An embroidered bear that looks like it's wearing a suit of lace-bordered plate armor and has tiny useless metal wings to match and is at least four times its likely original size charges the horses, who startle madly and go completely out of control.
The wagon goes over. There's a fence, at the side of the road, there's posted warning signs, beware Magic in this ravine until post marking its end, but the wagon with all the slaves in it crashes right through the fence. Gravity's upended, everyone's screaming, some of the screams cut off abruptly as they tumble end over end down the slope. Aya flings manacled hands over the back of her head, feels a familiar snap in her arm as something strikes it - that's broken; and now her nose is too - there's a splinter of wood through her calf and her ear's ringing and wet with blood and she's got to have cracked a rib -
She's completely unharmed, unperforated, not even embroidered as far as she can tell. The steel around her wrists and ankles is gone. She doesn't see any of the other slaves - no, on second though, maybe she does, there's a bright orange snake with a tail that splits into five fish-finned ropes and a beetle the size of her head with the lyrics of Midnight Lightning written across its wing casings in block letters and a surprised-looking rabbit with wheels for forefeet and a broom-end for a tail. Everyone else is either much less recognizable or vanished entirely. But she's fine.
(She checks her heel. It's still marked. So she's unrestrained and unsupervised, but not, technically speaking, free.)
She needs to get out of the magic soonish, before it gets bored with its minimal alterations of her person, decides she'd be prettier as a glass music box decorated with butterfly wings, or a leather-upholstered down pillow that drinks blood, or a goose with windmill blades spinning around its neck. She's not, however, sure that she can climb the hill. It's likely she'd get just far out enough to count as having exited the magic and then fall, taking her chances a second time, and while this occasion she was lucky, nobody else was - she doesn't think she's been lied to all her life about the general safety of the environment. She'll have to go out the other way. She wades into the waist-high grass, routing around the clump made of swords and the clump made of swaying violin strings and the patch that might just be pitch-black flora but might be something else - but most of the grass seems only to be grass; plants tend to be safer in magics than animals. She winds up startling a dozing bird-eel-cat hybrid so thoroughly mixed up that she has no best guess as to what it was originally. It flap-flop-flees.
And then, when she hasn't seen an embroidered plant for a while since the shrub that appeared to be growing assorted national flags for leaves and onions by way of fruit, and thinks she might be close to the edge, there's a door.
It is freestanding in its frame, painted bright and glossy red with a few words in other colors on it running in various directions ("entirely", "yellow", "jump", "choristers", and "melting"), has pink fringe growing out of its hinges, and has where a handle might normally be, a slender open jar affixed with its mouth pointing up which is full of small-denomination coins, dried cloves, and what looks like it might be olive oil.
Aya has no idea how big this magic is. She doesn't know if drinking the water or eating anything vaguely appetizing that she finds around it will be taken as a second invitation to turn her blue or centipedal or dead. She could turn back and try to climb out the way she came, but - then what?
She's nowhere near the border.
Her legal owner is the employer of the fellow who was driving her and the others to the labor rental office.
The magic hasn't given her a set of papers and it has not unmarked her heel, and provoking it is more likely to make things worse than better.
And she's never heard of a door in a magic before.
She gingerly touches the jar, which is cool under her hand - and she pulls - and the door opens, tufts of pink in the hinges squeaking, to reveal what looks like a bar, which definitely isn't behind it if she peers around the frame.
Aya takes a deep breath and she walks in.
And then she thinks it is about time she got going, but she bids Idania goodbye first and receives a copy of the board game (a travel version, with a quilted cloth board and small cone-shaped tokens) to take along with her.
And Aya gets on her hoverbike and heads Perinixu-ward, hoping that the goddess will be sufficiently interested in the device to say hi of her own accord because she's not sure how long it will take to find an actual temple.
When Aya arrives in Perinixu's domain nearly immediately a multi-languaged voice, based from everywhere and nowhere, says, "What manner of contraption is that? I, Perinixu, goddess of the highland spring commands you answer."
Okay, that's kind of disconcerting on two levels, but. "It's called a hoverbike," Aya says, with the first words in adorably-accented Jorten and the last the loanword Bar supplied.
"I am from a country called Eseo in a world called Tayane where the rules of magic are different from those here."
"None, or if we have them, they are very quiet. Magic is a condition that can affect a smallish location, within which unpredictable and usually displeasing things happen to things that enter."
"That is not where my contraption came from, although if you prefer I can depart your domain contraption and all. I fell into a magic in my home world, and instead of harming me it healed the injuries from my fall and removed my chains and offered me a door, which I opened, and it led to a place between worlds, where I was able to purchase anything I chose from any of those worlds with a loan from a native of this world who I found there, and this was what I wanted."
"I asked for a list of all of the gods around once I learned that there were real gods here and decided to come here, although I'll leave if you don't like me."
"I liked the sound of a god who chooses to use that power on something like healing. It is one of the most straightforwardly good things there is to do. So I thought I might like to meet you."
Aya bikes onward in search of someplace to settle and collect some income, since it looks like she's not getting spontaneously handed an acolytehood for being shiny.
Aya has several options available for income gathering. She could be a farmhand, messagenger, laundry-woman, maid, and other things - but the job that will most likely interest her is working at Perinixu's temple, as an aide. It doesn't pay exceptionally well, but overall it seems geared towards helping people, if in ordinary ways than with magic.