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Chapter 5 - Calriddia

They arrived at her house within a handful of minutes, Andrea annoyed at Julian

for talking about her mother in such a disgusting way, and Julian annoyed at her

for spilling his tea despite having gone to great pains to make sure such a thing was

impossible.

"Couldn't you just magic me more clothes?" she asked, to which he shook his

head, "No."

"And here I thought that you were able to do anything," She said, rolling her eyes.

"Where would I even begin, Andrea? I don't know your size, how much cloth and

wool would be needed, nor anything about your sense of style, other than it is

appalling. Now, could I solve these issues? Surely, I am Julian Nerva for Christ's

Sake. But will I?"

"I doubt it," Andrea stomped her feet towards her home, "It would be a nice thing

to do, and you're Julian Nerva, for Christ's sake."

She slammed the door behind her and almost jumped out of her shoes when she

saw him standing there, "Why are you here?"

Julian blew his lips and shrugged, "Why are any of us here, really? What is the

meaning of life, and our living it? There's just so many ways to answer that

question, Andrea."

She walked past him and climbed the stairs, "I fucking hate you."

Andrea slammed her bedroom door shut and knocked back into it when Julian

startled her again, "Shit!"

He grimaced and she pulled the middle finger up at him, "You do that often, huh?

Sneak your way into little girl's rooms?"

Julian rolled his eyes at her, "Now now, there is no need to be so crass, Andrea."

Andrea decided to try and ignore him as she pulled out her luggage bag and put

as many items of clothing as she could get her hands on before looking towards

her creams and make-ups and toothbrush and hairbrush and—

"Do you really require all of this?" Julian asked, annoying her with his…. Perfectly

soothing voice, "Am I putting all of this in my luggage bag?"

"I suppose."

"Then you have your answer." She snapped, finishing up by taking a picture she

had copied of her grandmother and her parents, a picture that was in Julian's

hands before she could even put it down, "Hey!"

He looked down at it and smiled, "Amusing."

Andrea marched over towards him to snatch the picture from out his hands,

"Yep, funny as funny can be. My granny and her folks decided to take a family

picture together in-between fighting off poverty and ducking Jim Crow. Oh, what

little rascals they were!"

"…. This is a picture of your mother and her parents." Julian said, his hands now

in the pocket of his navy blue coloured suit.

Andrea raised an eyebrow at him, not entirely sure if she had heard him

correctly, "What?"

He turned towards the door, "I'll tell you more later…. Or I just won't and let your

curiosity and desire for answers make you go crazy. I have a feeling I know

which I will choose to do."

"Juli—" she could barely get out more than half his name when he disappeared

from view, as if he had never been there to begin with.

Andrea jumped onto the bed to throw a tantrum, kicking and slamming her fists

down, Fuck Fuck Fuck FUCK!!!

If this were how things were going to be, she would back in New Orleans within

the month.

She got up off the bed and took her luggage bag, struggling to drag it towards her

bedroom door when she heard a knock and opened to find the invisible butler

stood there, offering to help.

"Thanks." Andrea muttered, still a little in awe at watching an invisible man lift

the luggage bag she intended to take with her to a magic school in England.

She hurried down the stairs after him, stopping to stare at the pictures of her

Granny and mother, her eyebrows furrowing as she began to think over what

Julian had said, "You've got to be fucking kidding me…." She muttered before

clearing the stairs in two strides. Andrea stormed her way out the house and

back into the chariot, finding Julian sat cross-legged with a newspaper in his

hands, "Did Mr Unseen help you come alright?"

"Go and fuck yourself." She muttered, sitting herself across from him as they

waited for his invisible man to place her suitcase in the corner, "What did you

mean up there, Julian?"

He ignored her as he continued to read the paper, reading it undisturbed until

she slapped at it, "Julian!"

"It's Mr Nerva." He said, fixing the paper and going back to reading, "And I will

tell you, on one condition."

Andrea sunk back into her seat, "Depends on the condition. My… momma told me that there is power in words, especially promises."

"Good to see that she actually taught you something worth a damn." He

muttered, and that annoyed her a great deal, "She taught me how to speak my

mind."

"And now the world suffers for it." Julian sighed, setting aside the newspaper and

looking at her intensely, "When we get to Camelot, you will mention nothing of

any form of bond or relationship between us beyond the fact that I brought you

in. You will call me Mr Nerva in public, and you must muster up the crumble of

respect that I know that Antonina has instilled in you, and behave accordingly."

She thought it over before sighing and closing her eyes, "Only in public?"

He nodded his head, "Only in public."

"You have yourself a deal, Juli-Boy!"

He barely reacted to that, "You come from a better home than your behaviour suggests,

Andrea."

She mumbled that he was right before bitterly agreeing to call him Mr Nerva and Julian

just as she felt the tendrils of sleep begin to grab hold of her.

Andrea could hear Julian sigh again, probably because of something she did like

breathe a little too hard in his presence, "Rest then, I suppose it was a very

eventful day. When you wake, we will begin with the basics."

Andrea dreamt of spiders and burning trees, slowly waking to the smell of

something warm and savoury, opening her eyes to be greeted by the sight of

freshly baked pie and a slice set-aside for her.

She yawned and stretched, feeling like she got a good eight hours of wonderful

sleep, her body feeling better than it had in ages.

"Well rested?" Julian asked, still somehow enthralled by the newspaper in front

of him

"Good enough, I guess. How long have I been out?"

"It should be chasing midnight." He said, looking at his watch and nodding, "Ten

minutes to twelve, as I suspected."

"Yeah," Andrea got up and stretched some more, "Congrats, you're the G.O.A.T for

real."

After getting the blood flowing again, Andrea waved at Mr Unseen, who bowed in

return, "How are you, Mr Unseen?"

He made the 'A-Okay' gesture with his gloved fingers, and then pointed at her,

drawing a laugh out of Andrea, "I've been better, Mr Unseen. Thanks for asking."

"Stop talking to the imaginary help, Andrea," Julian muttered, "Once you start,

they'll start to believe that they are people."

"Yes, Master Julian." She mimicked him in a trash-sounding version of his unique

accent. She looked at Mr Unseen and rolled her eyes whilst pointing at Julian, a gesture of which the servant seemed very amused by.

"Enough." Julian said, never once looking up from what he was reading. She

folded her arms over her chest and huffed, "I promised to be nicer to you, and

you promised to explain the photographs of my family. Time to live up to your

part of the deal."

He nodded his head slowly, "That I did. That photograph I said was of your

mother and her parents is, shockingly, actually a photograph of your mother and

her parents."

Andrea was silent for a heart beat before bursting out into laughter, "Fine then,

have it your way. Good luck hearing a 'Mr Nerva' come out of me ever again,

Julian."

He had the faint trance of a smirk appeared on his irritating face, "You should not

be so sceptical, Andrea. For you're talking to someone who was born in 1857."

She almost laughed again until she saw that he was absolutely serious. Andrea

turned towards the butler, "Mr Unseen…. Is this true?"

The butler nodded, and now she had to believe it.

Well…. I did think he seemed to have appeared out of a period movie….

"How?" she muttered, and Julian's smirk finally appeared, "Magic."

Andrea, despite being shocked, could not help but roll her eyes, "No shit, bruh. I

mean explain it."

"The source fuels us, and in turn, we live a little longer. The more powerful a

person is, the more their life span will be." He said, and she gasped at hearing it,

"Oh, for real?! It fuels you for how long?"

He set down a side plate on the tray, "The average magician will live 120 years

before they die, which means the likes of myself will be sticking around this

sorry planet for over 300 years. It says a lot about your mother that she still

looks the way that she does at 98-years-old, despite her retirement."

It was a good thing that Andrea was sitting down, or else she would have

collapsed from the madness of it all, "Then…. No, that makes no sense. We have

neighbours who talk about other family members helping them in court cases

decades ago!"

He sat back into his chair, "I think that you can guess how…."

Andrea was prepared to cuss at him should he had simply said the word 'magic'

again, but then it hit her, "Fuck me…. are those stories cause of fog-fuckery?"

Julian's smirk deluded into a small smile, "A rather indelicate way of putting

things, but yes, you are correct, Andrea."

She felt almost ashamed to humble herself so, but her curiosity had gotten the

better of her, "Could you tell me more." She mumbled, and Julian, to her surprise,

kindly obliged, "Your great-grandfather started your family practice some

time after the civil war, part of Grant's attempts at helping black owned business

here in the south. The many stories of ancestors helping people in courtly

matters is just an assortment of acts performed by either your mother or her

father or his father before him."

Andrea took a moment to take it all in before asking a question she was terrified

of learning the answer to, "So…. Am I actually sixteen…? Or is that part of the fog

too?"

What little joy expressed upon his face quickly fell away, "That is a boring

question, Andrea."

"Easy for you to say!" She snapped at him, "I need to know if everything apart of

my life is a lie, so sorry if my questions don't pique your high-brow interests!"

"You're sixteen." He said

"And how do you know that for a fact?"

He shrugged, an infuriating sight that seemed to matter little to him, "Your

insolence is a dead give away. And, because your body is only drawing enough

enough of the source's power so as to draw attention from the likes of Jeremiah

Riggs. That usually only happens some time after puberty."

Andrea exhaled a sigh of relief; at least that part of my life is not a lie….

"So…. I will get to live 120 years too, huh?" She tried to focus on the bright side,

but Julian seemed opposed to any future where she was even remotely happy, "I

severely doubt it."

She was disgusted and deflated by that response, "If what I am sensing from you

is correct, which it is, you don't seem to have enough magical potency to live past

100."

Andrea frowned, "What?"

He cocked his head slightly, "I had meant to be insulting before, but did your

mother actually teach you nothing?"

For some reason, Andrea felt the urge to squirm under his scrutinising glare,

"Outside of that promise thing…. No, not really."

"Not even the basics?" Andrea had never thought she would see him so….

disappointed.

"You said you would teach me the basics." She snapped back at him, resenting

him for making her feel this way. Julian sighed for the hundredth time and set

aside his newspaper for good, folding it neatly to place beside him, "I did indeed. Now, I will leave most of the boring origin aspect to your lecturers, and begin

with something actually crucial. The manipulation of the fog."

Andrea sat up, "Finally! Magic time!"

Julian sat up as well, in a far more refined and respectable manner than she had,

"Yes, magic time. Firstly, a little boring background."

"But you said—"

"Hush." He quietened her, "The source is connected to every person on the

planet. Their mind, body and soul. As an infant, your connection is barely a thread amongst the billions and billions of tethers connecting humanity to the Source. And so, one is unable to do magic or have their souls feed the Source. This connection grows and grows until one has reached the age of maturity, at which point, the Source is able to detect them, and take the energy it had given them back. Think of it akin to the ocean. What is one wave crashing on some beach compared to the vast volume of water

that covers over seventy percent of the planet? Nothing. But that water is still

pulled back in by the tides regardless. The Source operates in a similar manner.

It is why people begin to grow old and die once they stop growing and maturing."

Julian, especially this version of him, seemed almost bored by everything around

him, a consequence of life being too easy for a magician of his calibre, she

reckoned. But now, his otherwise blank expression was a little more…. Animated,

and his eyes, when not hidden, usually looked big and empty, but now had the threat of a spark within them as he went on to explain magic to her. Andrea did not like the man, and might even go so far as to say that she hated him on a bad day. But in that

moment, she was completely under his spell, listening to him and only him as he

peeled back the curtain and let her see the world for what it really was. A world

she was equal parts terrified and excited to be apart of.

"Most people only have a strong enough connection to the source to give twenty-

five to maybe forty years worth of energy back, and a couple of outliers may dare

give fifty. Medicine and science has gone some way to combating this, revitalising

the body and strengthening it against the illnesses of the world that would

otherwise make the human vessel wain some."

Andrea loathed interrupting him, but the curiosity within her was too much not

to, "Then shouldn't using magic impact the years a person has, not give them

more?"

Julian smiled softly, "A decent question, one that will be addressed soon enough.

About 6 500 years ago, pockets of people all over the world had sort of….

Stumbled their way into grasping a very minute understanding of the Source.

And the few amongst them realised that if their bodies naturally are able to give

to the Source, then those very same vessels should in theory be able to take as

well."

"Wow…." Was all her dumb mind could contribute to this discussion, way to go

brain!

"Wow indeed," Julian surprised her by not taking the opportunity to insult her.,

as she might have done, had their roles been reversed.

"These beings, taking the energy of the Source to revitalise themselves, began to

live longer and longer. This is where shamans and religious figures soon began to

pop up, and civilisations began to form. The Source, which had just been a

cauldron of energy before, soon began to change with humanity, taking on its

ideals and thoughts and personality, the good with the bad. Do you understand

why, Andrea?"

She sat and thought it over for a good moment, reviewing what he had told her

over and over again until Andrea sighed, "Don't laugh but…. You said the Source

is connected to a person's mind and soul as well as the body…. So wouldn't

what's on our minds also be sent to…. the Source… as well…. Never mind, it

sounds stupid."

His smile grew, "No, you are exactly correct, Andrea. Well done!"

It frustrated her to admit it, but his praise of her made her return the smile,

"Thanks…. Mr Nerva."

He was about to continue his lecture when a bell's ringing interrupted him,

sucking out the little joy that Julian seemed able to muster as he stood up from

his seat, "Well, this ends our lecture. Thank you for being an attentive student."

Andrea did not feel the carriage descend, but somehow knew that they were on

the ground now, "Wait, what about the fog?"

Julian took her luggage bag and lifted it as if it with one hand, as if it weighed

nothing, fixing his tie with the other hand before opening the door for her, "That

will be explained to you during your Magic Society 1A lecture. Probably your first

one in fact, if I know Professor Gywendd like I think I do."

She stepped outside onto a busy street, people coming and going as if there were

not some large carriage with several ethereal horses stood beside the sidewalk

in front of them, under the instruction of a headless man in a tired suit and an

invisible butler stood waving at them.

"Where are we?" Andrea asked, and Julian pointed to the clock in the far

distance, "What, do you need an establishing shot with the word 'London' written

out upon the screen for you?"

Andrea rolled her eyes as she followed him onto the sidewalk, "Cool reference,

Old man. Now, go on an hour long rant about how the talkies in your day were

real cinema."

Julian smiled at that, "That was actually amusing. Now come, we're about to

enter the Underground."

Andrea frowned, "Isn't that y'all's version of the subway?"

His expression contorted into such disgust that it were as if she had just spat at

him, "Look upon my suit, little girl. What I am wearing could be donated to an

orphanage and keep them fed for a few months. Do you think I would take anything resembling a subway?

"No. The Underground is the world beneath this one, the one within the fog."

He stopped at a street sign that read 'Gibraltar Avenue' and tapped it twice.

"Oh! Are we about to pull a Harry Potter?" she asked excitedly, and her question

only worsened the disgust upon Julian's face, "No, we are not about to 'pull a

Harry Potter'. This is magic, Andrea, real magic. Not whatever nonsense passes

for sorcery in—"

Andrea ignored him as she stepped towards the street sign, knocking her

forehead against steel before yelping as she stumbled backwards, "Ow! Julian! I

thought we were about to pull a Harry Potter. Why did you tell me this thing was

a portal, or whatever, if it was not?"

"I just told you that there will be no Harry Potter-ing of any sort."

Andrea sniffled as she rubbed her forehead, certain that there would be a red

mark and perhaps a welt there later on, "I wanted us to be like Harry Potter so

bad though."

Julian looked at her blankly for a moment before he turned away and said

something in Latin. The street sign began to tilt to the right before it fell into the

ground, doing a full revolution and appearing on the other side before standing

back up again.

Andrea was about to ask what had happened before she looked

around and noticed that they stood within a different city. There were still

people going about their day, simulating the hustle of a true city, but everything

seemed to be darker and the air felt heavier. There was no honking of vehicles,

or the sounds of people talking or any of the other loud sounds that would

pollute a popular city. It was as if she were in a silent memory of a town now

populated by ghosts and spirits. She looked around at the buildings made of

various greys and whites and creams, few shorter than a couple of storeys,

perhaps five at the smallest, but all made in some sharp gothic style with

gargoyles and griffin statues dotting every other building.

In the skyline were spirals and cathedrals with statues of weeping winged angels

wielding ancient weapons decorating their entrances, pillars made in ancient

Greek and roman style holding up ceilings of concrete moulded into domes or

around clocks that had arms that did not seem to move at all.

The streetlights were erect and straight, instead of the drooping kind that

Andrea was used to seeing in a modern city, made of a black metal that looked

like it was actually made of dark glass when one stared long enough, with

burning candles surrounded on four sides of glass sat up top, the light they

emitted unnaturally more than a candle ought to shine. In fact, everything that

was metal around them was enamelled black, including robots and guard railings

and phone booths.

Phone booths? She gawked, what the hell is this…?

In fact, this entire city seemed to be purposefully fashioned like that. Filled with

modern versions of cars and people walking around in modern styled clothing

that she would find in any other metropolitan city. Buildings had neon-styled

signs advertising their name and what they sold, shops like convenience stores

or vape stores and even a weed dispensary down the road from them. The few

conversations she could hear were in modern speech and there were billboards

promoting a new product or a new movie coming out this upcoming summer.

But there were anachronisms in things like phone booths, the roads being

cobbled instead of tarred, people walking around with sheathed-swords or

shields, police officers mounted upon shadow steeds that blew out smoke from

their large nostrils. It was as if Victorian London had been gentrified by hipsters,

and it felt awful to admit, but she liked it. They stood at a roundabout, the centre

of which was a fountain of a female angel with large wings, wearing an actual

bronze breastplate with a real bronze tipped spear in the right hand and a

bronze coloured shield in her left. Greaves and guards covered her lower legs

and forearm, and her feet were bound in leather boots.

From her empty eyes poured water, another display of weeping that made

Andrea uncomfortable to look at, "Julian…. Where are we?" she asked in a dumbfounded tone, tempted to walk and see every part of this dark city that was

lit by an unnatural trinity of moon, electricity and magic.

"This is Calriddia." He said, lightly grabbing her shoulder to guide her out the

path of a man running faster than a human being ought to be able to, "We are late

as is. We must hurry."

"How come we can't hear anything?" she asked, and he raised an eyebrow, a

momentary expression of confusion painted on his face before he seemed to

notice it too, "Apologies, it is of my own doing." He said, snapping his fingers to

allow a wave of noise to crash down onto Andrea's ears, bringing the atmosphere

of an urban city that had sorely been missing, "I prefer not to have my ears

bombard by nonsense. Which is why talking to you has been a hell of an

experience."

She stuck her tongue out at him as they continued down the road filled with

restaurants and art galleries on either side, Andrea finding it difficult to pull her

eyes away from the instruments playing themselves in the corner of one

restaurant filled with patrons laughing and conversing, as if such were an

everyday thing. She felt Julian's large hand wrap around her arm, "Andrea." He

spoke calmly, but she could detect the annoyance in his tone, "We are late."

"Sorry." She said sheepishly, following after him as they began to ascend a hill.

Andrea had been terrified to speak again, lest he finally lose his temper with her

and magic'd her out of existence, but the curiosity of all of it had gotten too much

once they walked past a building with a scarlet eye with a black slit iris

decorated upon its double marble doors.

"Does this city exist on like…. Some other dimension or something?"

Julian looked back over his shoulder towards her, "Yes, in a way, it does. There

are a handful of magical cities around the world, a few hundred towns, and

perhaps a thousand villages too. Usually, the fog is enough to keep people out,

but for the big metropolitan areas like London, a little bit more creativity is

needed…. Can you guess as to why?"

Andrea was beginning to tire as they reached the top of the hill, already feeling a

little drowsy even after having just slept a good night's rest, but the

view of the city had been breath-taking enough to deem it all as worth it.

"I…. I am not sure…."

Julian sighed, "Well, more people means a higher chance of discovery. As you

know, some people have a strong enough connection to the Source to see things,

usually not strong enough to see with much understanding, but just enough. If 1-

in-100 ordinary people are touched enough to see at the very least something,

those odds might be nothing in a large village or even middle-sized town, but you

could imagine just how much more prevalent it would be in a city like London."

Andrea whistled, "The magic community in China or India must be having a

tough time of it."

He almost smiled at that, "I would assume so. Have you noticed something in the

air?"

She yawned, "Yeah, it…. Feels heavy, and tastes weird."

Julian raised an eyebrow, "You cannot be already tired. You just slept."

She yawned once more and stretched, "Hey, I don't know what to say, but I've

had a lot on my plate the past week. Cut me some slack, Julian."

He did not look happy with her, more than usual, and the sight of his….

Annoyance? Irritation? Disappointment could not have been the right word,

because he barely cared about her enough to have expectations in the first place,

ate at her a little, "What? What did I do now, Julian?"

He turned to look ahead, pointing to the corner of the road where on the next

road over, there were railings placed in the middle of the road, "This is the

nearest stop for the Cabbage Cart, think of it as what you have in your San

Francisco. This will bring you into town should you wish to spend some of your

free time here, especially on weekends."

They arrived at the corner just in time for a cart to come barrelling down the hill

to stop right in front of them. He entered the cart before her, tapping a black card

that he had pulled out of thin air against the wristband of the cart's driver before

turning to look down at Andrea, "Come on, the trip will take us up to Camelot."

She stifled another yawn and joined him to sit towards the back, the only other

people in the 33-seat sized cart was an old lady in a cloak busy having an

impassioned argument with the cat in her lap, and a pair of twins sat silently

next to each other in what looked to be the school's uniform.

"Why is the air thicker and heavier here?" Andrea asked as she took her seat next

to him, "It feels like I'm wearing three extra layers of clothing."

Julian nodded his head, "It's called the Hide 'n Seek, colloquially. An area spell,

focused on taking a little bit of magic from each occupant in the city, done so in

order to fuel this dimension's magic to keep it existing the way it is. No amount

of fog manipulation could ever match this."

Andrea could not stop the yawn from grabbing hold of her, and her eyes were

beginning to get heavy, "Bruh, is this juju what has me so dead?"

"It shouldn't." He snapped, "There are far too many people in the city to even

notice that you're losing any energy at all. It's the equivalent to a drop of blood,

Andrea."

She frowned up at him, "Well, sorry if it's got me feeling some type of way, but

I'm still new to this magic thing, remember?"

He did not answer, and so Andrea rolled her eyes and focused on the view of the

city. To hell with him and his magical elitism, she thought, as the idea of sleep was

thrown to the back of her mind by the wonderful view of the city. In the centre

was a white-marble building as big as any she had ever seen, a domed

masterpiece with four angels standing tall and beautiful, carved out to

perfection, with cherubs surrounding each of them and holding above their

heads something glowing that looked like halos from where Andrea sat.

The dome was made of glass, with its sills and frames made of pure gold that

glinted and gleamed the reflection of light sent by a moon that shone so brightly

so as to make the stars around it useless. Around the central marble building were a

forest worth of the greys and whites and creams Andrea had seen before, and on

the northern end was what looked like an army made up of trees with black bark

and leaves, a terrifying version of nature's forests that she could not imagine any

bird or bug would ever want to live in.

Or rather, imagine the birds and bugs that do….

There was a mountain range in the north-east that had a tower of jet-black in

front of it that had that same scarlet eye with the black slit carved into it, but this

time, the eye was bordered by a ring that had spikes sticking out of it, looking like a grunge version of the four cardinal points. Despite the grotesqueness of the

sight, it took all her will power to look away from a carved eye that seemed to be

staring back at her.

"What the hell is that eye-thing about?" she asked Julian, half-surprised that he

still was willing to answer her, "The Gods' Eye." He said, placing a hand on her

shoulder to force her to look elsewhere, "You are never to go anywhere that has

that symbol. Even seven-feet near it, do you understand?"

Andrea looked at him with a raised eyebrow, "If it's that bad, why is it allowed in

the city?"

Julian pulled out his pocket watch and glanced at it, "You'll cover that more in

your Religious Studies, and your Arcane History class as well. But in short, they

are crazy religious cultists who worship the worst parts of the Source, the parts

where the evils of man seem to have carved out a place of their own."

Andrea gulped and did her best to avoid looking at the tower again, "No lie, that's

a little creepy…. And so, do you believe in a god then?"

Julian folded his arms, "No."

She decided not to press him on the issue and instead focused on the other sights

of the city. In the eastern part of it was another gothic styled building built up top

a hill with a faceless man statue holding up a torch that had a blue flame

hovering above it, the flame looked no bigger than Andrea's fist from how far

away she was, but must have been massive up close.

Behind the man was something that looked like a coliseum, but made in shining white marble with gold and silver dotted around it, a stadium fit for gods. Around them, she started to notice that the restaurants and small townhouses began to drift away,

replaced by taller apartment buildings, and libraries and bookstores and even a

few small malls here and there. Down the one street they past came loud music

and had every building pestered by lines of young adults, a row of bars and clubs

and lounges that Andrea was excited to visit as soon as she had the chance.

"Focus on your studies, Andrea." Julian said immediately, as if he was reading her

mind.... Wait! A terrifying realisation dawned on her there and then, what if he is

reading my mind?!

"Can you read minds?" she asked, and he looked up at her and raised an

eyebrow, "Why do you ask?"

Andrea thought back over all the times that he seemed to do something that

seemed like a reaction to a thought or observation of hers, and even then, whilst

she was replaying all their interactions, he had a wry smile force its way onto his

face, "Julian…."

He shrugged, "No, well…. If we're going by exact definition, then no. It's more like

I have a spell active that…. Allows me to empathise more, like I can surmise what

you are thinking off of what you are feeling. I noted your desire to go and have

adventures upon Theresa Avenue through feeling your excitement when you saw

it, less so that I read your actual thoughts."

Andrea raised an eyebrow at him, "No ways is the great Julian Nerva, god above

men, using his magic to try and empathise with.... people?"

He gazed down at his pocket watch again and stood up with her large suitcase in

hand, "We're here."

The cart stopped as if he ordered it to, right outside a small stop with a large

group of students waiting outside.

She followed after him nervously, nerves that only seemed to get worse when

she noted the silence of the previously lively crowd upon Julian and her exit.

The group of young adults, the youngest of them looked no younger than

seventeen, parted like the Red Sea to allow Julian to walk through the stop

unimpeded, earning a few, "Good evening, Mr Nerva"'s as they left the stop.

Andrea heard a few comments about her but tried her best to ignore them, but it

was all too much for her first day, and it forced her to walk closer towards Julian,

whose cold demeanour was now all of a sudden the warmest thing in this

strange city.

"You're quite popular." She noted, as they walked past a few small houses and

apartments that had flags and banners on them, invoking thoughts of the frat and

sorority houses that Andrea always scoffed at, but a part of her kind of wanted to

also experience.

"No," Julian answered bluntly, "I am just their headmaster, and a Nerva. It's more

fear than popularity."

Andrea wanted to roll her eyes at him, but he had said it so matter-of-factly that

she could not help but take him seriously, and so she followed after him in

silence, walking past students either coming back from a night out, or heading

out for a night out, all of them going out of their way to acknowledge Julian. They turned a corner, and before them was a large wall that was only eclipsed in

height by a hedge, and was separated into two by a large metal gate that had a

turnstile next to it. Above the gate was an insignia of a woman's arm appearing

out of a body of water, and in her hand gripped tightly was a shining sword.

The guards at the gate, previously disinterested in the people who came and

went, were all on their feet when they saw Julian and scrambled to open the gate

and stand at attention as he barely acknowledged their greetings and entered the

campus. Andrea had believed that she had seen just about everything today, but

was left in awe at the school that greeted her. Before them were large fields of

grass that were designated by the paint on their surface as to which sport they

were for, with each corner of the massive field having courts of some sort to

provide another alternative, like basketball or netball or tennis, with the one

corner, to her eye, being filled with astro-turf most likely for field hockey.

The road that started from the gate curved around the field like the athletics

track did, elevated on its northern side by a hill that led to a massive pavilion

with a scoreboard firmly set upon its middle, with a set of Greek god

statues wielding javelins and shot-puts on either side of the large scoreboard.

"This is gate E." Julian told her, "It will be the closest gate to the Cabbage Carts,

and so whenever you wish to leave campus, I would advise taking this route."

He began to follow the road with her suitcase still in hand, somehow not even

close to being a little out of breath like her. Andrea followed him, noting the rows

of trees on their left that separated the road and fields from the large Olympic-

sized swimming pools to their right. They soon arrived at the pavilion and

walked beneath the Gods forever locked in competition, entering a pavilion that

had a sort of two-level suite to their left, and bars and restaurants to their right,

with the walls covered in dark brown boards filled with the names of individuals who had excelled at their respective sport. She searched long and hard but could

not find Julian's name there, "Huh…. I thought that the great Julian Nerva

would've at the very least gotten a spot on these boards."

She teased him, but he only reacted with the shaking of his head, "My schooling

was done in France, obviously."

Andrea sheepishly shrugged, "I forgot. So…. Are your names on the boards of the

French school?"

"No."

"Why not?" She pressed, and was slightly annoyed by the sigh that left his mouth,

"I don't much like sports…. well no, that is not true, I do. But they were beginning

to become all too time consuming, pulling me away from mastering my magic."

That answer made Andrea frown, "But… sports are supposed to be fun, y'know,

the kind of thing you look to do away from all the serious stuff, bruh"

He snorted at that, "Fun? You're in competition with other people, how could

that ever be just fun? Fifteen other boys on a rugby field, or eleven on a soccer

field, or even one other person in squash or tennis, makes no difference the

number, I never found any fun in losing."

"Well, I mean," Andrea scrambled for words, "It's more about the activity and….

Stuff, y'know, not just the result."

Julian scoffed as he opened the door for her to exit the pavilion and enter a

pathway made in the middle of a beautiful garden awash with an army of colours

that she had never seen on flowers before, "The result is everything, otherwise

why have one at all?"

She cocked her head at him, "You're a strange dude, do you know that? Like why

are you wired the way that you are?

"I do not know," he said, "But it was something that vexed your mother greatly, if

memory serves."

She usually was annoyed whenever he brought up her mother, but this time,

Julian had said it in a more…. Sad wouldn't be the right word, Andrea thought, she

couldn't imagine Julian Nerva being anything other than smug or bored.

"Did you love her?" she asked, after the two had walked through the pathway,

Andrea reaching out to touching a flower as large as her hand, its petals a

beautiful mix of white and blue. Julian did not answer her immediately, but even

just the day she had spent with him had taught her that he would eventually,

once he had thought over his words correctly, "I do not know." He finally said,

the pathway long gone as they entered a hallway to an interior that looked like

some fancy boarding school was made out of some medieval castle. There were

blue and red and yellow lockers pressed against light grey and white walls, with

corners either decorated with small statues of either griffons or sphinxes or

lions.

"She…. I do not remember spending so much time with someone and not being

bored by them." Julian nodded, "So perhaps I did, to an extent of sorts...."

Andrea stopped and looked up at him, looking into those big eyes that were too

pretty to be so empty and forced to meet his blank stare by the instinctual pull in

her gut, "Julian…. Are you my father?"

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