[We've got ten more days before it's all over. Stick with me, people. You're all doing great so far.
Also, I made a technical error in writing that the lake is dried up, when it is only partially gone. Let us say that the soldiers are exaggerating and that the devas were bluffing their way through. (How would they know?) The gypsy admitted he didn't know the lake had dried up, so there's no problem there. I've left an explanation in my second last post before this one.
Glass is having a difficult time accessing PPT at the moment so this is her post in dark blue.]
Espoir casted yet another nervous glance around her surroundings. The lake was no longer existant, well, most of it, anyway. All that remained were little streams of water that hardly constituted even a pond. There were lots of mud and soggy weeds, where most of the lake had been. But apart from that, the area was vastly empty.
Espoir herself felt rather foolish standing in the middle of a huge opening, with a nervous wind bird and a young Kelpie. She wondered how much longer she would have to endure waiting before Artemis and Puk showed up. However long they took, they had better not be taking their own sweet time. For one, she couldn't imagine how she was going to defend herself and the small group should they be attacked. The deafening explosion, the human encounters -- all those suggested something was frighteningly wrong, and danger was close.
She could summon a creature or two to aid her, but she doubt she could do anything else. The Kelpie didn't look like it was raised to fight, and the wind bird, well, apart from singing and looking beautifully marvelous, there wasn't anything else it was good at doing.
[Back to me and Senya.]
"No," the more dominating voice mused. "Not so right to know all truth." A sound erupted from the voice that could only be called a laugh, but it sounded more like an excruciating howl. "That man be a fool."
"Yes," the reporter of events agreed. "He knows not he is blind."
"No," the dominating voice, presumably a leader of sorts, continued. "He sees but strength and wealth in man-world. He sees not strength and wealth in fae-world. Blind man thinks we help him when he helps us."
"He wants to meet with you," the follower cackled. There was a pause as the leader considered this for a moment.
"Bring him," it -- he, she or it? Senya could not tell -- decided at last. "I meet him now."
"What of the seal-girl?" the follower queried. Senya trembled, knowing they were talking about her.
"She stay here," the leader said carelessly. Then it stopped itself. The selkie could suddenly feel something bore into her skin with icy daggers; was it looking at her? She dared not open her eyes to see, but she could feel that it was thinking about her. The ominious feeling of dread increased when the icy dagger feeling went away and the thing said, in a voice boding no good for her, "I want man to see her."