"Dear, do you think we should have told the children?" Ella was wondering
if they had done the right thing.
"You mean that we're going to Ayortha to conduct peace talks. I don't think they need to know that there's a possible war starting. They're just children after all," said Char.
"Yes, but Lela seemed so upset when we left. Oh well, I guess that it was best. At least not all Ayorthians want a war. Areida is still on our side. I have not seen my good friend in such a long time. That at least is one good thing about this trip."
Areida was an Ayorthian who Ella had met when she was a child. She was also who they had named their oldest daughter after. Lela was the name that Ella had disguised herself with the night Char had asked her to marry him.
"I can't believe that Ayortha wants war. Our countries have kept peace for hundreds of years. I don't know what we could have done to offend them. Say, is their anything in your book about that," asked Char. Ella had a magic book that told her the doings of others.
"No, there's nothing about that," she said as she fumbled through the pages, "but here's something from Lela. Oh, Mandy's finally told her that she's a fairy. I think that she should have told the children a long time ago, but she insisted that we wait. Lela's told Areida and Edmund, but they haven't believed her. Now it says that Mandy finally convinced them. Look there's a picture. Lela looks ecstatic, but the other two look upset that they were wrong."
"Those two always were a little skeptical when it came to the exotics. We'll have to show them your Agulen wolf when we get home." Char looked very strange. He seemed disappointed that his son, who looked so much like him, didn't like hearing about fairies and such.
"Honey, we've arrived," said Ella, as they drove up to the inn her friend Areida ran. Areida was there to greet them along with one of her sisters.
"You mean that we're going to Ayortha to conduct peace talks. I don't think they need to know that there's a possible war starting. They're just children after all," said Char.
"Yes, but Lela seemed so upset when we left. Oh well, I guess that it was best. At least not all Ayorthians want a war. Areida is still on our side. I have not seen my good friend in such a long time. That at least is one good thing about this trip."
Areida was an Ayorthian who Ella had met when she was a child. She was also who they had named their oldest daughter after. Lela was the name that Ella had disguised herself with the night Char had asked her to marry him.
"I can't believe that Ayortha wants war. Our countries have kept peace for hundreds of years. I don't know what we could have done to offend them. Say, is their anything in your book about that," asked Char. Ella had a magic book that told her the doings of others.
"No, there's nothing about that," she said as she fumbled through the pages, "but here's something from Lela. Oh, Mandy's finally told her that she's a fairy. I think that she should have told the children a long time ago, but she insisted that we wait. Lela's told Areida and Edmund, but they haven't believed her. Now it says that Mandy finally convinced them. Look there's a picture. Lela looks ecstatic, but the other two look upset that they were wrong."
"Those two always were a little skeptical when it came to the exotics. We'll have to show them your Agulen wolf when we get home." Char looked very strange. He seemed disappointed that his son, who looked so much like him, didn't like hearing about fairies and such.
"Honey, we've arrived," said Ella, as they drove up to the inn her friend Areida ran. Areida was there to greet them along with one of her sisters.
