The news spread all the faster for being unbelievable.
Long-former Syndicate member Karen Albedo, née Cwaenwyb Helbyrtwyn, alias Lady Pine, alias The Silver Giant, alias That Bedamned Royalist (an appellation from Lord Lolorito) -- the quarter-Sea-Wolf who moved like a shark through Ul’dahn finance, gave away her power for the sake of an estranged son, survived the Calamity and prevented the total collapse of her family’s wealth -- lay dying.
Kannadi Albedo, sixty years her junior, found it impossible. She continued to find it impossible as she ran down the avenue, having dropped her shopping at the news through her family linkshell. She remained firm that it was impossible as she barreled through the All Saints’ Wake costume parade, coming out the other side trailing fake cobwebs and wearing someone else’s hat askew on her shoulder.
Her utmost conviction in the outright impossibility of what she had heard only grew as she slammed into the lift, shouted something incendiary at the attendant and rode to Ul’dah’s upper level.
And so, adamantine in her confidence that her cousin the doctor was wholly, totally, completely and utterly mistaken and furthermore due a slap about the ear for telling her such lies, Kannadi stormed into the Phrontistery.
Her monolithic certainty collapsed into sand when she saw the eighty-seven-year-old giantess lying prone on a bed barely big enough in a room that seemed to expand with the speed of horror.
Kannadi had seen a few faces that she could describe as “ashen.†Most were on zombies. Karen’s was nearly there, pale and drawn and slack. Slack, that was what struck Kannadi: her grandmother was always poised, always alert, always at most an ilm away from predatory tension. Not like this limp thing with its hand being held by its eldest son.
Kannadi tried to ask her father what happened, but the roughness in her throat from screaming and running had laced itself shut in horrified shock. Her eyes -- her grandmother’s, passed down -- shot the query anyway.
“Heart attack,†Torrent Albedo said, with effort. He was fifty-seven. Kannadi heard roughness in his throat too.
Doctor Rasim Albedo, Kannadi’s eldest cousin, had a better grip on himself. “I’m given to understand that she was moving her firing range targets by herself,†he said from his wheelchair. His body ended at the knees. “Heavy things. One of her attendants heard her collapse. That was close to two hours ago.â€
“Some people outside,†Kannadi forced herself to say.
“Less than she’d like, I’m sure,†Rasim said.
“She’ll recover,†Kannadi said, her self-control dancing atop a landslide in her head.
Torrent kept hold of his mother’s hand as he looked at his daughter. The look was enough. Kanandi’s throat shut again.
“She was able to speak not long ago,†Rasim said, wheeling himself closer to his cousin.Â
“She asked for you the second I was about to call.â€
“What else?†Kannadi squeaked.
“Nothing else. I rather hoped your presence would rouse her again.â€
Kannadi drifted to her grandmother’s side. Her father said not a word.
“Mother at the Wells again?†she asked him. Torrent nodded, dislodging tears she hadn’t noticed had welled up. Her father rubbed his face on his shoulder rather than release Karen’s hand.
Kannadi fished under the bedsheet and took her grandmother’s other hand.
“Grandmother?†she asked.
Karen’s eyes slit open, checked her surroundings and shut again. “Who else is present,†she demanded in a sigh without a question mark.
“Just me, Kanna and Rasim, Mom,†Torrent said.
“Door?â€
“Closed, Mom.â€
“Lock it.â€
“Yes, Mom.â€
Torrent rose and hurried to the door. Karen rubbed her hand on the top sheet.
“And stop panicking,†the matriarch said, her tone slowed by a weakness Kannadi could tell she hated. “Your hands sweat.â€
“Sorry Mom.†Torrent locked the door.
It wasn’t an expensive hospital room, not like the one that was nearly a hotel suite when Kannadi broke her arm in her youth. It was functional. Karen had gotten big on efficient functionality since the family finances took a Dalamud-sized hit. It saved money, she said, and it did. The fact that she was still richer than most could ever hope to dream of was a detail easily ignored.
“Kannadi,†the old woman said. “I am dying.â€
“Everyone is, Grandmother,†said Kannadi, who tried to smile.
“Then I may beat them to it,†said Karen, who succeeded.
Karen squeezed her granddaughter’s hand. Torrent knelt on the opposite side of the bed and Kannadi knelt with him, shoving aside shame that she hadn’t done so already. Karen breathed deep and regained a small measure of her characteristic tension. Kannadi was glad to see it, but noticed her cousin’s professional concern and her father’s filial worry.
“I keep informed,†Karen said. “Your father. My retainers. Old contacts. They tell me there are… items… that turn back the flow of time.â€
Several emotions ran so fast to the top of Kannadi’s mind that they collided and clanged out dozens of thoughts. No, Grandmother, they don’t work on living things. No, Grandmother, that’s just allegorical, they’re simply maintenance materials. No, Grandmother, don’t go, don’t be so damned soppy about this, you’re stronger than that, please don’t go, don’t be so depressing, there’s nothing I can do…
“Allegorical, I know,†Karen continued, oblivious. “There was that man who drank that so-called Oil of Time, and he got…†her eyebrows knitted in a moment’s thought. “What did you call it, Rasim dear?â€
“Acute gastroenteritis characterized by frequent combustive paroxysm.â€
Kannadi’s jaw dropped in spite of herself. “What, actual combustion?â€
“Green flame, as I’m given to understand,†said her cousin with the straightest face she had ever seen.
“And there was that man,†Karen said, “who swallowed a handful of so-called Sands of Time.â€
“Gastroenteritis again,†Rasim nodded. “Though it concluded in osteoporosis. He ended up vomiting far more granular mineral than he ingested.â€
“And yet on materials of ancient make, these substances work miracles,†said Karen.
“Likely a trait of the original pieces and not the maintenance substance,†Kannadi said quickly. “They’re made of something that responds only in the presence of these Oils and Sands.â€
“Yes,†said Karen, turning her face to her granddaughter, “and they respond with creation. Not repair, renewal. Holes filled, not patched, tears unified, not stitched, thinness made thick, not layered.â€
“They don’t work on living matter,†Kannadi said as kindly as she wished and as sternly as she dared.
“Then make them.â€
Karen’s gaze was horrible. Desperation mixed with stubborn strength and spun like candyfloss around solid fear. Kannadi wept in self-defense.
“You study things,†Karen said. “Study this. You solve problems. Solve this. Examine what makes those substances work, then make it work on flesh. I will eat, drink, or otherwise take whatever you devise.â€
“Grandmother…â€
Karen turned her head to stare at the ceiling.
She wept.
Kannadi had never seen it happen. Judging by the look on her father’s face, neither had he.
“I do not want to die,†her grandmother said. With her surge of energy spent, her face slackened again.
Kannadi’s hand flew to Karen’s neck and bumped into her father’s fingertips, already there. A pulse remained. Both of them sighed.
“Well?†Torrent said, staring hopefully over his mother.
“Father, what she asks is…â€
“Entirely reasonable,†Rasim said, wiping his spectacles.
“Oh come now, cousin, you’re a chirurgeon!â€
Rasim fitted his glasses back on. They shone. “She started her command with ‘study this,’ Kannadi. So study. If the rest of it turns out impossible, then so be it, but do not refuse to do what you can.â€
Kannadi blinked at her cousin, shedding lingering tears. This is a man, she thought, who witnessed a flaming stone from Dalamud kill his parents, and then witnessed the tower they were in come crashing down upon his legs, yet still had the wherewithal to stop the bleeding and save himself. He ought to know something about what one can do.
Kannadi comforted her father and left the room some time later when it became clear Karen had nothing more to say.
She walked in thought, apologized to the lift operator, passed another parade.
Study, eh?
She had already subjected the oil and sand allegedly-of-Time to analysis, for her own curiosity, and had hit enough dead ends that she had set well aside the question of how they worked. Nothing seemed to pierce their mystery, no matter what manner of test she tried.Â
Sunlight exposure, chemical exposure, aether exposure, no answer came clear through the microscopes…
The microscopes. Ah-ha…
Expensive things, yes, but only bits of metal and bent glass. Common materials, regardless of the price for quality. But these weren’t common things her grandmother wanted studied. Perhaps the problem was one of equipment…
How long could the old Silver Giant hold out?
Kannadi raced to her apartment, her mind spinning with apparatus designs...
Long-former Syndicate member Karen Albedo, née Cwaenwyb Helbyrtwyn, alias Lady Pine, alias The Silver Giant, alias That Bedamned Royalist (an appellation from Lord Lolorito) -- the quarter-Sea-Wolf who moved like a shark through Ul’dahn finance, gave away her power for the sake of an estranged son, survived the Calamity and prevented the total collapse of her family’s wealth -- lay dying.
Kannadi Albedo, sixty years her junior, found it impossible. She continued to find it impossible as she ran down the avenue, having dropped her shopping at the news through her family linkshell. She remained firm that it was impossible as she barreled through the All Saints’ Wake costume parade, coming out the other side trailing fake cobwebs and wearing someone else’s hat askew on her shoulder.
Her utmost conviction in the outright impossibility of what she had heard only grew as she slammed into the lift, shouted something incendiary at the attendant and rode to Ul’dah’s upper level.
And so, adamantine in her confidence that her cousin the doctor was wholly, totally, completely and utterly mistaken and furthermore due a slap about the ear for telling her such lies, Kannadi stormed into the Phrontistery.
Her monolithic certainty collapsed into sand when she saw the eighty-seven-year-old giantess lying prone on a bed barely big enough in a room that seemed to expand with the speed of horror.
Kannadi had seen a few faces that she could describe as “ashen.†Most were on zombies. Karen’s was nearly there, pale and drawn and slack. Slack, that was what struck Kannadi: her grandmother was always poised, always alert, always at most an ilm away from predatory tension. Not like this limp thing with its hand being held by its eldest son.
Kannadi tried to ask her father what happened, but the roughness in her throat from screaming and running had laced itself shut in horrified shock. Her eyes -- her grandmother’s, passed down -- shot the query anyway.
“Heart attack,†Torrent Albedo said, with effort. He was fifty-seven. Kannadi heard roughness in his throat too.
Doctor Rasim Albedo, Kannadi’s eldest cousin, had a better grip on himself. “I’m given to understand that she was moving her firing range targets by herself,†he said from his wheelchair. His body ended at the knees. “Heavy things. One of her attendants heard her collapse. That was close to two hours ago.â€
“Some people outside,†Kannadi forced herself to say.
“Less than she’d like, I’m sure,†Rasim said.
“She’ll recover,†Kannadi said, her self-control dancing atop a landslide in her head.
Torrent kept hold of his mother’s hand as he looked at his daughter. The look was enough. Kanandi’s throat shut again.
“She was able to speak not long ago,†Rasim said, wheeling himself closer to his cousin.Â
“She asked for you the second I was about to call.â€
“What else?†Kannadi squeaked.
“Nothing else. I rather hoped your presence would rouse her again.â€
Kannadi drifted to her grandmother’s side. Her father said not a word.
“Mother at the Wells again?†she asked him. Torrent nodded, dislodging tears she hadn’t noticed had welled up. Her father rubbed his face on his shoulder rather than release Karen’s hand.
Kannadi fished under the bedsheet and took her grandmother’s other hand.
“Grandmother?†she asked.
Karen’s eyes slit open, checked her surroundings and shut again. “Who else is present,†she demanded in a sigh without a question mark.
“Just me, Kanna and Rasim, Mom,†Torrent said.
“Door?â€
“Closed, Mom.â€
“Lock it.â€
“Yes, Mom.â€
Torrent rose and hurried to the door. Karen rubbed her hand on the top sheet.
“And stop panicking,†the matriarch said, her tone slowed by a weakness Kannadi could tell she hated. “Your hands sweat.â€
“Sorry Mom.†Torrent locked the door.
It wasn’t an expensive hospital room, not like the one that was nearly a hotel suite when Kannadi broke her arm in her youth. It was functional. Karen had gotten big on efficient functionality since the family finances took a Dalamud-sized hit. It saved money, she said, and it did. The fact that she was still richer than most could ever hope to dream of was a detail easily ignored.
“Kannadi,†the old woman said. “I am dying.â€
“Everyone is, Grandmother,†said Kannadi, who tried to smile.
“Then I may beat them to it,†said Karen, who succeeded.
Karen squeezed her granddaughter’s hand. Torrent knelt on the opposite side of the bed and Kannadi knelt with him, shoving aside shame that she hadn’t done so already. Karen breathed deep and regained a small measure of her characteristic tension. Kannadi was glad to see it, but noticed her cousin’s professional concern and her father’s filial worry.
“I keep informed,†Karen said. “Your father. My retainers. Old contacts. They tell me there are… items… that turn back the flow of time.â€
Several emotions ran so fast to the top of Kannadi’s mind that they collided and clanged out dozens of thoughts. No, Grandmother, they don’t work on living things. No, Grandmother, that’s just allegorical, they’re simply maintenance materials. No, Grandmother, don’t go, don’t be so damned soppy about this, you’re stronger than that, please don’t go, don’t be so depressing, there’s nothing I can do…
“Allegorical, I know,†Karen continued, oblivious. “There was that man who drank that so-called Oil of Time, and he got…†her eyebrows knitted in a moment’s thought. “What did you call it, Rasim dear?â€
“Acute gastroenteritis characterized by frequent combustive paroxysm.â€
Kannadi’s jaw dropped in spite of herself. “What, actual combustion?â€
“Green flame, as I’m given to understand,†said her cousin with the straightest face she had ever seen.
“And there was that man,†Karen said, “who swallowed a handful of so-called Sands of Time.â€
“Gastroenteritis again,†Rasim nodded. “Though it concluded in osteoporosis. He ended up vomiting far more granular mineral than he ingested.â€
“And yet on materials of ancient make, these substances work miracles,†said Karen.
“Likely a trait of the original pieces and not the maintenance substance,†Kannadi said quickly. “They’re made of something that responds only in the presence of these Oils and Sands.â€
“Yes,†said Karen, turning her face to her granddaughter, “and they respond with creation. Not repair, renewal. Holes filled, not patched, tears unified, not stitched, thinness made thick, not layered.â€
“They don’t work on living matter,†Kannadi said as kindly as she wished and as sternly as she dared.
“Then make them.â€
Karen’s gaze was horrible. Desperation mixed with stubborn strength and spun like candyfloss around solid fear. Kannadi wept in self-defense.
“You study things,†Karen said. “Study this. You solve problems. Solve this. Examine what makes those substances work, then make it work on flesh. I will eat, drink, or otherwise take whatever you devise.â€
“Grandmother…â€
Karen turned her head to stare at the ceiling.
She wept.
Kannadi had never seen it happen. Judging by the look on her father’s face, neither had he.
“I do not want to die,†her grandmother said. With her surge of energy spent, her face slackened again.
Kannadi’s hand flew to Karen’s neck and bumped into her father’s fingertips, already there. A pulse remained. Both of them sighed.
“Well?†Torrent said, staring hopefully over his mother.
“Father, what she asks is…â€
“Entirely reasonable,†Rasim said, wiping his spectacles.
“Oh come now, cousin, you’re a chirurgeon!â€
Rasim fitted his glasses back on. They shone. “She started her command with ‘study this,’ Kannadi. So study. If the rest of it turns out impossible, then so be it, but do not refuse to do what you can.â€
Kannadi blinked at her cousin, shedding lingering tears. This is a man, she thought, who witnessed a flaming stone from Dalamud kill his parents, and then witnessed the tower they were in come crashing down upon his legs, yet still had the wherewithal to stop the bleeding and save himself. He ought to know something about what one can do.
Kannadi comforted her father and left the room some time later when it became clear Karen had nothing more to say.
She walked in thought, apologized to the lift operator, passed another parade.
Study, eh?
She had already subjected the oil and sand allegedly-of-Time to analysis, for her own curiosity, and had hit enough dead ends that she had set well aside the question of how they worked. Nothing seemed to pierce their mystery, no matter what manner of test she tried.Â
Sunlight exposure, chemical exposure, aether exposure, no answer came clear through the microscopes…
The microscopes. Ah-ha…
Expensive things, yes, but only bits of metal and bent glass. Common materials, regardless of the price for quality. But these weren’t common things her grandmother wanted studied. Perhaps the problem was one of equipment…
How long could the old Silver Giant hold out?
Kannadi raced to her apartment, her mind spinning with apparatus designs...
"You know, I was God once."
"Yes, I saw. You were doing well until everyone died."