Chapter 2 - A new world, a new name, a new life
Silverthread
The first thing she noticed was how heavy everything felt.
Her arms. Her eyelids. Even her breath.
She blinked againâslow, foggy, and uncertainâtrying to make sense of the soft, flickering light above her. A lantern, maybe? But the glow was too gentle, and the light looked natural; she was sure it wasnât fluorescent or electric.
Someone shifted nearby; she smelled herbs, but it wasnât the sharp, familiar tang of sandalwood or mugwort, but something sweeter, more floralâlavender? No, something like it, but stronger.
"Sheâs awake again," said a voice. The same woman from before.
The language wasnât the one she used to know. It wasnât any language she should have understood.
But she understood it anyway.
Like her mind was syncing with it word by word, thought by thought.
Hana tried to turn her head, but it only wobbled a little to the side. She felt warm fabric pressed to her cheek, a light blanket over her, and the heat of a nearby fire.
A manâs voice spoke nextâdeep, slow, with something like awe.
âSheâs quiet for a newborn. Sharp, too. You saw how she was watching the ceiling.â
âI told you,â said the woman again, laughing softly. âSheâs not going to be like the others.â
She tried to speak backâto form a sound, even just a humâbut her throat caught. Her tongue flopped like it didnât know how to move.
Frustration bloomed in her chest, quick and bright.
The fire crackled.
And then⦠the room shivered.
Only for a second. A faint pulse of air that rippled across the floor. The herbal bundles above the window trembled. One of the clay cups rattled on its tray.
Silence followed. Not startled silenceâreverent.
The woman knelt down and picked her up again.
This time, Hana saw her more clearly. Young, maybe mid-twenties, with tanned skin and sun-faded freckles. A healer? Her clothes looked practicalâlinen sleeves rolled to her elbows, apron stained with drying herbs.
But her eyes were what Hana focused on.
They werenât wide with fear.
They were shining with something else.
Wonder.
âSheâs already sensing,â the woman whispered. âI told you, Orlen. I told you she wasnât ordinary.â
The man, Orlen, stepped closer. His presence filled the doorway. Thick arms, broad shoulders, and rough hands that looked used to both hammer and sword.
He leaned in, studying Hana like she was a puzzle half-solved.
âDoesnât feel like magic,â he muttered. âFeels older.â
âSheâs a blessing,â the woman said, as if that ended the conversation.
Hana blinked again.
She didnât feel like a blessing.
She felt like a seventeen-year-old girl stuffed into a body that couldnât hold up her own neck. A soul newly fused with a demonâs essence. A walking miracleâor maybe a ticking clock.
Because underneath all this warmth and softness, she could still feel it.
The thing she had taken.
Him.
The demonâs soul slept deep in her chest, coiled like a serpent in hibernation.
She reached for it with her thoughts to check if it was still bound.
And the moment her mind touched itâ
A slow warmth answered.
Like a sun rising behind her ribcage.
She inhaled. It came out as a hiccup.
âShe moved,â the woman laughed, holding her closer. âOh, sheâs strong. Sheâs going to be strong.â
Orlen didnât look so certain. He scratched the back of his neck and grumbled, âJust hope she doesnât start talking by next week. Iâm not ready for that.â
Hours passed. Maybe more.
Hanaâs world was a slow blur of sensationâsoft voices, dim firelight, the occasional scent of broth or bitter herbs. She drifted between sleep and half-awareness, her body useless but her mind alert.
The woman, whose name she learned was Sera, was kind. Her voice stayed steady, her touch gentle but firm. She spoke to her constantlyâeven when Hana couldnât answer.
That helped.
Even when Hana couldnât move much or speak, hearing Sera's voice helped her anchor herself.
She started cataloging sounds: the way the fire crackled in pulses, the chime of glass bottles in a nearby cabinet, and the rustle of leather boots on wood. After that she started cataloging emotions: the warm ache of hunger in her stomach, the slight dizziness that came after someone fed her a few drops of something sweet, and the weight of sleep dragging her down like a blanket every few hours.
But what she focused on most was magic.
It was here.
Not the quiet spiritual signatures she knew from her worldânot incense, sigils, or channeling through herbs and chants.
This was denser, thicker in the air. Like humidity, but alive. It clung to objects. Ran beneath the floor. Glowed faintly when the fire dimmed.
She couldnât touch it directly yet.
But she could feel its shape.
Mana.
That was the word that kept forming in her head.
This world had mana, and if she was right, her body was already responding to it.
She could almost trace itâwhen her heartbeat quickened, when her thoughts aligned, there was a faint tingling in her chest, like invisible threads starting to braid together.
That tingling always brought a second echo.
The soul.
Her soul now.
And something else.
The power inside was still too large for her to grasp.
Night returned.
She was bundled in a softer blanket now, resting in a wooden cradle by the hearth. Sera and Orlen had gone quietâtalking in the next room. She couldnât see them, but their voices drifted back.
âWhat will you name her?â Orlen asked.
There was a pause. Then, Sera answered.
âEirian.â
The name struck her like a bell. Hana froze.
âShe doesnât look like a village child,â Sera said softly. âShe feels like light under pressure. Like steel waiting to be drawn.â
The genuine version of this novel can be found on another site. Support the author by reading it there.
Orlen grunted. âHope she doesnât bring trouble.â
âShe is the storm. Trouble wouldnât dare.â
Hana didnât understand the name at first.
Eirian. A word of old magic, from a language she did not yet know.
It meant silver flame.
***
The light above her was gentler than the one she remembered.
It came through wooden slats in the roof, soft and golden, filtered by what mightâve been linen curtains. The shadows it cast swayed gently, dancing to a rhythm she didnât recognize, like leaves fluttering in a wind she couldnât hear. For a long moment, Eirianâstill Hana, still herselfâlay perfectly still in her cradle, letting the world unfold.
She tried to roll. Her body wobbled helplessly to the side. Her armâher tiny armâtwitched, barely enough to lift from the blanket before gravity reclaimed it.
A grimace tugged at the edge of her mind. She hadnât expected this part to be so frustrating. She was used to nimble fingers drawing perfect circles in salt, steady hands laying down rune cloth, and the fluid precision of years of learned ritual. This body? It drooled. It hiccupped. And worst of all, it wouldnât cooperate.
Still. She breathed in.
Something about the air told her she wasnât on Earth anymore.
Not just the scentâthough that was different too, like firewood and herbs and sun-dried mossâbut the texture of it. It had weight. A current.
Mana.
She couldnât touch it yet. But it surrounded her.
A thread here. A strand there. It pooled beneath the floorboards and flowed behind the walls like heat behind stone. Not refined. Not focused. Just present, in a way that no city apartment or school gymnasium could match.
Hanaâno, Eirianâfocused inward.
She hadnât lost herself in the transition. Her soul was intact. That much she was sure of.
And somewhere inside it, deeper than her thoughts could reach, was the other soul.
The demonâs.
She didnât try to interact with it, not yet. She could feel that it was resting. Wounded maybe, or suppressed by the strange rules of this body. But it still burned. A heat at the center of her chest that pulsed in time with her heartbeat, only half-awake.
She blinked slowly and let her eyes adjust to the room.
Thatched ceiling. White-plastered walls. A hearth near the far end of the room, stone-built, with a cookpot hanging over low coals. The soft murmur of a wind chime from outside. She could just barely see the curve of a doorway and the edge of a shelf filled with folded linen and small glass bottles.
A home. Someoneâs real home.
Footsteps moved nearbyâlight, practiced. Sera.
Eirian had come to know the rhythm of her steps already, even in the short time since⦠her rebirth. It was strange how quickly the mind adapted. Her old life had operated on schedules and ritualsâclass, meals, prayer sessions, shop hours. Now her world was measured in feedings, warmth, and the cadence of the woman who picked her up with a humming tune every morning.
Sera appeared in the doorway, sleeves rolled, a strip of cloth tied around her forehead to keep her hair back.
âThereâs my little star,â she cooed, kneeling beside the cradle. Her fingers brushed gently over Eirianâs cheek. âYouâre wide awake today.â
Eirian blinked at her.
She wanted to answer. Something simple. Yes. Or Iâm trying to understand everything, and I canât move my arms right. But all that came out was a soft soundâhalf breath, half gurgle.
Still, Sera seemed delighted.
âYouâll speak soon,â she whispered, lifting her carefully. âI know it. Youâve got eyes like someone whoâs already seen too much.â
She sat in a chair near the fire and cradled Eirian against her shoulder. The warmth of her skin, the gentle swayâit was oddly soothing. Like the spiritual resonance baths her mother used to prepare for her after intense rituals. Familiar, even though it wasnât.
Her thoughts wanderedâinevitablyâhome.
Was it even still there?
The moment she'd taken the demonâs soul into herself, everything had gone dark. There had been no painâjust fire, then silence, then the overwhelming sensation of falling. A soul untethered. The transition had felt instant, but time in soulspace was strange. Elastic.
Was her mother still holding her body? Screaming her name? Repeating chants over and over, trying to draw her back?
Or had she thought Eirian died?
She had been impulsive when she took the decision without thinking about her mother; now, looking back, she realized that maybe she hadnât made a good choice.
The thought lodged like a splinter in her chest.
Her mother had been strict, yes. Unyielding at times. But sheâd also loved her fiercely. Youâre my brightest student, sheâd once said, tracing Hanaâs forehead with a thumb dipped in ink. Youâll surpass me one day, and Iâll be proud to step aside.
And now, what? She was just⦠gone?
Eirian closed her eyes and reached with her soul. She remembered the techniques her mother taught her, the ones that were for linking.
When a spirit was adrift, when a soul needed to find home, her mother taught her how to create a lineâa thread of thought and memory and emotionâand cast it like a net.
She gathered her mana. She reached outward, and when that didnât work, she did it upward, but it hit nothing, like trying to shout across a canyon that had no far side.
Her throat tensed.
She didnât cry. She couldnâtânot the way babies did. But something inside her twisted. That same emptiness she used to feel as a child when her mother left to perform longer rituals alone. The ache of separation.
Sera, sensing something, adjusted her hold and started humming.
Eirian breathed in. Again. Slowly. The warmth in her chest flickered.
And something inside her responded.
The demon soul, but it didnât speak; she could feel its fire curled gently around her core, like a silent acknowledgment.
Eirian stared at the flickering shadows on the ceiling. Somewhere beyond the walls of this cottage, a world waited.
But today, she would lie still. She would watch. She would learn.
Because she hadnât let go to give up.
She had survived.
***
The sky outside turned silver before dawn.
Eirian didnât sleep muchânot in the way babies were expected to. Her body drifted in and out of shallow dozing, but her mind never shut off. Every flicker of wind against the window or whisper of leaves caught her attention. Every footstep Sera made across the floor became part of a new internal map: one step toward the hearth, two to the shelf, pauseâmortar grinding, herbs again.
She wanted to remember everything.
Because it kept her from thinking about what sheâd lost.
But that night, in the moment just before dawn, her control slipped.
Sleep took her deeper than it had before.
And she dreamed.
Not of this place, with its flickering hearthlight and wooden beamsâbut of the shop, of her motherâs world, of her home.
Jangâs Spirit Remedies & Blessings stood exactly where it always hadâin the narrow alley beside the closed-down bookstore and the overly bright nail salon. The hand-painted sign swayed gently in the wind. The charms above the door whispered and spun, casting dappled light on the sidewalk.
But something was wrong.
There was no sound.
No smell of incense.
She stepped forwardâthough she had no legs, no form.
The door was ajar. She pushed it open with a breath.
Inside, everything was too clean. The floor was polished. The shelves were full. But the herbs were dry. The candles were unlit.
And there, at the back of the room, her mother stood.
Paintbrush in hand. Hair twisted up in a jade pin. Wearing her ritual apron. Eyes closed.
Silent.
âMama,â Eirian whispered.
But her voice made no sound.
She stepped closer, trying to reach out, but her mother didnât turn.
âMama, Iâm hereââ
The figure began to dissolve, like sand carried by wind, drifting into the empty air.
âNoâ!â
She lurched forward, reachingâ
And woke.
Her body twitched in the cradle. Her small hands clenched, though they barely curled into fists. Her breath came in short huffsâpanicked, fast. A hiccup hit her chest. Her lungs ached, even in this tiny frame.
She wanted to scream. Not because she was scared of this placeâbut because sheâd left her mother behind.
I didnât mean to leave her.
The fire stirred slightly.
She exhaled slowly, and she felt how her chest calmed, even if her mother was out of reach⦠Hana had brought a piece of her, all of her knowledge, the training, and even her will. That wouldnât vanish. Her mother had passed on more than blood. Sheâd taught her how to stand in a world that didnât understand her. How to survive without being seen. How to speak in quiet magic.
And hereânowâEirian would do the same.
She would grow, but first she would learn how this world worked and maybe find a way back, if not to return, then to tell her mother she lived.
That she chose to live.
The door creaked gently sometime later, and Sera entered the room with a soft cloth in her hands. Her expression shifted when she saw Eirian awake again.
âOh, you poor thing,â she murmured, reaching down. âBad dreams already?â
She picked her up and held her close. Eirianâs body sagged into the warmth.
âI wish I knew what goes on in that little head of yours,â Sera whispered. âYou always look so serious. Like youâre thinking more than I ever will.â
Eirian made a soft noise. A half-sigh, half-hiccup.
She couldnât say anything yet, but she would, sooner than anyone expected.
Because this world was saturated in mana, and she could feel it responding to her even nowâbuzzing faintly at her skin, like threads brushing over cloth.
Sheâd need to learn its shape.
And then twist it into something she could use.
Because somewhere, in a different worldâbetween sigils and the scent of sandalwoodâher mother was still lighting candles for her daughter.
And Eirian would light one back.