Of Dirt and Gold
He waited until all the important people had quit the chambers, until the warplanning and the debates and the logistics were hammered out, until the words were chewed over in his mind. It was all the same, heâd thought-- these plannings were just shoving forces here and there, shoring up edges and pressing advantages. It was the most boring part of war; tactics and strategy that did not survive the first encounter.
Now, though, he waited outside Stendenâs office, waiting for the young Lord to return. He did not pace, instead leaning with booths shoulders to the wall, finger tapping out the tune for Goodemberâs Fall on his elbows.
Vissehn did not wait long as Stenden came marching up the spiral staircase. He was exhausted and somewhat flustered from the affairs he just had to deal with. Though it had ended amicably, he felt that he was this close to insubordination if he had not come to a compromise with Lirelle. He was glad for Thanidielâs presence and suggestion- And Vissehnâs support, the one thing he could always count on.
Seeing his friend at his door, he managed a tired smile. âHey Viss,â he said, the shortened name he had coined on the rooftops seemed to stick. âI think that went well, all things considered.â
âEy, Sten.â He tried out the shortening of the name, finding it worked better than he could have hoped. âIt sure went.â Vissehn pushed away from the doorframe and stepped into the office first, showing his back to Stenden as he gathered⌠what he could of his thoughts.Â
Once they were in the room, Vissehn perched himself on the edge of Stendenâs desk and levelled eyes at the youth, one brow cocked. âYou and the dead woman sure have a lot of thoughts on people whomst neither of you come from. Those soldiers might be your people by law of these lands, anâ she might see their blood as just the warâs due, but unless theyâre dead set to dying for one Lord over another, thereâs always more there. Least the militia.â
His voice was carefully neutral, despite the words, and he bounced one leg.Â
âDo you think I made the right choice?â Stendenâs tone is filled with exasperation. There was no answer to this question of course. Everyone had an answer that was right to them. âI have thoughts of them for sure, but as far as Iâm concerned, they are not tools- To be used, expended, until they are of no use to me- That was Merededâs way, and Iâm trying so hard not to repeat his mistakes.â
The anger in the youth abated some at the genuine frustration and consideration Stenden put into the fate of the captured. âItâs a sight better than outright ordering their deaths.â He offered softer, and ran a hand through his golden thatch of hair. âI think yer trying, and thatâs moreân I can say for most nobility Iâve come across.â He glanced sidelong, lips pulling into a tight furl. âTheyâre men anâ women just like us.â
He glanced to Stenden again, taking the measure of the boy once more. That red hair, the fine-boned face that was so like his lady motherâs, the set of jaw that was somewhere between father and uncle. He would grow tall-- as tall as Sederis, in all likelihood, if not taller. Intelligence lit those green eyes, and emotion that was raw and mortal.
âSten, yer gandsire made his mistakes in thinkinâ oceans of blood would buy lasting peace. Thereâs no thing as lasting peace-- thereâs spans of time where shit isnât as raw a deal, but it always ends.â He sighed. âIf you remember that anâ keep the price of violence low, yer ahead.â
His thoughts swam; Stenden had spent his whole life sheltered in these and the Dawnveilsâ walls. Heâd never been so hungry his body wasted, never know a violence so far above him he couldnât retaliate. He wasnât a cruel or unjust lad-- he was so used to the life of a Lord he knew nothing else.
Finally, he stood up. âAfter this next engagement, I want ye to set aside some time for yer pal Fish. Not much-- the span of a few days. Leave thâpaperwork for yer father for a spell.â He closed the distance and laid a hand on Stendenâs shoulder, forcing his lips to pull the roguish smile that had predicated their trip to the roof. âYe trust me?â
âI do, of course I do,â Stenden responded with a tired smile of his own, though it would never be as roguish, never be as wide. It was true of course, that he had lived a sheltered life. Never starved. Never struggled for warmth on a cold winterâs night. âIt may be difficult, but Iâll make time for you.â
âAnd I know they are just men and women like you and me, but there are so many voices Viss, so many. From both the living and the dead,â he ran his hands over his face and through his hair, undoing his tie and letting the locks fall across his shoulders. âMy father speaks about them as leverage. Mother speaks about them as means to vengeance. Lirelle speaks of tools to war. Sederis speaks- spoke- of them as children. His duty- my duty, to protect them, from the abuses of power- even- especially the ones from myself.â
âThat way, I will never be like Mereded. He may have had two hundred years of peace, but the cost of that is one we are paying for now. Because youâre right. Peace never lasts. Nothing ever lasts.â Vissehn didnât know what the boy was referring to exactly. But neither did Stenden. In a span of two weeks, which felt like an eternity, everything for the boy had changed. He had changed.
The cascade of red hair was so familiar it ached in Vissehnâs throat. If he could have prevented the death of Sederis, he would have-- his regret, as it was for many, from the Phoenix Wars. He could have saved a friend, and saved a youth from a weight far too much for one to carry so young.
âItâs hard, to just see people as people. Thatâs all they are, though.â He shrugged. âSederis was a good man but he was blinded by his guilt anâ what his father tried to make of him. Yer motherâs been a pawn in so many politics⌠I figure, sheâs burninâ herself up to reclaim somethinâ robbed from her and sheâd take all of the Emberglades down wiv her if it means getting her pound of flesh. Women donât get it easy, no matter their place in the world.â His voice is soft on that, something almost bitter and longing in the words. âYer father sees numbers anâ canât tell a man from a scarecrow.â His voice becomes a sneer, and his lips curl away from his teeth. âThinks yer lineage is what sets a man apart. Huh.âHe suppressed the urge to spit.Â
Taking a breath, he closed the distance and placed a hand on Stendenâs shoulder. âHey.â Again his voice went low with an urgent earnestness. âYer doing what you can, right? Just keep trying. Keep making thâchoices that no one wants to hear, for the sake of people who may not like or respect ye. Youâre more than decent, Sten. I got faith in your choices. Iâm here fer advising and helping where I can, but the reason Iâm here is âcause I got faith in you. I wouldnât have signed on wiv Solendis, anâ I didnât become Sederisâ anything but friend, yeah? Ye said you were the Lord of the Emberglades, anâ it werenât a title-- well, I ainât signing on with a title, Iâm signing on wiv you.â
He speaks with a conviction that he wills to fill his friend, to flow from the place his hand connects. His thumb brushes the place where collar meets skin and he grins roguishly. âIâm here to listen if ye got summat else to tussle with. Or if ye just need some sense beat into yer arse.â
Stenden makes a chuckle, the first today. âI appreciate it, I really do,â he looks up at his friend. âYou have to believe me Viss, when I say that Iâm trying my best. That if I make a bad choice, it isnât out of callousness, or that Iâve forgotten that people like you are just that: People.â And at the same moment of confession and a promise not to be callous, he mentioned that very line that got under his skin. Not so much that he said it, but the manner in which it was said. Like it was a matter of fact that there was something that set them apart at the core- and that it was normal
The hand drops. He wants to say it; wants to remind Stenden that they both bleed red, that their bones both bleach white in the sun, that their graves will be no more than stone and earth encompassing decay. Vissehn works the words over like tough hide in the jaws of his thoughts, and no matter how he grinds against it he finds no blood in the meat.
âSo long as I have yer trust, weâll be just fine, wonât we?â His voice is light, grin wide as he throws himself over the chair that faces Stendenâs desk. Words will not make a concept into a man; he cannot break a lifetime of Soldenis lectures with anger or debate or fighting until theyâre bleeding, even if his belly screams for it, even if he would feel better by slamming someone with that noble blood hard enough against the stone to see it wash over his hands.Â
Lying to survive was given to him in the cradle with milk; lies are the currency of the Unwelcomed, and Vissehn was wealthy beyond measure.
Swinging his long, lean legs, Vissehn whistled. âSo! Got an uprising to settle, anâ then those⌠men in the ground who think weâre still fightinâ the Big Blue Lion, huh?â
âYes,â he was glad for the redirection to the company of Men of the Black Banner who were somehow still operational in the troll tunnels that line the borders of the Emberglades. âI hear theyâve been stealing from peasants all along the mountain range, occasionally burning crops. Must think that the Alliance won and weâre all just sympathizers providing for the enemy now.â
Stenden wondered if the Civil War breaking out had anything to do with their sudden resurgence, or if they had always been there since the end of the war and Zarannis had been observant enough to pick them out.
Vissehn snorted. âWell, itâs a good thing I ainât goinâ to that lil shindig.â He drew his hands under his eyes and batted his lashes at Stenden prettily. âThese lookers would make âem shit bricks anâ shoot first, ask questions later.â His blue-gray eyes were certainly not the common Sinâdorei fare, shiny like metal and without the glow most considered inherent in the elves of the north.Â
âSeems a real shite deal, though. Best of luck to them that are gonna try anâ pry them from their foxholes. Must be hard thinkinâ the world ended.â He whistled softly, but thereâs no sympathy in his words; his fey mood has returned, masking the bubbling rage that boiled in his center.
Stenden laughed when his friend batted his eyelashes at him. âIâm sure they would. Hopefully father giving Zarannis their banner would at least make them pause for thought,â he said, shaking his head for his own benefit. âJust like the Shalemarchers. Weâll deal with them the best we can, and if we can get them home- All the better.â The boy failed to appreciate that if they had a home, it was likely gone in Lord Tarâsarenâs scorched earth policy he employed against Everliegh. Stopping her advance dead in its tracks. The Bulwark functioning as its namesake.
Still sprawled like a kitten, Vissehn laughed, raking a hand through his hair. âIâll wish âem well an be glad I ainât joininâ. Iâll take a revolt over men who think itâs all over, anyday. A man whose got kin anâ babes anâ land can be reasoned with. A man without shite? Hoo.â He mimed wiping sweat from his brow.
Propping himself up on elbows, he let his grin reach his eyes. âSpeakinâ ofâŚâ His tongue passed over his teeth as he weighed the capricious desire in him with the anger he struggled to hold at bay. In the end, he was no match for his own baser thoughts.
âHows about we don some cloaks anâ slip off to somewhere theyâre singinâ the good songs, all bawdy and blue.â He lifted his brows invitingly. âOr we can see ifân thereâs some trouble to suss up with yon merchants in town. Somethinâ to get us out of this prison of a castle! Telâdorei donât do well in stone walls.â He drawled the last, a helpless and teasing whine.
âI really shouldnât,â Stenden replied, and felt the weight of his station bear down upon him. But, he had already done his duty had he not? Put his foot down on what he could not accept, and what would be damaging to the realm that he had to put back together. The war meetings were over and it was all he was good for. Tomorrowâs reports could wait. His father was handling the amnesty proclamations. Drafting reconciliation clauses had a deadline that lay far into the future for now. All he would be losing was sleep, and with the war no longer in such a precarious state, he reckoned he could afford it.
âBut yeah, why not?â He said with a grin.Â
Vissehnâs grin was slow and languid, and he pushed up on the chair to rise, slinging his arm over Stendenâs shoulders as she all but pushed the youth out the door to the office and towards the guest wing. âI got a few spare cloaks anâ a ratty tunic thatâd suit ye, letâs get gussed down anâ have ourselves a night.â This he whispered into Stendenâs ear, the anger metamorphizing into something capricious and fey; he couldnât fight Stenden, not right now, so heâd do the damage his father had warned Vissehn against.
Heâd make a mortal of the Lord, if it killed the both of them.
--
They made their way through the mostly-empty halls to Vissehnâs suite, and the youth threw the lock as soon as they were inside. âNow, come on, off with that fancy embroidered doily you got on anâ weâll be out thâwindow anâ in a tavern afore the maids can gossip to yer father that you were seen walkinâ to my rooms.â
Led by the impeteous youth, Stenden tries his best to be silent as he makes his way to the guest wing. The beating of his heart rises, for the thrill and fears of being caught. Either by his father or the House Guards who would no doubt repeat what they saw to him. âRight then,â he says taking off his shirt of blues and golds and looking to Vissehn to provide him with something⌠Less telling of his station. âI doubt the patrons at the tavern would recognize me. Iâve hardly shown my face to the people until the last few months.â
âTheyâll not think yer anything but maybe a byblow once Iâm done wiv ye.â Vissehnâs brows arched high as he dug in his wardrobe, pulling and discarding clothing like mad. Heâd earned hazard pay from his stint spying, and a sizable portion must have been blown on the clothing he now tossed wildly-- it was a flurry of linen and cotton. Finally, he found what he sought, and wadded it up before chucking it straight at Stendenâs head.
The tunic proved to be well made, if simple; geometric embroidery around the collar and hems were all it sported by way of ornament, the natural colors of the fibers making it seem of poorer make than it was. âI got that in⌠I think it was thâhumans camp?â He whistled. âSmuggled it onâ to look thâpart, but it was Eversong made, the man musta taken it off someones washline.â He snorted. âItâs too big for my scrawny bones but mayhap itâll fit those growinâ young shoulders of yours.â
For his part, he simply pulled on a tight ocher vest, lacing it over his chest with a skill and speed that seemed uncanny. âNow, out the window we go!â His laughter was wild and bright as he flung himself to the sil and tossed the shutters wide. Without waiting, he was hopping onto the tiles, thoughts already halfway drowning in a bottle.
Stenden caught the wadded shirt as it rushed towards his face and chuckled. Then he gestured at the mess of clothes that had seemed to fountain out of Vissehnâs wardrobe. âI should have expected it but Iâm really amazed at all this. You must have an outfit for every occasion.â The boy of the Emberglades pulled the tunic over his head, checked if it fit but tugging on the shoulder edges.
Then, as his friend pulled himself out the window, Stenden smiled inwardly and followed him out. âSo do you know where weâre going?â He asked as he pulled himself onto the tiles after Vissehn.
âItâs all part of beinâ a spy, a soldier AND the best damn singer in Eversong.â He grinned as his friend caught up, footing sure on this part of the roof. Heâd explored it the first day heâd arrived-- he knew its cracks and shifts better than he knew the path to the front door. âI have to look the part!â
Unsaid was that heâd grown up in the same tunic for a decade, rehemmed and patched until almost nothing remained of the original fabric. When he got his first payment from the Sunguard, heâd been so stunned that the cheque had nearly been caught by a breeze. When the gold was in his hands, heâd spent it all on nothing-- pastries heâd never eaten, amusement and novelties, clothing. His innate vanity had overcome him and heâd been so pleased with the purchases.
It took him longer to realize how he was going to earn the coin; now he kept it out of vanity but the gilt had flaked from the lily.Â
When their boots hit the cobbles, Vissehn jerked his chin towards the common parts of the expanse. âThereâs a spot what I was told about by the cook, I think-- no one will much care who you are so long as you arenât an Emberheart, so weâll just have to pass you off as a bastard if someone gets too nosey.â He flicks Stendenâs nose as they walk, his arm finding its way around the young lordâs shoulders once more.
âA bastard huh?â Stenden folded his arms as they made their way down the cobbled streets towards the nearby township. âShall we pick an emergency name? Reddy Redwheat?â He gives Vissehn a grin and a terrible, terrible suggestion that he thought- for whatever reason- was a good one.
âOh, and should I put on an accent as well? I doubt I speak like a peasant.â Stenden cleared his throat to attempt a voice, but realized he had no idea what they sounded like. It humbled him somewhat, and his smile faded into thoughtfulness. âWhy are we really going to the tavern Viss?â
Vissehn laughed at the assumed name. âJust say yer name isâŚâ He tapped a finger to his chin. âAh! Say yer Alya.â He snickered. âHer get wonât be round here, the Bears arenât fond of anyplace without trolls.â he let the words hang enigmatically, still drawing on Stendenâs arm.
âWeâre gonna get piss drunk.â His response was easy. âIâm gonna learn you a bit, after the next fight, but I want you to remember how good it is to drink somewhere where noone cares who yer father or mother are, where yer just another nameless cock amongst the roost. Yer accents fine, plenty of lads from the south get good educations, anâ tonight, yer my friend from the south!â He clapped Stendenâs back.
âAlya,â he raised an eyebrow at his friend. âA girl's name?â He brushes off the engenderment, it didnât matter too much to him compared to other boys his age. Likely a side-effect of growing up around Dawnveil girls who were valued no less than the boys were.
The smile returns to his face when he gets clapped on the back. âWell no worries then, it even sounds like a spot of fun!â An anxiety spread up from the pits of his stomach but he ignored it. It was likely the first time heâd be regarded without his title hanging above his head. Would people hate him, not knowing who he was? Would he truly be just like everyone else? Only time would tell.
âAlya is a boyâs name where Iâm from! Right up there with Ilya, Ivan anâ Ares.â He repeated his cousins names by rote. It was strange; he hadnât seen them in most of his life, but he remembered their names and their faces and how theyâd died. âNow, Alyashun, thatâs a Matriarchâs name, anâ so I gave you the name of one of her sons. Heâs got red hair anâ long ears cause she got him with a nobleman.â His brows wriggled. âSome of the southern lords got Deals with the Mamaâs of the clans.â
It didnât take long, even on foot, to reach the bar. It was less a tavern than most-- meant to service the soldiers passing through and not the locals. So, when Stenden and Vissehn entered, nobody looked up from their tables or glasses. It was all loud voices and laughter-- they were winning, afterall. The atmosphere was light without being riotous, and it seemed the perfect place for a pair of young roustabouts to get a drink.
Vissehn guides them towards the bar itself, and one of the bartenders behind the wood calls out above the din. âWhatâll it be?â
âTwo of whatevers cheap, my friend!â He slaps his silver down, turning to listen to the motley men and woman having their grand times. The conversations are as expected; the front, the pay, what came next. However, a small group of men next to the pair of youths were speaking of other things-- the camp followers, and their lovers back home.
Stenden listens in on the men. Though most of their conversation continues about lust and desire there are subtle and occasional reaffirmations of fidelity. So despite Merededâs best efforts to forge perfect soldiers from his people: Drilling children into trained men and women, praising a warrior ethos that found value in being expendable. The people continued to live, continued to love, and outside the laws they lived under- life continued as normal. It made him wonder if he had it in him to change things. Because if this was proof that was all a tyrant like his grandfather could do, what chance did he have?
But he pushes that away as two mugs of the cheapest ale slide across the table to them. âVictory is on everyoneâs lips- Victory and what to do with it,â Stenden says with a smile. From Solendisâ propaganda papers that were being published out of a converted farmstead, winning was only a matter of time now.
They outnumbered their enemies three to one. Between House Swiftquiverâs new orders against a new enemy, and Amnesty Offers forging new companies of men. All they needed to do was march up to the last stand of Westheath at the Illithian fortress-home. But of course, the papers did not speak of the sheer disorganization of it all. Army units were spread throughout the Emberglades, some marching towards Kearn, others assisting with law and order in Shalemarch. Worse still, it did not mention that it could be over- Right now- if the Illithians that remained werenât prepared to fight to the death.
The boy listened to the men nearby them for a moment longer before asking his friend a question. âNo one special, no camp followers that struck your fancy or girls where youâre from?â Stenden did not know of course, of his friendâs people. Only that they were different.
âWell, the best of the Sunguard, this war werenât gonna last long.â He takes a glug of the ale and his brows shoot up. âCor, even yer piss ale is better out here. I donât regret slowinâ myself down here for a space.â His gaze slides over the room, but it keeps latching onto the youth next to him. The warm glow of the candlelight seemed to make him older, show the man he would become.
These men and women would serve Stenden; they would live their lives in service, but at least they lived. It was a comfort, that the nature of living never changed. If there were no lords tomorrow, if the whole system was gone, people would still drink. They would still laugh, and fuck, and cry and die. No matter what, people could thrive. If he could, heâd make it easier on them-- use his place and words to pave a path forwards for the people.
No one should have to starve; no one should fight for their right to live. Heâd born it, but he remembered the whispered truths from his mothers lips. He knew the promise of the Telâdorei.
Freedom.
The question startles him out of the reverie, and he looks to Stenden with a half choked laugh. âMe?!â He snorted and shook his head. âHa! Iâm not thâkind to take a long shine. A pretty girl-- or handsome lad-- for a summerâs hour, lips locked with mine and hands a-wandering-- thatâs certainly a pleasant waste of time. But I got too many places to rove for moreân that.â He chuckles. âA tumble, sweet parting words, thatâs all itâs gotta be for a lad like me.â
The lies flow easily. Itâs not hard; itâs not as if the relationships between individuals were kept from him. He knows the mechanics of intimacy-- has given others pleasure. But the charm he summons is as much armor as it is invitation, and when he leaves he knows his paramores sing his praises without knowing the secret of his frame.
âThey got a pretty Lady on the line for ye? Kissed anâ cuddled a gal from the Dawnveilâs lands?â He adds, willing to court danger for awhile with the conversation. He leans forward, so their noses nearly brush. âDonât tell me my friend hasnât had such a pleasant diversion.â His words come out low, teasing, those pretty blue eyes lidded with mischief.Â
Stenden takes a big swig of ale before continuing, hoping to dull the heavier thoughts that seemed to be dampening the evening. âOf course Iâve had⌠Pleasant diversions,â he paused and stressed the last words taken from his friend. âThereâs a girl from Dawnveil, niece of one of the maidservants who was staying with the Dawnbrooks for the summer- Least, what passes for summers on the Isle.â A blush seems to rise on the boyâs cheeks. It was nothing serious of course, just a kiss and bit of clumsy exploration before their time was interrupted by a dinner bell. But the thoughts still fired up something within him when he thought of it.
âSheri,â he said wistfully. âBut she isnât on the line no- Lowborn- and all that,â Stenden waved his hand as if chasing something off in mock annoyance. âIn either case, I didn't see her the following year, or this one. So I doubt anything will come of it: To my fatherâs relief if he ever knew about it.â
Then as the ale started to sink in he narrowed his eyes at his friend, âor handsome lads?â That seemed to resound in his memory.
Vissehn snorts. âYer father likely had somethinâ to do with her not beinâ there the followinâ year, friend.â He shakes his head, the memory of his conversation with the steward not one he would forget, despite the liquor and attempts to drown out the derision and disdain the man had for the people he considered his lessers. âBut thatâs a start, my friend!â He pats Stendenâs shoulder, in the way the wise do for the uninitiated; congratulatory and yet condescending.
He does not let his thoughts linger on how ephemeral Stendenâs attentions are; his own are flighty as well, save that he sees the common and the noble with the same lack of permanence.Â
When his friends eyes narrow, Vissehn giggles wickedly. âCâmon now, you have a good education anâ spent time wiv the Dawnbrooks. You canât be so sheltered as all that!â He leans in, the ale thick in his breath, and drags a finger under Stendenâs chin-- from throat to the very tip, where he catches the boy quick, thumb at the point of his face.Â
âIâve kissed the Jessamine of thâ Rosewinds anâ made her flush so prettily ye could say I placed the flowers in her cheeks; I courted thâlord of Voidsunder so well he gave me a blade fit for a king... all for the price of my lips.â He runs his tongue over those selfsame lips, slow and deliberate. âHad plenty of pretty lordlings anâ handsome lasses. May be a Fish outa water, but they know me by my honeyed tongue, and arenât liable to forget what I can do with it, either.â His grin widens and he lets a brow rise, conspiratorial and mocking all at once.
Stenden turns red, half from the alcohol, and half from the embarrassment before pulling away from Vissehnâs hand. âI know! Iâm not sheltered itâs just that-â he leaned back and gestured at his friend from head to toe. âYouâre Vissehn! I wouldnât have figured-â the boy quickly went back to his drink to shut himself up. His friend was a manâs man. Loud, boisterous, boastful. But he supposed he was pretty enough to draw the turn the heads of many-a-Lord.
Then, after a moment of alcohol mired thought, he gave Vissehn a look. âWere these courting of the Lords and Ladies intentional or incidental?â He asked a not so subtle loaded question.
Vissehnâs laugh is uproarious, and he grips the bar to catch himself from falling off his seat. âCor, the look on you!â He slaps the counter and takes a long drink, finishing his flagon. Dropping more silver, he chuckles even after the moment of pure, chaotic mirth is spent. âAhhh⌠I forget how young you are sometimes, friend!â He reaches up to ruffle Stendenâs hair. âHoo. I should be kinder,â though his tone is not promising.
At the pointed question, Vissehn snorts, eyes flicking from Stenden to the barkeep who was pouring him more. âPeople get drawn in by someone who smiles and has a good time. Half thâtime I just grin anâ giggle and they line themselves up neat like-- common anâ not.â He pauses. âI tell you this; Iâve taken a gift or so for my charm, but Iâm no whore.â He says it without rancor or shame. âI donât seek coin, or power, or nothinâ. Iâd be a mighty fool of a strumpet ifân I turned down your offer back when you asked if Iâd join on.â He lifted his brow meaningfully.Â
When the mug was filled, Vissehn nodded to the man behind the counter; he knew the kind, and he knew that the fellow was not a fool. Stenden would be known here, for all Vissehnâs posturing, and that he had come to drink-- and not cause trouble-- would be known as well. What happened with the information, well⌠he knew an ear or three to whisper in. Heâd make this a good thing for the boy-lord, and not one for ill.
Solendis might think making a man of an idea made it lose value; Vissehn knew better. Heroes were made from people, lifted high. You werenât born a god; the best heroes had a little of the godliness in the blood, and fought-- bled-- wept for the rest.Â
He shrugged then. âWhen I was just a sprout, I was popular with my set. Got myself good at talking, and listening, and it did me well. When I joined up with the Sunguard, well-- the good folks there were more noble than not. Myself, Captain Sunshard, The Oracle⌠who else.â He taps his chin. âDawnstalker, yeah. Heâs common. Highdawn is akin to it. You see how hard it is to name even two hands worth of commborn?â He lifted his newly filled mug for a drink, and then clinked it against Stendenâs. âIâm a simple man; I like diversions. New things, fun things, fun people. Iâll make friends with those around me, easy, and if they want more, well-- if theyâre interesting, I donât see the harm.â
Stenden got a refill for himself as he listened to his friend. âPower flows upwards,â he made the shape of a pyramid with his hands. âPeasants & commonfolk to landowners & merchants, landowners & merchants to their barons, barons to dukes, then dukes to the king- Well Lord Regent in our case.â The boy tried to explain what he knew of the system he was in.Â
âCommonfolk are good folks, but in the places that make the world, they rarely have the power to stand the others.â He gave a thoughtful pause. âThe Glades, we value merit as much as we do birthright. Take Lady Swiftquiver or Lord Tarâsaren for instance. Raised to their stations from action- Not whose loins they sprung forth from!â
The boy had forgotten his cover, and began speaking all Lord-like. Not drawing that much attention in the lively tavern but enough for the man behind the counter and some nearby to really take notice. But to Vissehnâs relief, they liked what they heard and made no mention of it.
âI donât give a lick about power.â Vissehn offered back with a laugh. âIâve been poor as they come anâ Iâve lead troops, all the same, and power is just another thing they tryân sell ye. Iâd rather be fightinâ on my own. Now, Iâll take it-- when needs must, or when it suits-- but thatâs not for me.â He waves a hand, noting that the shift in conversation is far easier for his friend to stomach. Well, that was fair-- he was a sheltered lad, and hadnât lived the kind of life Vissehn had. And well. Vissehn was luckier than his aunties and girl-cousins; heâd at least had the veneer of protection, and choice with his pursuits, brief and limited as they were. Heâd never been faced with the ultimatums or the pressure. Heâd been a boy long enough for it to benefit him.
âI got a passel of thoughts on things here but this ainât my home, so Iâm gonna listen more than I talk.â He shrugs. âAll I know is, pretty face anâ a way with words-- that gets me in a lot of doors. Noble, merchant, common-- we all wanna feel special anâ get that attention from someone who seems interested. When that donât work, Hawkinâ mail, or thâSunguard sign would do the rest. Now, Iâma have to find me other sure ways of finding mischief.â He wiggled both his brows.Â
The boy nods, it was never about power for Vissehn. Stenden remembered their first meeting, how he had casually turned down his offer for power. As meager as something as a cottage and a small stint of land. But perhaps, he thought, it was more about freedom than any particular distaste for power.
He chuckles and raises his mug for his friend, âto mischief then!â Stenden cheers and slips deeper into inhibition. But through his ale muddled thoughts he finds a thread that he picked up earlier but discarded at the time. His smile mellows somewhat as he stares into his mug. âSpeaking of mischief- What did you mean my father had something to do with her not being there? Sheri, I mean.â
The pair raise their glasses in the call for mischief, and it's as good an oath as Vissehn has ever given. He drains the flagon again, the quality of the ale just beginning to affect him. Everything has a gloss to it that he associates with the edge of inebriation, and it's a pleasant one-- with pleasant company to boot, even if Stenden is just a lad with more nobility than sense.Â
The other youth snorts as he puts down the empty mug. "Yee father got some notions about how you ought to spending your time. Which include less of me altogether." He twirls a finger in the air dismissively. "Not the first fucker to tell me I'm a bad influence, first one to say it was cause he'd set his--" Vissehn cuts off, and scowls. "Well, he had his ideas and I got mine. I got the feeling though weren't the first time he's warned someone off of ye, he had the words ready to cut to the quick; we're all just lucky I'm a bastard with no honor to protect from, yeah?" He rubs at the back of his neck. "If he got wind of somethin as sordid as a lordling pawing at a servants girl, well. Seems he's the type to tuck that away and get it gone afore anyone else is the wiser. Hope he just sent her and her auntie packin, an' no worse."
Emotions churn through him, they cut, wash away, and swirl. Like a storm on the alabester wall that was Stenden. He did not know what to do with any of it. "I had my suspicions," his voice hardens, swinging away from the mirth it held just moments ago. "And he must have said the same to you." He gestures for the barkeep to give him a refill.
"To protect me? Did he say what from? From you?"
"Fuck, Sten, I was piss drunk. I'm proud I didn't hit him in the jaw, cause I was that mad but I don't recall all he slung at me. Just that I'd be ruinin' yer future, and he was protectin' your credibility." He will not say he has a much better memory than he lets on; that Solendis knows he is Unwelcomed and Tel'dorei and a lower form of low than even the commoners at this bar, in these lands. Stenden can wring that from his father if he wishes; he can fight the power of his ancestry on his own, without the need to defend the honor of his friend who has none.
There is a quality to the hardness in Stenden that reminds Vissehn of the last days of Sederis rule as Lord in these lands, and it more than the reminder of his own fractured history that sobers the lad. Here was another who would not care to be controlled; sees his father's warning as protection, unnecessary for him, rather than protection of the way of life. He drops silver as a tip, and slings an arm around Stendens shoulders.
"Let's get th'fuck out of here, howl in the hills for a spell. Yer father can't rid you of me; yer the only one who can send my ass to pasture." He offers it consolingly, guiding Stenden to the door.
âPart of me wishes you punched him- But consequ- conse- Thatâd have been bad,â Stenden slurred minorly.
But as Vissehn slung his arm around his shoulder, the boy rises to his feet and gets guided to the door. âThatâs good,â he says, âbecause I never will.â With one final gesture to the barkeep, he swallowed both his ale and his anger down in one go.
He did not say it, but there was a tension in his heart. Being treated like a houseplant. Put in a box as his father did the gatekeeping. With that information now in the open, he began to wonder how many friends he had lost. Or if that girl from Dawnveil actually did feel the same way he did for her- he had assumed she never came back because he hadnât mattered that much to her. He had been Solendisâ offering to the Emberglades, except Solendis had never asked if he was willing or not- because the offering was finally beginning to think for himself. Like mother, like son.
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Image by Jason Manley.
@retributionpriestâ @stormandozoneâ @thanidielâ














