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Arrivals
Miranna Aedori, Written by Jackson
Posted on Sat, Aug 21, 2010 19:36 pm
Miranna was glad to be gone from the stern eye of Koralyn Sedai, even if it meant leaving behind the comforting sight of Issyl Gaidar and her sword. Their trip from Shol Arbela had been…eventful, to say the least, and painful and humiliating if she was to say more. Still vivid in the girl’s mind was the image of the switch floating before her eyes, Koralyn’s smooth hand reaching out to grab it before Miranna felt the sting of it against her flesh.
The Aes Sedai had beat her!
Their trip had been even harder after the night they’d made camp not far off the merchant’s road. Miranna, shocked beyond all belief, had at first been subdued into a meek silence of obedience, but as soon as she woke the next morning, her bottom aflame, she had began to rebel again until the Aes Sedai had bent her over the saddle on the ground and switched her again, right atop the bruises from the night before. She had been offered Healing then, but Miranna’s pride had her refuse and pull herself up into the saddle gingerly, her face a mask of pain for the day that followed.
Yes, she was glad to be free of them, but she was hesitant about what was to come next. She was delaying her footsteps, her strides short and slow as she moved through the corridors of the White Tower to the offices of the Mistress of the Novices. Part of her – Light, all of her! – wanted to run off and find the Training Grounds, to try and hide herself in the anonymity of the trainees there and throw herself into training so she could be as fierce as Issyl, but Koralyn had already told her that they would find her if she was to go and hide in the Training Grounds. They would find her anywhere, she suspected: Koralyn talked as if she could feel Miranna and her apparently ability to use the One Power.
She felt that Koralyn was proving some kind of point to her, by making her go to this Candance Sedai by herself instead of being pushed and pulled down the corridor. Light burn the Aes Sedai, she thought viciously as her feet continued to drag her in the direction that Koralyn had pointed out to her.
She didn’t want to be an Aes Sedai – she wanted to become a Gaidar!
In a fit of irritation, Miranna threw one of her worked braids across her shoulder, the gentle chiming of the silver beads that had been worked into them in Arafellian style comforting and familiar to her. Her large, dark eyes that stood out against her unusually pale skin were fierce and cold with anger, framed by her dark braids that were already slipping past her ear as she strode down the corridor, her arms swinging angrily and her pace now suddenly fast and furious.
Miranna would never admit it, but she was hesitant to meet this Candance Sedai. Koralyn had warned her of how gentle she was being with her compared to how the Mistress of Novices would be. Anyone that would hold the power that Koralyn threatened she would – Light, it sounded like the woman was going to control every decision in her life! – was someone to be feared. Even if Miranna would rather die than tell anyone she was scared of an Aes Sedai. Despite her fear, her anger ensured that her stride was now confident and fast, her skirts swishing out behind her as she began to daydream about how she would sneak off into the Training Grounds to play with the trainee’s swords.
The way she was walking, with her eyes focused only at the end of the corridor where she had been told the offices of the Mistress of Novices lay, it was really no surprise when Miranna barrelled right into another girl who suddenly turned into the corridor, heading in the same direction as Miranna to Candance Sedai’s office. Miranna didn’t even feel the girl until she’d charged right into her, her legs twisting with the girl’s in a way that brought them both crashing to the ground.
Surprised, Miranna felt the breath knocked clean out of her and gave a gasp of shock as her bruised legs – she had refused Healing throughout the entire trip to Tar Valon – were smashed against the tiled floor.
“Oh, Light!” she swore, angry with herself for being so clumsy, and worried she may earn yet another beating for running into someone.
OOC: I hope you don’t mind I jumped in on the intro thread before Jeremy replies :)
In reply to An Overdue Arrival[show]/[hide]
((OOC: Sorry for being gone so long. I got a new job not long after I joined, and that took up all my time for a while. I had nearly forgotten how much fun it is to write here. :) This picks up where my previous thread left off, which can be found way near the bottom of the White Tower (from before there were other boards :-o), if you're curious. There will definitely be opportunity for people to jump into this one!))
***
Three months!
Eleria Merelei, Aes Sedai of the Blue Ajah and Queen of Andor—well, Zerese certainly thought she could be Queen of Andor, with all her grace and regal composure—could not have been more wrong in her estimations. She could not really be blamed for it, though. Trying to move through the Black Hills, nearly separating Saldaea from the rest of the Borderlands and from Tar Valon, was like wading through a bog, and with only one leg working besides. She had estimated a week or two at best, but as each day passed and a new dead end was found, that estimate kept creeping upwards. Or perhaps it was more precise to say that the estimate remained exactly the same, while time crept ever forward. Near the end of the weeks spent in those mountains and hills, Zerese began to dream of running up a flight of stairs, desperately knowing that she would die of hunger or thirst if she did not reach the top, and yet no matter how high she climbed, she could never reach the top.
It was fortunate that the three of them had come so well prepared. It was nearly two months before they found their way out of the Black Hills; though the mountains did not cover a large area, they were a winding labyrinth of confusion, and each attempt to pass through to the east and rejoin the main road to Tar Valon only put them further west, and sometimes even further north besides. There were days when Zerese was certain they had made absolutely no progress at all, and others when she could have sworn they had moved closer to Maradon than Tar Valon! No, Zerese would not blame Eleria Sedai. She could not possibly know the Black Hills better than anyone else, and it would not do for a Novice of the White Tower to go around casting needless blame. Think of the bright side, she had told herself. At least we have long since lost those Trollocs.
What was unfortunate was that Eleria had all but given over their lessons. She claimed that it was because there was only so much Zerese could be properly taught out in the wilds like this; Zerese was convinced it was a measure of the Aes Sedai’s frustration, however. They continued to run through the most basic of lessons most nights, enough to ensure that Zerese could embrace the Source without harming herself, but Eleria would not go beyond that.
Eventually they did find a path out of the hills, but on entirely the wrong side, west and just between the forks of the River Ivo. Oh, that had put a burr in Eleria’s saddle, and even Liam seemed agitated to know it, though they certainly controlled it well. Better than Zerese had, anyway. Eleria had upbraided her no fewer than twice for complaining that after nearly two months they had only covered as much ground as a good rider could have in days. And then Zerese had reminded herself that it was neither Eleria’s fault nor Liam’s. Not that she had really blamed them to start, of course, but her temper did have a way of seeming to lash out when not properly controlled.
The following month saw them take an extended route around the Black Hills, at first in order to find the nearest town in which to resupply, a sleepy hamlet at the fork of the river called Ivo’s Hollow. It was well that they were in Andor now—well, they were almost in Andor, anyway—because Eleria knew the countryside well, and their travel progressed much more smoothly. A resupply was necessary because their own stock of rations had been stretched to its absolute limit; the three of them were down to a stringy meal per day, usually just bread and some roots found in the hillside, and even that would not last them more than another couple of weeks.
Well, despite her irritation, Zerese certainly found that a warm bath and a good night’s sleep in an actual bed did wonders for her, and in the middle of a long soak, she could almost forget why she had been irritated in the first place. That was just the one day, though; Eleria and Liam took no time for rest, furiously working to rebuild their supplies, and before the sun had even thought to peek over the horizon the next morning, they were on their way.
The trip was still far from over, however Zerese wished otherwise. They had to charter a ferry across the River Ivo, and then one across the River Haevin, and that was all before circling the many miles remaining around the Black Hills and Dragonmount. That had put a touch of awe and fear in her; the thing was like a black dagger cutting open the sky, and very nearly succeeding. Even miles from its slopes as they were, Zerese had to crane her neck just to see its jagged peak. And was that smoke rising there? No, it couldn’t be; what sort of mountain would make smoke?
It was less than a day from there before an even more impressive sight crowned the horizon. It should not have been, perhaps, compared to Dragonmount, dwarfed by it, and yet somehow the black spire had faded from view when Zerese saw it. The White Tower. It was said the Wheel of Time turns around Tar Valon, and Tar Valon turns around the White Tower; looking at it even from this distance, how could that not be so?
The rest of the journey was pleasant enough that Zerese actually wished it had not been so brief. Eleria and Liam lightened visibly as soon as the White Tower appeared on the horizon and they found their way to the road between Caemlyn and Tar Valon. It was a welcome change, though Eleria would still teach her nothing more of the Power. There wasn’t really time, anyway. And with the shining walls of that white city drawing ever closer, Zerese could not be brought to care.
She had found her way home.
***
“Eleria! You’re back!” a little woman sang in the high accents of Cairhien as they came within thirty paces of entering the White Tower. She was a dark-headed woman with the agelessness about her, bright blue eyes almost jarring in that pale face. Eleria climbed—flowed, really—off her mare and nodded her head in acknowledgement of the other woman.
“We were forced to detour through the Black Hills, Aislin,” Eleria responded, which seemed nearly enough to satisfy Aislin, except that she opened her mouth as if to ask something else and was cut off swiftly as Eleria said, “We will speak more on it later, Aislin, when we have had time to recuperate.” Zerese wondered why Eleria was avoiding mention of the Trollocs, but supposed it just wasn’t proper conversation for public spaces. Aislin looked to be of the Blue Ajah as well—she wore no shawl, but her fine silk dress lent itself heavily to hues of blue, despite being slashed with violet—so Zerese suspected they would discuss it in their Ajah’s quarters later on.
“Then this is the Novice you were sent for?” Aislin said, rounding on Zerese before she had even dismounted her horse. From her tone, their three-month delay might never have happened; Eleria could just as easily have come back from an easy ride. Under those bright eyes, entirely too intimidating for a woman reaching no higher than her shoulders, Zerese felt like her soul was being read. Perhaps it was, in a way. “Not bad, not bad at all.”
“Candance Sedai will be waiting for you, child,” Eleria said over her shoulder. She was already climbing the steps to the Tower itself, hiking up her rather dirty riding skirts and yet looking every inch fit for an Aes Sedai, or a queen. “You remember what I taught you about running, yes?”
Zerese bobbed a curtsey that would have done the most seasoned Novice proud. “How quickly, Eleria Sedai?”
The chestnut-haired woman nodded quickly and turned her attention back to the stairs. “Just keep up with me, child. The Mistress of Novices does not tolerate dawdling.”
Replies to Arrivals
A Momentous Occasion Novice Zerese Demenia, Sun, Aug 22, 2010 20:04 pm