Trust in Ulen with all your heart, and do not lean on your own understanding. In all your ways acknowledge him, and he will make straight your paths.
Glade 1 4622
It was a long flight for a small purpose, but it was for a purpose that drove Camille all the same. Long was somewhat of a misnomer — she could easily fly from Jarden to the Badlands in a smattering of days, and it only took so long because she had to carry Cedric with her. It was her choice to bring him, of course. She could have brought another Velsign, an Inquisitor rather than an Acolyte, but she felt it was important that he prove his abilities time and time again.
He was also her only friend, but she did not feel the need for many when she was in Ulen's grace.
To carry her Acolyte was a specific setup that really only she of most Velsign could accomadate. With her exceptionally large wings for her size, spanning 26 feet from furthest tip to furthest tip, and her uniquely shaped feet, she was able to carry a closely-woven net that carefully held both supplies and Cedric. It was a sturdy piece of ropework that had held up for hundreds of miles of travel without issue, and it was by far the quickest way for them to travel with such an urgent request passed towards them.
Somehow a group in the Badlands had acquired a Sundering kit and made enough noise for the Inquistion to notice. With the survival of initation being granted by Ulen, such a skill as Sundering was an affront to what Camille believed was acceptable. To steal a life — a life of one granted such power as magic — just for that raw magic they possessed was a sin, to be paid in an equal or greater measure of blood. All according to His plan, that —
There was a noise. A ripping, tearing noise, and suddenly what was clutched in her feet was much, much lighter. Camille could not construct a weave large enough, fast enough to cushion his fall before he hit the ground, her attention split between magic and panic that managed to result in nothing. Cedric lay on the ground amongst a outcropping of stone in a tangle of net and broken bones. They had been so high up, but they had been close to the camp, she could see the flame in the distance. Her attention was far from their original task, however, and her face was contorted in despair as she knelt beside him amongst Badlands sand and boulders. She held his head — he was still breathing, somehow, and his eyes were open but unfocused.
The Velsign wasn't a medic, but she reached a tether to him, the string of ether connecting them. She could see the pain and confusion and tearing destruction in his familiar mural. Camille closed her eyes and sent the joy of Minstrel through the tether, one hand touching his cheek. Cedric's death could not possibly be in Ulen's plan, even if everything else was. Was their current task so grave that they must be punished? They had simply been following orders. Rapidfire prayers left her lips, that the blood spilled tonight would not be his. Not after Ulen had saved his life and allowed him to elevate himself to the status of Acolyte from that of a slave. No, it wouldn't make any sense for him to allow such a thing. It must have been something else.
"It's okay, Cedric. You're going to be okay. Ulen will save you." Camille whispered to Cedric between her prayers, growing more stalwart in her belief that this was simply a test, and not a punishment. It was only a test.