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#oh you know what I should also listen to is 'Pray for You' by Jaron and the Long Road to Love
ereborne · 5 months
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Song of the Day: May 5
"I Hope It Rains" by Jana Kramer
#song of the day#gotta gotta gotta go to sleep so I'll have to make this one quick#very fun silly song! suits my voice well enough but more than that it sounds good with a smile in my voice#'I hope it rains / hope it pours / I hope she's in heels and those little white shorts / you can't find the keys to unlock the doors'#very fun bridge got a solid build to it. enjoyably unashamedly malicious. makes for a good kitchen song!#I did start humming it originally because I was hoping in a purely benign untargeted way for rain#or targeted I suppose but the target is my garden#the song popped in on the heels of the thought though and it is a good kitchen song so it stuck around while I made my soup#tofu puffs and soup dumplings and young mustard greens and yu choy and udon noodles and a ginger-chili-beef broth#very much a throw things in the pot soup but it was so good and I am so happy#oh you know what I should also listen to is 'Pray for You' by Jaron and the Long Road to Love#also enjoyably unashamedly malicious and such fun to sing. bless the ill-will revenge songs with their good building beat#'I pray your breaks go out runnin down the hill / I pray a flower pot falls from a windowsill / and knocks you in the head like I'd like to#I pray your birthday comes and nobody calls / I pray you're flyin high when your engine stalls#I pray all your dreams never come true / just know wherever you are / near or far#in your house or in your car / wherever you are honey / I'm prayin for you'#might've got that 'honey' in the wrong place actually I haven't heard the song in months but the sentiment is there#I'll have to listen to it tomorrow when I'm awake
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enchanted-prose · 4 years
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#13 Feall’s Deadly Dance
I just-
this is chOnky im sorry
Word count: 6, 991 
Characters: Imogen, Jaron, Mott, Harlowe, Tobias, Commander Regar (Original character), Feall Cormeach (original character), the Faola (original character)
Notes: my beautiful editing beta fish said this one was a blast so you have that to look forward to as you read 25 pages worth of ascendance content.
Enjoy!
"I brought you something, Jaron."
Oh, did she now?
His interest was captured. Jaron sat up from where he was lying on the floor. "Imogen, I'm-"
"It's alright, we all have bad days," Imogen said, she handed him a mug, and sat down beside him.
Did he have a good enough excuse for what he did? Probably not. Too much energy pulsed through Jaron's body. It was time to escape. Time to get out.
Taking it out on Roden was all too easy.
It was easier to throw a punch than discuss tender topics.
He was coming to terms with his anxiety by ignoring it. His palms were always sweaty, and his stomach was constantly being squeezed. Something was staring at him right in the face. Jaron scratched the back of his head.
Imogen's hand was on his shoulder, she was there to listen.
"I'll be meeting with Lord Row this afternoon," Jaron muttered. "I have a plan for whatever he asks. A way to help Avenia in any way we can."
"Good, a plan is always good," said Imogen, a tiny smile fluttering across her face.
Jaron lived for those tiny butterfly smiles.
"There's too much waiting in the future. I don't like that I've once again had to bargain with a criminal and I don't like all of this pressure to find Mireldis Thay. I know how it feels to be the lost
royal, and even if she's alive, I'd rather respect her choice to remain hidden. Her name is being
used as a scapegoat, and it's not fair."
Silence settled in. Jaron sipped from his mug; Imogen had brought him some sour tasting tea. The warmth spread through his throat, threatening to overtake the chilling anxiety that hadn’t quite left since he’d returned to court so long ago.
Even if he couldn’t save everyone, he could do what he could to help.
“Do you think I should apologize to Roden for what I did last night?” Jaron mumbled.
A dark curl fell across Imogen’s nose as she shook her head. “I think you might make him mad. Give him a little space, and then apologize.”
An apology was due this time. Jaron had been the one to start their fight.
Uncomfortable emotions tugged at his false sense of normalcy.
He chose to run from what he felt. “Did you know that Jolly has quite the network of people?”
“I did, actually. Amarinda was a little upset when she found out he’d be staying in Drylliad,” Imogen squeezed Jaron’s shoulder. “She fears that many of the people we’ve met aren’t who they say they are.”
“Nobody is who they say they are. We tell people what we want them to think and only show our true faces when we’re alone.”
“That’s not quite true.”
“Oh yes it is, Imogen.”
Anger was rising up in his lungs. Drink the tea, drink the tea. Jaron tipped his head back and didn’t stop drinking the scalding liquid even as it seared down his throat.
It was still hard to accept that no matter how hard he tried to hide, Imogen was there. She was always there with a kind word, and always there with a biting word if he did something dangerous.
But she was welcome.
Everyone’s filled with holes.
When he was removed from his family a decade ago, a Mother sized hole tore through his heart, followed by a Father shaped hole, and a Darius shaped hole.
No, no. It wasn’t a hole, it was a hollow. Hollows could be filled, but not every hole could.
Jaron had a family hollow in his heart for too long.
He was still getting used to having that hollow filled. Still getting used to how Imogen had stepped into his hollow, hollow heart and filled him with warmth.
Sometimes that warmth burst, and he always gave into it.
Emotion was a curse that plagued his family. Too much sympathy, too much energy, too much of everything.
It wasn’t very often that he lost control. In fact, Jaron prided himself on his ability to hold his head high in the face of condescending nobles. They tried their best to use his unorthodox tendencies against him, and he responded with a ferocity that his father, King Eckbert, had lacked.
“I’m sorry, I didn’t mean what I said,” Jaron dragged his hand over his face. “I haven’t been feeling as prepared as I’d like to be.”
Imogen was silent for several moments, then leaned over, and smoothed down Jaron’s hair. “Is there anything I can do to help? As your friend, and your wife, I want to support you however I can.”
There were so many things he needed, but the second somebody asked, he didn’t want to speak of them.
With Imogen, it was different.
She’d seen him at his very best and very worst, there was nothing he could willingly hide from her.
“I, ah, I’m having trouble picking my battles.”
“Which battles? We’ll go through them together.”
Go through battle together. With Imogen at his side, Jaron could do anything. He set down the mug, and reached for her hand. “I’ve been considering my deal with Ayvar, about catching the patched Faola who nearly butchered Feall. There’s too many things I can’t figure out, too many details are missing, and I can’t make a gamble without them.”
“Are there connections you’ve made?” Imogen asked, her head tilting ever so slightly. “There’s more to this than just an attack on a military leader. It reeks of something worse. I think the attack on Feall was very much on purpose; I think it was an assassination attempt.”
“But the motive? What was the motive? Feall has charmed everyone at court, he’s very well liked. It’s very difficult to get a large group of people in on an assassination attempt, and Ayvar’s resistance only proves that.”
“Are we ruling out money as a motive?”
Jaron drummed his fingers against the back of Imogen’s hand. “I think so. Too expensive for a group that large to attack one man. I’m also ruling out robbery, as Tobias, Renlyn, and Mott weren’t harmed on purpose. Any injuries that came were because they fought back.”
The most obvious remaining motive held the lowest moral ground.
Perhaps Feall had been attacked because somebody wanted his head on a pike, because somebody hated him with a fire that could only be put out with Feall’s death.
An attacker thinking like this would find a way to take their revenge, or die trying.
“I’m sorry, I have to stand, it’s hard to-” Jaron began, but Imogen had already sprung to her feet.
She’d extended her hand. “You don’t have to apologize. We’ll walk to the atrium.”
His heart was going to burst.
Imogen didn’t need to hear his excuse. She just knew. She’d grown to accept that his mind worked best while he moved.
There were times when he questioned why he prayed to the Saints, as it was very clear that he was married to one of them.
Arm in arm, Jaron and Imogen left the office, their pace gradually quickening. Fast walking made for fast thinking.
Who on earth would want Feall dead enough to follow him to Carthya?
Memories, memories. Jaron wrinkled his nose as he thought back to when Feall first arrived so many weeks ago.
The Faola had attacked him then too, called Feall by name, who responded in turn. Jaron hadn’t noticed it then. Hadn’t notice how casual the exchange was despite lives being on the line.
Feall knew who his attacker was.
"What are they calling you here? Shrike? The Black Knight?"
"Fight me like a man, Feall. There's a score to be settled."
"Many people want to settle scores with me, you'll have to tell me your name first.”
"Rot in Hell."
“You know that I’m not the one who’ll be rotting with the Devils.”
“Feall insists that the attacker was Mireldis Thay, but I didn’t think it was true. People take powerful names all the time,” Jaron mused, shifting his hand to the small of Imogen’s back. “I’m beginning to wonder if maybe I was wrong.”
The movement was subtle, but Jaron had a trained eye. He saw the tiny flicker of Imogen’s hand as it brushed her left collarbone.
Though her wound had healed long ago, Imogen’s shoulder could never quite forget the pain of an arrow wound. Her ghost pains made the occasional appearance. Jaron trained himself to catch the signs of their return.
He guided her away from the busy hallway, and kissed her fingertips, “Are you alright?”
The smile on Imogen’s face was sharp and bitter, nothing like the shy butterfly smiles she’d been flashing not long ago.
She paused for a moment, her hand hovering over her collarbone. Her hand fell to her side. “I can think of quite a few reasons why- if Feall’s claims are right -Thay would want him dead by her own hand.”
Was it wrong that Jaron nodded his head?
Was it wrong that he knew what that lust for revenge tasted like?
Revenge was easy to justify, it was easy to die for, and it was easy to spiral down the wrong path because of it.
Jaron touched Imogen’s face.
“I don’t want to be coddled, Jaron, I want to continue this conversation,” Imogen rolled her shoulders back. “If Feall is right, then we have to consider where Mireldis is coming from.”
“Mireldis might not be alive, too,” Jaron noted, taking great care to keep his pace slow and even.
“Then we find somebody who’s seen her. Who knows her.”
“I, ah, I can think of somebody who might have our answers.”
“Are we thinking of the same person?” Imogen arched her eyebrows.
He made a face, desperate to distract Imogen from feeling her ghost pains again.“Possibly, but just in case, you say your answer first so I can agree with you.”
“Jolly may have what we’re looking for. He seems to know everyone who ever lived.”
“That’s exactly what I was going to say,” Jaron grinned. He looped an arm around Imogen’s waist. “Perhaps we could pay him a visit. With a list of ballads, of course, I have no intention of listening to Ingrithay ever again.”
“Catchy ballad?” asked Imogen, her hand settling atop Jaron’s.
“Catchy and creepy.”
There was blood in the kitchen,
There was-
No! Not again!
There was a time from long, long ago when Jaron’s father would let him play in the corner of his study. . . If Jaron agreed to be quiet. Eckbert had a fondness for yellow citrus in his tea, and Jaron had a fondness for biting into whatever food he could. There would be no forgetting the way that slice of lemon tore through Jaron’s child mouth.
The expression he wore was the equivalent to the face he’d made after realizing how big of a mistake it was to bite into a lemon.
“Careful dear, your face will freeze that way,” Imogen said, patting Jaron’s cheek.
“But would you still love me if my face looked that way? That’s my real concern,” countered Jaron.
“I’d still love you no matter what way your face freezes.”
“Imogen, you’re implying that my face is going to freeze.”
“I’ve seen the expressions you make while explaining what the nobles request.”
Jaron chuckled, he couldn’t deny that. He’d considered becoming a model for gargoyle expressions. They could learn from the deep grimaces he made when reading over suggested policies.
“Would you still love me if I were a miniscule beetle?” He stepped ahead of Imogen, and held open the door to the massive atrium.
She nodded, “I would, in fact. I’d take care of you and make you a little beetle house and give you little crumbs of cake.”
“Promise me you won’t give me lentils. They’re disgusting and bad for beetles.”
“I didn’t realize beetles had specific diets.”
“They don’t, I just don’t want you to feed beetle me any lentils.”
Imogen set her hand over her heart, “I swear I won’t feed you any lentils in the event that you are magically turned into a bug.”
“A beetle Imogen. There’s a difference.”
---------------------------------------------------
Gold sunset light saturated the entire castle. It almost lifted Jaron’s spirits as he looked over each of his regents.
They all stood as he walked into the throne room, flanked by Mott and Harlowe. He held out his hand, prompting them to sit, and sat down in his cushioned chair. Gold sunset light saturated the throne room. One man remained standing. He flashed a small grin at Jaron.
Lord Thomas Row was wearing a splendid hook, but aside from that, wore almost the same clothing that he’d worn the day before. His braided black hair was pulled back into a ponytail, and adorned with a series of elegant beads.
He stood out among the richly dressed regents.
“Your Majesty, I once again must thank you on behalf of Avenia for assisting us during this time,” Row said, bowing deeply.
Jaron dipped his head, “It’s what anyone would do for an ally; for a friend. I’m prepared to hear what you’ve come to say, and I’m prepared to give Avenia aid in any way possible.”
With some exceptions, of course. Jaron refused to turn to dishonesty for as long as he could, he’d seen what happened when somebody was afraid to face the truth.
He’d been a victim of what happened when somebody was afraid to face the truth.
“We pray that all is well in Avenia,” Harlowe said. “Please, tell us of Avenia.”
The regents leaned forward in their chairs; Row rolled his shoulders back. “Your Majesty, regents, Sir Mott, I bring news of mixed success. I am proud to say that the southern region is doing well, we’ve allowed everyone an opportunity to learn to read, and in turn, our now literate farmers have been able to bring us economic success with their imports and exports.
“We’ve seen this pattern throughout the entire country, although this progress hasn’t spread easily through the northern regions. This is where we come for Carthyan aid, King Jaron. There are rumors of revolution in Isel. We haven’t found the cause of these rumors, though we suggest they were put into Iseli heads by an outside source, likely Gelynian or another outside source.
“King Aranscot has long envied Isel and its value. King Kippenger’s reign is still much like an unsteady colt stumbling through its first day, it wouldn’t take much for King Aranscot to topple the entire regime, and plunge Avenia into darkness once again.”
“Are you requesting military assistance, Lord Row?” Jaron asked, his hands clasped in his lap.
Row shook his head, “Not to that extent, your Highness. King Kippenger would feel much better knowing there is at least a small Carthyan presence in Isel.”
Ah, yes, Carthyan influence.
If Jaron played his cards right, he’d be able to fulfill Kippenger’s request without causing any offense. He wouldn’t be able to send Roden, his reputation preceded him, and Roden’s presence would likely invoke more fear than peace.
But if he placed a noble there, one with enough popularity, that could bring Kippenger a new sense of ease.
Renlyn Karise’s name bounced around in his head.
She’d be a valuable asset to Isel, she had property there, and enough power to hire her own army if needed.
However, Renlyn was a good friend to Imogen, and Jaron didn’t have the heart to sever that relationship.
Jaron felt a frown tug at his lips. He scanned the regents, trying to find Tobias for support. “Could you see this unease growing into a call to arms against King Kippenger?”
Tobias gave the slightest nod of his head.
“Perhaps, although we’d rather be safe than sorry, Avenia’s armies would be able to handle the insurgents should any fighting arise,” explained Row. “We hope that Carthya’s presence would be enough to stifle any more talk of revolution.”
“Hope might not be enough, but I am willing to take that risk in order to keep the peace.”
“Your Majesty, please understand that Avenia wants no more war, we fear bloodshed, and we fear the implications it would bring to every realm near the Eranbole sea.”
“I see your concern, Lord Row, and I will do my best to ease this fear,” Jaron held his hand over his heart. “I sense there’s more you have to say?”
Row shifted on his feet. “We’ve heard rumors that Mireldis Thay is in your custody, and though King Kippenger finds chasing rumors the work of a child, he does like to be informed. Is this true?”
Now it was the regents’ turn to all shift in their seats. Harlowe looked to Jaron for permission to speak, “I’m afraid we have only rumors about Lady Thay. There is nothing to fear, the young woman in Carthya’s protection is a bandit named Ayvar.”
“Ah, what a pity, I suppose,” Row sighed, and he held his hook in his hand.
Mott frowned, “Your reaction is vastly different from what’s common.”
“I’ve never been one to accept information without picking it apart.”
“If only more people were like you then, Lord Row,” Jaron said. “However, we are here for Avenia’s sake, not Mireldis Thay’s.”
“You are correct, your Majesty.” Once again, Lord Row bowed. “I shall leave you to discuss my nation’s matters with your regents, but I must ask that you do so with speed. I will not see my people suffer and a nation overthrown because of bureaucratic loopholes.”
Jaron didn’t bother hiding his smirk. It was no secret that Carthyan kings rarely got along with their regents. “My word is final, and my regents understand that.”
“I trust your judgement, King Jaron. If you would wish to speak with me, you know how and where to find me.”
“We will send for you the minute the King’s council has come to an agreement,” Harlowe promised. “Thank you for your time, Lord Row, and take care.”
“Your concern is reassuring, Lord Harlowe. I eagerly await the King’s response.”
The throne room remained silent as every pair of eyes watched Row walk away from them. He might not have been born into his title, but he carried himself with pride.
He carried himself with dignity.
“Your Majesty, I know we have an agreement with Avenia, but-,” began the infamous Mistress Orlaine, who would’ve lost her position as regent ages ago if Jaron didn’t care for his public image. She had the means to turn people against him, and Jaron couldn’t have that.
“But nothing, they are our ally, and if they need help, we will help them,” Jaron cut in. “If my father had been more willing to take action, we wouldn’t be in this mess in the first place. We will stand united in kindness and honesty, not through going back on our word.”
“We can’t send military aid, not without angering King Aranscot, he would think that we are preparing to rise against him,” Harlowe mused. He stroked his salt-and-pepper beard, obviously thinking of a solution.
Jaron drummed his fingers on his knee, “I will think of something, but whatever we do, we must do what we can to help King Kippenger.”
“Why be kind to them? They’re a nation of thieves,” spat another regent, Master Termouthe. “We must honor tradition, your Majesty. Without tradition, we are nothing.”
“And I acknowledge that, Lord Termouthe, I do, but traditions and times change. A nation of thieves cannot change on its own, King Kippenger deserves our support, and it would be selfish of us not to share what we have.”
The regents were becoming fussy. Another elderly mistress grunted. “We could be sharing what we have with our people. Your disregard for royal luxury is fuel for gossip.”
“And yet, I find that facing gossip is much better than leaving men and women to starve in the streets,” Tobias butted in. “This is a matter of Avenian policy, not an opportunity to scrutinize personal choices.”
“Bold words coming from-,” Termouthe’s sentence never finished.
People rarely finished insulting statements when Mott fixed a glare on them.
“Then it’s settled,” Jaron stood up from his chair. “We are sending somebody to Isel to keep the peace. I will call another meeting when I have made my choice.”
Termouthe, Orlaine, and the other dissenters kept their eyes glued to the ground.
“Lord Harlowe, Lord Branch, Sir Mott,” said Jaron, clasping his hands behind his back. “I would very much like to discuss our options in private.”
“You are dismissed,” Harlowe gestured from the regents to the wide, open doors.
Each regent stood, bowed, and walked out a little too slowly for Jaron’s taste. They were trying to stay and hear what he had to say.
But they would hear nothing that would advance their agendas.
“Mott, do you know anything about Commander Regar? Did you talk to him at all?” Jaron asked, pacing from his throne to Tobias’s chair, to Harlowe, and back to his throne. “Is he still here?”
Mott set his ankle on his knee, leaning back into his charge in the process. “I spoke with him as best I could, but I know him, Jaron. He’s clean.”
No matter how much time Jaron spent with Mott, there were still so many things he didn’t know about him.
“Don’t you find it odd that Lord Row asked about Mireldis Thay?” Tobias pointed out. He was sitting almost as straight as the back of his chair. “I doubt Row has ever met her.”
Commander Regar.
Regar, Regar, Regar.
Saints be cursed, something was staring at him right in the face. Jaron was smart, why was he still struggling with this puzzle?
“I’ll have to add that to my list of questions,” Jaron grunted.
Tobias shifted, “List of questions?”
“Imogen and I have an idea that a mutual friend of ours may know more than we’d expect. We’re going to pay him a visit.”
“He plays a lute and wears colors that murder the eyes, doesn’t he?”
Jaron nodded, “You’re correct, and I will come back with answers, or I won’t come back at all.”
A bold promise, but Jaron knew what he was capable of. His mind was beginning to get ahead of him, he was dreaming of all the possibilities awaiting him.
Perhaps he was wrong about everything, and there was no need to have an entire gang of morally grey thieves be thrown into the dungeon.
Or maybe he and Imogen were right. Maybe Mireldis Thay had come to Carthya with every intention to slaughter Feall, or die trying.
A crime punishable by death.
“Jaron, I do hate to backtrack,” Harlowe inhaled. “But I would propose that we station a small company of soldiers in Libeth, just in case the situation in Avenia goes wrong. It would be much easier to mobilize forces from there than from here.”
“That-, that’s not a half bad idea, actually. Ah, Harlowe, you’re far too brilliant to be working with these regents.”
“As are you, my king.”
Jaron waved the comment away, “I’ll speak with Roden about moving soldiers. Aranscot will likely figure our movements out, but he has nothing to do with the unrest in Isel, then he’ll leave us alone. If he does have something to do with the unrest, then we have our answer.”
“Isn’t it nice when things are straightforward?” Hummed Tobias, who’d begun rubbing his temples. “We’ll be able to move onto our next item of business once the troops are placed, there won’t be any secrets about it.”
Any secrets.
Several of Jaron’s policies were ridiculed by many of the regents. They mocked the way he kept things in the open. But it was because of honesty that Carthya was beginning to thrive.  
“Is the castle going to be involved in this year’s Blackberry Night?” Tobias was chipping away at every detail he could.
“I’ll think about it,” Jaron shrugged. “We’ve had a festival already, and Blackberry Night gets a little too wild for my taste.”
“The festival was weeks ago, Amarinda and I could coordinate it, and maybe it’ll draw in-“
“I said I’d think about it, Tobias.”
There were grander things to worry about than a party. Things with more benefits than gaining favor with regents who’d hate Jaron til either he died, or they died.
Mott accompanied him as he excused himself from the tiny meeting. They’d formed a pact in the dead of night not long ago to check in on Feall after the recent attack. They’d also both agreed to keeping Tobias indoors for a few days. Both Mott and Jaron clung to their promises for as long as they could, but eventually Amarinda left with Queen Danika’s investigators to search for Mireldis Thay, and nothing on earth could keep Tobias from going with her.
Mystic and Mott’s mare were already saddled and waiting to be ridden.
“Market day is going to happen shortly before the Morning of the Saints,” Mott said as he and Jaron stepped into the castle courtyard.
“Are you trying to start a debate about my church attendance with me?” Jaron countered. He had enough on his mind. Mystic stamped his foot as Jaron swung into the saddle. “You’re just like Imogen.”
“On the contrary, I’m only stating a fact. Market day technically is starting before the Morning of the Saints.”
“Too many holidays, too little time. I’d like to take a nap for a month or two.”
Mott clicked at his mare, leading the way out of the courtyard. “You’re doing a good job, Jaron. There’s a lot to deal with, and you’re doing your best.”
“Thanks,” he mumbled.
He didn’t want to admit how much he valued Mott’s approval.
Jaron uttered a silent prayer of thanks; he’d left his circlet behind, which meant he didn’t need to nod at each person who bowed to him. The streets were almost crammed, but not enough to render travel useless.
“You know, I’ve been thinking about all of these holidays,” Jaron grinned. “Maybe I should set aside a day where I can forget about my duties and remain calm.”
“There’s nothing stopping you from doing that now,” Mott guided his horse a few steps closer to Jaron. A carriage thundered past.
They were nearing the middle level of Drylliad, it wouldn’t be long until they were at the lower levels. Feall would have to be there somewhere.
“You know what, you’re absolutely right.”
“I typically am, people don’t like listening.”
“That’s because your version of ‘right’ isn’t nearly as fun as mine.”
“Strange, I’d thought my version of ‘right’ was better than yours because it typically means you don’t return to the castle with a black eye.”
Jaron inhaled deeply and leaned as far back as he could, his face turned to the sky. He couldn’t think of a response, as Mott’s argument couldn’t be countered without sounding like a blithering fool. Instead, he groaned.
“That’s what I thought,” Mott chuckled.
Children with bandages on their feet darted across the cobblestones, chasing after a striped lizard. A woman’s fashionable right boot flew through the air, caught by a pair of grubby child’s hands. Girls in tattered red rags waved from shattered windows. Lower Drylliad was often forgotten by nobles.
They didn’t want to get their hands dirty.
Didn’t want to help those born into a pigpen.
Mott sat a little straighter in his saddle. “This seems more like Roden’s route.”
“I think they switched patrol times,” Jaron racked his brain as he struggled to remember the last time Roden had told him about what he was up to. “With Feall patrolling during the day, it keeps him safe from his attacker. And Roden was very keen on being able to spend his afternoons either beating me at sparring or teaching Nila how to properly use a sword.”
“Probably makes it easier to avoid you, too.”
“Very true, which isn’t really that great, as I’ve been meaning to-,” Jaron gagged, “-apologize to him.”
“Consider me impressed, I know how much you hate doing that.”
Feall wasn’t far ahead, his jacket rested on his shoulders, dirt stained his white shirt. He waved. A large man with a full scarlet beard was gently tossing some of the children into the air. Jaron recognized him; Commander Regar was too massive to forget
“Have you come to visit me?” Feall joked. “Commander, show some respect to the king.”
Regar nodded his head to Jaron and Mott, nodded to the children he’d been throwing, and stood by Feall.
A man sized like Regar would have no problems holding his own against three men.
“We did, but unfortunately, I forgot to bring you flowers,” Jaron wiped away an imaginary tear. “Have you had any trouble, Feall?”
He shook his head, “Not exactly, I did have to separate a pair of urchins as they fought over a shoe.”
Regar gave no comment, which annoyed Jaron to no end.
What was it with people and not reacting to anything?
“Was it a woman’s shoe?” asked Mott, gesturing to the howling children several steps away.
“Yes, yes it was. I suppose if they aren’t bashing heads into the ground over it, they can play with it. Did you really come to check in on me, or is there something wrong?”
Jaron frowned, “Have you done something wrong?”
Ha! Regar coughed! That was almost as good as a biting comment!
“Not that I can think of,” a strand of long, dark hair fell across Feall’s forehead.
“Then we came strictly to check in on you, I’d hate to see a friend of mine come to harm. Again.”
Mott scoffed something about friends and harm, but his statement was almost too quiet to hear.
Feall raised his eyebrows, “Is that true?”
“Is what true?”
“Am I your friend, King Jaron?”
“I suppose so. Be careful, though, I do have bold requests of my friends. Mott thinks they’re ‘a danger to everyone’, and that I’m ‘going to chip somebody’s tooth’,” Jaron made sure to look Mott in the eye as he said so. “Consider yourself invited the next time I try to use a shield as a sled.”
“I’ll make sure to be-,” Feall stood straight, his sentence trailing off.
“Your Majesty, you may want to get away from here,” Regar muttered.
There were no more children shrieks.
His hand was resting on his sword hilt seconds after he recognized the unnatural quiet. Jaron squinted at the alley nearest to him, struggling to decide if the shadow he saw was because of a pile of trash or a lurking person.
“Where’s your horse, Feall?” Jaron murmured, his eyes locked on the shadow.
“Tied up in a stable, wasn’t in the mood to have her stolen from me,” Feall slowly unsheathed his sword. “I’m sure there’s a reason for the sudden silence.”
Jaron rolled his shoulders back, “I’ll dismount, Mystic won’t fit both of us.”
His feet hit the solid cobblestones, the sound echoing across the street. The only sound accompanying them through the streets was the constant clip-clop of horses’ hooves.
What a foolish idea, riding out to lower Drylliad.
What an even more foolish idea, letting Feall continue to patrol the streets despite having a target on his back.
A familiar sensation bubbled in his stomach. He’d grown up on tales of witches and their poisonous brews. Perhaps there was a tiny witch hiding inside him, using his insides as ingredients for her malicious magics.
Every so often, Jaron glanced back over his shoulder. There were too many things that could’ve caused the sudden wave of silence. Too many reasons why the street was suddenly lifeless. There were no girls in red waving from their windows, no children throwing discarded boots at each other, and no men with dirty blindfolds begging for money.
It was bad news when children hid.
It was even worse when the beggars vanished.
Mott scanned each alley. Jaron looked over his shoulder. Feall checked both sides of the street.
But nobody looked ahead to see the patched bandit in front of them.
“A pity, you should’ve told me there was a gathering!” Called out the patched Faola. His voice was rougher than before, and his saber looked a little worse for wear. “I’ve been told I’m the life of the party!”
Jaron’s hand shot out, gripping Feall’s upper arm as hard as he could.“Don’t do anything stupid.”
“I know it’s you, Mireldis Thay!” Feall stepped forward, breaking out of Jaron’s grasp. “I had my doubts, but your foolish note to Oberson confirmed my suspicions!”
“I wear only my name, and nobody else’s.”
Feall’s face fell.
The Faola bowed, “Your Majesty, Sir Mott, I humbly ask that you step away. This is, well, a matter of personal business. Don’t take offense when I say I don’t know you well enough to clash swords with the pair of you two.”
“I have to humbly ask you to step away,” Jaron countered. “It’s rude that you haven’t told me your name yet, I’m reduced to calling you Patches as your friend Ayvar does. Patches is the name for a household cat, not a sadistic murderer.”
“Sadistic? You’d see things differently if you asked the right questions.”
Mott dismounted as the banter continued, he too had drawn his sword. “What right questions?”
“Questions like-,” the Faola shrugged, his hood drawn low over his face. “Questions like why- ah, they don’t matter. Nothing will distract me from my chosen path.”
“Disappointing, I do love to talk,” Jaron frowned.
“Coincidentally, I do too when the cards are right.”
“Then maybe we should deal out new hands.”
It was unnerving, watching the Faola press a hand to his stomach and cackle. “You can’t get a new hand in this game.”
“Says who?” Jaron dug his foot into the cobblestones, risking a tiny glance at Mott.
The Faola only appeared to be one person, it was all too likely that there were multiple hiding in the alleys. There was a tiny chance that Roden had begun patrol early, and would come galloping to the sounds of a sword fight.
However, that had already worked once, and it was unlikely that the Devils wanted to play the same trick.
“Buy time,” Mott hissed.
Jaron stepped forwards again, “I don’t know your quarrel with Lord Feall, but I won’t let you shed any more blood in my city.”
Was it a coincidence that the Faola took a step back each time Jaron took one forward?
“You’re no king of mine,” barked the bandit.
“Then why are you retreating?”
He knew he shouldn’t have mentioned the Faola’s subtle retreat. The Faola roared, and flung himself forward, his saber moving with blinding speed. Jaron bellowed back and parried one of the Faola’s blows.
Though the saber was a slimmer weapon, the Faola’s tendency to leap out of the way kept Jaron from landing any debilitating blows. He lunged forward, and the Faola scurried backwards. With his sword raised, Jaron gathered his strength, preparing to sweep across the Faola’s middle.
That would put an end to things.
Feall and Mott were rushing to assist him. Regar, however, stood by Mystic and Mott’s horse, watching the fight from afar.
He wasn’t expecting it when the Faola pressed the inner curve of his saber to his leather gauntlet, and charged forward.
Jaron brought his sword crashing down on the Faola’s saber, locking both of their blades together. Mott and Feall were almost near enough to land a-
The world around him turned to pudding. Where was Commander Regar? Where was his mighty longsword and his skull crushing hands?
The Faola had delivered a sharp kick to Jaron’s upper right leg, sending stars across his vision. Where was Commander Regar? Where was his mighty longsword and his skull crushing hands?
“The King!” Feall shouted. “Mott! Regar! Get the King!”
“I can hold-!” Jaron tried standing on his right leg, but the overwhelming urge to vomit his entire day’s worth of food forced him into a loss.
Regar bounded away from the horses, his longsword in both of his huge hands. The Faola only ducked under his mighty arms, and did his best to strike a blow at Feall.
The Faola froze at the sight of Regar, the tip of his saber clinked against the ground.
Mott held his sword extended as he dragged Jaron back to Mystic, “We have to get you out of here!”
“Let me go!”
“You hold priority!”
“That doesn’t mean anything!” Jaron roared, shoving himself away from Mott. If he just stood with all of his weight on his left leg, he could still fight!
All it took was a step closer to Feall and the Faola to make his vision burst with white lights.
The world had turned to jelly, to pudding, to sludge. All Jaron knew was that he no longer retained a crisp sense of the air around him. Everything was too warm, too sticky.
His hair was sticking to his forehead. His insides were sticking to each other. His hands were sticking to his sword.
Was he going to be sick all over Mott?
The sword fell from his hands; Mott was shoving him onto Mystic. Bits of conversation drifted through his cotton hearing. He could sometimes see Feall and the Faola’s outlines against his holy-white vision.
It was almost like they were dancing together.
Feall was ever the gentleman, allowing the Faola to always strike at his head. He always returned the gesture with a hard swipe to the Faola’s middle.
“This is a bit-!” Feall ducked. “Below the-!”
The Faola jabbed his sword low, and sadly, Jaron didn’t catch the last part of Feall’s witty retort.
He clung to Mystic’s reigns, his eyes searching for Mott. The whiteness was fading, replaced with unnatural blues.
Mott would guide him to safety.  Mott would keep him safe.
“Jaron, ride ahead,” Mott urged. “Keep it slow, I’m going to get Feall out of his mess. Blink if you-”
Jaron didn’t need to blink, he only urged Mystic forward and tried not to vomit into his own lap.
Horse hooves clattered against the pavement in an odd compliment to clashing swords. Somebody was ordering Mott away; ordering him to consider himself and that he’d only make the close fighting quarters even tighter.
The Faola ducked beneath feall’s blade, twirling away from both Mott and Feall like a little girl in a new dress. Sounds of battle were dying. The fight was a music box, twinkling down to its last plink of a note.
Mystic tottered forward.
Straining, Jaron peered over his shoulder, looking just in time to see the music box’s final plink.
The Faola swiped the saber across Feall’s chest, missed, and kicked him in the stomach. Feall went tumbling to the ground. The Faola stood above his opponent, gloating words lost to Jaron’s pudding hearing.
But it was Regar who earned the last plink.
Tossing his sword to the side, Regar barrelled into the Faola. “Get them to safety! I’ll cover you!”
“Let me go!” The Faola shrieked, pounding his fists against Regar’s back
Regar let the Faola slide down his back. The Faola anticipated the fall, and rolled to his sword. He swung as hard as he could, but Regar caught the saber blade with his gloved hand.
Mott tugged Feall onto his saddle, leaving the Faola to his fate.
A sad finale to a short dance between Feall and his lethal partner. Jaron leaned over and vomited. He didn’t hear whatever it was that Mott was saying as he limped them all back to the castle.
All he could think about was that dance of life and death. It was a dance he’d performed himself. He’d seen somebody dance that way before- all jumping and twirling. The dancer’s name was just out of his reach. Knowing that the name was there was enough.
They were strange musings, but it was worth it to avoid vomiting again.
It was the musings of a man in too much pain to see straight.
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