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Chapter 1 Chapter ???

In the world of Greland

Visit Greland

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Chapter 1

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There had only been perhaps a handful of times in the hundreds of years that house Hayford had ruled Haycastle that its great hall had been this busy.  Tables packed the floor so tightly that the servants, carrying plates laden with food or flagons of wine, could scarcely move between them.  The room buzzed with the sound of hundreds of folk conversing at once, the scraping of forks on plates, the glasses clinking together, the bustle of the servants coming and going.

And yet somehow, at the head of the room, on the dais, an uncomfortable silence reigned.

Ophelia smiled politely at a joke made by her brother, Duke Brennar, the lord of Haycastle.  While she appreciated his attempts to put the table at ease she could not bring herself to laugh.  Feeling him tense, she gently squeezed the hand of the man - stranger, knight, hero, husband - sat to her right, a silent gesture of solidarity, she knew he must be feeling at least as uncomfortable as she was.

She looked across the table, and saw the familiar eyes of Laycie Sawler watching her with a gentle smile.

'Will you be staying in Haycastle long, Lady Ophelia?' Laycie asked casually.  Ophelia could almost forget that her old friend certainly knew the answer, had undoubtedly had a hand in the plans for her departure, knew more about the journey than she did herself.  Still, she was grateful for an easy question to answer.

'I don't think so.  Long enough for ser Newall to see Mattheo settled and Terin on her way, and then we'll be departing ourselves I think,' she answered.  She pretended not to notice the glare the teen sat beside Laycie fixed her with at the mention of her name.

'A shame.  It must be nice to be back in your childhood home again.'

'Yes and no.  I have been here since Brennar marched to war, so I have had plenty of time here.  But Haycastle has not been the same since...' Ophelia trailed off, a lump in her throat.  She wasn't even sure what specifically she meant, it seemed that since she had become an adult she only returned to her birthplace when some tragedy struck.  She tried desperately not to compare this day to those.

'Of course dear, of course.' Laycie fixed her with those eyes, full of empathy.  She knew the pressure on Ophelia, that had been on her since they first met.

She glanced at the man side at her side, examining his face for she knew not what.  He seemed distant, distracted.  He had barely eaten since they had taken their seats, pushing the food around his plate, but she could hardly faulty him for that, her own plate was in much the same state.  She was about to ask him a question, when the guest on his far side spoke up.

'Terin,' another familiar voice, comforting, addressing the girl sat across from her, 'have you ever been to the capital before?'

The girl scrunched her face into a sullen scowl at the sound of her name, barely looking up from her plate.

'No.'

'No your highness,' Ophelia corrected without thinking.  She stumbled to soften the admonishment, 'I-I know you don't know how to...that you haven't spoken to royalty before.  Ser Sola may be a knight, but she is a Princess too, so you should address her appropriately.'

Ophelia had not thought it possible, but the girl's scowl deepened.  She scraped her chair back from the table and gave an exaggerated curtsy

'I'm so sorry your highness.  I should go away and think about my rudeness.'

Before any of the adults could respond Terin had snatched a bottle of drink from the table and run down the steps of the dais to disappear into the crowd.  Further down the table a pair of older women in the distinctive black and green of House Gaunt shook their heads and muttered at the teen's insolence.  For her part, ser Sola Somercrag seemed more entertained than offended at the display.

'It's been a big day for everyone, I feel,' said Laycie, ever the diplomat.  'Especially the little ones.'

'Of course,' Ophelia responded.  'Change is never easy.'

And what a change it was.  Terin and Mattheo had barely had their father back in their lives when they were told of how their lives would be changing.  Now they had to say goodbye again.

'Speaking of the children, has anyone seen Mattheo?' she asked.

At the far end of the table her brother chuckled.

'I think he and Edgarth are out there somewhere.  Something about "wanting to connect with the real people of the castle", apparently.'

At least Mattheo was settling into his new place a little easier, and Ophelia was relieved to hear he was with his cousin, Brennar's son.

 

At one of the tables below the dias, near the head of the room, another sullen child sat between his parents.  On his right his father, in newly fashioned clothes to match his appointment to the position of Marshal for the Foxworths.  On his left his mother, whose flour-stained dress was a testament to her inability to stay out of the kitchens, even on a day like today when they were guests.  As for Colrin himself, like his father he wore a new outfit declaring himself a servant of the Foxworths, though he had never so much as met one of them before tonight.

Across the table from them, two women ate in awkward silence.  The first Colrin recognised as a Spire Advisor, clad in robes of rough grey wool, her head shaven, her face bearing a tattoo of sharp geometric lines down one side.  The second, he was told, was one of the Lamas Plainsfolk.  She wore a dress covered in delicate embroidery and a scarf of light, almost translucent, silk that wrapped around her head.

'Come now Colrin,'  he winced at the sound of his mother's strong Baycotte accent, 'yer goingta be spendin' time with this lady while ya goes to't Spire.  Ent they're nothin you wants to ask her?'

Colrin glanced first at his mother's round face, her brow furrowed in concern, then at the dark face of the woman across from him, smiling at him expectantly.

'Like you said, there will be time for that while we're travelling,' he replied, reverting his gaze to the plate in front of him.

'Hows about this Alis lady then?' his father asked, nudging him with an elbow, 'Sure she knows all about this Spire place, d'ya not wanna ask her nothin?  I bet she's got some stories or secrets she can impart, eh?'

'I guess.'  This time Colrin didn't even look up from his food, shoving a forkful of spiced pork into his mouth in the hopes it might buy him a reprieve from the conversations.

'You know, it's a great thing you're doing here Colrin,'  the Spire Advisor began, 'not just for the Foxworths, who will be forever in your family's debt, but for yourself.

'You father tells me you've been a lover of books from a young age.  The Spire has more books than you could possibly imagine - more books than you could read in a lifetime even if you never slept. And you'll be taught so much - medicine, science, history.

'I think you'll be like me - I'm one of the youngest ever to graduate The Spire - and then you'll start on a life as an Advisor to a Noble House, or maybe you'll travel the length and breadth of Greland as an Investigator, being one of the first in the world to learn about new things as they happen.

'I know it seems like a lot right now, to be leaving behind your family, but I'm excited for you.'

Beside him his parents murmured in agreement, while Colrin continued to eat in silence.

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