ScarletTears
Just a human... probably...
The capital city was a stressful place. Sebastian was used to the hive-like bustle of an army camp. He was used to men running and screaming through neat rows of tents that stretched out as far as the eye could see. As a younger man, he’d imagined the capital was smaller than some of the army camps. He had been very, very wrong. The chaos of the city was nothing like a camp. Men here ran through the streets without purpose, vendors plied their trades from little carts and women waddled through the streets like groups of colourful ducks. And over the whole thing towered the palace. Shining and clean, it stood in proud silence, casting the city into perpetual shade.
The inn at least was familiar. In his experience, cheap inns were the same wherever you were in the world. This one had cost him almost a week’s wages for a single room that was barely more than a cupboard, but he supposed that had something to do with this being the capital city, where merchants and soldiers alike would come to seek their fortune.
Sebastian didn’t want a fortune. He just wanted a working arm, or at least something worthwhile to do with his life. Just over 10 years in the army, in the service of a king who was now dead. 10 years and all he had to show for it was a month of pay and a wound to his shoulder and arm that would probably never heal. He couldn’t go back to his parent’s farm; he couldn’t work in the fields with a useless arm and he couldn’t be a burden on his family. So, with a scroll in his pack with the king’s seal on it- an invite to a ceremony at the palace- Bass had set off on the journey to the capital, with the hope that he’d find something worthwhile there.
The ex-soldier leaned against the barred window, staring out at the street below and watching two children splashing each other from a trough of water intended for animals. The sun was beating down already, spiralling the temperatures already, even though it was early in the day. He watched a man with a rich blue cloak pulled over his head walk purposefully towards the inn. A moment later someone was pounding at the door to the little room.
“Someone’s here to see you,” It was the innkeeper. A greasy little man who didn’t bathe nearly enough considering the heat inside the inn. “Waiting downstairs in the back room. He looks important.”
Bass was shocked for a second, but he shook his head and called back, “I’ll be a second.” He slipped on a clean shirt and tied his hair back from his face with a leather cord, before following the innkeeper downstairs.
The man sitting in the back room was indeed important. Now with his hood thrown back, Sebastian could see exactly who his visitor was. Most people probably wouldn’t recognise him, but Sebastian had spent years of his life staring at paintings of the man-in-front-of-him’s father. He’d pledged his allegiance to that very painting before every campaign. In person, the signature green eyes of the Bismarck’s were even more breath-taking.
The door closed behind the innkeeper and Sebastian fell to his knees, wincing at the way his arm pulled his shoulder at the change in balance. “My king,” he whispered, mostly directing his awe to the floor, “I am… honoured.”
The inn at least was familiar. In his experience, cheap inns were the same wherever you were in the world. This one had cost him almost a week’s wages for a single room that was barely more than a cupboard, but he supposed that had something to do with this being the capital city, where merchants and soldiers alike would come to seek their fortune.
Sebastian didn’t want a fortune. He just wanted a working arm, or at least something worthwhile to do with his life. Just over 10 years in the army, in the service of a king who was now dead. 10 years and all he had to show for it was a month of pay and a wound to his shoulder and arm that would probably never heal. He couldn’t go back to his parent’s farm; he couldn’t work in the fields with a useless arm and he couldn’t be a burden on his family. So, with a scroll in his pack with the king’s seal on it- an invite to a ceremony at the palace- Bass had set off on the journey to the capital, with the hope that he’d find something worthwhile there.
The ex-soldier leaned against the barred window, staring out at the street below and watching two children splashing each other from a trough of water intended for animals. The sun was beating down already, spiralling the temperatures already, even though it was early in the day. He watched a man with a rich blue cloak pulled over his head walk purposefully towards the inn. A moment later someone was pounding at the door to the little room.
“Someone’s here to see you,” It was the innkeeper. A greasy little man who didn’t bathe nearly enough considering the heat inside the inn. “Waiting downstairs in the back room. He looks important.”
Bass was shocked for a second, but he shook his head and called back, “I’ll be a second.” He slipped on a clean shirt and tied his hair back from his face with a leather cord, before following the innkeeper downstairs.
The man sitting in the back room was indeed important. Now with his hood thrown back, Sebastian could see exactly who his visitor was. Most people probably wouldn’t recognise him, but Sebastian had spent years of his life staring at paintings of the man-in-front-of-him’s father. He’d pledged his allegiance to that very painting before every campaign. In person, the signature green eyes of the Bismarck’s were even more breath-taking.
The door closed behind the innkeeper and Sebastian fell to his knees, wincing at the way his arm pulled his shoulder at the change in balance. “My king,” he whispered, mostly directing his awe to the floor, “I am… honoured.”