When Anneliese returned from her visit to Onychinusa far later than she normally did, and with a large smile on her face, Argrave knew she had made a significant advancement in helping the wounded ancient elf. In truth, hearing of her descriptions of her condition day after day was quite saddening. She had been broken in body and mind as a result of their actions... but in the end, perhaps it was possible to have a cake and eat it, too. They’d just have to make two cakes.
“Was beginning to worry,” Argrave said as she walked up to rejoin them. “It’s dark. Do I need to set a curfew next time?”
“Perhaps you should allow me to accompany you, Your Highness,” Orion suggested, and Argrave cast a glance back at the towering prince.
“It should not be many times more, and I will spend no more spirits on each journey,” Anneliese said, then amended, “...unless she has a particularly bad day, of course. I cannot discount that.”
Argrave put his hand on her shoulder, leading her forward as he explained what she’d missed. “The myriarchs have been electing the new Supreme Myriarch.”
“Still?” Anneliese looked at him in surprise.
“Mmhmm.” Argrave nodded. “Doesn’t matter who wins, really. All of them seemed to agree with the alliance we proposed.”
Orion cracked his knuckles, and said under his breath, “As they should.”
“While we wait... let’s visit with those still with us,” Argrave suggested, and Anneliese gave a nod of confirmation. “We have to broach that idea of ours with them...”
#####
Artur, Vasilisa, and Moriatran sat around the fire, somewhat removed from the Veidimen nearby.
“Reflecting magic? All of it, all of those S-rank spells, just bounced?” Artur said in a grim whisper.
Vasilisa looked at him with her cold blue eyes. “If His Majesty hears you know of this, he won’t be pleased. You were supposed to be fighting alongside the Veidimen, as we ordered us. Instead, you were spying on him.”
Moriatran gave a sagely nod, but added nothing more.
“I’m not eager to go into battle anywhere the king’s not,” Artur shook his head. “It’s too risky. Easy to send a man into death, but harder to march into it yourself.” Artur rubbed his squat hands together. “But by all extent, he fought the harder opponent than you faced. Surely you felt their power when we confronted them... but His Majesty faced them head on. All the might of their magic.”
Moriatran scratched at his brow with his wizened hands, asking, “And you’re claiming Argrave made these spells bounce?”
“S-rank spells,” Artur nodded. “Hundreds of them, maybe thousands. Definitely thousands, given how long he kept doing it. This was a barrage that put gods in their place... the same gods we saw tear through this forest those weeks ago.... and Argrave was the most important combatant, not them.”
In the Veidimen camp, all of the snow elves came to attention. Artur craned, looking to see what was happening. It seemed that Argrave had returned. After receiving a brief status update from Grimalt, Bastel, and Rasten, he quickly left them indistinguishable words and headed for the three Magisters by the fire.
“Look at this quiet bunch,” Argrave began as he joined them. The three offered subdued greetings, and so Argrave quipped, “If you stay so solemn, I might think I stumbled across you while you were talking about me behind my back.”
Artur’s soul left his body as the king glared sternly. Then, his face shifted into a grin and he laughed loudly, patting Vasilisa’s shoulder.
“I’m just kidding around with you. Always wanted to do that...” The king mused, settling down by the fire. Artur’s heart took minutes to slow again. “Not going to be here longer,” he continued, the flame reflecting off his gray eyes as he stared at it. “Things are coming to a close. But while I have you here... I’ve got some questions for you three.”
“You are the king,” Moriatran said simply, prompting him to ask away.
“First... Artur.” Argrave looked to him. “What we talked about, your enchanting institution... Elenore’s interested. You’d be merging with an organization she already had partially established, and you’d be subordinate to the crown. The finer details of pay and authority can be worked out... but I’m confident we can get it through parliament.”
Artur straightened his back. “Your Majesty, that’s... that sounds wonderful.”
“Yeah... wait until you get the work,” Argrave scooted aside, making room for Anneliese who came to sit just beside him. Orion came to stand guard at the back of the royal pair. “Fact is, we’re going to need to prepare for threats like we’ve faced here on every corner of the kingdom. I can’t imagine you’ll get more than two hours of sleep, daily. You’ll be preparing the entire kingdom for threats on the level of divinity.”
“And we must not prepare alone,” Anneliese cut in. “We must actively combat the opportunists in this cycle of judgment.”
“That’s right,” Argrave nodded. “Elenore tells me the expeditionary parties we sent out are coming back one by one, bringing grand spoils to Vasquer. You need to receive, copy, and distribute them en masse. You’ll have plenty of resources, and even more responsibility, Artur. I hope you enjoy it.” He looked next to Vasilisa. “And you...”
“No,” Vasilisa answered at once, shaking her head. “Whatever it is, I’m going to my sister in the north, and I’m staying there. Following you is bad for the heart.”
“...fair enough,” Argrave conceded. “Regardless, I’ll say it. Perhaps Moriatran will be interested.” The king cleared his throat. “Fact is, proactivity beats reactivity. We need to locate and destroy problematic gods, and forge alliances with beneficial gods as they appear. Naturally, I’ll need to employ a large contingent of powerful mages, who will in turn learn even more powerful spells.”
“What is beyond S-rank?” Moriatran questioned.
“Nothing,” Argrave shook his head. “But there are peaks left unreached on that level... partly because they couldn’t be reached, and partly because they shouldn’t be reached,” the king ran his hand across his legs as his gray eyes lost themselves in the flame.
Vasilisa poked the fire with a charred stick, and it let up a plume of flame as the branches of the redwoods they used as firewood collapsed inwards. “Hunting gods now, are you?”
“The ones I can,” Argrave confirmed.
Vasilisa laughed, fixing some of her hair behind her ear. She looked at Argrave squarely. “When will you stop setting your sights higher?”
Argrave smiled, enjoying the warmth of the flame as night set upon them. He thought on her question as the Magisters grew drowsier and drowsier from the flame. In time, an answer came to him.
“When there’s nothing higher to see,” Argrave said quietly.
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