(( OOC note – this post starts up mid-scene because Alyssia was a late arrival. This takes place in the graveyard of the Ascalon Settlement a bit after midnight. ))
Valeria nods slowly. ‘Magister… in the Priory… the Countess said she was “bookish”. This Adriwyn has a better friend in Countess Dom Perevelli than she probably realises – what’s that?’ She turns to face scrabbling noises coming from the bluff at the edge of the graveyard. It sounds like something with claws is managing to climb that steep face.
“Hm…she did mention…” Mirex cuts off as Val does, and she catches the scrabbling. Despite her weariness, she wraps herself in illusory leather armor, and has her glowing, purple ethereal sword in her hand, and chaos energy crackling about the other, “Stay back…” she warns, as she takes a couple slow steps toward the cliff, but keeping her distance so she wasn’t in strike range of whatever it was.
Val looks like she wants to object, but she then remembers she came out in her nightclothes with blankets, and not in armour with her weapons.
A whispering sound seems to be in motion along the side of the graveyard, then it stops and coalesces. ‘I certainly didn’t expect such a welcoming committee at this hour, dearies.’ It was Alyssia’s strong contralto, and she came further into the area, which makes her discernable by sight as well. ‘Orchid, dearie, do be careful. I think our servants have made people nervous.’
(( OOC note – this post starts up mid-scene because Alyssia was a late arrival. This takes place in the graveyard of the Ascalon Settlement a bit after midnight. ))
Valeria nods slowly. ‘Magister… in the Priory… the Countess said she was “bookish”. This Adriwyn has a better friend in Countess Dom Perevelli than she probably realises – what’s that?’ She turns to face scrabbling noises coming from the bluff at the edge of the graveyard. It sounds like something with claws is managing to climb that steep face.
“Hm…she did mention…” Mirex cuts off as Val does, and she catches the scrabbling. Despite her weariness, she wraps herself in illusory leather armor, and has her glowing, purple ethereal sword in her hand, and chaos energy crackling about the other, “Stay back…” she warns, as she takes a couple slow steps toward the cliff, but keeping her distance so she wasn’t in strike range of whatever it was.
Val looks like she wants to object, but she then remembers she came out in her nightclothes with blankets, and not in armour with her weapons.
A whispering sound seems to be in motion along the side of the graveyard, then it stops and coalesces. ‘I certainly didn’t expect such a welcoming committee at this hour, dearies.’ It was Alyssia’s strong contralto, and she came further into the area, which makes her discernable by sight as well. ‘Orchid, dearie, do be careful. I think our servants have made people nervous.’
A cheerful voice from partway down the steep slope answered, ‘Oh! All right!’
Miex eyes the necromancer a moment, then smiles slightly, “You know…I was just talking about you. Tori said you’d be back again, so I thought I’d wait.” She glances curiously at the cliff and the voice that had answered amongst the scrabbling, “Who’s your companion and why is she scaling the cliff with what I’m presuming are undead minions?”
Val steps back nervously before steadying herself. This night has had too much strangeness, and Aly’s glowing eyes unnerve her a bit. She looks and listens quietly, her eyes darting about.
Tori takes it in stride, waving to Aly, who waves back to her while answering Mirex.
‘That’s my apprentice, Orchid, and I didn’t want to raise up the minions here, where I might need the good will of Victoria’s aunties. Just in case, though, we decided not to parade them through town. So, she’s keeping them in line, riding one, while they climb. And they’re almost here. How have you been, Mirex?’
“I’ve been well, Lady Dore. Busy, unfortunately. You already know Tori, but this is Valeria Valdis, her sister,” she introduces Val, “If I may ask, what’re the minions for, precisely? Were you expecting a fight with the Baron? Or one of the Aunties?”
‘Pleased to meet you, Valeria.’ She chuckles, seeing Val’s reaction to her. ‘Yes, really, dearie. – And I came this at this late hour in hopes of avoiding the Baron. The minions are in case I really need protection while opening the Mists. My interest is in the spirit of Jocasta Mercer.’
“It would seem he’s away on business right now, so we’re safe for the moment. What’s your interest in Jocasta, my Lady?” she asks curiously. She lets her sword dispel, but she keeps her magic clinched to maintain the armor.
Tori takes interest in the proceedings again, twirling about and skipping up to Aly. ‘Jocasta doesn’t scream at me any more!’
The Grenthite is interrupted by this from answering Mirex. ‘Really, dearie? That’s good to hear! How did that come about?’
‘Auntie Dree gave her what-for! And… I forget. Claire and Jaine helped, and… Mirex was here… I’m just so glad she’s being nice now!’
Aly shoots Mirex an apologetic glance and keeps dealing with the younger girl-woman. ‘Do you think she might be willing to talk to me, then, dearie?’
Mirex simply smiles knowingly, “I think so, if Tori does. We came to a bit of an accord with Miss Mercer.”
Tori ponders the question, looking aside and seeming like she might be talking to the spirits again, with Aly’s gaze frequently following hers.
The minions crest the bluff and line up at the edge of the graveyard, with a very dark-coloured sylvari, as advertised, riding one of the larger ones. She hops down, patting the flesh golem fondly, her head tilting. Her violet glow barely helps to make her visible as she watches.
Aly nods with a smile at Mirex’s comment, and then again at what apparently she hears from Tori’s conversation. She leans on her staff, channeling some power through it, but not nearly so much as she seems to have saved up. ‘Jocasta Mercer, I am Alyssia Dore of House Durheim. As you were a priestess of Kormir, and in charge of Adriwyn Jardin’s instruction when she was at the orphanage, I’m sure you know what that means. But I am here as her friend, and I hope thus as yours. I would prefer not to exercise my power if we can just have a friendly little chat.’
Mirex blinks in surprise as Alyssia speaks, pulling her gaze away from the sylvari and her small army of creepy crawlies. She doesn’t interrupt while the two speak, although all she’d be able to hear is one side of it.
Aly seems to listen to the air while Tori chatters with Claire, based on the youngster’s side of the conversation. After a few moments, the priestess nods with a dry chuckle. ‘I’m sure we can accommodate that, Sister Jocasta, if you don’t mind a little set up time. – Victoria, dearie, I know you can see what I do – but please don’t try this yourself until you’ve learned about the dangers, hmm?’
Tori glances around in the way that indicates she’s listening to her Aunties, sighs heavily, and murmurs, ‘Yes’m.’
Alyssia nods, satisfied, and wanders along, reaching Jocasta’s uneasy resting place. She draws in the earth with her staff, encircling the whole grave including the headstone. She starts chanting and channelling, and from the looks of things, based on earlier events of the evening, probably gets help, since the misty portal opens quickly and apparently easily. The spirit that steps through resembles a woman of fairly advanced years, though erect and not bowed. She looks around, eyeing all of the living humans with some measure of suspicion.
Mirex watches the ritual with a certain awe. Just as many might be entranced by the wonders she could conjur up, so too was she by what Alyssia could do. She felt a brief pang as the thought occurred to her that what Aly had just summoned was a real person. All Mirex could create were lies. She shoved it aside though as she offered a small but welcoming smile to the apparition, offering a curtsy of respect.
Val shivers, shrinking back a bit, sort of hiding behind Mirex or even Victoria. Tori shrugs at this and watches intently, staring in that way five year olds do, and not usually those of five and twenty.
Jocasta’s spirit looks them all over some more, finally settling on Aly. ‘I have some measure of understanding as to why I needn’t fear for Adriwyn from them – probably. But I don’t know you, priestess though you clearly are.’
Alyssia nods with a dry chuckle. ‘In 1319, when she came back to the orphanage for the last time, she was in better health and better dressed than you had expected. She told you about a creepy-looking lady who withdrew charges and took her home for a while instead of letting her be prosecuted for stealing rags again. Look at my eyes. I am that lady who fed and clothed her.’
The spirit seems to mull this over a while, staring at Aly, and pacing over her grave.
Mirex offers a comforting hand to hold or arm to slip about Val, giving her a brief reassuring smile before her attention went back to Jocasta, taking in her appearance, and listening to some insight into Adri’s younger life, “I’m in love with Adriwyn, Sister Jocasta. Alyssia can confirm. When Adri was…badly wounded after the baron’s assassins Sam and Reg attacked us, it was Alyssia that Adri asked me to take her to, and who healed her mortal wounds. I will vouch for Lady Dore.”
Val takes the reassurance gratefully, sticking close to Mirex.
Tori seems to be talking quietly with the other spirits again, though she’s closely watching still.
Jocasta looks the living over again, pursing her lips and shaking her head. ‘That’s the two of you vouching for each other. Even with your image of her earlier, that’s not terribly satisfying, and I don’t want to risk her safety.’
Aly nods. ‘Then is there something else you could ask, that only she would know to tell me? Since you last saw her, she has learned to enchant jewelry of her making – and with that, I am in touch with her now.’ With a dry chuckle, she adds, ‘Not that she’s all that happy about being awakened.’
Mirex blinked a moment, then blushes, “Oh…you have one of those too?” she touches the baubles piercing her navel through the illusionary armor she wore, “I completely forgot about mine… Sister Jocasta…I can also take whatever test you wish. Adri and I are…also connected.”
<Darling…? Adri…? It’s me…> She thinks toward the sapphire set in her navel, although it might broadcast to Alex as well since theirs were all linked.
Jocasta ponders this more, and appears to be listening to something through the mist arch behind her.
While the spirit mulls things over, the thoughts come back, <Hullo, Me! I’m not sure who I am yet. But you’d better be safe after so long without checking in!> Her heart’s clearly not in the scolding, however.
Aly chuckles with a small nod, answering Mirex. ‘I have.’
Val looks confused, and Tori treats it like anything else that passes over her head – she ignores it.
<I’m so sorry, my love. I’ve been so caught up, I forgot I had this so I could still talk to you. Are you well, darling? Oh, I’ve so much to tell you! But that will have to wait, for now. I might need your help here, dearest. There’s a ghost here that is a bit…skeptical that I know you.> Mirex blushes a bit at being scolded, though all her companions would see was the blush, and the soft but affectionate smile that touched her lips at hearing Adri’s voice again. She eyes Aly and Jocasta while listening for Adri still.
Aly breaks the face-off first. ‘She says that Orwin never learned to stop bullying, and that last she’d heard, he ran off to join the bandits out Beetletun way.’
The spirit nods to that, still apparently also listening to something behind her.
The Valdises continue as they’ve been, with Val slowly regaining her composure – though Orchid’s continued playing with the warped minions probably isn’t helping her.
<Jocasta. So much I’d like to ask her. Tell her that her brother’s cryptic obituary is really frustrating when I’m having to stay holed up because of assassins. And we’ll talk later about regular check-ins, but Cris told me not to expect better, so I’m not mad, love.>
“She also says there is much she’d like to ask you, Sister Jocasta, and that your brother’s cryptic obituary is really frustrating when she’s having to stay holed up because of assassins.” Mirex relays the message. <I’ll try and be better, dear one. I promise. I love you, my Adriwyn.>
The spirit frowns, but nods. ‘I suppose Pierre’s message would have been, since he had to assume the Baron would also see it. And she will have no trouble asking me things if she can come here. Sadly, I can’t visit her.’
Aly nods to that with a small frown of her own. ‘She was hoping you could shed light on some of the references she hasn’t figured out yet – if you’re willing to now. Though one thing she especially wants to know is why you couldn’t tell her who she is – and what a danger that would be to her – once she’d got older.’
Tori gets bored and wanders over to see what Orchid’s doing, and starts up a mostly quiet conversation with her, though each of them keeps acting like an excited child as they talk.
Val keeps hold of Mirex’s hand, though she is steadying up again.
<I love you, too, silly! Or I wouldn’t be worried! But Aly’s there, so there should be no real trouble with the ghosts.>
<Oh, I’m not worried about the ghosts. They’ve been very helpful. Tori has helped me commune with them. Which reminds me. I can beat him. So easily. Find a way to get here. I have to stay to keep the Baron form harming Valeria and Tori now that Val is free. But I promised you the Baron was yours, if I could make it safe to do so, and I’m confident with their help I can. I also promised Sister Jocasta I’d bring you here to commune with her.>
Mirex squeezes Val’s hand reassuringly, while focusing on the spirit and Aly. She keeps an eye on Tori but she seemed safe enough with Orchid so she wasn’t concerned. “I confess, I’m also curious about Adri’s past, Sister Jocasta. And to try and understand more about why the Baron is doing all this, and what his connections are. Recall, that I promised to bring her here, when we had finished the Baron.”
<How soon? How extreme do I need to be about finding a way to get there?> Adri’s shift to her “action” mode was almost disconcerting.
Val smiles a bit, starting to look around again herself, mostly after her sister, but also apparently keeping something of a watch.
Jocasta’s spirit nods. ‘Right. Well, it wasn’t entirely my decision – and Pierre didn’t know her, but he knew the Baron. I’m sure watching Adriwyn’s mother die and being unable to get her help… well, it changed him. He was very nervous of the girl’s risks, and hated that he couldn’t find a way to adopt her himself to keep her from her troubles with bad families and the streets. And yet, being a “gutter-snipe” was her best camouflage, or so we thought.’
<Oh, don’t be unsafe, dearest. Just get Cristian to get you here. Preferably in the next few days. I don’t know when the baron will return but lets get you here before he does.> Mirex smiled at Val slowly getting used to all this, “Don’t worry, I’ll do my best to explain later” she murmured in promise to the young woman, while listening to Jocasta and Aly converse.
<So I shouldn’t just hop on the Chicken Pusher and jump off in the night sky over the Settlement? Honestly, that’s probably safer than anything but a stealth drop from the Current, anyway. But fine, if he’s not there right now, I don’t have to run out on Alex in the middle of the night.>
Val nods. ‘Would be nice.’ She gives Mirex a smile, then resumes scanning the area, possibly because playing sentry made her feel useful.
Aly thought over the spirit’s words, then nodded. ‘I see. Being seen with him would have been too obvious a thing to keep hidden, but an Ascalonian countess as a homeless waif in the streets of the Reach… who would believe that? And considering the holes I had to patch up in her this last time, I won’t disagree with your choices. Even she may not, once she gets here, though she’s simmering at me over it right now.’
<I’ll have him pick you up so that you can tell Alex.> Mirex giggled softly, “Me as well.” She added to Aly, “I’ll bring her here, though. I don’t want anyone putting any more holes in my Adri!” she stated firmly, “Lady Dore, I have a boon to ask of you. When you leave this place tonight, take Val and Tori with you back to the Reach. Leave them with the Shining Blade at the palace. They’ll be safe there until this is over….”
Aly nods slowly. ‘We’ll need to make some preparations here, then. Victoria will go if her Aunt Claire does.’ Her glowing gaze turns to the side, apparently looking at said ghost. ‘Valeria, you sounded willing for such an arrangement earlier. Is that still the case?’
Val nods, blinking. ‘Y-yes… I suppose I should pack us some clothes quickly, then.’ She turns to go do that.
Jocasta chuckles. ‘After so long, and being so worried about the girl… it will be good to see her again. But I should let you close up this portal so that you can get ready. I’m sure leaving before sunrise would be best.’
“I think so. Will it be possible for me to commune with you all here without Tori? I’m going to need your help one more time once Adri is here and he Baron comes back, but I’d like to keep Tori safe and away from here if possible.”
Aly and Jocasta both chuckle, the former almost sardonically and the latter with definite amusement. Aly answers, ‘With Adri here, her Gran will be irrepressible – and mobile. Though I’ll try to be back here as well, just in case.’ She looks over. ‘Orchid, dearie, I need you and Victoria here, please.’
As the sylvari and her new friend skipped over, the Grenthite looked at a different spirit. ‘Jaine, what does it take for you to be able to accompany her? Will you be able to for a possible extended stay?’
Val gives Mirex’s hand a squeeze and starts off toward the house to pack.
Mirex offers a warm smile and a nod as Val goes to pack, and she frowns as Aly seems to be discussing multiple spirits leaving, “Wait, they can’t all go with her. I need the mesmers here to be able to defeat the Baron!” she protests.
‘Ah. A good point. Yet she probably won’t go without Claire – who is one of the mesmers. – Victoria? Orchid? And Claire… are you agreeable?’ The three Mirex can see apparently hear Claire’s response. ‘All right. Victoria, your uncle will try to hurt you, mostly in your head, if he gets back and finds you not so much under his thumb – and even more so for your sister. Will you come back with Orchid and me – and Valeria – to Divinity’s Reach? You won’t be able to talk to your aunties for a few days, but we’ll visit with you as much as we can – and you heard what Claire said. How about it?’
“Please, Tori. I now it’s a lot ot ask and not quite what we’d been planning before Lady Dore appeared, but I don’t want to see you hurt. You’ve done so much to help me already.”
Tori looks rather put out, but Orchid squeezes her hand and whispers to her, and she smiles. She mumbles something to her aunties, then sighs and nods. ‘All right. But I want cookies!’
Aly laughs and smiles at her. ‘I’ll deliver them as soon as possible after we get you settled.’
Between that and Mirex’s coaxing, she seems suitably mollified.
Valeria returns after not too long in her armour and with a pack, and a day-pack sort of thing for her sister. ‘Just in case,’ she comments, tapping the metal.
Mirex nods in approval, “Very wise, Val. I’ll come retrieve you and Tori when this is all done. If for some reason the worst should happen, you’ll be safe there in the palace, and be taken care of.” She offered a last reassuring smile, then looked to Aly, “I’m in your debt, Lady Dore. Thank you for looking after them on the way to the capitol. There is an assassin. Reg. He may try to intercept you. I’m sure the Baron knows something has happened here with what I did to Valeria. You and Orchid be careful.”
Aly nods with a sly grin. ‘Oh, we’ll have the minions keep their eyes out. At least until we take a waypoint. But I’d rather not parade these notable redheads and my minions through town, so I’m afraid there will be a bit of a walk.’ She ponders briefly. ‘Valeria, you probably don’t want to go down the bluff in armour – but I believe you have sufficient authority to simply let yourself out?’ At Val’s answering nod, she smiles. ‘Then try not to show any reaction to having what will feel like a ghost leaving with you. I will stick with you whle Orchid and the minions get Victoria down, and we’ll meet up with them below.’
“I’ll remain here to await Adri…and the Baron.” Mirex adds, “Safe travels, both of you. We will meet again.” She remains there in the graveyard while watching their company split up to make their escapes.
Orchid lets Tori ride the flesh golem, which makes it all a grand adventure for her, while Aly and Val head toward the south gate. Along the way, Aly somehow just… seems to dissipate.
I hope this missive finds you well and in good spirit. Thank you kindly for sending word regarding Lady Jardin and her current condition. I will pass on a memo to the Roses so they are informed of the situation. I also wish you will pass on to Adriwyn my well-wishes for her swift recovery. Let her know she is in my prayers.
I’d like to request you perhaps make an exception and allow for me to visit Adriwyn. I’d like to see her if at all possible. Maybe seeing some friendly faces would help her recovery. Do let me know if this is a possibility at your earliest convenience.
If I may ask another favor, would you be so kind to give Adriwyn this bouquet of hydrangeas on behalf of myself and the Roses? It is a get-well-soon arrangement to lift her spirits. Also, give her my love.
Looking forward to hearing from you, and may the stars light your path,
Receiving her letters, with the one from Lux on top, and the hydrangeas, the small blonde’s pacing as she read made even the nervous Sylvari who’d made the delivery seem a model of decorum.
‘Are you all right, Miss Adri?’
Adriwyn laughed with a flash of white teeth and nodded. ‘Oh, aye. Just tired of being pent up, even with Alex’s elementals to spar with.’ She sighed, shaking her head. ‘Be good to get more visitors who can pass the Blade’s scrutiny.’
‘”The Blade”, Miss Adri?’
‘As in the Shining Blade, Orchid. The Queen’s own troops and special agents. That’s who’s in charge of my safety right now.’
‘Even here?’
She pondered the Sylvari briefly, and decided not to break her innocence further at the moment. ‘Aye, even here, sweetie, even though you haven’t spotted them.’ She wasn’t quite lying – she hadn’t spotted that even the butler, Andrew, was deadly, as was Lady LaCoria. Sometimes it was easier to just let Orchid go on being naive. ‘Anyway, I should write to Lux, and then decide how to respond to the rest of these. Thank you for bringing these by! Maybe Andrew will have something for you to snack on before you go?’
The Sylvari didn’t need much encouraging to scurry down to the kitchen, and the mostly recovered Adri sat down to write back to her friend.
Dear Lady Lux,
Thank you so much for your kind wishes and the flowers! I’m sure I can talk my caretakers into letting you in – and Aly probably already told you where I am, even if she hadn’t before. I don’t really know what she wrote earlier, come to think of it. So, in case she didn’t say, I’m at the LaCoria estate, slowly going crazy from being cooped up. I’ve had better medical care than money alone can buy, and it’s only a lack of guards to escort me that has me still hidden away. I hope nothing too awful has happened for me to catch up on in my enforced absence. And don’t stop by my shop – I’m pretty sure my blood is still on the door.
It
has come to my attention that one of our Magisters has been attacked
and is in medical care. As an Archivist and a leader within the Durmand
Priory, I would ask to be kept appraised of Magister Adriwyn’s
condition. You may be asking yourself why a charr is so concerned with a
human, then allow me to explain. I lost my warband many years ago, and
was ordered to report to the Priory. Since that time, those scholars,
explorers and Magisters have become my warband. Whether they are charr,
sylvari, norn, asura or yes, even human. Adriwyn is one of many
magisters that I keep tabs on, reading reports, and details of
findings. She is extremely valuable to this organization. And I would
hate to see her lost, not only as a Priory member, but as what I would
consider a ‘band mate.
As to how this letter came to me, I
have no idea who delivered a copy of this letter, as I found it laying
on my bunk in my personal quarters. Just know that I wish to be sent
word on Adriwyn’s condition. And should you require any assistance, I
can make myself available.
Regard,
Archivist Grishnack Soulclaw, Durmand Priory.
Looking through the other letters that Alyssia had sent to her, Adri found the one from Grishnack the most touching after Lux’s, and set about replying to that one as well.
Dear Archivist,
Thank you for concern. Lady Dore forwarded your letter on to me here, where I remain more or less in protective custody with the Shining Blade (and good friends – this is not captivity, don’t worry!). I’ve received better medical care than money alone can buy, and I’m almost fully recovered. I’m only still out of view because of other pressures on the Blade and making sure we can catch the mastermind behind the attacks on me without getting me pinned up to a door by ballistae bolts again – or worse. And yes, this most recent attempt did involve that sort of damage, which is why I’m lying low for now. On the other hand, because I’m so well recovered otherwise, I’m getting stir-crazy. While it’s not field action, if you have anything you need translated from any of the languages I specialise in, feel free to send such documents my way!
It
has come to my attention that one of our Magisters has been attacked
and is in medical care. As an Archivist and a leader within the Durmand
Priory, I would ask to be kept appraised of Magister Adriwyn’s
condition. You may be asking yourself why a charr is so concerned with a
human, then allow me to explain. I lost my warband many years ago, and
was ordered to report to the Priory. Since that time, those scholars,
explorers and Magisters have become my warband. Whether they are charr,
sylvari, norn, asura or yes, even human. Adriwyn is one of many
magisters that I keep tabs on, reading reports, and details of
findings. She is extremely valuable to this organization. And I would
hate to see her lost, not only as a Priory member, but as what I would
consider a ‘band mate.
As to how this letter came to me, I
have no idea who delivered a copy of this letter, as I found it laying
on my bunk in my personal quarters. Just know that I wish to be sent
word on Adriwyn’s condition. And should you require any assistance, I
can make myself available.
Regard,
Archivist Grishnack Soulclaw, Durmand Priory.
Looking through the other letters that Alyssia had sent to her, Adri found the one from Grishnack the most touching after Lux’s, and set about replying to that one as well.
Dear Archivist,
Thank you for concern. Lady Dore forwarded your letter on to me here, where I remain more or less in protective custody with the Shining Blade (and good friends – this is not captivity, don’t worry!). I’ve received better medical care than money alone can buy, and I’m almost fully recovered. I’m only still out of view because of other pressures on the Blade and making sure we can catch the mastermind behind the attacks on me without getting me pinned up to a door by ballistae bolts again – or worse. And yes, this most recent attempt did involve that sort of damage, which is why I’m lying low for now. On the other hand, because I’m so well recovered otherwise, I’m getting stir-crazy. While it’s not field action, if you have anything you need translated from any of the languages I specialise in, feel free to send such documents my way!
I hope this missive finds you well and in good spirit. Thank you kindly for sending word regarding Lady Jardin and her current condition. I will pass on a memo to the Roses so they are informed of the situation. I also wish you will pass on to Adriwyn my well-wishes for her swift recovery. Let her know she is in my prayers.
I’d like to request you perhaps make an exception and allow for me to visit Adriwyn. I’d like to see her if at all possible. Maybe seeing some friendly faces would help her recovery. Do let me know if this is a possibility at your earliest convenience.
If I may ask another favor, would you be so kind to give Adriwyn this bouquet of hydrangeas on behalf of myself and the Roses? It is a get-well-soon arrangement to lift her spirits. Also, give her my love.
Looking forward to hearing from you, and may the stars light your path,
Receiving her letters, with the one from Lux on top, and the hydrangeas, the small blonde’s pacing as she read made even the nervous Sylvari who’d made the delivery seem a model of decorum.
‘Are you all right, Miss Adri?’
Adriwyn laughed with a flash of white teeth and nodded. ‘Oh, aye. Just tired of being pent up, even with Alex’s elementals to spar with.’ She sighed, shaking her head. ‘Be good to get more visitors who can pass the Blade’s scrutiny.’
‘”The Blade”, Miss Adri?’
‘As in the Shining Blade, Orchid. The Queen’s own troops and special agents. That’s who’s in charge of my safety right now.’
‘Even here?’
She pondered the Sylvari briefly, and decided not to break her innocence further at the moment. ‘Aye, even here, sweetie, even though you haven’t spotted them.’ She wasn’t quite lying – she hadn’t spotted that even the butler, Andrew, was deadly, as was Lady LaCoria. Sometimes it was easier to just let Orchid go on being naive. ‘Anyway, I should write to Lux, and then decide how to respond to the rest of these. Thank you for bringing these by! Maybe Andrew will have something for you to snack on before you go?’
The Sylvari didn’t need much encouraging to scurry down to the kitchen, and the mostly recovered Adri sat down to write back to her friend.
Dear Lady Lux,
Thank you so much for your kind wishes and the flowers! I’m sure I can talk my caretakers into letting you in – and Aly probably already told you where I am, even if she hadn’t before. I don’t really know what she wrote earlier, come to think of it. So, in case she didn’t say, I’m at the LaCoria estate, slowly going crazy from being cooped up. I’ve had better medical care than money alone can buy, and it’s only a lack of guards to escort me that has me still hidden away. I hope nothing too awful has happened for me to catch up on in my enforced absence. And don’t stop by my shop – I’m pretty sure my blood is still on the door.
I hope this missive finds you well and in good spirit. Thank you kindly for sending word regarding Lady Jardin and her current condition. I will pass on a memo to the Roses so they are informed of the situation. I also wish you will pass on to Adriwyn my well-wishes for her swift recovery. Let her know she is in my prayers.
I’d like to request you perhaps make an exception and allow for me to visit Adriwyn. I’d like to see her if at all possible. Maybe seeing some friendly faces would help her recovery. Do let me know if this is a possibility at your earliest convenience.
If I may ask another favor, would you be so kind to give Adriwyn this bouquet of hydrangeas on behalf of myself and the Roses? It is a get-well-soon arrangement to lift her spirits. Also, give her my love.
Looking forward to hearing from you, and may the stars light your path,
After reading over the letter, the priestess handed both it and the bouquet to the Sylvari bouncing around behind her. ‘Orchid, be a dear and run these over to Adriwyn, will you?’ At the night-bloom’s incoherent questioning and gesturing at a pile of other letters, she added, ‘Along with the other correspondence for her, yes.’
Orchid scooped up the other letters and raced off down the stairs while Alyssia took up quill and parchment to pen her reply.
Dear Lady Luxelen,
I have sent your letter and the flowers to Adriwyn via my apprentice. You can find her at the LaCoria estate in the Salma district. I’m sure she’d appreciate a visit from you. She’s getting restless enough she’d almost welcome another visit from her assassins by now.
Mirex descended into the depths of the palace, and the warren of windowless halls that the Shining Blade occupied beneath the throne room. She had to go a fair ways to get past the offices of her comrades to the less frequented store rooms and the few interrogation cells kept under heavy guard and enchantment. This was her domain, that of the Shining Blade Interrogators. She nodded once to the trio of Blade guarding the only currently occupied cell, and entered to get a better look at the assassin they’d captured weeks before, who’d been given time to recover so he would be hail and spry for when it was time to question him.
The man looked up from where he’d been sitting, a fresh bruise starting to colour his cheek. Apparently he’d had another go at trying to get out when being fed. He rubbed the stubble on his jaw with the back of his hand, eyeing Mirex, sizing her up.
Mirex simply canted her head to one side, hood pushed back to expose her fiery hair. She met that gaze calmly, with no concern. Utterly confidant, with a hint of fire in her blue green eyes at the spark of anger for the damage he’d caused. She noted that bruise which only amused her and quirked the corner of her mouth as she sat in the only other chair in the room, the only other piece of furniture at all, directly across from him without a word.
The man looked back. He briefly quirked a brow, or attempted to, though his other brow’s following motion rather detracted from the effect. His dark eyes showed no particular emotion at all as he sat there.
“Who are you working for?” She finally asked into the silence. She didn’t expect an answer, but she didn’t really need one yet. Preparing his mind by directing it toward what she wanted to know, and offering one chance to take the easy way.
He snorted in what seems like a cross between annoyance and amusement. ‘Don’t know. Couldn’t tell you even if I wanted to.’
She arched a brow calmly, “Is that so? Do you know who you are then?” She asked with a slight amusement of her own.
‘Sam Ingrams. So far as I know.’ His slight drawl marked him as Gendarran, if it was real.
“And do you know where you are, Master Ingrams? And who you attacked?”
‘Not for sure, to the first. And some bint named Adriwyn, for the second, supposedly a Jardin. Looks like one, even.’ He shrugged slightly and rubbed at his stubble again.
“Hm. You are beneath the palace in Divinity’s Reach, Master Ingrams. In the custody of the Shining Blade. I am Exemplar Mirex Eskara, and I am most curious about these Jardins you’ve been set to hunt down by…who did you say hired you again?”
‘Below the palace, you say? That seems like it’s almost coming up in the world. Too bad it’s likely to be a dead-end promotion. And just one Jardin, if she really is one.’ He shrugged again. ‘And I still don’t know. No point in lying about it. I gotta figure, with both the Queen and the Master Exemplar being mesmers, my mind ain’t gonna be my own for long, anyway. But I really don’t know. Or can’t remember – not sure which.’
She nodded thoughtfully, “Moving up indeed, to have garnered our notice. I’m not sure I’d count it as a good thing for you, though. Unfortunately, the Master Exemplar and Her Majesty tend to avoid these discussions, so it’s just you and me, Master Ingrams. I am powerful enough as a mesmer for you, so fret not.” She regarded him again for a moment, “You’re definitely a professional, though. I can respect that. Hailing from Gendarren by that accent. Your partner. Are they also from there?”
‘So far as I know, ma’am. Not a question one usually asks in my line of work, though. And no, I didn’t figure to be worth their attention. But if there’s one organisation a guy knows will have mesmers, it’s the Blade. What’s your interest in this, anyway?’
“Because I’ve been assigned to protect Lady Adriwyn. I’ll admit, you got the drop on me outside the shop. You used Ballistae instead of your usual firearms. Much quieter. Impressive. You two must have been camped in that room across the street for some time, you and your friend….?” She left it hanging as a question to prompt him to identify his accomplice.
‘Assigned to protect her?’ He whistled softly. ‘If we’d known that, never would have taken the shot with you around. Reg argued with me about it anyway. I lost.’
“Too bad for you. And this Reg. I’d be most curious as to where he might be hiding. I take you two are only partners in this particular job? You don’t sound like you operate as a duo all the time.”
‘We d… I…’ his face twisted briefly into an annoyed snarl, glaring at the wall, then he sighed heavily. ‘I don’t know. I feel like I’ve known him for a long time, but when I try to remember…’ he shook his head. ‘Mists! I must already have been in a mesmer’s hands.’
Mirex pursed her lips, “It would be unfortunate for you if you are,” she replies, studying him again a moment, “Where might Reg hide. You two must have had some sort of fall back point in the off chance things went sour.”
‘Hmm. If they went really sour, we would have met up in the inn at Applenook. But that was only if we couldn’t report in, either. And no, I don’t know how I’d report in even if you turned me loose to try. It just… happens, and I don’t know about it.’
Mirex frowned a moment, “You’ve definitely been tampered with, then. And powerfully as well.” She grimaced, “And I was hoping your forthcoming answers might actually spare me my duty for once.” She sighed in resignation. “Tell me about the Jardins. What do you know of them.”
‘A minor House in the Settlement. Minor because small – seems they had some past glories, maybe mostly back in Ascalon. Didn’t much matter to a bloke like me. I think… there was some trouble between them and… someone.’ He sighed heavily again, his shoulders drooping for a moment. ‘Balthazar’s flaming arse! I can’t remember that either!’
“But you are certain you did know?” she pressed a moment, leaning forward intently.
He nodded, with a frowning grimace. ‘Pretty sure I did.’
“Hm. House Jardin. Were there others, when you took this job? Was it just Adriwyn you were hired to kill, or were there more and she’s the last on your list?”
‘There used to be more. Then… there weren’t any. That was… twenty years ago? Twenty-five? Somewhere in there. Then this job came up. “Last of the Jardins” we were told. Seemed off to me, but the pay was good.’
Mirex pursed her lips again, “Our records indicate a vague conflict with another ancient Ascalonian house that settled here after Rurik’s Crossing. House Valdis. Were they the ones? How did a noble family vanish overnight?”
‘Valdis? Mostly red-heads, like you? I can’t… hm. Can’t remember enough about them, so … maybe? And I was only fifteen to twenty back then myself, ma’am. I just know they went from somewheres around ten to… just not there any more.’
“I don’t know…” she admitted, “Right now Valdis is just a name to me, Master Ingrams. That will change though.” She smiled a touch sadly at the man, “I’m afraid I need more to go on though before I start snooping around them. And you know more then you are able to tell.”
He nodded, with another heavy sigh. He stretched, slowly and carefully, then sat back. ‘No objections to my getting as comfortable as I can for this, I hope?’ His pleasant baritone finally showed some trace of nervousness.
She shook her head, “No objections.” She slowly rose. “I had planned on venting my fury upon you for nearly killing Adri…. but you have been very forthcoming. A true professional. And you’ve obviously been tampered with and used by your employer. So I will be as kind as I can, but… I cannot promise you will survive this. Or that you will come out… unchanged. If you survive… perhaps we will discuss your future prospects.”
He nodded, a bit stiffly, swallowing. ‘That’s… better than I’d had any hope for, really. Though, with an employer that will mess with my head so much… well. I suppose I’ll worry about that if I still can, afterwards.’ He settled back, trying to relax, knowing that fighting was not in his best interest.
“Focus as much as you can on the things we’ve talked about, particularly your employer and the job you accepted.” She murmured encouragingly as she circled around Sam, and gently placed her hands on Sam’s temples. Closing her eyes, she began to weave her power into his mind. Obviously he’d been tampered with extensively, so she proceeded with extreme caution, seeking out hexes and snares the other mesmer might have set for anyone that went snooping. Those were the first priority to ensure she wasn’t harmed by an unfriendly curse, or that Sam’s mind was not instantly obliterated.
He nodded nerviously, liking his lips and swallowing. It was slow going. There were layers of misdirection: cloaked figures, the examination of which would lead to being trapped in a loop in the mind; some trails off to Ministers of the Settlement; some to Houses in Ebonhawke; and even one for the Shining Blade. Some of the false layerings were well done and took a while to tease out, while others were but an annoyance to anyone with real training. For some, the hardest part was keeping Sam’s mind from being blasted by the unravelling, but so far, Mirex’s skill proved the better.
Mirex bent all her focus and will on unraveling the layers that clouded Sam’s mind, expertly teasing them apart with skeins of magic. She glanced the each misdirection with a passing interest. Her unknown opponent was very good. Well trained, and highly skilled. That disturbed her. Not just any mesmer could do this to a mind without the subject becoming aware, assuming they survived the spells at all. On she delved, like passing through a dark tunnel laiden with cobwebs.
Further exploration dredged up that Reginald Pierce and Sam Ingrams had been boyhood friends, and fell into bounty hunting and then assassination together as their families came on hard times, in large part thanks to the continued centaur attacks on the Settlement. Their more nefarious jobs were the most recent, and all for Baron Valdis, who had slowly worked his way into their minds as he had their lives, hiring them at first for more honest work, and preparing them for over three years before finally sending them against the family of his wife to “take care of the issues”.
Having found something she was looking for, Mirex carefully pursued that train of thought, turning her magic on his mind in a gentle but firm grip to guide it toward those memories. Such deep memories of his childhood would have been very hard to manipulate and mask, especially with such a key figure always present. Since she’d thus far been able to work her way into Sam’s mind without having to cause any real damage, she worked to lift the compulsions that prevented him from reaching his own memories. If she could succeed at that, she might penetrate deep enough to his inner consciousness, her preferred method when dealing with someone who was not really an enemy.
It seems the Baron had underestimated just how much the two had been together in their lives, since even giving Reg’s name wasn’t supposed to have been allowed. The two had done almost all their “jobs” together, watching each other’s backs, especially in their earlier escapades, when they weren’t as skilled. Both of them had scars from fighting centaurs, as well as some from near scrapes in “bully boy” jobs of collecting on extortion demands, beating people for warnings, or killing selected targets. They’d been slowly hardened to their mercenary lives of crime, and tried to take some solace in the fact that they tried to be professional about it, and just get the job done without additional violence on their own.
It would seem that Sam’s mind was freeing up nicely. She cast her favored spell, creating a bridge between her mind and Sam’s, controlling the link to guide Sam’s mind to open up it’s inner most place. Everyone’s was different, a sort of mind castle created in their own experiences and interests to house themselves in. She created herself there, assuming her default form, which was unabashedly unclothed, “Sam…” she murmured to try and get his attention so they could talk more in his head. “Sam…”
The shadows moved in the corner of what resolved itself as a spacious workshop. A slightly younger (and better) looking Sam turned from the lathe he’d been setting up, and he blinked, giving Mirex a good looking-over with a smile. ‘Well, hello!’
Even as a mere conjuring in his head, she knew how to blush. She didn’t do anything about her nakedness though, “Hello Sam. Do you know me?” she asks. Best to make sure she’d gotten rid of all the cobwebs and reestablished his connection to himself.
‘I…’ He frowned, puzzled for a moment, brushing his hands on the leather apron he wore. ‘Oh! Right. The Exemplar. That’s why you’re here.’ Something seemed to be trying to draw his attention to a corner, but he managed to keep focussed on Mirex.
She smiled warmly, “That’s right, Sam. I’m here to ask you some things. About the Jardins and House Valdis.” She dropped the names very specifically. Names had power in magic. His would let her keep his attention. The others might draw out what hid in the corners of his workshop and her vision.
‘Ah, right.’ He nodded. ‘Shame what happened to the Jardins. There were rumours, even for the common folks like me. But what do you do when a manse is suddenly devoid of human habitation?’ He shrugged. ‘House Valdis… somehow wound up with the estate, adding it to their own. They’d been adjacent anyway, though, and something had to be done. There were whisperings, but… there always are.’
“What sort of whisperings? You mentioned something about Baron Valdis’ wife?” She prompted, taking a few steps into his workshop, and carefully looking around, letting her eye shift past those shadowy places where things might still hide, while ready to face them and free him of the compulsions that might still lay on his mind.
‘Well, apparently, for being neighbours, there’d been on and off again feuding between the two Houses. Very hush-hush, not supposed to be happening, all that. Now the Baron’s wife… that was sad. Seemed some of her family objected to the union, and were trying to get it annulled, or some such, claiming compulsions were used. They had to be convinced to stop their complaints, lest the legitimacy of his coming heir be called into question, if I recall correctly.’ He was struggling not to be distracted by whatever shadow was tugging at his attention, though so far nothing was obvious for Mirex to see. ‘That took a bit of strategic poisoning, I’m sorry to say. And all for naught, too.’ His voice seemed to carry real regret. ‘She died in childbirth, and the boy didn’t live past a day himself.’
“The Baron’s wife was poisoned?” She blinked in surprise, “Was this before the Jardins disappeared? How long before?” She pressed. She couldn’t see anything, and her senses didn’t offer much better beyond a lingering of something. His distraction confirmed that. Best to get what she needed, and either handle it, or get out before it struck.
‘What? No! Well, not that I know of… her uncle and cousin were poisoned. Or maybe it was just some bad wine, eh? No, her death in childbirth was natural, so far as I know. Though this was just a bit before the Jardins disappeared.’
“I see” she pursed her lips, crossing her arms over her bare chest, “So the Jardins objected to their union… and tried to slay their kin. They failed, however, and soon after were just suddenly gone. Leaving the Baron alone. Does he have other surviving relatives, Sam?”
‘Eh? Not sure the Jardins were involved in that. That was the Car…’ he turned, suddenly seeing something in the shadows, and a squirming mass of purple and black that’s vaguely wolf-like, but with improbably horrific jaws, launched at him, going for his throat.
She’d been waiting for that. Her hand shot up and blasted the apparition with a Spatial Surge. Her gift was to facilitate these places, giving feelings and minds a sense of tangible reality. This included the expression of unfriendly curses and hexes, allowing her to use seemingly conventional combat magic against such threats. The perk was it allowed her to handle such things without having to know the precise counter hex, “Stay back Sam,” she ordered him calmly as she kept the wolf from him, intent on destroying it.
He had his hands up, as though to ward it off, and fell back readily at her command, letting her deal with the thing. It seemed more intent on Sam than on self-preservation, but the blasting had already slowed it down.
Mirex unleashed another beam of chaos energy, and her projections would begin to adopt a purple nimbus as she brought her powers to bear, using an illusory wave to throw it back before hitting it with another beam.
The beast growled and snarled, but was obliterated readily enough. It seems it had only been prepared for Sam, or for not being opposed in time. He lowered his hands and steps forward again, visibly shaken. ‘Uh, thanks.’
She glowed for a few moments more with her power, which added some semblance of decency to her form. She turned slowly toward him once the beast was gone, and smiled softly, “You’re welcome Sam. I did promise I’d try and be as gentle as I can. And there is still much to talk about. Such as the name you were about to say that brought the creature upon you.”
‘The name – oh! The Cardiffs. They were the family of his wife. He sent Reg and me to doctor the wine of the ones who… well, whose deaths would shut the others up, I suppose. Nasty bit of business, that, but if we hadn’t done it, someone else would have – and likely we’d have been got rid of, too.’
“Likely so…. I’m not familiar with these Cardiffs, however.” She sighed softly as she let the glow dissipate. So many players. “So you and Reg poison some of the Baron’s wife’s relatives. Because the Jardins objected? Even though they were of a different House? I think we lost a piece somewhere along the way, Sam. Can you perhaps clarify the events for me?”
‘Not sure the Jardins objected, ma’am. Though maybe… I think in the, what, two hundred years since the crossing, all three Houses had intermarried at some point. But the Baroness had been a Cardiff, and it was her uncle Orwen who was the main focus of the objections, claiming there’d been coercions. Maybe the Baron had some idea the Jardins were behind that? I don’t know. “Above my pay grade”, as they say.’
“I see… perhaps you or Reg could point me to someone who might know? The Baron? Or maybe one of his relatives he keeps in confidence?” She needed leads now. Her mission had begun in earnest to end the threat to Adri and discover the fate of her family.
‘Only the Baron is likely still knowing of anyone alive. I don’t think his nieces, who are all that’s left… I don’t think he trusts them enough. That’s why he cared so much about having his own “proper” heir. And I think no family in the Settlement is still willing to allow anyone to marry him, so he’s getting desperate. But that’s … well, it’s probably right, but I’m guessing a little.’
“I see…. then the Baron hired you two for this job in hunting down Lady Adri?”
Sam nodded. ‘He did. Well, more like… renewed our contracts, I suppose. We’ve been kind of… on retainer with him for a while now. Said he’d found out somehow that there was a Jardin left over, and we needed to figure out a way to do her in without getting him implicated. She was wandering bits of wilderness a lot, mining, and we thought sure we’d got her – but her shop kept going. I don’t know what happened. There was a lot of blood in the water, and sharks there where she went in, and skale and such. But then again, she didn’t even flinch much when we spotted her in Lion’s Arch later, and I know we both hit her. And that time she was only in a dress, not leathers! She’s tough.’
Mirex smiled fondly, and in this place could not hide her real feelings of attraction and affection for Adri. “Yes she is. Even pinned to a door…she still held on,” she murmured with a soft sigh, then studied Sam a moment. “Show me the Baron, Sam. And his nieces. I may need them to get close to him. Show me what they look like so I can find them.”
He nodded and focussed his memory on their faces and overall appearance, the Baron first, then the nieces, Valeria and Victoria. He seemed a little surprised when the images showed in front of him for Mirex, but he rolled with it. The Baron is a powerfully-built man with what would be a pleasant face if his arrogance didn’t show through. Valeria, the heir, is a muscular young woman of probably twenty-five or so, and shows up in heavy armour with a mace at her side. Victoria is in her late teens, slight of build, and looks … almost vacant-eyed. All three are redheads, as he’d commented earlier.
MIrex studied the trio, committing them to her well trained memory. “Thank you, Sam. Can you think of anything else I ought to know about them, and the Jardins? Anything at all?”
He pondered, shaking his head a bit, before something occurred to him. ‘The younger girl, Tory, probably isn’t worth bothering with. I think the only reason the older girl is still alive is because Tory’s too feeble-minded to carry on as the Baroness. I don’t think Valeria trusts her uncle at all. And that’s probably mutual, so she might not know anything – but even when under compulsion not to know how we were reporting in, we knew not to talk to her. So maybe you should.’
“Hm… perhaps I will,” she agreed, “I’ve cleansed your mind of the Baron’s influence, Sam. At least, I cannot sense any other presence here but you and I now. Still…. Probably best to take precautions….” She smiled softly, “We’ll speak of that outside, though. I think you enjoy looking at me here just a little too much.”
He chuckled, nodding with a sardonic grin. ‘You are a might distracting, in a very nice way.’
“Too bad for you men don’t appeal to me anymore” she laughed, with a faint blush as she broke the connection, fading from his mind and returning to her own body. After a moment she was fully aware of her own body again, and she opened her eyes, clothed in uniform, and hands on Sam’s head.
He took longer to come around, blinking, his eyes blood-shot. He looked a bit disoriented, and it took him a couple of tries to speak. He rubbed at his throat, which seems sore, before sort of croaking out, ‘Yeah, I guess that is too bad for me. Ow.’
“Hm… you’ll probably feel some effects for a while. You were under many hexes and enchantments Sam. One last question before we discuss what’s to become of you. Reg. Where would he be. I need to fnd him to stop him from attacking Adri again.”
He blew out a deep breath, shaking his head. ‘I wish I knew. He’s got to have reported in by now – and that means I’m known captured or at least suspected for it, and as good as dead once I’m out of here.’ He groaned a bit, rubbing his head. ‘We report in at a place he follows his caravans to, outside the Settlement. Those might bear investigation, too, by the way. I don’t know for sure what goes on, but given that he’s been keeping us on his payroll, how clean can he be? Anyway, if you get a map, I can probably show you where that happens. But if they think I might have been questioned… they’ll have changed things up.’
“Just knowing the location will be enough, even if the layout has changed. It’s a start.” She came around and waved a hand to conjure a detailed map of Kryta and its outlying provinces bordering Lion’s Arch. “As for you…” she sighed, “I cannot take revenge on you. You’re a professional through and through, and a rare breed at that. If I cannot offer you freedom, at least I can offer you protection here until i’ve completed my mission, after which you’ll be added to the Blade’s list of assets. You and Reg both, if I can free him like I did you. You’ll have steady work using your skills… but your targets will be more honorable.”
‘That, ma’am, is more than I’d really hoped for – though I was going to ask if I could enlist or something. My odds of survival here are a lot better than if I meet the Baron again alone.’ He looked over the map and pointed out just where in the Gendarran fields their meet-ups had happened. ‘Here, or right about. Pretty obvious campsite when you’re in the area, anyway, but defensible enough against the centaurs.’
She noted the location and nodded slowly. “Then I’ll go there soon enough. I’m afraid you’ll be something of a prisoner here still until I’m done and Adri is safe but… well, the Blade does not waste talent, and you and Reg have it. And we will need it in the coming…” she frowned in thought “…. Sam. Have you ever heard of the White Mantle?”
He nodded, then almost smiled a little, or at least relaxed more, then blinked in surprise at the question. ‘Heard of them, sure… they’re still around?’
She glanced at the man, “You are quick, Master Ingrams,” she replied with a nod of approval. “Have you heard any mention of them around the Baron or his kin? Aside from the usual ghost stories and tales used to frighten children?”
He shook his head slowly. ‘No… but that sounds like the sort of thing that would stay above my pay grade. I wouldn’t put it past him, though.’
She nodded again. “I’ll have the guards here set you up a bit more comfortably. You’re still a prisoner, at least, but there’s no need for any further rough treatment… provided you don’t try and escape anymore. That would be bad if you did, since we are quite a ways below the palace and you have every Shining Blade in the city between you and freedom. Just sit tight, and you’ll be free in no time. You have my word.”
‘Now that I know where I am… and how much trouble I could be in outside… I’ll be very happy to stay here, ma’am. And thank you.’
She smiled softly. “Thank you, Sam Ingrams. We will meet again when I’ve ended the Baron.” With that, she left the cell. “Move him to the Seraph. Keep our own on him, though. He’s valuable and cooperative. I need recon on their Ascalon settlement region, specifically a camp near the outskirts, a trade post. Have them keep an ear out for the name Valdis, and for the other assassin, Reg. Capture him if possible and bring him here for me. I must return to Lady Adri before I meet the team out there.”
“As you say, Exemplar,” the guard she spoke to replied. Mirex conjured the images of the people Sam had shown her. “And find these folk out there as well. Full profiling and movements. Be careful. The man is a powerful mesmer, possible enemy ties.”
The Shining Blade nodded again, then moved off down the hall to carry out his orders. Mirex sighed, and followed, intent on heading home. “My darling Adri… I can finally make up my failure to you now…” she murmured to herself.
The sound of the lock shifting as she turned the key and opened the door seemed to echo through the house. Her blues taking a moment to look down at the letter that was slipped through her door while she was away in the Arch.
“Hm..” Seemed to be the only thing she let out as she scooped it up and shut the door behind her. Wasting no time to go up and get comfortable at her desk before breaking the seal. Even if the letter was short she took her time to make sure she read such a letter right before a frown shifted to her lips.
Someone she tended to was injured. Even if they did not have many meetings, Corinne still cared for each and every person she met. And so, she set out to write;
“Lady Dore,
I hope you do not mind me sending this letter back to you, but I will keep this brief. I am deeply sorry to hear about Adriwyn, And I do wish her a speedy recovery. I wish you to pass on the message for me as well as let her know if she needs me she can always send for me. Just in case, I will enclose my new card for her, this has my new address on it in case she rather see me herself, when she can.
Sincerely, Doctor Corinne Kerrigan
After looking over the letter, the Grenthite nodded to herself, filing the card away before taking up parchment and quill once more to reply.
Dear Doctor Kerrigan,
Thank you for the card and your letter. I will pass both along to Adriwyn as soon as she is able to deal with visitors. I am quite sure that your sentiments will ease her feelings in some measure, as she’d expressed some worry about your reaction to her in conversations with me before.
In Grenth’s service, Alyssia Dore of House Durheim
“Gods..” Odette hissed to herself as she reach over the brief letter. Soon making her way towards Luna’s office she had set up in her family home to start a reply.
“Lady
Dore,
I am fully aware it is not my place to read other peoples mail, and perhaps it is better that I decided to to take it upon myself to convince the house keeper to relinquish the letter for a few reasons. I will not waste you time making you read such a list of things but I would like to inform you, in turn, that currently Luna is missing.
Collyn, Luna’s cousin, has yet to give me information regarding Luna’s whereabouts or even what is going on. Though I wish he would, I am not stupid enough to throw myself into a fight I know nothing about.
I would also like to note, as I have no idea how close Saromire and Adriwyn were, That he is no longer with us. But when we do find Luna, would it be possible for you to check on her. We have no idea what condition she will be in, and Saromire’s passing may hit her harder once she is home.
Best wishes, Lady Odette Grayson”
The priestess looked over the letter, frowning a bit, and took up parchment and quill to reply.
Dear Lady Odette Grayson,
I’m most concerned to hear that Luna is missing. I will be ~ well, not happy, but perhaps eager will do ~ to assist should she be found requiring aid. You may call on me for that purpose at any time.
I never met Lord Saromire myself, but I know Adriwyn will be nearly as distressed to hear that news as she will be about Luna. I’m sorry to hear that the family is in such straits, yet I thank you for letting me know.
In Grenth’s service, Alyssia Dore of House Durheim