The Witch Son
and a swift justice to those that got away with it
Veora was here before her father, as she knew she would be. The Emperor and her father would make a slightly late appearance to dinner. As far as she knew, they'd spent all of noontime together, her father had not even been sent away long enough to change his riding clothes to something more formal.
The usher announced her entrance to the Empress's dining hall.
“Your majesties.” Veora entered and curtsied low.
“Welcome Lady Veora, you may rise.” Empress Alexandra nodded from where she sat, to the right of the head chair of the table. The left open for Lord Grimald, and then Tristan. With Veora’s seat nestled between the Empress and Princess respectively.
A seating arrangement divided by gender.
Prince Tristan approached Veora as she rose, and by now, she'd steeled herself to a perfect calm.
“This is my son and heir to the throne, Crown Prince Tristan.” The Empress introduced him.
“My Lady, a relief to be finally introduced.” Prince Tristan offered his hand.
Which Veora took, and she recalls this moment as one of wonder, now only a battle line drawn.
“The pleasure is all mine, your grace.” She said politely, allowing him to lead her to her seat. Her eyes did not linger on him.
“And this is my daughter, Princess Alegra.” The Empress gestured to her.
“Charmed.” Alegra looked her up and down, like a cat surveying if a mouse was worth hunting or not.
“It's an honor Princess.” Veora took her seat.
This moment she remembered well, it'd been the first time she'd been dispelled of the notion that the south was all gentile ladylike splendor. Princess Alegra’s claws bore into her for the first and last time, as she'd been deemed boring by the Princess, and was of no account. A blessing in disguise, as the Princess played roughly with the things she did deem intriguing.
At the time though, it'd dismayed her. She had thought to ingratiate herself to her cousin, her ultimate goal being becoming her sister by matrimony after all.
“Are those shell bobbles on your ears Lady Veora? How peculiar, I’ve never seen such a thing.” Princess Alegra reached over and inspected them, without asking and not being precisely gentle in the way she tugged them closer to her eye.
Veora bore it well, if a little surprised at the sudden tug. Despite knowing it was coming. She bent obediently.
“Well, yes, they are.” She knew the princess expected her to tell her from where they came, but didn't elaborate. They’d come from House Day’s heir. From Sylas, on her birthday, he usually got her a new pair of shell or pearl from his territory.
His name didn't need to be uttered in this court, by these people.
“Hmmmm, pretty.” Princess Alegra released her ears abruptly.
She and her cohort would be wearing ones like them within the next few weeks, and from there the rest of the court would suddenly take a keen liking to them. It would be one of summer's trends at court.
“If you could refrain from tearing our Lady Veora’s ears off Alegra…” Prince Tristan sounded annoyed. He always did when he was speaking to his sister, or of her.
His seat scraped on the floor, as if to make his displeasure known as he sat down on the other end of the table.
“Oh don't act as though she's delicate Tristan, she's as tall as you and I only come to her shoulder.” Alegra shot back.
Veora remembered being offended at this before, but now, she understood better that to the Princess this was no insult. She viewed delicate and weak things with disgust, especially if ever found in herself.
“Apologies, Lady Veora, they never grew out of bickering like children unfortunately.” Empress Alexandra sighed.
“It's the way of all brothers and sisters I think.” Veora’s smile was true at this.
“Do you miss yours already? I heard that your father never sent you or your brother to ward anywhere, nor much out of The Mountainkeep at all. I doubt you've ever spent much time apart.” Empress Alexandra asked.
“Ever? So like us?” Prince Tristan smirked at his mother.
“No, like me.” Princess Alegra retorted before her mother could respond.
“You've gotten to see a battle camp before and went on tour not a year ago. That's not being shut in a keep Tristan.” She bitterly berated.
“That's hardly anything.” Prince Tristan rolled his eyes.
Once again discounting his many fortunes as nothing.
“Yes.” Veora confirmed, looking to the Empress.
“Not only my siblings, though we may bicker, but the whole of the north. I’ve left my heart behind there.”
“Your heart my lady?” Prince Tristan asked.
“How sweet, you love your home.” The Empress understood what Veora meant.
“Indeed, I have no greater love than my home.”
“How dull, no explorative spirit to speak of.” Princess Alegra sniffed.
“Alegra…” Empress Alexandra sounded exasperated.
“I've read many accounts of explorers of the known world. Before it was mapped. And they all expressed the same thing towards the end. That home, ultimately, was where they yearned to be.” Prince Tristan piped up, looking toward Veora.
“But… I think it is the fate of ladies, is it not? To leave their home and make another once they marry.”
“Not necessarily, I doubt Lady Veora is bereft of options.” Empress Alexandra noted.
“True, I could, for instance, become a nun.” Veora smiled.
It earned her surprised laughter, her first words that sounded personable and not like rehearsed formality.
“So you follow the church, and not the heathens?” Alegra asked in a falsely innocent tone.
Though rudely phrased, it did not escape Veora’s notice that no one came to her defense on that matter.
“I proudly follow both, Princess Alegra.” Veora’s voice was not meek, nor did it tremble at the prodding of the princess’s claws. Rather, she sounded amused.
“How?” Said princess scoffed.
Prince Tristan clicked his tongue, “We're instructed to honor our forefathers by the church and yet you demand Lady Veora to abandon half of her’s? The north is a different animal entirely from the south, of course she must honor the religion of her people there.” He said, as though it were obvious, “And besides, you're sitting here castigating the honorable lady over a church you constantly complain about and never attend. Hypocrisy thy name is Alegra.”
“They're usually never this ugly in front of guests.” Empress Alexandra noted to Veora in a hushed tone.
“As though you're much better, citing scripture now are we?” Alegra’s tone increased in haughtiness.
“I am better, I thank you for recognizing superiority when you see it.” Prince Tristan made a great show of adjusting his doublet's collar.
Alegra rolled her eyes in disgust, but her pinched smile betrayed her amusement.
“To elaborate, it might surprise you to learn that while the church of aule sees fit to denounce all other faiths as false and invalid. It is not so the other way around. As Prince Tristan mentioned, it is an entirely different way of looking at the world. Aule is divine, untouchable, and sets for us rules by which we may live. While the old gods are much less interested in telling you how to live rather than sharing with you how they did, and offering you aid in your own story.” Veora said slowly and carefully, choosing her words wisely.
“How… peculiar.” Empress Alexandra nodded neutrally.
“Well they're much more interesting, these old gods, than scripture.” Prince Tristan’s eyes twinkled as he smiled, genuinely enthralled.
“I’ll say.” Alegra agreed as she took another sip of wine, looking around.
“Shouldn't father be here right now? What in the world could Lord Grimald and he be talking about that's taking so long.” Alegra looked to her mother, and arched a brow at the realization that it did not seem like her mother had an answer.
“Your father has always named Lord Grimald as his closest friend, and it's been years since they've met last. Your father is probably letting the time get away from him.” Empress Alexandra gestured to a valet at the corner of the room, who whispered something to a guard.
No doubt to go check.
Veora realized, with no small amount of discomfort, that it had been past the time when her father and the Emperor should have arrived.
“I hope everything is alright, I know father had a rather unpleasant thing to discuss with the Emperor.” Veora frowned.
“Oh? Does it have anything to do with that astrological event?” Prince Tristan asked.
“Again with the astrological event.” Alegra heaved a sigh, quite done, apparently, with hearing of it.
“You do go on about that dear.” Empress Alexandra agreed with her daughter.
“Ah but I have a new piece of the puzzle! I am to understand that Lady Veora, here with us, fell deathly ill, during this event. Or perhaps because of it? Or… maybe she caused it.” Tristan winked.
Veora froze.
And this time both mother and daughter rolled their eyes and sighed exasperatedly.
“My Prince you tease me, stars do not fall and move for silly women.” Only they do and they did. For silly women and the great and terrible oaths they make to old, desperate, gods.
She looked down demurely.
“No of course not, but all the same. When we got word that you had fallen so ill we were sad to hear it. We did not think that in so short a time you would be visiting us. But all the same, we are glad to have you.” Prince Tristan pressed.
“You must allow me to give you a proper tour, this keep is vast and there is more to see in it than your apartments.”
“Your grace is too kind. But I am due to report to her majesty's service in the morn.”
“And a Grimald never trades duty for pleasure.” Tristan nodded, teasing again.
He looked to his mother for permission.
“Seeking to take my newest lady from me? No, I have need of her for most of the day. But the morrow after next, I will allow.” The Empress diplomatically responded.
“The contest is tomorrow, no? For the revel. Is Lady Veora participating?” Alegra asked.
Prince Tristan smirked, “Surely there would be no need for her to participate in a contest to be one of the eleven Lady Virtues. It would be beneath Lady Veora, and she is already well qualified to be any one of them.”
“As one of her majesties’ ladies I believe my place would be to attend her and assist with the contest then, no?” Veora quickly and boldly asked, before running the risk of the Empress conceding to another of her son’s requests.
“Just so.” The Empress agreed.
“As I said, already well qualified.” Prince Tristan tipped his glass.
“Empress.” The valet approached and bowed, “The Emperor gives leave to begin without him. He says he will not be attending dinner. He instead is supping privately with Lord Grimald.”
“Privately? After all this fuss to plan five courses for our guests?” Alegra said indignantly.
“Alegra…” The Empress corrected pointedly, “Very well then, let us not starve ourselves. We are good company for each other are we not?”
Veora quickly wiped the confused frown off her face and agreed. Wondering what could have happened to cause this minor change in events, whether it be timing, knowledge, imprudence, or simple luck. She knew not if it even mattered, but something told her that it did. It didn't sit well with her intuition…
The usher announced her entrance to the Empress's dining hall.
“Your majesties.” Veora entered and curtsied low.
“Welcome Lady Veora, you may rise.” Empress Alexandra nodded from where she sat, to the right of the head chair of the table. The left open for Lord Grimald, and then Tristan. With Veora’s seat nestled between the Empress and Princess respectively.
A seating arrangement divided by gender.
Prince Tristan approached Veora as she rose, and by now, she'd steeled herself to a perfect calm.
“This is my son and heir to the throne, Crown Prince Tristan.” The Empress introduced him.
“My Lady, a relief to be finally introduced.” Prince Tristan offered his hand.
Which Veora took, and she recalls this moment as one of wonder, now only a battle line drawn.
“The pleasure is all mine, your grace.” She said politely, allowing him to lead her to her seat. Her eyes did not linger on him.
“And this is my daughter, Princess Alegra.” The Empress gestured to her.
“Charmed.” Alegra looked her up and down, like a cat surveying if a mouse was worth hunting or not.
“It's an honor Princess.” Veora took her seat.
This moment she remembered well, it'd been the first time she'd been dispelled of the notion that the south was all gentile ladylike splendor. Princess Alegra’s claws bore into her for the first and last time, as she'd been deemed boring by the Princess, and was of no account. A blessing in disguise, as the Princess played roughly with the things she did deem intriguing.
At the time though, it'd dismayed her. She had thought to ingratiate herself to her cousin, her ultimate goal being becoming her sister by matrimony after all.
“Are those shell bobbles on your ears Lady Veora? How peculiar, I’ve never seen such a thing.” Princess Alegra reached over and inspected them, without asking and not being precisely gentle in the way she tugged them closer to her eye.
Veora bore it well, if a little surprised at the sudden tug. Despite knowing it was coming. She bent obediently.
“Well, yes, they are.” She knew the princess expected her to tell her from where they came, but didn't elaborate. They’d come from House Day’s heir. From Sylas, on her birthday, he usually got her a new pair of shell or pearl from his territory.
His name didn't need to be uttered in this court, by these people.
“Hmmmm, pretty.” Princess Alegra released her ears abruptly.
She and her cohort would be wearing ones like them within the next few weeks, and from there the rest of the court would suddenly take a keen liking to them. It would be one of summer's trends at court.
“If you could refrain from tearing our Lady Veora’s ears off Alegra…” Prince Tristan sounded annoyed. He always did when he was speaking to his sister, or of her.
His seat scraped on the floor, as if to make his displeasure known as he sat down on the other end of the table.
“Oh don't act as though she's delicate Tristan, she's as tall as you and I only come to her shoulder.” Alegra shot back.
Veora remembered being offended at this before, but now, she understood better that to the Princess this was no insult. She viewed delicate and weak things with disgust, especially if ever found in herself.
“Apologies, Lady Veora, they never grew out of bickering like children unfortunately.” Empress Alexandra sighed.
“It's the way of all brothers and sisters I think.” Veora’s smile was true at this.
“Do you miss yours already? I heard that your father never sent you or your brother to ward anywhere, nor much out of The Mountainkeep at all. I doubt you've ever spent much time apart.” Empress Alexandra asked.
“Ever? So like us?” Prince Tristan smirked at his mother.
“No, like me.” Princess Alegra retorted before her mother could respond.
“You've gotten to see a battle camp before and went on tour not a year ago. That's not being shut in a keep Tristan.” She bitterly berated.
“That's hardly anything.” Prince Tristan rolled his eyes.
Once again discounting his many fortunes as nothing.
“Yes.” Veora confirmed, looking to the Empress.
“Not only my siblings, though we may bicker, but the whole of the north. I’ve left my heart behind there.”
“Your heart my lady?” Prince Tristan asked.
“How sweet, you love your home.” The Empress understood what Veora meant.
“Indeed, I have no greater love than my home.”
“How dull, no explorative spirit to speak of.” Princess Alegra sniffed.
“Alegra…” Empress Alexandra sounded exasperated.
“I've read many accounts of explorers of the known world. Before it was mapped. And they all expressed the same thing towards the end. That home, ultimately, was where they yearned to be.” Prince Tristan piped up, looking toward Veora.
“But… I think it is the fate of ladies, is it not? To leave their home and make another once they marry.”
“Not necessarily, I doubt Lady Veora is bereft of options.” Empress Alexandra noted.
“True, I could, for instance, become a nun.” Veora smiled.
It earned her surprised laughter, her first words that sounded personable and not like rehearsed formality.
“So you follow the church, and not the heathens?” Alegra asked in a falsely innocent tone.
Though rudely phrased, it did not escape Veora’s notice that no one came to her defense on that matter.
“I proudly follow both, Princess Alegra.” Veora’s voice was not meek, nor did it tremble at the prodding of the princess’s claws. Rather, she sounded amused.
“How?” Said princess scoffed.
Prince Tristan clicked his tongue, “We're instructed to honor our forefathers by the church and yet you demand Lady Veora to abandon half of her’s? The north is a different animal entirely from the south, of course she must honor the religion of her people there.” He said, as though it were obvious, “And besides, you're sitting here castigating the honorable lady over a church you constantly complain about and never attend. Hypocrisy thy name is Alegra.”
“They're usually never this ugly in front of guests.” Empress Alexandra noted to Veora in a hushed tone.
“As though you're much better, citing scripture now are we?” Alegra’s tone increased in haughtiness.
“I am better, I thank you for recognizing superiority when you see it.” Prince Tristan made a great show of adjusting his doublet's collar.
Alegra rolled her eyes in disgust, but her pinched smile betrayed her amusement.
“To elaborate, it might surprise you to learn that while the church of aule sees fit to denounce all other faiths as false and invalid. It is not so the other way around. As Prince Tristan mentioned, it is an entirely different way of looking at the world. Aule is divine, untouchable, and sets for us rules by which we may live. While the old gods are much less interested in telling you how to live rather than sharing with you how they did, and offering you aid in your own story.” Veora said slowly and carefully, choosing her words wisely.
“How… peculiar.” Empress Alexandra nodded neutrally.
“Well they're much more interesting, these old gods, than scripture.” Prince Tristan’s eyes twinkled as he smiled, genuinely enthralled.
“I’ll say.” Alegra agreed as she took another sip of wine, looking around.
“Shouldn't father be here right now? What in the world could Lord Grimald and he be talking about that's taking so long.” Alegra looked to her mother, and arched a brow at the realization that it did not seem like her mother had an answer.
“Your father has always named Lord Grimald as his closest friend, and it's been years since they've met last. Your father is probably letting the time get away from him.” Empress Alexandra gestured to a valet at the corner of the room, who whispered something to a guard.
No doubt to go check.
Veora realized, with no small amount of discomfort, that it had been past the time when her father and the Emperor should have arrived.
“I hope everything is alright, I know father had a rather unpleasant thing to discuss with the Emperor.” Veora frowned.
“Oh? Does it have anything to do with that astrological event?” Prince Tristan asked.
“Again with the astrological event.” Alegra heaved a sigh, quite done, apparently, with hearing of it.
“You do go on about that dear.” Empress Alexandra agreed with her daughter.
“Ah but I have a new piece of the puzzle! I am to understand that Lady Veora, here with us, fell deathly ill, during this event. Or perhaps because of it? Or… maybe she caused it.” Tristan winked.
Veora froze.
And this time both mother and daughter rolled their eyes and sighed exasperatedly.
“My Prince you tease me, stars do not fall and move for silly women.” Only they do and they did. For silly women and the great and terrible oaths they make to old, desperate, gods.
She looked down demurely.
“No of course not, but all the same. When we got word that you had fallen so ill we were sad to hear it. We did not think that in so short a time you would be visiting us. But all the same, we are glad to have you.” Prince Tristan pressed.
“You must allow me to give you a proper tour, this keep is vast and there is more to see in it than your apartments.”
“Your grace is too kind. But I am due to report to her majesty's service in the morn.”
“And a Grimald never trades duty for pleasure.” Tristan nodded, teasing again.
He looked to his mother for permission.
“Seeking to take my newest lady from me? No, I have need of her for most of the day. But the morrow after next, I will allow.” The Empress diplomatically responded.
“The contest is tomorrow, no? For the revel. Is Lady Veora participating?” Alegra asked.
Prince Tristan smirked, “Surely there would be no need for her to participate in a contest to be one of the eleven Lady Virtues. It would be beneath Lady Veora, and she is already well qualified to be any one of them.”
“As one of her majesties’ ladies I believe my place would be to attend her and assist with the contest then, no?” Veora quickly and boldly asked, before running the risk of the Empress conceding to another of her son’s requests.
“Just so.” The Empress agreed.
“As I said, already well qualified.” Prince Tristan tipped his glass.
“Empress.” The valet approached and bowed, “The Emperor gives leave to begin without him. He says he will not be attending dinner. He instead is supping privately with Lord Grimald.”
“Privately? After all this fuss to plan five courses for our guests?” Alegra said indignantly.
“Alegra…” The Empress corrected pointedly, “Very well then, let us not starve ourselves. We are good company for each other are we not?”
Veora quickly wiped the confused frown off her face and agreed. Wondering what could have happened to cause this minor change in events, whether it be timing, knowledge, imprudence, or simple luck. She knew not if it even mattered, but something told her that it did. It didn't sit well with her intuition…