The Lion of Farside by John Dalmas

That evening I ate with Wollerda and Liiset and Jeremid. And Omara. Liiset had invited her; she’d been assigned as Liiset’s secretary, lady-in-waiting, and healer to the palace.

Wollerda asked me again to go to Duinarog as his ambassador, but I told him no. There’d likely be too many ylver who’d resent me, the general of the invasion that killed so many of them. And anyway I didn’t want to. Then Liiset asked if I’d reconsider going to the Cloister. She believed Sarkia was having second thoughts about a lot of things in her life. There wasn’t any question now: she was in decline after more than two hundred years. I told Liiset I appreciated the invite, but I just wasn’t willing. That she should send Sarkia my thanks, and my best wishes that she could wrap things up all right.

Next she said I’d need someone to look after household matters for me on the farm. And that if I wanted, Omara was willing to take the job.

For just a minute I was tempted. I already had plans of my own that I hadn’t let on, and they included getting further trained in healing. She’d be as good a teacher as I could hope to have, and I liked Omara, liked how serious and honest she was. And for looks, she was scarcely behind Varia and Liiset. But I said no to that too. Making sure Omara knew that I liked and admired her.

That’s when I told them I wasn’t going to stay in Tekalos.

“Where are you going?” Wollerda asked surprised.

“Back home to Farside,” I told him.

You could have heard a pin drop.

“When?”

“I’m leaving here tomorrow. By way of the farm, to tell the staff I’m going, and to get Hog. They’ll take care of things till you sell the place to someone.”

He sat there stunned, so I explained. “An awful lot has happened to me: I started a war where thousands of men died. And loved two women and lost them both. Now I need to get away, let things settle out in my mind. I can help my dad on the farm, probably log some, and just be in my own world awhile. Then . . . then I expect I’ll come back. I’m not sure why, but it seems to me I will.”

I didn’t say anything about what I planned to do before I crossed over.

After we’d done talking, Wollerda invited me to his bath. Not Jeremid and me, just me. But when I got there, Liiset was there too. Standing nekkit like that, she’d have quickened a statue, so I got right in the water before I got a hard‑on. We talked a bit, and Wollerda asked me to stay for just a few months—long enough to help him with some problems. We talked about them awhile, and I got some ideas I told him about, but I could see he really didn’t need me. He just figured if I stayed around that long, I’d be over losing Melody and decide not to go.

Liiset told me that going through the other way was a lot different than coming through to Yuulith. She made it sound kind of like a hole opening in a water tank, squirting water through in one direction. Anyone could go through with the flow, the problem being whether you arrived alive or dead, sane or insane. But going through the other way, against the pressure so to speak, seemed to be possible only if you had enough ylvin blood and talent.

I didn’t worry about it. I had no doubt I could do it. Anyway, after a few minutes, I said I needed to get some sleep, which was true enough, so we got out and dried off, and I left.

In my room, I’d just gone to bed when someone rapped on the door. I figured it was Jeremid, curious about what got said in the hot tub, so I called out, “Just a minute,” and going over, turned the latch and opened it.

It was Omara standing there.

“Hi,” I said. “What brings you here?” I was pretty sure I knew.

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