Not A Pawn
The rain in Camelot always seemed to carry a specific kind of weight. It wasn't just water falling from the sky; it was a gray, relentless sheet that turned the training grounds into a sludge of mud and misery, soaking through cloak, tunic, and mail until the cold settled deep in your marrow.
I stood under the archway of the armory, watching the recruits run drills. They were slipping, sliding, shouting over the roar of the downpour. And in the thick of it, as she so often was, was YN.
She wasn’t a knight—tradition and Uther’s laws held firm on that account—but she was a fixture in the citadel that few dared to question. She fought with a ferocity that rivaled Gwaine’s on his best days and possessed a tactical mind that Arthur had quietly come to rely on. But looking at her now, trudging through the ankle-deep muck, parrying a blow from a heavy-handed new recruit, she looked less like a warrior and more like a candle burned down to the wick.
I frowned, crossing my arms over my chest. I knew that posture; I knew the slight delay in her recovery after a swing. She was favoring her left side. She hadn't slept properly in three days—not since the beast sightings near the Darkling Woods had put the citadel on high alert.
"She’s going to drop," I muttered to myself.
Gwaine, who had been leaning against a crate of apples and tossing one into the air, caught it with a snap of his wrist. "She’s stubborn, Leon. You know that better than anyone. If you tell her to stop, she’ll just train harder to spite you."
"It’s not about spite," I said, though I knew he was partially right. "It’s about endurance. We have a patrol scheduled for dawn. The Northern Borders. If she goes out in this state, she’ll be a liability."
Gwaine raised an eyebrow. "Careful. If she hears you call her a liability, you’ll be the one favoring your ribs."
I didn't smile. I couldn't. The bond I shared with YN wasn't like the one I shared with the other knights. With Arthur, it was duty and destiny; with Elyan, it was camaraderie; with Gwaine, it was usually damage control. But with YN, it was something quieter. It was a grounding force. We were the sensible ones. The ones who cleaned up the mess after the magic settled and the heroes had their glory. I looked out for her, and she, in her own sharp-tongued way, looked out for me.
But right now, looking at the gray pallor of her skin through the rain, I felt a surge of protective instinct that overrode my better judgment.
I waited until the drill was called to a halt. As the recruits groaned and limped toward the barracks, YN remained, wiping mud from her blade with a rag that was equally dirty. She was breathing hard, her shoulders rising and falling in a rhythm that was too jagged.
I didn't approach her then. If I did, Gwaine was right—she would bristle. Instead, I turned on my heel and headed for the Council Chambers.
The decision had felt simple at the time. Rational, even.
Arthur was poring over a map of the outlying villages, tracing the route for the dawn patrol. The Northern Borders were rugged terrain, full of rocky inclines and prone to bandits this time of year. It was a ride that rattled the teeth and bruised the bones.
"I've got the roster here," Arthur said without looking up. "I’m taking Merlin, obviously. Gwaine, Percival, and YN. She knows the terrain better than Percival."
I stepped forward, the lie forming on my tongue with practiced ease. It wasn't a malicious lie; it was a white lie, a shield raised to deflect a blow.
"Sire," I said, keeping my voice even. "I spoke with YN earlier."
Arthur looked up, quill hovering over the parchment. "Oh?"
"She mentioned… a previous injury flaring up. The shoulder she took a hit to last month." I clasped my hands behind my back, the very picture of the First Knight: reliable, honest Leon. "She wouldn't say it to you, of course. She’s too proud. But I believe the Northern ride might put her out of commission for weeks if she pushes it now."
Arthur frowned, concern immediately softening his features. "She didn't say anything during the briefing."
"She wouldn't," I reiterated. "But I saw her struggling in the yard. It might be best to swap her out. Give her two days of light duty in the citadel to recover."
Arthur sighed, scratching his jaw. "Right. Well, we can’t have her incapacitated. Who do you suggest?"
"I’ll take her place," I offered immediately. "And perhaps put Elyan on the perimeter watch."
Arthur nodded, crossing out a name on his list. "Done. Tell her to rest. That’s an order."
"Yes, Sire."
Walking out of the chambers, I felt a sense of accomplishment. I had solved the problem. YN would get the rest she desperately needed, she wouldn't have to admit weakness to Arthur, and I would take the burden of the freezing rain and the rocky terrain. It was a sound tactical maneuver.
I didn't realize until much later that in maneuvering the pieces, I had forgotten that YN wasn't a pawn to be moved for her own safety. She was a queen, and she did not take kindly to being removed from the board.
The fallout didn't happen immediately. The rest of the afternoon passed in a quiet lull. I spent my time overseeing the preparation of the horses and checking the inventory for the patrol. I avoided the mess hall, grabbing a hunk of bread and cheese from the kitchens, assuming YN was likely sleeping off her exhaustion.
It wasn't until the evening bells rang, signaling the end of the working day, that the atmosphere shifted.
I was in the armory again, this time alone. The rain had stopped, but the air remained damp and heavy. The torches flickered against the stone walls, casting long, dancing shadows across the racks of spears and swords. I was tightening the straps on my gauntlets, ensuring everything was ready for dawn, when the heavy oak door creaked open.
I didn't need to turn around to know who it was. The footsteps were light but deliberate—the stride of someone who walked with purpose.
"Leon."
Her voice was low, devoid of its usual warmth. It wasn't a greeting; it was a summons.
I turned slowly, setting the gauntlet down on the bench. YN stood in the doorway, still in her training leathers, though she had cleaned off the mud. Her hair was damp, plastered to her forehead, and her arms were crossed tightly over her chest. But it was her eyes that pinned me in place. They were dark, flashing with a mixture of hurt and cold fury.
"YN," I said, offering a small, tentative smile. "You should be resting. Arthur said—"
"I know what Arthur said," she cut in, her voice sharp as a whip crack. She stepped into the room, the door thumping shut behind her. "I just came from the physician’s quarters. I ran into Merlin. He asked me how my shoulder was."
My stomach gave an uncomfortable lurch. "Ah."
"Yes. 'Ah,'" she mimicked, her expression unyielding. "Imagine my surprise, Leon. Especially considering my shoulder is perfectly fine. In fact, I haven't injured my shoulder in six months."
I sighed, shifting my weight. "I know. I… I improvised."
"You lied," she corrected, taking another step closer. "You lied to the King. You told him I was unfit for duty."
"I told him you needed rest," I argued, my own defensiveness rising. I had done this for her. Why couldn't she see that? "I watched you in the yard today, YN. You were lagging. You were exhausted. If you had gone out on that patrol tomorrow, in this weather, against bandits..."
"That is my call to make!" Her voice echoed off the stone walls, loud enough to make the torchlight tremble. "Not yours. You don't get to decide what I can and cannot handle."
"Someone had to!" I snapped back, the frustration of the day bubbling over. "You never stop. You run yourself into the ground until you collapse, and then you get up and do it again. You think because you don't wear the crest that you have to prove yourself twice as hard every single day. I see it, YN. Everyone sees it."
She flinched, just slightly, as if I had struck her. The anger didn't leave her eyes, but it was joined by something more fragile—humiliation.
"So you decided to speak for me?" she asked, her voice dropping to a dangerous whisper. "You decided to go behind my back and tell Arthur that I am weak?"
"I didn't say you were weak," I pleaded, stepping toward her. "I said you were injured. It’s different."
"To a knight, maybe. To me? It’s the same thing." She backed away, refusing to let me close the distance. "I have fought tooth and nail to be in those briefings, Leon. I have bled more than half the men in this castle to earn my spot on that roster. And you just... erased it. With one conversation."
"I was trying to help," I insisted, spreading my hands. "I was trying to protect you."
"I don't need a protector, Leon!" she shouted, the raw emotion cracking her voice. "I need a partner. I need a friend who respects me enough to tell me to my face if he thinks I’m screwing up. I don't need a handler."
She stared at me for a long moment, her chest heaving. The silence stretched between us, thick and suffocating. I wanted to reach out, to grab her shoulder and shake some sense into her, to make her understand that I couldn't bear the thought of seeing her hurt. But the look on her face stopped me cold. It was a look of betrayal.
"You took my voice," she said softly. "That’s what you did. You didn't take my burden. You took my voice."
She turned and walked out, leaving me alone in the flickering torchlight with my polished armor and my good intentions.
I didn't sleep that night. I sat by the window in my chambers, watching the moon struggle to break through the storm clouds. The castle was quiet, save for the changing of the guards, but my mind was a chaotic storm of regret and self-justification.
I had been right about her exhaustion. I knew I was. Physically, she needed the break. But logically being right felt remarkably hollow when set against the look in her eyes.
I had treated her like a child. Like a damsel. Two things she had spent her entire life proving she was not.
The dawn patrol was grueling, just as I had predicted. The mud was slick, the wind was biting, and the bandits we encountered near the ridge were desperate and vicious. We handled them, of course. I fought with a mechanical precision, my mind elsewhere. Every time I deflected a blow, I imagined YN there, how she would have ducked under the swing, how she would have made a joke about the bandit’s poor hygiene.
Her absence was a physical weight in the formation.
When we returned to Camelot three days later, battered and soaked, the first thing I looked for was her. She wasn't in the courtyard to greet us. She wasn't in the stables.
I found her that evening on the battlements.
The sky had finally cleared, leaving a wash of vibrant purple and orange across the horizon. She was sitting on the stone ledge, legs dangling over the side—a habit that always gave me vertigo, though she claimed it helped her think. She was whittling a piece of wood, the shavings falling into the abyss below.
I hesitated at the top of the stairs. My armor felt heavy, encrusted with three days of grime. I probably smelled like wet horse and old sweat.
"I can hear you breathing, Leon," she said without turning around.
I exhaled, a small cloud of mist forming in the chill air. I walked over and sat down next to her, though I kept my feet firmly planted on the walkway side of the wall. I wasn't as fond of heights as she was.
We sat in silence for a long time. The only sound was the scrape of her knife against the wood.
"The patrol went well," I said eventually. It was a weak opening.
"I heard," she replied. "Merlin told me you took a mace to the shield. Said it nearly took your arm off."
I rubbed my left arm subconsciously. It was bruised, stiff, and aching. "Merlin exaggerates. It was a glancing blow."
"Still." She paused, blowing a wood shaving off her thumb. "Could have been me."
"It could have," I agreed. "But you’re faster than I am. You probably would have dodged it."
She stopped whittling. She turned her head slowly to look at me. Her eyes were no longer furious, just tired. "Is that an admission that I’m a better fighter than the First Knight of Camelot?"
"Let’s not get carried away," I said, a ghost of a smile touching my lips. "I said faster. Not better."
She snorted, a sound that broke the tension just enough for me to breathe again. She went back to the wood, carving a long, thin curve.
"I'm sorry," I said. The words felt inadequate, but they were necessary.
She didn't respond immediately. She focused on the knife, her movements precise. "For what, specifically? Being an overbearing mother hen? Or lying to the King?"
"Both," I said. "But mostly for not coming to you first."
I leaned back against the stone merlon, looking up at the darkening sky.
"I thought I was making things easier," I admitted, the words tasting like ash. "I looked at you, and I saw my friend hurting. I saw you pushing yourself past the breaking point, and I just wanted to… fix it. I wanted to give you a moment to breathe without you having to fight for it."
"I know," she said quietly.
"I didn't think about the politics of it," I continued, needing her to understand the root of it. "I didn't think about how it looked to Arthur or the others. I just thought… if I can carry this for her, I should. That’s what we do, isn't it? We carry the shield for each other."
YN stopped whittling. She set the wood and the knife down on the stone beside her. She pulled her knees up to her chest, wrapping her arms around them.
"The thing is, Leon," she said, her voice soft, carried away by the wind. "When you carry the shield for me without asking, you’re not just taking the weight. You’re taking the choice. You’re telling me that you don't trust me to know my own limits."
"I trust you with my life," I said instantly. "You know that."
"I do. On the battlefield, I know you do." She rested her chin on her knees, looking out at the horizon where the sun had just dipped below the trees. "But here? In the castle? It’s different. I have to fight for every scrap of respect I get. I’m not a noble. I’m not a man. I’m just YN. When you step in and 'handle' things, it reinforces the idea that I need handling."
I closed my eyes, the truth of her words stinging more than the bruise on my arm. "I didn't see it that way. But I see it now."
She nudged my shoulder with hers. It was a small gesture, but it felt like a peace treaty.
"I was tired," she admitted, her voice barely a whisper. "I was exhausted, Leon. If you had asked me, I might have even admitted it. Maybe. Probably not."
I chuckled dryly. "Definitely not."
She smiled, a real smile this time. "Okay, definitely not. But I would have grumbled about it, and then I would have gone anyway. And I would have been miserable."
"And I would have worried the entire time," I added.
"Exactly." She sighed, dropping her legs back over the edge of the wall. "You have a savior complex, Sir Leon. It’s your fatal flaw. You want to save everyone, even from themselves."
"Someone has to save you from yourself," I countered gently. "You have a habit of running into fires without checking if you have water."
"That’s why I have you," she said simply.
The words hung in the air, warm and solid. That was it, wasn't it? The core of us. I was the shield, and she was the sword. I was the caution, and she was the spark. We didn't work because we were the same; we worked because we balanced the scales.
I reached out and picked up the piece of wood she had been carving. It was rough, unfinished, but I could see the shape of a horse’s head emerging from the grain.
"Next time," I said, turning the wood over in my fingers, "I’ll talk to you. If I think you’re going to drop dead from exhaustion, I will tell you to your face. And if you refuse to stand down, I will…"
"You will what?" she challenged, raising an eyebrow.
"I will trip you during training so you have a legitimate excuse to go to the physician," I said with a straight face.
YN laughed, a bright, clear sound that chased away the lingering gloom of the last three days. "You wouldn't dare. That’s unknightly conduct."
"I’m willing to bend the code for the greater good," I said solemnly.
She shook her head, leaning back on her hands. "You’re an idiot, Leon."
"I’m your friend, YN."
She looked at me then, her expression softening into something deeply affectionate. There was no romance in it, no complicated tangle of unrequited feelings. It was just the profound, unshakable knowledge that we were two people who had seen the worst of the world and decided to face it standing next to each other.
"Yeah," she said. "You are."
She reached over and punched me lightly on my bruised arm.
I hissed, clutching the spot. "Ow! What was that for?"
"That," she said, picking up her knife again, "was for lying to the King. Next time you lie to Arthur, make sure it’s a better lie. 'Shoulder injury' is lazy writing."
"I panicked," I defended. "I’m not as practiced at deception as Merlin seems to be."
"True. You have a terrible poker face." She stood up, brushing wood shavings from her trousers. "Come on. I saved you some stew. It’s probably cold, but it’s better than whatever travel rations you’ve been eating."
I stood up, groaning slightly as my stiff joints protested. "Stew sounds perfect."
We walked back toward the tower door together. The tension was gone, replaced by the easy rhythm of our footsteps falling in sync.
"Leon?"
"Hmm?"
"Thank you," she said, not looking at me. "For the thought. Even if the execution was terrible."
I smiled, holding the door open for her. "I’ll work on the execution."
"You better," she said, ducking under my arm. "Because next week is the Solstice tournament, and if you try to get me out of the melee, I will actually stab you."
"Duly noted," I said, following her into the warmth of the castle.
I was still tired, and my arm still throbbed, and the politics of Camelot were as complicated as ever. But as I walked beside her, listening to her complain about the quality of the fletching on the new arrows, the weight in my chest lifted.
I hadn't made things easier, not really. But I had learned that making things easier wasn't the point. Walking through the hard things together—that was the point. And that was a lesson I wouldn't soon forget.














