There and Back
Copyright© 2013 by Aquea
Chapter 144: Come Here Often?
“Wait, what?” I stammered. Rolan and Conrad, two Wardens I’d believed taken by the darkspawn, probably dead, stood in front of me covered in darkspawn blood.
Conrad shot me a tired smirk. “Well hello there. Come here often?”
I laughed. It was so absurd that I couldn’t ask even one of the million questions that were currently jockeying for position in my head. Alistair’s shocked expression mimicked mine, and the soldiers stood back uncertainly, waiting for us to take the lead.
“What’s a nice place like this doing with a guy like you?” Alistair deadpanned, and I lost it. I slid to my knees, dropping my daggers and covering my face with my hands as I giggled hysterically.
There’s just been one shock too many. Between the horrific battlefield outside, the worrying presence of the templars, the missing Wardens, finding the Legion, Alistair almost collapsing ... and then two Wardens who I’d feared dead standing there joking with us ... I lost it. It was just too much to handle. A few annoying tears trickled down my cheek, and I swiped at them irritably, uncertain whether I’d laughed till I cried, or cried till I laughed.
Alistair put a reassuring hand on my shoulder, and when I looked up Conrad was holding out a hand with a kind smile. “I’d hug you, but...” He gestured down at himself, covered in darkspawn gore, and I shuddered.
“Raincheck,” I muttered, squeezing his hand and using the support to climb to my feet. “I just can’t even...” I took a deep breath, shaking my head to clear it. “Before I even start asking all the questions just begging for answers, what’s back that way?” I gestured to the doorway behind him, through which I assumed he’d come.
“Jail cells,” Conrad replied. “Empty. And more corpses. Did you see a ghoul come through here?”
“What? No, can’t say we did.” Alistair was looking more and more puzzled as we went, and I was sure our expressions matched perfectly. “Should we have?”
Conrad and Rolan exchanged frowns, but declined to elaborate further. “Have you found Anders and Solona?” Conrad asked.
I shook my head. “So they are here, somewhere? We assumed, when we saw the templars...”
Conrad sighed. “Long story.”
Uncertainly, Alistair pointed back the way the two Wardens had obviously come from. “There’s no other way out? It’s a dead end?” Rolan nodded. “Then let’s head up, and you can give your report to everyone at the same time. I look forward to an ... explanation.”
I groaned in frustration at the delay; Rolan winced, and Conrad clapped his hand on the templar’s shoulder sympathetically, which surprised me. I was still more than half-convinced he’d had something to do with what had happened outside, and I expected Conrad to be furious, not concerned.
“We’re not leaving without the mages,” Rolan insisted, and I raised my eyebrows. Clearly there’s a lot more to this story than we even suspected – and given how little we know, that’s saying something.
“Of course not,” Alistair agreed, surprised, and Rolan seemed to relax a little at that. Knowing that the hallways behind us were cleared, we allowed the soldiers to lead the way up the stairs, through the warren of tunnels. “Are you injured? Do you need help?”
Conrad shook his head. “Not sure how, but all our injuries were healed before we woke up. Not even a scar to show for them.” He gestured to the damage to his armour, where he’d clearly been impaled at some point; I raised my eyebrows, impressed.
“He’s learned a few things in the last couple of decades,” I muttered, thinking back to the book “The Calling” and all the bandages and poultices he’d used to keep Duncan and the others alive when he’d captured them.
“How did you find us so fast, anyway?” Conrad asked Alistair while we walked.
“Well, we knew where you’d headed, and when we didn’t hear from you, we sent a scout with a raven. He sent a note back saying he was overrun with darkspawn. Seeing as no one else had seen any sign of the Architect, we figured this was the place we needed to be.”
Conrad nodded sadly. “I sent a messenger, but I was pretty sure he wasn’t going to make it.” His voice dropped until it was barely more than a hoarse whisper. “Were there any survivors?”
“Outside?” Alistair asked, surprised. “With the templars?” Conrad nodded. “I’m afraid not,” he finished. “We found enough bodies to account for all the soldiers except one. And a bunch of dead templars.”
Conrad and Rolan both slumped at the news, and Rolan rubbed his forehead irritably with a sigh. Alistair and I exchanged curious glances as the senior Warden reached out and bumped the templar’s shoulder, murmuring some sort of platitude I couldn’t quite hear.
We walked the rest of the way in silence, back to the main chamber where Nate waited with the rest of the army. My mind was racing the entire way – what the hell happened out there? I had been so sure Rolan was somehow at fault ... and yet Conrad’s response would indicate otherwise. It was probably best that we waited until they could tell everyone all at once, but it took everything I had not to shake the both of them until they explained immediately.
We finally reached the main chamber, to find the other Wardens were waiting – we were apparently the last group to return – and their jaws dropped when they saw Conrad and Rolan following us quietly out of the narrow doorway. I grinned at Aedan’s speechlessness as we approached; Zevran smothered a bemused chuckle with a cough and stepped around Aedan to squeeze my shoulder with a wink.
“Cara mia, I’m not even surprised anymore. Welcome back, you two.” Zev nodded at Conrad and Rolan. “I’m guessing we need a place to talk, yes?”
I was grateful that he’d taken control; I was too emotionally exhausted, and everyone else seemed to be standing around trying to process what was in front of their eyes. Zevran thought for a moment, and then herded all of us – Wardens, me, Trevian, and Nate – into the side passage he and Aedan had cleared. There were ruined tables and chairs pushed against the walls – I guessed it had served as a dining area for the dwarves that had once lived there – and we all sat down on the floor facing the two ‘rescued’ Wardens.
“Start at the beginning,” Alistair suggested sternly, and Rolan nodded with a gulp.
“I was on my patrol when we ran across a group of templars camped near the pass up the ridge into the bannorn,” the former templar began. “I knew some of them from my training, though I’d never served with them. They told me they were tracking some apostates in the area. I decided we would share their camp for a while, offered my help if it didn’t slow us down too much. I set up patrols to keep an eye out for darkspawn. After a day, when most of the soldiers had gone to their bedrolls, Rylock – the Knight Lieutenant – finally told me the truth. They were waiting for Anders and Solona.”
My heart skipped a beat, and my stomach sank. Nothing good could come out of Rylock being anywhere near Anders. I vividly remembered killing her in game when she went rogue and tried to kill Anders after his conscription; clearly she didn’t respect Warden authority, so she’d have entirely ignored the fact that they were Wardens.
“What?” Alim exclaimed, agitated. He looked incensed, and only Wulf’s hand on his shoulder kept him in his seat. “Waiting for them for what?”
Rolan looked down, avoiding eye contact. “They were planning to capture them. Rylock was sure Anders was a maleficar, and if Solona was with him...”
“Guilty by association,” Zevran finished wryly. “So what was their plan? They had just come from the Circle, yes? Their Knight-Commander permitted them to go, so what were they intending?”
“I didn’t know it at the time, but these templars had been transferred away from Kinloch for not adapting to the changes Knight-Commander Greagoir had instituted at the Circle. They thought the mages were being given too much freedom, and got in trouble for being too harsh.”
“So who do they report to? Where were they going to take them? I don’t imagine Grand Cleric Dorothea would be on their side either,” I demanded.
“I don’t know,” he replied, obviously chagrinned. “I didn’t know any of this until after. Maker take me, I agreed to help them capture the two for questioning – I thought Greagoir would take a second look, and assuming they weren’t blood mages, release them back to the Wardens.”
The look on Aedan’s face was truly alarming, and Rolan seemed to shrink under his glare when Aedan stood abruptly, looming over the templar angrily. “You were going to help templars capture MY Wardens? And turn them over-”
“Commander,” interrupted Conrad. “Just wait. Please, hear him out. There’s a lot more to this story.”
Aedan stopped and stared down at Conrad for a solid minute. The warrior met his gaze calmly, not wavering, and finally after an agonising moment where all of us held our breaths and Rolan appeared to be hoping to be swallowed by the floor, Aedan stepped back. He didn’t sit, but leaned against the wall to his left thoughtfully, arms crossed over his chest.
“Go on, then,” he allowed, his tone a clear warning – there’d better be a good explanation for this, or both Conrad and Rolan are going to be hip deep in it.
I took a deep, relieved breath, and felt Alistair relax slightly at my side. Rolan swallowed reflexively, and then continued with a deep breath of his own. “I knew that the soldiers with me wouldn’t help Wardens be captured, and might try to stop us, so when they woke I told them to establish a new camp closer to the cliffs, keep an eye out for darkspawn, and wait for me there. I went with the templars and established an ambush site at the bottom of the pass where we would be within range to smite them before they would know we were there. And then we waited.
“They didn’t know exactly when the mages would be arriving – that was my first indication something wasn’t right. If they were working for Knight-Commander Greagoir, they should have known exactly when they were leaving. And then I overheard two of the men talking about ... about Solona. Inappropriately.” He blushed, and I was briefly glad he wasn’t going to give me any details to go with the vile mental image I had come up with. “And Lieutenant Rylock didn’t stop them. Later, it became clear she was going to let them do whatever they wanted to her. At the time ... I guess I hoped she thought it was a joke, or something.” He was clearly upset, his expression almost indignant.
Justice stood up abruptly, his armour scraping across the stone floor, but Aedan held up a hand before he could say anything. The spirit paced restlessly at the back of the room, fortunately not glowing blue or shouting in his horrible abomination-voice, but clearly agitated. I couldn’t blame him.
Rolan eyed him curiously, but then cleared his throat and continued. “I also knew the mages had guards with them, and assumed the soldiers would accompany us to Kinloch. Surely they would yield to the authority of the Chantry? Especially when outnumbered. I knew they’d never stand by and let the templars harm a Warden, and when one of the younger templars brought that up, asking what would happen if the soldiers saw the templars with Solona...” He trailed off, closing his eyes as if trying to banish a particularly bad mental image. “ ... I overheard one of the Corporals saying that he didn’t need to worry – they’d all be dead anyway. They had no plans to leave any witnesses.
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