Golden Door Chapter 13 David to the Sea, part 2 of 2

Mickey danced from one slippery stone to the next, as sure footed as a mountain goat. The others had to be more careful to keep from slipping and injuring themselves, especially David, and this made their overall progress very slow.

“Where dey go?” They heard the Cyclops as it finally pulled itself up to the top of the cliff.

Feeling good with the world, Mickey began to sing a little tune as he danced, and sometimes helped the others.

“Hi-dee, Die-dee, Diddly-dee.

Fiona love please marry me.

We’ll sail across the briny sea,

And make our home in Timbukthree.”

“Help!” Oren shouted between making horrible gurgling sounds. “Help! Help!” He got very loud, and Inaros and Floren had to make a mad dash to grab the boy who had slipped into a small pool where he could not get a grip. He swirled around and looked ready to slip on down the mountainside. Once Inaros caught the boy by the scruff of his collar and hauled him up to safety, Mickey continued.

“Hi-dee, Die-dee Diddly-do.

O’Mac my love I’ll marry you.

And promise ever to be true…

“Hey!” David interrupted. “I thought the place was Timbuktu.”

“Oh, ye heard that one.” Mickey disappeared into a dark opening beside the river.

“Found you.” They all heard the voice above and looked up to see a tremendous hand come grabbing down into the crevasse. The Cyclops could not reach them, but it did knock several boulders free, stones which were just waiting for the chance to let the water send them crashing down to the sea. David watched one as big as his chest pass inches from his face.

“In here.” Mickey stuck his head out from the dark and disappeared again. Floren hustled Oren and Alden into the dark. Inaros grabbed David’s hand and pulled him along.

“I can’t fit in there.” David protested, seeing the place as dark and foreboding. They looked up. The giant hand started coming down again, ready to make a more accurate grab at them.

“Rabbit warrens and gopher holes…” Mickey O’Mac chanted but David did not hear it all as he found himself shrunk to the size of a rabbit, if not a mouse.

“Curiouser and curiouser, Alice said.” Inaros added some words of his own as he shoved the young man into the dark and followed.

“Supper! Come back!” They heard the words before they heard pounding on the rocks with the tree trunk the Cyclops carried around for a club. The water worn rocks crumbled and that moved them deeper into the cave where it opened-up and where they heard the sound of breakers crashing against some rocks down below.

“Watch your step,” Mickey said, as they walked around the corner and came into a true grotto where they found a large opening to the sea, with wind and light above and swirling waters below. The rocks remained slippery wet from the sea mist, and the way narrow against the cave wall, before it opened out into a full-fledged ledge above the water. Inaros, Floren and the boys got big again, returning to their normal size. Mickey, of course, was naturally only about two feet tall, but David protested.

“Hey! I can’t do that!” He gave the little man a hard look, eye to eye as it were.

“Sure, ye can,” Mickey said. “Get big or little as you please, it makes no matter to me.”

Floren reached for David’s hand. “You just have to decide in your heart, and you can be your regular size again.” David tried it, and it didn’t work at first. He began to panic, but Inaros slapped him hard on the back, nearly knocking him over, and shouted at him.

“Put some gumph into it!”

David did not know what gumph was, but the slap made him mad and immediately he became his normal size again and might have said something improper to the elf if he had not noticed. “I did it,” he shouted instead.

“Yes, you did,” Inaros said, with a smile.

“Hey! Look at this!” Alden called them over. They had been looking at the crystals in the walls that reflected the light that came in over the sea. The light made so many rainbows of color they were hard to count. And that happened with only dim light from a cloud filled sky, David thought. The cave on a sunny day had to be spectacular.

“Cool!” Oren shouted, and the others looked more closely. Someone had arranged a number of crystals to make pictures, like one might expect a caveman to paint on a cave wall, but here, in the shimmering light, the animals depicted seemed to move. David could imagine the whale spouting and the dolphins leaping high above the water line. He saw the tentacles of the jellyfish swirling around, and the school of pilot fish darting into the coral to escape the jaws of a shark that looked all too real.

“Awesome,” Alden added, and up to a point, David agreed, as long as he did not focus on the shark. He hardly had time to say so, though, because three things happened in quick succession. First, the pounding on the cave entrance in the crevasse became marked and regular like the Cyclops became determined to dig out his treats. Several stones and a few crystals crumbled and fell from the ceiling, and while no one initially got hurt, they knew they did not have long to decide what to do. A few stones clattered on the ledge, though most fell into the water. Floren pulled David back from beneath a rather large stone which looked a bit like a loose tooth.

Then the water level began to drop. It may have been dropping slowly all along, only they really noticed as they watched the ceiling stones splash into the drink. It sped up, looked a bit like someone pulled the plug, and in a very short while the entire cave would be emptied.

Then third, there came a brief flash of light, not as bright as the light that surrounded Angel, but just as intense in its own way. A figure rose-up from the water, a woman, and she did not look too pleased with what she saw or heard.

“Enough!” The woman shouted with a voice of command that echoed in the cave loud enough to make David throw his hands to his ears. When he looked up, he saw Inaros and Floren bow, Alden and Oren pressed back into the wall in the hope that they might not be noticed, and Mickey O’Mac whined.

“Lady, dear lady. It is not what you think.” David barely had time to notice the pounding on the cave had stopped before he heard the lady answer and saw a very slim, wry smile cross the lady’s lips.

“And what do I think?”

“Oh.” Now Mickey bowed, deeply. “These fine people were about to be tasty morsels for the Cyclops, and I thought, kind heart that I am, that the Lady would not mind her place used to save such noble lives as these. Oh.”

“And yes, I have a kind heart,” the lady said. “But you have trespassed.” The lady paused in the pretense of thinking. “I should say letting you off for invading my sanctuary will be fair payment for the lives you have saved. Do not ask them for further payment of any kind, is that clear?”

“Oh!” Mickey wailed. “I’ll be beggared! I’ll starve!”

The lady pinched her fingers and Mickey continued to make noises, but his lips got sealed shut. “Now, let us see what noble lives you have saved.” She waved, and Inaros, Floren, Oren and Alden were drawn into a line as if they were soldiers waiting for inspection. David also felt the pull, but he resisted and stayed where he was; and then he regretted resisting as the lady looked at him. He should have run to stand behind the line instead.

“Inaros, old friend.” The Lady looked back at the line of elves.

Inaros bowed a second time. “Lady Alyscia. Always a pleasure.”

The lady returned a slight tip of her head and turned to Floren and the boys.

“Floren, mum.” Floren bowed. “My brother Oren and his friend Alden,” she finished the introductions.

“I see,” the lady said, seeing more than just the names. “Daughter and son of Lord Galadren, and friend. You are welcome to my sanctuary.” She turned toward David. “And what have we here? Were he not able to resist my simple will, I would have guessed he was mortal flesh and blood.” She stepped toward David, and to his credit, David stood his ground.

She set her hand gently against David’s cheek and appeared surprised. “Human, mortal, and yet not. Gifted with every ability of the elves of the light, yet he is not aware of it and has much to learn.”

Inaros made this introduction. “Lady Alyscia, naiad of the grotto, may I introduce David, son of the Kairos.”

The naiad’s eyebrows went up and that stern look changed back to that sly little grin. “But what brings you to my sea? Why have you come?” She pealed her eyes away from David and turned them again to Inaros which allowed David to let out the breath he had been holding.

“We had thought to find some way to reach the Palace beneath the waves. Our mission is to free Lord Galadren if we can, and the ladies that are held prisoners in the dungeon. Sadly, we got only this far before the Cyclops nearly had us for supper.”

“Oh, but Inaros friend, there is far worse coming,” Alyscia said. She took the old elf’s arm and lead him to the edge of the ledge. “You see, the sea is drained.” And mostly it was. “And that means much more will be along shortly.” She did not explain. “But perhaps I can help.” She paused for the touch on her garment. “Fine, Mickey, fine.” She said and snapped her fingers so Mickey’s mouth could come unglued. He gasped a great gulp of air as if he had not been breathing through his nose. “This should do it,” the naiad said as she touched each one on the head. When she came to David, though, she paused, and a look of concern crossed her face.

“Do not resist.” Inaros spoke up. “Let her have her way with you and trust that it is for your safety, like the rest of us.”

David paused, but he felt willing to trust the old man. He closed his eyes and felt a brief touch on his head and something like golden sparkles tingle through his body. When he opened his eyes again, the lady had gone. Then the water came back in a furious torrent and David barely heard Floren shout, “Tidal Wave!” Before the water reached the ceiling of the cave and they were all in over their heads. David might have balked at that, but it happened so fast, he was breathing underwater before he realized what he was doing.

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MONDAY

At least James gets a good lunch in before the trouble begins and they run into the ogre. Until Monday, Happy Reading

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Golden Door Chapter 13 David to the Sea, part 1 of 2

It took very little effort to convince Floren, Alden and Oren to follow along on the quest. Floren seemed anxious to get out from under her charge to watch the boys, and she imagined, perhaps falsely, that the boys would be more respectful of the older gentleman among them. The boys were bored and ready for the chance to break the tedium of hiding out and eating fish every day. They immediately began to fend off pretend dragons and imaginary monsters in the deep. They tried to get David interested in the game, but for David it started becoming all too real and he felt loath to imagine the dangers that might lie ahead. Still, he felt glad for the company and thought the more, the better; while Inaros, for his part, appeared content to sit comfortably and reminisce about real adventures he had in his younger days, perhaps with Captain Van Dyke, or Lady Margueritte, or some other person of the Kairos. In fact, after a good helping of fish, he easily reminisced himself into a nap.

“Hush.” Floren quieted the boys. “Let him sleep. We are only an hour from the sea and the day is young yet.” The boys hushed for a few minutes, but soon erupted in sword fights with fallen branches and imaginations run amok. Floren took a deep breath, but let it pass. The elder elf did not even twitch.

After Floren cleaned up, and before she could call the boys in and wake the sleeper, the ground began to tremble. The quake came. The boys screamed, and Inaros had no trouble waking.

“Hold on to your feet!” Inaros shouted when his eyes popped open. Floren literally bounced her way to where the boys trembled on their hands and knees. David and Oren looked scared, and rightly so, but also excited as if this shaking, in a way, was fun. Alden appeared simply frightened out of his wits, so it was toward Alden that Floren made her way. She hugged the boy when she got there, and Alden grabbed on for dear life, even as the shaking quit. It rumbled again, and after a few minutes, a third time. It brought an evergreen down not far away, but then it seemed over.

“Everyone still whole or have you all shaken to bits?” Inaros called out since they were out of sight behind some trees.

“Okay.” David yelled.

“All ship shape,” Floren said. She had clearly been thinking about going to sea and no doubt wondered how they were going to go under the sea to the Golden Palace of Amphitrite.

“Glad to hear it.” Inaros appeared tall, leaning on his staff and he grinned at them as they were still splayed across the ground. “I should say we had best get going. No telling when the next ground buster will strike.” Floren agreed and got right up. The boys bounced up, except Alden who did not like the term ground buster. They walked, the boys sometimes out front and sometimes following, but never far away, and always elf quiet, a condition Floren imposed on them lest she magically zipper their mouths.

When she had a moment where Inaros’ ears were all hers, she spoke what pressed on her mind. “That quake felt worse than the night before. I thought aftershocks were supposed to be less intense than the original.”

“Eh?” Inaros spoke rather loudly. Floren had to repeat herself with some volume, and unfortunately, David heard and came to join them. Oren and Alden were not far behind.

“But you see.” Inaros raised his hands, staff and all. “Sometimes there are small preliminaries before the big eruption!” He raised his hands to express such and mimed an explosion, but quickly returned the staff to the ground before he stumbled. That was not what anyone wanted to hear, and after that Floren decided not to ask any more questions.

David did smell the sea before he saw it. It smelled of salt-brine and centuries of seaweed. It remained a good deal below their elevation. He could only hear the dull roar of breakers against rocks in the eternal dance that would one day turn rocks to sand and drag the sand down into the deeps. The small river they followed dropped out of sight at that point into an ever-deepening gorge that it had carved over the centuries and that brought it swiftly to the sea. It looked like an excited lover who could not suffer a gentle slope. David did not know if their path would take them to an easier decline to the sea, but he knew the small river would get there first.

“Ah! The Western Cliffs,” Inaros announced. He took a great whiff of the air. “Sadly, my nose is not as it was.” He touched his nose. “Despite the fact that my nose appears to have grown larger.”

David looked, carefully around. They stood amidst the kind of shrubs and hardy grass that can only prosper in a salty mist, and it appeared that they had indeed come to some cliffs. The sea came in waves, a sheer thirty feet or more below them.

“All I sbell is rotten kelp.” Oren held his nose to exaggerate his expression of disgust.

“Seal People!” Floren interrupted.

“Where?” Oren and Alden together drowned out David’s, “What?” The young elf and brownie nudged right up to the edge to see. David went a bit more careful, and Inaros came to put his arm around the young man and point with his staff while he spoke.

“No one knows where they came from. Like the Centaurs of old, the Were and Mere people and others, some think they came from the stars, you know, another world altogether. See how the young frolic in the shallows. The birthing happened earlier this spring. Look, there.” Inaros raised his staff and pointed, but David was already looking where several of the hundreds that littered the beach, stood up, suddenly having legs and arms, and appeared to be in the shape of men. “Sailors used to fear the seal people, though I suppose that is like saying water is wet. Sailors generally fear anything different and strange. They are a very superstitious lot.”

“But are they seals or people?” David asked.

“Hard to say,” Inaros answered. “They have always kept to themselves and communicating with them has been a rare event. I understand your father, when he was Gerraint, he spoke with them once on an isle off the north coast of Scotland, but that was before my time.”

David looked down at the stone and sand, a very narrow strip at the base of the cliff. It looked gray in appearance, even as gray as the clouds that were beginning to gather overhead to dim the light of the sun. As such, the seals were very hard to see—unless they moved.

“They are also very seal-like.” Inaros appeared to be thinking out loud. “They fall prey to sharks like any seal and have never seen fit to make tools to defend themselves, though from all accounts, they could. But who can know the mind of such a strange creature?” The elf patted David on the shoulder and David thought, look who’s talking.

There came a rumbling sound from down the beach and Alden leapt back from the lip of the cliff in fear that the Earth might start shaking again.

“Cyclops!” Oren shouted and pointed in excitement even as his sister dragged him back from the edge.

David saw the Cyclops. It had to be more than twenty feet tall, and looked human enough, or something like a giant apart from the one bulbous eye in the center of the forehead. It appeared naked, but its hand, three fingers and a thumb, held fast to a club as big as a tree. David needed no encouragement to get back from the edge of the cliff, and on second thought, he imagined even Bert the giant would look like a shrimp next to this monstrosity. In a moment, it got worse.

The Cyclops opened its mouth and let out a glob of drool that fell, a bucketful that strung almost to his feet. Then he spoke. “I smell me seal meat for me supper.” The voice boomed. The eye scanned the rocks where the seal people were already evacuating the beach with all haste. But there were many young among them that could hardly move fast and so Floren moved fast for them. Before the Cyclops could bend down or lift his club for a smashing blow, an arrow shot out from the cliff top and pierced the creature’s ear. The Cyclops swatted at the sting, like a man might swat at an annoying insect, and the second arrow struck like a thorn in his hand. The Cyclops turned his head and David turned to run. He missed seeing the third arrow that just missed the creature’s big eye.

“Waaa! I see me wee folk for me desert.” The Cyclops roared and the club came faster than David would have thought possible for such a lumbering beast. It struck some on the side and some on the top of the cliff and broke loose several David sized boulders that crumbled like dust to the monster’s feet. “I be getting wee folk and eating wee folk.” The Cyclops roared again, but since his head stayed below the cliff top, and since the travelers ran, the impact of that roar did not sound as strong as the first. Then David turned and saw a great hand rise-up and slap down on the cliff top to search for wee ones to grab and gobble. With all his running, David got just barely far enough away so as not to be caught.

“Which way?” Floren asked, the bow still in her hand.

“Inland,” Inaros said. “But it will still follow, and even if we reach the trees, it will simply brush them aside to get at us.” Inaros seemed exceptionally sharp in the face of danger, and while it encouraged David who had been thinking of him as a doddering old man, what Inaros said did not encourage David at all.

“If I may suggest.” The voice came from roughly two feet off the ground in the direction of the river where it first started to carve the gorge down through the cliffs. David looked hopefully at the little man, but Floren held David back. She looked wary. “Old one-eye can’t get his hammy hands down into the gorge in most places and there’s caves near the bottom where we can be out of his reach altogether.”

“Mickey O’Mac!” Inaros knew the little one, and Floren relaxed, but just a little.

Mickey O’Mac leapt to the nearest boulder not yet swallowed by the running river and the boys all laughed because it made him look like his head stuck up out of the ground. “Well?” He disappeared down the gorge.

“Come on,” Inaros said, with a glance at the cliff’s edge.

The Cyclops had both hands up on the top by then with one up to the elbow. It had started to pull itself up and that terrible one eye was about to get a good look. Inaros hurried them, and they stepped out into the river and began to climb down among the rocks. They tried to keep out of the swirls, jetties, and avoid the mini waterfalls that followed the precipitous drop to the sandy beach below.

Reflections Wlvn-13 part 1 of 3

Wlvn woke up to find Mother Vrya bending over him. Shana sat close by his side when all of his missing memory rushed back into his head. That missing spring and summer got spent with the swan people. He married Shana in April. She sat, nearly eight months pregnant with their first, and she cried. He hugged her, and like Flern he had to reach around the baby to do it. Of course, that just made her cry all the harder, and Wlvn looked over her shoulder, but Vrya just smiled and shrugged.

“There are complications?” It became Wlvn’s first thought.

Mother Vrya shook her head. “Not so far, but the swan people and humans have not mated before. I just want to be sure. Don’t worry. Young Apollo has agreed to assist here on the edge of the world. He is over a hundred now and allowed out. Eir might help, but she is rather young and at present she is a little busy.”

Wlvn felt the anger rise up in his heart. It came mostly from Nameless, but not entirely. Wlvn, and every life he lived in time felt the anger because of Eir’s captivity to Loki and the Titan. They were outraged at the abject slavery of the people and determined to do something about it. Of course, Wlvn still felt afraid at the prospect of facing the Titan, but his determination to end things now became stronger than his fear. Wlvn wrenched his thoughts back from his feelings.

“What of my friends?”

“Here, but first you have to hear the truth of the matter.” Vrya put her fingers to her lips and let out a shrill whistle. Two people appeared, a young man and a young woman who did not look much more than a hundred themselves. Two hundred, perhaps, Wlvn thought as he smiled and recognized them. He turned to face them but left his arm around Shana’s shoulders to comfort and protect her in the face of the gods.

“Ares and Aphrodite,” Vrya introduced their guests, and Wlvn nodded. “And you have something to tell my son, even if he is not my son.”

Ares stepped up. “You seek the golden hind?”

Wlvn affirmed that with a nod and a word. “There is a Titan that is overdue to join his ancestors.”

“Father already burnt them all,” Ares shrugged.

“Zeus?”

“That’s him,” Aphrodite said, stepped up beside her brother and turned to Vrya. “These two are warm. Hot for each other.” Aphrodite smiled and the smile looked perfect on that perfect face. Mother Vrya just matched the smile.

“Sorry, kid.” Ares finished his thought as they all heard a banging sound begin outside the cave entrance. Wlvn smiled at who called who a kid, but he became too concerned about the sound to say anything. It sounded like someone hammering rocks to make gravel.

The gods moved to the cave entrance and Wlvn followed and held tight to Shana’s hand, so she came right beside him. What Wlvn saw shocked him for a second, but it did not really surprise him. A Cyclops, a giant about eighteen or so feet tall, had a club that looked like a tree ripped from its roots. And he yelled.

“Give me the red headed girl.” He said that several times and smashed his club against the rocks for emphasis. Wlvn saw that the horses had scattered across the field and his friends hunkered down in the rocks, except Boritz who kept sticking his head up while Andrea kept pulling him back down. The Cyclops had an arrow in his left cheek and another in his right shoulder, but he did not seem too bothered by them. And at least, after that bit of foolhardy courage, Moriah and Laurel appeared to be keeping their heads down with everyone else

Wlvn stopped. The gods looked at him, so he knew they were waiting for him to make the first move. He turned and shouted at the Cyclops. “Hey! Tub-o-lard. Yeah, you with the fat belly. Old one eye.” Shana stared at Wlvn like he had gone mad, but Aphrodite giggled, Vrya covered her smile and Ares let out a big guffaw.

“What?” the Cyclops turned to face the cave entrance when he realized he was being called.

“I hate picking on the defenseless,” Wlvn admitted to Vrya, and he shrugged in a way that indicated she would be welcome to intervene.

“What?” Ares did not catch what he said. “Your friends don’t appear to be damaged.”

“Don’t worry,” Vrya smiled for Wlvn. “We will send him home. Come on.” She took Ares by the arm, and they flew up to face the creature with the one eye.

“Husband?” Shana did not quite understand either.

“Aren’t you going with them?” Wlvn asked Aphrodite and pointed at Vrya and Ares. He imagined a moment alone with Shana.

“No,” she said. “I’ll just stay here and warm myself.” She stuck her hands out toward the couple and rubbed them gently. “Better than a cozy fire.”

“Oh?” Wlvn gave Shana a brief kiss and she looked like that would never be enough, but Wlvn had something in mind. “Excuse me,” he said, and left that place so Diogenes could be there. Diogenes turned to Aphrodite, caught her up in his arms and planted a passionate kiss smack on her luscious lips. Aphrodite did not resist. In fact, steam came out of her ears, almost cartoon-like. When he let go, he traded again so Wlvn could come home and kiss his wife.

“Hey! I wasn’t finished.” Aphrodite protested.

“Sorry,” Wlvn apologized to Shana, but she just grinned.

“I don’t mind. I did not marry Diogenes or any of the others. Just you.”

“Good,” Wlvn said, “Because me and my son only want to be with you.”

“And me with you.”

“And with you.”

Aphrodite stomped her foot. “Oh, kiss her already!” They were doing that very thing and Aphrodite grinned at them when Vrya and Ares returned, and the others vacated the rocks to run up.

“I think we better go,” Ares said as he took Aphrodite by the hand and dragged her off with her protesting.

“But I’m not finished.”

“Me too,” Mother Vrya said, and she gave both Wlvn and Shana a kiss on the cheek. “I have young ones to watch.”

“Gndr and Strn, are they behaving?” Wlvn asked quickly, though his eyes never left Shana’s happy face.

Vrya shrugged. “They are boys. But Brmr is very cute.” She vanished.

“Wlvn.” Wlkn became the first to name him.

“You’re back.” Moriah looked happy.

“Lord.” Badl tipped his hat.

Boritz’s eyes got big. “You look just like her, my Red I mean.”

“I had forgotten how much,” Andrea admitted.

Elleya said nothing and everyone paused to stare at her for a second to be sure she was all right. Laurel also said nothing. She just lowered her eyes.

“Laurel,” Wlvn spoke to her as if none of the others were present. “She is here, and here.” Wlvn touched his head and his heart. “And she says you will always be her friend and she can’t wait to see you again all grown up. Please don’t be sad.”

Laurel looked up and found a little tear in her eye, but she tried to smile.

“Everyone.” Wlvn turned his attention to the group. “This is my wife, Shana. And as you can see, we have been married for some time.” He placed a gentle hand on her tummy and the baby, and Shana let out her most satisfied smile.

Everyone said hello, welcome and congratulations, and then Elleya spoke. “You mean I don’t have to marry you?”

“No. I thought you were going to marry Skinny Wlkn.”

“Oh, yes, please.” She stepped up and grabbed the poor man and kissed him hard on the lips.

“Lost cause, that one,” Badl said only to find himself grabbed and put in a lip lock by Moriah. He did not seem to mind.

“Don’t look at me,” Andrea said. “I wasn’t going to marry you in the first place.” And she grabbed Boritz and dragged his head down to her lips.

“Poor Laurel,” Shana said, and looked up at Wlvn.

Wlvn rubbed his chin and tried to look serious. “Yes, we will have to find someone for her, don’t you think? It should be someone nice.”

“Yes, very nice.”

Laurel took a step back and raised her hands like she might be warding off a curse. “You wouldn’t. Oh no, you couldn’t. I’m too young. I’m just a child. Oh no, you wouldn’t, would you?”

Wlvn did not answer because Thred trotted up at that moment. Wlvn reached for the horse, but Thred ignored Wlvn and nosed up to Shana. His wife treated the horse like a loyal puppy, and Wlvn thought if Thred had been a puppy, it would lick her face with kisses.

“Well, I don’t blame you,” he said to the horse. “Maybe we should round up the whole herd and go visit the village Boritz and Andrea wanted to visit.”

“We aren’t going on?” Andrea asked and Laurel and Badl looked confused by the question as well.

“No point,” Wlvn said. “The golden hind are a dead end. Nothing to do but go back to square one.” He lifted Shana gently up to Thred’s back and helped her sit as comfortable as possible, sidesaddle, without a saddle. He understood at eight months, honestly no position could be comfortable, but he did what he could, and she was kind enough not to complain.

When the others arrived, he set out walking and leading Thred by the reins, and they all fell in line. Mostly they whispered, though he heard Boritz ask how Wlvn could know his name since they never met. He smiled because he and Flern were properly connected again, and he realized what an empty hole that left in him when she became inaccessible.

Wlkn inched up beside him, Elleya dutifully on his heels. “But square one is where the Titan is.” Wlkn looked scared.

Wlvn shrugged. He felt scared too, likely frightened out of his mind, but he had to do something. Everyone kept depending on him. Exactly what to do about it was the problem. He shrugged it off for the moment and went back to his thoughts about Flern. Of course, he knew Boritz. He knew what Flern knew and now Flern knew what he knew as well.