Notes: 1) If you see this story anywhere but Literotica it isn't supposed to be there. 2) Because of shorter chapters, this is being posted in chunks.
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*Eight*
Syreilla stepped through the door Ahevhethrah opened and found herself at the edge of an encampment. The elves and Magpie followed with Nali and Odos. When her grandfather stepped through he looked strangely hazy.
"What-"
"No one is supposed to notice him." Odos shook his head, "A few do, and gods can't help but see him, but try not to speak directly to him."
"I can see he's trying to hide, what I can't see is why we're here and not where I wanted to go." She narrowed her eyes as a shadow passed over her father. "Don't get murky on me, old man. I'll step back and let you all play your games until there are no moves left but to let me do what I see should be done."
"Please don't." Magpie put his hand on her shoulder. "Whatever you see I hope it involves sparing the elves."
"It does. I'm going to break the huntress' hold on her people and send them running."
"I don't know if you can." One of the elves shook his head and Magpie snorted.
"Solchion, if anyone could, it would be the Rook."
"If our gods couldn't..." The elf he'd called Solchion looked up and took a breath. "We should let our people know we've returned."
"I'll need to speak to your gods. I wanted to go home first but if I'm already here, I suppose I could get it over with." Syr waved away the elves' baffled expressions, "They don't like me. I imagine more than one of them celebrated on hearing I'd been pushed in the lake. Stealing their stones put me in their bad graces."
"You didn't steal all of them." Odos grinned.
"I didn't have to, but I would have if they hadn't been reasonable and done what I wanted them to do." She put on a wide mirthless smile and he covered his face.
"They'll take back every insult they gave you if you can steal their stones now, my little rook."
"The huntress has them?"
"They were persuaded to gather them together, to consolidate their power. Either they were betrayed or-"
Syreilla held up her hand and tilted her head. "One, that's idiotic to put them all in one place, and two... it was the elf whore wasn't it?" It wasn't really a question. The memory of the glimpse she'd had of the elven goddess' enjoyment in deception and harm flashed like lightning across her mind's eye illuminating fragments of events for the briefest of moments. "The huntress intended to take me somewhere, she just saw a better place to strike on the shore of the black lake. The rest of the elf gods can wait, I need to speak to Nimphon." She made a face and added, "Without going back to his lake."
"I can find Finwion and get his permission for you to talk to him. There are a few other things I need to see to as well." Odos glanced at Ahevhethrah who offered his hand. "Wait here, Syreilla."
"It'll give me a chance to get my Nali settled in somewhere and to make it clear any elf being rude to her will be treated like an elf being rude to me."
"I'll make sure no one is rude to her." Magpie held out his hand to the dwarf. "You can stay with my family."
"You have a family, Magpie?" Syr smiled at him and tilted her head. "Introduce me."
"The world went mad, Syreilla. I want you to promise you'll be on your best behavior if I introduce you."
"Done." She grinned and followed along behind Nali.
As they approached a cluster of tents a familiar-looking woman came rushing out with a smile to embrace Magpie chattering away in elvish.
"My dove, my sister, and our guest don't speak Elvish." Magpie grinned, "Syreilla, this is my wife, Amtalia. Our daughter, Belthamdir Camaenien, is-"
"Syreilla?" The familiar voice didn't sound pleased. "You shouldn't allow her around Belthamdir." Tirnel Acharnion emerged from a tent with a sour look on his face. "And she brought a dwarf?"
"This is why you made me promise to be on my best behavior. You get one warning, Tirnel. Insult my Nali and I-"
"Please." A human came out of another tent in the cluster. "Syreilla, there will be no insults. Matters have been hard enough and he doesn't understand."
She tilted her head as she looked at him with one eye and then the other. His hair was short and his face was lined, with her good eye she could see that hardship had made him look older than his years. "Edun?"
The man's face broke into a familiar smile, "You remember me."
"Of course. I'm sorry I wasn't able to look in on you, I was in-"
"You were imprisoned. I know." Edun looked at Nali and blinked, "Your priestess is still a child."
"Yes. Are you still-"
"I serve Ahevhethrah. He will allow me to look after your Nali and teach her if you wish."
"I'd like that. I was never any good at priesting. Who do I need to visit about your hardships?"
"No one needs to be burned on my behalf." He smiled again. "But I would like for this war to end."
"I'll do my best."
"Priestess?" Nali tapped her leg with a frown, "I thought Baduil..."
The bird began to make a sound like laughter, perched on a tent top.
"He's as bad at priesting as I am. He's a good friend though." She grinned as the bird started to preen. Another lightning flash like a premonition illuminated the events in motion around the girl. "Someday, I hope not soon, you'll have the choice. You can stand under my banner as my priestess and tell the gods you won't break and you won't run, or you can walk away and go back to a different life in the mines, the life your mother wanted for you."
Nali's bearded chin came up. "I'm a dwarf, Lady Rook. We don't break and we don't run."
Beaming, Syreilla bent to press her face to the dwarf girl's, "No, we don't."
Tirnel was looking at her oddly when she straightened. "You're not a dwarf."
"My mother might have had a little bit in her. King Adevalor's daughter-"