“Oi – Azkona!”The door to the Commanders’ (soon to be combined) quarters swung open.
Elio’s frame filled the entryway just long enough to block out the guard’s very
expressive face. Then the door slammed shut behind him with a definitive thud.
“Evening, gentlemen.” It was noon. Elio looked between the two Commanders, clearly caught in the middle of something. Quick, assessing eyes flicked over them. He gave a breezy smile.
“We have business.”“Fucking hell,” Barrett muttered, letting out a heavy sigh. He dragged a hand down his face as he leaned back in a creaking chair beside the table. Legs spread, boots planted wide on either side, not bothering to hide his irritation.
“We’re busy. Get out.”Facing the hearth with his arms crossed, Volkov turned just enough to glance over his shoulder. Blue eyes narrowing, he said nothing, assessing the stonemason with quiet scrutiny.
“That an order?” Elio crossed his arms, leaning back against the door. He kept his eyes trained on Barrett – let Volkov ogle. Giving the Aurelian his most irritating smile, Elio went on,
“Afraid I’m no good with those.”Barrett scoffed, a flicker of amusement tugging at the corner of his mouth despite himself. He knew damn well the stonemasons aversion to authority. Elio’s eyes flashed, smile growing.
Volkov turned to face them fully—no amusement to be found.
“What do you want, mason?” Elio’s gaze cut to the old man. His eyes hardened, the curve of his lips growing a little sharper.
“What you want,” he replied flatly. He turned his attention back to Barrett, some lightness returning to his voice.
“Peace and order in the streets of Dawnhaven, and all the troublemakers in a cell.” His amber eyes narrowed as he looked between the two commanders.
“After the cell’s been built.”Barrett leaned his head back, brown eyes drifting to the ceiling. He’d been expecting this.
Volkov raised a brow, casting a glance toward Barrett—who had warned him this was coming—before turning his gaze back to the dark-haired man who stood too comfortably in Barrett’s (soon to be their) quarters. Arrogant. Haughty. Taking up more space than he should.
“The cell is built,” Volkov said plainly. Barrett shifted in his chair, turning his narrowed eyes back on Elio. Waiting.
The mason blinked at him, feigning surprise.
“Oh, did we just need the one?” Elio tilted his head, nodding.
“My mistake then. I won’t worry about the unfinished roof, or the rest of the inoperable cells. I guess since you managed to lock up the most incapable treasonist on the continent, you don’t have to worry about anyone else.” He paused then and looked up to a ceiling in thought.
“Though… didn’t someone get close to proper regicide recently?” His amber eyes were sharp as they fell on Volkov again.
Volkov’s gaze sharpened, his patience already worn thin for the day.
“Perhaps if you worked faster,” he said coldly, eyes locked on Elio,
“instead of spending hours over the perfect placement of a single stone.”Something sparked in Elio’s blood.
Barrett sighed heavily again, not in the mood to trade barbs.
“Do you have a better suggestion then, Azkona?”“That’s not my job,” he said, voice low. But his eyes were still on Volkov.
“He’s in my way. I don’t care if you kill him, set him loose, throw him down a well. I just place the stones. Perfectly.” Elio pushed himself up from the door in a slow, smooth motion. His arms unfolded, hanging loose at his sides.
“I could go faster, it’s true. But then I might make a stupid mistake — like debriefing sensitive information with some random blighter that just blew in, and a soldier who’s clearly cracked in the head.”Volkov’s lips curled into a slow, dangerous smile as his eyes narrowed further. There was a flash of something violent behind his gaze—rage barely contained—but he held his silence, jaw tightening.
Barrett’s eyes flicked to Volkov, a question darkening his expression.
“What sensitive information?”“I’ve killed men for less than that tone.” Volkov ignored the Aurelian Commander, his eyes fixed on Elio.
“So unless you’re volunteering for the next cell, mason, I suggest you leave. There are plenty of stonemasons we can hire instead.” “And I’m sure once you manage to get a message to the capital and the snow clears enough for someone to make it here, they’ll do a wonderful job.” Elio took a step forward, his smile just as wicked as Volkov’s.
“Reckon I got at least four more months of running my mouth.”“Enough, Barrett snapped, rising to his feet the moment Elio stepped closer. Not in fear, but with the tension of someone who knew when the room was a second away from becoming a battlefield.
“Azkona, the prisoner stays until the Prince decides what to do with him. Work around him or don’t.” He held Elio’s gaze, making sure the message landed.
“We’re not doing this today.” Elio’s posture was still rigid, muscles coiled as he faced Volkov. But his gaze was on Barrett. There was a long, charged silence.
His eyes flicked up and down the Commander’s form.
“Another day, then,” he finally said, weight shifting back on his feet.
“Perhaps you can invite the prisoner to warm your bed, too.”Elio stilled. He’d just been turning away when Volkov’s voice cut through the room. He ran his tongue over the sharp edges of his teeth. His fists curled at his sides. Then he rounded on the Commander.
“I would, but it’s a little crowded right now with all your men.” Elio bit his lip, humming in appreciation.
“Fit and sloppy — cheers for that,” he bit back with a short, upward nod of his chin.
Volkov barked out a low, humorless laugh.
“So it’s true. Perfectionism isn’t why the cells haven’t been finished.” A thin, venomous smile tugged at his dry, cracked lips.
“You’ve been… distracted. Maybe it’s time you refocused—got your priorities in order.”Elio was about to refocus every piece of stone in the room up his
old, chapped –“Alright,” Barrett’s jaw clenched as he stepped forward, placing himself between the two.
“You’ve made your points.” He cast a hard glare over his shoulder at Volkov, who stared straight at Elio.
“Azkona does good work, and you know it.” he said, voice low.
“We’re not replacing him.”Slowly, Volkov’s eyes slid to the Aurelian Commander. Cold. Unyielding. But silent.
After a few beats, Barrett finally turned back to Elio, his expression tight. He gave a sharp nod toward the door.
“Let’s go.”Jaw clenched, knuckles white, Elio stared at Volkov with eyes aflame. The heat didn’t dim as he moved his gaze back to Barrett.
A shifting of his muscles that was less of a release and more a careful repositioning – a too-slick smile – a voice as smooth as the edge of a blade.
“You’re in charge,” he said with a shrug. The Lunarian Commander’s eyes narrowed. Elio turned his back on Volkov and crossed back to the door. He yanked it open with more force than necessary, not bothering to glance at the irritated guard standing in the cold.
Barrett followed, leaving the Lunarian Commander to simmer alone.
“The prisoner’ll be dealt with.” he said to Elio’s back.
“Just give us some time.” A beat passed. Then, drier, he added,
“I’m not thrilled about this either.”“Well it’s not like we thought we’d need a working jail so soon,” Elio spat, a hard edge to his voice. No, instead of a jail, they’d wasted their time requesting
frivolous things from him, like roads, and building foundations, and a fucking
tower. He stalked down the path
he’d laid — he didn’t need to look behind to know that Barrett was keeping pace.
“Dawnhaven being such a shining beacon of hope and unity, and all.” Elio hoped all those Aurelian banners in the room gave Volkov a
sunburn, the frigid bastard.
“Delusional.”Barrett didn’t answer right away, refusing to fan the flames. He knew Elio ran hot—like many of his own soldiers. His boots crunched in the snow as he followed behind him, breath forming white plumes in the frigid air. After a few more steps, his pace began to slow.
“Don’t let him get under your skin, Azkona.” His voice wasn’t unkind—just tired.
“You do good work. Everyone knows it.” He affirmed, coming to a gradual stop, watching Elio’s retreating back.
“Volkov’s just a miserable prick. You know that.”Barrett lingered a moment longer, then turned quietly, making his way back toward the commander’s quarters without waiting for a reply.
Elio finally slowed enough for a stop as he heard Barrett’s retreating steps. Hands fisting at his sides, he clenched his jaw again. Then Elio turned on his heel.
“That soldier I mentioned,” he called after Barrett. His deep voice carried across the distance, flat and quick. The Commander slowed, half-turning to listen.
“He’s a risk.” Elio saw Aliseth’s dead stare, heard his cold voice — something was
wrong. Something tight coiled in his chest like a warning.
“He was in the attack yesterday. It fucked with his head.” The feeling wasn’t just a warning — it was
worry. Elio saw Aliseth’s reluctant smirk, heard his quiet laugh. There’d been no trace of them yesterday.
“You keep a sword in his hand, keep throwing him at threats, someone’s gonna get hurt.” Elio wanted to punch something.
Barrett’s brow furrowed in thought as he turned back to fully face him again.
“You know Kain?” he asked, eyes narrowing slightly.
“He said he can’t remember much of the attack. Volkov told him to seek out a psychic user. Has he?” His gaze lingered on Elio, searching his face for any hint of the answer. He had not heard if anyone—
Volkov—had followed up on the order.
“Kain needs to be pulled off duty,” Barrett said after a beat, half to himself. Elio let out a breath.
“I’ll speak to Volkov.” He paused, studying Elio for a moment.
“How do you know all this, anyway? You and Kain are close?”Elio huffed, gaze moving to the shadowed treeline. He felt the scruff of a beard against his neck, calloused hands against his back.
“Ran into him yesterday,” he gave as an answer instead. His voice was softer, but it carried all the same.
“If he saw a psychic user, it didn’t do shit. Claimed the dead guard was Hale when he’d just seen him an hour earlier, roughed up some random blight girl, was dragging that Sage Hightower around, barking orders at other guards, threw a punch unprovoked…” Well…
mostly unprovoked.
“Don’t think Volkov’s order really sank in,” he said, his eyes cutting back to Barrett.
Barrett’s jaw tensed, frustration evident. Annoyance flared—at Volkov, at the discourse of it all, at the thought of the Sage being treated with disgrace, at the never-ending pressure of working with men who made every step harder than it should be. But he bit his tongue, unwilling to undermine the Lunarian Commander in front of Elio—not after the Prince had just told them they needed to be more unified.
“I’ll see to it,” Barrett said, giving Elio a single, sharp nod. Then, after a beat, he added,
“Is the blight girl the one Volkov spoke of “sensitive information” in front of?”Elio paused — just for a moment. He thought of that skinny, fucked up blight girl, wings hanging off her back and horns sprouting from the top of her head as she sipped her soup like a proper fucking lady.
“Hell if I know,” he replied with a shrug. Elio liked Barrett well enough, but he was still a guard — and Elio wasn’t about to sell the girl out for making the mistake of blabbing info when it’d served him well. Let Barrett think Aliseth was the leak. All the better if it got him thrown on the bench quicker — before he got himself killed.
“Ran into her at the inn. Apparently Hale gave her a welcome and Kain gave her his boot.”Barrett watched Elio for a breath, assessing him, then nodded.
“Very well. Thank you,” He took a step back, hesitating.
“I’ll try to make sure the prisoner is out of your way sooner rather than later.” Without waiting for a response, he turned back toward the commander's quarters.
Elio watched Barrett march away, following his cobblestone path. A small, satisfied smirk eventually found its way to his lips.
“Pleasure doing business,” he murmured to himself.
Turning, he continued down the road, swagger in his step.