Miranda's Tale
Jason Henderson
'We've thought about it, Miranda,' said Master Kenton. 'We talked for a long time about it, as you know.' Kenton had his pipe in his mouth and rocked back on his heels, a perfect caricature of the people of Denwyck. He squinted, for the sun was in his eyes, but he was too polite to move.
Miranda stood awkwardly, her arms cramping with the weight of the victuals she had just bought at the market. She looked past Master Kenton and saw the path out of the square, out of the village, out into the woods. The road from and to elsewhere. Miranda was glad for a place to hang her hat. But she had not expected the place to become—what would the word be—official? Permanent?
Miranda could envision the meeting without needing the answer, and it required no clairvoyance. She had wandered into the village of Denwyck because that was where the road had taken a wizard needing a village. And in she came, around the bend and through the wall, walking under trees that bloomed as if in defiance of the spiritual living death of Denwyck. And that first week, when the marauders came, casting spells and killing sheep, and she used her powers, the gossip started. Portly women hung over window sills and whispered audibly about the new wizard. New wizard! As if she'd come to fill that hole.
'We talked about it, and obviously everyone feels we've been long enough without a wizard,' Master Kenton continued.
'Yes.' Old Stephen must have died, what, eighty years ago, by all accounts? Before Miranda's wandering even began. Just her luck she'd land in a starving village.
'And of course we feel you have the qualifications.' Master Kenton stopped now to see if Miranda would respond. Miranda nodded, to acknowledge the compliment, such as it was. Master Kenton continued: 'Has the inn suited you?'
Miranda nodded, wanting to get her groceries home, 'Of course, thank you.' As if they were paying for it.
'Well, excellent, then,' said the old man. 'Jacob Deferish will be very happy to hear it. He has remarked that you have been a model, if silent, guest.'
This warranted a smile. 'Thank you again.'
'But I trust you would prefer not to remain at the inn, Master Deferish's hospitality notwithstanding. The council and I—we feel you should take Stephen's old house. It's not much, of course, and the place needs work. I understand there's quite a library. Haven't seen it myself, of course.'
Miranda couldn't help it. She wanted to say:
Jemuel had been shocked, she recalled, as she curled up by his fire and drank his chocolate, he in his ostentatious chair, a book resting beside him.
'You have never been placed in a village. Fascinating.' the older wizard had said 'You received your training at what age?'
'I was eight when the Circle found me.'
'Right,' he said, and he handed her a biscuit, and she kept from laughing, feeling as she did like a circus animal being handed a herring. But Jemuel was so sensitive. 'Eight, which is very late. Very late,' he repeated.
'Well, I wasn't available until then. I was shipwrecked with my father.'
'He was a wizard?'
'Not a very good one, but yes.' Miranda snuggled herself in the blanket Jemuel had given her. She felt comfortable. No way in the world she'd be here long. 'He taught me spells, but mostly it was my own ability that I worked on; I made up my own uses for magic. I didn't really know what I was doing. I talked to a few ghosts, of course, and had some unpleasant experiences with dead pets.'
'All part of growing up,' Jemuel said drily. He lied well for a man. No wizard pupil would be allowed anywhere near living subjects until she'd learned the ground rules; Miranda knew that, now. Father was careless, but he never could say no to her.
'We were returned to the mainland when I was eight and I was snatched up by the Circle.'
'Did you ever see your father again?'
'No.'
'And how did your training progress?' Jemuel's voice was always soft, like a father, but different. His voice made you want to go to sleep, but it made you talk instead.
'I was a difficult student, I think,' Miranda smiled, dunking her biscuit in her mug and nibbling at it. 'The Circle wasn't sure if I could be retrained, as they liked to call it, and God knows I fought them every inch of the way.'