“Who is that?”
Terra pointed to the right, squinting in the new shadows thrown by the ancient
tree beside them.
An old woman, bent
over with age or cares, ambled slowly along the far hedgerow, seemingly
sniffing at the berries and blossoms there. Terra had the distinct feeling that
she sent her gaze at Broadwood more often than was necessary when out walking
in the fresh air.
“That would be Ma
March,” Folly muttered. “Mad as the March Juniper, probably how she got her
name. She lives in a cottage on Ferntree.” He frowned and began to glance
repeatedly over his shoulder.
“What is it?”
Rhodry asked in a low tone.
“Jonah will do
his nut when he sees her.”
“Why?”
“He hates
thinking of Ferntree even by indirect reminder, you know that. Its proximity to
Broadwood …” Folly gestured beyond the hedgerow. “… often keeps him from
visiting here. When he surrendered his assets to the Church, he thought he was
doing the right thing, as a priest has no need of earthly wealth, after all,
but now he begins to wonder if he erred.’
“He erred,”
Rhodry said.
Folly placed
hands on hips. “How is that, my friend? Jonah will never further his line. Why
keep a manor house, one ageing year by year into disrepair without adequate
maintenance? For his old age? The Church will place him in care. More than
likely it will be decent care after his very generous gift. How, therefore, did
he err?”
“He was too hasty
after his father died. He allowed grief to–”
“Grief had
nothing to do with it. Jonah’s conscience came into play.”
“But you must
admit he was too hasty,” Rhodry insisted.
Folly swung away.
“Maybe. Still, what is done is done. And it is also a truth that he hates
reminders of his departed legacy … and Ma March is a direct reminder.”
“How?” Terra asked.
“She was his
nursemaid for many years.”
Rhodry made a
face. “Perhaps she stalks that hedgerow for a reason, one other than smelling
the bounty.”
“That’s what
worries me,” Folly muttered.
Terra was
decisive. “Then you two distract Jonah while I talk to her.”
Without awaiting
confirmation, she headed down the steps to walk with purpose across the
manicured lawn towards the far boundary. She hoped the two men would heed her,
but did not look back to check. She had to seem authoritative to the waiting
watcher.
Yes, Ma March had
straightened and was waiting.
“WHO
ARE YOU?” the older woman demanded as Terra came to rest on her side of the
hedgerow. “I must speak with Jonah.”
Terra eyed her.
“I am Terra. You’re not mad at all.”
A blink, then a
twinkle appeared in faded blue eyes. “A mad woman is allowed certain liberties.
No junipers in my line. My family name is, in fact, March. Suits my purpose to
appear mad, it does.”
“Your purpose?”
“I swore to look
out for the young master of Ferntree, and I aim to keep that promise until I
draw my final breath. His mother entrusted his well-being to me and if there is
one woman I have every respect for, it is Ruth Ferntree, bless her departed
soul.”
Terra frowned.
“Why are you telling me? Why trust me?”
“You are Terra.”
Terra abruptly
bent over, hands to knees, sucking in deep breaths. “Someone has said that to
me in my dreams since I was a child. You
are Terra, she says, many nights. You? How? Why?”
“Dear, calm
yourself. There are connections everywhere. In some manner or another we are
all of us linked. You heard me, I saw you, and now we meet.”
“How?” Terra
whispered, managing to straighten.
“There is magic
in the world, dear. This particular society may not feel it as it should be
felt, but it exists nonetheless.” Ma March changed direction then, much to
Terra’s consternation. “Do you know of Amaris?”
It took Terra a
fair few moments to focus. “The witch?”
“Many call her
that, yes, and she has power, thus they are not wrong … only misled about what
exactly a witch is. Amaris is dead.”
A blunt
statement, that, one which served to further confuse. “That’s terrible, but–”
“Zanderin visited
with her this morning.”
Terra was
silenced.
“Now you wonder
how Amaris is connected to the Stone. Not so? She was the love of Kell
Sindaland’s life, that’s how.”
Terra puffed out
her cheeks, feeling completely lost. “She died because a dead man once loved
her?”
“Yes.”
“How terrible.”
“What is terrible
is that Rhodry Fairweather has lost the ability to use her wisdom, and that
means Jonah loses some of the protection that surrounds Rhodry.”
“What?” She
sounded wholly ignorant, but this old woman now spoke in riddles. “You are not
making sense.”
A wrinkled hand
reached across the hedgerow to grip her wrist. “Dear, just listen. You are
Terra. Listen and tell them.” Maintaining a paralysing grip, she glanced over
her shoulder. “The holier-than-thou churchmen search for me. Part of the deal
for Ferntree is my continued existence, something Jonah insisted upon. Makes
them avid little watchdogs, I’m afraid.”
She turned back
to capture Terra’s eyes in a fierce, intense gaze, one as paralysing as her
hold on her wrist.
“Listen. Many
years ago Amaris spoke words of protection for Rhodry Fairweather, but its
efficacy is less now that she is passed beyond. It’s there, but less. The
danger to all of you young ones is thus greater than it was just an hour ago.
Be aware of this and help Jonah where you are able, for I cannot do so myself,
other than to speak the warning. And know this also, many will die before this
is over. The Tinsal whore cannot be turned from her path. She has a tarot card,
one she allocated to herself, for she is part of the net of connections after
all. Clever girl. It binds her to see it done.”
“How do you know
all this?”
“Because I have
the same card, dear. Oh, it wasn’t delivered me by that fool Zanderin; it is a
card handed down in my family, woman to woman, until it came to me. One will be
left, our story goes, and she will be the one who knows of the other.”
“I don’t
understand,” Terra urged.
“The Manipulator, child. We call it Destiny.
I am the last of my line. My destiny is to know when another takes up this
eccentric card, and Bronwyn has now done that. And not even Zanderin knows.
Tell Rhodry. It gifts him insights Zanderin is forced to overlook in his
ignorance … oh, here they come, my watchdogs.”
An astonished
Terra witnessed an utter transformation. Within moments Ma March was again bent
and frail and seemingly as crazy as the juniper with which she was associated.
Ma March winked at her and shuffled away. She wandered into the clutches of
three robed figures and did not look back.
The priests
merely nodded in Terra’s direction. Thank heavens they were an incurious bunch.
Why were junipers
considered crazy? It had something to do with dwarf trees and souls within, a
children’s tale once, now folklore. Drawing breath after breath, never mind the bloody junipers, she
berated herself, Terra strolled back to Broadwood.
Rhodry was
outside, waiting.
His seductive
smile drew her ever nearer.
Fantasy with a twist; akin to an
alternate Assassin’s Creed, where tarot cards are the weapons.
Bronwyn, a woman scorned, loses her
honour, status, and her leg, and now the time has come to exact retribution.
Zanderin, a sorcerer bound to
her, waves his magic over the attention seeking cards, each with a name
attached, and every card becomes a symbol of doom. This is a cosmic deck, dealing
in fate. Via his swift carriage, hooded and cloaked, he is the harbinger and assassin.
Terra meets her betrothed,
Rhodry, when Zanderin gifts his first card. Rhodry and Zanderin are connected,
and everyone linked to them is on Bronwyn’s list of names.
TINSAL is about bloodlines, secrets,
and a controlled society. As the cards are dealt, death follows, until the
endgame moves to Castle Tinsal itself.
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