Not all my stories take place on the continent of Vassa. The world is larger than that, with several different lands. This story takes place in one of those other places.
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Ailsa
Wintersong stared out over the dark forest, her eyes full of tears.
She wrung her hands together, her nails cutting fine lines into her
delicate fingers. The woman beside her took hold of them and pressed
them against the window sill. “Ailsa, he's not returning,” she
said, her voice carrying her irritation. “Why don't you accept that
Illior has other plans for you?”
Ailsa
pulled her hands free. “You're wrong.” Her voice choked in her
throat. “The High Priestess confirmed that Torgeir and I are soul
bonded. He's coming back. He has to.” She turned and fled back into
the house.
“That
was incredibly stupid, Rada,” Kelledron said. Ailsa's elder half
brother, and heir to the Wintersong line, was leaning against the
gleaming wall of the House's hereditary manor.
Lady
Rada Wintersong glowered at her stepson. He took every chance he
could get to remind her that, while Ailsa was a highly honored member
of the Wintersong household, Rada herself was considered little more
than an outsider by the rest of the House. The Law of Blood granted
familial rights to the children of a second mating, but not to the
mate in question.
“Well,
oh wise one, what do you suggest?” she asked, biting off her words.
“I
was going to suggest asking Aunt Eliana and Aunt Hania what to do,”
Kelledron said. “They've been out in the world more than the rest
of us. Perhaps they have some ideas.”
“Then
go pester them,” Rada said. She turned on her heal and flounced
off. Kelledron ventured deeper into the house until he came to the
parlor where his twin aunts were sitting.
“Aunt
Eliana, Aunt Hania, are you busy?” Kelledron asked, keeping his
tone respectful. Of all his family members, his twin aunts were his
favorite. His own mother died when he was very young and the two of
them took over raising him, teaching him all there was to know about
being a Day Elf. Once he was old enough to pass into the care of a
proper tutor, the two Bards once again left Sunhaven for the
farlands. They returned every few seasons to let their loved ones
know they were alive.
“What
is it Kell?” Hania asked.
“It's
Ailsa,” Kelledron said, sitting down between the sisters. “She's
soul bonded to Torgeir Darksun, but Rada keeps trying to force her
into another marriage.”
“Was
it confirmed by the High Priestess?” Eliana asked. Kelledron
nodded. She shook her head. “We have noticed Ailsa looking more and
more distraught. What's happened?”
“No
one really knows,” Kelledron said. “There was a small group sent
to establish the new waypoint at the other end of the forest. Father
told me that Torgeir and Ailsa were going to be asked to be in charge
of it. Two survivors made it back to let us know that the Crimson
Elves attacked the caravan. They swear that Torgeir and one other
were taken prisoner.” He shook his head. “That goes against
everything we've ever been told about them.”
“The
Crimson Elves are insane,” Eliana said. “You never know what
those – those beasts – are capable of.”
“Eliana's
right,” Hania said. “The question remains though, what do they
want with living prisoners?”
Before
Kelledron could answer, a terrible cry filled the house. The voice,
familiar only to Kelledron, was full of such grief, rage, and pain
that the three elves broke into tears. “Ailsa.” Kelledron was on
his feet in an instant, knocking servants aside as he charged down
the corridor, his aunts right behind him.
Ailsa
was lying at the foot of the stairs, blood trickling from her nose
and head. “He's dead,” she wailed. Her whole body shook. “He's
dead.”
“What's
this nonsense about?” Rada asked as she came to her daughter's
side. She reached down and slapped Ailsa. “What are you talking
about?”
Hania's
sword hissed as it left its sheathe. Rada gulped hard and backed away
from Ailsa's prone form. “The Law of Blood doesn't apply to you,
Rada,” Hania said. With a flick of her wrist, she slashed Rada's
face.
“What's
going on here?” Thanolos Wintersong asked. He was Kelledron and
Ailsa's father and the head of the House. “Hania, why is my wife
bleeding?”
“She
assaulted Ailsa,” Hania said. “Who is clearly suffering from a
rather violently severed soul bond.”
“What?”
Thanolos asked, turning his attention to his two children.
“Torgeir
was captured by Crimson Elves,” Kelledron said, reminding his
father of the recent tragedy. “I think they just killed him.”
“They
slaughtered him, like an animal,” Ailsa said, whimpering. Her eyes
were wide. “I saw it. I felt it.”
“Eliana,
can you - ?” Thanolos asked.
“Kell,
carry your sister up to her room,” Eliana said. “I'll be up in a
moment.”
Kelledron
lifted Ailsa into his arms. He looked at the stairs for a moment
before summoning a floating disk in the sapphire and silver hues of
his House colors. He stepped onto it. It lifted him up the stairs
without jarring his sister. Eliana took the more conventional way up.
“Now,
Hania, why is Rada bleeding?” Thanolos asked.
“Rada,
or so I've been told by the servants, didn't approve of the match
that Illior decreed for Ailsa,” Hania said. “Kell told us that
Rada wanted Ailsa to choose another husband. Torgeir's disappearance
was tearing Ailsa apart.”
“Do
you know what happened to her?” Thanolos asked.
“She
must have fallen down the stairs when the Crimson Elves killed
Torgeir,” Hania said. She lowered her sword and looked over at her
brother. “Thano, it's very rare that the surviving member of a
shattered soul bond lives long past the other one.
“I
know.” Thanolos looked down at his hands for a moment. “How long
do you think Ailsa has?”
“It
depends on her spirit,” Hania said. “If she wants to live, a moon
or two. If not, I'd give her no more than a sennight.”
“What
are you talking about?” Rada asked. “There was no soul bond. That
was just the Darksun's way of trying to take control of this House.
Ailsa's not going to die just because he's dead.”
Thanolos
turned to Rada. She could see the barely controlled rage on his face.
“Leave my House,” he said. “I took you as my second mate only
because it was required of me by the Council. Your father got his
male heir, and I was given my daughter. The contract was satisfied.
You are no longer necessary.” He turned to his sister. “Hania, if
she's not out of here in one mark, kill her.”
“As
you wish, Thano,” Hania said. There was no disguising the
satisfaction she felt at that command. She put her hand on the hilt
of her sword. A bloodthirsty smile twisted the corners of her mouth
up. Rada realized that there was a chance Hania wouldn't wait for the
mark to be up. She paled and, not stopping to collect any of her
things, ran from the manor.
Thanolos
made his way to his daughter's room. Kelledron was standing outside,
his pale blue clothing stained with blood. “Aunt Eliana said no
one's supposed to go in right now,” he whispered. “She's trying
some complicated magic on Ailsa. She says that soul bonding isn't
unheard of among the Plains Elves, and that they have ways of
preventing the death of the other half.”
“I
hope it does,” Thanolos said.
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