In the morning it's not really less overwhelming, but Ma'ar is at least able to decide not to cry about it. He eats a very subdued breakfast, and hugs Carissa, and goes to class.
It feels incredibly surreal, to be walking around the Tower, sitting with other children, and all the time knowing what none of them know. None of them have any inkling that the universe is wider and stranger and more terrifying than even he had realized before now.
For the next few days he comes home at lunch rather than eating in the dining hall, and hugs Carissa and sometimes cries.
The slight swell of her pregnant belly was already very salient to him but it holds a different meaning, now.
It's very hard to focus in class, and for the first time he brings home a test with a poor grade - and can't even care, at all, the scope of it is so much smaller and pettier than the world he knows about now. He - is probably not less concerning or frightening to his teachers, right now, and he knows he needs to fix that but he keeps feeling like his mind is a thousand miles away from the classroom - or a thousand years in its future - and that makes it hard to get his face to do things on purpose.
Within a week, though, somehow, impossibly, he's - kind of used to it? It doesn't seem like the sort of thing a person should be able to just get used to, but he remembers feeling that way too when Father and Mother died, and - it didn't get any less awful but the sharp edges of it in his mind got worn down, so it was less startling. This is the same.
He asks Carissa a lot of questions about Leareth. Often she doesn't know the answers, and he's not even sure it's helpful, to - focus on the surface, when Leareth had presumably been all sorts of different people in the intervening years. With the same core, which Carissa thinks he already has.
He starts making up his own pretend language, or cipher, to take notes in that no one else can read. (Maybe Carissa can with translation magic, but that's fine). He will write down what happened, and also how he felt about it, less because he thinks he would forget and more because it helps to make sense of.