Torack shrugs. “One bit me in ‘98. Still won’t look me in the eye.”
I pause, staring at him. “Are you joking?”
He shrugs again.
“Oh my god, you’renotjoking.”
He moves closer, picking up my abandoned boot from the ground like it’s a crime scene artifact. “You’ll need new ones. Those aren’t built for mountain soil.”
“I got them on sale,” I mutter.
“They lied to you.”
I sigh, then finally plop down on a flat rock and start wringing out my sock.
“You’re not quitting, are you?” he asks after a beat.
“Over a boot?”
“Over a swamp. Over Groth. Over… this.”
I glance around. At the piles of lumber, the buzzing of saws, the distant sound of Lillian shouting something triumphant to a squirrel.
“No,” I say. “I’m not quitting. I came here to prove myself, and I haven’t even had the chance to break a printer yet.”
Torack raises a brow. “You’re waiting to break office equipment?”
“It’s a rite of passage.”
His lips twitch. Almost a smile. Progress.
“You’re more stubborn than you look,” he says.
“Is that an insult or a compliment?”
“Both.”
I smirk. “I’ll take it.”
Across the field, Lillian is crouched in attack mode behind a tree, holding out what I think is a granola bar to a butterfly.
“She told me it’s a dryad in disguise,” Torack says when he sees me watching.
“Honestly? I believe her.”
“She’s either going to rule the world or burn it down.”
“She’s already doing both,” I say.
We sit in silence for a minute, the weird, comfortable kind.
“You know,” I say, “this place is a mess.”
“Yeah.”
“But it’s got something.”
He nods slowly. “That’s why we’re here.”