in five years time i'll be taking on the world

"You sound like mother."
The tone in which George Vitalis' sister Reima addressed him made it clear that this was not a compliment. Reima was not thrilled with being instructed not to smoke in the driveway. "Is that right?" He reached over and plucked the offending cigarette from Reima's painted lips and broke it in half before dropping it on the gravel drive. "There. Now the transformation is complete. What in all of Galidraan are you doing with those things, anyway? Mummy hates them."
"Mummy hates them," Reima mimicked him. "She's a hypocrite. She used to smoke all the time. Aunt Petra told me."
George tried not to sigh as his eyes scanned the horizon. "You know, despite the party, your birthday isn't for another few weeks. You could at least wait until you're sixteen to start knowing everything. I certainly did." He glanced at his sister, smirked. She was a waif of a thing, but towering in her own mind. Somehow, the Fortan propriety had passed her by, as had the Fortan discretion. George thought she was in altogether too much hurry to grow up -- a position he had the privilege of taking with his two whole years of seniority over her and his seventeen -- almost eighteen -- years being the subject of sky-high expectations. "I do miss you when I'm away, you know," he said after a moment. He didn't look over at her.
"I know," Reima said. After a beat, she added: "I miss you, too."
"Not long til Life Day, hm? I'll come home."
"Can't we do it at Foxfield? It's always so bloody cold here," Reima sulked.
"We can -- oh damn," George said, patting his pockets. "Where -- I just had it." He glanced at Reima, who looked inquisitive. "My wallet. I just -- oh, and there's Hart. Reima, be a darling and fetch my wallet." He had seen enough of Reima flirting with his friend and classmate when Hart had dropped him off the previous week that he didn't want there to be a repeat.
"Not likely," Reima said with a smirk. "It would be inhospitable not to greet your dishy friend, don't you think?"
"Reima -- " George began with an exasperated sigh. "Please, just go and -- "
"Where is it?"
"I don't remember. I thought I had it. I -- "
"There you are," Reima said as she raised a hand in greeting to Hart, who was piloting his speeder around the broad space at the drive. "I couldn't fetch it if I wanted to. I can't retrace your steps, can I? You'd better hurry -- oh, here comes your minder."
George grimaced and, giving one last irritable glance at his sister, he said: "Fine. Keep both feet on the ground and tell Hart I'll be right back." He turned and headed towards the door, ducking back into the great hall of Herevan Hold. His mother's ancestral home. No, he silently reminded himself. It's mine now. "Judicar," he said as he encountered Major Judicar in the doorway. "I've misplaced my wallet. I can't imagine where -- I could swear I left it right here." He rapped a knuckle on the broad circular table that hosted a silver salver and an exquisite bowl of namana blooms. "Would you keep an eye on -- that -- " He nodded towards the door where Reima was leaning against the side of the landspeeder, an exaggerated laugh escaping her lips. " -- and I'll be right back."
Judicar had been with George as long as the boy could remember. In many ways, Judicar was the father George had never had, since his own had been killed when George was an infant, and his uncle -- well, cousin, really -- Pierce had died when George was but a child. It had been Judicar who had taught George the trappings of manhood, from posture to self-defense to shaving. George nodded his thanks to the Major before taking to the steps, mounting them two at a time. At the top of the stairs, he paused to pull a thick brocade curtain to one side, gazing down at Reima accepting a light to her cigarette from Hart.
"She's fifteen, Hart," he seethed under his breath, shaking his head. "Uppity minx."
Deciding to get on with it before his sister could humiliate herself -- or worse, get into a gin-in-the-bathtub predicament -- he retraced his steps. His bedroom: nothing. His bathroom: nothing. Where else had he gone? The attic, yes, but certainly he hadn't brought his wallet there, had he? He jogged along the gallery, luckily avoiding the attention of Hendersmith who would have given him a ticking off, and took another staircase up, then another. He had been looking for a set of his father's cufflinks, bequeathed to him by his mother but stored away in the attic until he was old enough to wear them.
He pushed the door open; the hinges squealed in protest.
It was cold. Colder than he remembered it being just a few hours ago. Strange. He cast his gaze around and finally his eyes alit upon his wallet, sitting on a windowsill quite the opposite direction from where he had been examining his father's possessions. A set of footprints -- smaller feet than his own -- were apparent in the dust, approaching the window and then retreating to the entrance. Perhaps one of the maids had misplaced it while running an errand. He approached the windowsill in the canyon of things that made a sort of alleyway: bureaus and stacks of chairs, coatracks and chests of drawers.
There was a faint glimmer, like a spiderweb. George reached out to brush it to one side so he could pass, and then he simply wasn't there anymore. In the shadow of an armoire, a parlor maid jerked as if waking up. She didn't know why she was here or how she'd gotten to the attic. Had she been sleepwalking? And what was the young master's wallet doing here? She had picked it up -- but that must have been a mistake. He was getting ready to return to school; he'd need it! She picked it up and retreated, taking it down to the main hall where she placed it on the table near the door.
Up the stairs, and yet also lightyears away, George Vitalis looked stood in the attic of Herevan Hold. The room was suddenly dim and oddly discolored. Everything looked like a strange, coarse-looking pink-orange stone. For a moment he wondered if he was having a stroke. He blinked a few times, then forced his eyes open wider. "What is happening?" he asked. His wallet was nowhere to be seen. He turned, glancing back the way he'd come, but it looked like the same odd stone. It couldn't be real. Couldn't. He went to the door -- who had closed it? -- and pulled the handle. It didn't give. He slammed a fist on it.
"Ow -- damn it!" It was not polished wood he had slammed his first against, but coarse, uneven, and somewhat sharp stone. Blood splashed on his shoe from a gash in his hand. He raised his voice and called out: "Help! Is there anyone there? Please!"
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