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“Themis!” Julia roared through their house. “You’re going to be late! Hurry up!”

Elainus slid up behind Julia, and put his hands on her shoulders. Slowly massaging, he knew exactly the right spot to help bleed some of her tension away.

Thirty years of marriage tended to do that to a couple.

“I swear you’ve said that more than anything else in this house.” He murmured in his wife’s ear. “Gotten a skill for it yet?”

Julia flicked his leg with her hand.

“Only been offered it a few times.” She half-purred under his grasp. “You’d think he’d be on time for his own wedding at least.”

Elainus snorted.

“And miss one last chance to rile you up?”

“Last chance? Ha! I’d be so lucky. Only way they’d leave the house is if they moved to another city.”

Elainus kissed her neck in agreement.

“I put a fresh mango in the bowl. Should last us until the parties have died down.”

Julia turned round, beaming at her husband.

“Thank you.” She said, letting the moment linger.

“Now! You’ve gotten crumbs on your toga! Brush them off! Come on, we haven’t got all day!”

=====================

The ceremony went off without a hitch. Julia cried as they welcomed Helen to the family, and before they knew it, they were all sitting down around the table for the first meal together.

“Who’s the last spot for?” Helen asked, noting five places had been laid out at the table.

“My sister!” Themis proudly told his blushing bride.

“Oh? You’ve mentioned her a few times, but haven’t told me lots. What’s the big secret? Will I finally get to meet her?” Helen leaned forward, curiosity bright in her eyes.

Everyone looked to Themis, the man of the hour.

“You know she’s Elaine. She’s also Sentinel Dawn. She’s been on a mission for a few years now.” Themis explained, only for Julia to rap his knuckles with her infamous wooden spoon.

“Ow!” Themis knew the routine when Julia smacked him with the spoon. He was to complain. Elainus, his adoptive father, had made that quite clear over the years, and he happily played his part in the charade. Julia menaced him with her spoon.

“That does not even begin to explain things!” She scolded him, when Helen laughed.

“That’s a good joke, but really. Tell me about your sister.”

The family traded looks. Elainus coughed awkwardly to himself.

“No, seriously. Our little girl really is better known as Sentinel Dawn.”

“EEeeeeeeeeee! My heroine!” Helen squealed, then turned on Themis. “You never told me! Why didn’t you tell me? What’s she like? What’s her favorite color? How did she…”

Themis groaned.“This is why I hadn’t mentioned her before!” He complained with a smile. “I wanted you to be interested in me, not my famous sister.”

Helen laughed. “Well, fair enough. Tonight though, I want to hear all about it.”

Themis sensed the opportunity, and gave her a roguish grin.“I had other plans for tonight.”

==========================================================

Elainus held Julia as she cried in front of the Indomitable Wall. Their baby’s name was being written among the names of the fallen, another casualty.

“She was too young.” Julia cried. “It isn’t fair.”

Elainus didn’t trust himself to say anything, just letting the tears flow as he held his wife.

“I am most sorry for your tragedy.” A pale, thin man told Elainus. Elaine’s father wasn’t quite sure who the man was, but he had a deeper shade of red on his [Identify] than anyone else he’d ever known - his daughter included.

“There is no greater pain than for a parent to bury their child. Take my condolences, for what little they are worth. Elaine was the brightest of us. She exemplified what it meant to be a Ranger, to be a Sentinel, and inspired us all. No Sentinel has ever shone brighter, cared more, nor saved as many lives, and her mark will echo through history. Her name on the wall is a solemn promise. She will not be forgotten.

This simply made Julia cry harder, burying her face in Elainus’s tunic. The man seemed to know when he wasn’t wanted, and moved over to comfort Themis.

It was a dark day, overshadowing the joy of their third grandchild being born.

There was still a fresh mango in the bowl.

======================================================

Julia and Elainus grew old and grey together, watching their family multiply and prosper. Maximus had given their descendants free admission to his ever-growing school, for as long as he remained [Schoolmaster], and the unrivaled educational opportunities let all of Themis and Helen’s kids go far in life.

“Are you sure about this?” Themis asked Julia. She patted the elderly [Senator] on the arm.

“Of course we are.” She croaked. “Now, give your mother a hand, one last time.”

Helen hovered nervously as Themis offered his arm, Julia slipping her hand and leaning on him to slowly limp across the house. She made it to her destination, and slowly, trembling with arthritis and age, replaced the mango in the bowl with a fresh one.

“She’ll make it back.” Julia whispered. “I just… don’t think I’ll be here to see it.”

She turned around, and leaning on Themis, was slowly escorted back to her room, filled with her grandchildren and great-grandchildren. There was even a single great-great grandchild, but she was just a young baby. She wouldn’t remember the day, not unless she got a skill later in life.

Elainus was in their bed, and he turned his head as he heard his wife approach.

“Is it done?” He choked out.

Julia gave a tired nod, and with Helen’s help, laid down in bed with her husband of decades.

“Themis. I’m proud of you. I love you.” Elainus said. “You have always been my son, and there has been no greater joy in my life than being your father.”

Themis nodded, failing to hold back his tears.

“I love you, Themis, and your beautiful wife. You two have brought me such happiness.” Julia slipped her hands into Elainus’s, as the rest of the farewells were exchanged.

Finally, the couple looked at each other.

“I love you.”

“I love you too.”

The two looked to the only member in the room that wasn’t family.

They didn’t need to say a word. White Dove knew they were ready, and took them. Their incorporeal souls left their bodies, holding hands, back to the young couple they once were.

“What happened to Elaine?” Julia asked. They were free now, outside of mortal bonds. The great reaper might know.

The bird gave an impossible snort, and tilted her head.

“Oh. OH!” Julia exclaimed.

“Oh.” Elainus agreed.

They smiled together as White Dove guided them onwards.

==================================================

The mango got replaced, a fun little tradition. A reminder of a long-lost sister. A gesture to keep Themis’s parents happy in the afterlife.

When White Dove took Themis and Helen at the end of a long life, the tradition ended. Nobody living in the household remembered the woman who it was for.

One day, a mango was placed in the bowl. It was left there, waiting for a mouth that would never come, a brrrpt that would never be sung. It grew old, wrinkly, and moldy.

It was cleaned up without a second thought, and never replaced.

Comments

Scott, just Scott

Let them stay dead. It was a nice scene; don't spoil it with a sketchy resurrection. At least Artemis is still around so we can get her view of the Bard's music. :-)

Anonymous

I've been mulling over this decision since Selkie announced how they were going to move the setting forward (I stupidly didn't really realize that Iona wasn't concurrent)... I think I've concluded that this transition really feels like taking away Elaine's victory lap after a long race - she does all these things, goes through all these struggles, rises up so high... then, 'poof', none of it mattered. On some level I understand that Elaine is immortal, and that has been set up continuously for a long time now... and that is exactly the sort of setup you would want to have a 'poof' nothing I have ever done mattered arc because of that time scale... but the way it happened, relying on her recklessness rather than that growth and power, in such a way that it honestly wouldn't have made much difference if she was level 20? Yeah, that hurts. Elaine lost years of relative peace and happiness with her family here, and everything from here on may as well be a whole new sequel series since the setting is changing so much... the tragic end of a generally fun and uplifting (to me) story just feels bad. All credit to Selkie if that was their intention though, I'm glad they gave it the time and effort they did, and still plan to continue on it in this new (hopefully appropriately tragic) path.

Tarodan

I couldn't disagree more that none of it mattered. Why does her being there to see it change its importance? It's a bit like saying "Since all life in observable space will end with the heat death of the universe in 100 trillion years, nothing we do on Earth really matters." You're seeing this purely from an external reader's perspective, and ignoring the character perspective. The people she saved, the political changes she pushed for, the impact she had on Remus's entire society, all of that still happened. Heck, 10,000 years later people are still reading her medical manuscripts.

Joshua Little

Thanks for the chapter.

Anonymous

Goodbye Remus.

Jumping Flounder

Man why is it raining in my house? What a bad day for rain

Anonymous

I apologize if I sounded that way. What I intended to convey was the ultimate fact that, despite all she had done and achieved, after 10,000 years of catastrophic and world-shaking changes, her achievements would have essentially become worthless (to her). She was a sentinel, she was a hero who gave rights to women, she went on adventures and made friends all over, she wrote her manuscripts and did her best to teach others... She is now a sentinel to a dead and buried empire. Who's going to honor a controversial (at the time) if well-liked achievement millennia ago? She wasn't even there to Shepard and support the growing population of active and independent women, the politically inclined women would have done that anyway. The only living friends she has after this gap are going to be Night and probably the elves - and I'd note she had a standing promise with at least one of them she has now effectively broken. Honestly, the biggest slap in her face are probably those manuscripts - when I read about the healer talking about them, I had the distinct impression they were a new discovery - in this case, that means that despite writing and sending the documents as far and wide as she could, and proselytizing them to as many students as she could, they ultimately ended up dead and buried for long enough to be largely forgotten. Imagine she shows up 20-something years old and tries to claim credit for an ancient, lost medical manuscript? most would laugh in her face until she pulls a magical copyright trick, if she can.

Anonymous

Spain without the S

Quinn

I keeo seeing people mention how she will have 'no one', no friends, no one who remembers her except night. Despite the fact The Longest Day used 'WE arrived'. Elaine, Artemis, Julius, Amber (formerly Autumn). Elaine isn't alone. Displaced, yes, but not alone by any means.

Anonymous

I'm not crying. There's just something in my eyes

Anonymous

Edit: I am fine with how things went :) just expressing my sadness over the arc change, but things must go on. Elaine should have been given a break or something, to see how her changes would improve things. The whole decision to go into the fairy world to save one person who didn't particularly matter was a bit dumb. Like, who cares about Julius? he's literally just a ranger commander.

Anonymous

I cry for the mango

Anonymous

Author needed an out - point, I bet that otherwise there would've been six more books of this time.