As I walked away from Casey, I spotted Astrid, her eyes on me, and a knowing look on her face.
I hesitated for a moment, then walked over to her.
"You made a tough decision, Auslander. I commend you on your prudence."
I shook my head.
"I'm not sure this is worthy of commendation. Part of me thinks I failed to manage this situation properly."
Astrid shrugged.
"Such failures are inevitable for one in your position. It is the manner of handling it that defines the character. Take my life-bringer; he chose cowardice over accountability, and very nearly made everyone pay for his error."
I sighed.
"Your ability; to predict the future? How does it work?"
She studied me for a bit.
"The energy required to use it is significant. Do you desire a reading?" she asked, and I bit my lip, as I considered it.
"Couldn't hurt, I think."
She smiled a little.
"Sometimes, it does."
"What? If the future is unpleasant?" I asked, and she smiled.
"Yes. Knowing can be its own torment," she explained, and I shook my head.
"But, can't an unpleasant outcome be prevented? If it's known of in advance?"
She scoffed.
"Prevented? What force of the gods can achieve such a thing?" she asked, and I tilted my head at her.
"If you tell me that I'm about to trip, can't I prevent it from happening by making sure that I walk carefully?" I asked, and she laughed.
"You seem to think divination to be some cheap trick. If my ability saw you falling, then there is no certainty that you have tripped, Auslander. Nor will it be clear when such a fate comes to pass."
I rubbed my chin thoughtfully.
"So, the things you see... they always come true eventually?"
She nodded, and I frowned a bit.
"What's the matter, Auslander. Do you fear your destiny?"
"Well, not having control over it is a bit... disconcerting. Are you going to tell me that I should embrace what I cannot change?"
She shook her head.
"Image a windstorm, Auslander. A fierce spiral that will rip a fully grown birch from the root. Against such chaotic a force, even the deeply rooted canopy tree will bend and quiver; but to the singular leaf, cast from its branch and at the mercy of the sky, this force is but a current upon which it glides. Dancing in the wind, it is cast far from its source, and touches lands that it's branches could never reach. But the leaf can never be a tree, and when the journey ends, so too does its life."
I thought about her words.
"So, there are two ways to withstand the coming storms; to root myself so firmly to the ground that I cannot be uprooted, or to dance upon the winds, and detach myself from the things that ground me to this earth, then expire when my time is up."
"Yes, Auslander."
"And which path is better?" I asked, and she laughed.
"Better? They are simply two different paths. One, perhaps filled with more strife and suffering than the other, but is the absence of struggle truly better than a life lived for enjoyment, but which accomplishes nothing but the enjoyment of living?"
"Interesting," I replied thoughtfully. "So, you'll look into my future then?" I asked, and she nodded.
"I will need to rest and prepare, but I sense that you may better draw a premonition out of me than the many others who have tried," she said, her eyes travelling the length of my body as she did.
She walked away, and I spotted Lucia casting furtive glances at me from behind a nearby tree.
"Come on," I called, and the girl hesitated for a bit, before coming over, and I scooped her up.
"Naytan," she said, and I pinched her little nose, but she didn't giggle, and instead studied me with a worried look.
"What's that about? Do you really wanna train that badly?" I asked, and she shook her head.
"Don't be... sad," she said, and I chuckled a little.
"I'm not sad, kiddo. Just tired."
She wrapped her arms around my neck and held on, so I walked with her in my arms, over to Gisela, who also had that worried look on her face.
"Is everything alright... between the gods?"
I nodded.
"Did we upset everyone with that squabble?" I asked, and she shook her head.
"Most do not understand, but I worry... for you," she admitted.
"I'm fine," I reassured her, offering her a smile, and she nodded, though still appearing unconvinced. "Have the seeds been acquired for the ceremony?"
She nodded, gesturing to one of the supply carts, and she withdrew a sack from the cart which held several of the seeds.
"How do I do this?" I asked.
"Locate the core, then pour the energy from yourself into the seed. It can only absorb a little at a time, but when the core activates, the seed is planted, and beautiful flowers will spring forth."
"Do we announce the planting?" I asked, and she nodded.
"Many will come to observe the progress."
She led me to a spot, on the outer ring of the grove, closest to the roads which led between the cluster to the north and Palancar to the east.
As I got there, I sat down, then set Lucia down onto my lap, and she quickly curled up there as she often did when she was going to sleep.
Maybe you were tired after all,
I thought, as I took the seed into my hand, and began to concentrate.
Gisela, I noted, had taken a seat beside me on the floor, and I wondered for a moment if I'd ever seen the girl sit on bare earth like that before.
She seemed a little uncomfortable, and I observed the reaction with some amusement.
Come to think of it, Gisela's status within Palancar had probably afforded her luxuries all her life, hadn't it?
Maybe this life of campgrounds and travel had been rougher on her than I'd imagined.
"Gisela. You mentioned that the princess wished to oversee the selection of my queen," I began, and she nodded. "What did she wish for her people?"
She shifted a little, though I wasn't sure if her discomfort came from her seat on the bare earth, or my question.
"The princess believed that we are a civilization in fade," Gisela explained. "Many disagreed, and others believed that all things, no matter how grand, eventually fade anyway... but the power of the gods is one which shapes destiny itself. Perhaps, she believed, that you might shape our destiny into one that endures."
"What do you believe?" I asked, and Gisela blinked, as she studied me.
"I do not understand," she replied.
"You told me what the princess believes will happen; what about you?"
She shook her head.
"My eyes do penetrate the veil of uncertainty as one such as her," she replied, and I shrugged.
"Even so. Did you see the same signs that she mentioned?"
She bit her lip, then considered it for a moment, before shaking her head.
"I did not," she replied.
"Then, would you have sought us out. Us gods, I mean."