It started like any other day.
I woke up to the smell of something suspiciously close to burnt toast â which meant Father had once again tried to âsurpriseâ Mother with breakfast.
After the chaos in the kitchen subsided, my sister took me by the hand.
âCâmon, Arâcen! Letâs go into the village today! You can meet more kids your age!â
More kids⦠Joy.
We walked together through the winding path into the village. I kept my head low and my steps smaller than usual. I didnât dislike the village. It was warm. Familiar. But that didnât mean I wanted to talk to anyone in it.
Thatâs when it happened.
âHey... uh... Is your eye supposed to look like that?â
A boy had appeared out of nowhere. He had messy golden hair and an awkward sort of expression â like someone who accidentally touched a beehive and was trying to pretend they didnât.
I blinked. âWhat?â
âOne of your eyes⦠itâs red. Not, like, irritated red. Like⦠red red.â
Red?
My blood froze. I ran to the nearest window and stood on my toes to peer in.
And there it was. Staring back at me.
One of my eyes had turned a glowing shade of crimson â the same eye that had always been golden. Not even reddish-gold. Full-blown firetruck red.
Oh no. Oh no no no no no.
I quickly yanked down my bangs to cover the eye and turned around just in time to see the boy â later I'd know him as Deoh â still gawking like heâd just spotted a ghost.
âWhat are you even talking about?â My sisterâs voice cut through the moment like a hot knife through butter.
âHer eyeâdidnât you seeâ?â
THUD.
Deoh was now on the ground, holding his shin. Aspher stood over him, one leg still mid-swing.
âSheâs just fine. Maybe check your own eyes, sunshine.â
She turned to me, eyebrows raised slightly, but said nothing.
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We walked home together, and I didnât say a word the whole way. I could feel her eyes on me now and then, but she didnât push.
I was grateful for that.
I A V A I
âMom?â I asked once we were alone. âIs it⦠normal for eyes to change color suddenly?â
She was scrubbing something at the table, but her hands paused.
âWell⦠it can happen sometimes. Especially in children exposed to magic early. Think of it as⦠an enhancement.â
She turned toward me with a faint smile. âMaybe your body is adjusting. Accepting the mana around you.â
âSo⦠does that mean Iâve awakened?â
She tilted her head. âMaybe. You might start feeling stronger. Or faster. Maybe even smarter.â
Stronger, huh?
I squinted toward the living room⦠and locked onto my prey.
The sofa.
It looked big. Heavy. But no match for my new, magically enhanced self. Right?
I got into position, gritted my teeth, andâ
âNNGHâ!â
Nothing. Not even a budge. My arms started trembling from effort alone. My back made a weird pop noise.
ââ¦Ow.â
From behind me, my mother chuckled. âTrying to move the furniture already? I donât think the sofaâs ready for battle, dear.â
âNooo,â I groaned, flopping dramatically on top of it. âThe magic liedâ¦â
She just shook her head and ruffled my hair.
I A V A I
After the great sofa lifting incident (which resulted in a stubbed toe and a very smug chair in the corner), I decided that maybe... just maybe⦠my magical enhancement wasnât physical strength. Not unless the strength was in crying, because I was getting very good at that.
Still, life didnât slow down just because my eye glowed for a bit or I embarrassed myself by declaring war on a piece of furniture.
Not long after, my fatherâwho had the unnerving habit of treating even breakfast like a military operationâcalled me over with his trademark, "We need to talk."
That phrase had never meant good things in any world.
"You're about the right age to begin combat basics," he said, crossing his arms. "Your sister started at your age."
Of course she did.
I blinked at him. "I donât want to fight."
He looked like Iâd just said I wanted to become a potato for a living.
"It builds character," he grunted.
"It builds bruises," I countered in my head, but I kept my mouth shut. I didnât want to get conscripted just for being cheeky.
Mom stepped in to mediate, because sheâs the only one who could get away with telling him no without being challenged to a duel.
But my sister was another story.
One sunny afternoon, she came bouncing up to me, spear in hand, and excitement radiating off her like a second sun.
"Come on, just one round! It'll be fun! I promise Iâll go easy."
That was a lie. Or maybe not a lie, but a grave underestimation.
Ten seconds into our âlight spar,â I took a hesitant step forward and got accidentally poked in the stomach.
And by "poked," I mean I flew back three feet, landed flat on my back, and saw the silver moon in broad daylight.
My sister panicked. I cried. Dad looked like he was trying not to laugh. Mom dragged him away by the ear.
And that was the last time I ever agreed to touch a training weapon.
From that day on, I solemnly swore to stick to a different pathâone where stabbing was reserved for vegetables and burns came from the stove.
"Would you like to learn how to clean the pots?" Mom had asked me that same evening, trying not to hover too much after my âtragicâ duel.
"Do pots bleed?"
"...No?"
"Then yes. I will master them."
And so, I began learning cooking, cleaning, and other daily tasks from Mother. Turns out, peeling potatoes was a lot less painful than being used as a training dummy.
Still... sometimes, when no one was looking, Iâd glance at my sisterâs spear and wonder...
What if I hadnât fallen?
Then I'd remember the pain in my ribs and decide the potatoes were just fine.