#and Basim met Sigurd in Constantinople
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faithfulcat111 · 5 months ago
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Okay, so I finished reading Journey to the North - Logs and Files of a Hidden One . Absolutely fantastic. Adds so many little bits and insights as well as doing an amazing job at summarizing the events of the game and context of the world. And it is all from Hytham's perspective, which you know I love. Gonna share some of my favorite bits:
Hytham describing himself as being a little too vigorous when talking about the Order's influence.
Also describing himself as a scholar by temperament 😃
Hytham being curious about how his own wergild would be assessed if he "were to be terminated in some illegal fashion." The answer was zero. Eivor found this hilarious.
Him being referred to as "the Levantine bilge rat" while sailing from Constantinople to Norway.
Also mentions that he and Yanli are the only two "exotic" townsfolk. (I did an assessment about a month ago and yeah, mostly. The town is 64% Norse and 25% Anglo-Saxon. Then you got a few Danes, one Welsh, one Chinese (Yanli), one Syrian (Hytham), and I guess he wasn't counting Reda as a townsfolk? I did. )
Basim apparently said Tarben's bread was some of the tastiest he's ever tried.
The children once let a passel of squirrels loose in the shipyard.
Hytham is not good at playing Orlog (a dice game the creators made up).
Hytham found Eivor formidable and intimidating at first (totally fair).
Hytham feels more at home in Raventhrope than he did in his homeland, even stating that it felt like he found his long-lost family in the Raven Clan.
Eivor regarded Bishop Deorlaf as well-measured and wise (honestly he was one of my favorite allies to work with).
I forgot Birstan joined the Seige of Portcestre. Whoops...
Even Hytham can't understand Brigid. It appears only Gunnar can.
Hytham agrees with Eivor's assessment of how Sigurd changed after being rescued from Fulke.
Apparently, Hytham met Azar while in Ravensthrope? I thought they knew each other before.
Eivor did tell him exactly what happened when she, Sigurd, and Basim were in Norway from her perspective. He admits he has no reason to doubt her, but he finds the whole story unsettling and hard to believe (fair). The hardest part for him though isn't while Eivor was in the Yggdrasil machine, but afterwards when Basim attacked them. Mainly that Basim had a son as Basim had never once mentioned having had a son to him. I imagine, if he shared that part with Eivor, she would be more confused because Basim did mention losing a son before to her while they were in Cent.
He also calls Basim's actions an 'apparent betrayal' as he continues. And that he finds Basim's disappearance deeply troubling. Why did the game writers never do anything with this? Feels like they just left this part of Hytham's story unfinished.
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frenchoravocadotoast · 1 year ago
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Take me back to Constantinople
Hytham (AC: Valhalla) x GN!Reader
Word count: 2704
A/N: I finished reading The Golden City a few days ago and I'm inconsolable :] Have some more Hytham content! (because I fell down a rabbit hole)
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Had Hytham been told that he would challenge the tenets of the creed again, he would have vehemently denied it.
Constantinople had already been a tedious enough task to complete, and with his feelings involved, the young man swore to never get attached again. The life of an assassin was always on the run, never stable. He wasn’t meant to stay anywhere.
But then they met Sigurd. He and Basim traveled to Norway with him, then to England – and then Kjotve happened, and now Hytham had to stew in his disappointment as he healed from broken bones. His journey of travels ended here. At least he had the bureau to keep himself busy, as well as the lavish dinners to keep him fed and entertained. He liked it when there were get-togethers in Ravensthorpe. 
Like the one from a couple of days ago.
The assassin didn’t know what the reason for the celebration was – not that the vikings needed any. As long as they were promised food and booze at the banquet, they would gladly pillage and conquer any village they were asked to. Hytham had to admit that their logic was pretty efficient, if not a little too simple. But with Eivor, it was different. Her loyalties lay with her own virtues, a moral compass that luckily aligned with Hytham’s; and thus, she would willingly carry out any task that the Hidden One needed of her, even without the promise of a full belly and a drunken tongue.
She’d done a lot for him and his creed, and he couldn’t bring himself to say no to her when she insisted that he attend the celebration. She knew Hytham tended to overwork himself. There was paperwork to finish, new feathers to stock – hell, even the bureau itself was a mess. If Basim were to return with Sigurd now, and find the bureau looking like a rabid drengr had rummaged through it, Hytham would probably have to spend the rest of the month cleaning up the place rather than working up the ranks. 
He pursed his lips, not amused by the idea, but he tried his best to focus on the moment regardless. The clan members had come to form a circle, swaying to the tune of the music, and clasped their hands together as they stomped their right feet in unison. Hytham could feel the tremor under his own feet, and the laughing of the people echoed all over the room, pulling a smile at his lips too.
For a group of drunkards, they danced with great passion and expertise. Practice, Hytham shrugged. It definitely wasn’t their first night drinking and pissing mead, and dancing until their feet hurt. The circle spun faster and faster as the music enhanced. The dancers paired up to twirl and jump, and through the motion blur of faces and twirling dresses, Hytham saw it. Well, he wasn’t quite sure he’d seen it, but the smile looked familiar enough – and as the dancers continued to spin, his eyes settled on you.
He was right, then. You had indeed joined the circle. But your steps were calculated, and you lacked the drunken sway of the vikings who could barely keep themselves upright. Your smile shone bright, and your eyes crinkled under its pull as you switched partners with a woman. Her cheeks matched the tone of her ginger hair, and you somehow managed to avoid getting splashed by her drink, horn in hand.
Hytham’s eyes softened. It was moments like this that made him feel at ease, with no fear of an uncertain future or the haunting of a dark past. Everyone in this room had their fair share of demons, even the children – but they somehow possessed the power to forget about everything for the night, swinging and swaying to the music as the smoke from the bonfire fed off of each chant.
But there was something about you in particular that fascinated Hytham. Perhaps it was the way you carried yourself. The way you spoke, your presence. Maybe it was just the way you looked at him last week, when he’d taught you how to use his throwing knives. He was fixing your posture, and perhaps you’d noticed that he lingered close for too long, because Hytham caught you looking at him on numerous occasions since then. 
There was something there, he mused. A potion brewing quietly, and you were both none the wiser. Even now, the mere memory made Hytham’s fingers twitch as he watched you disappear on the other side of the circle.
“You’re staring.”
He stiffened, not wanting to give the woman the satisfaction of his reaction. 
“I’m just watching them dance.”
Eivor huffed out a laugh, dragging a wooden stool and plopping down next to him. From the corner of his eye, Hytham could see the blade of her ax glimmering under the candlelight.
“Basim was right, you’re awfully transparent.”
Hytham met her eyes, slightly offended. “He said that?”
“You can’t deny it if it’s true,” the blonde shrugged, nodding in your presumed direction. “Why don’t you ask them for a dance?”
Immediately, the assassin clammed up. It must have been an amusing sight to Eivor; a trained killer with a blade strapped to their arm, refusing to approach a person of their interest. When he and Eivor first met, Hytham had gone into detail about the imperative need to separate one’s feelings from their work – to allow such a thing could greatly compromise both his life and his creed. But it was a blurry line for the likes of him, a game that tested their loyalty to the brotherhood. The young eagle knew that line had been tested before, trespassed by his peers and predecessors. It hadn’t ended well for them – after all, the life of an assassin was short. It was built on sacrifice rather than yearning, that was the true purpose of a Hidden One. But now, Hytham knew he was once again at the mercy of his own heart – and what would that make of him?
Human, the little voice in his head said. It sounded an awful lot like Basim, and the acolyte was sure he could almost hear the older man’s trademark smirk. He must have trespassed that line too, at some point in his life; and Hytham couldn’t blame him. He was almost tempted to do it for the second time, too – perhaps he was spending too much time around the man. 
Hytham gave the viking woman a tentative smile. “You know I’m injured. I shouldn’t be dancing anyway.”
Eivor cocked an eyebrow, like she’d been expecting him to say that. 
“I thought it was your ribs that were broken, not your feet.”
Hytham frowned, frustrated; not because of her insistence, but rather because of her ability to read him like a book. Unlike his mentor, Hytham lacked the talent to keep secrets, and he was seemingly obvious to everyone except for himself.
“I don’t know how to dance,” he tried again.
“And they do?” Eivor laughed, looking at a drunk man who tripped and dragged his dancing partner down with him. Hytham could smell the alcohol on their breath from his seat.
“They’re too drunk to care.”
“Hytham.”
“I know you mean well, Eivor,” he softened his tone, shaking his head. “But I believe I should sit this one out. My ribs have been hurting again, and I wouldn’t want to aggravate them.”
It was a lie, and Eivor knew. Nevertheless, without questioning him, the woman sighed and stood up with great effort. She squeezed his shoulder in one last attempt to encourage him, but Hytham only patted her arm. It wasn’t that he didn’t want to, or that he lacked the confidence to do so – but Hytham felt like he’d be intruding if he were to approach you now. You gleamed and danced amongst the other dancers, stepping over the bodies of the people who had succumbed to a drunken sleep. You moved with the kind of expertise he would almost envy if he weren’t a skilled fighter himself. 
Someday, he told himself. Someday, he would try to talk to you again. Not now, when you seemed to be in your own world. Hytham was content with just watching for now.
»» ──────ஓ๑♥๑ஓ ────── ««
That day came sooner than Hytham expected.
The scenario was oddly familiar. As per your request, you were in the training yard once more, graced by the presence of a slumped dummy. The assassin didn’t stray too far from you, observing your posture as you readied another throw. 
“Remember to aim for a pulse point.”
Hytham muttered, not keen on interrupting your focus. You were deeply concentrated, he could tell. Your gloved fingers gripped the dagger tightly, readjusting your hold, before you pivoted and hurled the weapon at the humanoid sack. The blade hissed through the air and past the target, and the scowl on your face darkened.
“Damn it.”
The assassin smiled in amusement. Throwing knives were cheeky little bastards – they seemed to have a mind of their own and strayed wherever they pleased. And the wind today didn’t seem to be working in your favor, either. These weren’t the best conditions to be training; but for the two of you, spare time was just as slippery as the flying blades. The second you could find time to spend together, you’d take it.
So Hytham respected your choice to continue training. It was a good enough excuse to spend time with you, at least until he ran out of knives.
He drew another one from his belt, nodding at you. “That’s alright. Try again.”
You took the dagger from him, and perhaps your impatience was starting to get to you, because just a few seconds later, the knife was cutting through the air again. This time though, it embedded itself into the crotch area of the dummy, and true to its humanoid appearance, it slumped over as if it were in pain. Hytham let out an incredulous laugh, warily eyeing the dummy.
“Wouldn’t want to be on the receiving end of that.”
You grinned in triumph, satisfied that this one had struck the target. “But this would still work, right?”
“I suppose it would,” he hummed, instinctively handing you another knife. It was the last from his belt, and Hytham was relieved to know that he would soon be retreating back into the warmth of the bureau. He propped up the dummy before joining your side again. “Try one last time. Here, I’ll help you.”
Your posture was better than last time, but it still needed fixing. The man waited for you to curl the knife up to your opposite shoulder, before leaning closer to hover at your eye level. Gauging the distance by moving into your space was unnecessary, he knew you were capable enough to do so on your own. You knew you didn’t need him either. And yet, Hytham relished the side glance you gave him, one that lingered on his face longer than he’d expected. He fought back a smile as he reached to lift up your crooked arm.
“Focus on the target and take your time,” he reprimanded you playfully. You ripped your eyes away from him, and Hytham swore he could feel the heat emanating from your cheeks. “Your arm should be fully outstretched in a straight line. Aiming too high or too low will miss the target entirely, and you’ll quickly lose range advantage.”
He let go of your elbow when he was satisfied enough. Your eyes were trained on the dummy, unblinking, and the leather of your gloves groaned when you tightened the grip on the knife. Your voice was a soft mutter, but Hytham heard it. 
“You know, you sound a lot like Basim.”
The man gave you the ghost of a smile. It seemed the little voice in his head was starting to seep into his voice now, too.
��Well, he is my mentor,” a pause, and Hytham was tempted to speak again despite your focus. He added quietly. “Would you prefer his tutoring?”
“No. I would much rather enjoy your company.”
“And I yours.”
Another pause, and then, you flung the knife again. It cut through the air with a hiss, glinting for just a second before it sank into the neck of the dummy, and the stray strands of straw fluttered down at the stab. Hytham grinned as your eyes widened, and drew back to look at you properly.
“Good job,” he winked, promptly walking back to the mannequin to retrieve his knives. “Remind me to never get on your bad side again.”
“So this is how you do it?” you asked, and Hytham’s smile softened at the awe in your eyes. “I’ve seen you fling daggers from greater distances with just the flick of a wrist.”
The man shrugged, at a loss for words. He was never good at taking compliments, especially when they were this genuine. “It’s a matter of practice,” was all he said instead. He nodded at the bureau just as you joined his side.
“In that case, I’ll have to whisk you away more often. I need you to teach me how to do that.”
Hytham repressed a grin, but he couldn’t hide the blush on his cheeks.
“You know I won’t complain.”
»» ──────ஓ๑♥๑ஓ ────── ««
Complain? No, he could never.
Hytham didn’t know what it was that pulled him towards you. Other than his feelings, of course. Was it the way the fireplace of the bureau cast shadows on your face? The depth of your eyes, perhaps? The tender caress of your lips against his? Too many questions ran about in his mind, and no answer was valid enough to satisfy him.
There was one thing that did satisfy him, though; and he knew right then and there that he was doomed. The kiss started off with a peck –Hytham wasn’t sure who had leaned in first–; but then came a second one, and then another one, which turned into a lingering kiss. He felt the heat of your sigh, the gentle nudge of your nose, the caress of your lashes against his skin. The blood in his ears was roaring at your touch.
If this was how training ended every time, then Hytham wouldn’t have minded teaching you more often.
You had somehow found your way to the shelves. His body pressed you against them, caging you in his embrace as your hands cradled his face; and here, hidden away from any witnesses, your lips came to create a dance and language of their own. Hytham pulled back, desperate to relieve the burn in his chest but not leaning too far either. Your breaths intermingled once more as his finger skimmed over your cheek, and he whispered.
“I’m starting to think training was just an excuse.”
He felt you smile against his skin, like he had caught you in a lie. Perhaps he had, judging from the glint in your eyes.
“It wasn’t, at least not in the beginning,” you paused, interrupted by him as he surged forward to catch your lips again. Your words etched onto his skin as you whispered through the kiss. “But then you refused to dance with me at the celebration, and I had to come up with a new idea.”
Hytham stilled, and your smile widened at his reaction. He glanced between your eyes, trying to read you like he’d been trained to do in his novice years. It was so obvious now that he looked more carefully – maybe he was too distracted by his feelings in the past to even notice what you were plotting. That seemed to be a recurring problem for Hytham. His cheeks grew warm again, but his small smile said he was impressed.
“I was set up.” 
“Took you long enough.”
“You’re devious,” his words were teasing, but the assassin felt his eyes soften the more he looked at you. Your arms around his neck had never felt so welcoming. “Perhaps we should make a Hidden One out of you.”
“Only if you continue teaching me how to use the knives.”
Hytham grinned, whispering against your lips. “Deal.”
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lucyintheskywithtemplars · 5 years ago
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Sigurd you're acting kind of Cult-leader-like, what--
OH SHIT. WAIT. When do we find out the Prophecy? I mean, do we know when it was first figured out? I know its from ACII and the Brotherhood and Order both know it and apparently (IIRC) it said that the prophet is the person who appeared at a certain place at a certain time. (With the Apple? I don't remember clearly, it's been legit yeeeears since I played ACII.)
Was the Prophecy known at this point, 874 CE? When it mentions a location, does it say specifically Venice in the late 1400s, or is it more mystical like "At a city of/on/surrounded by water, at a time of great prosperity"? Well, in comparison to the West Roman Empire (RIP) at this point.
In other words: does Basim think that Sigurd is the prophet?????
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sonnefuchs · 4 years ago
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A promise
Eivor winced and held her side. All those weeks from Norway to England and her wound still troubled her. She seemed to have exchanged the rock of a boat to the rock stiffness of her new chair. Shifting on the hard, wooden throne seemed to do nothing for the ache.
The greeting from her friends and people was joyful but exhausted from the journey and trials of the last weeks, all she wanted to do was lie down for a few days.
She excused herself, waiving off Randvi's help, and slowly crossed the hall to her room. Holding her side she hissed and sat down on her bed. Looking at her boots, she already felt the stabbing pain just thinking about taking them off.
A sigh of defeat, she leaned back against the headboard and shut her eyes.
"I find a rolled up blanket helps ease the pain."
Her eyes fluttered open to Hytham holding a steaming mug waiting politely and patiently at the entrance of her room.
"Hytham." The surprise evident in her tone. She wasn't sure she would see him after telling him about Basim.
She beckoned him in and he crossed the floor in a few quick, quiet strides.
"Valka's herbs." Answering the question her eyes posed at the mug. "They were a great help for me when I was first...injured."
"Does your wound still trouble you?" She asked concern for him written on her face, her own pain momentarily forgotten.
"Sometimes. I fear it will never truly leave me." He said with a shrug, handing her the warm mug.
She sipped the tea and scowled at the bitter flavor. Feeling the weight of how much she had left to drink she wanted to launch it at the wall.
"Then we shall make quite a pair. Valka will be kept busy for the next few moons." Eivor gave in, continuing to sip the hot brew.
"No, you will be back to your ship well before then and before you can destroy all of Valka's mugs."
Looking at him oddly, she wondered if he could read minds.
"The Gods must have given you great foresight. How can you be so sure?"
"Because you have me." He said with a confident smile.
She laughed and then groaned, hand reaching for her side.
His gentle fingers reached out for her, concern evident in his face. Resting his hand on her side, his ocean eyes filled with sorrow.
"Does it pain you that much?" His voice dropping.
"Only when I move."
Nodding, he pulled a thick wool blanket from her bed and rolled it up. He helped her sit up so he could place it to help cushion her side.
Letting her settle back, she was confused when he crouched down at her feet. Squatting Hytham grabbed ahold of her boots and pried them off. A sigh of relief escaped her. Wiggling her toes she tried to find a comfortable position to rest.
Hytham turned to leave but Eivor's hand on the edge of his white tunic halted him.
"Stay. I could use some company." She asked, loneliness creeping in.
He was surprised but his big eyes softened when he looked at her.
"Unless you...you do not wish my company anymore."
"I could never refuse your company." He reassured fervently.
She let go and he sat down on the edge of her bed, suddenly shy.
"Tell me about your travels."
"Ah, so many to choose from." He smiled, lost in happy memories.
"Tell me..." She thought about places he had mentioned, "about Constantinople." Eivor said, bringing him back to her.
"Constantinople! There are so many wonders it holds I wouldn't know where to even begin!"
"How about its defenses." She laughed, stifling a yawn. The tea was already working its seidr. Her pain lessoned and her muscles relaxed.
He gave her a wry look that said there was more to life than raiding.
"How about the great Hagia Sophia." He chose.
"Ah! Sigurd spoke of it briefly. Does it hold treasure?"
"Unbelievable treasure in and of itself." His face lit up.
"I would love to see it."
"Then I shall take you there."
"Promise? You don't want to lie to a Drengr.
Even a wounded one." She teased.
"I promise." He laughed and then suddenly become serious.
"I promise on all that I...I hold dear." He said shyly holding her hand.
Searching his eyes, he seemed to be avoiding her gaze. Too tired to insist she sat back.
Silence filled the room as his thumb gently rubbed the back of her hand.
"Eivor, I.." Hytham started.
She waited looking at him, her fingers intertwining with his.
Losing his nerve he rubbed the back of his head with his free hand, unwilling to unburden himself of secrets long kept.
Taking pity on him, she squeezed his hand.
"You promised me a tale. And I'm not letting go until I'm satisfied." She coaxed.
His stomach fluttered and his eyes finally met hers. His nerves settled down and a smile crept back onto his face.
Holding her hand, he launched into a tale, first about the crystal waters and quickly on to ornate temples filled with gems.
Listening to him describe the beauties and wonders combined with tea and exhaustion soon had her slipping off into slumber. His voice always had a soothing effect on her.
Randvi stopped, hearing a voice coming from Eivor's room. Peering in she saw Hytham still telling her stories of great towers rising high into the sky of Constantinople as Eivor slept with a look of peace she hadn't seen in years. His hand still holding hers.
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camdentown-library · 4 years ago
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You hurt me first || male!Eivor x fem!Reader
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(GIF by eivorella )
𝕺𝖍, 𝖆 𝖇𝖔𝖔𝖐 𝖋𝖊𝖑𝖑 𝖔𝖋𝖋 𝖆 𝖘𝖍𝖊𝖑𝖋, 𝖜𝖍𝖆𝖙 𝖜𝖎𝖑𝖑 𝖎𝖙 𝖇𝖊?
Summary: You are a Hidden-One and Eivor is your travel companion. Things will change when Eivor forgets one of your important expeditions to spend a whole day with Randvi. What will happen? Requested? ANON: I love love LOVE your writing  😭 and I have a request that I hope you would accept 🥺 could you write a jealous reader x eivor awwww I love that kind of stuff about randvi’s crush on eivor and a cute confession at the end. 😚 Genre: Fluff, a bit angst (only 20%) Words: 2048
NOTE: siktir et = Fuck in turkish
"Eivor" your voice called the attention of the Viking who was returning to Ravensthorpe on a horse "But where have you been?" you asked impatiently putting your hands on your hips. You had been looking for him all day, today you would have had to leave for the porssimo kingdom to conquer, important peace negotiations were underway and he needed an alliance as much as you to find the rest of the order of the ancients. The blond friend with an agile leap jumped off his steed and only then did you notice that Randvi was with him, riding another horse. As your eyes met your stomach felt a sharp pang, as if your own hidden blade had pierced your organ, while a bitter aftertaste formed at the end of your tongue. "Y/N!" Eivor said in a joyful tone, awakening you from your hostile thoughts "Were you looking for me perhaps?" the hands on your hips tightened in a tenacious grip for the nervous. "Maybe I was looking for you?!" you asked with an ironic tone "siktir et Eivor, have you forgotten what we were supposed to do today?" you asked visibly annoyed, while your Viking friend (probably from the alcohol still running lightly in his veins) looked at you puzzled as he tilted his head to one side. You stared up in shock, was he really so overwhelmed by Randvi and his stupid crush that he forgot why they were there in Ravensthorpe?! "Oxenfordscire?! Your brother Sigurd?! We were supposed to leave this morning and I've been looking for you all day!" you said angry, while Eivor remained silent not knowing what to repeat "Your brother and my mentor had requested our presence, the negotiations seem to be more difficult than you thought, but apparently it is more important for you to go roaming around fields with Randvi!" your tone became more and more poisonous, and your anger and your jealousy took more and more possession of your body, leaving your calm and calculating Hidden-One mind on the corner "And tell me Eivor, did you drink together? fucked? Or maybe you did both, since you're back in the late afternoon" Randvi's gaze became dark with slight embarrassment, while getting off the horse she slowly walked towards the long house of Jarl Eivor on her side she seemed to have lost her patience, and as always she knew how to do, besides regaining consciousness of himself, he sharpened his sharpest weapon: his tongue and his words. "Stop being a child, Y/N! And above all do not disrespect Randvi, she is the Jarl's wife" replied the man approaching you, his tone was grim even though he tried to stay calm. "Jarl's wife? Seriously Eivor? Do you think ... Do you think I am blind or deaf by any chance?" you asked mimicking his words, while Eivor shook his head in disappointment. "I just took Randvi for a walk, you see she doesn't have the privilege like you of being able to roam far and wide, her duty is to stay locked up in that damn long house. I just let her breathe some air new and moreover..” Eivor took a few more steps towards you, but you did not retreat, as your faces left a few centimeters away “I have no obligation to inform you about my private life, you are not my Jarl , you are not my mother and you are not my wife” your eyes met for a moment, but nothing romantic passed through them, only disappointment and anger. Eivor had been clear with you, you were nobody to him, just a foreign girl who, together with her mentor and her partner, had entered the crow's clan. Pathetic, that's what you were, pathetic to have thought for just a moment that that rough, arrogant Viking cared about you. You took a deep breath, never looking down at those ocean-blue eyes and turning your back on Eivor you said in a cold tone: "I'm leaving now and alone" you said as you mounted the nearest horse. "Wait, the sun has almost gone down now, it's not safe to venture out" said the groom, emerging from the horse stable. "I've ridden alone for years in the desert and in far more hostile places than a couple of green hills" you said seriously and arrogantly, and then cast one last look at Eivor, who looked you in the eye almost...sorry. No! Nonsense...It was obvious he was anything but that or he wouldn't have said those heartless words to you. I beckoned to the horse to leave, and the horse pawing enthusiastically set off at a gallop towards the Oxenfordscire.
* * *
Night had fallen over the moors and forests of distant, cold England. You had camped near a river with your horse, while next to you there was a small fire lit in the hope of keeping you warm. You swore in your mother tongue that you were so reckless...you could at least have taken some fur or something to eat, and instead you were there, cold, alone and with nothing to eat. You looked out over the river, letting the water mirror the image of your face. Look at you, anything but feminine, foreign and definitely not Viking. What did you think was springing up in Eivor's heart? The burning fuse of love? The truth is that you were a fish out of water and neither you, nor Hytham, nor Basim would ever have been part of that extended family. A tear full of frustration, furrowed your face contracted in a grimace that tried in every way to suppress the desperate need to cry and in the impetus you chased a menacing growl by throwing a slap at that river, thus breaking your reflection. A strange rustle in the bushes caught your attention, making you whirl towards that threatening noise. Something was hiding in the dense bush! Slowly you let your hidden blade slip away from your wrist, approaching with extreme silence towards the source of your threat, and as soon as you noticed a dark shape hiding behind the trunk of a tree, you slid as quickly as a splinter, pushing the intruder to the ground . You overtook him immediately, sitting astride his chest and blocking his mighty arms with your legs, while the tip of your blade dangerously caressed his throat. "Give me a good reason not to kill you intruder or you will not see your precious Valhalla" you said threateningly, trying to see his identity in the dim light. "Well if you do, you'll have to explain to Sigurd the reason for his brother's demise" that voice ... Eivor? "You..." "Yeah ..." "YOU HAVE FOLLOWED ME" you said indignantly. "How could I have left you alone?" Eivor asked him indignantly this time. "Yes, sure, right ... spare your bullshit when you explain to Sigurd your delay in Oxenfordscire" you answered bitterly, shaking your head. Eivor was silent for a few moments, perhaps admitting defeat in that speech, and then cleared his throat. "As much as I'm finding, here ... very exciting having a woman straddling my chest, could you take your blade off my throat?" your face flushed with embarrassment and anger and after snorting annoyed you said: "I would really want to pierce your dick with this one, at least so you won't be fooled with that instead of your head" You got up nimbly from him, trying to ignore his amused laugh, how could he behave like this after your argument? Ugh...that man was absurd...
You both leaned back around the small fire you made while Eivor rummaged in his big bag. You tried hard not to stare and ignore it, but when you recognized the smell of dried meat, your throat twisted with hunger. "Have you eaten? I brought some food from Ravensthorpe" Eivor explained, as he brought two succulent strips of dried meat to you, but you shook your head. "I'm not hungry" but he didn't seem to believe it, in fact he raised an eyebrow along with the corner of his mouth. "As you want, then I'll eat it all" he said marking the last words...what a bastard, was he psychologically torturing you?! A cold gust of wind, however, shook you abruptly from your thoughts, making you shiver noisily...damn, what would you pay for a fur coat to cover you with, that cold was so different from the hot nights of Constantinople. Something heavy wrapped around our shoulders, and blinking in perplexity, you turned to Eivor, who had moved to your side, covering you too with his fur cloak. "I don't need you, stop it" you said arrogantly as he rolled his eyes. "Listen, I'm just trying to get you all to your destination, difficult days ahead and I need you and all your strength" the wheat-haired Viking explained seriously. "You wouldn't think you cared today" "Wha-? Listen Y/N ... I don't know what got into you today but I didn't want things to be like this" "Didn't you want? Eivor, you literally told me that my opinion doesn't count for you" the man bit his tongue at the thought of what he had said and shaking his head said: "I can prove to you it's not like that" "Go on" "Today, when Randvi and I were walking, she kissed me" you opened your eyes wide in shock, as you felt for the second time your heart crack into a thousand pieces "But! I rejected her...And not because she was the wife about my brother...as I initially thought. When I saw you go off on horseback, alone, the very thought of not being able to protect you made me feel like I was lost in the cold lands of Hel” he explained, it seemed really to be honest "And when I finally saw you camped here I was able to breathe again knowing that you were not in danger..." "This is not love, it's just a sense of guilt Eivor” you tried to reject it, still burned by your own jealousy. "No, no it's not guilt! I...I want you Y/N, I feel it when you climbed on me to attack me, I feel it now that we are close to warm up, I...for Odin sake I cannot be without you I'm sorry things had to go like this” he said, looking you in the eye. His expression seemed sincere, all of a sudden it no longer seemed I had a fierce and arrogant Viking beside me, but ... a wolf cub, a tender puppy, who just wanted to have his love reciprocated by him. Now it was your heart that was filled with guilt. "In truth...it is not because of the missed mission that I have taken it out on you, Eivor...seeing you with Randvi, has me-ugh what a shame in saying these things... I felt abandoned, I felt cornered, I felt I was worth nothing to you and I could touch the feeling that she was taking you away from me-” your speech was interrupted by the hand of the Viking who fleetingly grabbed your chin making it turn towards him, so as to be able to join your lips in a chaste first impact kiss, but which then poured out all your need to be united, to be able to touch you, to be able to merge your souls into one League.
"I'm here, forever Y/N" Eivor whispered as his mouth brushed yours "but only if you stop being an angry child and promise me you'll eat something, mh?" he said with a playful little smile, getting a light slap on the cheek from you. "Otherwise? Are you abandoning me?" you asked ironically, raising an eyebrow. "I know methods of torture that you cannot imagine, to make you smile with force" he said, returning the ironic tone, while his calloused hands caressed your soft hips. "I thought you were leaving these things to the Ragnarsson, Wolfkissed" you pretended to be surprised, as he pressed his lips to your ear and kissed the earlobe, while his frizzy beard tickled your sensitive skin, giving you a few snorts of laughter. "You don't know my evil side then" he replied with a chuckle and playfully biting your jaw.
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tepkunset · 5 years ago
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To the anon who was concerned Assassin’s Creed: Valhalla would present the Vikings as the myth of only being white - rest assured this is not the case!
Very early in the game, the characters start to talk of how they have sailed the globe. When Sigurd returns, he speaks of his time in Africa.
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Sigurd: We sailed to Rome, then Africa. Past oceans of sand, warriors of all colours, and beauty the eyes must weep to behold.
I think it was a smart move to straight up acknowledge this, before the dudebros get the chance to whine about how dare Ubisoft make the hold’s blacksmith and supporting NPC an adopted Black man. (But not that it’ll stop them.)
When Sigurd returns, he also comes back with who I’m suspecting will continue to be a main NPC: Basim Ibn Ishaq, who Sigurd met in Constantinople. I’m still very early in the game, but Basim is already becoming something of a mentor to Eivor. I really enjoy their scenes; a player familiar with the series can tell Basim is an assassin part of the creed, training Eivor, but Eivor doesn’t know the details (yet).
And this is quite cool: Remember I mentioned Ljufvina, the Mongolian Viking queen? She's already made a cameo!
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Ljuvina: My husband and I are one in this, lord. We do not limp together, we fly. King Harald: I am sad to lose a woman of your spirit, Ljuvina. But I hold no grudge. May the fates grant you good luck.
Anyway, I hate to sing any praises to Ubisoft as a company, but I will sing praises to the people who no doubt had to fight for this historical accuracy to be included.
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