Between a grey sky and a choppy sea slept a tiny island. Little more than a sandy shoal, it was too small for any type of enterprise but just large enough for a pair of warring pod twins to give it a use. Years ago they had set this place aside when they understood there could be no compromise and no coexistence between them. Here was an agreement of no bloodshed and no weapons that neither of them had betrayed despite their years-long feud. Here they could meet in peace.
Athrë had almost never gone when summoned by V’Zael; though they had acceded to inviolable peace upon that spot of land, they were not obligated to answer summons. That had merely given the latter an excuse to hunt down her profligate twin, however, and off that speck of sacred sand they were bound by no contract of civility.
Meet me was all the letter said. This time it had come from Athrë. V’Zael thought she had better go.
Standing upon the mound V’Zael observed, “You’re early.”
Athrë was angry. That was nothing new, but it was different than the norm. It was raw. Sharp. “‘F I could trust you not to have some bullshit trick waitin’ for me I might not feel compelled to get here with a few hours to spare,” she spat.
V’Zael’s heart sank. “When have I ever harmed you here?”
“You’ve not had the chance.” Athrë walked the few paces between her and V’Zael to take her by the throat. V’Zael’s voice choked into silence as the pressure of her sister’s fingers closed her windpipe. Athrë’s anger had grown as searing and malevolent as a blade fresh from the forge. “Send Fi after Sevyrin again, V’Zael,” she warned, her grip tightening vengefully, “and I’ll do to you exactly what he does to him.”
V’Zael stood in growing terror, clawing uselessly against the strength of Athrë’s arm. Athrë could feel her trying to escape, but her magic fizzled out, balanced and absorbed by her own fibers as it had always been. “I don’t give the slightest shit ‘f he burns the whole world up when I’m done,” she finished before releasing V’Zael, just as stars were beginning to crowd the corners of her eyes.
V’Zael blinked to the opposite side of the shoal and found her twin, having anticipated this, already turning to face her. “I did not send Laidre after your love,” she protested, cupping her aching throat. “He must have gone to ensure your safety.”
“Horseshit,” asserted Athrë from her side of the island.
V’Zael put up her palms. “I swear to you I didn’t know.” Thereafter she folded her hands and straightened her posture diplomatically. “I’ll ask him not to interject further, but he may react unfavorably if he finds out about this.”
“Oh, ‘unfavorably,’ is it? And what’s that look like? He gonna come after me, yeah? Maybe Sev’ll not be so gentle with him this time.” Athrë had a point: For once, it was she who had the upper hand. “‘S up to you, V. Call off your dog or let him get killed.”
V’Zael lapsed into silence. Just as her sister turned to leave she added, “I think I know how to fix this.”
Athrë panned a glance over her shoulder. “Eh?”
Her eyes launched into an immediate roll. “Right. What kinda poison can I expect in my gift basket, then?”
Now it was V’Zael’s turn to be angry. “Who are you?” she demanded. “You’re quite proud of yourself because nobody gets to tell you what to think or make up your mind for you, yet you buy wholeheartedly into all the baseless myths you’ve ever heard about the Nightmare. You think every Courtier is two steps ahead of you, luring you into some awful plot. I know you do. But listen to me. I’m your sister. I’m you. What do you know about me?”
Though Athrë was annoyed to be checked that way, she knew V’Zael was right. She turned toward her fully, undecided. “You’re askin’ me to trust you.”
“And why shouldn’t I? Have I ever led you into a trap? Yes, I have attacked you—and I regret it now, for what that is worth—but have I ever employed subterfuge? Credit me this. I am a noonbloom, the same as you.”
Athrë merely rocked her jaw in lingering apprehension.
“Hear me,” implored V’Zael, her voice lowered. “I was wrong. I was misled and shortsighted. What I’ve done to you is inexcusable, no matter the intention. I’m sorry.”
Athrë sieved V’Zael’s empathy for signs of trickery, pride, or anger, but all she could feel was remorse, sincere and authentic.
“I was wrong,” she repeated. “I can’t change that now. I shouldn’t have blamed you for how things happened. You deserve to be accepted, Athrë. Especially by me.”
It had been the better part of a decade since Athrë had taken that name and this was the first time V’Zael had called her by it. To hear her acknowledge and accept the distance Athrë had put between them swayed her that her sister was being genuine. “So...” she conceded, “what are you suggestin’?”
V’Zael shook her head to signal nothing. “I’ve decided everything all our lives. Now it is your turn. I won’t pursue you or yours again. I want peace between us, if we cannot have love.”
She was right not to demand immediate redemption. It had been so long since they’d been on good terms that Athrë was far from sure what that meant. But it was easy to agree to the end of a war she had never wanted. “Aye,” she mumbled, her voice sounding far away.
Unimpeded, she slipped back into the sea, leaving V’Zael alone on the small shoal.