December 26, 2009

Merry Christmas in Colour, part 1

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christmas09colour1

Merry Christmas 2009, in colour! part 1

coloured Dec 25, ’09

(567)

Aaaaaaaaand this picture should make a lot more sense now. Or maybe a little. Depends how much you were paying attention the first time? ^_^7

(sings and dances) I wuv my tablet, I wuv my tablet…

I’m using this picture as a tutorial to teach myself how to use it, and to relearn Photoshop as the version that came with it is similar to the one we have downstairs (Photoshop 5) but of course it’s different. So I will be shading and highlighting and making shiny over the next week or so. When I’m not playing Wii Sports Resort (that is a pretty darn good game, if I do say so). The tablet is very handy in that I don’t have to switch brushes to do the the tiny corners – I just let up on the pressure. It’s great! And of course it feels like drawing which is very comfortable. It’s a pretty cool device.

I’m not sure how I ended up colour co-ordinated with Flairé’s princely outfit. I think it’s because it’s a generally accepted fact that I look decent in black and red, and his outfit just happens to be black and red. Hmmmm. Oh, I just noticed that part of it is not the right colour (silly me), so I’ll fix that tomorrow. Esgalwen, too, is usually in red, but she also likes blue and green. …Marteth looks like his eyes are crossed. I better fix that. And maybe I’d better recolour Jalril’s tunic so it doesn’t look like part of his skin.

Y’know, the more I look at this picture, the more I like it. Is that bad?

Christmas dinner was great. The turkey was extra good this year. The sweet potatoes were mashed, instead of sliced in chunks as we normally have them, and they tasted like pumpkin pie. I have been wearing my contacts for 30 hours and my eyes are not particularly tired or strained, despite staring at screens all day. I wuvs my pillow.

Did I mention we toasted marshmallows on the fire in our fireplace? They were nommy. Om nom nom!

December 25, 2009

Merry Christmas 2009!

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Whoa! Lots of pictures today, folks! Hold on!

christmas09

drawn Dec 23-24 ’09

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First, a very Merry Christmas (or whatever you happen to celebrate) from all of us here at the Adhemlenei. People in this picture: Marteth, Bayn, Gyoriing, Lyrestan; Mathaning, Gullac, Zela, Flaer, Yoeath; Flaria, Jalril, Flairé, Tam, Rana; Ceniro, Leslie, Jennifer, Esgalwen. Quite a number! Didn’t have room to fit in Silver, but we all know she wishes you a Merry Christmas too. Yes? Yes.

Jalril is just embarrassed at standing next to a girl. Who’s dating his brother. She thinks he’s funny. And cute. Tam is a cloooooowwwwn. X D Flairé is wearing his princely-type tunic which you haven’t seen before! It’s red.

Eeeeeee I’m so excited!

Below are the Christmas presents I drew for the various webcomics I read.

 ctsleaf09

Leaf of Chasing the Sunset (and chibi Feiht, Ayne, and Myhrad)! drawn Dec 18, ’09

 tmjen09

Jen, of True Magic! drawn Dec 18, ’09

 lintcigarhermit09

The Cigar Hermit (Juan) of LinT! An underappreciated character. drawn Dec 18, ’09

 wayrifttrio09

Zemi and Kip (with Flairé, who thinks they’re the greatest funny dudes he’s met in the last century,  if not longer) of Wayrift! drawn Dec 19, ’09

P.S. Were you like this last night? (I wasn’t, but you never know who might be) XD So funny.

December 15, 2009

Adhemlenei: Sword’s Innocence: Chapter 5

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Chapter 4          Chapter 6

 

Chapter 5

 

Flairé was strolling through a dry, grey, rocky valley on his way south when he heard someone calling. He turned, and five kalmaei, dressed in leather with their hair tied back, appeared on a nearby ridge and hurried towards him.

“Sir?” they asked. “Do you have a moment?”

“What’s the matter?” Flairé asked pleasantly.

“We’re miners, searching for iron in these mountains. But we’ve found something truly bizarre: a child, and we don’t know what to make of him. Will you advise us?”

Flairé nodded, his imagination alight.

They led Flairé to a rough hut, built as a temporary shelter against any weather that wasn’t winter.

Flairé entered slowly, stooping to avoid the low door frame (built that way to keep in warmth) and saw a small boy, less than two feet in height, sitting cross-legged on the floor, clad in dirty colourless rags. The boy stared back with defiant brown eyes glittering from under a thick unkempt mop of black hair.

“Who are you?” demanded the boy gravely.

“My name is Flairé,” the elf in question answered.

“No, who are you?” repeated the boy impatiently.

“Why don’t you watch your tongue, you rogue?” one of the other elves said irritably. “This is a prince you’re talking to.”

“What the pixie gas are you talking about?” the boy rejoined, equally irritably.

The miner sighed. “A prince is a great leader in training. This man is Flairé descended of Flar and Stialia, King and Queen of the Moonland, and Lady Zela. I don’t suppose you know who they are, but you must respect him. Tell him who you are, now.”

“Make me,” the boy snapped, crossing his arms.

Flairé sat down next to the boy, who watched him warily. “Look, I don’t know who you are, but I’m a curious person, okay? I was just told that these people had found a boy far away from all settlements, and I thought, ‘that’s very interesting. I wonder who he is and where he came from’. Why don’t you tell me, for curiosity’s sake?”

The boy still glared at him, but it seemed cooled a little, now. “My name is Marteth and I was raised by pixies. I was too!” he added, as Flairé opened his mouth.

“I’m not doubting you,” Flairé said quickly.

“Yet,” the boy tacked on.

“Never,” Flairé answered. Pixies were secretive, tiny little fairy-like creatures, sentient but possessing a simple and other-worldly intelligence. They usually lived in swamps and played tricks on travellers. Flairé had never heard of them raising a kalmaeirin child, but here was one child, ragged, tough, wiry, not ill-fed, in the middle of nowhere. “You know, you remind me of people in my family.”

Marteth looked at him sideways. “How?”

“Well, you look a little like my mother, especially when you’re glaring at me like that.” Marteth scrunched up his eyes with an expression of disgust. Flairé chuckled a little, not unkindly, and went on. “And you sort of act like her, too, when she’s angry. She gets all cold and prickly like that.”

Marteth looked at him frostily. “Well, she has the right idea of how to deal with strange people, then.”

Flairé blinked, trying to connect the two thoughts. “Would you like to meet her?”

“Not really,” the boy answered. “I want to find my mother.”

“Your real mother, or the pixie who raised you?”

Marteth thought for a while. “Both. But preferably my pixie.”

“I see.” Flairé, too, thought, and then came to a decision. “May I help you find your mother?”

“What?” exclaimed one of the miner elves. “You can’t just let him go back into the wilderness. He’ll die!”

“He seems to have done all right so far,” Flairé answered drily. “If that’s what he wants, I’m not going to stop him. He’s his own master. And so young to be his own master…”

Marteth glowered. “Flairé-person is right. I’m not going to die. And I’m my own master. But my mother will only come back if I’m alone. I don’t need you big clumsy people scaring her away again.”

Flairé began to say that he wasn’t clumsy, and then guessed that he might seem so to a tiny, dragonfly-winged pixie.

“Is there anything else I can do to help you out?” the young prince asked, unwilling to stop the spirited boy and yet equally unwilling to not take responsibility for his welfare.

Marteth stood and pointed to the door. Flairé followed the boy outside and waved the miners back when they tried to follow. Marteth led him around to the back of the hut and a little way up the hill. He dug around in a pocket with a grimy hand and pulled something out. “Can you tell me what this is?”

Flairé took it, a small band of severely tarnished metal. “I think it’s a bracelet, a decoration for your wrist. A bit small, though.” He rubbed some of the encrusted dirt off and tried to find out what kind of metal it was under the tarnish; he thought it might be silver.

Then he saw what it was and his heart froze.

“What’s the matter?” Marteth demanded impatiently. “What’s that scared look for? It’s not going to bite you.” When Flairé didn’t answer, he went on. “I might, though, if you don’t tell me.” Later, Flairé would find out that that was a joke.

“This… engraving says… Hciristial,” Flairé whispered. “Do you know who that is?”

Marteth’s expression clearly said “Do I give a hoot?” but in the face of Flairé’s sudden seriousness, he simply said, “No.”

“That was my baby brother’s name,” Flairé said softly. “He was stolen from my mother and father when he was only a few days old.” He looked up suddenly. “How long have you lived with the pixies?”

“Ever since I can remember,” Marteth answered, equally serious. “Am… am I your brother?”

Flairé knelt and looked closely at him. Marteth looked searchingly back, something yearning in his eyes.

“Yes,” said Flairé, pulling his brother into a hug. “Yes, you are truly my brother, and Zela’s son.”

Marteth stood still, unsure of how to respond to the hug. Eventually, his arms crept around his brother, and his proud head lowered until it rested on his shoulder. “I… have… a kalmaeirin family.”

“Yes,” Flairé said again. “Will you at least come and meet the rest of them before you go back to the pixies?”

“I will,” Marteth said, looking his brother in the eye and giving a firm nod of his head.

“And one more thing: do you know of any more children raised by pixies?”

“No, why?”

“I had three more baby brothers, all vanished in the night…” Flairé smiled hopefully.

“I don’t know.”

“Well, I’ll go on hoping they’re alive, too, then. Now then! North-east we go! Mother’s in the Dragonland city.”

The miners watched them go, puzzled looks on their faces. Flairé waved cheerfully to them before the two newly reunited brothers climbed the long hill out of the valley.

 

“The frustrating thing is that we can’t keep you,” the elf-woman Youlastal said to Zela and the silver dragon, recovering groggily behind bars in a stone room with golden sunlight streaming through one window. “You’re far too recognizable, Aghazi, and you, Lady Zela.” She tilted her head to one side. “Of course, if you disappeared, it would only begin sooner. Perhaps that would not be a bad thing, but we’re not ready.”

“What would only begin sooner?” Zela asked sullenly. “What’s this all about?”

“You don’t know?”

“Of course I don’t. I’ve been here for months and heard nothing. Obviously you have been going to a great deal of trouble never to let any details slip.”

“I assumed you knew more than that,” Youlastal. “Else why would you come sniffing around here, the way you do, forest woman?”

“Something got out, at least,” Zela said defiantly, though she had to put her hand to her head to quell the pain. “The realms are filled with rumours of unrest. Now tell me what you’re doing!”

“Why don’t you ask Aghazi?” smiled the other, and left the room. “Gilzellen! Are you ready to go?”

“Where are they going?” Zela asked, looking up at the silver dragon’s iridescent blue eyes.

“Probably fleeing into exile in the east,” the silver said. “They will either take us with them, or deal with us here, though… I don’t think they will kill us.”

“I’m not afraid to die,” Zela said. “I’m only afraid of what it will do to Flaer.” She shook away that thought before tears could come to her eyes. “Is your name Aghazi?”

“That is my dragonname. You can continue to call me Silver. I know, I’m not the only silver dragon,” she said quickly, forestalling Zela’s confused question, “but the rest of my family, especially my clutch brothers, are all named things like Silverwing and Silvertail. My mother is named Quicksilver, and my father is Truesilver. In your tongue, of course.”

“Of course,” Zela said. “I’m glad to know. What is all this talk of treason?”

The silver sighed and shifted. Zela rubbed her aching head again – concussion, at the very least – and saw that deep red blood was trickling slowly from puncture marks in the dragon’s neck. She got up and took off the torn-off part of her dress, tearing it into strips and wiping away the blood from the wounds, trying to staunch them.

“Thank you,” said Silver. “It’s a strange tale, and shocking, but it’s true.”

“Go on,” Zela said, somewhat impatiently.

“Well, in a nutshell – we believe in the Lord God, don’t we?”

“Yes…”

“And in His angels, those who appeared to you and taught you, Lady Zela?”

“Yes…?”

“How many were there?”

Zela paused in her ministrations and thought. “I don’t actually remember. There were a number of them.”

“A hundred? Seven?”

“There were seven great angels, archangels, and some others. Not a hundred. Not more than twenty, I think.”

“What if I told you that there is only one angel?”

Zela jerked backwards in surprise, backing against the stone wall. “What!?”

“That is what some are saying now. I do not know why, but apparently they believe in this strongly enough that they wish to make everyone believe the same, and to remove those from power who believe in seven archangels by the hand of God.”

Zela shook her head in disbelief, and then stopped and held it in pain. “That’s unbelievable. That can’t be. That’s completely irrational.”

Silver’s head drooped. “I know. I don’t know how this idea got started, either. No one knows who first thought it, or else they’re protecting them. I was approached about a month ago, and I went along with them for a while to try and learn more, but when I learned that they are planning to remove King Kiirstril-“

“Truly?” Zela cried. “This – oh, this is awful!”

The silver nodded morosely. “Hopefully my outcries earlier helped, but I doubt it. Only the ones who were attacking us outright will be identified. The cancer will still be there. And we will not be…”

“That’s right,” said Youlastal. “You’re coming with us, into the east.”

“How far east?”

“As far east as we can get. Come on! Come quietly, or we’ll tie you up and carry you like grain.”

“Understood,” Zela responded, standing still. “But I am not like that.”

“You won’t come quietly?”

“No.”

“Well, then…” Youlastal reached behind her back and brought out a needle with clear liquid in a bag. She opened the cage, and the silver dragon roared. “Well, you’re an easier target, anyway.” The silver pulled her nose back and the elf chuckled. “Don’t want to go to sleep? It will make it much easier on everyone.”

“I stand with the Lady Zela,” snarled Silver. “She has fought and suffered for a complete stranger.”

“As would we, if there were others unknown whom we needed to protect,” answered Youlastal openly.

Zela blinked, surprised by the sudden earnestness, and nearly missed Youlastal’s next jab at Silver. She jumped forward and grabbed Youlastal’s arms, grappling with her.

“What?” gasped Silver suddenly. “Lady Zela, I hear someone.”

“So… do… I,” Zela responded, gritting her teeth as she fought against the elf.

“In my head.”

“What?”

“She says her name is Yoeath, and that I should keep talking to her inside my head. She says to keep the sleeping poison away from me as long as you can.”

“Yoeath!” Zela cried. “Thank the stars!”

“It will not be enough,” the elf she was wrestling with responded. “One unicorn will not be able to take you away. Gilzellan! I need the others.”

A dragonish grunt outside was the response, and the other two elves rushed into the room. Silver pulled the cage door shut before they could get there, and held it firmly.

The two elves looked at each other and took out sleeping poison of their own. Silver barked at them, coughing fire over her hand so they couldn’t stab it. But even a dragon needs to breathe to create fire, and they are incapable of circular breathing like the kalmaei, and when she did, one darted in and jabbed her with the needle, squeezing the bag until it emptied.

Silver immediately showed the effects, her hide eyelids half drooping over her blue eyes, and her paw dropping limply to the floor. She still breathed fire, but it was a purr now, a mere trickle that extinguished itself on the floor before her face. Within a minute she was asleep.

There was the sound of roaring outside, and one of the blue dragons stumbled back across the doorway. There was a bright flash of metal, then a bright flash of flame. A tenor shout.

“Marteth, stay back! Yo, keep him back!”

Youlastal’s eyes widened in panic, and she dropped the sleeping poison, wrenched herself away from Zela, and drew a small axe from her belt. Zela’s eyes widened, too, in surprise, and she flung herself back in a ready crouch.

“Tark, Zalmith, we need to go NOW!” shouted Youlastal, advancing on Zela in her corner.

Zela lashed out with a kick, and looked over helplessly as the other two elves rapidly tied ropes to Silver’s four paws and then to a dragon’s harness.

Youlastal swung sideways at Zela, catching her arm. Zela hissed and tried to ignore the pain, punching against the other’s armour with her good hand, and tried hooking her leg, but the other dodged it. Her opponent swung again, and there was no room to manoeuvre in the corner. This blow caught her across the stomach, tracing a long shallow gash.

Zela leaned against the wall, glaring, helpless. She hated being helpless. She hated it with as much passion as anything – except injustice. Her vision was tunnelling.

Youlastal raised her axe for another swing, and something sprang on her from behind, knocking her sideways and to the floor.

Youlastal rolled and came up in a crouch, and the person who had attacked her stomped on her axe before she could pick it up. The elf looked around and saw that her allies had gone in a panic, without taking Silver. She sprinted out of the room.

Zela collapsed, and the person who had saved her cried out and knelt down swiftly beside her, taking her into his arms gently. It was Flairé.

“My son?” Zela asked, uncertainly.

“Mother, oh, Mother, I’m sorry I’m so late. I only just got into the city, and then I found Yoeath galloping along the streets, and I found out you had vanished and I came straight away with her…” It seemed that Flairé had inherited his father’s tendency to babble, though when he was anxious, not embarrassed.

“Hush, son,” Zela said warmly. “I’ll live. Help me up. We need to help Silver, the dragon.”

Yoeath stood behind her, her horn faintly glowing, her eyes alight with worry. “Zela?”

“I’ll live,” Zela repeated, and then caught sight of the boy on Yoeath’s back. “Yoeath?”

“What is it?” asked Yoeath calmly.

“…Thank you for coming to find me,” Zela said. “I’ll never go anywhere without a sword again, though. Or maybe several. But who is that?”

Flairé’s face lit up with joy and pride. “This is my brother, your son, Mother.”

Zela’s face went absolutely blank. “…What?”

“Your son,” Flairé repeated. He went to Yoeath’s side and swung down the boy. “This is Marteth – I mean, Hciristial, who was stolen so long ago by pixies.”

“Pixies?” Zela said. Her mind seemed to be having trouble accepting news.

“Yes,” Flairé beamed. “He still has his bracelet.”

“Is this person really my mother?” Marteth asked coolly. “She’s hurt. You should fix her before it becomes infected.”

“Words of wisdom indeed,” Flairé responded, as Zela raised her eyebrows at her new son’s insolence.

“We need someone to help Silver,” Zela said. “Are the knights coming?”

“Yes,” said Yoeath. “Get on, Zela. I will carry you.”

First, Zela leaned down and studied Marteth. “Yes, I am your mother. I… can recognize my children. And your name is Marteth now?”

“Yes,” replied Marteth, somewhat impressed by his mother.

“Pride,” Zela mused. “It is not far off from the truth, I think. I may still call you Hciristial, and I can’t answer for your father.”

Knights and golden dragons rushed in, and one elf injected Silver with an antidote. She began to come around.

“Mother,” said Flairé, “he wants to return to his pixie mother.”

Zela hesitated, torn by conflict. “We can discuss that later.”

“Of course. I’m sorry, Mother,” Flairé said softly. “Let’s just go home and play music together.”

“No,” Zela replied shortly. “We need to fix the mess here first.”

“I can do that,” Silver said, crawling to her feet. “I thank you very much for your help, Lady Zela, and all your efforts on my behalf. You have probably saved my life, and certainly my freedom, nearly at the cost of your own. Now you should go and rest.”

“It was all I could do,” Zela said. “Thank you for telling me what is going on. They may call me a spy from the Moonland all they like but I am not. I only want to know so that we can sooth the unrest.”

 

They all went back to the Moonland, where Flaer wept with joy to find his son again, which surprisingly didn’t lose him any respect in Marteth’s eyes. Marteth himself needed instruction in almost everything, especially in proper dress, though he was very proud to have shimmering silk clothes. He talked back like anything, sending Flaria into fits of dismay, though she never lost her patience and adored her little brother dearly. Menad was nowhere to be found, and Zela found that he had left to explore the wild with a friend.

Flairé sent a message to Tam, saying “Taking care of Mother. How is your investigation? Come join us!”

Tam sent a message back after a month, saying “No can do. Can you come here instead? Very twisted business. Please come!”

So Flairé saddled his brown horse – his second horse; kalmaeirin horses lived as long as fifty years, and he had already seen one pass away – and prepared to leave for the North, leaving Marteth to the tender mercies of his mother and sister.

“So, be patient with Mother, please,” he asked Marteth before he left. “She’s not so strong in the patience department, and she’s a perfectionist… But she will teach you everything she knows willingly and with love, even if you don’t see it so.”

“I will try, Flairé,” Marteth answered seriously. “I was watching her sparring with Sir Gyoriing yesterday. I want to fight like they do.”

“You will be able to,” Flairé reassured him. “But it takes many years of hard practice. You understand?”

“Yes,” Marteth answered determinedly. “I will be a great warrior when you come back.”

Flairé almost pulled a face at his brother’s goal in life, and his naivety to practice, but didn’t. “I look forward to sparring with you. Goodbye!”

He arrived in the Moonland city a week later and went straight to Tam’s parents’ house.

Tam was waiting for him on the steps, lounging casually against the rail. He looked cool as a cucumber, but Flairé, looking at him, thought he looked different somehow. His eyes were more shadowed, as if he’d been sleepless for many nights more than he could stand.

“Hey there,” he said, as Flairé left his horse at the bottom of the stairs and sprang up two at a time to meet him. Flairé hugged him, grinning cheerfully. “I can see you’ve been well, at least.”

“Please, tell me what you’ve been up to!” Flairé said eagerly. “I just need to let my horse into your field.”

“Go ahead, and then come up to my room,” Tam said, smiling back same as ever.

 

Flairé took the outside route – climbing the wall – and slipped through Tam’s window and bounced on his bed. “All right. What’s this about twisted?”

“Oh, I want to hear what you’ve been up to first,” Tam said, leaning against the fireplace and running a hand through his hair. The blue dye in his bangs was fading back to brown again.

“Well, not too long after we parted ways, I found my long-lost younger brother-“

Tam leaned forward, eyes alight with interest. “Really? Which one?”

“The eldest. Hciristial. He calls himself Marteth now. It fits, too. He has such a stiff neck for a pre-adolescent, and he wants to be a warrior. Oh, he was raised by pixies. He has black hair and brown eyes, and glares at everyone unless they’re being particularly loving to him.”

Tam laughed heartily. “Well, go on.”

“And then I went to the Dragonland city, because I’d heard that Mother was there, and I wanted Marteth to at least meet the rest of his family before he went back to his pixie mother…”

“What, he’s not going to stay with you?”

Flairé mock-glared at his friend. “If you’d keep your mouth shut, I’ll tell you everything in order.”

“Okay, okay, I’ll shut up.”

“Anyway, so I went to the Moonland, and the first person I met was Yoeath, who’d gone with Mother, and she was galloping down the main road. I asked her what the matter was, and she said that some people had kidnapped Mother. So I followed her, and found Mother fighting three kalmaei and three dragons, and she was in a prison cell along with a silver dragon. So Yo and I managed to distract the dragons enough that they had to leave before the Dragon knights got there, and before they hurt Mother and the dragon too badly.”

Tam opened his mouth and then shut it again.

“Well, they’d been hurt when they were kidnapped, and when I got there, one of them was trying to kill Mother rather than have her escape and tell Kiirstril what was going on. So it wasn’t my fault,” Flairé growled mock-defensively. “Oh, so what was going on was that we have religious revolutionaries in the Dragonland.”

Tam leaned forward suddenly, intent. “Really? About seven archangels or one angel?”

“Yes. How did you know?”

“I’ll tell you in a moment.”

“All right. So the silver dragon went to tell Kiirstril everything, while Mother and Yo and Marteth and I returned to the Moonland. So we don’t know how long Marteth’s going to stay, either. So I didn’t get to finish exploring the mountains, but I think that’s all right considering the circumstances.”

“I hope you get a chance to go back soon,” Tam said. “It’s good to know the world from a personal point of view.”

“I know,” Flairé said, smiling. “You say that often enough, and Mother too.” His smile faded. “Now, tell me your story! You clearly know more than I do.”

“There is a Black Unicorn,” Tam said softly. “I’m certain of it. It’s out there, in the forest. It is insane, as those people we met were saying. And yet… it’s not completely lost all reason. I don’t know what it is. It’s certainly not natural. And I’m not insane!”

“Why didn’t you ask for Yoeath to come with me?” Flairé asked.

“My father has a unicorn friend. Yowiith, the White Wind. He told me about, well, how unicorns think and behave. If there is a Black Unicorn out there – I could be wrong, you know – it’s completely aberrant.”

Flairé nodded slowly. “So how did you find out about it?”

Tam frowned. “Well, the first thing I did when I got back was prowl around looking for more solid rumours. I know our people travel fast, but the physically closer to the source means more people might agree on what they say and I didn’t trust the mere word of those travellers.” He leaned back against the wall. “I soon found darker tales. People have disappeared from small villages, grown people, not babies abducted by pixies.” He smiled a little. “And there seems to be a miasma of fear in the west. Not oppressive, but noticeable if you’ve lived there for any length of time before now.”

“Then I got caught up in court intrigue for a while and had to leave that chase for a week. Princess Muila has been dropping hints about this ‘one angel’ theory, quietly, though even that seems unusually open for even her combative nature. Princess Layalin is very unhappy, because she loves her twin and believes in seven.”

“And Kylyra?” Flairé asked.

Tam smirked. “Oblivious, lover-boy.”

“Hey!” Flairé cried, hopping up and chasing Tam around the room. “I never said anything about me!”

“But it’s obvious,” Tam said, dodging around an armchair, laughing.

Flairé slowed down and stopped. “I don’t know about that, actually. Not anymore.”

“How so?” Tam asked, stopping and half turning towards him.

“I don’t think she’s the right person, somehow. I don’t think I’ve met the right girl yet.”

“Welcome to my world,” Tam beamed.

Flairé laughed and put a hand to his face. “So how does she feel about her sisters is what I meant?”

“She’s oblivious to them too. She just spends her time playing with her friends, same as ever. She’s growing into quite a beauty, though.”

Flairé waved that away with a roll of his eyes. “Go on.”

Tam grinned, opened his mouth as if to continue teasing, and then stopped, smiling ruefully. “Well, you know the girl who broke into my house when I first met you?”

“The one you never told me about? Yes?”

“Well, I finally found out who she was, though I always knew what she was looking for. She’s Princess Muila’s maid and friend. She was looking for evidence that I am a bad influence on society, probably to get me shut up out of the way.”

“Out of the way of what?”

“I don’t know, and that’s what scares me,” Tam said openly. “So I had to spend a few days tangoing with the political system to smooth things over; Erd is completely confused and distracted over his daughter right now and couldn’t help me out at all. And of course Marotheth hates my guts and would love to see me in prison.”

“Oh dear,” Flairé said sympathetically. “How did you deal with that?”

“Oh, same way I always do,” Tam said with a sigh. “You have to have been raised in the Unicorn-land to really understand, but I’ll tell you later, after I finish.”

“Right, go on.”

“Well, actually there’s not much more to say, really. This last week I’ve been trying to find out what happened to those missing people. I went pretty deep into the forest. I think it was probably too dangerous to do, now, but I’m pretty sure I got back all right. The last two days I’ve been here, waiting for you.”

“And here I am.”

“I want to head out west tomorrow with you and really get into the forest. I’d feel more confident if there were two of us working together, and there’s no one I trust more than you, Flairé m’lad.”

Flairé smiled gratefully. “And I you, Tatamkanai.”

Tam made a face as if he’d bitten a lemon. “Thanks.”

 

Chapter 4          Chapter 6

December 12, 2009

Adhemlenei: Sword’s Innocence: Chapter 4

« ... »

Chapter 3          Chapter 5

 

Chapter 4

 

A bare century later, Flairé and Tam had taken to wandering the wilderness, inseparable as always. The lance and sword were honing themselves to new levels, and Flairé was nearly Tam’s equal now in combat, as well as in height – he had finally come to his adulthood. They always chose the most difficult paths across the mountains, gradually working their way east and south, travelling vaguely parallel to the Moonland-Dragonland border. Sometimes they joined groups of travellers, making new acquaintances and occasionally protecting them from harm. People began to call them the Blue Lance and the Crow, and made much of them when they wandered into a town.

In that time, while protecting travellers, there was one whom they ran into often. Syuthowalth was young and pretty; a weaver-girl with long dark-brown hair and large grey eyes. She travelled among the smaller villages in the mountains, gathering threads and wools to amass a large collection, piled on the back of her donkey, that she would take to her home in the Dragon-land city and turn into fabric. Then she would give the fabric to her seamstress friend who made clothes and other cloth things out of it, like upholstery and drapes.

Flairé liked her, and her sense of humour that, while gentler than his or Tam’s, was playful and innocent. They were soon friends, though they only travelled together for a month before Syuthowalth returned to the city. He promised to write to her not infrequently, and they parted with a laugh. Tam would have teased his younger companion, but Flairé clearly thought of her as a playmate and nothing more.

 

The two remaining wandering kalmei had followed a long spur of the mountains down into the forests of the Moonland when they met a larger group talking animatedly. Tam and Flairé slipped in behind them and were greeted quietly while they listened to the conversation in front.

“And my cousin said that the unicorns have found out what the disappearances in the north are,” one said.

“Oh, really now?” said another sceptically. “And do you believe him?”

“Well, why not? He’s as truthful as any. Maybe he doesn’t believe it himself. He just told me what his friend from the Unicorn-land told him.”

“But what was it?” asked a third, eagerly. “Never mind the truth of it for now. We’ll figure that out later.” Flairé made a perplexed face at such a foolish notion, popping one eye while scrunching up the other. Tam snerked at him and made the same face back.

“It’s said to be a black unicorn, The Black Unicorn, they call it, and it’s completely deranged. It has no sanity, but it’s very cunning.”

“The Black Unicorn?” Tam said curiously. “I’ve never heard of such a creature.”

“Well, you haven’t been in the city recently, have you?” said one traveller near him. “I heard about that creature from my brother in law.”

Tam raised his eyebrows and shrugged. Flairé began talking to one of the other travellers about unicorns.

After a while, Tam beckoned Flairé off the road, waving goodbye to the group, and under a pine tree stood a while in thought. Flairé looked up at its awe-inspiring height and wondered if Menad still climbed trees, and if he’d like to climb this one.

“Hey, Flairé, lad, let’s talk this over. I really want to go back to the Nunathoemlen and check this out, hm? But we’re – you’re supposed to be exploring the mountains. What say we split up?”

“Do you think I’m strong enough?” Flairé asked, and then inhaled as if trying to reswallow the words.

Tam winced. “Famous last words in the wild. Either you are or you aren’t. I’d think you’d have realized that by now.”

Flairé nodded, still flushed from his slip of the tongue.

“Well, think it over. We can decide tomorrow. There’s no rush.”

Flairé nodded again.

“But, remember, lad, you must prove yourself to yourself sometime. I’d never trade our time together away for the world, but you’re still the son of a prince and someday you will have to lead me.”

“Lead… you?” Flairé asked, frowning at the unfamiliar thought.

Tam grinned abruptly. “We’ll be like your dad and Gyoriing, hey? You my prince and guide, and I your knight and guard. And friend and advisor. Et cetera. What abou’ it?”

Flairé’s eyes sparkled. “That sounds brilliant. Let’s do that. I’ll go on south alone. You go and find out about this strange unicorn. Come back in one piece, please.”

“See, already you sound like a leader!” Tam exclaimed, clapping him on the back. “I should have said that long ago.” He laughed.

Flairé quirked an eyebrow. “I’m sorry for leaning on you all this time.”

Tam shook his multi-coloured head. “No apologies. We walked as equals. Now all I want for you is to prove to yourself that you can be a leader, the same as – or likely, better than me. You’re not crazy like me, but you’re strong and you have a strong personality.”

“Thanks, Tam,” the other said. “Though you’re not crazy. You just act like it.”

Tam pouted. “Got me all figured out, don’t you, lad?”

“Yep.”

Tam stood still a moment, then reached out and tapped Flairé on the shoulder. “Tag!”

“What? Hey, wait up!”

 

Zela had gone to the Dragonland, as well, alone with Yoeath. At first Flaria had been going to come with her, but then the quiet girl decided she would much rather stay at home and look after Menad. Flaer’s work in the city kept him from coming, and it was only getting heavier as the city got more complex and more people lived in it. He and officials were at that time debating the merits of taxes on furniture for the benefit of the King’s intention to pave more of the roads outside of the city.

So Zela had gone to the Dragonland with Yoeath instead to see if she could find out anything about the reports of social unrest, and whether it was among the dragons or the kalmaei.

Her first few months were utterly boring to her; if the Unicorn-land had a straight-laced society, in which Tam stood out like a sore thumb painted purple and wearing a little hat, the Dragon-land society was almost worse, for it had fewer etiquette rules, but more intrigue.

In the Unicorn-land, kalmaei and unicorns said what was proper, acted proper, and – for the kalmaei, dressed proper. Dressing properly was very important in the Unicorn-land. Zela thought it silly, and got looks askance in return. But there, after the important things were done, one could still express what one thought – in private, with close friends and family, and trust them.

In the Dragon-land, rules were more relaxed outwardly. However, if one said the wrong thing, one could be sure that society would – temporarily, at least – shun one. Zela had heard that Kiirstril was constantly trying to reverse this ideology, but his own son followed it as everyone else did. Shlaes, the queen, was withdrawn from society altogether, despite the strange rumours she caused by it.

The dragons were an integral part of the city, too. The architecture was designed around their sinuous bulk, and there were huge stone couches everywhere, even in the streets, for them to lounge on while they were talking. There were five distinct colours of dragons, gold, silver, scarlet, emerald, and marine – the last two simply elaborate names for their colours blue and green, and nothing to do with jewels or the sea.

If it hadn’t been for the dancing, Zela felt she surely would have fallen asleep of boredom and not woken up. The dancing in the Dragon-land was always lively and rather exotic compared to the other realms, and the music was rhythmic and impossible not to dance to. She missed Flaer, and wished he could be there to dance beside her, for them to forget for a few moments together the spiritual scars of their lost children. Yoeath, contrastingly, found the place fascinating, and it seemed many liked her, though she learned less than Zela about what they had come to learn.

Zela went to gatherings, parties, meetings, but for the first four months, found absolutely no clue as to why people would come to the other lands and say “There is something wrong in the Dragonland; there is discontent and talk of revolution.”

She assumed it was more because she was considered a foreigner, and while not terribly recognizable, many people knew who she was. But they, outwardly, at least, thought she was only there to dance and to escape the Moon-land for a short while with one of her dearest friends.

Then, one day, she was in the right place at the right time, and felt that all her attending social functions of the kalmaei had been in vain.

She was walking along a high bridge between two towers in the rain – the Dragonland capital was a city of slender, angular spires and webs of bridges connecting them, in a grey valley above a jade green lake – when something roared overhead and two powerful whooshes of air buffeted her against the railing. Zela forgot all notion of going from her apartment to the marketplace and instead leaned over the railing to watch.

A blue dragon was chasing a silver dragon across the city. Both were clearly furious, and the blue dragon had a small kalla, an elf-woman, dressed in armour, clinging to the spines on his back. Gleaming, scaly heads poked out of windows in towers and caves in the mountainside, and rose from nests to see what was going on.

The dragons returned to the towers Zela was walking between, dodging around them.

“Why do you do this?” called the blue dragon.

“I won’t stand for it anymore!” cried the silver dragon, wings beating powerfully as it hovered above the tower, watching the blue. “I cannot sit by while there is plot and treason in the land! I shan’t be silent any longer!”

“Treason is a strong word,” roared the other dragon. “Be careful of whom you accuse!” called the kalla on his back.

“Silver!” called Zela to the dragon. It was acceptable to call dragons by their colour if one didn’t know their name.

“Who are you?” the dragon cried, turning towards her and diving to get a closer view.

Zela stood steadily against the rush of wind and silver, silver scales, silver claws, silver teeth, silver wing webs, but brilliant, pale blue eyes. “Silver!” she called again. “I am Zela.”

That was all she managed to say before she had to spring aside from the blue dragon. “Lady Zela of the North? More like spy from the Moonland!” he roared.

Zela reached down and tore the lower part of her lavender-coloured skirt off in case she had to do any more dodging. “I would argue with you, but I wish to speak to this dragon.”

“Lady Zela?” said the silver dragon. “Please, climb on. I will take you to safety – such as there is.”

“There will be no escape for either of you,” cried the blue dragon. “Youlastal, call another. We’ll sacrifice ourselves for the others, but we must have back-up before the knights come.”

The elf-woman blew shrilly on a silver whistle, and two more dragons, another blue and a green, rose into the air above the city and flew swiftly in their direction.

Zela slid onto the silver dragon’s neck, tying the torn-off remains of her skirt around her waist and then wrapping her arms around the smooth round neck. “Where are we going?”

“Up,” said the silver, wings pounding the air on either side of Zela. They rose to such a height that the buildings looked like toys, and the people watching open-mouthed like specks. The other dragons followed them as fast as they could, and because they were bigger and had more original momentum, looked like they were going to catch up to them.

“Down,” said the silver when they had reached the edge of the clouds raining on the spires of the city. Zela braced herself, and the silver dragon looped itself over and dove, just before a blast of fire from one of the blues shot through the air where she had been.

Faster, faster, they blasted downwards towards the sharp stone spires, and Zela half-shut her eyes against the wind. At the last second, past the last second, the silver altered her angle and swooped into a wide street, heading under arches. She touched down and began to gallop, folding her wings tightly to her back, sending pedestrians of both races ducking for cover.

“We should head to the castle,” Zela said, and the silver gave a grunt of agreement.

The road, quickly becoming a tunnel with all the arches and towers overhead, was long and winding. The silver gave quick glances to the sides as she careened down the street.

Suddenly she gave a start and darted off into a side road. Two big red dragons had appeared in her path, blocking it entirely. She zipped through side streets, trying to get back on course, but dragons kept appearing in the way she wanted to go and even innocent crowds got in her way.

“Go back up!” Zela called. “No good this way – they can outmanoeuvre us from the air. Just have to hold on until the knights come!” The silver nodded once and leapt over a crowd, clawing at the wall until she could clamber onto a bridge, spread her wide wings, and spring into the air again.

They were still in the thick of the city, getting closer to the castle, but not close enough. They were still herded to the right, towards the mountainside, and their pursuers never showed themselves long enough for Zela to get a good look at them, though she probably wouldn’t have recognized them anyway – dragons were not her strong point. Unicorns were.

They were so close to the castle, so close the disappointment was nearly a physical sensation, when the silver ran into a dead end, a short cave formed by a building below, towers on either side, and a bridge close overhead. She turned quick as a cat, and found the green right behind her. He had a rider, too. The other two blues dropped lazily down behind him, and all three advanced, their riders dismounting and brandishing weapons.

“Look!” Zela cried, pointing to the sky. Golden dragons with purple neckbands, knights of Kiirstril, were circling, trying to find a way down to the disturbance.

The kalmaei glanced up, but the dragons didn’t so much as blink.

“Just a few more moments, and we’ll be all right,” Zela said softly.

“You don’t have a few more moments,” said the elf who had first challenged the silver from the back of the blue. “Knock them out and let’s get out of here.”

For answer Zela, in a torn dress and completely unarmed, darted forward, straight towards their armed and armoured opponents. Two of them dodged rather than attacking. She tore a short sword from the belt of one wielding an axe and cried over her shoulder: “Silver! I’ll deal with the dragons! You’ll have to take on the kalmaei!”

The silver sat up on her haunches and roared, and then spat fire at the feet of the kalmaei. Zela swung herself up onto the shoulder of the green and gave him a thump on the head with the hilt, and then dodged the claws of one of the blues.

“This isn’t working!” cried the silver desperately. “I don’t know how to fight kalmaei!”

“All right!” Zela called back. “I’m coming!” She ducked two claws and a tail, grabbed hold of a blue wing, and leapt back towards the silver, landing in front just in time to lock sword with axe.

“Watch out,” said one of her opponents to another. “You know how good she is.”

“I know,” the other answered.

Zela parried again and again. “Have we fought before, in a tournament perhaps?”

“That would be it, wouldn’t it?” replied her antagonist, a smile reflected in the words coming from under his helmet.

Zela made no reply, concentrating on fighting the three. The silver dragon seemed to be doing all right against the two blues, but the green was moving to flank her. Zela slowly switched places with one of the fighters and backed up until she could protect that side of the dragon.

“The knights are coming,” hissed the green dragon. “Hurry up!”

Zela was still smiling tightly in anticipation of success when a blue paw came out of nowhere and batted her against the wall. She caught a glimpse of the silver with her neck in the jaws of the green dragon and then saw only black.

 

Chapter 3           Chapter 5

December 10, 2009

Adhemlenei: Sword’s Innocence: Chapter 2

« ... »

Chapter 1          Chapter 3

 

Chapter 2

The tournament was nearly called off after the tragedy of the morning, and the tensions now rampant – for no true reason – between the dragon people and the griffon people, but the knights had all travelled a long way, and were less than thrilled at the prospect of returning all the way home without so much as brandishing their weapons in less serious conflict.

There was a two day pause to attend the funeral of the two kalmei, as each nation mourned in the way that they felt most appropriate; most of them through dance, some at noon, some at night. The dragon and griffon each were sent home, utterly unconsolate and still potentially vengeful. But after this, the tournament went on.

The sun was shining brightly, nearly dispelling the feeling of gloom that had settled over the camp the previous days. Gyoriing, Zela, and Flaer were all sparring at one point or another, and Zela took to wandering off at random times to practice by herself. Flaer found her before her first match, dancing in full armour, her sword humming around her in glittering circles. His breath stuck in his throat and he remembered the day he had first seen her.

“Do you want to spar with me?” Zela asked, coming to a halt and smiling.

He ignored the shadows around her eyes as he answered. “Shouldn’t you save your energy for the fighting later? There are much more difficult opponents than me, you know.”

“I’ll be fine. I don’t care if I win or lose-“

“Well, that’s not true,” Flaer interrupted, eyes twinkling. “I know you.”

“Very well, but I still want to spar with you.”

“I’m no match for you, but as you like,” answered the prince, smiling easily, unsheathing his own sword.

Zela came at him with a leap and a bound, and he found himself hard-pressed to defend against her.

After only a few minutes, they fell apart again in separate heaps of laughter.

“I wish everything could always be like this,” Flaer said suddenly.

Zela cocked her head quizzically at him. “Are you still upset about the day before yesterday?”

“Everyone is,” Flaer answered softly. “It’s only when I’m concentrating very hard that I can forget, like when I’m duelling…”

Gyoriing appeared from behind a tent. “Flaer! What have you been doing? It’s time for the first match! Hello, Lady Zela. Come, both of you!”

“I’m coming, we’re coming,” Flaer sighed with amusement. “Gyoriing’s better than my mother.”

“What was that?” Gyoriing asked.

“Nothing important,” Flaer answered. Zela shook her head.

 

The rest of the week passed in gleaming silver and the meditation of combat. But the sadness was not forgotten, nor the anger that each of the families felt. On the surface, everything looked normal, if a little more serious than usual. But underneath, the Dragonland people and the Griffonland people, even subconsciously, distrusted each other now.

The representatives from families of both the fallen showed up at the Moonland castle the day after their return, however. It was customary to choose a judge from another country for disputes, though there had never been a dispute as serious as this one. Flaer went to talk to the Dragonland family, and his younger brother Lyrestan went to talk to the Griffonland people.

“But how can you ask for punishment?” Lyrestan asked the brother of the murdered elf. “The Dragonland people have lost their brother as well.”

“Suicide is not a punishment,” the brother said angrily. “We want them to pay for what he has done to us.”

“They already pay,” Lyrestan said earnestly. “They grieve for their brother as well. He’s dead! You can’t bring him back and kill him again. That’s impossible and, were it possible, it would be wrong!”

“We still want reparation! It is not enough to say that everyone is very sad. We want justice as well!”

“There is nothing they can give you!” Lyrestan answered, trying not to raise his voice.

He felt a blow on the cheek and was knocked to the floor.

“What was that for!?” he demanded, picking himself up slowly, rubbing his cheek where he had been hit, and then pushing his long golden hair out of his face. He was still very young, hardly more than a full-grown boy.

The brother of the fallen elf towered over him. “It’s no good arguing with you. I lost my temper, Prince. We would like to speak to your brother or your father. Perhaps they will be more willing to listen to reason.”

“My brother is speaking to the family of the elf who killed himself. My father and mother are already occupied in annual city planning.”

“I don’t want to speak to you, you stubborn brat!” the elf shouted, winding up for another punch. His sisters and cousins watched impassively, though two of his three sisters and one of his two cousins looked distressed. But they did nothing, and Lyrestan was forced to duck. “I notice you weren’t at the tournament! No one in your family knows anything about strength or justice. You and your family should not be rulers of the Moonland!”

At that, the two sisters winced, and the cousin looked shocked. The other sister and cousin nodded, though. Lyrestan ducked another punch, turned, and grabbed a curtain pole. “I don’t need to take that kind of talk, sir. My family are true upholders of justice. Just because they choose not to fight doesn’t mean they’re weak!” He began blocking the attacks of the other elf with the pole.

“Besides, he’s only a boy,” said one of the sisters softly. “He couldn’t have been at the tournament, Seya.”

“Your brother was beaten by his fiancée at the tournament. He’s pathetic!”

“My brother is not pathetic!”

The other elf began to draw his sword. Lyrestan paled and backed away, holding his staff with a death-grip and clearly thinking about calling for help. The sisters and cousins backed away too, suddenly afraid.

“I’ll ask for the last time. Will you let me speak to someone older than a mere boy?”

“A-are you going to try and kill me?” Lyrestan managed to squeak.

The elf looked down at the sword in his hand. “No. But I will beat some sense into you, kid.”

Lyrestan’s eyes widened, and he gave a little whimper of fright just before he blocked the first strike of the elf’s sword.

Then a dark-blue blur shot into the room and hooked an arm around the Griffonland elf’s neck, trapping his sword arm behind his back.

“What are you doing?” Zela hissed in his ear. “Why are you attacking the prince? Are you stupid?”

Lyrestan vanished out the back door of the room, his face white as a sheet. He dropped the dented curtain pole behind him.

“Lady Zela,” said the Griffonland elf coldly. “Come to defend your future family?”

“I was only passing. What were you fighting about?”

“Well, perhaps you’ll be reasonable. I doubt it, though. Who around this castle of stupid pacifists will give us reparation for the wrongs done us?”

“Keep up this kind of behaviour, and I’ll tell the prince to demand reparation from you,” Zela replied, keeping the elf pinned.

Flaer and Lyrestan entered, with Gyoriing and several guards. Lyrestan was still pale and stood close behind his brother, but more relaxed now that he was not alone. Flaer looked tired. Evidently the Dragonland people had been having similar discussions with him.

Zela released the elf and he stood still, a guard on either side of him.

Flaer took a deep breath and motioned his brother forward. Lyrestan nodded and spread his hands.

“Go home and cool off. It’s too soon to think straight. Mourn your brother! In a few years, think it over. Think whether you want revenge on a family that has lost as much as you have.”

The Griffonland elves made no reply, but at a nod from Gyoriing, left the room without arguing.

Lyrestan ran his hands through his hair and sighed. “I have no idea what just happened. Why can’t I negotiate with reasonable people?”

“Reasonable people are harder to find than you might think,” Zela said.

“I disagree,” Flaer said, sitting down; Lyrestan followed, but Zela remained standing, pacing slowly back and forth with the skirt of her dress swirling around her legs. “But I’m not happy with today’s outcome. Will they get over their anger, or will they let it become bitterness? Murder is like a poison, spreading its touch to all who even hear about it.”

“Two weeks ago, we didn’t even have a word for it,” Lyrestan said sadly. “Brother, I don’t think you’re pathetic.”

“Why do you say that?”

“Those people called you pathetic. Maybe you should practice swordfighting more.”

Flaer looked over at his younger brother. “Why should you care what they think?”

“Well, I think I can only be a diplomat as long as the people I’m talking to respect me. First I need to get older, obviously,” he said, smiling a little.  “But I’m going to train with my axe until I’m as strong as anyone. I don’t need to fight anyone, and I don’t need to go to tournaments-“

“Though it might be entertaining,” Zela put in.

“But I can still be good at fighting, and that might help. Though maybe it’s already too late.”

“It’s never too late for anything,” Flaer said warmly.

 

Flaer and Zela were married a few years later, and Zela left her woodland home permanently to live in the Moonland castle. Yoeath followed her, but left often to return to the northern forests.

Their first son was born many short years later, and they named him Flairé, that is, Son of Valiant. Soon after his sister Flaria and his brother Menad followed. Flairé grew into an active, mischievous bundle, climbing the highest trees within the castle grounds, or chasing the wind along the walls. Flaria was much more reserved, but Menad followed his elder brother. Flairé noticed, and together he and Flaria kept their darling little brother out of trouble.

Zela and Flaer were busy much of the day, but kept their duties to separate days so that every day one of them would be with their children. Flaer instructed them in music and literature; Flaria especially would often come and curl up on her father’s lap with a book they would read together. Menad was less interested and would run and hide, playing on his own with stones and dolls, or practicing music in private, away from his father. Flairé took up playing wind instruments and percussion, though he also learned well in strings and harp. He was always playing, eager to show his father some new thing he had learned or made up.

Zela was a harder teacher. Unlike Flaer and his natural empathy, she treated everything seriously, and without much tenderness, challenging her children to strive for more and more perfection, just as she drove herself.

Flairé, of all people, didn’t mind, cheerfully undergoing increasingly rigorous exercises in dance and swordplay. Often, Zela would have him practicing one series of dance steps for a whole day, and he would finish at dusk and come in from the little dance stage he had set up in a corner of the garden, exhausted but triumphant; while Flaria, who would take the time to practice her harp playing to provide music for her brother, would follow less enthusiastically, flexing her tired fingers. Flairé loved dance, even more than he loved pipe, and he tried doing both at once until he was good enough to be able to keep music going for himself, even when Flaria decided she was busy.

Menad, again, was harder to find; he often snuck off to climb trees, and Zela let him, seeing that he was growing stronger by this. Sometimes, though, he would come of his own accord and beg for sparring lessons, though he was only a little boy still, and that was the time that Zela and Menad most enjoyed.

One evening, when it was just growing dark, Flaer appeared in the door of the garden – he had just returned, from discussing the placement of a new orchard with a group of farmers, to the Lilemlen castle.

Zela was watching Flairé practicing his dancing; before, he had only done it for fun, but Zela had begun teaching him a few years ago the proper way to move, and now he spent hours a day perfecting it.

“All right; Father’s home; can I take a break?” Flairé asked, breathing heavily as he paused on the edge of his little wooden stage, twisting his head to look upside down at his mother.

“No; keep going; show Father what you have practiced today. Your sister and I will sing for you.”

Flairé sighed and let his head flop, then twisted back upright. “Yes, Mother.”

“You love it,” accused Flaria, rubbing her hands together as she came hurrying out from the alcove where she had been reading, sitting down at her harp to play.

“I do, but ten hours a day… Haven’t I learned it well enough by now? I have years ahead of me to keep perfecting it. Why does it have to be perfect now?”

“You’ll thank me later, when you can move as you want with grace and ease,” Zela told him, her eyes glinting. “It’s how I live, and I didn’t have anyone to push me along.”

“You don’t need to push him,” Flaer said gently, sitting down on the grass nearby. “He’s doing fine.”

“I agree with Mother,” Flairé said unexpectedly. “It will be super when I can go anywhere in any way, perfectly safely, because of my amazing strength.” He laughed at his own flippancy, then hid his smile as Zela raised an eyebrow at him.

“One must be prepared for anything,” she said simply.

“But where is Menad?” Flaer asked. “Is he up a tree again?”

“Here I am, Father,” called a thin, high-pitched voice from somewhere above. Flaer looked up, and saw the dark head of his second son peeking through the branches of the pine above him. “I did a little dancing, but I’d rather be up here.”

“Why don’t you come down and join us?” Flaer called to his son. “It’s nice to be together, isn’t it?”

Menad hesitated, then nodded, skittering down the tree as if he weren’t even holding on.

“Careful,” Flaer said automatically when his son reached the ground.

“I’m always careful, Father,” the little boy replied, sitting down behind Flaria. “You know me, always comfortable up a tree.”

“I know.” Flaer began to say something more, but Flairé had begun to move, and Flaria was already playing. Zela’ voice rang out strong and glad, and Flairé took off.

Spinning, leaping, the young princeling of the Lilemlen showed just how graceful, quick, and inventive he was.

Flaer applauded when he had finished.

“Now can I stop, Mother?” Flairé asked, panting even harder. “I’m hungry.”

Zela watched him with narrowed eyes, then smiled and nodded. “I suppose a growing boy can’t go without food. Come along and we’ll make supper.”

Flairé smiled happily and hopped down from his stage.

Zela looked at the sky and sighed. “And I guess you can have the evening off, too. It’s getting dark, and you’re not ready for night dancing yet. You might hurt yourself.”

“Oh, Mother, you say that every day.”

“In two months, when the night begins to lengthen, then you can start learning.”

“I’m looking forward to it.”

 

The family had not heard of trouble in the Griffonland or Dragonland for some time. Whenever they visited either land – Zela had taken up a habit of wandering everywhere in the Adhemlenei, the Four Kingdoms, and memorizing each place as if she’d lived there for years – people seemed content and busy, making music or food or houses or ornament. The Griffonland grew the most food in the Adhemlenei, and mined jewels from their western mountains, while timber and gold and epic poetry came from the Unicornland. The Dragonland was famous for their metalworking and general craftsmanship, and the Moonland, besides its fame for music, exported fish and other jewels, and woodcarving.

Gyoriing and Layalin were still courting, each cautious about the other’s feelings, but equally sure that they had all the time in the world to find out.

 

Chapter 1          Chapter 3

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