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The Knights Guardian had wanted to take him back to Far Away, where there would be the best clinics and doctors and medical modules and memory edits. Le
Several dozen Silfen were camping in the broad glade. A semicircle of wide marquees had been set up, with long heraldic flags fluttering from the tips of tall poles. A huge fire was blazing in the middle of the semicircle. Some Silfen sat around it, playing flutelike instruments. More were dancing.
Araminta wasn’t entirely surprised to see a human woman among them. She was dressed in Silfen clothes: a simple white shirt with intricate dragons embroidered in gold and turquoise thread, a loose petal-layered cotton skirt that swirled and flared out as she danced. Her face was rapt, lost in the enjoyment of the music. Wavy golden hair swished around her head. Araminta could just glimpse a long chin and well-defined cheekbones-similar to her own.
“Ozziebedamned,” Tomansio muttered. He was staring around at the scene as if the elves had enchanted him.
Then Clouddancer and Bradley were walking toward them. Araminta hurried over. The dancers encircled her, warbling approval and greetings.
“You did well,” Bradley said.
“Thank you,” she said. “Thank you for believing in me.”
“In your case it came easy,” Clouddancer said, his circular mouth fluting out to laugh.
“I’ve brought somebody,” she said.
“We know.”
“Please help him. He suffers from terrible demons in his head like you once did,” she told Bradley.
Bradley’s wings spread wide. “And if the Silfen can cure me …”
“That’s what I hoped.”
“He can walk with us,” Clouddancer said. “Where he will go can never be foretold.”
“He’s sure-footed,” Araminta promised. “Look what he did for everyone.”
“Oh, how you have grown. You are a wonder, Araminta. Mr. Bovey is a lucky man.”
She gri
“I think I’d better go and speak to your other friend before he explodes,” Bradley said.
Araminta laughed at how scared Tomansio looked as Bradley went over to him. The toughest superwarrior humbled by his idol. Speaking of which … She slithered through the dancers, finding herself swaying in time to the rhythm. Somewhere by the end of the marquees two of the biggest Silfen she’d ever seen started drumming, pounding a compulsive beat.
The woman beckoned her over with both hands. “I’m Mellanie,” she called above the music.
“Yeah, I know.”
“Of course you do. I’m proud of you, Araminta.”
“Thanks. That really means a lot.”
“It’s all over now, so let’s dance.”
They came from across the galaxy, the Raiel arkships and warships, congregating in orbit around the star where Centurion Station was based. From there the starscape was unchanged. The Wall stars still shone with their normal intensity, giving no hint of the endeavor they had just driven. It would be centuries before their leap in luminosity would be visible to any observer standing beside the ruins of the observation outpost.
Paula accompanied Qatux as they teleported into Makkathran. They arrived in Golden Park, where Querencia’s seabirds were still flapping above them, calling out in confusion as they hunted their missing sea. Paula turned a full circle, as admiring as any tourist as she took in the tall white pillars and the sweeping domes of the Orchard Palace.
“I never expected to stand here,” she admitted.
Qatux was staring out over Paula to the towers of Eyrie beyond. “Nor I,” he said. They made their way together through the overgrown park, following the curve of Champ Canal until it took them to Birmingham Pool. Paula was only too well aware of all Edeard’s gallant events that had played out around the pool and down the canal, yet she kept her silence, knowing Qatux was here for only one thing.
As they started along the side of Great Major Canal to High Pool, Paula looked over the weed-saturated water to the unmistakable Culverit ziggurat. That was when she finally appreciated Justine’s melancholia at how empty the city was. She was thrilled just to make this visit, but to have seen it during the Waterwalker’s heyday, watching the intrigues unfold and meeting people she knew only from dreams-that would have been glorious.
There was a bridge she didn’t remember across Market Canal, taking them into Eyrie itself. When she glanced up at the crooked towers, she could see past the crystal dome to the vast constellation of Raiel ships gathered protectively around their ancient comrade.
“What’s going to happen next?” she asked.
“We will decide together,” Qatux told her. “The change will come hard for us, I expect. The Void gave us purpose for so long; it is a part of what we became.”
“You know you will always be welcome in the Commonwealth.”
“Your kindness does you credit. However, we do have a responsibility to the other species living in the High Angel and all our other arkships.”
“Will you take them home?”
“Possibly. Some no longer have homeworlds they can return to. It has already been suggested we accept our original undertaking and spread out to new galaxies to begin again.”
“And you, Qatux, what about you? Do the Raiel still have a homeworld?”
“Yes. But it is not one any of us recognize. Two other species have come to sentience there in the time since we declared war on the Void. There will be no going back for us.”
“Perhaps that is for the best. I tried going home once. I had grown too much while I was away. We all do.”
Finally they stood in front of the Lady’s church. Qatux hesitated on the steps leading up to the entrance.
“You don’t have to,” Paula said compassionately.
“I do.”
The church was silent inside. Light shone through its transparent central roof to illuminate the center, leaving the vestibules in shadow. Right on the edge of the silver-hazed light, the Lady’s white marble statue stood resolute. Paula gazed up at the solemn well-crafted face, and the corners of her mouth lifted in an appreciative smile. “She looks so different here,” she said. “But then, I only ever met her once. We parted as soon as we got to Far Away.”
“I remember,” Qatux said. “It was the day I first met her.”
“I disapproved.”
“I loved her even then. She was so colorful, so flawed, so imbued with life. She taught me to feel again. I owe her everything.”
“How did she wind up here?”
“She was re-lifed, of course, after the Cat had finished with her. I supplied the memories for her new body, for I shared everything she felt right up until the last. That was why we parted. There was nothing left for us to know.”
“So she boarded a Brandt colony ship to start a new life. So many Brandts were disillusioned with the Commonwealth after the Starflyer War, they say almost a fifth of the senior dynasty members left. They would have welcomed her on board. She must have been quite solitary, poor thing.”
“It was for the best. Then Makkathran must have heard her as they flew around the Wall-somehow. It mistook her for a Raiel, for our minds had shared so much, and it called out.”
“And the Void did the rest. As it always does.”
“Yes.” Qatux extended a tentacle and stroked the statue’s cheek. “Goodbye, my beloved.” He turned and left the church.
Paula couldn’t resist one final over-the-shoulder check just to make sure she wasn’t mistaken. For an instant she could’ve sworn the statue was gri