The Angel of Elydria (The Dawn Mirror Chronicles Book 1) (61 page)

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Authors: A. R. Meyering

Tags: #Kay Hooper, #J.K. Rowling, #harry potter, #steampunk fantasy, #eragon, #steampunk, #time-travel, #dark fantasy, #steampunk adventure, #Fantasy, #derigible, #Adventure, #Hayao Miyazaki, #action, #howl's moving castle

BOOK: The Angel of Elydria (The Dawn Mirror Chronicles Book 1)
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Their stroll brought them back to the castle and Penny was quite sorry when Noah bid her goodnight. He gave her hand a gentle kiss before departing, promising to see her again soon.

Noah kept his promise with a great deal of determination, and popped up frequently over the next few days. The increased exposure helped lessen Penny’s nerves and she discovered she regarded him as a true friend, but was well aware of his forward affections and unsure of her own feelings on the matter.

During their stay at the castle, Penny had seen very little of Hector. He was present during times when they were needed to speak with the foreign liaisons and barons, but otherwise his absence was notable. Whenever Penny came poking around his room, it was always to find it deserted. If she did chance to run into him, his thoughts seemed elsewhere. He refused to answer any questions about how he was spending his time, which perturbed Penny further. Her curiosity not satisfied, she barged into his room late one night after a long day and found him leaning over his desk, which was almost swallowed by heaping piles of notes and dog-eared books. He jumped at her abrupt entrance.

“Good to see you’re back to normal,” Penny commented as he began grumbling about manners and knocking.

“I’m busy now, can’t you come back later?” Hector requested, keeping his eyes focused on the book before him.

Penny scowled. “No. Where have you been lately? I―I almost sort of miss you,” she stammered, yanking the book from his hand and scanning the pages. It looked complicated, so she closed it and set it aside. Hector sighed, obviously irked that she had lost his place. He leaned back in his chair and rubbed at his forehead.

“I’ve been working on something. I need some peace and quiet.”

“What is it? What are you working on?” Penny tried to look at his notes, which he hastily covered.

“As it turns out, it’s none of your business, though I expect I shall be finished by tomorrow evening, at which time I shall see fit to tell you.” Hector picked up his stacks of paper, shuffled them and set them on top of a high stack of books.

Penny frowned. “Why, of
course
, your grace. How rude of me to interrupt,” she said with a mock curtsy.

“Off with you,” Hector pointed to the door, but Penny remained firm.

“Sorry, but I don’t take orders from Professor Arlington anymore. Or should I say…Aín?” she retorted and Hector’s haughtiness deflated. He sighed and turned away with a melancholy smile that almost made Penny sorry she’d brought it up.

“So, you caught that, did you?” he murmured.

Guilt washed over Penny as she saw the sorrow that he attempted to hide with a quivering smile. “Well, yeah…I mean―why’d Della call you that?” she asked in a more delicate manner and Hector cast his gaze to the far window.

“She called me that because it’s my name, or at least it was in Nelvirna. I wasn’t born as Hector Arlington. I picked that name for myself shortly after I came to Earth,” Hector explained.

“I see, that makes sense…but why’d you go with Hector?”

“Well, when I was familiarizing myself with the classic pieces of literature from Earth, I came across
The Iliad
,” Hector explained, perking up a bit. “I don’t know if you know the story or not, but Hector’s courage was enormous, especially when compared to the cowardice of Paris. It―It made an impression on me. After reading it I decided that I would never allow my courage to fail as Paris’s had…that I would become like Hector. It’s stupid, I know…” Hector stammered, avoiding Penny’s eyes. She offered a sympathetic smile, then stepped forward and put a hand on his shoulder when he continued to look away.

“You’ve more than lived up to it…” she told him with affection.

Hector glanced up at Penny, surprise and poignant emotion apparent. Their gazes connected and Penny felt her heart leap and flutter in a way that was almost painful. She tried to look away, but found that she had lost the ability to as she studied the flecks of green and brown in Hector’s eyes. For a brief moment she caught a glimpse of something like guilt in his stare, but she didn’t have time to interpret it as a voice interrupted them.

“Ahh, I thought I heard something
steamy
going on in here,” Simon sang.

Penny swung around to face Simon, wrenching her hand away from Hector’s shoulder before the magician could make any unnecessary comments.

“What do you want?” Penny asked, blushing.

Simon raised an eyebrow at the mountain of books on Hector’s desk. “I thought it was time we all had a little parley. It’s only a matter of time before we’re sent away from the palace and back to Annette’s house…we need to be certain of our plans for the future,” he suggested, taking a seat on Hector’s bed and grabbing a purple fruit from the bowl on the desk.

Questions arose about the night of the confrontation in Hulver and what exactly had happened. None of them seemed to think that Nestor was gone for good, and they puzzled over the tiny treasure chest that Della had given Penny, wondering when it would open and what would be inside when it did. It seemed to be an unspoken truth that they would all stay together and follow Della’s orders as well as they could―they had to go on and try to find the remaining pieces of Seival that were still lost somewhere across Elydria.

“The eyes, the wings, the heart. That’s five pieces all together,” Simon surmised, stroking his thin mustache.

“It could be as little as three people, as many as five,” Hector said, thinking aloud. “I suppose our best bet would be to look for people with extraordinary talents, something that sets them apart from others―like Annette.”

“Or they could just be gloomy recluses who stay inside reading all day, like you!” Penny added with a roguish smile.

“The heart of Seival―perhaps a person with the capacity to love in a way that humanity has never known! How intriguing.” Simon’s eyes looked unfocused, and Penny could tell his imagination had already begun to elaborate on this possibility.

“Leave it to Simon to fantasize about the dismembered heart of an Angel,” Penny smirked.

Hector laughed and stood up. “I suppose even with the most extensive planning, our efforts would be worth nothing. If I’ve learned one thing from living in Elydria, it’s that trouble has a way of finding us whether we want it to or not,” he said with a finality that seemed to end the conversation.

 

THE NEXT MORNING Penny got the news that they were going to be released from the palace in two days. From that moment on, everyone rushed to get last minute arrangements in order before their departure. The day was long and arduous and by the time Penny had finished her to-do list, night had fallen.

Penny wandered through the castle after everyone had gone to bed, saying silent goodbyes. Her last visit was to the ballroom. It seemed extraordinarily empty as Penny tiptoed through it in the shade of night, each footstep giving a resounding echo as she crept to the same balcony where she and Noah had talked the night they met. The view of Iverton was as astonishing as ever and it captivated her.

Enjoying the lights that blinked throughout the sprawling city, Penny knew that this calm in the storm would only last for so long, though the idea did not frighten her as much as it would have in the past. Rather, it made her appreciate the serenity of the lull and let her relish the moment of quiet that life allotted to her.

“Penny?” a voice called and she turned to see Hector stepping out onto the balcony. She greeted him with a wide grin, surprised to see him out and about. “Whatever are you doing out here? It’s cold—I expect it’ll begin to snow soon.”

“Just getting one last look before we go. What’s wrong—you look like—”

“I’ve got something I need to tell you,” he stammered, looking down at his feet. She tensed, wondering what it was that Hector had sought her out to say. Hector looked up at Penny with a misty smile.

“I’ve finished what I’ve been working on…” he admitted, looking at her with equal parts joy and rue. She waited with an expectant gaze for him to continue. “I’ve finally figured out how to do it―I can take you home now.”

 

 

 

I
t took almost half a minute for Hector’s words to sink in.

“You mean…you’re saying that…”

“I mean that whenever you wish to return to Earth, you can. It took me this long to figure out how to do it―but somehow, ever since Della told me I could…I just sort of
knew
how to do it. After I mastered that, it took even longer to work out how to appear at the exact right location, but I think I’ve got it down fairly well. Just say the word and I’ll take you there. I’ll take you home,” Hector said with a small smile as Penny beamed.

“Well, what are we waiting for? Let’s go! I can’t wait!” Penny cried, overjoyed at the idea that she might be back in her cozy little house and jumping into her mother’s arm in just a few moments.

Hector looked astonished. “Don’t you―don’t you at least want to say your farewells to everyone? I know Annette will be heartbroken when she finds out you left without saying goodbye, and I’m sure His Majesty would―”

Penny shot him a dangerous look and he stopped. She considered the goodbyes waiting to be said, and it was at that precise moment that the grief hit her. Could she look into Annette’s face, the girl who had come to be her closest friend, the person with whom she had defied death time and time again, and tell her that they were going to have to part ways? Was it going to be possible to try and explain to Simon why she was leaving them? She did not want to look at Gavin’s confused and hurt expression when he heard the news, or see tears gather in his gray eyes, or have to endure Argent pretending he would not miss her in the slightest. Least of all, she didn’t want to lie to Noah when she told him where she would be going.

“I don’t know if I can, Hector,” she murmured, looking down at her shoes as the excitement of the moment ebbed away as quick as it had come. She could not bear to look at Hector’s bewildered expression.

“But don’t you want to take a last look around? Don’t you want to see Humphrey just once more? I know he’s going to be―”

“Look―I’m not that strong, okay?” Penny fought back tears as she thought of Humphrey sitting in the stable waiting for her return, unaware she wouldn’t ever be back. “I can’t sit there and watch as I hurt everyone…I don’t want to live with those memories. I’d much rather remember everyone as they were the last time I was with them―happy, carefree, and together, not when they…” Penny could not bring herself to finish the sentence.

Hector shrugged, a forlorn expression on his face. “Suit yourself. Let’s go get your things,” he said, walking off in the direction of the hall.

Penny trailed after him, forcibly turning her thoughts to consider the fact that she would be stepping through her front door in a matter of moments, where her bed would be waiting, and her mother might have banana muffins sitting on the kitchen counter.

They walked back to her room, where it only took a few moments to gather up the rest of Penny’s things and put them into her bag. Penny handed the miniature treasure chest that Della had given her to Hector.

“You guys are going to need it way more than I will back home,” she explained, and Hector nodded before stowing it in his pocket. Penny sighed and looked around her castle bedroom for a final time. She made a feeble attempt to smile at Hector. “Ok…I think I’m ready.”

“Are you absolutely sure about this? Because if you left anything incomplete or unsaid, you may never get another chance to fix it. I―I probably won’t be coming back to bother you,” Hector reminded her with a stony expression that made Penny’s heart sink even deeper.

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