The blanket Edrei offered was threadbare, and her answer was little more comfort.
The prince gave a despondent sigh, eyes dull as they fell on the hard, leafy ground beneath and daydreamed it into woven silk.
Edrei was right. But Luka swallowed hard, trembling at the notion of turning into a corpse on a bed of nettles and wet leaves. Ice slipped down his spine, and he shivered, hugged himself.
“You should eat then,” he instructed her, though the intended regal effect was lost when his words wobbled. Food would keep her much warmer, even if his own stomach somersaulted at the thought of even a crust of bread.
Luka unfolded his blanket and cocked his head, eyeballing the measurement. “We could share, if we stayed close,” he said, dreading a night with a deathly chill nipping his toes and facing it all alone.
Yet as the suggestion iced over in the freezing night air, a more healthy pink rose on his cheeks with the fever flush.
He shrugged, released a shaky sigh, watched his breath cloud into mist before him.
“You should keep warm,” he told her. The prince displayed a measly show of chivalry as he offered his blanket, trying to keep the discomfort from his eyes. His fist shook under the weight of the thin fabric. His teeth chattered.
He squinted at the stars, wished they’d spare a bit more light. He blinked the darkness from his eyes, searched for the absent moon.
“Will you...keep close?” he asked suddenly, disgusted by the raw longing in his voice. His unsteady heart continued to thrum in his chest, beating at his breastbone like a drummer deep in his cups. Sweat beaded his brow, fatigue dragged at his bones, and the cold stole his breath away.
Desperate, Luka took inventory. A ceremonial sword at his hip, made of sharp steel, good steel. A cloak of dyed black wool, warm, hooded. A knife, with jeweled hilt and wicked edge.
He stared at his outstretched fist, and something caught the light. One ring, set with ruby and diamonds. His father’s.
Shoving the blanket into Edrei’s chest, Luka tugged at his finger and freed the ring. He held it out to Edrei between forefinger and thumb. The gold winked at him in the pale gloaming.
“We have this too,” he said, waiting to set it into her palm. It felt a pathetic exchange, but hooded and apple-cheeked and her gaze filled with starlight, Edrei had something of the fae in her — something eldritch, something fearsome, something that prowled in the shadows.
“Take it,” he urged her, eager to settle a fraction of his unending debt.
The prince gave a despondent sigh, eyes dull as they fell on the hard, leafy ground beneath and daydreamed it into woven silk.
Edrei was right. But Luka swallowed hard, trembling at the notion of turning into a corpse on a bed of nettles and wet leaves. Ice slipped down his spine, and he shivered, hugged himself.
“You should eat then,” he instructed her, though the intended regal effect was lost when his words wobbled. Food would keep her much warmer, even if his own stomach somersaulted at the thought of even a crust of bread.
Luka unfolded his blanket and cocked his head, eyeballing the measurement. “We could share, if we stayed close,” he said, dreading a night with a deathly chill nipping his toes and facing it all alone.
Yet as the suggestion iced over in the freezing night air, a more healthy pink rose on his cheeks with the fever flush.
He shrugged, released a shaky sigh, watched his breath cloud into mist before him.
“You should keep warm,” he told her. The prince displayed a measly show of chivalry as he offered his blanket, trying to keep the discomfort from his eyes. His fist shook under the weight of the thin fabric. His teeth chattered.
He squinted at the stars, wished they’d spare a bit more light. He blinked the darkness from his eyes, searched for the absent moon.
“Will you...keep close?” he asked suddenly, disgusted by the raw longing in his voice. His unsteady heart continued to thrum in his chest, beating at his breastbone like a drummer deep in his cups. Sweat beaded his brow, fatigue dragged at his bones, and the cold stole his breath away.
Desperate, Luka took inventory. A ceremonial sword at his hip, made of sharp steel, good steel. A cloak of dyed black wool, warm, hooded. A knife, with jeweled hilt and wicked edge.
He stared at his outstretched fist, and something caught the light. One ring, set with ruby and diamonds. His father’s.
Shoving the blanket into Edrei’s chest, Luka tugged at his finger and freed the ring. He held it out to Edrei between forefinger and thumb. The gold winked at him in the pale gloaming.
“We have this too,” he said, waiting to set it into her palm. It felt a pathetic exchange, but hooded and apple-cheeked and her gaze filled with starlight, Edrei had something of the fae in her — something eldritch, something fearsome, something that prowled in the shadows.
“Take it,” he urged her, eager to settle a fraction of his unending debt.