Book Read Free

Arrival of the Traveler (Waldgrave Book 1)

Page 17

by A. L. Tyler


  “But you like talking to me.”

  “I like Hesper more.” Lena walked to her closet, mostly to muffle her voice in case someone happened to come to her door, and started grabbing clothes that looked trendy and travel-appropriate. She grabbed several blouses, piled them on the bed, and started to pick through them for the ones that Hesper would approve of.

  Griffin went on. “So you don’t want to talk to me at all then? It’s been so long, and I never really got to check up on you after the incident. Go with the blue—you always looked great in blue.”

  Lena grabbed the blue blouse off the hook and rolled her eyes. “Okay, smarty-pants, you win. You’re a genius at this and I’m not worthy of the family name.”

  “Just sharing an opinion.”

  “You mean showing off. Give the phone to Hesper before I get you in trouble.”

  “Well, well. Somebody hasn’t been doing her research.”

  “And what does that mean?” Lena put a hand on her hip.

  “Silenti are officially adults at age sixteen, so you can now call me at all hours of night and day like I know you’ve been wanting to. But since you seem in no mood to discuss the details, I’ll give you back to Hesper.”

  “Griffin, wait!”

  Hesper’s voice answered. “Hello? No, he’s gone. I think he’s got a meeting—that’s been happening a lot lately.”

  “Am I an adult?” Lena asked anxiously.

  “Is this a theoretical discussion?”

  “Hesper!”

  “You mean, technically? Yeah, I guess so. Congratulations, you can now be tried as an adult in our legal system. Woohoo.”

  Lena sat down on the bed and thought. What rights did she garner now that she could use to her benefit?

  “Is Griffin coming back? He said something about coming here while we’re in Australia.”

  “I doubt it. The Council wouldn’t let it happen. It’s one thing for the two of you to talk, but you pose too much of a threat living in the same house. A lot of them probably don’t even want you to talk, but indiscriminate contact with other members of the community is one of our basic rights. He’ll probably leave before you get back.”

  “Can I leave?”

  “No. The Council probably won’t let you.” Hesper said dryly. “For good reason, as I’m hoping you’ve figured out.”

  Lena? Are you available?

  Lena looked back at her bedroom door. “I’ve got to go, my keeper wants me.”

  In the background, Lena heard Griffin yell something.

  Hesper sighed. “Griffin says you need to take your new journal with you. I don’t know what that means. Later.”

  “Yeah, bye.” Lena hung up the phone. She picked up the blue journal her grandfather had given her and tossed it in with her clothes. Yeah. What is it?

  I need to talk to you about something—meet me in the study.

  Lena walked the long hall and made a left into the room at the far end. Howard and Ava were seated in a couple of the plush reading chairs in front of the desk, both looking very serious. A new door had appeared on the right side of the room.

  Lena pointed at it. “Is there a spiral staircase behind that door? The one that goes up to the third floor?”

  Howard glanced briefly over at the door. “Sure.”

  This response usually meant that the guess was wrong. Lena made a mental note to check it after the impending lecture was over.

  “If she can’t even navigate the house yet, how can you possibly think this is a good idea?” Ava crossed her arms, stood up, and walked to the window. She gazed out in her usual effort to look dramatic.

  “She might never gain that ability, and she’s learned enough that she’s not getting a mental shock anymore. Lena, do you have any interest in politics?”

  “Politics?” Lena sat down in the chair her mother had vacated. “This isn’t about Griffin, is it?”

  Howard shrugged. “It is, a little.”

  “I’m sorry. I know I should have just hung up, but it was really just a few seconds, and Hesper said that I’m a legal adult, so—“

  Howard raised his hand to silence her. He wasn’t smiling. “As long as it happened today, you’re within your bounds. You’re old enough to make those decisions for yourself now. But this is about family representation. I want to name you as my heir for legal reasons.”

  “Like what?” It came out in a ruder tone of voice than she had intended. It was flattering, but a huge surprise—she hadn’t exactly given him reason to trust her. Lena’s only experience with the naming of an heir was Griffin, and up to this point, she had thought it was a process reserved exclusively for males.

  “Now, I can’t make any promises,” Howard said simply. “But I think it could work. As my legal heir, you’d still be my legal responsibility, but you’d be entitled to make decisions independent of the will of your grandfather. Even though he can’t force you into the marriage, he does retain the right to make your life a living hell if you don’t go willingly. You could also attend the Council meetings and have a hand in the decisions that control your life. Master Daray has an influence on his situation, and I think it’s only fair that you do too. At the very least, you’d inherit the remaining Collins’ earthly possessions.”

  “Earthly possessions?” Lena repeated.

  Howard shrugged. “There’s a trust fund, and that’s probably the only thing with real monetary value. Family photos. Your grandfather’s old archeological tools, and ownership of some of the items he recovered. Most of them are in museums now, or on display here in the house. Master Daray laid claim to some of the Silenti artifacts, which he’s squirreled away somewhere here.” Howard glanced around the ceiling, as if he suspected the old man might have hidden some of them in the very walls. “My mother’s house would be in your care as well, in the event of my death. But I’m planning to sell it soon, because it’s too much trouble to maintain in addition to everything here. I suppose you would also get my music, wardrobe, books, and a very fine collection of Sunday comic clippings from my youth. Stuff like that. The main value for you will be the access to the Council, and the influence you could gain over your situation.”

  Lena looked at her feet and nodded.

  “It will never stand.” Ava turned and looked directly at Lena, who looked back at Howard—it had sounded too good to be true.

  Howard nodded his head back and forth. “A woman has never been an heir or a Representative, and if I name you, you will inherit the position upon my passing. There’s nothing in the law that says I can’t do it, but your approval is dependent on a forty-percent vote of Council assent.”

  Ava glared. “As your mother, I’m telling you not to do this.”

  “She is your mother, and you should consider that, but you are of legal consenting age and the decision is yours.” Howard said with finality.

  Lena looked from Ava’s face, bleached by the light coming through the window, to Howard, who was watching her eagerly. “What are my chances? Do you think they would vote a girl in?”

  “I don’t know. But I want to try, for your sake. For reasons you can’t even understand yet, but you will. You’ll be able to plead your case for yourself, and I think you’ll gain a great deal of respect for it.”

  Ava hissed. “You’re a Daray, not a Collins, Lena!”

  “Mom, Griffin is a Daray. That’s why he’s the heir, and not me—I’m a Collins.”

  “Lena!” She pleaded.

  “Howard, I’d love to be a Head of Household and inherit your crap. And thank you. Really, thank you.” Without looking at her mother, Lena went back to her room and packed her luggage in solitude.

  *****

  CHAPTER 11

  The few days until the trip passed uneventfully. Ava had made an unsuccessful plea to Master Daray to interfere with Howard’s plan to pursue Lena as a named heir. Master Daray had more or less ignored her, probably believing that the Council would never approve a woman.

  She used th
e free time she had since “graduating” to read a few books, assist Howard and Mrs. Ralston with their daily chores, and talk on the phone with Hesper more often. Before she knew it, the day of the trip had come.

  Lena stuffed her boarding pass into the automated reader at the gate and grabbed the stub that popped out the other side.

  “Have a good flight.” The woman at the gate chirped.

  She nodded at the flight attendant and walked down the jet way, immersed in the smell that all airplanes innately gave off—a mechanic-automation smell; it smelled slightly of rushing ionized air, grease, hydraulic fluid—cold and awakening. It was the smell that Aaron Collins always had in his clothes.

  She looked down the gap between the jet way and the plane as she stepped over the threshold and savored the fleeting moment of vertigo. She took in the miniature kitchen and the stacked plates of desiccated airplane food, the flight attendants, the horrifically dated orange fabric that covered the stiff and uncomfortable chairs, and the narrow aisle between the seats where she would inevitably smack a leg on an unforgiving arm rest. Except that this time possibly she wouldn’t; it was the first time she had ever flown first class.

  “Lena? Is everything okay?” Behind her, Mrs. Ralston was already shoving her carry-on into an overhead bin. Lena took her seat, put her own bag on the floor, and pushed it under the seat in front of hers with her foot.

  “Yeah, it’s all here.” Lena said, still looking around.

  Their eyes met. Mrs. Ralston smiled. She sat down in the seat across the aisle from Lena. In the galley, Ava had already found someone to harass.

  “…and a glass of white wine…well then, as soon as I can have it!”

  Ava took her seat next to Lena. Her hair was already ruffled and she seemed to have realized that wearing a stylish dress onto a ten-plus hour flight might not have been the best idea. She’d brought along two carry-ons, one of which was in her lap, the other of which was being stowed by an annoyed-looking attendant. She looked over at Lena, who was greatly bemused.

  “I hate traveling,” she murmured, shaking her head and licking her lips. “Too many memories.”

  The flight passed more slowly and miserably than any other flight Lena could remember. Ava took a sleep aid and then drank a glass of wine, which made her more or less dead to the world for the duration of the flight. Mrs. Ralston had brought a book, and sat quietly with her magnifying reading glasses perched on her nose for most of the flight. Lena looked out the window, or else sat back in her chair with her eyes closed, imagining. She wondered where she would be, right in that moment, if her father hadn’t died; it was possible that she would have been on a plane. Maybe even this plane.

  The flight ended too soon. Greg Mason picked them up from the airport and drove them back to the house; they arrived early in the morning, but already tired. Lena woke up that afternoon to go back to the airport. Mrs. Ralston and Ava had given consent for her to go with Eric to pick up Hesper so that they could correct their sleep schedules.

  As Lena and Eric sat in a smallish and overpriced airport café, enjoying generic coffee of the sort that Lena had been missing since the train accident in Egypt, they heard Hesper’s approach before they actually saw her.

  “Oh! My! God!”

  Lena twisted around in her seat to see Hesper strutting toward her, a large wheeled pink suitcase in tow. Her broad smile was somewhat negated by the look in her eyes.

  “What the hell, Lena? What the hell!” She made an exaggerated gesture with her free hand.

  “What?”

  “You’re petitioning to become an heir! Are you crazy?!”

  Lena stood up, grabbed Hesper’s arm, and walked as far as she was legally permitted, given that Eric was supposed to be keeping a close watch on her.

  “So?” She asked.

  “So?! People are pissed! And I don’t just mean the ones who already didn’t like you—like, everyone. You pissed off the entire Silenti community in one fell swoop. While I do find that impressive, and I am a little jealous, this isn’t going to make life any easier for you! And more importantly, I have to hear about it, like, all the friggin’ time because Griffin’s Butt-Kissing Brigade is always at my house!”

  Hesper stopped to take a breath. She sighed; Lena was half smiling.

  “This isn’t funny.” Hesper said in a high-pitched voice.

  “‘Butt-Kissing Brigade.’ Good one.”

  “Yeah, I thought it up somewhere over the Pacific Ocean.”

  They walked back over to where Eric was sitting. He smiled politely at Hesper, asked if everything was okay, and then they walked to the car and started the long drive back to the Mason residence. Although Lena had decided that Eric was young enough to still be considered a cool adult, she wasn’t comfortable discussing her highly politicized situation with him. He was very quiet about his own political beliefs, and since the incident with Astley, she’d been wary of people who didn’t openly express their affiliations; in retrospect, Eric had hung around entirely too much during the last meeting. He gazed into the rearview mirror and at Hesper.

  “Was it a good flight over?”

  Lena gave Hesper an apologetic look.

  “It was fine, thanks.” Hesper turned and looked out the window with a sly smile. Eric stared at her a moment longer, and then kept his eyes on the road. The rest of the drive passed in silence, and they didn’t arrive until after dark.

  The Masons owned a good deal of farm-type property on the outskirts of Inisfail, Australia. Smack in the middle of it, there was a red two-story house with a gravel drive-way, framed by some surrounding foliage. Eric carried Hesper’s suitcase in for her and up to the room that she would be sharing with Lena. The rest of the house was already asleep; Hesper and Lena were still on U.S. time, and so decided to stay up talking in the kitchen for a while.

  “Thanks for coming. I mean, Daisy and Rose are cute, but they’re not exactly great conversationalists.”

  Hesper shrugged. “Hey, I told you—I wouldn’t miss it for the world. This is going to be great. But we really need to talk about—“

  Lena cut her off in exasperation. “Look, it can’t be that serious, can it?”

  “Yes. It really can. I can’t even believe Howard is trying to do this…”

  It’s unheard of. But it’s a step in the right direction. Would you girls like something to eat?

  Hesper and Lena went silent as Serena Mason walked into the kitchen. Lena had only had one brief conversation with Serena since arriving at the house, but she seemed nice enough. She had long, dark hair that was often pulled back into a ponytail, a thin frame, beach tan skin, and bright, challenging green eyes. She wasn’t like most of the other women and wives Lena had encountered in the Silenti world; she was outspoken, well-educated, and had a commendable amount of common sense which Ava lacked. She was a very confident woman, and Lena wanted to stay on her good side.

  “I’m sorry…we didn’t mean to wake anyone up.”

  “You didn’t. I’ve been waiting up. It’s good to see you again, Hesper. I’m making sandwiches. Turkey? Ham? Hesper’s a vegetarian, of course.”

  “You are?” Lena looked over at her friend, surprised that she’d never noticed.

  “Since I was thirteen. It’s great for the figure.” Hesper struck a pose, making Lena stifle a laugh.

  As Serena walked over the threshold and into the kitchen, she rolled her eyes. “Sweetie, complain about your figure when you’ve had two kids. Complain about your figure when you’re forty. But trust me when I say your figure doesn’t need any work or complaints now.” Serena pulled out the necessary implements and made a stack of sandwiches. She set the plate in the middle of the table and sat down with Lena and Hesper. “Now. Have you decided what you’re going to say to the Council?”

  “What I’m going to say…?” Lena asked.

  “You get to give an exposition.” Serena nodded. “A campaign speech, of sorts. And probably a really fantastic one, if you’re hoping
to get in.”

  Lena’s stomach churned. Howard hadn’t said anything about giving a speech.

  “There’s a few different angles to consider. Master Daray’s supporters don’t want you in at all, and they’ll likely only let you in if you present yourself as submissive and malleable: an extra pocket vote for Old Faith interests. The Integrationists won’t let that happen; they want you to be independent—an insider that supports and encourages Daray’s house arrest. Of course, everyone is going to be a skeptic, because there’s never been a woman before. So what’s your angle?”

  Serena picked up a sandwich and started to munch. Lena looked desperately at Hesper, who rolled her eyes. I told you, it’s a big deal…

  “I haven’t really…I don’t know.” Lena said, wide-eyed.

  Serena smiled and nodded knowingly. “Well, try not to worry too much about it. I’ll even help you if you need…it’d be a great thing for equal rights if this happens. But enough of that now—what do you want to do tomorrow?”

  “Well, I suppose I should go shopping. I somehow managed to forget that it’s winter down here…I’ve been away from travel too long.” Lena sighed.

  “We can do that.” Serena nodded.

  Hesper’s eyes lit up. “Can I pick your clothes? You’ll need makeup, too. And some jewelry—have you ever considered piercing? Oh, wait! Manicures! Can we get manicures? Or what about a trip to the spa?”

  Serena smiled broadly. “Well, of course! And I know of this great place where we can—“

  “Lena?” Ava’s head poked in through the kitchen door. She looked very sternly at Serena and the plate of sandwiches. “It’s time for bed. You need to get your sleep pattern on track. You too, Hesper.”

  “Sure…We’ll go up in a little while. We’re just making plans for tomorrow.”

  “Five minutes, Lena.” Ava stood in the door until they had all said good night, and then walked Lena and Hesper up to their bedroom. Lena waited until she was out of earshot.

 

‹ Prev