HAHAHAHA my job is torture. At least right now. Supposedly things will calm down after New Year's.
11/12 Update: 1622 words (total 16346)
And she forgets that in a hold like this, he can sense everything. Lord Massey immediately backtracks, his turns growing wilder, like he can’t control it.
“You don’t have to!” he says. “If that makes you uncomfortable. Light reading does not an expert make. As I’m sure you know.”
What makes her uncomfortable is how much she wants to give him an opinion. It wouldn’t truly be a second opinion, since Eustasia has cottoned on that she wrote him the first one, but writing to someone isn’t the same as sitting in a room engaged in lively back-and-forth. She wants his immediate feedback. She wants to see him light up when she has a good idea. She wants him to try out her theory and have it succeed and then wrap her up in his equally-perfect six-foot wingspan, in a hug as tight as her sisters’ once were.
All of… that spills out of her like sunshine. Eustasia presses in closer, filling Lord Massey’s dance frame, knees brushing knees, thighs sometimes brushing thighs. She’s sure she’s making an absolutely stupid, giddy face. “No, no. I’m not uncomfortable. I’m sure it will be helpful to have any second opinion at all. Just someone to bounce ideas off of.”
Lord Massey straightens, his relief clear through every point of contact Eustasia has with him. One corner of his mouth quirks up in a tired smile, and he twirls her out as the song ends, then offers his arm to lead her off the floor. “Join me for some refreshments, then?”
Obviously, Eustasia accepts.
---
Ms. Roche vibrates on Gil’s arm. She stands ramrod straight, her face twitching like she can’t keep whatever she’s feeling off of it, and energy pulses out of her in a constant thrum. As Gil flags down a member of the ballroom staff to bring them something to drink, he takes her in again.
Somehow, she doesn’t seem as plain as she had the first time they met. Her dress today is a charming light-to-medium blue ombre, with fine white embroidery down the entire length. He probably shouldn’t be looking at that part of her for so long, but he swears he sees the northern zodiac constellations above her waistline, and the southern constellations below… and are those planetary orbits around her neckline? More than her clothes, though, is the eagerness flushed across her cheeks. Her face is pink, her eyes wide, her lips red as she keeps trying to stop herself from biting them.
Lady Lyall had graced him with the same pleasant, welcoming smile every time they spoke. She had welcomed his attentions, but never seemed to seek him out or really want to talk to him. For all that this discussion is academic in nature, Ms. Roche clearly wants to be here with him. She wants to chat about magecraft. Wentworth had said she had stared at him from across the room the first time they met. There is no doubt, or wondering if she actually likes him or is just aiming for the best possible match.
Two glasses of something bubbly find their way into Gil’s hands, and he passes one off to Eustasia, watching as she swirls it and sniffs it before taking a sip. He’s pretty sure she does actually drink it, too, though not much. Her tongue darts out to taste her lips after she swallows, and Gil can’t help but track the movement.
She whips her head up to face him, eyes bright. “You wanted a second opinion on something.”
“Erm. Yes.” Gil checks for any potential eavesdroppers before ducking his head down, though it does little to get his mouth closer to Eustasia’s ear. “Promise you won’t spread this around?” Gil hasn’t been invited to any of the events he’d been at last year. The goings on at his hunting party are well known across the echelons of society he’d tried to make himself part of, and he’s sure they’ll trickle their way down here as well. But to the knighted and the untitled gentry, a baron is a baron, no matter how poor.
“Of course I won’t.”
And Gil knows this is true, if what Wentworth said about her sisters is any indication. The fact that Eustasia still turns up at balls and parties, holds her tongue, and holds her head high, is testament to her ability to keep mum, even if she seems given to passion under other circumstances. So Gil tells her. “Ah. I might have magically flooded my estate.”
Her eyes grow as large as dinner plates.
“Then I turned it into a desert. Then I blew up my house.”
She blinks and takes another sip of her drink. “That’s significant. Did you mean to cause intense weather?”
“No!” Gil says, then lowers his voice when he notices a mother and daughter pair look their way. “No. I only meant to hold off some rain for an evening, and then I tried to call a drizzle to counter the original spell gone wrong. Then, when we tried to see how my output compared to Wentworth’s… well.”
Ms. Roche considers this information. “Where exactly is your estate?”
“It’s in Shropshire.”
“What time of day did you cast each spell? As exact a time as you can remember, please.”
Gil wasn’t really thinking about time when he did magecraft. “Noon-ish, maybe? And then around sunset. And then… I’m not sure. Mid-morning?”
Ms. Roche mutters something about a demonstration and measuring implements, and her voice warps and wavers into her glass, which she still holds up so that she can sniff the tart, fizzing aroma of the punch. They stand together for an uncomfortable length of time, and Gil is about to poke her somewhere so that she’ll look engaged with him, because he sees a father and daughter starting on the approach, and he can’t let them interrupt this.
“There’s a fault line near Shropshire,” Ms. Roche states, looking alert and attentive again. “The ley lines are not very stable, so it’s entirely possible one shifted to be under your house. Did Mr. Wentworth or Sir Thorton seem any more powerful there?”
“Not as far as I could tell?”
This answer does not satisfy her. Ms. Roche’s chin wrinkles, and her eyebrows furrow the slightest bit, and she shifts her weight from side to side. She adjusts her grip on her glass, as if to move and cross her arms, but stops herself. A lady does not cross her arms in public, after all. “Hmm. Have you attempted magic outside of your estate since then?”
Gil blanches, and that’s answer enough. Ms. Roche waves away the question and answers it herself.
“Of course you haven’t. You’re too afraid of blowing up someone else’s property. It’s not commonly done, since few people ever reach the scale of power you’re talking about without concerted effort, but I read an article once by an Italian archeologist, and the Romans had some chant language about order of magnitude power reduction. Maybe incorporating something to that effect will help you control things until you know what you’re working with.”
Gil hardly knows where he would start with that, but Sir Thorton surely knows someone who can help. Or, if Gil continues talking to Ms. Roche, she may explain her way through it unprompted.
“Any thoughts on what order of magnitude I should start with?”
Maybe it’s just the candlelight, but Gil swears Ms. Roche gets this wistful look in her eyes. She looks out at the dancers–currently skipping their way through a jolly reel–and it’s like there are numbers dancing across her irises. “In your case, I suppose conservative is best. Perhaps you start at a million?”
A million? Gil fights to keep his jaw from plonking on the floor. “That’s… quite a big number.”
Ms. Roche lets out a silver-bell laugh. “I agree, but think about it this way: how large a flame did you intend to summon?”
“Fist-sized?”
“And how large did your companions say it was?”
Gil had closed his eyes the moment the fire grew beyond his control, but judging from how much of his house caught fire… well, he can estimate a size. He’ll confirm with them later. “Maybe… a fifteen foot radius sphere?”
A line of dancers spins by them, shoes loud against the wooden floor. In the mere seconds it takes for them to whoosh by, Ms. Roche is already done calculating things. She turns to him, no longer contemplative or trying to hide herself, but bursting with confidence. “Say your fist forms a six-inch diameter sphere. Fifteen feet is thirty times that. When you consider that you must cube that difference, well. You’re looking at a spell twenty-seven thousand times more powerful than the original.”
Oh. Wow. Gil hadn’t even thought that was in the realm of possibility.
“Given that we’re estimating here off of size, and not a more reliable measure for fire, and you want to be conservative to prevent harm or property damage, I think scaling back to a millionth is perfectly reasonable. If that produces nothing, scale to a hundred-thousandth, and then a ten-thousandth, and so on.” Ms. Roche waits a few moments for the sheer scale of Gil’s problem to sink in. He looks back at her, not really seeing, just trying to process what she’s said. The ballroom around them melts into a wash of golden candlelight and beatless music.
She breaks into a nervous smile. “Uh. Lord Massey? Everything alright?”
Gil can’t keep the wonder out of his voice. “Why don’t you write for National Mage?”
Like flicking a switch, Ms. Roche’s eyes dim. She averts her gaze, and her charming, concerned smile transforms into a flat, wooden thing–still there, but painted on. She breathes out something that might be a laugh and might be a cry for help. “What a funny thing to say.”
But she isn’t laughing, and Gil isn’t laughing. Rather, he feels as if he has said exactly the wrong thing.

