16 Searing 121
Sivan hadn't gone into Jacun's shop that morning. He hadn't taken a day off for illness since his apprenticeship had begun and while he wasn't sick, he needed a day off. The bonding with his aidolon hadn't been traumatic, but joining with it to cast the spell that locked Flower safely into symbiosis with a new tree had certainly taken it out of him. Perhaps he had overstepped the bounds of his power a bit, and now he knew first-hand how using the full power of an aidolon required recovery time.
While the celestial creature coiled within him to rest, the elf puttered about his garden, bare feet treading flagstones and mossy, grassy earth. The hours went by in a state of trance. He communed with his sprites, with the plant and animal and elemental spirits that gathered in the little oasis he had created for them in his back yard. He repotted a fragrant herb that was enjoying its shady home too much. He watered and pruned. Frequently he would touch the bark of the Flower-tree, murmuring to his hibernating spirit much as he would to any other wild thing he encountered.
He could See Flower within it, see how the ensorcelling tree had arrested the progress of the curse and kept him safe for the time being. While he wished he could have gotten affirmative consent from his ward, he told himself that Flower had placed his trust in him that night in the wilds and every day since. When he ceased to be able to rise from his torpor, it fell to Sivan to make hard decisions and at least this one would buy them both more time to find a permanent solution.
The fae'ethalan is safe, Exael reminded him.
"I know," he murmured.
A bird twittered in the Flower-tree's branches. A butterfly floated past his gaze to inspect the tiny flowers of the repotted shrub. There wasn't much else left to do. A constant gardener wasn't necessary for so small a space. Everything had been rearranged to get the most of the limited sunlight as possible to all of the plants now that a tree's branches formed a canopy over most of the place. All that was left to do was let life live. With a sigh, he folded his legs under him and rested his bare back against the Flower-tree's trunk.