Chapter 22 – Where to Begin
As soon as Leonidas opened the front door, he shut it again and dead-locked it.
“Forget going to the airport. It’s too late. We have to get Alice underground right now!”
“What are you suggesting?” Alice asked alarmed.
“Come with me,” Leonidas led the way to the ground floor bedroom. Gone were the twin beds with their brightly covered quilts, the toy box and play things that I last saw when Faith left this house to move into the Modern Mansion. The floor level had been changed and a small set of steps led down to a pleasant meditation area. Leonidas pushed back a sculpture and a portion of the floor fell away to reveal a hidden staircase. Leonidas led the way followed by Alice while I brought up the rear.
Under the foundations was a basement full of nectars. The cavernous room intermittently lit by old fashioned flame torches. I never knew Leonidas indulged. He pulled down on one of the unlit torches and the staircase we had just descended disappeared. Disconcerted Alice clutched my hand. I remembered too late that she had previously displayed claustrophobic tendencies when we had been in Appaloosa Plains. “I’m right here and I’m not going anywhere without you,” I said to reassure her. She nodded her response, her eyes stretched wide with fright.
We walked among the rows and rows of nectar racks twisting and turning like a maze. I realised that’s exactly what it was; a maze. Our way was lit by the occasional wall torch which flickered with our movements. I noticed that the place was scrupulously tidy. No footprints in the dust were there to give away our passage through the maze. Then the maze of nectar racks gave way a row of bookcases. Stopping at one particular bookcase which looked exactly like all the others, Leonidas systematically pressed the spines on a series of books and the right half of the bookcase slid behind the left side revealing a small hidden doorway.
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Once we all walked through the hidden door, the door swung shut. Looking briefly back the doorway looked like a recessed panel with no obvious way to open it again. Inside the poorly lit room was a pile of junk; the usual detritus of a lifetime with children whose interest in objects waxes and wanes. Leonidas led us over to the far corner of the room. Hidden behind a couple of video games was a spiral staircase leading down to yet another maze of bookcases! Dotted among the bookcases were chairs and oddly enough a few jelly-bean bushes. I’d observed that there had been some jelly-bean bushes in the nectar maze upstairs but now I was concerned. One little mishap with those things could be deadly. Maybe that was the point. I shuddered inwardly at that thought.
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Again at a bookcase indistinguishable from the others, Leonidas pressed the book spines but this time the hidden door swung open to reveal a small reading room. Well lit and comfortable. A bibliophile’s dream actually. At the back of the room was a door. Leonidas led us through the door which opened into a small powder room which had a second door. Through the second door was a spacious sumptuously furnished meditation room. Alice was taken by the room. I wonder if she was able to meditate. If she didn’t, perhaps I could tutor her enough Martial Arts so she could in the future.
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Around the walls, not all of the torches were lit, giving the room a soft calm ambience. Leonidas pulled one of the unlit torches and the wall on the other side from the chess set revealed another hidden doorway. After we’d followed Leonidas through the doorway, he manually closed the door after us. Once closed, it was not possible to distinguish the doorway from its solid wall counterparts. I looked around an opulently furnished room with all the mod cons. It looked like an upmarket hotel room, complete with a little kitchenette, dining nook and a small comfortable sitting room with a huge TV. Dividing the sitting room from a bedroom was a huge wall fish tank where whimsical digital fish swam to and fro. A door leading to a room in the corner of the suite was probably another bathroom. No expense had been spared in furnishing the room.
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“We will be safe here. When the full moon passes, then you have to leave Moonlight Falls and never come back.”
“What is the danger? Who or what is Solindae?” I asked anxiously but I was secretly super impressed by the elaborateness of his fortress of solitude. I hoped we’d never have to make a run for it because I could not reliably find my way out of either labyrinth we came through.
“I can’t tell you that. When this is over, it is best to forget all about Moonlight Falls, our troubles and especially that you’d ever met the Kalamias,” declared Leonidas vehemently.
“Leonidas,” I said, “We accept your well-meant advice. But if we don’t know what the danger is, we’ll probably blunder straight into it without knowing whether the path we choose would take us to safety or lead us into further danger. Think this through logically, Leonidas. Your reticence about what we should or shouldn’t know may be sending us to our death!”
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“I understand that there are risks. But if you had simply stayed in Sunset Valley and lived your life normally, you would not be in the mess you now find yourself in. I’m not responsible for that. I’m sorry that it had to come to this, but I am willing to make that sacrifice to ensure the safety of those most at risk.”
“Alice is your flesh and blood. Your close mindedness could see her killed!”
“Alice is not my daughter!”
“Yes she is. Only your wife did not give birth to her.” I lowered my voice and tried to make my tone as reasonable as I could under the circumstances. “But Alice is indeed your flesh and blood, just as much as Charity and Faith are. It is not her fault that she had no childhood or that she reached adulthood without ever knowing your love and protection!” Leonidas and I glared at each other.
“Don’t talk about me as if I’m not in the room! I am not a doll to be fought over. I have feelings too. I don’t need or want either of you protecting me. I’ll just take my chances above ground like the rest of the Sims in the town!” Alice’s passionate speech left me astonished. She turned on her heels and with her head held high walked back to the wall we’d come through. But there was no obvious method of opening the hidden door.
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She searched the wall for the switch but there was none. She pushed against the door to no avail. She leaned into it but it wouldn’t budge. She turned her back against it and shoved but there was no movement on the door.
“No Alice! Stop! Don’t leave! They will find you!” Leonidas said anxiously. “I’m sorry. You’ve made your point. This door is time locked anyway. The earliest it will open is 6:00 AM tomorrow.”
“Then you have lots of time to tell us the truth,” said Alice all fire and temper gone. As Leonidas paced about the room wrestling with his thoughts, I stared at Alice. She was now leaning nonchalantly against the wall and winked at me. I couldn’t believe how I had been misled about her. She was every bit the subtle manipulator that Charity had been. She had known exactly which buttons to push on Leonidas and was not afraid to use them.
As if his mind was made up, Leonidas went over to the small kitchenette and prepared dinner. It was stu surprise which was no surprise given the state of affairs with food above ground. Despite its simplicity, it was well made and tasted delicious. I remembered many dinners with Leonidas and his family and they were noisy affairs. Tonight’s dinner was silent. Only the ticking of a clock somewhere passed the time.
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After dinner, Leonidas opened one of the bottles of nectar from a small rack in the dining alcove. He took a tray of glasses over to the lounge area and gestured for us to take one too. Alice declined. I took one glass and waited patiently for him to begin his story. Leonidas took a glass but looked at it before taking only a sip.
“It’s a very long story,” he said staring at his glass clearly debating what to say.
“Why don’t you start at the very beginning,” encouraged Alice, “I’m reliably informed that it’s a very good place to start.1”
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“I guess that makes sense. Elias knows some of the story but you probably know next to nothing.” Leonidas took a long drink from his glass, emptying it.
“It all started a long, long time ago. Kingdoms were much smaller then. Until 927 AD the country we now call England held seven kingdoms. Those Kings had to defend their kingdoms constantly from raiders of all sorts; from savages and pirates to raiding parties of Vikings. But mostly, those seven Kings fought countless battles defending their kingdoms from each other.
Far away from England’s shores in a vast sea were two small island-kingdoms each ruled over by hereditary Kings. The people of the larger island of Helidonn were human Sims. They were brave warriors and hunters. Their shrewd blacksmiths and craftsmen were skilled in making all sorts of weapons and gadgets. But the Helidonn peasants often suffered from bouts of poor health and many children died in infancy.
The people of the closest but much smaller island of Ludaine were elf Sims. Small in stature, pale haired, blue eyed, with creamy coloured skin, the elves were masters of the natural world. Their druids and physicians could cure almost all ills. Their farmers produced bountiful crops which filled their peoples’ bellies as much as the wise words of their scholars broadened their minds.
The two kingdoms had for centuries, fought battles against each other and against common enemies. Each of the Kings had a dream which foretold of the fall of their kingdoms unless they joined together in a coalition to fight a common foe. Both Kings, realising that they could never hold off their enemies indefinitely, formed an uneasy alliance. The elven kingdom sent the Helidonn help from amongst their wisest druids, cleverest physicians and scholars and most talented bards. In return the human kingdom sent the elves some of their strongest knights and skilled blacksmiths and craftsmen.
Under the alliance, both kingdoms prospered for hundreds of years. Each newly crowned King held to their part of the bargain. Each time a new king was crowned in either kingdom, they would re-seal their pact with a weeklong festival in each kingdom. At one such festival held by the Ludaine to celebrate the coronation of King Alton, the newly crowned Helidonn King. King Alton met the elven Princess Lindae who was only just old enough to attend her first ball. They danced and talked throughout the days and evenings of the festival. The couple were inevitably followed everywhere they went by the Lindae’s two handmaidens who acted as chaperones and two of King Alton’s personal guards.
On the second to last evening of the festival, Lindae took King Alton to her favourite place in the kingdom, the headland. The couple’s entourage discretely followed the couple but kept their distance to allow them some privacy.
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Dawn saw them still on the headland watching the water and talking. Lindae’s handmaidens were fast asleep as were the King’s guards. Relieved of the restraints their watchers’ presence imposed, King Alton confessed to Princess Lindae that he had fallen in love for her. In return Princess Lindae confessed her love for him. They sealed their love with a passionate kiss before their chaperones could rebuke them for such behaviour. King Alton asked Lindae if she would marry him and live on Helidonn. Lindae said yes. The happy couple roused their entourage and walked hand in hand back to the palace.
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There King Alton asked the Ludaine King for the hand of Princess Lindae in marriage. The old Ludaine King refused, then explained that Princess Lindae, his second youngest daughter had been promised in marriage to the Prince of the island of Córa, and he could not break that promise without risking war.
It was a known practice among kingdoms in those days to cement treaties with marriages. King Alton’s own mother had been a Córan princess and he reluctantly agreed that even he could not risk breaking his country’s treaty with the warlike Kingdom of Córa and brokenheartedly accepted the older King’s decision.”
“Please tell me this is a love story?” interrupted Alice.
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“My dear not all love stories have happy endings,” replied Leonidas kindly.
“In that case, please don’t just gloss over the love story.”
“I understand Alice,” Leonidas smiled indulgently. “You’re not the first Hopeless Romantic I’ve told this story to. Where were we?”
“The Ludaine King had to refuse King Alton’s marriage bid,” said Alice with a heartfelt sigh.
“Indeed. Yes. So Princess Lindae on hearing her father’s reply was horrified. She loathed the vain and pompous Prince Æthoran of Córa. Realising that she, like her two older sisters before her, had no choice in such crucial strategic matters, knew in her own heart that there was no possible way she could ever comply with her father’s plans. She wrote a letter to tell her father that she would never marry the Córan prince. If she couldn’t marry King Alton, she would marry no one.
Lindae then told her two handmaidens that she was going for a walk out to the headland as was her custom when she was troubled. The handmaidens did not want to leave the festivities but their duty was to ensure that the princess never left the castle grounds unaccompanied. Reluctantly, they followed Princess Lindae walking a few metres behind her instead of beside her. At the headland, they stood well back from the edge as the relentless waves crashed against the rocks below sending sprays of water high up the cliff face. Princess Lindae watched the waves and the spray as if in a trance. She turned around briefly to look at castle as silent tears streamed down her face. One of her handmaidens went to go to her but to their horror Princess Lindae suddenly stripped off her royal robes and dived into the treacherous waters at the headland. Certain that their princess had jumped to her death, the terrified handmaidens didn’t know what to do.”
Alice clapped her hand over her mouth in dismay.
Leonidas continued the story either unaware of his effect on his audience or totally disregarding it. “On receiving his daughter’s letter, the Ludaine King was furious and summoned his Royal Advisor to find his daughter to explain herself. The Royal Advisor scoured the castle but could not find the princess. The castle servants searched the nearby grounds and found the two frightened handmaidens waiting with the princess’ robes on the headland. The servants and guards then searched around the base of the cliff to no avail. When advised of what happened, the Ludaine King was heartbroken. King Alton was shattered. The remainder of the coronation festivities were cancelled.
As it was considered neither proper nor regal for King Alton to openly mourn the loss of the girl he loved because she was betrothed to another, he returned to his own ship where he could mourn in private.”
“Oh dear. I am so sorry,” exclaimed Alice aghast.
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“But wait, there’s more,” cautioned Leonidas. “Unbeknownst to her father, Lindae knew the waters around Ludaine, their tides and their drifts. She did indeed survive the dive from the headland and swam out to King Alton’s ship which lay at anchor in the next bay. Silently climbing aboard, Lindae stowed away, but not before she performed a small act of sabotage. When King Alton returned to his ship and prepared to set sail, his captain informed him that a rope on one of the main sails had frayed and needed to be replaced before the ship could sail. The ship would not be ready to sail til the next morning’s tide. Lindae stayed hidden listening to all that was happening. King Alton drank heavily that night drowning his sorrows.
Sneaking into the King’s cabin after his servants had put him to bed, Lindae seduced the man she loved. King Alton believed that his beloved had come to him in a dream. When the eight bells tolled signalling the end the middle watch, Lindae slipped out of her lover’s cabin and over the side of ship. She swam to a nearby rocky islet.
On the rocky islet lived a reclusive druidess, Lumava, who lived in an old but serviceable fisherman’s hut. Lumava had once been the most powerful alchemist in the land until her potions failed to cure an ailing King, the grandfather to the current Ludaine King. For her failure to heal the old monarch, Lumava was exiled to the rocky islet. Lumava eked out a comfortable living growing her vegetables and herbs and continuing to make and sell the most powerful elixirs and potions to any who could afford to pay her price.
Lindae begged Lumava to allow her to live with her. Lumava was happy to provide the princess with a refuge. Lumava felt no particular loyalty to the current King and disliked the way the princesses were being married off against their will for strategic gain. For the next few months the two women lived happily together. Lindae helped Lumava with her garden and kept the little hut as neat as she could.
Whenever customers rowed out to the islet to purchase their wares, Lindae hid in the hut. Eventually Lindae had to confess to Lumava exactly what she had done the night she ran away because she could no longer hide the evidence of her night of love with King Alton. Lindae gave birth to an elven daughter, whom she named Solindae. But Solindae was not like the other pale haired and blue eyed elves. Solindae had auburn hair and pale green eyes.
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Together the two women raised baby Solindae to be a happy healthy child. As little Solindae grew out of babyhood, it became evident that she’d inherited an unusual ability for an elven child. She was an elven witch. There had never been a Ludaine elven child with magical ability before. There were many mixed marriages among the Ludaine and Helidonn people, but the children born of such unions were either one or the other, never a hybrid of both. It was unlikely that King Alton had been a secret wizard so it was a total mystery how little Solindae received her powers. Until she reached her teenage years Solindae’s full ability would not be known, but even as a child, Solindae’s magical ability was very pronounced. She practiced her magic turning vegetables into all sorts of objects, some of which were useful for Lumava’s elixirs.
When the old Ludaine King passed and her brother, Mennindae, was crowned King, Lindae scanned the horizon for the royal ship of King Alton. As the coronation festival was getting under way, his ship sailed into the bay. The old druidess had arranged for one of her customers to row across to bring back news of the festivities. The obliging customer brought back the news that King Alton was accompanied by his Queen. Lindae was heartbroken. All during the seven day festival she couldn’t decide whether she should try to see King Alton again to tell him about Solindae. On the seventh day, just when Lindae had reconciled herself to keeping her secret and never seeing him again, King Alton’s crew rowed the King out to the rocky islet.
The druidess had never had such an important customer visit her islet. King Alton sought the secret meeting to procure a procreation elixir for his marriage to Queen Altami had been childless. His young nephew, Lynton, his sister’s only son, would inherit the throne should he die childless. As King Alton and the druidess talked, Lindae sneaked a peak at her beloved and felt that was enough for her. He was now married and that was the end of it, but her daughter had other ideas.
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Solindae longed for the father she had never known and hid herself under the unused sail on her father’s boat. She stayed hidden as the boat was rowed back to the royal ship but was discovered soon after the smaller boat was hauled aboard the royal ship. The captain ordered that the red haired stowaway be taken to the ship’s brig. A storm was brewing further along the coast and the captain was determined to put out to sea before it got worse.
Once at sea ahead of the gathering storm, the captain questioned the little stowaway. The captain knew the Ludaine were always blond with creamy coloured skin. Solindae’s skin colour and ears marked her as an elf but her auburn hair and pale green eyes was not typical of the Ludaine. The captain was annoyed when the child demanded to see the King. When told of this, the King was amused and wished to see the child. The captain brought the child before the King, who immediately recognised a resemblance to the Ludaine royal family and asked for her name. “I am Solindae, daughter of Princess Lindae of Ludaine.”
“Child you are mistaken for the Princess Lindae has been dead these past ten years.”
“No my Lord, my mother has lived these many years in exile with the druidess, Lumava.”
Thinking that he was humouring a dull witted child, King Alton asked. “Is that so? Then who is your father, Solindae, daughter of Princess Lindae?”
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“You are my Lord. My mother came to you on the night she escaped from the palace. You may have thought it to be a dream but it was real. I am the fruit of your night together.”
The King was no longer amused. He summoned the ship’s doctor, a Ludaine physician who was familiar with both royal houses, to examine the child searching for evidence of her claims. The doctor examined the child as instructed. The doctor told the King that the child had a birthmark on her right buttock, in the same place as did King Alton and the King’s father and grandfather before him. “Solindae is a royal name, your Highness. No Ludaine could name their child thus without severe penalty. It’s difficult to say as her hair is not the white blonde of our people, but in all probability, your Highness, the child may be telling the truth for she has the bearing and look of both royal houses.”
The King ordered the captain to turn the ship around and return to the rocky islet in the bay of Ludaine. The captain cautioned the king against such a endeavour because they would sail into the teeth of the storm. King Alton listened to his captain and vowed to return to Ludaine as soon as possible. Thus the royal ship sailed homeward to Helidonn with Princess Solindae happily on board.
King Alton’s Queen, Altami, took an instant liking to the child and did not want Solindae to return to Ludaine. Once safely home; King Alton dispatched his most diplomatic advisor aboard his ship to tell Lindae and the druidess that Solindae desired to live with him and to ask their permission. The advisor also had secret instructions to ask Princess Lindae and the druidess if they might be willing to come to Helidonn to live. The ship returned to Helidonn with neither elf.
Princess Lindae on realising where her daughter may have disappeared to, had hired a boat and sailed after the Helidonn royal ship in search of her daughter but instead sailed into the growing storm. Neither the boat nor Princess Lindae had been seen since. Lumava who was very old, had died of grief on hearing the news.”
“Oh no!” sobbed Alice.
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“Not all love stories have happy endings,” cautioned Leonidas.
“So what happened to Solindae?” I asked intrigued. I’d never heard any of this story before and I had no idea how it tied into the current situation.
Leonidas picked up another glass of the nectar that he’d poured and drank a few sips before he continued, “King Alton and Queen Altami resolved not to tell Solindae about her mother’s death but simply told her that she had received her mother’s permission to live with her father. Solindae settled down to life in the Helidonn castle relatively easily. She was the adored daughter of the King. Queen Altami tutored her in royal etiquette and procedures. Spending part of each day with Solindae was a joy to Queen Altami. They read books of poetry or embroidered pretty doilies as royal ladies were expected to do. Solindae quickly became bored of these tasks and made friends among the guards and domestic staff.
One thing Solindae learned very quickly was never to mention that she had magical powers. The people of Helidonn feared witches above all else. As a royal princess, Solindae had little or no privacy so practising magic even in secret was not an option. Solindae revelled in her father’s attention and accompanied the King and Queen on royal visits to other territories. Her father taught her to hunt deer and rabbits. Solindae loved the forests; which were a revelation to her having spent her whole life on a small rocky windswept islet. She taught her father the best ways to catch the best fish.
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Thus they lived in happiness until the death of Queen Altami. Despite the potions purchased from Lumava the druidess, Queen Altami had been unable to bear a child. Solindae was proclaimed heir apparent to her father the King despite being born out of wedlock.
To placate his advisors and emissaries, it was deemed diplomatic that as soon as his nephew, Lynton, came of age that the two children should marry, solidifying the family’s grip on the monarchy. Like her mother, Solindae would have liked to choose he own husband. But in this matter she realised that she could not choose. She could not rule Helidonn without the supporters of her young cousin making life extremely difficult. To her father’s proclamation and engineered betrothal, Solindae grudgingly agreed that it was best for the kingdom.
Solindae liked her cousin, Lynton, but he was a serious scholarly child. She much preferred the company of the soldiers of the royal guard, who taught her to use weapons. As a teenager, Solindae hunted with the hunters, fished with the fishermen and trained just as hard with weapons as any of her guards. Solindae especially enjoyed watching the blacksmiths ply their trade. One of the blacksmiths was especially fond of her and together they designed the most amazing sword for Solindae. She couldn’t wait to show it off at the next tournament.
Her young cousin, Lynton had no interest in such pursuits; he was an intellectual and preferred the administrative roles. Lynton studied the country’s laws, watched with a keen interest which edicts were passed or failed, analysed treaties with the royal advisor and listened attentively when his uncle the King held court hearing petitions from the people.
As Lynton’s coming of age drew closer, the people of Helidonn prepared for a magnificent wedding. Solindae, now a beautiful young woman, accepted that her cousin would make an exceptional King. Lynton was full of ideas for modernising the country including updating farming methods, compulsory schooling for all children and banning the use of the stocks as a cruel and inhumane punishment.
As they both aged, Solindae and Lynton could see the value the other would bring to their joint rule. They grew to like and respect each other a lot and both felt that with time, their marriage would not be a loveless arrangement.
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With her wedding day less than a month away, Solindae asked her father why her mother had not replied to her invitation to attend the wedding. King Alton broke the news that her mother had perished in a storm at sea some years ago. Solindae was understandably distraught and dashed headlong for her secret place in the forest. There she calmed down and asked herself why had she never felt that her mother had died. In the calm of that forest glade Solindae listened to her heart. She felt intuitively that her mother still lived. Going to the docks, Solindae asked the ships’ captains to keep a lookout for any news of an elf living alone on any island between Helidonn and Ludaine.
The captain’s listened to the princess and said they would keep a sharp lookout. But as the captains preferred to keep to the known shipping lanes where they knew the underwater hazards and currents, few believed they would find a castaway especially after all those years. As each ship that returned reported no sign of life among the scattered tiny islets along the trade routes, Solindae became dejected.
Till one day, an unexpected storm at sea blew one of the trade ships far off its course. The ship was badly damaged in the sudden storm. Needing urgent repairs, the ship’s captain steered his listing ship towards a small uncharted islet which contained some tall trees. As the ship’s carpenter and some crew walked about the islet looking for a suitable tree to provide the lumber for the repairs, they came upon a rudimentary cabin nestled amongst a rocky outcrop. Although nobody was there, the signs of recent habitation were readily apparent.
Finding nothing they could use in the cabin, they continued their search for a suitable tree. As they felled the tree, an arrow pierced the trunk half an inch from the carpenter’s hands.
“Move one inch more and the next arrow will go through your heart,” called a gravelly voice from a thicket near the tree.
“Begging your pardon sir,” replied the frightened carpenter not sure to whom or to where he should address his words. “Our ship is damaged, we need to make repairs. We need only this one tree. I swear, we meant no harm. We did not know we were trespassing.”
“Since the tree has already been felled, you may as well take it. But be warned, take nothing else,” replied the gravelly voice.
“Yes sir,” replied the carpenter respectfully.
The carpenter reported his encounter with the captain who desired to know the identity of the islet’s inhabitants and whether further trade was possible.
With one of his crew, the captain approached the little cabin among the rocks. He called out, “I am Captain Silas from the ship Herallion. I wish to offer you compensation for the tree we felled.” There was no reply from within the cabin. When it became apparent that the islet’s occupant or occupants were not going to answer, Captain Silas wrote a note and left a parcel of goods which he hoped would be considered suitable compensation for the tree.
The ship repaired, Captain Silas carefully charted the waters as he sailed along the coast back to Helidonn. There he told the princess of the strange encounter. The princess asked if the carpenter had kept the arrow and if she could see it. The captain proudly gave it to her as a present. Princess Solindae showed the arrow to her guard who confirmed that it was very like the arrows that the Ludaine fashioned.”
Alice began to get excited again and leaned in to hear every word.
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“Solindae believed that she had found her mother. Solindae reported the facts to her father who was not convinced but indulged his daughter and approved the trip she proposed. King Alton and Princess Solindae boarded the royal ship and guided by the new map, carefully sailed along the coast to the islet Captain Silas found. The royal ship’s captain was wary as the reefs in the area were treacherous and could hole a ship’s hull with ease.
After two days of sailing, they found the islet. Following the hand drawn map the carpenter made of the islet, Solindae accompanied by her father and an assortment of guards and crew to the small cabin nestled amongst the rocks. The cabin again was empty and Solindae called to her mother in the Elven language.
A lone figure appeared above them high on the rocks. Dressed in rags, the figure gave every appearance of being an old man with a long white beard. Then a breeze caught the long white hair and revealed a very different and immediately recognisable figure.
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The figure approached them cautiously picking its way down the cliff face path to the beach. Standing before them was none other than Princess Lindae. Mother and daughter hugged each other for a very long time. Although it had been twenty years since he had last seen her, King Alton knew that his heart would never be his own again.”
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“Oh that’s so sweet. And you said it didn’t have a happy ending!” interrupted Alice. “Then what happened?”
“I’m tired. How about we leave the rest for another time?” sighed Leonidas.
“You still haven’t explained how this story, pleasant though it is, is relevant to our circumstances,” I said to Leonidas.
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“Tomorrow we can talk more. Alice can take the bed while you and I can sleep on the couches. Goodnight Elias.” With that Leonidas fell asleep. No doubt the nectar helped him fall asleep so easily.
Alice and I had no choice. Whispering a soft goodnight to each other, we did as instructed. Although the couch was very comfortable I didn’t think that I would sleep but I did, quite soundly actually, until the sound of someone or something banging on the inner door echoed through the room.
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1 Hammerstein, Oscar II & Rodgers, R., (1959), Do-Re-Mi from The Sound of Music.