Her horse veers off left. Shara steadies it - but looks left, why not, to see what's distracted the horse.
Well, that's one hell of a garden. It's got residual magic over it - the raveler's equivalent of lint, nothing Shara can mess with while the plant raveler's not actively working on it, but there is definitely a plant mage here.
The house has the same property.
And so does - something else.
Three different kinds of raveler-residue over the same property. All recent, though the house, requiring no active maintenance, less so than the garden and the - other thing.
Shara raises a hand; Kayam comes to a halt while Shara squints.
And then the unfamiliar something inside the house flares and Shara gets a very clear look at what's making the third kind of lint.
She promptly loses her breakfast onto the excuse for a trail they're riding on before she can even think about interfering with its work.
"Whoa, milady, what's - what's wrong, were the rations bad -?" asks Kayam
Shara shakes her head. "Some kind of raveler I don't recognize in that house. They're - I don't even know how to describe it. Raveling people."
"...The way you say that I somehow don't think you mean like healers do."
"Not like healers do," shudders Shara, swigging water. "Raveling their - feelings, I guess. There's people in that house and I don't know if there's a thing keeping them all together except the magic."
"Could... you... stop them, if they tried to do it to us?" asks Kayam slowly.
"I think so. I was caught off guard - there, they're doing it again, I can't reach from here but I can see the stitching. I think I could counter it."
"You think."
"If it was coming at me, absolutely - I'm less sure I'd grab it in time if it was aimed at you. It doesn't feel long-range, though."
"Okay. So - what do you want to do, milady?"
Shara thinks.
"Tie up the horses. You hang back here and watch through the window. I'll - knock on the door and see if I can fix the problem by talking. When I've figured out who it is, if I've decided they can't be reasoned with or I'm worried they're going to keep raveling at me until I'm too tired to stop them - I'll let off a flashball and you fold straight in - don't walk through the garden, it'll turn on you if the plant mage wants - and then I guess you kill this particular raveler. Maybe their work will dissolve when they die and the others will be okay."
"What if their work, um, does not dissolve when they die, as a for-instance?"
"Then," says Shara, "we'll be in a house with a bunch of people who just watched us kill their best friend, and you will fold us back to our horses smart-quick and we will run away very fast, but at least no one else will get - mindraveled."
"This sounds a bit more dangerous than your usual sort of idea," says Kayam.
"It's pulling double duty," says Shara, and she dismounts, and approaches the house, and knocks.
"It does, doesn't it? I'm resisting the urge to start trying it while on the horse, you realize."
"If you flop off of this horse while we've got daylight left because you were playing with magic that will be extremely silly of you."
"As you like. Although if the crown doesn't like me I can get demoted within my lifetime, I will still be a pennon, so you're safe to get used to it."
"Along with the hugging thing," he points out. "And leftovers from that place in general."
"I've never seen anybody - process their thoughts the way I do, so maybe it won't help, but do you want to borrow a notebook?"
"Not sure it would help, but I can always give it a shot. How do you process your thoughts?"
"I write them down. And then they're not inside my head anymore - well, not exclusively - and I can look at them without them sliding around, hiding or trying to look prettier than they are or distorting themselves even further the more I turn them over in my head."
She pulls a blank notebook and a pen out of one of the saddlebags and hands them over. "You're welcome."
"Okay," he pronounces, after a while. "I'm not sure if that helped or not but I think I have a better idea of what I'm working with, now. I'll explain, if you'd like to hear it?"
"I don't mind. Uh - I think I need a crash course in 'how to social' to get a better feeling of it, but - in general, if someone touched me in just about any way right now, I don't think I would care. And I used to."