An Exaltation of Muse Ch. 04
Thalia is mentor to the frustrated muses assigned to writers who don't publish stories but comment freely—and frequently harshly—on other writers' stories. She has dubbed this unlucky lot
Muses to the Overt Commentariat (MOCs)
; they meet each Wednesday at their local,
The Fleeting Muse
. Three Wednesdays ago she mocked some of the commentators assigned to the muses present, paying particular attention to the one attended to by Clio; she then held Clio up to ridicule for not properly inspiring him. Two Wednesdays ago, she apologized profusely for being so thoughtless and rude, then tried to explain how and why she came to be assigned as mentor to the MOCs. Wednesday last she was struck by a lightning bolt as she left the pub, found herself in a surgery waiting room, then was taken to a pub in a sedan chair borne by invisible carriers. In this pub,
The Uneasy Head
, she is met by her father Zeus, the king of all gods, who advises her how to find her heart's desire.
-§§§-
Previously on
An Exaltation of Muse:
Zeus leaned forward and fixed her with a godly glare. "Be consistent; don't jump back and forth between being a sarcastic
prima donna
and a comforting best friend. In your discourse with others, always be honest; never take the easy way, instead make the hard choices." He cushioned her hand beneath his. "And don't worry about them liking you, Thalia, worry about them respecting you."
He abruptly stood, his anorak and cap replaced the chiton. His face reverted to the features of a handsome, virile young man, not the commanding visage of the king of gods. "Now, if you will excuse me, I have an appointment—or soon will make one—with a winsome milkmaid I spied entering a nearby barn." He leaned down and kissed her gently on the top of her head, then disappeared.
Thalia looked about frantically, but he was truly gone; no one else seemed to have noticed his disappearance. Just then she heard several horses whickering outside the pub, then a coachman opened the door and looked about. Spying Thalia, he gestured for her to come along.
"Your coach awaits, My Lady Thalia." When he saw her glance toward the toilets, he hastened to assure her. "You'll not need to use the facilities, it shall be a brief journey." And so it was.
-§§§-
IN WHAT SEEMED but a few minutes, Thalia felt and heard the carriage wheels clattering over cobblestones, then they lurched to a stop. Once again the horses whickered their impatience at not moving. She peered out the window and was startled to see that they were standing outside
The Fleeting Muse
.
While she pondered how such a long outbound trip could be navigated in reverse so quickly, the coachman clambered down, opened the door, and placed a velvet-covered footstool on the ground. After Thalia stepped down, he handed her the briefcase and purse she had carried into the pub when she last visited. He addressed her before she could ask how he came by her possessions.
"It's now Wednesday next, yer Ladyship. Time flows like a river, and we be aught but flotsam and jetsam carried hither and yon in its current." With that, he gathered up the footstool, climbed back up to his post, fanned the reins in his hands, and shouted "Blucher!" The four black chargers reared, whinnied, then thundered off, dragging the carriage up Tribar Mews at a terrible pace.
Thalia stood for a few moments, trying to reconcile the footman's calendrical announcement and florid philosophy with her perception that only a few hours, at most, had passed since Zeus summoned her from this very spot with a lightning bolt. Accepting that hers was not to question why, she set the briefcase and purse down, smoothed her hair and clothes—noting without surprise that she was wearing different, yet still stylish, business wear—then picked up her accoutrement and entered
The Fleeting Muse
.
-§-