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In the Shadow of Her Spark

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Synopsis
In the serene border village of Dophis, sixteen year old Zeppelin Isa Okta Nur Indah Sari enjoys a harmonious life under the guidance of her quirky witch master. Beloved by the villagers for her friendly and kind nature, she aspires to master magic; however, her own magical abilities have been suppressed, leaving her potential dormant due to reasons she cannot comprehend. Unbeknownst to her, she harbors a perilous secret: a curse linked to an obscured history and a legacy with the potential to bring the world to ruin if the truth comes to light. When a sudden attack from an enigmatic foe disrupts her peaceful life, Zepp unleashes a forbidden magic, signaled by crimson lightning and the echo of a power long concealed. Her adventure commences not with a summons to action, but with the curse of reconnection. Even love has the power to ruin the world if it flows through blood.
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Chapter 1 - Chapter 1: The Apprentice’s Daily Life

The morning sun poured through the cracks in the wooden shutters, casting delicate golden beams across the cool stone floor. In the heart of the Whispering Vale—an ancient forest in the remote borderlands of Kholjr Kingdom, where civilization grew thin and wild magic ran deep—stood a crooked tower. Its weathered stones, quarried from the long-dead Draetrotus Empire, leaned ever so slightly to the left, as if caught in perpetual contemplation of the slowly shifting ley lines beneath its foundation.

The tower bore the unmistakable marks of a mage's dwelling: crystalline formations jutting from between stones where ambient magic had crystallized over decades, and windows that seemed to shimmer with more than mere glass. Runes, so old their original language had been forgotten by all but the most scholarly of mages, spiraled up its walls in fading silver script.

At its base, nestled beside a vibrant garden that defied the natural seasons, was a quaint cottage. The garden itself was a wonder—medicinal herbs from the southern Sunlands grew beside frost berries that should have withered in anything warmer than winter, while bioluminescent mushrooms from the Deep Caverns cast an ethereal glow that never dimmed, not even in full daylight. A careful observer might notice that the plants arranged themselves in precise geometric patterns, following the invisible currents of magical energy that flowed through this place like underground rivers.

Inside that cottage, a girl stirred awake in the gentle embrace of dawn.

"Mmgh... five more minutes..." A hand emerged from beneath the soft, patchwork blanket—each square sewn from fabric that had once belonged to traveling mages who'd sought shelter here over the years. She lazily swatted at a shimmering crystal that floated just out of reach, pulsing with a soft chime every five seconds. This enchanted little nuisance, carved from resonant quartz found only in the Singing Mountains, had clearly been designed with the cruel intent of tormenting her. The crystal's tune was allegedly calibrated to match the optimal frequencies for a mage's circadian rhythm, though Zepp had her doubts about that particular claim.

"If I had magic," the girl muttered as she wrestled with the folds of her blanket, her eyes still closed, "you'd be fried by now."

Her name was Zeppelin Isa Okta Nur Indah Sari—a name that spoke of the old traditions, when children of magical bloodlines were given names from all the cardinal directions to ensure their power would never be bound to a single element. Thankfully, most simply called her Zepp. At sixteen, she was an apprentice in the truest sense, though perhaps not in the way most would expect. Her smooth, short black hair framed her face like a halo, and her warm, dark eyes held a gentle glow that seemed to put even the most nervous village children at ease.

Every now and then, when she was certain no one was watching—not even the household spirits that Selva insisted dwelt in every corner—those eyes flickered with a crimson glimmer. Just for an instant. Just long enough to remind her that something deep within her was decidedly not normal. In the old texts, such a phenomenon had a name: Ignis Occultus—the hidden fire. It was spoken of only in whispers, and only by those brave enough to study the forbidden archives.

Once she finally roused herself and dressed, Zepp moved through the cozy kitchen with the confidence of someone who had performed these tasks countless times before. The kitchen itself was a study in practical magic: copper pots that heated themselves when filled, a pantry whose shelves seemed to stretch further back than the cottage walls should allow, and a water basin fed by an ever-flowing spring that originated somewhere in the tower's mysterious depths.

Her plain white tunic—standard apprentice garb throughout the Three Kingdoms—fit snugly against her form, especially across her chest. The fabric had been treated with subtle protective wards; nothing dramatic, just enough to turn aside a blade or soften a fall. She gracefully tied up her satchel, a leather bag that had been her master's once, and before that, her master's master's. The worn leather bore faint traces of mana from all its previous owners, creating a patina that no new bag could replicate.

She glanced in the mirror—a piece of polished silver-glass imported from the floating cities of Aethermoor—and a wave of relief washed over her as she saw her eyes were their normal dark brown again.

Good.

The reflection showed more than just her appearance. For those who knew how to look, mirrors of this quality revealed the subtle aura that surrounded every living being. Most people glowed with soft, steady colors that matched their temperament and magical affinity. Zepp's aura flickered between warm gold and something else—something darker that seemed to pulse like a hidden heartbeat.

Later that morning, she was sweeping the path near the garden, her heart warmed by the familiar chorus of forest birds that seemed drawn to this place. The birds were not entirely ordinary, of course. Few things in the Whispering Vale were. Some bore feathers that shimmered with residual magic, others sang in harmonies that could influence the growth of nearby plants, and the cleverer ones had learned to mimic simple cantrips they'd observed over the years.

A gentle joy filled her chest as she greeted them with a wave. Zepp was naturally friendly, perhaps overly so, at least in her master's eyes. Despite Selva's repeated warnings about maintaining proper mystical distance, Zepp often trekked to the nearby village of Dophis bearing treats from their magical garden. She guided lost travelers to safety along the forest paths that shifted with the phases of the moon, and listened intently to the ramblings of elders who reminisced about the "golden days" when the kingdom was whole and magic flowed as freely as water.

The villagers of Dophis recognized her, and more importantly, they liked her. The baker saved her day-old pastries, children waved from windows as she passed, and even the village guard—usually suspicious of anyone connected to magic—tipped their caps respectfully when she appeared.

And she liked them just as fiercely, in the way that someone who had never known blood family might cherish the warmth of found community.

Not that her master showed any concern for these social interactions. Selva maintained a position of complete indifference toward what she called "mortal entanglements." The truth was, Selva seemed largely indifferent to most things, approaching the world with the casual detachment of someone observing mildly interesting insects. The irony, of course, was that Selva herself had been born in Dophis, though she spoke of those days with the same emotional investment one might reserve for discussing yesterday's weather.

Speaking of which...

"You're doing it wrong again," came the voice from above, delivered with the same tone one might use to comment on the color of grass.

Zepp glanced up with a resigned sigh. There floated Selva, her master, suspended upside down in midair as if gravity were merely a suggestion, which, for someone of her caliber, it essentially was. Her expression held all the emotional investment of someone watching paint dry. Selva's meditation pose was a technique called the Inverse Contemplation, though knowing Selva, she might have just been bored and decided floating upside down seemed marginally more interesting than sitting normally.

"It's sweeping, Master," Zepp replied, her gentle smile unwavering. "There's no wrong way to sweep."

"You're using a southward stroke. Eastward encourages the flow of mana through the garden's root network and aligns with the morning's natural energy currents."

Zepp tilted her head in confusion, genuinely trying to understand. This was the eternal puzzle of her apprenticeship: learning magical theory when she herself seemed to possess no magic at all. "Even if I don't have magic?"

"The spirits of place hear everything, see everything, remember everything," Selva replied with the casual air of someone discussing the weather. "Your actions create ripples in the ambient field, whether you can sense them or not. A trained mage learns to make those ripples harmonious rather than chaotic." She paused, examining her fingernails with mild interest. "Or so the theory goes. I've never actually asked the spirits their opinion on sweeping techniques."

"Then I hope they heard my sigh just now," Zepp murmured, a hint of mischief dancing in her voice.

Still, she adjusted her sweeping direction. Even though Selva was strange, aloof, and maddeningly vague about everything—including the true nature of the seal that supposedly bound Zepp's latent magical abilities—she was family. The only family Zepp had ever known.

The seal itself was another mystery that Selva treated with characteristic indifference. When pressed, she would shrug and mention it was "probably necessary" and had been placed when Zepp was barely old enough to walk. But protective against what? And placed by whom? Selva's response was usually a noncommittal "hmm" followed by a change of subject, as if the entire matter was only marginally more interesting than watching clouds drift by.

Sometimes, in the quiet hours before dawn, Zepp dreamed of a boy with her face but different eyes—eyes that blazed with unconcealed power. A twin, perhaps, or a reflection of what she might have been in another life. Someone she had been separated from long ago, in circumstances that remained frustratingly opaque. In these dreams, she could feel magic flowing through her like a second bloodstream, wild and joyous and utterly natural.

But dreams, she reminded herself, were simply dreams. At least... for now.

Some minutes later, after that

The sound of the tower door exploding open shattered the morning's peaceful rhythm like a stone through glass.

BANG!

Selva descended with the casual grace of someone for whom dramatic entrances were simply another Tuesday. Her robes—deep blue fabric shot through with threads of actual starlight, a gift from the Sky Weavers of the Northern Reaches—settled around her with practiced ease as her feet touched the ground.

"Errand. You're going." She delivered the announcement with the same enthusiasm one might reserve for reading a grocery list.

Zepp blinked in surprise, setting aside her broom. "The village again?"

"Dophis's healer sent word through the message-birds. They need nightshade root and blood lily petals. Apparently, there's been an outbreak of shadow fever among the children." Selva examined a speck of dust on her sleeve with more interest than she'd shown for the medical emergency. Shadow fever was no trivial ailment—it was a magical malady that could prove fatal if not treated with the right combination of ingredients. "And I'm busy."

"By busy, you mean..." Zepp prompted, knowing the answer already.

"Making tea and cursing the ravens that keep stealing my focusing crystals, yes."

This was a long-standing battle that Selva approached with characteristic nonchalance. The ravens of the Whispering Vale had developed an unfortunate appreciation for shiny magical artifacts, and Selva's collection of focusing crystals proved irresistible to their acquisitive nature. Rather than being properly outraged by this theft, Selva seemed to view it as a mildly amusing game of wits that helped break up the monotony of her days.

With a giggle, Zepp grabbed her satchel, automatically checking that it contained the basic supplies she always carried: a water flask, some travel bread, a few healing herbs, and a small knife that had been her first gift from Selva years ago. "Alright. I'll head out now. Should I stop by the bakery?"

"You always do." There was neither approval nor disapproval in Selva's voice, just the mild acknowledgment of an established pattern.

"Can't help it if Mr. Harth bakes with love." And indeed, the baker's pastries carried just a hint of emotional magic—nothing powerful, just enough warmth and comfort to brighten anyone's day.

Selva made a sound that might have been agreement or might have been mild indigestion, then regarded her apprentice with the same detached interest she might show a moderately curious beetle. "Just don't charm half the village again."

"Hey! I'm just nice!"

"You're too nice. Someday, someone will try to take advantage of that." The observation was delivered with the casual tone of someone pointing out that rain tends to make things wet—obvious, inevitable, and not particularly worth getting worked up about.

Zepp paused for a moment at the door, her smile fading just slightly. When she spoke again, her voice carried a quiet certainty that made Selva's eyes narrow with sudden attention.

"If they do," she said softly, her gaze steady and strangely adult, "I'll handle it."

Something flickered in those dark eyes—not the crimson glimmer this time, but something else. Something that suggested hidden depths, like still water that might prove far deeper than expected.

Selva watched her apprentice depart down the winding path that led toward Dophis, her expression maintaining its characteristic bland neutrality. The girl walked with the easy confidence of someone who had traveled this route hundreds of times, but Selva's trained eye noted the subtle changes—the way the forest spirits whispered more urgently in the trees, the way the morning light seemed to bend slightly around Zepp's form.

If only Zepp knew what truly slumbered within her. Though honestly, Selva mused with typical detachment, the girl would probably handle that revelation about as well as she handled everything else—with irritating optimism and an alarming tendency to see the best in everyone.

In the distance, beyond the girl's sight, storm clouds were gathering on the horizon. Not weather-clouds, but something far more ominous. The kind of disturbance that made old mages wake in cold sweats and check the strength of their protective wards.

Change was coming to the Whispering Vale, whether they were ready for it or not.