Dixon
Page 24
Chapter 20
“Are you packed?” Desmond asked her doubtfully. Sienna was standing at the door to her chambers in the Jeffroian palace, and her rucksack was nowhere near full. “Why not?”
‘I got distracted?’ She tried with her mind, but he pointed back to the door.
“Go,” he said. “Otherwise, you will never see the things you brought again. Eliza is not a fan of things lying around.”
“Where is your jacket? It's freezing out.” Mariah was on the other side of the hallway, ready to take Sybil's arm. But as soon as she felt bare skin, she turned, scolding her grown Tiro. “Unpack it? Are you kidding me?”
Desmond smirked, calling across the hall to Mariah. “It never ends, does it?”
“Apparently not,” Mariah answered. “Where's your other one?”
“Ah, Nathaniel is saying goodbye to Eliza,” Desmond said, glancing at his watch. “And that is all he better be doing, because he agreed to teach class in approximately fourteen hours, and it's a twelve hour trip.”
“I'm here. I'm here.” Nathaniel showed up in the hallway, a packet in his hand.
“What's that?” Desmond asked, confused. Nathaniel held it up, a smug grin on his face.
“I wrote the reports,” he said. “Don't look so surprised. I can actually take the lead once in a while.”
“I'm shocked. In the whole time I've known you, you have never written a report,” Desmond answered.
“Doesn't the Maestro usually write the reports?” Nathaniel answered. “That's me now. Here.”
“Why are you handing this to me?” Desmond asked, in surprise “These go to the Jurors.”
“Can you proofread it?” he asked. “I didn't really do that part.”
“Some things never change, Nathaniel.” Desmond rolled his eyes as Sienna came out of the room. “That's better. You have everything?”
She nodded, and they all finally seemed ready.
Eliza was waiting for them at the landing platform. She was in full regalia, surrounded by guards. There would be no tearful goodbyes here and no private moments. They approached her, bowing deep. She dipped her head.
“Long live the alliance we have,” she said. “For I shall forever be in your debt. And you, Sienna.” She nodded to one of her ladies who brought forward a beautiful box. Sienna's eyes lit up, and she turned to Desmond, who nodded her approval.
The box was opened, and inside was a golden apple, inscribed with the Jeffroian coat of arms.
“My thanks to you, young one,” Eliza said. “Especially.”
“Thank you!” Sienna practically hugged the box. It was heavy, and she stumbled. Desmond took it out of her arms, and she looked grateful.
“Have a good trip,” Eliza said, and they bowed one last time.
Nathaniel took one last lingering glance at her, trying to keep his composure. And then he turned, heading into the ship. The others followed.
Sybil nudged him. “There will be new quests posted tomorrow,” she said. “I'm sure you will be back before you know it.”
“Do you think I'm a fool?” he asked Sybil. “For being involved with her?”
“No,” Sybil answered, surprised. “You made a choice, and you're living with it.”
“I…” Nathaniel looked around, as Kierry drifted back to talk to Sienna. “I told her that when Sienna is trained, I will be back. For good.”
“Oh,” Sybil took this in stride. And then, to his surprise, she smiled at him. “Like Maestro, like Tiro.”
“What?” Nathaniel answered.
“That's such a Desmond thing to do,” she said. “You must have learned it from him.”
“I suppose I have,” Nathaniel looked upon on his former Maestro fondly. “I suppose I have.”
“Nathaniel is taking this well,” Desmond observed to Mariah as they got settled on the ship. “Normally, he's a mess when we leave.”
“Wouldn't you be?” Mariah asked. “Whenever you leave, I am used to it. But–”
“I am glad that we are not in the same situation,” Desmond answered. “I don't know if I would be strong enough.”
“Oh,” Mariah said. “Why, Desmond, are you getting soft in your old age?”
“My old age?” he answered. “You're aging along with me.”
“Yes,” she took his hand gently. “Thank the creator for that.”
“Yes,” Desmond answered, squeezing her hand.
He looked out on the others. Nathaniel was showing Sienna the controls before he powered up. Sybil and Kierry were lugging bags and joking amongst themselves. This was a different legacy than most people got. But, he thought as he watched the younger ones, if this was all he and Mariah got, it would be enough. He was comfortable with these being their legacy – the ones who would pass on their name and their memories. They may have made some mistakes along the way, but it was for the best in the end. His love for Mariah had created all of this. It was the best life he could have imagined.
He had it all.
Epilogue
“Can you sign this?”
Nathaniel jerked from sleep at his Tiro's accented voice. He had been sleeping, dreaming of a battle they had won. It was a common dream: to be reliving his glory days and waking with a smile. It was also a common dream for him to awake with Sienna standing over him, asking him something at an ungodly hour. He had no idea where she had learned that mornings were a good idea, but he wished someone would teach her otherwise.
“What…?” he asked blinking. She had a tablet in his face, and it was blinding him. “What are you doing?”
“Early class,” she said. Although her vocabulary had jumped by leaps and bounds in the past three years, it hadn't expanded enough for complicated conversation. Except, it appeared, when she wanted something. Then, her words came perfectly and without hesitation. “I need this for class.”
“Right, right.” He barely made out a signature line, assuming it was something about homework. He put his finger on it and scrawled a signature. “Go away. I'll see you at noon.”
“Thank you.” She started toward the door, and that was when his brain started to tick. “Sienna, what did I just sign? Why didn't you take it to Desmond? It's seven a.m. He's awake.”
“Class?” she tried, but he beckoned her forward.
“Let me see,” he said, and she sighed, bringing the tablet back. He raised an eyebrow as he read it. “This is a waiver for a tournament.”
“Yes,” she said sheepishly. “Just an in-class tournament.”
“You have not taken defense courses yet,” he said. “You're not doing an in-class tournament.”
“But I need it,” she whined, and he motioned for her to sit.
“Why do you need it?”
“Quest certification.”
“What quest?” he asked. “We don't have one.”
“Yes,” she changed screens on the tablet. “We got one just this morning. You'll like it.”
“Why will I…” he started, confused. He liked training her, and he liked quests, but the quests that he liked were no longer the ones that they got. Sienna was sick, despite her magical strength, and they didn't get warrior quests. He was content, but none of the quests filled him with excitement. He accepted the quieter life they were living, where his Tiro's strength was in her mind, and in her uniqueness.
That was, until he saw what was on the screen.
Royal Escort Galaxy Tour, Trade Agreements. Jeffrorian Royal Family.
Level 1 Defense Certification needed.
“Oh my,” he looked up on her. “Did you bid on this?”
She nodded, then her grin disappeared, “Are you mad?”
“Not mad,” he answered, handing it back to her. “Go fight in the tournament. I'll deal with Desmond.”
“Thank you!” she cried, bouncing off. He threw off the covers, a grin on his face as he went to his monitor. He saw Eliza was lingering online and hit the button, aware of the fact that he was shirtless.
“Natha
niel, oh!” Eliza cried, unimpressed. “What are you doing?”
“You don't like?” he asked as he sat down. “Because there will be a lot more of that if we are on your trade deals.”
“They assigned it to you?” Eliza said, in shock. “I thought it was too low level for you.”
“Luckily, I had a Tiro with barely a defense certification,” Nathaniel answered, and she laughed.
“Sienna to the rescue again,” Eliza said. “Thank the creator for her.”
“Thank the creator for her,” Nathaniel answered. If someone had told him he would be saying that two years ago, he would have laughed at them. But now, he saw that it was meant to be. Sienna had come to them at just the right time, and he was so grateful. “Onto the next adventure.”
***THE END ***
Book 2: The Ripple Effect
Chapter 1
“You have to stop calling me when you don't have any clothes on,” Eliza said.
Nathaniel grinned as he leaned closer to the camera. “I have pants on, your highness. It's seven a.m. here. I have to teach class in ten minutes.”
“So why are you calling me then?” The Queen of Jeffro smiled at him. He may be a galaxy away, but he was the only witch – the only being, at that – that could send shivers down her spine. She didn't like to admit it because they could never be together, but she had been in love with Nathaniel since she was seventeen, and nothing would change that.
She was only comforted by the fact that Nathaniel had been in love with her just as long. As soon as their eyes met -him fifteen and on one of his first big missions as a trainee witch- they knew that they could never be without each other. Witches weren't supposed to fall in love; they were supposed to devote their lives to magic, to the craft, and to training new witches to be the guardians of the galaxy. They were taken from their homes at a very young age and trained with no contact from their families. Most were accepting of this lifestyle, for they had known no other way. But occasionally, rouge ones like Nathaniel and his Maestro – his mentor Desmond – saw another way. Nathaniel had learned from Desmond that walking a grey line of witchcraft and love was possible. Neither of them were public about their relationships, but it meant the world to them.
“I'm calling you, my love, because I got a message from your offices saying my quest as your royal escort has been delayed.”
“Oh, that,” she said, as if she hadn't even been thinking of the month they were supposed to spend together. “Sorry. All the meetings were getting too complicated, so my team thought it best to postpone until we could work on a better schedule. I will still need a witch protection team. I'm just not sure when.”
“I was looking forward to it,” Nathaniel said, leaning back in his chair, “but, perhaps it's best there is a little delay.”
“Why is that?” she asked.
He sighed, running a hand over his face. “It's been a rough few nights.”
Eliza's face turned sympathetic. “Is she all right?”
“She'll be all right,” Nathaniel said, after a moment. “It's just rough.”
He was referring to his student; his first Tiro. Sienna was a witch, from an offsite facility, that displayed incredibly impressive strength. Her magic had brought Eliza back from the dead on her very first mission, something that had only been theorized. She was the star of the magical universe. She also carried a defect in her genes that made her horribly ill. Other witches born with her defective genes had not survived infanthood, and had certainly never been trained. Everything was a challenge with Sienna, it seemed. Some days, she could display enough strength to bring down an entire planet, and other days, keeping her on her feet was a challenge. She was such a unique case and challenge that both Nathaniel and Desmond had been designated as her Maestros, fitting Desmond's experience in his advanced age with Nathaniel's youth and energy. They split the duties of training her as best they could, accepting mostly low energy quests or staying at the Academy, teaching, training, and learning. It wasn't the life that the warrior witches had planned, but it was the life fate had set out for them.
Nathaniel had been angry when Desmond practically forced the assignment onto him. But Sienna, with her broken knowledge of the Basic language and a twinkle in her eye, had become his shadow, his world. She was from Jeffro, which made him feel closer to Eliza every time she spoke. He and Desmond had agreed on a rough schedule of six p.m. to six a.m. for supervision on Nathaniel's part, which meant lately, Nathaniel was the one not getting any sleep when she caught a raging fever during the night.
“She's strong,” Eliza said. “She's been through more than any twelve-year-old I know. Maybe she has a career as a medic.”
He snorted. “She may as well. She spends enough time in the med bay,” he said. “Except, we can never figure out what works. The acridid genes attacks her and everything around her that grows naturally, such as fruit, which is the focus of most medicine. I have to find things so heavy in chemicals that they would knock out a horse to give her any sort of relief. And Creator knows what that is doing to her system.”
“Did you sleep at all?”
“Nope,” he answered, with a false, cheery grin. “And I should get to class before the young ones bounce off the walls. Submit your new dates when you have them, Eliza.”
“I will,” she said. “It will be soon. I promise.”
“I hope so,” he said, and signed off. He took a deep breath, gathering his energy, and then went to get his shirt. The shower and juice had done nothing for him, and he was hoping that the emotional stimulation of several young Tiros in a flight simulator for the first time would have an effect.
He heard a knock on his door and swished his wrist to open it. He knew it was Desmond; he had felt him approaching through their magical bond.
“Good morning,” he said as he pulled his shirt on. “I have about thirty seconds.”
“I know,” Desmond said. He was normally a morning person, happy to rise at the crack of dawn, but today, his eyes were dull. “I felt that you had a difficult time last night. Is she still asleep?”
“For hours yet, I imagine,” Nathaniel replied.
“Should I have come?”
“No, I had it,” Nathaniel answered, although there were several times in the dark of night where he wished for an adult, until he realized he was one. When Sienna was fighting the pain and he could do nothing, he felt helpless, and it took him a long moment to come to terms with the fact that he was the adult; he was supposed to fix things. “Mostly. I did already write in to excuse her from classes today, and probably tomorrow.”
“Did you call the med bay?” Desmond tried to gather as much information as he could.
“I'm considering it,” Nathaniel answered truthfully. The medics, even in their advanced facility, knew little about the acridid gene, and could rarely do anything helpful. In addition, their choices of going with chemical treatment, considered outdated, was criticized in the med bay. They didn't consider it a useful option unless her body was in danger. “I don't know. She's got a fever, and she threw up everything I gave her. I think sleep is the best option, but–”
“I'll be around,” Desmond said. “Mariah is due back today, so I don't want to leave the facility.”
“Of course, you don't,” Nathaniel teased him. Mariah was an older Maestro, like Desmond, and the one who had his heart. For forty years, they had walked a grey line between appropriate and inappropriate behavior. Their relationship was so questionable that Nathaniel wasn't even sure if they had ever done more than held hands. Mariah had been blinded in a quest ten years ago, and since then, Desmond had become more protective of her. Despite the fact that she used her magic to make up for her lack of sight, she accepted his arm, daring anyone to oppose them. “I shouldn't be long. It's a two-hour class that I'm teaching, and then the rest of the day I will just be marking papers.”
“And get some rest,” Desmond said to him. “You're not eighteen anymore, Nathaniel. No sleep doesn't do you
any good.”
“I'm all right,” Nathaniel said. “I'm sure you saw that Eliza delayed the mission, so we have some time.”
“I did see,” Desmond said. “So, if you don't get some rest for yourself, do it for Sienna. She will need you. And Eliza will need you soon, as well.”
“Right,” Nathaniel replied. “You've got it for right now, though?”
“Everything is fine,” Desmond assured him. “Go.”
“Thank you,” Nathaniel said, grabbing his bag and heading out the door. Desmond watched him with a smile. Nathaniel had come a long way since they had first taken on Sienna. Part of the reason Desmond had suggested they both train her was because Nathaniel wasn't ready to be apart from his Maestro. Physically, he passed the tests with flying colors. But emotionally, he was still young and in need of guidance. Desmond had thought it was the perfect solution for everyone. He hadn't foreseen the problems they would have, but he also hadn't foreseen their success.
He turned off the lights that Nathaniel had left on and was about to exit the room when his com-link buzzed. Looking down, he saw Mariah's caller ID.
“Hello,” he said, taking advantage of the privacy of the room. “Are you on your way back?”
“I am,” she replied. “Another few hours or so, though. I had trouble getting transport out. Is that all right?”
“That's fine,” he said. “I doubt my day will involve me leaving the building at any point. Everything all right?”
“Just a storm,” she answered. “I will be fine. I made such progress with them that I didn't want to leave early.”
Mariah was regularly offsite, working with those who had lost a sense in an accident or attack. Blind, deaf, or mute, she had a way to cope. She was an inspiration and regularly called on whenever there was such an occurrence
“I understand,” he said, and she picked up a note of sadness in his voice.
“Is everything all right?
“Nathaniel had a rough night with Sienna, it seems,” Desmond said. “And our quest was delayed, so I'm going to look into it. But on the bright side, it means that I will get to see you for longer.”