Soar (Wings N Wands #3) Read Online Jocelynn Drake

Categories Genre: Fantasy/Sci-fi, M-M Romance, Paranormal Tags Authors: Series: Wings N Wands Series by Jocelynn Drake
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Total pages in book: 99
Estimated words: 93267 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 466(@200wpm)___ 373(@250wpm)___ 311(@300wpm)
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Sora lifted a hand and spoke a spell, most of which went right over Salem’s head, but the second he finished, a thin red line flew out of his hands and drew itself in interesting lines all around his child. In fact—oh my god, it was drawing out the child’s skeletal structure, then major organs, and hooo, there were numbers showing blood pressure, heartbeat, oxygen intake, the works. Like a magical monitor. But better. He could see in a glance everything he needed without taking x-rays, CT scans, ultrasounds, any of it.

Salem whimpered. “Please, please tell me you can teach me this spell.”

“It’s a little hard to do over distance,” Sora admitted. “Takes some practice to get the right hang of it. But I’ll do my best.”

He released the spell, kissed his child on the head, and then turned him loose.

As the child ran off, he instructed, “Do not go flying without either me or your father!”

There was a giggle of pure mischief but notably no agreement.

Sora sighed. “He’s already thinking of what to get into. I’m doomed. Why did I agree to two of them at once?”

“I can’t help you there.”

Salem rubbed his head, feeling like his brain was going to leak out of his ears at this rate. “Sora, you did that so easily. Is it a basic spell for you?”

“It is. Takes no prep and only captured sunlight. As you just saw. Now, let me fully explain what all you can do.”

Sora launched into something of a Basics 101 lecture of everything, sometimes only giving an overview as he admitted it wasn’t his specialty, but this was what he knew about it. Just the summary was enough to blow Salem’s mind. What Sora explained meant a wholly different approach to medicine, one where Salem could defeat chronic illnesses, conditions, and injuries he could do precious little about with modern medicine.

Dammit, this wasn’t fair. Sora held all of the knowledge Salem would give a limb to possess and here he was on a wholly different continent.

Salem fired off one question after another, trying to find magic’s limitations and received basically this answer in return: While there were limitations, they didn’t begin to compare to the limitations Salem already labored under. Salem could do vastly more with magic.

When Sora wound down from his lecture, Salem felt like crying. From frustration and envy, mostly.

“Sora.” Salem huffed out a breath, already knowing the answer, but needing to ask it anyway. “Last week I had a situation where a little girl almost died on the surgery table. It should have been a routine appendectomy, but her grandmother slipped her food before the surgery, and she crashed on the table. We barely saved her. If I was trained like you are, would that have happened?”

“No,” Sora answered decisively. “For one thing, appendectomies are a very, very rare occurrence for us. All of the normal causes for appendicitis are things we can cure. Parasites, bacterial infection—all of those things we have potions for. The only time I’ve ever seen an appendectomy done was when the woman in question had blunt force trauma to her rib cage, and it was so bad it ruptured the appendix. We chose not to save it as there was already so much damaged, and we focused on the other organs.”

“So an extreme outlier.”

“Pretty much. Your patient would never have needed surgery to begin with.”

Shit. Salem had just known that would be the answer.

He had lamented only days ago how he wished his magic could help save a child. Now, he was told it could. That all the information he needed existed right here in front of him. What else could he do but grasp it with both hands?

“Sora? Any chance you take apprentices?”

Sora grinned, laughing a little. “I already put together a bundle of textbooks for you. Had a feeling you’d want to know everything.”

“Well, yeah, duh!”

“To answer, yes, I’m happy to teach you.” Sora pointed downward. “Type in chat your email and phone number so I can send you things.”

Salem leapt to obey. “Are these books digital?”

“They are. Some of them are scans because they’re so old. We don’t dare pass around the physical copies. Makes them interesting to read. I highly suggest printing them out rather than trying to read them on a screen.”

“Got it.”

“Sadly, I have to cut this short.” Sora sighed, glancing off to the side. “I’m due somewhere else in about thirty minutes. But start with the reading.”

“Sounds awesome. Sora, thank you so much for this.”

“Not a problem. I quite enjoyed the conversation. You ask very good questions. For now, I’ll let you go.” With a wave, he cut the connection.

Salem sat there for a good five minutes just trying to process everything he had learned. Failed. Too much input, he needed to buffer for a while.


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