She wanted this too much, she realized. She wanted this moment to drag, and to fill every hour of every day. Trepidation loosened by the ease of his company, by the charm of his gestures and subtle curls of his expressions. She wanted to bask in their moment, to swim, to drown in it. It troubled her, knowing it couldn’t last, and perhaps, to her demise, that it may never come again. Aidoneus wished to see the future, wanted to blow away the murk and mist, the tangles of road they were meant to follow. She wished to straighten divinity, to call upon the stars to erase everything that ever dared to darken her mood, her world.
Still selfish, still childish.
His words were balm; a salve to the wounded pride and the crippling of her sense of security. It was shaken, after all, by him in that moment, and he owed her
peace. He owed her this kindness, and this make-believe dream in which they stood. This was her mirage, this was
her moment of paradise. And she would have it.
I always thought you could do with a bit more colour,
Cheekily, those rosy lips pulled at her lips. Broadening that façade of hilarity; that terrible absurdity of would-be enemies breaking bread. What was expected of her now? She felt guilty, felt remorse to break faithfulness with her husband in playing a part in her reunion with Alaric. Had it been better to turn him away? To avoid him? She was summoned and she had come. Happily. Skipping, almost. Perhaps not a frolick, but guilt had a way of altering perception, didn’t it? She tilted her face at Alaric, turning her cheek as though assessing his entire look, his fashion and style. A discerning eye, to cake the wares with an appreciative and approving glint.
Perhaps not red, but a bit more colour.
No, not
blood. Not the violence he and others like him so chose.
Was she trying to guilt him for his passions? For his ambition?
Now that would have been too unkind, too unlike her. Perhaps Amaryllis had done more than simply alter the path she had meant to walk. Maybe it too, had taken from her heart and placed there seeds of sin. Perhaps that intruder on the sands spoke something closer to truth. Maybe she were something to be smote, something to be punished and ruined. Perhaps her mother, Hercyna, had been right to choose her daughter to sacrifice to Hades and their dark divinity. The Cult had been right to ask Hercyna for her only daughter, and Aidoneus repaid their generosity in ways expected of her. In methods she had always wanted to avoid.
Who. Who was left in Amaryllis was left with clean hands? That confident thought returned, knowing she was not spared the twining of sin. She had killed too. It wasn’t done with talent, or desire. But she had done it all the same.
Life, she knew, was not meant to be easy.
But it didn’t stop her from wanting it.
Is there anything left in the world that comes easy?
Easy.Being there felt easy. The progression of their banter, was
easy. It was everything else in the world that ruined it.
Only to you.Don’t—she wished to say.
Don’t make this any harder than it already is.
The lies she told herself in that moment could only do so much, work only so much
magic. The mirage was slipping, and she felt her heart bruise. Wounded by
want, bereft of joy. There was a faltering to her expression, and a dismissive roll of her shoulder.
Oh, I would be a fool to think myself special.
Winding, writhing; she hated this.
Hated him. Hated the Rike. Hated the Sigrun. Hated Amaryllis.
She hated it all.
Her eyes grew wet, wet with tears she did not want to shed.
Esmerée is gone,
to where? She had thought maybe the woman had followed Alaric, joined him in the mire, became his wife. They’d been so cozy, hadn’t they? What a sight her little tribe must have made at the Hollows.
How long ago that felt. A lifetime ago, an eternity. Her, him, Amaroq, Gauthier and Esmerée. It was, outside of the birth of her children, where she last felt
complete. She had it all, yet nothing truly. But it was enough. Her friends, her place. A purpose.
Friends. And where were they all now?
As well as Elvira.
Lonesomeness panged; her mind spun at these brief tidings of sorrow. It took little, but it was enough, for Aidoneus to realize how much she loathed misery. There was no sun in misery, there was no gilt embrace of warmth. It all felt contrived, she could not help but think it. Doubting the sincerity of the feeling, for she’d never had friends before Amaryllis. She never had
family in the sense of this, and now she understood why. Family meant hurt. Friends meant losing
something in the end. Something was quickly beginning to feel like
everything, but she wasn’t ready to dwell on that. It was all too
dramatic for her liking and she swept it away with that imp’s smile.
Now you’ve gone too.
She felt the impulse to rush him, to jostle his shoulder and broach the distance between them.
To embrace him.
To be held.
She wouldn’t.
As much as it shocked her to
feel these things, once more, for someone else outside her marriage.
She wanted to.
Maybe it was me chasing you all off.
She forced a laugh, conjuring the illusion nothing had changed, nothing at all. There was no war, there was no Sigrun or Rike feud splintering their worlds, there were none disappearing without notice. Here one moment, and gone the next. No—nothing, nothing at all had changed. A delusion she wished to cling to, to bring back with her into the Oasis. That they could continue to thrive and bask, where malicious eyes were spared their flesh. Safe. Serene.
Solitude. Oh,
if only.In another world.
In another world. But she could not help it, could she? Too brash, too impulse—too hungry for answers to questions she’d no right to ask. And she knew this was grappling with the tepid fragments of their friendship. She knew this might go a shade too far. She thought of Eulalia, the one she’d met, the one who’d threatened. The one who left her with one prophecy that had yet come to pass.
The next beast you cross may not be so kind and generous. Watch your tongue.
Oh, she learned to watch it all right. Watched it dance her into predicaments.
When, she wondered, when would she learn
enough was enough, and not every thought needed to be said? Listening to him, hearing Alaric’s words and feeling them as though they were own, she still could not help it. Could not stop it. Could not, or would not—it didn’t seem to matter. She was piercing, she was just as avaricious as any, if not more. There was no role cast for her in what appeared to be a classic, age old tale. Yet, there it came. The setting, oh
fair Verona, landing flat upon where she stood.
Why—why Seneca’s child?
threadbare tether, but one all the same. Any piece of Seneca had managed to become a piece of her.
They existed not in a vacuum of serenity, but at the mercy of calamitous galaxies of wayward fate and unkind destiny. A thin line separated Aidoneus now from the crimes of passion committed by those she’d never met nor could have the intention to meet. It was unfair, punished by the choices made by others—childish, she knew, but Aidoneus never claimed to be matured in her thinking, in her beliefs. The flip-switch toggle of her perspective went fickle, tampered by that loyalty and love for her husband, and the remnants of her youthful naivety. She’d been wizened to the ways of the world in many ways; but since arriving there in Amaryllis she realized there were still a many large thing she’d need to learn, to know. One of those things, was
how and
why they had the propensity to be so callous. How could any see a child and seek to injure? To slay? These weren’t the ideals she held to heart, but even her own parent fell into that shadowy realm of morality. Even her mother was pushed to choose: her child or herself.
A pound of flesh.
She knew
that lesson all too well.
Everyone could be in want of that. Revenge. Retribution.
Their lives had become currency, they were naught but commodities to swapped and bartered, diminished to pieces of the same burden. So, there came no use in imaging the why it was done. Certainly, she too could imagine herself wanting to wound those that wounded her, or her family—that preacher and his apostle, came to mind. But,
a child? Grief tightened her throat, wondering if their ties to Seneca’s allies swept them beneath the purview of Rike wrath. What would she do, if they struck Seneca’s children again? Could she stand idly by while her husband grieved another of his progeny? She knew the extension of their family was loose and turbulent, knowing that there was a thinning of the aether between what was simply hers, and what was his.
Would she
act for him? For Saga’s brood? For those of their allies?
Immediately, she knew there would be no end to the lengths she’d go for her children, for Seneca’s. With Diantha and Leonie still not yet found and brought home to their Oasis, she felt the billowing of anger. Lightly dusted by the swiftness of his reply, of the decisiveness of what he believed. The Rike had not harmed them, had not played a role in their absence. Her eyes pulled towards the smoke surrounding them, the cacophonous mist that lingered and mocked their plight. Was their fruitless searches all for naught? Were they chasing ghosts? She had hoped, darkly, briefly, regretfully, that maybe the Rike had struck again. It was easier for her to understand, to accept. That was a tangible evil that could be brought to heel, easier to get her
pound, her
vengeance.How does one fight
mist?The mist ate her.No, no sweet Promaetheus. Mist did not have a mouth, but
lions very well did.
And how can you be so certain it stops there?
It was pointed, imploring—she wanted to know
why, why
Rike, why Erna? How could he have left them for one so villainous? One so
unclean. She couldn’t besmirch her friend for wanting what she’d had, what Seneca had given her. But
why this entanglement? Why this mess? A firm, yet pensive frown swept the grace from her face. The brows peeled from their light expressions of faithfulness and benevolence, tightened deeply into concern, trepidation. Dread dulled the glimmer in each eyes, as her heart began to sink.
In another time, another place—we’re free. What help could he bring? What more could @
Alaric do?
Her mouth softened, rent immediately from the muted ferocity. Grief-stricken, childlike,
small.
She did not feel like any Queen.
She felt like a lost lamb.
I need—
what? A miracle?
She needed to know how to fight, to defend herself, to defend their children. Though she trusted her friend to believe all that he’d said. But, she remain unconvinced. It solidified the notions of earlier, that there was trouble looming across the horizon and there were preparations to be made. She needed to
do more, to act. A pleading look overwhelmed her countenance, slackening as she returned her eyes back to Alaric’s. Fixed there, unmoved. Poignant and hungry for the
right answers, for all the things one were in want from trusted friends, from those who’ve shared meals and homes and triumphs and losses.
I need to know if my family will remain safe.
She paused, weighing what was
right of her to ask, to want. What would still be proper, and yet respectful to her own feelings of
greed. If you see my girls, you will keep them safe for me—won’t you?
Even from her? Even from your new family?