Post by Westley Roberts on Nov 16, 2017 18:20:15 GMT -5
The first thing he noticed was that there were people around. Not an altogether unusual thing at most academies, of course, but at this one, considering the disarray he arrived to find, this was cause for concern.
Damned portal. Why does everything have to take longer in Florin? He’d jumped in within the hour it’d appeared on his acreage, yet judging by the seemingly-well-adjusted population all around him now, the others had likely received their passages weeks ago. Of course they had. First the mail system, now this. No matter. There were bigger fish to fry. (Oh, good God; was Nessie still here? Or had that been a rumor in the first place? There was a question to ask.)
There were a number of people he needed to find. Whomever was headmaster, for one thing. No doubt they would have answers, as well as plans. But no one came before Della. After Buttercup, there’d been no one he’d cared for as deeply. Not even Kiara, if only due to how briefly they’d known each other before she vanished and returned with amnesia.
(It was getting somewhat harder to remember why he’d even been fond of this place, come to think of it.)
The dormitories seemed a nonstarter now. He’d expected as much. She wouldn’t be staying in her old room. She’d have aged a decade, if her world and his had passed the time at the same rate. If they hadn’t, God only knew, but either way, there was only one place he knew for a fact would be the likeliest chance to find her…. When in doubt, follow the books.
The library looked disturbed. (As in ‘recently removed from disuse,’ not as in the usual way.) A final stray vine still slouched across the doorway; he slashed it away without thought or effort, advancing slowly, sword in front of him, just in case of coyotes or any sort of warlock-related dangers ahead.
As he reached it, dusty windowlight filled the main room. And instead of danger, he found what he’d been looking for. The back of a head. A redhead, to be precise.
He straightened, quietly sheathing his sword, and announced himself with a rather emotional smile.
“With concentration like that, I might think you’d been in here all this time. Did you read straight through the war?”
Damned portal. Why does everything have to take longer in Florin? He’d jumped in within the hour it’d appeared on his acreage, yet judging by the seemingly-well-adjusted population all around him now, the others had likely received their passages weeks ago. Of course they had. First the mail system, now this. No matter. There were bigger fish to fry. (Oh, good God; was Nessie still here? Or had that been a rumor in the first place? There was a question to ask.)
There were a number of people he needed to find. Whomever was headmaster, for one thing. No doubt they would have answers, as well as plans. But no one came before Della. After Buttercup, there’d been no one he’d cared for as deeply. Not even Kiara, if only due to how briefly they’d known each other before she vanished and returned with amnesia.
(It was getting somewhat harder to remember why he’d even been fond of this place, come to think of it.)
The dormitories seemed a nonstarter now. He’d expected as much. She wouldn’t be staying in her old room. She’d have aged a decade, if her world and his had passed the time at the same rate. If they hadn’t, God only knew, but either way, there was only one place he knew for a fact would be the likeliest chance to find her…. When in doubt, follow the books.
The library looked disturbed. (As in ‘recently removed from disuse,’ not as in the usual way.) A final stray vine still slouched across the doorway; he slashed it away without thought or effort, advancing slowly, sword in front of him, just in case of coyotes or any sort of warlock-related dangers ahead.
As he reached it, dusty windowlight filled the main room. And instead of danger, he found what he’d been looking for. The back of a head. A redhead, to be precise.
He straightened, quietly sheathing his sword, and announced himself with a rather emotional smile.
“With concentration like that, I might think you’d been in here all this time. Did you read straight through the war?”