Chapter 23

That evening, Ian walked the pleasant trail to the Majis village behind Lockwood. He had visited once more after helping build the cottage, to talk with Lyra and learn more about the Majis.

As expected, the ever-watchful community had seen his approach from some way off, and Lyra herself was at the village edge to meet him. “Ian,” she said. “This is an unexpected, but not unwelcome surprise.”

“Good eve to you,” Ian said. “I have come to ask for your help with something.”

“I will do what is in my power,” Lyra said. “Come sit by the fire.”

Ian followed the older woman through the softly lit village. He did not know that the beauty of the glowing glass would ever fail to amaze him.

At the center of the six cottages, several of the Majis sat around a large fire. The sun had just set, and it was that peaceful time of evening when it was too dark to continue work but too early to fully sleep. Ian hoped that it would be the perfect time for what he had in mind.

Approaching the fire, Lyra gestured for him to sit on a wooden bench next to a familiar light-haired figure.

“Robin?” Surprised, Ian sat down next to her.

She turned to him, her hood back and her eyes bright. “Ian?” she said, imitating his tone. “Why am I not surprised?” She smiled, turning back to face the fire. “I keep finding you in the most unexpected of places.”

“Which makes this an expected place?” Ian asked. She did not sound irked at finding him all around Lockwood.

“What are you doing here?” Robin asked.

Ian pulled the silver needle case from his pocket and turned to face the Majis woman who had sat on his other side. “I came to ask Lyra for help.” He opened the case and dropped the thick iron needle into his hand, holding it out for both women to see.

“My sister,” he said, referring to Ashlin, “discovered an ancient tapestry from the time of the Majis queen. It appears to tell the history of Majis in Iseldis, but several panels have been destroyed, making the story unreadable. This needle, a Majis artifact, held remnants of harmony magic, and it guided Ashlin in restoring some of the panels. But it has since run out of magic.”

“Ah.” The woman nodded. She reached out to take the needle from Ian. “And it will only work if someone who knows the story reinfuses the magic.”

Ian nodded, letting her take the needle. “Prior to a few days ago, I only knew a few Majis, and none of them know the true history of what happened two hundred and fifty years ago.”

“The one-thousand-season exile,” the woman echoed, still pondering the needle.

“You do know that we have been little more than slaves since then?” She reached up to touch her throat.

It was bare, but the gesture referenced the chaos gems that the Chendas kings had used to silence the Majis for generations, cutting them off from their magic.

“With our voices stifled, it was difficult to pass down our own story. What little we know is woven into song.”

“Do you think those songs could help fill the needle with magic?” Ian asked.

“I do not know,” Lyra said, still holding the needle, rolling it between her fingers. “I myself do not know what parts of the song are truth and what are myth.”

Ian sighed silently, hiding his disappointment. He had no right to feel sadness that his idea would not work when he heard the grief in the other woman’s voice.

“But perhaps we do not need to know,” Lyra continued, speaking more to herself than to Ian. “Perhaps the truth in the songs will speak for itself, and the harmony can still be felt.”

She stood, approaching her fellow Majis.

Ian looked to Robin, unsure what to make of Lyra’s reaction.

Robin had her eyebrows raised, appearing equally as unsure.

Lyra returned, sitting back down next to Ian. “We will sing,” she said. “I do not know if it will work, but there are many of us here. Each of us carries different threads of our story, moments and words passed down in different ways from different parents and grandparents. It cannot hurt to try.”

Clutching the needle in her hand, she pressed her closed fist against her chest and looked out at the other Majis sitting around the fire.

A young woman a few stools down began to hum, setting the tone and rhythm. Around her, the other Majis joined in, each of them landing on the same pulsing note.

Then, an older man across the fire started to sing, adding melodic words above the communal hum.

Ian felt a wave of calm wash over him as the sound filled his ears from every direction. It was not the kind of calm that made him close his eyes or wish for sleep. Rather, he found himself leaning forward to listen, fully engaged in the beautiful moment.

Lyra dropped her fist from her chest, holding out the needle to the woman sitting on her right. The Majis woman took the needle, cradling it in her open palms. She examined it gently as she sang in the familiar but different words of her people.

Ian did not recognize this particular song, as he had only heard a few melodies from Aizel. But it somehow seemed like something he had heard all his life.

Around them, the smooth glass pebbles that hung from the nearby cottages glowed brighter, as if all the glass within earshot was affected by an influx of harmony magic.

Ian turned to Robin, wanting to see if she was experiencing this in the same way.

She, too, was leaning forward, her face relaxed in awe.

The blue glow of the glass behind her reflected off her light hair, contrasting with the warm firelight that illuminated her face.

Noticing the movement of Ian’s head, she turned to him.

As she returned his stare, her face softened into a simple smile.

Ian still heard the song filling the air around him. He still felt the glowing warmth in his chest and saw the flickering brightness of the fire in the corner of his eye. But the only thing he could truly notice was the smile on Robin’s face.

His next inhale felt like the first breath he had drawn in years.

This was the truest Robin he had ever seen.

Her eyes, dancing with light, looking back at him.

Her body, relaxed for a moment despite everything they faced, breathing next to him.

Her smile, honest and radiant, filled with awe at the harmony surrounding them.

This was both the young girl he remembered and the powerful woman he was coming to know. This was Robin.

Ian stared back at her, soaking in every detail of this moment before it passed him by.

She returned the stare, blinking softly in a way that said she welcomed his gaze.

If it had been just the two of them, Ian might have reached out to her.

Might have voiced the doubt that had plagued his mind.

The Robin then had wanted nothing to do with him.

She had been too hurt by his father’s decision and never responded to a single letter he wrote to her.

He wanted to know if the Robin now felt any different.

But this Robin in front of him was at peace. And the magic around them called him out of the past, into the present moment.

He turned back toward the flames and relaxed back onto the bench, bringing his body close enough to feel the shared warmth between them.

The song had changed now, seamlessly blending into one of the melodies that Aizel frequently sang to calm Celesta to sleep. The Majis villagers continued to pass the needle around the fire as they sang, each of them imbuing it with their memories and their song.

If ads affect your reading experience, click here to remove ads on this page.