I don't remember where I had planned for this quote to go, but when I looked at the prompt again this morning it was a perfect line to add into what I had written the previous day. A great ending line by a mystery character as you will see below.
I've been moving along great on this story and I am very excited. I have a month more to work on this before I turn my writing attention to 007 Fest and write mostly Bond fics for the month. Most importantly, my beta should be returning from her vacation soon and I can't wait to see what she thinks of how this is coming along.
Favourite writing from this week:
“Ah, there he is,” Arthur said when the riders broke out of the trees. “You said you would have strawberries; I don't see any.”
“I said no such thing.” Merlin countered. “Those aren't in season anymore in Camelot. For that matter, neither are the fae.”
At that, the mounted men drew their swords and Arthur did the same. He pointed it at The girl’s heart.
“Arthur?” she asked, voice shaking. “What is going on?”
“You can drop the act,” he replied. “We know you are not Guinevere. You are an imposter.”
“What? Of course it is me,” she protested.
Arthur waved his free hand and the guards held up their disks. Spread about the circle, she couldn't escape seeing the magenta glow.
With a very unnatural snarl, she dropped the guise. She was still the same height, but nearly everything else changed. Her cloth dress became moss, her skin the colour of soured milk, and eyes a vivid green. Her ears lengthened and stuck out from her frizzy hair.
Arthur backed up a step, but the sword in his hand remained steady.
“I was so close,” the creature sneered. “You would have been disgraced, flirting with a serving girl. And then what would the world think of the shining Prince of Camelot?”
“The world would think no worse of him,” Merlin said in a quiet, stern voice. The gancana turned to look at him. “They would see a prince who chose love over political gain. They would see hope for a Queen who could understand the problems of the common people. They would see a prince who is his own man, not a duplicate of his father.”
She cocked her head to the side and looked more closely at the man speaking. He was not holding a sword, he was not one of the shiny men who could hurt her. And yet something in the way he spoke made her fear him more than the others. The sword to her chest seemed far less worrisome than provoking the wrath of this man.
Arthur was also surprised by the tone of Merlin’s voice, but before he could add anything further, a crack of thunder was heard and a woman appeared in the clearing. A flowing midnight blue and black cloak danced in a nonexistent wind.
“I’ll be taking this one off your hands,” she said imperiously. With a firm tug, she pulled the gancana away from Arthur. “She will bother you no further. You can return those disks,” she spat the word like a curse, “to the vaults. Or better yet to the hellfires of the earth.”
Pinning the gancana with her stare, she said sternly, “It’s time to leave. And there’s no coming back.” She gave a slight nod in Arthur’s direction and vanished as fast as she had come, taking the creature with her.