Earlier this month I featured a guest appearance in The Lioness and the Spellspinners from a recurring character, and I thought I’d do another today. Marjoram, my Good Fairy, has a tendency to push her way into every story, including this one…but today I thought I’d share the first scene of another character, familiar from The Storyteller and Her Sisters. Although he’s ten years younger here!
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Karina didn’t really mind going out to the vegetable garden with Forrest. Honestly, it sounded better than sitting inside and peeling turnips or unsnarling yarn.
She ought to be getting into town, finding out how to get away from this rock. But everyone had work they needed to do this morning, Richard had promised to give her a ride in the afternoon and that was soon enough. She’d get there earlier walking, but her ankle still felt tender and it would be easier to find out about a ship with someone local to help. She still wasn’t entirely clear on how she was going to pay for passage, but…she’d work that out. Or she’d find out about the ship with Richard, and then sneak aboard later when neither he nor the ship’s captain was looking. That would serve too.
In the meantime, it wasn’t so bad sitting in the sun, leaned up against a convenient rock. There hadn’t been many sunny meadows in her past. None at all, in fact.
The quiet was new too. It wasn’t silent, with the distant murmur of waves, bird cries and occasional scurrying of small animals in the underbrush. Repairing a fence involved some knocking together of wood and other sounds. But behind all that there was a deep quiet, a quiet of empty land with far fewer people on it than she was used to.
It wasn’t quiet like this at home. At home people were all jammed in on top of each other and someone was always making noise. Shouts and conversation and creaking carts and a hundred other sounds. Except maybe in the very deepest, darkest part of the night. And that was a wary quiet, not a peaceful one. That wasn’t a quiet you lingered in. That was a time to get your work done and get gone, quick, before anyone else found you out in the dark.
No, it wasn’t bad sitting out here. She had pulled the hood of her cloak down over her face, with an announced intention to take a nap. She did doze a little…and she also spent some time watching Forrest work on the fence, under the cover of her hood’s shadow. It was a good view.
Arm muscles like that, she had known Farmboy had to be good at something besides knitting.
Forrest was knocking the last fence post into place when a new arrival came into view around a fold of hill. Karina kept her hood pulled down and studied him covertly, an automatic habit and safeguard—though probably unnecessary here, since the stranger looked to be all of ten years old.
On the other hand, she had met some dangerous ten year olds. She had been one. Continue reading “Fiction Friday: Royal Guest Appearances” →