《The Traitor's Heir》Chapter Five
Advertisement
"I know what you're trying to do." Quara's eyes narrowed and she said the words in a flat, disinterested voice that belied the excitement that had begun to unfurl in her chest at her sister's first mention of a library. A library bigger than her entire world, hidden away beneath the earth? She wouldn't even have set foot above ground to see it, to sit and flip through the pages of giant tomes, reading about men and women and events that had long since been forgotten.
No, she pushed the thoughts away with a shake of her head. "I know exactly what you're trying to do and it isn't going to work. At all. I'm not some child that you can entice to join you on some fool hardy adventure by simply promising a library full of books. That's ridiculous." As she spoke she focused on the corridor leading down to the Lake, avoiding Lina's gaze.
"I'm not trying to do anything. You know me Quara. I'm not subtle." Lina caught her sister's eye and shrugged, a movement that was not easy with the pole pressing down on her shoulders. "Let's finish our walk home before Mom sends Xav down to find us. Dad's probably already home by now. We may have already missed dinner entirely. Do you think Mom meant it last month when she said that anyone who wasn't home by dinner wouldn't have a scrap of the meal that she made? I mean I know that was directed at me, since I'm always off doing the sort of things that I tend to do, but do you think she'll really stick to it, especially since I'm with you?"
"I don't think she will but if she does I know where Xav and Iggy have a box of treats hidden and since they've been staying down at the Garrison just about every night I don't think that they'll miss it."
"They have food hidden?" Lina was clearly shocked by the news, but Quara sensed that the shock was because she knew nothing about their secret hiding place, rather than surprise that the stash of treats existed in the first place.
"Yes, they do. But I don't think we'll need it. Mom knew where we were going." They trudged on in silence with Lina steadily refusing her sister's offers to take her turn carrying the heavy load.
"Quara, there's one thing that I haven't told you yet." They had walked for some time and were nearly to the entrance to the Training Field when Lina half whispered the words so that for a moment, Quara wasn't entirely certain that she had heard them.
"What is it, Lina?" She said the words gently, mentally commending herself for not revealing the stress that the idea of another surprise brought washing over her body.
"There's a place that I go to sometimes. A little hiding place. It's not far from our house. And it's totally safe. I started hiding there sometimes, when I needed space and quiet, when I was five or six." Quara's thoughts went back to frantic searches when Lina slipped off, despite the family's thorough efforts to have eyes on her at all times, only to reappear an hour or two later exactly where she'd last been seen, acting as though nothing out of the ordinary had happened. "There's something there that I want you to see. I don't think that it will change your mind, but I think that you should be the one to have it."
Without waiting for her sister's response she stepped out into the bright light of the Third Level, not looking to see if Quara was following behind her. Quara stood for a moment, watching Lina move easily around the edges of the busy field. The Guard looked as though they were preparing for some major operations in the near future, and people were running here and there carrying armloads of armor and weapons across the field towards the staircase leading down to the Guild Halls. She spotted Xav and Iggy by the doors of the Garrison, but she didn't have time to go over and ask them if there was anything that they could tell her.
Advertisement
A sinking in the pit of her stomach told Quara that, more than ever, she needed to stick by her sister's side and make sure that she stayed out of trouble. She ran after her, dodging Squires that were running here and there carrying out their orders in an attempt to keep up with her nimble footed sister.
Quara caught up to Lina just before she reached the staircase leading to the government level. She walked beside her smallest sibling, a comfortable silence falling between them with each girl entirely lost in her own thoughts. Despite Quara's adamant speech, her thoughts turned back to the library and her mind wandered through the aisles, her arms outstretched, her fingers trailing across the spines of a hundred thousand books, each just waiting to be plucked from the shelf and opened so that it could reveal its secrets to her.
Lina had walked the entire distance from the landing in the Lake Corridor, with a small smile playing at the corner of her lips. She had spent more time with Quara than she had spent with any other person on the face of the planet. Quara was the one person who she never really tired of being around. And knowing Quara as she did she knew that the library had an appeal that her sister simply would not be able to resist.
The library in the Walemont Caverns paled in comparison. It wasn't that it was too terribly shabby. But it was absolutely unimpressive. And Lina knew that now, every time her book loving sister glanced at a book she would be imagining all the books that had been left behind in the city that Lina was determined she visit. She doubted that her sister's imagination had truly captured the magnitude of the city that lay deep down in the rock below their feet, but she knew that whatever she was imagining was grand enough to do the work that needed to be done to convince her to come along for the adventure that Lina had been imagining since she first discovered the City nearly three years earlier.
Still, even if Quara, through some super human effort managed to resist the temptation of a city sized library, Lina knew that she had one last weapon at her disposal in breaking her sister's resolve. She'd brought it up out of the ground six months ago after strapping it onto her back and beginning the long, slow climb up the tunnel to rescue it from its millennia long resting place. It had weighed heavily against her back and in places she hadn't been entirely certain if she would be able to maneuver it through the narrow passageway. Occasionally she'd even had to slip it off her back and push it in front of her to guide it through some of the tightest places. It hadn't been easy to bring it back with her, but now Lina was certain that it had been worth it.
The next morning Lina was sprawled beside the outer door that opened onto the stairway. The small bag that held her tablet and chalk were flung on the floor beside her. Quara, who was usually the first one out of the house, was taking longer than usual to get ready but the small girl laying in the entryway, her head propped on her hand, was determined not to miss her. Lina could barely make out the sound of her footsteps somewhere in the back of their little home.
The residential apartments in this part of the city were fairly standard. They had been made long before the fall of the King, when Walemont had been a busy, prospering city, and this portion of the residential wall had overflown with children. By and large, most of the apartments had small bedrooms carved from the mountain, along with a common area, a small cooking area, and a water closet, where the two buckets of water they'd brought home the night before could be used for washing, in between trips to the long communal pools that they all visited several times a week.
Advertisement
Many empty residences lay off of the long corridors that snaked back, deep into the Dome. The members of the Kalena family who had first stumbled upon the Caverns had been allowed into the hidden city, but there were many within the community who had not been entirely sold on allowing outsiders to live next door to their families. As a result they had been given a home on the very edge of the area that was still considered habitable.
Still, Lina couldn't imagine living anywhere else. The walls of the cavern had been carved smooth and flat by one of her ancestors who had made the journey from the plains. Her father had explained that it was because they missed the look of the flat vertical walls and so they had carved them so that if a tapestry was hung across from one side to the other, the fabric lay flat against the stone, and the room resembled a room in one of the large Plains tents. And tapestries there were, aplenty.
Her mother liked to say that surely they had the warmest home in all of the Caverns, for every wall was draped with at least one thick tapestry. Some walls were covered with two or three tapestries layered on top of each other, for there had been generations when women had stitched away, year after year, and when they were finished they couldn't find an inch of open space on the walls and so they had hung their latest creation on top of one that was already up. After all, there wasn't much storage space in the little home. Over the years some of the tapestries had made their way to other caves, as children grew up and started their own families, but the best tapestries stayed there, shuffled at times from the back to the front when they were taken down and the dust was beaten out of them over the edge of the Chasm.
The earlier tapestries depicted places and moments in the world outside the Cavern Walls. One showed a dozen scenes that all looked to have come from their ancestors life on the Plains. Lina's favorite showed a great glowing white castle, with a long line of men and women on horseback filing down a smooth road to its gates. A few months ago her mother had hung that tapestry in the center of the common area, after a morning of cleaning the house, but she had quietly taken it down and put up another in its place when her husband returned from a day of making swords and his eyes had rested on the tapestry, his mouth turning down at the edges into a rare frown.
In its place she'd hung a deep crimson drapery, a brocade hand stitched with gold silk, in a neat, steady hand, that must have been brought with the family when they arrived at the Caverns, for silk had not made its way here anew since the closing of the main gate when the people of the Walemont Dome went into hiding. The design showed the sun at the center and Lina wondered if the woman who stitched it had sorely missed the life that she was leaving behind when she crossed the threshold into the Caverns and said goodbye to the open sky and fresh air she had always known.
The floor in the common room was littered with pillows of varying sizes, piled here and there to form seats. Some were as large as Lina and others were much smaller, in a variety of colors and fabrics. There were no large pieces of furniture in the room, except a long low table where they ate, sitting on the ground, a tradition that they had held onto at home, although it was not a custom that was known in the Caverns before their arrival and most of the neighbors thought that it was quite strange.
The common room opened into the cooking area, which was small and had a few shelves, a small table for food preparation, and a little stove with a pipe that carried the smoke out of their home and into a space above their living quarters that ultimately vented into the Chasm at a high level, where the smoke could drift out of sight and was eventually vented out somewhere, without polluting the air below. The stove, while not large, did a more than adequate job of heating their already temperate living quarters to a comfortable temperature.
A short hallway began at the spot where the common area and cooking area met, and off to the right there was the water closet, and then three bedrooms with three doors that faced each other. Off to the right was the boys' room. If one continued straight down the hall they came to the master bedroom. And on the left hand side lay the girls' room. Each of the children's rooms had four sturdy beds, stacked two and two so that the floor had a bit of space, while their parent's room had one long low bed which lay on the ground in a room that had nearly as many pillows as the common area.
Quara came into the room Lina reclined in, plaiting the end of her long braid and looking at her sister thoughtfully, a hint of suspicion not quite hiding at the corner of her mouth. She was wearing a pair of rust colored breeches, which she usually wore when they went to the Hidden Meadow, and a loose ivory blouse that was brought close to her body by a thick olive vest. Quara tied a green ribbon around the bottom of her braid and twisted it worriedly for a moment before throwing it back behind her shoulder. When she glanced at her sister she saw that she was now sitting up, her bag on her lap and one eyebrow raised as she regarded her older sister curiously.
They walked silently to the door and were about to step through the threshold when their mother came bustling in, a shawl thrown across her shoulders and a basket in her hand.
"Girls, I didn't think I would catch you. I bought you both sugar rolls at Smitty's this morning. Here, take two of them with you. I managed to catch the boys at the training field and I thought I might see you down there already on your way to class." She pressed warm, sticky rolls wrapped neatly in wax paper into their hands. Both girls avoided their mother's eyes as they quickly tucked the packages into their school bags.
"What time is it? Are you going to be late?" She said the words as she walked to the kitchen and put her basket lightly on the little table before lifting the thick woolen shawl from her shoulders and hanging it quickly on a peg. She was wearing her light blue work dress, which matched her eyes, with a sparkling white apron that covered and protected nearly the entire of the front of the dress. The apron had two large pockets and she dropped her hands into them for a moment, as if to check to see if she'd forgotten anything, and then pulled a list from the right pocket, glancing at it quickly before turning to deposit it back in the basket she had been carrying.
Quara noticed that her dark shining hair, which had been streaked with silver for as long as she could remember, looked more silver that morning than brown, and her eyes, while still shining with energy and cheer, had a collection of tiny lines around them, along with an uncharacteristic smudge of plum half circles adorning the lower part of her eyes, that made Quara wonder if she had worries weighing upon her mind that she had not spoken of to her daughters, for she looked as though she had been worrying late into the night.
"We won't be late Mom. We'll fly down the stairs." Lina answered for both of them as Quara slung her bag over her shoulder, giving her mother a long look, until the older woman thought she might say something more. When Quara didn't speak her mother continued her line of questioning.
"You're dressed for the Meadow. I hadn't realized you had a shift. Are you girls planning on going up there after school today? I thought you might help me with some baking for the boys. Things have been busy down in the Garrison and it seems that they've hardly been feeding them."
"I think we might be taking over a shift to help out, but we're not sure just yet." Lina said the words with a wave of her hand before her sister could give any explanation for her chosen outfit. "But we'll see you later. Love you." The small girl tossed the words over her shoulder and her older sister echoed them as they hurried out the front door and began their descent down the long staircase.
"That was close." Lina said the words to her sister in a whisper as they walked across the Heart. "You would have spilled everything if I gave you a chance to say a single word. Lina's hair shook from side to side, as she tossed her head. "I mean I know that you can't lie to save yourself, but it was worse than that. Just the idea of not being entirely honest turned your cheeks ten shades of pink. They still are. And the rest of your face is as white as a ghost."
Quara stared at her sister, not because of the words she had said, which she was certain were true and which came as no surprise to her, but because she still found herself marveling that in the last day she had heard her little sister say a hundred times more words than Lina had ever before shared in the entire twenty eight hours that it took for their little planet to spin around one time.
"Is it safe to assume that you haven't changed your mind? That you don't want to see that library?" Quara shook her head in response and Lina nodded. "I didn't think so, I just wanted to check to make sure. But you will come with me after our classes today to my hiding place." Lina caught the doubtful look in her sister's eye and saw that after the conversation with their mother she was wavering and was actually considering going up to the Hidden Meadow to help tend the flocks. Or maybe that really had been her plan all along.
The Hidden Meadow was the source of the Walemont Caverns food supply. The Meadow wasn't open to the sky, as one might imagine upon hearing the word meadow, but was instead inside of an enormous cave several times larger than the Heart. Like the Heart it had a large, spectacular golden light source. It had much in common with the Heart light source, in that it burned brightly and never flickered while it was lit. No one really knew for certain what it was formed off or how it had been made. It gave off a warm golden light that warmed the skin and kept the Meadow at a balmy temperature year round.
Yet there were distinct differences that set it apart from the Heart. It was shaped like a glowing amber egg and its width was so great that if it had been on the ground it would have taken four men with their arms stretched as far as they could go, to encircle it. That was impossible to do, however, since it was set deep in the black granite of the cave ceiling, so that only half of its surface was visible.
The light source came on every morning as the sun outside came up, and it dimmed every night, eventually going out altogether as the sun sank behind the southern horizon. It was said that the real end of the Walemont Caverns would come when the light went out, but people didn't really worry too much about it. It had been burning away, lighting their world for as long as anyone could remember and no one could think of any reason why it wouldn't continue just as it always had.
Still, the Egg's most striking feature wasn't its appearance. Its value lay not in its great beauty but in its ability to make almost anything that was planted even at the very furthest edges of the Meadow grow into a robust and healthy plant. This was the real source of the Walemont Caverns continued survival. You cannot feed an entire city for generations on overhunted deer and an average sized river that a man might easily swim across, regardless of how it teems with fish. But inside the Meadow an underground farm existed.
Advertisement
- In Serial305 Chapters
The Dao of Magic
Here I am, sitting on a mountain so far away from civilisation it might as well be the godforsaken arse of the world, about to ascend. Can't wait to leave this crapfest of a planet... Turns out that the higher ups decided that an unaffiliated rogue like me is too big of a risk to let run around free. Seems like this entire cultivation world is a late stage capitalist money making machine for the powers that be in the higher realms, and me stealing the good loot in front of their descendants and sect disciples noses finally pissed them off enough to take action. First, they sent all the sect masters and hidden dao protectors to off me - which failed, obviously. Heh, afterwards they simply bitch slapped me out of their universe though. That is interesting and all, but I just woke up in a valley watching some critters murder each other while trying not to freak out about how bad it smells here.Soo… where the fuck am I? Why is that deer fighting a feathery squirrel? Why am I teaching this baby rabbit saved from a cannibalistic mother how to kick beings in the face with the power of qi?Releases a couple of times a week! Come stalk me through social media and stuff:Twitter | Facebook | Instagram | Website | Discord Please check out my released books!The Dao of Magic: Book I - Amazon | AudiobookThe Dao of Magic: Book II - Amazon The Dao of Magic: Book III - AmazonSkeleton in Space: Histaff - Amazon | AudiobookSkeleton in Space: GalaxSec - Amazon Go read my other story; Skeleton in Space. I took the WriTE pledge, which means I will finish it. Or at the very least not drop it or put it on hiatus. Check here for more info.
8 500 - In Serial51 Chapters
I, Kobold: A crafting cultivation litrpg monster story
A Sailor, after getting tossed from his ship in a storm, finds himself waking up in a world of swords, sorcery, monsters, and adventure.This could have been exciting, except that, instead of being a mighty-thewed Barbarian, Powerful Wizard, or wood-wise elf, He found himself in the body of a monster. Not just any monster, but the weakest, most cowardly, and well-known newbie-target, a kobold. Not only is he stuck as the lowest of the low, but he may also need to save two worlds, his new one and the one he came from! (Royal Road Writathon 2022 winner)
8 213 - In Serial50 Chapters
Exalted Warlock
Magnus Tempest was a young man back on Earth, filled with hopes and dreams. That is until everything that tied him to Earth was taken and destroyed. One night tormented with grief and contemplating dark thoughts. He stumbled upon a mysterious black gem-like shard, that whisked him away to another world called, Pandora. A world part of the vast stage of the Known Cosmos. -------------------------- 3 chapter (3,000+ words a chapter) a week. On Monday, Wednesday, and Friday! Please be advised this is a slow burn, so if you do not like novels that go at a leisurely pace, then do not complain later. I have stated it right here and right now. Also, constructive criticism and feedback are always welcomed! -------------------------- Advance Chapters:https://www.patreon.com/Abdirah Support Channel:https://ko-fi.com/Abdirah Line Of Communication:https://discord.gg/4SRPMpg
8 195 - In Serial7 Chapters
Tales From Elsewhere
*Currently on Hiatus due to a new project* Tales From Elswhere is a collection of short stories. They are short burst of flavors that consist of different worlds and characters. When a Tale is weaved a new one unfolds, but a fragmented tale will continue to be told. A new tale will be released once or twice in one month. Thanks having patience and i hope you get cozy as you read through them.
8 140 - In Serial15 Chapters
Timeless Love
A tragic accident leads her to woke up into a new era she never knew before. Slowly learning about her new identity, she also learnt there was some connection between her former life and her current life. Woke up and found herself tied up and being kidnaped, no one believe her when she said she might be Jiang Xi Yu, the daughter of Duke Jiang from Luoyang. The two eunuchs, who saved her, brought her to served their sly, cunning wangye. after being forced to spend a night full of lust with the first Prince of the kingdom, she got the offer to become his sex slave. She, who believe she was a daughter from noble family, against him, who believe she belong to him from that night forward. Their fate started that way. From a night full of lust to forever be tangled in love.
8 186 - In Serial39 Chapters
Pretty Little Thing | ✓
[Highest ranking: #1 in Spiritual on 15/8/18]•••• In which a girl saved a boy's life in the most unexpected of circumstances •She drank water. He drank alcohol.She had a family who'd take a bullet for her. He had a family who'd throw him under the bus.She dreamt of her future. He dreamt of his death. Both are Muslims but only one is closer to their Lord.•••*NOT CLICHÉ*This story in no way depicts the true Muslim culture. It's about the modern Muslims nowadays who steer away from the right path.This book contains some strong language, graphic content and violence so I advise you to read it with care. WARNING: too much cuteness you'll die squealing.©Copyright 2018. sanasays.Any sort of plagiarism of my story will be reported immediately, and that includes my aesthetics and banners as well.
8 141

