Home / Fantasy / THE SEVENTH FRACTURE / Chapter 36 — The Walk North
Chapter 36 — The Walk North
Author: Cael Voss
last update2026-06-19 21:45:11

They left Callow before the light fully changed.

Essie stood at the gate the way she always did, arms crossed, watching the road in both directions out of habit rather than necessity. She'd packed them food without being asked — the same grain-and-root mix Drav favored, wrapped in cloth that had clearly been used for this purpose many times before.

"You'll come back through," she said to Kaelen. Not quite a question, not quite the same finality as before. "I don't know," he said honestly. "Hm,"
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  • Chapter 40 — The Second Reaching

    She came that night.Not the gradual frequency from the road, building slowly enough to prepare for. This time the ground simply shifted—a single deep pulse that ran through the orchard like a held breath finally released, and Mira sat up from where she'd been resting against the tree before anyone had time to react."She's here," Mira said. Her voice was steady but her eyes had already gone distant, the particular stillness Kaelen recognized from the road, except faster this time, the transition happening in seconds instead of minutes.Dava was beside her instantly, hand finding Mira's shoulder. "Find the edge," she said. "Don't go past it without me holding you." "I'm trying," Mira said, and something in her voice had changed already, gone thinner, like she was speaking from slightly further away than her body actually was. "She's not testing this time. She's not just reaching to check if I'm real.""What is she doing," the Witness asked, her cane forgotten on the ground beside her

  • Chapter 39 — Past the Edge

    Three days passed in the orchard before Dava said it was time.Kaelen had watched the pattern settle into something almost peaceful — mornings spent practicing the edge-finding, afternoons resting in the strange directionless light, evenings when Mira sat with Dava and asked questions that ranged from technical to painfully simple. He'd used the time to send word to Drav twice through Essie's relay, brief confirmations that nothing had changed, that the work continued.On the fourth morning, Dava said: "Today we go past it."Mira nodded, settling into her now-familiar position against the tree's base. She'd grown more comfortable with the orchard's strangeness — the directionless light, the ash that avoided certain patches of ground, the sense of being inside something that was also somehow inside her."How far past," she asked. "Not far," Dava said. "Just enough to feel the difference between edge and depth. I'll be touching you the whole time. If I feel you start to lose the thread

  • Chapter 38 — The First Lesson

    The clearing near the living tree felt different at night.Kaelen had expected darkness, the way the rest of the Silent Fields went dark in predictable patterns. Instead, the orchard held a faint ambient glow he hadn't noticed during daylight visits — not light exactly, more like the visual equivalent of the frequency he'd felt on the road, the Accumulated Elegy made faintly perceptible at the edge of vision.Mira sat near the tree's base, close enough to touch the bark if she extended her hand. Dava sat across from her, the same configuration as the clearing earlier, except now the darkness made everything feel more contained, more deliberate."First lesson," Dava said. "Before anything else. How to stop." "Stop what," Mira asked. "Carrying. Absorbing. Whatever word feels right to you." Dava's bark-covered hand rested against the tree beside her, a casual gesture that Kaelen suspected wasn't casual at all. "Everyone who teaches this skips the stopping and goes straight to the holdi

  • Chapter 37 — What Dava Knows

    Dava led them to a clearing behind the living tree that Kaelen hadn't seen on his previous visits.Small, maybe twenty feet across, the dead trees forming a natural circle around it. The ground here was different from the rest of the orchard — not turned earth like the gap around the living tree's roots, but something flatter, more deliberate, like it had been used for a purpose over a long period of time."I practice here," Dava said, noticing his attention. "If practice is the right word. I don't know if there's a better one." She gestured for them to sit. The ground was ash-free in the clearing, the same way it was ash-free near her feet wherever she walked. "It's where I learned what carrying actually feels like, instead of just theorizing about it."Mira sat across from her. The Witness and Kaelen took positions slightly outside the immediate circle, present but giving the space its proper center. "Tell me what happened on the road," Dava said. "Not the summary. The actual sensa

  • Chapter 36 — The Walk North

    They left Callow before the light fully changed.Essie stood at the gate the way she always did, arms crossed, watching the road in both directions out of habit rather than necessity. She'd packed them food without being asked — the same grain-and-root mix Drav favored, wrapped in cloth that had clearly been used for this purpose many times before."You'll come back through," she said to Kaelen. Not quite a question, not quite the same finality as before. "I don't know," he said honestly. "Hm," she said, which from Essie was practically a paragraph. She looked at Mira. "Whatever you're carrying," she said. "Carry it like you've got somewhere to put it down eventually. Even if eventually is a long way off." Mira looked at her for a moment, then nodded. It seemed to land somewhere true, the way Essie's plain statements tended to.They walked.The road to the orchard ran northwest, away from the corridor's most active stretch, through fields that had gone fully into the grey-orange perm

  • Chapter 35 — What Drav Heard

    The crystal connection took longer than usual to establish.Kaelen sat in Essie's back room with the cracked casing in his hands and waited through the calibration sequence, longer here than at Millford, the equipment older and less reliable. When the connection finally opened, Drav's voice came through thin and slightly distorted, but it was Drav's voice — steady, present, the surfacing quality from this morning fully gone now."You're at Callow," Drav said. Not a question. "How do you know that." "Essie's signal frequency is different from mine. I've worked this line for eleven years. I know what every station sounds like." A pause. "The fifteen turned around four hours ago. Came within sight of the circle, stood there a while, then walked north again. Didn't approach. Didn't speak." "Veylan called them back," Kaelen said. "I assumed as much," Drav said. "Wanted to hear you confirm it." Kaelen told him what had happened — the road, the Sleeper reaching, Mira carrying more, the conv

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