Iona rolled over onto her side and hugged the pillow closer to her chest. As she waited in silence, her eyes watched as Cilas lay down on his own bed across from hers. Their gazes met, silver clashing with blue. He gave her a simple reply that hardly answered her question, but she couldn’t bring herself to feel disappointed even the slightest. She blinked when he turned his beautiful eyes away and closed them, leaving her with a strange sense of emptiness. He appeared weary, eager to once again rest in the comfort of a bed. How long had he been sleeping under the stars? How long had he been on his journey? Iona buried her nose into the top of the pillow, her eyes peeking over to watch Cilas. She returned no reply, instead letting herself fall into silence. Containing her excitement was no easy feat, but gradually, as the silence and waiting extended, Iona was nearly driven to sleep. Her eyes fluttered shut with a slow drawn in breath. The pillow carried the scent of various flowers, but it was stale, as if it had not been refreshed anytime recently. It was nothing like Cilas—he carries the waters and the winds, the trees and the earth, all life that surrounds them. She much preferred that over the pillow, but the pillow was the only thing she could embrace. A false sense of comfort.
Suddenly, the ship creaked quietly, and Iona was lifted. Although she had not been standing, it was as if the ground vanished from beneath them. As if they were lifted into the air. Her eyes slowly opened. Cilas explained that they were finally leaving Canelux. Silently, she moved to lift her upper half with her arms. Iona looked up at the round window behind them, but all she could see was blue through the thick glass. One after the other, her legs dropped off the side of the bed, and she stood, straightening out her dress for a second. Then she walked closer to the window, leaned over the small table beneath it, and attempted to peer outside. She looked from various angles, but there was still only blue. It was then that she decided to do as Cilas said. With a single glance back at him, she walked out the door, trusting he would be close behind.
She went down the halls until she found the stairs leading up to the deck. The moment she stepped into the open after the climb, the wind ruffled her silver hair. She gathered it all in her hands and held it over one shoulder, to keep it from becoming unruly. The air smelled strongly of salt, and when she looked skyward, she noticed how the clouds seemed much closer before, and they gradually approached further. Were they falling?
A bird’s cry drew her attention to the side where there flew a flock of seagulls. She walked over to the railing. There, she looked down, her eyes widening at the vast blue beneath them. It was a shade far deeper than the sky, the water glistening gold and white from the bright sun overhead. It stretched and stretched, an endless ocean that went far beyond what she could see. Behind them, she spotted land, where they had boarded. Slowly, slowly, the city shrunk from both height and distance. Ahead of the ship, she could only see more ocean. It was then that she realized what Cilas was talking about. Her eyes were massive and shimmering with delight. Her joy was overwhelming to the point that it began to spill over, causing her lips to form the largest smile, one that reaches the eyes. “It’s…so beautiful,” she whispered. It was like nothing else she had seen, a league of its own when compared to the splendor of land. She wondered what lied beneath the crashing waves, what creatures thrived, what world was hidden in the depths of the sea.
Then, there was another flash of an image. A woman standing on pale sand, while the joyous laughter of a child echoed in her ears. The ocean expanded before her, with a little girl dancing and splashing in shallow waters. The vision lasted no longer than a moment, but it left her with a strange feeling. Longing, happiness, sorrow, and emptiness. Her smile softened as she looked out, watching the ocean grow further away beneath them and the clouds come nearer. Her eyes revealed how she was feeling as one hand moved back down to her belly. A child…had it been Iona’s? She had never seen her even expecting one through the many years the Wisp watched her pass by the lake. If not hers, then…who was she seeing?