Chapter Seventeen
The common room was crowded, packed with locals listening to Katrin sing. The people in these small villages often seemed starved for any sort of entertainment. Ariadne found Treya and Sarette at a little table in the corner of the room. They'd saved a seat for her, and a serving girl soon came by to give her a wedge of coarse, dark bread and a bowl of fish stew.
Ariadne couldn't understand the song's lyrics--it was in Eastern, and she was using the necklace for the Western tongue--but Katrin had a way of showing subtle visions in her listeners' minds. This one appeared to be a love ballad, judging by the vision of a man and woman exchanging shy glances from a distance.
Ariadne found herself twisting the enchanted ring around her finger as she listened. A waste of money, she'd decided at first, but the day before they'd left Tyrsall, she'd gone back to Marco and made the deal. If she ever saw Loofoo again, he was in for a surprise.
Loofoo. A common criminal who refused to take anything seriously. She'd known him for less than four weeks, even including his three days of shore leave in Tyrsall. It was unlikely she'd ever run into him again, and maybe that was for the best. He wasn't Chosar.
He was something close to it, though. Was that enough? The two of them hadn't made any plans to meet in the future, and Ariadne had gotten the impression that he changed ships often, and not always by choice. If they did meet again, it would be random chance. She sighed. The ring had definitely been a waste of money. Perhaps it would come in handy when she visited the seaborn homeland.
There was a break in the music, and Katrin went around the room to greet the listeners, regaling anyone who asked about the warden sigil on her brow with a brief but fanciful tale of how she'd gotten it from a wizard. Some people passed her a coin as she spoke.
Just as Ariadne was finishing her meal, Ellerie found their table. They made room for her on the bench.
The elven woman pitched her voice low so she wouldn't be overheard. "I was just looking through my notes so I could write a section about the Chosar government, but I realized you never told me the wardens' names."
"I thought you weren't going to include the wardens," Ariadne said. She'd hoped Ellerie wouldn't notice the omission.
"Not
as
wardens, but you said they held high positions. I need to know how everything fits together."
Ariadne didn't answer right away. Could she trust the other woman? The wardens' ritual was almost certainly the reason Tir Yadar had been abandoned and the Chosar had disappeared. Whether it was a betrayal or a mistake, that didn't change what had happened. If the new wardens learned of it, would they attempt the same thing?
"I don't want to talk about it in the common room," she said. "Let's go somewhere quieter."
"Are you still playing cards tonight?" Sarette asked before they left. "We need a fourth."
"I'll be there; don't let Katrin start without me."
Ariadne and Ellerie went to Ellerie's room, since it held a writing desk. She sat and took out a quill pen, a bottle of ink, and a sheet of paper. Ariadne remained standing. She felt like pacing, but she forced herself to stay still.
"You called the oldest warden Pallis, right?" Ellerie asked. "I have that one written down somewhere. Does that mean he was chosen during the First Demon War? You told Hildra that's when the original wardens came about."
"No. He was the First Warden in my day, but there were others before him. I don't know who they were. We were only taught about the ones who were still alive."
Ellerie scratched down a few notes. "But the earlier ones were still Chosar?" she asked.
Ariadne hesitated. "I think so," she said. "Most wardens were."
"Who were the others from your time?"
"The Second Warden was Boreas. He was an elementalist and a soldier. Iris was a
vasta
druid, and Arodi was a wizard. Those four all fought in the Second Demon War."
"Iris? That's an odd name for an elf."
"It's an old Chosar name. Some parents picked names from other languages. Or she might have chosen it herself; I'm not sure."
Ellerie nodded, then frowned as she looked down at her notes. "These names. Iris, Arodi, Pallis..." She didn't complete her thought.
"Yes, I know," Ariadne said. "Do you want me to keep going?"
Ellerie visibly steadied herself before nodding.
"Allos was a wizard and a researcher," Ariadne said. She ignored Ellerie's quick indrawn breath. "Zachal was a human wizard--I never heard much about him. Demea was an elder mage who mostly worked with our crops and farmland. And I've told you about Hera already."
"The names," Ellerie said. She silently mouthed the more familiar ones. Then, out loud, she said, "Demea, Boreas. Demesis and Borrisur? But why would they...? The new gods came
after
your people, right? Why would they choose names based on the dead wardens?"
"Why do you
think
?" Ariadne said, though she understood the other woman's struggle. The idea still seemed crazy. "Hera must be The Lady, which means Zachal is the Dead God."
Ellerie pushed her chair away from the desk suddenly and stood up. "But that would mean... that would mean..." She stepped over to the only window and looked out onto the dark street, then stalked back to the center of the room.
"You see why I didn't tell you?" Ariadne asked. "The old wardens destroyed my people. What if the new wardens do the same thing? We can't let anyone know. Don't use the names in your book."
"But it doesn't make any sense! A person can't just
become
a god!"