Siegfried took a long look at Queen Aelynn, recalling how she’d carried herself during the King’s feast. He was the sort of person who, when encountering someone in a wheelchair, would contrive to drop something on the floor to give him an opportunity to check on the soles of said wheelchair user’s shoes. The Queen had been carrying herself as one without sight, as far as Siegfried was concerned. Being very careful and deliberate in her movements. Even though her eyes were clouded milky-white, her eyes had been involuntarily darting about behind the veil. Her eye movements and body language did not match. Siegfried frowned thoughtfully. Interesting, he thought. The Queen deferred to the King, who was considering Siegfried and Bob’s proposal. A single, perfect tear ran down King Melendrach’s perfect cheekbone as the elf noble stared off into the middle distance. “My courtly mages and seers have inquired many a time into the fate of my son, and we have never been given reason to hope, though there is a part of me that continues to do so.” Queen Aelynn squeezed his hand sympathetically. “If, as you say, you have the ear of Hanali Celanil, then by all means, we have an appropriate shrine in my Court where you can commune with your deity in peace and privacy.” “Bob, shall we wash our hands?” Siegfried said to Bob. Bob nodded. “Excuse us, your highness,” Siegfried said. He and Bob made as if to get out of their chairs. At the far end of the table, Varien’s eyes narrowed as he surveyed the situation. King Melendrach got to his feet, helping Queen Aelynn, who kept. The rest of the dinner party got to their feet in due deference. We’re going to the King’s shrine to commune with Sune, Siegfried said by way of message to Varien. “My wife, son and I shall join you,” King Melendrach declared slowly, but decisively. Siegfried nodded respectfully. “You’ll have to excuse me,” Varien said to Lord Thalorin. “You do you, my friend,” Alec said around a mouthful of Feywild pheasant. As they stood away from the table and were ushered towards the shrine, Bob couldn’t help but notice that Queen Aelynn’s knuckles were white as she clutched her husband’s hand, and her sightless eyes seemed to be tracking both him and Siegfried as they moved. Varien, if you wouldn’t mind, could you engage your divine senses to see if there’s something nasty about? Siegfried cast a message with subtlety. The King, Queen, Prince Glorfyndin and the party members began to walk slowly along the pathway, which had been shaped by talented forest druids from root and branch networks. The path began to incline until the party was lost in the treetops of the Laughing Hollow. Varien activated his divine senses. While there was no detectable source of noxious evil odour, at the faintest edge of his senses, he could hear the sound of a child’s music box playing a quiet, discordant melody. Well, that’s unsettling, the paladin thought to himself. The royal party approached the shrine, which was nestled in the treetops, the forest canopy giving way to an opening that would allow clerics full view of the sun or moon as need be for their worship. Several tree stump altars were arrayed before an imposing dais, atop which was planted an impressive display of topiary, which, depending on the angle at which one viewed it, changed its shape into each of the deities of the elvish pantheon. A neat trick, Siegfried observed. Bob chose a spot in the shrine where the trimmed tree took on a Sune-like shape, and began to prepare himself for the ritual to commune with his goddess. Queen Aelynn still held on to King Melendrach’s arm, and to Siegfried it wasn’t clear who was supporting who, as the Queen stroked the King’s arm and whispered words of comfort as the monarch bent his crowned head to listen. Prince Glorfyndin seemed upset that there weren’t any scantily-clad oracles stationed at the shrine. Bob knelt at the altar, closed his eyes, and began to pray. He opened them to find himself standing not in a treetop, but on a mountaintop, one cloaked in roiling pink-hued clouds. The moon shone brightly overhead, and far below in the valley created by the mountain peaks, spread the romantic realm of Brightwater, Sune’s domain. A stone staircase led away from the summit out into the sky above Brightwater like a phallic promontory, and at the tip floated Lady Firehair, the Princess of Passion – Sune in all her crimson-tressed glory. She was wrapped in a clingy silken sash, the ends of which twirled about her slowly, and Bob couldn’t be sure whether or not Sune was undressing or getting dressed as he approached. Bob steadied himself as he approached, as there were no safety railing affixed to the stone archway. He knew in his heart that Sune was the type to let people down easily, so there was little chance of him falling to his death. But little chance was chance enough. Sune’s full red lips parted in a welcoming smile. “Robert, my Beloved, it has been too long. What a pleasure to see you. How may the Lady Firehair soothe your spirit today?” Bob bowed reverently. “Milady, I come today to inquire about the whereabouts of a young Prince of the Misty Forest.” Sune stared off into the distance, her lips twisting into a frown of puzzlement. “While traveling in the Misty Forest seeking amusement, Prince Alagarthas met a Bitter End.” “A Bitter End,” Bob repeated, cognizant of the seeming weight that the goddess had placed on those two words in particular. “Was the prince murdered?” Sune took a moment to think, and then nodded to herself as if confirming a suspicion. She leaned forward and said, “No.” “Huh,” Bob said, thinking things through. “Was it an accident?” Sune shook her red tresses. “No,” she breathed. “Not an accident.” Then she leaned down and placed a kiss upon Bob’s lips. Bob’s eyes snapped open and he found himself back in the elvish shrine. “Bob blushes!” Siegfried said. “What news from Brightwater?” “I’ve communed with Sune,” Bob said, his heart still pounding. “She has revealed to me that the prince met a Bitter End in the forest.” Bob detected the slightest flinch from Queen Aelynn at the mention of a Bitter End, but she covered it by hugging King Melendrach, saying, “you see my love, it is the same as all the other divinations.” “I also regret to inform you that it was not an accident,” Bob continued. “It was no accident,” the king repeated, as if testing how the words sounded in his mouth. “It was the Emerald Assassin, after all.” “Was it murder?” Siegfried asked Bob. “It was not murder,” Bob confirmed. The king’s eyes narrowed. “Not murder?” “It implies a sacrifice, perhaps,” Bob said. “A sacrifice?” King Melendrach replied. “I do not understand.” “A ritual sacrifice would still be classed as murder under a number of laws in the Realms,” Siegfried said. “Sune told me that the prince met a bitter end while seeking amusement in the forest,” Bob summarized. “And that he was not murdered, but it was no accident.” “That leaves two possibilities in my mind,” Siegfried mused aloud. “Please, illuminate us,” The King said. “This is no sacrifice,” Varien said. “There is the possibility of suicide, that is, a killing that was no accident but was not murder, either,” Siegfried said. “However, Sune told Bob that the prince was seeking amusement in the forest, which leads me to believe that he was not intending to kill himself. So he was seeking amusement, met a bitter end, not murdered, not an accident, then perhaps a fey bargain. Perhaps he partook of fey food and was not able to return. Have your seers contacted the archfey regarding this disappearance?” King Melandrach nodded. “Of course, would he have crossed the fey boundaries of our forest, into the Feywild, we would have used our eladrin contacts to seek him out on that plane. There was nothing to suggest that he has slipped between the planes in this manner, though there are many fey crossings in the Misty Forest. My son would have been taught from an early age about these things, tutored in the ways of the fey. It is our way.” The king thought for a moment. “But my son, Prince Alagarthas, was a curious spirit, an adventurer at heart, always keen to uncover new understandings. He was…so full of life,” King Melendrach said, his voice catching sorrowfully. Another tear spilled down his cheek. “He would not have accidentally fallen afoul of some trick, not my son. Not my son.” Siegfried thought for a moment, then pulled out a notepad to sketch some probabilities. “Bob asked Sune if Prince Alagarthas was alive, and she replied that the prince had met a bitter end. That’s not a no.” His eyes widened. “No, that’s not a no!” He turned his eyes heavenward. “Petrification! Transmogrification! Abduction!” He shouted. “Sune! Bob really wants to talk to you again! Oh, she’s sneaky.” He turned to Bob. “I’m not speaking ill of your goddess, but I am saying she really wants you to call her back.” “That could get complicated,” Bob said. “Every time I attempt to contact her in this way, the likelihood of making such a connection decreases.” “I’m aware,” Siegfried said. “But I’m willing to let you take that risk.” He shook his head ruefully. “Oh, she’s clever.” Bob nodded. “Let’s see if we can uncover Sune’s secrets,” he said. He prepared to cast commune again, as a ritual. Siegfried made some notes and handed a scrap of parchment to Bob. “Are we doing this?” He asked with a glint of insanity in his eyes. “Are we crazy enough to do this?” Bob closed his eyes and began to chant, again. He opened his eyes, and was back in the mountains above Brightwater. Sune floated before him, a knowing expression on her beautiful face. “Robert,” she chided gently with an amused smile. “Twice in one day?” “I just cannot stay away, milady,” Bob replied. “Well,” Sune blushed. “I was hoping I would see you again, my beloved.” In the shrine, Queen Aelynn continued to speak to the king. “This is causing you too much distress and distraction, my king,” she said softly but insistently. “We’ve been over this painful ground so many times before. Why put yourself through this again?” Varien noticed that while she was speaking, her face and body oriented towards King Melendrach, her sightless eyes were darting about as if to keep Bob, Varien, and Siegfried in view. Varien approached and put a hand on the queen’s shoulder. “Calm yourself and be still,” he said firmly, using his healing powers to attempt to heal the queen’s blindness. Prince Glorfyndin’s eyes widened as he suddenly began to pay attention to his surroundings. “You dare? You dare lay a hand upon my mother?” “I do,” Varien said sharply. “Sir, you forget yourself, you are in the presence of royalty!” Glorfyndin snarled. He motioned to the guards stationed nearby, who lunged forward protectively. “And you are in the presence of divinity!” Varien said. “Guards!” Prince Glorfyndin shouted. “Belay that!” Siegfried said loudly. “Madmen are changing fate!” “Would you deny your blood be healed?” Varien asked the prince. “You should be thanking Sune.” He looked at the queen, expecting a miracle. Queen Aelynn’s sightless eyes stared back at Varien, even as her face remained oriented towards King Melendrach. “Huh, that should have worked,” Varien said, puzzled. The King frowned, and grasped his wife protectively. “We have tried to cure my wife’s affliction through magic many times. Your heart is in the right place, but-” “That’s because your queen is not blind,” Siegfried interrupted. “Why would the queen lie to her people?” Varien asked, looking at the queen. “That’s none of my business,” Siegfried said. Queen Aelynn turned until her body was oriented in the same direction as her eyes, staring sightlessly at Varien. “I tell you the truth; I cannot see.” “But why can’t you see?” Varien asked. “I believe the Queen,” Siegfried said. “Her eyes work, but she cannot see. We’ll deal with that later. Right now, we’re following up on your son. One miracle at a time.” He turned back to Bob, who was on his knees praying intently, oblivious to the goings-on around him.