The knock on the door was partly expected, partly a surprise. Through the night, Aiyda had wondered if the dreadful situation they were in, the sight of the bloody meadow and Mathys’s arrival had gathered into a cluster Ethon would not be able to withstand. Northerner or not, a boy like him would not have been taught to take the stories of old told by grandmothers for granted. As selfish as she wished to be in that moment, she could do naught but understand.
And yet, when he did come, relief washed over Aiyda like freshly fallen snow over heated cheeks. She did not hesitate before opening the door, knowing from the very sound of knuckles against wood that it could only be him. With a short leap, she wrapped her arms around his shoulders and pressed her head to his chest before her eyes could grace over him.
He sounded just as exhausted as he looked. His scent brought a certain comfort that was still on the verge of foreign to her, but something that was welcome, easily accepted after the previous day. As scared as she was, she was happy. Mathys was alive, which meant that the Gods had not forgotten her, not entirely.
Not yet, at least.
“There is much to be said,” she murmured in his shoulder. A part of her knew they would have to regain their poise soon, and act like proper diplomats before Lord Victor Sterling; the other was still a child, longing to stay in his arms for a bit longer. “Mathys will want to speak... I know it. I hope so. It’s like I both dread and want to hear what happened to my village after the attack.”
Aiyda lifted her eyes to look up to him and let out a quiet huff through her nose. “Did he say anything to you? Did he tell you if he was hurt? Did he cry?” Mathys was young, but he was strong. Their parents had taught them well, yet even a man had his weakness, and one would have to be mad to not be afraid of such nightmare come to life. “Did he look as mad as I looked when you brought me home from the woods?”
*
Oddly enough, Lyram was the last of his brothers to arrive for breakfast.
The gaze etched in Hector’s eyes weighed more than words. For a man of his skepticism, it was a wonder to see him share the same terror as those he had once considered mad. He noted the journal pushed to the side, crammed to the brim with loose pages ripped from old books and stained with black and blue ink. At least he knew then that he had not been the only one having lost that night to deep thinking.
“They’re not here yet,” he observed as he drew closer to his brothers. That day, he was wearing a black coat embellished with ermine, a subtle omen to Aiyda’s family and Northcross. “I suppose this will be a difficult breakfast to digest... Until we get to talk about what really matters.”
He looked over his shoulder, to the guards by the door, then back to Conrad and Hector. “Do you think father will want to make the Kilgours aware of this mess?” He pulled back a chair and took a seat by Conrad’s side. “Our only proof, truly, is a raided village. We will not be able to officially determine the cause unless we send men to ride there. We ought to alert the other villages, as well, we-“
He stopped himself before continuing, his mouth already growing dry from the alarmed and endless talking. It was a strange feeling, even for himself, and Lyram could not allow himself to lose his focus and calm. Not then, not before his brothers and even more, not before his father, if he wished to prove himself worthy of leading the North one day.
And yet, when he did come, relief washed over Aiyda like freshly fallen snow over heated cheeks. She did not hesitate before opening the door, knowing from the very sound of knuckles against wood that it could only be him. With a short leap, she wrapped her arms around his shoulders and pressed her head to his chest before her eyes could grace over him.
He sounded just as exhausted as he looked. His scent brought a certain comfort that was still on the verge of foreign to her, but something that was welcome, easily accepted after the previous day. As scared as she was, she was happy. Mathys was alive, which meant that the Gods had not forgotten her, not entirely.
Not yet, at least.
“There is much to be said,” she murmured in his shoulder. A part of her knew they would have to regain their poise soon, and act like proper diplomats before Lord Victor Sterling; the other was still a child, longing to stay in his arms for a bit longer. “Mathys will want to speak... I know it. I hope so. It’s like I both dread and want to hear what happened to my village after the attack.”
Aiyda lifted her eyes to look up to him and let out a quiet huff through her nose. “Did he say anything to you? Did he tell you if he was hurt? Did he cry?” Mathys was young, but he was strong. Their parents had taught them well, yet even a man had his weakness, and one would have to be mad to not be afraid of such nightmare come to life. “Did he look as mad as I looked when you brought me home from the woods?”
*
Oddly enough, Lyram was the last of his brothers to arrive for breakfast.
The gaze etched in Hector’s eyes weighed more than words. For a man of his skepticism, it was a wonder to see him share the same terror as those he had once considered mad. He noted the journal pushed to the side, crammed to the brim with loose pages ripped from old books and stained with black and blue ink. At least he knew then that he had not been the only one having lost that night to deep thinking.
“They’re not here yet,” he observed as he drew closer to his brothers. That day, he was wearing a black coat embellished with ermine, a subtle omen to Aiyda’s family and Northcross. “I suppose this will be a difficult breakfast to digest... Until we get to talk about what really matters.”
He looked over his shoulder, to the guards by the door, then back to Conrad and Hector. “Do you think father will want to make the Kilgours aware of this mess?” He pulled back a chair and took a seat by Conrad’s side. “Our only proof, truly, is a raided village. We will not be able to officially determine the cause unless we send men to ride there. We ought to alert the other villages, as well, we-“
He stopped himself before continuing, his mouth already growing dry from the alarmed and endless talking. It was a strange feeling, even for himself, and Lyram could not allow himself to lose his focus and calm. Not then, not before his brothers and even more, not before his father, if he wished to prove himself worthy of leading the North one day.
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