Tumgik
witsyo · 3 years
Text
staff​:
subscribe to technoblade
1M notes · View notes
witsyo · 4 years
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Been sketchin'
2 notes · View notes
witsyo · 4 years
Photo
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
a commission i drew for the wonderful @crushingonsans of her OCs. it was a nice challenge to work on non-fandom stuff and i had a lot of fun figuring them out! 
11 notes · View notes
witsyo · 4 years
Text
if you dont like oc stuff block the tag “oc crap”
okay so i was talking with @witsyo about a BlueRaspberry/Tabbace AU with her ocs Blue and Razz and my ocs Tab and Wally
cause see… Tab and Wally are the essential blue collar couple. Tab works at a wood factory, Wally works as a construction worker. They have a kid named Clarity who is the light in their lives. They don’t have a lot to their name, but they have each other.
Blue and Razz are a powerhouse of a gay couple, for being straight. Blue is a force of nature and Razz is the sweetest guy you’ll ever meet. They take care of each other, whoever needs it, and they love each other so goddamn much.
so of course i ship the four of them :3
5 notes · View notes
witsyo · 4 years
Text
Reinne 13
Just after Halle had died, Basille had made a request for more roses to be planted in the palace gardens. She’d been able to see the gardeners as they got to work fulfilling her request, and had gone down to see the bushes as soon as they were in the ground. They hadn’t been blooming when she’d gone, but she’d made plans to see them as soon as they were. Because of the king’s orders and her later injuries, however, this was the first time she was actually seeing them in all their beautiful glory.
She was finally healed enough that the king had granted his permission for her to leave her rooms, and the moment word had come, she’d gathered her skirts, excitedly looking to Malak in anticipation. He’d laughed and called for her maids, to her disappointment, but she knew he was right. It wouldn’t do to make the king think he was being shamed by her waltzing about the palace grounds in peasant’s clothes. She was still the queen, after all.
The moment she’d stepped foot outside, hair curled and properly dressed, she’d made a beeline for this corner, Malak having to trot to keep up with her.
The gardeners had gone above and beyond with the request, and the beautifully arranged buds nearly brought tears to her eyes. Halle would have loved them, she thought. The myriad of colors was all the memorial she ever could have hoped for.
Carefully, she stepped onto the wood that encircled the plants, lifting her skirts with one hand to prevent herself from tripping. With the other, she cupped a particular blossom, stroking the petals softly before all at once burying her nose in the center and taking a deep breath. Immediately, she sneezed, pulling back to avoid ruining the flower as she sneezed again, then again, all in quick succession.
Behind her, she heard a familiar laugh, and turned with a smile to see Reinne approaching. “I’ll thank you not to laugh at your queen.”
Reinne bowed deeply, the smile still plain on her face. “Yes, your majesty.”
“What brings you?” Malak asked, looking at his partner in confusion. To Basille’s knowledge, her guards weren’t meant to switch until after dinner, and by his expression, she assumed he was thinking the same.
“General Byron requires your presence,” she said as she straightened. “He’s a few men short on his patrol. I’ll take over your duties until tomorrow morning.”
Malak nodded sharply, then turned back to Basille, bowing just as Reinne had. “Excuse me, your highness. I am required elsewhere.”
She smiled fondly. He really was an earnest man, seeming much younger than he was at times. “Of course. I wish you safety.”
“Thank you, your highness.”
As he left, Reinne assumed his position, hands clasped behind her as she watched Basille turn back to the flowers. They stood in silence for a few moments, Basille smelling the blossoms at a safer distance this time, until Reinne suddenly spoke.
“Are these for Halle?”
“Yes,” Basille answered, smiling happily down at the latest bloom, a dark purple that reminded her of the shirt Reinne usually wore. Following the thought, she turned around, squinting at the shirt in question before holding out a hand. “Come, I want to compare these colors.”
Reinne furrowed her brow, but stepped forward, allowing Basille to take her by the arm and hold her sleeve against the richly-colored petals. The match was slightly off, the flowers a little bluer than the cloth, but it was still close enough to make her grin in satisfaction.
“You know, Halle’s sister was Banamoran,” she said suddenly, letting Reinne have her arm back. “They had different fathers, and Halle came here in the hopes of finding her sister’s father. He was a nobleman from their country.”
“Did she ever find him?”
“No, I don’t think so. As sad as it is, he had likely passed on before she took her station. Didn’t you say that your grandfather was from Banamore?” Reinne nodded, and Basille continued, happily tracing a finger over the petals of the rose. “Perhaps the two knew each other. They would have been of an age, I’m sure.”
“I doubt it,” Reinne said with a grin. “My grandfather was a foot soldier. He’d have had no reason to know a nobleman.”
“You’re a foot soldier,” Basille commented. “And I’m the queen. Yet, we have met.”
Reinne laughed, the sound clear and bright. It always brought a smile to Basille’s face, and she found herself suddenly entranced by the flash of the other’s smile. She took a step forward, suddenly, leaning in to smell the flower Basille held. Her softly curling hair brushed Basille’s wrist, and she shivered.
“I’m not a foot soldier,” Reinne said, voice still holding a smile as she pulled back. “I could have you brought up on charges of treason for disrespecting the king’s decrees.”
“Oh, could you? I’d like to see you try!”
“I think you’ll find it’s my duty, woman,” Reinne said, biting back further laughter and stepping back into her position of respect.
“Woman?!”
“Was I mistaken in my assumption?”
Basille snorted, shaking her head as she suddenly said, “You know, I think that if I had known you better while Halle still lived, the two of you would have been great friends.”
“She seems to have been quite the woman,” Reinne commented quietly, but when Basille looked up, she was smiling.
“The two of you have that in common.”
“Thank you, but--”
“No buts,” Basille said sternly, considering the flower for a few moments before beginning to pick off the first few thorns. “Do you have a knife?”
Reinne snorted, pulling a hunting blade from its sheath at her waist. “You know, in addition to being your friend, I am still a palace guard. Why do you need a knife?”
“In addition to being the queen, I’m holding a flower that I’ve just de-thorned, Reinne.” Basille couldn’t stop her smile growing as she looked back at the other. The combination of the sunshine, the company, and the flowers were putting her into a better mood than she’d had in months. Despite still being behind the castle walls, she felt free. “Take your best guess.”
Unable to hide the laughter in her eyes, Reinne stepped forward, taking hold of the flower and slicing it neatly just below her hand. Basille, still smiling, dropped her grip to overlap Reinne’s, entangling their fingers around the stem as she said, “For you.”
Something unrecognizable flashed through Reinne’s face, her smile softening for a split second before her whole body stiffened. Confused, Basille let go of her hand, allowing the other to take the flower. Reinne couldn’t seem to look up from the petals, and Basille watched a war fight across her expression.
“Thank you, your highness.”
Basille wasn’t sure what to say for a moment. She was unsure what had just happened, but knew she didn’t like the other pulling back, using her title when they were clearly alone and refusing to look her in the eye. “Please, Reinne, call me Basille. As far as I am concerned, we are equals.”
Reinne took a deep breath, finally looking up from the rose but still not quite making eye contact. “Basille.”
She wasn’t sure what to say for a long moment, but finally settled on, “What’s wrong?”
“Ah,” Reinne said, glancing into her eyes for a split second. “It’s been a long day, is all. I’m quite tired.”
“If that’s all it is, we could go inside. You can sleep in my room.”
She was surprised to see a deep blush appear on Reinne’s face, but the other spoke quickly, her laughing tone at odds with her wringing fingers. “I’m sure if an assassin breaks in, I would be alerted to his presence by the sound of your dying screams.”
“I will choose to be assassinated silently, then, if it will allow you to rest.” A flicker of a smile flashed across Reinne’s face, and Basille shook her head. “Please, Reinne. What ails you?”
This was unlike her, and Basille knew she didn’t like it. Reinne was nothing if not straightforward, and the very fact that she didn’t seem to have the words at her ready was worrisome in and of itself.
Reinne swallowed, again staring at the flower. When she spoke, her voice was breaking. “Your highness, I find myself at quite a loss.”
“Yes?” Basille prodded, watching her carefully. She still didn’t like being called an honorific, but she let it slide, not wanting to discourage Reinne from her thoughts.
“I am… W-when I had just come of age, there was a boy in the city, the son of a friend of my father’s. He was kind to me, and Karlen let me make my own choices, so I allowed him to court me.”
Not having the slightest clue where this could be leading, Basille just watched her.
“There was nothing wrong with him, you see, but I just… he was not…” Reinne seemed frustrated, reaching up to push the fingers of one hand through her own hair as the other arm wrapped itself around her chest, rose still held tightly in her grip. “I-I…”
“Reinne, it’s okay,” she said, stepping forward. Almost of their own volition, her hands jumped to cup the other’s face, and she smoothed her thumbs over her skin. “Whatever it is, it’s okay.”
There was a long moment where they just looked at each other, Reinne’s brown eyes filling with terrified tears. “Basille, I… I have grown too close to you.”
Despite the pain in her chest, Basille asked, “Did Tyrrel hurt you?”
“No! No, that’s not…” Reinne took a deep breath, looked up to the sky in an attempt to get her tears to fade. “The king has not touched me.”
Basille just watched her, slowly letting go of her face and reaching instead to lay her fingers on the other’s arm. “Whatever it is, you don’t have to tell me if you don’t want to. I wish you nothing but happiness, Reinne, and so long as you have that…?”
“I prefer the company of women, your highness.” The words seemed to burst from Reinne’s lips, shame coloring her face as Basille’s eyes widened in surprise. “And I seem to have fallen in love with my queen.”
The words lit up something inside of Basille’s mind, puzzle pieces fitting together to make a picture that, in retrospect, was embarrassingly obvious. It was… gods, it made so much sense. She’d never even considered it. It was incredibly uncommon in Saibhadha, a crime worthy of execution. She supposed she could be excused for not realizing--
“I know that what I am is against the law,” Reinne was saying, words flying from her mouth more quickly than Basille had ever seen her speak. “But I needed to tell you, before I left. I am putting you in danger, Basille, even by standing at your side. I have kept this secret for so long, but I have never had reason for it to be--”
“You’re leaving?” was all she could think to say, mind still rushing.
“Y-yes. Yes, I-I… I am going to go to the king tomorrow, ask him to transfer me to the company of the Banamoran ambassadors. But I did not want to just abandon you without reason, so I--”
“Oh, you…” The words to describe the other’s stupidity didn’t immediately spring to mind, and she glanced over her shoulder. There was a gardener, far out of earshot but not out of sight, and Basille let her hand drop from Reinne’s arm. Then she turned, gesturing quickly and beginning to walk towards the palace.
After a moment of hesitation, Reinne followed, accompanying her through the halls, passing servants and guards until they arrived at her rooms. Basille’s heart was pounding, and as they entered, she jumped at the sight of the maids, arranging her sheets and chatting quietly as they worked. At the sight of her, they all stopped, and, more severely than she’d intended, she barked, “I require the room!”
They exchanged glances, then quickly filed past her, the last of them scampering through and Basille catching Reinne’s arm as she started to follow. “You stay.”
Reinne’s face was growing pale, but she nodded, and Basille gathered her wits about her as the other closed the door behind them and set her rose on the dresser. For a long moment, Basille was frozen, and Reinne just watched her.
“Your highness, I know that I am a traitor to the gods,” she finally said, voice coming out a broken whisper. “But I do not wish to hear that from you.”
“Oh, Reinne…” Basille murmured. “I could not fault you for it if I tried.”
The other’s brow furrowed in confusion, and Basille held out a shaking hand. “When I came of age, I did court men. I have never found fault in their gender alone, but as you spoke, I… Reinne . I am so sorry.” She was understanding her previous hesitation, now, a lifetime of following unfeeling gods stopping the words before they could leave her mouth. “Please don’t leave on my account.”
Reinne’s head inclined, and she said, “Basille, I appreciate this. I thank you for your kindness, but I don’t think you understand. I have to.”
“I think that I understand better than you know,” Basille said, finally summoning her courage and stepping forward, taking Reinne’s hand in her own and lifting it to her lips. She felt the other’s fingers light on her shoulder as she pressed a kiss to her other palm, and Reinne’s breathing grew uneven.
When Basille looked up, the other was staring at her in disbelief. How could Basille explain? That her words had put meaning to the feelings that had been growing inside her for so long? That even from the first moment Basille had seen her, there had been a sense of admiration she had never before experienced. That she…
“Reinne, in the event that you choose to stay,” Basille murmured, “I should hope that you believe me when I say it would bring me great happiness. I would never think to betray you.”
Letting out a short laugh, Reinne shook her head, wide eyes staring into Basille’s own. “I want to protect you.”
“I don’t think even your leaving would do that,” Basille said dryly. “You put me in no more danger by staying than I would be in without you. Can I ask you, instead, to stay by my side?”
“Basille…”
“It’s a request, not a command,” she said quickly. “As much as I… your life will be in danger. It’s selfish of me to even ask, but… Reinne, I think that I may be in love with you.”
Reinne blinked, long and hard, brows raising, then laughed again, disbelievingly. “What?”
“I love you,” Basille repeated, and she knew that she meant it. “I knew that I felt strongly towards you, but I hadn’t had the words to describe it until you said it. You love your queen? Your queen finds herself returning those feelings.”
They just looked at each other for a long moment, Basille’s heart pounding in fear until she saw the smile growing over Reinne’s face. “Are you sure?”
“Absolutely.”
Pulling her hand from Basille’s grip, Reinne cupped her cheeks with shaking fingers. “And you want me to stay?”
“You make me happy, Reinne,” Basille answered. “Of course I do.”
“This could end very badly.”
“It won’t end well,” Basille said. “No matter what happens, there aren’t many happy endings, and if you do choose to go, you take my heart with you. I won’t fault you, and you are always welcome here when you return to Saibhadha.”
Wildly, Reinne shook her head, starting to laugh as she leaned forward. She hesitated, then drew her into a tight hug. “I thought I had already made my decision, but damn it, Basille!” Reinne pulled back, reaching up and holding her face, laughter creasing her eyes. “How could I go? You really want this?”
“Yes,” Basille said, starting to laugh herself. “How many times must I repeat it?”
“At least as many as it takes to convince me this isn’t a dream.” Reinne leaned closer, searching her face carefully. Her smile didn’t seem to want to fade, and she slowly shook her head. “I would die for you in an instant, Basille. I always would have. And this would… it would bring me great joy, even if it does end badly. Of course I’ll stay.”
Smiling, Basille leaned into one of her hands, looking up at her and wishing that Reinne didn’t have to make such promises. “Reinne?”
“Yes?”
“Would you do me the honor of a kiss?”
Reinne’s eyes grew soft, and she nodded, moving forward to close the distance between them. Their lips met, a gentle press that burned through her like fire. Basille’s grip went to Reinne’s hips, and she felt one of the other’s hands slip down her jaw to rest at the curve between her neck and shoulder.
Breaking apart, Basille felt her face flushing red, and Reinne seemed equally affected, only looking at her for a moment before she buried her face into Basille’s hair.
“I love you,” she said, and Basille couldn’t help her smile.
“I love you, too.”
0 notes
witsyo · 4 years
Text
Reinne 12
Reinne leaned back against the wall, the rickety bed frame creaking below her as she moved. Outside the window, she could see a new contingent of guards practicing, and watched them with a faint smile on her face. There were several of them that she recognized from her home in the city, boys much younger than her, who’s advancement into the ranks of the guard had given her a shocking reminder of the passage of time. 
They were a mess, as they were expected to be, but most of them looked as though they would learn. Given enough time, nearly anyone could, she thought. Karlen had certainly always believed that. 
It was evident enough in his decision to pick up a street rat and turn her into a warrior. 
She started as the door opened, Malak stepping in and squinting at her. “Why are you awake?” 
“I already slept,” she answered, looking at him questioningly. “How long have you been with the queen?” 
“Since the sun set last night,” he said, and she shook her head. 
“You could have summoned me.” 
“Ah, about the time I would have, the king visited. He asked me to stay through the visit, and he and the queen took a turn in the garden.” 
Reinne looked at him, surprised. “Only a walk in the garden? Isn’t that unusual?”
“Why, because the king keeps her at arms length? Yes, except that we currently have Banamoran visitors in the north wing. They arrived last night.” 
That explained the higher activity of guards in the courtyards, and the polished armor on the new men. “I’m surprised I wasn’t summoned.”
“You will be. They're meeting with the dignitaries in a few hours, and I’m going to need to sleep anyway, so you might as well head up to the queen’s quarters now. Did you know that one of the Banamoran women has a wife?” 
Forcing her expression into one of neutral indifference, Reinne asked, “Oh?” 
“Yeah! A woman, not only a representative of their royalty but with a wife of her own! I had heard stories that that sort of thing was accepted in Banamore, but I hadn’t believed it! Imagine a priest being willing--” 
“I hear they worship different gods,” Reinne interjected, swinging her legs off the bed and setting them flat on the floor. “Goddesses, who encourage living freely and who rule over their nature instead of their people.
“Our king may be a cruel man, but at least our gods are sane!” Malak laughed. “I thought the king was going to pass to the heavens themselves the moment he heard of it, but he managed to keep his head, luckily for the queen.” 
“Do you…” She hesitated, the question on the edge of her tongue, one that she knew she shouldn’t ask. Still though, she wanted to know the answer. “Does it bother you?”
“Does what bother me? The Banamorans?” He leaned down, looking into the round mirror set into the wall and picking at something in his teeth. Honestly, he was like an animal. Sharing a room with him was an adventure that never came to an end, but it was better than sleeping on the floor, like many soldiers did.
“No, I think you’ve made your feelings on that clear,” she forced a laugh. “I meant the king. Does… does it bother you, what he does to the queen?” 
Malak froze, and Reinne watched as his knuckles turned white where he was gripping the edge of the wardrobe. He straightened suddenly, sadness in his eyes despite refusing to look at Reinne. “I’ve known Queen Basille longer than she’s been the queen. She grew up a lady on the other side of Saibhadha, and my father was their head guardsman. I was a close friend to her brother, and considered a courtship with her sister before I was offered this appointment. There was a time she might have been one of my own sisters.” He looked up, the sadness in his eyes all the more apparent as they met Reinne’s. “You can’t let it get to you. There’s nothing we can do to stop the king. All we can do is serve the queen as she asks, and keep her safe from the dangers from outside.” 
“It seems useless to protect her from danger that has no evidence of existing when there is danger right now, next to her in the palace.” She could feel herself growing bolder, knowing what she now knew about his history. “I wonder, at times, if the king only has us here to prove to Basille that she is truly powerless.” 
He flinched as Reinne used Basille’s first name, and she cursed herself for the slip, opening her mouth to come up with an explanation before he asked, “You remember Halle, right?” 
“Yes, of course,” she said, not liking where she knew this tangent was going.
“Do you know why she died?” 
“So that the king could hurt Basille,” she murmured, sure in her answer and thus surprised when Malak shook his head. 
“Halle went to the visiting Banamorans, and was going to ask them to take the queen with them as they left. I heard the king gloating of how she never even reached their wing of the palace. If you would like to join her at the bottom of the walls, then by all means. Protect the queen from the danger here. Or do what is smart, and find another way to help. Now get off the bed, I need to sleep.”
Nodding, Reinne stood, letting him crawl below the thin blanket, then abruptly huffing and pulling it away so she could tug off his shoes and throw them into a corner. “I told you not to wear those on the sheets.” 
“If you’re going to be a woman, do it in another room, Reinne. I’m too tired for this.” 
Rolling her eyes, she grabbed her shoes and sword and left the room, shutting the door perhaps a bit louder than was necessary. 
As she made her way towards the queen’s rooms, she found herself lost in thought. The part of her that understood their position knew that Malak was right. The king had so much power, too many guards and too high of an ego. Nothing Reinne could do would make any real difference, unless she wanted to be killed. 
She nodded to the queen’s door guards as she passed, knocking quickly before letting herself into the quiet room. 
Basille turned, smiling when she saw who her newcomer was, and Reinne sighed inwardly. The sunlight streaming through the window lit up her white-gold hair in a shining blaze, glinting off of her eyelashes and making the blue of her eyes clear and bright. Reinne couldn’t pull her gaze from the queen’s smile, or her thoughts from the way the room smelled of her, of the flowers she adored and the perfumed oils that filled her baths. 
Yes, the part of her that was a guard knew there was nothing to be done.
“Reinne! I’m so glad to see you, won’t you come and sit with me?”
There was another part of her, though, that didn’t think twice before nodding, smiling as she crossed the room to look down at what the queen was working on. That part of her already grieved for the pain of trying to do something anyway.
She truly was lost, wasn’t she?
~~~
When Reinne had gone through her things, she’d found a pendant tucked into one of her bags, something she’d stuffed in on second thought when she’d left Karlen’s house. It was the only thing left of her mother, but her mother was a mystery, not so much worth holding on to keepsakes as she was to leave Reinne wondering what of her was in her own face. The memories were scattered, but the ones that stuck with her were the reason she’d kept the pendant for so long. 
The pendant held the symbol of Banamore’s goddess of the sky, Cerulean. Her worship was outlawed in this country, and it was really no surprise when you considered how freely their goddesses let their people live. 
Reinne had taken to wearing it around her neck in the last few weeks, tucked down the front of her shirt where no one could see that she was betraying Saibhadha’s gods. Karlen had raised her to worship them, but she had never really felt their presence. Cerulean, though, Reinne could remember her mother praying to, feeling electricity light her fingertips as her mother spoke. Reinne had been hurt, once, broken her arm and her mother hadn’t had the money to bring her to a medicine woman. Her mother had turned to her father’s gods, and she had claimed they had healed Reinne. 
She wasn’t sure she believed that, but the idea of these goddesses brought with them a strange sort of comfort. They were women. Perhaps they could understand.
It was becoming more common for Basille to ask her to stay as she slept. Usually, that just meant pulling the guard’s chair close, maybe holding her hand like she had that first time. A few times, though, Basille had followed through on her question, asking Reinne to be right beside her. Reinne would always do so, laying on top of the blankets and letting Basille decide how much space was left between them. It always made Reinne’s heart pound, a strange mix of guilt and happiness choking off her breath until Basille’s head rested on her chest. Nothing untoward ever came of it, of course not, but Reinne still felt like she shouldn’t be doing it. 
The only reason she still did was because it helped Basille. There was no denying that she slept more peacefully with someone beside her. Whether she felt safer or was just pretending she was Halle, Reinne had no idea, but she always had to reassure herself of her own motivations. 
She was helping. She was giving comfort, a purely platonic method of soothing someone she knew needed the companionship. Someone that, despite the breach of decorum, Reinne considered to be her friend. 
Reinne was falling in love with the queen. 
It was stupid, so unbelievably thoughtless and selfish on top of the fact that it could get her killed, but there was no denying it. The sight of Basille filled her with warmth, and the curve of her smile appeared too often in her dreams. Every time she saw the other, she wanted to pull her into her arms, bury her face into her neck and let her draw comfort just from the hold. 
Her soul ached just to think of her, of the pain she couldn’t take away and the fact that… well, it was an impossible wish. 
She’d tried to change her thoughts, though admittedly not very hard. It wasn’t a bad feeling, and not one she wanted to get rid of, but to be in love with the queen? 
God, it was just so stupid. 
But the brush of blonde hair on her chin, soft fingers curled lightly into her sleeve, breath running over Reinne’s skin, with the smell of flowers and the sensation of warm affection that filled her heart? It was something like a drug. Reinne was afraid she’d never be able to give it up. She didn’t know if she could hold it back. 
Never in a million years could she imagine hurting Basille, but if she found out? If the king did? It could put them both in danger, no matter that Basille didn’t return the affections. The king would take any excuse to press his advantage over her, and even if by some miracle, he left Basille alone, Reinne would undoubtedly die. 
It felt like the obvious solution, to leave. She’d thought long and hard about it, coming to the conclusion that if she asked, the king would likely be happy to move her to his ambassadors’ company of soldiers. That would put her before the eye of their royalty, help him to further whatever agenda had caused him to hire her in the first place. 
It would seem like abandonment. She couldn’t explain to Basille why she was leaving, so it would seem as though she no longer wished for their friendship. Reinne had no desire to hurt her. She didn’t want to deprive a hurting woman of another of her friends, no matter that Reinne didn’t think she could ever forget her love for her. 
Wasn’t that what love was, though? Doing everything you could to help the other person? Keeping them safe, and doing the best for them? Even if Basille hated her at the end of it, this is what would keep her safe. 
It just ached. 
Reinne leaned over the rail of the bridge upon which she stood. She could see the sun flashing over the water, the cool air soothing her mind and making it easier to think. It’d been a long time since she had come here, since long before Karlen’s death, but it had been her place. The place she’d come any time his wife was overly cruel to her, or when the guilt of loving women threatened to overwhelm her. It was her safe place, a tucked-away pocket of just herself. 
Today, she’d come here to pray, clutching her pendant tightly in her hand and squeezing her eyes shut as she asked what to do. There’d been no answer. Of course there hadn’t, but she couldn’t help but be disappointed. There was no easy solution, no ready-made decision for her to just follow and lay the blame at someone else’s feet. 
There was no way she could just leave. That was such absolute bullshit, and she knew it. Running away under the guise of keeping Basille safe did no good if it put the other in more pain. She knew it would, that her leaving with no explanation would do nothing but hurt the woman she was falling in love with too fast to stop. 
Reinne took a deep breath. 
If she really thought about it, she knew that Basille would never report her. Basille may not approve, she would not return the feeling, but she deserved an explanation, and Reinne didn’t think she could report anyone to the king, especially for an infraction based so deeply in love. That was it, she thought. 
Basille would be safer for her leaving. But Reinne would tell her, before she went. She deserved an explanation.
And Reinne would, for the first time, be protecting the queen.
1 note · View note
witsyo · 4 years
Text
Reinne 11
This is one of those really rough chapters, and I’m not going to copy it onto my Tumblr. However, here is the Ao3 link, and there are TW tags there! I’ve included the TLDR below the cut here so that you can follow the story if you’d prefer to stay on Tumblr. 
TLDR (chapter spoilers): Basille has just been beaten by the king, and after Reinne helps to treat her, Basille reveals to her that the king has been forcing miscarriages for any child that isn't a boy. She tried to fight back and that's why he hurt her. She asks Reinne to sit with her until she falls asleep, and right before she does so, she hears Reinne praying to unfamiliar goddesses for her protection.
0 notes
witsyo · 4 years
Text
Flower Crown 4
Blue had been a child, when the magic showed itself in her. She’d been playing, just kids on a field of grass, chasing each other in circles. She hadn’t quite been fast enough, couldn’t quite catch the others, and she'd fallen, hard, burst into tears at the pain in her knees. Her father had run to her side, kissed her scrapes and smoothed her hair, and she remembered being confused by the tears in his eyes. 
“Why are you sad?” she’d asked. 
“You’re blessed,” he’d replied. “Blessed by the gods.” 
She'd realized, suddenly, that her knees no longer hurt. When she'd looked down, the scrapes and cuts had entirely disappeared.
Those with magic were those that ruled the kingdoms. The kings, the queens, the generals and ladies. The gods chose who was right, and sent them where they were meant to go, and where they were meant to go was almost never with the families they had been born to. 
Blue had always been meant to be a queen. Her powers weren’t for fighting, not for diplomacy or finances. She had always been a comforter. 
She could make light, dancing along her fingers. There was the soft warmth she could summon, and she could alter hers and other's appearances. Most of all, though, she was a healer. 
That had been the power of most use to a queen in her position. 
The servants used to come to her with their sick children, beg her to heal them. Often, she couldn’t fix them entirely, but she could soothe their aches and pains, make them a little less scared. She would usually just heal herself, smooth down scars and take away the stinging pain of the king’s brands. There wasn’t often he’d let her get rid of them all, but she would do what she could. Sometimes, trapped beneath his hands, she would try desperately to heal him of whatever horrible spirit had invaded his soul to make him the way he was. 
She hadn’t been able to save her only friend, something that haunted her to this day. Her handmaiden, a woman named Charity whose soul echoed the name. She’d been the one that had gotten Blue out, a woman brave enough to steal a queen, strong enough to not even cry out as an arrow pierced her back. 
Blue had reached for her, magic already sparking in her fingertips but knowing, just already… there was nothing she could have done. She’d known that. Charity had known that. 
So she had sat back a little further, let the arrow pierce her heart and left Blue with nothing to do but run. It was still hard to believe that she’d made it. Stealing a boat, crossing the river, stumbling up onto dry land and falling to her knees. She’d barely known what to do, and all she could think of was that she couldn’t be recognized. 
Her eyes had found a flower, half-buried under the grass, whose petals were the color of the ocean, and everything went Blue. 
Days of walking, not having anything to eat, and knowing there was no one to help her for at least another week. Ljosvollr was famously empty, all the people gathered at the center of the land, and she was so close to the edge. 
She had been pretty sure she was going to die. She’d even been okay with that, accepted it right up until the sound of hoofbeats and--
“Are you okay?”
Jumping, Blue looked back to see Razz standing behind her. There was concern in his eyes, and he took her hand softly. She nodded, laughing dryly and gesturing at a hollowed-out stump by the side of the road, much more decrepit than she remembered it being so many years ago. 
“I think I slept there, one of the nights that I--” She cut herself off, shaking her head and turning back to face him. “I thought you were all so imposing, up there on your horses. Now I know that all soldiers are fools.” 
“Including you?” he asked, the humor in his eyes not doing much to hide the pity that he knew she hated. 
“Especially me.” she said with passion, forcing a laugh. Then she turned, gesturing to where her men were setting up for the night. “They haven’t been fed yet, and here I am, staring at a tree.” 
He didn’t say anything for a moment, and she gave him a look, knowing he had better things to be doing with his time than caring for her. 
“Will you ever…” he stopped, shook himself and smiled. “Will you join me tonight?”
The question he’d stopped was one he’d asked before. He already knew the answer, but she murmured it anyway. “My past is my own. I don’t want to remember it, and I don’t want you to see me differently. But yes.” Blue shot him a grin. “I will join you tonight.” 
Razz laughed, leaning forward to kiss her cheek, then turning as someone called for him from across the field. She assumed he had left, jumped again as he cupped her face. He opened his mouth, then hesitated. 
“You’ll be in my thoughts, then,” he finally said, and she laughed, leaning down to pick one of the blue flowers that dotted the entire landscape of this beautiful country. She tucked it behind his ear, grinning widely at the picture he made. 
“Token of my favor. Until tonight.” 
~~~
Blue ducked through the flap of Razz’s tent, setting down her bags in the corner his didn’t fill. He wasn’t here yet, but the women posted at his door (a pair from Halle’s command, she thought) hadn’t blinked an eye as she stepped past. Word must have traveled quickly of their marriage the past few days, many of the soldiers under her charge clasping her hands as she walked by to murmur a congratulations. This was the first night she had stayed the night with him, though, her duties keeping her up late enough she had just crashed on the ground with her soldiers.
Grinning to herself as she sat on the pile of furs and feathers that made up his bed, she started to unlace her boots. Being a first lieutenant wasn’t without its perks, the semi-privacy and protection from the elements that a shared tent provided being invaluable after being a foot soldier for so long. But Razz was a captain. He was afforded privileges she had only been able to dream of, not the least of which was the tradition of many soldiers carrying an extra blanket for their captain.  
The people of Ljosvollr called it good luck, but up until this moment, she’d always thought it was foolish.
She placed her shoes next to her bags, then reached inside for her bow, polishing the smooth wood and checking the draw of the string. Relaxing, she unstrung the weapon, laying it carefully over the bags and starting to unclasp her armor before the flap lifted again. 
Razz smiled tiredly as he saw her, letting the tent fall closed behind him as he leaned in for a kiss. Quickly, she returned it, watching him with soft happiness as he sat beside her and began to unbutton his shirt. When he had it loosened, he tugged it over his head, leaning forward and tucking it carefully into his bags, glancing over his shoulder at her explosion of breath. 
“What?” 
Without a word, she came up onto her knees, smoothing her hands over his spine and following the lines of his back. He sighed as she pressed softly with her thumbs, soothing the knots that had formed in his shoulders. “We’re almost there,” she murmured, pressing a kiss just below his ear. 
“One more day of travel,” he sighed. “Then two weeks of patrols.” 
“The patrols are always easier, my love. At least, easier to command.” She kissed him again, guided him back to sit beside her in the nest of blankets. 
“Not for you,” he remarked dryly, turning against her hands and twining their fingers together. “You must be tired, all the riding back and forth you had to do today.” 
“Abel will be the death of me,” she laughed, naming the second that gave her the most trouble. 
“He is a good man,” Razz said. 
“A very good man.” Blue kissed him, then pulled away, finishing removing her armor and laying it in front of her as she reached into her bags for the oil she always rubbed into the leather. A soldier should know to care first for their horse, then for their weapon and armor, and only then for themselves. Razz’s rank afforded him armor of chainmail, and she knew from her years serving in his company that it was hung from a pole of his tent. It had to be cared for much less frequently than the leather, but she never would have sacrificed the freedom of movement. Razz thought she was crazy, but Razz didn’t know that there were few injuries she couldn’t heal on her own body. 
Beginning her routine, she could feel his eyes on her. “You’ve come a long way, haven’t you?” he remarked, and she laughed, turning the brace in her hands to get the back. 
“A long way from battered and weak-willed?” 
“You’ve certainly never been either,” he said, and she felt his fingers working softly under the hem at her back, tracing the skin under her shirt. “I meant as a soldier. I remember the day you told me you wanted to learn.” 
“You laughed at me,” she said dryly, looking back as he hugged her from behind. 
“Can you blame me?” 
She thought back, remembered the shivering woman who had stood in front of him in the training yard. A cleaning maid, far fallen from anything she’d been but with so much more hope. He’d been the one to employ her, a lieutenant at the time, having her clean up after his soldiers until the moment she’d gotten brave enough to ask if she might become one of them. “No. But I’ve worked hard.” 
Drawing her into his bare chest, he held her tightly. “You have. You always do.” 
“I thought you were soft,” she commented, concentrating on her armor. “That you let your soldiers walk all over you.” 
“I am soft,” he hummed, and he felt his grin against her skin as he kissed a place on her neck that she knew was sweaty and disgusting from the day’s riding. “That doesn’t mean I’m weak.” 
“I know the respect you have, now.” She laughed as he kissed the same place again, looking over her shoulder at him. “You don’t have to kiss me, love, I know that I need a bath.” 
“If a little dirt could dissuade me from any part of you, we should never have married,” he murmured, already kissing another piece of her skin. She sighed, feeling him lay back and lift her shirt to mark a trail with his lips. Going back to work on her armor, she was soothed by their comfortable rhythm. Eventually, he ceased the kisses, letting go of her shirt and burying his face against her waist. Just as she set aside the last piece, one of the door guards smacked the flap of the tent. 
“Messenger for you, Captain.” 
“Come in,” Razz said with a groan, sitting up as the tent’s flap was pushed aside. 
“Three of the lieutenants report their men settled, sir, but I cannot find--” the man seemed to notice Blue for the first time, and he blinked. “Lieutenant.” 
“My men are settled, as well,” Blue said, and Razz laughed under his breath. 
“Thank you, Jacob. Is there any more news?”
The man flushed brightly at Blue’s smile and glanced between them. “No, Captain. Are you…”
“Can you please relay to the lieutenant’s men that if they wish to contact her, to direct themselves to…” he looked at her, and she spoke directly to the man. 
“Still to me. Tell them to send a messenger if they cannot come themselves.” The man nodded, excusing himself from the tent, and Razz gave her a questioning glance. 
“I had hoped we could spend the night without interruptions.” 
“My soldiers know where I am,” she said with a soft smile. “And my Seconds are more than capable. If an issue arises they need my assistance with, it will be something only I can do. This company needs to keep turning, no matter my time spent with you.” 
He huffed, but nodded, returning to his task and placing kisses to her hip. Smiling, Blue turned to him, drawing him up for a real kiss and running her hands over his bare skin. “There is still no privacy, Razz.” 
“And yet my self-control wanes with each day away from you,” he breathed, then laughed. “I’m not a fool. I just wish very much to hold you. Perhaps receive a kiss or two, if you’re willing.” 
She smiled, thumbed carefully at his cheek. “I love you.” 
“I love you too.” Grinning, he wrapped his arms around her, stole a kiss, then another. “Will you lay with me?” 
“I will. Let me finish getting ready for bed.” 
Razz nodded, kicking off his shoes and crawling into the nest. Blue smiled after him, fixated just for a moment. He was a beautiful man, well-muscled and with hair in the sort of waves bards wrote ballads about, wonderful to look at and even better to speak with. There was so much kindness in him, impossibly much with a world so cruel. He smiled as she watched him, and she found herself entranced. “Blue, as much as I enjoy admiring you from afar, I’d much rather find you beside me.” 
She smiled at the not-so-subtle push to hurry up, leaned over to kiss him deeply. “Falling asleep in your arms? What else could a woman dream of?"
0 notes
witsyo · 4 years
Text
Reinne 10
Basille relaxed back into the sheets of her bed, rubbing one hand back and forth over her stomach. She was small in frame, always had been, and through all of her pregnancies, she’d been able to feel the roundness of her stomach a few weeks sooner than Damien said she should. 
They’d established, over and over, that it was no damage to either her or the child, though, so she was largely left alone about it. 
As she’d thought, the king hadn’t let her escape examinations for long. Damien had taken a look at her earlier that day, his procedures for checking her health somehow even more invasive than the one he used to check for pregnancy in the first place. He’d confirmed that both she and the child were okay, and that as long as she stayed in her rooms, she should be fine. She’d been further along than even she thought, and her heartbreak had only increased with the proclamation that Damien would be able to determine the sex of her child within the next few days. 
Tyrrel had asked to be present, as he always did, and she pushed back the fear that threatened to overwhelm her. She wasn’t much of a religious person, the gods having failed in their protections one too many times to be able to earn her respect, but she was praying now. 
Please. Please be a boy. 
Slowly, she opened her eyes, hand pausing in its path as she stared at the underside of her bedframe. It was a smooth wood, and her eyes searched out the patterns she knew by heart, eyes locking to the faint outline of a crescent moon before she sighed. 
There was no point in dreading it, she supposed. It was going to happen, one way or another, and there was nothing she could do to stop it. 
Sitting up, she glanced over at Malak. He was working on his puzzle ring, as usual, a pair of interlocking pieces of metal he’d gotten at a town’s fair. You were supposed to be able to arrange them in a fashion that they were easily separated, but he’d been working on it for at least two years and she’d never once seen him succeed. The man was nothing if not determined. 
“Can I try?” she asked, and Malak jumped, not seeming to have noticed her sitting up. 
“Of course, your highness,” he said, standing and crossing the room to hand over the rings. She struggled with them for a moment, twisting and turning them one way and another before she sighed. Giving up, she handed them back, then patted the mattress beside her. 
“There’s not much to do when I’m stuck in my room,” she explained. “I should like to watch you work on the puzzle, if I could.” 
Slowly, he nodded, taking his seat beside her and going back to what he had been doing. She watched his fingers with interest, trying to puzzle out the shapes at the same time as him. 
Malak had never been a friend, but he had been a constant part of her life for almost as long as she could remember. He’d been close to some of her siblings when they were younger, and though none would admit it, she thought her father might have asked him to follow her to the palace when she was married. For someone she’d known for so long, he was too stuck on decorum. Basille had always been lacking in friends, but she certainly didn’t blame him for that. Still, though, she had always wished they could be closer. 
He reminded her a great deal of her oldest brother. It’d been years since she’d seen him, but he’d have to be… oh, twenty-five? Twenty-six? He’d been married when Basille was still quite young, and moved to the far coast. She was closer in distance to him now, but she’d never really thought to try and reach out to him. Basille wanted her family to remember her as the wild-minded child they’d once known, instead of the broken woman she now was.
Malak made a small noise of frustration, then tucked the rings into his pocket. Glancing up at her windows, he suddenly asked, “Your highness, would you like me to open those? Get you some fresh air?” 
“I would love that,” she said with feeling. The queen’s rooms weren’t exactly lacking in amenities, but any time she was placed on constant supervision, she could feel herself waning. 
Standing slowly, she followed Malak to the windows, propping her elbows on the sill and peering out over the gardens. She could see the flowers beginning to bloom, and allowed herself a small smile at the sight. 
“Do you like flowers, Malak?” 
He paused in his motions, window half-open and not yet propped. “I suppose. Not to the same degree as you, though.” 
Nodding, Basille took a deep breath, trying to catch a whiff of the blooms below and finding herself disappointed to find none. “Could you ask one of the door guards to fetch a maid? I would like to have roses brought.” 
“Yes, my lady.”  
“Thank you,” she said, and he paused. For a long moment, she thought he might say something, but as she looked back to meet his eyes, his gaze dropped to the floor. 
“I will collect them myself, actually. It’s time for me to fetch Reinne anyway.” 
Slowly, Basille inclined her head. “Okay. Thank you.” 
These were the few precious moments of privacy she ever got these days, the time when one of her guards would fetch the other. Often, she would use those moments to relieve herself or change a chafing piece of clothing. Today, though, she was content. 
Basille leaned against the window’s edge, closing her eyes and breathing in fresh air. 
~~~
When Damien came for her, it was again Reinne that was acting as her guard. The blooms Malak had fetched a few days before were beginning to wilt, and she was just starting to think that she should ask for replacements when her door inched open, the weasel-faced man himself peeking through. 
Basille had been busying herself with her reading, but she slowly put down her book as she saw the other. 
“Is the king waiting?” she asked, and he nodded. 
“Do you require my assistance to--” 
“No. I will meet you at your quarters,” she said shortly, dismissing him with a wave and pulling herself to her feet. Reinne started to stand, but she waved her off. “You don’t need to accompany me. Please, rest.” 
Reinne hesitated, then tightened her grip on her sword. “I think I will accompany you anyway, Basille. If you don’t want me inside the examination, I will still walk you to the door.” 
Giving her a look, Basille decided not to push it further. Her heart was pounding, the calm facade she was desperately holding in place as risk of giving in at any moment. “Fine,” she said. “I… I appreciate the protection.” 
The same unfunny joke of Reinne’s protection made them grimace in unison. 
Basille needlessly smoothed her skirts, then beckoned to Reinne, making her way out the door and past her guards with the other following silently behind her. Their footsteps made echoes down empty halls, and Basille glanced up to the ceiling. It was pristine, she noticed, and briefly wondered how the servants got high enough to clean it. 
Reinne held open the door to the east wing, and Basille nodded her thanks, suddenly unable to speak as Damien’s examination room came into view. Each step felt like it covered a mile, and yet she felt as though she wasn’t moving forward at all. Her breathing stuttered, and she fought back panic as she--
“Your highness.” 
Snapping out of the fear, Basille suddenly realized that Reinne had taken her hand. The other squeezed it softly, then, in a seeming moment of wild bravery, lifted her fingers, pressing a soft kiss to Basille’s skin before she dropped the hand entirely.  
Basille’s heart skipped a beat. 
“I’ll be right outside,” Reinne said quietly, and Basille nodded in thanks. 
She stepped up to the door, pushing it open and wondering why the place Reinne’s lips had just been felt so much like it was afire.
1 note · View note
witsyo · 4 years
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
I put Razz and Blue through a thing called artbreeder and the results are honestly kind of terrifying but also I'm absolutely obsessed
1 note · View note
witsyo · 4 years
Text
Sun and Moon Epilogue
This is it! This marks the end of this story! If you’re interested in the prequel, check out Reinne! It’s under the Reinne tag here or you can find it on my Ao3!
~~~
Year 1, Month 1, Day 15
Skies Haven at night was truly a sight to behold. Festival lights were still hung between the buildings, and their twinkling glow drew Halle’s eyes up to the sky. It was a cloudy night, but she could still see the moon. It was nearly full, throwing the shadows on the ground into sharp relief. 
She took a deep breath. 
This was the first time she’d left the temple in a while. The thought of facing the people she'd grown up around, giving them smiles and exchanging pleasantries still made her feel sick, and only the reminder of her patients had brought her here. Her hood was pulled low over her face, but as she approached her goal, she slowly lowered it to better see the sky. There was no one around anyway, as late as it was. She was lucky Adrian had agreed to meet with her at this time. 
Why was she still here? 
Halle had always promised herself that after the sacrifice, she would leave. Skies Haven was a large city with many resources, and there were people out there without that that needed her healing. She didn’t want to wait around for someone she knew was never fully coming back. 
She could still remember the heat of fires hitting her face, the priestesses lighting the roof’s braziers while they sung songs to the heavens. Razz and Basille had clasped hands, raising them to the sky as prayers were called around them. 
The ceremony of sacrifice was a perfectly choreographed dance, but Halle hadn’t known her part in it. She had stood stock-still, staring as Razz pressed a kiss to Basille’s mouth and feeling tears starting to fill her eyes. 
Then the choreography broke, Halle jumping as Basille suddenly clasped her hands. She’d looked up, seeing Razz sitting on the flat slab of rock upon which he would soon be sacrificed. Halle got the feeling that Basille was meant to be beside him, but she cupped Halle’s cheeks, smoothing one thumb over her skin to brush away a falling tear. 
“You don’t have to watch this,” she’d murmured, and Halle had hesitated. 
“I don’t know if I’ll be able to believe that you’re gone unless I do.” 
Basille had smiled, tears jumping to her own eyes. They’d both known that was bullshit. “I won’t be, though. You’ll see me again.” 
So Halle had gone, leaving her best friend with a hug. Leaving her to… She’d pressed her back to the roof’s door, listened as the last prayers were called to the goddesses. It was easy to picture what was on the other side of the wood. Razz’s hand would be on Basille’s cheek, foreheads pressed together. The sheer cloth they wore would be spread over the cold marble, and the fires would throw out a golden light that made them almost glow. 
The tell-tale swish of an axe had had Halle sliding to the ground. She’d landed hard on the top step, head falling to rest against her knees as a sob had wracked her body. 
Fuck the goddesses. Fuck whatever stupid plan they had that made this necessary. 
Now, standing in the middle of the city, Halle set her mouth into a firm line. She couldn’t stay here. The memories were too pronounced, and she didn’t like feeling so helpless.
Even looking at Grelda’s shop made her heart ache, wishing Basille was beside her as she knocked lightly at the door. Pushing away the feelings, she tried to peer through one of the windows. Hopefully, Adrian had remembered their appointment. He hadn’t been to the temple in nearly a year, so it was rare that she saw him these days. Grelda had taken a fall around then, and he’d moved to the city to take care of her. He practically ran her shop during the days, and Halle would have no one else prepare the mixtures she needed. 
She hadn’t been able to convince herself to come during the day, though. The idea of the townspeople wishing her their congratulations made her want to punch something. Their good intentions were of no matter. 
So she’d sent Adrian a messenger, detailing what she needed and what time she would prefer to come, and the man had said that Adrian had agreed. 
A shadow moved inside the shop, making her sigh in relief, then the door creaked open. He’d gotten impossibly taller since she’d last seen him, and his voice was deep as he murmured a hello. Already holding the jars she needed, he pressed them into her hands. 
She was surprised when Adrian kept the hold. He clasped his fingers to hers, struggling for words for a long moment before he asked, “They’re really gone?” 
Ah. Poor kid. “Yes,” she murmured. 
A slow nod made his curls shift, and he took a shaky breath in. “Razz came to see me, the day before the festival. I said I was too busy to talk.” 
Her chest clenched, and she inclined her head. “He knew you loved him.” 
“I know,” he whispered, letting go of her hands and leaning heavily into the doorframe. “Are you… are you leaving soon? I thought you’d have gone by now.” 
“I’m not sure.” 
Inspecting her carefully, Adrian swallowed. “Do you think you might stay?” 
She shouldn’t. “I… Are you?” At his doubtful glance back into his shop, she clarified, “Planning to wait for him, I mean.”
“I think I’d like to.” He looked down at the ground, and she was unsurprised to see tears welling in his eyes. “I don’t want to put my life on hold, but I… it would be good. To see him again.” His voice broke, and she rested a hand awkwardly on his shoulder. 
“You’ll be grown, then. I think he’d like to meet the family you build. Whatever happens, you’re welcome at the temple.” 
At that, he gave her a teary grin. “That kind of sounds like you’re not going anywhere.” 
Huffing at him, she raised her gaze again to the sky. “It’s stupid, but it feels like she’s gonna need me.” 
“You’re her companion, aren’t you?” he asked, eyes filled with sadness. “Of course she does.” 
Eventually, they bid their goodbyes, and Halle’s thoughts rushed as she made her way back up to the temple. Basille had grown up alone so many times. She didn’t deserve to do it again, no matter how much the thought of staying twisted at Halle’s ribs. Fuck, she didn't know if she could do this.
She would have to be ready to greet the townspeople tomorrow, she thought. It would be inconsiderate of her to demand her patients only meet her at night, and no matter how much she didn’t want to, she would have to get over her fears. 
As she emerged over the curve of the hill, she glanced at the temple. Frowning, she noticed that the door guards were nowhere in sight, and she slowed her walk to glance around the fields. If something was wrong, things wouldn’t be so quiet, right? 
Carefully, she tucked her medicine bag closer to her hip, circling the temple and entering through a side door. She ducked through the room on the other side, glancing over at the small shrine in its middle before she crossed the marble floors. Slowly, she inched open the door, peeking into the main hall and sighing with relief at the sight of the guards just inside. They were holding completely still, watching the scene before them. 
Halle recognized Caroline, leaning heavily on her cane with her back to Halle. She was speaking, too low for Halle to hear, and as she emerged into the main hall, she caught sight of who she was talking to. 
A man and a woman, both with bedraggled clothes and dirty faces, were leaning into each other. There were tears in their eyes, and Halle was surprised to see a toddler clutching to the man’s pants. The child wasn't crying, but they seemed confused, and as she looked at them, they caught her eye, ducking shyly behind their father. 
Then her eyes shifted, catching onto the baby the woman was holding. 
Small hands waved, and bright eyes stared at Caroline, but Halle’s gaze was caught by the bright tuft of blue hair that covered her small head. As she watched, the young mother sobbed, leaning forward to press her forehead to the infant’s. “We are blessed to serve the goddesses,” she said, voice breaking, and her husband nodded. 
Before she could really think about it, Halle lowered her hood, crossing the room to put a hand on Caroline’s shoulder. The older woman jumped, but Halle took no notice, staring down at the baby. She took immediate notice of her with wide blue eyes, burbling happily and stretching out an arm. Gently, Halle touched the small hand, smiling as her finger was grasped. 
“I can take her,” Halle said, starting to reach for the infant before Caroline grabbed her wrist, pulling it back and shaking her head in response to Halle’s questioning glance. 
“Who are you?” the mother asked, and Halle looked at her in confusion. She wasn’t much older than Halle herself, but there weren’t many souls on this side of the sea who didn't know Halle's face.
Gently, Caroling explained, “They’re from Banamore. Traveled quite a long way to get here.” 
Halle looked again at the baby. She liked to think she could already see something of Basille in that round face. Then she tore her eyes away, looking back up at the confused couple as Caroline spoke.
“This is Halle,” she said quietly, and their eyes widened. “Daughter of Moons.” 
In awe, the woman stared at Halle, and she shifted uncomfortably. After a moment of hesitation, she held out her hands again, and the woman took a deep breath. Then, she stepped forward, passing the infant into Halle’s arms. 
Halle’s eyes filled with tears, looking down as Basille stared back. She didn’t cry, but Halle felt her own breath catch. Taking a moment to gather herself, she looked back up at the couple and their other child, still staring at her. 
“I am her companion,” Halle said softly. “The Queen of Moons will be well cared for with me.”
1 note · View note
witsyo · 4 years
Text
Reinne 9
Basille cursed, shaking her pricked finger and setting her sewing aside so that she could look at the spot of blood growing from it. The stinging pain made her wince, and she swore again, louder, before standing and crossing the room to plunge her hand into her water basin. 
“Are you okay, your majesty?” 
She turned to see Reinne half-standing from her chair, looking at her in concern. She’d almost forgotten she was there, a silent presence as always. Reinne had a talent for fading into the background, an underappreciated skill for a personal guard, but Basille was still surprised, for a moment, that she had forgotten she was there. Reinne had a presence about her that Basille admired. Strength, she supposed, that she envied. It was unusual for Reinne to fade into the background of her mind whether she was the one guarding her or not. 
“Yes, don’t worry,” she said, laughing lightly as she looked at her finger again. “I just pricked my finger. It surprised me, is all.” 
Reinne looked unconvinced, setting her sword aside to cross the room, holding out a hand. Snorting, Basille let her take her own, turning it over to investigate the prick. “Honestly, Reinne, you can’t even see--” 
The door burst open, and Reinne jumped back, dropping her hand. Basille took no offense from it, turning to face the king with annoyance. “Your highness, I thank you deeply for knocking.” 
In the two months since Halle’s death, she’d felt herself growing bolder. She’d been surprised by how much he’d let her get away with, wondered if she could have done this from the beginning. There was nothing left for him to take from her, now, and pushing the limits of his patience could hurt no one but herself. He was going to hurt her anyway, she’d realized, so she might as well hold some dignity while it happened.
“Cut the bullshit,” he snapped, and she raised a brow, surprised until she saw Damien standing behind him. 
“This is unnecessary,” she said, and felt more than saw Reinne stepping back into her corner and re-belting her sword to her waist. 
“It’s plenty necessary. I need to know the moment you’re with child.” Tyrrel wasn’t even looking at her, just gesturing for Damien to do his work. “This isn’t a new routine, Basille, and I don’t know why you insist on protesting it. Every six months, like clockwork. You could have better prepared yourself if you had been paying attention.” 
She swallowed as Damien crossed the room to her. His eyes were downcast, but she was far past the point of feeling pity for the man. “I am telling you that this is unnecessary.” 
“And why is that?” 
“I’m already aware of my pregnancy, your highness.” 
The room went silent, and Basille saw Reinne’s hand drop to the hilt of her sword. Foolish, honestly. What did she think she was going to do? 
“And how is that?” Tyrrel growled. 
She lifted her chin. Fear was nothing new to her, and a slap in the face was temporary. He certainly wouldn’t do more than that, now that he knew. “Halle brought a healer into the castle to check for me when my bleeding was late. She informed us that I was with child.” 
The anger in his eyes inspired a little more fear, and she had to fight to keep her head up. “When were you planning on telling me?” 
“I think you’re more than aware that I was not.” She directed her attention to Damien, who was looking at her in shock. A man without an ounce of spine, he probably couldn’t imagine why she would do such a thing. “So keep your hands off of me for a few weeks, at least.” 
Tyrrel was wrestling with this, she could tell. Whether to pointlessly test her, to prove his power, or to let her be. He had to know she wasn’t lying. Her life was infinitely freer when she wasn’t with child, he had made sure of that. Finally, he directed his furious gaze to Reinne, who’s clear face was doing nothing to hide the pride in her eyes. Truly, the woman was a fool, but Basille couldn’t help feeling bolstered by it all. 
“The queen is to be sequestered in her rooms. The safety of her child is of utmost importance, and you and your partner will keep her under personal guard at every moment of the day and night. Do I make myself clear?”
“Yes, your majesty.” 
“Good.” He turned back to sneer at Basille, and she could only hold his eyes for a brief moment. “We will have a conversation about this when you have completed your duty, one way or another.”
The threat hung in the air as he turned, Damien trotting confusedly after him and shutting the door as he went. The moment they were gone, Basille felt herself collapsing inward, relief battling the feeling that perhaps she should have said nothing at all. 
“You really are with child, your highness?” Reinne’s quiet question brought her back to herself, and she jumped. Holding up a hand before Reinne could apologize, Basille grimaced. 
“I’m afraid I am.” 
“You’re unhappy?” 
Before she could stop them, tears welled up in her eyes, and Basille laughed self-deprecatingly. “Oh, very much so, Reinne. Very much so.” She reached up, pressing the palms of her hands to her eyes and biting back a sob. Whether the emotion came from fear, relief, or pure, devastating sadness, she had no idea. So much had happened, so very fast in those last few months. She’d had so much pain, and she wanted, more than anything, for it to stop. Arms wrapped around her, squeezing tightly, and Basille let herself collapse into her guard’s hold, leaning into her for support as the waves of emotion finally broke free. She didn’t question for more than a moment why on earth Reinne had decided to hold her, choosing instead to appreciate the all too rare moment of not feeling as though she was completely alone in this hell. 
“I… I hope you know, your majesty, that we stand beside you,” Reinne murmured, one hand briefly reaching up to touch Basille’s hair. It dropped almost immediately, and Basille straightened as the other pulled back, letting Reinne hold her at arm's length. “I know that Malak and I are no replacement for Halle, and I would never try to be, a-and I wish that I could promise to provide you with the protection I am meant--”
“How is it that you found your way here, Reinne?” Basille couldn’t fathom being bold enough to comfort someone like her, someone so entirely powerless and somehow untouchable. There was no part of Reinne that she felt as though she understood, and the mystery was enough, for the moment, to distract her from her own misery.
Reinne looked surprised at the question for a moment, arms slowly dropping to her sides. “The king chose me for my upbringing, but you know that.”
Laughing, Basille wiped away the last of her tears. “Ah, yes. There are some who still see you as the first move for the women of this kingdom. The bringer of change, the symbol of power.”
Bitterness mixed with amusement took over Reinne’s face, and Basille grinned. “Yes, I can see change on the rise,” Reinne said with a faint tone of lighthearted mockery. “I’ll stand for every powerless woman in this kingdom as our king fights to keep his place. Everyone is happy.” 
“Good to know you’re self-aware, at least,” Blue laughed. It was borderline treason, what Reinne was saying, but Basille would die before she would report it. This was an odd feeling, a companionship that it had been too long since she had felt. Not like the comforting friendship Halle had brought, but something...lighter. “Even so, you are inarguably the most powerful woman in this kingdom. I can’t help but wonder how your story began.” 
“That title would belong to you.” 
Basille was still smiling, despite the emotion that suddenly roared to life inside of her. “You’re avoiding the question. I have no power at all.” 
“Actually,” Reinne ventured, glancing down at her hands, “I know that you do. Every eye in the kingdom is on you. I know of more than one woman who has taken their strength from you, from the stories of your kindness. I know that I… I take my strength in the powerlessness I feel from you, your highness.”
It was amazing, Basille thought, that she actually believed her. Looking at Reinne, she had no doubt that she meant it. It was objective, she’d thought, to believe that Basille had no strength at all. But this woman, standing before her in deference despite there being no real reason for it, truly thought that she was strong.
“Basille.” 
Reinne looked up, confusion plain on her face. 
“Call me Basille. At least when we are alone.” She wasn’t sure what had come over her, but she didn’t regret the informality. 
“Basille?” Reinne said, seeming to be trying out the shape of the name in her mouth. Laughing, Basille nodded. 
“Please. It would bring me great joy.”
Reinne’s face lit up into a smile, and Basille found herself enjoying the spark of warmth that entered her eyes. 
“As you wish.”
0 notes
witsyo · 4 years
Text
Flower Crown 3
Blue patted her horse’s neck, looking around guiltily before slipping him a slice of apple. He lipped at her hand, seeming very pleased with the treat as she grinned. His name was Bones, and it was not an apt description. All of the horses in this country were hardy and beautiful, very much at odds with the blocks of muscle she had grown up with, but Bones reminded her a lot of a childhood horse she’d had by the same name. 
Pulling her quiver from her back, she slipped it into the saddle’s straps, tightening them quickly. She reached back for her bow, jumped about a foot as someone seized her wrist. Her sleeve was yanked down, exposing the newly tattooed symbol on her wrist, the one that matched the pattern of the ribbon still tied to Razz’s bed, with blue ink that carried a universal meaning through this country. They had gotten them done this morning, since there would be very little opportunity in the coming weeks. 
“See?!” Timothy cried, brandishing her tattoo towards Halle. “Now pay up!” 
Halle scoffed, taking her arm to inspect it for herself. “I think you’re both trying to worm my money from my hands. There is no proof!” 
“Is this about Razz?” Blue asked, but they just kept arguing over the top of her. 
Timothy waved a finger in Halle’s face. “There is proof enough! She wouldn’t get a binding tattoo for the sake of twenty gold!”
“You bet her twenty gold?!” Blue exclaimed in disbelief, but Timothy waved her off. 
“It’s forty, but twenty would be half.” 
“Forty! I swear, the two of you will have nothing left in your pockets if you don’t stop competing!” She shook her head, yanking back her arm. 
“Ah, but you’ll keep us in furs, with your captain’s pay,” Timothy grinned, waggling his brows and receiving a whack on the arm from Halle. 
Blue scoffed. “I have my own pay, Timothy, and I certainly won’t be sharing it with the likes of you!” 
Before he could come up with a good retort, Halle spoke up, physically shifting him to one side in order to look at Blue. “You can’t possibly be married to him, Blue, you don’t even love him!” Blue winced, remembering a conversation of a few weeks past where she had confirmed that very thing. She had been trying to convince herself, disgusted with her own weakness in falling for the man who had given her everything. 
“Ah, you’d best just pay him, Halle. It’s true.” 
Halle scoffed, looking at her in disbelief for a long moment. Apparently finding no deceit in her expression, she yanked her coinpurse from her belt, beginning to fling individual coins at Timothy. “Why did you lie?”
“I wasn’t lying, Halle.” She hated the hurt in the other’s eyes. Halle was her closest friend, outside of Razz. They had shared a home since the other had come to king’s town, up until, well… last night, she supposed. Neither of them were free with information about their pasts, but they trusted each other. She’d never meant to betray that. Her voice went quieter, glancing around to make sure no one was listening. “I just… didn’t know it myself, then. You know how it is, Halle, giving yourself over to a man. Trusting him, and trusting yourself to know what you’re actually willing to give up.” 
“No, actually, I don't. I never will, and that was three weeks ago, Blue. In three weeks, you’ve made that decision?”
“In two. That’s all it takes sometimes. Especially when I’ve known him for so long.” 
Halle threw the rest of the money at Timothy in a handful, leaning against Bones and looking at Blue in concern. “Did he explain that in Ljosvollr, marriage is--”
“Binding. I know.” Blue smiled to herself, brushing a clump of dust off Bones’s flank. When Razz had come to her, she’d been terrified. His profession of love had scared her, and she’d pushed him away, refused to even look at him, pretending the hurt on his face didn’t cause her pain. 
She’d been afraid that he thought she owed him something, even after all these years. Angry that that had to be the reason her heart would pound as he approached, her breath coming short and her eyes drawn to his. She didn’t want to fall in love with her rescuer. 
It’d been only a few weeks before she realized that wasn’t the reason at all. Blue had fallen in love with the man himself, so deeply and truly it was taking over her soul. She looked back, met Halle’s gaze and softly smiled. “I’m happy to be bound to him.” 
“He is a good man,” Timothy murmured, tucking the last of the coins into his pockets. 
“The best,” Halle said. “But… still, could you have not waited? You’ve never been the sort.”
“We haven’t been lovers for long, but he’s been my friend even longer than I’ve known the two of you! I don’t need to wait to find out how he’ll treat me, or how he’d raise our children, or anything about him when I already know everything important! He makes me so happy, Halle, absolutely fills my life with joy. Would you delay, if you could feel this love burning through you like the gods themselves are--” She cut herself off as their brows raised, realizing her voice was swelling with passion. Dropping her arms with a huff, she got her tone under control. “He’s kind and wonderful, and fear stopped me from realizing I loved him for far too long already. Why would I wait when I already know?”
“Are you pregnant?” Halle asked, and it was Timothy’s turn to smack her. 
“No!” Blue protested, folding her arms with a huff. “If I was pregnant, you think I would be traveling by horse?” 
“Maybe if you don’t want him to know yet?” 
“I’m not pregnant! We hadn’t even--” She cut herself off, scoffed at their expressions. “That is none of your business. The captain and I will worry about it ourselves , if and when we decide to have children.” 
“What? You hadn’t slept together?” Halle scoffed. “Blue, you’re not exactly a beacon of purity, you’re telling me you waited until your wedding night?” 
Not sure how to respond, she just stared at the two of them for a long moment until Timothy suddenly gasped, leaning in conspiratorially. “You can’t possibly be saying that the captain --”
“Lieutenant,” said a voice from behind them, making all three of them jump and spin around to face the man. He was one of Halle’s, holding the reins of her horse and looking between the three of them curiously. Halle thanked him quickly, waiting for him to leave before double-checking the ties on the saddle. 
Blue swung onto Bones as Halle mounted her own horse, grinning down at Timothy. “What, messenger, no steed?”
“My steed is fine, excuse me for not having my men at my beck and call. What, Halle, you rise in the ranks and forget how to put on a saddle?” He was the son of her mother’s cousin, which was probably the only thing saving him from receiving a beating from her on a daily basis. Blue was nearing her six-month mark of lieutenancy, but Halle had recently been promoted to the rank, her rise faster than even Razz had achieved when he had joined the royal guard. She may have been invited into the company on Timothy’s recommendation, but she was fast proving her capabilities.
“How about you mount up so I can show you why I save my energy!” Halle shot back, attempting to kick him from her saddle. Timothy danced out of the way, laughing, then waved them off. 
“Well, should we report in?” Blue asked, and Halle laughed, settling more comfortably and following as Blue led them to the group of soldiers gathering at the base of king’s hill. 
Razz had command over about a hundred soldiers, with four lieutenants over five seconds, and Timothy’s small company of messengers. Blue could see him, off his horse and helping one of the men fix his saddle. He laughed at something the man said, and she smiled softly to herself, ignoring Halle’s raised brow. Razz looked up as they approached, smiling at them and nodding to accept their salutes as the man he’d been helping walked away. 
“My twenty-five are outfitted and prepared,” Blue said, her horse shifting in place. She rubbed the side of its neck, turning to Halle. 
“I report twenty-four,” she said wryly. “The short notice found Karlen in a tavern, and he’s rotting in a cell. I figured he could wait until our return for me to find my keys.” 
Razz laughed. “I’d say that’s a reasonable conclusion. Do you have a replacement in mind, or should we press on?” 
“Press on, I should think. He’s capable of resuming his duties after a few nights of thought. And, Captain?” she smiled. “I hear congratulations are in order.” 
It took him a moment, then he grinned, inclined his head and glanced up at Blue. “Thank you, Halle. When will your men be ready to ride?” 
“Within the hour,” Halle said, and Blue nodded. 
“The same for mine. Have we heard from Robyn and Adrian?” 
“Robyn is still preparing her soldiers, and Adrian had to round one of his up from a house not belonging to her wife. I expect he’ll be reporting her inability to join us soon enough. Was there anything else to report?”
“No, Captain.” they said in unison. Blue found herself distracted by the curve of his shoulder, getting a strong urge to dismount and press her lips to the dip of his collarbone. 
“Halle, you’re dismissed,” he said, pulling her back to reality. “Blue, would you mind joining me?” 
Halle laughed in a manner that would have had her disciplined by any other captain, but as it was, Razz just slapped her horse’s flank, sending her riding off in the direction of her command. 
“Timothy told her?” Razz asked quietly as Blue dismounted, and she nodded. 
“That bet of theirs. Are we hiding it? I’m sure if they were told to, they would keep their own council.” 
“Blue,” he said, picking up her hand and pressing a soft kiss to her gloved fingers. “I would be unable to hide this any longer even if I wanted to, and I do not want to. May I expect you to stay with me tonight?” 
She truly was a blessed woman, stared into his honey-brown eyes for a beat too long. “You may,” she said laughingly, then let him pull her into his arms, kissed him soundly on the lips. “And every night thereafter, i should think. You should probably announce your marriage to your company, captain, so that no one thinks you’re some kind of rogue.” 
“I am very roguish,” he said jokingly, and she snorted, accepting another kiss. 
“Was there anything else?” 
“No, my love. Make sure your men are ready to go, we’ll leave in about an hour.” 
“Yes, captain ,” she breathed, quite in the same way she had spoken the night before. 
He inhaled sharply, and she grinned at the sight of the blood rushing to his face. Starting to lean forward, he was brought up short by her hand on his chest, seeming to realize quite suddenly how many people were glancing in their direction. When he spoke, his voice was an octave higher than it had been the moment before.
“I don’t think you’re supposed to say it like that, Lieutenant.” 
0 notes
witsyo · 4 years
Text
Reinne 8
I’m putting the full chapter under the cut to avoid spoilers for those discovering the story through this chapter! If you want to start from the beginning, here’s a great place to read it!
~~~
Basille had been nearly silent through the funeral. It had been attended by the court, with Halle’s body interred into stone alongside the ancestors of Saibhadha. It was a great honor, but it felt like a sick joke to Reinne. She’d stood at the queen’s side through it all, restrained herself from doing or saying anything through the ceremony. Even as the king gave a speech full of thinly-veiled threats that made the tears run faster down Basille’s face.
No one would tell her why Halle had died, but she got the feeling Basille thought it was her fault. Reinne was surprised to feel pain hit her from the thought, the very idea of Basille’s grief making her chest ache.
She couldn’t believe she hadn’t known how bad things were. That the king would do that to his wife, in front of all his advisors and guards, and not a single person had batted an eye. That he had looked straight at them, taunted them with the idea of stopping him.
Reinne hadn’t known, when she’d come to the palace, that the idea of protecting the queen was so impossible. She almost wished she’d never found out.
When the funeral was over, Basille had retired to her chambers, again refusing to speak. Reinne and Malak had exchanged a glance, and eventually, Malak had been the one to follow her inside.
The night had not brought sleep for Reinne. Instead, she had watched as the sun rose, dressing quickly and hurrying out to town to buy more of the scones that had made Basille so happy.
Now, she stood before her bedroom door, leather armor strapped tightly to her body and booted feet shifting in place before she finally raised her hand to knock.
Malak opened the door on the first hit, shushing her quickly and ushering her into the room. “She’s still asleep,” he explained in a whisper, nodding quickly to the door guards before closing the door behind them.
“How late was she up?”
“I’m not sure,” he said. “She was up and about until at least midnight, and tossed and turned for a while before she finally went still. Reinne, she still hasn’t spoken. Do you think she’ll…”
His worry was the same as Reinne’s. The queen was fragile, and Halle had seemed to be much of what had been holding her together. They were both afraid that without her, Basille wouldn’t be able to continue as she had.
“I hope not,” was all she said, then she flapped a hand at him, still whispering as she insisted, “Now go sleep. I’ll stay with her until you come back.”
It was by unspoken rule that they had decided to guard her like this, constantly trading off shifts so that Basille was never left alone. They used the excuse of the Banamoran dignitaries in the palace when the door guards had asked, but… Well. She may be the queen, and them only her guards, but they wanted her to be safe, and Reinne knew that she didn’t want Basille to feel abandoned.
Malak nodded tiredly, finally leaving the room after Reinne handed him one of her scones and ushered him to get some sleep.
Gingerly, Reinne took her seat, watching the slow rise and fall of the queen’s breathing as she crossed her legs and pulled out a pastry for herself.
~~~
When Basille finally woke, Reinne didn’t notice at first. She was staring out the window, admiring the glow of the sun against the panes, and when she finally looked back towards the bed, Basille’s eyes were open, looking at her blankly.
“Your highness,” Reinne murmured, standing quickly and bringing the bag with her.
Basille didn’t immediately respond, following Reinne’s earlier gaze to the sky before she looked back towards her. “Are those scones?” she asked, voice raspy with dried tears.
“Yes,” Reinne said, opening the bag and holding it out. “I got them this morning.”
Slowly, Basille sat up, clutching at the blankets as she took one of the pastries. Numbly, she took a bite, closing her eyes as she chewed it. “Reinne?”
“Yes?”
“How do you get them? Are you using your own pay?”
“Yes, my lady,” Reinne admitted. “But there’s not much to use it for while I’m living in the palace. I don’t mind.”
Basille fingered at the surface of her scone, swallowing her bite. “You must remind me to repay you.”
“That won’t be necessary.”
Letting out a short laugh, Basille finally met her eyes. “I think it is. You shall have my money.”
Reinne gave her a small smile. “I suppose I shall have to take it, then.”
“You shall.”
As Basille took another bite, Reinne leaned against the bedpost, setting the bag on the blankets and considering the other. “I know it would be stupid to ask if you’re alright, your highness, but are you… better? Better than you were?”
“I finally cried,” Basille murmured. “Not much, but a little. Damien said that sadness is much better than numbness.”
“And are you sad, rather than numb?”
“It’s not often I am happy, Reinne,” she said with finality, but took another bite of the scone, seeming to consider the question in seriousness. “But yes. I think it… I’m beginning to believe it. I don’t expect her to walk suddenly through that door, to save me or…” she broke off, shoving the rest of the scone into her mouth and chewing in apparent frustration.
Reinne watched her in amazement, impressed despite herself by the other’s ability to keep from choking as she swallowed the massive bite. Basille seemed to notice her gaze, cheeks reddening as she finished swallowing.
Then, quietly, she asked, “Are there more?”
0 notes
witsyo · 4 years
Text
Reinne 7
“No,” Basille said, in a voice that was not her own. “No, she can’t be.”
She vaguely saw Reinne sinking back into her chair, grief flashing across her face. Basille pulled back her hand, but Malak shook his head. “I’m so sorry. But I went to see for myself. It’s her, and she’s gone. I have asked the king to excuse you from your--”
The king.
Basille gathered her skirts around her as she stood, anger beginning to pound hot and hard through her head alongside her grief. She kept her face tightly controlled as she gestured for her guards to stand, shoulders ramrod straight. Malak was watching her, looking as though he wasn’t sure if he should stop her from whatever she was about to do. She could see Reinne out of the corner of her eye, confusion evident in her stance, but ignored them both, choosing instead to make her way out of her rooms, sweeping down the halls on her way to the object of her anger.
She barely noticed the servants moving out of her way, ignored the surprise on their faces at the quiet power the queen was exhibiting. It had been a long time since they had seen her do more than sit quietly at the king’s side and wander the palace gardens.
Basille knew how stupid this was. She just didn’t care.
She burst through the doors of the throne room, and the advisors within went quiet. Behind her, the door was closed, and she felt more than heard her guards coming up to stand at her shoulders. The king looked up in surprise. “Basille, this is a private--”
“How dare you!” she spat, clenching her fists in her dress as she seethed. Just the sight of his face, smoothed in false innocence, made her want to throw something. “How could you do this? How could you kill her?”
He hummed, and for a split second, she saw the smugness in his eyes. Then it was covered by pity. “Oh, I must have forgotten to inform you. I am very sorry for your loss, but your servant experienced an accident earlier tonight.”
“An accident? ” Basille growled.
“Yes, I’m afraid so. Fell from a palace window as she was cleaning it. I’ll be sure to replace her at my soonest convenience, my dear, but unfortunately--”
“You bastard!” her heart was pounding, and despite her anger, she felt tears threatening to burst from her. He had killed her, he had killed her only friend, and there was no reason to pretend he hadn’t. She stepped forward, advancing towards him as she fought back her whirling emotions. There was no one to stop him, no one to punish him, and there was no reason at all for him to lie into her face. No reason except for his own sick satisfaction. “You coward , you murdering, broken--”
Pain exploded across her face, and she stumbled back from the king, tripping backwards over her own feet and threatening to fall. She felt a pair of arms suddenly thrown around her from behind, straightening her up, and looked back to see three copies of Reinne letting go of her, the look on her face one of shocked anger. Malak grabbed Reinne by the arm, and Blue felt her chin seized, yanking her back around to look into the King’s face. The wrenching motion made her vision swim again, and she closed her eyes to steady herself.
“Would you care to repeat that?” he asked, his voice cold.
Before she could stop herself, she whispered, “Murderer.”
She almost couldn’t feel it as he slapped her again, but the sound of it echoed through the room. It was loud, accompanied by a sick sort of thud that was making her dizzy.
“Repeat yourself.”
“You…” she thought she might be sick, raising a shaky hand to her own face, feeling the tender spot beginning to bloom across her face. “You knew. You knew what she was trying to do, and you…” The hand gripping her chin tightened, and she finally cried out in pain.
“I don’t think that you understand the position you are in,” the king spat, grabbing her by the shoulder and turning her head to look behind her. “Do you see your guards?”
Malak’s face was carefully blank, staring somewhere into the middle distance. It was an expression she had seen on him more often than she cared to remember. Reinne, though, was staring directly into Basille’s eyes, her expression one of abject horror. Then, she glanced up, seeming to realize the king was looking at her, and made a poor attempt to school her face into one of indifference. Malak’s hand was locked around her upper arm so tightly that Basille could see indents into Reinne’s skin, and felt bad, for a moment, that it would probably bruise.
The king laughed into her ear, the sound low and threatening. “What are their jobs, my queen?” She didn’t answer for a moment, confused by the question, and by Malak suddenly seeming to come to life, anger burning behind his eyes before he looked down to the ground. Tyrrel shook her, once. “What are your guards here to do, Basille?”
It took her a moment, to realize the answer he was looking for. When she spoke, her voice was strained. “Protect me.”
Reinne jerked in place, and Malak’s hand tightened on her arm.
“Exactly,” King Tyrrel murmured, the smug tone of his voice making her want to cry. The hand on her shoulder disappeared, and she felt him grab a handful of her hair, pulling harshly so that she was trapped against his chest, the hand on her chin dropping to wrap around her neck. “Do me a favor, Basille, and tell them what it is you’re accusing me of.”
“You…” she started, choked to a stop by the tightening hand around her throat. Wheezing, she reached up, scrabbling ineffectually at his arm for a moment before his grip loosened. She was surprised, for a moment, to see tears beginning to gather in Reinne’s eyes.
“I what ?”
He was right. That was the thing, and it killed her. She had no power here, and they both knew it. It didn’t matter that she was the queen, that she was guarded, that she was…no, she was alone.
Her anger faded, and her grief flew up to replace it.
“An accident,” she whispered, and the hand dropped from her throat, his grip on her hair loosening. “Halle died in an accident. She was a… a good friend of mine, my king. May I request that she be honored by a lady’s funeral?”
He laughed, quietly enough that she was sure none of his advisors could hear.
“Anything for you, my dear.”
0 notes
witsyo · 4 years
Text
Reinne 6
Warnings for this chapter are spoiler-heavy, so I would advise visiting the chapter itself if you would like to check them!
~~~
It took Basille a long time to fall asleep, tossing and turning as thoughts whirled through her head. She knew there was nothing she could do, no action she could take no matter what happened, but she just couldn’t make herself accept that.
She’d been sick for days. Some foods were okay, and some made her stomach roil, with no apparent distinction between the two. The only thing she’d been able to stomach in the past two days had been soup and the scones Reinne had brought. She’d been right, they were delicious.
But they had confirmed something horrific inside Basille’s mind. There had been two times in her life that she’d been sick at everything but chocolate. Only two times.
Gods, she couldn’t do this again. She couldn’t sit here, knowing what was going to happen and unable to do a damn thing to stop it.
She’d barely slipped off to sleep, it seemed, before she was being shaken awake, momentary fear arcing through her before she saw that it was Halle who was kneeling on the edge of her bed.
“Basille,” she whispered, then gestured behind her. “I’ve brought someone who might help.”
Slowly, Basille sat up, still blinking sleep out of her eyes as she took in the sight of a round, unfamiliar woman, standing just behind Halle and unsuccessfully trying to wipe the pity out of her eyes. “Who…”
“I’m from Banamore, your highness,” the woman explained. “No one in your palace knows me, but I was a friend of Halle’s sister. My name is Martha.”
Basille blinked, looking to Halle for an explanation.
“Martha is a medicine woman,” Halle explained, and Basille’s eyes flew wide in understanding. She looked towards the doors quickly, but Basille answered her question before she could even ask it. “We told the guards we were here to clean up your bathing room. They know you’ve been sick, so it didn’t take that much convincing.”
“I’m not that sick,” Basille protested, and Halle smiled.
“Are you okay with this?” she asked. “It seemed best to know for sure before we take any drastic steps.”
Basille was unsure what drastic steps could possibly be taken, but she nodded anyway, looking up to Martha in askance. “I know I am the queen, but please treat me as a patient. This knowledge is far more important than my comfort. What do you need me to do?”
Martha agreed easily, but the examination passed without pain. Blinking back tears, Basille pushed away the thought of other examinations she’d had for this, made to cry out in pain by the court physician. Damien was a weasel of a man, a coward who tried to pay for his sins by helping those he had never hurt in the first place. She didn’t like him, never had, but she hated the thought that he was hurting her on purpose.
It took only a few moments, then Martha sat up straight, gesturing for Basille to relax and seeming to struggle for words. “My lady, it’s true. You are with child.”
Tears welled up in Basille’s eyes. It wasn’t a surprise, not at all, but her grief still almost overwhelmed her to hear the words. “Are you sure?”
“Absolutely. How long has it been since your last bleeding?”
“Seven weeks,” Basille said faintly.
“Then there is no doubt in my mind. Halle told me of your symptoms, and I was sure even before I came into the room.” She hesitated, glancing at Halle quickly before she returned her gaze to Basille. “If you would like, my lady, I can recommend a medicine to make it not so.”
For a long, horrible moment, Basille considered it.
“No,” she finally said. Her pain didn’t lie with the child. If it was a boy…
Halle spoke quietly to Martha as Basille’s mind rushed. Could she take that chance again? Was she willing to bet herself on it? Before she could change her mind, Martha clasped her hand, and Halle ducked into Basille’s bathing room, re-emerging with her chamber pot as Martha closed her eyes and murmured a short prayer.
“By the lady of the skies, I bless you, Basille.”
Then Martha took the pot, murmuring one more goodbye as she left the room. Halle sat heavily on Basille’s bed, and all that Basille could think to say was, “Lady of the skies?”
“I don’t know,” Halle said quietly. “The Banamorans have different gods than ours. She won’t tell anyone, Basille. I’m sorry I didn’t ask your permission to tell her your fears, but she is leaving tomorrow morning, and I wanted you to--”
“It’s okay,” she said quietly, then looked down at her hands. “Halle, what am I going to do?”
“Escape.”
“What?!” Basille had to bite back her voice, glancing up at the door to make sure no guards were going to come bursting through. “Halle, I can’t do that. The king hardly lets me leave the palace grounds. He’d search for me, and kill anyone who sheltered me. I can’t bring that risk to people.”
Halle had brought this up before, the idea of running from the palace. It had only ever been a dream, an impossibility that not even Halle could come up with a solid plan for. Despite herself, Basille felt hope blossom in her chest at the expression on Halle’s face.
“The dignitaries of Banamore would bear no such risk.”
~~~
In the weeks they had waited, Basille had barely been able to keep her wits about her. The night that Martha had come, there had been no such ambassadors in the palace, so she and Halle had had plenty of time to plan.
When the ambassadors came, Basille must act normally. She would stick to her usual routine, and would make no attempt to contact the Banamorans. Largely, she was left out of the king’s councils, so unless she was summoned, she was to stay in her rooms and draw no attention to herself at all.
So much of this plan depended on Halle.
A servant, passing silently through the corridors, held no suspicion. A servant, bringing water to the ambassadors, would not be seen as a strange event. And once she was there, then she could tell them.
Banamore was a proud kingdom. Basille knew they had doubts about their alliance with Saibhadha already, not wishing to be associated with their broken kingdom. There was a very high chance they would refuse to support a king who was harming his queen. And if they made that decision, Halle had thought maybe , just maybe, the ambassadors would insist on taking Basille with them as they left.
If Basille agreed to go, what could the king’s soldiers possibly do? Few of them knew of her plight, and upon finding out the risks, she was sure they would let her go. And what was the king without his army?
Her heart had been pounding since the night before, when Reinne had brought with her the news that the ambassadors had arrived. Just as they’d planned, she and Halle had acted quite normally, Halle bidding her goodnight with a clasp of her hand.
Basille wasn’t sure if she had done it right then, or if she was waiting until this morning, but Reinne had stayed the night, dozing silently in her chair when Basille awoke the next morning. Her maids had come to arrange her hair and clothes, and she was sitting at her desk, peering out the window at the garden as she waited for Halle to return with news.
Finally, the door opened, and she spun around with excitement she couldn’t repress, then came to an abrupt stop at the sight of Malak stepping through the doorway.
“What are you--” Reinne started to ask, but Malak silenced her with a gesture, and Basille felt the blood drain from her face as he crossed the room, kneeling to take her hand in a gesture more informal than she had ever had him direct to her.
“What?” she asked, voice suddenly dry. Behind Malak, she saw Reinne rise to her feet, the same worry she could feel tightening her chest appearing on the other’s face.
“Your highness,” Malak murmured, and she heard his voice break. “The wall guards caught me in the hall. They found your friend in the early hours of the morning.”
Basille’s throat constricted, and she swallowed. “They… found Halle?”
Slowly, Malak nodded. “Yes, my lady. Her body was found. I’m so sorry, but she is dead.”
1 note · View note
witsyo · 4 years
Text
Reinne 5
Reinne watched as, for about the thousandth time, Halle straightened the queen’s sheets. She would unpend the top few layers, firmly tucking them into place one at a time before arranging the pillows at the head. Then she would leave them, busy herself with another task for a few moments before she would return, repeating the whole process despite there being no visible wrinkles that Reinne could see.
Any fool could see the pain in her eyes, and Reinne was not any fool.
“Halle,” she finally said, and the other jumped. Reinne didn’t know her well, but in serving Basille, they spent a lot of time together. Most of it was silent, and as the older woman turned back to look at her, Reinne half-wished she had left it that way. “What’s wrong?”
Hesitating, Halle looked down at the perfect bed. “I think it would be best not to say,” she finally murmured.
“I know the king isn’t a good man,” Reinne said quietly. “I say that not to speak treason, but to recognize a fact. The queen looked terrified, as much as she was trying to pretend she was fine.” She could still see the other’s eyes in her mind, reassuring her that it was okay to leave even as her expression screamed that leaving was the same as abandonment.
Halle sighed, the sound filled with pain that Reinne had rarely seen in her time here. “The months you’ve been with us have been very unusual, Reinne. The king has been preoccupied, and on his best behavior in front of the dignitaries. But you’re right. He is not a good man.”
“Is there anything we could do?” Reinne asked, and Halle immediately shook her head.
“Be of comfort. Follow his commands to the letter, and give him no reason to remove you. Respect Basille’s wishes.”
“Does…” Reinne hesitated, not sure if she wanted to hear the answer. “Does he hurt her?”
Halle said nothing for a moment, then turned to face her. “It would be his right, if he did. He is the king, and she is his queen. You must not argue with it.”
It wasn’t easy to see, but Reinne noticed a spark in the other’s eyes, the anger hidden there contradicting the words coming out of her mouth. Halle was a powerful woman, and it didn’t take much time at all to see the way she cared for the queen. Reinne and Basille were very similar in age, she knew, and the queen was not a child. But she thought Halle might care for her as one.
“Okay,” she said, adjusting herself in her seat. The guard’s chair sat in the corner of the room, a surprisingly uncomfortable thing for how ornately decorated it was. “What should I do, when she returns to her rooms?”
Leaning back against a bedpost, Halle took a deep breath. “Excuse yourself, and leave her be.”
~~~
“Reinne!”
She jumped, looking back over her shoulder to see Malak waving her down. They were in the town, both having needed to run errands, and since Basille had dismissed them both for the day, they had decided to come together. It wasn’t a market day, so the streets were as quiet as they could be, and they’d found their way to a shoemaker’s shop, then to a bakery, and Reinne had taken one look at the scones before she was ordering a bagful, intending to bring the chocolate ones back with her to the palace.
The queen loved them, she knew, and Reinne liked the expression on the other’s face whenever Halle would bring them in the mornings. The palace’s rendition, however, was a pitiful imitation of the pure delight this bakery made, and she had found herself excited at the thought of introducing the queen to what she was missing.
It’d been nearly two months since her discussion with Halle, and she was growing more and more wary of the king. He had done nothing outright, but would sometimes summon Basille, or Reinne would pass him speaking to her in the halls. She always looked scared, but she always hid it. Especially around Reinne.
She hoped she had done nothing to make the other think she had to be shamed before her. Reinne had experienced her fair share of harassment from men, soldiers who thought they could touch her when her father’s back was turned, and she was well aware that most women in Saibhadha had not been given the opportunity to defend themselves as Reinne had. She didn’t know what exactly the king had done, but knew that Basille didn’t want her to know. She tried to respect that.
“What do you want?” she asked Malak, turning to see him staring at a tray of honey-soaked rolls, still steaming from the oven. As much as she liked to pretend she didn’t, she liked the strange man. He was gangly as hell, and despite being older than her by a few years, reminded her of the teenage boys she would wreak havoc with as a child.
“I want these,” he said, nodding past the glass.
She stared at him, unamused. “You’re a grown-ass man, buy them.”
“But you already bought all those scones! It’d be so much easier if you just paid for everything at once!”
“I’m not paying for your--thank you,” she said, taking her bag of pastries from the baker, who was grinning at her knowingly. She had been a customer of this bakery for a long time, and had been close friends with the baker’s daughter when they were both children. His daughter was married now, and lived far from King’s City, but the man was kind, and she had no doubt that when she opened her bag, there would be an extra treat or two tucked away inside. Pulling out her coinpurse, she began counting out the money to pay him as she finished speaking to Malak. “Buy your own, or don’t buy them at all, you overgrown child.”
“But Reinne …”
“No. Now, I need to pick up my shirts from the tailor’s,” she said as she finished paying the baker and turned to her companion. “Are you going to whine here, or would you like to go with me?”
He scrunched his nose. “Is it a woman’s tailor?”
“It’s just a tailor.”
“Fine. Give me a moment,” he huffed, counting out his own coins and quickly exchanging them for one of the rolls.
Reinne waved goodbye to the baker as they left, watching in disgust as Malak tore into his treat. “Must you act like a wild animal?”
“Yes,” he said, and she rolled her eyes. Earning his respect had been an endeavor, especially after she had embarrassed him so deeply on her first day. He’d sulked about her win in front of the other soldiers for almost a month, then had abruptly changed face to thinking she was lacking in skill. She’d had to take him back to the training grounds, let him win once or twice then pound him into the ground the moment he let his head swell too big.
None too happy about it, he’d grown to like her since then, and despite his fragile pride, she liked him too. He was a good man, no matter his faults.
She huffed as he threw an arm over her shoulders, glancing to one side to see him grinning at her. “Is the roll good?” she asked.
“You are very beautiful,” he said, and she scoffed, shrugging him off violently and speeding up her walk. She knew he was joking, but he was pressing buttons, and he knew it.
A woman who preferred the company of other women was a rare thing, in a kingdom where its discovery could lead to her execution, but when you shared a single bed in a broom closet of a room with a man with no sense of privacy, it was a difficult thing to forget. Especially since Malak seemed to think he was the gods’ gift to womankind.
She didn’t think he knew, exactly, but she’d also been surprised when he responded to rejected advances with nothing more than shrugging acceptance. Malak had seemed the sort of man to let failed romance ruin a friendship, but he’d barely seemed to think twice about it, all three times he’d tried.
She supposed it could be much worse, but she might actually kill him if there was a fourth.
Laughing, he caught up with her again, finishing his food noisily and gesturing up at the sky. “It looks like it might rain,” he commented, and she looked up.
The sky was beginning to gray, he was right. Reinne frowned in annoyance. “It had better not until we get back to the palace,” she said. “I don’t much like the rain.”
“Why not?” he asked, and she sighed.
“Curly hair. It frizzes into a ball atop my head. Quite inconvenient.”
“Oh, truly,” he said, tossing his pin-straight hair over his shoulder. “I’m never able to stand it.”
Reinne rolled her eyes, but she smiled as they walked. The trip into the tailor’s was much quicker than she had expected, but sure enough, as they came out of the shop, drops of water began to fall from the sky. Malak and Reinne looked at each other.
“Run for it?” he asked.
“Run for it.”
When they arrived at the palace, the rain was pouring from the sky, water dripping from her eyelashes and the ends of her hair. She laughed as they got under cover, waving to the bridge guards, and Malak shook his head like a dog. Out of breath, they both leaned against the wall, Reinne still laughing under her breath as she checked inside her pastry bag. By some miracle, the treats were untouched, and she grinned.
“Malak, can you take these to our room?” she asked, holding up the shirts. At his questioning glance, she gestured to the scones. “I need to bring these to the queen.”
He nodded, grinning as she tossed the soaked shirts at his equally wet face.
Reinne made her way quickly to the queen’s rooms, jogging up the twisting staircase that led to the door and tossing a few of the non-chocolate scones to the very bored-looking door guards. “She in there?” Reinne asked, and one of them nodded.
“Halle went in about an hour ago, but nobody else is with the queen,” he said, turning over the scone he’d caught and narrowing his eyes at the fruit inside. “What is this?”
“Cranberry, I think,” she said. “It’s from Papa Gilerdo’s.”
The men hummed in appreciation, many of them having grown up in King’s City and being very familiar with the bakery. Grinning, she nodded at their thanks, then ducked quietly through the door.
She slowed as she was greeted with the sound of sobbing, proceeding silently through the room until she reached the open doorway to the queen’s bathing room. Basille and Halle sat inside, Basille’s head on her lap. Halle was stroking the queen’s hair, tears in her eyes as Basille sobbed into her skirt.
“I don’t want this again,” Basille was saying, words muffled past her heaving breaths. “This can’t be what it is, Halle, I-I… I don’t want Damien to--”
Halle shushed her gently, neither of them noticing Reinne as she watched them. Damien? That was the castle healer, wasn’t it? He seemed like a fine man to Reinne, working tirelessly to help even the servants when they needed him, not charging a penny for his services. Reinne had had to seek his help more than once when training sessions with Malak grew too intense.
“We can’t assume anything, Basille,” Halle murmured. “It could just be something in your food, or a normal bout of sickness.”
“It feels different.”
“Basille, it’s going to be okay. You’re going to be alright.” Halle ducked her head, sounding like she was trying to convince even herself and rocking back and forth like she was trying to soothe a child to sleep. “Even if the worst should happen, you will survive it. You’re the strongest person I have ever met.”
“I’m terrified. I shouldn’t be--”
“Your highness,” Reinne said quietly, firmly deciding that this was not a conversation she was meant to be hearing, and that she should not betray the queen’s trust by continuing to listen.
Basille jumped, sitting up quickly and practically falling onto her backside as she stared up at Reinne in surprise. “How long have you--”
“Just a moment. Not long enough to know why you’re upset, but enough to be glad I brought these,” she said, holding up her bag. “Chocolate scones, from the best baker in King’s City. Would you like one?”
She didn’t miss the look of grateful sadness in Halle’s eyes as Basille smiled through her tears. “Are these the ones you told me about? That the palace kitchens tried to copy?”
“Yes, your majesty.” Reinne hesitated, then held out a hand, helping the other to her feet before reaching for Halle. The woman hesitated, then turned back, picking up the chamber pot and nodding to Basille.
“Will you be alright with Reinne, for a moment? I’d like to clean this out now so that I can stay with you tonight.”
Basille nodded, and as Halle left, Reinne quietly asked, “Are you sick, my lady?”
“Possibly,” was all the other said about it, then held out a hand for the bag. Reinne gave it to her, and Basille sat on her bed. “Why are you wet?” Suddenly, Reinne noticed that the other was clothed only in her chemise, frowned as she realised how cold she must be.
“It’s raining,” she explained as the other pulled out one of the treats, inhaling what was left of the scent and taking a delicate bite. Reinne retrieved one of the extra blankets from the armoir as Basille sighed in contentment. Carefully, she wrapped it around the queen’s shoulders, watching as the other relaxed.
“I was afraid I would be too sick to eat it,” Basille said happily, reaching out to grasp Reinne’s hand in thanks. “But this is so good. I can’t imagine how delicious they must be warm!”
“Perhaps I will take you with me, next time,” Reinne murmured, sitting as Basille patted the mattress next to her. “The cinnamon ones are worth every moment of the trip, but he was out of them today.”
Basille laughed, and Reinne’s heart warmed in relief. There was no real way to help this poor woman, but she didn’t want to stop searching for the small things.
Halle was right. The queen truly was the strongest person Reinne had ever met.
0 notes