YEOLIS PLOT TO DECIMATE ARKO AGAIN!!!
Minis put the cheap broadsheet down and
would have put his face in his hands but looked with distaste at the smeary
mess of substandard ink all over his palms and even on the cuffs of the
Imperial whites, though it wouldn’t cling to the Seals. It was a new ‘sensational’ Pages, printed out
of Solengal, near the mountains.
He picked it up, gingerly, read a line
or two, decided that the report on it being too crazy to be something taken
seriously and dropped it back onto his desk and pushed away from it. The clock chimed and he’d just have time to
scrub his hands.
The Highest office washing room was tiny
but sufficient, then he nodded goodnight to Atzana and pushed off across the
bridge, skatewheels clicking. It felt so
good to be moving.
By the time he got to the roof landing,
the wind had blown up, gusting wildly. He caught his hair in one hand to keep
it out of his face, sheltering his eyes with the other, joining the lookout and
welcoming committee staring up at the rapidly darkening skies.
It was strange how fast the weather had
turned but instead of settling into normal temperatures it kept bouncing up and
down with these odd storms and that played merry Hayel with the wing couriers.
“There they are!”
“You didn’t have to come up to meet
her,” Idiesas said as quietly as he could.
Minis grinned at him. “You think she’d not figure out I was hiding
and come to very sensibly whap me over the head with her stick?”
“Er... well, no.”
The edge of that storm will just catch
them... oh, mother. You’re coming to
meet Sukala as well?”
Somehow she was keeping her orderliness
in the face of the wind. He suppressed a
grin thinking that her hair didn’t dare creep out of her braid or her sleeves
indecorously wave at every passing breath.
“Of course, my son.” Her voice cut
through the booming, shifting, wild wind running in front of the bank of black clouds looming over the
Rim. “They’re a full day late because of
the weather I suppose and I want to whisk my friend off to a warm glasshouse to
look at exotic flowers. That way she can
scoff at me for treating her delicately.”
He let the grin out this time. “I don’t even know how she does it. She’s
still living in that cave.”
The wings that had been spotted
spiralled down through shafts of setting sun and gloom of the onrushing storm
and he could see Sukala’s wildly coloured clothes as bright as if they were a
beacon light.
She was already waving, all the way up
there and he could see, when a roll of distant thunder marked a lightning
strike, that she laughed. The storm was
still on Finpollendias and not close enough for anyone in the city to see it
directly.
“Ha! There’s my emotional boy!” She said
as she stepped out of the wing-harness.
He ducked under the wing to hug her hello. Her shirt was an eye-searing
red, with purple collar and cuffs, her pantaloons a clashing orange. She wore an overvest that had green and blue
embroidery on it that looked as though it had come from somewhere in Zak
country.
“Just standing around weeping into my
hands, Sukala. Welcome to Arko again.”
“I’ll keep coming, especially since I’m
going to have lots of stiff youngsters to look after my goats. I certainly need to help you pick out the
good bodyguards!”
He offered her his arm, instead of her
stick and they hurried over to where Inensa waited. He
smiled and said “Of course. And I’ll make sure you have sufficient chocolate
and sweet oranges whenever you come to do such hard work!”
She just laughed and tapped him on the
arm, her ancient old face split with a wide smile. “Inensa, you look well! How’s Tesha?
And the stray girls who came back?”
Minis let her go and just had time to
marvel at the contrast between his
oh-so-proper mother like a column of dark burgundy silk next to Sukala’s wild
colours, before the latest clap of thunder sounded along with a direct strike
on the ancient lightning tower and the roar of the first rain. He rushed inside the wing-barn, but was still
soaked, the women already on their way downstairs.
“Mother... I’ll just go put some dry
clothes—“
She nodded at him, not taking her
attention from Sukala. “We’ll see you
next bead, son. Do you have a dinner meeting?”
“No, Atzana didn’t need to schedule one
tonight.” Minis dripped a bit as he
swept his bow, exaggerating to get Sukala’s laugh. “I’ll see you lovely ladies when I’m not
looking like a drowned rat.”
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