Gavain sat in his cell, meditating with his arms shackled above him. The whippings had ceased for nearly a week as nearly every able bodied man in Frasheid became otherwise occupied. Heâd heard whispers in the halls. The slave revolt that was supposed to be quashed had won an upset battle. The soldiers theyâd sent to Rendholdâ¦
He gritted his teeth. Heâd sacrificed so much to prevent that from happening. He knew heâd needed to take responsibility for the animosity heâd created. Heâd even done a good thing in the midst of it, making sure that the criminal Dantes, who Pacha had told him of, was arrested. But even thatâ¦
He tried to bring his attention back to his breathing, and failed. Dantes had apparently been the one whoâd scattered the Frasheid forces, which meant heâd been released, which meant that his sacrifice had been doubly for nothing.
Gavain was suffering. Suffering for doing the right thing. Heâd always done the right thing, it had been easy for him. He was strong, born strong, and attained greater strength. As a child heâd strangled a wild coyote that had attacked him while he was outside with his mother. There had been mumblings that he was blessed, but the priests found no signs of that in him. He was just different. Heâd taken that difference as a responsibility, that he needed to be a hero. Heâd loved that, reveling in his strength, the smiles he saw on peopleâs faces when he saved them.
Heâd devoted his victories to the god of Justice, but heâd never heard his voice. Where was Justice now? He hadnât been fed a full meal in months. He was beaten daily. He hadnât resisted, thinking he was doing the right thing. Thinking his suffering was nothing compared to the good he was doing. Certain of it. He strained against the manacles, hearing them groan a bit from his effort. He could still get out, but at this point he couldnât manage to take out more than ten, fifteen guards before he was killed.
What would the point be anyway? The Adventurerâs Guild had disavowed him, no one had come to save him as he had saved so many others.
There was one reason he could think of. One that put a bit of fire back into his belly. He could make them suffer too. Those who shouldâve been the ones to be tormented as he had. He could make them pay.
He strained against the chains again, and the manacles bent, and broke from the stone wall. He looked up, and saw a large form clad in blood-red armor, holding out a gauntleted hand to him. He could feel that taking that hand would be a choice. One that would mark him forever. He reached out and took it.
â¦
Dantes held the bag of seeds carefully in his hand, placing each one in a long row across the dirt. The explosion that had destroyed his largest garden had been a painful blow to him, but now the dirt seemed much more lively, as if the ashes of what had been there before were now acting as nourishment. As he planted the seeds throughout the garden, other men were creating a wooden platform on which the words of love would be exchanged and the sealing between Vera and Vampa would be completed. Vera didnât have any favorite flowers, sheâd received flowers of all kinds and never really cared much for them, but Vampa had a preference for elf-lilies which were a sweet smelling flower shaped very similar to elven ears. Dantes had worked with Clay to find some seeds for them. Decorations in general had wound up being up to Dantes, as he didnât really trust anyone else to make things look the way he felt Vera deserved. Zilly had been similarly insistent on being in charge of all the food and drink for everything. It had been surprisingly easy to work with her with the common goal of making Vera and Vampa as happy with their nuptials as possible.
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Syn sat against the remains of a charred tree, chewing on an apple.
âYouâre certain that you and Jacopo donât need a hand?â
Jacopo looked up from the small hold heâd dug as he was placing and shook his head at her.
âWe can influence the soil and the seeds as we place them.â
âAnd you canât do that if I place them? Or perhaps you donât want me to mess anything up for your auntie?â she said with a smirk.n/o/vel/b//in dot c//om
âHa,â said Dantes sarcastically as he stood up. He gathered lifeforce from elsewhere in the city and began to channel into the seeds heâs placed. They all began to sprout, but he cut off the flow just before they were ready to bloom. He was planning to save that for the day of.
âWe still need to discuss what youâve been doing,â he said as he pulled a cloth from his pocket to wipe the dirt from his hands.
Syn nodded, her eyes shifting from purple to green to pink, and shifting pupils from catlike, to goatlike, to human. âI was just waiting for you to ask.â
Dantes sat, sipping from a water skin, and pouring some out for Jacopo as he sat on a bed of moss he created just for him to relax on.
âYou know that changelings are arrested upon detection here, yes?â
Dantes nodded.
âThat same law is followed in every other kingdom Iâve ever encountered. Changelings are to be confined or exiled wherever we go. It has been that way since we first came to the mortal plane, and unlike Elves, we arrived in separate clusters all across it. Many of us even arrived alone.â
âWhere did you come from?â
âWe do not know, but we do know we share ancestors with the other fey, even elves though their blood is much thinner than ours.â
Dantes nodded, staying silent so she could continue.
âI cannot blame most kingdoms for their actions. We are more dangerous than other Fey. We can take the shape of anyone, and feybind, giving us extraordinary ability to cause chaos. I can blame Rendhold though, because without changelings, it wouldnât have been founded.â
âIâm not exactly a student of history, but Iâve never heard anything about that.â
âFew have. Though everyone can agree that Rendhold is unique. It in many ways, doesnât make sense,â her outfit changed to that of an academy professor, except much tighter and more flattering. âIt is a city that acts as a nation, that managed to secure its territory from the two neighboring kingdoms with no issue, that was founded by nobility from many different nations and had avoided conflict for a millennia. The reason for that is because of the feybinding pacts that the changelings involved in the cityâs founding enacted. We made sure that the city would thrive and in return we were meant to have a place in it.â
âIt is odd that our neighbors didnât take part in the invasion at all. On either side.â
âThey couldnât. Their royal families and all the nobility within them is bound not to interfere with Rendhold. The only action they could take was allowing troops to pass through their territories unimpeded.â
âWhat happened?â
âParanoia, fear, and greed. We were imprisoned, forced into bindings that limited us. Many ran, but a few of us stayed in the hopes that we could change things back to the way they should be.â
âAnd thatâs what youâre doing now?â
She shook her head. âNo. The killings in Uptown were to release old pacts, or get revenge on those who had been involved before⦠and a few were to help you.â
âLike the murder of that man on the war committee.â
Syn nodded. âMaking Rendhold accept changelings is something I cannot do. I just wanted those of us that were trapped to be able to leave safely. Now, I just want to spend my days with you. If youâll have me.â
âI hope to have you many times and in many ways, but have the other changelings already left?â
Syn smiled with a raised eyebrow. âIf you want to be with more than one woman at a time, Iâm sure there are less complicated options available to us.â
Dantes smiled. âNo. I want to help you. Iâve already got one member of the council I know will be on my side, and I have a plan for Argenta. The othersâ¦I can figure out a way to move them onto the board for us.â
âI canât ask you to do that.â
Dantes shook his head. âIâm not doing it just for you. Rendhold is my Locus. If we can restore whatever balance had existed between changelings and the city before, then weâll have a group of shapeshifters that can forge pacts and are loyal to the city. I can see only benefits to that arrangement.â
âYou wish to use them?â
Dantes nodded. âI wish to use every tool possible to ensure that my city isnât invaded again. If they donât wish to be used, itâs not as if Iâll hold them here against their will.â
Syn ran her fingers through his hair as she sat next to him. âIf I had asked you to do it for me, selfishly, would you have?â
Dantes smiled at her. âAlmost definitely.â