“It did, huh? Good things, I hope. Or she was listing off the people who nag her constantly about her safety,” Daryll said as he piled food on his own plate. Kire shook her head, starting on her own dinner.
“How’re you feeling, Nard?” Kire finally asked. Narda shrugged a shoulder.
“Better. I can go back to camp tomorrow. With you, if you’re up to it. While I’m confident Ed and your other generals can handle the captured lords, I’m sure you’re itching to go back.”
Kire nodded. “If everything’s going smoothly, Jan should be coming back soon, too. And we could—”
“Kire,” Elva put in, amused, “weren’t you the one who said no war talk at the dinner table with Etta and Precy just the other day?”
Kire clamped her mouth shut. “Right. Sorry,” she said, turning to her younger cousins.
“Aw, we don’t mind though,” Etta put in, pouting. Precy likewise had a disappointed look.
“It’ll be terribly boring, Etta,” Narda said, smiling down at the girl, “we’ll be talking about numbers a lot, and which crusty old lord is the most annoying of the lot.”
“Nard,” Kire warned, though she was smirking at the description.
So the cousins skirted talk of the recent battle. Kire asked the girls what they had been up to while she was gone, which part of the Northern towns Daryll had taken them to, which books Elva had lent them to read. Elva told them about her day; after tending to Kire and Narda, she had left the manor briefly to visit the nearby villages, a regular habit of hers as both their Lady and healer.
“I’ve been badgering Kire to let me visit this other world,” Daryll put in later, “so imagine my disappointment when I find out she took Narda, and that Ed’s been there this whole time.” Narda let out an amused snort.
“First of all, Narda wasn’t meant to come along then,” Kire put in, pointing at the giantess with a fork. “And Ed was stranded. Doesn’t count.”
“Sure. I still want to meet—Envy, right? And you, actually,” he said, turning back to Ruli. “Especially after what happened at the gate.”
“You have been throwing yourself back at your research ever since that incident,” Elva said. Daryll shrugged a shoulder.
“I never really stopped. Just—slowed down.”
Dinner was over a while later, and, to the girls’ disappointment, Kire had asked to talk to the adults without them. “I know you two are going to find someone to badger into telling you tomorrow, anyway,” Kire whispered to them with a wink after she and the others said their good-nights. “It’s Daryll, isn’t it? You know he’s a terrible liar.” The two giggled at that, not denying it. “Now get your rest, you two.”
“Bye, Ruli,” Etta said, much less formal now. Precy grinned and waved at him, too. Immediately after turning their backs on the adults the two girls started whispering rapidly in Taakalon, casting looks behind them now and then before they disappeared upstairs.
Kire sighed, watching them go, before turning back to the others. “When did they get so big,” she sighed. “Right. So. Narda, what time do you prefer going back tomorrow?”
“Early,” she stressed; Kire wrinkled her nose at that, but nodded, understanding the necessity.
“Once Jan returns, and we’ve met up with Ed, we can convene the war council for the retaking of the Capital,” Kire said. “We’re ready.”
“What will you do with the captured lords, Kay?” Elva asked, elbows on the table, fingers laced together.
“We’ll decide with the council. We have both the patriarchs and their immediate heirs, while their next-in-line for command haven’t proven themselves yet as leaders. Big chance they would be more pliable, with their sires as our hostages.”
“Mm. A year ago you wanted them all beheaded,” Narda mused.
“I know. I still want to,” Kire muttered, leaning back on her chair, looking down at her right arm as she flexed her fingers on the arm rest. “Traitorous bastards.” She exhaled noisily, then looked at Ruli. “I’ll bring you back tomorrow. Depending on how the war council goes, I will be back to get Ysaryn. She’ll have her new swords then.”
Daryll cleared his throat. “I want to be there. The council.”
The women looked at him. “Really?” Elva said, a little dubious. “Are you sure? You’ve never wanted to be involved in this sort of thing before.”
“Look. They used traitors and magic to unseat you from the Capital, cost us dearly, cost us Earnest, nearly had the girls taken hostage. I want to be there when you decide how you’ll pay them back,” he muttered, frowning at the table. “And—I want to run a few ideas by you.”
“Ideas—for the siege?” Kire said, surprise evident on her face.
Daryll nodded. “Which is partly why I wanted to talk to you,” he said, turning to Ruli. “Those wards worked so well, enough to contest Gemini blood magic. They have that on their side, and likely would have prepared for an attempt to retake the throne. We’re more than a match for their military might now, especially after the victory today, but you have to admit, it was their magic that had driven us away from the Capital in the first place.”