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her steps stilled, but she didn’t turn. not right away. the silence that followed his question wasn’t hesitation. it was permission — granted to herself, and to him — to let the echo settle in the architecture between them. and then, slowly, she pivoted. not to face him in full. only just enough. as if she were allowing him a glimpse behind some curtain he hadn’t quite earned — but had come close enough to tempt her interest. “to tether is not always to worship,” she said, voice even. “sometimes it is simply to anchor.” the gallery light cut across her cheekbone like the edge of a coin — sharp, glinting, impersonal. still, she met his gaze without armor. only precision. “foolish? perhaps.” she tasted the word as if deciding whether to spit or savor it. “but gluttonous?” now, that earned the faintest flicker of amusement in her expression. “no. i do not suffer for pleasure. i suffer with purpose. and that—” she finally moved toward him again, slow, deliberate, “is a distinction your guilt does not allow you to make.” she did not touch him. but the nearness — chosen nearness — was contact enough. “you mistake endurance for preyhood,” acelya said, tone low, almost reverent in its chill. “but to stand still in the storm, knowing it will tear flesh from bone, and choosing to look it in the eye anyway?” her head tilted, that feline sort of curiosity coiling beneath her stillness. “that is not submission. that is defiance.” a breath. not deep. just decided. “you ask what pain i’ve deemed worthy.” her gaze dipped — only slightly — to his chest, to the weight he wore like a second skin. and when her eyes returned to his, they were no longer searching. they knew. “the kind that cannot be buried. only carried.” a pause. then, “and i carry it not in the hope it ends.” her smile now was barely a breath, but there. “but in the knowledge that i won’t.” she turned again, but this time her step was slower. deliberate. a retreat not of defeat, but invitation — left open, like a door unlatched in the wake of dusk. “what you call survival,” she said without looking back, “i call legacy.” and in the hush of the gallery, framed by oil and time and all the shadows they refused to name, acelya kara moved like a woman who had already made peace with the fire — and dared it to follow.
"Does that make you fool, Miss Kara, or gluttonous for a suffering you can convince yourself you are in control of?" He asks her, the lining of her words like the edge of a blade he had found himself leaning against far too many times in his life. "You are human, are you not? Our bones even know our instincts can be simplified to fight, or to run. We are creatures of survival, but those who stay and linger in the face of danger... they are not heroes, or gods. They seek to endure rather than survive. Their last breath may surpass the rest, but at what cost? They are still prey."
Thayer knows better, and yet, he bites his own tongue whenever he tries to soothe the ache in his chest. He knows that the honor he holds is tainted crimson because he made it so, because old wounds turn into scars that make it harder to slip away. It is easier to wallow, to taste hell and grow accustomed to its bitterness, than to risk falling in love with heaven. It is better to die for the idea of it than live to see it fall.
"To endure is to suffer, and to suffer is to be human." His voice is soft, but it's the most certain he's been since he's opened his mouth to her. "If you do not run, then pray, what pain have you deemed worthy enough to tether to your soul? What grief have you welcomed as the very cost of staying right where you are— is the hope of it all worth it?"
#✮ satin daggers & sovereign blood ˏˋ°•⁀➷ the art of war wrapped up in a woman (threads) ✮#✮ satin daggers & sovereign blood ˏˋ°•⁀➷ int: thayer claremont ✮
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a lesser woman might have filled the silence. but acelya kara had never feared the quiet. she let it bloom — not between them, but around them. like fog on still water. like the slow unfurling of something ancient, patient, and deliberate. her gaze did not break from florentia’s, though something behind it shifted — imperceptible at first glance, but unmistakable if one knew how to read restraint as fluently as desire. “a rare currency,” she murmured at last, as if the words had been filtered through a finer sieve than usual. time. freedom. the absence of justification. each syllable placed with the weight of silver on silk. “and rarer still when offered without collateral.” her fingers curled slightly, brushing the edge of her plate — not possessively, but like someone reacquainting themselves with the notion of choice. “i have spent much of my life in rooms,” she said, and now her tone was quieter. not softened — acelya did not soften — but clarified. like a blade held to flame. “rooms where everything was negotiation. where kindness was bartered, and silence weaponized.” a slow inhale, though her posture didn’t waver. “so you’ll forgive me if i listen less for what is said… and more for what is left.” a pause. longer this time. a suspension, not of disbelief, but of something harder to name. “what you offer,” she continued, gaze narrowing ever so slightly — not in suspicion, but focus, “is not a bargain. it is a mercy.” her mouth tilted then, neither smile nor smirk. something more dangerous in its honesty. “and mercy, lady viscountess, is often the most frightening thing of all. because it asks for nothing. and in doing so, dares you to believe it.” she reached for the sorbet then — not idly this time, but deliberately. a slow spoonful, tasted without commentary, like an answer given without fanfare. “very well,” acelya said, and this time her voice held something like... concession. not weakness — never that — but a rare and earned yes. “we will proceed without contract. without cost.” her gaze held firm, steady and unblinking. “but do not mistake my acceptance for ease. i am not a simple woman. and i do not forget the shape of what i’ve survived.” she leaned in again, just slightly. not predatory. not defensive. just present. “if you offer me time, i will take it.” another pause. deliberate. “but do not be surprised if i use it to see you.” and this, finally, was her answer. a mirror turned not outward — but toward the woman who dared place her offer on the table, unwrapped. how rare. how dangerous. how… intriguing.
her gaze did not waver. nor did it plead. florentia had practiced the art of not needing aloud. of keeping to the quiet corners of discretion. but ... something in her manner shifted. not enough to be marked by the casual glance of someone unfamiliar with her. but certainly enough to be felt by acelya. the same way one notices the soft give of frost beneath the boot. if only they are paying attention. “there are arrangements that hold without contract.” her voice lowered , no more quiet than before. moving with not insistence , but intent. “understandings , if you will. not written , but sustained.” her fingers eased their grip, though they did not part. florentia did not look away. but the space between them grew less like a measure and more like a threshold. “the kind that do not ask to be proven. only kept. —you have known power in its sharpest forms ,” she observed. “and likely generosity too. but tethered to cost.” a pause. “i do not offer either.”
a flicker. like the ghost of something unspoken. not quite a smile. but the softening of features. inward and brief. “what i offer , miss kara , is time. and the freedom not to explain oneself , every hour.” a silence echoed long after her words. it did stretch so much as it settled. made heavier not with uncertainty, but choice. and florentia allowed it the grace to stand. some truths asked not to be carried. simply laid down. presented. “if that is of use to you , then it is yours.” not a request. not a claim. an offering. left unadorned. but unmistakably real.
#✮ satin daggers & sovereign blood ˏˋ°•⁀➷ the art of war wrapped up in a woman (threads) ✮#✮ satin daggers & sovereign blood ˏˋ°•⁀➷ int: florentia rosewood ✮
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the glint in his eye was met with something colder — not cruel, just... refined. aged like the bourbon she toyed with, never in a rush to finish, always in control of the burn. “deserve is such a fragile word,” she said, voice smooth as lacquer, “and it always says more about the speaker than the spoken to.” she let that linger a moment, watching him with the kind of patience one afforded to a play they’d already seen twice — not out of boredom, but curiosity for which scene he’d fumble next. “you speak of narrative like it’s an accusation.” her head tilted again, deliberate this time — like someone granting permission to be amused. “and yet, here you are defending yours with all the subtlety of a man cornered by his own reflection.” the corner of her mouth curved again — not fond, not mocking. deliberate. precise. “i never claimed to know you. that would be indulgent of me.” a sip of bourbon. languid. “but i did see you. that discomfort you’re dressing up as disdain? it’s far too practiced to be casual. and men only bristle when you brush too close to something sharp.” she leaned forward now, elbow propped against the arm of the chair, fingertips cradling the curve of her glass. the air between them was still and charged — like the second before a violin string snaps. “you think i’m fishing,” she said, almost tenderly. “but that’s your tell, not mine. the people who accuse you of trickery are the ones who carry it in their bones.” a beat. something darker flickered beneath the surface — not anger, but a knowing. something earned in rooms far quieter and colder than this one. “you think it’s clever. the feint. the misdirection. the false tells you feed in hopes someone bites, just to prove you were right to mistrust them.” she shrugged, something almost sad in the movement. “i’ve seen it before. it’s not new.” and then, just as easily, her tone softened — not warm, but quiet. “no one’s asking you to spill your soul.” she said like a final card laid on the table — not dramatic, just decisive. “but don’t mistake still water for shallow depth. or clarity for cruelty.” she rose then — elegant, unhurried — and placed her glass on the table, untouched now by whatever taste lingered. “if you ever decide to speak plainly,” she said, eyes like lit coals in the dim, “do let me know. you might find it’s the one trick you’ve never tried.” and with that, acelya turned, the scent of sandalwood and something darker trailing after her as she moved — not away, not quite — but just enough to leave space for choice. a gift, rare as truth.
“Darling,” he echoes mocking rife in his voice and no attempt to hide it. People had assumptions and no matter how poetic the waxed on with an elusive tone meant to portray mystery, they always came up wrong. “It is not a mirror you hold up but a narrative that you have led with when you arrived and made contact with me. The mirror you presume to hold up could be one you’re reflecting onto others with how you expect them to be. It is not that I do not like what catches the light, I reject it for how inaccurate it is.” The drink is now sipped slowly, this one he’s enjoying. Unlike the others, it’s a whisky that goes down smooth but with a slight burn in the throat that lingers. Not expensive but clearly a cheap brand but those are his favourite and sought out on purpose so memories are bought forward of times when he and his brothers at sea would drink anything and enjoy their time at a tavern with cheap but plenty of ale or the bits of rum, they’d drink on deck on a night off. Those times always in moderation. “Who says I am trying to outwit you?” It seemed that was yet another example of a conversations happened not in their reality, but it seemed in her head or maybe that she had an expectation of how it was going to go and replied based on that. “Do you think you deserve to know?” he says looking at her with a glint in his eye. “You’ve read me wrong so much. Whatever tricks you think you have, perhaps it is best you work on them before trying to gain information.” Then it clicked in his drunken mind. Feed someone false readings of them so their ego becomes too big and must correct and reveals the secrets people kept hidden.
#✮ satin daggers & sovereign blood ˏˋ°•⁀➷ the art of war wrapped up in a woman (threads) ✮#✮ satin daggers & sovereign blood ˏˋ°•⁀➷ int: tobias thorpe ✮
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the corner of her mouth lifted — not quite a smile, but something near it. something rare. something earned. "lady maude whitlock," she repeated, each syllable delicate, as though unwrapping a piece of history from tissue paper. "a name dressed in expectation. silk gloves. curated manners." she took a half step closer, the gallery’s dim light soft against her sharp cheekbones. "but it doesn't fit you. not really." her gaze dipped briefly to the curls that had fallen across maude’s cheek, then lifted again — unwavering. "no... you’re not silk. you’re wildfire wrapped in chiffon. they’ve tried to tame you with titles and etiquette, but it’s all just... embroidery, isn’t it? the truth of you burns brighter than any of it." acelya paused, letting the words settle between them. she was used to people looking at her with awe — with envy, with fear. but maude’s gaze was different. reverent, yes, but also raw. open in a way that most people had forgotten how to be. and it disarmed her. not that she’d ever show it. “how do they do it?” she echoed softly, tilting her head toward the bleeding brushstrokes of a nearby canvas. “they bleed where we cannot. they weep in color. they tear the soul into shreds and stitch it back together with gold. artists are simply those brave — or mad — enough to carve their grief into something beautiful.” a beat. her voice gentled. “but you already knew that, didn’t you?” maude’s confession lingered in the air, tender and impossibly sincere. and something in acelya — usually so carefully barricaded — shifted. not enough to crumble, not yet. but enough to show a sliver of what lived behind the glass-and-marble exterior. "i'm miss acelya kara," she said at last. “just an archivist of other people’s heartbreak.” she offered her hand — not the stiff, expected way, but palm-up, like an invitation. “it’s truly lovely to meet you, maude. not the lady.” her voice lowered, intimate now, as if they were the only ones left in the gallery. “and if you truly want to be seen... you’re in the right place. or at the very least — in the right company.” her eyes gleamed with something both solemn and promising. “but be warned. once someone sees you — really sees you — it’s very hard to go back to hiding.”
maude, despite her tireless lessons with governesses as a young girl ( which, granted, she rarely attended ), had no poise or grace — especially as she stood next to acelya. acelya, who moved like a lioness surveying the savannah, every move she made was a quiet display of power, grace, and cloaked in elegance. maude lacked the lioness’ quiet confidence and instead moved like a startled ostrich on uneven ground. she could hear the soft clink of ice shifting in her glass and the thumping of her own heartbeat as the beautiful lioness observed her, not as prey but as a source of ruckus in her calm den. 'or a dangerous one' — the words reverberating deep in maude's chest where a dormant ache laid. the escaping maude was doing? it was, perhaps, dangerous for her emotional state, but it was all she could think to do. stories had been her hideout, her safe haven the last few weeks so that she didn't have to face reality. acelya was patient, she didn't rush maude. and maude was so used to rushing. it was as if acelya had opened a drawer that hadn't been touched in years and pulled out something she knew hid inside of it. and oh, how maude admired her for it. maude's eyes were wide with awe and she stepped closer to acelya. "it's nice to lose myself in another story, if only for a few moments," she admitted, a girlish giggle sorely attempting to hide the pain in her voice. maude felt an invisible string pulling her towards the other, almost as if she could let herself be seen by acelya and she wouldn't be judged. aceyla had seen it — she'd seen the way the painting had pushed itself through maude's heart like a poisoned dagger. all she could do was nod, a few loose curls falling into her face. "do you wonder how they do it? how artists are able to use such beauty to break our hearts?" she asked, her tone reminiscent of that of a little girl who's just learning the ways of the world. she watched acelya intently, mesmerized by the woman. and her question hung in the air for a moment before finding its way onto the curve of maude's lips, causing her to smile ( albeit, softly ). "i want to be seen," she spoke, voice laced with honesty as her eyes found acelya's, "not for my name, not for my family, but for me." her smile grew, dancing with curiosity, "i know you will be far more than seen. you'll be remembered for generations. i don't believe i've caught your name, though." a polite curtsy and a grin, "i'm maude whitlock...erm, lady maude whitlock. it's truly lovely to meet you."
#✮ satin daggers & sovereign blood ˏˋ°•⁀➷ the art of war wrapped up in a woman (threads) ✮#✮ satin daggers & sovereign blood ˏˋ°•⁀➷ int: maude whitlock ✮
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she didn't flinch. she never did. her steps, measured and mute against the ancient boards of the king’s theatre, had the quality of smoke — elegant, curling, impossible to grasp. she paused just out of reach of the footlights, a silhouette in silk and shadow, half-limned by the ghost of chandeliers above. “charming,” she drawled, head tilting slightly as she regarded the boy with the careless grin and quick hands. “but wrong.” not whistledown. not tonight. not ever. acelya stepped forward — not into the light, but close enough that its edges kissed the hem of her gown. oxblood red, naturally. theatrical in the way only someone who didn’t need to act could be. “though i imagine she’d be flattered by the accusation. or deeply insulted. it’s difficult to tell with women who know exactly what they’re doing.” her gaze swept hunter from head to toe like a glass of wine appraised, not for taste — but for how well it stained. “mister thorpe, isn’t it?” a pause. her voice curved like ribbon drawn taut between fingers. “you’ve a gift for finding yourself where you shouldn’t be. must be exhausting, being hunted and hunting your next thrill.” she wandered toward the railing with feline indifference, one hand gliding along the edge as though reading the bones of the theatre itself. “tell me,” she said, voice dipped in dry amusement, “was it the ghosts, the girls, or the gamble that brought you skulking through the rafters tonight?” acelya stopped beside him now — not too close, never that — just enough to make her presence a question, not a comfort. “if it was whistledown you sought, you’ll need sharper bait.” a glance sideways. sharp, sleek. “but if it’s trouble you’re after…” a beat. her smile, slow and devastating, like the pulling of a curtain. “…you’ve already found it.”

Who: @gildedxthorns for one, Miss Acelya Kara Where: King's Theatre
the sounds of hunter's feet moved through the hallways with the gait of a deadly combination. of boredom and confidence. well, maybe not deadly. more...ominous? that seemed more fitting. despite whistledown's exposure, not much had been able to stop the fox-faced thief. comeuppence had started and stopped with his name in ink. it was fairly hilarious to think about. all of that fanfare for nothing? she was clearly not as powerful as she thought she was. oh! maybe she was here tonight. a plan if so. how would he figure it out-
the sounds of another broke him from the train of thought and hunter scrambled to the railing over the side of the walkway inside of the theatre. it was only once that the sounds of the feet carried close enough to him did hunter throw himself back up to the railing proper and swing an accusatory tone at the other. "whistledown, i know it's you!"
#✮ satin daggers & sovereign blood ˏˋ°•⁀➷ the art of war wrapped up in a woman (threads) ✮#✮ satin daggers & sovereign blood ˏˋ°•⁀➷ int: hunter thorpe ✮
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acelya didn’t smile — not in the traditional sense. but something in her expression shifted, like the soft drag of silk through a blade’s edge. not mockery. not irony. something rarer. interest, perhaps. or the gentle unfurling of a woman unaccustomed to being asked. “hm.” a note, low in her throat, as though tasting the thought before offering a reply. “you speak of beauty as if it were a hand extended.” her gaze drifted toward the painting again, where crimson clawed its way through gold. “i’ve always seen it more as a wound. not the injury itself, but the moment just after — when the blood is still warm and the nerves haven’t decided whether to scream or go quiet.” she glanced back to madeleine then, and for a moment, something in her eyes softened — not into sweetness, but into revelation. “but perhaps you are right,” she said, voice like the brush of velvet over bruised skin. “perhaps comfort is not a lie. perhaps it is simply rare. like a butterfly choosing, against all odds, to land on your hand.” her fingers curled slightly at her side, like she could feel the weight of it even now. “most things that are beautiful vanish the moment you reach for them.” and then she looked at madeleine again, really looked, as though her curiosity had slipped past the painted walls and found something far more intricate in the woman before her. “your governess called you unruly,” acelya echoed. “and yet you speak with such grace. that tells me you learned, very early, how to wield softness like a shield.” a beat. then, “or a blade.” she let that linger between them, not as accusation — but as recognition. and when she moved, it was just a half-step forward, enough that her voice lowered into something meant only for miss sinclair. “i think beauty is what remains after the fire. not the glow, not the ashes — the silence,” she murmured. “and comfort... comfort is when someone chooses to sit beside you in that silence. not to fix it. not to fill it. just to witness it.” she tilted her head slightly, studying madeleine the way one might study a handwritten letter — unsure whether it’s meant to wound, or save. “you seem like someone who would stay.” and it wasn’t quite a compliment. not quite a confession. just truth — spoken the only way acelya kara ever spoke it. beautiful. and a little bit dangerous.
"One of the rare ones? I do hope that you mean that in a way that is most kind. I would like to think we are all rare in our own way - like the very art we see, Miss Kara." She smiled, shrugging just a little bit in her own naive fashion. "Mmm, many memories indeed, of our governesses taking us to the beautiful gallery and seeing, speaking of the art. I remember because it was the one part of my lessons that I quite enjoyed. I was a rather unruly student at times - as my governess called it - I fluttered around like a butterfly." She giggled, shaking her head. Madeleine listened to the very differing tale of art in the eyes of Acelyn Kara and it fascinated her quite a bit. "How very - how very interesting you see art in that way, Miss Kara. I can only say that art brings out the most peculiar and staggering parts of ourselves, does it not? It brings out our innermost qualities. It has that power for us." She concluded, nodding. Hearing her, Madeleine's smile fell warmer on her face, entirely touched. "How - how very poetic and lovely of you to compare me to such, Miss Kara. Truly, how kind. I thank you." Madeleine thought of her question and sighed, a pause in between. "I - I quite think beauty can be looked at and be the most unexpected of things. When a friend is rather upset, you go to them, you comfort them - that is beauty. It may come from upset and from unpleasant situations, but only then when we allow ourselves to be vulnerable can we truly feel the beauty that is comfort, care and friendship - even love. Beauty does not have to be strictly aesthetically pleasing. A beautiful painting can be messy and - and dastardly, but if it brings others together - perhaps that is the beauty that surrounds it." She softly smiled, shrugging. "And what do you think, Miss Kara? I would be terribly remiss if I did not ask you."
#✮ satin daggers & sovereign blood ˏˋ°•⁀➷ the art of war wrapped up in a woman (threads) ✮#✮ satin daggers & sovereign blood ˏˋ°•⁀➷ int: madeleine sinclair ✮
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a flicker — not surprise, not satisfaction, but something far older — passed behind acelya kara’s eyes at evangeline’s reply. i’m not afraid of anything. the words were bold, certainly. but it wasn’t the declaration that made acelya’s mouth curl at the edges. it was the certainty. and certainty was always such a delicate thing to test. “no?” she asked — not a challenge, not quite — just a question dressed in silk and shadow, carried between them like smoke. her fingertip lingered, a gesture not of possession, but of notation. as if she were reading something written on her skin in invisible ink. “not even of finding out how much you could want something… you shouldn’t?” a pause. “or worse — how much you already do.” and that was the cruelty of it, wasn’t it? not hunger. not even temptation. but recognition. acelya leaned in just enough to let their lashes brush, let the hush of their breath braid together like secrets traded in candlelight. this close, every inhale felt like a confession. every stillness, a sentence yet to be spoken. “you say i choose my words too carefully,” she whispered now, voice barely there, “but i think you simply hear them too well.” a beat. “and that makes you dangerous too.” there was no smile on her lips now. just the suggestion of one. something reverent. something that knew the cost of this kind of game. her hand fell away at last, slowly, deliberately — leaving behind the memory of touch like a ghost that might haunt long after the night was over. “so then,” acelya murmured, standing but not stepping back, “the question isn’t whether you’re afraid.” her gaze held evie’s now, a dark and gleaming thing. “it’s whether you’re brave enough to stay for dessert.”
Breath caught in the pit of her throat, the rush of warmth against her ear, a sound like she'd been laced with the venom of a viper. Perhaps she had been indeed. Enchantment and persuasion in an elixir that had no doubt embittered her blood, running its course down to each end of her toes and out her fingertips. The mind which endured the illusion of look but don't touch suddenly became feral under the poison. No, not poison - potion. A spell to which they both added incantation after incantation, each affixed with almost, almost, almost... Evie found herself following the turn of Lady Kara's head, ends of noses dancing like fireflies, two points of light held together by smoke and summer. "You choose your words too carefully," she passed the phrase between their lips, a note handed under the shadows, whispers meant to vanish, "to have ever been taken by surprise."
The lioness's threat was never in the bite. Never in the jaws or the talons. No, it was in the standoff. The roundabout. The stalk. Ambush predators never announce their intentions until the kill is complete. The excitement overtook her, the risk of even chances of being pride or prey. A pair of bewitching lips called to her, close to hers, a siren disguised as a songbird. Once she tasted the satisfaction in a single drop of blood, she knew it would be impossible to resist gulping the lot. "I'm not afraid of anything."
#✮ satin daggers & sovereign blood ˏˋ°•⁀➷ the art of war wrapped up in a woman (threads) ✮#✮ satin daggers & sovereign blood ˏˋ°•⁀➷ int: evangeline huntington ✮
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acelya regarded him now the way one might regard a painting long after everyone else had walked away — with unhurried curiosity and the patience to watch something shift. “mm,” she murmured, swirling her glass once, the liquid catching the light like bruised silk. you think I’m dangerous? he’d asked — and she didn’t answer right away. not because she hadn’t already decided, but because she wanted him to sit with the possibility. “i think,” she said eventually, stepping just slightly closer, her perfume threading into the air between them — cedar, smoke, something dark blooming beneath it, “that danger doesn’t always look like a blade. sometimes it looks like someone who’s stopped pretending not to bleed.” she looked at him then, really looked — and for once, it didn’t feel like a challenge, but something far quieter. something true. “you don’t lie,” she said simply. “and in a room full of thespians, the honest man is always the most unsettling.” a pause. her gaze drifted, catching on a streak of paint like it meant something more than color. when he turned the question on her — no pretence about her? — the corner of her mouth twitched, not quite a smirk, not quite denial. “there’s a difference between honesty and exposure,” she said, voice low, nearly private. “i never said i was unarmed. only that i don’t see the point in hiding the knife.” and then came his answer — i’ve tried swimming for the shore for a long time now… her expression shifted, softened only in the way winter light softens — never warm, but just enough to see by. “then you’re tired.” not a question. not a judgment. just truth, placed gently between them. “but you’re still swimming.” she turned her body fully toward him now, drink forgotten, a rare thing glinting in her gaze — not admiration, not sympathy, but recognition. “and that,” she said, “is the most dangerous thing of all.” her eyes flicked back to the canvas one last time. “storms are loud. they get all the attention. but it’s the ones who survive them that leave a mark.” then, softly again, but firmer this time. “don’t underestimate the ones who stay above water.” a beat. her head tilted. “not even yourself.”
the more that she spoke, the more confused he grew. she had asked him what he saw which was what he said. and now she says that what he sees and what is there is not the same thing? he could not make heads or tails of it. this is why he struggled to wrap his head around art. none of it was as simple as say what you see. there was always something underneath. he knew that she was right, though. too many people of the ton kept on some sort of mask. he just had never really seen the point in doing so. though he didn't know how that would mean that he was dangerous. amos thought of himself as a lot of things - dangerous was not one of them. " you think i'm dangerous?" amos repeated with a curious tilt of his head. "what exactly do you think is dangerous about me?" he couldn't help but be a little bit curious about her observations - what did she see in him that maybe wasn't there for others? "and, i suppose, that means there is no pretence about you?" he countered. she certainly seemed to be someone who was very up front about the person that she was. he didn't like her next question, though. it prodded too close to a question that had been in his own mind - why hadn't he just given up already? "i've tried swimming for the shore for a long time now. i suppose i would continue to do the same."
#✮ satin daggers & sovereign blood ˏˋ°•⁀➷ the art of war wrapped up in a woman (threads) ✮#✮ satin daggers & sovereign blood ˏˋ°•⁀➷ int: amos locke ✮
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a sound — not quite a laugh, not quite a sigh — slipped from her lips, the kind that lived behind closed doors and veiled glances. it hung low in the throat, intimate in the way only truths half-spoken could be. evangeline’s touch didn’t startle her. no, it was the restraint that intrigued her most — the suggestion of contact, the mercy of it. “mm,” she breathed, chin tilting just slightly toward the velvet whisper of evie’s mouth, the weight of her own amusement honeyed and sharp. “you assume,” she murmured, “there was ever a decision.” acelya turned her head then — just enough that their breath mingled in the hush between them. not enough to meet with a kiss they wouldn't speak of, not enough to retreat either. caught somewhere in the charged stillness of two women who both knew how to set a room on fire without ever striking a match. “want,” she said, a slow exhale against the shell of evie’s ear, “is too pedestrian a word for this.” her lashes brushed her cheek as she let the next silence stretch. not to build tension — but to let evangeline feel the exact shape of it. the inevitability. “i did not sit down to want,” acelya continued, finally meeting evie’s gaze again — nothing soft in it now, only velvet stretched over steel. “i sat down to collect.” and in the candlelit hush of that parlor, where shadows curled like secrets and names could be made or unmade on the tongue, her hand finally lifted — one fingertip drawn, featherlight, along the path evie’s hand had taken just moments before. “tell me,” she added, quiet but dangerous, “do you only serve fare you’re afraid to taste?”
It was here Evie allowed herself to swallow in the vision of Lady Kara - the heavy, sleek brow; collarbones jettying out from the gentle rise and fall of her ever-even breath. Words that no doubt gutted worse than a knife, and they were hers to keep. It seemed impossible to be entirely sated and entirely hungry all at once. A duality, like both edges of a sword. Evie was happy to be greedy.
"They sound treacherous," she smirked, "reckless." Floating, as if adrift off the coast of calm seas, forgotten baggage, a hand dropped to the inner slope of Lady Kara's knee, not a force, but a suggestion, using only the ends of slack fingers to submit more space. An invitation to draw nearer, the stage still darkened by its curtains. The sound of her name hushed, a spell cast, a signature on a skipped heartbeat. "Lady Kara," she returned, "I would never do you the dishonor of forgetting."
A satisfaction all its own (restraint) came from refusing to break the veil. Good enough to eat, but too beautiful to taste. "Answer me one question before I do," she whispered, the bow of her lips threatening to overtake the soft lobe of her ear, teeth and all. Poised to feast. "When, before this conversation began, before you indulged in my fare, before you even sat down, did you decide you were going to get what you wanted?"
#✮ satin daggers & sovereign blood ˏˋ°•⁀➷ the art of war wrapped up in a woman (threads) ✮#✮ satin daggers & sovereign blood ˏˋ°•⁀➷ int: evangeline huntington ✮
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“perhaps,” acelya said, her voice delicate as pressed lavender, “but only because it has the good sense to keep secrets.” she did not look directly at isadora at first — only let her gaze skim the length of the path ahead, the glint of dew still clinging to the edge of rose leaves and gossip. kensington gardens always had a hush to it in the morning. too quiet to be innocent, too serene to be untouched by what had passed the night before. when she turned, it was with the careful grace of someone who never gave away more than she intended — but offered just enough to be missed when she withdrew. “though i suspect,” she added, eyes glinting just faintly, “you’re not here for silence.” her gloved fingers brushed a trailing vine, but her attention never left the woman beside her now. miss winters carried herself like something between a lullaby and a warning — a softness that dared to be underestimated. acelya understood the power of that all too well. “so?” she asked, voice dipped in silken curiosity, “am i to believe you’re simply out enjoying the blooms? or is there a name you’re hoping will reach your ears before luncheon?” a beat. a faint smile. not cruel — just... knowing. “after all, no one walks this path without a reason.”

who : @gildedxthorns , lady acelya kara. where : kensington gardens.
the morning was pale and still, the kind of quiet that seemed to hold its breath beneath the broad leaves of the gardens. isadora moved softly among the hedgerows. the breeze shifted, carrying the scent of earth and bloom. and the silence that followed held the weight of things not yet said. not yet felt. beneath that ease, isadora caught the faintest trace of something waiting— some quiet longing or secret ache, precious keepsakes hidden beneath lace and silk.
a presence lingered just at the edge of her attention. it was strange to be noticed so quietly, to have another’s gaze linger without the weight of expectation. acelya moved with a kind of measured freedom, and for a moment isadora envied the lightness that seemed to follow her steps. lips parted, almost without thought. the words soft and low, carrying the barest hint of invitation. “do you find the garden speaks in its own way ? sometimes … i think it listens better than people do.”
#✮ satin daggers & sovereign blood ˏˋ°•⁀➷ the art of war wrapped up in a woman (threads) ✮#✮ satin daggers & sovereign blood ˏˋ°•⁀➷ int: isadora winters ✮#sorry this took so long iheuf<3
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a breath — not sharp, not soft, but purposeful. it filled the space between them like incense, lingering. she didn’t flinch at his confession, didn’t interrupt the unraveling of something deeper than myth or grief. no, she let it echo, let the ghosts of his brothers thread their names between the columns like forgotten hymns. her eyes found his again, and for the first time, there was something almost gentle there. not kindness. never that. but recognition — the kind that didn’t ask for permission. “legends,” she repeated, the word tasting strange on her tongue. “how cruel, then, that history carves names in stone but leaves the living in ash.” her gaze flicked toward his hands — the tremor he thought he’d hidden. she did not look away. “you speak of monsters and sanctuary, but the altar does not judge the blood that stains it. only the ones who kneel.” and then, as if to shift the weight of the moment, her expression shifted with it. not lighter — just different. drier. sharper. “but of course you wouldn’t corrupt this place, not when you still believe you might atone for something.” she took a step closer, her presence precise. not invasive. inevitable. “as for me?” she breathed the question like it bored her. “i don’t compare myself to beauty. i measure what endures.” a pause. her voice dropped, softer now. not intimate, but incisive. “and i’ve yet to find a brushstroke bold enough to hold me.” she turned then, the hem of her dress trailing against marble, movement like a signature left behind. “besides,” she said over her shoulder, “escape implies there’s something to run from. and i don’t run, not even from ruin.”
She is a like a snake in the grass, but even that is too feeble of a comparison for her. The scene is painting with exquisite taste, echoes of tales from holy lessons, but he could not find the words for her. Yes, Thayer waits for her to strike— in plain sight, in this quiet— and yet part of him begs for it. Oh, to be misunderstood meant he could have some grasp of who he was if Acelya taunted him with the wrong interpretation. It was wishful thinking if she could see right through him, even if he tried. He stands at the ready, careful and diligent steps, but he knows he will not come out of this unscathed.
"Familiarity perhaps, but not recognition. My brothers, and my father, became legends. Their names are carved in stone that will protected and carry on for years," He said, slowly following her lead woven between the statues of the gallery. Were they trying to pull him back, or hide her? "It is far easier to die a monster, Miss Kara, than a hero. The war is over. All that's left is to learn to behave again and these hands—"
Thayer looks to his fist, knuckles white to keep the tremor as quiet as he can. It's faint, and hidden once more behind his back.
"These hands have yet to understand there is no need to up in arms anymore. I do not wish to corrupt the sanctuary my brothers laid their life down to protect."
While he loved his father, there is no doubt that Thayer does not mourn him the same. The very blame the people of England place on the old King is one he pins upon him as well. It was him who offered his sons like bargaining chips when they were children. He misses Timothee and Thomas above all else.
"And of what you?" He asks her, a smirk curled if only to tempt away a frown. "Comparing yourself to the beauty, finding new places you'd out to escape to if they were worth the brush stroke?"
#✮ satin daggers & sovereign blood ˏˋ°•⁀➷ the art of war wrapped up in a woman (threads) ✮#✮ satin daggers & sovereign blood ˏˋ°•⁀➷ int: thayer claremont ✮
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her gaze lingered on amos as he spoke — not indulgent, not impressed, but interested. and for someone like acelya kara, that was its own kind of reverence. “a storm,” she echoed, the words almost a whisper, though there was no softness in it. she stepped closer to the painting — not to observe it, but to place herself within the frame of his interpretation. “a boat in the chaos. no shore in sight. nothing to do but weather it.” a slow nod, lips brushing the rim of her glass again before she finally replied, “yes, that’s what is there.” a beat. “but not what you see.” she turned her head to him now, and for the first time, the curve of her mouth sharpened into something resembling a smile — but only in the way a knife can resemble mercy. “you’re not describing the painting,” she continued, voice a silk thread pulling taut, “you’re describing yourself.” the gallery hummed behind them — soft footsteps, the low clink of glass, murmured critiques too cautious to be sincere — but in the space between them, the world had gone quiet. “most of the ton are liars,” she agreed, with the same ease one might agree the sky was blue. “but they lie because they are terrified of what’s underneath the surface. they perform feeling, because the real thing might drown them.” her eyes drifted back to the painting. “you, though…” a small hum at the back of her throat, thoughtful. “you’d rather admit to drowning than pretend to swim. and that makes you dangerous.” she let the silence bloom again, stretching just enough to suggest a dare. then, softly — so softly it almost didn’t reach him — “no,” she said, finally answering his earlier question. “i didn’t come to be seen. i came to see who else was brave enough to stop pretending.” and now, it was her turn. her eyes flicked toward him, a flicker of intrigue behind obsidian calm. “so tell me,” she said, voice dipped in velvet shadow, “if the boat sinks — do you swim, or do you go down with it?”
amos watched acelya as she took in her words. she was truly captivating and he was certainly intrigued to hear what it was that she was going to say. there was something about the women in front of him that told him she wasn't like most of the women of the ton and she would be worth listening to. and as she spoke, he was glad that he had waited, "most of the ton are liars." he nodded. "none of them are honest about what they're thinking or feeling. they just go along with things because that's what they're supposed to do." his tone made it clear how he felt about that. he thought that it was a stupid sentiment that was going to get them all nowhere. "and is that why you're here?" he questioned, "to be seen feeling something?" he already had a feeling he knew what her answer would be. though he was certainly intrigued to hear why she was there. an amused smile slipped onto his lips and he nodded his head as he looked at the painting in front of him. "i see...." he paused. "a storm. a boat out in the ocean caught up in the storm. isn't that exactly what is there?"
#✮ satin daggers & sovereign blood ˏˋ°•⁀➷ the art of war wrapped up in a woman (threads) ✮#✮ satin daggers & sovereign blood ˏˋ°•⁀➷ int: amos locke ✮
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the extinguished flame left a curl of smoke between them — delicate, deliberate, and far too telling. darkness didn’t startle her. no, it welcomed her. kissed the hollow of her throat like a lover who knew exactly where to press their teeth. “amnesia,” she repeated, tasting the word like a foreign fruit. bitter rind. sweet pulp. “how curious…” the air between them had shifted again, but not lessened. if anything, it had grown bolder — no longer strung tight with question, but humming with recognition. acelya let the quiet bloom for a beat longer than necessary. the kind of silence that made you ache to fill it. but she never rushed a thing she could savor. “the forgetful ones,” she said at last, voice dipped in that low, unplaceable accent — velvet with a blade beneath it, “are often the most dangerous. they act with abandon. conviction. they throw matches into rooms just to see what will catch.” she didn’t flinch beneath evangeline’s gaze, nor shrink from the space between them now cloaked in shadow. instead, she let it press in. let the weight of the unspoken settle over her shoulders like a second skin. “but make no mistake, evangeline…” the name slid from her tongue like a secret. “when the smoke clears, someone always remembers. the moves. the murmurs. the moment the line was crossed.” acelya’s hand lifted then — not to touch, not yet — but to trace the air where evie’s fingers had been. a ghost of contact. “so,” she said, the word more breath than sound. “shall we continue to pretend the forgetting is mutual?” and though she remained seated, it felt like she had closed the distance — all firelight and threat, all elegance and eclipse. “or are you ready to admit that we’ve both already begun?”
A beautiful story - perhaps one that at first tasted of blood and ash now held the indulgent flavors of peace ice cream and chocolates. A description that gave part of the game away: a reverence for the play, dedication and respect for the craft. "Someone," she repeated, her voice rich like the chocolate that still lingered on her tongue. "You don't strike me as the forgetful type." Evie dragged her fingers along the table so familiar to her, she could have spelled out the grooves and notches. A territorial move, stopping just short of Lady Kara's hand. Each word licked with fire, caught under the crest of the earth and rumbling like thunder. "I suddenly find myself riddled with amnesia."
Like a mirror, Evie followed - when Lady Kara sat back into her chair, Evie came forward, not enough to even let the ends of their skirts touch, never severing the plane that loomed between them, like the round slope of a peach before lips and teeth broke the skin. Her hands, unrushed, slid over the ends of the armrests beside her, eyes flitting from gaze to lips and back again, as if sizing up a kill. Her shadow cast over the other woman, but it danced, a premonition. A thread of air between the ends of the noses, pulled taut but unmoving. Heat and breath combined into a cocktail of want. But all she did was reach beyond her, fingers slipping just past the razor edge of her cheekbone, and pinched the candlelight out.
#✮ satin daggers & sovereign blood ˏˋ°•⁀➷ the art of war wrapped up in a woman (threads) ✮#✮ satin daggers & sovereign blood ˏˋ°•⁀➷ int: evangeline huntington ✮
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the air in the room had thickened. not with heat, nor humidity, but presence — a charged stillness that clung to every velvet drape, every breath not yet drawn. the parlor had nearly emptied now, but something in the space between them felt fuller than it had all evening. like it was no longer the fire in the hearth warming the room, but the tension strung taut between two predators who knew better than to bare their teeth too early. acelya watched the apron drop with the kind of precision that suggested it was a move meant for her — and maybe it was. maybe all of this was. and wasn’t that delicious? “how does it end…” she echoed, slow and pensive, the pads of her fingers brushing the grain of the table like she was reading it in braille. her gaze lifted again — always slowly, always deliberately — until it met evie’s. no blink. no tremor. “it ends,” she began, “the way all beautiful stories do.” a pause. her voice unfurled softer now, like silk drawn across the skin. “with someone forgetting where the game stops and the wanting begins.” she reached for the candle closest to her, just enough to draw its light up her wrist, letting flame trace the curve of her skin like a whisper. her next words dropped like pearls, unhurried and precise. “we circle. we test. we taste. we never ask outright.” a glance toward the chocolate, then back — sharp, then soft. “and then we tell ourselves it was inevitable.” acelya tilted her head, slow as a moonrise, and regarded evie as if she were trying to decide whether to spare her or claim her. both were dangerous. “you asked how it ends,” she repeated, then leaned forward — not enough to close the distance, but enough to make it feel like gravity itself had shifted in her favor. “perhaps the better question is…” a beat. a glint. “do you want it to?” she let it sit there — the invitation, the challenge, the dare — and then, with feline ease, leaned back once more. your move.
There was no rush, no hurry between them. They could have lobbed banter back and forth for hours, long after the doors were locked, far into the night, and Evie dared to think neither of them would tire. Stamina, another mark of feral lioness power. Her eyes bored into Lady Kara's as she stood over her at the table, inspecting the darkness, the way the light of the candles shone like blades inside them. Even on the outside, she seemed weaponized. Evie smirked, a single chuckle lifting her chest for a moment. "I believe all women are blessed with the gift of bite," she remarked, a controlled lift of her brow, a suggestive tilt of her chin. "Lionesses are the ones that hunt, after all."
Even if the Lady meant harm, as if there could be any gain to the destruction of an already poor family, Evie's unknown name, or the parlor itself, the effort would be fruitless. The store had emptied. The fires almost ready to put out. The kettles poised to be removed. Understanding where she stood, Evie felt her pulse quicken, and part of her prayed Lady Kara had a sixth sense for it.
"A thousand languages," she echoed, reaching behind her waist and pulling the bind of her apron loose with a single, slow tug. She tossed it over the back of the chair opposite Lady Kara, and put her hand on the table. "How does this end, then?"
#✮ satin daggers & sovereign blood ˏˋ°•⁀➷ the art of war wrapped up in a woman (threads) ✮#✮ satin daggers & sovereign blood ˏˋ°•⁀➷ int: evangeline huntington ✮
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acelya regarded her then — truly regarded — the way a jeweler might regard an uncut stone: not for what it appeared to be, but for what it dared to contain. her chin tilted, just a degree, as if angling toward better light. not for her sake. for florentia’s. “in kind,” she echoed, not as agreement but as appraisal — tasting the shape of the words on her tongue before committing to them fully. her fingers, idle moments ago, now traced the stem of her glass with a slow, contemplative motion. “a noble proposal. but dangerous. kind rarely means equal.” the observation was not cruel. merely honest. crystalline and unflinching. “still,” she murmured, and this time her gaze flicked down — briefly, deliberately — to florentia’s clasped hands before rising again, “i find myself tempted to indulge the idea.” the spoon met the sorbet once more, but she did not eat it. instead, she let it hover midair, as though even sweetness required deliberation. the silence that passed between them was a shared breath — not absence, but presence. not tension, but something far more charged. recognition. “the first move,” she said finally, “is not a step.” the spoon was set down, untouched. her hand, however, remained close, fingers splayed loosely against the lace cloth like something poised. “it is a question.” she leaned forward slightly, and in that instant, the room around them — the polite hum of cutlery, the clatter of carriages outside, the scent of pastry and civility — fell away, narrowed to the moment forged between two women who had not come to pass time but to test measure. “a question that makes the other wonder if they’ve already surrendered something… by answering.” a pause. then, as her voice dipped low, there bloomed a rare thing: the echo of delight. not girlish. not giddy. but dark and exquisite, like velvet under bloodlight. “so, lady viscountess,” acelya said, and now her tone sharpened like the pull of a drawstring. “what is it you want from me?” and there it was. the first move. not declared. dealt.
when at last she crossed the remaining distance , it was done without ceremony. only purpose. a single , fluid motion — the fall of skirt and heel softened by the hush of linen and polished floor. she lowered herself into the chair opposite acelya with the unhurried ease of someone who had long ago learned never to mistake haste for decisiveness. hands found one another. centered upon the table’s top. clasped , not folded. “curiosity is no shame to wear. nor silence a fault.” a challenge. set with a raised eyebrow. untouched was the place set for whomever dared to join. the gleaming edges of silver , the glass with its faint chill at the rim. it was not disinterest. it was restraint.
her gaze , level and unflinching , did not stray from acelya’s. not searching. not challenging — simply holding. “it is the loud ones who often reveal themselves first. and most regrettably.” florentia still did not smile , not quite. but edges of her expression softened by the weight of consideration. as if she had turned the words over once already. inspected them for flaw before allowing them free. the silence that followed was not a pause — it was space. deliberate. given and taken alike.
“you say you do not tear apart for sport …” her voice did not rise. instead anchored. placed with the quiet gravity of something meant to settle rather than strike. her tone might not have faltered. but the same could not be said for the air. the subtle shift one feels when the sky darkens before rain , imperceptible yet certain. “then surely ,” she continued , each syllable measured , “if i am to warrant the risk , it must be one we take in kind. would you not say so ?” no ornament in her voice. no plea. only the precision of a truth offered without apology. a pause , deliberate. then the slightest incline of her head — not subservience , but recognition. finely cut. “tell me … in what manner does the first move reveal itself ?”
#✮ satin daggers & sovereign blood ˏˋ°•⁀➷ the art of war wrapped up in a woman (threads) ✮#✮ satin daggers & sovereign blood ˏˋ°•⁀➷ int: florentia rosewood ✮
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acelya didn’t move, not at first. the edges of her mouth curved — not quite a smile, but the memory of one, as if he’d said something that struck bone instead of surface. her gaze remained ahead, fixed on the canvas and all its impossible ache, but her attention… that shifted. wholly. "then it’s a mercy," she said after a pause, soft enough to be mistaken for reverence, "that most men aren’t worth remembering." her glass tilted slightly in her grasp, the liquid within catching the low light like garnet. a calculated gesture, languid and assured, the kind that said she knew her silhouette was already being watched — if not by him, then by someone else. it didn’t matter. it never did. only then did she turn to look at him, fully — the cool gleam of her gaze meeting his with quiet precision. not curiosity. assessment. "you speak of survival like it's separate from worship. but tell me, sir thayer," she said his name like an old title, something she’d dusted off for the occasion. "is it reverence that draws you to marble gods and painted myths? or recognition?" she let the silence settle like ash between them. "i wonder," she added, barely above a whisper, "what you see of yourself in their ruin." acelya shifted then, only slightly — just enough for the scent of rose and resin to trail in her wake, for the sculpted fall of her dress to catch the light again. the gallery murmured around them, distant now, as if the walls themselves leaned in to listen. "or perhaps," she mused, her head tilting just so, "you simply enjoy standing close to beautiful things you're afraid to touch."
"No one will survive art," Thayer counters, stepping away from one of the statues he had dared to doubt was stone at all. He swears, if he look at it long enough, he can see it breath with its thin skin over veins that hands could never carve unless they had created life already. The cut of muscle is too delicate for something meant to sustain. Life could never be held so quietly, or kept so still. As intriguing as it was, as awe worthy, it was daunting above all else.
He recognizes her voice with ease. No matter the outcome of the races, Miss Kara is victorious in her own right.
A shake of his head, his gaze just barely brushes over her before it returns to the work before them— but he is not foolish enough to think she doesn't belong beside it all. Just as he does not touch the artwork, he would not dare to even breathe in her direction.
"Art will outlive us all, and if it does not, it is because man is threatened by it. Most of the figures in these paintings and carvings are long gone, alongside their creators."
#✮ satin daggers & sovereign blood ˏˋ°•⁀➷ the art of war wrapped up in a woman (threads) ✮#✮ satin daggers & sovereign blood ˏˋ°•⁀➷ int: thayer claremont ✮
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his question — careful, almost tender in its delivery — lingered in the space between them, and acelya, who had made a life out of moving through shadows and silence, did not rush to fill it. instead, she watched him as if he were the rare manuscript now. open. breathing. marked by grief’s long calligraphy. when he finally sat, her smile deepened — not in volume, but in depth. a shift beneath the surface. something warmer than before. “a vow,” she murmured, lifting her tea as though weighing its warmth against the weight of his request. she let the word turn over in her mouth, unfurling like parchment touched by fire. “a heavy thing, even in jest.” she sipped once — quiet, elegant — then set the cup down with a grace that suggested nothing in her life had ever been dropped. “but yes,” she said at last, and though the words were simple, they rang with intention. “i vow not to run.” a pause. “not yet.” her gaze swept over him again, slower now, as though memorizing the way he looked when he chose not to hide. when he asked, instead of assumed. when he sat. “and yes,” she added, her voice dipping low, as if speaking it too loudly might dissolve the truth of it. “it gets lonely.” she didn’t flinch from the word. she’d lived with it too long to fear it. “but i’ve never been one to mistake solitude for suffering. the difference,” she said, as her fingers brushed lightly along the edge of her saucer, “is choice. control.” her head tilted slightly, the silver in her earrings catching the light — small mirrors, almost. “and control, as you so astutely pointed out, is its own sanctuary.” a breath, and then —“but tell me,” her tone softened, though her eyes remained sharp, “if you are a man who weathered storms alone so no one else would drown... why now?” her voice, though gentle, didn’t let him look away. “why this café? why this table? why me?” she did not ask it to corner him. she asked it because she deserved to. because something in his presence — some pull toward honesty he could not seem to fight — had asked her to remain. and acelya kara had never stayed anywhere without knowing why. but the question wasn’t a blade. it was a key. and she was willing — if he was — to unlock what came next.
kit had only just met miss acelya kara, but he could immediately tell that she left an impression on everyone she met. the way her gaze lingered, the way her movements were slow — not languid, just unhurried and astute — as if the very sun in the sky held its breath for her and she knew it. he stood in silence — as if he, too, held his breath for her, his cheeks blooming with a light blush as her gaze studied him. “yes,” he added with a nod, “i’ve devoted much of my time to the quiet, perhaps mistaking it for peace and safety. my study is a place where nothing unexpected happens — and if it does, it happens to no one but me. if a storm washes over my study, i’m the only one who will have to face the roaring waves.” kit thought there was simply no way acelya couldn’t read his every thought, access his every dream, and collect his every fear just with her eyes. she wielded so much power, and kit was utterly defenseless before her. acelya’s words had settled over him like fog — gentle, clinging, and impossible to grasp. her words illuminated kit in a light he hadn’t expected, and one that made his chest ache with revelations he’d never had about himself. it was a rare talent, indeed, and one that made kit fidget with his cuff links. a breath as his gaze found hers again — and he was sure she’d see the pain in his eyes that he tried to mask. but, as he’d learned, she could see straight through him, so what was the point of hiding? “loss,” was all he could muster with a nod of his head and his thoughts drifted to his mother. hand over his chest, kit gave her a weak smile. “feeling to me means living — even in the painful moments. but,” he hesitated, “some might say i feel too much.” his brows furrowed and he shook his head gently, ‘so much worth remembering’ — kit didn’t see it that way. he tilted his head to the side, finding each word she spilled to be enigmatic, “the ruins, the edges where most don’t dare to venture — theres strength in that. but does it not get lonely there?” a brow raised, a smirk pulling at one of the corners of his lips, “someone?” a shaky breath as he looked to the chair — then back to her. he pulled it out and slowly sat down, adjusting his cravat once he was settled, “do you vow not to run? at least, not yet?” kit pressed his lips together in an attempt to hide the growing smile that was threatening to betray him.
#✮ satin daggers & sovereign blood ˏˋ°•⁀➷ the art of war wrapped up in a woman (threads) ✮#✮ satin daggers & sovereign blood ˏˋ°•⁀➷ int: kit locke ✮
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