Author Topic: Ajri's Ivory Shores: Chapter Thirty-Two (8/25/15)  (Read 59409 times)

Offline intl_incident

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Re: Ajri's Ivory Shores: Chapter Ten - Stellan
« Reply #60 on: December 19, 2013, 10:00:37 AM »
I have nothing on mind, just to wonder what would that evil spirit do with Stellan as his host, is there any cure to this situation? I imagine there will be Uka Uka and Aku Aku, if you ever heard or play Crash Bandicoot you’ll familiar with that terms or shaman things related? Interesting!

And Indy was a good name, it's cute and adorable and easy to use and remember. Hello, Indy :P

I've never played Crash Bandicoot, so I don't know the specific reference you're referring to, but every good story needs a good villain, right? :)  There may be a cure, or maybe not -- I don't want to give anything away!  The only thing I'll say is that things are going to get worse before they get better (if they get better at all... *evil laugh*)

Offline intl_incident

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Re: Ajri's Ivory Shores: Chapter Eleven - Dining Room
« Reply #61 on: December 19, 2013, 10:06:34 AM »
Our family's dining room was a regal place, and the big trestle table was always gleaming with sparkling crystal, gold-rimmed china, and embroidered linens.  In days past, it had been the site of wonderful dinner parties, and every chair had been filled by friends and family, laughing or singing or telling stories of days gone by.  Now the extra chairs gathered dust along the walls, and only half the remaining seats were filled on any given night.  My father and brothers usually clustered down at one end of the table to talk business, my mother almost always took a light supper in her room, and my cousins only dropped in when they had some news to tell or -- like tonight -- when they had trouble to start.
 
The staff still cooked and baked as well as they had ever done.  But as they took away the platters and bowls from the main meal, and filled the table with fruits and candies and wonderful pastries, my father continued his habitual scowl.
 
"The time was," he said, "children would dine with their father.  They would show him some respect. They would attend to their family duties and do as they were told."
 
Torin stifled a sigh as he poked and prodded at a small chocolate tart, moving it around his plate without taking a bite. "Stellan and I are here every night, father.  And so is Savna.  She must have a good reason for missing the meal."
 
My cousins exchanged a smug little smile between them, but no one noticed.  My brother Stellan just eyed my empty chair with a sardonic, dissatisfied shrug.  "Or she's out dancing in the tavern again," he drawled. "She needs more discipline, if you ask me.  She's turning into an unruly, disobedient slacker."
 

 
"That's not fair..." Torin started to protest. 
 
But Stellan cut him off, leaning forward with a frown.  "You need to stop defending her, little brother, or you're going to be painted with the same colors.  You already spend too much time with that den'Rhelys snake."

"Den'Rhelys," my father spat. "I've half a mind to throw him out.  Send him back to his family with his tail between his legs and show his father what I think of their kind."
 
"You should," Stellan encouraged.  A sudden breeze blew up, rustling the branches outside the wide windows. "He's nothing but a troublemaker.  They all are, and he's the worst of the lot."
 
"He is not!"  I had finally made it to the dining room, breathless from running up the stairs. I hadn't realized how late it had gotten before Jaffaran and I left the boat.  I'd dashed home as fast as I could, and come up to the dining room without stopping to change.
 

 
My father threw his fork down with an angry clatter as I interrupted, stabbing a finger toward me as he shouted a reply. "Finally!" he yelled. "You finally show your face and it's to contradict me in front of our guests!" He meant my cousins of course, whom I would hardly have considered guests, and who were smiling at each other with a devious sort of gleam in their eye that I didn't yet understand. "Where have you been, girl?"
 
"I'm sorry I'm late. But I was unavoidably detained." Where once I would have stammered a fearful reply, now I spoke with a clear, firm, unapologetic voice.  I was filled with a confidence that I hadn't felt in ages.  "Is it strawberry tarts for dessert?"
 
"Where have you been?" my father demanded again, enunciating each word with a menacing tone.
 
"I don't care to tell you," I answered blithely, pulling out a chair at the opposite end of the table rather than walking meekly to my seat.
 
Torin started to hold out a hand, probably to try to mediate whatever storm was sure to come next, but before my father could do more than slide his chair back, my cousin interjected herself with the news she'd been waiting to spread since dinner began.
 
"Savna was out on the barge," she said primly. "With Jaffaran den'Rhelys." 
 

 
I stared at her in open-mouthed, slack-jawed shock.  She smirked back at me, but her smug smile didn't last long.

"What did you say?" my father thundered, jumping up from his chair.  My brothers stood up as well, and so did my cousin.  She jumped back from the table at the sound of my father's voice, practically in a panic now that his anger was directed at her. 
 
"How dare you?" I shouted at her as well.
 
"Me?" She squeaked back, as my other cousin darted over to support her. "I haven't done anything!  You were the one out there kissing him, and lying around on the couches with him, and who knows what else!"
 

 
I knew right then that I was done for.  Stellan crossed his arms and stared at me with a hard, accusatory glare, waiting for whatever explanation I might offer.  But my father was beside himself.  "YOU TRAITOROUS HARLOT!" 
 
"Father, please..." Torin -- sweet, dear Torin -- was trying to think of something he could say to protect me.  He looked more confused than anything, and I could absolutely understand why.  Our once happy family, with our once loving father, had somehow turned into this vicious, snarling mess.   I didn't know why or how it had happened any more than Torin did, but unlike him, I was beyond trying to fix it.  I'd had enough. 
 
"Call me whatever you like," I countered. "I don't care anymore!"
 
"I'm your father!"
 
"You're not!"  I shouted.  "My father loved me!  He was kind! He was good!  And you're nothing but a cruel, bitter, spiteful old man! I hate you!"
 
"OUT!" My father yelled.  "GET OUT!" One hand curled back as if he were ready to strike me, but instead he pointed from me to the door.  "Stellan, take her to her room, and lock her in it.  Bring me the key.  She can rot in there until she comes to her senses.  And bring me den'Rhelys!"
 

 
"Leave him alone!" I cried, suddenly frightened.  But Stellan had grabbed hold of my arm, and was dragging me away from the table toward the hallway. "Torin, go warn him! Don't let them do anything to him! Father, leave him alone!"

My frantic words echoed in the stone hallway as the door slammed shut on the dining room.  The last thing I saw was my younger brother trying to reason with my father, and my two idiot cousins standing by the windows crying.  The wind outside was howling against the glass.
 
Then I was hauled up the stairs, and pushed into my room with a hard shove. 
 
"Stellan, please," I pleaded, grabbing onto my brother's boot as he turned to go. "Please don't do anything to Jaffaran!" 

But my brother never looked back. He shut the door behind him as he left, and I heard the bolt close with a solid, metallic clank that echoed in the sudden silence.  I climbed up onto the couch by my windows, put my head in my hands, and started to cry.
 




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Offline Luna

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Re: Ajri's Ivory Shores: Chapter Eleven - Dining Room
« Reply #62 on: December 20, 2013, 02:32:56 AM »
As always wonderful writing from Indy, I always fascinated of your work *claps hand*

I never expected that this would happen to Savna. Oh, poor Savna! I hope she would get a chance to get out from that place and Torin could warn Jaffaran about this. Well, at least glad to know that she's not truly alone.
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Offline Nettlejuice

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Re: Ajri's Ivory Shores: Chapter Eleven - Dining Room
« Reply #63 on: December 20, 2013, 12:34:28 PM »
I like how subtle the wind was and then it started raging as the tension in the room had reached its climax. Poor Savna, I hope she and Jaffaran will leave soon!
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Re: Ajri's Ivory Shores: Chapter Eleven - Dining Room
« Reply #64 on: December 20, 2013, 03:44:06 PM »
I really hope Savna could find her happiness after going through this awful situation! I can't believe about what that person said to her, this is horrible what they after anyway for being mean to Savna? Some people are just unbelievable! I guess real life situation more complex than we imagine isn’t it? Especially when it comes to family tradition.

I also love the room that you decorated for Savna, which looks great. I guess you really know how to use your expansion well, Indy ;D
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Offline melancholy_anju

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Re: Ajri's Ivory Shores: Chapter Eleven - Dining Room
« Reply #65 on: December 20, 2013, 10:08:12 PM »
Oh no that was an awful situation, but wonderfully written as usual.   :-\
I can't wait to see how they get out of this mess.

Offline intl_incident

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Re: Ajri's Ivory Shores: Chapter Eleven - Dining Room
« Reply #66 on: December 23, 2013, 10:14:07 AM »
I like how subtle the wind was and then it started raging as the tension in the room had reached its climax. Poor Savna, I hope she and Jaffaran will leave soon!

Oooh, I'm glad you noticed the wind.  It's supposed to represent the influence of the evil that's attached to the root -- just like it used the wind to talk to Stellan.

I really hope Savna could find her happiness after going through this awful situation! I can't believe about what that person said to her, this is horrible what they after anyway for being mean to Savna? Some people are just unbelievable! I guess real life situation more complex than we imagine isn’t it? Especially when it comes to family tradition.

I also love the room that you decorated for Savna, which looks great. I guess you really know how to use your expansion well, Indy ;D

Thanks! I like Savna's room, too.  I may end up uploading a small castle of some kind, using the décor from the different rooms of her house -- the problem is, I use a LOT of store stuff, and almost all of the EPs and SPs, and even some cc to get the look I want.  So I will have to think about a way to make the look accessible to everyone and uploadable here (I.e., no cc.)

Her unbelievably mean father and brother will be explained soon.  They are really nice people, but unfortunately they are not themselves right now.

Oh no that was an awful situation, but wonderfully written as usual.   :-\
I can't wait to see how they get out of this mess.

Your wish is my command!  On to the next scene, so we can start to see how they get out of this mess! :D



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Offline intl_incident

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Re: Ajri's Ivory Shores: Chapter Twelve - Locked Up
« Reply #67 on: December 23, 2013, 10:19:31 AM »
In the end, my father just threw Jaffaran out of our home.  He called Jaffaran into his study, told him he and his family were no longer welcome among the Pembina and gave him an hour to collect his things and leave. Then my brothers were given the orders to escort him to the edge of our lands and to make sure he left.  It was unheard of to banish a teacher that way.  But I wasn’t thinking of the political angle to any of this.  I was just thinking that my life was ruined.

I didn’t see him leave, of course, as I was still locked in my rooms, with no intention of apologizing to my father for anything I had done, nor taking back anything I had said.  Instead I found out about his departure from my ever-gossiping idiot cousins, whom my mother sent to my room on the third day to try to convince me to come out and reconcile.

"But he’s gone," one of them said. "Why won’t you just forget about him?"
"Your mother sent this pretty necklace for you, see?  Don’t you want to come down to join us?"

"I’m not a child," I shouted back. "I’m not going to be bribed out of love with a necklace. And you can’t come up here and pretend we’re friends, or that you haven’t played any part in this."

"But Savna…"
"But we never…"

"Get out," I yelled, and I sounded like my father.  But I didn’t care.



That was the third day I was locked up.  On the eighth day, my father called me down to his library to try to dissuade me.  But what started off as a false pretense of his concern for my well-being quickly turned into another shouting match.

"I’m not going to apologize, Father. I love him."

"I forbid it!"

"I don’t CARE! Why won’t you understand that?"

Torin tried once again to mediate, pointing out to my father that simply forbidding someone to love someone else wasn’t going to change things. 

But my father and Stellan, as usual, wouldn’t listen.  "You stay out of it," my older brother interjected .  "She’ll marry Laren when she’s told, no matter whom she thinks she loves." Laren was the distant cousin that I had always suspected would be my future husband.  I liked him, I truly did.  But I couldn’t love him, not now, not when I knew what it really meant to be in love.

"I won’t!" I shouted back.

"You will," Stellan insisted. "It’s arranged for next week."



That took me aback for a moment, and I stammered a less confident denial. "I--I won’t! You can’t make me!"

"Go back to your room," my father snapped. "And we’ll see what happens."

"Did you know about this?" I turned to Torin, who looked as guilty and miserable as I had ever seen him. "Is it true?"

"I’m sorry, Sanni," he said as Stellan took hold of my arm to take me back to my bedrooms. "There wasn’t anything I could do. Jaffaran’s not Pembina.  You must have known…"

The door to my father’s study closed before I heard the rest of what he had to say, but I knew what it would have been:  That I would have to marry Laren, and get on with my life as a Pembina heir.  Maybe the marriage to Laren was coming earlier than planned, but it would always have come eventually.   It was true, all of it, but I couldn't think about it.  All I could think about was Jaffaran, and the things he'd said, and the things he'd written, and the way he'd looked on the boat when he told me he loved me. 



For the next few days I refused any visitors.  The staff who came to deliver my meals came back hours later to take the plates away, still full.  I could see them looking at me with concern every time they came and went.  My eyes were red with crying, my hair looked a positive mess, and after a day or two I didn’t even bother to get dressed in the morning. 

But eventually, Jaffaran’s words came back to me: "We all steer our own ships, Lady Savna," he’d said. "If yours is not going in the direction you want, maybe you need to put a firmer hand on the wheel."

"This isn’t getting me anywhere, is it?" I asked my little cat Farli, who’d been my pet since I was a young girl, and who had been trying to cheer me up during the long days alone. He had no answer, of course – he just purred softly and pressed his furry cheek against mine.



I sighed, and rubbed at my eyes, then climbed up to my feet, where I caught a glimpse of myself in the mirror.  With a resigned frown, I scooped up a few fingers full of the cream I had usually put on before bed every night, before I had given up caring. It wasn’t much of an effort, but it was better than nothing.  Here I was, surrounded by luxury, an heir of one of the four great houses, and my biggest concern was having to marry a perfectly nice man whom I'd liked since we were children.  What right did I have to cry like a spoiled child just because my foolish romantic dreams hadn't worked out?

 

At the thought of those romantic dreams -- at the thought of Jaffaran -- my eyes started to sting again. But I pressed my lips together and blinked back the tears.

"I need to grow up," I said to Farli, who licked his paws and pretended to listen.  My voice cracked and wavered, but I was determined to convince myself to move on. "No one is going to come rescue me, like the princesses in the old fairy tales."

 

Offline Nettlejuice

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Re: Ajri's Ivory Shores: Chapter Twelve - Locked Up
« Reply #68 on: December 23, 2013, 03:36:32 PM »
Ooh, yay, Jaffaran in the last shot has my heart fluttering. I couldn't help but feel so sad seeing Savna with her hair all over the place and that dejected look on her face.
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Offline Luna

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Re: Ajri's Ivory Shores: Chapter Twelve - Locked Up
« Reply #69 on: December 24, 2013, 10:30:33 AM »
I love Savna in her new hair; maybe it looks a bit messy but that looks suit her well ♥
I also love the last scene, I just wonder if they finally could break free?
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Offline Eldridge

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Re: Ajri's Ivory Shores: Chapter Twelve - Locked Up
« Reply #70 on: December 24, 2013, 05:46:41 PM »
Ooh, I just love the detail of screenshots that you used. I love when to see her cousin bring that necklace and she looking at her. I just wonder why old folks very rigid with their own tradition, I can compare from the data that I gathered that nowadays people seems forgotten the rules that old folks keep to maintain in the past.

Can't they just see that Savna wants to be with her beloved one? I also wonder if this related to a political reason to benefits their family namesake. You know that like some kind of alliance and they are never fair to women, as they just see them as a tool not a human being :(

And that hair looks perfect for Savna for her current situation. It looks messy but she still looks beautiful—no I even love her hair like this.It is a store content? I would like to know from what set it is. Would you mind to tell me?  I really love the last part, Indy! It's kinda exciting to see the princess being saved by her own prince charming.

Go, Jaffaran! I hope next part would never tell about trouble.



Wish you a very merry Christmas, Indy! Hope that you'd enjoy your time with your family :)
“Sometimes the little things in life mean the most.” ― Ellen Hopkins

My Stories:
1. The Demosthenes Immortal Dynasty: Kev's Corner #08 - Thankful (31/12/13)
2. The Goode-Rotter's Life Story: Case Eleven - Signs of Love (27/12/13)

Offline intl_incident

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Re: Ajri's Ivory Shores: Chapter Twelve - Locked Up
« Reply #71 on: January 08, 2014, 09:18:18 PM »
Hi, all. Hope you had a good holiday break if you had one. Thanks for the kind wishes. I am back from break, but it will be a while before I post. I have to catch up on work, plus all of the pipes in my house froze yesterday and so I have to deal with that for now. But never fear. Jaffaran will find his way to Savna eventually!  :)

Offline intl_incident

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Re: Ajri's Ivory Shores: Chapter Thirteen - Plans
« Reply #72 on: February 04, 2014, 04:52:25 PM »
Well, I am FINALLY back at it.  Work has been insane for the last few weeks, but I finally had a chance to get this scene finished up.  There is a lot of exposition/explanation of the root in the middle.  Let me know if anyone needs anything explained.   It will all be very important to a key plot point coming up later in the story.  Mwahahaha. 

Anyway, sorry for the long delay, thanks for the nice comments since the last time I checked in, and now on to the story! These two are finally getting somewhere!

----------

"... no one is going to come and rescue me, like the princesses in the old fairy tales," I said to my dear little cat, as I continued patting my skin cream onto my cheeks.  It smelled like mint, and looked like clay, but it kept my skin clear.  And if I was going to have to marry Laren in a few days, I had resigned myself to at least looking the part of a happy bride.  "Everything might have worked out in those stories," I continued with a sigh, "but that's not what happens in real life."

It wasn't my cat who answered. It was a voice from behind me, standing at the door to my balcony. "Such little faith?"



"Jaffaran!" I spun around in an instant, and ran to meet him in the middle of the room. I had never been so happy to see anyone in all my life, and as I fell in to his arms, all of my fears seemed to melt away. "What are you doing here? How did you get here?"

"I climbed up your ivy," he replied with the lopsided smile I loved so much. "Just like in the old fairy tales. I remember those stories had princesses, but I don't remember them being green..."

"Oh!"  My hands went up to my face, which was covered in pasty, minty cream. "I look terrible!"



Jaffaran was laughing, and his amber eyes were twinkling in the candlelight.  "You look beautiful," he said, and he leaned down to kiss the tip of my nose. 



"But we have to talk," he said.  "I can't stay long.  I just came back to ask you what you want to do."

"What do you mean?  Why do you have to go?"  I grabbed onto him and held tightly, as if I could prevent him from ever leaving my sight again.



"I don't want to risk anyone finding me here, and taking it out on you, for one," he replied. "I have no right to be in your family's lands anymore, but even if your father and I were on the best of terms, I don't think he'd allow me to climb up the ivy into your bedroom.  More importantly, I have to get back to my family and help decide what to do about the root we found in the ruins.  I placed a charm around it for now, to keep anyone from interacting with it, but I'm worried.  I'm not the best alchemist in the family, and the root has changed in ways I don't understand.  My mother needs to know about it, so she can put a stop to whatever it's doing."

"Yes, of course," I said, taking a step back and letting my hands fall away from Jaffaran's chest. "You have to go.  I understand."  My gaze dropped to the floor before I could even think about it.  I wanted to stop him, to say that I loved him and didn't want him to go.  But no matter how much I inwardly cursed my own inaction, something was keeping me from doing it.    Luckily, Jaffaran was not so easily dissuaded.



He gently lifted my chin so that I was forced to look at him. He was staring deep into my eyes, with a concerned, curious expression, as if he were a doctor looking for signs of a concussion.  "Come with me," he said gently. "I need to explain something to you."  He gestured to the couch by the window, where Farli had gone to keep watch.  I shooed the cat aside and sat down as he kept talking. 

"I told you before that I thought the root was connected to the way your father has changed," he said. "It's more than that.  It's stronger than I thought.  I think it's affecting the whole area, including you and your brothers and your cousins... everyone really.  What it does, is it finds your weakness, and it makes it worse.  So if you have a temper and you're impatient, like Stellan, it will make you more angry, and more impatient.  If you are insecure about your own authority, like your father seems to be, it will make you more authoritarian.  If you are shy, like your mother, it will make you a recluse.  If you are envious and nosy, like your cousins..."

"I understand!" I interrupted him, my cheeks turning briight red.  It was hard to hear him list my family's shortcomings, even if I recognized them all too well.

"Savna, I don't mean to criticize," he said quietly. "We all have faults that we all work to overcome, and if that root weren't here, I'm sure your father and Stellan and the rest of your family would be perfectly able to manage theirs.  Just like you would be able to manage yours."

I looked away again, as I felt my jaw begin to tremble. "And what are my faults?" I asked weakly. "What terrible traits has that awful thing made you see in me?"

Just as before, Jaffaran turned my gaze back to his with a gentle touch on my chin. "That you have no idea how beautiful you are, or how brilliant.  That you don't see your own worth to the world, or how much I love you."

And suddenly, I was blinking back tears.  It was true, and I knew it.  I had always been a tomboy, always comparing myself to my prettier cousins in their dresses and pearls.  I knew had a talent with making guitars, but I always lamented that couldn't play or sing.  I remembered time and again, as a child and young woman, having to convince myself that my friends really did want me to come to a party, or that my work really was good enough.  Silly little things really, and up until recently I had always been able to overcome my lack of confidence. 

But Jaffaran was right.  It was as though a fog had settled on all of the Pembina, and everything had changed, back when my father first started acting so strangely.  I had thought that it was simply a case of one thing leading to another -- my father's attitudes changed all of ours.  But the more I thought about it, the more I saw that I really had lost my confidence, and really had started to let my fears get the better of me.  All until Jaffaran had come to take up his job as teacher, and he had understood me from the very first time I met him, and I had fallen in love with him.



I leaned more closely against him, and wrapped my arm across his chest, burying my face in the soft fabric of his shirt.  "You make me so happy."  It was a simple fact, but the truest thing I had ever said.

For some reason, it seemed to make Jaffaran uncomfortable. 

"No, but...  I mean, yes, but..."  He furrowed his brow, trying to frame his reply.  "You need to understand that when you're with me, part of what you feel, part of why you feel better with me... if you feel better with me... what I mean to say is, the den'Rhelys have a sort of natural immunity to the root and the powers behind it.  It's been built up over generations,  and strengthened over time, so that the root doesn't really affect me.  And when you are close to me, it eventually stops affecting you too. So when you're with me, you naturally become more of yourself, and less of what that thing is trying to make you." 

I knew that with all of his stammering he was trying to give me a choice, to be sure I wasn't confused about what I was feeling for him.  It was a kind and gentlemanly thing to do, but it was useless.   "I love you," I interrupted him.

"Well, I hope so... But I don't want to take advantage of the fact that part of what makes you think that you love me is that I have this immunity, and..."

"I don't think I love you," I interrupted him again.

"You don't?" Now he was confused.

I laughed at the expression, as purely happy as I had been in a very long time.  "No, you daft man. I don't think I love you.  I do love you."

"Savna..."

"Stop," I said, holding up a hand to cut him off. "You said it yourself. When I am with you, I am who I really am.  Well I am with you now, and I really am madly in love with you."

I had caught him with his own logic, and he knew it. "Will you come with me then," he asked. "when I go back home? Will you come? That's what I came to ask you."

"Yes," I said immediately.

"It's a big decision, Savna.  You'd be leaving your family, and leaving your home, and..."

"Yes," I said again.

"We can't guarantee that my family will take you in. I think they'll understand, but..."

"Yes, yes yes! Stop talking! Yes!"



And that was that.  It took a bit more planning, a bit more discussion of details.  We couldn't do anything that night -- it was already too close to morning, and Jaffaran needed to finish up some last research.  But in a hurried discussion on the balcony, we made plans to meet at the ruins the next night.  I would get dressed in travelling clothes, and carry a charm he'd brought me to help me slip past the guards.  He would create a distraction in the courtyard, I would climb down the way he'd come up, and we'd make our ways to the designated spot. 



Now that the plans were in motion, I could barely contain my excitement.  We parted on the balcony after one last kiss, and then I dashed back into the bedroom to pace away the hours until the sun would set again.  I only hoped that no one would come to visit me -- there would be no way I could hide my smile.


Offline intl_incident

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Re: Ajri's Ivory Shores: Chapter Fourteen - Escape
« Reply #73 on: February 11, 2014, 12:58:38 AM »
The narrator in this chapter goes back to being Meridel (Jaffaran's sister.)  You may remember that way back in the first chapter, she was writing a book about all of this.  And that she had gotten to the part where Savna was telling her story to Meridel and her mother and sister.

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Savna told us the rest of the story with the same breathless exuberance she'd displayed since the start. She told us how Jaffaran's plan worked without a fault, and she climbed down out of her rooms wearing the charm he'd given her.   She told us how she snuck off through the woods and found her way to the ruins in the dark, using the moon as her guide.



She told us how nervous she had been that she'd be seen, or that Jaffaran wouldn't be there waiting for her for some reason -- maybe her father had found out about the plan, or maybe Jaffaran had been caught, or maybe he would change his mind.  How her confidence had started to falter and her fears seemed to get stronger the closer she got to the ruins.  How she knew now that it was all the result of the root and its effect on her mind. 

Because there was our brother, waiting for her as planned, and ready to risk everything to carry Savna Pembina off of her family's lands and into our home.



They kissed in the moonlight, and made promises to stay together, no matter what might happen.  Then Jaffaran gathered up his journals and research, she took hold of the small bundle that held everything she would take with her from the only home she'd ever known, and the two of them stepped out of the ruins, past the root -- which was now glowing green -- and climbed onto Astanal, who was waiting by the pond.



She told us how they'd ridden all night and through the next day, with her falling asleep and clinging to Jaffaran's waist to stay upright.  How Astanal had carried them over hills and across the island's streams, and how his hoof beats had startled the bright green birds on the shore as they came into the den'Rhelys territory.



They stopped outside the first village they came to, and she changed into a traditional scholar's robe so that no one would think it strange that Jaffaran was bringing her with him.  And that brought the story back the beginning of this tale when they had stepped into our courtyard, hoping that my parents would understand why she'd come, would understand how much they loved each other, and would let the two of them marry.

That was where my mother finally interrupted.  But after the entire starry-eyed recounting of my brother's and Savna's courtship, instead of making a single comment about them, she fixed her quiet attention on one detail in particular.  "Did you say the root was glowing green?"

"Mother!"  Nella was practically beside herself with frustration at the question, and when I turned to look at my usually practical sister I could see that she had been totally won over by the romance of it all.



My mother quelled her with a look, noting calmly: "There is much more at stake here than two people's wishes, Nellaska.  We sent your brother to the Pembina to find out what was happening there, and to bring home evidence of whatever it was.  We mustn't be distracted by anything else he happened to find and bring home."  She paused for a moment, considering, and I could see that her forehead was creased with concern.  "I need to discuss this with the scholars.  And then I suppose your father and I will need to go to speak with Lord Radal."

"No need." My father's deep and somber voice made a sharp contrast as he and my brother stepped into our little female sanctuary.  My brother looked unhappy, and seemed unwilling to meet Savna's gaze.  He was looking at his feet, or out the window, and I knew that whatever he and my father had discussed, it hadn't ended the way he would have liked.  "Lord Radal is here, in the courtyard," my father continued. "He's come to take Lady Savna home."



"Well she can't go!"  my sister protested, and my brother gave her a grateful smile.

"Nella, you are not helping."  My father didn't even look my sister's way.  Instead, he just held Savna's gaze with his own, calm and certain. "I'm sorry, child."

Jaffaran opened his mouth to join in the protests, but my mother shook her head at him, and held up a hand to stop him from speaking. "Things may yet work out," she said quietly.



My father scowled at her, clearly annoyed that he's been contradicted, but my mother had a gift for seeing beyond the present, in ways that the rest of us could not.  I had never yet seen my father disregard my mother's wisdom, no matter how perplexed he might be by it, and he wouldn't do so this time either. "We shall see," he said simply.

And I thought that perhaps my brother and Savna had a chance after all.

Offline melancholy_anju

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Re: Ajri's Ivory Shores: Chapter Fourteen - Escape
« Reply #74 on: February 11, 2014, 06:26:08 AM »
Haha Nella is definitely my favorite. I wonder how they are going to deal with the root though, and bring Savna's family back to normal.