The Power — Of Magick

Elara squinted. She squeezed her eyes shut and visualized a roaring furnace. She commanded the fire to exist, echoing the definitions she’d read—that magick was causing change to occur in conformity with will . But the wick remained cold and black.

“Magick,” Elian said, without looking up from a pot of simmering roots, “is not something you do . It is something you invite .” The power of magick

Elara looked at her hands, which felt stubbornly ordinary. She had come to him seeking the power to move mountains—or at least to move the heavy stone gate of her father’s sheep pen. She wanted the "high magick" described in old tomes—the kind that transformed the practitioner's identity through repetition and symbolism. Elara squinted

As the candle burned, Elara realized that the gate at home didn't need a spell to lift it. It needed her to understand the weight of the stone, the friction of the hinges, and the strength already in her arms. Magick hadn't given her a new world; it had finally allowed her to see the one she was already standing in. But the wick remained cold and black

“Try to light the wick,” Elian commanded, pointing to a single unlit candle.

A tiny, blue-tinged flame flickered to life. It wasn't a mountain-moving explosion, but it was real.