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Sir Jerel Ban
Jerel received his invitation to the ball after a long ride, which hadn’t done much to clear is head, no matter how hard he went. Both horse and human had been studded with sweat, stinking of each other and dust and earth. Never had Jerel made so fast for the baths.

Quite why the captain had chosen him was a mystery that occupied Jerel all the while, one he was not able to unpick: was this a punishment, a reward, or some gesture beyond that, beyond the scope of just him? Thoughts for later, as so many wonderings were; for now he had to make preparations as tardiness would just not do.

Before leaving, uncertain of so much, Jerel had taken up a red rose from its vase and began a prayer to Mayon, watching the sun falling in the sky, knowing she would be near, that it was her time alone in the sky soon. Crushing the flower in his hand, a thorn drawing blood, he dropped the perfumed petals from the balcony and ended his silent prayer. For guidance now that he felt so lost, for strength now that he felt so weak, and for faith above all else in her will.

He did not think of the Horse Gods.

The ball was much as any would expect. Ter could not come, not after last time; he was too smart for his own good, and had a quick dislike of nobles and a good aim.

Yet still Jerel found himself daunted: throngs of highest society peered through the masks that were their own faces. Their eyes gave away nothing. It was what put Jerel most ill at ease; in court nothing was as it seemed, everything had layers and repercussions, as a breeze bent differently a thousand blades of grass.

Which is why Jerel flowed around the outskirts in silks and a rigid jacket, watching, avoiding the wolves and lions, letting his path cross with only minor nobles and lordlings. Ambition glowed in some like hot embers, and these Jerel quickly disengaged, as politely as possible - an empty drink, an old acquaintance over there, hunger, a story of Bloody Aria or another comrade to leave them appeased - for they were just as dangerous as the established names in their own right. Perhaps more so in the risks they took.

Of course, the Grand Game was above Jerel, and what he understood was from smatterings of history he came across by chance. It was a lethal thing.

During his flitting between small circles he came across the flint-edged Indrau, rapping along.

“Ho Ser Indrau,” Jerel banged his chest in salute, even tilted forward, almost a bow, “How are you finding the affair?”

Over the elder man’s shoulder he caught the moment Tyaethe put a hand on Velbrance. His jaw clenched, and he nodded at the happening, “Paladin Radistirin does not look pleased.”
@TheFake
I'll post (hopefully correctly this time ^^*) Sunday most likely as I don't really have time before then. I'm still loving it though.
@jdh97: Sorry I didn't make it clearer. ^^;


It's fine, should have really assumed something like that, or at least checked. My bad.
oops
oops
I'm holding off on posting so I can be later in this turn's order.
Likewise, I'm good with whatever.
Sir Jerel Ban
A smile, a true smile, slipped onto Jerel’s face. It felt good, to smile and make others laugh, like a knot inside his chest was unravelled by its loose end. When he realised, he became overly conscious, and it fell away, and rising up to replace it was some of that same tension that had momentarily abated.

His jaw muscle jumped as he clenched it.

He scratched his beard, the horse bone scrimshaw rattling on their braids.

“Do you forget I spend most of my time in a rookery?” Jerel said, his gait sauntering, loose; he was too tired for the rigid decorum he usually demanded of himself, “They eat rotten flesh and shit it back out just as fast.”

He shook his head, a slight smile fighting its way back to his face, "They almost smell as bad as you."

The darkening of Gerard’s features didn’t go unnoticed, but Jerel decided not to comment on them. There was a pit growing in his stomach, and it needed filling.

They took the shortest path to the kitchens.

The bandage stank of herbs and ointments. It was dubious whether such a thing was even needed, given the healing magics. They claimed it aided the process. Jerel thought it served more as a brand, to let their shame be known to all, to hammer home that they needed to be better. As if that wasn’t known already.

And then, a thought. An answer to a private, idle wondering that birthed another litter.

“Ser Gerard, I was not there in the battle. What was it like fighting him? What did you learn?” Jerel asked. What he did not say, but what rattled in his mind, How many men could have stood before him? How many would it have taken? If not for the Knights?

@HereComesTheSnow
Sir Jerel Ban
“Bah!” Jerel barked, waving away the apology like a bad smell, a wry smile twisting at the corners of his mouth, “If she could then she’d have been doing you all a favour.” His pride twinged beneath the joke; it wasn’t too far from reality. It echoed in his wounded arm.

Breaking eye contact, he looked over at a far corner of the room whilst talking; the plaster whirled between the stone in circular patterns. The smile fell away. “I do not think what you did was wrong. Sadly, our captain exists as something more than us mere mortals; to have not rushed to her aid for the sake of some lowly girl?” Jerel shrugged, as though shifting under a heavy pack, “At least you left her with a fighting chance. However small.”

“I have my doubts,” Jerel went on, “Whether many others would have thought to do such a thing. Whether they cared, even, for the one thing that kept the fight going, or if they just wanted to wet their blades.”

His eyes snapped, to Gerard, as though remembering he was not alone. “Forgive my blathering. I should not talk of my comrades so, certainly not after..." he motioned at his injured arm to finish his sentence, he bobbed his head downwards with a long blink, a minute bow, and said nothing more of it.

It was then that a young servant boy skittered up to them and began gathering Jerel’s armour. He bowed deeply upon arriving and departing, but Jerel scarcely paid him more than a glare.

“Besides, I do not think you need to learn the subtleties of court,” Jerel glanced sidelong at Gerard, “Unless you plan on carving an illustrious career for yourself, but that takes more than simple deeds. No, I think our lot go there as entertainment, something exotic for the circles of higher society to look at, maybe a bard’s tale or two spun overtop. Clumsy social graces might serve to make you more outrageous of an attraction, so erratic are their tastes.”

From his stomach came the growl of a neglected beast. Trail rations and marching weren’t great sustenance for healing. As before when he could not muster a smile, his brows arched.

“I think the kitchens beckon. Walk with me? If not to the kitchens,” he said, looking the sodden Gerard up and down with exaggerated distaste, “at least until our paths split to the baths?”

@HereComesTheSnow
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