peerless_thayet (
peerless_thayet) wrote2012-05-04 08:23 pm
(no subject)
Summer in Corus can be punishingly hot, especially in the enclosed banquet halls and galleries of the palace.
Thayet has taken to indulging in a morning visit to Milliways, just to slip outside and have the cool Scottish breeze dance off the lake and through her hair, cooling her down for at least a little while.
Today she takes a large glass of iced tea along and chooses a spot underneath a tree, listening to the leaves rustle above her head and the whinnies of horses turned out in the paddock.
Milliways is enchanting in the morning mist.
Thayet has taken to indulging in a morning visit to Milliways, just to slip outside and have the cool Scottish breeze dance off the lake and through her hair, cooling her down for at least a little while.
Today she takes a large glass of iced tea along and chooses a spot underneath a tree, listening to the leaves rustle above her head and the whinnies of horses turned out in the paddock.
Milliways is enchanting in the morning mist.

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This will be fun. Thayet glances about and retrieves her tea, eager to be on their way.
"Would you like to leave a note? Alert anyone where you have gone?"
Because otherwise Thayet is going to sweep her inside and right out the door. She is already starting to walk that way.
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She has every faith that she'll be returned in good order.
Sweeping inside and out the door works for Amy.
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(Yes, closets. Queens, as Amy surely must know, have many, many clothes.)
Thayet pauses, brow furrowed into a delicate frown. Silk, velvet, brocade, all in sumptuous colors and elegant cuts, and yet... tossed about the room with little care.
"I really am abhorrently messy on occasion."
It's cheerful.
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She looks around the room.
"It's lovely.
"If I tried to be abhorrently messy, I'd come back to find someone dreadfully helpful had tidied up."
It must be nice to have a chance to be abhorrently messy, on occasion.
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She scoops up a scarf and tosses it on a chair.
"They do try," she sighs, before clapping her hands together. "Enough of this, though. You didn't come to Tortall to see the latest court fashions."
Horse Lords forbid.
Thayet smiles and leads Amy into her bedroom. Technically it is hers alone, and sometimes it can be just that, but generally Jon stays here as well; that's his dressing gown tossed at the foot of the bed (a very kingly robe, of course) and his stack of papers on the table.
"Jonathan is tied up in meetings the rest of the day, I'm afraid. I do hope you can meet him eventually."
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"I hope so, too, though I quite understand.
"There are days I don't see Perry for more than thirty minutes, he's in so many meetings."
And Amy usually has her own to attend as well.
"And occasionally, there are afternoons we have to run away and hide in the woods."
Very occasionally, these days. But they still work them in when they can.
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It's breezy, teasing in tone, and yet the look in Thayet's eyes is wistful. She had at one time so looked forward to escaping royal life.
Holding the door, she smiles once more at Amy and asks, "Did you and Perry have any particular questions about the university?"
The bedroom leads into a sitting room, where a larger door opens to a grand hallway. Outside, a palace guard eyes the two women as they walk out and frowns slightly, certain that only one, the queen, had gone in.
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(Queens are generally good at looking like they have every right and expectation to be where they are, doing what they're doing.)
"I really think you just have to insist on an occasional escape. After all, even kitchen maids get an afternoon off every other week.
"As for the university, my first question for in this sort of situation is always, 'What do you wish someone had told you before you started?'"
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"That Masters of Music and the Noble Arts need their egos stroked almost as much as diplomats," she answers, lips curving in a wry sort of smile. "You wouldn't believe how they angled to win the best classrooms, the best instruments, the best students."
She shakes her head and starts down a staircase, redirecting her thoughts toward a more serious subject.
"I do wish I'd been better prepared to fight for students of reduced circumstances. Providing aid for them turned almost as controversial as allowing girls to train for knighthood."
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As for the more serious matter . . .
"Hmmmm. Yes, I can see that. People can be quite . . . stuffy about that sort of thing. And it can be hard to challenge too many conventions at once.
"What did you do about it in the end?"
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Amy understands, she knows. It's comforting. Not for the first time, Thayet thinks how nice it is to count another queen as a friend.
"Compromises elsewhere," she answers, a tad rueful in tone. "And we had to agree to build it on the north bank of the Olorun so nothing too 'important' would be lost if it happened to blow up."
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It tempers extremes.
"Is the university likely to blow up?" she adds, curiously.
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"Surprisingly, yes." A short laugh. "There is a mage school."
Untrained and beginning mages are notoriously explosive under certain conditions.
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"Well, that at least I shan't have to worry about. We haven't enough magicians to require a school. There probably aren't five in all of Ambergeldar."
And she'd be surprised if there were that many.
"Are most people pleased that you have a university, now that it's built and running and all? Even with the objections and compromises along the way?"
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"Pleased might be a stretch. I suppose some critics have been made to realize the advantages to properly training mages and then hiring them. Healers, in particular. We have had fewer deaths from improper healings, if my sources in the Lower City are to be believed."
She holds open a door, still considering her answer.
"What objections remain will fade in time, generation by generation. The nobility never like handing over power, of which knowledge is a sort, but the longer it exists the more common place it will seem."
She very sincerely hopes.
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There are a few witches, and of course there are fairies, but fairies have their own society, and Kings do not employ witches.
Amy nods. "Every way it's always been was once a terribly daring thing someone insisted on trying.
"Do you find that the part of the population not comprised of the nobility approves?"
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"Yes," she breathes out, smiling. "I do. It has opened many doors for those who felt permanently locked away from opportunity."
Throughout Tortall Jon and Thayet are considered terribly strange rulers, but not bad ones.
"My Riders sometimes have friends at the University. I hear about it through them."
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(To say nothing of regular trips to the end of the universe.)
"I would think it would have positive effect on traffic and commerce in the area as well," Amy says, thoughtfully. "Benefits for more than just the students."
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Like Alanna, Thayet has a soft spot for certain thieves.
"Here we are, then," she says, as two attendants, moving in perfect harmony, open a set of double doors.
The sun is bright, making the queen blink rather a lot. Beyond, the royal stables, where Jon and Thayet's personal mounts are kept. There aren't as many people here as in the main courtyard, but there are still quite a few liveried servants hurrying about. Thayet approaches one such man, who snaps to attention and bows.
"I'll be needing a carriage brought around. We'll be visiting the University today."
The man blinks. "A carriage?"
Thayet nods patiently. "A carriage."
"Very well, Your Majesty." He sends Amy a curious look and turns toward the stables, shouting orders.
"I usually ride," she explains. "Buri should be down with the trainees. We'll stop there first."
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It's a skill.
"I'm more than content to let you set the itinerary," she tells Thayet with something of a grin.
"And I suppose that's something else to consider. What sort of things would have to be provided to support a university, and the area it's in. Like security."
Though Ambergeldar really has very little crime.
"I almost feel as if I should be taking notes."
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She nods, amused at Amy's comment.
"I have many left over of my own I am more than willing to share."
As they wait, Thayet tells Amy of how they decided on different programs, how they recruited instructors and how they began providing regular meals for the vast quantity of people who were suddenly occupying that part of Corus.
She is still talking about the food when the carriage arrives and they climb inside.
"Do you have a location in mind?"
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"Our Protocol Officer's. He was in on a plot to take the throne.
"He'd be completely horrified that that's what happened to his lands. It's just not what's done. Of course, the same can be said of high treason.
"I shall have to make sure he hears about it . . . "
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It would pain her to admit, but Thayet's expression turns from interested friend to Very Indignant Royal at the mere mention of treason.
High treason is something she has witnessed first hand. Amy might have heard the highlights from Alanna or even from Thayet herself, but as they wind their way from the Royal palace to the banks of the Olorun with only a brief stop for Buri, Thayet recounts what happened the day of Jon's coronation just as she experienced it.
It isn't something she talks about much, but it's important to establish what was and what might have been while Amy sees for herself what is.
The tour itself is a success. The staff of the University -- even the most persnickety masters -- are eager to impress, and Amy does the same with practical questions about everything from how it is run to daily budgets and construction costs. Thayet answers when she can and seeks out others to answer when she cannot.
A good two hours later, the sun is high in the sky and Thayet takes the Dean of Magic up on his offer of tea service on his office balcony.
"I think you've made a fan of Harailt," Thayet smiles at Amy, waiting for her tea to cool, "even though none of your questions pertained directly to the Gift."
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"Thank you, Thayet. I suspect I am about to go home and talk Perry's ear off for a few days, but I think I have a much clearer idea of what we'd need to do and arrange and so on."
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She lifts her cup, smiling over her tea.
"You know, I was thinking while that Master of Legal History was rambling at you about the establishment of the Provost's Guard: you're the first proper friend I've brought here from..." her eyes dart to the room behind them, checking that it's clear "...Milliways." Her smile widens. "It's fun."
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And Amy's Court is rather used to the Queen's odd friends materializing from the ether.
"I'd love for you to come visit some time.
"Certainly once there's a university to show you, but before then, too, if you'd like."
Because it's likely to take a little while to pull together.
Her smile wrinkles up her nose. "The Master of Legal History did ramble a fair bit, didn't he? I'm reasonably certain he reached his point in the end, but not completely."
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Perhaps Jon and Perry would also enjoy getting to know someone with similar royal responsibilities.
"At least we aren't required to attend his lectures," she notes, "though he looked rather hopeful that we would. It would be entertaining to see his face, should you tell him why exactly you've no need of our detailed history."
The thought very nearly makes the Queen giggle.
"Yes, a rather successful day, I think." Holding her tea higher, she toasts, "To the universities. Long may they fulfill our hopes for them."
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"And to friends.
"Wherever we are so fortune as to find them."