Saturday, October 10, 2015

The Knights of the Jewel: The First Battle

             The runes engraved in the shining steel barrel of Alicia's weapon lit up green at the touch of her fingers, and Alicia giggled delightedly. They wouldn't do that for anybody else; she had passed the contraption to Ion, to Lovisa, and to Eluani, and when they traced, the runes only glowed faintly white before flickering out almost as soon as they had begun. Alicia felt that the weapon trusted her and only her, and so she was drawn to it.
              Alicia was familiar with weapons. She was a skilled archer, she enjoyed fencing for sport, and she practiced magic just like all of the Earth Sylphs had. But this contraption was entirely foreign to her: a metal device that half resembled a bow and half resembled a gun and fired the projectile of neither. A trigger switch positioned under the hub produced a click and a twang of the rear bowstring, which issued forth a starburst shaped, six-pointed metal blade that expanded as it soared through the air. The first time Alicia had managed it, she had been so startled that she yelped and flung the weapon right along with its projectile, which landed by three of its points in the earth fourteen feet away. That had told her that she needed to spend more time with this weapon than with the bows and staves that were more familiar to her.
           That being said, Alicia didn't understand why she had been given this weapon at all. It was out of place among her other weapons: a massive mechanical wooden bow, two staves carved with runes that also lit up when she touched them, and a long steel bo-staff painted with primitive-looking images. Still, the weapon was made for her, and so she was determined to unlock its secrets. She and her comrades were out in the fields attending to their morning training for the fourth day since the end of the festivities. She stroked the weapon gingerly, tracing the runes to illuminate them. The weapon, she had been told by Cordelia, was called a shuriken blaster, “shurikens” being the six-pointed starlike blades. The shurikens were pretty little blades—in fact, they were the only blades that Alicia felt could be rightfully called “pretty”--but they did not captivate her in the way those runes did. “You're trying to tell me something, aren't you?” Alicia said to the weapon as she continued to illuminate the runes as if searching for the answers within the glow. “I just don't understand what it is yet.”
          A whirring sound in the air above her called her to attention, and she quickly ducked her head. The javelin pierced the sky and landed in the dusty soil several feet away, its tip splitting off into three prongs and taking hold of the ground like a metal claw. “Alicia!” Rodin called to her sharply. “What are you doing? You can't just stand around!”
         “I was just looking over my weapon,” Alicia said, “that's all.”
         “You shouldn't be looking at it,” Rodin said as he passed her by to pick up the javelin, “you should be using it!” In spite of her anxiety about the strange weapon, this was all the pep talk that Alicia needed. She set off on her swift feet in search of a training manikin. Rodin trailed behind her, insistent upon keeping the princess out of more trouble than was necessary. She was a decent fighter, and she was a borderline wizard with a bow, but her attention span was her Achilles heel. But Rodin enjoyed shadowing Alicia, who fascinated him nearly as much as Morgana. He would have given anything to train with the both of them, but Morgana's training was done out of sight and behind closed doors.
         Movement in the tall rushes ahead of them revealed the presence of a possible manikin. It moved from side to side in a mechanical fashion, daring them to cross it. Rodin palmed his javelin and went ahead of Alicia, then the two of them stood as still and quiet as statues. The thing in the rushes stopped moving, and the silence around them was only broken by the sound of the wind and of their comrades going about their own training in the distance. The click of the javelin as Rodin locked the tip in place was almost startling. Still, they waited. Alicia thought she saw the thing move again—only the smallest flicker of movement out of the corner of her eye.
         As Rodin raised the javelin, its core pulsated in tune with the blue stone around his neck and those on the silver rings he wore on his right hand. Now he could see it; the hazy form of a manikin, crouched down to its heels in a right-hand corner, its bow fitted with an arrow but held at a passive stance. It was visible to him for only a moment, but a moment was all that he needed. The javelin flew, making no sound except for the airy whir that couldn't be heard fast enough. It struck the manikin just below its right eye, and the defeated manikin disappeared. “Bulls-eye!” said Rodin, smiling cockily.
          “Let me get the next one,” Alicia said. “I'm not as good as you are.” When she followed him to retrieve the javelin, she nearly got her wish. Three manikins emerged from the front and sides and lunged for them. Alicia yelped, leaped backwards, and made a desperate attempt with the shuriken blaster as Rodin abandoned his javelin and conjured a sword to his hand. Its blade glistened in the sunlight like threads of silver filigree. A shuriken pinked a manikin's shoulder, and as it staggered, Rodin lunged for it, eliminating it with a slash across the chest. Another shuriken coasted over a manikin's head. Alicia's feet danced wildly as she fought to stand her ground. Another shuriken sailed past the manikin's face, and another only scraped the side of its cheek. With an angry screech, the manikin lunged for her, and she nearly tripped over her feet as she leaped backwards and away from its threateningly-gleaming sword. As it thrust forward, it was eliminated by Rodin, who came up behind it and stabbed it in the back. The manikin collapsed, and the final one immediately turned on him.
          Alicia dropped the shuriken blaster and unstrapped the mechanical bow from her back. One shot, and the manikin collapsed, disintegrating like a broken fog as it hit the ground. Rodin's cheek had been scraped and a gash was cut in his forehead. Alicia rummaged through her pouch for a box of wet cloths and a silver ring twisted into the shape of a fairy, the wings formed by two bright emeralds. She gently wiped at the gash, and the cloth produced a heady herbal fragrance and felt delightfully cool against the sting. She slipped the ring on and softly ran her fingertip over the gash. As the emeralds glowed warmly in tune with the stone around her neck, the wound began to fade from red to pink.
         “Thanks for having my back,” Rodin said. “That was an excellent move with the bow.”
          “Of course,” said Alicia, “and thank you.” The wound was fading to reddish brown, and Alicia got to work on the scratch on his cheek.
          “If you're so good with the bow,” Rodin said, “then what do you need the blaster for? It seems like more trouble than it's worth.”
          “I have to learn it!” Alicia said urgently. “It's counting on me!” She gingerly stroked the weapon's runes and smiled fondly when they glowed in response. “There's a message for me in that green glow, and it's waiting for me to find out what it is.” She patted the weapon's barrel in a motherly fashion.
          “You're a strange one, Alicia,” Rodin said with a chuckle. “But I can't say that I've ever met anybody more interesting.” He regarded her with a warm smile, which she returned. The distant shouts of approaching manikins called them back into action.

          The only light in the cellar was the light that emanated from the runes carved in the amulets on the table. It was a beautiful light, a contented light, nothing like the oppressive rays of the sun that beat down on the faces of those unlucky enough—or foolish enough—to stay out in the fields. As Morgana ran her fingers over the runes, they whispered secret words of power that filled her with glee. She allowed herself a throaty laugh as she guided an amulet through the air without touching it, setting it into an open slot on her ebony staff. The amulet twisted and shifted its shape until it rested comfortably in the slot. A flicker of white light that illuminated the cellar issued forth from the staff's core, indicating that the magic of the amulet had been well received. Morgana laughed and gave the staff a twirl, mixing together the magical energies from the amulet and the staff's core. Her heart fluttered, and she felt a tingling sensation that began in her fingertips and distributed itself throughout the rest of her body until it filled her entire being with euphoria. Her fairy aura brightened as her own magic intermingled with this new energy. Under her breath, she found herself involuntarily muttering the incantations whispered to her by the runes. She opened her clenched fist, and a stream of flames burst forth from her palm. Screeching with delight, Morgana waved her hand wildly, hurling flames at the walls, the floor, the ceiling, the furniture, and willing them to increase in size and intensity as she did so. In her other hand, her staff felt hot, and it shook wildly as if in anticipation of the spell that it was holding inside. She waved it, and the spell was released—the room was cloaked in a thick, noxious haze. Morgana drew back and quickly slipped one of her amethyst rings over her finger. Its single stone gazed at her like a shimmering purple eyeball, blinking in the glare of the flames. She felt the caress of invisible hands and the wrap of invisible arms, sheltering her from the poison. The air around her grew thick. Out of the corner of her eye, she watched her aura as it briefly danced like the flame of a candle until it settled.
          She was safe. She stuck her nose into the dissipating haze and breathed it in. Its scent was overwhelmingly sweet, like the syrup from the sugarplum trees back in Arganell. She swallowed, exhaled, and laughed merrily. She was Morgana the Wizard, Morgana the Mighty, Morgana the All-Powerful, wielder of poison and friend of the flames. The air itself could bend to her will. She could obliterate an entire landscape with the snap of her fingers. A wave of her staff would bring the immediate demise of any fool who dared to cross her. She had tapped into the kind of magic that was so cleverly hidden away from the eyes of men and even the eyes of other fey, the kind of magic that could and would easily turn a careless user into a miserable pile of ash. What good were companions with power like this? The fools who traipsed around in the burning sun with their new toys were of no use to her. She found her camaraderie in the magic, and her ever-increasing power was its glorious token of their friendship.
          The racket from outside shook the cellar walls, and Morgana growled. They would disrupt her training after they perished trying. She twirled her staff again and willed the flames that had fallen dormant inside the core to awaken. She donned her hood, dashed up the stairs, and moved aside the massive cellar doors without touching them. With a cry of fury, she hurled a flame through the air and watched it combust on the grass. Only then did she realize that nobody was out there to receive the warning. The air was disconcertingly still.
What was I thinking? Morgana scolded herself as she called off the flames with a wave of her staff. Of course it isn't them, they're all the way out in the fields! In the pit of her stomach, she felt a chill. Something had shaken the cellar walls, and it hadn't been the mechanical stampede of the knights' automaton horses, nor was it the fallout of a mis-aimed spell. Without bothering with her own horse, waiting like a statue in the stables, she took off towards the fields.

          Lovisa, Eluani, and Sanjaia did not doubt their gems' warning of a disturbance near the palace. Yet, the air was peaceful, disturbed by nothing but the sounds of distant combat against manikins. The automaton horses, commanded by the rapidly pulsing glow of the gems, increased in speed with every gallop, and their riders had to steel their bodies to keep from being bumped around. Lovisa's heart pounded as hard as the metal hooves of her horse. After only four days of training, they were already threatened by something unknown, and she was sure that whatever it was, they would not be ready for it. “Train as you fight,” Cordelia had told them on the first day, “and fight as you train. There will be times when you will have to do both at once.” Lovisa had not been entirely sure what she had meant, but it was comforting to recall the advice either way.
         “Can you see it yet?” Lovisa asked Eluani urgently, raising her voice over the sound of metal hooves.
          “I can't!” Eluani replied. “There's too much going on for me to get a clear image! All I can see is that Morgana is out there and she's in danger, and if she had opted to train with us instead of going off on her own...”
          There was a loud popping sound followed by a brilliant red and orange flare. The horses were immediately drawn to it, and Lovisa was able to forgive them for being machines; the horses that she knew would have reared and retreated. Even as the earth began to shake, the horses continued on. Sanjaia's trident issued an upbeat note as it was removed from its hold, and the next thing either of them knew, his horse was halted in its tracks as he leaped off of its back. He landed, staggering, on his feet and charged forward.
          “Are you insane?” Eluani cried. “What do you think you're doing? Get back on your horse!”
          “If we have to fight,” Sanjaia called up to her, “then those mechanical beasts will be nothing but a hinderance!” There was another tremor, and he jammed his trident into the ground to steady himself, vaulting around it and going on his way once it ceased.
          “There is fire, Sanjaia!” Eluani cautioned him. “Did you not see that explosion?” But there was no stopping him as he made his way, skipping over rocks and leaping over hills and bouncing off of the trunks of trees. He slashed the air rapidly, as if cutting down invisible enemies, and his trident sang a war song. “He's an idiot,” Eluani said, “but we can't let him go alone.” She dismounted her own horse, and Lovisa reluctantly did the same. They took off after him, following the call of the singing trident, until another tremor nearly knocked the three of them off of their feet. Sanjaia cried out and jammed the trident into the earth again. Lovisa and Eluani wrapped their arms around eachother tightly, and Eluani could feel that the girl was trembling. Looking ahead, she could see the faint but apparent form of a massive creature, pounding the ground flat with its anvil-thick feet. The insignificant forms of Morgana and Sanjaia were nothing but ants to this colossus. Without a second thought, Eluani broke free of Lovisa's embrace and made a bee-line for Sanjaia, who was making his way towards the creature that for now was only movement in the distance. “Sanjaia, come back!” she hollered. “Come back here right now!!!” She was taken aback by the fear in her voice—it had been so long since she had allowed it to be expressed. Sanjaia was as surprised as she was to hear her carry on like that. “What is it?” he asked. “What did you see?”
          “You can't fight this alone!” Eluani said with all the urgency that she could manage. “It's...it's a behemoth, a colossus!” The rumbling of the ground beneath their feet as it came closer was foreboding and ominous. There was another popping sound as another flare lit up the field, and Eluani knew now that it was a distress flare. She grabbed both of her partners by the hand and took off, and the two were forced to keep up as best as they could. Lovisa felt her stomach tighten as if squeezed; their first battle, after only four days of training, and it would be against some massive beast that shook the earth! She fought every urge to break out of Eluani's grasp and turn back.

          The moment that she set eyes on the creature, Morgana knew that both flames and poison haze were going to be useless. It was a behemoth constructed of compounds of stone and steel, and unlike the golems that she was familiar with, this one kept its core well out of the way. Still, she knew it had to have a core, and the only way to bring the monster down was to catch hold of it. The prospect excited her; yes, she would bring it down from the inside out before it even knew what hit it! Unfortunately, the spell that was needed to do that evaded her. She had used the training manikins until she was bored by their inability to measure up against her power, but there was no manikin that matched this creature in either physical characteristics or ability. She could only hold it off as best as she could, and the thing was certainly not very willing to be held off. It was an implacable machine, only merely inconvenienced by the chains of spells that had managed to bring down manikin after manikin. Still, if she could hold it off long enough to locate the core...
          A fireball the size of a watermelon burst forth from her hand and exploded into a magnificent blaze when it hit the ground. To Morgana's surprise and subsequent horror, the golem was completely unfazed; it continued its hulking march without paying any notice to the explosion, and its path was taking it straight to the Palace of the Jewel. Morgana closed her fingers tightly around her gem and closed her eyes, consulting it and soon receiving the answer that she needed. Dropping her staff and placing both hands on the ground, she created a wave that began at the top of her head and traveled down to her fingertips. It was released from her body in the form of a violent tremor. The creature stumbled, and for a few seconds it was driven to a halt. But Morgana found that the spell had completely drained her. The world spun around her, and she threw her arms around herself to steady. Her heart pounded, her head throbbed, and she fought back vomit that burned the back of her throat. She was unable to come to her senses before the monster came to its own. It continued pounding along on its way to the palace.
          Ignoring any further discomfort, Morgana released another earth-shattering shockwave. Again, the golem faltered and struggled to regain its footing. Steadying herself and fighting against the nausea, Morgana released another one that knocked her on her back. The heavy sounds of rock and metal knocking together indicated that the colossus had been brought down, but Morgana could only see the sparkles appearing before her eyes. She moaned and convulsed helplessly on the ground, and without really thinking she sent out another flare. Don't you go under! Morgana willed herself. Stay with me, you clod! You aren't done! But her eyelids grew heavier by the second, and even if she managed to remain conscious, there would be no more spells for a while.
          Her eyes could no longer remain open. The golem stirred back to life and continued on its way, and she could do nothing, reduced to the level of a squashed ant. It infuriated her—all of this power had been drained out of her so easily! I'm going after it, she told herself. I'm getting off of my miserable ass and I'm going after that thing! It was her last thought before she fell into the darkness.

          Morgana awoke to a wonderful fragrance and the sensation of something cool pressed against her cheek. Her body no longer ached, and the warmth of her aura had returned to her. She sat up and found that she had been taken to her quarters in the Palace of the Jewel. She was wrapped in soft white blankets, and her head had been elevated by thick down pillows. Her cheek was pressed against a wet cloth that smelled of a mixture of lilac and mimosa.
          “Morgana!” In an instant Lovisa was by her side and taking her by the hand. “Oh, look at you! You look so much better!”
          “I suppose that I have you to thank for that,” Morgana said, sinking back into the pillows that she wasn't ready to leave just yet.
          Lovisa nodded. “The first thing I saw,” she recounted, “was that gigantic beast—Eluani called it a golem—coming right towards me. I froze up! I was so sure that I would be crushed under one of those feet! But then I saw someone lying motionless in the grass, and I didn't know it was you at first, but I had to do something. 'There's somebody!' I said to Eluani and Sanjaia. 'There's somebody lying on the ground!' Then I was off like a flash, though I felt awful for leaving them, and when I saw that it was you I screamed! Oh, I was terrified! I thought that you'd been killed! I carried you off into the woods and I set us both down in a thicket of bushes. I couldn't see or hear any other enemies around, but still, I wanted us out of sight just in case! As I held you, I could feel that there was life still in you—the energy was suppressed, but it was there, and oh, I was overjoyed! I kissed your cheeks, I kissed your forehead...I had been so sure that you were done for, and I hated to think of losing you! I pressed my fingers to your collar and I could feel your heart beating. You weren't gone, your energy had just been drained. So I opened up my vial of healing serum and forced it down your throat. It only took a few drops before I felt that your energy was returning. I stayed with you until your breathing became steady, then I set you up against a wild cherry tree and climbed. I had to see what was going on with Eluani and Sanjaia.
          “The monster had gone insane! It danced and convulsed erratically as if it didn't know what to do with its body anymore. I thought it was going to put a hand or a foot down and squash them both! Sanjaia was squawking out some discordant mess on his violin that had no tune, no rhythm, and no sense of order or arrangement. I thought that the sound might have driven the monster insane...or else something else had driven them both insane. I was terrified, and I felt completely useless! There was nothing my bow could do against a creature made of steel, and I was sure that my magic wouldn't amount to anything. Eluani and Sanjaia were in danger, and there was nothing I could do! I felt awful, and I still do, for being so useless! But you were in danger too, and all I could do was stay by your side and make sure that you were going to be all right. Your aura had come back then, though it was glowing very faintly. I even cast a spell to boost your energy. When I did, your heart beat fast for a few seconds and your aura started to flicker, and I was scared that I had done something to hurt you. I grabbed the vial quickly, in case I would need it. But then it stabilized, and I heard you sort of mumble in your sleep.” She chuckled halfheartedly. “I'm sure that you had something to complain about, even then!”
          Morgana gave the girl's hand a squeeze. “You certainly aren't useless,” she assured her. “I may be alive right now all because of you. I'm sure those two could take care of themselves just fine.” She released Lovisa's hand and softly patted it. “Now tell me what happened to the golem. Don't tell me it's still clunking around somewhere!”
          “The golem is gone!” Lovisa said. “By the time the others had showed up, Eluani had been able to bring it down! A golem, she told me afterward, could always be brought down...”
          “...if you get hold of its core,” Morgana finished. “I know. I've dealt with them.”
          “Eluani could see where its core was,” Lovisa continued, “but she would need to hold the golem off before she was able to force herself in. So Sanjaia played that crazy song on a frequency that forced the vibrations to sort of break through to the golem's core, and they caused a disturbance. The core is like the golem's brain, and with those horrible mixed-up vibrations inside of it, it had essentially gone insane. It couldn't remember what it was meant to do, or where it was, or even what it was anymore. But at the same time, it was fighting to get rid of those vibrations that were creating such an awful disruption...and yet it couldn't, because more and more kept coming in and it couldn't do anything to stop them! That's why it was dancing around like that—it was in despair, and it really didn't know what it was supposed to do with itself! When Eluani found the core and looked inside of it, she saw that the magical vibrations from Sanjaia's violin were interfering with the magic that was inside the core, and the result was a jumbled mess of magic that wasn't good for anything at all. Eluani shut the core down, then, and Sanjaia stopped playing. The golem was driven to a halt, like a wind-up toy that had run out of its wind.”
          “That's all it took?” Morgana was almost insulted. It sounded so easy, and yet her own magic had nearly killed her before she could figure it out! She growled and sunk into the blankets. How could Eluani and that foolish bard have figured that golem out before she could? That future sight, she thought with scorn.
          “Morgana, it wasn't easy!” Lovisa assured her, taken aback by her sudden change in demeanor. “What if the core had not reacted to Sanjaia's violin, or else had been able to cancel it out? What if the golem had stepped on them...or fallen on them...or else Eluani had not been able to detect the core in time?” Her heart began to pound, and she had to remind herself that none of that had happened and the two of them were safe. “Their lives were in danger the entire time, and really, in the end it was all down to luck...”
          “I understand,” Morgana said. “I'm sorry. Where are the two of them now?”
          “The last time I saw Eluani, she was resting in her room,” Lovisa said. “The fight took so much out of her! She had fallen to her knees just like the golem when it was over, and I ran to fetch our horses—another good thing about machine horses is that they'll never run off on you! I buckled you onto the back of my horse, and I helped Eluani onto her own. Sanjaia went with Eluani, but I don't know where he is now. I hope he's all right. He trembled the whole way back to the palace!”
          “Well, he's a party minstrel,” Morgana said. “I doubt he's ever even seen a golem in his life, much less had to take on one of that size and strength.” She moved the blankets away and carefully rose to her feet. She wobbled a little, and Lovisa held a hand on her shoulder to steady her, but she shook it off. “I'm all right,” she assured her. “You've done enough for me. Go and find that bard, will you?” She regarded Lovisa with a genuine smile, and Lovisa was astonished by the beauty of the elfin face that looked so much like that of a painted doll when it wasn't scowling or stony or pinched up in disagreement. She smiled back. “I'll go and look for him,” she said with a nod. “But if there's anything else you need, Morgana...”
          “I don't think there will be,” Morgana assured her. “But if there is, I know exactly who to call upon.”

          “Come in, Morgana,” Eluani answered to the light rapping on her door.
          I'll never get used to that, thought Morgana as she entered. Eluani was sitting on the edge of her bed, staring into a tourmaline-inlaid mirror as if it was alive with images that only she could see. “You are doing well,” she said to Morgana without looking at her.
          “Can the same be said for you?” Morgana asked.
          “It can,” Eluani said with a nod. “I only needed a rest. You were much worse off than I was.”
          “It wasn't the golem that did it,” Morgana said. “It was...”
          “...your spell,” Eluani finished. “You were careless and hasty with a spell that had already taken a toll on your body, and it overwhelmed you.” The criticism stung her, but Morgana couldn't say that she was wrong. “I hope that was a lesson to you,” Eluani went on. “You've been gifted with amazing power that must be kept in check and used responsibly.”
          “So long as you use that future sight responsibly,” Morgana said with a wry smile. “So, what happened to the golem?”
          “It's still out there,” Eluani said. “Ion and Troy are guarding it, and the others have gone into the capital to report it. Hopefully, its core will be extracted and I will get the chance to examine it.”
         “Did Sanjaia go with them?” Morgana asked.
          “Hmm.” Eluani thoughtfully pressed her finger to her chin. “I'm not sure. I haven't seen or heard anything of Sanjaia since the fight.”
          “Can't your future sight tell you where he is?” Morgana asked.
          “You told me to use it responsibly,” Eluani said, a playful twinkle in her eye betraying her stoic demeanor. “I'm not sure how responsible it would be to use it for that, when we can easily go and look for him ourselves without the aid of any sort of power.”
          “Very well, then,” Morgana said. “I hope the poor fool isn't too shaken up.” She wasn't ready to admit that she was impressed by the way he had held his own in the fight—his first fight—nor was she ready to admit that she wasn't planning to train alone again.

Monday, September 21, 2015

Into the Land of the Elves: Today Katie Met Apple Blossom

(My Word computer has bit the dust, and this is my first time posting anything over from OpenOffice. I apologize in advance for messed up formatting.)

The Diary of Miss Aidyn Hall, friend of the Jadeites
August 15
10:42 AM

Today Katie Met Apple Blossom

I got out of bed, dressed, and went out to the mini forest. I had to find a place that was far enough away from the magnolia archway and far enough away from any sign of human civilization. Two days ago, I told Apple Blossom that she and Katie could meet out there in the mini forest. “Do you really want to meet Katie?” I had asked, whispering so that Wildflower, who was sitting nearby and writing away, would not express a desire to get involved. “Do you really and truly want to meet her?”
Yes,” Apple Blossom said hastily, “but...only if you’re there with me.” Her eyes darted around nervously. “Silly girl,” I said, tousling her hair. “Of course I’ll be there with you! Do you think I’ll just scurry off and leave you two alone?”
Of course, Apple Blossom didn’t really think that. It was just that she was beginning to have second guesses about meeting a strange human, even if it was one that I knew personally. I assured her that I would be right there, that she could stay close to me if she wanted to, and that Katie would never know the location of the Greenwood. They would meet for ten minutes and I would be timing them by the clock. Katie would probably ask questions, and Apple Blossom would not have to answer them if she didn’t want to. Also, she had to let her mother and father know that she would be leaving the Greenwood with me, but that we would not be setting foot in the human world (I consider the mini forest to be a sort of borderland; not human, not elven, just a world of its own). I would make sure that she would return promptly after the ten minutes were up.
      Apple Blossom accepted these conditions, and when I called her up that evening, so did Katie. She was practically bouncing off the walls (in fact, I think I actually heard her bounce), screeching, “Oh my goodness, I’ll get to see the elf? You’re gonna take me to see the elf…a real, live elf?!” She had certainly changed her tune about the veracity of elves. “Don’t talk about her that way,” I told her. “She isn’t ‘the elf,’ I told you her name is Apple Blossom. And you won’t be there to gawk at her, do you understand? She wants to meet you, and I assure you that she will likely do most of the talking.”
       Katie’s lunch break is at twelve-thirty, so we’ll be meeting anywhere between twelve-forty-five and one-o-clock. After that, I’ll be going right to the Greenwood from there—after making sure that Katie has fully cleared out, of course. So I have about an hour and forty-five minutes to get some work done on the computer and pack up my things.

1:35 PM

      Katie arrived at my house promptly at twelve-forty. I had was waiting for her on the porch. “I brought lunch,” she said. “Do you think the elf might want anything to eat?”
     “If you have grapes, she’ll definitely want some of those,” I told her.
     “Aw man,” said Katie, “I only have strawberries.”
     “She’ll happily take those too,” I said.
      I led Katie down to the mini forest and to the sunny, flowery clearing that I had selected for our meeting. I had told Apple Blossom to stay out of sight until we arrived. “I’m here, Apple Blossom!” I called out. “You can come on out now!”
      Cautiously, she emerged from behind a cluster of inkberry bushes, her wide eyes fixed on Katie. She was wearing one of her good dresses—purple chiffon, with the shape and design of a violet petal—and the flower crown I had made her for her birthday. On her feet, which were usually bare, she wore gold lace-up espadrilles. All of a sudden, I felt hopelessly underdressed. Slowly, as if trying to avoid stepping on hot coals, she crept over to us. She had none of the pep in her step that she had at our first meeting; it had been her birthday then, and she had been full of the excitement of the celebration. But when she stopped at Katie's feet, she bounced on her heels a bit and managed a cheerful, “Hello!”
      Katie was stunned. For a few moments, she could only stand there and make a bunch of ridiculous gasping sounds, with her mouth hanging wide open like it had become unhinged. Apple Blossom took a step back, and I nudged Katie's shoulder. “You're scaring her!” I said sharply.
     “I'm sorry!” Katie said breathlessly. “It’s just…I can’t believe that there is a real elf standing right in front of me right now!” She knelt down to eye level with Apple Blossom. In her eternal good nature, Apple Blossom smiled back. “Don’t worry,” she chirped, “I’m real!”
      “You are real!” Katie exclaimed, and she reached out to touch her face. Apple Blossom yelped and took a few rapid steps backward, and I pushed myself between the two of them.     “Don’t touch her!” I hollered. “What is wrong with you?!”
      “I’m sorry!” Katie said again. “I don’t know what’s come over me! I feel as if I must be dreaming.”
     “I don't feel like a dream,” Apple Blossom said, peering out from behind me. “though I suppose it doesn’t feel like anything to be a dream. Are you Aidyn’s friend?”
     “I’m her best friend,” Katie said, still a bit stunned to be speaking to an elf.
     “You’re her best human friend,” Apple Blossom corrected her. “I’m her best Jadeite friend. Do you see her every day?”
     “I used to,” Katie said bitterly. “I guess now she sees you every day instead. What’s a Jadeite?”
     “That isn’t right,” Apple Blossom said. “You ought to see your best human friend as much as you see me, Aidyn.”
      “I’m only one woman, Apple Blossom,” I told her. “Between my work and Katie’s work and coming out here to see you and your friends, I’ve been having a lot of trouble making time for her. Anyway, she just asked what a Jadeite is, so why don’t you tell her?”
      I must have been afflicted with a serious case of the stupids to actually come right out and say that in front of Katie. As Apple Blossom explained Jadeites and tree elves to her, I could tell that she was only half listening. The other half was seething. She looked at me out of the corner of her eye, and I could read her thoughts. One of the main reasons we became best friends is that we have an uncanny ability to read eachother’s thoughts. Now, her thoughts said, You can't make time for me because you want to prance around in elf lands all day? You're too busy for me, but not too busy for them? I hadn't been going out of my way to see things from Katie's point of view. I had disappeared for nearly a month, blown off all of her attempts to reach me, and now I had this entire secret fantasy life that she had been excluded from. Of course she was trying to push her way in! She wanted to be a part of anything that I was a part of. It's always been that way.
      Unfortunately, there's no safe way for her to do that. First and foremost, I have to consider the well-being of the Jadeites and their Greenwood. Who's to say that letting Katie in wouldn't set off a domino effect of human after human? What if she let it slip to Janelle or Hannah and got them interested? What if she let it slip to one of her co-workers? And even if she didn't, I have a strong feeling that the king and queen wouldn't take kindly to her being around, nor to me for bringing her around. Apple Blossom could charm them into accepting one human, but not another. It simply cannot be done.
     I hadn't done a very good job of checking my watch, because the next time I did so, I realized that a whole fifteen minutes had gone by. “Your time is up,” I said to Katie. “Actually, it was up five minutes ago. You have to go back to work, anyhow.”
    “Oh!” she exclaimed. “Has it really been that long? You're right, I do need to go back to work!” She turned to Apple Blossom and laid a hand on her head.“Apple Blossom,” she said, “you are truly the most interesting character I've ever had the pleasure to meet!”
    “And you are the second kindest human I've ever had the pleasure to meet,” Apple Blossom replied with one of her characteristic smiles. “I'm starting to think that the bad ones are really only stories.”
    “Well,” Katie said, “you be careful out there. There are some pretty nasty humans in the world...but there are some pretty nice ones as well.” She gathered up her things and stood up, brushing blades of grass off of her jeans. “Bye-bye, Apple Blossom! You take care of Aidyn for me, all right?”
    “I will!” Apple Blossom said with a giggle.
    “Wait for me by the bridge,” I told her as I began to lead Katie out of the woods. I was suddenly feeling kindly towards Katie all over again, and I felt bad that there was no real way that she could ever be included in my adventures. Ever since we became friends, Katie had been included in just about everything. Now, here's the first thing that she has to stay out of and away from. I know that it makes her heart hurt. I shouldn't have been so nasty about it.

6:17 PM

    “Katie is so nice, Aidyn. I don't understand why you don't want to be her friend anymore.”
Apple Blossom is one of those people who can either build you up to the top of the world or bring you down to the level of an earthworm. She will make an excellent queen someday. “Well,      I've changed my mind about that,” I told her. “Katie and I are going to go on being friends.”
     “That's good,” Apple Blossom replied.
     “But you know that I can't bring her here,” I cautioned.
     “I know,” she said with a sigh. “But I wish you could.”
      Beside me, Wildflower was writing away. She had been so quiet that I had forgotten she was there. “Are you sure we should be talking about this in front of Wildflower?” I asked, lowering my voice to a whisper.
     “I think so,” Apple Blossom said. “I think that Wildflower ought to know that somewhere out there is another nice human, just like you.” She lowered her voice to a whisper then, and said, “But she doesn't need to know any of the details.”
     I looked at Wildflower, who was so absorbed in her diary that I wasn't sure if she was even listening. That's why she surprised me when she set her pen down for a moment, looked as us both, and said enthusiastically, “I'm going to write about the nice humans.”
    “You are?” I asked.
    “I am,” she said with a nod, and returned to her silent journaling. And just like that, it all came to me like fireworks going off in my brain. Wildflower wanted to write about nice humans—a subject that was virtually nonexistent in Jadeite writing—and just like any writer, she would need source material. Katie wanted to be included in my adventures in the land of the elves, and I wanted a way for her to be included without intruding upon the Jadeites' territory. Katie was, at least according to Apple Blossom, a nice human.
     Katie could help me provide that source material! 

Friday, September 4, 2015

The Knights of the Jewel: A Bit of Training



King Lawrence had not been exaggerating when he said that the celebration held in honor of the Knights of the Jewel was one like Rasta had never seen before. The event managed to surpass the coronation celebrations of Lawrence and all other monarchs before him that the current citizens were able to remember the coronation celebrations for, as well as the birth announcements of each heir to the throne that had been born in their lifetimes. A feast and ball held in the palace and attended by the country’s nobility, clergy, and those who had personal dealings with the royal family was only the beginning, and only a fraction of the festivities that spanned the course of three days. The eight knights were seated at the table of the king and the princess, and Ion took note that the knights of Rasta were seated at the table directly beside them. He would have liked to trade places with Eluani, so that he might be seated where he would be more easily able to speak with them. What he would have given to tell them of his many feats back in Lamorak! But his rigid politeness in the company of royalty did not allow him to ask to move.
            Eluani herself could not have cared less where she sat. The great dining hall with its shining silver chairs and carved crystal dishes, the heaps upon heaps of abundantly flavorful food cooked to perfection in various herbs, spices, and marinades, the silk and velvet that she was clad in, and the company of nobles and kings were all much too extravagant for her. It seemed so unnecessary to surround them with such finery; knights or not, most of them were only ordinary people. Just two days ago, Eluani had been a simple seer from the House of Sight, and though the seers were much respected members of Calner’s citizenry, it would have been unthinkable to shower them in extravagance such as this. Even the aristocracy did not hold parties of this caliber, and the seers did not attend the ones they did hold. As the jovial conversations carried on around her and the knights were continuously toasted and complimented, Eluani only spoke when she was prompted and said little. As her companions enthusiastically sampled just about everything out on the table in front of them, Eluani only touched her food—which was just a bit too flavorful—out of the obligation to be polite. She knew that her life was in for a drastic change, and she had even been able to anticipate exactly what sort of changes would come about. But now they had arrived, and she was experiencing them all at once, and the effect was overwhelming. Her only solace was in the quiet company of the priests and mages, many of whom wished to keep to themselves as much as she did.
            The night after that first day of celebrating, when the knights had been thoroughly worn out with dancing and feasting and conversation, they learned that their quarters were set up at the Palace of the Jewel. Eluani could breathe easy then; the Palace of the Jewel was haven of solitude, free from the hustle and bustle of this big city that towered into the sky. It would be an ideal location to practice her craft, which had been newly refined by the pink stone that the Jewel had given her. After saying goodbye to the king and the princess and the guests that they had come to enjoy the company of, the knights were shuttled out to the palace via Carriage 1-A. Though she was exhausted by the day’s events, Lovisa remembered the tip that she had promised to find for the valets, and they were rewarded for their services with the two red roses that she had been given by a flighty young earl.  “There will be much more than that,” Lovisa promised sleepily, “as long as you continue to treat us with such kindness.”
            The Palace of the Jewel was unchanged from when they had left it that morning, and it was rather awkward to be there without the princess, who knew the Jewel more intimately than they were sure they ever would. Even so, Sanjaia, Lovisa, Alicia, and Rodin took the mind to stop by its chamber to wish it goodnight and thank it for all of the wonderful things that had happened to them upon their arrival. The Jewel did not respond to this. It was one to speak when it had the mind to, not when spoken to. The three of them were overcome with a pleasant, homey feeling as they exited the chamber, as if something unusually comforting had just taken place. They made their way to their quarters, which turned out to be quite easy to find. Were these rooms made especially for us, Lovisa pondered as she changed from her creamy gown into a hyacinth-colored night shift, or have they ever been used before?


“As nice as all of this celebrating is,” Troy said the next morning at breakfast, “we really ought to focus more on training and less on partying.”
            The knights were seated around a silver table very like the one they had feasted at in the palace of Rasta, though of course much smaller and simpler. Servants from the palace had brought in a hot morning buffet and told them that they were expected back in Rasta City; there they would be taken through the streets by a show coach, allowing the common citizens to behold the Knights of the Jewel for the first time. “I get that we’re a big deal,” Troy went on, “but knights are soldiers, and they’re treating us like showpieces. How are we supposed to find time to prepare for the fight if they’re going to take out whole days for partying and showing us around?”
            “It’s to boost our morale,” said Alicia. “It isn’t only Rasta’s spirits that they’re trying to keep up, but ours too. After so much celebration, we’ll feel more ready for the fight than ever!”
            “I feel ready for the fight anyhow!” Ion said energetically. “I should have thought to ask the princess where our weapons are located, but I was so swept up in the revelry that it slipped my mind.”
            “They’re locked up somewhere here in the palace,” speculated Alicia. “We didn’t get a chance to see where everything is.”
            “Well, we should have time to find them and to at least learn a little bit of how to use them,” Troy said.  So after breakfast, the knights took the time to explore. The Palace of the Jewel was a small palace that was unused to accommodating guests, and yet it still had many more rooms, hallways, and chambers than the knights had expected to find. There was a stable outside, should any of them choose to keep a horse (Ion and Lovisa, who had already made plans to find good horses, were delighted by this discovery). There was a tiny kitchen attached to the dining hall that must have been meant for servants, but the knights planned to use it themselves as much as possible—except for Morgana, they didn’t feel very comfortable with allowing servants to wait on them all the time. The front courtyard was narrow, but very organized and decorated on both sides with boxy rosebushes and showy petunias and verbenas. A wide, barren cellar was discovered through a back door at the end of the main hallway. There were a few empty chambers that seemed to have no real purpose at all. But a weapons hold was not to be found.
            “They are here, though,” Eluani mused, rubbing her temples with the tips of her fingers. “They are behind one of those closed doors, and they will not be revealed to us until after today’s celebration is over. So I suppose we’ll have to just get through that, and hopefully we’ll still have time for training.”
            “If you knew that,” Morgana snapped, “then why didn’t you tell us before we spent all of this time searching, Miss Future Sight?”
            “Because it didn’t actually come to me until a few moments ago,” Eluani retorted. “Besides, it’s beneficial for us to get acquainted with our surroundings anyhow.” 
            “Maybe we could just ask for them,” Alicia said, “and we could request a break from the festivities to do a bit of training.”
            “I doubt it,” said Morgana. “I’ve found that it’s pretty futile to ask for anything from anyone in a palace.”
            “Stop generalizing,” Alicia said. “I’m sure if we were to ask Cordelia, she would think of something. She’s already done so much for us. And I really want to see my weapons!”

It was Cordelia herself who arrived at the Palace of the Jewel that afternoon to lead the knights into Rasta City. She had expected them to be dressed in more silks, brocades, and tassels to be shown around the streets of Rasta, and was quite taken aback when she found them in plain shirts, jackets, trousers, belts, and mail. “Why aren’t you dressed yet?” she asked. 
            “We’re dressed for training,” Alicia told her. “Cordelia, as much as we really do appreciate all of these celebrations held in our honor—and we are very much honored!—we think that it would be beneficial if we had more time to train. You must understand this, as you know that so many of us will be engaging in combat for the very first time. We would like to get properly acquainted with the abilities that the Jewel has granted us, as well as ensure that we have enough time to adequately learn to use our weapons. Will you and your people allow us that?”
            “I understand,” Cordelia said with a nod, “and you’re right. I will ensure that there will be time for training. But for now, the coach is waiting to take you around. The citizens have waited so long to see you, and you will allow them that, won’t you?”
            “Of course,” said Alicia. “Thank you, Cordelia. Your kindness knows no bounds.”
            There was no time to change into finery. “It’s better this way,” said Troy. “The citizens need to see us as the soldiers that we are, and it’s hard to do that if we’re all dressed up like dolls.” Their gems, resting in white gold filigree, were already fine enough for anything. Once again, they were led through the pristine bottom level of the towering city, and it all seemed much less imposing than it had the day before. The citizens were ready to welcome them with open arms, shouting, “Hey, knights!” as they passed by. The knights returned their greetings in the best ways that they knew how.
            The coach, which was waiting for them outside of the glassy gate of the palace, was a splendid white double-decker vehicle with shining metal balconies built along the top layer. The wide, square-shaped windows had no glass to obscure the wind or the eyes of curious onlookers. The vehicle was hung with red and silver banners, and the largest of them bore golden threads which read “RASTA’S KNIGHTS OF THE JEWEL.” One by one, beginning with Alicia, they were escorted up the sunken metal stairway leading into the vehicle, past a vestibule where the driver sat in the solitude that they would not be awarded this time around. Morgana had already made plans to curl up on the floor and refuse to come up until she was good and ready, and Eluani decided that she would feel more comfortable if she did not have to actually look at the crowd as she passed them by. Sanjaia, on the other hand, ecstatically made his way up to the topmost balconies, overcome by the thrill of an opportunity to perform for the largest audience that he was likely to ever be faced with.  
            The knights took their places, Cordelia took hers on the balcony at the head of the coach, and they were ferried through the streets of Rasta City. The crowds gathered in huddles on all sides of the roads seemed more fitting for a royal procession or a parade than the mere introduction of eight knights. Those who had not been fortunate enough to find a spot outside pressed their faces to the windows and congregated near the doorways, and the coachman pressed a button that bathed the carriage in lights that matched the eight colors of the Jewel, ensuring that it would not be missed even by those forced to remain inside. In the upper layers of the city, people peered over the railings and found places to stand on the stairwells. Children were hoisted up onto the shoulders of adults so that they may behold the knights for themselves. Sanjaia despaired of losing his ultimate audience as the sounds of his harp were quickly drowned out by shouts, whistles, and applause.  
            Time passed by, and the single-coach procession showed no sign of drawing to a close. At around two in the afternoon, the coachman announced through a loudspeaker that there would be an intermission so that the knights may be served their lunch. We don’t need an intermission, Troy thought in dismay, we need to finish this up so we can get to our freaking training! The lights were turned off, the coach was pulled into a carriage station, and they were driven to the very back so that they were properly secluded from the crowds. Troy confronted Cordelia on the steps down from the topmost layer of the coach. “How much longer is this going to be?” he asked irritably, and felt immediate remorse for speaking so harshly to a princess. “I mean, I know you want us to see all of your people, and that’s really very nice of you. But you said you’d make sure we had time to train, and quite frankly, that’s much more important.”
            “And who’s to say that this isn’t part of your training?” Cordelia asked with a conspiratorial smile. Troy thought that she would have made more sense if she had told him that she was an alien. In fact, it would have explained a lot. “It isn’t,” he insisted. “What kind of combat experience are we getting from being paraded around the city?”
            “Do you think that combat experience is the only part of training?” Cordelia asked.
            “No,” said Troy, “of course not. But I don’t see how grand processions through the streets are any part of it.”
            Troy,” said Cordelia, “the Jewel isn’t all that you will fight for. The Jewel is the guardian of Rasta, and so any enemy that threatens it threatens Rasta as a whole. If the Jewel were to go down, or if it were taken away from us, the entire kingdom would suffer. Each and every one of the people that you saw in the crowds today—the children, the mothers, the scholars, the shopkeepers, all of them—would suffer. Now that you’ve seen what you must fight for, does it not inspire you to give all that you have to the fight? Will you not fight for their smiling faces, their joyous cries, their spirits full of faith in the knights they are counting on to defend them?”
            “Of course I’ll fight for them,” said Troy. “It’s what we’re here for.” In the Arcadian military, training consisted of long hours and long days getting to know the battlefield in its entirety. There was the firing of rifles against target after target, the dispatching of swords against one thickly-constructed training dummy after another. There was the rehearsal of protocols and the familiarization of defensive maneuvers down to the letter, repeated until the procedures became as natural as breath and sleep. There were seemingly endless drills out in the hot sun that very often took up entire days. Troy knew his rifle as if it was an extension of his own body. The Arcadian combat maneuvers and defensive tactics had been ingrained in his mind to the point where it seemed as though there never had been a time when they were unknown to him. Of course, his fight was powered by love for his beloved Arcadia. It was love for his country that had inspired him to enlist in the first place.
            But there was love for one’s country, and love for one’s people. The Arcadian military had motivated Troy to fight for a faceless entity that he loved, but did not truly know. Now, as Rasta’s Knight of the Onyx, he was not only trained fight and protect, but to know the people that he must fight for. A country’s strongest connection was, of course, through its capital city. The Arcadian military would have seen such a thing as an unnecessary frivolity in the way of preparing for war. But as Troy remembered the hopeful smiles, the energetic cheers, and the eyes full of faith, hope, and support for the new knights, he realized that they had been preparing for war this entire time. And as the princess had expected, he was more inspired than ever to fight for each and every single one of those faces, and all of the rest that he had not gotten a chance to see.

            The procession ended at dinnertime, and the princess accompanied the knights’ return to the Palace of the Jewel. The enjoyed a hearty meal in the palace’s comfortable solitude, but the day’s excitement had not worn off.
            “I must say,” Lovisa said between bites of spice cake, “Rasta is one of the very nicest countries I’ve ever had the pleasure to visit. Then again, I’ve never been to any place outside of Eridell. But even if I had, I’m sure that Rasta would be one of the nicest.”
            “It’s certainly the showiest,” said Sanjaia. “Two eyes and two ears are simply not enough in a place where the city lights up and touches the sky!”
            “I’m happy to hear it,” Cordelia said warmly. “But there’s so much more to Rasta than its capital city, and I hope that someday you will get to see it all. It’s my good luck that someday I will be queen of a country as lovely as my Rasta. But, you know, a good amount of that loveliness is on account of the Jewel.”
            “The Jewel is a true wonder,” Rodin said rapturously. “I’ll do all that I can to protect it, even if it means I must give my own life.” Back in Shalorre, where his biggest daily threat was the horseflies that bit at his face and arms in the fields, he would have never thought to say a thing like that. But now it seemed all right, and even natural.  
            “So you are all ready to fight,” Cordelia said, and it was not a question. “I was always ready to fight,” was Ion’s response, “but I never thought that I could be even more ready, until I saw Rasta’s capital for what it was.”
            Cordelia rose from her seat. “Come with me, then,” she said, “and I will show you to your weapons.”
             “We spent all morning looking for them,” Troy told her, “and never found them.”
            “Well, allow me to show you where you ought to have looked,” said Cordelia. The knights followed her in an orderly fashion as she led them through the halls of the palace, and out of an unimportant-looking side door that Rodin had discovered and immediately forgotten about during their search that morning. The grassy walk that this door opened out on led them to a rusty brown door that Cordelia inserted a key to open.
            “Your weapons,” Cordelia told them, “were crafted by the same weaponsmiths that constructed those of our own knights, as well as the master mages, the most adept bards, and the finest artisans and craftsmen in Rasta. Without the Jewel’s blessing they would be quite ordinary weapons, but with the Jewel’s blessing they will synchronize with the abilities granted to you by your stones. Each weapon possesses a core, and each core responds to a corresponding stone.” She pushed open the door and they entered a wide, circular chamber laid out with cases, racks, and mounts of all kinds. There were swords of all sizes bedecked with odd buttons and switches on metal hilts, which contained glimmering stones in their centers. There were massive shields painted with intricate patterns, which seemed much more for decoration than for actual use. There were cases full of glittering rings and necklaces set with polished stones. Staves mounted on the wall were carved with forest scenes, airy cloudlands, and ravens with glassy dark eyes, all set around glimmering stone cores.
            Ion shook his head. “These weapons cannot be for battle,” he said. “They are much too extravagant, too showy and unwieldy.”
            “Why don’t you test one out for yourself?” Cordelia suggested.  
            Ion approached the array of swords mounted along the right wall. He was not sure of which one was meant for him, until he caught the gleam of a ruby-red stone emanating from the hilt of a massive broadsword. Gingerly, he removed the weapon from its mount. The sword was much heavier than any he had ever wielded, and he had to quickly grasp it with both hands to keep it from toppling to the floor. And yet, he felt a surge of sudden confidence in this sword. He had been drawn to it, and as he held it in his hands and looked into the center of that bright red stone, he knew for sure that it had been made for him and that despite its elaborate appearance, it was meant for him to use. “It’s a peculiar sword, that’s for certain,” Ion said to Cordelia, his voice strained slightly by the weight of the sword. “But I’m certain that I can learn to wield it. I declare that this will be my starting weapon! Where must I go to begin my training? Will we be going back into the city?”
            Cordelia shook her head. “You’ll be training out here, in the fields nearby the palace.”  
            “And who will we be training under?” Ion asked. “Will it be under the commander of the knights of Rasta?”
            “No,” Cordelia said. “You will be training under me.”

            Cordelia had selected a meager training foil, which had been situated on a much smaller rack in a corner of the weapons holds. It was not too different from the training foils used by the knights of Lamorak, and Ion questioned the sense of using it against his own enormous broadsword. Cordelia stood six paces away from him, and the others, waiting patiently with their own weapons, watched from the sides.
            “Firmly grasp the hilt,” Cordelia instructed, “and enter the basic stance. It looks like this.” She demonstrated with her own training foil, which was needless; Ion already knew the basic stance for a broadsword and she could not adequately copy it with her training rapier. Ion tightened his grip around the hilt and began to lift, only to be startled into nearly dropping it entirely. Cordelia’s rapier had changed right before his eyes. The blade had extended, widened, and sharpened, and the hilt now shifted and unwound to accommodate the new shape. Cordelia switched her stance from a poor imitation to a flawless execution of the real basic broadsword stance. Her feet shifted until they reached the correct position.
            “How did you manage that?” Ion asked in bewilderment.
            “It’s a simple press of a button,” Cordelia said. “Now go ahead and match my stance.” With a conspiratorial smile, she added, “I know that you know how.”  
            Does my own weapon allow for such transformations? Ion wondered as he eyed the many switches on the hilt. The possibility of many weapons in one, he mused, to change as circumstances may demand…why, there is nothing that could catch me off guard! I would be an unstoppable force! Of course, such affairs would be better addressed when it was less of a struggle for him to hold up a sword that touched the sky.

Thursday, August 20, 2015

Into the Land of the Elves: Talking Way Too Much About Katie

The Diary of Miss Aidyn Hall; don’t call me human
August 12
2:04 PM

Talking Way Too Much About Katie

            Katie showed up the moment I was about to head out into the Greenwood. I had finished my lunch and finished packing up my writing materials. Apple Blossom was no longer confined to the palace and I knew that she would have me running around for most of the day, but still I knew that I would find a convenient time to write. Writing in the Greenwood was the only way that I could get any writing done anymore. Apple Blossom’s interest was part of the reason for that, but the other part was the Greenwood itself. There was no better place for the imagination than a place like the Greenwood, where elves lived and fairies played and the waters rang like bells.
            But then Katie came along. I swore under my breath when I saw her coming up to the door. It’s gotten so that I genuinely cannot stand the woman anymore. I answered the door before she could ring the bell. “What do you want, Katie?” I asked in an admittedly snappish tone.
            “What’s with the ice?” she asked as she attempted to invite herself in. Her entitled self was just so shocked when I blocked her way. “I just have a few questions about that stone,” she said. In one cupped hand, she held the tag.
            “Aren’t you supposed to be at work?” I asked her.
            “I’m on my lunch break,” she answered. “I ate my lunch in the car on the way here, so I have time.”
            “I won’t be able to answer everything,” I said with a sigh. “But go ahead, shoot. I have somewhere to be.”
            “Can I come in?” Katie asked, and I moved aside to allow her to. She sat down on the arm of the sofa.  “Make this quick,” I told her.
            “Do you have one of these too?” Katie asked. I responded by slipping my tag out of my pants pocket and handing it to her. “Yours has a different marking,” she observed. “Do you know why that is?”
            “Mine is the symbol for the number five,” I said. “Yours is the number six. It means that we’re the fifth and sixth humans to come by that particular Greenwood.”
            “What happened to numbers one through four?” Katie asked.
            “They weren’t able to get in,” I said, “and you won’t be able to get in either. Only I was able to get in.”
            “What, are you part of an exclusive club?” Katie asked standoffishly, crossing her arms. “No,” I said, “I’m personal friends with the princess. Do you remember her? She’s that little girl you terrified.”
            “Oh.” Katie guiltily looked down at the floor. “Did I really terrify her?”
            “You did,” I said. “I mean, she was hiding.” 
            “Can I go back and tell her that I’m sorry?” Katie asked without looking up.
            “No, you can’t go back!” I said. “That will terrify her even more! Not only that, but it will cause one heck of a commotion among all the other elves! They really, really don’t like humans at the best of times, Katie! If you’re really sorry, then I’ll tell her that for you. I really ought to get going now.” I took my tag from her and slipped it into my pocket. “If you have anymore questions, just text them to me and I’ll answer them when I can.”
            “I guess I’ve got to get back to work,” said Katie. “But Aidyn, I have to say that I’m sorry I didn’t….well, I said that there weren’t any elves, and I acted like you were telling a kids’ story when you were telling me about all of this elf business. But now I’m starting to realize that you were telling the truth the whole time. And if you were, well…who knew, right?”
            “Of course I was telling the truth,” I said. Somehow, her little “who knew” irritated me.
            “Well, I’m sorry I doubted you,” Katie said, “and I’m sorry for being such a jerk about it.”
            “I appreciate the apology,” I said, and I have to admit that I was still rather cold about it. I wasn’t in the mood to be friendly to her yet. I saw her to the door and to her car, and as I waited for her car to completely disappear from view, I sat down on the curb to write all of this down. I guess I had a lot more to say about it than I thought, because she took off ages ago and I’m still sitting here. Oh well, Apple Blossom will understand.

7:00 PM

            Apple Blossom was waiting for me at the bridge, entirely untroubled by the delay. “Good afternoon, friend,” I said cordially, and I gave her a little hug, which she returned.
            “What happened to that woman who came by yesterday?” she asked.
            “You mean Katie?” I said. “Oh, I don’t think you’ll be seeing her again.”
            “She’s not coming back?” Apple Blossom asked with widening eyes. “Why isn’t she coming back?”
            I raised a brow. “You don’t want her to come back, do you?” I asked incredulously.
            “I do!” she cried. “I do want her to come back! She’s a friend of yours, isn’t she?”
            “Well, not really. Not anymore,” I said begrudgingly. I had enough of Katie, and now that I had finally gotten away from her, I didn’t want to talk about her. Unfortunately, Apple Blossom did not feel the same. “You aren’t friends anymore?” she asked. “Is it because of what happened yesterday?”
            “It absolutely is,” I assured her. Then, to change the subject, I said, “I have more to read today. Do you remember when you took a peek at that lacy book on your mother’s desk?”
            “I remember,” she said. “But why are you mad at your friend when you’re the one who attacked her?”
            “I didn’t attack her!” I insisted. “I had to get her to go away! I couldn’t just let her in, could I?”
            “I wouldn’t have minded that,” said Apple Blossom. “I would have liked to meet a friend of yours.”
            “But you were afraid of her!” I said. “You hid from her, and then you cried!”
            “I was only afraid of her until I found out she was your friend, Aidyn!” Apple Blossom said with a hint of exasperation. “And then I was afraid because you were fighting!”
            Ow, did that ever hurt. Up until then, I hadn’t acknowledged my own culpability in her terror, and even then I wasn’t exactly ready to, so I just dodged the subject for the time being. “Your parents would be absolutely livid,” I reminded her, “if I started bringing even more humans in here.”
            “She wouldn’t have to come past the bridge,” said Apple Blossom. “I just would have liked to talk with her.”
            I could hardly believe what I was hearing. “I can’t guarantee that she would want to talk with you, Apple Blossom,” I told her. “I mean, she didn’t even think you were real, even when she was looking right at you. Besides, it’s way too much of a risk. Katie isn’t concerned with protecting this place. She sees it—and you—as a point of interest, nothing more. And once humans start finding points of interest, they start wanting to find out more about them. And when they want that, they’ll do anything it takes to get any information they can, with no regard for whether or not it will cause trouble or even whether or not they have a right to it.”
            “You didn’t do that,” said Apple Blossom. “And I don’t think any friend of yours would do that either.”
            “I don’t want to discuss this any further, Apple Blossom,” I said firmly, and the matter finally dropped. The day continued perfectly pleasantly, so long as we didn’t have to talk about Katie. We did our reading on the banks of the mermaid pool, and after that we got to go for a sail on Apple Blossom’s oak log raft. The mermaids were just as receptive to the both of us as they had been on the day of our swim a while back. Just how many new friends am I going to make in the Greenwood? I realize more than ever that each and every one of them is superior to Katie in each and every way.
            And yet, as Apple Blossom was walking me back to the bridge at the end of the day, she lightly tugged at my hand and asked, “Is it okay to talk about Katie now?”
            “I’d rather we didn’t,” I said. “I still don’t like her very much right now.”
            “Well, do you think that the next time you come here, you can bring Katie with you?” Apple Blossom looked up at me with hopeful eyes. “She doesn’t have to follow us over the bridge, Aidyn. I just really want to meet a friend of…I mean, somebody you know, just once.”
            I heaved a sigh. “I’ll think about it,” I told her. “But I am not going to promise you anything.”
              Unfortunately, I’m still thinking about it.