âWe should have just canceled,â Verum muttered cantankerously, and Callida sank heavily into the corner of the couch in his study.
âWeâre doing the best we can, but thereâs not much I can do about your noble guests getting harassed as they arrive.â
âI know. Itâs just⦠after nearly two weeks of the camp breaking up and people finally leaving⦠how many did you say there were?â
âLess than a full battalion, more than I care to admit.â
Verum snorted humorlessly. âSo not quite two thousand? And they just showed up overnight?â
âNo, Verum, most of them are the people who have been stubbornly still sticking around, but their numbers did inflate again over the last two days. Like I already said, thatâs what Iâm the most worried about. Who is joining them now that the camp is breaking? It might just be late-comers, but with the ball being tonight, my concern is thatââ
ââtheyâre not Primordialist believers and are just here to hide amongst the masses.â
âExactly so. Maybe theyâre plotting something.â She sighed, her head tipping back to rest against the cushion behind her. âIs it too late to cancel?â
âCallida, the guests are already arriving, I need to wrap this meeting up so I can get myself ready, and you need to get home so you can get ready! Yes. Itâs too late to cancel.â
âFine,â she snapped. âIn that case, I want you and Flore to stick close to your bodyguards tonight. Pius, did you hear that?!â she shouted to be sure that the captain standing just inside the door could hear her.
âYes, General.â
âGood. And Pius, let Sal know when you next see him?â
âYes, General.â
âWhat about you and Qiangde?â Verum interjected. âYou know a potential plot might be targeting you two rather than us, right?â
âWell, Iâm me, and Iâll be wearing my sword belt,â Callida retorted with a smirk, âbut Gravis is already planning on watching Rogueâs back for me, and I half expect that Vir will be doing the same for me despite that not being his assignment tonight. Iâve also assigned my boysâ nobilises to guard the palace nursery.â
âYouâre still planning on your boys joining Tatio in the nursery tonight?â
âYes. Iâve confirmed those plans with the nursery staff already, but, speaking of, I need to go bring the boys to them. They are expected right about now.â
âSounds like youâve got everything taken care of,â Verum noted with melancholic distraction.
âVerum, weâll get through this, and tomorrow Iâll go chew out whomever is still camping at the gates. Would that make you feel better?â
âCan I watch?â he returned with a sly grin. âThat would be fun.â
Callida laughed and got up to leave. âSure. Tomorrow, we can ride out together in a display of friendship to show a united front, and you can watch as I lay into these guys. Deal?â
Verum stood up to offer her his hand to clasp. âDeal. Iâll look forward to it, General.â
âThen, Iâll see you tonight, Your Majesty,â she said with a bow.
***
Her team of stylists had outdone themselves as usual. Callida and Rogue were dressed as the living embodiments of the day and night skies respectively â the sources of the Primordial power according to mythology. With a shimmery gown of a similar color to her hair â designed with a fitted, highly detailed bodice, a layered fringe skirt and fringe sleeves falling off her shoulders â Callidaâs look represented the sun and would be fun to twirl in later that night. Contrastingly, Rogueâs black hair was further emphasized by a black suit studded with small, white, sparkly things and a thin crescent-shaped strip of silver subtly patchworked into the material of his jacket â the night sky.
âI will never get used to you looking like that,â Callida said of Rogueâs ensemble.
âIn a good way or a bad way?â he smirked back.
âYou look good, Rogue,â she assured him quickly. âYou lookâ¦. Youâll fit in perfectly with the glamorous Lion Tribe nobility⦠except maybe your hair color. How did I end up with such a handsome husband?â
âButâ¦?â
She smiled wistfully, her finger winding itself up in one of his freshly coiffed curls falling just to his shoulders. âBut I married a bandit⦠who smelled of campfire smoke most of the time and wore old, patched clothes and tanned animal skins stitched haphazardly together. Nowâ¦. Iâll never get used to seeing you in costumes like this.â
Rogue collected her hand, still twisting itself through his hair, and kissed the meat of her palm. He then pointed at her dress, grinning goofily at her. âItâs shiny.â She laughed, and Rogue took the opportunity to draw her into a kiss that collected some of her lipstick with his neatly trimmed and shaped scruff. His just-been-kissed grin fell flat as Callida pulled away worrying her bottom lip. âWhatâs wrong?â
âNothing.â She quickly smiled and pecked at his lips again.
âYeah, because I bought that, â he snarked. âWhatâs wrong, Callida?â
âJust⦠stay close to me or Gravis at all times tonight.â
âWhy?â
âJust promise me.â
âI⦠ok, fine, but why? Does this have anything to do withââ
âYes.â
âYou didnât even let me finish,â he snorted.
Stolen from its original source, this story is not meant to be on Amazon; report any sightings.
âYou were asking if this had anything to do with the people crowding the palace gates.â
âTangentially, sure. I was going to ask if it had anything to do with that stupid prophecy.â
She ignored the correction. âIâm feeling nervous about tonight. I donât have any concrete reason to be nervous, but I am.â
Rogue frowned. âGoldieâs intuition?â
âIâm inclined to trust her instincts. Sheâs rarely wrong with stuff like this.â
âI know,â he said softly, studying his wifeâs troubled caramel eyes.
âYeahâ¦. So tonight will be⦠interesting,â Callida said optimistically.
âHopefully not too interesting,â he returned with a tease and got kissed for it.
***
Neurotically checking on the boys before going to the party in the ballroom, Callida found them all very happily playing or sleeping in the palace nursery. Probus had buddied up with Optatio and the pair were diving off a couch theyâd disassembled onto the loose cushions on the floor, laughing hysterically while Rapax kept the pair from jumping on top of each other by accident. Tiaki and Manasik were exploring a bin of new toys, and Callida laughed when Manasik reached for a toy that was too deep and ended up upside down with his chubby feet flailing in the air, requiring a watchful Arum to fish him back out. Apparently that wasnât the first time that had happened. The twins, Tajam and Ddalu, were sleeping while Moro and Adjutus gabbed nearby with a pair of flirty nurses. Callida was shooed away before she could even ask how everyone was doing. Mind at ease for the moment, she left quietly before the boys could see her, and led Rogue to where the orchestral music and visual splendor became overwhelming.
But the atmosphere was all wrong. Normally the New Yearâs ball was festive with most of the space reserved for dancing. This year, the only quarter of the room with dancing couples was the space near that enormous observation platform where the king and queen presented themselves before joining the festivities. Callida poked her head out of her metaphorical turtle shell to actually pay attention to the people around her. Her conclusion: the glamorous nobles were nervous.
Instead of flaunting their plumage and trying to one-up each other, most of them were engaged in hushed conversations, commiserating in common stresses, worrying about the zealots at the gates â zealots in their own cities and territories, relaying anecdotes about the things these people were saying and doing⦠and threatening. The conversations danced around the prophecy, most of them refusing to address it directly, and as soon as they noticed Callida hovering nearby, they silenced, their mannerisms either becoming falsely cheerful or closed off and vaguely hostile. Sheâd gone from war hero to social pariah in record time, it seemed, and as soon as Rogue was connected to her, he too became an outcast. Itâs not that she cared so much about what the nobility thought of her â frankly, any disinclination was mutual, but, if nothing else, it was uncomfortable dragging Rogue through the mud with her. It was tempting to simply walk out and go home, but that disquieting something niggled at the back of her mind, and her sense of obligation kept her in the room.
âLion General! Qiangde, welcome to the party,â Verum greeted them with artificial gusto and a broad smile. He was trying to lighten the mood with Flore at his side and their bodyguards, Pius and Sal, following behind. He was facing an uphill battle. âWell donât you two look fabulous?!â came the requisite compliment. âEmbodying the celestial lights, the sources of power for the Primordial spirits. Does that make you a power couple?â He laughed at his own joke, and Callida humored him with a grin.
âWhy donât you explain your costumes to me, Verum?â she asked, knowing full well that the costumes were Verumâs favorite part of this event, and also knowing that heâd designed them himself. Both he and Flore were wearing magnificent outfits pieced from exquisitely detailed panels in the same five colors: black, gold, silver, blue, and red.
âOh, come, now, Callida. Isnât it obvious?â He pouted playfully and launched into an overly detailed explanation while Flore rolled her eyes. Sheâd heard this explanation probably a dozen times already. âSo, there are five colors, and each oneââ
âârepresents one of the five Primordial spirits,â Callida finished his sentence, trying to hurry him along. It backfired.
âVery good, General! Youâve been brushing up on your lore!â
âEveryone knows that, Verum,â she rolled her eyes. âIâm not an idiot.â
He chuckled and continued. âWell, the detailing on each color is symbolic of the essences of the Primordial spirits. So red feathers for the Red Phoenix, blue scales for the Blue Dragon, gold suns for the Golden Lion, silver stars for the Silver Wolf, and black smoke for the Black Bear.â
âItâs very symbolic,â Callida nodded with approval.
âBut you havenât seen the best part yet!â he exclaimed, and next to him, Flore all but facepalmed. Verum opened his jacket to reveal a white satin also detailed with scales. âItâs the Dragon King! Isnât it awesome?!â
âAnd Flore has her own secret, white panel?â
âItâs hidden by the bustle of her gown,â Verum confirmed, âbut I think sheâs tired of me showing people,â he added and grinned apologetically at his wife.
âItâs⦠awesome,â Callida validated dryly, giving Flore a knowing, sympathetic glance. âHow are you, Flore?â
âOh, the evening is treating me well enough,â she declared diplomatically and side-eyed her husband.
âHas Verum asked you to dance yet?â
âOne song,â Flore rolled her eyes again, and Callida snorted.
âUnacceptable. Verum, you need to fix that.â
âRight, erm, next dance?â he asked sheepishly.
âYes, please,â Flore said with a polite curtsy, rising again to mouth âthank youâ at Callida (without any real effort made to hide her silent gratitude) as Verum led her to where people were dancing next to the corner tower.
âCallida, everyone is staring at us⦠well⦠at you,â Rogue drew close to whisper in her ear, his eyes scanning the near groups of people all quickly looking away the moment she too started looking. âHow do you stand it?â
âItâs not usually this bad,â she whispered back, âbut mostly, I just ignore it.â
âBut how?!â
âI donât know. I guess I just donât care enough for it to bother me.â
âOh, to be you and able to just not care,â he snarked uncomfortably.
She laughed at that. âIt used to be annoying,â she backtracked and began mindlessly fussing with the collar of his shirt as an excuse to snuggle in closer. âMaybe I just got used to it. Someday, you will too.â
âI donât think I want to do this often enough to get used to it,â he retorted but grinned with her nose nuzzling softly against his jawline. âOk. Maybe itâs not so bad. Hey, you wanna pretend weâre teenagers and find a quiet corner somewhere to makeout?â
Callida snorted and then actually considered the joke proposal. âI wonder if anyoneâs found the library yet.â
âYeah?!â Surprised, Rogue became excited, and Callida took his hand with a wink, leading him through the crowds to the side door and through the hallway beyond it, at the end of which was the library in question. Sadly, someone had already found the library â unironically, a pair of teenagers. âDang. Out-teenagered by the teenagers,â Rogue sulked and laughed at the same time.
âItâs probably just as well,â Callida sighed, and laced her fingers through his on the walk back. âRaincheck?â
âIâll hold you to that.â
âI think we lost Gravis somewhere back there. First night with a bodyguard, and youâre already giving him the slip,â she grinned impishly as they arrived at the ballroom.
And someone screamed.
âIâm not that ugly, am I?â Rogue quipped for Callidaâs benefit, but she was too distracted to hear him. The volume of the room dimmed, there was another cry of alarm, and the next moment, everything fell into chaos as the nervous nobility spooked. Some people were shouting or shrieking, others made a break for the exit. The palace guards began confused efforts to either block people in or help them get out more quickly while others searched for the source of the mayhem.
âRogue, Gravis, now!â Callida ordered, pointing at the tall lion just a few feet away, her hand on her sword as she identified a section of the crowd that had stopped to stare. It was an upstream swim, but it became evident pretty quickly what had started the commotion. Faces were turned upwards toward the tall corner platform. At the front edge stood Verum and Flore, knives at their throats.