A crater, Zaichaer
27th of Frost, Year 123 of Steel
Finn was late for a very important date, but better late than never, he hoped.
On 67th Glade, on one of his rare days free from the exigencies of the Custodes Deorum and Arvælyn's court, he had been taking a nap when light, pleasant dreams of what he might do to Arvælyn should he come to bed had been violently altered into a nightmare of darkness and fear, primordial pain and determination, of being hunted. He awoke in a cold sweat, his right hand aching where Lyra had inscribed her mark upon him.
The next day, he had discussed it with Phocion Vigilia, as the Custodes Deorum was already aware of Lyra and her strange magic. Aværys himself had only been mildly miffed when she answered his call on Hilana's disastrous quest, but Finn knew he no longer had carte blanche to pursue his whims, or even his instincts and intuition.
In any case, it was less than a month before he was in Kalzasi for the coronation of Shokaze Karam Senue, and he had managed to make time to return to Lyra's shop and her home outside the city to question his former co-workers. Again, in Ash, he compared notes with them over several trips to Kalzasi with Hilana, her sister, and Lykos.
But it would take until after his wedding at the beginning of Frost to persuade his brother-in-law that he ought to go to Zaichaer to investigate. That was where all the evidence pointed and while it was the belly of the beast to a man raised in the shadow of the High City, he was determined to do his job and to be the friend Lyra had been to him. Without her, his hand wouldn't be able to play music, and he wouldn't understand magic, nor indeed the world, as well as he did.
So here he was, dressed as a decently successful man of Karnor, his raiment as secretly protective as his Sentinel blacks. The flight over had been aboard a Solunarian trade vessel, testing Zaichaeri airspace and market value, but now he was here, he could suss the slipspace and return home without any further apparent affiliation with them. Some might wonder at the golden cast to his skin, a gift from Aværys' sceptre throughout the Eclipse, but what light there was in this benighted city would only serve to wash it out. Phocion hadn't let him go alone, whether because he wanted eyes on Finn or to protect him or both. But Decius had warned him of the warding preventing physical intrusion, as well as the fact that it didn't encompass the entirety of what lay below.
He daren't linger long here at the edge of this crater. It was cordoned off, but his compatriots had already noted the rotation of the guard. This was his first time seeing it as they hadn't wanted any possible guards to note a familiar face. It was unlikely he would be troubled by military or the Order, and they seemed to rely on the good sense of the citizenry to avoid spelunking in craters that emanated the strange feelings. While Finn began to recall flashes of that long ago dream, he rubbed at his right hand through the black leather glove. While she had taught him much, she hadn't given him an instruction manual for her mark—he hadn't even known it was there at first—and it was entirely possible this was a fool's errand.
But he had to know. He had to do his due diligence, both as her friend and as a Sentinel to ensure the Zaichaeri weren't attempting to do something along the lines of what the Imperium had intended with Talon Novalys. He didn't want his friends to become batteries, nor to suffer the indignities and pains of forced incarceration.
"Lyra...?" he called down into the void, feeling both apprehensive and foolish. Then again, she had always made him feel a stripling boy. He had thought her a long-lived elf, but she was apparently something else entirely. Varvara and Zalkyriax made him feel that way, too.
Wanting out of sight in case this took a while, he felt along the slipspace, found lines leading down and in that didn't interact with the Order's wards capping the crater. He vaulted into darkness. There was some light from above, but very little. Zaichaer didn't have the Sceptre and so their night was dark and full of terror.
She wasn't going to answer to his voice, so he reached up to his neck, remembering the feel of her power—what had remained in the mark upon his hand at that time, anyway—stitching into him there. A golden serpent, Hilana had said, though he couldn't see it in any looking-glass. Still and all, he felt as though it were there, close to him similarly as he could feel Aværys' crown about his brow even when it wasn't flush and burning with his Majesty.
Thrice he could call upon her and she would answer; she had promised. Finn knew more stories than most about the wild fae and other creatures who offered their gifts in sets of three, but he saw no other way through the dead end between his investigations and the mysterious Lyra. He wasn't sure how to invoke it other than with intention, but he could see more of the room as golden light shone through his fingers, could feel his voice altering such that it echoed through the Void in a way that made the nothingness reverberate as if it were something.
Lyrielle tu Kovash Elmari, he said, a name he didn't know. Epithets poured out of him in Vallenor, which he could understand, though he didn't know from whence they came. Lana. Scribe of the Gods. Lady of Whispers. King Breaker. General of the Dark. I call upon you and you will answer me.
He blinked, hoping the light pouring from his neck like heartsblood and the augmented voice hadn't drawn any attention from above. That had been dramatic, he thought. That had been something. But his hand itched where she had first marked him, even though the Vigilia had determined that its power was spent. His neck burned. His throat throbbed from carrying that voice that was his, but more than his, words he knew without knowing how. Damn Lyra and her mysteries, but then, they were what had kept him as her beck and call boy for years.
Still.
Finn prepared to vault away, having already mapped out several places he could move between in quick succession should anyone from the Order be able to match him and attempt to track him through the slipspace. But really, he just wanted to hear her voice once more.