digiflora
digiflora
everlong.
358 posts
breathe out so i can breathe you in
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digiflora · 15 days ago
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digiflora · 18 days ago
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oh my GOD
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this is THE princess/knight au to end all princess/knight aus this is genuinely the most beautiful fic i've ever read methinks. one of my favourite tropes executed so beautifully i will be returning to this frequently
★ ABOVE THE TIME.
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before he is a soldier, before you are the princess, and in between the titles that separate you, you think phainon might simply be yours.
★ pairing: soldier!phainon x princess!fem!reader ★ tags & warnings: romance, angst, light smut (unprotected sex, virginity loss), slow burn. childhood friends to lovers!au, royalty!au, secret romance!au. coming of age, first love, love confessions, mutual pining, etc. profanity, class differences, misogyny. ★ word count: 23.5k ★ song rec: above the time by iu.
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i). When you are young, they assume you know nothing.
There is a boy inside your room.
He has hair the colour of snow, and eyes the colour of the sea just before a storm: blue and wild, darting around the room like a thief caught in the act. There is a wooden sword strapped to his belt, too long for his waist and carved with clumsy symbols he must’ve etched himself. He doesn’t see you at first. He’s too busy peering out the arched window behind your bed, standing on his toes, breath fogging up the glass.
You sit up, clutching your silk coverlet to your chest. “You’re not supposed to be in here.”
He jumps. Spinning around, he stumbles over the corner of the rug and nearly crashes into the gilded leg of your writing desk.
“Oh stars, don’t scream,” he says, voice a frantic whisper. “I wasn’t trying to—I didn’t know it was your room, I swear.”
You blink at him. He looks about your age—nine, maybe ten—but he’s dressed in the dark training leathers of the palace guards-in-training, the sleeves rolled up unevenly, like he’d tugged them up in a rush. His hair sticks out in damp curls, and there is a smear of dirt on his cheek.
“You’re the soldier boy,” you say, narrowing your eyes. “The one who knocked over the archery targets last week.”
His cheeks turn bright red. “That was an accident.”
“You lit one on fire.”
He clears his throat. “Also an accident.”
Silence stretches between you. It’s early in the morning—early enough that the sun hasn’t begun its ascent yet, and the moonlight filters through your gauzy curtains, casting silver stripes across the rug where he stands frozen, as though your room was a stage and he’s forgotten his lines.
“What’s your name?” you ask.
“I’m Phainon of Aedes Elysiae,” he says, straightening a little. “I’m going to be the captain of the royal guard one day.”
“That’s a big dream,” you say, lifting your chin.
“Well, I already made it into the palace, didn’t I?” Phainon says, grinning.
You try to glare at him. You’ve never had someone your age sneak into your room before. You’re always surrounded by ladies-in-waiting and stiff-backed tutors, and the only boys you ever see are princes visiting from other kingdoms, always polished and dull.
Phainon looks like he tumbled in from the wild.
You scoot over and pat the empty space beside you on the bed. “If you’re hiding, you might as well sit down. Mistress Calypso wakes early. You’ve got maybe twenty minutes.”
His eyes widen. “You’re not going to tell?”
“Not unless you snore.”
Phainon beams. He kicks off his boots and climbs onto the bed without hesitation, flopping beside you with a sigh loud enough to echo. “I hate sword drills. Master Gnaeus makes us practice stances before breakfast.”
“That sounds dreadful,” you say, wrinkling your nose in sympathy.
“You’re different from what I imagined a princess would be like,” he says, glancing at you sideways with his cheek squished against the pillow.
“You’re not what I imagined a soldier would be like, either.”
“What did you imagine, then?”
“Taller,” you say. “Quieter, maybe. Less… floppy.”
“I am not floppy,” he says, affronted, and attempts to sit up straighter—only to sink back down with a groan. “Maybe a little.”
You stifle a giggle behind your hand. It bursts out anyway, small and silver like a bell. Phainon turns to look at you properly then, eyes sharp despite the pillow flattening his cheek. Up close, he smells like grass and horsehair and smoke.
“I meant it, though,” he says. “You’re different.”
“How so?”
“You didn’t scream. Or ring that little bell by your bed. Or call for a guard. You didn’t even look scared.”
“I am scared,” you say solemnly, then lean closer and whisper, “You’ve got a sword.”
Phainon scoffs, lifting the wooden hilt an inch from his belt. “It’s not even sharp. Watch.”
He draws it with a flourish—too quickly, catching the edge of your coverlet and nearly decapitating one of the embroidery swans. You both freeze. Then you burst into laughter, rolling onto your back as Phainon fumbles the sword back into place, mortified.
“You’re not very good at using it,” you declare between gasps.
“I’m a knight-in-training,” he insists, and you’re not sure whether he’s more annoyed or embarrassed. 
“You’re going to make an excellent captain one day,” you say, and this time you mean it, not as a tease but as something quiet and true. “You’ve already snuck past five guards and a chambermaid to get in here.”
“Six guards,” he corrects proudly. “And the chambermaid was asleep. I left a biscuit on her tray so she wouldn’t be too cross.”
You smile. “That was kind of you.”
Phainon shrugs, but his cheeks are turning pink again. “Is it alright if I hide in here more often? It’s peaceful. Smells nicer than the barracks, too.”
“What do the barracks smell like?”
“Feet. And soap. And Gaius, who eats too many onions and sweats in his sleep.”
“Ugh.” You grimace.
“Exactly.” He yawns, eyes fluttering. The adrenaline is wearing off, you can tell. His limbs are getting heavy. “Your bed’s nice, too. Like a cloud. I bet princesses don’t have to wake up before dawn.”
“I do,” you sigh. “To learn embroidery and dance steps and which fork to use at state dinners.”
The boy—your friend, now, you suppose—shakes his head in solidarity. “We should run away.”
“To where?”
“I don’t know. The stables. Or the forest. I’ll bring my sword, and you can bring snacks.”
You glance at him. His lashes are long. One of them has a bit of fuzz caught in it. “What if we get caught?”
“Then I’ll protect you,” he says sleepily.
You decide you quite like the sound of that. Outside, the sky is starting to lighten. The first birds begin to chirp.
You reach for the corner of the blanket and pull it over the both of you, just enough to shield him from the dawn. “Go to sleep, Phainon of Aedes Elysiae. I’ll wake you before Mistress Calypso comes.”
Phainon mumbles something that sounds like a thank-you.
(You end up falling asleep, too, and only wake when Mistress Calypso shakes your shoulder with a fond—if exasperated—frown and reprimands you for sleeping in late. The mattress beside you is cold.)
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“I won’t fall asleep this time, I swear it!”
You squint at him through the veil of sleep still clinging to your lashes. Phainon is back, dirtier than before, with a fresh scrape on his cheek and leaves in his hair, as though he wrestled a tree on his way in. He crouches by the edge of your bed, grinning like he didn’t vanish without a word the first time.
“You told me you’d wake me up before Mistress Calypso came!” he says. “I nearly got caught. And Master Gnaeus gave me a talking-to for sneaking out of the barracks in the night.”
Heat floods your cheeks, and you look away, embarrassed. “I’m sorry.”
“I had to dive into a laundry basket,” Phainon huffs, flopping onto the carpet. “A laundry basket. Full of damp sheets.”
You try to hold in a laugh. You really do. But it escapes in a small, muffled burst, and once it’s out, you can’t stop. Your shoulders shake beneath your blanket, and Phainon turns his head to glare at you from the floor, betrayed.
“It wasn’t funny,” he says. “I smelled like lavender and mildew all day.”
“You smell like moss now,” you say in between giggles, pointing at a leaf stuck behind his ear.
He swipes at it with a scowl and misses.
Still grinning, you lean over and pluck it out for him. Your fingers brush his curls for only a second, but it’s enough to make something fizz strangely in your chest. Phainon must feel it too, because he goes very still, eyes flicking to yours.
“Thanks,” he mumbles.
“Why’d you come back?” you ask, tugging the blanket tighter around your shoulders.
“Couldn’t sleep.”
You wait. He fidgets with the hem of his tunic. 
“And I didn’t want you to think I didn’t want to be your friend,” he adds, finally. “Or that I was in trouble. Or that I didn’t want to come back.”
Your fingers curl into your blanket. “I didn’t think that.”
“Okay,” he says.
“Do you want the pillow this time?” you ask, scooting to one side of the bed.
Phainon lights up like a lantern. “Do you want to sleep on the floor?”
You throw a cushion at him. He catches it, and then he clambers in beside you, wriggling under the corner of your blanket. You both lie on your sides, facing each other, noses a breath apart.
Outside, the wind rattles against your window panes. Inside, your shared silence is warm. 
“I really won’t fall asleep this time,” he promises, blinking slowly.
You smile at him, drowsy, and mumble, “Me too.”
(“Stars above,” comes a voice, fond and faintly amused. “Gnaeus, come look.”
You stir. Phainon groans softly and buries his face in your pillow. You open one bleary eye to see Mistress Calypso standing beside your bed, arms folded over her golden skirts, lips pressed together in an almost-smile.
A heavier tread follows, and then Master Gnaeus pokes his head into view, all sharp grey stubble and frowns. “If this is what passes for night training nowadays, I’ll eat my scabbard.”
Phainon jerks awake at that, sits bolt upright, and nearly knocks his forehead into yours. “I didn’t mean to—I wasn’t—I mean I was just—”
“Hush, little boy,” Mistress Calypso says, waving a hand with a smile so maternal, it could unmake gods. “No one is turning you into stew.”
“You should be running laps,” Master Gnaeus mutters, squinting at you both. “Instead you’re sneaking into the princess’ chambers like some scruffy raccoon.”
“He didn’t sneak,” you say, voice thick with sleep. “He was invited.”
“Oh, pardon me,” the captain of the royal guard says, mock-offended. “I didn’t realise he needed your permission, little princess.”
Mistress Calypso nudges him with her elbow. “Stop scowling, old wolf. You’re just jealous no one invites you to secret sleepovers.”
Master Gnaeus grunts but doesn’t deny it. He watches the two of you for a long moment—your hair mussed from sleep, Phainon trying to smooth his tunic into something that looks presentable—and then sighs through his nose like it pains him to find this sight charming. “I’ll expect you on the training grounds in ten minutes, mud-boy,” he says, turning away. “No excuses. Not even royal ones.”
Phainon nods fervently, already sliding off the bed.
Mistress Calypso’s gaze melts into warm affection as she adjusts the corner of your blanket. “Don’t let him make a habit of it,” she says, voice ripe with mischief, before turning and following Master Gnaeus outside your chambers.
Phainon hovers by the edge of your bed, sheepish. “I’ll come back tonight.”
“Bring fewer leaves next time,” you say.
He grins.)
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Weeks pass, and then months, and years, and before you know it, you have more responsibilities thrust upon your shoulders.
Mistress Calypso teaches you about the bleeding that occurs once every moon, about the blossoming of youth. She speaks gently but frankly, brushing your hair back with fingers that have seen a dozen girls come of age before you. You try not to flinch at how grown-up it all sounds.
Your dresses get longer. Your voice becomes more measured. The halls you once ran through with muddy slippers are now places you walk with your chin held high and your hands folded neatly at your front. Even your laughter has changed—no longer loose and careless, but quiet and reserved, meant to be polite rather than real.
Phainon changes too.
You hear of it more than you see it, through whispers in the halls and idle remarks from the guards. He’s fast, they say, too fast for someone who’s only eighteen. He’s clever with a blade, and quicker with his words; reckless, often, but brilliant. Master Gnaeus’ favourite headache.
The maids speak of him more airily, with giggles and cheeks dusted pink. He’s too pretty for a boy with dirt on his cheeks and calluses on his hands, they say. He smiles as though he’s got more than enough happiness for everyone to share, and walks like the world already belongs to him. Mistress Calypso calls him a menace with more than enough charm to spare, but her eyes always twinkle when she talks about him, as though she remembers the mornings where she would find both of you tucked into your blanket together.
Sometimes, if you’re lucky, you catch glimpses of him from the tower windows: a blur of movement on the training grounds, sweat-slick hair clinging to his neck, his tunic darker from exertion. You never call out. It wouldn’t be proper. He never looks up.
It becomes easier, in time, to pretend that’s enough.
But one day, when the afternoon sun glows warm against the stone and the air carries the scent of crushed grass and coming rain, you find yourself standing for longer than usual by the window. Down below, the soldiers run drills in neat lines, their movements sharp and practiced. Phainon is among them. You spot him immediately. His posture is looser than the others’, less rigid, as if the rules don’t apply to him in the same way. His strikes are precise, his footwork quick, and even when he missteps—just once—he recovers with a grin and a flourish that earns him a clipped bark from Master Gnaeus and a smothered laugh from the younger boys.
Your fingers curl against the sill. You turn from the window before he finishes the set, something fluttering too hard in your chest to name. When you find Mistress Calypso in the solar, you surprise even yourself with your question.
“May we walk in the grounds today?”
She blinks at you, embroidery needle paused mid-stitch. “The gardens again?”
“No,” you say, and then, quieter, “Past them.”
Her brows rise but she doesn’t press. “Very well,” she murmurs, “but wear your hood. And don’t dawdle.”
You don’t. Your footsteps are eager, your heart beating a rapid staccato against your ribs. Mistress Calypso nearly trips over the hem of her skirts trying to keep up with you, and only then do you slow your pace.
It’s strange, walking so close to the training fields—stranger still to do it on purpose. The clang of steel and barked commands fills the air, but you keep your chin high and your steps even, even when your gaze shifts.
You spot him across the yard—older, taller, with broader shoulders and a sharpness to his movements that startles you. He’s sparring with someone larger, someone stronger, but Phainon doesn’t falter. He fights with all the wildness he used to bring to your bedtime stories, all the fire you remember from summer nights long past.
And then he stumbles—on purpose, you think, because in the next breath he ducks beneath his opponent’s swing and knocks the wooden blade from their hands. He laughs and shakes his opponent’s hand good-naturedly anyway.
Your chest aches.
Phainon turns, wiping sweat from his brow—and freezes when he lays eyes upon you.
You look away first, heat blooming at the base of your throat, but Mistress Calypso only huffs a quiet breath beside you. “I should speak with Master Gnaeus about the training rota,” she says, already stepping away. “Stay on the path. Don’t let your feet wander where your thoughts do.”
You nod, but she’s already moving, skirts sweeping behind her. You glance down again. Phainon is closer now, walking towards the edge of the field with a slow, lazy gait that you think is deceptive to his swiftness.
“Princess,” Phainon calls, just loud enough for it to reach you. His voice is deeper now, roughened like sandpaper against what you remember he used to sound like. “I thought you forgot how to look at me.”
“I haven’t,” you say before you can stop yourself. “I just forgot what you looked like.”
He laughs at that, ducking under the fence railing. “Well, I’ve gotten handsomer. Taller, too.”
You tilt your head. “More arrogant.”
“That, too,” he agrees, grinning. “But I can’t be blamed. I’ve been told I’m Master Gnaeus’ worst nightmare and his finest pupil. Possibly in that order.”
“I’ve heard,” you say, folding your hands in front of you and trying to still the ache in your chest.
He studies you now, something softer threading into his expression. “You’ve changed.”
“So have you.”
“Not all of it’s bad,” Phainon says, squinting at you. “You stand straighter now. You don’t stumble over your words when you’re angry.”
“I never did,” you murmur, lifting your chin.
“My mistake. You were always very dignified. Even when you threw a candlestick at my head.”
“That was once.”
“Twice,” he corrects, “but who’s counting?”
You laugh a little, soft, and it eases something in your chest. For a moment, he just looks at you—not in the way the courtiers do, calculating and distant, or the way the maids do, fawning and fearful. Phainon looks at you like someone who’s known you muddy-kneed and sleep-mussed and still thinks the sight of you in silks is something worth staring at.
He rubs the back of his neck. “They’re changing your guards, soon.”
“How do you know that?” you ask.
“I overheard Master Gnaeus talking to your father,” he replies.
You frown. You only ever see your father at mealtimes, because being the king and queen of a kingdom is tough work. Busy as he was, he still used to feed you peas and carrots and tickle your sides until you giggled, when you were much younger. 
The older you get, the less you see of him. Your mother passed away whilst giving birth to you; your father focuses on managing his kingdom. Mistress Calypso, your nurse since birth, is the closest maternal figure you’ve had.
“Is it for a reason?” you ask.
“They’re saying it’s precautionary. Something about tightening security.” His tone stays easy, but his expression flickers. “Gnaeus will choose them himself.”
“And what are you telling me this for?” you say, pressing your fingers together, tight.
Phainon leans in a little—not improper, not indecent, but enough that you catch the scent of leather and sweat. “Because if you asked,” he says, low, “he’d assign me.”
“To stand outside my door?”
He shrugs, mischievous again. “I wouldn’t fall asleep on duty. Other than that, it’ll be just like the old times.”
You arch a brow, schooling your features the way Mistress Calypso taught you, though something bright and treacherous stirs inside your stomach. “The old times didn’t involve you standing guard. They involved you sneaking into my bedroom through the window and pretending not to be the one who knocked over the inkwell.”
“Yes, and I was excellent at both,” Phainon says unabashedly.
“You were terrible at both,” you retort, and though your voice is steady, it lilts in a way it hasn’t in months. “You always got caught.”
“Only because you told on me.”
“Because you blamed it on the cat.”
“That cat had it coming.”
You almost smile, and turn your gaze back to the training grounds, where the other boys are starting up again. Phainon follows your glance, but his eyes are already half on you.
“I mean it,” he says, quietly.
You don’t look at him, but the wind catches your cloak and lifts it slightly. The sun warms your cheek. “Mean what?”
“That I’d take the post. If you asked.”
Your throat works around a sudden lump. “It wouldn’t be your decision.”
“No. But you’ve always had a way of… making things happen.”
You do look at him then. His smile is subdued now, and something in his eyes—not fire, but resolve—burns steadier than it did in the boy who declared he would be captain of the guard as soon as he met you. It would be selfish of you to say yes. It would be reckless to want him near, not as a guard or a shadow by your door, but simply as himself.
“It would be improper,” you say.
He nods, accepting the words. But his voice, when he speaks, is gentle. “A lot of the world is. Doesn’t mean we don’t live in it.”
You open your mouth to say something, then close it. The path is still quiet, though you see Mistress Calypso crossing the grounds to come back to you. The scent of rain is stronger now.
“I’ll think about it,” you say.
Phainon steps back and bows. “Then I’ll wait.”
You watch him go until he reaches the far end of the field, and his figure blurs again into motion and shouts and sweat and steel. Mistress Calypso joins you and, guiding you by your elbow, ushers you back into the palace walls, fretting about the possibility of rain.
(You think, just maybe, you will ask Master Gnaeus.)
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The next morning, the palace is quiet. Mistress Calypso has gone to oversee the linens, and your lady-in-waiting has excused herself to fetch your embroidery kit. You walk alone, steps echoing faintly through the stone corridors. You know where you’re going. You’ve rehearsed the words in your head all night.
The armoury smells of oil and dust and old leather. You spot Master Gnaeus standing beside a weapons rack, arms folded, eyes narrowed as he surveys the group of boys cleaning the rust from old spears. His presence is imposing, but you know he’s always had a soft spot for you and Phainon, after having had to wrangle the both of you away from each other. The memory brings a smile to your lips; Master Gnaeus had once called you and Phainon as inseparable as a sunflower and the sun.
He notices you before you speak.
“Your Highness,” Master Gnaeus says, his gravelled voice breaking through the clatter of metal. He straightens, folding his arms tighter, though something gentle flickers across his expression. “You’ve no business in the armoury unless you plan to spar.”
“I’ll keep my slippers away from the blades,” you say, smiling faintly.
The boys around you fumble into bows or hasty salutes before returning to their tasks, whispering to each other as you pass. Gnaeus jerks his head towards the back, where it’s quieter, away from nosy ears and adolescent posturing. You follow, skirts brushing the dusty floor. Once inside the small side chamber—a storage room that smells like iron and cedar—you turn to him.
“You always did have that look when you were about to ask me something I’d say no to,” he mutters.
You gather your words with care. “I heard you’re changing the guard outside my quarters.”
“You heard correctly. It’s overdue. Your father agrees.”
“I’d like to request someone specific,” you say.
Master Gnaeus smiles, almost knowingly. “Is that so?”
You nod, folding your hands in front of you to keep them from fidgeting. “Phainon.”
“Of course.” Gnaeus lets out an odd sound, a cross between a chuckle and a groan.
“He’s capable,” you say quickly, before he can wave you off. “You trained him yourself. He’s fast, observant, loyal—”
“—and reckless,” the commander cuts in, raising a brow. “Too familiar with you. Too stubborn.”
“But you trust him.”
“You do know what it would mean, having him stationed at your door?”
“I am not a fool,” you say. “I know what it looks like.”
“Looks aren’t the issue. It’s what it stirs up,” Master Gnaeus says. “People in this court and kingdom live for whispers. If they catch even a hint of impropriety—”
“There won’t be any,” you interrupt. “He won’t so much as look at me in the wrong way.”
Gnaeus snorts. “That’s the problem. He already does.”
“Then make him prove otherwise,” you say, holding his gaze even as your heart—that traitorous organ—races inside your rib cage.
Gnaeus studies you—eyes narrowed, mouth pursed like he’s chewing on something he doesn’t want to swallow. “That boy’s been sniffing around the assignment list all week,” he mutters finally, more to himself than you. “Didn’t say a word to me, of course.”
“He said he’d do it if I asked,” you murmur.
“Of course he would. You could ask him to walk into a fire and he’d do it without blinking,” Master Gnaeus says gruffly. He sighs deeply, as though the weight of his years and the weight of your request are the same. “Fine.”
You blink. “Fine?”
“He starts next week. Trial basis,” Gnaeus grumbles. “And gods help him if I catch him dozing off or sneaking you sweets. One wrong move, and he’s back in the kitchens peeling onions for the stew.”
A small laugh escapes you. “Understood.”
“And you,” he adds, pointing a thick finger at you like you’re ten again and have just hidden a training sword up your skirts, “are not to coddle him. Or distract him. Or lure him away from his post by any means whatsoever.”
“I would never.” You give him a solemn nod, fighting a grin. “Thank you, Master Gnaeus.”
He waves a hand. “Don’t thank me yet. You two were as inseparable as a sunflower and the sun—”
“You remember!”
“I remember how much trouble the sun got in when the sunflower followed it into the courtyard past curfew,” Master Gnaeus says, low and thoughtful. “He’s not a little boy anymore, and neither are you a little girl. Be careful, Princess.”
(You slip past the boys and their spears, rushing to the stables where Master Gnaeus said Phainon would be. Your feet cannot take you there fast enough, but you lift your skirts up and urge yourself to move faster. You find him brushing down one of the younger horses, sleeves rolled to his elbows. He has hay in his hair, and he hums under his breath, soft and tuneless. 
“Phainon,” you call, breathless.
He glances over his shoulder, and when he sees you, his smile blooms so fast, it nearly knocks the wind out of you. “Princess. You’ve either come to drag me to a duel or to tell me something reckless,” he says, tossing the brush aside.
You come to a stop in front of him, cheeks flushed, not from the run but from the way Phainon looks at you: bright and open, like you’ve brought in the sun with you.
“I asked Master Gnaeus,” you say, “and he said yes.”
“You did?”
“He agreed. You’ll start next week, on a trial basis.” You bite your lip, watching his expression shift. “But he warned you not to doze off or sneak me any sweets.”
Phainon grins, wide and boyish and blinding. “Too late for that.”
Before you can say anything more, he steps forward and takes your hand—just briefly, just enough to squeeze your fingers once, quickly, like he might not be allowed to again.
“I won’t let you down,” he says, low and certain.
“I know,” you say.)
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There is nothing you can do to quell the rush of excitement that jolts through your body when Phainon arrives for his first night of duty. It bubbles warm beneath your ribs, a spark fanned into flame, and you have to bite the inside of your cheek to stop yourself from grinning like a fool.
He stands in the hall outside your chambers, a far cry from the boy who used to steal apples from the kitchens and blame it on the stablehands. Now, he’s clad in the full regalia of the royal guard: black and silver, crisp and ceremonial, the metal of his breastplate catching the flicker of fire. The insignia of your house is etched into the clasp at his shoulder, a small gilded sun. And yet, there are still remnants of him that remain unchanged—the ever-messy hair that no brush can tame, the faint smudge of ink on his fingers, and the tilt of his mouth, cocky but never cruel.
“Your Highness,” he says, voice pitched in that deliberate, court-appropriate register, before giving you an exaggerated bow. “Reporting for duty.”
You arch an eyebrow and fold your arms, trying not to laugh. “You’re late.”
“I was ambushed,” he says, straightening up, “by the cook. I barely survived.” Phainon reaches into his cloak and pulls out a small parcel, wrapped in linen and still faintly warm. He holds it out with both hands. “She said you’d requested for apricot pastries yesterday.”
“That’s very kind of her,” you say, and then smile, giddy and childish. “They’re for you.”
“For me?” Phainon blinks.
You nod, suddenly shy. “A thank-you. And to celebrate your first day on duty. I’d hoped to deliver it myself, but…” You trail off, sheepish. “The kitchens were busy today.”
He looks down at the parcel in his hands as though he doesn’t quite know what to do with it. Then, slowly, his fingers curl around the edges of the linen wrap, careful and reverent. The torchlight makes his blue eyes look brighter, and when he glances up again, something in his expression softens, his usual wit quieted into something gentler. 
“You always were the generous one,” he says.
“I wasn’t generous when you broke my reading tablet and—as always—tried to blame the cat,” you point out.
Phainon huffs a laugh, then shifts his weight, leaning just slightly closer. “In my defense, that cat hated me.”
You fight the smile tugging at your lips. “You’re not supposed to say things like that when you’re wearing a royal crest.”
“We’ll keep it between us,” he says, with a conspiratorial wink. Then, softer: “Thank you. Truly.”
You let yourself smile at that. You can hear the faint clatter of boots down the corridor, the echo of a servant’s voice, but here, in the little alcove outside your chambers, it feels like the rest of the palace has fallen away.
“You’ll be stationed here every night?” you ask, though you already know the answer.
“Until the king changes the rotation,” he confirms. “But Master Gnaeus gave me the impression that won’t be happening any time soon.”
“Good,” you say, trying not to let your relief show too obviously. “I think I’ll sleep better with you outside.”
Phainon smiles at that—an unguarded thing, a little crooked, a little too fond. “I’ll keep the shadows away,” he says.
You nod, then take a slow step back towards your chamber door, fingers brushing against the iron handle. “Don’t let the candle burn out. If you’re cold, there are spare blankets in the antechamber. And if anyone bothers you—”
“I’ll glare at them until they run screaming,” he finishes, mockingly solemn. “Very professional. Very terrifying.”
You shake your head, laughing softly. “I’m serious.”
“So am I.” He holds up the pastry bundle. “Fuel for my duties.”
You open the door, pausing one last time to glance over your shoulder. He’s already stepping into position beside the frame, posture straight and expression composed—but his eyes, when they meet yours, are still bright with warmth and mirth.
“Goodnight, Phainon.”
“Goodnight, Princess.”
(When you finally lie in bed, heart hammering and cheeks warm, you wonder how on earth you’re meant to sleep with him just outside.)
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Three nights after, sleep evades you wholly. No matter how many times you shift, how tightly you tug the covers over your shoulders, how deeply you breathe, rest dances just out of reach. The candle on your bedside table has long since burned out, and the coals in the hearth pulse faintly. The air is neither warm nor cold, yet you feel restless.
Eventually, you give up. You swing your legs over the side of the bed and reach for your shawl, wrapping it around your shoulders and knotting it loosely at the front. Phainon will still be awake, won’t he? You smile a little.
The palace is quiet when you open your door, quieter still when you step into the corridor. The flickering torches lining the hallway cast gentle amber light, and the stained-glass windows above them scatter moonlight into fractured gems across the floor. Your bare feet make no sound as you walk.
Phainon stands just as he has every night since he took up the post: beside your chamber door, one shoulder leaned against the wall. He’s not in full regalia tonight, only his black tunic with silver edging and a loose cloak fastened at his collarbone. His hair is, as always, a wild thing—too stubborn to stay neat, despite his best efforts. He straightens at the sound of your approach, though he doesn’t seem surprised.
“You’re supposed to be asleep,” he says softly.
“I tried,” you say, hugging your shawl tighter and crossing your arms over your chest. “The bed refused to cooperate.”
“A shame.” His gaze drifts towards the other end of the corridor, scanning it briefly, then returns to you. “Is this a formal inspection, or am I being graced with your company?”
“Depends. Do you want to be inspected?”
He hums thoughtfully. “I’ll take my chances.”
You let out a quiet laugh, and take a few slow steps closer, until you’re standing just across to him, back to the opposite wall. The stone is cool even through the layers of your shawl. His eyes follow you, not in the way of a soldier watching for danger, but something fonder. Master Gnaeus’ words echo through your head, but you squash it. It is nighttime now, and no one else is there.
You slide down the wall, careful, until you’re seated across from him on the cold stone floor. The hem of your nightgown brushes your ankles, and your shawl slips slightly from your shoulders as you settle your arms around your knees. You don’t fix it. It feels too gentle a moment to disturb with fussing.
“I thought I might find you awake,” you murmur.
Phainon sits down as well, crossing his legs. He watches you without speaking for a long while, his head tilted slightly. “I told you I wouldn’t sleep on duty,” he says.
“Master Gnaeus would be proud,” you agree solemnly. He cracks a smile at that, and shifts slightly so his knee brushes yours. “Can I ask you something?”
“You can ask me anything.”
“Are your favourite things still the same?” you ask.
He leans back against the wall and thinks on it. “Some. Not all. I used to think the best sound in the world was the call to market in the city square at first light, before the crowds set in. Now I think it might be the way the torches crackle in the hallway when it’s too quiet to hear anything else.”
You glance at one of those torches now. It pops, like punctuation to his words.
“I still hate wearing the ceremonial gloves,” Phainon adds, tugging at the fingers of one hand, though he’s not wearing them now. “They make my hands sweat and I can’t hold my sword right.”
“You always said they felt like trying to write with wool tied around your fingers.”
“They still do,” he says, grinning. “I still think the kitchens make the best bread before sunrise, when no one’s had the chance to ruin it yet. And I still don’t like pears.”
You press your cheek to your knees, watching him through your lashes. “You used to say pears were fruit pretending to be water.” 
“They are. Pick a side, I say.”
You laugh again, louder this time, and then fall quiet. “And… is Lyra still your favourite constellation?”
“Yes,” he says. “That won’t change anytime soon.”
You nod, something warm and fluttery settling inside your rib cage. When you don’t speak, he adds, “Your turn.”
“I still dip my bread in tea when no one’s watching. I still hate wearing slippers—too stiff. I prefer walking barefoot, even when I’m not supposed to.”
“I noticed,” he says, with a wry glance to your feet.
“I still sleep facing the window,” you continue, “even though it gives me the worst light. I still read by the hearth until my eyes ache. And I still braid my hair when I’m anxious, even if I undo it right after.”
He watches you closely, eyes roving over your features like you’re a scripture he’s memorising. You swallow, suddenly self-conscious, and say, “I still love marigolds. Even if they do smell like dust.”
“Because they look like little suns,” Phainon finishes for you, so easily that it knocks the breath out of your lungs.
Your eyes meet his. Neither of you looks away. He leans forward just slightly, resting his elbows on his knees. “There’s something cruel about time,” he says quietly. “It doesn’t wait for us to grow into the people we need to be. It just expects us to be them anyway.”
“I missed you,” you say before you can talk yourself out of it.
“I missed you, too, Princess. Every single day.”
You shift your hand and your fingers brush against his. “I should get some sleep,” you whisper.
He nods, but doesn’t move. “Will you be able to?”
“Maybe.”
“Then I’ll stay until you do.”
You push yourself to your feet slowly, and he rises with you, less like a friend now, and more like the soldier he has grown into being. “Goodnight, Phainon,” you say.
He bows his head slightly. “Goodnight.”
(What is this aching, this yearning, that settles itself behind the bones of your chest and nestles itself deep into your heart? It pulses with every beat, quiet but insistent, like a secret knocking at the inside of your ribs. You press your palm there as if you could smooth it away, but the warmth of Phainon’s voice still rings in your ears, and the ghost of his hand brushing yours won’t leave you be. 
You return to bed, but the sheets are colder now, lonelier somehow, and your thoughts spin in endless, silent circles. You don’t get a wink of sleep, not like this, and Mistress Calypso tuts over the abysmal state of you come the next morning.
When you describe this strange ache to her, her motherly eyes soften in understanding, and her lips curve upwards in a knowing smile. “Oh, my dear child,” she sighs, and says nothing more of it.)
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ii). When you’re older, you think you know it all.
Years pass. You are older now, not prone to childish whims and fancies anymore, or perhaps you are, but you’re forced to keep it hidden. Your father deems it necessary that you sit by his side during court meetings. You are to pay attention and make note of stately affairs, but you are not meant to speak, your father had told you sternly. It had stung, just a little, but Mistress Calypso comforted you by saying that your father was merely afraid you would surpass him in wit and knowledge.
Thus, you spend less time with your needlework and more time in the palace halls, and so, Master Gnaeus had only deemed it fit that Phainon gets a promotion. He is now your personal guard, and the distinction is not a small one. It means he is no longer posted just outside your door at night but follows you throughout the day—into the great hall, the colonnades, the gardens, and even the stifling court meetings where noblemen drone on about wheat prices and border tensions. 
He stands a step behind and to your right, hands clasped at his back, eyes ever watchful. He rarely speaks, save for short exchanges or quiet jests whispered under his breath when no one else can hear. You’ve learned to school your expression well, to stifle your laughter behind the pretense of a cough or a delicate touch to your lips.
Today, the sun slants through the high windows in angled beams, catching dust motes in its golden light. You sit with your hands folded neatly in your lap. Your posture is impeccable and your gaze is fixed on the speaker, though your mind drifts.
Phainon shifts behind you, just slightly, and the movement pulls your attention like a tide. Even without looking, you can sense him—solid, steady, unchanged in most ways. Yet, two years has carved something finer into him, like a sword honed again and again on the whetstone. His face is sharper now, his presence heavier, though never suffocating. You wonder if he notices the changes in you, too.
As the meeting finally draws to a close and the courtiers begin their ritual of shuffling and bowing, your father rises. You do, too, bowing your head as expected. He doesn’t spare you a glance, his attention already swept towards his advisors.
Phainon steps forward, a half-measure closer. “Boring as ever,” he murmurs, too low for anyone else to catch.
You glance up at him, lips twitching. “I’ll add that to my notes.”
He smiles, but only faintly. “You’re doing well.”
The simple words settle in you more deeply than they ought to. You nod, grateful, and start walking, the long train of your gown whispering over the marble. Phainon falls into step beside you, just far enough to be proper. You don’t speak as you make your way down the corridor. You don’t have to; the silence between you both is companionable now, a familiar quiet like the hush before dawn.
But you’re aware, more than ever, of how much space he takes up in your world—and how little room you’re allowed to show it.
So you walk, head high, voice quiet, fingers itching by your sides for something you cannot name. When he opens the door for you and you pass through first, you pretend your heart doesn’t falter.
You are older now. You are wiser. But still—still—he is the softest thought you carry.
“Do you think we can visit Marmoreal Market today, Princess?” he asks.
“Why? So you may see your precious baker girl once more?” you say, allowing a sly smile to play at your lips.
Phainon exhales a laugh, low and amused, as he follows a pace behind you down the corridor. “She has a generous hand with the honey glaze, that’s all,” he says innocently.
“And a generous bosom, if I recall.”
“I hadn’t noticed,” he replies with too much earnestness to be sincere.
“You’re a terrible liar,” you say.
“Terrible at many things, Your Highness. Lying is simply the least dangerous of them.”
You shake your head. He’s always been like this: clever in a way that toes the line between impish and careful. He knows just how far he can go, how much he can tease without overstepping. You, for your part, never quite want him to stop.
You reach the landing where the hallway forks—one way leads to the royal chambers, the other to the open terraces that overlook the city. The late spring breeze filters through the carved stone arches, warm with the scent of wisteria.
You pause, turning your face towards it. “Let’s go,” you say, already veering off the expected path.
“To the market?” Phainon asks, ever the guard, ever the rule-follower—but he follows anyway.
“To the terraces,” you amend. “The market can wait until you’ve made your peace with the fact that your baker girl does not, in fact, love you.”
“She doesn’t have to love me,” Phainon says breezily. “She only has to give me free pastries.”
You laugh, startled at the honesty of it, and you don’t miss the way his eyes flick towards you at the sound, like he’s collecting it to keep. The two of you walk in step now, no longer master and guard, but friend and companion. There are things you do not say: how his presence is a balm; how his nearness steadies you in ways even your lessons cannot; how in a court full of power plays that treats you as nothing more than a precious accessory, he is one of the only people who speaks to you like you’re simply a person.
When you reach the terrace, you rest your hands on the balustrade, staring out at the sea of rooftops and chimney smoke below. He stands beside you, just close enough to share the view. The wind lifts your hair gently, teasing strands loose from their pins, and you make no move to smooth them back. Phainon leans his forearms against the stone railing beside you. You glance at him from the corner of your eye.
“You’ll get in trouble for slouching like that,” you say.
“I’ll get in trouble for far worse one day,” he says, not looking at you.
The words land between you, light as falling ash and just as hard to ignore. You don’t respond right away. Instead, you look out again, watching how the light glimmers off the glass domes and copper roofs of the kingdom. It’s beautiful in the late afternoon, with the shadows lengthening and the air warming with the promise of summer.
“Would you ever leave?” you ask.
“Yes,” Phainon says, after a moment. “If it was the right reason. If it meant protecting something, or someone, I care about.”
When you breathe, the air catches in your chest and stays there, unmoving. “And would you come back?”
Phainon tilts his head towards you. “That depends. Would you want me to?”
You finally turn to look at him, the wind catching the hem of his cloak and the light catching in his eyes. He’s not smiling now.
“I don’t think I’d like the palace very much without you,” you admit. The words are too small for what you mean, too fragile—but they’re what you can give, and he seems to understand that. His gaze softens. Something in his expression shifts, like the drawing of a curtain.
“Then I suppose I’ll have to stay,” he says, and you think you can see the trace of a smile return, though it’s smaller than usual.
You lower your gaze before you can say something foolish. Before you reach for his hand, or let your shoulder brush his, or ask him if he ever thinks about things he shouldn’t.
“Phainon,” you say lightly, chasing the heavy quiet away, “when you go to the market, you ought to bring back something for me. Pastries, or maybe dried figs.” 
“Of course, Your Highness,” he says with a playful bow of his head. “Though if I bring the wrong kind of figs, like I did last time, will I be banished to the dungeons?”
“Only if they’re sour. Like last time.”
“Then I’ll make sure to taste all of them first.”
You smile to yourself, turning your face back towards the sun. It’s easier this way—to pretend, to flirt with jest and hide everything you mean in the spaces between the words. You don’t know if he feels the same, or if this is all just duty and loyalty gilded in affection for his childhood friend. But for now, it’s enough. It has to be.
(You wonder what happens when a princess and her guard cannot stop looking at each other with fondness.)
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“There are reports of the Northern Kingdom rallying for war, Your Highness,” says Master Gnaeus, voice grave as it cuts cleanly through the silence of the chamber.
The candlelight flickers against the polished marble floors, throwing golden shadows against the walls. At the centre of the great hall, the court is gathered—noblemen in their brocades and ribbons, advisors with scrolls and ink-stained fingers, the occasional general in muted armour trimmed with the kingdom’s colours. All eyes are on the man standing near the raised dais.
A hush falls in the wake of Gnaeus’ words. Tension coils in the room like smoke. You feel it settle in your bones, even as you sit perfectly still, hands folded in your lap like you were taught. You do not speak. You are not meant to.
Beside you, your father—the king—does not react at first. His face remains unreadable, cast in part shadow from the sun filtering through the high stained-glass windows. He is a man who does not betray emotion easily, whose command is forged from control.
“And the severity?” he asks.
“More than rumours this time,” Master Gnaeus answers. “Our border outposts have reported movements. Small skirmishes, targeting mainly the farmland on the border. They haven’t attacked anyone outright, yet.”
Your father drums his fingers once against his armrest. “What of the Southern provinces?”
“They remain neutral,” the commander of the royal guard says, “but neutrality seldom lasts when coin and blood are promised. The North is testing us. They are measuring how far they can reach before we push back.”
Lady Caenis, ever eager, ever cunning, rises from her seat near the front. Her ceremonial rings clink softly against one another as she clasps her hands behind her back. “If I may, Your Majesty.”
The king lifts a hand. “Speak.”
“We may yet avoid full war. The prince of Castrum Kremnos is expected to arrive at our court in three months’ time. His father has long sought favour with our kingdom.”
Several heads turn at this. The name holds weight—Castrum Kremnos is a mountain city-state fortified by steep walls and a fearsome army, known for surviving three major invasions without surrendering an inch of land. 
“They are not without ambition,” Lady Caenis goes on, “but they are strategic. If we were to offer an alliance, formal and binding, before the North makes its move—before they choose a side—we could secure a military partner unlike any we’ve had before.”
“An alliance of what nature?” your father asks, though you’re certain he already knows the answer.
Caenis smiles with well-practiced diplomacy. “A royal one.”
You are acutely aware of your surroundings: the rustle of a silk sleeve to your left, the distant creak of a high window shifting in the wind, the flicker of torchlight behind the throne. But louder than all of that is the silence that follows. Your name is not spoken—but it doesn’t need to be.
A royal match. A marriage.
You remain unmoving, as you have been trained. But your breath catches ever-so slightly at the back of your throat. You don’t let it show. You focus on the cold edge of your seat beneath you, the feel of your gown’s embroidery beneath your fingertips. 
“A marriage,” your father echoes.
Caenis inclines her head. “The prince is said to be capable and respected by his men. It would be a… strategic match. Kremnos’ military strength paired with our control of the trade routes would ensure no northern force dares to strike. We have a strong enough army to hold off their advances until the prince arrives.”
The weight of the room shifts, as if the very air bends towards your father. Everyone is watching him—but he is not watching them. He is watching you. His gaze turns slowly and fixes on you in full for the first time that day. You meet it, though your heart is thundering somewhere behind your ribs. You have always obeyed. You have always listened. Still, some part of you—that foolish, tender part—had hoped you would be more than a pawn on a royal chessboard.
There is no cruelty in the king’s eyes, but neither is there softness. There is only that strange, piercing contemplativeness, like he is studying you through smoke, measuring something that can’t be weighed with scales or numbers.
Behind you, Phainon is still as stone. The distance between him and you that has always been proper now feels unbearable.
(“Princess,” Phainon starts, later, when he accompanies you back to your chambers. “You’re to meet with the seamstress after the meeting.”
“Tell her I am unwell,” you say, hurrying down the corridor as fast as you can. It isn’t a lie; you do feel ill, your stomach roiling and roiling uncomfortably.
“Princess,” Phainon says again, keeping pace with you. “I understand this is sudden, but—”
“You don’t understand anything!” you snap, harsher than intended. Your words echo in the corridor, clipped and cold.
He falters just slightly, enough for you to notice out of the corner of your eye. His jaw tightens, though he says nothing. Loyal as ever. Silent as ever. You regret it instantly. Your footsteps slow; the tightness in your chest presses deeper now, regret curling alongside the sickness in your stomach. 
You stop a few paces ahead and close your eyes for a breath. “I’m sorry.”
He approaches again, careful. “You’re not well,” he says, as though offering you permission to feel as overwhelmed as you do.
“No. I’m not,” you say.
He nods once, gently, and then says, “I’ll tell the seamstress you need rest.)
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The throne room is overwhelmingly vast when it is just you and your father standing inside it. Your footsteps echo against the marble as you approach the dais, the train of your gown trailing behind you. The light through the stained glass paints the floor in fractured colours—crimson, gold, deep sapphire—but it does little to warm the air between you. Your father watches you with cool detachment from the foot of the throne, hands clasped behind his back. His crown sits slightly askew on the crown of his head.
“I would like to leave the palace,” you say, the words coming faster than you’d meant. You swallow and lift your chin. “Just until the prince of Castrum Kremnos arrives.”
Your father arches a brow. “Leave? And where, exactly, would you go?”
“To the coast,” you say. “To the summer manor. I won’t be idle—I’ll continue my studies with Mistress Calypso—”
“Your nursemaid?” he interjects, a faint sneer in the word.
“She is my governess as well,” you say. “I’m not asking for leisure, Father. I… I feel ill here. I haven’t been sleeping. I find it difficult to breathe within these walls.”
There is a long pause. A crow calls somewhere beyond the windows. Your father regards you a moment more; then, he exhales once, short and dismissive. “You may go,” he says. “There is no use for you here until the prince arrives anyway.”
You flinch, just slightly, but you nod. He doesn’t notice, or perhaps, he doesn’t care.
“You may take your guard and Mistress Calypso,” he says, already dismissing you with a wave of his hand. “I’ll not have the court talking of you dragging half the palace to the shore for your whims.”
“It is not a whim,” you say before you can stop yourself.
“Is that so? Very well, then. See to it that you leave tomorrow before dawn.”
“Yes, Father,” you murmur, dipping your head even though he no longer faces you. You remain where you are until he disappears into the adjoining corridor, footsteps echoing until they vanish entirely. Only then do you lift your gaze again and let your shoulders sag.
The next morning dawns muted and grey, the sky still heavy with the last clinging fingers of spring. Your trunks are packed by the time the sun crests the horizon, and Mistress Calypso waits patiently near the carriage. Phainon stands beside it, already in travel leathers, a pale grey cloak draped over his shoulders and a sword belted at his hip. He helps you into the carriage without a word, though his eyes linger on you longer than usual—not as a guard, but as someone who has quietly noticed how tired you’ve become.
The journey to the coast takes most of the day, winding down through green hills and old roads, past vineyards not yet in bloom and sleepy villages with bright rose bushes. The sea appears at last like a sliver of melted silver along the horizon, widening with each turn of the road until it swells fully into view—vast and blue and endless, the waves curling like ink upon the shore.
The coastal town lies nestled in the curve of a shallow bay, its rooftops the colour of worn terracotta and its buildings pale from salt and sun. It smells of brine and fish and rosemary, and the narrow streets are paved in rounded cobblestones that shift slightly beneath the wheels of the carriage. 
The manor sits just beyond the town proper, high on the cliffside and overlooking the water. Pale limestone walls rise from wild green, sea-thistle and tall grass climbing up the stones. Ivy winds around the old balconies and shutters. The air here is sharp with the scent of salt and the sea, but it is clean. For the first time in days, you inhale without feeling caged.
Phainon and manor’s maids begin unpacking the trunks, while Mistress Calypso busies herself with inspecting the interior for dust and damp. You slip away quietly, sandals crunching over gravel, until you find the narrow path that winds down to the town below.
You aren’t alone for long. Phainon catches up with you, as he always does. “Princess,” he chides, “don’t walk away like that.” But you smile at him widely and he softens, shaking his head.
The coastal folk are not the court. They do not bow or stare. Few even seem to recognise you.
You pass through the open-air market with your hood pulled loosely over your shoulders, but it’s more habit than disguise. The baker merely offers a polite nod as he stokes his oven; the fishmonger continues haggling with a hunched old woman, and the children dart barefoot through the plaza fountains, trailing laughter. Here, they do not see a princess and her guard. They only see a boy and a girl, walking through streets unfamiliar to them.
Phainon walks half a step behind you at first, out of instinct more than instruction, his hand never far from the hilt of his sword. But as the crowd thickens and the scent of roasted almonds and sea-brine swells in the air, the stiffness in his shoulders begins to loosen. A boy juggles apples near the fountain and nearly drops one at your feet. You catch it before it rolls away and toss it back with a grin.
“You should be careful,” Phainon says, though the corners of his mouth tilt upwards. “If anyone did recognise you—”
“They haven’t,” you say, tugging him towards a stall where seashell necklaces hang in neat rows. “And they won’t.”
You buy one with a pale pink conch strung between two tiny ivory beads, trading a copper coin from the hem of your sleeve. The merchant gives no second glance; he simply pockets the coin and moves to the next customer. Phainon watches you quietly.
“You’ve changed,” he says after a while, once you’ve wandered beyond the edge of the market, towards a low stone wall that overlooks the bay.
“Have I?” you ask, settling on the wall with your arms around your knees.
“You’re… lighter,” he says, and then immediately flushes, like the word has embarrassed him. “I just mean, you seem more at ease. I haven’t seen you smile like that in weeks.”
“I suppose my father trading me off to some prince I’ve never met from some kingdom I’ve never seen will do that to a person,” you say. You lower your gaze to the water. The tide has begun to turn, waves curling in slow arcs towards the shore.
“I think,” Phainon says, “you could ask your father to let you stay for longer.”
“He might prefer it.”
“That’s not what I meant.”
“I know,” you say. “But it’s still true.”
A gull cries overhead. A boat rocks gently in the harbour, its sails furled tight. The air is cooler now, and the stars begin to prick through the veil of twilight, soft and faraway. You reach into your pocket and pull out the seashell necklace, the pink conch warm from where it’s rested against your skin. Without a word, you hold it out to him.
Phainon blinks. “For me?”
“For the boy who’s always chasing after me,” you say. “Consider it a reward.”
He takes it gingerly, like it might vanish if he isn’t careful. Though he doesn’t say thank-you, he loops it around his wrist. 
(When you return to the manor that evening, Mistress Calypso eyes your wind-tangled hair with something like fond disapproval, but she says nothing—only sets a cup of chamomile tea on the table and reminds you to take your tonic before bed. That night, the waves sing you to sleep, and for the first time in many weeks, you rest.)
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“Isn’t it cruel, Phainon?” you say, walking through the market once again, the next week. “I always thought parents were supposed to love their children no matter what. My father did love me, when I was very young, but it was so long ago that I hardly remember.”
Phainon walks beside you in silence, his eyes scanning the street as if the right words might be hiding between the bread stalls and spice carts. The market is livelier today—someone is playing a tin whistle near the fountain, and the sweet scent of cinnamon buns wafts through the warm air. You pass a stall draped in bright fabrics dyed indigo blue and pomegranate red. Children dart around your legs, laughing, their feet kicking up dust. But all you can think about is how far away the palace feels now—how far away you feel from it.
“Sometimes, I wonder if I only think he loved me because that’s what children are meant to believe,” you continue. “But the older I got, the quieter it became, as though his love faded with time, the way stars disappear at dawn.”
Phainon exhales slowly. “It’s not meant to be that way,” he says. “But it happens.”
“Did it happen to you?”
He shrugs. “My parents were bakers. They had too many mouths to feed to waste time on affection. But they gave me bread when I was hungry and kept me warm. Maybe that was love in their own way.”
“I think I would have rathered bread and warmth, too.”
A wind stirs, carrying with it the faint tang of approaching rain. You tip your head back towards the sky. The clouds are heavy, charcoal grey and swollen, rolling in fast from the sea.
Phainon notices it too. “We should—”
His warning comes too late. A single drop of rain lands on your cheek, followed swiftly by another on your brow. Then the sky breaks open all at once, a sudden, sharp curtain of rain that scatters the marketplace into bursts of movement. Children squeal and dart into open doors. Merchants scramble to cover their wares with linen and oilcloth. You laugh, startled, as the rain soaks through your sleeves in an instant, the hem of your dress sticking to your ankles.
“Come on,” Phainon says, reaching for your hand without hesitation, and you let him, your fingers slipping into his with a familiarity you don’t allow yourself to think about. He tugs you under the cover of a narrow alcove just beside a shuttered pottery stall. It’s cramped, the two of you standing close with your shoulders brushing, the sound of rain pounding the roof overhead.
The rain comes heavier now—thick sheets of it, washing the colour from the sky and smearing the edges of the market into pale, trembling silhouettes. It’s as if the sea itself has leapt into the clouds and poured down onto the town, soaking everything in its path. The cobblestones are already slick, puddles forming in the dips between them. Water rushes in rivulets along the gutter, swirling with petals from the overturned flower cart you passed by just minutes ago.
You shiver, rainwater dripping down your temples. Phainon’s cloak is coarse and rain-damp, but warm. It smells faintly of him: sun-dried linen and leather polish, salt and steel. He undoes it; and wraps it over your shoulders as he fastens it clumsily at your throat, his fingers brushing the hollow of your collarbone, and you don’t move. You barely breathe.
His touch lingers, fingertips ghosting over your skin like he wants to do more. Then, he draws back, expression shuttered.
The alcove is carved into the curve of an old wall, likely once part of the town’s inner ramparts. Its stone is damp and moss-slick behind your back, but you don’t dare shift. If you move, if you speak, you’re afraid everything will spill out—and it’s not the kind of truth you can shove back once spoken. 
You stare at the market, though it’s empty now, save for the most stubborn vendors crouching beneath makeshift coverings. A woman pulls a basket of apples under an awning with an exasperated grunt. A dog scampers down the alley, drenched and wild-eyed. You try to speak—to untangle the knot growing steadily tighter inside your throat—but your voice fails you.
“Phainon…” you say, soft and shaking, eyes still fixed on the grey blur beyond the archway. You cannot look at him.
He doesn’t respond, though you feel him shift slightly beside you. Waiting. Listening. The words are right there: You make me feel safe. I don’t know how to exist in the palace without you. I think I’ve fallen—
“I—” you try again, but your mouth closes around the rest. Nothing comes. Your fingers curl around the fabric of his cloak where it bunches at your chest.
It’s too much. Everything is too much. The chill from your soaked gown clinging to your skin, the ache in your chest that’s grown bigger every day you’ve been at the coast, the quiet way Phainon looks at you when he thinks you’re not watching—it all unravels you from the inside.
You press your back harder against the stone wall and slide down just enough that your shoulders slump and your knees bend, curling in on yourself like the fragile thing you’ve spent years pretending you’re not. Phainon doesn’t say anything. He doesn’t touch you, either, but his presence is steady and unwavering, as it always is. 
Your breath fogs in the cool air, heart racing and thoughts tangled. You wonder if he knows—if he’s always known—and you’re simply the last to understand what you’ve become, what you’ve come to need.
The rain hammers down around you both. The marketplace stays empty. The skies remain grey. Still, he stands beside you, silent and stolid, as if he, too, cannot speak the thing that lies heavy between you.
(It’s as if you are children again, scolded for playing too long by the fountains in the courtyard. Mistress Calypso clucks her tongue as she pulls the soaked cloak from your shoulders and ushers you through the manor’s side entrance, both you and Phainon dripping water onto the tiled floor. You don’t resist when she pulls your hands into hers and frowns deeply at your cold fingertips.
“Idiots,” she admonishes. “Running around like storm-chasers. Look at you both: half-drowned and already flushed.”
You’re too cold to argue. The fever came on fast—maybe it had been waiting for the first excuse to bloom. Your limbs ache; your skin is too warm and too tight. Phainon’s face is pale, lips tinged with grey, but his hand steadies you at the elbow as you waver on your feet. You don’t make it to your own chambers.
Mistress Calypso directs you both to the same guest room at the end of the east wing: closer, easier, warm. The fire is already lit. One of the maids must have stoked it while you were gone, and the flames crackle gently in the hearth, casting soft amber light across the stone walls.
She has you both strip out of your damp clothing behind a screen, averting her eyes though she’s seen you in worse states since infancy. Fresh linens are brought, and the manor’s softest night things, smelling of cedar and rose. You pull the wool shift over your head with trembling arms, and when Mistress Calypso guides you to the wide feather bed, you don’t protest.
You don’t even realise Phainon has followed until the mattress dips under his weight. “You’ll share,” Calypso says briskly, tucking blankets around you both. “You’ll warm faster that way. Don’t argue; I’ve had enough of your foolishness for one day.”
Phainon shifts beside you, awkward and uncertain, but says nothing. It’s the first time you’ve shared a bed since you were children who knew nothing better. You’re both too exhausted to protest her orders, and truthfully, neither of you want to be anywhere else.
She lays a damp cloth on your forehead, then Phainon’s. Her touch is gentle now, brushing hair from your temples, fingers cool and firm. “Try to sleep,” she says. “You’ll feel better in the morning.”
You nod faintly. When she leaves, the room settles into silence, punctuated only by the pop of firewood and the wind outside whispering through the shutters. Phainon lies on his back beside you, stiff as stone. You, curled slightly on your side, are close enough to feel the warmth of his arm beneath the blankets, though not quite touching.
“I can hear your teeth chattering,” Phainon mutters eventually.
You smile weakly. “They’ve a mind of their own.”
Feverish and trembling and tucked beneath thick quilts like unruly children, you finally sleep, pressed into the silence you cannot name and the warmth you cannot speak of yet.)
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“The prince of Castrum Kremnos will treat you well, Princess,” Phainon says one afternoon, as the two of you walk a winding trail that cuts through the windswept cliffside. The sun is veiled by thin clouds, casting a soft, silvery sheen over the sea. “I’ve never met him, but I know a soldier who has, and—”
You stop walking. The gravel crunches beneath your feet as you turn towards the edge of the overlook. Below, the sea churns, restless and dark, rolling and breaking against the jagged rocks far beneath. The air is sharp with salt and cold with the promise of another rain. 
“Princess?” Phainon turns to look at you. His voice falters into silence.
“Please don’t call me that,” you say quietly.
He doesn’t respond, but he waits. Always, he waits.
You wrap your arms around yourself, the breeze tugging at the hem of your light wool cloak. The wind toys with your hair, and curls it at your temples. You can’t bear to look at him, so you look at the horizon instead—where the sky meets the sea, blurred in shades of pewter and indigo.
“I don’t want him to treat me well,” you say. “I don’t want to be treated like anything. That ship will arrive soon, and when it does, I’ll meet a stranger. I’ll smile at him, and I’ll dine with him. I’ll be paraded beside him in silks and jewellery, while the court whispers about how well the match turned out. And in time, I’ll be expected to love him—or at least tolerate him—and bind myself to him before the gods and bear his children in a kingdom I have never seen.
“And none of it will have anything to do with me. Not with what I want, or what I fear. There are other ways to secure alliances, Phainon, but they do not care.”
Phainon stands with his arm at his sides, but there’s tension in his shoulders. He doesn’t offer empty comfort. He knows better. Instead, he listens.
You glance at him, then, catching his gaze. “Doesn’t that sound like a sentence to you?”
“It sounds like a prison,” he says, voice soft.
You search his face, fingers tightening around your cloak. “If I did not bear the title of a royal,” you say, barely more than a whisper, “would you treat me differently, Phainon?”
He draws a slow breath, and when he exhales, something in him loosens. His gaze drops to the earth for a moment, and then returns to you. “Yes,” he says. “I would.”
Your throat tightens.
“If you weren’t a princess,” he continues, quieter now, his voice roughened by something that aches, “I’d steal your hand in the street. I’d kiss you when you looked at me like that—when you see something you want to show me, too. I’d braid wildflowers into your hair just to make you laugh, and I’d call you by your name, your real name, until you were sick of hearing it and asked me to never say it again.”
Your heart kicks hard in your chest. His words are simple, but each one is a tether pulling you further into the confines of your rib cage.
“I’d take you dancing at the summer festival,” he says, stepping closer. “Not in a hall with stuffy walls and bowing nobles, but barefoot in the town square, beneath paper lanterns, with music spilling out of open windows. And I’d hold you so close, no one would doubt what you meant to me.
“I would have written poems about your smile, even if I was no good at it. I’d have carved our names into the old fig tree by the palace gates. I’d bring you honey cakes when you were cross at me. I would have walked beside you—everywhere—not as your guard, but as the boy who accidentally climbed through your window and the man who loved you.”
Tears sting your eyes, but you don’t look away.
You take a step towards him, lips parting, the confession trembling just behind your teeth. “Phainon, I—”
The words falter. Your voice breaks and nothing comes. You clench your jaw against it, but the surge of feeling is stronger than pride, stronger than caution. So instead of speaking, you slump down to the ground, sitting down with all the grace of a weary heart. You press the heels of your hands to your eyes, trying to hide the tears that threaten to spill.
Phainon is beside you in seconds. He crouches low, but doesn’t touch you—doesn’t press. He simply sits there, knees drawn up, watching the wind rake through the tall grass and whip the water below.
“I’m sorry,” you whisper. “I can’t say it. I don’t know how.”
There is no one here, in this secluded spot, and even if there was, the coastal folk don’t know you. It’s this logic, you’re sure, that compels Phainon to wrap his arms around you, tentatively, and draw you to him. You fold into him as though you’ve done it a thousand times before, as though your body knows something your tongue is still afraid to say. His chest is warm, the fabric of his tunic soft, and when you press your cheek against it, you feel the steady thrum of his heartbeat underneath your skin.
The sea below crashes against the rocks in a rhythm older than names. Overhead, gulls wheel and call out across the sky, and the clouds—those heavy, brooding things—have begun to break apart, letting through faint bands of light. The wind is calmer now. The storm has passed, but something in you still trembles like a girl lost in it.
Phainon’s hand shifts to the back of your head. He cradles you against his body.
“Don’t be sorry,” he says into your hair. “There’s no need to be sorry.”
You stay like that, wrapped in him, while the wind combs gently to the grass and the scent of the sea clings to your skin. Your dress is muddy, and your shoulders ache, but here, in the quiet hollow between cliffs and sky, you are allowed—for the first time in what feels like forever—to simply be.
You don’t speak again for a long while. You let the silence hold you both. When at last you lift your head, his hand falls away, but he doesn’t move far. He watches you with that same unreadable expression—half-guard, half-man—eyes the colour of deep sapphire skies.
“I’m scared,” you say.
“I know.”
“If I asked you to take me away from all of it, would you?”
He doesn’t say anything. His gaze drops to the earth once again, and he holds you close and buries his face into the crook of your neck.
(“I would want to,” he says finally, lips warm against your skin. “More than anything.”)
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The halls of the manor are dark by the time you return. The oil lamps have been extinguished, and the shutters latched against the rising wind. The others sleep in the opposite wing—Mistress Calypso, the maids, the steward—and only the distant hum of cicadas and the gentle creak of wood frame the silence as you walk side by side, like children sneaking back in from mischief.
You reach your chamber door, and Phainon stops as he always does. He lingers just a pace behind, like a shadow unsure of its shape. A week ago, he might’ve bowed and stood outside your threshold with the discipline of a man sworn to service. But tonight—tonight, something hangs unfinished between you. Unspoken. Unburied.
You turn the key in the lock and open the door. He begins to step back—but your hand reaches for his.
He stills immediately, and the look in his eyes is not confusion. It’s caution, hope barely daring to surface. You don’t speak. You simply tug, gently, and he follows. You shut the door behind him, lock it, and turn to find him watching you. Your heart hammers, thunderous in your chest.
Phainon gives you that lopsided grin, the one that used to irritate you for how easily it made your guard drop. “My, Princess,” he says. “How very forward of you.”
You arch an eyebrow, walk past him to the chaise without a word, and throw one of the embroidered pillows directly at his chest. He catches it with one hand, chuckling.
“Do all royal invitations come with threats of smothering?” he says.
“Only for the most insufferable guests.”
“So violent,” Phainon teases. “Should I be worried?”
“I haven’t decided yet,” you reply. “That depends on how much more teasing I’ll have to deal with tonight.”
“More, probably.”
You watch him, waiting—for a joke, a quip, another deflection—but he simply stands there, silent, watching you in return. He sets the pillow down carefully. The candlelight plays against his jawline, his collarbone, the faint line of a scar along his knuckle you weren’t witness to him earning. He’s right in front of you. You ache.
Toeing your sandals off, you sit down on your bed, patting the spot next to you. Phainon obliges, unlacing his boots and unclasping his cloak.
“Will you indulge me once more?” you ask.
“Of course,” he says. “Of course, I will.”
“If I wasn’t a princess, and you weren’t my guard, and we were just two people alone in this room,” you say, unwavering despite the nervousness that flits inside your chest, “what would you do with me?”
Phainon stills, but he doesn’t look away. His gaze lingers on your face for a long, measured beat, as though he’s trying to decide if you really want the answer. If he is allowed to say it out loud.
But he leans in slightly, voice low and steady. “I’d start with your hair,” he says, and your breath hitches.
“I’d take it down,” he murmurs, fingers moving slowly, carefully, to the pins holding it in place. One by one, he slides them free, until the last piece falls and your hair tumbles down around your shoulders. He doesn’t touch it, yet; he watches it fall like silk over your collarbones.
“I’d run my hands through it,” he continues, “because I’ve spent months wondering how it feels. If it’s as soft as I imagine. If it would slip through my fingers, or tangle there and stay.”
He lifts one hand, and brushes a lock behind your ear. Your skin burns beneath his touch. “And then?” you whisper.
His gaze drops, and a quiet smile plays at his lips—something almost shy. “Then I’d trace your face, slowly, with just my fingertips. Your cheekbones, your jaw. I’ve watched you turn away when you’re not trying to laugh. I’ve watched your mouth tighten when you’re fighting not to speak your mind. And I’ve always wondered what you’d look like if you let all of that go.”
“I’d kiss the space between your brows first,” he says, brushing his knuckle there, “because you furrow them when you’re reading. When you’re worried. Then your nose—because you scrunch it when you’re annoyed, and it drives me mad.”
You let out a quiet breath of laughter, and he grins. “Your lips,” he says, voice dipping, “I’d take my time with. You always speak so carefully. I’ve always wanted to see what you’d say when your mouth is only mine to kiss.”
“Your neck,” he goes on, and his voice is like velvet now. “I’d kiss the hollow of your throat, and the curve where your shoulder begins. You hold tension there when you’re trying not to show you’re tired, and I’d kiss you to make you feel better.
“Your hands—they’re so small compared to mine. But they’re strong. I’d hold them open, palm to palm, and kiss each finger, because I want to know what touches the world before it touches me. Your chest, because that’s where your heartbeat lives. I’d rest my head there and listen.
“I’d trace the line of your waist. Hold your hips steady beneath my hands. Kiss the softness of your stomach where no one else dares to be tender. I’d go slow,” he whispers. “Learn the map of your body like a pilgrim, not a thief. And if you asked me to stop, I would. But if you let me…”
“Phainon,” you whisper.
He closes his eyes, like your voice is something holy.
“And then?” you ask, again.
“I’d kiss you,” he says, and his eyes flutter open, “until your lips were red, until you forgot how to speak. I’d find every place on your body that makes you shiver, and claim them all.”
Your hands find the fabric of his shirt, fingers curling into it. You pull him closer. “Do it, then.”
He doesn’t ask if you’re sure. He doesn’t tease. He merely leans in and kisses you. It begins soft, a brush of lips. But the second time, it’s deeper—warmer. It’s as if you’re making up for every time you looked at each other and turned away; every secret glance; every second you stood too close and did nothing.
His hands rise to your face, cradling your cheeks as your mouth parts beneath his, and your fingers move up his chest, over his shoulders, dragging his shirt with them. He shrugs out of it without breaking the kiss, and you marvel at the heat of his skin, at the strength of it. Every inch of him is sun-browned and scarred, hard-earned.
Your hands find the hem of your dress, and slowly, you lift it over your head. You sit bare-chested before him, skin kissed by firelight, heart beating so loudly, you’re sure he can hear it. Your arms twitch to cover yourself, but you don’t.
Phainon’s gaze sweeps over you, not with hunger, but with awe.
“You’re—” He swallows. “You’re so beautiful.”
You duck your head, bashful, but Phainon will have none of it. He closes the space between you again, kissing you like he’s trying to commit the shape of your mouth to memory. His hands tremble slightly when they touch your skin, moving carefully across your ribs, your waist, as though he’s still not sure he’s allowed. You guide him. You teach him.
You lie back against the pillows, and he follows, bracing himself above you. You undress each other slowly, fumbling at times, laughing once when his belt catches on itself and breaks the moment. 
You touch, explore, learn. You whisper when something feels good. He listens. He mirrors your movements, unsure at first, and then with more confidence, brushing kisses over your collarbone, the swell of your breast, your stomach, like you’re a language he’s finally been permitted to speak.
When he pushes into you, it’s slow and careful. You clutch at his shoulders, eyes locked to his, you breath stuttering in your chest at the stretch and burn and fullness of it. He goes still, watching your expression, concerned and cautious. You nod.
He presses his forehead to yours, and the movement begins—gentle, uneven, his hands cradling your hips. You wrap your legs around him, urging him deeper. The ache turns to pleasure, a pulse in your core that builds and builds, and the sounds you make only encourage him: little gasps and whimpers, your name on his lips, his on yours.
There are no titles here. No barriers. Only two bodies moving together under candlelight, tangled in silk sheets and first loves.
You cry out as pleasure crashes through you, seizing your limbs, your breath, your thoughts. He follows soon after, gasping into your neck, trembling above you; he is, you think, a man who’s finally been allowed to feel everything he’s been denied.
(“Is it strange that I don’t want the sun to rise?” you whisper into Phainon’s throat. He’s tucked your head under his chin, while his fingers trace patterns onto your spine.
“Not strange,” he whispers back. “Cruel, maybe. But not strange.”
You shift slightly, enough to press your cheek against the warmth of his collarbone. His skin smells like salt and cedar, and something softer—like the sheets between you, like sleep.
“If morning comes,” you murmur, “it all goes back to how it was.”
“I know,” he says. You feel the breath he lets out, the way it lifts his chest just slightly; then, he adds, “But it’s not morning yet.”)
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Dawn comes cruel.
The pale light bleeds in through the gaps in between the drapes, casting the room in watery gold. You blink slowly from where you lie tangled in the sheets, eyes adjusting to the dim light. Phainon is already awake beside you—half-dressed, back half-turned, one hand dragging down his face in exhaustion or disbelief, or something in between.
You sit up, letting the silk slip from your bare skin, and watch him for a moment. There’s a softness to his posture, something almost boyish in the slope of his shoulders and the way the morning light outlines the curve of his neck. A purpling mark blooms at the base of his throat—your mark—and something about that fact knots your stomach with heat and something else you dare not name.
“We should’ve slept,” you say, voice rough with sleep.
“We did,” Phainon says, not turning.
“For an hour.”
“Better than none.”
You rise and cross the room. Your fingers brush the back of his hand as he laces up his bracers—not for armour, just for show. “You should go,” you whisper. “Mistress Calypso always wakes early, and if she finds you here, no explanation will suffice.”
He smiles faintly at that. “I know. I dived into a laundry basket because of her, remember?”
You laugh softly, but the sombre thought of him leaving wedges in your mind like a splinter. Phainon seems to realise it, too, because he simply nods once with no protest or drawn-out goodbye; just the quiet acknowledgement of what the world expects. He leans down, presses a kiss to your shoulder, then the inside of your wrist, and finally the corner of your mouth: a promise and a farewell folded into one.
When he slips out, the door closes with a soft click. You exhale.
You move through the rest of your morning on instinct—pulling on a light gown, brushing the knots from your hair, fastening a necklace you don’t even remember choosing. You find Mistress Calypso in the parlour, seated in an armchair with her book on her lap and her cup of chicory in her hand.
“I wish to visit the marketplace today,” you say. “The sea air is good for me, and I want to walk before the sun climbs high.”
“As you wish, Princess,” she says. “I’ll send one of the girls with you.”
You smile. “I’d rather go alone, if I may. I’ve grown tired of fussing.”
“You always were a stubborn little thing,” she sighs.
“Would you have liked me soft-spoken and obedient?”
“Stars, no. I wouldn’t know what to do with you.” She waves you off, and you leave before you can change your mind.
Outside, the market stirs to life with colour and noise. The scent of salt and fruit and spice fills the air as fishermen arrange their catch and fabric merchants unfurl bolts of dyed silk to flutter in the breeze. Shopkeepers shout over one another, offering baskets of ripe pomegranates, jars of preserved lemons, bundles of thyme and bay leaf, and combs cut from metal. You walk slowly past the stalls. A younger girl thrusts a petal-stained hand at you, offering a bundle of dried flowers with uncertain eyes. You buy it immediately.
Phainon appears eventually, as he always does. You find him standing just beyond a barrel of olives, his arms folded, posture loose. He wears no armour today, and there is no sword tucked into his belt. He only wears his simple shirt, rolled up to the elbows, and a sardonic little smile on his lips.
“Is it dangerous to let the princess wander alone?” you ask when you reach him.
“More dangerous not to,” he quips.
You grin and link your arms together, pulling him with you. You share grapes and honey-coated figs. He dares you to out-bargain a spice merchant, and you do, though the old man throws in an extra pouch just for your smile. Phainon nearly gets pickpocketed by a boy no older than ten, and ends up giving him a coin anyway.
When you walk past the stalls selling sweet loaves of bread, some of the older women smile knowingly in your direction. One offers you a braided loaf of bread with lavender baked into the crust. Phainon insists on paying for it, and the baker swats his hand away.
“Let a soldier buy a gift for his princess,” Phainon says, exaggeratedly courtly.
“Buy it for your wife, then,” the old woman retorts, winking.
You leave with warm bread, a small jar of honey, and cheeks that refuse to cool.
Later, with the heat rising and the stalls beginning to close, you and Phainon slip away from the crowded square and walk down to the narrow, pebbled shoreline. The beach is quieter here, tucked behind a rise of sand and sea-worn grass. Pebbles clack underfoot as you both step closer to the water’s edge. You kick off your sandals, letting the cold saltwater lick at your ankles.
Phainon sits first, knees bent, arms draped across them. You lower yourself beside him, knees drawn to your chest, head tilted back towards the endless stretch of sky. Your fingers graze his over the sand.
For a while, neither of you speaks. The wind plays with the hem of your skirt. A gull shrieks in the distance. Phainon says something, low and teasing, about kidnapping you onto a fishing boat and vanishing into a life of anonymity. You laugh. You tell him you’d hate the smell of fish guts, but your hand doesn’t leave his.
“I could stay like this forever,” you say eventually.
“I know.”
You look at him. “But I won’t, will I?”
“No,” he says softly. “You won’t.”
It hurts more than you expect, that simple truth.
“Princess!”
You both jolt at the voice—breathless, hurried, and too close. A maid stumbles over the rise behind you, skirts bunched in her hands, cheeks flushed with exertion and panic. When she spots you, her face nearly crumples with relief. “I’ve been looking everywhere,” she pants. “Please forgive me—there’s news. A messenger has come from the capital.”
You straighten at once. “From the king?”
She nods, still catching her breath. “He carries your father’s seal. He’s waiting at the manor.”
Behind you, Phainon has already risen. He’s gone silent again, every part of him falling back into his role: the guard, the shadow. You brush the sand from your dress, your pulse suddenly loud in your ears. The sea wind picks up, and suddenly, the morning is no longer yours. The world has come to collect you.
You trudge back to the manor, not bothering to fix your appearance. Let the messenger see you wild-eyed and wind-snared. Why should you care? Phainon’s offer of running away suddenly seems ironic, and you bite back the sudden laugh that bubbles up your throat. The maid rushes ahead, her slippers slapping unevenly against the stones, but you walk slower. Your feet drag through the fine grit that clings to your soles, and the humidity makes sweat bead at your temples.
Phainon doesn’t speak. He walks beside you at a careful distance, eyes forward, hands clenched into fists at his sides. You want to reach out, just once more, and say something small. But you don’t; if you do, you might not stop.
The manor gates loom up ahead, black iron wrapped in ivy, and beyond them, the sun-splashed courtyard where the roses are still in bloom. A shadow waits at the threshold. The messenger is tall and narrow-shouldered, dressed in the king’s colours—deep blue and silver—and he carries a leather satchel with the royal seal. His eyes flick over to you with the barest hint of surprise. You wonder if it’s the sand on your calves or the flush on your cheeks he notices first.
He bows. “Your Highness.”
“You’ve come a long way,” you say, dipping your chin, just slightly.
“I bring a letter from the king,” he says. He extends the sealed parchment, and you take it with hands you hope don’t shake. The wax glints blood-red in the afternoon sunlight, imprinted with the crest you’ve seen since childhood, familiar and final all at once.
You break the seal with the nail of your thumb. The parchment unfolds stiffly, the script inside unmistakable. Your father’s hand: ornate, precise, and devoid of warmth. 
The prince of Castrum Kremnos is to arrive at the capital in two weeks’ time. His arrival must be met with the dignity and preparation befitting our kingdom and future alliance. You are to return immediately and make the necessary arrangements. 
You are not to delay. Your presence is required.
— By Order Of The Crown.
(You glance at Phainon, stricken, wanting nothing more than his arms to wrap around you and soothe away the tension in your shoulders like he’d told you he would last night.)
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iii). If I loved you less, I might be able to talk about it more.
The prince of Castrum Kremnos looks rather like a brute: long, messy hair, bright golden eyes that rake over your face, robes the colour of red rubies, and strong arms that look like they could crush a boulder. Yet, when he takes your hand in his and presses his lips to your knuckles, his fingers are gentle.
“Princess,” he says, after he straightens up. “It is an honour to finally meet you.”
You tilt your head to the side in greeting. “Welcome to our kingdom, Prince Mydeimos. I trust your journey here was pleasant.”
He smiles, and his eyes gleam like coins freshly struck. “Long,” he replies, “but not unpleasant. I do hope it will have been worth the ride.”
You withdraw your hand with care, suppressing the urge to wipe it against your skirts. Behind you, the courtiers shift in interest. Somewhere near the dais, your father watches with thinly veiled satisfaction, his expression the mirror of a man who has already counted his gain.
“Mydeimos,” he says, voice echoing throughout the hall. “We are pleased to host you. You must be tired. I’m sure my daughter will be happy to show you the gardens after you’ve had a moment to rest.”
“If it pleases you, I’d be glad to give the prince a tour,” you say, schooling your expression.
“Excellent,” the king says. “Then it’s settled.”
Mydeimos’ golden gaze flicks to you again, appraising. “I would be honoured.”
The moment the two of you step past the threshold of the great hall, into the quieter, sun-warmed corridor beyond it, it feels like slipping out of a costume. The marble walls hush the sounds of courtly interest behind you, and the breeze filtering in from the open arches smells faintly of lemon blossoms.
You lead him in silence for a while. Mydeimos falls into step beside you without complaint. His presence is large, but not overbearing, his footsteps heavy but measured. The sword strapped to his back shifts slightly with every step, a quiet reminder of who—and what—he is.
When the garden gate swings open with a soft creak, you both step into a world of colour and calm: roses spilling over trellises, white hydrangea blooming in the shade, and the soft burble of the fountain in the centre where ducks often gather in the early morning.
“Impressive,” he murmurs, gaze trailing over the grounds. “Your kingdom is fond of beauty.”
You glance at him. “Is yours not?”
“We don’t have the same luxury of fertile grounds,” he says simply. “But we do what we can.”
You walk slowly towards the edge of the reflecting pool. Mydeimos stops beside a small cluster of marigolds, crouching to inspect one without plucking it. His fingers are rough, but he touches the petals with unexpected care.
“You know why I’m here,” he says after a moment. His voice is low but not unkind. “There is no sense pretending otherwise.”
“The alliance was finalised only weeks ago,” you say quietly. “My father moves fast.”
“He’s trying to protect what he can,” says Mydeimos. “And he thinks a marriage will keep the borders from collapsing.”
“He is probably right.”
He looks up at you. “That doesn’t mean either of us has to enjoy it.”
“I have no interest in being your wife,” you say.
“I suspected as much.” Mydeimos sounds resigned.
“My heart belongs to someone else,” you say, softer now, “though no one else knows. It’s… complicated.” If you are to be wed to this prince, he must, at least, know the truth.
To your surprise, he doesn’t scoff or sneer. He only nods once, slowly. “Then I won’t insult you by asking if it’s returned. But I will promise this: if we are forced into this arrangement, I will treat you with respect. I won’t make a mockery of you.”
There is something sincere in his voice, you think. Something lonely, too. “Thank you,” you say. “That’s more than I expected.”
He straightens up, brushing the dust from his hands. “I’d prefer to have a friend in this, if nothing else.”
You consider him—messy hair, calloused hands, and eyes like summer lightning—and nod. “I would like that very much.”
He smiles at you, this time less like a prince and more like a boy your age who has also had to grow up too fast. “Then it’s settled,” he says. “At least between us.”
“I suppose it is,” you agree, giving him a smile of your own. “Tell me about Castrum Kremnos, my new friend. I have never visited, though I’ve heard many things about it.”
Mydeimos turns towards the hedge-lined path, and you follow his lead, walking in slow, companionable silence for a few steps. “Many things,” he echoes with a dry laugh. “Let me guess—bleak stone cliffs, soldiers with no tongues, and children raised to fight?”
You raise an eyebrow at him. “Is that not the truth?”
“It’s not the whole truth,” he says, somewhat wistfully. “We do have cliffs, yes. Our mountains overlook the ocean, and the citadel sits high above the sea. It’s built into the rock itself. The wind there howls in the winter and makes you feel like you might be swept into the sea if you step too close to the edge. But in the spring… the fog rolls down like a veil, and everything smells of salt and wild herbs.”
You imagine it: the sound of crashing waves below stone towers, boys training with swords in the mist, women weaving thick wool in candlelit halls. You ask, “And the people?”
“Stubborn,” he replies. “Proud and practical. Not particularly good at small talk.”
You laugh at that. “I can’t imagine how you survived court, then.”
“Barely,” he admits, glancing at you sideways, a grin tugging at his mouth. “But I’m adaptable, even if I’d rather be sparring or riding.”
You reach out to brush your hand against the soft lavender lining the path. The breeze stirs the petals and sends their fragrances trailing through the air. “I don’t think I expected you to have a sense of humour.”
“I’ve been told that a lot.”
He says it so matter-of-factly that it makes you laugh again, and this time it feels freer, lighter than it has in days. You almost forget that you had worried yourself sick over this man, feeling so ill at the prospect of marriage that you’d put yourself through a self-imposed exile. But it was worth it, you remind yourself, because you now know that Phainon is yours and you are his.
“I think we’ll get along just fine, Prince Mydeimos,” you say honestly.
He gives you a short, mock bow. “Then I’ve accomplished something today. Although… I have told you about my kingdom, boring as it may be. It is only fair that you tell me something about yourself, Princess.”
The path begins to curve back to the courtyard. In the distance, the bells begin to chime the hour.
“I am madly in love with my soldier,” you say, surprising even yourself with your candour. 
He straightens, clearly startled—but not offended. If anything, he looks intrigued, his golden eyes narrowing slightly, the tilt of his head more thoughtful than disapproving. “That,” he says slowly, “is quite the answer.”
You don’t flinch, though your cheeks warm. You lift your chin and meet his gaze squarely. “I assumed you wanted honesty.”
“I did,” he admits. “Though I expected a more… diplomatically evasive kind of honesty.”
“I’ve had enough of diplomacy for today,” you say. “You asked who I am. That is who I am.”
Mydeimos studies you for a long moment. “Does he know?”
“Yes,” you say. “But it changes nothing.”
You expect a sigh, a frown, some bitter commentary on alliances and duty. Instead, he hums, low and contemplative. “Then he must be brave. Or foolish. Or both.”
“He’s many things.” You smile faintly. “Brave among them.”
“I won’t ask who he is,” Mydeimos says. “It doesn’t matter to me, and I suspect it wouldn’t be wise for either of us to say more than we already have.”
You nod in agreement. He offers you his arm, and you place your hand in the crook of his elbow. “Thank you,” you murmur.
“For what?”
“For not being angry.”
“Ah.” His mouth quirks. “I might be. Later. In private. When I’m alone and wondering what sort of fool I’ve been made into. But right now, I think I quite like you.”
You don’t suppress your grin as you walk in silence back through the hedge gate. It is a tentative friendship, not created out of roses and vows, but made out of something oddly sturdier—honesty in the face of expectation, and the quiet understanding between two people playing parts in a story neither of them wrote.
(“Well, Princess,” Phainon says later, when you make your way back to your chambers. “What do you think about the prince of Castrum Kremnos?”
“Must we talk about this here?” you ask, rolling your eyes with fond exasperation.
“Yes,” he says. “I’m curious.”
“He is perfectly agreeable, Phainon, but he is not you.”)
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The corridors of the palace are quieter in the late evening, steeped in amber torchlight and the sounds of the servants returning to their quarters. You move swiftly, the hem of your gown caught up in your hands to keep it from dragging on the stone. Phainon walks a pace behind you, silent but solid, a shadow at your back that warms rather than frightens.
You slip through an archway that leads into the west wing—a part of the palace few use, half-forgotten in the shuffle of royal life. It’s not entirely abandoned, but it’s private enough. The corridor ends in a small vestibule with high, narrow windows and an alcove half-swallowed by trailing ivy from the outside garden wall. It is, in essence, a hidden corner of stone and moonlight.
You turn to face Phainon as soon as you’re sure you’re alone, chest rising with the breath you’ve been holding in all day. “We only have a few minutes.”
He doesn’t ask if it’s a good idea. He doesn’t ask if you should be here. He simply steps forward, steady and certain, and brings his hand to your cheek.
“I hated seeing you walk beside him,” Phainon murmurs.
“I know.” You lean into his touch. “But I had no choice. My father expects—”
“I know,” he says. “You don’t have to explain.”
There is nothing but the sound of your breathing and the distant chatter of wind through the ivy. His forehead rests gently against yours. His fingers graze your wrist, and even that is enough to make you shiver. You tilt your chin up, and he kisses you, soft at first, slow and sure. Your hands twist in the fabric of his tunic, and—
You hear someone clear their throat behind Phainon. 
You jolt back as if burned, heart leaping to your throat. Phainon instinctively moves in front of you, his hand flying to the hilt of his blade out of habit, until he realises who stands at the edge of the corridor.
Prince Mydeimos leans against the archway, arms folded across his broad chest. His golden eyes gleam in the dim light—far more amused than angry. “Well,” he says lightly, “I was looking for the stables. Imagine my surprise.”
Neither of you speaks. Phainon tenses like a drawn bow, and you feel your shame blooming hot across your cheeks.
But Mydeimos raises one hand, palm outward. “Relax. If I was going to cry treason, I’d have done it already.” He pushes off the wall and steps closer, tilting his head thoughtfully. “Though I must say, soldier, you’re either very bold or very stupid.”
Phainon doesn’t respond. His jaw is clenched so tightly, you want to soothe his skin with your thumb.
“Mydeimos,” you begin, voice low, “please—”
“Don’t worry,” the prince interrupts. “I’m not here to tattle like a child. I told you before—I like honesty.” He looks between the two of you. “And this… this is honest, isn’t it?”
You nod slowly.
Mydeimos sighs, rubbing a hand over his face. “Well. It complicates things, but I suppose it makes my position easier to refuse when the council starts pushing for wedding dates.”
You blink. “You’re not going to—?”
“No,” he says, smiling a little. “I may be considered one of the best warriors around, and not very well-versed in matters of the heart, but I know enough, Princess.”
Phainon finally speaks. “You won’t tell?”
Mydeimos shrugs. “It’s not my secret to tell. But if you value her, soldier, you’d better be careful. The king may be blind, but the court is not.”
The prince disappears with a rustle of his cloak and a low whistle trailing behind him, as though he really means what he said—that he won’t tell. The corridor grows quiet again; the lack of his presence leaves behind a vacuum. You don’t move. Phainon does. He steps away from you, the warmth of his body vanishing as if a door has slammed shut between you both. His jaw is tight. His hands curl into fists at his sides, and when he finally speaks, it’s not the softness you’re used to—it’s something harsher, brittle and breaking.
“You can’t let him do that.”
“What?” you say, disoriented.
“You should’ve stopped him.” He turns to face you fully now, eyes dark and unforgiving. “You should’ve told him the truth—that you’ll marry him. That it was just a mistake. That this—” he gestures between you, his voice rising—“whatever this is, it ends now.”
The words knock the breath out of your lungs. “Phainon—what are you saying?”
“You can’t let him call off the engagement because of us,” he says.
“He said he doesn’t want to marry me if I don’t want to,” you argue, stepping towards him. “He said he understood—”
“He’s being kind!” Phainon shouts. “Because he’s honourable! Because he’s giving us a chance to walk away before this escalates any further!”
“You want to walk away?”
“I want you safe,” he says. “This is not safety. This is selfishness. We are selfish. Do you think I don’t want you? Gods, I want you more than I want to breathe. But if it means your father sees your reputation torn apart in court, if it means Castrum Kremnos turns its fleets away and innocent people die on the borders, then yes. I want to walk away.”
“Don’t put all this on me,” you say.
“I’m not!” he bites back. “I’m as guilty as you are. But you’re the princess. You’re the one they’ll parade down the aisle and pin like a jewel to someone’s throne. Not me. I’m just the stupid son of some village baker with a sword. I was never supposed to climb through your window all those years ago.”
“You don’t get to decide that!” You push past him, chest heaving. “You don’t get to act like this is just a lapse in judgement. You don’t get to—to kiss me and hold me and touch me, and—and then just run the moment something happens!”
“I’m trying to protect you!” he yells.
“Then stop pretending it’s about me,” you say. “Stop lying and admit it. You’re scared.”
Phainon freezes. “Of course I’m scared,” he says, low and bitter. “You think I want to watch you marry another man? You think I want to hear the bells ring and know you’re standing at an altar I’ll never be allowed near? I want to kill every man who’s ever looked at you the way I do. But I don’t, because I can’t. Because I’m not supposed to. I’m nothing. I’m a sword in your father’s army. That’s all I’ve ever been.”
You’re shaking now, rage and grief tangled together so tightly you can barely breathe. “Then why did you ever touch me?” Your voice breaks. “Why did you let me fall in love with you?”
He lifts his eyes to yours, and when he speaks, his voice is a whisper of war-torn resolve. “Because I thought—just once, I thought—that maybe the gods had made a mistake.”
“Then fall out of love with me,” you whisper, venomous and hurt. “Go ahead. If it’s for the kingdom, if it’s for the people—fall out of love with me, Phainon. And I’ll fall in love with Mydeimos like I’m supposed to. I’ll do my duty.”
Phainon’s face crumples. “Don’t say things you don’t mean, Princess.”
You square your shoulders. You don’t cry. You won’t give him that. “I mean every word.”
(You cry and cry and cry yourself to sleep that night, streaks of saltwater running down your cheeks and your nose. The next morning, there is a different guard standing outside your doors.)
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“Do you find this banquet particularly riveting, Princess?” Mydeimos nudges your shoulder, with the same ease he has shown you since your friendship.
You blink, pulled from your thoughts by the touch of his shoulder against yours. The ballroom is a blur of warm candlelight, colourful gowns, and laughter that sounds too bright to match your current state of mind. You haven’t tasted a single bite of the feast. You haven’t truly slept since that night with Phainon. Your eyes flick towards the far end of the hall—towards the empty space near the guards’ post, where he should be. But he’s not there.
He hasn’t been anywhere.
“Sorry,” you say. “I wasn’t paying attention.”
“Clearly,” says Mydeimos, a wry smile tugging on his lips. “I’ve been singing a ballad to you for the last five minutes. You didn’t even flinch when I rhymed ‘goblet’ with ‘sorbet’.”
That earns the faintest laugh from you. Mydeimos doesn’t push more than that. Instead, he reclines back slightly in his chair and surveys the grand room as if it’s a chessboard. “I have been thinking lately,” he says.
“A wonderful feat, Prince,” you tease him, and he smiles, just once, quickly.
“Indeed. But I have been thinking about how strange it is… how much power we let titles have.”
“You’re a prince,” you say, glancing at him.
He lifts a shoulder. “Precisely. And yet, I didn’t choose it. I didn’t earn it. I was born with a crown on my name and a sword in my hand and told the world would make way for me.” He takes a sip from his goblet, watching the wine swirl like blood amidst gold. “Meanwhile, I’ve seen men sharper than any general be dismissed because they didn’t speak with the right accent. I’ve seen women with more grace than any noble be cast out because their blood wasn’t ‘clean’ enough for court.”
“Is that why you didn’t tell the council about me and Phainon?” you ask.
Mydeimos doesn’t answer right away. He studies you, eyes glinting with something far more serious than his usual jesting nature. “No,” he says finally. “I didn’t tell them because I don’t believe love should be a privilege reserved for the highborn. And because… I don’t think either of you deserves to be punished for wanting something honest in a world this rotten.”
You drop your gaze to the still-full plate in front of you, food long gone cold, because your appetite has vanished. “You really think it’s honest? Even when it hurts so much?”
“I think,” Mydeimos says, “that anything worth wanting is bound to hurt. But it doesn’t mean it’s wrong.”
The music swells again, a string quartet weaving a lively melody as men and women line up to dance.
“Come, Princess,” Mydeimos says, offering you a hand. “We must salvage what little enjoyment is left in this banquet, don’t you think?”
You look down at his extended palm, hesitant, and then place your hand in his. His grip is warm. He leads you to the centre of the ballroom, where nobles glide like swans across the marble. The music swells into a sweeping waltz, ornate and majestic, like everything else in this place: grand and golden and only beautiful if you don’t observe too closely. You don’t look for Phainon this time. It already hurts too much.
Mydeimos settles one hand against the curve of your back, the other clasping yours. He moves with a grace that belies his broad demeanour, not stiff like the courtiers who danced only to be noticed, but smooth, fluid, as though music lives in his bones. You let yourself be led, each step a distraction from the turbulence in your head.
“My mother used to dance like this,” Mydeimos murmurs. “Always a bit too fast. My father used to say she was trying to outrun the court.”
You glance up at him. He’s watching the crowd, not you. “She sounds wonderful,” you say.
“There are few things court life respects less than a woman who defied expectation,” he says, eyes flicking to the high dais where the elder lords sit. “Fewer still who remembered her for more than the silks she wore.”
“Your mother was… Gorgo, wasn’t she? Didn’t they call her the Sapphire Princess?”
“Yes. For her eyes. Never for the fact that she broke a treaty engagement and nearly started a civil war because she refused to be sold off like cattle.”
“She was supposed to marry the northern lord, wasn’t she?” you ask.
Mydeimos nods, spinning you gently in between phrases of the music before returning you to him. “She was betrothed to the very man whose army threatens your borders now. But then came my father—Eurypon, the commander of the Castrum Kremnos army. He was a war hero, but he was common-born, and entirely unacceptable for that fact.”
You smile softly. “But she chose him.”
“She did,” he says, gaze finding yours, “and nearly lost everything for it. Her father threatened exile. The court was scandalised. Yet… they married. Their stations were close enough—barely—that it could be spun as political, not romantic. She reminded the court that without Eurypon’s army, her home kingdom of Argyros would have fallen to siege three winters earlier.”
You’re quiet, absorbing this. “She married for strength?”
“She married for conviction,” he says. “And she gambled her kingdom on it. My father was no noble, but he was necessary, and sometimes, that’s all the crown cares about.”
You close your eyes, your mind reeling with ideas now, after Mydeimos told you about his parents. “Phainon, he—he told me he was going to be the commander of the royal guard one day. It was his dream. Master Gnaeus is fond of him, certainly, but he cannot let favouritism come in the way of electing the new captain.”
Mydeimos’ eyes twinkle. “How convenient that you have one of the most skilled warriors of the nation visiting your court, then, Princess.”
(The banquet is not over yet, but you excused yourself early and now, you search for Phainon. You walk fast at first, then break into a near-run, your slippers skidding slightly on the polished stone floors as you hurry down the palace corridors. Your heart thunders louder than the orchestra ever could. You don’t entirely know where you’re going—but your feet do.
Phainon is not on duty tonight, but there are places he goes when he wants to be alone. Places even the guards forget; places he showed you when you were young and guileless. You remember them all.
You find him behind the old watchtower in the eastern wing, where the wall juts out just enough to be missed unless you know to look. The alcove is dim, lit only by moonlight slanting through the high windows. He stands there with his back to you, armour unbuckled and resting on the stone bench beside him. He’s in a plain shirt now, his hands braced against the wall, head bowed.
For a moment, you simply look at him, relief and frustration warring inside you. “Phainon,” you call.
He stiffens, and doesn’t turn. “Go back, Your Highness.”
You ignore the sting in his voice, the distance in it. “I will,” you say, “after you listen to me.”
“I have nothing left to say.” Phainon moves to reach for his armour, but you step forward, blocking his path. 
“Then you’ll listen out of duty,” you snap. “If not to me, then to the princess of your kingdom, who is issuing you a command.”
Slowly, Phainon lifts his eyes to yours. The anger in them is subdued, like embers glowing between ash, but it is there. “Is that what we are now?” he says bitterly. “Orders and rank?”
“You told me, once,” you say, “that you were going to become the captain of the royal guard.”
“That was a long time ago.”
“I haven’t forgotten,” you say. “Everyone knows you are the top candidate for the next position, but Master Gnaeus cannot let his affection for you and me affect his decision-making. If you were to become the captain of the royal guard, then we—” You stop yourself there. “You have a chance now, Phainon. Mydeimos is here, and the court is already restless with the border skirmishes from the north. If war comes, they will need strength. They will need leadership.”
He shakes his head, turning away again. “They’ll never choose me. I’m no one.”
“Then make them choose you. Challenge Mydeimos to a duel.”
“Are you insane?” he says.
“I’m serious,” you say. “He’s a prince, yes, but he respects strength. And the court does, too. If you defeat him—or even come close—they’ll have no choice but to remember you. There are other ways we can secure this alliance, Phainon. And if you become the captain of the royal guard, they cannot say anything about us staying together, because our ranks will be nearly equal.”
Phainon ducks his head and curses under his breath. Then, he looks up at you, and his anger cracks. “You think I can survive fighting a prince and the court?”
“If there is anyone who can, it is you.”)
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Dawn has barely begun to stretch across the horizon, but the court is already assembled around the patch of training grounds used as a sparring ring. Nobles in rich brocades and glinting jewels watch from the colonnades, expressions schooled into polite interest or thinly veiled dread. The dew has not yet dried from the stone, and a thin mist curls around the edges of the courtyard, ghostlike.
There is no music, no fanfare; there is only the rustle of silk and the occasional murmur of speculation passed behind a gloved hand. The duel is not public in the usual sense—no civilians, no celebration—but it is undeniably a performance. Every glance, every breath, every footfall will be judged.
On the eastern platform, the king watches from his elevated seat, robed in black and silver, his crown slipping down his forehead. His expression is as if it is carved from stone. You stand just beneath him, close enough to hear the way his ringed fingers tap once against the arm of the chair, right next to Master Gnaeus. You force your spine straight, your expression passive, but your nails leave crescent-shaped indents on your palms. You are not allowed to show favour here: not for Mydeimos, the foreign prince and your suitor; and certainly not for Phainon, your oldest friend, your hidden heart, and your last defiance.
The rules were made clear the moment Phainon approached the council chambers and issued the challenge. If Mydeimos wins, the alliance will be sealed by marriage between him and you. Phainon will be exiled for insubordination and interference in royal affairs.
If Phainon wins, the alliance will be negotiated through trade and defense treaties instead of marriage. He will be named the next captain of the royal guard, by merit and recognition.
At the far end of the ring, Phainon steps forward first.
He is silent, face unreadable beneath the steady press of expectation. His silver-white hair is tied back, his armour plain but fitted with care—worn in places, the leather softened from use. He carries no insignia. The hilt of his sword glints at his back, catching the early sun in flashes as he moves with calm, deliberate steps to the centre of the ring. He does not look at you.
On the opposite end, Prince Mydeimos arrives with significantly more fanfare. His entrance is flanked by two of his personal guards, though they peel away before he enters the sparring ground alone. He is dressed in deep crimson, edged in gold, and his armour is polished to an almost absurd shine. His twin swords rest easily at his hips, curved slightly and sheathed in scabbards inlaid with foreign script.
Phainon does not extend a hand. Mydeimos doesn’t seem surprised. They say nothing, but they bow their heads as the king rises. The hush that falls over the courtyard is instantaneous. When he speaks, his voice carries without effort.
“Let the court bear witness to this sanctioned duel—its terms already set, and its consequences clear. Combatants, you will fight until surrender or  incapacitation. Death is forbidden.”
He motions for Master Gnaeus to step forward, and that old man, with his father-like fondness towards you and Phainon, calls out: “Begin.”
Just like that, the world narrows down to two figures moving swiftly across stone.
Phainon moves first—not charging, but closing the distance quickly, decisively, blade angled low. Mydeimos watches him, lips curling into a faint grin, before drawing one sword and blocking the first strike with a clean, practiced motion.
Steel meets steel, and the sound echoes throughout the courtyard.
The duel begins as a dance of testing: quick jabs, dodges, parries. Mydeimos is faster, his footwork more fluid, spinning lightly on the balls of his feet with the ease of someone trained since birth for pageantry and power. But Phainon is relentless. He fights like a soldier, not a showman, waiting for Mydeimos to overextend.
They are matched blow for blow, sword ringing against sword, the courtyard captivated by the clash of wills. Dust rises around them in golden clouds, sun now creeping past the pillars and spilling onto the marble arches.
Mydeimos breaks the rhythm first. He feints left, then spins behind Phainon and lands a glancing strike across his shoulder. Phainon stumbles but does not fall. He turns, grits his teeth, and retaliates with a blow that Mydeimos barely manages to deflect. Sweat beads on their brows. Blood blooms through Phainon’s tunic where the blade cut—but he doesn’t slow. If anything, it fuels him. He ducks low, aiming a swipe at Mydeimos’ legs, but the prince leaps back, laughing under his breath.
“You’re better than I expected,” Mydeimos says through panted breaths. “But is it enough?”
Phainon does not answer. Instead, he drops his centre of gravity, shifts his stance, and surges forward.
There is a moment—barely more than a blink—when everything shifts. Mydeimos lifts both swords in a cross-guard, but Phainon’s strike doesn’t aim for the swords. It aims just past them—forcing Mydeimos to twist, exposing his side—and Phainon slams his elbow into the prince’s ribs, making him grunt in surprise and pain. Mydeimos staggers. One of the blades flies from his hands.
Phainon doesn’t let up. He drives forward, his movements tighter now, every swing more urgent. Mydeimos parries one more strike, two—but his footing is off. He is sweating hard, slower than he was.
Phainon knocks the last sword from Mydeimos’ hand. Then, he levels his blade at the prince’s throat.
You realise you’re holding your breath when Master Gnaeus steps forward again and announces, “The duel is complete. The victor: Phainon of Aedes Elysiae, a member of the royal guard.”
Cheers do not erupt. The court is too stunned for that. But murmurs rise, and heads turn. Even the king’s eyebrows raise fractionally.
Mydeimos stares at the sword pointed at his neck, then raises his hands in surrender. Surprisingly, he laughs—just once, rich but tired. He steps back, out of reach, and bows. “Well played,” he says. “I hope you make a fine captain, soldier.”
Phainon lowers his blade. 
You do not move. You can’t—not when every gaze is trained on him. Not when the weight of the court settles like lead on your shoulders, pressing into your chest until your lungs feel tight. Phainon looks up, and for the first time since the match began, his eyes find yours. There is a flicker there—just a flicker—of something that is soft, meant for you and you alone. It’s not a smile, not quite. It’s a promise. A plea.
But he does not reach for you. Not with the king mere steps above. Not with nobles whispering into goblets and adjusting their gem-encrusted jewellery. Master Gnaeus is already striding forward to escort him from the ring, murmuring something low that you cannot hear.
Your fingers twitch at your sides. You imagine what it would feel like to run to him, to place your hand against the scrape on his cheek and whisper, “You did it,” over and over again into the space between his breaths. But you cannot.
So instead, you force your hands into stillness and let your eyes speak in the language you’ve both learnt too well: restraint; longing.
Phainon holds your gaze for one heartbeat longer than wise. Then two. Then, with the barest incline of his head—a bow meant for the crown, but perhaps tilted just slightly in your direction—he turns and follows Gnaeus from the ring.
You remain in place. Behind you, the king speaks, announcing the revised terms of the alliance. There is clapping. The courtiers resume their performance of diplomacy. You follow Mydeimos back into the palace.
(“Tell me the truth, Prince Mydeimos,” you say. “Did you lose to Phainon on purpose?”
Mydeimos blinks, then lets out a soft, almost wounded laugh. You’re alone now, or close enough. The colonnade is empty but for the afternoon sun hanging high above your heads and the low hum of distant music echoing from the feast halls. Mydeimos leans against a stone pillar, arms folded, his tunic stained from the duel and a sheen of sweat shining on his forehead.
“Do you really think I would do that?” he asks, looking at you not with offense, but with something quieter. “Throw a duel in front of the entire court? Humiliate myself in front of your father, the king, and the council, when I am a guest in your kingdom?”
You don’t answer.
He sighs, pushing himself off the pillar and taking a few steps short steps closer. “Your soldier bested me. That is the truth of it. I didn’t expect him to fight like that.”
“Mydeimos—” you start, but words fail you. What can you even say, that would be kind to this mighty prince from a mighty kingdom, but also your gentle friend, who promised he would treat you well even if the marriage were to go through? 
“I didn’t lose on purpose,” he says again, gentler this time. “But if you’re asking me if I regret it?” He tilts his head, golden eyes studying yours. “No, I do not, Princess. It was an honour to fight against such a skilled warrior. I meant what I said—he will make a fine captain of your guard.”
“I know,” you whisper. “Thank you, Mydeimos.”
“Hush, now,” Mydeimos says with a chuckle. “Friends do not thank each other for such trivial things.”)
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Your father summons you to the throne room before the court meets the next morning. Mistress Calypso untangles your hair and pats your cheek, and tells you to not keep him waiting. 
The throne room is nearly empty at this hour—quiet, hollow, the banners of the kingdom fluttering faintly in the stale wind. Light from the high windows spills across the polished floor, catching on the familiar stained glass windows. You walk with steps too loud and a heart beating even louder.
The king sits alone on the throne. There are no courtiers, no scribes, and no guards, save for two flanking the doors behind you. There is only your father, his crown placed on his lap and his shoulders wrapped in a robe, fingers steepled beneath his chin. The moment you bow, he speaks—not with rage, but with something closer to weariness.
“I would’ve rather heard the truth from your mouth than have to pry it from a sword fight,” he says.
You keep your head bowed. “I did not think it would change anything.”
“You’re my daughter,” he says. “You’re the heir to a kingdom and the last piece of a woman I loved more than life itself. Of course it would’ve changed something.”
Silence stretches like a shadow between you. Then, in a voice that surprises you with how small it sounds, he adds, “Do you think me such a tyrant that I would barter your happiness away without care?”
You glance up at him. The lines on his face are deeper than they were a season ago. “I only wished to protect the kingdom,” he continues. “You are smarter than I am, daughter, for you have done better than I in securing an alliance with Castrum Kremnos.”
“Father…” you trail off, unsure.
“I have not spoken of your mother to you,” he says, “and it is a great folly on my end. I have not been a good father to you, and she would despise me for it. She was wittier than any noblewoman who has ever graced this court, and ten times as beautiful. She was a commoner, yes, the daughter of a tailor, but she had fire in her blood and stars in her eyes.
“She used to say that fate is only a thing to curse when it doesn’t give you what you already knew you wanted. She would’ve liked Phainon. Gods help me, I think she would’ve told me to step aside and let you choose him.”
“But it was not in vain, father,” you interject. “Phainon was given the chance to prove himself and to the court that there is a reason why Master Gnaeus always favoured him.”
“Do you know,” he says, “the first thing your mother said to me? I was in disguise, wandering the markets, trying to discover the commonfolk’s woes in my kingdom. I had not been prince for long. She looked me up and down and said, ‘You walk like a farmer, but your boots are too clean. Who are you fooling, really?’ She never let me pretend to be anything less than I was.”
You allow yourself the tiniest smile. “She sounds like she would’ve terrified the court.”
“She did. And me, most of all.”
He looks down at the crown in his lap then—polished, heavy, too bright for the early hour. “I have worn this longer than I should’ve. My father died too soon. And I… I have tried not to repeat his mistakes, but I see now that I made different ones. I thought to guard you by turning you into a symbol. I forgot to see the girl who craved a parent’s love and had to learn how to stand taller than every man in this court, alone.”
“Father,” you begin, “I was never alone. I am everything I am now thanks to the people around me: Mistress Calypso’s motherly gentleness; Master Gnaeus’ fondness for me; Phainon’s steadfast, unwavering presence; and now, Mydeimos’ kind friendship. You have not been very kind to me, father, but I have more than sufficed with what I have.”
“I am sorry,” he says at last, swallowing hard. “For nearly binding your fate to someone your heart did not choose.”
“But I have chosen,” you say. “And Phainon has chosen me.”
He studies your face then. Not as a king studies an heir, but as a father studies a daughter grown too quickly—half pride, half sorrow. “Then may the gods bless what I nearly ruined,” he says, and rises from the throne with more effort than he shows. He places the crown back on his head, the gold glinting in the pale morning light.
“Let it be known,” he declares, “that the match was the Princess’ will, not mine. May the court know her judgement surpasses even my own.”
The throne room is full by the time the sun reaches its highest point, with courtiers and nobles lining the marble aisles in their finest dress. You stand beside the dais, dressed in formal regalia, but your hands are warm—not from nerves, but from where Phainon’s fingers briefly brushed yours beneath the folds of your robe when no one was looking. At the foot of the dais stands Master Gnaeus, his weathered face solemn but proud. Beside him, Phainon kneels, one fist pressed to the floor, his head bowed.
“Rise, Phainon of Aedes Elysiae,” your father says, voice ringing clearly through the chamber.
Phainon stands. Sunlight cuts through the windows, catching on the dull bronze of his breastplate at the clean line of the sword at his hip.
“By the authority vested in me as sovereign,” the king continues, “and with the recommendation of Master Gnaeus himself, I name you Captain of the Royal Guard. May your sword be the shield of this kingdom, and your loyalty its unbreakable spine.”
Master Gnaeus steps forward. In his hands, he carries his old sword—notched from years of use, the hilt worn by time. “I have served three kings, and fought more battles than I care to count,” he says, placing the sword flat between his palms. “But I have never met a soldier with a truer heart than this one.” He turns to Phainon and holds the sword out. “I was a younger man when I carried this into battle. Now I give it to one younger still, but stronger, steadier, and far more stubborn.”
Phainon takes the blade, kneeling once more—not to the court, not even to the king, but to Master Gnaeus himself. You catch the gleam in his eyes as he rises. He meets your gaze across the floor, and the faintest smile passes between you like a shared secret. 
Mydeimos steps forward next. Dressed in his ruby-red ceremonial garb, he bows to your father, then to you. “It is with honour that Castrum Kremnos finalises its alliance with your realm. But I would be remiss if I did not also speak personally.” 
He glances at you, his gaze kind, if bittersweet. “Your Highness, thank you—for your companionship and your presence. You were never obligated to give me either. I have learned more than I expected, and I carry no bitterness at how things have turned out. In truth—” he turns his gaze to Phainon—“I look forward to fighting beside a warrior like you in the campaign against northern raiders. Your reputation, it seems, is well-earned.”
Phainon nods. “I look forward to having you at my side, Prince.”
The moment settles—a rare, rare peace shared between kingdoms and warriors and people who have each made their choices. Your father raises a hand.
“Let this court bear witness to the dawn of a new alliance,” he says, “and the beginning of a reign led not by fear or ambition, but by strength, and by choice.”
Cheers rise like a tide, and the stained glass above scatters the light like jewels across the floor. Phainon sidles over to your side, no longer covert, but open and proud. He leans ever so slightly closer.
(“Is it always this loud when you win a fight?” he says.
You don’t look at him, but your smile answers for you.)
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iv). Look at us, it’s like we’re one.
There is a man inside your room.
He has hair the colour of snow and eyes the colour of the sea before a storm, and he gazes at you with a smile you can only think to describe as terribly lovesick. The hour is late, and the moon spills silver through the open windows of your bedchamber, pooling in quiet puddles across the stone floor and the silken-smooth sheets. The hearth crackles low, casting flickering gold across the canopy above you. Outside, the castle sleeps. Inside, you don’t have to.
“Mistress Calypso is very proud of you, you know,” you murmur. “She would not stop raving about how the little boy who used to climb in through my window every night is now the captain of the royal guard, off to fight along with the prince of Castrum Kremnos two weeks from now.”
You turn your head, letting your nose nudge against Phainon’s jaw, where the faintest hint of stubble tickles your skin. His arm is draped lazily over your waist, legs hooked in between yours, and he smells like grass and leather and cedarwood. The shell on the necklace you’d bought for him, wrapped around his wrist, digs into your skin just slightly.
Phainon exhales a soft laugh, the sound low and warm against your temple. “I think Mistress Calypso just likes that she no longer has to pretend she doesn’t see me sneaking out of your window at dawn.”
“She always did turn a blind eye,” you agree. “But we were so young then, so what could she do about it?”
“Barred your windows, probably,” he answers solemnly. “But she is like a mother to you, and does not have the penchant for such cruelty.”
You stifle a laugh into his shoulder, fingers brushing over the fabric of his tunic where it’s wrinkled from your embrace. He shifts so you’re nestled even closer, his thumb drawing gentle patterns on your hip beneath the sheets. “Two weeks,” you whisper, quieter now. “That’s not very long.”
“No,” Phainon says. “But it’s long enough to kiss you a hundred times.”
“You speak like you don’t plan on coming back.”
“I do. But the north is cold, and war is colder. If I’m to leave, I’ll leave no words unsaid.”
You lift your head to look at him. His sea-storm eyes meet yours, steady and full of the kind of tenderness that makes your chest ache. 
“I’ll return to you,” he promises. “If there is breath in my body and strength in my limbs, I will always return to you.”
You reach up, cupping his cheek, your thumb brushing the spot just below his eye. “I’ll be waiting. With the same window open, just in case you forget the door exists.”
He grins then, boyish, beautiful, and yours. “I might climb it anyway. For tradition.”
You laugh, and he kisses the sound from your lips. There is no rush now, no secret to keep. There is only the moonlight, the steady thrum of his heartbeat beneath your palm, and the quiet promise of love that spreads between you like an oath sworn in fire and sealed in starlight.
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a/n: thanks for reading! comments are very much appreciated ♡ also thank you to @lotusteabag for beta reading & letting me ramble about this fic with her, and for being my biggest supporter ever! the first section’s title was taken from cardigan��by taylor swift; the second was my own; the third was from emma by jane austen; and the fourth was taken from above the time by iu.
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digiflora · 1 month ago
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1/4 exams done raghhh
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digiflora · 1 month ago
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— 08:28, a matter of national security;
or, cliche “kissing/pda to not get found out” scenario with spy!gojo!
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the evening air is warm, humming with the low buzz of streetlights and distant laughter, the city alive and breathing around you. you’re just minding your own business, walking down a half-crowded plaza, maybe heading to meet friends or just killing time, when you feel a sudden, firm hand wrap gently but insistently around your wrist.
you barely have time to gasp when you’re pulled, not roughly, but urgently, into a small, shadowed alleyway between two buildings. your back presses lightly against the cool brick wall, and a figure — tall, broad-shouldered, wearing a casual black hoodie and dark jeans — steps into your space.
“hey, hey, don’t scream,” he says quickly, voice low, a little breathless. his face is hidden by the low hood and a pair of sunglasses, but something about him — the shape of his mouth, the faintest glint of a smirk — flickers with familiarity, even if you can’t place him.
“i really need your help. it’s, uh—” he leans closer, his body almost shielding you completely from view. you can feel the heat rolling off him in waves. “national security.”
he says it like a secret, like a joke he’s half hoping you’ll believe.
you blink up at him, heart hammering wildly in your chest. “what—?”
“please,” he adds, a little softer. the hand not braced by your head comes up and gently, carefully, places your fingers against his head. against white hair. so stark and pale that it glows under any light.
he gives you a sheepish little smile. “just—keep your hand here. hide it for me. pretend we are making out or whatever.”
you swallow, your fingertips curling awkwardly into the strands. it’s so soft. suspiciously soft for a man throwing around phrases like “national security.”
but his urgency feels real. and there’s a strange kindness in the way he touches you — careful, never rough, as if he’s terrified you’ll bolt.
he keeps his face tilted close to yours, forehead brushing yours like a mockery of intimacy, breath feathering against your cheek. you can smell his cologne — something warm and clean, not sharp — and your pulse stutters.
you hear it then. footsteps. heavy ones. men’s voices — rough, urgent, speaking in some clipped language you don’t understand.
the man in front of you stiffens. for the first time, you feel it: a cold, sharp edge underneath all his easy charm. he’s alert.
you glance past him and catch a flash of black suits. earpieces. serious faces scanning the crowds. they’re looking for him.
he sees your panic rising and murmurs, urgent but impossibly gentle, “sorry about this.”
before you can ask what for, he leans down and kisses you.
it’s not rough. it’s not invasive. it’s almost… careful. his lips brush against yours, slow and warm, like he’s asking permission even though he doesn’t have time to wait for it. he moves closer, crowding you into the shadows, his arms braced on either side of your head to shield you from view.
your hand stays buried in his hair. his fingers ghost down your side, barely touching, like a protective cage rather than a threat.
you can hear the enemies— enemies? soldiers? whatever they are — moving closer, their steps slowing, scanning. your body tenses instinctively, and he feels it; his mouth curves against yours in the faintest reassuring smile as his hand curls around your cheek.
like he’s done this before.
the footsteps pass. slowly. slowly.
the seconds stretch out, unbearably long.
you feel him listen. you feel it in the way his muscles stay coiled, ready to move. and only when the danger is gone — when the sound of the agents fades into the noise of the city — does he finally, reluctantly, pull away.
he lingers close, still caging you in, his breath a little heavier now.
and then—
he smiles.
a real smile. wide and boyish and infuriatingly charming.
“you’re amazing,” he says, voice low and a little breathless. “best partner-in-crime i’ve ever had.” his grin turns a little lopsided, teasing. “and damn, you’re a good kisser.”
you stare at him, wide-eyed, heart jackhammering in your chest. you haven’t even gotten a word out yet.
he gently, almost apologetically, brushes a thumb against the corner of your mouth — like he can’t resist touching you one last time.
“thanks, sweetheart,” he says warmly. “you probably saved my life.”
you open your mouth — to say what the hell just happened or who are you or come back here right now — but he steps back, flashing you a wink.
and then he’s gone. melting into the crowd like he was never there.
you’re left standing there, hand still half-curled in the air, feeling the ghost of his kiss on your lips, the echo of his warmth pressed against you.
later, you’ll wonder if you imagined it. if the adrenaline made it all seem more intense than it was.
but deep down, you know you didn’t.
you’ll remember his voice — playful, grateful, intimate — and the look he gave you, like you were the only person in the world who could help him.
and somewhere out there, in the city’s tangle of lights and shadows, gojo, one of the best agents national secret service has to offer, is smiling to himself, running a hand through his now-mussed hair, already planning exactly how he’s going to find you again after reporting at the headquarters.
because the mission might be over — but you?
you’re a new mission entirely.
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digiflora · 1 month ago
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im burnt out hes jst burnt we're cool
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digiflora · 1 month ago
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hihii i just wanted to come on here quickly and say TYSM FOR 1.6K FOLLOWERS!!! :DDD
that is a very big number and i am very flattered that that many people gaf abt what i write, it means the world to me :))
lots of love to everyone, have a blessed and wonderful day 🫶🫶
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digiflora · 2 months ago
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see u in miami sukuna
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digiflora · 2 months ago
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iktr 🙂‍↕️🙂‍↕️
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digiflora · 2 months ago
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HSR EXPRESSION TEST
[DO NOT REPOST W/OUT PERMISSION]
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digiflora · 2 months ago
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I'm on period gang
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digiflora · 2 months ago
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i'm horny okay maybe
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digiflora · 2 months ago
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Diluc sketch
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digiflora · 2 months ago
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SUMMER LOVIN' ◟⊹ 𖧧. ָ࣪ ◝. EPISODE⁰³
Ꮺ prev. masterlist. next. Ꮺ
TONIGHT ON LOVE ISLAND ...
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the cheeky greeting uttered mere moments ago still rings in your ears, and you're almost hesitant to swivel your head to see the face that comes with the voice.
hu tao's beaten you to it, her excited gasp which she makes no effort to conceal giving you that little last push of equal parts courage and curiosity to turn around and look at the newcomers.
it's two men, one tall and ginger, the other somewhat shorter with some pale blond hair pulled back into a half updo which looks rather nice, you must admit. they couldn't be more opposite of each other- the taller one practically swaggering his way towards you and the rest of the islanders, taking his sweet time all with a million dollar smile plastered across his face. you'd bet your bottom dollar that it was him who called out that greeting.
the other guy trailed slightly behind, not necessarily shy, but certainly paling in comparison to the other bombshell.
the ginger comes to a stop at the edge of the sofa, right by where you're sat, sandwiched between hu tao and alhaitham. the latter had his arm haphazardly thrown across the back of where you were sat, though you can't help but notice the almost imperceptible twitch of it against the back of your head as alhaitham's gaze scours over the newcomer.
he's dressed to impress, in a deep red buttondown that fits him just right, slightly unbuttoned at the collar and rolled up at the sleeves. even with the man sat next to you, you'd have no trouble admitting that this bombshell is hot.
he's got steely blue eyes too, ones that briefly shine with mirth as he meets your gaze, then hu tao's.
"y'alright, darlings?"
oh, it was definitely him who called out that greeting.
"my name's childe, i'm sure you won't be forgetting it any time soon." a flirty wink from him that somehow manages to direct itself to both you and hu tao- it's impressive. and it's working, which is arguably an even more impressive feat.
you can feel yourself flustering under his gaze, and from the brief glint in his eyes he can tell, but he decides to take pity and start introducing himself to the other islanders.
"nice to meet you, mate." he extends a hand to alhaitham, one which is gingerly accepted and very gruffly shaken.
"likewise."
the other bombshell also pipes up, a more timid smile on his face.
"i'm albedo, it's nice to meet you too." you give him a quick smile and a wave. he seems nice enough, but he was very much a different type of person to childe- one which didn't have you feeling suddenly hyperaware of your appearance and sitting up that much straighter.
they make their way through the islanders, saying their greetings. no words need to be exchanged between the girls, a quick exchange of glances and rosaria's daringly mouthing "oh my god" as childe hugs her bringing everyone to a unanimous verdict that this bombshell is hot.
interestingly, ganyu seems to go pink when albedo introduces himself to her- a fact that doesn't go unnoticed by ayato, as he swiftly tries to put an arm around ganyu, that she expertly removes.
they eventually settle down, squeezing onto the curved sofa aroubd the firepit, and the laidback interrogation begins.
"so," jean starts, a slight slur to her voice. she had mentioned offhandedly how she was an absolute lightweight, but with the minimal drinks that were handed out tonight, this was a whole new level.
"which one of you's chemistry and which one of you's men at work?" it takes you a second, but you realise that she's talking about those hashtags that were in the text sent to hu tao's phone earlier. you can't help but giggle into your drink a little at the question, though it seems to be taken in stride.
"i'm a biochemist, if that's what you're asking?" albedo says uncertainly.
"and i work in construction, so i guess i'm the man at work." childe's voice alone makes it sound like an innuendo, let alone his more than knowing smirk.
jean's question seemed to get the ball rolling, the new arrivals quickly settling in.
and just when things started to feel alright, albedo's phone buzzed. he scrunched his brows at it as if he couldn't quite believe it made the noise, before gingerly reading out the text.
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you were pretty sure that all the islanders were half expecting a text like that to make itself known tonight too, though its impact doesn't seem to lessen with that in mind. looking around, it was clear that the first power shift, so to speak, had been felt in all the male islanders. even the ever-so-cocky ayato had an imperceptibly smaller smirk on his face, the fleeting glance he sends to albedo as he downs the rest of his drink giving his true feelings away. even the stoic alhaitham next to you seemed slightly more on edge, if the less than 24 hours that you had spent with him were anything to go off of.
the carefree nature of the party not even an hour ago was hard to be found now, and with the all clear from production, it was only the natural next move to call it a night.
it was a mild surprise to see that names had been assigned to the beds- you're surprised to see your name next to alhaitham's in a bright cursive font on one headboard, with the same for each of the other couples. much to your amusement, the same had been done for childe and albedo, designating them to share for this first night at the villa.
you find yourself naturally straying over to the dressing room with the rest of the girls, all of you collectively getting unready before turning in for the night.
hu tao and jean were quick to turn in, barely getting the makeup off of their face and their pyjamas on before diving into bed. ganyu is next, already yawning and hair up in a bun, a dreamy little "goodnight" escaping her lips before she glides back to the bedroom.
rosaria isn't quite as tired, taking the time to do her skincare routine thoroughly before turning in, leaving you with a little wave.
you're almost done yourself, except for one last thing
it was such a trivial matter, though you found that those were the matters that you spent the most time deliberating over. and deciding what to wear on your first night was about as trivial as it got.
on one hand, you could go the sexy route- you had some silky matching sets with a tasteful amount of cleavage to show. or you could play it safe with the comfier (but still arguably cute) route of sleep shorts and a t-shirt. you're staring at the options in your suitcase so hard that you can feel your eyebrows beginning to crease, before you startle at the door to the changing room swinging open suddenly, and rosaria flashing you a quick smile.
"forgot my water bottle." she snags the thing up, eyes casting over your hunched figure and your suitcase in front of you.
she's quick to figure out your earth-shattering dilemma, chuckling to herself lightly.
"i say wear the sexy ones, and get your little nerd all hot and bothered so he'll be crazy about you." that's enough convincing for you, and you quickly finish getting ready for bed.
by the time you make it back to the shared bedroom, the lights are off, and everyone seems to be making some attempt to sleep. it's a slightly annoying fact, considering that a) the whole point of wearing the sexy pyjamas was for alhaitham to see them, not use his imagination, and b) you're going to have to navigate your way into bed in the dark.
you're vaguely aware of where your bed is, on the far side of the room someplace in the middle, and you wander in that general direction as quietly as possible.
your eyes are still adjusting to the dimly lit room, nondescript lumps of bodies under the covers being all that you can really use to tell whether you've reached your destination or not.
you think that you're there, feet shuffling across the cool tile floor as you make your way to the edge of the bed. your eyes strain, not sure if they're playing tricks on you or if you can really hear the slightest noise of giggles under the covers. you shudder briefly, someone clearly having a better time than you are.
you try cast your mind back to earlier- back when you had the aid of light to be able to tell which bed was yours- was it the second from the left? or the third? you try to be as surreptitious in your investigation as possible, not wanting anyone to see you shuffling around the beds and squinting at the people in them.
you hear the rustle of sheets, then see the vague silhouette of someone sitting up, eyes still not adjusted enough to have a clue of who it was. nevertheless, you freeze like you've been caught doing something wrong, stuck in some odd standoff with this person.
"...y/n?" even as a whisper, you recognise alhaitham's rather distinct voice.
"....yeah." it's a sheepish admission, and there's another pause before the sheets ruffle again, and you hear the vague sound of alhaitham patting the space next to him.
"the bed's here." the auditory cue helps more than you expected, and you decide to take the less graceful route of crawling into bed from the foot of it, not wanting to risk tripping on anything by walking round to the side.
as careful as you are, you aren't devoid of any further embarrassments, as your hand lands itself somewhere on what you would guess was his arm on your way to your pillow.
"sorry." you're as quick to retract your hand as you were to place it down, and save for the slightest of exhales when you did it, alhaitham made no sign that he had felt it at all.
"it's fine." as soon as your fingertips graze the pillowcase, you're quick to assume a semi-comfortable sleeping position, curled on your side with your back to alhaitham, too mortified to face him. you can vaguely sense him lying there, something in your gut telling you that he wasn't trying to sleep.
you're not sure how to break the silence, though. for starters, anyone else in the room could potentially hear you, and rolling over and asking are you awake felt like setting yourself up for public ridicule.
the seconds feel like hours as you lie there, tense and very much awake. the room is surprisingly cold, partially from the aircon which you're sure you'll appreciate a lot more in the day, and partially because of what little coverage your skimpy pyjamas had to offer. damn you, rosaria.
to your surprise, you don't have to break the silence, instead hearing the slight shuffle of alhaitham, before he whispers again.
"...did you forget where the bed was?" it didn't sound like a question of judgement, rather one of disbelief. either way, it doesn't help your embarrassment.
"um, yeah... i did." another beat of silence.
you're almost scared that he'll leave you hanging like that, but then you hear another little exhale from him that sounded very much like a snort.
"you know you can just call out next time instead of fumbling your way through the dark."
"oh, yeah. sorry."
another pause, and you're not sure if it's that same disbelief or if he's thinking very hard about what to say.
"you don't have to apologise, i was just suggesting an alternative."
"oh, sorry."
that garners another snort from him, and you can't help but laugh into the pillow too at how absurdly this conversation was going. decidedly braver now that your eyes have adjusted and that you've managed to laugh your nerves away, you slowly roll over to face alhaitham.
you're a bit closer to him than you expected to end up, though it's still a far enough distance that you're not immediately regretting your decision.
you can make out the planes of his face, just about, the slightest reflection of his eyes as he looks at you with a mild curiosity and something akin to mirth.
"hi." you smile at him sheepishly. a fresh start to that awkward conversation.
"hi." he echoes your greeting, the slightest smile tugging at his lips. even in the minimal lighting, you do your best to remember the sight.
"so, um, are you a blanket hog?" your brain was definitely just spitballing at this point. it seems to be working, though, as the easy smile on alhaitham's face didn't let up, and he shook his head.
"i'm not. do you sleep on top of the covers the whole night?" you had been too shy to even properly get into bed, merely assuming the foetal position as soon as your head hit the pillow.
"i don't, no." it's an awkward dance of arms and legs to get the cover out from underneath you and then getting underneath it, but you manage it without any further snorts from alhaitham, much to your relief.
it's still a bit chilly under the sheets, enough to make you shiver, and you rub your legs together to speed up the warmth generation process.
"are you cold?" curse alhaitham's astuteness. it's a hesitant nod, one that alhaitham sees anyway in the dim light of the room. there's another almighty pause from him, and now that you can see his expression you're sure that it's because he's thinking very hard about what to say next.
"we could... um.. cuddle, if you like?" he says it all quiet like it's a dirty word, and you think you've now been made privy to the shyer parts of him. your stunned silence must have been read as a rejection, as alhaitham's regular expression of a furrowed brow and rather discontent face returns, and he begins to move away from facing you and onto a more conservative position of lying on his back.
"forget i said anything, never mi-"
"-wait." your hand latches onto his arm under the covers, a move that you weren't anticipating to do. it takes you both by surprise, if the way his bicep tenses against your fingers is anything to go by. you try to swallow around your suddenly dry throat, still whispering out to him in the dark.
" that ... would be nice."
there's a few beats of silence, the both of you processing what you just said. of what's to come. it's a rather wordless progression, alhaitham coming back to face you. you shuffling your hips closer to him, meeting in the middle of the bed. there's still a respectable amount of space between the two of you, this careful dance of not wanting to come across as too eager being choreographed by the two of you.
there's a gentle hand at your waist, the lightest of pressures reminiscent on when you were first coupled up. you had melted into his touch then, and you do the same now, letting yourself shuffle just a touch closer. his hand resting across your waist is still the only real point of contact between you, but you could practically feel the warmth radiating from his body, a delightful realisation that had you wanting to close the gap so very badly.
"is that better?" you could swear that the roles were reversed now, what with alhaitham sounding so tentative. you smile to yourself, deciding to crack first and get what you really wanted, dance be damned.
you let your hand drift down to the one on your waist, fingers wrapping around his and guiding it to rest more naturally on your back, effectively embracing you now. alhaitham follows your directions without any complaints, even shuffling himself forward to accommodate for it. with the home stretch in sight, you let your own arm now wrap around him, pausing for the briefest of moments when your fingers meet bare skin rather than a tshirt.
perhaps your eyes hadn't completely adjusted, after all.
nevertheless, you take it in stride, enbracing alhaitham properly as well, letting yourself finally melt against his warmth with a content sigh.
even with your pyjamas on, there was still a decent amount of skin to skin contact- enough for this to feel delightfully intimate. you're close enough again to be able to smell alhaitham properly, the pleasant scent of him one that you were still trying to put your finger on. something woody, slightly earthy. but also sweet. the thought makes you smile as you finally shut your eyes, your lashes fluttering somewhere near alhaitham's collarbone. you feel him shiver in response, the slightest of twitches of his back muscles against your fingertips, and you file that tidbit of information away somewhere in your head.
alhaitham seems to be curious about you, too. he keeps his hands where you placed them, remaining respectfully north of your ass, though you feel his thumb skim under the hem of your pyjama top. at least they were serving you well now. you feel his thumb and forefinger experimentally rub the fabric of your top before he hums lightly, then returns to his original spot against your back, his thumb now rubbing small circles into you.
the sensation, the tiredness of the day setting in, and his very comforting warmth are all more than enough for you to feel your eyelids begin to droop.
"much better."
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gia's notes ㌐ ₀₃ reader who gets less shy during the interaction x alhaitham who gets more shy YESSIRRRRRR 🫠🫠🫠. sorry that this chap took so long last term finished me OFF and i had to take a breather
taglist ㌐ ₀₃ (let me know if you would like to be added!) @arraxthatsonjah @nebsisdead @voasprofile @bunnychiffon @dainsleif-when-playable @meigalaxy @0lives10 @klancification
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digiflora · 2 months ago
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THE IMAGINARY MAN EVERRRRRR
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Luocha from hsr’s anniversary on bilibilli part one 🙂‍↕️🙂‍↕️ link here!!
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digiflora · 2 months ago
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Heyy, just came to say that your archived masterlist’s links don’t connect to anything (at least for me,,) Sorry for bothering, have an amazing day/night! :)
HI ANONNN ik this is super late but i only just got round to fixing the masterlist links LMAOO. basically after i changed my username all my old stuff didnt work anymore cos the url and yea.
it's not a perfect solution and on the actual separate posts the links have not been updated but the you should be able to navigate to everything through the masterlists. i hope.
thank u for letting me know!! <3
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digiflora · 2 months ago
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HE SAID THE LINE
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digiflora · 2 months ago
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thank you hsr for being so much more generous than g*nshin ever will be ^_^
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