Tilly’s day began like any other. That was to say, she awoke, screaming and sitting bolt upright, soaked in cold sweat. The nightmares were back.
She’d been plagued by them for a year or so, but recently, they’d begun to go away. She hadn’t had one in nearly a month, but it seemed that whatever troubles her subconscious had designed to fret upon had come back to take a bite of her again. She felt weak and groggy, but the light pouring into her room through the cracks of her blackout curtains told her that she was late for class. It must have been almost noon. She didn’t have a clock or anything, to keep one maintained would be an exercise in futility, but she had a good head for what time it was.
She rolled out of her bed, and found that her legs could barely support her weight. She had to scoop her staff from the wall adjacent to it to support her weight fully, clinging to it like her grandmother held her own. She caught a look at herself in a mirror, (which she really should have remembered to turn around last night, least someone peer through it) and was frightened by what a mess she looked. Her hair was a frizzy, tangled mess, and she was pale as a ghost.
She realized now that Grandma Blackstone’s staff was just as much a tool of locomotion as it was a tool of magical prowess, and she wondered if age would ever reduce her to that point. She wasn’t really sure how old her grandma was, but she knew that her father had been a veteran of the Scottish Revolution, so she probably had time to spare before she had to worry about that.
With those cheery thoughts to keep her occupied, she hobbled to her kitchen, kicking open the icebox. Mom and dad had sent her a case of Vernors for just such an occasion, and she cracked a can of it open and took a few sips. Shuddering, she set the can on the counter and pulled a can of chicken soup from the cupboard. It was that kinda day.
Bundled up in her robes, with a pack of crackers, a bowl of hot soup, and the best ginger ale in the world, she sat on the little loveseat in her room and tried to keep comfortable. The soup had bolstered her strength, but it did nothing for the monstrous headache that usually accompanied these nightmares. She’d just gotten up for some excedrin when there came a knock at her door.
”Ugh.” She grunted, scooping up her staff. It was probably an RA, or maybe Shiro or Lottie or one of the other MA people that she’d hesitantly begun to call her friends, come to check on her. Either way, it was a disruption in her recovery process, and she was not having it. She hobbled to the door, her strength having mostly returned, although she still warily clung to her staff, in case it failed her again. The lock unlatched itself with a small effort of her will, and the door was eased open by a breeze.
At the sight of the figure standing before her, any color that might have been restored to her face immediately drained, and her green eyes grew wide.
”Thunderation.” She uttered, and what usually was nothing more than a simple curse to be uttered by Tilly in her frustration manifested in static electricity, crackling across the length of her staff and into the floor. Just an instant later, she raised her hand, bringing her will to bear.
”Kansius!” She would cry, drawing forth a hurricane gust of wind to drive the woman before her out of reach and through the wall behind her… and the wall behind that wall.