
Where: https://mixer.com/lanonima
When: 9:30 am CST (about 45 minutes)
Everyone and anyone is welcome to come join if they want to listen to my bad Fire Emblem opinions LIVE™.

Where: https://mixer.com/lanonima
When: 9:30 am CST (about 45 minutes)
Everyone and anyone is welcome to come join if they want to listen to my bad Fire Emblem opinions LIVE™.

Where: https://mixer.com/lanonima
When: 9:30 am CST (about half an hour)
Everyone and anyone is welcome to come join if they want!
I’ll probably get on to mess with settings about 5 minutes before

It’s been so long since we’ve done it, I’m just gonna go for it.
Starting time will be 9:30 am US CST, I’ll put up a link about half an hour before that.
Disclaimer: I played this game once, shortly after it came out, and except for one brief run through of the first few levels in college, I haven’t played it since. So this will be an experience.
Anyone who wants to listen to my dumb bullshit LIVE is welcome to join us!
Since it’s actually been a while since I’ve done cross-stitch frequently, a lot of you might not know how awesome I am.
So I’ve found some of the projects I’ve designed and completed over the years. Not all of them, though. I’m missing my mermaid (which I SWEAR I took a picture of???), the one I made for @almedha b/c I’m a dumbass and didn’t take a photo of it before I mailed it, and also The Biggun, which is not completed yet and also I have no idea where it is. Oops.
I like to design my own! But I also have a lot of patterns I’ve bought so I’ll probably work on some of those next XD
I do also have a Sailor Moon pattern I’m working on but I’m not sure how long that will take me so you guys shouldn’t expect to see it anytime in the near future.
Marth: Which Fire Emblem continent is your favorite?
Alm: Favorite male Lord?
Celica: Favorite female Lord?
Sigurd: Favorite class?
Seliph: Favorite skill(s)?
Leif: Which character(s) do you most want to see added to FEH?
Roy: Favorite legendary weapon?
Eliwood: Least favorite recurring character archetype?
Hector: Do you prefer units that focus on defense/resistance or strength/magic?
Lyn: Do you prefer units that focus on speed or on strength/magic?
Eirika: Which game would you most like to see a sequel (or prequel) to?
Ephraim: Favorite sibling relationship?
Ike: Favorite FE character in Smash Bros?
Micaiah: Favorite healer class?
Kris: Favorite avatar (includes Kiran and Mark)?
Chrom: Favorite FE ship(s)?
Robin (M): Magic or physical weapons?
Robin (F): Melee or ranged weapons?
Lucina: Favorite child unit(s) from any FE game?
Corrin (M): Favorite type of transformer class?
Corrin (F): Favorite dancer (or variation)?
Alfonse: What character in Heroes can you just not seem to be able to get?
Shareena: What character in Heroes have you gotten far too many of?
I’m still trucking along. 1,513 words
It was the park they went to, and Sue’s happy intake of
breath at seeing such ‘wild’ greenery was enough to tell Lilina she had made
the right choice. Well, that and the fact that hardly anyone came here.
The park had been a hunting reserve at one point, but none
of the lords of late had cared much for the sport. At least as far as Lilina
had been told. Certainly much of the meat on her tables came from here, and
certainly there was a bit of poaching among the servants to help out family
members who didn’t have cushy castle jobs, but there were no more great hunting
parties, and hadn’t been in decades.
Instead, Lord Hector had given control of the park to Lady
Lyndis, who had turned it from a slightly wild ‘tame’ forest into something
hardier and more sustainable, and something a great deal prettier too.
Something that just felt right in a
way that cultivated land never did.
“You can come here whenever you want,” Lilina said. “It’s
safe to ride too, at least as safe as anywhere is.”
“I will,” Sue said. “I didn’t realize there was such a nice
place here.”
“Mother did it,” said Lilina. “She spent a lot of free time
here.” They meandered through the park side-by-side. There was plenty of space
to cover – the park was no mean, scraggly patch of trees. It was large enough
that it supported plenty of deer and boar, in addition to smaller forest
dwellers.
“It’s a good place to come listen,” Sue said. “Nature’s
voice is very strong here. To have a place to be close to mother earth and
father sky, well, any Sacaen would want that.”
“Even Lycians need it,” Lilina said. It did seem easier to
breath out here, for all that the trunks of oak, elm, and ash pushed just as
closely as the castle walls, and their interlacing branches formed a ceiling
nearly as solid as the castle roof. “I should have come out here before, to
clear my head. I’ve just been so angry lately.
I don’t like it but I can’t seem to make it go away.”
“Because of Roy?” Sue asked. She finally settled down on a
fallen tree trunk and Lilina fell into place beside her, not at all concerned
that it might ruin her dress.
“He started it, the other lords finished it.” Lilina could
not keep the bitterness out of her voice, and didn’t even try. Sue was safe to
talk to – she wasn’t involved in politics, had no strong ties to any other
region but Sacae. “They’re trying to turn Ostia into a dog – collared and
controlled and Etruria’s hand on the leash!” She dug her fingers into the trunk,
and bits of bark and moss crumbled under her grip. “And General Cecilia! As if
I should be batting my eyeslashes and saying ‘you’re my hero Lord Roy!’ like
some simpering moron. And she scolds me as if I’m a child throwing a tantrum.
Ha!” Lilina pulled her hands away from the trunk with difficulty and rested
them on her lap instead, tangling her fingers in her skirt. “Ostia won’t end
with me, I swear it by St Elimine, aye, and by mother earth and father sky too!
She’s my charge, my birthright, my legacy, and I’ll restore her to her place if
it kills me.”
“The arrow that does for rabbit won’t do for elk,” Sue said,
in Sacaen.
The proverb took Lilina by surprise even more than the shift
in tone, or language. “Ah…mother used to say that too,” she said.
“Yes, the people of Sacae are very wise.” Even Sue couldn’t
keep a straight face for that. First, she smiled – an expression just as
subdued as the rest of her, but no less nice. Then she laughed a little and
suddenly they were both laughing – a touch hysterically, but real laughter.
Lilina couldn’t remember the last time she’d laughed like
that, laughed so much she was wiping tears from her eyes as she stopped. She felt
lighter, as if some invisible load had been lessened. “I won’t tangle with the
other lords without being prepared,” she promised. “And there’s still Bern and
Etruria to consider, before I can do much of anything at all.”
Sue was rubbing at her eyes as well. “Still, I admire you,
Lilina. If I was half the warrior you are…”
“What happened? In Sacae?” Lilina’s tragedy was plain
enough, she couldn’t have hidden her losses if she wanted to. But Sacae was far
away, and Sue was so private a person, and Lilina only had a faint idea of what
had transpired.
Sue stared at the ground as if willing it to talk for her,
and sighed. “The clans of Sacae took a stand against Bern, all but one. Those
traitors attacked us, along with Bernese troops they’d given access to the
plains.” She scowled. “A hunter I am but a warrior? I was sent with the other
women and children, only to find that we’d ridden into a trap. I did what I
could but in the end…all I could do was flee with nothing more but my horse and
my bow. Lord Orun gave me safe lodging, until he was murdered.”
Lilina did not want to give Sue an empty ‘I’m sorry’ like
the ones given to her, and she couldn’t say nothing. “Bern has a lot of lives
to answer for,” she said, instead. “Lives lost and lives ruined. But that kind
of greed can’t possibly stay locked up quietly behind those mountains. And the
next time they cause trouble…”
“I won’t run, this time,” Sue said. “Some of my people might
still be alive, or captured. Vengeance solves nothing and violence solves
little, but I’ll rebuild my home too, however I must.”
“I’ll help, if there’s anything I can do.”
Sue nodded, and silence fell between them, for once not
awkward but comfortable. It was nice to sit outside on a beautiful day and
listen to birdsong and watch the ever-changing patterns of sun and shadow as
the light changed. It was nice to do those things with a friend, and even that
thought thrilled Lilina just a little bit. She was not a girl with many
friends, perhaps none outside of Roy, and now Sue.
But the light was changing,
and it was nearly time for dinner. She stood up and shook her skirt to free it
from the bits of moss and wood she had scattered liberally around.
“We should get back. Until I find a new seneschal, I don’t
have much free time.” She offered Sue a hand, which was accepted, and pulled
the other girl to her feet.
“Seneschal?”
“A lord’s right hand, someone who takes care of the little
details. Father’s seneschal, Lady Marian, was a treasure, but Leygance saw to
her during his coup.” Lilina set off back towards the castle, but she couldn’t
help moving slowly still, unwilling for this brief respite to end. “I’ll need
to have one found and trained before I can think of joining forces with Roy
again.” She sighed. “And tomorrow I need to ride out and start making rounds of
the tenant farmers outside the city proper, and I need to check on Bors and his
new guard recruits, and talk with the housekeeper and the butler about filling
any servant positions that need filling.” She stopped there, even though the
list went on and on. Her father had tried to prepare her to rule, but the
amount of work still took her by surprise. Where, in this wave of minutiae,
would she find time to fight Bern or the other Lycian lords?
“Can I help?” Sue asked. “Leading here is more complicated
than doing so in Sacae, but if I need to regather my clan it’s something I must
continue to learn.”
Lilina paused as they neared the gated wall that separated
the park from the rest of the castle estate. The sun was setting behind the
park, throwing long, twisted shadows from the wall and gate across the
perfectly manicured lawn. A good representation of how she felt – as soon as
they crossed that threshold she was Lady Ostia again, with all the
responsibilities and problems of the country firmly on her shoulders once more.
Lilina had always known who she was, what she was destined
for, and she had wanted it. But she’d never wanted it like this. Never wanted
to claim it from death and despair. Even so Ostia was hers, and it needed care
and keeping. She pushed the gate open.
“I can’t refuse any offer of help right now,” she told Sue.
“I’m sure we can find something that will be useful for both of us. And…well,
we do have one of the best training arenas in all Lycia. Perhaps we can spar
together sometime? We have to keep up on that
as well.”
Sue smiled her elusive smile again, and closed the gate
behind her. “I’d like that, very much.”
Alright so we were talking about it last night and this is my definitive list, as a lesbian and also as an asexual, of men in Fire Emblem that I would fuck (provided they were over 18) divided into whether or not I would regret it in the morning
Regret: Naesala, Berkut, Ashnard
No regret: Pent, Hector, Tibarn, Lukas
?????: Matthew, Chrom
And if I had to pick one dude from Fire Emblem to sleep with til the end of days it would be: SKRIMIR
All this and I’ve still only gotten through a chapter and a half. I have a lot to say. 1,316 words.
Lilina traveled back to Ostia alone. Roy was to remain in
Pherae to oversee the beginnings of the new Lycian Alliance Army. He offered to
send an escort back with her, but Lilina refused. She pitied the bandit who
thought to mess with her in such a black mood.
It almost seemed like an insult that nothing untoward
happened. The sky was clear, the sun was bright, and the roads were relatively
peaceful. She returned to Ostia in one piece, though the sight of her home did
little to soothe her spirits.
“Oh, Lady Lilina!” said the guard at the gate. He was one of
Roy’s people, a young archer named Wolt. “Didn’t expect to see you arriving
with so little fuss, my lady.”
Lilina reigned back her horse. The black palfrey snorted at
the command and shied away from the gate. No matter how Lilina worked with her,
the mare remained liable to startle. There was something to be said for Sacaen
horses, no matter how scruffy they were. They tended to be more ornery than
skittish. Lady Lyndis had tried to breed their stubborn practicality into the
Lycian bloodlines, but the program had ended with her death.
Lilina brought the mare completely to heel before she spoke.
“Wolt, please gather all the members of the Lycian Alliance army and have them
meet me in the throne room in an hour. There are changes you need to be aware
of.”
“Lady Lilina,” he said, offering her a quick bow. “If you
don’t mind asking…it’s not Bern again is it?”
“It’s not Bern,” she said. “At least, not yet.”
An hour was not much time to see to her horse and to make
herself presentable, but Lilina had been doing both of those things for as long
as she could remember. She managed. She always did.
She pulled on the first bliaut that came to hand – one made
from soft violet wool and stitched with designs in thread-of-gold. She didn’t
bother with jewelry or a veil, but pulled her hair back into a thick braid.
That was enough finery for Ostians. It would have to suit the others.
There were less of them than she expected. Roy had taken
only two dozen men with him to Pherae, but the remains of his army did not even
fill up her throne room. She knew that without Etruria’s intervention, Ostia
would have fallen. Given a choice, she might have even made the same one Roy
did. Acknowledging it didn’t make her any less angry. She hadn’t been given a
choice. He could have at least told her.
Lilina mounted the dais steps and settled into the throne.
Like most other things about Castle Ostia, it was no nonsense, a simple
high-backed chair carved out of gleaming ebony. Geometric patterns were carved
into it, making it quite beautiful up close. From afar it seemed solid and
severe. That had suited Ostia, when it was the most powerful region in Lycia.
Now it almost seemed more pretentious than even the gaudiest of gold and gem
encrusted monstrosities common elsewhere.
She took her time, studying the men and women in front of
her. They waited in patient, if not entirely respectful, silence. She had lost
most of her castle guard in the rebellion, and these people had taken over
those responsibilities admirably. Sending them away would weaken her again. But
it might be worse to keep them around, where they could so easily spy on her
defenses and report them to the rest of Lycia. Which was more important,
physical security? Or political?
Lilina considered these questions as she considered the
people. There would always be spies in Ostia. Perhaps it was better for them to
be spies you knew, rather than those you didn’t. But those spies she and her
father knew before, well, none of them had been in martial positions. And that,
in this time of war and unrest, might be the most important thing of all.
Finally, she addressed the gathered soldiers. “Lord Roy has
been officially named as Lycia’s general,” she said. “The army is being
reformed. If any of you have commissions, they are renewed. You will report to
him in Pherae at the earliest possible opportunity. If you wish to join the
army officially, you may enquire with him. Those who have no wish to continue
fighting are free to return home.”
“And that’s it then, is it?” said one of the innumerable
mercenaries Roy had recruited. “You’re just tossing us out, just like that?”
“As for the mercenaries among you,” said Lilina, “I
understand that most of your contracts were with my father. But he is no longer
the general and Ostia no longer has any ties to the army, or its treasury. If
you want to renew your contracts, you’ll need to speak to Roy. I will ensure
that your bills of service get to him.”
It was petty, that. Childish, even. Hector had made the
contracts, and Ostia most likely should be footing the bill. But if Pherae
wanted to be the power in Lycia so badly, they could learn to deal with what
that entailed.
It seemed to satisfy the mercenaries, at least. They left
first – their time was too valuable to waste it here. The soldiers followed,
leaving singly or in groups, but none questioning her orders.
“Bors,” Lilina called.
He had been standing at the back of the room. Now he hurried
forward and dropped to one knee. “Yes, my lady?”
“You’re now the highest-ranking knight left in Ostia. I’m
naming you knight commander,” she told him. “I understand this unexpected
departure will put a strain on you. However I trust you to fill the gaps with
worthy Ostians. I will expect a list of potential guards on my desk by the end
of the week.”
Bors paled slightly, and Lilina felt bad for throwing the
responsibility at his feet. But she knew he was up to the task. “It will be
done, my lady.” He bowed slightly lower before climbing to his feet and
trailing after the retreating soldiers.
That left only two people waiting in the throne room:
General Cecilia, and Sue.
“It’s a poor ruler who makes decisions in bitterness,”
Cecilia warned.
Lilina just looked at her. What could she say? That she
wasn’t bitter? That she was doing her best? One was a lie, the other a sure
sign of weakness. But Cecilia was still waiting for her response. “I will do
what is best for Ostia, lest you have any objections.”
“Only,” said Cecilia, “a warning. Don’t take any paths you
might regret, later.” So saying she left the room, going through the opposite
door than the soldiers had, the one that led to the private suites.
That left Sue.
“And what of you?” Lilina asked her. “Will you go back to
the plains?”
Sue shook her head. “There’s not much there for me now but
graves. I was thinking…” but she trailed off, the way she usually had when they
were children.
“What?”
“I thought I might stay here, for a while,” Sue said. “Roy
has been kind enough but he doesn’t understand. Not what we’ve been through,
not who we are.”
Lilina leaned back into the throne which was imposing, yes,
but also damned uncomfortable. Like everything else about her life these days. “To
be honest, Sue, I could really use a friend.”
Sue stood awkwardly, twirling a lock of dark green hair
around her finger. “Do you want to go somewhere and just…talk for a while?”
Lilina looked at her, thinking about how improbable it was
that they would become friends, now,
which is what their parents had wanted all along. They’d never got on before,
but maybe they just weren’t trying hard enough. She stood up.
“There’s nothing I’d like better. And I know the perfect
place to go.”

Some older Lilina and Sue!
I tried some interesting things while coloring this. Some of it worked and some of it didn’t but I still think it turned out well enough!
I’m very angry about Lycian politics. 1,849 words.
If anyone had asked, which no one did, Lilina would have
said she had already had enough. She had lost her mother, her father, her home,
and many of the staff she had trusted in all her life. Surely that was enough
to make up for any wrongs she had committed. Surely the great cosmic scales
were now balanced. If anyone had asked, that is what she would have said.
And she would have been wrong.
After Etruria’s intervention, Bern’s activities subsided to
a low murmur. Peace became the order of the day. And then the message arrived.
Roy came to find her in her father’s office.
It was a bittersweet place to spend time. Lilina remembered
playing on the floor while her parents ran their country, bickering good
naturedly until an acceptable course of action could be found. She remembered
later, when it was just her father and her, seated side-by-side while he taught
her what she would need to know. The office was very large, and very, very
empty. Still, Ostia needed to be run and Lilina was still the one to run it,
and this office was still the most convenient place to work.
General Cecilia had little desire to involve herself in
Ostian affairs and left most of the managing up to Lilina. During the day this
made Roy’s actions more palatable. It was still Lilina behind the massive
hardwood desk, still her name on the orders, still her that the people looked
to. At night, however, Lilina could admit to herself that she resented being
turned into a puppet ruler of her own country. Parroting Etrurian orders,
however infrequent, left a sour taste in Lilina’s mouth that only fed her
growing anger and malcontent.
She had mostly avoided Roy since General Cecilia had
arrived, citing work as a reason. He respected her enough to stay away from her
office, until today.
Lilina did not look up from the contract she was reviewing
when someone knocked on the door. She merely said, “Enter!” and kept reading.
She only looked up when Roy spoke.
“This came for us today, Lilina.” Roy slid a rolled up piece
of parchment to her across the desk and Lilina put aside her current work to
look at it.
The message was short, but brief. “Your father is calling a
Lycian council?” she asked, though she could read the scroll as well as anyone
else.
Roy shrugged. “He is the largest power left in Lycia now
that-”
“Now that my father is dead and Ostia is delegated an
Etrurian plaything,” Lilina said flatly. She was too tired and too bitter to
play those kinds of games.
“Lilina…”
Lilina stared at him, and Roy stared back. He really had
changed, he was calmer now, more decisive. He understood, certainly, that his
actions had hurt her, but he didn’t regret them. If he did, he would have
looked away. If he wanted her forgiveness, he would have looked away.
So that was the way it was. Lilina sighed.
“It’s reasonable for Lord Eliwood to call a meeting,” she
said. “Many changes have happened. And given his illness, it is reasonable for
him to ask us to travel to Pherae rather than hosting them at Ostia as we
always have before.” Although, she added to herself, we both understand that
Etruria’s involvement is more pressing than either of those things.
“If you don’t mind,” Roy said, “I thought I would see to
preparations. We can leave the bulk of the army here. It should be an easy
enough ride with only a small force as escorts.”
Lilina waved a hand. “Do what you think best. We can make it
in good time if we leave the day after tomorrow.”
Roy inclined his head and saw himself out. Lilina returned
to her contract, but she couldn’t concentrate. She could only think about the
upcoming council meeting and what it was going to mean.
Castle Pherae had changed very little in the past few months
since Lilina had been there, but she had changed so much it seemed different.
The white stone walls that had once felt so bright and happy now felt
impersonal and cold. The colorful banners and tapestries that had fascinated
her as a child now looked garish and out of place. Roy, changed from his war
gear to a finely woven short bliaut and parti-colored hosen looked odd and
unfamiliar.
Lilina too had dressed up, in a tightly fitted bliaut, with
some of the expensive jewelry her father had gifted her draped around her neck
and a lace veil over her teal hair. The face that greeted her eyes in the
mirror seemed just as unfamiliar as the castle, or Roy, or anything else these
days.
All of the men Roy had picked to escort them were of Pheraen
birth. But even those few men she had come to know looked different here. They
had put off the practical clothing of war for their ceremonial garb. Perhaps
Lilina should have insisted on having something to do with the preparations
after all – she now felt her lack of allies clearly, as she should have all
along.
Everything was bright and gay and utterly at odds with
Lilina’s increasingly black mood.
The no-nonsense conference room with its plain oaken table
came as a relief, though the other lords, just as fancily dressed as anyone
else present, undercut that effect slightly.
Lord Eliwood was already seated at the head of the table.
Once each seat had been filled, he opened up remarks. “I think you all for
coming,” he said, looking to each of the attending marquesses in turn. “I
called this meeting to address all of the recent changed to our fair
city-states. First among these is the lost of our dear friend, Lord Hector of
Ostia.”
A low murmur rose in the room and Lilina felt the eyes of
everyone in the room turn to look at her. She kept her eyes fixed stubbornly
ahead, gazing at Lord Eliwood. He seemed as calm as he ever had, but as Lilina
continued to gaze at him, she saw he was more tired and drawn than even his
illness could account for. He was far more changed than he should have been,
after only a few short months apart. She remembered that Lord Eliwood had been
her father’s best friend, and that Hector’s death must have affected Eliwood
almost as much as it had affected her.
“Lord Hector wished his daughter to succeed him to the
throne,” Eliwood said. “I see no reason to dispute that. All of my sources
indicate that she is doing a perfectly admirable job managing the region.” For
this, Eliwood did not give anyone time to dispute his claims. Lilina did not
quite breathe a sigh of relief – it would have been far too obvious. But she
did feel as if a weight lifted off her shoulders. She had been afraid that the
marquesses wouldn’t support her claim, especially now with Etruria muddying the
waters. She remembered, too, what her father had told her. Most of the Lycian
territories resented Ostia for its power and for its attitudes towards more
common Lycian traditions. This would have been a perfect time for the other
lords to attempt to bring Ostia to heel. With Eliwood backing her, though,
Lilina at least could feel as secure as possible.
Later on, Lilina would think unkindly on her optimism.
Eliwood continued, oblivious to Lilina’s thoughts and to the
few marquesses signaling to be recognized. “Much more troubling is the death of
Lord Orun. He did not leave any heirs to govern Toria and it would be less than
kind to leave his steward to manage everything. We will need to send someone
trustworthy to oversee the area.”
Clamor broke out immediately after those words, loud enough
to cover Lilina’s sharp intake of breath. Uncle Orun too? Lilina remembered,
vaguely, hearing the news, but somehow it had not sunk in on top of everything
else.
She watched the lords squabbling for the right to take
Toria.
All things considered, Toria was an offshoot of Ostia,
having belonged to Lilina’s grandmother since her first marriage. It was a
gesture of goodwill on Ostia’s part that the land retained its independence,
rather than being included in the bridal properties when she married Lord
Ostia. With Orun’s death, the lands should have gone to Hector, and then to
Lilina.
She would not sue for her rights in this case. Toria was a
small territory but no less of a prize – good enough to have distracted the
lords from the assertion that she should remain in control of Ostia. If Lilina
tried to rightly claim Toria, it would be like putting meat in front of a pack
of hungry dogs.
Angry she might be, but she was hardly a fool. She kept her
silence as Marquess Araphen emerged from the fracas triumphant.
That done, Eliwood began again. “There are other matters to
think of as well. Lord Hector was both the head of the Lycian Alliance and the
general of her army. These are positions that will need to be filled anew.”
This time there was no clamor. There was absolute silence,
but not a peaceful silence. It was the silence of the forest when the wolves
are hunting, the heavy silence right before a wild summer storm, the silence of
some dozen lords now realizing they had been handed the tools to strike Ostia’s
death blow. She had lost her lord, her independence, her sister state, and now,
at last, was a way to take every last vestige of power from her.
Lilina balled her hands up in the soft velvet of her skirts
and said nothing. Ostia had ruled Lycia for nearly as long as there had been a
Lycia. Even her father, not so much older than she, had taken place as the head
of the Lycian Alliance with little struggle. But then, he had just made an
advantageous if controversial marriage alliance with Caelin, and had Eliwood’s
support.
Eliwood had no intention of backing Lilina in this, she
could see it. His gaze was fixed on Roy, and his eyes gleamed with the same
predatory light being exhibited by all the lords around the table.
They would take this from her, all of them, and they would
do it with smiles on their faces. Eliwood had backed her control of Ostia. But
what was Ostia, after all, stripped of power, dignity, and autonomy?
But Lilina they underestimated. This would not be the end
for Ostia. She made a promise, to her father and mother, to her people, to
herself. This was not the end. Ostia was not finished as long as Lilina was not
finished and one day soon all of these men would come crawling back to Ostia’s
conference room to beg her forgiveness.
Even as Eliwood took Lycia as a jewel for his crown, even as
Roy took the army, even as these lords bickered and plotted and cut Ostia to
shreds, Lilina smiled.