NOVEL The Ten Thousand Deaths : 1000x Exp System Chapter 204: Oda
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Chapter 204: Oda

The territory was ten days east.

Ren and Kael walked it in eight — the road running through territories where the between-space’s full presence made travel easier, the gradient supporting the movement the way it supported everything else in the full presence.

Priya met them at the territory’s edge.

She looked tired in a specific way. Not the exhaustion of overwork. The specific weariness of someone who had been present with something difficult and hadn’t known how to help.

"Three weeks," she said. "I’ve been here three weeks. The first two with the standard intake. The last one knowing it wasn’t working and not knowing why." She paused. "Oda wants to develop what she feels. She comes to me. We have tea. We talk." She paused. "Every time I get close to confirming what’s real about her ability, she pulls back." She paused. "Not away from me. Into herself." She paused. "Like the confirmation is the thing she’s afraid of." She paused. "I didn’t understand until your message." She paused. "She’s afraid it’s real."

He looked at Priya.

At three weeks of honest work that hadn’t been wrong but hadn’t been enough.

"You did the right work," he said. "The standard intake confirms what’s real. For most people the fear is that it isn’t real, and the confirmation relieves the fear." He paused. "Oda’s fear is different. The confirmation increases it." He paused. "That’s not a failure of your work. That’s a different situation requiring a different approach." He paused. "We’re going to find the different approach together."

Ren had been quiet.

Reading the territory.

The directional awareness running.

"It’s her," Ren said. "Not the territory. The territory’s between-space quality is healthy. The resistance is in the space immediately around Oda. The fear so strong it’s affecting the between-space within a few meters of her." They paused. "I can feel it from here." They paused. "The fight." They paused. "Her development reaching toward expression. Her fear pushing it back. Both inside the same person. The fight strong enough to disturb the between-space around her." They paused. "She’s not aware she’s doing it." They paused. "The fear is below her awareness." They paused. "She thinks the territory is hard." They paused. "It’s her." They paused. "But not in a way she can be told." They paused. "Telling her would be another confirmation she’d pull back from."

He thought about that.

The fear below awareness.

The person not able to be told because the telling was the thing the fear resisted.

A harder intake.

"Take me to her," he said. freёwebnovel.com

Oda lived alone at the edge of the territory’s main settlement.

A woman of fifty-one. Level 33. The between-space quality around her dwelling visibly disturbed in the way Ren had described — not unhealthy, not the wound’s thinning, but agitated, the specific quality of a space where a fight was running.

She had grown up in the absence.

She had spent forty-nine years in a world where the between-space was withdrawn and the suppression was running and abilities were threats and people who felt things they couldn’t explain learned to fear what they felt.

The full presence had arrived in her territory two years ago.

For two years she had been feeling something developing.

For two years she had been afraid of it.

Kael arrived in the afternoon.

Tea, Priya had prepared. The intake setting.

He sat with Oda.

Not Priya. Priya was present but he was the one across from Oda.

He did not introduce himself as the World’s Warden. He did not show his display. He did not explain why he had come.

He sat.

"Priya tells me you weave," he said. Not the ability. The ordinary thing. "What do you weave."

Oda looked at him.

At the stranger who had come and asked about the weaving rather than about what she felt.

"Baskets," she said. "Reed baskets. Thirty years." She paused. "Why are you here."

"To sit with you," he said. "Priya thought I might be useful. I’m not sure I will be. But I came." He paused. "Tell me about the baskets."

She told him about the baskets.

For an hour.

The reeds. The seasons. The specific quality of the reeds from different parts of the marsh. The thirty years of learning which reeds did what.

He listened.

Genuinely.

Not waiting for the opening to address the fear.

Receiving the baskets.

Because the baskets were real and worth receiving.

After the hour Oda stopped.

"You haven’t asked me about the thing," she said.

"What thing," he said.

"The thing Priya keeps almost asking about," Oda said. "The thing I feel. The thing the territory is making hard." She paused. "Everyone who comes wants to ask about the thing." She paused. "You asked about baskets."

"The baskets seemed more interesting," he said. "Tell me more about the marsh reeds."

She looked at him.

For a long time.

The specific look of someone deciding whether the person across from them was performing patience or actually patient.

"You’re not going to ask," she said.

"No," he said.

"Why not," she said.

He thought about how to answer honestly.

"Because the thing you feel isn’t separate from the baskets," he said. "You’ve been weaving for thirty years. The thing you feel — Priya’s been telling you it’s an ability, that it’s real, that there’s a path. She’s right. It is real." He paused. "But it didn’t arrive from outside. It grew in the thirty years of weaving. In the marsh reeds and the seasons and the specific quality of the work." He paused. "The thing you feel is what thirty years of honest work built in you." He paused. "It’s not a separate thing you have to be afraid of." He paused. "It’s the baskets." He paused. "It’s you." He paused. "I asked about the baskets because the baskets are the thing." He paused. "You’ve been weaving the thing for thirty years." He paused. "You already know it." He paused. "You’re just afraid it’s bigger than you thought."

Oda was very still.

The between-space around her shifted.

Ren, in the corner, felt it. He saw Ren’s attention sharpen.

"It’s bigger than I thought," Oda said quietly.

"Yes," he said.

"That’s what I’m afraid of," she said.

"Yes," he said.

"If it’s real," she said, "and it’s bigger than I thought — then I’m responsible for it." She paused. "For thirty years it was just baskets. I could be just a basket weaver." She paused. "If the thing is real and it’s bigger — then I’m not just a basket weaver." She paused. "I’m something I don’t know how to be." She paused. "I don’t know how to be that." She paused. "I’m fifty-one." She paused. "I know how to be a basket weaver." She paused. "I don’t know how to be the thing." She paused. "So I’ve been hoping it isn’t real." She paused. "If it isn’t real I can keep being a basket weaver." She paused. "I know how to be that."

He looked at Oda.

At the fear named.

Not the fear that the ability wasn’t real.

The fear that it was, and that being what it meant required becoming something she didn’t know how to be at fifty-one.

The fear of the responsibility of being what was real about herself.

He thought about how to respond.

Not the confirmation — she had just confirmed it herself, in the naming.

Something else.

"You don’t have to become anything," he said. "That’s the part the fear gets wrong." He paused. "The thing isn’t separate from the basket weaver. You don’t stop being a basket weaver and become the thing." He paused. "The thing is the basket weaver, more fully." He paused. "You keep weaving baskets. You keep being exactly who you are." He paused. "The thing expresses through the baskets. Through the work you already know how to do." He paused. "You don’t have to learn how to be something new." He paused. "You have to keep being what you already are, and let the thing express through it." He paused. "The basket weaver doesn’t become the thing." He paused. "The basket weaver was always the channel for the thing." He paused. "You’ve been doing it for thirty years." He paused. "The thing being bigger than you thought doesn’t mean you have to be bigger." He paused. "It means the work you’ve been doing was carrying something bigger than you knew." He paused. "The baskets were always carrying it." He paused. "You don’t have to change." He paused. "You have to keep weaving honestly and stop being afraid of what the honest weaving carries."

Oda looked at her hands.

At thirty years of basket weaving.

The between-space around her shifted again.

Ren’s attention sharpened further.

"I don’t have to become something," Oda said.

"No," he said.

"I keep weaving baskets," she said.

"Yes," he said.

"And the thing — expresses through the baskets," she said. "I don’t have to do anything different."

"You have to stop being afraid of what the weaving carries," he said. "That’s the only thing." He paused. "Not learn a new skill. Not become a new person." He paused. "Stop being afraid of what you’ve already been carrying for thirty years."

Oda was quiet for a long time.

The between-space around her continued to shift.

Then she picked up a half-finished basket from beside her chair.

Looked at it.

"It’s been different for two years," she said. "The baskets. Coming out different. Better. In a way I couldn’t explain." She paused. "I thought I was losing my touch. Making mistakes I couldn’t see." She paused. "I was afraid the change meant something was wrong." She paused. "It wasn’t wrong." She paused. "It was the thing." She paused. "Expressing through the baskets." She paused. "For two years." She paused. "And I was afraid of it the whole time." She paused. "Fighting it." She paused. "Trying to make the baskets the way they used to be." She looked at him. "I’ve been fighting my own work."

"Yes," he said.

"Because I was afraid the change meant I had to become someone I don’t know how to be," she said.

"Yes," he said.

"And I don’t," she said.

"No," he said. "You keep weaving. You let the change be what it is. You stop fighting your own work."

Oda looked at the half-finished basket.

Then she began to weave.

Not performing. Not demonstrating.

Weaving the way she had woven for thirty years.

But not fighting it.

The between-space around her changed.

Ren stood up in the corner.

Kael felt it too.

The fight stopping.

The agitation in the between-space resolving.

Oda’s development and Oda’s fear no longer fighting in the same person.

The development running.

The between-space around her clarifying.

The basket in her hands coming out different.

Better.

Carrying the thing.

And Oda, for the first time in two years, not afraid of what the work carried.

She wove for a while.

Then she looked at the basket.

At what it carried.

She didn’t cry the way Sefa had.

She just looked at the basket and said: "Oh."

The specific sound of someone who had been fighting something for two years and had just stopped.

"Oh," she said again. "It was never wrong."

"No," he said. "It was never wrong."

His System pulsed.

[ODA — THE THIRD — FEAR NAMED AND RESOLVED]

[THE FEAR: NOT THAT THE ABILITY ISN’T REAL — THAT BEING IT REQUIRES BECOMING SOMEONE NEW]

[THE RESOLUTION: YOU DON’T BECOME THE THING. YOU KEEP BEING WHAT YOU ARE.]

[THE BASKET WEAVER WAS ALWAYS THE CHANNEL.]

[NOTE: SHE’D BEEN FIGHTING HER OWN WORK FOR TWO YEARS.]

[NOTE: THE CHANGE WAS THE THING. NOT A MISTAKE.]

[NOTE: SHE STOPPED FIGHTING.]

[NOTE: IT WAS NEVER WRONG.]

[THE WORK CONTINUES.]

Author’s Note: Oda — the third of the seventeen. The harder intake. Kael asks about the baskets, not the ability. The fear named: not that the ability isn’t real, but that being it requires becoming someone she doesn’t know how to be at fifty-one. The resolution: you don’t become the thing, you keep being the basket weaver — the basket weaver was always the channel. She’d been fighting her own work for two years. She stops. It was never wrong. Drop a Power Stone! 🔥

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