...
St. James Palace, the home of sovereign, was a monolith: heavy, brown, and solid. It lacked the symmetry of the Parliament and the Crown's other great structures, as its twin towers were located off to one side, their octagonal turrets standing like two sentries at the ready. The red-and-blue Franco-British flag flew proudly from the roof and whipped in the air. Above, the sky was gray, as it always was; the clouds stirred and streaked across the horizon, but never parted to reveal the sun. Perhaps the great palace would look less dour if the sun ever shone on it, but it rarely did. The gray London made the castle look darker, more ominous. Aelwyn felt increasingly small and insignificant as she got closer to it. St. James was the seat of the queen, and had been home to centuries of British and Franco-British rulers. Its architecture spoke of unquestioned power, of a strength that had stood for centuries without interruption—of a power that would never bend, never compromise.
Her father was in his study, she was told by his unsmiling secretary. It was the same dour old woman who had ushered her out of the castle four years before. The chamber was tall and narrow; like the castle itself, the proportions of the room were designed to intimidate anyone who entered. Slender pilasters dressed the walls, their thin golden lines interspersed with panels of rich red cloth. In the early morning light, the cloth reminded her of blood. A brazier of candles made the darkness of the room even more intense, more foreboding. Her father's desk occupied a faint patch of light below the flickering candles. The mighty table could seat a dozen men, and the desk nearly dwarfed the man sitting at its head. A globe decorated on side of the tabletop; it spun slowly, apparently of it own accord, and guessed it was her father's magic that made it spin. Indeed, it was the power of the Merlin that made all things turn. Behind the desk hung a loosely knit tapestry embroidered with a map of the empire. The map's size, its age, its glorious detail, all said one thing to anyone who braved a visit to the first magician of the realm: Our empire is vast, our power unquestioned; our rule will stand forever.
She had not seen him in a decade, but Emrys Myrddyn looked exactly the same, with his stern countenance and trim white hair and beard. He was dressed in a beautifully tailored morning suit, his gold cufflinks catching the light. "Ah, there you are," he said, looking up from his paperwork with a distracted smile, as if she had just disappeared for a movement and not been sent away for four years.
"Hello, Father." she said politely.
"Have a seat," he said, motioning to the chair in front of his desk. "How was your journey? Are you hungry?"
She shrugged. "I'll get something from Cook later."
Ermys took an apple from behind his desk, peeled it, cored it, and cut it into fourths. She was touched by the gestured. He'd remembered that as a child she had always preferred her fruit this way: peeled, prepared, cleaned of skin and pits and stones, which was the way the princess's fruit was always served. When she was a child in this castle, she had insisted that everything she had be exactly like the princess's. She had never settled for less than what Marie received.
She accepted the plate gratefully and took a bite from one piece.