my cuttings. Is that alright?” Joshua cuts in, “Yes, it’s alright. We’re going to come here lots. Jed likes it here.” Joshua gives you a bit of a pleading look over her head as she looks back and forth between the two of you.
A genuine heartfelt laugh bursts from Jed as he sees the anxious face pleading with him. “I do indeed like it here. In fact, I would venture to declare that I love it here. And as far as you adding cuttings to my garden, I wouldn't presume to tell you that you can't add anything you want to that garden. I had a box that was growing some basil and some weak little tomatoes. Now look what you've done with it. That garden ceased to be my garden when you started working on it and will forever be our garden, for as long as you like. I would be delighted for Samia to join us, although I'm not sure a bowl of noodles from Samurai Noodle is fitting fare for so boon a companion.” Jed blushes as he realizes how ridiculous he sounds. “How long have you had your shop Samia?”
Samia smiles and says, “All my life. It was my fathers. He was Sam. I inherited it two years ago when he passed away. I spent my childhood in this shop learning history, sociology, mathematics, you name it.” She smiles and says, “My father was a frustrated college professor. He knew more about everything and anything than anyone I’ve ever known.” She laughs then, “Except for organizing. I was forever needing to put things in their proper order. Once he passed I was able to finally change the layout of the shop, install more shelving and a more efficient method of cataloguing and still install the aquaponics system for the herbs in the kitchen I’d always wanted. I did a few updates of that as well.” She looks up at Joshua and says, “I don’t think I’ve ever met anyone as talented as you. I can believe it when Jed says he had one small plantar. I’m already looking forward to learning the methodology for increasing the yield of non-magical plants without stressing their root systems or destabilizing their essences with artificial methods of fertilization.” She looks at him. “And I’m really impressed at how much you were able to do without a focus. My minor was in artificing. I can help you make a focus if you’d like?” She looks at Joshua expectantly and then adds, “And I love noodles.”
“Well I guess if we’re ever going to eat dinner I should conclude my business portion of this visit. Samia, I'm not a typical Mage. I don't learn magic by formula. I feel it out. Casting for me is like drawing mana together and shaping it, creating with it. Consequently, I can't always find spell formulas that work for me. I need a spell to increase my awareness, and a ritual to create Watchers. Also, I'm hoping to pick up a primer on artificing. Can you help me?”
She frowns as she thinks about your request. “Well, maybe. I do have a spell called Ghost Vision. It’s not quite what it sounds like. It superimposes a sort of bubble like aura over your head and it sharpens the senses in that area, so, seeing, hearing, taste and touch are all heightened. But, it can be very difficult for your tradition to learn spells as you don’t parse the data in the same way. Even watching someone else cast it is often not helpful. As for the Watchers I have several spells. You can look at them and see which one makes sense to you. And the primer on artificing is easy. I still have my old college books. You can come here everyday and study it and I can help you by explaining what doesn’t make sense. I’ll charge you for every hour of the actual tutoring and reduce it by every hour Joshua tutors me.” She smiles at Joshua openly and as he looks at her he smiles back. Joshua has a nice smile, it lights up his face. And seeing that Samia responds, her eyes light up as she looks at him and then she looks back at you. “So, let’s see about those scrolls.” She finishes her tea and takes the cup to the sink to rinse it and then turns to go to a small cupboard. Turning back she says, “If you’ll return to the shop I’ll meet you there.”
Jed and Joshua went back into the main shop. They didn't have long to wait. Samia came back into the shop carrying several scroll and a few books. She laid everything down on the counter and smiling said, “Take a look and see if you are able to use these. As I said your tradition makes spell use and learning new spells more difficult.” She unfurled one of the scrolls, “This is the only spell I have that increases awareness. There are other spells that might help you, but I'd have to order them.” As Jed looks them over he notes that this spell use a very different type of notation and calls for reagents in the casting.
Jet begins to study the scrolls as he considers his needs versus what is available. He's never encountered a spell that requires reagents, and he realizes he intends to buy this spell even if it's not something he wants to put in the time to learn yet. “I've never seen a spell quite like this, this is interesting. Does this person regularly provide spells to you?” One of the scrolls contains the Watcher ritual Jed was looking for, and he sets it aside as he continues to examine the awareness spell. The spell is an arrangement of Kanji characters on a page of actual parchment.
“Yes, he does. If you count 3-4 spells a year regularly.” She smiles at Jed. “Given the rarity of material I do. And, his spells tend to be easier for some mages to cast is it gives them an additional focal point for the casting. And almost impossible for others given the notations system and lack of specific protocols from any one tradition.” Nodding, Jed continues looking over the scroll. Samia looks at him with a bemused smile on her face. “You're looking at it wrong” she says softly. Glancing up at her, Jed turns the page 90 degrees, the 90 degrees again. He lets his eyes unfocus, he looks at it at a sharp angle with his eyes squinted, but he still doesn't see the spell. Samia shakes her head and returns to Joshua's side. Jed hears the two of them happy discussing horticulture. “So nice. He is beginning to heal.” But how much. Jed shifts his vision to the astral, to evaluate Joshua's aura, and the gray, “static-y areas of his aura are lessening.
As Jed is looking away from Joshua he sees the page in front of him and actually jumps. There is a 3-D astral image projecting up from the page. It's a series of odd geometric shapes. Jed picks the page up. The sheets are static relative to the page and as he turns the page so turn the images. “Spirits! It's a puzzle.” He isn't sure it's exactly what he's looking for, but it's too interesting to leave behind. Adding it to the Watcher ritual, he walks over to the text books that she had indicated. Looking at them, he quickly sees that they’ll do the trick.
He walks back to Samia “I would love to come here to study. But I'm not happy to trade Joshua’s time for yours. I think Joshua would be happy to tutor you, but I'd rather you give him the credit for his time. I’ll get by for now. I do have a friend however, that may be willing to purchase time tutoring with you. His name is Marco.
She smiles, “I’ll take that as a compliment that you feel confident enough in me to recommend me as a tutor.” She smiles at Joshua, “And I’m really looking forward to learning from you. What do you say?” Joshua looks at her and then down, and then up again and looks at her intently. “I want to come here.” he says simply. Samia smiles at him and Joshua blushes and looks down. And Samia smiles even bigger.
Well, this was an interesting development. Jed had to think carefully about how to handle the knowledge that he possessed that Joshua had forgotten. He'd had the spells he needed, had arranged for access to pick up a new skill. Jed took a quick turn through the store, make a rough mental catalogue of what was available here, before returning to Samia and Joshua, who were still alternating between smiling and blushing. “Shall we head out for noodles?”
Samia hands Jed the balance of his items and smiles and says, “I think we should.” Once Jed slots his cred stick she picks up her keys and following them out the door locks up.