65th Day of Bloom - AOK 21
Even with long hours camping under the stars, in cold weather, in rain, after a season of Iron Hand rations, Elyna didn’t know a time when she had been so tired. As though she could sleep for a week. The journey across the sea had been calm enough, but it had been exhausting. Her mother’s determination that she should eat very little, hadn’t helped her sense of energy and had had the desired effect. She felt as though her muscles had been stripped from her bones and left her feeling weak. Too tired to protest the many lectures, the hours of needlework and confinement below the decks. Caelin had been appalled by her daughter's tanned features and sought to remedy the effect of the sun, by denying it. So Elyna emerged, feeling like a wraith. One of the deck hands steadied her as she stepped down off the boat and looked around. She didn’t recognise the man, having not interacted with anyone other than her Mother since setting foot on board the boat. The docks were bustling, alive and busy and far too noisy after near fifty days confined to a cabin with only her Mother for company. Retreated into herself, the young woman was grateful when they were led to a closed carriage and the door closed behind. Dimly, she remembered her excitement to see another country. As though that feeling had been part of a dream, detached from who she was now. Beyond the veiled carriage door, a new city beckoned. She peered at it, surrounded by her Mother’s maids packed into the small space with the Baroness.
It was a short journey to a tall townhouse in the Parade. One step down from the Palace itself, Caelin had explained how all the nobility kept houses here. The door was painted a deep navy blue, pretty white flowers decorated every window box and gave off a sweet smell. Finding her feet on the pavement, Elyna wondered how many rooms could be found within, the house was bigger certainly than the Burhan residence in Renmere’s capital. Though, the family of Cain had been around longer than Renmere had existed.
It was a cool, misty morning that promised better weather to come. Caelin bustled through the opened door. Preening as the three maids were directed to servants quarters in the attics. They stood in a vast entrance hall, with a double staircase that rose towards what Elyna could only imagine were dozens of bedrooms and studies. Everything was perfectly clean, dust free and scented with beeswax. The tiles gleamed underfoot.
‘Lady Beatrice is my Aunt,’ Caelin explained for the one hundredth time, ‘I’ve not seen her since I was a tiny girl. You are fortunate that we have kept our correspondence. Beatrice will be hosting us, here in Aramane for the start of the season.’
Elyna couldn’t ignore the note of warning in her Mother’s voice and simply nodded.
The door to an antechamber opened and the footman bowed towards them. Cealin checked her appearance in the marbled tiles one last time before swaying through.
‘Aunt Beatrice, Lady Cain,’ Caelin dipped into a curtsey that Elyna copied, maintaining distance of just a few feet.
‘Caelin! How wonderful that you’ve arrived safely!’ Beatrice was on her feet, a woman who must have been in her sixties at least. Her pale hair had long turned silver and was neatly tied back from her face. Her blue eyes were icy, a trait she shared with Caelin, but there was a warmth to her narrow face as she greeted her niece and turned towards Elyna.
‘My goodness, this must be Elyna? Come girl, let me look at you.’
Elyna stumbled on her steps, her stomach turning in knots. She prayed to the Seven that she wasn’t going to faint as she approached Beatrice, finding the matriarch to be several heads taller than she was. But that wasn’t a surprise.
The blonde wig that she wore, wobbled atop her head. Threatening to fall off if she failed to keep herself perfectly balanced. Beatrice’s fingers were cool, soft and gently as they touched her face, tilting her head this way and that to study the angles.
‘My goodness,’ Beatrice shook her head as she smiled, ‘you look a lot like my Aunt, your Grandmother. Now do take off that ridiculous wig darling, it does your colouring no favours.’
Elyna glanced at Caelin who gave a small nod. Relieved to have her mother’s blessing, she grasped the centre and pulled it from her head. Caelin sat down as directed and Elyna, casting about for somewhere to put the hair, sank down beside her mother.
‘Oh yes,’ Beatrice clapped her hands together. ‘You could almost be the image of her now. Except your eyes.’
‘Mother had blue eyes,’ Caelin spoke quietly, ‘just like mine.’
‘You must have your fathers gaze, Elyna.’
‘I do,’ feeling a little confused Elyna looked between the two, ‘I always thought I looked most like him.’
‘Oh not at all, you’re a Cain or rather a Welles through and through.’
Elyna blinked and found herself staring at her Mother. Caelin had never really discussed her family in Aramane.