It was at the end of a dark afternoon that we came into the shop. A storm had grumbled its way off the ocean to simmer through Zeltiva's Old Quarter, scattering rain over the day's slowing egress. Lillis drummed the flats of her hands against the door while I eyed the sky, glowering at it with what was then a typical degree of love and lost certainty. We must have been a sight, she and I, dampened and broken heeled creatures that belonged anywhere but there between her Lily and scales and my Ukalas-bred form. Knowing how fast the night was falling and how badly I wanted to be off the street when the change came over me, Lillis just banged and banged on the door. You would have thought it would have been angry and desperate, but instead it was laughing and sweet.
Let us in! Are you home? Let us in! She mostly sang, causing all manner of looks to be cast our way by passersby. I wanted to go. I told her the owner must not be at home and I wanted to leave, to get out, maybe to find a new city entirely. Those were difficult, anxious days inside of me. But Lillis just rolled her eyes and grabbed the lapel of my jacket, holding on in wordless reminder of my promise not to leave her, and kept banging on that door.
There really was no where else to go. We were fresh from the wilderness, worn down with tragedy and exhausted by our travels. I needed to make her feel safe again, and looking back I think she needed the same for me. Sunberth would never survive us. That much we'd already determined. And I could not ever think of a city as walled as Syliras as a sanctuary. Cyphrus and Mura were strictly off limits by mutual agreement. This was new. This was a rebirth. This was our life and what lives we had lived before were not allowed to have bearing here. Everywhere else was just too far away, or just exactly out of reach.
---
"Did you get it?" Elise asked when Caelum returned to Alements. The young woman turned from where she was arranging flowers in a collection of pitchers and bottles on the bar. They would be some of the last summer centerpieces.
"Got it," Caelum nodded. He patted his pocket and offered her a smile. "Do you want to come up and see it with me?"
Elise hesitated, dark blue eyes lingering on her employer and friend's face. She had spent the happiest seasons of her life since he had lifted her out of the black of Rattling Chains last winter, and she had followed him around through every day of it. She knew and understood Caelum far better than he realized. "No." She brushed her hands through the air, playfully shooing him along. "You go on. I'll look at it if you decide you want to buy it. I want to finish these up anyway."
"Alright," he agreed.
The door was tucked at the end of a short hall. The hall entrance began off to the side of Caelum's kitchen and led as well to the six bed infirmary. Since he and Elise, with the considerable help of Kavala, Cadra and Larik, had designed and set up Alements this door had been locked. He knew it led up to Treza'lyn's residence and in short order he had the pleasure of meeting the widow. She became a regular, and he a fast friend. It was at her urging that he unlocked the door now and made his way up the wide stone steps to the second floor. A smooth railing graced the stone and he trailed his fingers along it on his way toward the sunlight visible at the top.
A small open foyer was at the top of the steps with a cushioned beneath tucked beneath a wide window. A corridor ran down the length, covered in a long, narrow rug the color of the plains, all comfortably faded greens and greys and blues. Caelum looked on this with some surprise, not having expected furnishings to still be present; but he supposed that it made sense for Treza'lyn to have left some things behind. He went first to the left and found a trio of doors -- one on either side of the corridor and one at the end. Behind the first door was what appeared to be an office and crafts room, most of the space cleared but some of the furniture and window treatments left behind. The second door held a parlor and the third housed a simple but clean, functional privy.
His mind mulling over details, Caelum made his way back down the hall to pass the stairwell and walk into the other half. The first door he opened on this end revealed a small kitchen to his dismay. He did not need a kitchen, not when he had a large, fully stocked kitchen belowstairs. Yet as he studied the drainage system for the sinks and the coal shoot, an idea occurred to him. With a little money and some skilled laborers, this room could be turned into a rather luxurious bathing chamber.
The remaining doors revealed three bedrooms -- two standard and one that was obviously meant to be the master bedroom. It was this last that Caelum paced through, taking in the four poster bed and the comfortable furniture. He walked right to the window and came to a halt, a hand rising to the glass. It was warm from the day and beyond it was a view of Plunge Pool Bay.
He lowered his eyes from the water to the windowsill and rubbed his fingers along the wood, remembering. |