Book
Three
Chapter
Nineteen - In the Garden
After
a particularly unrestful night, Robin rises early on the day of the
Memorial. A quick stop at the baths to clean up and then once
more to try to find Vere.
Getting directions from the ever-patient page staff of the Castle, the
Ranger does her best to memorize the local of Vere's office and sets
her feet in that direction.
After only
getting lost once, Robin finds herself at the door. Taking a deep
breath and clearing her expression, she raises a hand and knocks, much
more tentatively than she hoped she would. Darn hands!
"One moment," Vere's voice calls from within. Within
a
few seconds the door opens. Vere regards her silently from the
doorway for a few moments. He has already dressed for the day's
service, and gives the impression that he has probably already been up
for several hours.
Robin's green eyes gaze back at him, letting the man take
his time. The girl is somewhat rumpled, but no more so than
usual, and
she is dressed much as she was yesterday - browns, greens, leathers,
sword. She doesn't look entirely comfortable to be here, a fine
line of anxiety
is visible in the trace of her shoulders. No fear, but perhaps...
uncertainty? "Vere."
"Lady Robin," he says. "It is a pleasure to see
you. Would you care to step within, or shall we find a more
comfortable place
for conversation?"
A flicker passes through the Ranger's green eyes, she
never even thought of going anywhere else. Her green eyes drift
for a moment as she considers. "No, please. I think inside
would be best. Thank you." She finishes slightly awkwardly.
He steps back and gestures for her to enter, then silently
closes
the door behind her. The chamber is small and Spartan, and there
are
two chairs in front of a table, and another behind it with its back to
the
wall. "Please," he says, "take a seat. Would you care
for
some water? I keep nothing stronger in this chamber, although I
could
send for something. But that is not your preference, as I recall."
As Robin steps into the room, she casts a quick glance to
the wall at her back. Regardless of what she sees, the gesture
itself
brings a quiet flash of self-directed humor to the girl's lips. A
flash that is quickly repressed.
The wall is bare, the entire office looks as though it has
recently
been given a thorough cleaning, and there is almost nothing within it
to
indicate that it is currently being used. Vere gives no obvious
reaction
to her gesture, anyone who didn't know him would probably assume that
he
didn't notice it.
Robin seats herself in one of the chairs facing the desk,
with some reluctance. There is the slightest twitch of one hand,
a restless fluttering, as she perches delicately. "Thank you,
Vere. But
no, I don't think I'd care for anything to drink right now." She
smiles up at him, though the flickerings in her emerald eyes don't
exactly match that smile.
Vere moves the other chair in front of the desk a bit
farther away from the one Robin is in, then turns it to face her and
sits.
He waits silently for her to speak.
"Uh, okay." The Ranger runs one gauntleted hand
through her hair, pulling it back from her forehead nervously.
"Two things, before things get really... wacky between us."
Another of those weak smiles.
"Vere, I'm really sorry Jovian dumped that on you in front of an
audience. That was never my intention. And then I said too
much too. I
apologize." Not easy for her, but right and necessary.
"Also..." she draws the word out, and then jumps in. "Do you have
a genealogical chart or family tree or whatever of the royals that I
could get a quick
look at? Please?" Her eyes say that she *really* didn't
want
to ask this when there were issues between them, but time has trapped
her
on this.
"There is no need for an apology," he replies. "Your
brother
no doubt felt that I should know at least the basic information as
quickly
as possible, and I do not fault him for that decision. The
conversation
took place in front of no one but family, and considering how much
personal
information I have gathered on everyone else in this family it is only
fitting
that they have a chance to repay the compliment." He smiles.
"Your
apology is unnecessary, but the fact that you offered it is
appreciated, and I thank you for that."
A quick understanding smile dashes across the Ranger's,
echoed by a slight chuckle at Vere's decision on how to interpret the
events of
yesterday. She shrugs one shoulder at the end of the Danu's
statements
and drops her eyes almost bashfully. Some of the tension eases
out
of her shoulders.
"As to the chart, I do not have such an object immediately
available,
although I believe that the Princess Cambina has one. Nestor is
also
almost certain to have created one. If you need it immediately,
then
I can sketch one out for you right now. However, I should warn
you
that recent events and conversations have led me to understand that
there are certain deliberate errors in the publicly available
information."
Those green eyes come up to meet Vere's, flashes and
flickers in their depths.
"I don't need it *immediately.* Just before the coronation.
And, thank you for the lead on Cambina and Nestor. If you don't
mind, I'll probably check with them too." Cambina. Dung!
This homework
project her father's got her on is taking her to just all *sorts* of
wonderful
places. Bleeehhh!
"I don't know how much time the two of us will have before the
coronation. So if you want to draw or talk about... other stuff,
it's up to you."
"By all means speak with them, they are both fascinating
people, and I have never found a single moment in their company to have
been wasted." Vere pauses and considers her before continuing,
"For right now, I think
it is more important that we discuss 'other stuff' as you put
it."
He stops, and seems to be waiting for her to speak.
"Yeah." The Ranger pushes her hair back from her
face again. And leans back in her chair. For a moment, her
eyes dart around the barren room as Robin gathers her thoughts.
"I was riding through shadow, Vere. And I stopped to get a bite
of hot dinner. At the Osprey?" She looks over at him to see
if he's
heard of it.
Vere nods at the name of the inn.
"I swear, Vere, if I had known where I was - I would've
kept on riding. I don't mess with other people's homes. But
by the time I knew, I... was already entangled.
"Anyway, there
was an armed man in the courtyard, brushing down his horse."
Robin proceeds
to give a very 'law enforcement' style description of Hartwell.
"He
followed me into the Osprey, bought me a drink, asked me my business.
Told
me I couldn't have missed the signs of war on the road I rode in
on." Robin shrugs, she hit the road too late to see any signs of
war.
Robin becomes silent for a moment with an unhappy flat line to her
lips.
She sighs and continues. "Then he invites me to a meeting with
the
Chancellor. Said invitation was backed up with drugged ale and a
tankard
to the head.
"When I wake
up, I'm restrained without visible means in a room with a view."
Robin
again proceeds to describe the room, the table and the Chancellor with
an
keen observer's eye. She does not neglect to mention that someone
was
standing behind her. "Lady didn't introduce herself. She...
had
my Trump of Prince Julian and began asking me questions about that. I
was
less than polite in my responses." Wryly.
"She was not amused. So I was... escorted like a balloon to the
dungeons." The Ranger stops, licks her lips and can't prevent
herself from glancing
around the small, confined, bare ce... room she's in now.
"Listen, Vere. Would it be okay if I didn't sit?" Despite
her best efforts, Robin's gone a little pale and her respiratory rate
is climbing.
"Of course," Vere is up in an instant and pauses,
waiting to see if she will accept a hand to rise from the chair, or if
the gesture will irritate her. If he judges it to be the latter
he will abort
the gesture almost before it begins.
Robin bolts from the chair as though released from a
leash.
Her green eyes catch Vere's almost-gesture and a quick smile flashes
across
her lips as she minutely shakes her head. She hates that
'handing'
stuff. For a brief moment, an actual beam appears from the girl
at
Vere's consideration. Something that by its brief brilliance
shows
just how shaded Robin has been in the past.
"Would you mind if we continue this conversation as we
walk through the garden?" he asks. "I confess that I am finding
this room less than conductive to good listening." He strides to
the door and opens it, and waits for her.
A relieved snicker shakes the Ranger. "Dung,
Vere. I'm sorry. I really hoped I could do this, you know,
indoors." She gestures around the room. "But it gets better
and yeah, I'd better have more air if I'm to get anything across to
you. If you're going to be okay with the security levels in the
garden, then I guess I can be
too."
The Ranger approaches the open door with cautious steps, though there
is a hint of eagerness in the lines of her calves.
Vere laughs softly, "If anyone bothers to go to the
trouble of spying on this particular conversation," he says, "They are
welcomed
to also offer to come along with me to the Isles. I could
certainly
use the help of a good spy when I get there."
When Vere mentions returning to the Isles, Robin smiles
quietly to herself. The girl is, again, relieved of something
that she hasn't mentioned.
The Ranger doesn't quite run out of the office, but there is a certain
efficiency and speed of movement to her.
Once they are in the corridor he will lead her outside to
the expansive gardens of Castle Amber. Vere will respond politely
to anything Robin says while they're still in the castle, but will be
mostly silent
until they are outside.
The Ranger is silent as they walk. Her paleness
fades, her breathing returns to normal. However, a little knot of
tension
reforms in the line of her brows.
Their emergence into open air and greenery is like an elixir to
Robin. Deep breaths go in, steps lighten, her hands begin to
float at her sides, and
her whole body becomes somewhat invigorated. Though from her
expressions, Robin isn't too fond of some of the more... exotic forms
of gardening, topiaries and such.
The girl strides as far away from the towering heap of stone walls as
she can get.
Once they are in the gardens, and some distance away from
any working gardeners (assuming the day of the Memorial is not a
holiday for
them), Vere will look at her and raise an interrogative eyebrow.
"Dungeons." Despite her surrounding, Robin shivers a
little
as she re-orients herself in her story. "I was dropped on my ass
in
the dark, released from whatever was holding me. And the echoes
of
the clang... from the door died down when I heard a male voice.
Asking
me if I was Avis."
Those green eyes look over to Vere. "The voice identified himself
as one
Siege, a fellow prisoner and former Commander of the Brotherhood of the
Stag. He said he'd been locked up for declining to compromise his
principles." Robin shrugs with a fond half-smile for the memory.
A brief fond chuckle escapes Vere at the mention of
Siege's statement about his principles.
"Anyway, I asked... that he keep talking while I worked on
the
cell door." Robin's tucks her gauntleted hands under her armpits
for
a moment. "He said that he had served under the Lady in three
wars, the most recent being 'her current war against Chancellor Vianis,
who has betrayed the Mother and the church and reverted to olden ways.'
"He said the 'civil war has lasted a decade and many brave Danu have
died fighting each other.' He said that his 'troops have been
harrying the Dark
Ones around Lady's Town' which is called Mothersport, these days
and
that 'Avis, the Lady's daughter was keen to recapture it.'
"He
also mentioned your name Vere. Their plan was to take the town,
and contact you for aid. And they need it. They do."
Robin looks
over to her cousin.
Vere has a slight frown, but he meets Robin's eyes and
nods. "I will return to the Isles, as soon as possible. I
do not believe
I am the aid they need, but I seem to be all they will receive.
Discovering a cure for Father's condition will take too long, and he
cannot return to the Isles in his current state. Not if there has
been a widespread
return to the old ways."
"I'd go back if I could, Vere. But..." the Ranger
shakes her head, "I won't be able to any time soon. And maybe not
ever." She looks unhappy at that thought.
He regards her silently for a moment, then asks gently,
"What else occurred?"
"I got pissy. And heavy-handed." Robin
sighs. This kind of thing seems to happen to her. A lot.
"I wasn't quiet when I tore out my cell door. And after I let
Siege out, we were kinda in a time crunch. So... so we... ummm,
the sewers go
under the dungeons, you know." The girl pales for a moment and
swallows
visibly, her eyes on other things.
Then a graveyard laugh drifts past Robin's lips as she looks to
Vere. "The ambitious middle sons of Mothersport should look
toward futures in waterworks maintenance. I was... kind of
agitated. So the moss, it'll be pretty verdant if I don't miss my
guess."
"We made tracks... tracks a 'tracker-ray' could follow. It seems
that
my enthusiasm with the cell-door left behind a fine sample of my...
blood." She finishes, not able to come up with a cutesy way to
say that she screwed up that one too.
"Anyway, Siege and me are a dangerous two-some when armed with iron
pokers.
Tracker ray was not a problem... the flood was." Again that
pained,
pained look.
"We... ran. Eventually, we make it to open ground. And
Siege gives
me the rundown on possible pursuit vectors. Soooo, I start
tweaking
little things - the weather, the foliage... Again, I'm sorry,
Vere.
But if I had let them put me back in that hole, it would have been
worse.
Much, much worse." The Ranger's voice is grim.
"Anyway, Siege wants to check on where his people were camped, so we
dodge and scamper our way hitherward. That's when someone else
starts messing with the climate." She stops. "Listen,
Vere. I'm not going to be telling you Jove's bits. Those
are his. Okay?"
"Of course," Vere replies. "One can make what one
believes to be some fairly accurate assumptions based upon what you
have already
told me, in any case."
Robin looks uncomfortable at that, but she doesn't really
know what else to do. If she withholds too much, Vere's
under-informed
- lethal considering where he's going. She's just got to hope
that
Jovian will understand. Whiiiich is going to be tricky,
considering
him.
He is silent for a moment before continuing, "You cannot
be faulted for doing whatever was necessary to prevent being retaken."
He captures her gaze and repeats, in a calm, measured tone that conveys
understanding and acceptance, "Whatever was necessary."
A shiver goes through the girl as she looks at him with
large emerald eyes. "Oh, don't write me the carte blanche yet,
Vere. More went down than that. And you're going to have to
contend with
more than a rebellious spider.
"See, we hit Siege's camp to find the three-day old signs of a lost
battle. Siege says that two of his brothers died there. And
that Avis - his commander - had been captured. And that's where
Vianis' hunters finally get us cornered.
"Things get... real busy. Siege takes one to the head and goes
down.
And I'm... tearing things up, Vere. There's no other way to put
it." She sighs. "I wasn't careful, I wasn't kind and I was
still losing."
Vere nods thoughtfully, his thoughts not showing on his
face.
"Then, in the nick of time, Jovian and the draconic
cavalry arrive." She chuckles fondly. "End of game for
Vianis' trackers.
"It only takes Siege a couple of minutes to get his eyes refocused. He
says
that he's not feeling so well, after being beat up and imprisoned for
six
weeks. But he walks it off pretty good." A moue of
uncertainty
crosses Robin's forehead at the memory of Siege's speedy
recovery.
"Mostly he's concerned about Avis. And what will happen to
her.
The word sacrifice comes up."
An extremely faint sound, almost a snarl, comes from Vere,
but
nothing shows on his face.
"The lot of us decide hole up elsewhere and Siege tells us
that
the excuse the Chancellor used to start her little rebellion is that
the
Lady wouldn't summon her husband - the God Gerard -- to win the war
against the black warriors or sacrifice himself for the good of all."
Robin darts a gaze to her cousin. "I didn't have anything useful
to add
at that point."
"While we're looking at options, Siege also mentions that many of
the... Priestesses have 'followed his grandmother into infamy.'
And that there was a
fleet in the making in the port. Though Siege figured it wouldn't
be ready for a couple of weeks, yet, but that he thought that it was
being
readied for an assault on their hold at... Methrin, I think."
"Methrin's Isle," Vere says, "Yes, that makes sense."
"Annnnnd it kinda slips out at that point, who Jovian and
I are." A soft snort of fond exasperation fluffs the hair over
the Ranger's forehead.
"Things go back and forth for a while, but eventually a plan comes
together for
a two pronged assault on Mothersport. Annnnd I do a little more
creative work, kind of in preparation. Since the gulls were a
matched set,
Vere, it's possible that they could breed. If they do, no
witch-queen
or staff-wielding priestess will ever walk in the open safely
again."
Robin winces at the possibilities on that one.
Vere smiles at the image, "It would do the priestesses
good to have a natural enemy in the ecology of the Isles," he observes
mildly. "When I was growing up I often thought that a certain
culling of the herd would not be a bad thing."
There's an answering glint of something feral deep in
Robin's eyes. "Watch for them then, Vere. If the gulls
survived the
trap, they'll go to shore. They're only two now. But they
could
be a... harbored resource for other - ummm - like-minded fellows."
The Ranger takes another deep breath, looks around the garden and
pushes on.
"Jove... does something dangerous and tricky that I *still* do not
understand and
can't predict the ramifications of. You'll have to get details
from
him. But we get into position."
"The
dragonriders are scheduled to hit the main lighthouse and pound the
fleet. By this time, there's... something already kind of odd
about the storm. I've had my talons in the air too much, and it's
slipping away from me..."
"Siege, me and
a rider named M'corli... uh, we get back into the Chancellory the same
way we got out." Robin gulps again. "Signal is given, we
hit 'em."
"Annnnd, of course," lots of 'Duh!' coming from the Ranger here, "run
straight into the trap that Vianis has set for us. It's in one of
the small rooms in the dungeons. She's there. One of her
priestesses is there - very, very concealed. And a lady tied to a
chair with a bag over
her head."
Robin gives another of those law-enforcement style descriptions of the
room and its occupants.
"We charge in,
but there's some kind of magical barrier inhibiting forward
movement. I throw a spear, just to check, and yep, it stops wood
too."
"Vianis drags the girl over in front of the spear, removes bag and
Siege gets all tense. It's Avis."
Vere nods once again. Careful planning combined with
the
brilliant use of changes in the situation, that's the Spider all right.
"Me and Vianis start puffing out our chests at one
another, when... there's this," Robin tastes for the word, "ping?
Twang? Something, somewhere... something major just snaps.
You can feel it down through your bones." Her brows furrow as she
tries to convey
the sense of what she... sensed.
Vere lifts an eyebrow. "I understand what you are
saying," he says slowly, "But I do not think that I actually
*understand* it. If you see the difference."
"Ah, yeah. Actually I do." A soft snort shakes
the
girl and her green eyes dart over to Vere with an odd flicker there for
a
moment. "I see, Vere. I hear, too."
Those eyes sweep out over the gardens, restlessly, as though seeking
somewhere
else, anywhere else, to settle. But their search ends in
disappointment. The Ranger ruffles her shoulders and reluctantly
returns to the past.
"Vianis starts back-pedaling from her plans. Still has enough on
the intimidation table to take a stab at calling me Julian's kid.
Even though she doesn't recognize the man on the card she's holding
over the flames." Robin ticks her tongue and shakes her
head. The spider got that one wrong on several counts.
"I'm still scoping out the barrier - selective to sound, impervious to
motion, heat, scent - when Avis makes her move." A grim admiring
smile finds its way to Robin's face. And she nods in
approval. "Girl's got balls. And smarts. I'll give
her that." She looks up at Vere.
"Without a move or a sound, she targets the no-sense-'em priestess
behind me and... gives her life into my hands." Robin falls
silent for a moment. "Courage too."
"I nail said priestess, though I think Siege gets the kill on that
one. Barrier falls. I dive for the spear. M'corli
hits Vianis." Robin nods in satisfaction, *that* at least went
well.
"I'mmmmm not totally in time, Vere. It was my spear that holed
your sister's arm." An unhappy moue pouts Robin's lips, she hates
it when that happens.
Vere nods his understanding, accepting this statement
without comment.
"Anyway, I get to my feet and stoop to help M'corli with
Vianis... heh. Who knew an old lady could move so fast. She
throws the
rider into me and we go down into the burning oil on the desk.
M'corli
is injured... his eyes. Siege throws his sword through Vianis,
through as in passing through like a wind. No resistance, no
damage, no kill. And Vianis disappears. Damn!
Damn!" Robin stamps once,
then glances over to Vere and brings it quickly under control.
"Has M'corli recovered? Does he require
assistance? I'm not a healer, but if there is anything I
can do...?"
"M'corli was blinded. He's not going to recover
normally." Robin says sadly as she toes the ground.
"But Aisling's a not-normal healer, isn't it? Father mentioned
that there had been a... difficulty with Daeon. And I heard
Jovian mention M'corli's name to it in the courtyard yesterday."
Robin looks up to Vere, hoping that he can find hope where she has.
Vere appears to be considering the matter. "Dame
Aisling is an extraordinary healer. While there are limits to
what she can
do, my understanding is that she can do astonishing things. I
cannot
make promises for her, but there is reason for hope."
A faltering smile crosses the girl's lips and she nods her
thanks.
He turns away from Robin and gently touches one of the
nearby roses, giving her a chance to regain her composure in some
measure of privacy. "I have always preferred flowers growing upon
the bush," he observes quietly.
"Their beauty is a part of the world, giving pleasure to the eye as
they serve
to bring forth the next generation. Cut from their parent and
artfully arranged in the vase their beauty becomes more sterile, and
they act as
a reminder of how we use the death of others to further our own
ends." He shrugs, "I can be overly fanciful at times, I fear."
Robin raises an eyebrow. For a moment, her lips part
as
though to speak, then quickly clamp shut again. She shakes her
head against something internal, frustrated.
He turns back to her. "And after the Chancellor
vanished?" he asks.
The girl's voice, quiet until now, becomes even quieter, a
low
murmur that mixes with the breeze but carries no further than
Vere. Her head cocks to the side and for just a moment, her
attention comes off of the Danu to *carefully* become aware of
surroundings, hearing, listening, feeling for *anyone* else's proximity
or attention.
Vere smiles slightly, more than a hint of approval in his
manner.
"M'corli was screaming. Avis... she generated a blue
light
from her hand, and 'disconnected him from the pain' long enough for me
to
restrain and bandage him."
"But her voice, Vere. She was burning muscle for fat and had been
for a
long time. Game, but very very blown. She recovers my Trump
from
the wreckage of the desk and Siege gets her bandaged up."
"M'corli gets it under control enough to tell us that Antrith - his
bonded - wants us upstairs right away. Which, despite my
proclivities," a dash of
graveyard humor, "was *not* what I had in mind."
"See, the stairwell... there's a substance hovering in the air.
It looks
like smoke, smells like burning acid, behaves however it wants to and
I've...
run into it before. On the Black Road. I can't tell you
what
it's exact properties are. I can make arguments for
hallucinogenic,
temporal distortive, spatial displacement and necrotic... probably all
of
the above and more besides. But..." she sighs, "up it is. So I
gather
up M'corli, Siege gets Avis and up we go. Through that stuff."
Robin stops
and shivers, despite the sunlight and the air.
"Interesting," Vere observes. "I had some experience
with
the manifestation of the Black Road in the Isles, we called it the
'Black Woods.' Things came out of it. Things dangerous
enough to cause us to begin fighting alongside the Witch Queens to
defend our world, an
alliance which had never happened before.
"In retrospect, that might have been a mistake, as it might have been
what eventually led the Chancellor to seriously considering turning
back to the Old Ways. The Witch Queens never abandoned those
ways."
He falls silent for a moment, then continues, "I am handicapped in
never having walked the Pattern. I understand intellectually the
abilities that
it can confer upon an Initiate, but I do not truly understand what it
is
to have those abilities, and what it does to one's senses and
perceptions. I must count upon your experience in these
matters. Do you think that this 'smoke' that you went through is
somehow related to the Black Road,
and does its presence in the Isles after the defeat of Chaos somehow
indicate that Chaos retains its influence in the Isles?"
Robin *thinks* about that question, her green eyes turn
inward and she licks her lips thoughtfully. A couple of times,
she opens
her mouth to speak. Stops. Rethinks...
Vere waits patiently, doing nothing to attempt to force
her answer. He gives the impression that he would wait,
contentedly and silently, if it took her all day to formulate her
response.
"What the Pattern does... is make one's senses and
perceptions... manifest. Thus, certain questions have a real
danger of becoming circular." She bites her bottom lip and looks
up at the Danu. "And my assessments have been known to be...
occasionally overly dramatic, Vere. Keep
that in mind." A rueful ironic smile darts across her face.
A small smile turns up the corner of Vere's lips.
The girl folds her arms across her stomach
nervously. "I don't know from Chaos, Vere. I never made it
that far. But yes, I think the Black Road was active in the Isles
during the time I was there. The question is – was it active
before or after I was there? Or did I bring it with me?"
"Later, Prince
Julian surveyed the scene. He has *much* more experience than me
with both the Black Road and Chaos. He also knew of my concerns
in that direction. He gave absolutely no indication that there
was any evidence of Chaos or
the Black Road in the Isles."
The Ranger shrugs
with a sad smile. It's not much, but honestly, it's the best she
can do.
"I very much hope to have a chance to speak with your
father on these matters before I return to the Isles," Vere says.
"So I think we can turn from unanswerable questions for the moment."
"Please do, Vere. If there's anyone who can see the
right in this mess, it's Prince Julian." Absolute confidence
rings in the voice of the Ranger.
He pauses, then continues, "After you passed through the
smoke on your way up the stairs?"
The Ranger looks off into space, not seeing the garden,
and the color leaches away from her tanned face. "The Temple,"
she whispers hoarsely.
Those green eyes dart around taking in the thing that isn't
there. "I...
I'd seen it before too. On the Black Road. Arches.
Windows
lit by fi... no, by lightning this time. Outside the storm was
mad." She gives that word the connotations of both anger and
insanity.
"Candles. Like lives flickering in the wind." Her eyes dart
to one side. "The Altar pushed aside. Broken. Sucking
darkness beneath it." There's no clinical description this time,
but a swelling of emotions. Dread inevitability finely tempered
with rising panic.
Robin blinks herself back to the present. She glances up at Vere
and blushes deeply.
"I... uh... Siege didn't recognize the place. But Avis says it
was changed. Avis returns my Trump. But the two of them are
plenty upset."
"M'corli
moans. There's fire outside the windows. And the building
is shaking. I had to get the three of them out of there. So
we head for the door. I kick it open. And... and behind
us," Robin's expression begins to lighten, a quizzical smile of
strange amazement.
"Behind us,
over the Altar and the hole, the building just... collapses.
Gigantic stones burying the whole thing." There's almost
something gleeful there.
"But that's not a good thing for Siege and Avis." The girl
sobers. "Avis... Vere, she was completely gone to shock.
Stone-faced staring. I think she forgot to breathe for a while
there."
"Understandable," Vere says. He's silent for a short
while
after that.
"Buildings become invested with significance," he says finally.
"Perhaps it is a good thing that events will occasionally occur which
remind us that it
is not the building but the people that are important." He looks
back
at the castle, and its ruined tower. "Buildings can be rebuilt."
Robin flinches a little. Okay, the Temple was a big
ouch. Poor Vere.
Looking up, she follows the Danu's eyes, but from her, the tower evokes
a grimace and a repressed shudder. She turns back to the greenery
and draws
a deep breath.
"It shouldn't take destruction to remind us of that," she murmurs sadly
to herself. Then she presses on.
"By then
Antrith has landed in the main courtyard. M'corli makes a
bee-line for his
bonded and I get Siege and Avis moving dragonward. It's a heavy
load,
but Antrith manages to get us out of there.
"A really quick hop to the mainland, and the whole flight does a
bit of regroup and triage. Kourin and T'dor see to Avis and
M'corli. While
Jovian's getting things together for the up and out, I take a look back
at Mothersport."
"Vere, even on the mainland – it's raining. It... really should
*not* be
raining." The Ranger looks to Vere, with her voice and her eyes
she
tries to convey how absolutely WRONG it is that it's raining.
"Much
less monsooning."
"And Mothersport-way?" A sad shake of her head, "The shadow is torn,
and fraying away from me. Energies are loose and discharging
randomly. It's still cohesive, somewhat, but..." she shakes her
head.
"I get... afraid," the Ranger admits with some chagrin, "that if I try
to fix it, not only am I going to fry myself and everyone around me,
but the whole shadow is going to disappear in a nice pretty
explosion." She doesn't really want to meet Vere's eyes at this
point.
"So that's when we call Prince Julian."
Vere has become very still. He waits for her to
continue without comment.
Robin flinches and a soft croon of worry emerges from
her. She ruffles her shoulders.
"P... Father's assessment is not so dire." Her eyes flicker to
Vere and
back to the ground. "Remember, me dramatic, him experienced and
sensible. He says that we are in no immediate danger. And
he doesn't indicate that the shadow is either."
Vere relaxes. Not completely, but certainly enough
for Robin to notice.
"Avis..." Robin shakes her head again in admiration, "she
approaches him right away. The thing on her mind that she cannot
relay fast enough... the hole under the Altar? It was a
tomb. The tomb of someone
who's name I'm not going to mention in this place." A brief
flicker
of.. something from the Ranger.
"Prince Julian directs us out of the storm. He doesn't seem...
twitchy about using 'abilities,' so I try to calm down. He says
it's bad to claw
at the air, but that the immediate existence of Danu is not in doubt.
"Jovian and I
get a brief history lesson, and Father mentions that the No-Name's
ghost
has been risen. Whiiiich sounds like a bad idea, even to
me."
There's heavy irony in Robin's voice for that one.
"All this while, Prince Julian has been doing some quiet investigation
of the... damage. He says that he had formed some preliminary
conclusions. But... he didn't share them with me, Vere. I'm
sorry."
Vere makes a waving-away gesture with his hand at this
apology, but doesn't elaborate upon it verbally.
"Prince Julian gives Avis a note for Lady Corvis and sends
Avis
and Siege to Methrin's Isle via dragon courier. You can see in
Avis'
eyes – she had hoped that we were their saviors. Instead we're a
pair
of idiot kids."
"We mount up and take a swing over Mothersport on the way out. A
fleet
of 50 to 60 warships is splinters and ash. A lighthouse is broken
off
at the top. A Temple is collapsed on one end. And it's
still
*raining* hard and heavy."
"We get here and Julian makes for your father at best speed... and I'm
out of the discussion by that point." She shrugs.
"Sooooo," Robin looks back to Vere, "Avis is profoundly shaken,
truly exhausted, slightly skewered, and kind of disappointed. And
home."
"One other thing, that just doesn't quite fit into the story anywhere,
but I
think I should mention... my ocarina is still there. With
Vianis."
A hollow wind blows through Robin's soul at that thought. But
there
was no time.
"Your ocarina." Vere smiles, a look of genuinely
delighted bemusement. "I will certainly keep it in mind once I'm
back in the
Isles. Defeat Chancellor Vianis, put down the practice of the Old
Ways,
save the Isles from complete destruction, and recover your
ocarina."
He closes his eyes for a moment, and when he opens them he says,
"Polished
wood, about so big," he gestures with his hands, "and apparently carved
from
a single piece of wood. Correct?"
Robin raises an eyebrow. "Yep. That'd be it.
You know, the thing I've played the music of my soul through. The
thing I've backed with the power of the Pattern to conjure life,
deflect fate
and seal destinies. The thing that is held by a Witch Queen who
has
my blood and has raised the ghost of my m..." Robin bites it off
there. She stops, rubs her eyes. "Okay, I'm being...
dramatic again."
"Ah," says Vere. "I did not quite understand."
He
gives her a half bow. "I will do my best to reclaim it, I assure
you."
"Reclaim it or destroy it, whichever works best for
you. I... just wanted you to understand it's... potential."
"Vere. What can I do? What more do you want to know?
What aid can I
give you?" She's serious. It's time to pick the
knives.
And Robin's willing to help.
"First of all, I owe you a debt of gratitude
already. You rescued my sister and my closest friend, you and
your brother destroyed the Chancellor's invasion fleet, and you brought
my father and myself the news of what was occurring. Thank you."
He frowns. "I am not sure what other information I need right
now. It depends on how I will be returning to the Isles, how
quickly, and whether I will be going alone or not. I need to
speak with Prince Julian about the situation, and seek his
advice. I need further conversation with my father on this
matter."
He tilts his head to one side, regarding her silently for a moment
before speaking. "Most of all, I need to know that if I do not
return Father will continue in his efforts to find a way to heal his
legs and walk again. Solange will continue to push him, of
course, but if you could see to it that Prince Julian also makes
certain that Father does not once more decide that everyone else's
problems are more serious than his own, I would be very grateful."
Robin nods, though there's something swimming in her eyes
that she can't talk about.
Vere pauses for a long moment and stares out across the
gardens. "I have been happy here," he says, "Despite all the
problems, despite the fact that in many ways I do not think this truly
*is* Amber without the
Pattern. Do you know, I do not believe I have even touched a
sword
in all the years I have been here. I have not been challenged to
any
duels, I have not been forced to prove myself in combat, I have not led
men to their deaths against other men or against fell beasts out of
nightmare."
He looks back at Robin. "I have read!" he says, with what may
seem to
Robin to be undue force. "And no one has criticized me for
it.
If I were still in the Isles I would be leading the Brotherhood now, or
such
of it as remained faithful to my mother.
"And no doubt
my mother would already have found a wife for me, most likely an aging
noblewoman with a large force of men at arms and bags full of gold to
bring to my mother's cause, or else a politically powerful priestess or
an exceptionally able
sorceress who wants her granddaughter to have a chance at becoming The
Lady.
In any case, it would be a wife who well knows that a husband's duty is
to
listen and obey. And now I return to all of that, for the good of
my
people and my land."
He falls
silent for a moment, then shrugs. "So be it. I am my
father's son,
and I will not turn from duty. But it was a sweet dream, while it
lasted."
Robin is fiercely shaking, her emotions visibly warring in
her,
tears welling in her emerald eyes. "Vere," her voice tearing in
low
hissed intensity, "Dammit, Vere!" She crouches slightly, as
though
in pain. One gauntleted hand reaches out for her cousin,
tentatively,
like a wild animal stepping into an open place, not sure how the
gesture
will be received or even if it's desired.
Vere reaches out and clasps her gauntleted hand with his
bare one, not tightly, just a moment of contact. "Thank you," he
says.
Closing her streaming eyes, Robin nods, gulping without
words.
After that brief moment he releases her hand, and turns a
determined face back towards the castle. "I should probably go
back inside, it would not do to be late for any of today's
ceremonies. I am spending the morning closing the last few
matters I had to attend to, and preparing my office for whoever takes
it over next. I do not expect I shall
ever use it again."
"Yes, you will." It's a low growl. And a
promise. When Robin opens her eyes to look up at the Danu,
there's a green inferno burning there behind the tears – a fountain of
ferocity and passion. "When I'm done with my own war, Vere, you
had better be back. Or I'll be coming for you. Come hell or
high water."
The Ranger takes a small step backward, not trusting herself.
She's gone so far already.
He meets her eyes for a moment, then lowers his
head. "Lady," he says. It's half acknowledgement of what
she's said, half something else altogether than even Vere would be hard
pressed to put into words. After a few seconds he raises his
head. "Good fortune
attend thee and thine," he says. Then he turns and walks calmly,
and
with no sign of emotion upon his face, back towards Castle Amber.
From behind him comes the sound of a soft lonely croon,
that twists off into a snarl. A sound only Robin could make.
And though she makes no sound, the Ranger is gone – running deeper into
the
garden to find some sequestered spot hidden by lowered branches where
she
can curl up and cry herself sick.