No matter what age she was, Lucy loved snowball fights. Even when the trite phrase "aren't you too old for this?" came out, she would only laugh and throw one at the asker.
Lucy fumed, finding herself, her brother, and her cousin completely dry and in the little room that Lucy slept in alone in the Scrubb's house. Pressing her lips together to keep them from trembling, she plucked the painting up from the floor, and put it back on the decorative mantelpiece. The hearth there was bricked up, with no space to put so much as a candle in it.
"Once again, we go to Narnia and we miss winter," she fumed, setting her jaw. She turned, looking at Edmund, who was staring at the sheathed sword in his hands. Eustace too, had a hard time tearing his gaze away. "It's not fair that it happened twice now," she added softly.
"One last snowball fight would've been grand," Edmund admitted after a lengthy silence, tearing his gaze away. Rhindon sang in his arms, and for once, he could hear it. Peter had always said the blade sang, but Caspian hadn't heard it, and neither had he until now. The sword was back in the world where she belonged, if not yet in her keeper's grasp. "But it wouldn't have been the same without Ner and Bel."
Edmund's wife, Belinay, couldn't get a snowball to hit the broad side of a barn, much less a moving target, but she was never discouraged by her teammates. Nerya was as much of a sniper as Susan, with pinpoint accuracy that usually would determine how the match would go within a few seconds of the opening volley. Tumnus had proven highly agile to the boys' team, much to the girls' consternation. Lucy let herself feel the grief that lay in her depths, the same as it did in all of them, save Eustace.
"We're going to need to ring up Peter," Edmund said gently, laying a warm hand on her shoulder. "That'll help some, and he'll want his sword back as soon as he can get it."
Eustace dashed out of the room to see about the telephone, earning an irritated but indistinct shout from Albert and Harold. Lucy clung to Edmund. "I don't know how they did it," she mewled. "How did Pete and Su keep such brave faces on when they knew... When Aslan told them..." She couldn't bring herself to speak the words.
"Peter's the High King," Edmund said, and didn't bother correcting himself to change it to past tense. "He's had to make difficult decisions that he didn't personally agree with, and sometimes even hated, and commit to them without a trace of complaint. Susan's composure has always been iron-willed. Too many people didn't take her seriously for her to not have perfected that façade."
Lucy understood Susan better now than ever before. Girls dismissed as silly, as emotional, as hysterical. Lucy understood very well why Susan had always leaned on logic and reason because emotion was always discounted. "I wish I hadn't been so..." Lucy stepped back, wiping her face clear of tears. "Her life was a lot harder than I realized."
"Part of it was she didn't want you to see it," Edmund shrugged, and slid the sword under Lucy's bed. There was no other place for it that it wouldn't be immediately seen and potentially confiscated in the meantime. "And you were too young to understand yet what a girl growing up in this world entails."
"And when we did grow up the first time, it was somewhere else," Lucy murmured. "Where our opinion was listened to and valued." It must have been a terrible shock, and then to be denied the very place they'd been accepted, cherished, and prized...
The thought scattered into pieces when Eustace trundled back up the stairs, breathless. "You can ring Peter up, I convinced them," he wheezed, bending over, hands on his knees. "Why can't I run like I did in Narnia?"
Edmund and Lucy exchanged a bemused look. "You've just come back to a body that has forgotten what Narnia taught it, but the lessons are still in your mind," she said, and Edmund slid from the room, gliding down the stairs as silently as a ghost. While Lucy distracted herself from her grief and distracted Eustace from the stitch in his side, Edmund waiting while the operator connected the call to Professor Kirke's house.
Mrs. MacReady was as unpleasant as ever, though Edmund was civil enough for her to not hang up on him immediately. His message to Peter was short, and even if Harold and Alberta had cared to eavesdrop, what he said wouldn't have made any sense at all.
The next day, Edmund, Lucy, and Eustace boarded a train for Oxfordshire. Rhindon never left Edmund's side except at need, finding comfort in the steady, low thrumming he could feel from it. Lucy was able to feel it as well, and Eustace could faintly feel it. If strange looks and glances came the Pevensie’s and Scrubbs' way, they were ignored. Rhindon only got lighter and lighter, the closer they got to Peter, and when Edmund and Peter were reunited at last, Rhindon weighed nothing at all, lighter than air.
Peter, unsheathing the blade and holding it in both hands, felt the surge of power scream up his bones, along his veins, setting his skin alight with flame. Blue light surged, making the words etched into the blade glow, and that same glow settled into Peter's eyes, otherworldly and electric.
"The High King has returned," Edmund murmured, feeling the strangeness in him settle into contentment. He'd done his duty, the sword was back with the king, and he delivered it, as he'd sworn to. He bowed his head, and then Lucy and Eustace followed.
Edmund looked up as a hand settled onto his shoulder, meeting Peter's gaze. "There's a war for us to end, Edmund the Just," Peter said. "Will you stand beside me one more time?"
Edmund's grin was so sharp it could've cut glass. "Until my dying breath," he said, touching Rhindon's lion-headed pommel. "Until the end of the world."














