1 Ash 121 Steel
Hall of Reconciliation
Hall of Reconciliation
"Ah, Mister Angevin," she said, looking up briefly from her desk.
"Vigilant Richter." He bowed. He sat. He knew by now that she cared little for the niceties, but he performed them anyhow, and prepared himself for the inevitable interruptions and unbuttoned his jacket.
She pushed a paper to his side of the desk.
"Sign this and Fverard Manor is yours to rename as you wish."
He took the proffered quill and signed his name. He held the wax over the candle flame, spilled enough beside his signature that he could push his signet ring into the wax, leaving the stylized lion of Angevin.
"Very good," she said tersely, sliding an ash steel key ring to him, as well as a portfolio. "Your keys. The deed."
"Thank you, Vigilant."
She ignored his thanks as she ignored his other polite gestures. She was clean and efficient as a physician's scalpel, and as uncaring.
"The investigation of Ava Albrecht's—"
"Underway," she cut in. It was a dismissal. He knew that.
"I understand," he said, pleased that her efficiency might help bring justice to whoever had killed Albrecht's mother. "When her personal effects are no longer evidence, I would like them released to me or to her son."
Pale blue eyes came up to assess him. "Growing fond of him, are we?"
"He is an asset of the Order and a soldier of the Corps," Angevin asserted. "I will do my duty, of course, but I have been working in close proximity with him and he has performed well in service to the State. I am not unfeeling."
"Noted." If there was a hint of humor in her voice or in her mien, he couldn't be certain. "Once her effects are processed, they will be sent on to Fverard Manor and you can keep them for him until such time as he desires them."
"Thank you, Vigilant." He stood to go.
"One more thing," she said, forestalling his departure. He didn't sit back down, not certain it would be necessary. She slid a dossier across the desk to him. He picked it up and began to scan it.
"Aeseth Leichenberg?"
"Your new mentee."
"They're older than I am."
"I'm pleased to know that you can read."
"Vigilant, with all due respect, I am a full-time airman in the Corps. My duties to the Order have to dovetail in order for me to be of use to either—"
"Leichenberg is a dilettante," she cut in. "They have many talents, but no skill honed enough to elevate them to Watcher. When the Noble Gambit is on patrol, they can remain behind and pursue whatever leads you assign them. When your airship is in Zaichaer, you will oversee their training until their skills befit a Watcher. Until then, they are your Aspirant." When he opened his mouth to say something, she railroaded him. "This is a challenge for you, Mister Angevin. Just as the Lysanrin experiment. Your devotion to the State is no longer in question, at least no more so than anyone else's. I realize I have been called a zealot. But the time has come for you to add your own career trajectory to your list of priorities. New challenges and responsibilities will allow you to build yourself up within the Order and within the Corps. You can be of greater service to the State when your stature is greater. From Watcher to Seeker. From Commander to Captain. Train Leichenberg. Then, someday, you may sit across from them as we are now."
He considered. "Can this wait until after—"
"There is no time like the present, Mister Angevin. Your holiday doesn't commence until the Fifth. That gives you four days to orient yourselves. They are waiting outside for you now. Enjoy your birthday."
Angevin didn't gape. He paused, collected the dossier, the portfolio with his deed, the key, and all, and bowed before leaving. Upon exiting her office, his eyes sought out Leichenberg.