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Saturday, December 20, 2025

Serial Saturday: "The Last Inkweaver" Part 5


Part 5
"Dreams And Delirium"

The sun had sunk to the very top of the Academy steeples as I made my way across the Square. On the other end of the wide, central space stood the Council Building and the adjoining Great Hall, where all of Mirrorvale's social Gatherings were held. The Council Building, itself, held the offices for all the municipal authorities, the town records meticulously maintained since its founding, and all the laws that kept things running smoothly.

Around and between these were the common industry buildings: the tinker, the tailor, the baker, the butcher, the carpenter, the apothecary, and various other skilled workers whose job it was to create and maintain Factory-made items according to Factory standards. Mirrorvale was unusual, in that it was too far away from the closest Factory. Long ago, the town council had effectively argued against stripping dozens of buildings away for the sake of one large, unseemly warehouse, all in the name of "aesthetic." There had even been a few farms at first, tasked with growing crops and raising animals to provide our own food--but it wasn't long before the Civil Authority got wind of our self-sufficiency and stepped in, saying that everything grown and raised in Mirrorvale still had to be delivered to the Factory for processing. This kind of distant oversight didn't last long--the families all packed up and left after the second "Factory reaping." While this was happening, the Civil Authority got wind of all the other independent industries going on, and very soon, every one of our shops had to be beholden to the Factories in some way. The shoemaker could continue to receive shipments of shoes from the Factory to sell, and in the meantime repair any worn-out shoes until the next set arrived. The baker could continue to make her loaves, cakes, muffins, and rolls according to Factory recipes; Mistress Needle could serve as Mirrorvale's tailor, sewing dresses and trousers with Factory patterns and repair those clothes as necessary--and even though we had avoided the usual requirement of a centralized Factory Market, all the little shops around the Square functioned as one.

By-and-large, Mirrorvale could continue to pass itself off as a thriving municipality, even though just about everyone who lived here ended up dying here. Sure, we might see a few families arrive to settle here, and it might happen a few times in the course of a generation, but either they stayed long enough to earn their spot in Mirrorvale's long and tradition-laden history, or they didn't stay at all.

I gave a wry glance at the vacant inn set up at the end of the row of shops. It was built back when the City Planners believed Mirrorvale would become a thoroughfare to the western coast of Hemptor, just like all the other towns... but not even Mirrorvale's residents used the long trail to the Old Dockyard, anymore. Rather than being a gateway, this town had become very much an "end of the line" sort of place. In a way, it seemed like we had found a safe, predictable rhythm a long time ago, and never left it.

I trudged up the small hill at the edge of Mirrorvale proper, over the small copse that separated that half from all the houses where people lived and such, and turned around to get the best view of the town. I could see all the way from the inn and the carriage house across the street, back to the Academy and the Council Building--and just beyond that, The Wall.

I shivered when I saw the way the sun's rays seemed to pass beyond it, leaving the whole structure in shadow. The Wall had stood there, marking that particular edge of the town's boundaries, for as long as I could remember--but the only reason I had ever been given for its existence was "it stands as a memorial to the day the Wordspinners left." To hear some people talk, the Wordspinners themselves had built The Wall, as some kind of warning, or a threat, maybe--though what sort of threat could a wall really pose?

I gave myself a little shake to break the thrall that had come over me, and marched down the hill toward the clusters of stately, identical houses, grouped in sets of ten or twelve around circular communal spaces we called "loops."

Various neighbors moved around the outdoor spaces, gathering up their children, or getting one last walk in before the sun went down completely. I waved at a couple of neighbors who stood at the front of their loop.

"Good evening, Callista!" called the one whose name was Dorthy Galvesyn, a matronly sort with two brown braids hanging down her back.

I smiled and returned the wave. "Good evening!"

The other, a pinch-faced woman with close-cropped pewter-colored hair, scowled discreetly at me. Mrs. Cordelia hated being interrupted, and she loved to tell long-winded stories and complain about every little ache, pain, and inconvenience.

"Anyway," she resumed speaking as I passed, "I've just been to the apothecary for a sleeping tonic."

Dorthy clicked her tongue in sympathy. "Oh, is your back bothering you again?"

I had crossed the street already and reached the edge of my home loop, and I still caught Mrs. Cordelia's reply.

"It's not my back so much as a plague of memories that afflicts me," she said in a tone that sounded more boastful than pitiful. "Oh, my troubled mind will not let me rest!"

I entered the loop for my home and stopped. Some part of what Mrs. Cordelia said caught my attention and almost drove me back toward the women. If I didn't know any better, I could almost think that Mrs. Cordelia's "mental malady" was not too far off from the inconvenient "dreaming" I experienced almost on a daily basis!

I stood there, thinking about retracing my steps and asking Mrs. Cordelia about her experience with the "dreams", if that was what they were. One didn't talk about "dreams" in a proper society--well-bred ladies spoke of "memories" or "night worries" instead.

The thing that held me back, though, was the recollection of exactly what had happened the first and only time I tried to tell my parents about a dream I'd had.

I had just started Level 5 at the Academy, when one of the farms had a break-in at the last Waning of Verdant, and the intruder had slaughtered several animals and damaged the barn they were in, spoiling the newly-harvested crops as a result. No one could discern the culprit, and yet the notoriety increased to the point of four big-city investigators coming out to see what they could learn. They stayed at the inn, and they questioned many people, staking out the entire property and searching it over and over again, in every corner. People started mistrusting one another, and all sorts of secrets came out between people--but though the investigators stayed a week and scarred some relationships for the rest of time, still they had to leave empty-handed. Theories ran wild, from a jealous ex-lover or a roving band of crooks, to whole packs of savage dogs or wildcats--but nobody could confirm for sure exactly what had happened at that farm.

Nobody except me.

I remember dreaming about the farm in question, even before I knew that something so extreme happened there. I had the dream the exact same night it happened, and while I dreamed I actually felt like I stood there in the grass, just outside the gate, while three huge, wolves--all mangy and starved to skin-and-bones--trotted onto the farmer's land and slipped in through a loose board in the barn wall. I remember the screams of terror from the animals, and the awful crashing and banging of splintering wood as the wolves fought their way out again. Somehow, the dream gave me the impression that they had wandered deep into the forest and died of hunger by the first cold snap of Harvest--which would have been just after the investigators left Mirrorvale--but when I awoke in my bed and everything about me was totally normal, I took it for an errant burst of imagination.

My parents weren't so dismissive, however. The next morning, I remember Father describing the grisly scene of the purported crime, and I simply mentioned that I had dreamed of just such a scenario the night before--and the moment I said "dream", my Mother cried out in shock and said that I must have studied too hard and overtaxed my brain. They held me home from Academy classes, sending word to Headmaster Guillem that I had awoken with a case of "fever and delirium" and I would not be resuming my studies until I felt well again.

That was the part that scared me the most--their insistence that I must be unwell, when I felt absolutely fine. Every day, Mother let me stay home and do as I pleased (provided I didn't leave the house, and stayed in my room when guests came over), and every morning, they would ask if I'd had any more dreams. For two weeks, I did dream, but it was the same event over and over again. Meanwhile, the investigators still pressured the town as if a person was at fault for the whole thing, but when all their efforts still did not produce a satisfying culprit for them to arrest (because in fact no person was actually guilty!), they gave up and returned from whence they came. From what I heard, they didn't even offer the farmer any kind of compensation or assistance.

By the time I finally felt miserable and bored enough to inform my parents that the dreams had "stopped" (they hadn't), and that I had recovered enough mental acuity to prevent them from ever happening again (as if I had any control over the thoughts in my brain), I was sure of two things:

First, the vision I had witnessed was the actual truth, but no one else seemed to realize that, so I could never figure out how to confirm it; and

Second, I was never going to mention any kind of dreaming or speculation to my parents ever again.

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Saturday, December 13, 2025

Serial Saturday: "The Last Inkweaver" Part 4


 Part 4
"Information Gap"

I stood in the midst of several huts made of various natural materials: sticks, stones, mud, and even animal hides or canvas. Everyone around me, moving in and out of those buildings wore the same kind of old-fashioned clothing, robes and tunics instead of dresses and trousers.

"The Wordspinners serve the community by their craft," a large, warm voice boomed out from all around me. I watched a dark-haired man with a short beard--looking a good deal more civilized than the rest of these villagers--emerge from a canvas tent. He smiled and greeted the people he saw, and they responded with courtesy and politeness. Was I looking at Dobran Allius, himself?

"They made clothes and wares for the people, and also grew plants for food and medicine to give to those who needed it, as well," continued the voice, and I saw several booths just like the one I'd witnessed in History class, with people selecting items they wanted, or the seller picking out what they wished to distribute.

The ground before me tilted and twisted, and when my vision balanced again, I saw the small settlement had been replaced with a large village of modern buildings. For the second time that day, I saw the woman selling hand-made pots outside the Factory Market, and the people walking by as if they never even noticed her.

"The King's reforms are less about fixing what is necessarily wrong with the native's practices," observed my disembodied narrator, "and more designed to alter and replace their normal way of life. However..." and here the scene shifted to the grand hall of some palace or something. I saw a crowd of courtiers in fine clothing. Some of them bore a grand medallion hanging from their necks. "With the relocation came opportunities. The King saw much benefit in welcoming a few Wordspinners into his court. He heeded their advice, and the land flourished. So began a Golden Age for the kingdom of Gramble..."

I watched the medallion-wearing people gathered around the king, and it all made sense somehow in my mind. Were these the Wordspinners?

The ground lurched again, and I felt someone grab my hand...

"Whoa, Callista, are you all right?" Terra's voice broke through the dense fog around my senses, at at a blink, I was back in a seat a the table in the Academy library. Dobran Allius' book, mercifully, had been placed out of my reach.

I inhaled a deep breath, feeling exactly the way I did when swimming underwater for too long.

I stared at the fair face beside me. "Terra! How long was I out this time?"

Terra's face was rarely serious, but she looked it now. She fiddled with the laces of her bodice as she declared, "Out? You mean you had one of your bizarre memory-flashes just now? You've only been sitting there long enough for me to finish the passage and realize you'd stopped moving." Her hands lifted to the edge of her collar. "Well? Tell me everything! What did you see?" She leaned forward with a giddy expression on her face.


For once, I didn't feel afraid of discussing this strange phenomenon. Terra was the only person I could talk to about it, and between the two of us, she had been the first to embrace it as something exciting for me, rather than evidence of some aberration in my brain.


I stared down at my notes, once so thorough and concise, now sounding so pedantic and hollow, after what I'd just witnessed.

"I saw the Wordspinner encampment," I said, "and the same seller's booth I witnessed in History Class." I gave her a meaningful glance. "And that is what sparked my outburst in the middle of Scholar Mikel's lecture--what he was saying didn't match up with what I was seeing, and I wanted to know which one to believe."

Terra made a contemptuous noise and leaned back, easing the tension on the laces of her bodice. We were taught during our formative seasons that a flat stomach appeared healthier than a distended, bulbous one--but on girls like poor Terra who enjoyed good food far too much for the limited capacity of the laces, the effect was rather less aesthetic and more tortuous. "It wouldn't be the first time our authorities chose to ignore the obvious in favor of the preferable narrative." She perked up with a sly grin. "At least you were sitting down for both flashes, so you didn't start wandering around in the middle of class! Wouldn't that have been hilarious?"

I snorted and went back to my notes, filling in the details based on what I'd heard from Dobran Allius. "Of course, Terra--it's always absolutely amusing to go dashing about like a headless chicken, with my eyes seeing impossible dangers that aren't even real!" Terra had seen it happen to me before: if I was standing when the images overtook me, I tended to wander around within them, my eyes not registering the same places my feet traveled. As a result, I ended up in more strange, out-of-the-way places than I was comfortable with! "Anyways, this time I heard... I think I was hearing Allius giving his own account."

"Oh wow!" Terra breathed, leaning in and running her fingers over the sweeping script. "Like, you heard from the Explorer himself? Was he old and creaky? Did it sound really pompous and stuffy, or did he have a strange accent that twisted his words into unintelligible gobbledegook?"

"Terra!" I folded my brow at her. "He just spoke, it sounded normal, and I think--" I broke off speaking as I reached for the journal. I hesitated to pull back the cover, after what had just happened to me, but I had to see for myself.

I glanced through the words on the pages, and his kind, calm voice rang in my ears as I comprehended the words, but thankfully my psyche remained rooted in the present.

"Unbelievable!" I muttered, reading the very words that had narrated my experience just moments earlier. Even entries that the visions had somehow skipped still filled in the missing details, resounding in that same voice."It's the same as Senevere's report," I mused, flipping back in my notebook to compare, "but so different!"


Allius spoke of the Golden Age, yes--but Wordspinners were still accepted as contributing members of the burgeoning society. They weren't welcome at the Academies because of their religious ties, of course, but they could still make and sell wares in the local market square. According to this record, as Academies taught and trained more of each generation, the number of Wordspinners arrested, accused of spreading falsehoods and tried for treason also increased. Allius at one point concluded that they retreated into hiding, and then died out in obscurity some time later.

I scribbled down what I could of Allius' perspective, and handed the book back to Terra.

"You need to put this back exactly where you found it," I warned her. "I don't want either of us to get into trouble for breaking the rules!"

Terra nodded and eased over to the shelf as I put away my pencil, packed up the notebook, and left the book exactly as the Archivist directed. High over our heads, the great bell tolled the end of one class period and the impending start of the next.

Something in the sound gave me pause. I felt as if we'd been in the library for three days, not just half a class period.


On our way out, I asked the Archivist, "How many times has the bell rang since we entered?"

He sniffed and stepped out from his desk. "The bell? It's rung twice since you walked in."

Twice! I grabbed Terra's hand and groaned. "I've missed Sewing," I muttered. "Mistress Needle is going to expect me to make it up tomorrow. Why didn't you tell me the first time the bell rang?"

Terra wagged her head. "You were out of it, I suppose--I thought we both heard it, and the reason you didn't respond is that you had permission to skip as many class periods as you needed for this project. How was I supposed to know you were up to your eyeballs in some invisible environment?"

"But you could have left me!" We emerged in the hallway at about the same time as other ranks of students swapping classrooms. "Just because I had permission didn't mean you could also stay behind!"

Terra tossed her lively red curls. "It's only Dance--I'm Level 9 competent in that subject already. But let's get back to you." She fixed her gaze on me and pressed her lips. "Are you going to be all right? Two memory-flashes in one day--"

"Hush!" I gripped her arm and gave it a little shake to stop her as eyes slid and heads turned ever so slightly in our direction.

Terra didn't take the hint. "Well, I mean, really--aren't you the least little bit curious as to why it happens all of a sudden, and today has seemed worse than ever--you don't think people have already noticed and are starting to wonder?"

"Not if I can help it!" I retorted, falling in line for Level 9 Etiquette. "Go on to Music, Terra. We'll talk about this later."


Sitting in my straight-backed chair, listening as Madame Collette explained the proper use of one's fan for communicating careful signals, I thought about Terra's parting words.

Why was I singularly plagued with these rampant memories that hardly seemed to have anything to do with me? What did it mean when one historical account reflected everything I'd been taught, and another one triggered bizarre visions and communicated just the opposite?

I blandly went through the motions of the lesson, copying Madam Collette exactly, and the final bell rang to release me. I shuffled along with the crowd flowing toward the front doors of the Academy, my thoughts spinning as I thought of my house, my family, and the long, confusing essay I would need to write before tomorrow.

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Saturday, December 6, 2025

Serial Saturday: "The Last Inkweaver" Part 3


Part 3
"Research Project"

The atmosphere inside those doors was hushed, and very empty-feeling.

"Wow," Terra hissed in my ear, "It's so quiet and dark in here!"

It was true, the thick, vaulted windows only let in so much light, and most of it was swallowed by the copious amounts of dust swirling in the air. The Academy severely limited the number of students could be allowed in this space at one time, and one especially did not go wandering among these shelves stocked with ancient books alone.

The Archivist led me down the rows of shelves until he found the one containing the accounts from early Gramblian history. He verified the title Scholar Mikel had written, and selected that book.

"You may record notes from the text as needed," he informed me, laying the book on a long, empty table stretched between bookshelves. Placed at the center of that table was a small box containing bound stacks of parchment and more pencils. "Please do not remove this book from the library. It is the property of The Academy. When you are finished, leave the book on the table, and I will come by and re-shelve it later. If you need another book, you must ask me first."

I nodded my thanks and glanced behind me--but Terra had disappeared. Had she gotten bored already and walked out?

The Archivist strode back to his desk at the front of the library, and I flipped open the book to begin taking notes.

"Eighteenth day of Renewal, in the Third Cycle of King Malacuse's Reign.
Explorer Senevere reports that the Western land beyond the Fforgan Mountains is indeed wild and untamed. We have charted many miles without encountering another human. Today is the third day since navigating the treacherous Fforgan Pass, and we have come upon one of the isolated communities, a cluster of family groups who seem native to this land. They are wary of us, and Senevere senses a strong undercurrent of superstition, in the way they interact with one another, and the strange quirks of their habits. When Senevere asked to speak with their leader, his words seemed to have little effect upon the people..."

I rubbed my eyes as the words began to swim. I clenched my hands into fists and focused on the shape of each word. I would not be swept into another one of those strange memory-flashes--especially since it was that very thing that landed me in such trouble in the first place!

I read on, taking careful notes on every observation Senevere recorded. It was a little irksome, the way the "careful record" seemed to skip anywhere from three to five days at once, and occasionally I found, by observing the trend in my notes, that Senevere had this habit of assuming one thing about the "native culture" and then finding out that it was actually something subversive and dangerous to the "civil reforms" cause King Malacuse wanted to implement, even in lands so far away from the central kingdom.

I had to admit, though--the more I read, the more evidence I had that supported the way Scholar Mikel taught. There were several points where Senevere introduced the term of "Wordspinner" to refer to a religious sect among these "natives" (so, not all natives were Wordspinners, but all Wordspinners were native to Western Hemptor?) who harbored some kind of resentment toward the colonization attempts directed by King Malacuse. "The land is fertile and spacious," Senevere reported, "with plenty of resources to benefit the kingdom... Yet these Wordspinners seem averse to the relocation proposition..."

I rubbed the corners of my eyes, and focused on shaping the letters as I scribbled down notes. The pencil felt heavy in my hand as I noted the first mention of Wordspinners in Senevere's account. Five days after that entry, Senevere again noted, "We have succeeded in convincing large numbers of the indigenous population to move into the newly-established cities, inviting them to pursue opportunities for trade and industry. Still, the Wordspinners continue to spread their propaganda, stirring the people even to the point of blocking the Pass and preventing any movement in or out of the Western lands."

"How's it going?"

Hands landed on the table next to me and I jumped, leaving a thick dark mark across the remainder of the page.

I scrunched my nose at Terra's cheeky grin. "Where have you been?" I hissed in a low voice. "You're not supposed to run off in the library!"

Terra blinked wide, innocent eyes. "I was just looking!" She glanced at my notebook. "What are you writing about? Wordspinners?" Her face lit up and she stared at me. "Oh, is that what the argument in History class was about?"

I clapped my hands over the pages of my notebook. "I don't--that wasn't... How did you know about that?"

Terra waltzed around the table, her eyes roaming the shelves. "Oh, I suppose I might have overheard somebody in Art say that there had been a massive row in History class--somebody trying to discredit a Scholar... and That Somebody got called up after class." She turned and gave me an unladylike wink. "I should have known it might have been you, Callista!"

I gave a small huff. "I wasn't trying to discredit him!" Gracious! Was that the rumor going around about me now? I tried to ignore Terra's amusement and refocus on my task, noting that the events took a sharp downward trend from that point onward. "The King's Army has dispersed the rebels blocking the Pass... All Wordspinners have been dispersed on either side of the mountains, no more than two or three in a large city at a time... Most Wordspinners have taken up a nomadic lifestyle, wandering from place to place and making their home in the unsettled places..." Further on, I read of the "rebellion" Scholar Mikel had alluded to, and how that had led to a series of trials finding many Wordspinners guilty of sedition, and in support of treasonous plots against the King.

The final blow came early the reign of King Phillisto, predecessor to the current king, King Desmond. According to Senevere, by the time Phillisto came to power, the Wordspinners were again attempting to seize power, gaining favor among the simple folk of the smaller villages, and attempting to spread their "religious texts laced with underhanded misinformation" around the larger cities--but already, the social and philosophical advancements had turned the tide against these "superstitious mystics", and with the ushering in of a Golden Age of enlightenment and industrial prowess came the Academies. The emphasis on intellectualism led more and more people to abandon the abstract and often harsh teachings of the Wordspinners, and as their popularity dwindled, so did their numbers, fading away to almost nothing, till the only ones left were the criminals who spoke out against the King and got arrested and tried for it anyway.

I glanced between my notes and the recorded account. Nearly everything Scholar Mikel had to say on the subject was indeed referenced in Korstan Senevere's reports. Even the partial information he would ostensibly give at the less advanced levels was still according to the recorded evidence.

What still rankled me was the way Senevere would skip three and even five days between reports, and commence discussing a rapid change in manner and dealing, saying one thing at first, and two entries later, affirming the opposite. He was consistent in his inconsistency--why could I not leave well enough alone?

I flipped back to the beginning of the book, intent on reading it all the way through again if I had to.
"I just want to find out the truth!" I muttered, more to myself than anyone else.

"Hey!" Terra's voice issued from behind me. I heard her grunt as if she was reaching for something. "Look what I found!" She dropped a second book on the table in front of me.

I jerked back as if it had been a snake.
"Terra!" I snapped, staring at her in shock. "Put it back! Only the Archivist can remove books from the shelves! I don't have permission for this one!"

"But look!" Terra pointed to the title: The Personal Account of Dobran Allius, As He Lived Among The Wordspinners. "You wanted to find out about the Wordspinners, didn't you? Maybe this has more of the kind of information you're looking for!"

I stared at the offending item. Did I really want to find out about Wordspinners, or was I only looking for information to satisfy Scholar Mikel?

Terra grew tired of waiting for me to make up my mind, and she reached for the book herself, flipping it open. "Here it is, listen! As I listened to the inhabitants of this village, I began to discern that they referred to themselves as Wordspinners, and that they professed to be guided by an ideology known simply as The Truth..."

I felt my eyelids droop and my vision blurred as Terra spoke. I tried to reach out for her, tried to tell her that something was wrong, but my voice didn't come out. My fingertips rested on the cover of the open book, and by the time my eyes refocused, I was looking at something else entirely.

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