Joan looked over her notes before giving a small nod. âPerfect.â
As if sensing her work was complete, there was a light knock on the door. âJoan? Are you about ready to go?â Bauteut asked.
âOh, yeah, coming!â Joan said before getting to her feet. Some clothes and her gear were already stuffed into her bag, at least the stuff she was taking. The fact theyâd be staying at one of Vivianâs friendâs homes meant she didnât have to pack for a long adventure. Just a few days of getting clothing and relaxation.
âWhatâs that?â Bauteut asked once she came out of the room, the healer motioning towards the small stack of papers Joan was holding.
âOh, just some minor things for the Chosen to take care of while weâre there,â Joan said. âI figure weâre going to be near them anyway, might as well deal with it before the merfolk and the nagas break into a full war, right?â
âThe who and the what now?â Bauteut asked. âWeâre going to be visiting merfolk?â
âNah, this is Chosen stuff,â Joan said. âThereâs like, only a few things they can deal with while weâre there, anyway. Oh, and a ghost ship thatâs caused by an old cursed island. Oh, right, and I guess that ancient underwater god thatâs going to try and create tidal waves to wipe out the coasts in a few decades, probably best to take care of that while weâre there.â
Bauteut just stared at her as if she was insane.
âWhat?â Joan asked.
âWeâre going to be there a few days, do you really think thereâs enough time to do all of that?â Bauteut asked.
âNormally, no,â Joan said before holding up the papers. âExcept I already know how to deal with everything and what the Chosen need to do. The whole war thing was spread out over YEARS. I swear we had to go back there like twenty times to try and stop it from getting out of hand. It turns out there was this advisor among the merfolk who actually thought his sister had been killed by the naga, but it turned out that she had actually been abducted by a leviathan due to her beautiful singing voice and is trapped in this weird realm ofâ¦â She trailed off, her cheeks going red. âItâs not as complex as it sounds. Okay, it is, but I know what they need to do and deal with it all now, rather than having it explode in our faces later.â
âOne of these days Iâm going to have a long talk with you about the concept of âvacationâ,â Bauteut said with a soft sigh.
âI mean, doing this bit of work today will literally save us years of work,â Joan said. âBesides, as busy as the Chosen are now, once this is all over theyâll have so much time to relax. Itâs a lot like compressing fifty or so years of work into a few days. Which sounds way worse than it is.â
Bauteut rolled her eyes and started walking away. âCome on, letâs go. Though that analogy works very poorly. Iâd say it sounds more like youâre putting medicine on a cut before it becomes infected and you need to amputate the arm.â
âConsidering the amount of deaths weâll be avoiding with this method, thatâs probably fair,â Joan said softly. âItâs just going to be Korgron, Searle and Myrin, though. I wouldnât give more than they could handle. I wish Chase was here, though. Heâd be really helpful for a lot of these.â
âBecause heâs a changeling?â Bauteut asked.
âNah, his water magic,â Joan said. âKorgron is amazing, donât get me wrong. The greatest mage in the world, easy. But he was water incarnate. His magic was an absolute wonder to watch. Though, I guess thatâs not surprising. Theyâre all incredible in their fields.â
âEven Searle?â Bauteut asked.
âEspecially Searle,â Joan said. Her cheeks turned a little red when she remembered the way that Qakog and Searle had been sparring. They were both growing so quickly, what if she couldnât keep up in the end? Well, at least she knew Searle would never lose to Qakog so long as he was fighting to protect her. After all, protection was what he embodied in so many ways. That and if he lost, she might be trapped with Qakog and there was no way Searle would allow that.
âWere you two ever this close before?â Bauteut asked.
âWhen I was the Hero? Not at all,â Joan said with a roll of her eyes. âThe Hero was an idiot. I was an idiot. I thought a shield was useless and I was already so angry when I met him that I just never really gave him a chance.â
âDo you think it would have fixed things if you had?â Bauteut asked.
âMaybe,â Joan said with a shrug. âWho knows? I mean, I tried so many lives, but I was always on the attack. Trying to find the way to just break through everything. Maybe I should have focused more on defending. Just⦠I donât know. Itâs not like I can ever know now, right? I made my choice, Iâm here, thereâs no going back. So I have to accept it rather than worrying about the what could have beens. Right?â
âRight,â Bauteut said before glancing ahead. âHope youâre ready for this.â
âAs ready as I can be,â Joan said before the two walked out into the courtyard. To her delight she could see that the others hadnât packed more than a few bags themselves, all neatly piled onto the teleportation circle. She walked forward and put her bag besides theirs. Just a few days, that was all. Her, Korgron, Searle, Bauteut, Qakog, Zorn, an annoying little blue spider, Myrin and Vivian.
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âHere,â Joan said before holding out the papers to Searle.
âWhat are these?â Searle asked, though he took them.
âJust some minor things for the Chosen to deal with while weâre there,â Joan said sheepishly. âShouldnât be more than a few days works.â
âI thought you said there wasnât anything pressing? How is this just a few things?â Korgron asked.
âThere isnât anything that difficult, it just looks worse than it is,â Joan said. âItâs just some quick things that will later become big things. You donât have to do them, itâll just save some lives and effort if we deal with them now.â
âFine, fine. The life of a Chosen, it seems. Always taking care of chores,â Korgron said with a roll of her eyes before moving into the center of the circle. âOkay, everyone hold on. It might be a bit bumpy. Bucket, what are you doing?â
âIf I throw up Iâm throwing up on you,â Bauteut said, her hands locked on Korgronâs arm. âSo go ahead. Make it bumpy. I dare you, Corked.â
Korgron blinked a few times before she grinned wide, showing off her fangs. âI didnât think you had it in you, Bauteut. Fine then, letâs go.â
Joan held her breath before the world, once more, shifted around them. For a moment they were nowhere, everywhere and somewhere all at once, then the next they were in the middle of a large, walled in courtyard.
âDonât do it!â Korgron yelled, her eyes locked on Bauteut. The healer was clasped tightly onto her arm and leaning into her, her face slightly green as she took slow, deep breaths.
âOkay,â Bauteut said softly. âIâm good. I think Iâm good. I think-- oh dear. Thatâs a lot of⦠wow.â
âHuh?â Joan asked before glancing up. Oh, there were a lot of arrows pointed at them. Oh. Right. Demons.
Vivian cleared her throat. âErr, just give me a moment and Iâll take care of this. They were supposed to be expecting us, I donât know why theyâd react like this,â she said before slowly walking away from the circle and towards one of the soldiers. At least those on the ground hadnât drawn their weapons, it was only the archers on the walls who were ready to attack.
Still, Joan really didnât like having so many arrows aimed at them. Hopefully this wasnât an omen for how the rest of their trip would be.
------
âMy cheeks hurt,â Joan said before collapsing onto her temporary bed.
âWhat did you expect?â Bauteut asked in a teasing tone. âYouâre the Joan theyâd heard soooooo much about.â
âWho pinches someoneâs cheeks that much?â Joan asked. Still, despite herself she couldnât help but grin. It had felt nice to be the center of attention for once. Apparently this friend of Vivianâs, Bridgett, had known her since the two were little girls. She didnât have any grandchildren (yet, as Bridgett had repeatedly informed them, though she hoped to have that changed by the end of the year), but she hoped when she did have one they were âhalf as adorable as little Joanâ.
Bridgett had barely seemed to even notice the Chosen, instead focusing on her. Unfortunately, the woman apparently thought pinching cheeks was a sign of endearment and had spent half the introduction pinching her cheeks followed by complaining how thin she looked, only to praise her a moment later for being so accomplished as a daughter of one of the Chosen.
Joan was beginning to think she understood now why Hardwin hadnât wanted to come. Still, the woman was nice enough to let them stay in her manor during this trip, so she could endure a little bit of cheek pinching. Though she really wished the woman hadnât said she was nearly the splitting image of Hardwin at that age, if a bit thinner. She knew it was supposed to be a compliment, but it didnât feel like one.
âHowâs your stomach feeling?â Joan asked.
âItâll be fine,â Bauteut said. âI think Iâm going to just stay here and rest for a few hours. If you want to go out and explore the city, youâre welcome to.â
âEh,â Joan said before giving a shrug. âIt wonât feel the same without you. Besides, Iâve explored this city before. I wanna show all of you some things. Maybe--â
There was a light knock on the door and she froze. âYes?â
âItâs me,â Searle called in. âI just wanted to let you know weâre going.â
âWe?â Joan asked before jumping to her feet and darting to the door, yanking it open. âWhat? Why? Where are you going? We just got here!â
âThese,â Searle said before holding up the papers sheâd given him. âWeâre going to try and get some of these done before we settle in. We shouldnât be gone too long.â
âOh, right,â Joan said sheepishly, her cheeks turning a little red. Why in the world was she so disappointed they were going so soon? âWell, Bauteut needs to rest anyway. How about after you get back I can show you around the city? All of you?â
âThatâd be nice,â Searle said with a small grin. âDonât wait up for us, though. Weâll try and take care of these as fast as we can.â
âYeah, I know,â Joan said with a small smile. At least it wouldnât be that long. Would it? She gave him a small wave before watching him leave, her stomach tightening into a knot.
Damn it. She mentally kicked herself. Why did she have to send them off on tasks as soon as they got here?
Oh, right, because hundreds, thousands or possibly millions of innocent people could die otherwise. Ugh. Why did saving the world have to be inconvenient to her enjoyment? All she wanted to do was grab all of her friends and take them on a wild adventure through the city.
âDo you think Iâm selfish?â Joan asked before walking back towards her bed and collapsing on it.
âA little bit at times,â Bauteut said. âThatâs okay, though. Everyone is greedy sometimes. Itâs all about moderation.â
âI just want everyone to do what I want, when I want it and for there to be no ruining my plans,â Joan said softly. âIs that so much to ask?â
âProbably,â Bauteut said. âFor what itâs worth, I wish they did too.â
âThanks,â Joan said with a light chuckle. âAs soon as they get back, weâre going out though. If they feel up to it.â
âOf course,â Bauteut said with a small nod.