Pril gave a nod and sweeping wave of her hand to the four fully armoured guards standing outside Principia Abundance. The sight of these women, Disciples of Strength, comforted her far more than the Enforcers of Form at the entrance to Endowment Hall. With highly improper haste, she darted to the back of the room where her Mistress stood, blonde hair awry, leaning heavily on her desk with fingers splayed.
"Mistress," she gasped.
Atreya, her long dark hair neatly coordinated with her working blue outfit, and Shanata in her armour, helm tucked under her arm, both looked up in panic at Pril's sudden appearance.
"Yes?" the Sorceress's bewilderment strained her voice.
"Talla, Mistress," Pril gasped. "I saw her run into Form with the Fighters. I would have stopped her but I-"
"She did what!?" Abundance asked, her eyes alight with angry fire. "As if I haven't spent the last several weeks making up excuses to dodge whatever reason they have for wanting to 'interview' her again."
"I saw her run off and she looked upset," Pril straightened to attention, fully certain she shouldn't have heard what her Mistress had shouted. "She's probably armoured up by now. I think she means to go with them."
"Because of Zhair'lo," Atreya put in. "She'll have found out somehow."
"The Seal Breaker?" Pril stepped back. "What's he got to do with this?"
"He's going to be the Conduit," Atreya explained with strained patience, jerking her head toward the other women to let Pril know this fact had caused the stress amongst them. "Quite possibly, he already is."
"Rutting beasts," Pril whispered as she looked aside and tried to regain her breath. "He's so young ..."
"Find Talla and get her back here," Abundance snapped.
"Let her go."
Abundance's straightened up with indignation. Her anger dissipated into astonishment as she looked back and forth between Atreya and Shanata, who had spoken the words simultaneously.
"Pardon?"
Without moving her head, Atreya turned her eyes to give Pril a sideways glance, but she only looked at her Sorceress and planted her feet.
"I say again," the Sorceress hissed flatly. "Pardon?"
The two mutineers looked at each other for a moment before facing their superior again.
"Our duty is not just to the Temple," Atreya's lips formed firm, thin lines.
"Nor," Shanata continued the quote, "just to the women."
"The Temple serves the people," Atreya continued the Virgin lecture. "The women and the men."
"Or it serves nothing," Shanata put a note of finality in her voice.
"What has that to do with Talla?" Abundance put her hands on her hips. "She is no warrior. Who will -?"
"She made her choice," Atreya, impossibly, interrupted. "She is a woman and we are to respect how she wishes to Serve."
"More to the point," Shanata carried on. "Who is protecting Zhair'lo?"
"Are you two insane?" the Sorceress asked, her voice carrying a bit too far. "Zhair'lo will be the Conduit, the whole point of the journey. The Fighters will do their utmost to protect him and deliver him to Beshenna."
"To Beshenna," Shanata said. "And then what? He is eighteen, nowhere near ready. We've already discussed what state a man is in after that. Who will guard him then? Who will watch over him as well as Talla would?"
"You are relying on their personal loyalty," Abundance glared at her underlings. "The feelings that landed them in so much trouble just a few ... how long ago was that again?"
"So be it," Shanata folded her arms. "Let my sister go."
"Indeed," Atreya moved to stand hip to hip beside Atreya.
"Sister?" Abundance stalled. "I though that an honorary title."
"I changed my mind," Atreya said. "Just now."
The Sorceress sniffed at the air, tossed her hair and stared into the distance.
"Very, well," she pronounced finally. "By the gods it's on your heads. Especially yours, Shanata. You're going with them as Our Representative. You watch out for her. She'll watch out for him."
Shanata's eyes sharpened with excitement. "Mistress," she said as she bowed, turned, and rushed away.
"I've never seen her move so quickly," Abundance noted. "I wouldn't have guessed her for bloodthirsty."
"Hardly," Atreya pointed out. "Her goal now is to find Talla before anyone in Form notices."
-===================-
Atop a balcony overlooking Form's largest practice field, two women stood, alike in dignity and stature. Beneath them, the Temple's military rolled itself out across a wide, torch-lit yard. The smell of leather mixed with the human scents of anxiety and excitement as hundreds of women marched and hundreds more rushed to don their armour. Others, always at the ready, had laid out stations with weapons.
Every woman had a place to go and knew her obligations. If one had the eye for it, one could see the organization and purpose in the chaos, as well as spot those out of place.
"Oh, Madra Zen. What's she doing now?", the taller of the two women, a lightly armoured Valkyrie, leaned over the solid oak railing to get a better view through the visor of her helm.
"Mistress?"
"The little one, look," she pointed. "An old grudge breaking into a new mutiny."
The second woman, graceful as a swan, extended her neck to look down into the beehive.
"Talla, Mistress?" she whispered, not quite sure of the identity of the lost woman in her armour. "What's she doing here?"
"Isn't it obvious?" the first said. "We can see the anger from here and surmise the rest."
"There will be no dissuading her, then?"
"No. But we can get her some place better than here."