By midday, my pack started to feel really, really heavy. I'd never carried this much weight on my shoulders before. Well, not the physical kind anyway. Goben eagerly joined me with a dramatic exhale when I stopped and heaved my pack onto the ground. He was tall and lean, but not particularly muscular. He threw his own pack down and sat on it, letting out a groan. "I don't know which hurts more, my shoulders or my feet."
Considering how much running I normally did, my feet were just fine, but I didn't want to rub that in his face. I was just glad he'd agreed to come with me in the first place.
I pulled two carrots out of the pack and tossed one to him. He caught it easily and bit off a mouthful. We sat there crunching on carrots in the middle of an empty plain. It didn't seem real. It felt like the world around us had been erased, and all that was left was the two of us. And grass.
Siena once told me about how much she loved lying in the middle of an open field, just staring up at the sky and feeling nature all around her. I didn't feel any of that.
"It's lonely out here," Goben said, echoing my thoughts.
"I miss the trees."
"And the squirrels," he added.
"Especially the red ones."
He chuckled and made a rodent face at me, making me laugh.
When I was five, I was enamored with squirrels. They were all over the forest—gray ones in one part of the woods, and red ones in another—always chittering and jumping around the treetops. My favorite, of course, were the red ones. I thought they were part of our family because, obviously, the red hair. I would talk to them and give them little seeds. I began carrying seeds in a little pouch everywhere I went, just in case I ran into a hungry squirrel sister. One day I had gotten tired while wandering around, and I decided to curl up at the base of a tree for a nap. My parents had gotten worried and began looking for me. They found me, still asleep, covered in squirrels as they raided my seed pouch. They claimed that the squirrels had adopted me, and from then on, "Squirrel" had become their pet name for me.
"We should get going." I sighed and stood up.
"Aww," Goben groaned. "But I wasn't done committing all this empty space to memory yet."
I hoisted the pack onto my shoulders and pulled him to his feet. Then it was back to slogging through the endless expanse of grass. It was interminably boring. The sun trekked its way slowly across the sky. Almost as slow as our own progress.
"I don't think I've spent this much time with you since we were kids," Goben commented. "It's sort of nice. Boring, but nice."
"Thanks a lot." I pushed him, and he stumbled sideways.
"You're always running off after breakfast. I mean, you literally run off."
I laughed. "Yes, it's part of the routine that keeps me sane."
"What do you do after running?"
"I practice controlling my gift."
"Show me." He looked at me expectantly.
"Right now?"
"You have someplace else you need to be?"
Why not? I flicked out my index finger and produced a solitary flame.
He faked an exaggerated yawn.
I flicked all five digits outward, each flickering with its own little flame.
"Cute," he said, but the slight twist of his mouth indicated he was unimpressed.
"Cute? It took me almost a year to figure out how to do this without making one big fire!" I closed my hand, which snuffed the small flames, then flung a quick little fireball at him.
"Hey!" He brushed sparks off his shirt. "I'm just a bored big brother wanting to see something impressive. What else do you have?"
I thought for a moment. "Well, I have been working on something new. Not sure I've got it right yet."
"All right, let's see it."
"Okay, here we go." I stopped walking and set my pack down. Then I tipped my head back and closed my eyes.
"Dramatic much?"
I peeked at him. "Shush."
My arms drifted away from my body, hands relaxed. I pushed the warmth out in all directions in a smooth, steady flow. When it felt even, I increased the intensity and poured everything out at once.
"Is it working?" I opened my eyes.
His mouth hung open. "Sember, you're on fire . . . everywhere! Your entire body is a torch! Even your eyes are on fire!"
I grinned, and his eyes focused on my flaming teeth.
"Okay, I'm officially impressed," he said with wide eyes.
I snuffed the flames and searched the ground for burning grass. After reabsorbing those with my foot, I looked back at him.
His head tilted to one side. "Ever wonder why our clothes don't catch fire?"
"Sometimes. I guess that's how our gifts work?" I examined my shirt sleeve. "It's a good thing too. I'd hate to think how many embarrassing moments I'd have otherwise."
"Nah, your practice is really paying off. You're pretty amazing, Squirrel."
I felt a goofy smile spread on my face. I wasn't used to compliments about my fire abilities. It was usually, "Thank goodness she didn't burn the house down."
I put an arm around his waist for a quick side-squeeze. "Thanks, Goben."
If you could create fire, what would be your favorite trick? Preferably one that allows you to vote at the same time. ;-)
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Sember (Forestfolk, Book 2)
AventuraLittle Sember stole readers' hearts in "Siena." Join her now, ten years later, as she embarks on a quest of her own to save her people, and to finally accept her true self along the way. - - - Sixteen and struggling is not how Sember wants to descri...