He did it. He won. The tapestry of the Twilight Tundra was his.
But as Lorene approached the auctioneer, Jack of Clubs in hand, he drew closer to the art gallery--and found himself peeling away from the excited stream of people rushing up to claim their winnings.
The Red Sun was undeniably a beautiful piece. Thread art also happened to be one of Lorene's favorite mediums--what few pieces of art at the Royal Keep back home that had survived the Usurper's ransacking and his mother and uncle's liquidating in order to pay for public works projects tended to be tapestries. More to the point, the scene the artist had depicted wasn't just of the Twilight Tundra. It reminded Lorene of home, so strongly that when he first saw the piece, he thought he might weep.
But now that the thrill of the hunt was over, now that he'd secured a victory (and now that he'd had a chance to step outside and clear his head after overthinking himself into a spiral earlier in the event), the Prince realized what a fool he'd been. The Red Sun was enormous. What was he thinking? There was no way this massive thing would fit into his and Insight's humble little condo.
Something disgruntled and peeved brushed against the edges of his thoughts. No--someone. Lorene's telepathy was (finally) constantly active now, so occasionally he'd catch other people's stray thoughts brushing against his self-made Psionic shields, just like he was used to. Carefully, Lorene lowered those shields just a bit, and looked around the crowded room.
There. The person with whom he'd accidentally gotten into a bidding war over the Red Sun. The Ten of Spades--Helena Harper.
A cold feeling settled into Lorene's gut. A sense of horror and shame--how had he gotten so carried away? And over something he couldn't actually use? It was completely nonsensical. And Helena? Had been nothing but kind to him, from the moment he arrived in Spirale. He hadn't interacted with her extensively, but despite her sharp edges, she had a warmth to her that could not be denied.
She deserved the Red Sun more than he did. She also, apparently, wanted it more than he did. Lorene resolved immediately to make this right.
But he needed to be subtle, and he needed to be quick.
Lorene skirted slowly around the crowd that was slowly dispersing around the auctioneer. Helena was within thirty feet of him; he could do this. He lowered his Psionic shields a little bit more.
The Prince's majyk wasn't strong by any metric. He had a very limited telepathic range, and a very limited telepathic scope. Without leaving himself completely unshielded and vulnerable (unthinkable), he could only send or receive surface (worded) thoughts--or pick up little subconscious thought impulses. But he could send those, too.
Lorene subtly threw out a thought that sounded more or less like the voice of Helena's impulsive thoughts, like a doubtful inner voice, and queried: what's your address? To her, it would seem like an if I had won that auction, I'd be giving the auctioneer my address right now kind of thought process. When Helena's thought-voice answered, Lorene memorized her address, and rebuilt his own Psionic shielding to its previous strength.
The Elf walked up to the auctioneer, handed them his Jack of Spades, gave them his best Gala smile, and quietly, confidently repeated Helena's full name and address for their delivery information.
"I might have to commission the same artist for another piece sometime," he commented offhandedly. "Maybe for a similar piece, just smaller. I really love their work. Thank you so much for all of your efforts today."
@headlesshydra









