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12 mos ago
Could use a 10 hour nap

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#A64017 ....|..... outfit .....|..... #c9bef3 ....|..... outfit .....|..... arena


Colton startled at her kindness like it had been set gently but unexpectedly in his hands. For a second he didn’t know where to put it, how to hold it without breaking something. The words about brothers and living and scars landed soft but heavy, pressing somewhere behind his ribs. And then she said that word again, about herself, and it slipped out of him before he could think better of it, rough with instinct and honest care.

“Don’t—don’t call yourself that,” he blurted, ears already warming, voice low but firm in the way a tree was firm, not loud, just unmovable. He swallowed after, suddenly shy about having spoken at all, eyes dropping to the planks beneath their feet. He hadn’t meant to bare anything when he talked to her before. He’d just answered her questions. Just told the truth because it felt like she deserved it. Somehow that had turned into something gentler and deeper than he’d expected, something that made his chest ache in a quiet way.

Then she apologized for the flirting, crossed her heart, and before he could sort through what to say to that, before he could tell her she didn’t need to change herself into something smaller or quieter or easier, she sat down on the edge of the platform. His brows knit in confusion as he took a step forward, hand lifting halfway, uncertain.

“Blair, you don’t gotta—”

But she was already pushing off.

For one stunned heartbeat, Colton just stood there staring at the empty space she’d left behind, the water below still rippling from her fall. Then a surprised snort burst out of him, half laugh, half disbelief, and before his thoughts could catch up to his body, he was moving too, feet pounding once, twice, and then nothing beneath him at all.

The jump felt different than it ever had before, especially with no rope to swing him across. No spike of fear. No flash of heat or smoke in the back of his mind. Just wind tearing past his ears, a bright, weightless second where the world held its breath with him, and then the cool rush of water splashing around his body like a clean answer. He smacked into the surface near her with a splash, hair slicked back, lungs burning in a good way, laughter caught in his throat.

He wiped water from his eyes and found her standing beside him, real and solid and alive, and his grin came wide and unguarded, sun-bright, dimples deep, all the warmth he carried written plainly across his face.

Blair turned away from the splash with an incredulous laugh. She had expected him to swing across to the other side and wait for her, or something, not jump right in after her. She couldn’t hide her stunned smile as she looked over him, thigh deep in water beside her. "Didn’t your mother ever warn you about not jumping off of bridges because your friends do?"

Colton tilted his head as he pretended to think about that, chuckling to himself at the idea of that sort of conversation taking place with his mom. He was certain it had, but it had likely been phrased more along the lines of don’t go cattle tipping if your friends invite you, you never know which farmer has a shotgun but… well, he knew all farmers had a shotgun or ten. “I was scared of heights for most of my life,” he grinned. “So… no.”

“For the record, there’s no such thing as an ugly scar,” he said, voice easy. “They just mean you lived through somethin’ hard, that you’re a survivor.” He hesitated a fraction of a second, then added more softly, “And you’re fine the way you are. You don’t gotta be… better. Not for me. Not for anyone, as long as you’re happy.”

"You—" She poked his chest, trying her damndest not to focus on the rigidity of his muscles beneath her finger. "—haven’t seen my scar. ‘Survivor’ is a loose term, but considering you’re not technically wrong, I’ll let you have that one."

Colton’s second comment hit a little deeper, weighing down the corners of her smile as her gaze fell to the surface of the water rippling around her legs. "I’m… trying to figure that out," she confessed quietly. The truth was, Blair was trying to be better for herself, kinder to herself. True that didn’t mean she needed to dull her shine, but maybe she did when it was the root of the problem, if only a little. Being herself didn’t seem to do much for her recently, but she supposed she met Anissa and Colton—although him showing up to help her had absolutely nothing to do with her, but maybe him sticking around did. What the hell did she know?

"But I’d like to be happy someday," she added with a smile that was painted with the quiet optimism of someone who hasn’t given up. Blair was a lot of things, but she wasn’t a quitter. She was far too stubborn to let a little melancholy and loneliness drag her down indefinitely.

He paused, glancing back at Blair with a softened expression. “That’s a good goal to have,” and he understood it, because that was the same thing he wanted for himself. Colton hauled himself up, water streaming off his clothes, chest rising and falling with steady breaths. Then he turned back to her and held out his hand, rough palm open, patient and sure as good ground. “C’mon,” he said gently. “I got you.”

Blair followed him toward the edge of the pool, wading through the water with soft sloshes. Her eyes found his face before dropping to his offered hand. That time she didn’t hesitate, like even in the short time he’s been her shadow, she’s found a strange comfort in accepting his help. She placed her bandaged hand in his and wrapped her fingers around his thumb before letting him help lift her out of the water. Once she stable with both feet firmly upon the ground, she let go and made her way toward the next obstacle.

Recalling her previous attempt, Blair preemptively twisted and scuffed her shoes in the dirt and sand to try and remove what water she could from her shoes. She slowly approached the rising beam. She took a second to steady her breathing before bracing her right foot against the wood and extending her arms. It was easy, just one foot in front of the other. That’s what she did the first time. While she was no longer hungover to hell and over, exhaustion was still blurring the edges of what she could and couldn’t do, and the last thing she wanted was to fall… again. She drew in a sharp breath and forced herself to climb. With every step her body rocked back and forth, and her arms flapped and flailed to try and keep her upright.

Colton lingered a step behind her as she approached the beam, slowing his pace until he was directly beneath it, close enough that his shadow folded over hers but far enough that he wouldn’t crowd her balance. There wasn’t much he could do here, no steadying hand, no careful boost, no clever trick to make gravity kinder, but instinct still pulled him forward, eyes tracking every wobble of her ankles, every frantic windmill of her arms.

His hands hovered uselessly at his sides, flexing now and then like they remembered the shape of catching her and wanted to be ready again. He moved when she moved, paused when she paused, breath unconsciously syncing to the uneven rhythm of hers, heart giving a small, unreasonable jolt every time her foot slipped half an inch too far to one side. If she fell, he would be there. That much, at least, he could promise the universe in the quiet of his chest.

And somewhere between one careful step and the next, it surprised him how much he was enjoying this, how easy it felt to simply exist beside her, even in the middle of sweat and sore muscles and the low ache of exertion. It reminded him, faintly, of the time he’d spent with Sloane that morning, the calm that settled in without permission, the strange peace that came from shared silence and small, unremarkable moments stitched together. He hadn’t expected friendship to feel like this, soft around the edges, steady, something that didn’t demand anything but presence. It was nice, he thought, to make more friends, to let his life widen in gentle, human ways instead of sharp, lonely ones. Though, distantly, he supposed he ought to find a guy friend or two someday soon, just to keep things balanced… even if right now, walking beneath Blair’s careful progress across the beam, balance felt like the last thing his heart was concerned with at all.

Blair’s progress across the beams was slow, like everything else she had done throughout the course. Her footing was abysmal and her muscles ached every time she had to over correct a misstep. She actually had decent balance from years spent in stilettos, but exhaustion was pulling her thinner and thinner with every obstacle. There was a fleeting moment where she wondered if she could do it better in heels. Probably. But she wasn’t going to make the journey back to her cabin just to grab a pair. If she left the arena, she wasn’t coming back and she was certain that would come with a whole other slew of problems from nipple boy over there. When she reached the descending beam, Blair hurried down it before gravity or her balance could betray her. The momentum carried her a few feet forward in a sloppy short run, but she managed to stop with a small skid along the sand.

After catching her breath, Blair wasted no time slipping off her shoes and socks. She scooped them up and held them out to Colton with a tired smile. "Do you mind?" She flashed him a reassuring wink as she tugged the zipper up on her crop top until her shirt was fastened all the way up to the collar. "Don’t worry. Swimming is the one thing I can do." She patted his bicep once, being extra sure not to let her hand linger—although it was insanely tempting—and then made her way toward the pool.

She didn’t run at it or make a show of getting in. Even if swimming was the one challenge she could handle without an issue, Blair was entirely too deflated to even think she could somehow redeem herself with her aquatic skills. She stopped with her bare feet at the edge, toes curling around the lip. Then, with a deep breath she pushed off and dove into the water. She slipped into a perfect freestyle. There was no rush in her strokes, just an elegant patience of one arm then the other, breathe and kick. The water was soothing against her aching muscles and while she absolutely hated being in wet clothes, she was thankful to be rid of the sweat and grime from the course.

Compared to the other obstacles, even when taking her time, this was by far Blair’s fastest. She reached the opposite side of the pool in the time it would take someone to walk the length of it. She emerged from the far side, wiping water from her eyes and slicking back her drenched hair. When she opened her eyes, she was met with the daunting log ladder that waited ominously for her. "This place is going to be the death of me," she muttered under her breath, resting her hands on the edge of the pool in no rush to get out. Perhaps she could just live there from now on. Learn how to grow gills and a tail and become the camp's resident mermaid. There could be worse things.

Colton took her shoes and socks with a smile that came easy and stayed, curling warm at the corners of his mouth like sunlight that had decided to linger. He hooked the laces over two fingers, and watched her go with an easy fondness that surprised him in its own quiet way. Then he waited, shifting his weight from one foot to the other while the course lived and breathed around him. Campers ran past in bursts of effort and laughter and frustration, water sloshing, sand kicking up in pale clouds. His gaze wandered without much intention, catching on small stories unfolding at the edges; River sitting stiff at the edge of the arena, speaking to two women with that pinched, uncomfortable look like he’d been cornered into a conversation he didn’t know how to leave… or maybe like he really had to use the bathroom and was too polite to say so.

Farther off, he spotted Sloane’s group trudging out of the last shallow pool, soaked and miserable. He smiled to himself at that, not because she was likely exhausted but because she’d made it. There were other faces too, two girls sitting together on the course, talking quietly, some passing faces were blurred and nameless, all rerunning the course or talking at the edges of the arena or leaving. He even thought he saw a guy from his own run, someone he’d been certain had passed, splashing back into the water like the course had personally called him out for round two. Colton huffed a quiet laugh under his breath. Camp was strange. Exhausting. Kind of wonderful.

He turned back just as Blair surfaced on the far side, water slicking her hair dark and shining, shoulders rising with slow, steady breaths. He crouched near the edge of the pool, resting on the balls of his feet, her shoes dangling loosely from his hand like a small, ordinary offering. There was something about the way she looked right then, tired but stubborn, elegant even in defeat, that tugged a soft, careless warmth through his chest. His voice lifted before he really thought about it, bright and easy, charm slipping out the way breath did.

“Hey,” he called gently, eyes crinkling at the corners. “You’re nearly there, you know.” He tipped his head toward the looming log ladder, then back to her, grin widening just a touch.

“Just a little more, then you can nap, or eat, or… do whatever it is pretty girls do after horribly brutal obstacle courses ruin their mornings.” His smile stayed gentle, unassuming, entirely unaware of how naturally the flirtation lived in his tone, how it threaded itself into kindness without ever asking permission.

Blair looked up as he reached the edge of the pool in front of her, his presence blocking out the sun and casting her in shadow. She tilted her head back slightly, watching him lower himself from a tower of muscles and southern charm to something smaller and unassuming as he held out her shoes toward her. She followed the nod of his head toward the looming ladder and sighed. "Oh yeah. I just have the most—"

She paused, corner of her mouth curling upwards at the compliment he laced so effortlessly into his words, one that Blair wasn’t even sure if he was aware he did it. She couldn’t help the small laugh that followed, echoing off the water and the space between them. "You’re cute," she said plainly as her hand emerged out of the water. But she didn’t take her shoes. Instead she slipped her cool and damp fingers into his other empty palm… before he offered and before she asked, assuming he’d help her out as easily and unbothered as he had with everything else.

Colton’s breath caught, not in any dramatic way, not sharp or loud, but like his chest had briefly forgotten what it was meant to do when she called him cute. The word hit him square and unguarded, and his smile bloomed slow and bright in response, honest enough that it felt like the best compliment he’d ever been handed. Maybe it was. His eyes softened at the edges, crinkling in a way that made the warmth in his expression linger, like he hadn’t quite decided how to put it away yet.

Then her fingers slipped into his palm. Cool. Damp. Certain. He didn’t hesitate. Didn’t ask. Didn’t overthink it.

His hand closed around hers easily, steady and sure, the motion as natural as breathing. With his other arm, he braced and lifted her up and out of the pool in one smooth motion, no strain, no spectacle, like he’d done it a hundred times before and never once questioned whether he should. Water streamed from her clothes, droplets catching the light as he took a single step back once her feet found solid ground, releasing her just as effortlessly as he’d taken hold, giving her space without ever making it feel like distance. His grin stayed, soft and a little dazzled.

Blair didn’t really climb out of the pool as much as she was lifted. The ease at which he hoisted her up stole her breath and stunned her momentarily. She had to try very very hard not to stare at his flexing bicep or the tensing muscles peeking out from beneath the torn hem of his shirt. Once she found her footing and he released her hand, she cleared her throat and looked up at him with a smile that spoke her gratitude without words. "I can’t speak for other girls, but I’m desperate for like… an hour long bubble bath." Her smile grew, tinged with the greed that came from simple pleasures like candles, hot water to melt away the ache in her muscles, and a glass of wine. Then her face immediately contorted into a disgusted grimace. "No wine though. It’s like, not even noon and the thought of alcohol after that hangover is actually nauseating." She laughed softly at her own misery, but ultimately was unbothered by it.

Colton laughed softly at her confession, the sound warm and easy, like it had been waiting right there behind his smile. He rocked back on his heels, shoulders loose, eyes bright with that unthinking optimism that seemed to follow him everywhere. “Back home, folks swear by pickle juice for hangovers.” He lifted a finger, earnest as could be, as if imparting sacred wisdom. “Not glamorous, I know, but they say it helps with the headache and the nausea. Something ‘bout electrolytes or salt or—well, I dunno exactly.” The grin that followed was unapologetic, golden and bright. “Worth a shot though, right?”

She laughed softly, looking up at him with a small smile of disbelief with a scrunched nose. "You’ve never drank a day in your life, have you?" Blair asked with a small shake of her head, but there was no judgement. If anything, the softness behind her eyes was almost endearing. "The cute girl with braids patched me up pretty well, but if I ever need pickle juice, I know who to bug." Then her head cocked to the side, brows furrowing as the other, less PG, meaning of her words flooded her mind. She squinted her eyes for just a second before shaking it off. Get your mind out of the gutter, Blair.

“You move really well in the water,” he said, tone easy and sincere, like it was an observation rather than a flirtation, though the charm slipped through all the same. He tilted his head, curiosity lighting his eyes as he looked at her properly now, hair slicked back, cheeks flushed, something quietly luminous about her in the aftermath of motion.

“You ever swim competitively?” he asked, thumb brushing absentmindedly against the heel of her shoe where it still hung from his fingers.

Her head tilted to the side slightly as he spoke, hands sweeping her drenched hair over to one side. "You’re sweet, but no." A soft chuckle hummed behind her lips as she started ringing out her hair, letting the excess water slip free and darken the sand between them. "I’m not very athletic, if you couldn’t already tell." Her fingers ran back through her dark mane, separating the locks into their natural coils. "But my father bought my brother and I ‘the best swimming instructor money could buy.’" She made dramatic air quotes for emphasis before continuing. "If nothing else, I know I’ll never drown."

Blair took a small step forward, slowly reaching out her hand to take back her shoes from him. All the while she held his gaze, her dark eyes seeming to soften the closer she reached the end of the course. It was mostly from the fatigue that was settling into her bones, but beneath that was a part of her that had eased around Colton, simply because he was seeing her at her worst and still didn’t judge her. Ok, well maybe not her worst, but definitely her most downtrodden. "Thanks."

She slowly walked over toward one of the other obstacles, toes squishing in the sand and leaving behind dark prints in her wake. Blair leaned against one of the wooden supports, brushed the sand and dirt from her right foot, pulled on her sock and then her shoe. Once finished with one foot she did the other. There was no ceremony or procrastination behind it, just a resolute determination and desire to be so fucking done with this. She slapped her hands against her thighs and stood upright.

The ladder stretched so tall that it nearly brushed the clouds as it waited for her to attempt it once again. Each step Blair took closer, the pit in her stomach grew. She saw a lot of people fall on this obstacle, too many, that it was a surprise she survived with only a twisted ankle the first time. How the hell she was going to defeat it a second time, she didn’t know. But she had to, there was no other choice. She was far too tired to attempt push ups now and after making it this far, she kind of owed it to herself to see it through… As long as it didn’t kill her in the process. She stopped in front of the lowest rung and rested her palm against the log with a sigh. "What’s the worst that could happen?" she whispered to the wood like the obstacle would take pity on her.

Colton watched her walk away with a quiet stillness that surprised him, her damp footprints marking the sand like a soft, temporary map of resolve. He didn’t rush after her. Instead, he mirrored her pause when she stopped at the base of the ladder, standing there for the same stretched heartbeat, eyes traveling up the towering logs and back down again. He could see it written all over her posture, the fatigue, the dread, the stubborn refusal to quit now. Something in his chest tightened, not fear exactly, but a deep, instinctive pull toward her, like gravity deciding its preference. When she rested her hand against the wood, he exhaled slowly, as if coming to a decision that had already been made for him.

After that brief beat of hesitation, he moved. Closing the distance in a few easy strides, Colton reached the ladder and hoisted himself onto the first rung, shoes thudding solidly into place as though the obstacle itself had accepted him without question. He leaned down then, arm extending naturally, hand open and waiting for hers, his smile bright and steady and utterly sincere. “Hey,” he said softly, eyes warm as they met hers. “I won’t let you fall.” The promise wasn’t loud or dramatic, it didn’t need to be. It lived in the way he held his balance, in the unwavering confidence of his grip, in the simple certainty in which he extended his hand to her.

Blair only looked over when she noticed movement out of the corner of her eye. She watched in almost disbelief as Colton hoisted himself onto the first rung of the ladder like it was nothing, like it was his intention all along. "What are you doing?" she asked. The question came out quiet, like a whisper lost beneath the sound of his feet on the wood and the stirrings that echoed throughout the arena. Her gaze flitted between his calloused palm extended toward her in earnest, and the warmth that remained a constant behind his eyes. He had helped her with most of her other obstacles, sure, but this was different. This wasn’t a boost or a cheerleader on the sidelines. He intended to climb alongside her, every step of the way. Something about that made her stomach flip and a strange weight settled in her chest that she didn’t know how to name.

She drew in a deep breath, weighing her choices—as if she was going to turn down his assistance—before inevitably raising her hand and slowly slipping her fingers along the warm, rough skin of his open palm. "You’re going to ruin men for me," Blair mused up at him as her fingers curled around his hand. Using her strength, but mostly his—it’s not like she could really compare with those muscles—she climbed up to the first rung, standing beside him as her arm gripped tightly to the next highest log. "I might need to cap how often you’re allowed to be charming." Her laugh was breathy and tired, but there was a warmth that lived beneath it, persistent like embers of a fire that refused to be extinguished. "... So I don’t swoon."

Colton’s smile turned impossibly brighter the second her fingers slid into his palm, like the simple act of her trusting him was enough to light something up inside his chest. He steadied her without effort, muscles flexing as he helped hoist her up beside him, careful and sure, as though she were something precious rather than heavy. Her words, ruin men for me, hit him like a spark, and he choked on a laugh, bright and open, the sound echoing softly against the wood and sky.

“I’m not tryin’ to make you swoon,” he promised, eyes crinkling at the corners, warmth spilling out of him with every syllable. “I’m just… being genuine.” He hesitated only a beat, grin softening into something more earnest. “But honestly? If men don’t treat you with this kind of respect, they ought to be ruined for you anyhow.” The words came so naturally, so plainly, like truth didn’t require polishing.

"Gods, that means I’ll be single forever," she mused with a quiet laugh as she tilted her head back to look up at the remainder of the ladder that stretched above them.

A soft hum sung from behind Blair’s closed lips as she weighed his words. While her expression shifted to something more somber, her smile still clung persistently to the curled corners of her mouth, unrelenting as it lingered. "To be fair, I haven’t always been the most deserving of respect." There was some validity in the perspective that respect was earned, and given her history, she couldn’t blame people for not respecting her. It came with the territory. Plus, how much respect could she really expect from others when she rarely gave it to herself? She shook her head, pushing away the thoughts while her own bright smile slowly returned, a little forced but no less warm.

Colton shook his head immediately, the motion gentle but certain, like he couldn’t let that thought take root between them. “No,” he said softly, with a kind of quiet conviction that didn’t ask permission. “Even if you felt like you didn’t deserve it… that says more about the men who treated you without respect than it ever could about you.” His voice warmed on the truth, earnest as sunlight. “Respect ain’t some prize you earn by being perfect. It’s the bare minimum. And anyone who couldn’t give you that… well, that’s on them.”

Blair laughed quietly with a shake of her head. She wasn’t going to argue, not in the middle of climbing the world’s most annoying ladder, and not with a man who could hardly handle hearing her call herself a slut. He had his southern ideals, charm, respect, the whole nine yards. While she was a product of a spoiled life in the city. It was a difference so stark that she could understand why Colton struggled to accept it. Or perhaps he just saw the best in everyone until proven wrong. In that case it was only a matter of time. "You’re stubborn," she mused, sparing him a sidelong glance before she steeled what strength remained in her weary bones and began pulling herself up to the next log.

He started to climb alongside her, one rung at a time, never rushing ahead, never leaving her behind. He stayed within arm’s reach always, body angled subtly toward her as if he could become a shield against gravity itself. “Easy… just like that,” he murmured, voice steady as a hand at her back, pacing himself to match her movements instead of his own strength. Each time she shifted, he shifted too, ready to catch, ready to brace, ready to help without making her feel small.

Blair climbed slowly, steadily, but with a little more confidence knowing that Colton was keeping pace beside her. She didn’t really know if he could do much to keep her from falling, but the false sense of security gave her the last bit of push she needed to muscle through the obstacle. She was so focused on taking one rung at a time that when he spoke, his words that were meant to be encouraging landed differently. Her mind—traitorous little thing—wandered… toward thoughts that were not uncommon for Blair, but ones that didn’t need to be plaguing her as she tried to climb a splintering log ladder dozens of feet above the ground. She imagined those words whispered in soft dimness, muffled beneath silk and flesh and—Oh my fucking god.

Her brows tugged together, creasing her forehead. "Huh?" The confused sound of disbelief slipped out before she could stop it. Then her foot flipped. Her arms clung tightly to the log in front of her, snapping her eyes shut as she pressed her chin against the wood. Blair laughed, shaky and uneasy like her footing, reluctant to look over at him as she tried to get a grip… because Gods know she needed to.

Colton’s body moved before his mind could catch up, instinct sharp and immediate the moment her balance faltered. He shifted down a rung in one smooth motion, closing the small distance between them so he wasn’t hovering above her but beside her, solid and present. One hand stayed clamped around the log to keep himself anchored, knuckles whitening briefly with the force of it, while the other pressed firmly to the middle of her back—steady, supportive, unmistakably there. The contact wasn’t hesitant, it was protective, like his muscles had decided for him that she wasn’t allowed to tip backward into empty air. His breath left him in a quick exhale, relief and alarm tangled together.

“Whoa,” he said, voice light but edged with something real underneath, a careful attempt at humor to keep panic from blooming. “Don’t scare me like that.” His thumb rubbed a small, comforting trail along her back, slow and grounding, as though he could soothe the wobble right out of her bones. He leaned closer just enough to see her face, brows drawn with concern, eyes searching.

“You alright?” he asked gently, confusion flickering across his expression. “Are you dizzy? Or… scared of heights?” The questions came softly, earnest and practical, trying to find the shape of the problem so he could hold it steady for her.

He stayed there, unmoving except for the quiet rhythm of that reassuring touch, his presence a brace against gravity and whatever storm had flickered through her mind. Colton didn’t tease, didn’t assume, didn’t press, only watched her carefully, like she was something fragile balanced on the edge of exhaustion. “Just tell me what you need,” he murmured, voice warm as sunlight through leaves. “We can slow down, we can go faster. We can stop. I’ve got you.” And he meant it with the simple certainty of someone who didn’t know how to offer anything less.

She nodded her head, acknowledging his words and that he was there, with her arms still tightly locked around the log. But Blair didn’t look at him, not right away. Her attention was focused on ignoring the warm tingling that radiated from where his hand rested against the bare skin of her back. She had a problem and while she might have been able to reach that conclusion a year ago, now that she was trying to be good it felt like everything around her was amplified. It was a cruel twist of fate. Blair from two days ago would have been trying to get the sexy cowboy naked and in her bed as fast as possible… but, friends. He wanted a friend, she agreed to friends. And Gods know she was trying. But then he had to be all charming and chivalrous and book boyfriend coded and… fuck, she was getting a headache from spinning in circles.

Blair let out a heavy sigh that almost sounded like a groan as her head tipped forward and her forehead slumped against the log with a thud that was a little harder than intended. "Ow," she muttered into the narrow space between her face and the wood, but didn’t lift her head. "I can’t stop," she conceded before drawing in a deep breath. They had already started and she didn’t want to live on that ladder, but she was also so close to the end that all she really wanted was to be over it and shoulders deep in a bubble bath so hot it’d melt away the aches.

She finally peeled her head from the rough wood. Small splinters and specks of dirt clung to her skin, but she hardly cared or noticed at that point. She looked over at Colton with a tired absolution behind her dark brown eyes, unable to fight the small smile that took hold at the sight of his own warmth and concern that he didn’t owe her, but still gave freely. "I just slipped. It’s fine… I’m fine." A lie, or partly. He didn’t need to know the true depths of her sex addled mind. "Thank you… again." Her smile softened, weightened down but her inability to get through a single fucking obstacle without help. She truly was useless.

"At this rate, I think I’ll owe you for the rest of my life." Blair nodded her head, accepting her fate before getting a solid hold of the log and started climbing once again. She kept her breathing steady, or as steady as she could, focusing on her grip as she moved her feet, then focusing on her footing when she shifted her hold. And she tried very very hard not to listen to Colton’s quiet praise with every successful ascension. Don’t get her wrong, Blair loved praise… in more ways than one, but he was hot and distracting and it was almost more frustratingly distracting that he had no clue he was doing it. So she just focused on climbing.

When Blair reached the top she was tempted to stop, sit down, and catch her breath, but knowing she was halfway done gave her the drive to keep going, as much as it was tempting to let herself wither away and die up there. Of course, she found the climb down to somehow be far more challenging. It felt like every time she lowered her feet to the next log they slipped or missed the rung entirely. Her arms were starting to tremble from the strain of supporting herself through each misstep and her breathing grew heavy and labored. Halfway down, she had no choice but to stop, if only to give her arms a break. She lowered herself precariously to sit on the log and rest her back against one of the side supports. Her head lulled back against the wood, closing her eyes as her chest continued to heave, unable to steady her breathing.

Colton stayed quiet while she rested, though it cost him something to do so. His gaze didn’t wander, didn’t fidget, he kept it steady on her, tracking the rise and fall of her chest, the tremor in her arms, the way exhaustion clung to her like a second skin. He wanted to say something, to ease it, to lift the weight off her shoulders the way he’d lifted her from the water. But it was clear she needed the silence more than she needed encouragement. So he gave it to her. Just his presence. Just the steady nearness of someone who wasn’t going anywhere.

When she started moving again, he followed without comment, matching her descent rung for rung. His praise quieted now, trimmed down to small murmured words that barely disturbed the air between them. He watched her carefully, aware now that even kindness could become a distraction if laid on too thick. When she finally paused halfway down and lowered herself to sit, he descended the last bit to settle beside her. Close enough that their legs brushed. Close enough that he was there if she needed him. Not close enough to crowd.

After a beat, he spoke.

“I have two younger sisters,” he said, tone easy, almost conversational, like he was offering her a story instead of a lecture. He glanced at her with a lopsided little smile, fondness already curling at the edges of it. “One of ‘em’s pretty tough. Likes to go fishin’, shoot guns, fight anybody who so much as looks at her or her sister wrong.” A soft huff of laughter escaped him. “She got in trouble a few months back for throwin’ crab apples at passin’ cars. Managed to toss one clean through an open window, hit some man’s kid right in the head with it.” His brows lifted slightly. “Kid was fine. He was eatin’ the apple in the backseat. But the dad pulled over and started yellin’ at her… so she threw another crab apple at him for yellin’.” He shook his head, smile gentler now. “She’s a menace.”

He shifted slightly against the wood, letting the warmth of the memory soften his voice. “My other sister though… She's too prim, too proper for any of that. If she’d come to camp and River told her to run this course?” He gave a quiet snort. “She’d probably tell him to stick it where the sun don’t shine before packin’ her bags and headin’ home.” He nudged Blair’s shoulder lightly, just enough to pull her attention back toward him, eyes warm and steady. “Point is… they’re real different. But they’re both strong in their own ways.”

His expression shifted then, softer, more earnest. “Even if you’d failed,” he continued gently, “Even if you’d accepted help the whole way up… you still did it. You climbed it. You showed up.” His gaze held hers, unwavering. “You seem like the kinda girl who’s hard on herself for no good reason.” A faint smile tugged at his mouth again. “Give yourself some credit, Blair. Not everybody keeps goin’ when it’d be easier to quit.”

Blair assumed he would have continued on or perhaps dragged her along, but the settling of his weight on the log beside her and the light touch of his leg against hers drew her attention. She slowly lifted her head—which felt like lead, having to hold it up on her own once again—and opened her eyes to look over at Colton, who rested beside her. When he began talking about his sisters, she settled more where she sat, letting her breathing ease, and the trembling ache in her muscles subside, if only slightly. She studied his face as he spoke: the golden stumble that shaded his jaw, the soft green of his eyes like grass on the cusp of autumn, and the fondness that painted his ever present smile at the mention of his siblings. There was the warmth and light that burned bright and unapologetic behind his features like it was woven into his very DNA, like Colton didn’t know how to exist in any other form but to be a beacon and safe haven for others.

A tired smile crept across her lips as she listened to his stories, naively assuming he was just trying to fill the silence as she regained her strength. But then he gave her a gentle nudge that pulled her gaze up to his eyes as he revealed the lesson hidden beneath his own quaint farmboy paraboles. Blair laughed softly, tucking loose hair behind her ears with a quiet sigh. "There are some good reasons," she mused as a sad guilt tinged her smile.

She sucked in a sharp breath as she pushed off her thighs, shifting to sit more upright and beside Colton. Her gaze followed the obstacle course, across pools of water and along ropes back toward the stands where she caught a glimpse of River and Anissa. "I would love to tell River to stick it, but my friend kind of has the hots for him." Her hands fell to rest against the rough wood on either side of her, accidentally brushing Colton's leg in the process. The brief touch drew her attention for a second and she muttered an apology, but didn’t sacrifice the stability her hold on the log gave her. "And as much as I hate all of this… I have a new understanding for its necessity after Pandora’s box." Blair’s brows tugged together as she swung her legs idly. "Nearly dying has a way of changing your perspective on things."

With that, she drew in one last deep breath before slipping her weight off the log and slowly started lowering herself down to the next rung. Once her feet found purchase, she pivoted to wrap her arms around the beam where she had just been sitting. She squinted as she looked up at him with a smile that was all playful determination. "If I’m going to die at this Gods forsaken camp, it should at least be cool… like monsters or in battle or something." Blair leaned back slightly, looking down over her shoulder to see just how far she had left to descend. "Not to this damn ladder. I refuse." Her laugh was breathy and weak, but filled with perseverance as she flashed him a quick wink before lowering herself down another log.

Colton listened without interrupting, his expression softening in ways he didn’t quite realize were visible. He knew what she meant, about near-death experiences, about perspective shifting so violently it left the world looking unfamiliar afterward. The house fire had carved something into him too, something permanent and wordless, a quiet before-and-after that he still didn’t have language for. He didn’t offer that up, didn’t turn the moment toward himself. He just nodded, eyes steady, understanding living there without spectacle.

“On a battlefield with monsters,” he repeated, a low chuckle warming the words as they left him. “Yeah… I suppose that’d be a pretty cool way to go. Lot better than via obstacle course trainin’.” His grin widened at her wink, and the flush that rose to his cheeks caught him off guard, heat blooming suddenly and bright beneath the golden stubble of his jaw. He watched her lower herself down with that stubborn determination, admiration flickering across his face before he followed without hesitation. Close behind. Not hovering. Just there, matching her pace, ready if she needed him, like it was the most natural place in the world to be.

Her descent was slower than the climb, less sure footed, and tired. But her last reserves of energy and her stubbornness that never wavered, she eventually reached the final rung. Abandoning form, Blair let herself drop the last handful of feet to the ground. Her landing was clumsy and her knees gave out from the force, but she didn’t care. She landed with a soft thud and oof as she went ass first right down in the dirt like a toddler learning to walk that tipped backwards onto their backside. But rather than being frustrated or embarrassed she fell at the end, she only smiled and let out a relieved sigh knowing that all she had left was one single god damn hurdle. Then she was free.

Colton followed her down at a careful pace, feet finding each rung with quiet certainty until the ground rose up to meet him. He landed steady where she landed scattered, knees bending easily to absorb the drop before straightening again. The moment her legs gave out and she tipped backward into the dirt, he instinctively stepped forward, hand half-extended to catch her, only to pause when he saw the smile spreading across her face. It wasn’t frustration or embarrassment that met the fall, but relief. Pure, unfiltered relief. And something about that, about the stubborn girl who had fought every rung and still found it in herself to smile at the end, warmed his chest in a way that felt almost proud.

He crouched down in front of her, the grin he offered soft and bright, like sunlight breaking through after a long stretch of clouds. “Need help up?” he asked gently, one brow lifting in playful question, “Or do you want a breather before we tackle that last little jump?” His voice carried no impatience, only that steady, uncomplicated support that had followed her from the first obstacle to the last. There was a quiet pride in his tone, not loud enough to embarrass her, but present all the same—an acknowledgment of how far she’d come on tired legs and sheer willpower.

Blair’s smile grew just a fraction as she slipped her tired, trembling fingers into his palms before they were offered, silently accepting his help one last time. "No way," she replied to his second question with a quiet laugh that was muffled beneath her weary and heavy breaths. Then, before she could think better of it, her grasp tightened around his hands, using what strength she had left to half pull herself to her feet, letting him make up the difference. Her gaze fell to their hands, for just a second, studying the contrasts between the two. One pair was larger, stronger, sun-kissed and calloused from years of hard work. While the others were small, dainty, olive toned, manicured and soft like velvet, the stark reality of a girl with a privileged life who never lifted a finger a day in her life. It was something that, in the past, she would have been proud of it, flaunted it even. But at a place like that, it only felt like another reason she didn’t quite belong.

Before her thoughts could drift too far, she cleared her throat and shook her head. She gave his fingers a playful squeeze, then let her hands slip from his grasp and fall to her sides. "Just one left. Then I can die," she teased as she stepped around him and started making her way toward the final obstacle.

Blair’s legs felt like noodles, like she was walking on top of jello not solid earth. Her exhaustion was no longer psychological, but deep seeded, rooting itself in her nerves and joints so fiercely that she wondered if she’d ever feel normal again. It was almost terrible enough that she momentarily considered making a workout regimen… almost. She reached the hurdle without ceremony or pomp, just the last singular shred of willpower and determination she had left. She didn’t run or jump. There was no way she had enough energy for that. She simply shifted to the tips of her toes like she was wearing her favorite pair of heels, swung one leg over the obstacle, letting her foot settle in the puddle without a care, then pulled her other leg over. With the quiet splash of her second foot settling into the shallow water… she was done.

Her body nearly gave out. She felt it like a tremor in her knees and the way the air left her lungs in a wheeze, like it too wanted to get out of that arena as fast as possible. She didn’t move from where she stood in the puddle, she couldn’t. Blair hunched over, bracing her hands against her unsteady knees, hanging her head in a mix of exhaustion, resolve, and frayed pride. She had pushed herself more than she thought possible to reach the finish line that it now felt like an additional obstacle to leave. Honestly it was pathetic how useless and out of shape she was. Why in the hell was she in a place like that? She sucked in a sharp breath. "Fuck that was horrible."

Colton grinned when she teased about dying, shaking his head at her dramatics like he’d already grown fond of them. There was something endearing about the way she made catastrophe sound theatrical instead of tragic, like she refused to let anything steal her humor outright. He followed her without hesitation, shoes splashing right over the hurdle instead of attempting any clean leap. There was no grace in it, just a solid step, a careless slosh, water soaking into his laces, but elegance didn’t matter. What mattered was that she’d finished.

A quiet relief loosened something in his chest as he watched her bend forward, bracing herself against trembling knees. Not relief for himself, he probably could’ve run the course again if someone dared him, but for her. She looked wrung out, like the last ounce of stubborn pride had been spent dragging her across that final line. There were other things he could’ve been doing, checking in at his cabin, sorting through whatever responsibilities waited, but none of them felt more pressing than the way she swayed slightly in that shallow water.

He stepped closer without making a show of it and laid a steadying hand on her shoulder, firm but gentle, like he was anchoring her without trapping her. “You alright?” he asked softly, concern plain in his voice. “You look like a strong wind could knock you over.” His thumb traced a slow, soothing circle against her shoulder blade, grounding and warm.

“C’mon,” he added gently, already angling his body to support her if she leaned. “Let’s get you outta the water. Should I carry you? I don’t mind.” And he didn’t, there wasn’t a hint of teasing in the offer, only genuine worry that if he let her stand there too long, she might crumple back into the puddle at his feet.

Blair blew out a deep breath before pushing water and sweat dampened hair back out of her face as she slowly stood upright. As much as she wanted to be strong and independent, she could feel her body swaying and leaned into his support, albeit a bit reluctantly. She flashed him an incredulous look, all pursed lips and furrowed brows, as she looked up at him. "Calm down, Prince Charming, " she teased through the exhaustion that stole the wind from her lungs and lightly patted his chest with the back of her hand.

"I don’t think my pride could handle the embarrassment of having to be carried." Even so, her smile grew, just a fraction, as she humored the thought of being literally swept off her feet and carried around in front of half of camp. If she hadn’t already made a fool of herself that day she might have actually considered it, if only for the envious glares, the pleasure of being spoiled… and the muscles. "...As much as the Princess treatment from a devishily handsome cowboy sounds like something straight out of a romance novel."

While she didn’t let Colton carry her, Blair had leaned on him so much throughout the course that she wasn’t going to deny his help now. She lifted her arm, lightly bracing it on top of his with her hand gripping his shoulder. Her legs felt like they might give out with every shift, but she let him be her crutch, supporting her weight whenever she couldn’t. After all, he offered to carry her… If he could carry her and catch her falling from a rope, she imagined it wouldn't take much effort to help her stay upright on her own two legs. She took her time climbing out of the shallow pool, thankful that it was only a couple inches deep so it was little more than stepping up onto a curb.

Her fingers adjusted their hold on his shoulder as she spared him a sidelong glance. "If you wouldn’t mind helping me to my seat—" her free hand rose, pointing to the nearly empty stands where her jacket lay against a lone bench. "—Then you’re free of babysitting duty for the rest of the day." Blair chuckled under her breath, poking fun at her own expense as she often did. She already felt bad stealing far too much of his time. Aside from nipple boy and Anissa, there were only a couple other stragglers. Colton could have been eating lunch or napping or subjecting a more suitable girl to his charming wiles. She was grateful for his help, but mostly felt guilty for needing it in the first place. Even if that seemed like the exact place he wanted to be, she had a hard time believing it. It just wasn’t something people did where she’s from.

Colton let out a soft huff of laughter at her calling him Prince Charming, the title landing somewhere between amusement and fluster. A faint flush crept up along the bridge of his nose and into his cheeks when she added devilishly handsome cowboy, and for a second he looked almost boyish about it, like he hadn’t quite learned how to carry compliments without tripping over them. “I’ll try not to let the crown go to my head,” he murmured lightly, though the warmth in his voice gave him away. His hand stayed steady at her back, guiding rather than gripping, unbothered by the weight she leaned into him. “I’m happy to help,” he added simply, smiling softly as he glanced down at her.

He moved with her at her pace, adjusting his stride so she didn’t have to, letting her arm rest comfortably over his while his hand hovered near her waist in case she wobbled again. There was no strain in him, no sigh of inconvenience, only a quiet attentiveness that felt instinctive. When she mentioned babysitting duty, he shook his head faintly. “I don’t see it like that,” he said gently. “We’re friends now.” The word friends settled easily between them, uncomplicated and sincere, and whose statement landed with a softness only someone who was genuinely a decent person could manage.

As they neared the stands, he shrugged one shoulder, casual and honest. “All I’ve really got waitin’ on me is unpackin’ my stuff and gettin’ familiar with my cabin,” he admitted. “Chores, basically.” His smile broadened just a touch, eyes flicking toward her with an easy glint of humor. “Helpin’ a beautiful woman’s a much better way to spend my time than foldin’ laundry. Do you want help walking back to your cabin?”

He didn’t seem to realize how the words landed, how naturally the flirtation threaded through them. To him, it was a simple truth, offered the same way he offered his hand. And as he helped her up the last step toward her seat, he stayed close until she was steady, content to remain exactly where he was.

Blair laughed softly at his compliment as she carefully took one step at a time. She knew she likely looked like death, she didn’t need a mirror for that, but she also didn’t argue having quickly learned just how stubborn he could be about insisting the best out of people. So she let it settle quietly without contradiction or playfully drawing attention to it. However she did roll her eyes at the mention of chores, scoffed even. "You can’t spend all your time locked away in your cabin. Pretty face like yours—" she raised her hand that rested on his shoulder to poke his cheek lightly, before letting it fall and resume its grip. "—should be shared with the less fortunate." She chuckled and shook her head at her own dumb joke. The exhaustion was definitely getting to her head. "A sweet guy like you deserves all the friends. You can’t make those in a cabin."

Their pace slowed as they stopped before the bench where her jacket was strewn like a discarded relic. Her gaze fell to the empty space beside it where her brother sat at one point. Lochlan didn’t stay to offer his support, much like he left her to stumble back to her cabin last night practically incoherent. It all sat uneasily on her stomach, especially when it was him that egged her on to drink in the first place. Her free hand rose to pinch the bridge of her nose with a sigh. Just the thought of it gave her a headache… She could dwell on it later. Whatever. Fuck him.

She didn’t let go, not yet, instead adjusting how she stood while still relying on the stability of his support. Her smile returned slowly, weighed down at the edges but still warm, and could be easily played off as fatigue or what have you. Blair slowly looked up at him while giving his shoulder a gentle pat. "I managed to stumble back to my cabin alone, and entirely too drunk last night… I think I’ll manage."

Blair went to take her seat, nearly slipping out of his hold when she paused. Her brows tugged together as she glanced back up at him. She shifted up onto her tip toes—a dumb decision that immediately made her calves burn and legs shake—then leaned in and gave him a small kiss to the cheek. It wasn’t romantic or flirty, just another way to show her gratitude in the only way she knew how. "Thanks again, Colton." Her words were quiet and sincere, without the usual playful lilt that laced her tone. She didn’t really know how to express what it meant for a stranger—now friend—to drop everything to help her when no one else did. It was small to him, but the gesture was monumental to a woman who had felt lost and lonely and like a shadow of the person she had been since arriving at that miserable fucking camp. His kindness made her smile without the need to be seen as an object or the assistance of alcohol.

With a satisfied nod of her head, Blair finally lowered herself on the bench beside her jacket, letting out a deep sigh of relief when she no longer had to support her own weight. "There’s stables, you know?" she commented, resting her hands in her lap as she looked up at him. "I imagine a cowboy like you probably loves horses." She tried her best not to let her thoughts wander to her time in the stables as she pointed toward the Southern exit of the arena. "I’m sure a piece of home might help you settle better than chores and unpacking would." She grabbed her coat and draped it across her lap, settling into her seat a bit more rather than rushing to the exit. "Don’t worry about me. I’ll be fine. I’m just going to rest for a bit, then I’ll be right as rain to go enjoy that bath I promised myself." Her smile brightened, just a fraction, just enough to give him the reassurance he needed to go and enjoy his day without stressing himself over her well being.

For a fleeting second, the world seemed to still.

The press of her lips against his cheek was light, gone almost as soon as it arrived—but the warmth lingered, blooming across his skin and sinking somewhere deeper than he expected. A flush crept up beneath the sun-touched gold of his face, heat settling along his cheekbones as his breath caught in a way he hoped she didn’t notice. Colton blinked once, steadying himself, smoothing his expression into something calm and easy despite the sudden thrum in his chest. He offered her a soft smile, as though nothing had shifted at all, even if his heart was pounding so hard in his chest he felt a little dizzy.

Colton took a steadying breath, rubbing a hand over the back of his face, and trying to hide how flustered he was by focusing on the idea of the stables, the tired lines of concern for her making it back on her own, the flustered feelings from the soft kiss, all eased into something brighter, softer, familiar. The idea of horses settled into him like a memory of home, warm and grounding, but his gaze lingered on her a moment longer, weighing whether it felt right to leave. “If you’re sure,” he said after a brief pause, tone gentle, deciding not to press further. His smile was small but sincere, careful not to tip into worry. “I’ll catch you later then… just make sure you get home safe.” He hesitated, then added, “I’m in cabin twenty-eight, if you need anything.”

With one last glance to be certain she was settled, he stepped back and made his way toward his own seat, retrieving his jacket from where he’d left it. The fabric felt heavier now, not with weight but with the quiet shift of the day, how it had started as training and somehow turned into something more meaningful. He slung it over his shoulder, pausing only long enough to throw a final wave in Blair’s direction, his grin easy and warm before turning toward the arena’s exit.

As he stepped out into the open air, a low hum slipped from his lips without thought, some half-remembered tune carried on habit. The idea of the stables tugged at him, but the grime and sweat of the course clung stubbornly to his skin. A quick shower first, he decided, clean up, change, then find the horses. The thought steadied him as he walked, the promise of something familiar waiting on the other side of the day.

Collab pt. 3/3



interactions ....|.... none ............... mentions ....|.... anissa, river & lochlan ............... collabs ....|.... @Mjolnir




#a4ded2 ....|..... outfit .....|..... #54998e ....|..... outfit .....|.......... arena


The arena had quieted into something almost peaceful, though the air still hummed with the ghost of exertion. Katryna dragged a hand down her face, fingers pressing into her brow as if she could physically smooth away the exhaustion etched there. Sand clung stubbornly to dried skin, and her muscles trembled in faint aftershocks from the course. She felt hollowed out, scraped thin, like the day had peeled her down to something raw and blinking beneath too-bright lights. Kacper stood a few paces away, slower now, turning in a lazy half-circle as he took stock of the handful of demigods still trudging through the obstacles, their movements heavy and stubborn in the fading heat.

“Well,” he drawled at last, the word stretching out lazily as he glanced back at her over one shoulder. “This was an eventful first day.”

Katryna snorted, the sound sharp and humorless as she rolled her eyes toward the sky. Eventful first day was certainly one way to describe it, if one were fond of understatement. In her mind she was composing a rather colorful list of grievances, about the gods, the arena, the course, certain campers whose names she had already committed to memory for the sole purpose of disliking them. All she truly wanted was hot water, silence, and the blessed oblivion of sleep that lasted no fewer than seventy-two uninterrupted hours. “Let’s go,” she muttered, casting one final glare at the ladder that had nearly claimed her dignity a second time in one day. “Looking at this stupid course makes me want to barf.”

There was a pause as she scanned the arena one last time, her gaze briefly skimming over the stragglers still dragging themselves through sand and rope. Then she turned on her heel and stalked toward the exit without waiting for agreement, shoes grinding into the dirt with tired finality. Kacper chuckled under his breath, falling into step behind her with unhurried ease. His eyes lingered on the remaining runners, a faint pang of reluctant sympathy stirring in his chest as he watched one nearly slip from the log ladder. He shook his head lightly, lips curving into something softer than mockery.

“Poor bastards,” he murmured, more to himself than to her, before quickening his pace to close the distance between them. The arena receded behind them, still humming faintly with magic and sweat and pride. The cold hit them like a wall the moment they stepped beyond the arena’s enchanted threshold. Heat fled their skin instantly, replaced by a biting wind that slipped down collars and curled icy fingers along overheated spines. Snow compacted beneath their shoes with a sharp, rhythmic crunch, the sound oddly loud in the quiet stretch between buildings. Their breath spilled out in pale plumes, ghostlike and fleeting, while the sky above hung low and iron-gray, threatening more flurries before night fully claimed the camp.

For a while, they walked in silence. The path to the cabins wound between drifts that glittered faintly in the afternoon light, untouched except for a few staggered tracks from earlier travelers. Kacper shoved his hands into the pockets of his hoodie, shoulders hunched not from the cold but from thought, gaze drifting across the frosted treeline. Then, casually, too casually, he cleared his throat. “So, Sloane—”

“We just met her.” Katryna didn’t break stride as she cut him off, her boots grinding into packed snow with renewed purpose. “I don’t know what you’ve got in your head, but you need to actually get to know the girl. Try being friends or something. And if you steal my first and only friend at this camp, I will hurt you.” Her voice was tired but sharp, edged with a protectiveness she barely tried to disguise.

Kacper raised both hands at once in surrender, snowflakes catching briefly in his dark hair. For a fleeting second he looked almost sheepish, caught mid-scheme, before smoothing the expression away beneath practiced ease. “I just wanted to see what you thought of her. I feel like she’d be a good friend.” The innocence in his tone was laid on far too thick, theatrical enough that Kat let out a sharp breath through her nose in disbelief. “I’m too tired to humor this.” He snickered softly behind her, undeterred.

A few more minutes passed in companionable quiet as their cabins came into view, smoke curling lazily from one chimney into the frozen air. Kat’s steps slowed slightly, her earlier irritation settling into something more contemplative. “Her brother, though,” she murmured at last, brow furrowing as memory tugged at her. Kacper shrugged one shoulder, easy and unbothered. “He seems like a dick, but he can’t be that bad. They’re siblings.” It was said with the unshakeable certainty of a brother who could not fathom raising a hand, literal or otherwise, against his twin.

Katryna shook her head faintly, steps crunching slower now as they reached her door. She had always been better at noticing the smaller fractures in people, the subtle flinches and silences others overlooked. Sloane had tensed earlier, not like someone startled, but like someone bracing. It hadn’t made sense, but she had seen it. “Maybe.” That was all she offered, and though Kacper glanced sideways at her with a faint frown, he let it rest.

Warmth enveloped them the instant they stepped inside her cabin. The fire Kacper had started earlier crackled merrily in the hearth, casting golden light across wooden floors and thawing frozen fingers with merciful speed. Kat exhaled deeply, tension loosening as she shrugged off her coat and let it fall carelessly over a chair. She grabbed her bag and dumped its contents unceremoniously across her bed, clothes and trinkets scattering without care.

“I’m going to shower,” she declared, already pulling fresh clothes free before pausing to scratch beneath Opal’s chin as the white cat pranced across the blankets, purring like a tiny engine.

“I’ll meet you at your cabin after. Do you want to take Opal over with you? They can scope out your place together.” Her smile softened as she watched the cat tilt into her touch. Kacper had already slung his own bag over one shoulder, scooping up Onyx with practiced ease and cradling the black cat like an infant. “Yeah,” he cooed in an absurd baby voice, nuzzling his nose lightly against Onyx’s head. “Sounds good, doesn’t it? Want to go exploring?” Onyx answered with a pleased meow, tail flicking.

Kat grinned, pressing a quick kiss to Opal’s head. “Go on then. Jump on Kacper.” The white cat chirped happily, crouched low, wiggled with feline precision, and launched. She flew across the small cabin in a blur of white fur, colliding squarely into Kacper’s chest. He staggered half a step, letting out a soft, dramatic “Oof!” as he juggled both cats with exaggerated care. Kat’s grin widened at the sight before she disappeared into the bathroom, the sound of running water soon blending with the crackle of the fire and Kacper’s ongoing, ridiculous narration to his feline audience as he left.

Kacper’s walk to his own cabin was short and brisk, cold air still biting at the tip of his nose as snow packed beneath his shoes. The chill had settled into his muscles now that the arena’s warmth was gone, a reminder that sweat and winter made poor companions. When he stepped inside, though, he paused, because it was bigger than he’d expected. Not ostentatious, but spacious in a way that felt deliberate. He set the cats down gently at the threshold with a soft shoo, watching as Opal and Onyx darted off in opposite directions, tails high and curious.

The living room and kitchen flowed together in warm honeyed wood and darker stained beams overhead, the ceilings pitched high with glossy planks that caught the light beautifully. An AC unit perched above the wide windows, useless for now, but promising mercy come summer. Beneath the mounted television sat a stone hearth, and he crouched without hesitation to build a fire, movements efficient and practiced. Flames licked upward quickly, chasing away the cold that clung stubbornly to his skin. The stainless-steel dishwasher gleamed from the kitchen corner, cabinets pale and clean-lined against butcher-block countertops that looked unused.

He wandered into the bedroom next, socked feet soft against polished wood floors. The bed was large, framed in darker timber, layered in neutral linens and a folded gray throw at the foot. The bathroom connected neatly to the side, and for a brief, confusing second, he frowned— no shower. He retraced his steps with a crease between his brows, stepping back onto the covered porch. There he noticed the large grill first, solid and gleaming, and beyond it (Score!) a hot tub tucked into the corner beneath the roofline.

Further along the porch sat a fenced wooden enclosure he hadn’t clocked before. He doubled back inside and found the connecting door from the bathroom. When he stepped through, he blinked at the tall cedar walls enclosing an outdoor shower. Steam vents lined the perimeter, and as he pressed experimentally at a sleek panel near the entrance, warm air poured outward and the tiled floor beneath his feet radiated heat. “Damn,” he muttered, smirking to himself as steam rose lazily into the winter air. “Nice set up.”

He left the shower running to warm up the space, and focused instead on unpacking. He dropped his bag onto the bed, but unlike Kat, he didn’t dump it. He unpacked deliberately, almost reverently. Shirts were folded and placed into drawers by color, blacks and charcoals first, then cool grays, then deep greens and navy, lighter tones last. Jeans stacked by wash and thickness. Socks paired, rolled, aligned. Even his toiletries found symmetrical places along the bathroom counter. There was comfort in order, in control, in making something predictable in a world that rarely was.

The cats drifted through his orbit while he worked. Onyx leapt onto the kitchen island, sniffing with regal disdain, while Opal investigated beneath the couch before curling briefly by the hearth. Kacper paused to hang the photographs last. Most were of him and Katryna, thin and hollow-cheeked in the orphanage, standing stiffly in ill-fitting clothes; later, healthier, dressed sharply in tailored clothes after their adoption. There were photos of them in matching Christmas pajamas, grinning too wide beside their adopted father. Hiking trips. Birthday dinners. One of Kat mid-laugh, head thrown back, hair caught in the wind. He set some in simple table frames along the mantel and hung others carefully on waiting nails along the walls, stepping back each time to ensure they were level.

A small swell of pride settled in his chest as the space began to look lived in.

When he opened the refrigerator, he froze. It was stocked perfectly. Organized produce, fresh herbs, marinating meats, dairy placed precisely where he would have put it. His mouth pressed into a thin line. “Fucking Gods,” he muttered under his breath, refusing to offer even a sliver of gratitude. He grabbed the bowl of ribs, already seasoned and soaking like some divine kiss-ass gesture, and carried them out to the grill, setting it to preheat so they could cook low and steady while he showered.

He stepped back inside and grabbed a clean pair of sweats and a soft, fitted tee, heading for the steam-warmed shower. As he shut the door behind him, he tried not to dwell on the faint curl of anticipation settling low in his chest. Sloane would show up soon. He told himself it was just coffee. Just conversation. Just… nothing.

The small smile that tugged at his lips said otherwise.



interactions ....|.... none ............... mentions ....|.... sloane, sylas ............... collabs ....|.... none
I had a final last week and it was absolutely brutal to study for, but I just caught up on everything. I loved everyone's posts!

First look at Eleanor was really nice, her inner dialogue was just fun to read. Mentioning Memoirs of a Geisha was a great touch. Really enjoyed the first look at Jalen too!

I loved the collab between Margot and Hayden, when Hayden stepped in on the sly for a fake statement to help Margot I said "aww" out loud...on that note, I'm not all that sad about Josie kicking it anymore.😊 On that note, loved how sassy Scarlett was with Josie. Everyone is just collectively fed up with her and her questions. Daisy was a nice contrast, actually physically lashing out in her own subtle way. That was a great read.

Writing the murder with the count down was a great touch, them having the recorder is great. And reading Bobbi's interaction with Jones was entertaining.😄
This is RP is closed & invite only. Anyone is welcome to read along!


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B E N E A T H . A . B L A C K . S U N

“What comes is not war, nor judgment, nor ruin. It is endurance.”
—Attributed to the Prime Seat, final record before the eclipse

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T H E . A G E . O F . E N D L E S S . D A R K .

as preserved in fractured records, disputed by survivors

Over a century has passed since anyone felt the sun’s warm embrace in Umbrael. On a day that should have been ordinary, the sky betrayed the world— a permanent eclipse swallowed the light, plunging the land into an endless, suffocating twilight. From that shadowed veil came nightmares: hulking manbats, towering bearwolves, and twisted horrors no mind should conceive, spawned by an arctician whose name has been lost to fear and legend. Had it not been for a single, miraculous grace, humanity itself would have been erased, leaving nothing but whispers and bones.

Before the dark, magic had been mankind’s greatest triumph. Arcane academies rose beside marble towers, and generations of mages were taught to bend flame, wind, and light to their will. Sorcery once shaped nations. Yet when the eclipse fell, magic failed. Spells unraveled against the monsters, passing through flesh that did not obey the old rules of the world. Incantations that once leveled armies now barely slowed the beasts that stalked the night. One by one, academies fell silent, abandoned, destroyed, or sealed away, until magic became a relic of a brighter age, remembered more in history than in practice.

Historians and scholars claim the light did not vanish, it was driven downward, buried deep beneath the earth alongside something far older than mankind. There, entombed beneath stone and silence, it became known as moonlite. In a single, impossible instant, the silver that suffused the land transformed, yielding a metal that gleamed of its own accord, pure and keen enough to cleave through the fiends that now haunted the world. Where magic faltered, moonlite endured. It did more than illuminate; it guided. It traced a path through the dark for those who survived, a fragile promise that the light had not truly abandoned them—only adapted.

From this silvered dawn, strongholds arose, spires and bastions carved from resilience itself. Humanity endured in scattered pockets, clinging to order and courage even as the world beyond their walls writhed and shifted in shadow. Moonlite blades replaced spellbooks. Forgemasters eclipsed mages. Those who still practiced the arcane were regarded with skepticism, their art unreliable at best and dangerous at worst. No living soul remembers the sun’s touch, yet an unspoken sense of change pulses through the air, as though Umbrael itself is holding its breath. Whispers pass between scholars and sentries alike, of sealed places, of ancient truths best left undisturbed.

Among these bastions, the Kingdom of Moonreach stands. Its people are tempered by darkness, and its king, strange, enduring, relentless, has guided them toward prosperity against odds that should have crushed them long ago.

Now, a summons echoes across the kingdom.

The king calls for his strongest, his sharpest, his most cunning, though the nature of the task remains veiled in careful words and deliberate silence. He speaks of relics to be recovered, of long-buried threats to be confronted for the good of all mankind. Warriors, scholars, hunters, and thieves will gather, moonlite gleaming in their hands, driven by the promise of reward and the unyielding need to believe their actions still matter in a world that has forgotten the sun.

The shadows watch as they answer the call. The air hums with expectation. And far beneath the Earth, something ancient stirs— its prison thinning with every step taken in the king’s name. Umbrael waits, balanced on a knife’s edge, unaware that the next chapter of humanity’s struggle against the dark may also be the moment it finally wakes.

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T H E . A G E . O F . A N S W E R I N G . L I G H T .

as recorded in scattered annals, contested by scholars

Long before the eclipse, before moonlite gleamed in the dark, the world of Umbrael was governed by a different certainty: that magic answered when called. It was not a miracle nor a mystery, but a discipline— studied, refined, and passed from one generation to the next. The arcane was understood as a force woven into the fabric of the world itself, neither benevolent nor cruel, but responsive to will, knowledge, and restraint.

In those days, sorcery was not feared, nor was it wild. Magical academies stood beside royal courts and trade capitals, their towers as common on the horizon as keeps and cathedrals. Institutes of arcane study welcomed students from every corner of the world, elves and humans, dwarves and others whose names have since faded from record. Not all were born with equal aptitude, yet magic was not reserved for the gifted alone. Anyone, it was said, could learn to shape it with sufficient discipline, patience, and sacrifice. Talent determined how swiftly one advanced; dedication determined how far.

Magic shaped the world into its golden height. Cities rose where barren land once lay, sustained by woven wards and conjured abundance. Kingdoms prospered, or collapsed, at the hands of sorcerers whose power could turn the tide of war, mend broken lands, or unravel dynasties. Yet for all its potential, magic did not rule unchecked. The existence of the an elite group of mages ensured that power remained measured, that ambition did not eclipse balance. No academy taught without their sanction. No great work endured without their scrutiny.

They were known as the Sixfold Veil.

The Sixfold were not rulers, nor priests, nor conquerors. They did not sit thrones or command armies, yet kings bent and councils listened when they spoke. They were the apex of understanding, six mages whose mastery crossed beyond spellcraft into truth. Race, bloodline, and nation held no meaning among them. Only clarity, restraint, and comprehension mattered. When a mage’s understanding of the arcane reached a threshold no teacher could guide them beyond, the Veil took notice. If deemed worthy, a Seat was offered— not as a reward, but as a burden.

Each Seat represented not a school, but a principle, a law by which reality itself abided. Through these principles, the Sixfold governed magic not by decree, but by example. Their presence alone was enough to temper excess, to remind the world that power carried consequence. It is said that during the height of their influence, magical disasters were rarer than famine, and wars of sorcery ended before they truly began.

Among the academies sanctioned by the Sixfold, none was more revered than the High Arcanum of Vael Tiras, where the Veil themselves convened and taught. It was there that the most promising minds of the age were shaped, and it was there that an arctician, whose name has since been stricken from record, rose with unsettling speed. His grasp of cold and void, of preservation and stasis, surpassed even his peers, and his theories stretched the boundaries of accepted arcane law.

Whispers followed him through marble halls and echoing chambers. Some claimed he saw patterns in magic others could not. Others said the arcane itself bent more readily to his will. In the final years before the eclipse, rumors spread, quiet, dangerous rumors, that the Sixfold debated the creation of an seventh seat. Not a principle newly discovered, but one newly understood.

Then, without explanation, the arctician vanished.

No farewell was given. No sanction was issued. The Sixfold neither condemned nor pursued him, and the academies were instructed to speak his name no longer. Within a handful of years, the sky darkened. The eclipse fell. And the Age of Answering Light came to a sudden, irreversible end.

Scholars still argue whether the arctician’s departure was coincidence or catalyst. Whether the Sixfold foresaw the coming dark, or whether they helped shape the last defenses against it. What is known is this: magic answered freely in those days, because the world was listening.

And when the Sixfold Veil fell silent, the world did too.

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R A C E S . O F . U M B R A E L
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T H E . H I G H . E L V E S


High elves were once the foremost architects of the Age of Answering Light, founding academies, libraries, and arcane courts across Umbrael. When magic failed after the eclipse, they were among the first to abandon spellcraft entirely, declaring it unreliable, dangerous, and obsolete. Rather than cling to a dying art, they turned their mastery toward moonlite, studying its resonance, forging techniques, and martial applications with scholarly precision.

Today, high elves are widely regarded as the finest instructors of moonlite combat, training elite guards, wardens, and noble houses in disciplined moonlite-blade traditions. Their cities gleam with moonlite inlaid into armor, crowns, and jewelry, worn as both protection and status, proof of stability in an unstable world. Modern high elven culture prizes visible prosperity, controlled strength, and public order, believing survival itself is the highest form of wisdom.

Magic is remembered politely, taught nowhere, and spoken of like a beautiful language no longer spoken aloud.
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T H E . D R O W


Drow trace their origins to deep cities carved beneath Umbrael long before the eclipse, where secrecy, trade, and adaptation were necessities rather than virtues. When moonlite became humanity’s salvation, drow forges moved swiftly to replicate it, experimenting with alloys, luminous salts, and false silver capable of mimicking its glow.

These creations, known politely as dusksteel and less politely as grave-silver, flood border markets and desperate settlements, sold to those unable to afford true moonlite. Though inferior, such weapons still cut monsters better than bare iron, earning drow merchants both profit than suspicion. Their underground strongholds remain vital trade arteries, supplying tools, information, and mercenaries to surface bastions.

In the current age, drow are most commonly encountered as traders, smugglers, tunnel-guides, or brokers of rare materials, thriving in the spaces between trust and necessity, where truth is flexible and survival is the only honest currency left to anyone.
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T H E . A F F L I C T E D


The Afflicted are descendants of twenty elven arcanists who ventured into the deepest reaches of eclipse shadow during the final year of the Age of Answering Light. The darkness did not kill them, but rewrote their bodies and magic, leaving them cold-blooded, long-lived, and marked by black-and-red eyes and red markings.

This transformation is hereditary, passing unchanged to their children regardless of mixed blood. Neither fully living nor truly dead, they survive on residual arcane energy, blood, and endure wounds that would fell others. Feared as monster-kin and blamed for ill fortune, most Afflicted live as nomads, traveling between strongholds as guides, relic-seekers, couriers, or discreet mercenaries.

In cities, they hide their eyes behind tinted lenses or heavy veils, trading anonymity for safety. Few realize their bodies still answer to true magic, even when the world itself has forgotten how to listen again.
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T H E . D W A R V E S


Dwarves are believed to have been born of the deepest caverns, shaped by stone long before sunlight became memory. When the eclipse fell, most retreated downward, delving far below even the tunnels the Drow consider dangerous. Entire holds vanished behind sealed gates, and in the centuries since, sightings have become so rare that many surface scholars argue the race is extinct.

This is untrue. Dwarves endure in vast fortified cities carved around moonlite veins, growing wealthy through careful mining and secretive trade conducted by masked envoys. Their weapons and vault-forged alloys rival any craft known above. Yet their isolation is not born solely of caution. Rumors persist of a war fought in the lightless depths, against things that claw upward from deeper dark.

Whatever the truth, dwarves no longer walk openly beneath the sky, guarding their borders, their riches, and their silence forever.
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T H E . H U M A N S


Humans are the most numerous and adaptable people of Umbrael, building their civilizations atop whatever ruins remain stable enough to hold walls. Before the eclipse, humanity produced kings, merchants, generals, and mages in equal measure, though their short lives lent urgency to every ambition. When magic failed, humans turned to moonlite with relentless practicality, perfecting its mining, forging, and mass deployment into weapons and defenses.

Today, most strongholds are human-founded, ruled by councils or hardened monarchs who measure success in years survived. Humans dominate trade routes, exploration companies, and mercenary orders, serving as the connective tissue between isolated civilizations. They are admired for endurance, criticized for recklessness, and feared for how quickly they adapt to new horrors.

In the current age, most humans expect neither salvation nor justice, only another day of borrowed breath beneath an unmoving sky that never forgives them fully.
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@Qia, if it's not a thanks I don't want it!


Oops 😭 noted for the next one. Loved your post though! The dynamic between Jag and Tamara was really interesting to read after his little romp in the bathroom. 😊

<Snipped quote by Sleepy Tani>

You're too sweet! <3 As an ESOL teen quite some time ago, I've always been a bit self-conscious with my writing.


That’s understandable, I can be pretty self-conscious too. I usually just write with a group of my friends on here, but I’ve really enjoyed branching out and joining ya’ll. ☺️
Not me having anxiety because I think my writting is mediocre and you all have great posts thus far 😅


I loved your post! The way you portrayed her emotional state during that was great, kept me engaged and interested. Give yourself more credit.😊

There's only room for one mediocre writer in this RP.

And that's me.


Editing because I missed this but...

We're one week from launch! Loved everybody's intro so far, and keen to see more. Just a quick reminder that posting guidelines are 14 days from the last GM post, or 21 days from your last IC post, whichever is longer. Looking forward to getting everyone on the board!

If anyone would like to utilize Tremayne or Josie for their own purposes do just give us a shout - particularly Josie who has a, let's say........limited window.


I'll take you up on a run in with Josie in the future, before she expires!😂


einarr ...|... outfit ........ serene ...|... outfit ........ elrik ...|... outfit ........ selja ...|... outfit ........ emil ...|... outfit ........ lei ...|... outfit ........ the great hall


Ironcrag had taught Einarr that love was a liability, a softness the cold would punish without mercy, yet Roric Storvane entered his life like a quiet defiance of everything the mountains had ever demanded of him. Roric was good in a way Einarr had not known men could be, not soft, but principled, kind without naivety, just without cruelty. By his side, Einarr learned that strength did not need to be cruel to endure, that justice could be carried with open hands instead of clenched fists. He stayed away from Ironcrag longer than tradition allowed, letting himself thaw in Roric’s presence, becoming someone gentler, someone his people would not have understood. Einarr did not care, because Roric loved him as he was becoming, not as Ironcrag had forged him to be.

The end did not come on a battlefield, but in a polished courtyard meant to disguise violence as honor. When King Leoric demanded noble women as concubines, Rhea Storvane was named among them, and Roric answered that insult with steel instead of silence. Einarr stood among the onlookers as the duel was declared lawful, his heart pounding with dread he could not explain. Roric fought brilliantly, precise, relentless, righteous, and Einarr saw victory within reach, saw the king falter beneath the weight of his own sins. For one breathless moment, it seemed justice would be done cleanly, in the open light of day.

It was stolen from him in an instant. As Roric raised his blade for the killing blow, a king’s guard drove a spear through his back, the sound wet and final in a way Einarr would hear forever. The king staggered away alive, dishonor clinging to him like rot, while Roric collapsed to the stones, blood blooming beneath him. Einarr moved without thought, caught Roric as he fell, and felt the warmth leaving his body far too quickly. Roric tried to speak, tried to smile, and then there was nothing left but weight and silence.

Something in Einarr died with him. Not loudly, not violently, but completely, as if a door inside him had been sealed in ice. He did not scream, did not beg, did not collapse, he simply went still, the way Ironcrag taught its sons to endure catastrophe. Kindness drained out of him first, then hope, then the belief that honor meant anything to men who wore crowns. When Rowan looked at him afterward, grief hollow-eyed and shaking, Einarr knew the same fire had taken root in both of them, even if it would twist them differently. The war had already begun, even if no banners yet flew.

Rowan raised the call to arms years later, his brother’s blood no longer staining the stones where justice had been murdered, but the ache had never hollowed for either man. Einarr followed him without question, not as the man he had been, but as something colder, sharper, forged by betrayal instead of love. He fought not for glory, nor even for victory, but because every blow struck against the crown felt like a continuation of the duel that had been stolen. Where Roric had fought with honor, Einarr fought with purpose stripped bare of mercy. The war was not born of ambition, not for Einarr, it was born of a broken body laid at his feet.

Those who fought beside Einarr learned quickly that he did not hesitate. He did not laugh, did not offer comfort, did not flinch from cruelty when it served the cause. Rowan watched the transformation with quiet anguish, recognizing the cost even as he relied upon it. Einarr became the man willing to do what Roric never would have needed to do, the blade drawn from grief rather than justice. If Roric had been the conscience of the rebellion, Einarr was its executioner.

Even after the throne fell and a new king was crowned, Einarr did not return to the man he had been. Ironcrag welcomed him back without question, mistaking his emptiness for strength fulfilled. But in the quiet moments, when the wind howled like mourning through stone and snow, Einarr remembered warmth, the sound of Roric’s voice, the promise of a life not ruled by cold necessity. He carried that memory like a wound that never closed, proof that he had once been better. And if cruelty lived in him now, it was because honor had been murdered first, bleeding out on palace stone while the world watched and did nothing.

So forgive Einarr, if he did not feel grateful to see the man who now wore the crown, because though Rowan lived to honor his late brother, he would never be Roric. He waited for the noise of the hall to ebb, for the laughter and clinking cups to thin into something quieter, more bearable. He did not push forward with pomp or demand attention; Ironcrag men do not announce themselves with spectacle. When the space opens naturally, like a held breath finally released, Einarr stepped forward. The stone beneath his boots felt steady, familiar, and he focused on that instead of memory.

* * *

The room felt as if it held its breath around them, a vast cavern of heat and hush where torchlight gilded banners and polished stone alike, and the silence lay thick as a cloak across Elrik’s shoulders. He stood with his family in a line of dark finery, the murmur of courtiers pressing in from every side, their voices a low tide that broke and receded without meaning. His mind drifted despite himself, back to the journey, to the guards unblinking eyes, to the feel of Svartrhedinn’s warmth under his palm, anywhere but here, where spectacle was dressed up as tradition and every gaze was a blade seeking a soft place to land. When the herald’s voice rang out, he turned only out of habit, eyes skimming the figures at the stair’s edge with the practiced indifference of a man who had seen too many processions to be stirred by another.

The young woman was lovely in the way courts preferred, polished, composed, the sort of beauty that learned to breathe shallow so it would not disturb silk, the white of her dress made the flush upon her cheeks more endearing. Her brother’s arm was steady at her side, his presence the only thing that seemed to anchor her as they descended into the weight of waiting eyes. Elrik’s gaze slid away almost immediately, not out of disdain but out of certainty; loveliness had never been enough in Ironcrag, and it would never be enough for his father. He felt the familiar, cold calculus settle into place, alliances weighed in land and blood, not in laughter or softness, and the thought bored him. Then the sound reached him, bright and sudden as a struck bell, and his attention snapped back as though tugged by an unseen thread.

He did not hear the words that coaxed it from her, only the laugh itself, soft, unguarded, a ripple of warmth through the hall’s oppressive heat. The change in him was subtle enough to be mistaken for a trick of the torchlight, a widening of the eyes, a single surprised blink, the slightest cant of his head as though listening for an echo. It was not desire that stirred, nor pity, but recognition of something unarmored in a room that prized steel. For a heartbeat, the hall’s rigid geometry bent around that sound, and Elrik found himself standing in the quiet after it, aware of the absence it left behind.

Beside him, Emil made an odd, choked noise, half breath and half laugh, the kind that betrayed a heart too quick to open, and Elrik felt his father’s tension ripple forward through the line like a pulled wire. The older man’s shoulders set, jaw tightening as though the laughter had scuffed something sacred in his private ledger of order. Elrik did not look at either of them, his gaze lingered on the stair, on the young woman who had already begun to fold herself back into composure, dimples fading beneath duty. The hall resumed its murmur, the silence loosening its grip, but the bright fracture of that sound remained with him—an unwanted warmth caught under the ribs, cooling into something he would not name.

Elrik watched the next pair descend with the practiced stillness of a man who had long since learned to still his face before it betrayed him. Princess Maeve moved like a lesson perfected, each step measured, chin lifted, poise sharpened into something almost ceremonial, while Prince Dorian strode with a casual confidence that belonged to men who had never been made to doubt the ground beneath their feet. Elrik’s gaze traced them once, then smoothed into neutrality, the mask settling back over his features as easily as breath. The other princess was beautiful, undeniably so, but there was a rigidity to the line of her bearing, a precision that felt rehearsed rather than lived.

His attention, traitorous and unbidden, slid instead to where Princess Rhea stood, drawn to the quiet irregularity of her composure, as though she were a riddle written in a hand he could not yet decipher. He told himself it was nothing more than idle curiosity, the mind’s habit of seeking asymmetry in a hall built on mirrored perfection. Yet the way her laughter had fractured the hush lingered at the edges of his thoughts, a warmth out of place in stone and ceremony.

The court demanded polish, demanded lines drawn clean and sharp; Rhea did not quite fit within them, and the dissonance tugged at him like a thread pulled from a tightly woven tapestry. He kept his eyes steady, his breathing slow, aware of the faint weight of crag-ore at his hip like a quiet admonition to remain what he was forged to be. The puzzle would be set aside, this was not a hall that rewarded wonder.

When the King and Queen emerged, the air itself seemed to bow. The herald’s litany rolled across the Great Hall, and Elrik felt his father’s presence sharpen in front of him, tension knitting his shoulders into a rigid line. The King moved with a warmth that read easily even from a distance, his gestures broad, his smile practiced into something that invited the hall to believe in it. The Queen’s grace cut colder, precise, economical, her gaze measuring rather than welcoming, two halves of rule presented in a single, seamless procession. Elrik marked the invisible seam between them as they took their places, the quiet space that power left between paired thrones.

His father’s breath changed, shallow and contained, as though each title spoken tightened a band around his ribs. Elrik recognized the cadence of that tension; he had grown up beneath it, learned to move within its shadow without tripping the wire. He straightened minutely, aligning himself with the posture expected of Ironcrag’s eldest, the blade polished and displayed for appraisal.

Time passed in a way that left his gaze returning to the girl that had become a puzzle to him as differing families introduced themselves to the King and his children. He stood where his father placed him, posture straight as a drawn blade, his expression composed from the same restraint he’d learned over the years.

His father bowed when he’d decided it was their time to approach, deep and exacting, the Ironcrag way, acknowledging power without offering the throat. “My king,” the words that followed were gentler than Elrik had ever heard them from his father’s mouth, the cadence almost warm with old familiarity, yet the edge remained, honed into every syllable like a blade that had learned to smile. “My old friend, it is an honor to present my family to you, and to meet your own, after so many years away.”

Elrik felt the dissonance of it as a faint tightening beneath his ribs, the unsettling thing about kindness from a cruel man was not that it surprised, but that it reminded one how rarely it was given. He kept his gaze forward, unblinking. Behind the bow and the measured courtesy, House Járnbjørn stood in disciplined silence unlike many of the Houses that came before them.

Elrik was aware of Emil at his side without looking at him, the restless shift of weight, the too-careful stilling of it, the softness that clung to his brother like a begging for mercy. It disgusted him, that softness, the way Emil wore his heart too near the surface in a world that delighted in cutting, and the resentment of it was a familiar ache. And yet, beneath that ache, there lived a stubborn, inconvenient truth… Elrik loved him still, loved him the way one loves a flame one knows will burn out in a storm, with a ferocity sharpened by fear. He would never say it, and Emil would never understand the shape of that love even if he did.

Selja stood composed beside them, chin lifted, eyes keen and observant, her stillness not born of fear but of learned vigilance. Elrik felt the quiet gravity of her presence, the way she carried herself as though she were already learning the weight of expectations not meant for young shoulders. Their mother’s nearness was a softer thing at the edge of his awareness, a steadying warmth he did not turn toward, as if looking might make it less durable. Together they bowed when required, a single motion carved from discipline and blood, presenting unity where fracture lived just beneath the skin. Elrik did not think of absence, did not allow his mind to wander toward the shape of what was missing in the place of his youngest sister. Instead, he stood in the present, forged into the role he knew too well, and let the hall see only iron.

"Lord Einarr," the King’s voice was warm and welcoming, matched with extended arms as he descended the stairs to the dais. It was a greeting that felt more familiar than what someone would expect when faced with the leader of the coldest and harshest lands in the kingdom. There was a weight to his words that was lost to the unknowing, but it wasn’t for them. It was for the shared loss and the emptiness that could never be filled by revenge or war.

Rowan’s feet found the stone floor, even with the Lord, not above him as he placed a hand upon the man’s shoulder. "It has been far too long." His gaze then swept across the Járnbjørn family, giving each and every one of them a smile along with a small nod. "You have a beautiful family."

When his gaze settled on the daughter, his expression softened but his hand upon the Lord’s shoulder tightened in a way of showing solidarity without sacrificing decorum or strength. "I was saddened when I heard about your youngest daughter." The King drew in a heavy breath, glancing back over his shoulder toward Rhea. He recalled the fear, concern, and grief he felt when she had left the castle. It wasn’t for more than a fortnite, but it was a hollowness he would not wish upon any man. And while he could not speak of his similar aches, it did not dull his sympathies. His attention slowly returned back to Lord Einarr before dropping his hand. "I attempted to aid where I could. My leads turned up dry, but if there is any further assistance I can offer, you need but say the word."

Elrik watched the exchange from his place just behind his father’s shoulder, alert to the smallest shifts the way a man learned to be when storms came without warning. He saw it plainly, the way Einarr’s expression softened and hardened all at once beneath the King’s words, grief and restraint colliding like ice floes grinding together. That reaction, at least, Elrik understood. Loss spoken aloud had a way of sharpening old wounds even as it wrapped them in something almost gentle. What unsettled him was not his father’s response, but the fact that he had not expected the King to care, not truly, not with that quiet weight carried in his voice.

The King’s gaze drifted toward the dais, toward the princess standing there, and Elrik followed it before he could stop himself. Again, his attention snagged on her like a blade catching flawed metal, irritation flaring sharp and sudden. He did not understand the glance, did not like that it pulled at the same unease she already stirred in him. She was a complication he had not asked for, a puzzle pressed into his path when his life had been shaped around straight lines and brutal clarity. He forced his eyes away, jaw tightening, as if by sheer will he could return the world to its proper order.

Einarr bowed his head, just slightly, and when he spoke his voice was pitched low, meant for the King, for their families, and for the edges of the crowd alone. “I appreciate it, my friend,” he said, and the word friend landed among the Járnbjørns like a dropped stone on thin ice. Elrik felt it as much as he heard it; Emil stiffened beside him, Selja’s eyes flicked sideways in brief disbelief, and even their mother seemed to falter for half a breath. Their father had never spoken that way of anyone, not in Elrik’s memory. There was something altered in him here, something reluctantly eased, as though the sharpest edges of his cruelty had been dulled, not removed, merely soothed, in Rowan’s presence.

Einarr continued, voice steady but weighted. “It is to the point that we must assume the worst, but mourning will wait until we return home. Only then may we lay her spirit to rest.” The words were ironbound, final, and Elrik felt the familiar ache settle behind his ribs, acknowledgment without surrender, grief caged until it could no longer interfere with duty. When his father straightened and spoke again, it was with the cool formality of a lord reclaiming his armor. “Still,” Einarr said, voice oddly earnest. “I would be honored to introduce you to the rest of my family.” Elrik lifted his chin a fraction, mask settling firmly back into place, and stood ready to be seen.

"Yes, of course." The King nodded his head in solemn understanding and did not dare to linger on the subject nor drag their moods down further. "When the time comes to make peace, do send a raven. I would make the journey, along with my family, to pay our respects." It was an offer kinder and more sacrificial than a King should give. But it was not sympathies given from a King to his subject, it was one father to another, two men bonded through the same pained absence for the remainder of their lives.

Declan stood on the far side of the dais, back against the wall, cast in shadows. He remained perfectly still, left hand lightly resting on the hilt of his sword, other hand at his side. A dark sentinel out of sight, forgotten but watching. Watching… And listening. Not because he particularly desired eavesdropping, but it was hard not to listen when you were regarded as a statue, an invisible piece of decoration that went unnoticed.

Einarr was a name he was familiar with. He recalled the stories his father would tell him and Dorian about his time during the war. A Járnbjørn by his recollection, if the red hair and icy demeanor didn’t already give it away. Declan’s mind and gaze drifted toward Ser Lei as he drew the comparisons with the new information he gained earlier that day, the knowledge that still weighed heavily on his conscience. He could see the resemblance, pale skin and hair like fire. But where the men presented were tall, with broad shoulders and a commanding stance, Lei was shorter and lean. A man bred for speed and agility, not strength and fortitude like these other Lords.

He caught glimpses of Lei’s face through the slits of his helm, recalling the ease of his features along the shore of the Weave, when duty and honor didn’t weigh on his shoulders. There was a light behind his eyes and smile that Declan rarely saw amongst the happiest of men. High cheekbones and a softer jawline that did not match those of the other Járnbjørn men: strong, sharp, and unyielding. ’A pretty man,’ according to the courtesans with a laugh soft like a song and light enough to be carried by the wind. And then there was the seclusion. He had no real friends. Never joined the men in the bathhouse…

Declan felt a sudden and sharp tightness twist in his chest. Pieces of the puzzle started shifting into place before his eyes. A puzzle he did not know had been laid out before him until that moment. Lei left his family… saw his brother in the Valley. But the Járnbjørns were missing a daughter, not a son. His gaze found Lei’s eyes through the heavy shadow cast over them behind the visor of his helmet… her helmet. He wasn’t harboring a Lord that had escaped his cruel father, but a noblewoman hiding in plain sight. A year… She had been hiding under his nose and amongst his men for a year.

He closed his eyes and drew in a deep breath. Gods preserve him.

The words carried across the hall whether she wished to hear them or not, too close, too clear for comfort, and Soleil felt every one of them like a stone dropped into still water. Youngest daughter. The phrase coiled in her stomach, tight and bitter, twisting until her breath caught painfully beneath her ribs. She kept her posture immaculate, chin level, shoulders squared, but her eyes slid shut, lashes resting against skin already gone cold. It felt like standing at the edge of herself, like being named aloud by a ghost.

She was suddenly acutely aware of her family’s presence in the room, of the shape of them, the weight of them, the way their grief was being handled like a blade carefully wrapped until it could be wielded again. Her father’s voice, ironbound, restrained, pressed against her memory with familiar force, and for a moment she was young again, small again, holding herself still so she would not draw notice. The hall seemed to dim around the edges, sound dulling, light thinning as though water had crept in and filled the space inch by inch. Her stomach rolled, nausea sharp and unwelcome, and she forced herself to breathe.

Then she felt it.

Not a sound, not a word, just the unmistakable weight of attention settling on her skin, hot and sudden as a spark struck too close. She did not open her eyes at first; she did not need to. She turned her head slowly, deliberately, the way one might approach a blade left bare on a table, and lifted her gaze just enough to meet his. Declan’s eyes found hers through shadow and steel, and in that single suspended second, understanding bloomed between them like a wound torn open.

It was over as quickly as it began. His eyes closed, jaw tightening as though he were swallowing something sharp, and Soleil looked away at once, her own eyes slipping shut again as if the act might undo what had just been seen. Her heart sank with quiet finality, dropping straight down into the depths of her chest until it felt lodged somewhere dark and unreachable. The room pressed in on her from all sides, heavy and suffocating, the sensation so complete it felt like being dragged beneath the surface of a black sea.
She drew in a slow breath through her nose, held it until the ache steadied, then let it go just as carefully. Another breath followed, measured and controlled, a soldier’s breath, practiced and necessary. Whatever had been revealed could not be taken back, but neither could it be allowed to surface, not here, not now. Soleil straightened imperceptibly, armor settling back into place, and waited at the bottom of the ocean for the moment she would be forced to rise.

The King cleared his throat and took a step back, replacing the fatigue of a battle worn ruler, torn and frayed through years of sacrifice, with his usual warmth, lighting the Great Hall with greetings not grief. "Introductions." Rowan clapped his hands together gently and stepped aside so he could see the Lords before him, and his family above him. "Perhaps merriment and new bonds can bring us happiness anew."

Rowan motioned his hand up to the dais, first and foremost toward the Queen. "My wife, Valenya." She stepped forward, as was expected of her, and curtsied. Her gaze swept across the family before her with the same level of scrutiny she had given the other Lords that had been presented to them. But where the other families might have lost her attention, the Járnbjørns held it. Especially the eldest son. She studied him like a specimen, not a suitor. Her gaze flicked to Maeve. There was no exchange of expressions, but a shared conversation transpired through eye contact alone, passing in a void that no one could decipher but them.

"My son and heir, Dorian." The Prince pushed off the throne and gave a bow. It was still formal and perfect enough but it seemed with every passing introduction, his flourish diminished with impatience. He much preferred getting to know prospective Ladies and Lords alike, over food, drink and dancing. Not the pomp and ceremony of formal introductions and ego stroking. The Járnbjørns were a handsome enough family, although they all looked a bit too… uptight and cold for him, but perhaps that was due to the watchful gaze of their intimidating father or the King’s presence. Maybe both. Either way, he could pry further under more comfortable arrangements. Everything sat better with wine, especially getting to know new people.

"And last, but certainly not least, my lovely daughters. Maeve and Rhea."

The Princesses stepped forward together, but where they usually stopped side by side and dipped into their curtsies, Maeve took one more step further, positioning herself partially in front of her sister as they lowered themselves. Lord Elrik was one of the top suitors on her list, and as such, she had to be certain she was the only thing that caught his eye. Everything about her movements were the perfect display of poise and etiquette, a charming smile, exquisite posture, and just enough eye contact to show intent.

Under normal circumstances Rhea might have made a huff over her sister’s actions, but in that moment she was content being invisible. Her gaze remained fixed on the hem of her skirt as it brushed a small crack in the stone tile. She couldn’t bring herself to look toward the family out of fear of meeting Emil’s gaze. The last thing she wanted was to draw any attention to herself or him. All it would take was a single glance, a single spark and her mother would make a scene. Perhaps if she pretended like she didn’t exist, then it could all blow over and be nothing but a humorous memory… far far down the road.

Elrik felt his father’s presence shift beside him as Einarr stepped forward to return the courtesy, voice measured and controlled once more. “My wife, Serene,” he said, and their mother moved with quiet grace, skirts whispering as she curtsied, her expression warm but carefully composed, as though softness itself were something to be rationed in this hall. Elrik watched her with a familiar tightening in his chest, admiration braided with protectiveness, before his gaze moved on as his father continued. “And my daughter, Selja.” Selja stepped forward next, her smile gentle and respectable, eyes bright but sharp, her curtsy flawless without being showy, a young woman who understood precisely how much of herself to offer and no more.

“My youngest son, Emil.” Elrik’s jaw set almost imperceptibly as his brother obeyed, bowing with a visible wince, as though the motion pulled at something tender beneath his ribs. Emil straightened quickly, color high in his cheeks, eyes lowered in a way that read as deference but felt too close to vulnerability for Elrik’s liking. It stirred the familiar contradiction in him, irritation sharpened by worry, disdain tangled tightly with a love he did not know how to make gentle. He kept his expression closed, refusing to let any of it show.

Then Einarr’s voice rang out again, heavier now, carrying the weight of lineage and expectation. “And my eldest son, Ironcrag’s pride—Elrik.” The words landed like armor being fastened, and Elrik stepped forward without hesitation, boots striking stone in a single, decisive rhythm. He bowed deeply, precisely, the kind of bow that acknowledged power without kneeling to it, head lowered just long enough to be respectful before lifting again.

“It is an honor to stand before you with my family,” he said, voice steady and formal, shaped by the cold halls and harsher lessons of Ironcrag. His gaze met the King’s first, then the Queen’s, then Prince Dorian, unwavering and clear. As he straightened, he tipped his head, first toward Princess Maeve, acknowledging her poised presence and the intent shining too carefully in her smile, and then, just as deliberately, toward Princess Rhea. The second gesture was smaller, almost restrained, but no less intentional, as if he were marking something unfinished, a question set quietly between them. It would be disrespectful not to address her, after all.

Seeing Lord Elrik before her, not from high above through the distortion of a window pane, Rhea couldn’t deny that he was attractive, as were the rest of the Lords vying for their attention. But it was a different type of appeal compared to his brother. Emil was warm like sunshine and an offered hand, where Elrik was strong with purpose and sharp around the edges. She noted the way he addressed her entire family, but notably the difference between herself and Maeve. Her sister drew attention first, with a deeper, more reverent deference. She called it then, up in the sitting room, and this only reaffirmed her thoughts. Both of them were chiseled from stone, cold, unyielding and perfect. A perfect match by Rhea’s count.

The Queen’s attention, however, was not focused on the ideal suitor offered up on a silver platter for her daughter to devour, but on Emil. Her gaze sharpened at the young Lord’s wince, snapping like a vulture to a corpse that had yet to fully rest. "So you are the Lord my daughter nearly trampled to death?" While the question was posed to the youngest Járnbjørn, the Queen’s gaze, more piercing than the sharpest blade, turned to her daughter for an answer.

Rhea paled beneath her mother’s scrutiny. Her eyes darted around in a rising panic while her clutched hands went white from the tightening of her grasp, grounding herself in the discomfort when she wanted nothing more than to disappear. There was a part of her that hoped if her mother was going to address it, that she would have at least waited. For what, she did not know. But having her misdeeds laid out, not only before her father, but in front of strangers felt like a new degree of shame she was not prepared to handle. "I…" Her voice trembled, trying to form the words she could not find, while silently pleading with the Gods to open the earth and swallow her whole. Death would be kinder.

The King’s brows furrowed, his confusion evident as he made no attempt to hide it considering his wife decided making a scene was always the best course of action. One of her more infuriating qualities that wore on his patience in his old age. His daughter’s tension did not go unnoticed at the posed question. Of course, he didn’t need to be a scholar to know the comment was in regards to his youngest daughter. Maeve was rarely the type to leave the Citadel unless forced.

"Rhea?" he asked with a father’s gentle warmth.

"Your daughter—" the Queen began to answer.

"Can speak for herself," the King interrupted. His tone was hushed and calm, but carried a cold, commanding finality.

Elrik’s gaze snapped toward the dais before he could temper it, attention pulled sharp as a blade drawn too quickly. He saw it all in a single, damning sweep, the way Rhea’s color drained, the tightening of her hands in her skirts until her knuckles blanched bone-white, the faint tremor she failed to still. His eyes flicked once to Emil, then back again, catching the way the Queen’s scrutiny bore down like a physical weight, pinning the girl where she stood. Something in Elrik’s chest tightened hard enough to steal his breath, because the shape of that fear was achingly familiar.

He recognized it not as a stranger might, but as one who had lived alongside it. The clenched hands. The shallow breath. The look of wanting to vanish, to step sideways out of the world entirely. Even now, he saw echoes of Soleil everywhere, reflected in moments like this, in young women trapped beneath expectations sharpened into weapons by those meant to protect them. The ache surged, heavy and urgent, carrying with it the reflexive need to move, to place himself between them, to take whatever blame or attention might spare her. He’d done it countless times before, it was a role he knew all too well.

For a heartbeat, he nearly did.

The urge rose hot and reckless, the same one that had driven him onto battlefields and into bloodied villages when he was far too young to be called a man. To step forward. To speak. To shoulder the weight and redirect the focus onto himself, where he knew how to bear it. But Elrik forced his gaze away from the Princess, jaw tightening as he dragged his attention back to neutral stone and torchlit banners, because he did not trust what was unraveling inside him. If he acted now, if he made a spectacle of himself in defense of a royal daughter beneath her mother’s gaze, he would expose something he could not afford to name.

His thoughts faltered mid-stride, the certainty he had carried stalling like a horse over a frozen river as cracks formed beneath it in the ice. What was he thinking? He was here as Ironcrag’s eldest, as a potential match for Princess Maeve, he was certain, as a blade meant to be weighed and wielded, not turned aside by sympathy. And yet, despite that knowledge, despite the neat expectations laid before him, his attention kept circling back, traitorous and insistent, to Princess Rhea. The realization unsettled him more than the Queen’s sharp words ever could, because he did not understand it, and Elrik Járnbjørn did not trust what he could not understand.

Rhea took a step forward, blinking slowly as a flush reddened her heaving chest, and bloomed across her cheeks. Her fingers idly tugged at the hem of her bodice needing to busy her hands so her trembling was not evident. The silence dragged on for far longer than was comfortable as she tried to gather her thoughts into tangible words. "I was on the shore of the Weave earlier this afternoon," she started, her gaze flitting back and forth between the floor and her father. "I challenged Ser Coren to a race back to the Citadel. I got distracted… I did not notice Lord Emil in the path ahead of me and nearly ran him over."

It was only then that she spared the Lord in question a sidelong glance, her hazel eyes were heavy where words were left unspoken, another apology for her ignorance, for the injury, for bringing chaos into his life because of her own childish delights. But there was a more dire apology now, one of a daughter who was worn and calloused from carrying her mother’s spite alone, who felt the weight shift in his direction, if only a fraction, and she was desperately trying to redirect that ire back on herself. She drew in a deep breath that made her lungs fight against the boning of her corset before meeting her father’s gaze. Her breaths were ragged, coming in short bursts as she stumbled and tripped through her words. "It was an accident. His injuries are not from my horse but of his own heroism. Lily reared and I fell and if he had not caught me…"

The King held up his hand, a kind gesture to try and calm his daughter. Rather than keep the attention on her, he gave her peace, if but for a moment, and turned to Lord Emil. "It sounds like I owe you my deepest gratitude, Lord Emil. For saving what is precious to me so that she was able to return home in one piece." There was a time where he thought he had lost his daughter once. It was a pain that festered in the hollow void left behind in her wake. It hurt in a way a father should never have to feel, more raw than the wound left behind after the deaths of his brother and sister. Knowing that this young man saved him from that pain a second time indebted the King to him and his family immeasurably.

Rowan stepped forward and took Emil’s hand in his, giving it a firm and thankful shake, along with a pat to his shoulder. "I’ll be sure to send Lord Farraday to see to your injuries in the morning. Anyone who sees to the safety of my children deserves the finest care."

He released his hold and took a step back. Rowan’s gaze drifted back up to Rhea who stood at the edge of the dais. Her hands still trembled, wrinkling the ivory silks of her skirts, but her breaths were coming slower and more steady. "So," he started, voice coming low, almost conspiratorial as he leaned in her direction with a raised brow. No doubt an attempt to lighten conversation and steer it towards more enjoyable subject matter. "Did you win?"

A weak, almost strangled laugh slipped out as Rhea’s gaze lifted from the stone of the dais steps to meet her father’s expectant gaze. She was not met with anger or disappointment, but the warm playfulness of her father, the man who controlled the entirety of the Ninefold and a man who still found the simple pleasures that came from living life. "What?" she asked, a little stunned, but a quiet smile started to grow all the same.

"The horse race, did you win?" He met her smile with one of his own, warm with care and curiosity.

Rhea’s smile turned a little guilty, lips scrunching as if she was attempting to remain modest in her victory, but the light behind her eyes betrayed her humility. She dipped her head a fraction like it might hide her unapologetic pride beneath the veil of crimson curls. "... Of course," she replied barely above a whisper.

The faintest twitch touched Elrik’s mouth at her answer, a smirk so small it might have been imagined, born less of amusement than recognition. Of course she had won, there was something defiant in her even now, something that refused to be entirely cowed by silks, crowns, or watchful eyes. He noticed, too, how the tension eased from her shoulders, how her breath settled into something steadier under the King’s warmth, and it stirred an unexpected approval in him... not that he was watching Princess Rhea.

Even his father let out a low chuckle then, a sound so rare it seemed almost misplaced in the great hall, shaking his head with a fondness that sat uneasily on his severe features. Selja and Emil exchanged brief, uncertain glances, as though they, too, were startled by the sight of it.

“She reminds me of…” Einarr began, and the words hung suspended between heartbeats. Whatever memory had risen in him seemed to strike all at once, because the warmth vanished from his face as though it had never been there, expression flattening into iron. His posture stiffened, shoulders squaring, grief and restraint snapping back into place with brutal efficiency. Elrik watched the change with narrowed eyes, cataloguing it the way he did all dangerous things, wondering which ghost had brushed too close to the surface.

He said nothing, though his thoughts churned with the same uneasy irritation that had been building all evening. Somehow, illogically, unfairly, he felt as though this, too, was Emil’s fault, tangled up in the Queen’s sharp attention, in the horse, in the tremor that had set everything in motion. It was a foolish notion, and Elrik knew it, but the blame settled anyway, heavy and familiar, because softness always seemed to invite complications. He forced his face back into stillness, smothering the smirk before it could betray him again, and fixed his gaze forward. Whatever memories his father had nearly named were not meant for this hall, and Elrik would not be the one to give them breath.

Among the Black Citadel, it was no secret that Rhea was the most skilled rider among her family and she had yet to find a challenger who could keep up, although Ser Coren did try, time and time again. The King knew this, knew she was untouchable on horseback, knew his daughter was as wild and untameable as her mare, and yet he still beamed at the confirmation. Pride was worn shamelessly warm and bright across his face like an autumn sunrise. His laugh was jovial, echoing throughout the hall with a single clap of his hands.

The Queen, on the other hand, did not find it humorous or something to rejoice at. Their daughter was impetuous and headstrong. She did not have a single care or consideration when it came to decorum or how her actions reflected upon the rest of the house. She was reckless, careless, selfish. She could have killed a Lord, and all the while her husband was applauding her for winning the race that nearly created chaos in the first place. "This is why your daughter is this way." Her voice cut through the light that had begun to settle between the two families like an eclipse casting everything in her cold, unforgiving shadow. The disdain was worn plainly across her face like the blanche that paled her skin as she stepped forward, a silent challenge against her husband, against his lack of authority, against the King. "You reward her when her actions nearly took a life."

Rhea flinched at her mother’s words. She tensed when she heard the sharp click of her mother’s shoes upon stone, half expecting the harsh and unrelenting grip on her arm that left behind dark marks she often hid beneath longer sleeves, even in the heat of summer. Just the sound of her mother’s voice snuffed whatever light had ignited anew behind her eyes. Rhea retreated in on herself like a hermit crab slinking back into the safety of her shell. It was cracked and chipped and barely in one piece after two years of her mother’s hatred. The only thing that kept the walls erect was the strength of her father and brothers, and her own determination… but even that had begun to waver being heralded as a disgrace, a black mark, a nuisance rather than a wayward daughter.

"Does the boy look dead to you, Valenya?" The King’s amusement died as quickly as it blossomed, smothered beneath his wife’s endless night. He gestured toward Emil, stepping up to her challenge rather than glossing over it or redirecting the conversation a second time. He was far too old and too tired to deal with her reproachable ire. She had grown brazen over the years, using her crown as a shield and a spear. While she was a honed blade, sharp and powerful, it was meant to be wielded against their enemies, not allies and friends, and most certainly not directed toward their children. "Gods forbid I be proud that our daughter has a talent beyond napkin folding and curtsying."

The Queen held her ground, staring down the dais at her husband’s with an untamable fire behind her eyes. "She must apologize for the offensive she has given to Lord Emil and his family."

"... Mother," Rhea pleaded as the nerves coiled in her chest like a serpent.

"Apologize."

The King went to argue further, but it was Rhea who silenced him with a shake of her head. Everything was getting far too loud. She could see the heads of nearby Lords turning toward the cacophony, dropping their eaves to catch a glimpse of their discord. Every argument and thrown barb showed not only a weakness in their family, but in her father. She knew the whispers that spread through the kingdom, read the raven’s notes when her uncle was not looking… The Ninefold was unhappy. He needed to be strong and surefooted. Infighting was an exploitable weakness. If bending to her mother’s whims kept the peace and made them look strong and unshakeable… then it was a price Rhea would pay.

Her hands trembled from the attention that lingered on her, but there was a strength beneath her resolve, a silent power in the way she lifted her chin a fraction higher and clenched her jaw. The Princess had given countless apologies already, but she would give another if only to silence her mother and shield her father. Her breaths were shallow and strained as she took up her skirts and descended the steps of the dais. She lowered herself to stand as an equal before the Lords, like her father would, humbling herself before them at their level rather than above them. She bowed her head as the words came out uneasy and fell between short breaths. "Forgive me Lord Emil, and your family, for the offense I have given due to my recklessness."

Valenya stepped forward to the edge of the dais, looking down her nose toward her daughter with an antipathy that felt solely reserved for her. "Like you mean it, Rhea Elspeth Storvane," her voice snapped with a venomous bite.

Rhea’s breath hitched, sharp like the wind had been pulled forcibly from her lungs. Her head turned slowly, looking up at her mother who hovered above her like a gargoyle, ever watching and ever judging. There was no relenting or softness behind her eyes, just the sharp authority of a woman demanding obeisance. Looking up into the darkness of her gaze she knew that there was no arguing, no begging. She either did as her mother demanded or suffered the hellfire that would rain over her head… And once the fire caught, there was no way that her father would not also be burned.

She gave her mother a curt nod, just once. Single, sharp and empty. Her corset suffocated her with every sharp breath. The tremors shook her body, settling into her bones like a chill that would not leave. Her eyes burned as tears began pooling along her lashes. It was like drowning on dry land while everyone watched and waited. Her blinking quickened, holding tight to her resolve and focusing on her breathing. The Princess’s lip quivered so faintly it was almost unnoticeable as her hands struggled to take hold of her skirts. Then Rhea bowed a second time, lowering herself deeper until her knee nearly brushed the cold stone beneath her. But before she spoke, it was her father’s words that filled the silence, cutting deeper than she had ever heard before.

"That is enough," he snapped. His gaze was piercing and locked on the Queen who stood above him like a vulture, untouchable upon her perch. "You will not debase our daughter further and publicly humiliate her before our guests." Rowan took his own step toward the dais, heavy and decisive with a power that could not be challenged without facing consequences no one wished to brave. "Know your place."

Elrik felt the tension coil tighter with every exchanged word, each command and rebuke winding the cord around his ribs until breathing became a conscious act. His gaze locked on Rhea as she descended the dais, and with every step she took toward them, toward judgment, toward humiliation, something in him edged closer to fracture. When he saw the sheen of tears gather at her lashes, catching the torchlight like glass, it nearly undid him. He drew in a sharp breath through his teeth, jaw clenching hard enough that a quiet pop sounded near his ear, the muscle tightening as if pain might anchor him where discipline threatened to fail.

He could already feel the movement beginning in his body, the instinctive shift of weight, the urge to step forward and place himself between her and the blade of her mother’s gaze. Reputation be damned, Ironcrag had never been built on silence in the face of cruelty. The words formed at the back of his throat, heavy and reckless, ready to spill forth and shatter whatever fragile balance this hall pretended to hold. His father’s voice echoed faintly in memory, warning of appearances and alliances, but it was drowned out by the far greater desire to shield, to endure harm so others did not have to.

Then the King spoke.

The sound of Rowan’s voice cut through the hall like a bell struck true, sharp enough to cleave the moment cleanly in two. Elrik stilled mid-breath, the words slamming into the space before his own could escape, and with them came a sudden, almost dizzying release. The cord around his chest loosened inch by inch, tension bleeding away as the authority of the crown asserted itself where his own restraint had nearly failed. He remained where he stood, spine rigid, expression carved back into impassive stone, but beneath it, something eased, knowing the blow had been halted without his hand needing to strike.

Slowly, deliberately, he let the breath leave his lungs. He did not look at his father, nor at Emil, not even at the Queen whose shadow still loomed. His eyes remained on Rhea, on the way she held herself upright despite the tremor in her hands, on the quiet courage it took simply to remain standing. Elrik told himself that was all it was, that the storm inside him had passed. Yet even as calm returned, it left behind a truth he did not like and could not yet name, that her tears had nearly moved him to action.

The Queen clenched her jaw, a challenge burning behind her eyes but unspoken as she bowed her head sharply toward him. "Your Grace." Without another word she turned from where she stood and returned to her place beside the throne, her gaze fixated on the far wall rather than dignifying any of them with her attention.

Maeve had remained silent, still as stone that could weather any storm unchanged and unharmed. Only her eyes betrayed her, shifting from her mother, to her father, to Rhea and back again. Every word exchanged tightened in her chest, making the corset and heavy layers of silk and satin grow heavy as the tension tethered itself amongst the Storvanes. There was no avoiding their mother’s anger, she learned that young, learned it was better to be favored rather than a disappointment, a skill neither Rhea nor Dorian had yet to master. What did they expect? They rebelled at every turn, refused tradition and decency for their own pleasures. Sacrifice was the price they all had to pay as nobles… as royals.

Yet…

There was still a small dormant part of her, hidden somewhere beneath silk and boning, deep somewhere under her ribs that tensed at the scene. It was a subtle sharp pang like when Amira fastened her corset too tight. She did not understand it, nor where it came from, only that it subsided when their father intervened. And as the hall seemed to exhale in unison, Maeve too let out a breath she was unaware she was holding.

Dorian was not skilled at remaining invisible or knowing he should stand aside. The moment his mother forced a conversation that should have happened in private, he was no longer leaning against the side of the throne lazily, but standing upright with his arms crossed over his chest. He didn’t know the meaning or reasoning behind the attention until his sister was forced to recount what happened, but he didn’t need to know either. He was no stranger to their mother’s temper nor the vile ways it usually reared its head.

It seemed, for a moment, they had navigated the treacherous conversation… until their mother did not just snap, but challenged their father—the King—openly, without restraint. Dorian tensed, jaw clenching and eyes slowly closing at the sight of Rhea not only willingly stepping into the line of fire, but descending step by step down into the furnace. His attention drifted over to Declan who held his post unmoving, but there was a rigidity in his posture where there was once ease. No words were exchanged. None were needed. Just a small nod that would go unnoticed by most and then Dorian moved.

The King was at Rhea’s side before she finished standing. She wanted to fall into his embrace and beg for forgiveness. Her lips parted to say something, but he shook his head before she could give the words life. A single tear slipped free, leaving a glistening trail down her cheek that her father quickly wiped away with the back of his knuckle before too many curious eyes could see. He then tucked a loose curl behind her ear and gave her arm a gentle squeeze. "Return to your brother," he instructed her gently.

Rhea turned toward the dais and Dorian was already there, descending the stairs toward her with a sympathetic smile and his hand extended, a quiet comfort that only she would understand. Her brother preferred to remain fairly unnoticed during ceremonies, rarely spoke or stepped out of turn, yet there he was. He was not called upon or summoned, but moved of his own volition because he knew… knew their mother’s anger, knew the strength it took to face adversity with her head raised, and knew an offered hand could keep someone from falling apart.

She drew in a deep shaky breath as her fingers slipped into his palm, holding tight to him like a lifeline that would keep her from drowning beneath the weight of their mother’s shame. His thumb gently stroked her knuckles, a quiet gesture of reassurance as he helped her back up the stairs and to her spot beside him. But as they turned around to face the court and Great Hall once again, he didn’t return to leaning against the throne, but offered her his arm as a silent support through the chaos.

Rowan cleared his throat in an attempt to turn the Lords’ attention back to him and give his daughter as much of a respite as he could manage. "My apologies, Lord Einarr, Lord Emil. My daughter meant no offense or ill will. She has a kind soul, but is a free spirit. I assure you, she could no sooner harm a mouse than your son intentionally." His smile was warm and fond as he spared Rhea a quick glance. "And please forgive me for my wife’s outburst. She is jaded by the crown and often forgets that some conversations are better kept behind closed doors."

Elrik held himself still as his father inclined his head, the movement precise and heavy with intent. “Your kindness is noted, Your Grace,” Einarr said evenly, voice carrying just far enough to be heard without courting the hall. “I am certain my youngest might have taken greater care to avoid such a situation, but neither heir stands mortally harmed, and that is all that concerns me.” His gaze lifted, steady and unflinching.

“House Járnbjørn will hold no resentments.” There was a pause then, a breath suspended, before Einarr added quietly, almost painfully, in a tone Elrik had never heard from his father before. “Roric would never forgive me if I did.”

Emil bowed his head at once, too quickly, as though afraid the moment might turn again if he lingered upright, or perhaps scared to find their father was an actual human being with feelings that did not include rage and cruelty. “Thank you, Your Grace,” he said, voice unsteady but sincere. “And… my apologies, my Queen. I never believed harm was meant, I’m simply grateful I could protect the Princess in the moment.”

The words seemed to cost him something, Elrik saw it in the tightness of his shoulders, the way Emil’s hands curled as if bracing for a blow that never came. Selja did not speak at all, her expression drawn and anxious, eyes flicking briefly toward their mother as though wishing she were anywhere else but here.

Elrik remained silent as well, his face carefully composed as he stared ahead, listening without truly hearing. The King’s warmth, his defense of his daughter, the apology offered so openly, it all unsettled him in ways he did not yet understand. He found himself caught between irritation and something dangerously close to respect, neither emotion sitting comfortably in his chest. Words pressed at the back of his throat, unformed and unwelcome, and he forced them down with the same discipline that had kept him alive on colder ground.

So he said nothing. He let his father’s voice speak for Ironcrag, let Emil’s gratitude soften what edges it could, and let Selja’s silence pass without comment. Elrik stood as he always did, unmoving, unreadable, while inside him thoughts churned like water beneath ice. Whatever he felt about the Princess, the King, or the strange mercy threaded through this hall, he would not give it shape here. Not yet.

The King’s smile slowly found its warmth once again, eased by Einarr’s understanding but glowing from Emil’s kindness that reminded him of Rhea in many ways. "You’re a good lad." He nodded his head toward the young man in silent gratitude. "Perhaps it is in poor taste, but I am grateful it was you she ran into." He laughed, a loud and radiant roar that filled the hall with the levity it had lost. "Not many would be so understanding and save the rider in turn. You have a kind heart. I can tell," he added, not that it was simply fact, but something of pride, not shame.

Rowan gave Lord Einarr one last pat to the shoulder, an attempt to ground themselves in something more pleasant and hopefully move past whatever in the nine hells his wife thought she was doing. "I am pleased you made the journey." His grip tightened faintly. "Let us share fine company, stories, and far too much wine that we forget all about this."

He nodded his head toward each member of the Járnbjørn house, before turning and starting back up the steps of the dais. But with his back towards court and the waiting Lords, the King’s smile faltered and a darkness bloomed behind his eyes as his gaze drifted over toward his wife who could not be bothered to return the glance. He lowered himself back onto his throne, resting his elbow on the armrest as his hand stroked his beard, masking his mouth from anyone watching. "Challenge me publicly again, and it will be the last time you set foot out of your chambers."

Elrik heard his father answer without hesitation, the words carrying a familiarity he rarely allowed himself to hear. “As am I, old friend,” Einarr said, voice low and even, before he turned slightly and lifted his hand in a subtle command for his family to withdraw from the center of the hall. The moment shifted, ceremony loosening its grip as attention began to scatter elsewhere, and Elrik moved when expected, posture precise, steps measured. He felt the evening tilt toward revelry, toward wine and noise meant to bury what had nearly surfaced

As they stepped aside, Elrik allowed himself a single glance back toward the dais. His eyes caught first on Princess Maeve, poised and immaculate, her presence sharp with intent and polish, exactly as the court would wish her to be. But before he could anchor there, before discipline could lock his attention where it belonged, his gaze betrayed him, flickering instead to Princess Rhea. The sight of her, steadied now beside her brother yet still fragile at the edges, struck him with an unexpected force, and he turned away at once, jaw tightening as though the weight settling in his chest might crack something open if he lingered.

He followed his family into the periphery of the hall, torchlight dimmer here, voices blurring into a distant tide. His face slipped into shadow, expression sealed, though inside him thoughts pressed and shifted with unwelcome insistence. He did not like the way the evening had rearranged something within him, did not like the pull of it, the questions it left unanswered. Ironcrag had taught him that uncertainty was a weakness best exercised quickly.

As they came to a stop, he felt rather than saw the watchful presence nearby—a King’s Guard stationed close to the royal family, red hair catching the firelight like a warning flare. The man’s expression was unreadable, eyes sharp and assessing as they tracked the Járnbjørns’ retreat without comment. Elrik did not meet that gaze, he kept his eyes forward, shoulders squared, every inch the disciplined son his father demanded. Yet even then, with the hall pressing in and the music beginning to stir, the weight in his chest did not ease.



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Everytime a cuck chair is mentioned or referenced, I giggle. Working in a hotel and all, we have weekly cuck chair videos we share from tiktok. It's great.


Any time my girlfriend and I travel we giggle over the cuck chairs. There's one in my airbnb right now, which is what inspired that part. 😂
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