jellyfishsecret
BLACKJACK!
Ansgar
It was a beautiful, clear summer day and the Royal Palace in the Kingdom of Sonnechen was bustling with activity as every palace servant, and many others who had been hired just for the event, worked on the last minute preparations for the wedding between the country’s youngest prince and the King of Nangues. Guests had been arriving in the city for days and every noble’s suite in the palace was full as well as all of the hostels, inns, and guest houses throughout the city and neighboring towns. The people of Sonnechen were excited for the royal wedding; it meant feasting, music, dancing, magical displays, and so much more even for those who weren’t invited anywhere near the palace gates. For those who were lucky enough to be invited, they would be treated to a rare glimpse of the elusive King of Nangues, about whom many of them had heard rumors.
While all of this activity continued throughout the palace, Ansgar Baumstadt, the youngest prince in the Kingdom of Sonnechen and one of the grooms, stood by the largest window in his rooms in the palace contemplating his future as he watched some of the guests mingling in the courtyard below. In an hour he was to be married to a man he had never met, a King he knew only through whispers and hearsay, and while he had been raised knowing this day was coming and was curious about his future husband, this did little to lessen his anxiety when he would be leaving the only home he’d ever known to live with people who were essentially strangers. His sister Catriona, the Crown Princess, had advised him to view his wedding and move to Nangues as an adventure, much like the ones he was so fond of reading about, and he had thanked her with a smile while privately thinking that it was easy for her to say such things. She had chosen her husband from among her many suitors and was set to be the future ruler in a palace she’d known all her life and of a kingdom she loved more than life itself.
Thinking back on the conversation he’d had with Catriona shortly after she and their parents had agreed Ansgar would wed King Emile of Nangues, he let out a small sigh. He wished he had more information about King Emile but no one had seemed to think this was very important when the king was offering an alliance that Sonnechen sorely needed.
“I know the rumors about King Emile are frightening but don’t make him out to be a monster,” Catriona had scolded when Ansgar reminded her that King Emile was also known as ‘The Demon King’. “His advisor speaks highly of him.”
“Of course he does, Lord Baptiste is his friend,” Ansgar had argued but Catriona had given him a glare that said it had already been decided and she expected him to thank her for signing the treaty and marriage contract. He had quickly changed tracks and added, “But I am certain that also means he knows King Emile best.”
“Exactly so,” Catriona had agreed, looking much more pleased now that Ansgar wasn’t questioning her, and turned the topic to the colors she thought would be most becoming on him for the wedding ceremony despite Ansgar’s insistence that he would wear his knight’s uniform.
A knock at the door pulled Ansgar from the memory and he turned around in time to see his parents, his sister Catriona, and his brother Sebastian entering his antechamber. Both of his parents were ailing and he was surprised to see them walking under their own power until he realized his siblings were each holding one of their parents’ hands in support. An illness had swept through Sonnechen the previous fall and many elders, young children, and those with poor health who had not died from the illness had been left with permanent side effects. The royal family tried to keep this information as quiet as possible but it was still an open secret that the palace healers did not expect the King and Queen to survive the coming winter.
“Don’t you look handsome,” his mother, Queen Elisa, rasped as she stepped towards him while leaning heavily on Catriona. When Elisa was close enough, Ansgar held his hands out to her so he could gently pull her into a hug. “I’m so happy your father and I are still here to see you get married.”
“Mama–” Ansgar began to protest but both Catriona and Sebastian subtly shook their heads at him, telling him not to argue. “Thank you,” he said instead, understanding that his siblings were communicating the most recent news from the healer wasn’t positive. He leaned forward to brush a kiss against his mother’s cheek. “I’m glad you’re here.” He looked over her shoulder at his father and said, “You too, Papa.”
“You worked hard to wear that uniform,” King Hans whispered with a small smile, his voice even weaker than his wife’s as he clutched Sebastian’s forearm tightly to remain upright, “it would be a shame not to see you in it one last time.”
Catriona rolled her eyes at this comment, having lost the argument that Ansgar should have new, much more formal, clothes in the style of Nangues made for his wedding, but Ansgar felt a sharp pang in his chest at the reminder that he would no longer be a Knight of Sonnechen once he was married. He would need to pledge his allegiance to his husband’s country, afterall he would be ruling beside him, and therefore would be ineligible to represent Sonnechen or wear their colors.
“You do look good,” Sebastian added, eyeing Ansgar critically before nodding his approval. “Put your mask on though or your new husband will know you’re nervous.”
Ansgar nodded and forced his expression into the courtly smile he’d been taught since before he could walk. As a child, Sebastian had tried to turn this into a game, referring to the expressions they were taught to wear when speaking with courtiers as a ‘mask’. It didn’t reach his eyes but the smile made Ansgar look approachable and handsome. To show one’s true thoughts or emotions was a weakness in the Sonnechen Court and all of the Baumstadt children had received training and instruction in Court manners as part of their education from a very young age. Ansgar personally hated how superficial the courtiers could be but he knew better than to let that show and was always quick with a smile or joke that could get almost anyone to like him. He hoped this skill would serve him well in Nangues or he’d be desperately lonely.
“We should go take our seats,” Catriona said quietly, more to their parents than to Ansgar or Sebastian, “we don’t want to be late.”
“Of course,” Ansgar agreed, well aware Catriona was concerned that this short visit had already exhausted the King and Queen. “I’m sure Jakob will be here soon to escort me to the temple’s Grand Hall,” he added, referring to the man who had been his personal servant ever since he’d left the nursery. Jakob was nearly fifty and would not be traveling with him to Nangues, instead preferring to remain behind to serve Catriona’s young son. Ansgar would miss a familiar face when he was gone but he couldn’t blame Jakob for not wanting to leave. Besides, he thought, it wasn’t as though Jakob was a friend. The old servant was such a stickler for propriety and never spoke with Ansgar beyond what was required of a manservant.
“We’ll see you there,” Queen Elisa assured softly before a coughing fit overtook her and both Ansgar and Catriona rushed forward to help keep her from falling. Once she was steady, she offered Ansgar a watery smile and held tight to Catriona’s arm, which was now wrapped securely around the Queen’s waist, nodding to show she was able to walk.
“Don’t be late,” Catriona ordered, her tone only slightly teasing and Ansgar knew that if he wasn’t waiting in the wings of the temple’s hall at least twenty minutes before the wedding then the Crown Princess would come looking for him with all of her guards in tow.
“I won’t,” Ansgar replied, mildly amused at his sister’s fretting that he would suddenly decide to abandon his duties and abscond from the kingdom. He might not know much about King Emile but that didn’t mean he was opposed to marrying the man or that he was so selfish as to only think about his own interests. Ansgar knew what this alliance would do for his people and even if King Emile did turn out to be part-demon like the rumors claimed, Ansgar wasn’t about to sacrifice the people of Sonnechen to spare his own comfort. He might not be a Knight of Sonnechen after his marriage but he still took his oaths to protect the kingdom seriously.
As his family filed out of his room, Ansgar saw Sebastian glance over his shoulder and wink, allowing Ansgar to relax slightly. He trusted his brother and Sebastian had been honest with him about his impression of Lord Baptiste and the man’s reassurances that King Emile would be a good spouse. He didn’t need to love his husband, Ansgar knew, but it would certainly be nice if they did more than tolerate each other.
Catriona was thinking only in terms of what was best for Sonnechen and while he knew his sister loved him and wouldn’t intentionally try to find someone cruel, she would have signed a contract with the devil for her brother’s hand if it meant Sonnechen would have the support they needed. Sebastian didn’t have the same power as Catriona but he had been part of every discussion with Lord Baptiste, and was slightly more discerning than their sister, so when he said Ansgar would be taken care of, that the king would not abuse him, and that he would be allowed to continue training with a sword, Ansgar desperately wanted to believe him. He also wanted to like his future husband, he wanted so badly to like his new home, but not having much information about the man made him nervous and while the portrait Lord Baptiste had provided of King Emile had shown a tall, muscular, attractive man, the portrait had given no sense of his personality.
If anything, the painter had made King Emile look distinctly unfriendly. Ansgar couldn’t tell if this was because the king was young and so he’d asked the painter to make him look intimidating, the painter was actually terrible at capturing people’s likenesses, or if that really was the king’s personality. Ansgar’s request to meet King Emile before the ceremony had been quickly struck down as improper by both sides so he had only the words of others, most of whom had never actually met King Emile, and a portrait that could be of a completely different person on which to base his judgments. He’d seen his relatives ask painters to remove blemishes from their skin or even give them a full head of hair when they were balding; there was no reason to think King Emile hadn’t done the same.
He was about to go back to the small nook where he’d hung the portrait to look at it one more time when there was a knock at the door from the servant’s stair and Jakob’s voice requesting entrance.
“You may enter,” Ansgar called, trying not to be annoyed with Jakob for following protocol.
“Your Highness,” Jakob greeted when he entered, immediately bowing as soon as he saw Ansgar, “I’m here to escort you to the temple.”
“I’m ready,” Ansgar lied, glancing in his looking glass once more to ensure his hair was still neatly tied back. Catriona had demanded he have his hair and makeup done by one of her ladies-in-waiting and Ansgar had to admit that the woman had done an incredible job. He wasn’t completely sure what kind of potion she’d put in his hair but he doubted even the fiercest wind storm would be able to blow a strand out of place.
If he knew Ansgar was lying, Jakob didn’t let it show and he bowed once more before quickly crossing Ansgar’s room to open the door for the prince. “After you, your Highness,” the man encouraged, bowing deeper when Ansgar didn’t rush into the corridor. “You don’t want to keep your new husband waiting.”
Biting back a sarcastic retort the older servant didn’t deserve, Ansgar nodded tightly and forced the mask back onto his face as he left his rooms. This would be the last time these rooms were his. All his remaining things would be packed by palace servants after the wedding to be sent with him to Nangues. He still didn’t know how long it would be until they left for Nangues but he planned to ask his new husband that evening during the wedding feast. He didn’t have any strong preferences but he liked to know what was being planned and pretty much everything about this wedding had been dictated by someone else. The only input he’d been allowed to have was what he wore for the ceremony and even that had been contested.
As Jakob led him through the palace and towards the temple’s secret stairs that would take them past the curious eyes of courtiers who either couldn’t fit or weren’t deemed important enough to actually witness the ceremony, Ansgar was so distracted by the rumors he’d heard of King Emile that he barely noticed they’d arrived until Jakob cleared his throat.
“Your Highness,” he said loudly and Ansgar got the sense this was not the first time Jakob had addressed him.
“I’m right here, Jakob,” Ansgar replied, his courtly mask never wavering as he turned the bland smile on his manservant. They were in a small, private prayer room that had been set aside for him to wait in so none of the guests would be able to see him before his entry into the ceremony. “What’s wrong?”
“Nothing is wrong.” Jakob was too proper to outwardly show any hint of annoyance but Ansgar had a feeling the man was disappointed with him. Music began to play outside of the private room they were in and Jakob glanced over his shoulder before bowing to Ansgar one last time. “I must inform Princess Catriona you are ready but please remain here, your Highness. The novitiates will come to fetch you soon to lead you to your husband,” he said, referencing Sonnechen tradition that temple novitiates escorted the royal getting married rather than their family.
“Thanks, Jakob,” Ansgar said softly, hoping the man knew he was grateful for more than just guiding him to the temple. They hadn’t always gotten along over the years and Jakob had often informed his parents of any mischief Ansgar had attempted when he was young but the manservant had always been kind to him in his gruff, proper way and Ansgar appreciated his hard work.
“It’s been an honor, your Highness,” Jakob replied, touching his hand to his heart in a mark of respect before quickly exiting the room.
Left alone now, Ansgar sat in an uncomfortable prayer pew and reached into his pocket to withdraw a slim, well worn paperback he’d smuggled in his uniform for just such a purpose. If Catriona could see him now, she’d have a conniption fit, Ansgar thought, but he wanted just a few more moments to pretend he was in control. He could hear the music in the Grand Hall speed up and knew the novitiates were going to come soon, the wedding march would be played next according to tradition, but he had reached such an exciting part of the book and he needed a distraction before his life was irrevocably changed forever.
It was a beautiful, clear summer day and the Royal Palace in the Kingdom of Sonnechen was bustling with activity as every palace servant, and many others who had been hired just for the event, worked on the last minute preparations for the wedding between the country’s youngest prince and the King of Nangues. Guests had been arriving in the city for days and every noble’s suite in the palace was full as well as all of the hostels, inns, and guest houses throughout the city and neighboring towns. The people of Sonnechen were excited for the royal wedding; it meant feasting, music, dancing, magical displays, and so much more even for those who weren’t invited anywhere near the palace gates. For those who were lucky enough to be invited, they would be treated to a rare glimpse of the elusive King of Nangues, about whom many of them had heard rumors.
While all of this activity continued throughout the palace, Ansgar Baumstadt, the youngest prince in the Kingdom of Sonnechen and one of the grooms, stood by the largest window in his rooms in the palace contemplating his future as he watched some of the guests mingling in the courtyard below. In an hour he was to be married to a man he had never met, a King he knew only through whispers and hearsay, and while he had been raised knowing this day was coming and was curious about his future husband, this did little to lessen his anxiety when he would be leaving the only home he’d ever known to live with people who were essentially strangers. His sister Catriona, the Crown Princess, had advised him to view his wedding and move to Nangues as an adventure, much like the ones he was so fond of reading about, and he had thanked her with a smile while privately thinking that it was easy for her to say such things. She had chosen her husband from among her many suitors and was set to be the future ruler in a palace she’d known all her life and of a kingdom she loved more than life itself.
Thinking back on the conversation he’d had with Catriona shortly after she and their parents had agreed Ansgar would wed King Emile of Nangues, he let out a small sigh. He wished he had more information about King Emile but no one had seemed to think this was very important when the king was offering an alliance that Sonnechen sorely needed.
“I know the rumors about King Emile are frightening but don’t make him out to be a monster,” Catriona had scolded when Ansgar reminded her that King Emile was also known as ‘The Demon King’. “His advisor speaks highly of him.”
“Of course he does, Lord Baptiste is his friend,” Ansgar had argued but Catriona had given him a glare that said it had already been decided and she expected him to thank her for signing the treaty and marriage contract. He had quickly changed tracks and added, “But I am certain that also means he knows King Emile best.”
“Exactly so,” Catriona had agreed, looking much more pleased now that Ansgar wasn’t questioning her, and turned the topic to the colors she thought would be most becoming on him for the wedding ceremony despite Ansgar’s insistence that he would wear his knight’s uniform.
A knock at the door pulled Ansgar from the memory and he turned around in time to see his parents, his sister Catriona, and his brother Sebastian entering his antechamber. Both of his parents were ailing and he was surprised to see them walking under their own power until he realized his siblings were each holding one of their parents’ hands in support. An illness had swept through Sonnechen the previous fall and many elders, young children, and those with poor health who had not died from the illness had been left with permanent side effects. The royal family tried to keep this information as quiet as possible but it was still an open secret that the palace healers did not expect the King and Queen to survive the coming winter.
“Don’t you look handsome,” his mother, Queen Elisa, rasped as she stepped towards him while leaning heavily on Catriona. When Elisa was close enough, Ansgar held his hands out to her so he could gently pull her into a hug. “I’m so happy your father and I are still here to see you get married.”
“Mama–” Ansgar began to protest but both Catriona and Sebastian subtly shook their heads at him, telling him not to argue. “Thank you,” he said instead, understanding that his siblings were communicating the most recent news from the healer wasn’t positive. He leaned forward to brush a kiss against his mother’s cheek. “I’m glad you’re here.” He looked over her shoulder at his father and said, “You too, Papa.”
“You worked hard to wear that uniform,” King Hans whispered with a small smile, his voice even weaker than his wife’s as he clutched Sebastian’s forearm tightly to remain upright, “it would be a shame not to see you in it one last time.”
Catriona rolled her eyes at this comment, having lost the argument that Ansgar should have new, much more formal, clothes in the style of Nangues made for his wedding, but Ansgar felt a sharp pang in his chest at the reminder that he would no longer be a Knight of Sonnechen once he was married. He would need to pledge his allegiance to his husband’s country, afterall he would be ruling beside him, and therefore would be ineligible to represent Sonnechen or wear their colors.
“You do look good,” Sebastian added, eyeing Ansgar critically before nodding his approval. “Put your mask on though or your new husband will know you’re nervous.”
Ansgar nodded and forced his expression into the courtly smile he’d been taught since before he could walk. As a child, Sebastian had tried to turn this into a game, referring to the expressions they were taught to wear when speaking with courtiers as a ‘mask’. It didn’t reach his eyes but the smile made Ansgar look approachable and handsome. To show one’s true thoughts or emotions was a weakness in the Sonnechen Court and all of the Baumstadt children had received training and instruction in Court manners as part of their education from a very young age. Ansgar personally hated how superficial the courtiers could be but he knew better than to let that show and was always quick with a smile or joke that could get almost anyone to like him. He hoped this skill would serve him well in Nangues or he’d be desperately lonely.
“We should go take our seats,” Catriona said quietly, more to their parents than to Ansgar or Sebastian, “we don’t want to be late.”
“Of course,” Ansgar agreed, well aware Catriona was concerned that this short visit had already exhausted the King and Queen. “I’m sure Jakob will be here soon to escort me to the temple’s Grand Hall,” he added, referring to the man who had been his personal servant ever since he’d left the nursery. Jakob was nearly fifty and would not be traveling with him to Nangues, instead preferring to remain behind to serve Catriona’s young son. Ansgar would miss a familiar face when he was gone but he couldn’t blame Jakob for not wanting to leave. Besides, he thought, it wasn’t as though Jakob was a friend. The old servant was such a stickler for propriety and never spoke with Ansgar beyond what was required of a manservant.
“We’ll see you there,” Queen Elisa assured softly before a coughing fit overtook her and both Ansgar and Catriona rushed forward to help keep her from falling. Once she was steady, she offered Ansgar a watery smile and held tight to Catriona’s arm, which was now wrapped securely around the Queen’s waist, nodding to show she was able to walk.
“Don’t be late,” Catriona ordered, her tone only slightly teasing and Ansgar knew that if he wasn’t waiting in the wings of the temple’s hall at least twenty minutes before the wedding then the Crown Princess would come looking for him with all of her guards in tow.
“I won’t,” Ansgar replied, mildly amused at his sister’s fretting that he would suddenly decide to abandon his duties and abscond from the kingdom. He might not know much about King Emile but that didn’t mean he was opposed to marrying the man or that he was so selfish as to only think about his own interests. Ansgar knew what this alliance would do for his people and even if King Emile did turn out to be part-demon like the rumors claimed, Ansgar wasn’t about to sacrifice the people of Sonnechen to spare his own comfort. He might not be a Knight of Sonnechen after his marriage but he still took his oaths to protect the kingdom seriously.
As his family filed out of his room, Ansgar saw Sebastian glance over his shoulder and wink, allowing Ansgar to relax slightly. He trusted his brother and Sebastian had been honest with him about his impression of Lord Baptiste and the man’s reassurances that King Emile would be a good spouse. He didn’t need to love his husband, Ansgar knew, but it would certainly be nice if they did more than tolerate each other.
Catriona was thinking only in terms of what was best for Sonnechen and while he knew his sister loved him and wouldn’t intentionally try to find someone cruel, she would have signed a contract with the devil for her brother’s hand if it meant Sonnechen would have the support they needed. Sebastian didn’t have the same power as Catriona but he had been part of every discussion with Lord Baptiste, and was slightly more discerning than their sister, so when he said Ansgar would be taken care of, that the king would not abuse him, and that he would be allowed to continue training with a sword, Ansgar desperately wanted to believe him. He also wanted to like his future husband, he wanted so badly to like his new home, but not having much information about the man made him nervous and while the portrait Lord Baptiste had provided of King Emile had shown a tall, muscular, attractive man, the portrait had given no sense of his personality.
If anything, the painter had made King Emile look distinctly unfriendly. Ansgar couldn’t tell if this was because the king was young and so he’d asked the painter to make him look intimidating, the painter was actually terrible at capturing people’s likenesses, or if that really was the king’s personality. Ansgar’s request to meet King Emile before the ceremony had been quickly struck down as improper by both sides so he had only the words of others, most of whom had never actually met King Emile, and a portrait that could be of a completely different person on which to base his judgments. He’d seen his relatives ask painters to remove blemishes from their skin or even give them a full head of hair when they were balding; there was no reason to think King Emile hadn’t done the same.
He was about to go back to the small nook where he’d hung the portrait to look at it one more time when there was a knock at the door from the servant’s stair and Jakob’s voice requesting entrance.
“You may enter,” Ansgar called, trying not to be annoyed with Jakob for following protocol.
“Your Highness,” Jakob greeted when he entered, immediately bowing as soon as he saw Ansgar, “I’m here to escort you to the temple.”
“I’m ready,” Ansgar lied, glancing in his looking glass once more to ensure his hair was still neatly tied back. Catriona had demanded he have his hair and makeup done by one of her ladies-in-waiting and Ansgar had to admit that the woman had done an incredible job. He wasn’t completely sure what kind of potion she’d put in his hair but he doubted even the fiercest wind storm would be able to blow a strand out of place.
If he knew Ansgar was lying, Jakob didn’t let it show and he bowed once more before quickly crossing Ansgar’s room to open the door for the prince. “After you, your Highness,” the man encouraged, bowing deeper when Ansgar didn’t rush into the corridor. “You don’t want to keep your new husband waiting.”
Biting back a sarcastic retort the older servant didn’t deserve, Ansgar nodded tightly and forced the mask back onto his face as he left his rooms. This would be the last time these rooms were his. All his remaining things would be packed by palace servants after the wedding to be sent with him to Nangues. He still didn’t know how long it would be until they left for Nangues but he planned to ask his new husband that evening during the wedding feast. He didn’t have any strong preferences but he liked to know what was being planned and pretty much everything about this wedding had been dictated by someone else. The only input he’d been allowed to have was what he wore for the ceremony and even that had been contested.
As Jakob led him through the palace and towards the temple’s secret stairs that would take them past the curious eyes of courtiers who either couldn’t fit or weren’t deemed important enough to actually witness the ceremony, Ansgar was so distracted by the rumors he’d heard of King Emile that he barely noticed they’d arrived until Jakob cleared his throat.
“Your Highness,” he said loudly and Ansgar got the sense this was not the first time Jakob had addressed him.
“I’m right here, Jakob,” Ansgar replied, his courtly mask never wavering as he turned the bland smile on his manservant. They were in a small, private prayer room that had been set aside for him to wait in so none of the guests would be able to see him before his entry into the ceremony. “What’s wrong?”
“Nothing is wrong.” Jakob was too proper to outwardly show any hint of annoyance but Ansgar had a feeling the man was disappointed with him. Music began to play outside of the private room they were in and Jakob glanced over his shoulder before bowing to Ansgar one last time. “I must inform Princess Catriona you are ready but please remain here, your Highness. The novitiates will come to fetch you soon to lead you to your husband,” he said, referencing Sonnechen tradition that temple novitiates escorted the royal getting married rather than their family.
“Thanks, Jakob,” Ansgar said softly, hoping the man knew he was grateful for more than just guiding him to the temple. They hadn’t always gotten along over the years and Jakob had often informed his parents of any mischief Ansgar had attempted when he was young but the manservant had always been kind to him in his gruff, proper way and Ansgar appreciated his hard work.
“It’s been an honor, your Highness,” Jakob replied, touching his hand to his heart in a mark of respect before quickly exiting the room.
Left alone now, Ansgar sat in an uncomfortable prayer pew and reached into his pocket to withdraw a slim, well worn paperback he’d smuggled in his uniform for just such a purpose. If Catriona could see him now, she’d have a conniption fit, Ansgar thought, but he wanted just a few more moments to pretend he was in control. He could hear the music in the Grand Hall speed up and knew the novitiates were going to come soon, the wedding march would be played next according to tradition, but he had reached such an exciting part of the book and he needed a distraction before his life was irrevocably changed forever.
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