Princess Aydalya? Not only had he found an elf, he’d found the only living elf princess. What was Princess Aydalya doing wandering around the northern edges of the kingdom with a bunch of treasure hunters?
“My brother was the better choice for heir,” she continued. “His mind was built for ruling and planning and listening.” Ayda reached up and touched a leaf. “Mine is… less steadfast.”
“More human?”
Ayda laughed again, “That’s what my father would say.”
“So, your mother was captured by goblins and rescued by the human, Boman. She then lived with him for the rest of his life.”
“For forty years, yes,” Ayda said. “When she returned to the forest, she had developed some human-like tendencies. When she married my father, he said she proved that humanness was contagious. When I was born, he decided it was also hereditary.” She looked ahead to where the forest still blocked their view of the caves. “May we continue now, Keeper?”
Alaric fell into step beside her again. She was Princess Aydalya. Even traveling with Queen Saren to the elves, he had barely received more than a nod from King Andolin. Elves just weren’t interested in humans. A few elves had been assigned the job of making the human visitors comfortable, and they had been polite but distant. His mind swirled with questions for her.
“So was that when you left your people? The day of the ceremony?” It was hardly the most important question, but he needed somewhere to start.
“No. I went to the southern edge of the Greenwood for that day only. Once the ceremony was finished, I returned.” She was silent a long moment. “I thought I had ended any plans my father had for me.”
“He had another?”
Ayda’s face shadowed again. “He didn’t plan it, but he still forced me into a terrible fate.”
“More terrible than becoming queen?” Alaric asked wryly.
Ayda took a deep breath, and the trees around them stilled. Alaric glanced around uneasily.
“More terrible than you can imagine,” she answered.
The moment passed, and the forest breathed again.
They walked in silence for several minutes. Alaric kept a watch on her from the corner of his eye. It was unnerving that she walked so soberly beside him. His mind still shot out question after question. She was an elven princess who had first refused the throne, then left her people. Each of those facts alone demanded a long explanation, but she was walking so pensively, he couldn’t bring himself to ask.
“The elves thought that Elryn had changed into a tree very quickly,” he said, looking for a new subject, “but it took him several minutes.”
A smile cracked her somberness.
When she didn’t comment, he continued, “They said Elryn was faster than any elf they had ever seen.”
“It drove him mad!” she said, bursting into laughter. “He had praise heaped upon him for how fast he could change, and the whole time, he knew what I could do. When we were children, we used to race. If you can call it a race.”
“He never told anyone?”
She shook her head. “It wasn’t his secret to tell. Until today, no one else has seen me change.”
“How do you do it? Are you some sort of… elf prodigy?”
Ayda’s laughter rang off the nearby trees. “Hardly. I’ve always been mediocre at everything. Except changing. And I don’t know why I’m so fast at that. Elryn says he has to coax his body into changing shape. For me, it’s like stretching. At any given moment, I think my body would rather be a tree.”
“You’re good at that freeze-the-fire trick,” Alaric motioned to the flame that still hung around his neck.
Ayda’s smile faded from her face. “That’s a more recent skill.”
“I’ve never seen anything like it.”
She sighed. “Neither had I.”
“What is it?” Alaric raised the flame toward her. “Is it flame or stone?
“It’s a flame still. Well, it has the potential to be a flame still. Or maybe the longing to be a flame.”
“Can you turn it back into a flame?”
Ayda’s eyes widened. “Oh, you don’t want that. The potential it has keeps building up in it. I changed one back, once. It had only been still for a few minutes, but when I changed it back, it quickly grew to several times bigger than it had been. The one you have has been still for so long, it would be huge if I changed it back.”
Alaric held the flame as far away from him as the necklace would allow. “Is it going to happen on its own?”
Ayda laughed. “No, it takes some very specific manipulating to coax it back into a flame. It couldn’t do it on its own.”
She turned away from him and continued walking. Alaric cast out toward the flame to see if he could detect any energy, but it was completely dormant. He let the flame fall back down onto his chest, hoping he wasn’t carrying around some sort of bomb.
“What do you want Kordan’s treasure for?” Ayda motioned to the pouch hanging beneath Alaric’s robe. “It has to do with Evangeline, doesn’t it? Can it raise the dead?”
Alaric grabbed the pouch, protecting it against his chest. “Evangeline’s not dead!”
Ayda raised an eyebrow. “She’s not really alive, though, is she?”
Alaric pulled the pouch out of his shirt and loosened it. He dropped the warm, swirling ruby out into his hand. “Still alive,” he answered, “but still sick.”
Ayda’s eyes widened. She leaned toward the Reservoir Stone but made no move to touch it. The light filled his palm, casting red light over his hand and Ayda’s face. There was a pulse to the swirling, like a heartbeat. Alaric let his eyes follow the currents diving and dancing from one irregular surface to another for a moment. It was several breaths before the dark line surfaced. It stretched out longer than before. Alaric clenched the ruby in his hand before returning it to his pouch.
“Kordan’s treasure is a Wellstone that holds the antidote I need to heal her.”
“What will you do with the ruby?” Ayda asked.
“Wake her up.” He shook his head.
“Do you know how?”
“I understand the process.”
Ayda let out a short laugh. “That worked out well for you last time. Maybe I should be there in case you almost die again.”
Alaric scowled and walked faster.
“The real question is,” Ayda continued, “why did the wizard steal the Wellstone? I doubt he has a wife in a crystal box.”
“Stay out of my head!” Alaric snapped.
She skipped a little to keep up. “You think about Evangeline constantly.”
Alaric stopped.
Ayda stopped, too. “I don’t try to listen, you know, but sometimes you shout your thoughts at me. And your thoughts of Evangeline are usually so sad. Although sometimes they’re sweet. Like this.” Ayda reached out and touched Alaric’s arm.
Alaric stood in the Napon market. The southern sun poured down on the awnings slung between booths, lighting the stalls in hues of reds and yellows. It was still too deep in summer, too stiflingly hot, for there to be many shoppers. The few vendors that bothered to open booths today called out lazily in deep, southern accents.
Alaric set down another bottle of ink. Just a dark bluish black, like the others. The vendor called after him, dropping the price as he walked away, but Alaric gave him a smile and moved on. In the corner of the next booth sat a mismatched collection of little glass bottles filled with inks. Alaric held several up to the light to see their color. Behind him, he heard Evangeline ask a question.
“Six coppers,” the vendor said. “Six coppers for the pretty flower bowl.”
“Six?” Evangeline laughed. “Two coppers for the pretty flower bowl.”
She was holding a small, clay bowl. The red clay formed an almost round bowl with a blue and yellow flower painted on the inside. It was a happy bowl, if not a high quality one. Two coppers was generous.
The vendor shook his head. “Six coppers. Flower bowls are six coppers.”
Alaric turned back to the inks, hoping to find a red.
“Four coppers?” Evangeline’s voice was less certain now.
“Six.” The vendor’s voice was firm.
The last bottle Alaric held up to the light was dark blue. Red ink was too rare to find in a naponese tourist market, but it never hurt to check.
He turned to find Evangeline behind him, smiling and holding the bowl. The pottery vendor flashed him a big smile, and Alaric put his arm around Evangeline’s shoulder as they walked away. Her shoulders quivered with little laughs.
“You bought it?” The bowl was not even close to being round.
She looked up at him ruefully. “He wouldn’t change his price.”
Alaric laughed. “He didn’t need to.”
“I know,” she laughed, “but shouldn’t he have at least pretended to bargain with me?”
“He bargained very well.” Alaric held his hand out for the bowl. “I think you’re the one who didn’t really bargain.”
She laughed and gave it to him. “It didn’t quite go as I had planned.”
“Why didn’t you walk away?”
“Because I like the bowl,” she said, considering the colors painted on it. “The flower reminds me of the sky and sunshine.”
Alaric held the bowl out in front of them and squinted at it. “Well, I do see blue and yellow. What exactly does the brownish red clay remind you of?”
“Someday,” she said, taking it back and admiring it, “it will remind me of a naponese market I visited with you. It will remind me how great Keepers are always rummaging through the things around them, looking for what they need—whether it’s knowledge or red ink. And it will remind me that maybe sometimes, it is better to stop rummaging and just ask someone.” With a flourish, she produced a small glass bottle.
Alaric reached for it in astonishment. He held it up toward a ray of sunlight trickling through the fabric above them. The ink inside glowed like dark red wine. “This is perfect!”
“You can repay me at dinner tonight. When they request a story from you, tell Tomkin and the Dragon. I love that one.”
“I will.” Alaric kissed the top of her head. “I have the best wife.”
“Yes, you do.”
He glanced at her out of the corner of his eye. “Do I want to know how much you paid for this?”
She grinned. “No, you do not.”
“I like that memory,” Ayda said. “You two are so happy.”
Alaric yanked his hand away from Ayda. “Stay out of my head!”
Ayda resumed walking. “Keep your thoughts to yourself.”
Alaric followed her, off guard. It was his own memory she had shown him. He was partly furious that she knew it, partly heartbroken because he and Evangeline had been happy. He watched Ayda walk ahead of him, settling on an emotion somewhere near irritation. “Can you read everyone’s mind as easily as you read mine?”
Ayda crinkled her brow. “No, yours is the clearest. Maybe because it’s more… open? You could read my mind if you wanted, couldn’t you?”
“I could try.”
“Maybe that’s why, then. You’ve trained your mind to reach outside of itself, so to me, it’s open.”
“Wasn’t Gustav’s mind open?”
Ayda cringed. “No.” She paused. “Maybe that’s why I never thought he was a wizard. Even Brandson and Douglon occasionally shout their thoughts when they’re excited, but Gustav was always shut tight. I assumed he was just incredibly boring.”
Alaric wished he knew how Gustav had done that. Add that to the list of questions he had for the wizard.
“Maybe he wants the Wellstone for a different reason than you do.” Ayda said. “What else is in it?”
“Records of Kordan’s work. He worked with seeds and…” Alaric reached for the ruby again, “he created a stone like this one. An emerald.”
“Maybe the wizard is after that knowledge. Maybe he needs to bring someone back from the brink of death, like you do.”
“Who would a Shade Seeker want to wake?”
Ayda stopped walking and spun toward Alaric.
Her eyes burned and her hair darkened until it was the deep red of a glowing coal. Waves of heat radiated from her, pushing Alaric back a step.
Her hair lifted, blown by a wind Alaric couldn’t feel, and sparks whipped out from the ends. She clenched her fists, and Alaric took another step back.
When she spoke, it was in a deadly whisper that shook the ground beneath his feet.
“He’s going to wake Mallon.”