Five witches besides Isabella ward the colony site. Robots guard the site of the portal, obligingly letting colonists through during scheduled trips and reporting to Isabella by mirror if anybody else shows up. Other robots help the colonists with setting up their farms and houses in the warded area. It'll hold a city, no problem, although another transfer of silks and bags to pay for warding a second site is going to be called for before they get literally everyone across, since in addition to city they need farmland, and since they can't build vertically as effectively as fully industrialized Earthlings or the deceased aliens.
One day:
"It's been exactly a year now since you crashed my picnic. Let's go to a fancy restaurant and celebrate."
"... They're really all quite nice," says the smaller one who is - cringing an awful lot like Enathira did. In fact, she looks very much like her.
"However magical you may be," adds the Siamese.
Her little bird trills a few sad notes.
Adarin looks between the two, and focuses on the cringing one. "... You're Enathira's sister."
Vern snuggles him. She preens Path, a little. Adarin currently has his cold poker face on, he's unreadable. (But he takes Isabella's hand.)
Her daemon whispers something in her ear, and she pets him, apparently finding whatever it was soothing. She looks honestly sorry.
"This is a long trip and a serious soul renovation to undertake to issue an apology for something you didn't personally do." Isabella squeezes Adarin's hand.
"She wasn't - doing it, it's the sort of thing that someone should apologize for and I don't think anyone else was." She looks down. "So I am."
"So you've apologized. Now what? Are you going to get an apartment in Skokie and breed exotic lizards, what's the plan?"
"Actually," says the other mage, "we are here because we agree with you. So we're offering help."
"We'll go if you want us to but we hate what New Kystle's become," says the little daemon from under her hair.
Cuddly daemons. Such cuddly daemons.
"We're sorry," whispers the bird.
Wince, cringe. This is becoming something of a theme. "No, it's not. I'm so sorry. I didn't know what to do. So I suppose I didn't do - anything."
"But before yesterday," says the redhead, "she hadn't met me. And she couldn't get here on her own."