Entry tags:
Seven Devils (for
littlemother)
"No," is the first word from his mouth, flat and disbelieving, when the idea is put to him.
He'd expected the worst when the other Alorn monarchs - and isn't having to preface that collective title with other a horrifying experience - had cornered him in the council chamber. Cho-Hag is inscrutable as always; Anheg is wearing the irritated look of a man who regards the proposal he's putting forward as the lesser of two evils. Garion just looks nervous and vaguely guilty, and with every underhanded instinct he possesses he seizes on the obvious weak link.
The argument goes on for quite some time. The horrible thing is that from a dispassionate, purely political point of view, he can see the sense of it. Drasnia rests uneasy with her king newly buried and no son to succeed him. They're a few short years past one war, with another not far enough for comfort off their eastern borders; the Bear Cult is on the rise again, and now...now is not the time for instability. Now is the time for as much continuity as humanly possible. Now is, in short, the worst possible time for Aloria to look divided. Now is the worst possible time for Drasnia to have a king who clearly doesn't want to be there on the throne.
By the time the argument fizzles out they're just going in vituperative circles, and it's with no excuses and scarcely even an attempt at a farewell that he storms out. Garion follows, catches his arm, only to start in faintly hurt surprise as one of his oldest friends jerks furiously out of his grasp with something that's very nearly a growl.
Infuriated energy propels him as far as a deserted distant corner of the palace gardens where - hidden from prying eyes by ornamental trees and the sheltering darkness of deepening night - he sinks onto a stone bench, buries his face in his hands, and very quietly panics.
He can't do this. That's the one inescapable fact that everyone around him seems wilfully blind to, for reasons absolutely beyond his understanding. Yes, he fully agrees, someone should rule Drasnia. But only an idiot would suggest him for the role and expect it to end anything but spectacularly badly. It's a mystery to him why otherwise intelligent and sane people who a year ago wouldn't have trusted him with their coinpurse are suddenly determined to entrust him with an entire kingdom.
He's never dealt well with feeling trapped, figuratively or literally, and this gods-forsaken mess of a situation is closing around him like a noose. He presses his palms over his eyes and tries just to breathe past the dizzying knot of grief and shame and fear wrapped around his chest and clawing its way up his throat. Someone is probably watching, of course. In Boktor someone is always watching. But he doesn't have it in him to care right now.
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Rhodar, you've left too soon. You were supposed to give me a son...
But Porenn doesn't -- can't -- dwell for long on the should-have-beens. She's a woman of the present, and she'll deal with what's in front of her. They'll find a way around this. Porenn might have been divested of most of her political power by the death of her husband, but come hell or high water, she won't give up that easily. She knows of the plan the Alorn monarchs must have brought to Kheldar by now -- whatever her status, she still has plenty of spies working for her. No doubt they intended not to bring it to her attention until Kheldar had made his decision -- Alorns -- but they'd be fools to imagine she wouldn't already know by now. And at any rate, what Kheldar wants isn't relevant right now. Her own desires, whatever they might be -- her feelings, her grief -- are of even smaller importance. Porenn can see what needs to be done, and for the sake of her country -- her daughter -- she'll make sure it's done.
Finding Kheldar isn't the hard part, she knows. The hard part comes now, as she approaches him with footsteps that fall silent by habit, and she reaches out slowly to put a hand on his shoulder. When she speaks, her voice is soft, gentle, but there lies beneath it an undeniable firmness. She will not permit him to ignore her.
"Kheldar."
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It's not an option, of course. Not really. But it's a nice fantasy.
There's a long moment of no response whatsoever before, with a visible effort, he pulls himself together. It's not unlike preparing to assume a role for some piece of con-artistry. In fact in many ways that's exactly what it is. He takes a deep breath and straightens, body language shifting subtly as he assumes the mantle of someone else so completely he almost believes it himself.
Maybe that's the way to get through this. For a con to succeed, the role you're playing needs to be a person in your head. A person you can step back and let rise to the surface. Perhaps from somewhere he can cobble together a passable enough King of Drasnia persona to play this role for him, to step up when the person he really is never could.
He gives her a tired half-smile, assuming the role of someone who is entirely in control of their life and was not having a minor breakdown a few moments ago. "Good evening."
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The pleasantries are just another way to stall for time, but Porenn is not interested in dawdling now. There's a world of understanding in her grave little face, in the way she touches his shoulder, and a hit of sympathy, too, but none of that comes in the form of empty words. When she offers her comfort, it will be genuine.
"I know what the other Alorn kings proposed to you." Her voice is still quiet, level, unwavering. She expects no surprise on his part, merely watching him, waiting, her hand never leaving his shoulder.
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It's not even that bad a plan, really. It's not the he doesn't accept that. In terms of legitimacy and stability and having someone in proximity to the throne who actually knows what they're doing it's probably the best suggestion anyone has put forward so far. That isn't in dispute.
He can consider the idea perfectly reasonable and logical and still hate it with every fibre of his being.
Sighing, he rubs a hand over his face, looking tired and resigned. "I imagine you have an opinion on this." Of course on a personal level she probably likes the idea even less than he does. But much as he'd rather not, they do have to consider it from a political angle as well.
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"My opinion hardly matters, now, does it?" she says, almost primly. She may be projecting the absolute face of stability, but even the tiniest hint of the usual smiling lilt to her face has disappeared entirely. Make no mistake; Kheldar isn't the only one whose future has been irrevocably altered here. She sweeps the skirts of her black mourning gown about her and sits down neatly beside him on the bench, smoothing her little hands over her lap. "There will be plenty of time for us to feel sorry for ourselves later, Kheldar. Now is not the time. I think you know what must be done." And she lifts her chin, her eyebrows raising just a hair, as if daring him to disagree.
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He's aware that he's looking at their friends and allies in much the same way he would any enemy agent in the field. It seems merited, at the moment. He'll stop when they stop making it necessary.
There's a challenge in her gaze; he meets it for a long moment before lowering his eyes, before bowing his head and raising his hands in a peculiar gesture almost of surrender. Of submission. He trusts her judgement; a great deal more than he trusts his own, when it comes to this matter. He's willing to put himself in her hands.
"I know."
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"Then preparations shall have to be made," she says quietly, businesslike -- perhaps too much so; the way she wears it as armor might be considered pitiful by some. "We'll wait a respectable amount of time after the funeral, of course. But it can't be too long. Drasnia is in a very precarious position right now, Kheldar. And then, of course," she proceeds, smoothly, never skipping a beat, "there is the matter of your proposal. Garion will endorse it, as I am sure he already plans to; Belar knows he holds enough sway over all the Alorn nations."
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"Did you have anything in particular in mind?" he asks with a whimsical sort of edge. "I'm sure we can come up with something suitably ostentatious and tasteless." If not else at least it's easy enough to find a kind of gallows humour in the situation. It would be funny if it was happening to someone else.
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"We'll have to keep it respectfully tasteless, at least," she says, her hands clasped tightly over her lap. "But I suppose it doesn't have to be a somber affair, does it?"
Her lips tighten for just a moment, and then her face softens, a touch of sadness relaxing her features. "I'm not going to insult you by pretending to think that this is what you wanted, Kheldar," she says softly, looking directly at him. "There's no need to make this any more difficult than it already is, after all."
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There's a balance to be found between unnecessarily grim and inappropriately cheerful. They can figure out the details later. She's right, after all; they'll need to wait a respectful period before going ahead with this if they want to play it right. The key to a successful con is in the details.
He should probably make an effort to stop thinking of it in those terms. But at the moment it's the only thing keeping him together.
That hint of sorrow passing across her face stirs an echo on his, something raw and pained that's there in a flicker before being rapidly suppressed. "I think we have already established that what either of us wants is quite beside the point here," he replies with a small shrug, not quite meeting her eyes.
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Porenn is quite used to the idea that what she wants is of little consequence indeed. Kheldar, she suspects, is far less acclimated; perhaps in some regards, he has accepted his losses and moved on, but she knows him too well. He has had the opportunity, far more often than she, to indulge in selfish whims and simply leave when the climate is no longer well-suited to his tastes. She would not do them either the disservice of thinking this will be an easy adjustment for him.
Her voice is still quiet, still hushed, as though that will make it easier for him to listen. She has always been respectfully reticent when it comes to matters of the heart with him; until now, she has never suspected it would do him any good to talk about it. "There are things we may want to discuss before we proceed," she says, her eyes still locked on his face, whether or not he meets her gaze. "We have a unique opportunity to air some things out, so to speak -- some of which, I think, are long overdue."
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This isn't one of those times.
He feels almost sick with restlessness; feverish and twitchy, as though if he tries to hold still he'll claw his way out of his own skin. The impulse to run is so strong it's like a physical force pressing against the back of his skull. And if it's this bad already, in a week it'll be a nightmare. In a year it'll be a living hell.
Assuming it's not headed in that direction more rapidly. He eyes her with the wary gaze of one who has seen the feint and is waiting to see which direction the real strike comes from. "Apparently," he replies. It's more an acknowledgement of the fact that she's spoken than any real response. He could happily go the rest of his life without ever broaching this topic aloud.
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They don't have that luxury now, and this is where she shows her steely, edged resolve, simple and quiet and unmoving. She can see the reluctance pulling at his face, the sick look about him, and part of her aches with the knowledge that she is hurting him. But he has hurt her plenty of times in the past, and never, she thinks, with so noble a reason.
"Not here, of course," she says primly, the quiet briskness of her voice only serving to mask any regret. "Someplace rather more private would be more suitable. After Kheva has gone to bed, I think -- that should leave us plenty of time to talk."
You like backtagging, right?
It's not in any way a substitute for a real response, and he concedes this with a small shrug. "Fine," he replies neutrally. Privately he doesn't really consider this to be something they need to talk about; so long as he keeps his mouth shut and his feelings to himself, there is absolutely no reason for this to be anyone's problem other than his. But fine. He'd rather be doing almost anything else, but if there's no better option then he'll just have to deal with it.
He's aware in a detached and dispassionate sort of way that he's approaching this as he would a mission. He's also aware, though this is not something he's willing to acknowledge just yet, that he's approaching this as he would a mission he's not really expecting to come back from.
Maybe it's twisted, but it helps to think of it in those terms. This is-- simply something that has to be done. Something which will be unpleasant, probably painful - if in a more metaphorical sense that he's strictly used to - but ultimately, something which is necessary. In such circumstances it's best to take each blow as it comes and anticipate nothing. Sometimes you simply cannot allow yourself to look ahead.
i will backtag FOREVER. (also, let me know if this is ok)
Porenn knows that privacy in Drasnia -- in the palace at Boktor, especially -- is relative. But even so, the delicate nature of this situation, or so she considers it, is such that it simply feels wrong to conduct it in the open light of day. The gardens are far too exposed for Porenn's taste, and although there may well be the same number of eyes on them in the confines of her quarters, in a way, it is simply a matter of propriety. It's not something Kheldar has ever quite been able to understand.
She waits for him in her chambers, after she has kissed her daughter on the forehead and bade her goodnight. She sits in a small, stiffly upholstered chair by the window, smoothing her hands over the skirts of her black mourning dress. There is a bottle of wine on the small sitting table nearby, because surely Kheldar will find this an occasion to drink, and she knows that sometimes he finds difficult conversations easier to wash down with alcohol. She has laid out two glasses. Porenn sits, her gaze settled on the darkened city outside, and she wonders if Kheldar will come.
IT IS ABSOLUTELY NOT OKAY. I AM NOT OKAY ;_;
The knock is a formality, a rap on the doorframe even as he's already letting himself in. The silence in the well-appointed chamber is oppressive as he crosses the carpeted expanse of floor on quiet feet.
His eyes pass over the table, the bottle of wine sitting on it, and a fleeting hint of something strange and unreadable flickers across his face. He gives a humourless smile and sits down in the other chair and, for what feels like the hundredth time that day, forcibly composes himself. The little nervous twitches stop instantly and completely.
"Well then," he says, embracing the facade of calm so wholly he can almost believe it. "Do your worst."
lies down slowly......
She makes no gesture toward the wine. Kheldar will help himself when he feels the need. Her gaze settles back on him, on his gaunt face in the dim light. He has hardly ascended the throne, and already it does not suit him. When Porenn speaks again, her voice is soft, painfully gentle.
"Don't you think we ought to have had this conversation years ago, Kheldar?"
/weeps forever
He seems faintly puzzled by the question. "No," he replies with a small shrug, calmly matter-of-fact. "Why bother? It was never going to change anything." After all these years it's a phantom pain, almost reassuring in its constancy for all that it hurts. He's resigned to never being fully rid of these feelings, and has long since accepted that in turn, she will never reciprocate them. What is there to discuss?
crawls into the cry pile
But then, it's the easy way out, isn't it? Not everyone would see it that way, but Kheldar's unwillingness to confront the issue only demonstrates to Porenn that he is far, far more afraid of the honest truth than anything else. And that she has known about him for years.
He can't seem to meet her eyes for more than a minute at a time. That stings more than anything, although she can't quite place her finger on why. And at the same time, some small, dark part of her in the silent depths of her heart feels a swell of triumph, an acknowledgment that she, here, has the upper hand. But for all that Porenn might revel in every shred of power she manages to claim -- if only because she has had to fight for every bit of it all her life -- she has never reveled in the opportunity to hurt someone she loves so dearly.
"How long?" she asks, softly. She won't confront his conviction on the immutability of his heart, and she can't ask how she could have possibly missed it until it was too late to smooth things over. That's not something she can ask him.
Coming back after a completely normal amount of time
Remarkable, really, how little buying time to think helps. The wine doesn't do much to steady his nerves either, but it's a pleasant distraction at least, a rich and sweet tolnedran red which speaks of a place that couldn't be more different from the windswept moors of Drasnia. Once again that caged feeling crawls over the back of his neck.
It feels like forever, is the honest answer; a constant of his life so fundamental that the shape of the man he's become grew around it like a tree that twists its way through gaps in a stone wall. He takes another measured sip and gives a small shrug, not quite meeting her gaze. "Since the Academy," he replies. It's strange now to think about that time, infinitely long ago as it now feels, before they'd been so thoroughly trained to trust no-one. They'd been children, even if they hadn't felt it.
Perhaps that's why he's never been able to shake this. That gap in his defenses; the small, tender place in behind the walls of wit and misdirection that he keeps between himself and everyone else on the face of the earth...it's worn so perfectly to her shape that it's hard to imagine how anyone else could ever fit there. Even if these feelings were somehow to finally fade, all that would be left behind is a hollow emptiness. Perhaps even a constant ache is better than nothing at all.
He gives a thin, self-deprecating smile and forces himself to look her in the eye. "I supposed you were unfortunate enough to slip in before they sealed the gates." There's no need to elaborate; they went through the same training. More than anything else, he's mystified by the way that after all of it she's been able to keep her heart open, to build a life with roots as a wife and mother. If there was ever a version of him who might have done the same, he's scarcely more than a memory now.
there is no statute of limitations on psls
It’s when he pours her a glass, oddly enough, that she feels like they can see this conversation through to the end. If we must do this, we might as well do it together — that’s what she’d like to hope for, anyway. She picks up her glass, lightly swirling it in her hand, and for the first time today, a soft, tiny smile touches her lips. Visible for only a moment, as she follows it with a light sip of the wine.
“I used to think you were teasing me.”
Once upon a time, at least. She’s not sure she can pinpoint the exact moment at which she acknowledged that she knew just how he felt about her, but she knows that by then, it was too late. Could she have ever disabused him of the notion to begin with, if she had only realized it sooner?
He’s looking her in the eye, and this time it’s she that nearly finds it difficult to meet his gaze — because she understands now, all too clearly, that even if she weren’t complicit in his heartache before, she surely is now.
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"Of course I was teasing you, your majesty," he replies, light and breezy. "I certainly don't recall that I'd stopped." He gives her a shadow of a grin, and for all that it's just as hollow as any other he's mustered today, there's no helping the trace of genuine fondness that curls around the edges of it.
Funny now, in a mirthless sort of hindsight, to think how long he'd let things linger in the hazy realm of plausible deniability. He's never been shy in any other circumstance about making a straightforward pass at someone, nor has he otherwise had any particular difficulty in shrugging and moving on with his life when rejected. But if he's honest with himself — a vice he does toy with occasionally in the privacy of his own thoughts — it's been easy every other time because it didn't matter.
It had always felt like there would be more time. And then, quite abruptly, there wasn't.
He rolls the half-empty glass of wine in his hands, feeling the weight of it shift in the same absent, reflexive way he'd test the weight of a dagger. "It doesn't matter." He drops his gaze, looking into the swirling liquid in his hands, and takes a slow, steadying breath. "It doesn't change what needs to be done." In an odd way, thinking about their time in the Academy does make the concept seem infinitesimally less unbearable. They were ruthlessly drilled in how to maintain a charade, how to set aside whatever they might think or feel and do what had to be done. Perhaps this is just...another lie he can learn to live.
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She takes another sip from her glass, fuller this time, letting the rich flavor permeate her tongue and bring her buzzing thoughts to rest for just a few moments. For all her composure, she's still only human; her day didn't stop at enduring a seemingly unending funeral procession with her composure intact and comforting her grieving daughter, far too young to have to lose her father. In fact, it still hasn't ended, now conducting this conversation with Kheldar, coaxing him into a difficult subject because to let it lie any further would only leave them a tangled mess. She glances in the direction of her bed briefly. Porenn is a woman of remarkable restraint, but the notion of simply climbing into bed now is a powerful one.
But his smile means something. It warms her just slightly, gives her hope that he won't be swallowed whole by the magnitude of the task placed before him. She needs him to survive for her, for more than one reason.
"For what it's worth," she says, her voice still hushed, but she has somehow banished the sorrow, leaving behind only an iron conviction and the fondness in her voice, a voice that somehow belongs more to that girl he'd fallen in love with in their Academy days than the brave-faced Drasnian queen she's become. "I'm glad it's you, Kheldar. I know we — I have made you a prisoner of your own country. I never wanted that for you. But, if I must do this at all...at least it's with someone I can trust."
Because he must know that she trusts him, insofar as a Drasnian queen can trust anyone — not the trust born of great deeds, but of a shared immutable past.
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Himself included. Torak's scorched fucking skull, he'd rather be anywhere other than where he is. Once again he curses Rhodar for not taking better care of himself. They could have avoided all of this if the old scoundrel had held on long enough to father a son. He might still have found himself roped into helping in some advisory capacity, but at least it wouldn't have come with...all the rest of it.
He drains what's left in the glass and eyes the bottle longingly. Part of him desperately wants to drown his sorrows until he can't quite remember what they are any more, and find what solace he can in unconsciousness. It's how he usually deals with being trapped back in Boktor, after all. But then usually he's well on his way again by the time he sobers up, and the headache is easier to bear with a fast horse under him and the road winding on to the horizon. Not many things sound worse than dealing with this sober, but dealing with it hungover is one of them.
With one last reproachful glance at the glass, as though the whole situation is its fault, he sets the dregs of the wine aside. He sighs, scrubbing a hand over his face. "I suppose I had my fun. I always thought Belgarath poaching me out from under Javelin would spare me any other responsibilities, but apparently not." He scratches contemplatively at his jaw, eyes on the mid-distance. "Maybe I'll get lucky and some other quest of world-ending importance will come up."
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At that last comment, she makes only a thoughtful noise and sips from her wine; despite her apparently prim little sips, she has nearly drained her glass. She sits forward then, a few strands of fair hair coming loose from the elaborate braiding apparently demanded by an occasion of such gravity.
"I'll grant that it isn't outside the realm of possibility," she muses, "but if you go off on some grand adventure, who will help me disassemble the Bear-cult's presence in Drasnia?"
She sets the glass down on the table and clasps her hands in her lap, her eyes glittering in the dim light. "And I am very much looking forward to taking them apart."
She smiles again, girlish despite the weariness. "We haven't collaborated on an operation since we were in the Academy, Kheldar. I could use your insight."
Maybe it'll make it easier for him to frame it like this, to treat it all like a mission. But beyond that, she must afford herself some levity, at least in private company, if she is to have the strength to carry this on. She does not relish the knowledge that the comfort and safety he provides is only rewarded with pain, nor does she want to cry in front of him just now.
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Looking into her eyes, bright and impish and framed by the hair falling loose from her uncharacteristically severe coif, for a bittersweet moment he feels almost as though he can catch a glimpse of the world where they were nothing more than old Academy friends, able to approach the task ahead of them in good humour as the grand cosmic joke it is. A better world, most likely. Certainly one that would be easier to live in.
A trace of a whimsical smile tugs at the corner of his lips, and he spreads his hands and inclines his head, a gesture towards the florid bow he'd be giving if he could face the thought of standing. "I am at your command, my queen."
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Transparent she may be, but she's glad it seems to have worked anyway. Everyone treats this as an obligation for Kheldar, and in a sense, it is — but Porenn understands, perhaps more than anyone on that council of Alorn kings, that it is more than anything a sacrifice. The very least she can do is make it easier for him.
"Just don't let Anheg hear you say that at the next council meeting," she murmurs. Not that Anheg should be under any illusions about who will actually be running this country, but Chereks can be so...Cherek.
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Small danger of that, under the circumstances; anyone of any political standing is watching the situation unfold with great wariness. Really, he doesn't know what they think he's going to do. There have always been bad kings: weak, stupid, self-serving. Belar's teeth, Riva managed just fine without an arse on the throne at all for centuries. He'd have to actively set out to wreak havoc to do much at all to redirect the inertia of millennia.
It's a thought that could be reassuring under the right circumstances, but in the moment it's as depressing as anything else. The best case scenario is that he marks out his years unremarkably enough to be a historical footnote.
He sighs and finally moves to stand. "In any case, I should leave you to your rest, your majesty," he says, giving a shallow bow. "It's late, and I'm sure tomorrow is going to be every bit as irritating as today was."
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"Oh, yes, I'm sure I'll be called to meet with the Council of Kings after tomorrow's ceremonies have concluded, where they'll present this carefully considered solution to me as though they don't know that I already know." A trace of irritation, then amusement glints briefly in her eyes, "I wonder who will have the nerve to speak first."
But Kheldar is right — she is tired, and it's starting to show, her mind exhausted and her heart weary. She begins to pull out the pins holding her hair in place, one by one, and waves a stray wisp of hair away from her face. Yes...yes, she ought to rest. She begins to comb her hair loose with her fingers, rising from the chair, and smiles faintly.
"Goodnight, Kheldar."