#i have complex thoughts on this i am a complex man and i will soon open my etsy đ¤
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God I could and should write a whole fucking book by the end of this life here on Lev and his symbols
ill write it then burn it before anyone else gets a copy. or i wont. im supposed to be helping him this incarnation here to get a better anchor in this plane so maybe it would help more than itd be weird - im just getting from him the energy of "yeah no people already effectively have these things, people on my plane already know me inside and out to an extensive degree, may as well have it here too" you know. fair
#~abyssal murmurs#ugh god i love his tone saying that tho. i kept trying to prod to see if it was a ''ugh yeah people know me inside and out and Yes Its#Invasive But -'' but no#oh my god man. his like energy towards his people is..... BEFORE I SAY THIS#I HOPE YOU ALL KNOW IM ANTI PROPAGANDA. the biggest reason i dont work with Lu and others is bc theres this tendency to#be like ''we're darkness but also light! we're teachers we're enlightened we're pure in our own way and the kings are here to#teach you how to empower yourselves and they love all worshipers and they reject all tyrannical authority and they are the good guys#against the chrxstian god who (insert specific atrocity that actually was committed by the kings not the 'chrxstian god' - and#''demons'' should KNOW that because it was AN IMPORTANT PART OF THE WAR so either theyre LYING orrrrr) and we're actually#really down to earth and more holy than anyone else bc we're enlightened - i mean uh uh no wait that contradicts us being#against the love and light style of enlightenment chasing'' like. i will tell you that my boss has massacred a lot of people i will tell yo#im anti monarchy and i dont believe that the kings' peoples are any better than 'angels' and i will tell you a lot of innocents on both#sides have been lost bc of royalty and rich families the kings are directly tied to#so i hope you know that when i say the way lev treats his people in his mind is..... holy shit#i pick apart everything he does. ive seen sides of him that are dark af (and i love him for them lmfao) but as soon as his people are#involved... have you ever been w someone getting hot and bothered and a kid walks in that you thought was sleeping and you just switch#completely into parent mode like. he'll have complex fictions w me helping me write stories about corrupt monarchies and shit#and then no. he is like. hes very good at mindset switching and going immediately into different faces but i swear#his ''i am a king and a king is a head of a mass of people - a king is a servant to his people'' mode is like. impenetrable#he is so. fucking intensely single-minded and trained to be a king unlike anyone else. anyway what was i talking about#OH YEAH. his tone w what i wrote in the post. was so switched into that mode of ''my viscera is theirs to eat as Im splayed on their table#and this is divine ruling. this is my purpose with them'' type shit. PURE thought. there is no other energy i can find in it other than#pure ''this is my job and i do it''. pure as in distilled. a pure tone like a sine wave played on a synth as opposed to a string plucked#leviathan //#ive. im nervous about saying the shit ive said here lmfao but ive had his OK before to say it ALSO. AS I SAID. theres no way his people#dont know the massacre was done by the kings lmfao. like. yall were involved. and also you all have to know that one of the#people that pretends to be the christian god is. two of the kings actually and since lev commonly appears to people and lets them#decide who he is bc hes never arsed making a show of Being Leviathan and whatnot im sure hes been called God plenty of times#too but like. cmon. I dont know who started the ''oh the uh the invading heaven and killing off half the population was the#chrxstian god'' rumour but i was first exposed to it through lu and (his wife) worshipers so yall get the blame - that said...
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bend an ear
pairing: peter parker x fem reader
summary: your boyfriend doesn't listen to you. good thing your friendly neighborhood spider-man does.
a/n: there's just something about him idk. andrew garfield spidey bc of course! look at him! this came from me playing the spider-man game after it went on sale and yearning for peter parker (will prob have to rewatch the movies bc of this) anyways hope you like it
wc: 3.6k
warning(s): reader's bf is shitty -- they argue for a while and he lowkey slut shames her. but this is basically all fluff otherwise bc childhood best friends to lovers babby!!! real yearning loverboy hours!!!
Peter just wants to go home.Â
Itâs been⌠a day. He got his ass kicked by an English test (he doesnât have time to do the readings when heâs fighting crime), got his ass kicked by Flash Thompson (itâs not like he can fight back with his super strength and pulverize his ribs), and has spent every second since his final class ended fighting petty crimes around the city.Â
Stopping ATM thefts and minor muggings feels good, sure, but on days like these, it doesnât really make up for failing intro literature classes and getting absolutely zero sleep. Heâs just thankful May is still letting him live with her while he studies at ESUâif he had to do all of this in addition to trying to make his rent? He doesnât really want to think about it.Â
So he swung his way to the roof of some random building, and heâs taking a break. Sue him, but Peter thinks he deserves it. Whatâs the point of living in a city like New York if you canât have a second to yourself every once in a while?Â
Heâll go home soon. Grab a bodega sandwich, maybe stop another crime, and then get home for some much needed rest. But for now, heâs just going to sit on this rooftop and relax for a second. Even Spider-man needs some peace andâÂ
âBabeââÂ
âWhy are you following me?â
Peter winces as the door slams open, an argument following close after as a girl storms out onto the roof followed by a guy speeding to keep up with her. His first instinct is to swing away as soon as possible, but for some reason, he stays.Â
âBecause I want to talk!â
âGod, do you even hear yourself?âÂ
âYou keep talking over me, so I reallyââÂ
âYou donât get to babe me right now!âÂ
As if his day hadnât been bad enough, now heâs accidentally made himself privy to some coupleâs dispute. Heâs about to web himself out of this third wheeling nightmare when the girl turns around with a groan, revealing her face, and Peter realizes who it is.Â
Itâs you.
This is your apartment complex. Peter came here without even realizing it, but can he really be surprised? Your name is synonymous with peace in his brain. Comes with the territory of being friends for so longâit still calms him, even when youâre being the opposite of peaceful.Â
âI donât get why youâre acting like this!â the guy exclaims, frustration clear in his voice.Â
Of course. Why wouldnât your shitty boyfriend be here too? The only reason you live here is because you scored this place together; said he didnât want you living on campus anymore. Ethan Frey might be the bane of Peterâs existence after two and a half years of him being your boyfriend.Â
âBecause you and your posse are acting like complete jags in front of all my friends!â you shout back.Â
He laughs in disbelief. âIâm just being myself, babe. Besides, youâre the one who said I could invite them!âÂ
âBecause you complained about it just being my friends,â you grind out. âYou werenât even supposed to be here, Ethan! You just canât handle the thought of me being around guys that arenât you!âÂ
âWell, what the hell am I supposed to think, huh?â He gestures wildly. âYou spend every second with that geek and Iâm supposed to believe youâre not into him?âÂ
And now heâs eavesdropping on a conversation between you and your boyfriend about him. How could this get worse?Â
âGod, it isnât like that at all!â you exclaim with a mirthless laugh. âPeter is my friendâ my best friend since elementary school. You knew when we got together that wasnât going to change.âÂ
âYeah,â he says, nodding lazily, âbut that was before I knew how obvious his hard-on for you was.âÂ
Peter feels his face heat beneath the mask, wants to wipe the sweat off his palms. Thatâs how it could get worse.Â
Your nostrils flare as you turn away, your hands flexing while you shake your head. âGet out of here, Ethan.âÂ
âOh, of course thatâs where you draw the line,â Ethan mocks. âWhen I bring up fuckinâ Peter Parker.â He pauses then chuckles. âYouâd love that, wouldnât you?âÂ
Peter nearly intervenes right then and there, wanting to stop this mess before Ethan does anything to hurt you. But revealing himself sounds like the worst possible thing to do, so for once he listens to the rational part of his brain over the emotional.Â
âHeâs not even here!â you retort. âI live with you, not him. Iâm dating you, not him. Why are you bringing him up?âÂ
âBecause Iâm not blind.â Ethan crosses his arms. âYâknow, I thought youâd get over this little thing after you let me take you out, but for some reason, itâs exactly the same. I swear you spend more time with him than me.â
Your hands clench into fists. âGet out of here.âÂ
He scoffs. âYou want me to leave you up here?âÂ
âYes,â you nod.Â
âGod, youâve been acting crazy this whole night!â he complains. âYouâll freeze up here. Just get over itâweâll go back down, Iâll get you a beerââÂ
âI hate beer.âÂ
âThen Iâll get you a fucking apple juice,â he spits. âJust stop being so dramatic.âÂ
âYouâre not listening to me!â you shout. âI want you to leave me alone!âÂ
This time he says your name, and you shake your head.Â
âGo back to the apartment,â you interrupt. âBecause if I have to spend another second with you, our relationship might not make it through the night.â
For once, Ethan is silent as he stares at you. You stare back with no sign of giving up. Eventually, he just huffs and shakes his head.Â
âWhatever.â He starts walking towards the door. âYou better cool off up here, because Iâm not dealing with this shit when you come back down.âÂ
You stare at the door for a good twenty seconds once he closes the doorâslams it, ratherâbefore you angrily kick a stray soda can. Your childhood days of rec soccer must still be in you, because you get an arc on it. Just before it can go over the side of the building, Peter shoots a web to catch it wholly on instinct.Â
Your eyes widen as you dart around, and Peter is finally spotted from his place on top of the roof door building thing. What is that even called? He doesnât really have time to think about it. The aluminum can crunches as it flies into his hand, and you stare at him in complete shock.Â
âUh,â his mouth suddenly feels very dry, but he has to make some excuse for why heâs up here, âlittering is bad.âÂ
Good one, Parker.Â
âYouâre Spider-man,â you say, eyes still wide.Â
âThe one and only,â he nods.Â
âOh my god,â you mumble, finally seeming to break out of your shock as you cover your mouth and turn away. âOh my god, Spider-man just heard my relationship falling apart.âÂ
âI didnât hear anything!â Peter exclaims. âIââ
You shoot him the withering look he loves so much, that was able to get his bullies to shrink on the spot in high schoolâit feels weird being on the receiving end of it.Â
âIâm not stupid,â you say.Â
âI knââ He has to stop himself from saying I know, because realistically Spider-man has no idea who you are. âIâm sorry.âÂ
You huff and cross your arms. âDo your superhero duties include eavesdropping on failing couples?âÂ
âIt was an accident,â Peter says. âI was up here before you were. So technically, you were eavesdropping on my actual superhero duties.âÂ
You laugh, and he smiles just at the sound of it. One benefit to wearing the mask, because it would expose him right on the spot. âOh yeah? And what are those?âÂ
âPatrolling the streets,â he says. âIâve got a very good vantage point from up here.âÂ
You hum, your mood turning a bit more morose as you glance away. âWell, Iâm sorry you had to hear all that during your patrol.âÂ
âIâm sorry you had to go through it,â he says. âYour boyfriend sounds like an asshole.âÂ
You roll your eyes. âHeâs fine, most of the time. Just had a little bit too much to drink.âÂ
Peter will never understand why you defend Ethan so much. Youâve been together since freshman year and heâs only gotten worse since thenâmaybe he hides how he is around you, because he hasnât really shied away from showing Peter how much he hates him this past year.
âHe looked pretty sober to me,â Peter says. âAnd trust me, I have plenty of experience fighting guys that have had too much to drink.âÂ
You huff. âWhat are you, a spider-therapist?âÂ
âIâm good at a lot of things,â he says. âAnd Iâm always good for bending an ear.â
âSurely you have better things to do than listen to me complain.âÂ
Peter shakes his head. âMy scheduleâs pretty clear right now, actually.â
âReally?â you marvel. âThereâs no crime in New York City at,â you check your watch, â11:37 pm?â
âAbsolutely none,â he says. âI solved it all. At least for now.â
You laugh again at that and gesture with your head as you walk over to the edge of the roof. âThen I guess Iâll take you up on that offer.â
Peter jumps down and follows you over. You hoist yourself on top of the wall, legs dangling over the edge, and he feels himself frown as he leans his back against the wall and looks up at you.Â
âIsnât that a little dangerous?âÂ
âYouâll catch me if I fall,â you say.Â
âObviously,â Peter says. âIâm supposed to encourage safe behavior in New Yorkers, though.âÂ
You laugh and tilt your head up towards the night sky. The moonlight reflects in your eyes and Peter knows he could get lost in them forever. âJust this once, then.âÂ
âI think I can let it slide.âÂ
âGood.âÂ
A comfortable beat of silence passes between the two of you, and Peter finds himself smiling. No wonder he ended up at your place out of instinct. Thereâs nothing else like your company.Â
âI always think itâll be different,â you murmur. Peter glances up at you, your expression shifted to something more melancholic. âWeâll have a good day, whichâll turn into a good week and a good month, but he always does something to mess it up. Itâs like itâs in his DNA.âÂ
He stays silent as you think. Most of the time when you rant to Peter, you just want to be heard, not given advice. At this point, heâs an expert at listening to you. Itâs not like he minds.Â
âI want things to work out. Iâ I still love him. I mean, I think I do. But everything is a fucking struggle with him. If I donât do things the exact way he wants, if I try to do something for me instead of him, if I canât read his fucking mind, then he loses it and we argue. And Iâm so fucking tired of arguing!âÂ
Your voice has risen by now, and you bite down hard on your cheek. Peter doesnât realize heâs started reaching towards you to comfort you until you look back down at him, and he runs his hand over his head in an effort to cover it up.Â
âIâm sorry,â you sigh. âI promise, Iâm a much nicer person than this. You just caught me at the worst time.â
âDonât worry,â he says. âI know.â
Your brows rise. âSpider-man knows Iâm a nice person?â
âI can just tell,â he rushes, trying to save himself. Heâs doing a real good job at not revealing his identity. âIâm good at reading people.â
You chuckle and shake your head, then adjust your position so your back is towards the open air. It makes Peter nervous, he canât lie, but itâs not like heâs not a superhero.Â
âSo, spider-therapist,â you say. âAny advice?âÂ
So this is one of the rare times you do want answers. Peter wonders if youâll leave your boyfriend if Spider-man tells you to.Â
âHe doesnât sound great,â Peter says, inclining his head. âHow many times have you argued this week?âÂ
âFour,â you say. âFive, if you include tonight.âÂ
He whistles. âAnd itâs only Wednesday.â
You tip your shoulder. âWeâre efficient.âÂ
âAnd unhappy, it sounds like.âÂ
âWeâre not unhappy,â you defend. âWeâre justâŚâÂ
âYouâre up here talking to me instead of down there with him,â Peter says wryly. âThat doesnât exactly scream âhappy coupleâ.âÂ
You shake your head with another sigh. âItâs because he canât get over Peter.âÂ
He tries to act as nonchalant as possible when you bring him up. Is this an invasion of privacy? Letting you talk to him about all this when you have no idea who Spider-man actually is?Â
Instead of floundering over moral qualms, he just clears his throat. âAnd whoâs he?âÂ
âMy best friend,â you say. âThe one person whoâs been by my side since the second I moved to New York. He means everything to me.â
Peter feels his heart skip a beat. âYeah?âÂ
âHeâs likeâ like the opposite of Ethan, and itâs wonderful. I guess thatâs why Pete irks him so much. Yâknow,â you pull out your phone and start typing in your password, âmaybe I should call him. He always knows what to say.âÂ
âNo!â Peter exclaims with a bit too much force, causing you to give him a look. âNoâ I mean, itâs late. Heâs probably asleep. Andâ and itâs a school night?âÂ
You tilt your head, and Peter exhales when it seems to work. âTrue. Heâs probably studying for that biochem test.â You grimace. âI should be doing that too.âÂ
He watches you type out a few texts and send them, and Peterâs never been more thankful to have his phone on silent. What a way that would be to blow his cover.Â
You shove your phone back in your pocket with another sigh. âI just hate that my boyfriend and my best friend donât get along. I love them bothâwhy canât they like each other?âÂ
âI meanâŚâ Peter trails off when you look at him, and he gestures with his head. âIt seems pretty obvious why they donât get along.âÂ
âYeah,â you say dryly. âBecause Ethan thinks Peter likes me, and he probably thinks I have some secret crush on him too. I swear, heâs always looking for a reason to fight.âÂ
God, could the universe be calling him out any more? Itâs honestly ridiculous how this is going.Â
âDo you?â Peter asks, because he canât help himself. âLike him, I mean.âÂ
âI donât know,â you murmur. âI love Pete, I do. Itâs always been the two of us no matter what. But IâŚâ
He holds his breath as he tries not to look at you, tries not to make it too obvious that he might have stumbled his way into his simultaneous dream and nightmare scenario.Â
Heâs had a crush on you for what feels like forever. Since you stood up for him against his bullies in elementary school, honestly, and itâs only grown over the years as the two of you have grown. From recesses spent together and bike rides through the city; spending the night in Peterâs apartment because it was easier for your sister to let it happen than try and drag you back home; endless nights with heads bent over textbooks trying to study for tests, over college applications trying to get into the same place, and now studying and researching near every damn weekend together because youâre both unfortunate enough to try for ESU STEM degrees.Â
You were there when Ben died. Heâs there on every anniversary of your parentsâ accident. Without knowing it, you were there when he got bit and his whole life turned upside down.Â
You and Peter have been there every step of the way for each other, and itâs why heâs content with just friendshipâPeter wants you in his life no matter what. But he canât lie and say he doesnât hope.Â
No, actually. He yearns. Heâs doomed to be a yearner for the rest of his life because heâll never stop loving you. How could he?Â
âIâm not sure,â you finally say with a sigh. âAll I know is that Iâd rather be with Pete tonight than Ethan.â
Peter wonders if your chest compressions are still as good as they were in high school, because he feels like heâs about to have a heart attack.Â
Youâd rather be spending tonight with him than your boyfriend of two years and seven months, and Peter isnât even supposed to know.Â
You mistake his silent freakout for nonchalance, and you clear your throat as you jump back onto solid ground.Â
âWell, Iâve spilled my soul to you,â you say wryly, crossing your arms. âAnything a superhero can spill in return?â
Peter thinks for a good, long second. His hands itch to take off his mask, to do what heâs wanted to do since he got bitten by that stupid spider and show you who he really is.Â
How many times has he been a total asshole, canceling plans on you because he had to go stop some supervillain from wreaking havoc in Times Square? How many times has he been late to something important to you because he was caught up stopping dime a dozen muggings? He still remembers the look on your face when he showed up just in time to miss the entirety of Les Misâs opening night with your first lead role.Â
You were a better best friend to Peter than he was to you because of this stupid mask. If he took it off, it wouldnât make every mistake fade away, but it would sure help explain some of it.Â
But Peter has been doing this since high school, and he has seen far too many times what happens to the loved ones of heroes. Theyâre used as leverage, used for ransom, sometimes just straight up killed.
Youâve been friends with Peter since you and your sister moved into the apartment next to Mayâs thirteen years ago. It doesnât matter if you never share Peterâs feelings. Youâre one of the only constants in his life, and heâs not going to lose you because heâs too selfish to keep a secret.Â
Losing you would be the last straw. He couldnât take it.Â
So Peter pushes all thoughts of secret identities revealed out of his mind and tries to chuckle convincingly.Â
âIâm allergic to peppermint, believe it or not.âÂ
You stare at him, deadpan. âThatâs nowhere close to all the shit I just gave you.âÂ
âItâs true!â he exclaims, holding up his hands. âHappened after I got bit by the spider. Theyâre repelled by peppermint oil, and I guess I am too.âÂ
You shake your head in disbelief. âI canât believe Spider-man is a coward.âÂ
âA superheroâs gotta have some secrets,â he says, and he taps the side of his head. âOtherwise this thing doesnât do much good.âÂ
âYeah, yeah,â you say. âWhatever.âÂ
A chill suddenly goes up Peterâs spine and he whips aroundâhe can hear a distant scream followed by a distant gunshot, and he mentally curses.Â
âDuty calls?â you ask, drawing his attention back to you.Â
âYeah,â he says. âIâm sorryââÂ
âDonât be.â You smile, and itâs genuine. A nice change from the state Ethan effortlessly puts you in. âYou went out of your way to cheer me up. Pretty super of you.âÂ
âI hope it makes up for the eavesdropping,â he says.Â
âMore than,â you nod. âNow get out of here. Your city needs you.âÂ
Peter nods too, and he backflips onto his original spot. âHave a good night. Youâre real special to somebody.âÂ
Heâs gone before you can say anything else, already zipping across the rooftops to get to the scene of the crime. Peter can only think of your face as he swings through the airâall the things heâs too scared to say to you.Â
The crime, which turns out to be yet another petty theft, is resolved easily enough with some punches, kicks, and a snappy one-liner. Once heâs retrieved the womanâs purse and alerted the police, heâs back in the sky.Â
Peter only stops once heâs swung a couple miles away, perching on the edge of some rooftop for some actual peace and quiet. He checks around once or twice to make sure heâs not somehow back at your place, and when heâs sure itâs all clear, he pulls his phone out. He swipes past all the notifications heâs racked up until he finds the one heâs looking for: the texts from you.Â
hey pete, I know youâre prob asleep rn but you were right. I really need to study for that test lol
wanna meet me at the library tomorrow after QM? Iâll buy the coffee this time i promise <3Â
as long as you use your roomieâs dining dollars to get me a croissant lolÂ
Peter canât help but smile, larger than anything tonight. This is why heâs okay with being nothing but your friend for the rest of his life.Â
Deal. Anything to get you an AÂ
lol
assholeÂ
NeverÂ
Try to get some sleep. No good studying on a tired brainÂ
Three dots appear for a good long second, enough to constitute a decent paragraphâthen they disappear. In its place:Â
Iâll try just for youÂ
night boy genius
(How could he not love you?)Â
Night, girl wonder
#peter parker x reader#tasm!peter x reader#tasm!peter parker x reader#spiderman x reader#spider-man x reader#spider man x reader#peter parker x you#peter parker fanfiction#tasm x reader
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Sitting at the very top floor of the hotel listening to the elevators as they move and there's something calming about it
#clawing at the walls.... don't make me go back to real life don't make me go back to my JOB.....#i think even with my wack finances i should have at least one vacation a year bc. it is good for my soul you see#turn off my brain for mindless fun đ¤ i have a lot of things i need to look at when i get home#financial planning being one of them; i hope they gave enough vaccines at work for that bonus#bc i can stick the whole thing in my savings and then not worry too much about using my entire check for bills#please. please give the annoying vaccines i am not even there to be annoyed by them#idk who's even been working the past few days lmao; everyone requested vacation time for almost the same days#i have complex thoughts on this i am a complex man and i will soon open my etsy đ¤#aiming for February.. goes with the lovebug theme I'm using and also gives me time to make the listings + test out#a source for acrylic charms; we're gonna make it; everything's gonna be okay#I'm glad I'm getting aggressive with it now and not 3 months before the apr kicks in#hey hey hey. hey? it's gonna be okay#shai speaks#i do have to drive like 100 miles tomorrow and. i don't wanna lmao; there's a tacky gift shop across the street#i wanna check it out before i go lmao
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Dude Iâm so tired of seeing this shit about the remmick thirst and fanficâŚbe so for real, ITS A VAMPIRE. HE HAS LAYERS. HES INTERESTING. Outside of being a handsome ass man and an alluring vampire, he is a character that we donât know much about. We just know that heâs a bad guy, the villian who thinks heâs the hero. I am a black woman. Yes, the mf ainât shit. He recked havoc and tried to force submission. Yes he used manipulation; when hasnât a vampire done so to get what they want? Other vampires use compulsionâŚ.yall okay with that? I never seen any complaints with them making someone do something against their willâŚ.No, it wasnât okay. However, as Ryan has stated, HE DID SO BECAUSE HE FELT HE RESONATED WITH THEM. Once again, his actions are not justified, but it shows that he wasnât doing what he was doing with ill intention. He thought he was helping more than hurting, in his own twisted way. Thatâs what makes him a complex character. Thatâs what make ppl want to know more about him. His past, his struggle. Iâm not saying heâs more important than other characters but it does make you want to dive deeper. We know nothing about himâŚdangerous, intriguingâŚjust like a vampire is supposed to be. Yall act like this the first time ppl have romanticized the villian. Hannibal was a cannibal, ppl thirst over him. Joe Goldberg, no different. Lestat, abuser, yall let ppl thirst over him. Like can we please understand that we have two sides of our brains and we can use both. We see what the movie is conveying!!!! WE ALSO SEE A NEW HOT VILLAIN THATS LITERALLY A FANTASY! NOT REAL!!! Irl, I wouldnât even waste my time on a mf like remmick, but baby this ainât real. He can get it!
I keep seeing ppl claiming âno one let the film digest before they started with the remmick fics.â Yall do realize, when writers get an idea, that shit needs to be written out as soon as they can because it eats away at their thoughts or it get so bad to the point they canât concentrate on anything? Like damn just let ppl be. If yall donât feel the same about him, let it be and ignore it. It wasnât for your consumption clearly. I respect those opinions and I definitely understand them. But itâs tumblr bro, let it be. đĽą
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One of my favourite things about Arcane is that all the couples can be read as toxic, which is GREAT.
I'm tired of people bringing morality debates into dark media. Let dark media be fucking dark. You guys wouldn't survive a day in the TMA fandom, needing everyone to be as good as gold. How are they going to make for enjoyable complex characters if they're not morally grey. In fact, I wish there'd been more expansion on just how morally black they can become!
"CaitVi is so toxic" According to lesbian statistics, that sounds just about accurate. đ Heck, I wish Caitlyn had done more (Not really, but it would have been nice to further explore the darkness in her heart). Isn't it adorable how she immediately folded as soon as Vi called her cupcake? Caitlyn's like one of those villains that will consistently do the most....until it comes to someone else hurting her girlfriend. The only one allowed to hurt her girlfriend is her. đ
Then let's talk about Vi. Someone pointed out how Vi never cared about Zaun's independence in the first place and many people yelled that they were wrong. But actually, they were right. Vi never wanted Zaun. Zaun was Silco's dream, and Jinx inherited that dream cause Silco would never shut up about it. Vi wanted Piltover to take responsibility for all the shit they allowed to happen in the Undercity. That's a part of the reason she joined up with Caitlyn in the first place. Let's not forget she wasn't dissuaded when she dragged Jayce down to fight with her and he killed a child. Children been dying, it's been her whole life. Someone needed to do something about it, and Zaun would have just isolated the people from all the privileges that Piltover SHOULD have been providing for them. Some people just can't accept that Independence cannot in fact solve every problem, and sometimes independence is colonisers running away from the responsibility of fixing the mess that they started in the first place.
Besides, we all know Vi joined up with the Enforcers because "I feel like I am worthless if I can't be of service." She'd already run out of family members to serve, Caitlyn was the next best thing. She's just like Jayce.
And speaking of Jayce, let's talk about his violent levels of codependency with anyone who'll give him attention. People LOOOOVE to talk about Mel, but it's there with Viktor too. When bro wasn't basing his worth on his inventions, he was centering it around Viktor.
Viktor who decided at some point in his life that he would not LIVE without Jayce. He was fine dying without him, but living without him was unacceptable. Oh how healthy. đđ Viktor be the kind of toxic ex to threaten divorce 500 times over, then burn the world when you actually leave him. Jayce is no better cause he's the kind of guy to keep going back to his toxic Ex.
Yes, Mel is manipulative. That's what I love about her. How are you guys failing to give this woman the praise of being an outsider in Piltover, but running their entire council. đ Girl raises her hand once and the whole government starts spinning. She was the best sugar mummy Jayce and Viktor could ever ask for. She kept the whole city running. Literally the entire of Piltover dancing on her palm. And yes she manipulated Jayce but let's not forget she thought that was a love language. đ You wanna be mad at someone, be mad at Ambessa for raising her that way.
I also don't think it's fair to blame her for the Undercity situation, she's not native. Monkey see, monkey do, and not a single one of those Council members actually cared about the situation down there, it was deplorable. đ Jayce did way more in his two weeks as Councillor than any of those drug pushing, money laundering, Piltovian heads of government.
And that just covers MelJayVik, we don't even need to get fully into TimeBomb, cause we know what's wrong there. đ Surely we have not forgotten the many teammates Jinx has killed, but making sure to never kill Ekko cause that's her man. Ekko has a lot to unpack, like how his consistent and unwavering love for Jinx is an indication of a lot of doors he might not be ready to open. I know they dynamics go crazy and I love to see it.
Ambessa and Sevika are a crack ship but I'm sure we all know bedroom dynamics go crazy with Mrs. Warlord and Miss Liberation. I love it when characters clash in a toxic heap. It's insane and should be explored.
Quit saintifying my toxic ships with your woke morality debates. If you want everyone to be sunshine and rainbows then you should be watching literally anything else. đ "It's not healthy." GOOD, I like it that way. đ Angst, spice and trauma are the recipe for a plethora of explorative fanfiction. Any of their dynamics can be taken in any toxic direction and I want that EXPLORED.
#arcane#arcane netflix#caitlyn#caitlyn kiramman#caitlyn arcane#vi arcane#violet arcane#jayce arcane#jayce talis#caitvi#caitlyn x vi#vi x caitlyn#viktor arcane#viktor x jayce#jayce x viktor#meljayvik#meljay#jayvik#timebomb#ekko x jinx#jinx x ekko#ambessa x sevika#ambessa medarda#arcane ambessa#I'm gonna need Arcane fans to quit ruining the opportunity to get dark fics out of all this
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self-doubt. l Harry Castillo
đ a few ways to break your heart đ
Summary:Â they decided to show you your place
Warnings:Â Self-doubt, complexes, imposter syndrome, gossiping, crying, breakups
A/N: I thought a lot of us struggle with this so I wrote this⌠will I fix it?
your feedback is very important to me and I thank you for all the reblogs, comments and likes. đ¤ sorry for all the mistakes
a few ways to break a heart [masterlist]
"I really don't understand why Harry showed up with that thing. Have you seen her dress? It was in style last season."
A soft giggle echoed through the bathroom, mixing with the sound of running water and the clicking of heels. Your heart was pounding so hard in your chest that it was strange that the women fixing their makeup in front of the mirror hadnât heard you in one of the stalls.
Finally, the voice of the second woman rang out. "I heard they met at a cafĂŠ."
"No kidding! She probably worked there, huh?" the first one snorted. "She looks like she works at a cafĂŠ because she couldn't make it anywhere else. Harry's too good for her."
"Mhm. She'll probably get pregnant soon and inherit his fortune."
Someone slammed their hand on the marble counter, and the owner's voice rose noticeably. "Spit it out, Susan! Harry should at least have a little more sense. If he wants to have fun, fine, but he should watch her hands more closely. I'm telling you, she only wants his money!"
"And she's not even pretty."
You couldn't move. When the women finally came out of the bathroom and you knew you were alone, you realized you had been holding your breath and welcomed the oxygen in your lungs. Your fingers were icy cold and when you looked down at your hands, you saw they were shaking.
They were talking about you. You were sure of it, you had seen them earlier, watching Harry and you at that stupid sponsors' party. The best of the best, beautiful people with lots of money. Champagne, oysters, and other expensive food you've never tried.
You felt like you didn't fit in there, but now you were sure of it.
These women weren't wrong, though. You met Harry Castillo at a coffee shop when he accidentally spilled coffee on you. Plain and simple. But no, you didn't work there. You went there regularly and sometimes you saw a tall man with broad shoulders and a prominent nose. Once or twice you exchanged friendly glances and smiles.
It was easy to fall in love with Harry Castillo. He was charming, sweet, sensitive, and really listened. You quickly fell in love with his brown eyes, and on the third date he told you that âyou were more than that.â
You had your insecurities, and your self-confidence had been shaken for years. How could you blame yourself? Growing up in the age of social media, magazines, and the constant rush to be perfect took its toll on everyone. You were no exception.
And even though Harry did everything right, and you felt like the most beautiful woman in the world, in that moment, in that fucking toilet, at that awful party, it all came crashing down.
Only, miraculously, the tears that were gathering in your eyes hadn't ruined your makeup yet. You stepped out of the stall and saw your reflection in the mirror. Despite the tears glistening in your eyes and the slight shock on your face, you still looked the same as when you arrived at the party.
The dress you and Harry had chosen complimented your figure beautifully. The makeup highlighted your eyes, and you could still picture Harry's look in your mind when he saw you like that.
"I don't know, maybe we should stay home..." he said tenderly kissing your neck "But I want to show everyone how lucky I am."
But in that moment, in that fancy bathroom of that damn expensive hotel, you felt like someone you weren't. You didn't belong to this world, to these people. All your fears and insecurities had found an outlet, and no rational words could change that.
What if they were right? What if Harry was just playing with you? Would he be capable of that? No, Harry wasn't like that. The man had a heart of gold, and you were sure of it. But he would soon see for himself that you weren't on his level, that you were far below him. The imposter syndrome kicked in.
Harry would find out soon. He would soon discover that you weren't who he thought you were.
The approaching voices brought you back to earth. To avoid anyone noticing how bad your condition was, you headed for the door.
You noticed him immediately. Your eyes searched for Harry and easily found him in the crowd. Damn, he looked so good in that perfectly tailored suit, his shirt collar slightly loosened. For a moment you wanted to go to him, but then you saw the woman he was talking to. She was beautiful. Her hand lightly grabbed his arm as she let out a sweet laugh. You wanted to be her so badly...
The lump in your throat was becoming unbearable. You didn't dare go back to the party, instead you headed for the exit. Yes, you were a coward. You were one too when you called Harry from the taxi you caught.
"I'm sorry, Harry, but this is pointless."
"What? I'm sorry, darling, but I don't understand. Where are you? I'll be right there." he replied. Concern was barely noticeable in his voice.
"I'm not there anymore." The silence on the other end was terrifyingly loud. Finally, you heard Harry take a deep breath.
"Okay, so where are you, love? We'll talk."
âHarryâŚâ You stopped for a moment, feeling the tears already streaming down your cheeks. âPlease donât come to me. I donât think we should see each other for a while.â
"Darling..." Harry started, but you interrupted him again. In the background, you could clearly hear him moving around, probably trying to find his driver and car.
"Harry, please. Respect my decision." you said, trying to keep your voice calm. "I need...space. This is too much for me. I'm sorry, but it's over."
And before he could say anything, you hung up. You were a fucking coward. You didn't care about your makeup anymore, you let the tears flow.
ââââ
Thank you for your time.
#pedro pascal#harry castillo#harry castillo x f!reader#harry castillo x reader#the materialists#a few ways to break a heart
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Disillusionment (gr63)

âł A/N Oh wow, I am excited for this one. From watchin this video on Medieval life and sex, I was interested in writing my own take on this era as historically accurate as possible, right down to the way of speech (while still making it legible for us in the 21st century). I delved into hours upon hours of research for what was supposed to be a 'short fic' and ended up with this glorious beast. I hope you love it as much as I do! It was so much fun (and so much work!) to write!
âł Summary: George had spent his entire life as a peasant farmer in the quiet fields of Norfolk, sheltered from much of the unrest that had gripped late 14th-century England. Choosing to leave behind the stable, modest life he was born into, he sets out for London in hopes of forging his own path among the cityâs guilds. His apprenticeship master is a kind and just manâbut it is the masterâs eldest daughter, a fair and intelligent maiden, who begins to stir something deeper within him. Though everything seems promising at first, the lingering unrest in the wake of the Peasantsâ Revolt still hangs heavy in Londonâs streets, and George soon discovers that life beyond the fields is far more complexâand far less kindâthan he ever imagined.
âł Pairings: Peasant!George Russell x Master's Daughter!OC; Peasant!George Russell x Nomad!Lando Norris (platonic); Apprentice!George Russell x Apprentice!Alex Albon (platonic)
âł Word Count: 31.7k
âł Warnings: 18+, smut, unprotected sex (well, she drinks herbal tea and jumps around a little after which was historically accurate contraception), premarital sex (aka sin!!!!), exhibitionism (not really, but outdoor/semi-public sex was all that was possible in this era), other historical accuracies that we in the 21st century may deem strange. Mentions and descriptions of violence, social uprisings, societal divide, thievery, treason, executions and death, religion/God.
In all the three and twenty years of his life, never had George once thought of a life beyond Lynn. Born unto a family of modest means in a village lying a ways beyond the eastern walls of the town, he was destined to toil for his livelihood and to serve his Lord. From there, all that he might ever think to need lay within a day's journey: the town-centre and the bustling river port for trade, a modest chapel for Sunday mass, and the wide-spread hills of Norfolk for those rare days granted to rest. To George it was but the way of things, as it had ever been; a life measured in bushels and seasons, in toil and in prayer, and in the simpleties of a peasant's lot.
At the break of day, the labour was already well begun, George and his family having been roused long before the roosterâs first crow to prepare for another grueling day. While his sisters tended to the cows and the homestead, George and his brothers took to the fields while dew still clung to the grasses and the soil was heavy beneath their feet. As spring drew closer, the farmers of England set themselves to the important task of preparing the land for planting of the crops that would feed their countrymen for the year ahead. Each soul, from man to woman, from child unto elder, had their part to play and they knew it well. There was no time for dawdling; not when the nourishment of hundreds lay upon their shoulders.
George lent his hand to the fastening of the heavy plough to the pair of oxen, and soon they set to their dayâs work. Their father took up the rear, steadying the plough as its iron share bit deep into the soil, breaking the earth in readiness for planting, while the sons, ropes in hand, guided the beasts by nose and horn, coaxing them steady through the furrowed field. The sun, though yet low upon the horizon, bore down with a slow, unyielding heat, and the day stretched before them with neither promise of ease nor mercy. The Lord of their village required the work to be completed, his land to be tended to, rain or shine, and that was the way of it.Â
The sprawling arable land of their village had been divided amongst the families dwelling therein, each set to their allotted strip to farm. For decades, the Russells had laboured upon their share, the charge of peasantry passed down from man unto man, from father unto son. In time, when their father should be called to Godâmay He grant him restâit would fall to Georgeâs eldest brother to take over their plot of labour and provide for their family.Â
Being born unto this fate was grueling with little rewards to reap. Families were granted but enough pay to afford food and shelter, yet their lives were ever bound and beholden to their Lordship. Many villages and its peasants would toil beneath the iron fist of wretched and greedy Lords who took the fruit of their labours for themselves and left them with little. The Russells were fortunate to dwell beneath Lord Hamilton; a generous and kindly man who saw fit to share the blessings of their toil with those who worked his land.Â
And work the land they did; bathed by the warmth of the springtime sun, the labourers ploughed and sowed until the sun kissed the western horizon, nestling between the grassy hills and budding sycamores and thus decreeing the dayâs labour at an end. The well-worn oxen were returned to pasture and the men withdrew from the fields to their homesteads for supper, caked in mud and in grime and in pride. The village women had prepared fresh bread with butter and stew and ale for the men upon their return and the families gathered in their respective huts to share a meal around the hearth.Â
Between his elder brother and sister sat George, bowl in hand, spooning thin broth into his famished mouth with dirt-stained fingers clutching a spoon of rough-carved wood. The low fire crackled in the centre of the one-room farmhouse, the embers glowing, and a veil of smoke rose, winding upwards toward the vented opening in the roof. A thin drift of ash lay upon everything within the farmhouse, cloaking every surface in a light grey, the necessity if wanting to have pleasant heat in those chilly springtime evenings.Â
Across the floor strewn with rushes, a tabby cat gave chase after a mouse, narrowly missing the fire that sought to snatch at the tip of its tail. In the far corner, the family cow mooed soft and slow, settling into its bed of straw beside the lowly sheep and the pregnant pig, which snorted and chomped in its muck. The women had cleared out the soiled straw and rushes from the house that day, and for a little while, the fresh sweetness of greenery overtook the heavy odour of the livestock with which they shared their dwelling. Then, when the tabby returned to the fireside with the mouse clutched in its jaws, George leaned from his low stool to give it a scratch behind the earâyet another hand about the farm, doing her part.
The golden glow of the evening sun waned through the open wood shutters of the farmhouse as night began to fall while supper concluded. As darkness drew nearer, his mother stooped by the fire to catch a flame in the tinderbox to bring to the few candles dotting the perimeter of the room while the siblings brought their dishes to the metal basin in the corner to wash up. The eldest sisterâon the cusp of being betrothed to a young man from a fine family in their same villageâtook her place at the basin to do the washing with the last of their well water for the day.Â
While he aided his sister in gathering the dishes, George caught the eye of his eldest brother, who leaned idly against the doorway, arms folded across his linen shirt. The brothers had spoken in hushed voices out in the fields of their hope to venture out after supper, for tomorrow was Sunday, and no work would be required of them. Now, burdened with evening chores, George grew restless, eager for the rare company of other townsfolk and men of his own age. He shared a knowing glance with his brother, a silent exchange of anticipation.
âFather,â his brother said, pushing away from the wall and stepping nearer to where their father prepared for evening prayer, âmight George and I be granted leave to visit the alehouse tonight, for a small measure of leisure before bed-call?â ("Father, can George and I go to the pub tonight for some free time before bed?")
Their mother answered firmly in his place, âYe shall not come to mass to-morrow, drunken.â ("You will not come to church drunk tomorrow.")
The father looked up from his preparations, his brow furrowed with quiet authority over his wife, âAye, let them have their time. Our lads are worthy and modest.â ("Oh, let them have their time. Our sons are respectable.")
As the younger siblings mulled about in play, the eldest brothers exchanged another glance, hopefulness flickering in their eyes as they silently pleaded with their parents. Their mother, seated by the hearth with her hands busy mending one of the younger boysâ stockings, shook her head slowly without raising her gaze, her expression heavy with judgment, as if knowing her tongue was nothing against that of her husbandâs.Â
âGo on then,â their father then waved his hand towards the door as if to shoo them out like vermin, âBut I shall expect no grumbling come morn when we rise for mass.â ("Go on then. But I don't want arguing in the morning when we have to get up for church.")
A ways down the dirt road, the brothers made their way to another villagerâs homestead with the promise of fresh ale and good company. The thatch roofed houseânot unlike the architecture of their very own from which they cameâlured them in with twirling smoke rising from the centre and a straw broomâindication that the brew was onâpropped up against the mudded wall beside the door. George followed behind his elder brother into the ashy and torrid alehouse where a few other townsfolk were already gathered around a handful of wooden tables surrounded with rickety stools.Â
The alewife stood behind a table near the entrance, her cottage rearranged to suit the plentiful brew and the growing demand for it. She greeted the brothers warmly, âAye, the Russell lads, good even.â ("Ah, the Russell boys, good evening.")
âHail, madam, well met,â George returned the greeting with courtesy. ("Hi, ma'am. Good to see you.")
âMight I tempt ye with the finest ale this side of Norfolk?â ("Can I interest you in the best ale in all of Norfolk?")
Georgeâs brother chuckled, âWe came not to scrub the floors, I assure thee.â ("Well we definitely didn't come to scrub the floors.")
One to be swooned by the dazzling smiles of the brothers, the alewife let forth a merry laugh as she gathered the metal cups they had brought, then turned to fill them from the tapped barrel set behind her. When she returned, she charged them each a penny. George reached within his leather satchel fastened at his belt, and drew forth a slender silver coin to pay his due.
With cups in hand, the brothers made their way through the throng and found a bench amongst their fellows, summoned by the merry voice of a distant friend. The young men greeted each other with hearty embraces and settled round their table to drink.Â
The friend, long absent from their village since his journey to London the year past, now spoke earnestly about the Great Uprising. He recounted how hundreds of peasants flooded the streets of London, crying out for lessened tax, redistribution of the Churchâs wealth, and the abolition of wage caps. Many men had lost their lives fighting for a better future for the common folk, yet their friend had not lost the spark in his eyes; and instead, he spoke as though he saw himself as a gallant knight.Â
He had returned but a fortnight past to their modest village, yet already did he speak with longing of London, eager to take his leave once more. George found himself enraptured by the tales the man told, his thoughts straying far beyond the bounds of Lynn, chasing visions of the great city and all it might yet hold. London lay many days away and the road there was treacherous for a man of his standing, never often pondered or faced by such men. Facing the trek would threaten one's livelihood should it not work out.Â
When the tale had drawn to a close, and the others turned their talk to merrier things, George leaned forth, his voice low but earnest, âTell me, truly, is London fair?â ("Be honest with me, is London good?")
The friend, cup in hand, regarded him with a smile as warm as the firelight, âAye, if thou can take up a tradeâŚand have the coin to do so. Its walls house promise to men like we, a chance for something more.â ("Yes, if you can do a trade and have the money to do so. London's walls hold lots of opportunities for men like us, giving us a chance to do more in our lives.")
George sat back, his mind alight with the revelation. Men around him had been sparked with ideas of revolution, George, now was filled with the heat of forging his own path rather than accepting what doth been provided to him upon his birth. Much to ponder as he spent his days toiling the fields of someone elseâs land, destined to labour ever for the gain of others rather than his own. It was the way of things, so he had been taught. Who was he, then, to think otherwise?
But as George lay on the straw and feathered bed between his mother and his sister that nightâhis prayers said and his tunic shedâhe dreamt of London streets and the adventure that awaited, just beyond reach.
It was well understood that the permissions of his father and mother did little to secure his journey. Rather, it was the permission of the Lord of their village that would need to be sought; he alone held the power to grant George his leave or to forbid him from straying from his destined toil. Long and wearisome were the days spent pleading his case at home, yet the greater trial still loomedâthat of standing before the nobleman who held rule over their very livelihoods.
The townsfolk saw little of his Lordship, for he was often away on business in Norwich or London, or else kept to his modest manor at the villageâs heart, as though to watch over his lands and his people. He came amongst them for festivals, at sessions of the manorial court, and, of course, mass upon Sundays, yet elsewise, their worlds were vastly different and paths did not often cross. Those lives of the serfs and the peasants were starkly separate from the lives of the nobles and knights; one to work, one to protect.Â
Henceforth, Georgeâs unease as he approached the guarded doors of Lord Hamiltonâs manor was warranted. The armoured knights stationed at the threshold turned their gaze upon him and asked his purpose to which George requested an audience with his Lordship regarding his matter of employment. Without haste, one of the knights led him within the stone-lined home, his metal armour clanking through the vast space with every step. George, mindful of his steps, peered about the chamber they crossedâawestruck by the soaring arches and carved beams, so unlike the humble farmstead to which he was born.
Through the sitting room and into the study, the knight led George forth. There, bathed in the golden light that poured through the opened shutters, sat Lord Hamilton at his writing table of fine-carved oak, a quill resting between his ringed fingers and his desk littered with parchment. His garments were of a deep-dyed blueâfar too expensive for the commoners to ever lay hands onâand the fabric was well kept and hardly frayed and dull as Georgeâs were. For a moment, George felt as though he were laying gaze upon King Richard himself, so stately and almost ethereal was the figure before him.Â
Lord Hamilton raised his gaze upon their entry and he dismissed the knight to return to his post. With a modest smile to the young man who now stood before him, he turned to rest his quill back in its ink pot, âA Russell lad, art thou?â ("You're a Russell son, aren't you?")
With haste, George removed his canvas hat from atop his head and clutched it in his grimy fists as he bowed at the waist, greeting his liege with a courteous, âMy Lord.â
âPray tell, for what purpose dost thou seek my audience?â ("Please tell me, why did you want to speak with me?")
George wrung the rough fabric of his cap in his hands and shifted his weight, as he mustered his courage to speak his truth, âMy Lord, I beseech thee to grant me leave to travel to London, that I might seek an apprenticeship.â ("My Lord, I ask of you to permit me to travel to London so I can look for an apprenticeship.")
âAye, an apprenticeship?â Lord Hamilton turned towards his peasant, staring upon him as if in study, his kirtle cascading from his lap like the riverâs waves. âThou dost wish to part from our village in search of greater fortune?â ("Oh, an apprenticeship? You wish to leave our village in search of more money?")
âI am much indebted to thee and thy kindness, my Lord. I wish to see Englandâs fine lands and all that she doth offer. It grieveth me greatly to bid farewell to our town,â George assured him quickly, his heart racing within his chest. ("I am very indebted to you and your kindness, my Lord. I want to see England's beautiful land and all that it offers. I makes me sad to say goodbye to our town.")
Lord Hamiltonâs handsome face broke into a Godly smile, âThou art not betrothed to thy land, goodman. If thou hast the means, thou mayst venture wheresoever thou dost please.â ("You are not married to your land, son. If you have the money, you can travel wherever you want to.")
âMy father hath been saving, and I have fared well in my trading this season, my Lord.â ("My father has been saving and I have made successful trades this season, my Lord.")
âI believe this to be true,â Lord Hamilton said kindly, his voice soft as the Kingâs finest silk, âThou hast my blessing, lad. But tread with care, the journey is treacherous.â ("I believe you. You have my blessing, son. But be careful, the journey isn't an easy one.")
For a moment, George could not believe what his ears had heard. Lord Hamilton had always been a fair and just nobleman, caring for his workers and his townsfolk, but to permit leave so generously had George bowing to him deeply. He then bowed once more, spilling words from his quivering lips, âAye, my Lord. I thank thee. God bless thee.â ("Yes, my Lord. Thank you. God bless you.")
âGo with God, and may He watch over thee on thy journey.â ("Go with God, and may He protect you on your journey.")
The fairest of the Russellâs trusty steeds was to be gifted unto their second-born son for his lengthy journey to the city. It was a ride of four nights from rural Lynn to the city gates, and George bore some coin in his satchel to spend at inns along the way. His mother fretted over him as his father prepared the steed, warning him of looters and marauders who often loitered in the woods, seeking to raid young travelers such as he. George assured her he would be cautious, reminding her of his archery training as a boy to pacify her as he affixed his quiver and crossbow over his back in the rare case of an altercation.Â
He embraced his siblings in farewell and kissed his mother, promising to write if he could soon afford some parchment upon his arrival. His father held him tightest of all, clinging a moment longer, before patting his back and taking his face in both of his hands. He murmured a prayer over him, kissed his brow, and then stepped away. George, with a tempest of excitement and trepidation stirring in his breast, mounted his steed and settled upon the padded saddle comfortably and situated his leather boots against the horseâs flank. With a soft nudge and a click of the teeth, George turned from his homestead and all he had known, offering one final wave in farewell.Â
The River Great Ouse guided him southward, along the well-trodden path of men having come before him for centuries. His steedâs hooves clopped upon the muddy trails at a steady canter, through winding hills, sparse forests, and the quiet richness of rural England. With nothing upon his back but his bow and a canvas bag of a singular change of garments, a tinderbox, a bowl and cup, some bread, and a sprig of lavender, George felt heartily prepared for what might lie ahead. He whistled as he rode by his lonesome, some merry tune often heard at village festivals, passing the hours beneath the grey skies of springtime.Â
His steed grew weary after a few hours of travel and as he came upon the next small village, George decided to rest for the rest of the evening and return to his journey come morning. In Littleportâa village not unlike his own, with thatch-roofed cottages nestled amidst fields of tilled earthâhe found a quiet welcome. His satchel weighed light on his belt, a reminder of what little coin he had to spare, and as he rode through the streets of the unfamiliar village, he was faced with the travelers choice between inn or stable.Â
To take to the hay overnight was to risk theft, his sleep destined to be light and uneasy upon a bed of strawâbut the promise of a free night's rest weighed heavily in its favour. And so, turning down a narrow, mud-soaked path behind the small village, George guided his horse toward the stretch of farmland beyond the outskirts.Â
The sun had just dipped beneath the horizon, and the folk of the village had taken their leave from the fields, retreating to their hearths and homes. Left to his own company, George found a quiet place to rest beside a low stone wall that marked the edge of a farmerâs plot. He tied his steed to the post and then settled himself atop the strewn straw, being cautious that the fence hid him sufficiently from potential townsfolk wandering their streets after dusk.Â
Without the warmth of his family in their shared bed topped with a thin stuffing of feathers, George drew his arms about himself as the nightâs chill crept over the countryside. The straw upon which he lay scratched at his skin and his garments did little to guard him from the itch and the cold. He shifted and turned, seeking comfort upon the prickly bed until the moon was hung high above England.Â
From his side came a low whicker and a snort, followed by the dull thud of iron-shod hooves upon hard earth and the soft jangle of harness, the noise stirring George from his restless doze. With a soft click of his tongue and an outstretched arm, he beckoned the steed near and invited the loyal creature to take its rest, for the road ahead would be long come dawn.
The horse bent its legs and lowered itself upon the grass like a hound at its masterâs feet, laying its great head beside the straw where George lay. A fond smile touched Georgeâs lips as the presence of his familyâs horse brought a flicker of comfort. He tenderly stroked its muzzle, and before long, sleep took him at last.
George vacated the town before the inhabitants had risen for sunup. His limbs were sore and stiff from the nightâs rest upon the hay, but he counted himself fortunate for no thief had come to trouble his sleep nor lighten his satchel. His steed moved with rejuvenation, trotting proudly beside the river that wound southward like a silver thread through the land. As they journeyed on, George broke his fast with the bread his mother had wrapped for him, the taste of home still warm upon his tongue despite the stiffness of the grain.
Just past midday, the river had begun to narrow and George took his rest under the shade of the oak trees along the river bed. He tethered his horse and then rid himself of his garments before wading into the stream with a sigh of contentment. The babbling water drew him in, cool and clear, swallowing up the lowly travelerâs body in its bath of stones and sand. The springtime sun had chased the chill of winter from the stream, leaving its waters cool but kind upon the skin. They flowed down from Lynn, his home, where the mouth of the river drew its breath from the northern sea.Â
George bathed himself in the river then laid upon the grassy bank to dry, stretched long beneath the sun like a weary wayfarer. It certainly felt abnormal to not be spending his days toiling the land in his modest village, helping his family and his fellow townsfolk to bring in revenue for Lord Hamilton. Yet, it was a taste of freedom that was sweet upon his tongue, a part of life unexplored and readily at his fingertips.Â
Having relieved himself at the base of one of the many trees along the riverbank, he dressed once more and mounted his steed, ready to carry on with the journey laid before him.Â
Cambridge lay not far, and as the day wore on and his horse grew weary, George sought the shelter of an inn for the night. It was the safest option when facing a lively town such as Cambridge and he need not risk resting beneath the open sky for a second nightâthe odds against thievery would not favour him twice. He trod upon his horse across the dirt roads of the town as the inhabitants bustled to and fro from buildings and homesteads come the end of the working day.Â
Though not quite so famed and populus as his native Lynn, yet alone Norfolk or London, Cambridge had grown swiftly, owing to the University which had opened its doors not quite two centuries past. Only the richest of men could attend, and thus the townâs populace had begun to rise above the bounds of the lower orders that often made up the majority of inhabitants. As George rode through the outwardly bustling streets of Cambridge in search of an inn, he caught his first glimpse of the townâs shifting divide: men in finer garments, their tunics of richer fabrics and boots polished clean standing in stark contrast to the worn attire and weathered leather of the working folk.
The first inn George came upon was perched on the outskirts of the city, its courtyard being tended to by a servant when George approached. He guided his horse to halt at the gate and the servant approached.Â
âGood day, sire,â the young man greeted the weary traveler, âHow may I be of service?â ("Good day, sir. How can I help you?")
George, having never been addressed as someoneâs societal superior, paused for but a moment to gather his wits before answering, âGood evening, goodman. Might thy fine establishment have a room for myself and my steed this night?â ("Good evening, sir. Does your fine inn have a room for me and for my horse to stay tonight?")
âAye,â said the servant, unlocking the gate with a creak, âfor two pence a night, if such a fee suits ye well enough.â ("Yes, for you pence a night, if that is fine with you.")
Such a high fee gave George pause for but a moment, yet again. His hand moved to his satchel on his belt, feeling the light weight of the few coins it containedâhis very livelihood until he reached London. Two pence would not be everything, yet the thought of parting with it felt as if there had been a blow to his stomach.Â
George offered a polite smile to the man and dismounted from his horse, âAye, two pence it shall be.â ("Yes, two pence it is.")
The servant held out his hand to collect payment and George rifled through his satchel before placing two silver pennies in his grimy palm. The worn and dirtied nails upon George's fingers spoke plainly that he, too, was no stranger to the hardships of the lower classes. The servant gave a curt nod in thanks, and George passed him the reins. A stablehand came forth to take the steed, leading it across the modest courtyard toward the stables, whilst the servant turned and bade George to follow toward the inn.
Within the walls of the modest inn, George was surprised to find the common room quite lively. Fellow travelers sat on low stools around wood tables, metal cups of ale in hand, chattering and laughing over the toe-tapping tune floating from the lute-player in the corner. George had been familiar with local ale-houses in his small village but never before had he stepped foot in such an establishment that rivaled that of a festival.Â
The servant bade him onward into the rambunctiousness of the common room, and with nothing but his single canvas bag in hand, George stepped warily across the floor of packed earth, his eyes casting about in search of an empty seat. A woman bustled between the tables, bearing metal platters of bread and meat and bowls of cabbage stew, serving the travelers who filled the cramped space. She cleared their empties and refilled their cups of ale at the offer of another silver penny while delivering polite conversation to those who initiated.
Catching sight of George where he lingered beneath the wood beamed entryway, she waved him in, her words hardly heard over the flurry of lute music and drunken chatter. With a brisk motion, she ushered him toward a vacant spot at one of the long boards and nearly tossed him onto the bench between two men. Before he could speak in protest, she had vanished once more, swallowed up by the kitchen's bustle.
The fellow young travelers greeted him upon his sudden placing at their table, the group of strangers just as worn and straggly as George appeared, sharing in the communal lot of peasantry.Â
George offered a courteous nod to the faces turned toward him, âHail.â ("Hello.")
The young man from his leftâwho looked no older than George, with unruly curly hair like the earth and and eyes like the forestsâinquired, âFrom whence do you come?â ("Where are you from?")
âI have journeyed from a small village beyond the fair town of Lynn.â George replied simply, barely glancing up as the woman returned and set before him a plate of bread and pork. ("I have come from a small village just outside of the lovely town of Lynn.")
âAye, Norfolk,â the newly acquainted acknowledged as George paid the woman a penny for his sustenance, âHave thee ever set foot in Norwich?â ("Oh, Norfolk. Have you ever been to Norwich?")
The rest of the men at their table busied themselves with their own conversation or toe-tapping along with the lute, ignorant to the two of them. George did not quite mind; he preferred the solitude, to avoid finding himself in the centre of a crowd if he could spare it. And this stranger seemed the perfect company to help him pass another night of his journey.Â
âNay,â George replied, âNever have I left my village till now.â ("No, I have never left my village until now.")
âNever at all?â the young man echoed in surprise. âWell Norwich is ever the cityâsecond only to London, Iâd wager.â ("Never at all? Well Norwich is quite the city, almost as good as London, I bet.")
âThou hast been?â George inquired as he pulled some meat off the bone from which he had been served. ("You have been?")
âAye, I have journeyed to many cities across England.â ("Yes, I have traveled to many cities all over England.")
âArt thou a merchant?â ("Are you a merchant?")
The young man laughed as if such a claim were most comical before replying, âNay, merely a wandererâa slave to no Lord but God.â ("No, merely a wanderer, a slave to no man but God.")
George had never met such a person in his life; someone so free and aloof. In his village everyone played a crucial role in the daily toil, everyone with a purpose. The thought of doing anything but filled George with curiosity, âPray tell, how dost thou earn thy bread and keep?â ("Tell me, how do you afford food and shelter?")
Leaning in closer until they were shoulder to shoulder, the lad had a glint in his eye as he held up his hand and gave his fingers a wriggle, âNimble fingers.â
George nearly choked on his bread at such a bold confession. Was he truly breaking bread and sharing ale with a thief? The very sort of person his mother had warned him about upon the commencement of his journey?Â
As though sensing the unease his admission had brought, the lad clapped George upon the back, âPeace, goodman. I steal not from your kind. Nay, I take from the lordsâthe very men who forged this wretched order and condemned the likes of us to a life of misery and servitude. With this University, Cambridge is rife with wealthy men whose pockets hang loose.â ("Relax, man. I don't steal from your kind. No, I take from the lords, the men who created this society and doomed our kind to lives of work and servantry. With this new university, Cambridge is full of wealthy men who are easy to pickpocket.")
Coughing, George lifted his cup of ale to his lips to clear his lungs from the shock.Â
To maintain the peace, the thief offered out his hand like an olive branch, âThey call me Lando, of the town of Bristol.â ("I am Lando, from Bristol.")
George set his cup down and clasped the offered hand, âGeorge, from Lynn.â
âWell met, George of Lynn.â Lando grinned with a boyish smile that met his eyes. ("Nice to meet you, George from Lynn.")
The lute-player entertained the crowd whilst George ate his supper; meat being such a rarity that he feasted heartily, feeling like a king. His fingers were coated in fat by the time he sucked the bones clean and he licked them off one by one, satisfied.
âSay, how hath thy journey been since departing from Lynn?â asked Lando with his elbows atop the wood table and his metal cup clutched in both hands. ("Tell me, how has your journey been since leaving Lynn?")
âHas been fair,â George answered whilst he reached for his own cup to rinse down the tough pork, âI slept upon straw last night in some small village to save coin. But thankfully, I was not disrupted.â ("It's been fine. I slept on straw last night in some village so I wouldn't have to pay for an inn. Thankfully, I was not bothered.")
âNay, nay, nay,â Lando pushed himself back from the table to sit up straighter, addressing his new friend seriously, âSleep not in the open air! Find a Monastery where they are required by God to feed and house weary travelers. They may turn away idle chatter, save for that of the Bible, but they will offer food and a bed without charge.â ("No, no, no. Don't sleep outside! Find a Monastery where they are required by God to give weary travelers food and shelter. They won't appreciate casual chatter unless you talk about the bible, but they will offer food and a bed for free.")
George raised his eyebrows, âA Monastery? I dare not impose upon the men of God.â ("A Monastery? I don't want to bother the men of God.")
âNay, it is their duty,â Lando assured him, âThey are pleased to be of service and to lend the charity of the Lord unto His people. I have lodged with them many a time in my wanderings.â ("No, it is their job. They are happy to help the Lord's people. I have stayed with them many times on my journeys.")
George pondered this for a moment and, knowing the lightness of his satchel and the heavy fee for another nights stay at an inn, he relented in taking up his new friend on his suggestion. The promise of safety and food and a bed while also offering an opportunity to connect with God and His servants was not easily refused.Â
The newly acquainted shared their table and spoke of their travels well into the evening, even as the other travelers took to the sleeping chamber and the lute-player's tune dwindled to silence. Lando, ever generous with his coin, beckoned the alewife time and again, bidding her to bring forth more cups of ale for them to share. George, though curious, held his tongue and dared not ask how a man of equal means to himself had come by such coinâhe reckoned he already knew the answer.
Lando sat with his leather boots kicked up upon the wooden table, eased into the worn back of his chair with his cup nursed in hand. He spoke to George about his adventuresâhis journeys into many of towns and cities that England had to offer, and all the interesting folk he hadst stumbled across. George soon came to see that Lando had lived many lifetimes in his two and twenty years. Born to a family of peasants not unlike Georgeâs own, Lando had instead grown up beneath the rule of a cruel and unrelenting Lord, where the folk were sworn to their land and left with naught to provide for themselves.
He had fled at but fifteen years of age, leaving his family behind, and took to the streets to carve a life of his own merit. Modest thievery and the kindness of strangers kept him afloat, and Lando found his calling in aiding those who, like his family, did suffer. He stole for the greater goodâto take from the wealthy and give unto the poorâseeking a world where men did divide their coin rather than hoard it. In the year past, Lando had even taken part in the infamous Peasantsâ Revolt of 1381, when the working folk rose up and stormed the streets of London to cry for the end of unjust taxes, the abolishment of serfdom, and the redistribution of the Churchâs riches. He had stood, too, amongst the crowd that came face to face with King Richard himself, who had come to quell the unrest.
George listened to Landoâs tales with wonder in his eyes and a blossoming of hope in his chest. He had been lucky to have been born unto a family under Lord Hamiltonâs name where life had been kind and just, but he could see the fractures in his reality as Lando went on. Was his life truly as fair as he had assumed it to be? Perchance his choice to journey unto London had been rightly made.
The young men retired to bed together, treading quietly over the floorboards into the communal bedroom filled with their fellow wayfarers, trying not to let the effects of their plentiful ale haze their balance in the darkness. Mattresses of straw and feathers were set across the floor around the central hearth, each left bare without linens, a precaution to limit the spread of bedbugs. Lando and George removed their outerwear and boots and shared a vacant corner of the room, nestled in near a man who snored like thunder.Â
At first light, George rose with the sun, well-rested and peaceful. Beside him, Lando stirred, stretching so far he struck George's jaw with an elbow, muttering an apology with his voice slurred with lingering sleep. Around them, the communal chamber was already stirring; several travelers had gathered at the wash basins to cleanse themselves for the journey ahead. George rose at his own pace, exchanging easy words with Lando as they donned their outer garments and freshened themselves amid the thinning crowd.
They broke their fast with a small serving of bread and cheese in the common room and George observed in quiet astonishment as Lando drifted behind a distracted nobleman seated nearby and discreetly slipped the manâs coin-satchel from his belt without breaking stride. The act was so easy, so practiced, that it nearly seemed an art. Returning to the table, Lando sat with a grin and without a word split the silver coins evenly between them, offering George his share as though it were a parting token.
He hesitated to take it but Lando insisted, curling his fingers around the coins and pushing it towards his chest, âTo start thy life in London.â ("To start your life in London.")
George couldnât bring himself to refuse.
They embraced in parting, the kind of farewell shared by those who had, in only a night, become kindred spirits. George offered to take Lando with him, to ride together into London, but the young rogue only shook his head, âIf God wills it, weâll meet again,â he said simply. And it wasnât in Georgeâs heart to doubt Godâs will. ("If it's in God's plan, we will meet again.")
With ten extra pence tucked into his satchelâcourtesy of Landoâs so-called generosityâhe retrieved his steed from the stables, mounted, and turned southward once more. Cambridge faded behind him with the promise of all that London had to offer on the horizon.
Four days after leaving the outskirts of Lynn, George arrived at the Walls of London. The gatehouseâBishopsgateâupon which he approached from the northward paths was loosely guarded by knights but they bade George no trouble upon his arrival. Instead, they stepped aside and permitted him to canter through the large oak doors that welcomed him into the infamous London.Â
After having spent the night in a Monastery in a village halfway between Cambridge and London, George reached his destination well fed and well rested and still with a comfortable amount of coin in his satchel. The springtime sun warmed the streets as he steered his steed through the winding dirt and stone paths between multi-storeyed homes and intricately carved buildings. George had been into the heart of Lynn on occasion for trade, and so was no stranger to the bustle of a populous townâbut nothing he had known could compare to the splendour of the illustrious London.
Inhabitants bustled to and fro along the streetsâpeasants and noblemen alikeâsome leading livestock or carrying goods or engaged in conversation with fellow kin. The city rang with noise, far livelier than Lynn had ever seemed, and George found himself struck by the feeling that London bore a true heart, the very soul of England. The spire of St. Paulâs rose high above the rooftops, drawing him toward the cityâs centre where the jagged lanes gave way to the expanse of the main square. There, merchants called out from their stalls, tempting him with artisan craft or fresh produce, but he rode on, too awestruck by the towering architecture and the astonishing truth that he had, at last, arrived.
As much as George longed to gawk at the marvels around him, he had come to London with a purpose; and time was money. He dismounted beneath the shade of a great oak at the edge of the square, tying his steed to one of its stout branches. Back on solid ground, he cast his eyes over the bustling crowds of the city, familiarizing himself with his new reality, as he straightened his cloak and retied his belt and the laces of his weathered leather boots. Catching his reflection in a polished glass window of the opulent St. Paulâs, he ran a hand through his wind-tossed hair in an effort to look somewhat presentable after the long journey behind him.
It was known that George had not been blessed to have been born unto a family of wealth or trade and, so, in order to achieve an apprenticeship, he would either have to pay a generous sum to a master of said trade or, more realistically, be incredibly convincing at selling himself as an apprentice. George knew himself to be a diligent worker at heart, but as a common peasant, he was well aware that earning the favour of a man of higher station would be no simple task. It was to be a long day ahead.Â
Donning his best tunic and cloak, George walked his steed through the streets of London to begin his task of finding himself an apprenticeship. He approached the first guildhall: that of the chandlersâcandlemakers, an impressively important trade as the men who provided light to all of England. He knocked upon the wood door, politely greeted the servant who answered, and requested to speak with the master of the guild.Â
When the well-dressed gentleman met him at the door, George straightened up formally and offered him a smile, âHail, good sir. I am George, son of Stephen, of the town of Lynn. I come humbly to request the honour of an apprenticeship at thy fine shop. I possess no coin, butââ ("Hello, sir. I am George, son of Stephen, from the town of Lynn. I am here to politely ask if you are able to offer me an apprenticeship in your fine shop. I have no money butâ")
He got no further. The door was shut in his face before the sentence left his lips.
Startled, George blinked at the wood now sealed before him and took a small step back, uncertain whether to knock again or turn away entirely. Not wanting to be a pest, he decided on the latter. There were plenty more guilds to pitch to, after all. This was London! The city of opportunity.Â
With a click of his tongue, he guided his horse back to the street and they continued on their way. Soon, they stumbled upon the Grocerâs guild hall; the lavish building housing those who were in charge of the importing and trading of spices from the continent. As he had done previously, George knocked upon the door, asked to speak with the guild master, and barely got his introduction from his lips before the door was yet again shut in his face.Â
He had known it would be difficult to earn an apprenticeship without coin, but the sheer inhumility of those he had encountered thus far left him more rattled than he cared to admit. He had journeyed so far and his spirits were already starting to sink.
And still, he went on. He tried the mercers, the drapers, the butchers, the blacksmiths, the goldsmiths, the saltiers, and even the bakers and the clothworkers. Every guild master replied to him like the man before: with a refusal and a firm shutting of their door.Â
The sun was beginning to set, and George had time to visit one last guildhall before he would need to find an inn for the night. His steed was growing tired as he guided it by the reins through the cobbled streets, its hooves clinking against the stone and earth in a solemn rhythm behind him, as if the beast could feel the desperation and wallowing of his master. George gave his horse another encouraging tug as he approached the facade of the final guildhall for the evening: the carpenters.Â
The hall was not quite as elaborate as many of the others George had visited and, instead, it almost blended right into the many other standard buildings that made up London. It stood within a modest garden surrounded by four other cottage tenements and George crossed the path beneath the shade of the buildings and the foliage that grew within the courtyard. It felt as though he had stepped outside of London for a moment as the noise of the lively city gave way to the serenity of the garden and the faint chirping of birds from the treesâ budding branches. George peered up towards the sky that peeked between the thin canopy of trees, finding solace in the momentary shade and calm.Â
He tied his horse to one of the trunks and it let out a tired snort and a stomp of its hoof against the earth. George patted its side and then made his way up to the front doors of the guildhall and, with a defeated sigh, he raised his fist and knocked upon the wood. As he had countless times that day, he greeted the servant and requested an audience with the master of the guild, then waited patiently upon the stoop.
An older gentleman of no more than five and forty years appeared in the doorway, his dark hair and beard peppered with white of seasalt and his deep set eyes housed a hue of seafoam green. His garments were not that of a nobleman but certainly more tidy than that of Georgeâs class, donning crisp edges of fabric and colourful sleeves, even with the dusting of wood shavings that littered the front of his tunic. He was a broad gentleman but there was a sense of warmth about him that George caught onto immediately, something almost paternal that set him apart from the other guild masters with which he had spoken to that day.Â
As always, George straightened up and offered a respectful smile and recited his pitch with practiced ease, âHail, good sir. I am George, son of Stephen, of the town of Lynn. I come humbly to request the honour of an apprenticeship at thy fine shop. I possess no coin, but I offer honest labour, willing hands, and a quick mind in return for thy tutelage.â ("Hello, sir. I am George, son of Stephen, from the town of Lynn. I am here to politely ask if you are able to offer me an apprenticeship in your fine shop. I have no money but I offer good work, eager hands, and intelligence in return for your guidance.")
âFrom Lynn? My, quite the journey, lad,â the man replied, his voice low and gravelly. ("From Lynn? My, that's quite far, boy.")
âFour days, sir,â George nodded once, almost as if in a brief bow, âI have heard naught but praise of London, and I carry dreams far greater than Norfolk can hold.â ("Four days, sir. I have heard nothing but good things about London and I have dreams bigger than what Norfolk can offer me.")
âAye,â the guild master acknowledged before asking with measured curiosity, âAnd what werest thou doing in Lynn, lad?â ("I see. And what were you doing in Lynn?")
âWorking the land, sir. My father is a farmer, as was his father before him,â George said plainly, âBut I seek to learn a craftâto build a life by my own hands in a city that might make use of them.â ("Farming, sir. My father is a farmer as was his father before him. But I want to learn a trade so I can build a life for myself with my own hands in a city that would find me useful.")
âAnd thy dream to join me and my fellow carpenters, George?â ("And your dream is to join me as a carpenter, George?")
âIn all honesty, good sir, I seek an apprenticeship of any kind. I would be most indebted were you to grant me the means to a life and an honest trade in this fair city.â ("To me honest, sir, I want an apprenticeship of any kind. I would be indebted to you if you would offer me an income and training in this fair city.")
The man chuckled, the sound deep from within his chest, and when he smiled at Georgeâs words, there was a glint of something kind in his eye, âYour honesty is admirable. God hath surely blessed thee.â ("Your honesty is admirable. God has blessed you with it.")
âI have naught but truth and my dedication to offer thee, sir.â George insisted, his voice thick with resolve, as though he might drop to his knees in plea, âBut I swear upon God HimselfâI shall bring no strife to thy door. I would give my very soul to thy guild and to thy craft.â ("I have nothing but truth and dedication to offer you, sir. But I swear to God, I will bring no annoyances to your household. I will give my soul to your guild and your trade.")
âThou art a brave man and thy hast persuaded me, lad. I shall accept thee into my guild as an apprentice, provided thou apply thyself earnestly and conduct thyself with humility, dignity, and honour under my roof.â ("You are a brave man and you have persuaded me, boy. I will accept you into my guild as an apprentice, only if you apply yourself to the work and if you show humility, dignity, and honour in my house.")
For a moment, George could scarcely believe what he was hearing. Could it truly have been that easy? Had his day of toiling through the streets of London finally paid off in the eleventh hour? The kind gentleman before himânow his masterâwore the face of a man to be trusted, and George moved swiftly to bow.
âThank thee, sir. God bless thee, sir,â he said, with all the gratitude he could muster. ("Thank you, sir. God bless you, sir.")
âCome in now, out of the dusk. I will urge a servant to tend to thy steed.â his master instructed and ushered him inside. ("Come in, out of the dark. I will have a servant take care of your horse.")
Stepping over the threshold into the entry room, George was captivated by the timber framed interior that surrounded him and the wood floors beneath his leather bootsâregal underfoot compared to the packed earth and rushes he had always known back home. A large brick framed hearth took up a majority of the far wall and chairs draped with furs and wool were positioned in front of it. Directly across from the door was a narrow wooden staircaseâa feature George had never before seen in a home beforeâand he tried to peer up the staircaseâs sharp bend as it vanished into the upper floor before turning to follow the gentleman onwards.Â
They crossed the reception room and passed beneath the rise of the staircase, where a low passageway opened into a smaller sitting room. A writing desk sat beneath a narrow windowâlikely the master's officeâand George eyed the stacks of parchment and bound books along the other surfaces. George followed him onwards, into a cluttered cooking room and then right through the adjacent door that led them into the dining room. There, a group of people were gathered around a central table, their faces lit by candlelight and the glow of a crackling hearth. Ten heads lifted from their meals to watch him enter.
With a hand on Georgeâs shoulder as if he were showing off a prize pig, his master introduced him, âMay I introduce my newest apprentice: George of Lynn.â
For a moment, George was more struck by the fact that they dined at a proper tableâsomething he had never known in his village, where families took their meals around the hearth, balancing them in their laps. At once, he urged himself back to his new reality as his master gave him a friendly nudge forward to find a spot at one of the benches at the table.
On the side where George sat, there were three other young men, no older than he, dressed in humble garments much like his own and they gave him courteous nods of greeting, though none spoke a word. At the far end of their line sat a young lad and lass, likely the master's youngest children, while, on the opposite side of the table, the five eldest children were seated in what appeared to be the order of their years, with the eldest taking the place nearest the head of the table, where their father was sure to sit.
âFather,â said the eldest of the lads, likely a few years Georgeâs elder, âI knew not we were in want of another apprentice.â ("Father, I didn't know we wanted another apprentice.")
âWe were not,â replied the master, settling himself at the head of the board, âYet this young man moved me well, with good speech and solemn vow of industry.â ("We were not, but this young man convinced me with good words and a promise of hard work.")
The second son, seated close beside his brother, cast George a dubious glance but addressed his father as well, âWillst thou take him without fee, then? For nothing?â ("Will you take him without payment? For nothing?")
âPray thee, judge not, son,â the gentleman warned, his voice steady but firm, âFor as long as I draw breath, this house and this shop shall be ruled by mine own hand.â ("Please, don't judge, son. For as long as I am alive, this house and this shop will follow my rules.")
George shifted uncomfortably upon the far end of the bench, where he sat distanced from his master, urging himself to focus on the gentleness of the man, rather than the suspicious gazes of his heirs.Â
âI am indebted to thy familyâs kindness, sir,â spoke George at last, âI will do my best to not burden thee.â ("I am grateful for your family's kindness, sir. I will do my best to not be a burden.")
âI have utmost faith in thee, young George,â the master smiled. ("I trust you, young George.")
He then took it upon himself to make proper introductions. The table, though crowded, bore warmth in its company. Three apprenticesâAlexander, Andrea, and Oliverâwere named as Georgeâs new companions, both in labour and in lodging. With a touch of pride in his voice, the master spoke of his own brood: seven children in all, a blessing in these times when many did not survive beyond infancy. He did not shy from sharing that the birth of his youngest had cost him his beloved wife, yet his words held no bitterness. The child, merely eleven, with braids woven like a crown upon her head, was spoken of as a jewel most dearâso precious that none could place blame upon her for the sorrow that marked her birth.
The master went on to name each of his children in turn, and George did his best to mark their names and ages in his memory as they came. The two eldest sons, those who had voiced their misgivings towards his arrival, regarded him in silence, their stares not unkind, but rather, measuring. Yet it was the third born, a daughterâjust a year shy of Georgeâs own ageâwho caught his eye. She had said not a word since his arrival, but there was a gentle sureness in her that drew him, and when her gaze met his, he felt the air shift near imperceptibly, as though the room had grown warmer for it.
Her hair was as golden as the morning sun, plaited into two long braids that were folded upward and fastened just above her ears with white ribbons, framing her porcelain face with an air of quiet grace. Freckles dotted her nose and the apples of her cheeks like constellations and the warmth of her hair was contrasted by the striking blue of her eyes like winterâs first frost, gazing upon him with an intensity that rose shivers along his arms. Norfolk had many fair ladies but never before had he seen a woman so beautiful, so graceful, as though she had been shaped by the very hand of God, made not merely for the world, but for him and him alone.
The gorgeous Guinevere. A name fit for a queen.
George was torn from his reverie by the voice of his master, who bade his second daughter fetch a bowl of stew for their newly arrived guest. When it was set before him, he offered the girl a grateful nod and a soft word of thanks. Yet when his eyes sought the eldest daughter once more, he found her gaze lowered, her bashful smile now turned modestly to her own bowl. He bowed his head himself and smothered his rouged cheeks behind a spoon of his meal.Â
George was settled into his new home quite swiftly, and though the two eldest sons had shown some wariness at first, he soon found his place with comfort among the household. The fourth storey of the home was where the four apprentices slept, each upon a single bed of straw and feather, clad in simple linen and with modest pillows. The bed assigned to George lay in the far corner beside a small dormer window that gave view to the bustling London street below. As the days passed and the air grew warmer, he would often unfasten the shutters to draw in a breeze and ease the closeness of the attic chamber.
He got on well with the other apprentices with whom he was to share much of his waking and sleeping hours. Oliver and Andrea were but seventeen and sixteen years of age, respectively, and their families had paid for their apprenticeships, as was common for boys of reasonable fortune. Their youth had allowed them to form a bond in the year past under their master's roof together, and their impish antics did sometimes keep George from his rest after nightfall.
Alexander, the third apprentice, was nearer to Georgeâs own age at four and twenty and his late entry into apprenticeship came from his seeking of a new beginning after his young wife had perished in childbed when they were but twenty, the babe lost with her. The sorrow of losing both his beloved and their firstborn had him quitting their small town to begin anew in London. George was fond of Alexander and his humility and brotherhood he had shown him since his arrival and they confided in each other often.Â
The apprenticeship itself pleased George greatly. He found much worth in labouring with his hands in the carpenterâs shop, learning from the master how to wield the tools and fashion goods of needful use for the people of London. On slower days, the master would teach his apprentices techniques and helpful mathematics that helped in their trade through hands-on application. When not labouring beside the master in the shopfront or tending to folk who came to purchase wares, the apprentices were set to their tasks in the loft above, toiling steadfastly on honing their craft.Â
George knew well that his place in the apprenticeship was granted by the grace of God, and thus he did not dare idle; often was he the last of his fellows to depart the workshop, retiring to his bed well after the sun had set. One particular evening, George had chosen the shop over dinner, toiling until the moon blessed the sky. The crowded house soon grew quiet as its inhabitants retired to their chambers for the night and George was left entirely to his lonesome in the shop. His hands were rough from working the timber and wielding his tools, wood shavings scattered over the tabletop and his lap as he sat atop a stool at the workbench, focus narrowed on the small forming shape in hand in the flickering candlelight.Â
Having taken no supper, he soon grew weary and knew he ought to put an end to his toil until daybreak. George put away his tools and his project and swept the workbench and the floor free of scraps and shavings, disposing of them in the bucket in the corner to be later used for kindling. Having blown out the candles, he left but one alight in its candelabrum to carry through the darkened homestead.
The floorboards groaned beneath his feet as he stole downstairs in search of a bit of bread and cheese before he would take to his bed. In his careful hand, the candlelight flicked across the walls, dancing with the moonlight that filled the reception room from the large courtyard window at the base of the stairs. Just as George turned to cross the chamber toward the cookroom, his gaze was drawn to a figure bathed in candlelight within the modest office set just off the hall.
Guinevere was nestled upon a fur-draped chair in the corner of the chamber, surrounded by melting candles and stacks of parchment, a leather-bound book held in hand from which she read most intently. The skirt of her kirtle flowed about her feet, the plainness of the garment lending her an elevated elegance in the golden glow of the flame. The dark blue dye of the cloth near shimmered like royal purple, and George thought she might well have passed for a lady of King Richardâs own court. Never had he seen someone as effortlessly graceful as his masterâs eldest daughter, never had someone caused his heart to race just so.Â
She looked up from her pages upon hearing his cautious approach across the creaking floorboards and she smiled at the sight of him, lowering her book to her lap.Â
âGood evening, George,â she greeted in a voice as smooth as satin. George would never tire of it, âIs all well with thee?â ("Good evening, George. Is everything okay?")
He stopped in the opening to the study to share in her polite greeting, âGood evening, Miss Guinevere. I hath not expected thee. I had stayed late at my labours and came now in search of a morsel before I take to my chamber for the night.â ("Good evening, Miss Guinevere. I was not expecting you here. I had stayed up late working and came downstairs for something to eat before I go to bed.")
âAye, I had thought as much. We all missed thee at supper.â ("Yes, I had thought so. We all missed you at dinner.")
George leaned against the doorway, candelabrum still held in one hand and a fond smile on his face, âThou flatter me, Miss Guinevere.â ("You flatter me, Miss Guinevere.")
âTis the truth.â ("It is the truth.")
There was a moment of silence between them as they simply stared at each other in the dim candlelight. George took in the sight of her in her comfortable kirtle and stockinged feet as she relaxed in the comfort of her home after dark, her feminine hands resting delicately on the book in her lap.Â
Not wanting to part quite yet, George inquired, âWhat art thou reading?â ("What are you reading?")
Guinevere gently tapped the cover of the book, âI read last monthâs ledger, that I might ensure Fatherâs business runneth smoothly.â ("I am reading last month's ledger so I can make sure father's business is running smoothly.")
George had learned, in the weeks since his apprenticeship began, that Guinevereâbeing the eldest daughter and in the aftermath of their motherâs passingâserved as the bookkeeper for the masterâs trade. She kept the ledgers, overseeing the accuracy of orders placed by the cityfolk, the payments received, and the taxes duly paid. Though her bearing was gentle and graceful, she was a resolute and steadfast steward of the accounts, standing firm for her father against customers and tax collectors alike. Behind the scenes, she also worked closely with the wives of other guildmasters to ensure their shared affairs proceeded as they must.
âFor that, I admire thee,â George stated. ("I admire you for that.")
âI admire thee for bearing the assiduity of my father day by day.â ("I admire you for dealing with the perfectionism of my father every day.")
They shared soft laughter at her discreet and playful dig at the stubborn work ethic of her father.Â
George merely shook his head fondly, âThy father is a man of great worth, and I hath learned much from him.â ("Your father is a very skilled man and I have learned a lot from him.")
Guinevere leaned back in her chair comfortably, âAye, perhaps âtis not long before thou wilt aid me with the ledgers?â ("Yes, perhaps it's not long until you will help me with the ledgers?")
âNay, thou hast the blessing of literacy.â ("No, you actually are lucky enough to be literate.")
It was a rare gift to read, granted only to the wealthiest who could afford tutors or the halls of university. Most folkâs labours needed no learning, and thus, reading was often a pastime for those with leisure and money. Since his coming to London, George perceived that his master held education in high regard for his children and, indeed, for any whom he might aid. They were no noble house, yet the gain from their prosperous carpentry trade granted them some added comforts and opportunities beyond most common folk.
Guinevereâs eyes softened at Georgeâs simple reply, and she offered graciously, âPerchance I might tutor thee?â ("Maybe I can tutor you?")
âTo read? Latin?â
âSome,â she shrugged, âmainly ledgers, so that when thou becomest a master in thine own right, thou mightst structure well thy business.â ("Some Latin, mainly ledgers, so when you have a business of your own, you will be able to run it smoothly.")
Georgeâs teeth sunk into his bottom lip as if to smother his flattered grin, âThy predict my mastery?â ("You think I'm going to be a master?")
âNo other apprentice doth skip supper to carve.â Guinevere replied with a knowing smile. ("None of our other apprentices skip dinner to work.")
âVery well,â George relented, unable to turn down an opportunity for more time with his masterâs beautiful daughter, âI graciously accept thine offer of tutelage.â ("Very well, I will happily accept your offer to tutor me.")
ââTis wonderful. I look most forward to it. Might we read together after supper most nights? When the chores are done and the household hath taken to bed, that we be not disturbed?â ("That's wonderful, I am looking forward to it. Maybe we can read together after supper most nights? When chores are done and the family has gone to bed so they won't disturb us?")
âAye, after supper it shall be,â George agreed. ("Yes, after supper sounds great.")
Guinevereâs lips held the softest of smiles; something that seemed as effortless as breath to her. Everything she did appeared so graceful, so righteous, that George near felt the need to kneel and bow before her.Â
They lingered in a quiet, gentle gaze until at last she spoke, âI dare not keep thee from thy bread and cheese.â ("I don't want to keep you from your snack.")
George blinked himself back to the present, almost forgetting why he had come downstairs in the first place, and he stepped away from where he leaned against the wall. He was reluctant to part, for he had found great joy in her company and their discourse, yet he would not overstay his welcome. With a tender smile, he offered, âI thank thee, Miss Guinevere. God keep thee.â ("Thank you, Miss Guinevere. Be well.")
âGod bless thee, George.â ("God bless you, George.")
Since their moonlit discourse in the study, George and Guinevere had grown nearer still. Though he kept steadfast to his duties as an apprentice throughout the daylight hours, upon sundownâonce supper had been takenâhe would often spend his evenings with her in the reception chamber by the hearth with parchment, open ledgers, and inked quills lay scattered before them.
At first, he felt himself a fool, unable to make sense of the symbols and markings she read with such ease. Yet she bore great patience and did not hurry him, guiding him gently through each letter until they became known to him as well as the tools in the workshop. Their shared evenings became most dear to him; not solely for the broadening of his knowledge, but for the quiet ease it brought after a dayâs hard toil in the shop. Her presence soothed him in ways he could scarcely put into words, and on certain nights, they spoke at length rather than studied, their discourse flowing as freely as the fire crackled in the hearth.
George spoke of his youth and what it meant to be born unto a family of peasants, offering the city-dwelling maiden a glimpse into the labours of the farming life. In turn, Guinevere shared of her motherâs passing and the burdens she bore as the woman of the house, and what excitement youth in London entailed. They found common ground in the sorrow of lost siblingsâtaken by the cruel fate of infant death, so frequent in their world that neither wept at the telling, though their hearts lay heavy. Yet laughter too was shared over favoured jests and good memories from local festivals. One night in particular, their merriment in shared tales grew so full that their laughter stirred the master from his chamber above, and he came down from his chamber and bid them both to bed at once.
Over the weeks, George found himself engraving his wood blocks with letterforms and words, employing his carpentry tools to etch decorative symbols and shapes into the surface. He practiced what Guinevere had taught him whenever he could, tying in literacy with his trade. Yet he would not take from her without offering payment, no matter how gracious she was in giving of her time and knowledge for no fee. Instead, he repaid her with quaint carvings and figurines fashioned in the shop, and she was ever honoured to receive them. Those, too, did grow more intricate as time wore on; from a modest box wherein she might keep her hair ribbons, to a simple comb for her hair, to a simple carved bird with its wings tucked at its side and its beak turned towards the sky.
One day, as he passed by the daughtersâ chamber on the second floor of the homestead, he saw the door set slightly ajar, and within, there upon the window ledge beside Guinevereâs bed were his gifts, set out proudly in the sunlight for display.
Another Sunday drew near and, as was their custom, the family took their respite from labour for a day of prayer and rest. The apprentices accompanied the family to the local church a few streets over, trailing behind them respectfully in the pleasant summer sun. George could not deny that Guinevere looked absolutely ravishing in her Sunday best, the rich blue dye of her kirtle standing out against her pale skin and over modest linen shirt like ink upon fresh parchment. Walking behind her alongside his fellowmen, George found himself drawn to her every step as she strolled with the hands of her two youngest siblings in hers, the skirt swishing around her legs and caressing the cobblestones beneath her leather boots. George almost felt inferior in his faded blue tunic, frayed at the edges and having faced many a season on his back.Â
During mass, George was trapped between Guinevere and Alexander in the pew, seated so close in the cramped church that their thighs did touch. As always, Guinevere lifted her voice in hymn with the choir, singing with such grace that it seemed the very angels had lent her their tongues. On his other side, Alexander joined the song as wellâthough his voice, God love him, was ever out of tune but he was a man of faith and sang proudly to the hymns as if willing his voice to reach Heaven.
George kept his eyes dutifully upon the altar, though it was no small task with Guinevereâs voice floating beside him like incense in the airâsweet, clear, and wholly distracting, contrasted almost in jest by the unflattering notes of Alexander. He knew the Lord called for humility and so he prayedâfirst for forgiveness for the errant thoughts that stirred whenever he sat so near to Guinevere, and then, perhaps more earnestly, for strength not to grin every time Alexander tried to hit a note and missed tragically. He bit his cheek and feigned focus on the Gospel.Â
The church bells tolled, guiding the faithful from the quaint stone chapel, its people spilling out into the streets beneath the late-morning sun. It was a blessed relief to take a breath of fresh air after so long within the cramped confines of the nave and on such a beautiful day, most would gladly prefer to pass their hours beneath the open sky. As the family gathered upon the cobbled streets to speak of the sermon and ponder the dayâs leisure, George lingered near to Guinevere within their familiar cluster.
He craved for more of her company outside of their nightly lessons and his heart raced in his breast with the need to have her for a moment to himself, desperate to find an escape from the presence of the entire family. Knowing he had no right to speak up against the will of the master of the house, his protest could only be given by a gentle touch of his finger against Guinevereâs wrist. She glanced at him with the limited space between them in their cramped cluster and their eyes met knowingly, a thousand words shared in but a glance.Â
Guinevere turned back to their gathering and spoke above her bickering siblings, âFather, might George and I take a turn through the square to behold the vendors before we return home?â ("Father, can George and I go for a walk through the square to look at the vendors before we go home?")
The master cast but a brief glance upon the pair, his attention divided between all seven of his children at once, and he granted them permission of leave with a wave of his hand and a passive, âAye, if ye must.â ("Yes, if you must.")
George scarcely had a moment to realize Guinevere had taken his hand before they were hastening down the street together, far from the church steps, leaving the family well behind. Once they had disappeared from view, they slowed to a leisurely stroll and Guinevere slipped her hand from his, desiring not for the townâs gossip to be laid upon them. They fell in step together as they strolled aimlessly through the London streets which were far more hushed upon a Sunday than on days of toil.
âI am sorry if I hath torn thee from thy day with thy kin,â George said gently. ("I'm sorry if I took you away from your day with your family.")
Guinevere simply scoffed out a lighthearted breath, âNay, I see no need to squander yet another Lordâs day amidst such tiresome company.â ("It's fine, I don't want to waste another Sunday with their exhausting company.")
âThou holdest me to higher standing, Miss Guinevere?â George teased. ("You like me better, Miss Guinevere?")
âCertainly, sire,â she said right back and slid her hand into the crook of his arm as if she had been doing so all her life, âThy company is most blessed.â ("Certainly, sir. Your company is most lovely.")
George stole a glance at her, letting her words and her playful honesty settle between them.Â
They walked arm in arm awhile longer until they came unto the Wall of London at Aldgate, where they paused upon the threshold, gazing forth across the rolling green hills of Englandâs fair and fertile lands beyond. They had not been permitted to venture forth beyond the city walls, yet the call of privacy and a sweet summerâs walk drew them out, and they strode in step together as they departed the bounds of the city.Â
The quiet of the outskirts of the city walls were a welcome change from the hustle and bustle that was ever present on the London streets within. Conversation flowed between them with the ease and warmth of their evening lessons, now exchanged as they walked side by side along the earthen paths. The air smelled of summer and its rich soil and flushing foliage, carrying with it birdsong and the hum of insects.Â
Along the bank of the Thames, a little ways off from the Tower of London, a quiet collection of willow trees lured them closer into the shade of their branches. In respite from the summerâs sun, George and Guinevere took rest upon the grassy brink beside the river, sheltered beneath the cool shade of ancient trees and, together they watched the waterâs current, swift and sure, haste in its course toward the sea. As George sat upon the grass, he watched as Guinevere hoisted up the hem of her kirtle to kick off her boots so she could wade, barefoot, into the shallow rocky edge of the river.
She appeared to him as Eve in Eden, fashioned by the hand of God and in perfect harmony with the green splendour of the earth. George lay reclined upon the riverbank, propped upon his elbows, a soft smile playing on his lips as he watched her crouch low to trail her fingers through the rushing waters, the current dancing around her hand like it, too, was drawn to her grace. Her golden hair fell around her shoulders and in waves down her back, free from her usual tidy braids and plaiting, and George craved to run his fingers through it to know if it felt as soft as it looked.Â
When Guinevere did receive her fix of the cool stream, she carried her boots back up the riverbank and joined George upon the grass. She tucked her legs beneath her and rested back upon one hand, appreciating the serenity of the quiet summer afternoon as the warm breeze flitted through the ends of her hair. George tried not to stare at her beauty and, instead, he, too, kept his eyes focused forward on the impressive Thames that rushed past them.
âFather is seeking a suitor for me,â Guinevere said plainly, suddenly, breaking their calm. ("Father is looking for a husband for me.")
Something unkind stirred in Georgeâs breast, and he kept his gaze fixed upon the river, unwilling to let her glimpse the wound her words had struck upon his heart.
âHast thou heard?â she asked, casting a glance in his direction, âI had not thought he would see me wed to some gentleman, not whilst I remain his bookkeeper. Yet perhaps, once my eldest brother taketh the shop, his wife shall be made to keep the ledgers and I shall be left with nothing.â ("Have you heard? I thought he wouldn't marry me off to some gentleman, not while I'm his bookkeeper. But I guess my eldest brother will be taking over the shop and then his wife will be in charge of the ledgers and I will be left with nothing.")
âNay, speak not of such woes,â George tutted, at last turning his gaze upon her. âThou hast intelligence beyond measureâthy worth is not bound to ledger nor shop, thou need not tether thyself thereto to prove it.â ("No, don't talk like that. You have so much intelligence. Your worth is not tied to the ledgers or the shop and you don't need to be stuck with them to prove it.")
Guinevere pursed her lips in thought as she gazed out upon the river as if letting his words soak through her like water, her expression steady but her eyes holding a hint of unease. She did not quite acknowledge his sentiment and, instead, replied with a plain, âFather hath enough coin to betroth me to a nobleman. âTis a fine prospect for the shop, to bind us to a name of strength and standing.â ("Father has enough success to marry me off to a nobleman. It is a great idea for the shop as it will bind us to a name of strength and title.")
âA nobleman,â George echoed.
She glanced back upon him, âThe few suitors I have met thus far hath been dreadful bores.â ("The few men I have met so far have been so boring.")
The heaviness of her initial confession lifted with that statement and Georgeâs lips pricked up at the corners into an amused smile. Squinting in the shaded sun as he glanced up at her lounging beside where he lay, he spoke, âAye?â ("Yeah?")
âThe suitors have not worked a day honest in their lives, nor held labour in any proper trade. They scarcely can keep a conversationânothing upon their tongues but talk of coin and standingâand lend no ear to what I might wish to say.â she insisted, turning her body so he could lounge herself upon her stomach with a gentle sigh, settling upon her forearms beside him on the grass until their eyes met, level and unhurried in the hush of summer. Finally, she added softly, âNot like thee.â ("The men have not worked a day in their lives or have had any proper job. They can barely keep a conversation unless it is about money or titles and they don't care to listen to what I have to say. Not like you.")
George smiled faintly at her addition, watching the way her words were formed by her pinkened lips, before he replied honestly, âI do take thy words with much delight, Miss Guinevere.â ("Your kind words make me happy, Miss Guinevere.")
Her slender fingers played with the blades of grass beneath her, plucking strands from the grasp of the Earth to caress them soft and tender. She appeared younger in that moment, bathed in the shade of the willow tree and the fractured haze of sunlight that slipped through, her boots cast aside and her stockinged feet swaying to and fro in the breeze. George desired to never return home, to stay in their sanctuary of river and tree together for the rest of time.Â
Lounging back upon his forearms beside her, George reached forth with one hand to pluck a wildflower from the patches that grew along the riverbank. He turned it between his fingers a moment, admiring its bright yellow petals and dainty leaves, before he summoned the courage to reach for Guinevereâs golden hair, tucking it behind her ear and secured it in place with the blossom. Her diamond eyes rose to meet his with a fond smile at the gesture, and as his hand began to move away from her cheek, she caught it gently in her own.
âForgive me,â she breathed, gazing into his eyes as she held his hand to her cheek, âI have been taken with thee since thou were first welcomed into our home.â ("I'm sorry but I have been admiring you since you first stepped foot into our home.")
George broke into a bashful grin and cast his gaze down upon their joined hands, his thumb grazing over her knuckles. ââTis I who must confess, Miss Guinevere; I have been plagued by thoughts most unseemly toward the daughter of mine own master, for I have been wholly captivated by thy beauty. I do yearn for but a moment of thy timeâŚand of thy affections.â ("It is me who has to confess, Miss Guinevere. My mind has been filled with salacious thoughts about my master's daughter as I have been in awe of your beauty. I crave even just a moment of your time or attention.")
Guinevereâs lashes fluttered as she drew a faint gasp at his confession, her gaze unwilling to part from his. Her voice, timid in a way he had not yet heard from herâlike a maid too fearful to raise her hopesâcame soft, âIs it so?â ("Really?")
âAye,â Georgeâs thumb brushed across the apple of her cheek, caressing the light dusting of freckles that kissed her porcelain skin, âWhen the Divine Being made you, He left nothing undone.â ("Yes. When God made you, he gave such attention to every little part of you.")
âI cared not to tutor thee,â she spilled out, as though in a hurried penance, âI did so only that I might steal a moment alone in thy companyâto speak with thee, to behold thy fair visage by firelight, and to take to my bed visions of thy lips.â ("I didn't care about tutoring you. I only offered so I could spend time with you; to talk with you, stare at your handsome face by firelight, and to go to sleep with thoughts of your lips.")
George, with a racing heart and his gaze locked with hers, guided her hand away from her face to dust a cautious kiss to the back of it. He was testing the waters, the limits he could push with the daughter of his master who had just confessed that she had been taken with him, likely just as strongly as he had been taken by her over the few months they had shared. Guinevere did not flinch at the touch of his lips against her skin, rather, she watched with awe as his lashes fluttered shut and he left another kiss to the inside of her wrist.
When his eyes opened once more, her wrist still resting against his cheek and her hand held tenderly in his own, he found her already watching him as if to tempt him, her lower lip caught between her teeth. They sat so near that as he turned his head from her hand in his, his nose brushed her cheek, his breath warm upon her skin. His fingers toyed shyly with hers, the roughened touch of a tradesman tracing the softness of a feminine palm. The simple graze felt as if embers of a hearth sparked between them wherever his skin caressed hers.Â
She intertwined her fingers with his, taking hold of his hand and he returned the favour with a kiss most tentative upon her cheek, slow and lingering, like a breath of morning fog. And then another, to the corner of her mouth, wandering, testing. What they were doing was incredibly risky, a trespass upon all that society did deem proper and right, and, perhaps most grave of all, a defiance of her fatherâs will. But this was Guinevereâthe most elegant maiden George had ever had the pleasure of knowingâand who was he to resist such temptation as the Lord Himself had placed before him? He was but a sinner, as any other Christian soul in all of England.
Let it be known that she did kiss him first. She was the one to lunge for his lips with her own, closing the mere breath between them with an intensity like no other. George made an embarrassing little sound at the sudden contact, a squeak of surprise as his eyes screwed shut and his hand tightened in hers. Neither of them moved for but a moment before, finally, they broke apart just long enough to move in for another searing kiss. George pulled his hand out of hers to grasp the side of her face in his calloused palm, pulling her deeper into their kiss and her palm fell against his chest.Â
Her lips were as soft as flower petals, as fair to feel as they were to behold, and George found himself aching for moreâmore of her, her lips, in any manner she might grant. She shifted closer still, almost leaning atop him, side by side, and her hand against his chest slid up to the side of his neck. It was a dream as they laid there on the riverbank, kissing languidly in the privacy of the willow tree shade, no one around for miles.Â
After a moment, Guinevere broke away from his lips for only a breath, her nose brushing against his as her fingers traced the edge of his jaw, âIs this wicked of us? To succumb to something not yet ours to take?â ("Is this wrong for us to do? To give into this temptation that is not ours to take?")
Georgeâs thumb swept lightly across her cheek while his gaze took in every inch of her soft face in their close proximity, âIf it be wicked, then let us both fall together, for I would sooner sin with thee than live righteously without.â ("If it is wrong, then let us both break the rules together, because I would rather commit a sin with you than not have you at all.")
And then she lunged at him once more, crashing their lips together with enough force that pulled a startled gasp from his breast and his hand tightened on the back of her neck, fingers tangled in the back of her hair. Their kisses turned feverish, near frantic, born of long weeks gone withoutâof withstanding the natural pull that drew them nearer, as though their very souls yearned to meet. It was everything so wrong, so sinful, sharing such closeness and intimacy outside of the promise of betrothal. But, with the first sweet taste of what they craved, even God Himself could not part them.Â
George moved off his forearms to rest flat against the grassy bank beneath him and Guinevere followed earnestly, as if parting from his lips were an unthinkable idea. His hands could not get enough of her as they traveled over her back and shoulders and tangled in the luscious golden strands of her free-flowing hair. Her leg then slipped over his, drawing herself closer still, her hips pressed up against his thigh and her hands pressed against the grass on either side of his head.Â
Guinevere then drew back from his kiss, her lips wandering soft over his cheek as she breathed a dreamy, âAh, I burn for thee. Deep within my very soul.â ("I crave you, deep within me.")
George felt it too, that unearthly heat which seemed to stir beneath his skin wherever she laid her touch, and deeper still within his body, in some place strange and sorely tender. It was a sensation unlike any other, raw and unrelenting and so incredibly fierce, impossible to ignore.Â
âMiss Guinevere,â George breathed like her name was a prayer, his long lashes fluttered atop his rouged cheeks, nose nudging against hers, âI crave thee in every way known to man.â ("Miss Guinevere, I need you in every way imaginable.")
His hands slid down her back and gripped her waist, pressing his fingers into the curve of her hips as if to draw her impossibly closer. Her lips pressed firmly to hisâonce, twice, thriceâand then she drew back to gaze into his eyes, her finger trailing slowly along his bottom lip, âI am utterly besotted with thy lips.â ("I am addicted to your lips.")
âThey are thine,â George nearly promised in a whisper, his thumb trailing slow along her hip over the flowing blue-dyed fabric of her kirtle where it draped across his thigh, âTake from them what thou wilt.â ("They are yours. Take from them whatever you need.")
And so she kissed him again, right down against the summer grass, her arms encircling his head as if to swallow him up completely in her embrace. He held her just as passionately, strong arms of a farmer locked around the city girlâs waist, clutching her to his body as if he willed her never to part from him. They kissed until they were dizzy and their lips were tingling with sin and the heat of their bodies outpowered that of the summer sun above them.Â
George had never felt this intensely before and the stirring in the depths of his stomach was something almost unparalleled, something he subconsciously craved to chase more of. When Guinevere shifted beside him with her leg still draped between his two and her hips rutted against his thigh, causing her to let out the prettiest sound he had ever heard right against his lips. His hands drew downwards, grabbing onto her buttocks to pull her body close again, encouraging her to move against him just so once more.Â
The need that swelled within him made him near ill with longing, and he lifted his head from the grass to press his mouth to hers once moreâharder now, desperate to ease the red-hot coil of tension that burned within him. Guinevere drew back from his kiss and a string of spit broke between them as she sat upright, straddling his thigh. Breathless upon the riverbank, George gazed up at her with wonder, the summer sun crowning her head like a halo, its light dappled through the rustling branches of the willow above.
Her soft hands trailed down the breadth of his heaving chest and, upon reaching his waist, she threaded his long leather belt between her fingers. George could not break his gaze from her, utterly entranced by the sight of her in such a position and by the way she allowed her hands to wander his clothed bodyâright down to the swelling of his loins, where the fabric of his outerwear strained with want. He had known such arousal before, for it was a natural affliction of the flesh, yet never had he dared act upon it. The Church and its teachings had long made it clear that to touch oneself in such a manner was a sin most grievous.
To engage in such actions outside of wedlock was, too, a great sin and George felt a glimmer of guilt somewhere in his soul, as if his local priest were whispering in his ear to not be tempted by the forbidden fruit. However, once Guinevere lay her hand upon him, cupping the inflated front of his groin, all Holy sensibility vanished from his brain like smoke. His head fell back against the grass with a dull thud, a strangled gasp falling from his lips as he stared up towards the canopy of willows filtering the blue sky.Â
âDoth it pain thee?â Guinevere asked in a whisper just as uncertain, just as inexperienced. ("Does it hurt you?")
âNay,â George choked out, heaving his head up again to steal a glimpse of her hand rubbing the shape beneath his garments, âNay, âtis mostâŚpleasing.â ("No, it feels pleasurable.")
A proud smile did come to Guinevereâs lips from his praise and encouragement. She stayed straddling his thigh with her hand rubbing over his groin for a moment longer until she began to hike up the fabric of his tunic and undershift, exploratory fingers itching for more. It was not uncommon for lovers to seek such delights by dayâin gardens, in alleys of the city, or amidst the fieldsâever longing for but a moment of seclusion. Yet the manner in which they now lay together, unbetrothed and in secret, bore the weight of great scandal. George glanced up the riverbank towards the path to confirm their isolation.Â
By then, Guinevere was pulling at the drawstring around his breeches to loosen the linen undergarments, her kiss-swollen bottom lip trapped between her teeth in eager anticipation. Georgeâs chest was heaving as she reached within the linen fabric and guided out his cock. Her hungry gaze was all over him, taking in the sight of him and how her fingers wrapped around it like he was made for her to touch. No one had seen him in such a manner and neither had she seen a man in such a state of undress and they took but a moment to get used to the circumstance.Â
âGod above,â she whispered, her voice near trembling with wonder, âI had not imagined thee thusâbut now I find I cannot look away.â ("Oh my God, I had not imagined what you would look like this, but now I can't look away.")
George could only reach a hand up towards her and she followed his silent invitation to lean down and meet his lips in another searing kiss. His fingers tangled in the back of her hair and his lips locked with hers in heartracing symphony while her hand stayed firm around his dick and began to stroke him tentatively. He pulled in a shuddering breath and curled his fingers in the roots of her hair for something to grasp onto, his other finding the fabric of her kirtle over her waist.Â
No sooner did he melt into her kiss did she pull away again and she moved down his body just enough to wrap her lips around the head of his cock. Georgeâs fingers tightened in her hair as his entire body twitched in surprise, eyelids fluttering as his eyes struggled not to roll with the unfamiliar pleasure. His head dropped back against the grass and he swallowed thickly, struggling to keep himself composed as she gently sucked on him with that sweet mouth of hers.Â
He had heard the tales often told by village friends at the alehouseâof their ventures to the brothels at the heart of Lynn and the pleasures the women there offeredâbut never had he reckoned to find himself upon the receiving end of such delights. And delight it was as he held the privilege of having the most beautiful woman in all of England treating him like the King himself. Guilt was the furthest thing from his mind as his hand, tangled gently in the back of her hair, guided her shallow motions up and down, whilst his other arm lay folded behind his head so he could gaze upon her through eyes heavy with pleasure.
âNever hath a man been so blessed,â George exhaled thickly, âSweet mercy, Guinevere, thou makest me mad with longing.â ("I'm the luckiest man. My God, Guinevere, you drive me made with how much I want you.")
Guievere drew back with a proud smile as radiant as the blue skies above them and she left one more kiss to the head of his cock before she was standing up between his legs. For but a moment, George was stricken with panic and rose upon his forearms, near expecting her to take her leave then and there; it was clear he was in no fit state to return to her fatherâs house. Instead, he was privy to the way she grabbed onto the skirt of her kirtle and the white linen chemise beneath and hiked them up to bunch them around her waist.Â
His breath shuddered in his breast as he stared upon her skin revealed before him in the sunlight. Her blue-dyed stockings ended at her calves and were tied there with their drawstrings and contrasting her milky legs that continued higher and higher until they reached her feminine hips. With her chemise, her sole undergarment, drawn up out of the way, George held his gaze upon her naked figure, the first female body he had seen in such a manner.Â
Guinevere crouched back down towards the Earth, one leg on either side of his lap, and as she did, he sat up to meet her, craving to touch her and explore her how she had done with him. She straddled him and rested upon raised knees, their lips meeting instinctively, and his hand found its way between her glorious thighs, brushing through the coarse hair upon her mound before his fingers slipped lower. The soft gasp she breathed into his mouth from his touch had his dick twitching against his abdomen and he let instinct guide him as he caressed the source of her wetness.Â
She was leaking upon his fingers like water from the river that flowed past them, her hips moving with his hand as if seeking more of him. The awareness that no one had touched her like this had Georgeâs heart racing in his breast, a sense of pride bursting within him, and his desire to make it enjoyable for her stirred in his very soul. It was the pleasure of sex that the Church deemed to be a sin but from stories from friends about their excursions to the brothels, it was nothing to shy away from. To be desired, to take pleasure, and to delight in life was no cause for shame. And as Guinevere framed his face in her delicate palms and kissed him with passion unspeakable, he wanted all of that and more with her.Â
With fingers blessed by her wetness, George reached down to wrap a hand around his stiff cock and helped to angle it where he knew it needed to be. He knew how it worked from life on a farm and from stories from friends and the shamed teachings of the Church, knowing to connect their bodies together in the most intimate way. Guinevere held one hand atop his shoulder and the other kept her skirts up as they worked to get themselves situated together until he was teasing across the heat of her cunt.Â
He had always been told by the world that man was the warmth and woman the coldâbut as she lowered herself upon him, he swore that he had never felt heat like that of her body ever before in all his days. Guinevere gave a soft cry as she sheathed herself upon him, little by little, her fingers clutching at the fabric of his tunic where it lay across his shoulders and back, her forehead pressed to his. George held her close, seeking to offer comfort and quiet assurance, though his mind nearly failed him for the sheer wonder of how tightly she gripped him.Â
âIt aches,â Guinevere spoke vulnerably, her breath against his cheek, âbut I want thee still.â ("It hurts, but I don't want to stop.")
George gazed up into her diamond eyes, his hands roaming tenderly over her hips as she sank fully upon his lap, and he answered her in a breath half-stolen, âIs this how it is meant to be? Then let it never end.â ("Is this what it's supposed to feel like? I don't want it to end.")
Her smile was beautiful and he tasted her euphoria upon her lips with a searing kiss, fingers pressing into the bunched up fabric of her skirts around her waist as if to draw her ever nearer. She moaned like heaven into his mouth and curled her body towards his, grinding against his lap in a way that had him coiling tight with pleasure. Their breaths fell as one, panting, longing, thrilled on their secrecy on the riverbank. It felt so good, he wanted more. Needed more. There was no going back now.Â
With cautious guidance, his hands at her waist began to move her in tender, shallow rises atop his lap, each motion gentle and unsure, while their breath mingled in gasps, mouth to mouth. George felt the searing pull of pleasure tightening in his loins, each of her movements driving him nearer to a peak almost too great to bear. He knew not what this fierce stirring within him truly was, and as much as it frightened him, some part of him, unspoken and wild, craved to chase it.Â
Only moments laterâscarce five gentle bounces atop his lapâthe fire within him rose to a terribly sweet pitch, and with a sound half-cry, half-prayer, he gave himself over to her wholly. Guinevere gasped as he spilled within her, his body drawn taut beneath her, the two of them clinging to one another with a desperation born of pleasure. George held his face buried in her neck, in her hair, holding her in place for a moment longer as he let himself return to Earth.Â
Neither spoke as their lips sought solace in one another, exchanging tender kisses between their breathless sighs, until at last she began to draw away. Georgeâs hands remained at her hips, steadying her as she rose from his lap, leaving him limp and spent upon the grassy riverbank. Though they knew well there would be no consequenceâfor it was commonly known that both partners must find their peak for a child to be conceivedâGuinevere still gave a small hop in place, as if to coax what remained from within her.Â
With her skirts still gathered in her fists, George watched as a pale, creamy substanceâlike that of smooth buttermilkâdripped from within her and onto the grass between her feet. But it was the smear of blood upon her thighs and between her legs that held his gaze most, the faintest trace, yet proof enough of what they had done. For a moment he hesitated as if guilty realization settled within his breast, knowing that once she were to be married off, she would no longer be able to provide proof of virginity, putting shame upon herself and her family name. It was a harsh truth, cold and unforgiving, and yet George would not dwell upon it. Instead, he let himself be soothed by the heavenly press of her lips as she leaned down to grant him a kiss, sweet and unburdened.
âWe must return home,â Guinevere whispered between kisses, her skirts falling softly about her legs as she cradled his face in her dainty hands, âFather will be expecting us for supper.â ("We have to go home. Father will expect us there for dinner.")
âI know not how I am meant to go on,â George confessed, his voice low and sincere, âwith my thoughts so sweetly plagued by the memory of thee.â ("I don't know how I'm supposed to carry on as normal when my thoughts are now filled with the memory of you.")
âWe must go on in secret,â she vowed, âfor I cannot bear to part from thee now that I have known thee so.â ("We must continue in secret because I can't imagine not doing this again.")
And who was George, to turn away such a vow as that?
Their quiet evenings of tutelage soon gave way to stolen kisses by firelight, the two of them tangled together upon the floor amidst scattered parchments and ink-stained quills, pouring their passion into one another with breathless restraint. Yet they dared not revisit the intimacy they had shared upon the riverbank, for never was there a moment when they were truly alone. Even during their evening sessions, the threat lingeredâa creaking stair, a voice from aboveâthe ever-present risk of a family member emerging unannounced.Â
Instead, they explored many pleasures together in other ways: wandering hands beneath clothes by the hearth, grinding together in a secluded corner of the guildâs courtyard, and stealing kisses in passing whenever possible. George repented often during his nightly prayers, knelt by his bed in the attic, hands clasped together, and praying for forgiveness to the Lord. It was perilous of them, but they could not stop. It was easy to believe they were destined for one another, and that made all seem right.
But reality fell upon them like an iron fist. George had found himself in the reception room one afternoon, having been sent to retrieve lunch from the cooking room for his fellow apprentices in the shop. On his way, as he so often did, he had crossed through the office to find Guinevere in his moment of respite from his toil. When she was found to be missing from her bookkeeping, he moved to the front window to look out upon the courtyard.Â
There, strolling side by side, was Guinevere and a nobleman not much older than he. He donned rich red garments and impressively pointed boots with the lengthy toes curled upwards, revealing his wealth and status through the most stylish footwear one could have. His Earthy hair was neatly bound beneath a matching crimson hat, and his handsome face was framed by a modest beard along a chiseled jaw. From the window, George watched as Guinevere walked beside the man, her hand resting lightly in the crook of his arm, speaking with him politely.Â
The nobleman admired her as they strolled, stealing glances at her beautiful face in the sunlight. George swallowed thickly, unease tightening in his breast at the sight. He had been aware that his master had been finding suitors for her but never before had George bore witness to such goings on. Now, stood at the window, he was filled with the realization that their shared passion in secrecy was unsustainable. It was only logical that her father should wed her to a man of noble standing, to ensure the shopâs prosperity and grant her a life of ease. Though Guinevereâs family dwelt among the better-off commoners, they were not rich, and so such an alliance was deemed most necessary.
Yet, as logical as it was, it felt not fair in the least. George had toiled the land since the day he reached his twelfth year, fated to a life of hardship and struggle as many in England were. He knew himself a steadfast worker, a worthy provider, and an honest man â and yet, none of these merits could weigh against the ease and splendour of noble birth.Â
His thoughts drifted to Lando from his brief stay at the inn in Cambridge, remembering his confession to thievery from the rich to give to the poor. For the first time in his life, George felt as though he understood. What had this nobleman in the courtyard done to deserve such a wonderful lass? He would merely take breath and the pleasures of the world should be bestowed upon him, while George and the majority of England toiled long days and still saw no such rewards. The feeling was evil in his breast.
Outside of Guinevereâs afternoons with her suitors, her time with George progressed like it always had. Between their lessons, he still carved her presents from his work in the shop, determined, if nothing else, to win her heart with the intricacies of his craft. For days, he set himself to the task of crafting another figurine, wielding his tools with quiet devotion and whittling with utmost care. At last, he presented to her his most treasured creation: a finely carved little horse. With a flowing wood mane and tail, it stood in proud stance upon whatever surface it was placed. Guinevere, upon receiving it, was all awe and delightâgrinning by the hearth on yet another evening they stole togetherâand declared it her favourite of all he had made.
And, as always, it was presented proudly on her window ledge with all his other presentsâsilent tokens of affection lined up like a row of unspoken promises.
On a rare evening where they were not set to meet by the hearth, George took leave of his lodging to visit a local alehouse for a change of scenery. He had frequented a few since his arrival in London on those rare evenings where work was sparse and he found socializing with locals to be most enjoyable. Sometimes his fellow apprentices joined him but this particular night, he ventured out alone.Â
As he stepped over the threshold, the scent of spiced meat and ale hung thick in the air and the crowded space was filled with clinking of mugs and boisterous conversation over the lively lute being played in the corner. George kept mostly to himself as he navigated through the chaos to the bar and paid the alewife for a serving of brew with a single silver coin. With his metal cup in hand, he scanned the crowd for a vacant seat but he did not get very far before a hand came down upon his shoulder.Â
Startling, George spun around to see who had come up behind him, only to find himself face to face with a grinning Lando. His acquaintance grinned at him, âGeorge of Lynn! Godâs mercy, but it is a joy to see thee!â ("George from Lynn! My God, it is nice to see you!")
âLando of Bristol,â George smiled and wrapped his arms around him in a friendly greeting, âWhat wind blows thee to London?â ("Lando from Bristol, what brings you to London?")
Lando laughed, âThou didst speak of it so grandly, I thought to come again and see if thy praise held true.â ("You spoke so highly of it. I thought I'd come back to see if what you said was true.")
âIt hath been treating me grandly.â ("It has been treating me well.")
âCome, let us sit and speak of our travels,â Lando offered. ("Come, let's sit and talk of what we've been up to.")
George followed him across the alehouse to a small table in the corner, away from the centre of chaos and noise, somewhere quieter for them to catch up. It had been a few months since they had first met at the inn in Cambridge and there was a lot to share. It was nice to see a familiar face in the bustling city of strangers.Â
Over ale and bread, Lando listened intently as George spoke of his arrival to London and the struggle to find a guild willing to take him in for no cost. He spoke highly of his master and the generous chance he took with him to welcome him into his home and his shop and how he had been learning so much as a carpenter. Entrusting of Lando, George also told him the basics about Guinevere, his masterâs eldest daughter, and simply how he was infatuated by her since the moment he first laid eyes on her but she was expected to be betrothed to a nobleman.Â
Lando listened patiently to his every word, nodding or chiming in where the conversation allowed. When George was done, Lando set his cup atop the table in front of them.Â
âThou lovest this maid, yet she is promised to another?â Lando questioned. ("You love this girl but she is promised to another guy?")
âA man hath not yet been chosen, but âtis to be one of noble birthâfor the good of the shop and to grant her a life of ease,â George replied flatly, his fingers idly tracing the wood grain of the table. ("A man hadn't been chosen yet but he's going to be a nobleman to benefit the shop and to promise her an easy life.")
âNay, fie on that,â Lando scoffed, âThy master singeth thy praises as a man and a workerâhow can he think to wed his daughter to any but thee?â ("No, fuck that. Your master talks so highly of you as a man and as a worker...how can he think to marry off his daughter to any one but you?")
A flattered smile grazed upon Georgeâs lips at the support and kindness of his friend, âI hath been thinking often about what thou hast told me in Cambridge; how the nobles steal from us commoners without thought.â ("I have been thinking a lot about what you told me in Cambridge; how the nobles steal from the commoners without thought.")
If for but a moment Landoâs face twitched into a smirk, George scarcely missed it. Instead, he continued.
âI cannot bear to think of them stealing love from me.â ("I can't stomach the idea of them stealing love from me.")
âIt is not the nobles alone,â Lando replied coolly, âThy master, too, be not without blame. Standing on the threshold of nobility with the wealth of his guild behind himâhe holdeth power that thee and I may scarce comprehend. He is a man of trade, driven by coin and standing, as hungry for honour as any lord.â ("It's not just the nobles. Your master is also to blame. He's standing on the cusp of being a noble himself with how well off his guild is; he holds power that you and I can't even understand. He's a man for trade, driven by money, and he's as hungry for a title as any Lord.")
George pursed his lips in thought for a moment, letting Landoâs words settle over him. He had known that his masterâs family were not nobles, were not blessed with a bloodline of riches and status, but they were at the upper end of the commoners; with a house in London and a successful shop and opportunities not often seen by many others. The reality of that realization settled heavy over Georgeâs shoulders.Â
âBut my master hath been most kind to meâhe took me in as an apprentice when he had no cause to,â George protested, clinging onto the last shred of humility. ("But my master has been really kind to me. He took me in as an apprentice when he didn't have to.")
âAye,â Lando acknowledged with a shug, âI say not that he is wickedâbut he is blind to his own wealth, as any nobleman might be. He taketh thee in without coin, true, but neither doth he pay thee, nor would most masters. Yet think on itâhe reaps the fruits of his apprenticesâ labour and spendeth it as he will, for his own gain.â ("Yes, I'm not saying he's wicked, but he is blind to his own wealth as any nobleman. He took you in without payment, yes, but he doesn't pay you, neither would any other master. Think about it; he takes the rewards of his apprentices' labour and he spends it however he wants for his own benefit.")
George could only blink, âNayâŚâ ("No...")
âThese guild masters make their fortunes on the backs of unpaid apprentices. âTis free labour, no better than the toil of serfs in the fields. Our hands do the work, yet 'tis they who take the harvest.â ("These guild masters make their money on unpaid labour. It is free labour, no batter than the work of the slaves in the fields. Our hands do all the work but they take the rewards.")
âHe giveth me a roof over my head and food to fill my belly,â George protested, though the surety in his voice had waned. ("He provides me with a home and food.")
âAye, and thus thou art bound to him,â Lando returned smoothly, as though he had spoken such truths a hundred times before, âLeave, and thou risk hunger and a bed of cobbles in some piss-stained alley.â ("Yes, and so you are bound to him. If you leave, you will risk starving and sleeping on the street.")
George looked out across the alehouse, watching the cityfolk laugh and dance and talk amongst their groups, carefree, as society held so many fractures. So many of the men and women around them were workers just like them, just like most of the population of England, spending their last penny for a cup of ale and good company. Where were the rich? The guild masters, the nobles, the lords? Busy with their own folk with infinite ale and bread and fresh meat that was not a luxury as it were for the working class.Â
As though he sensed the unrest stirring within George, Lando laid a steady hand upon his shoulder. ââTis why we rose up, why we set London alight last June and drew the King from his hiding place to heed our cries. âTis why Watt Tyler, the captain of our revolution, was struck down before mine own eyes, his head set upon a spike upon London Bridge. We give our lives for the cause of fairness, George. We seek not their sufferingâbut their respect. Man to man, as equals.â ("It's why we revolted, why we set fire to London last June and drew the King from his hiding place to hear our demands. It is why Watt Tyler, the captain of our revolution, was murdered before my eyes, his head put on a stick on London Bridge. We give our lives in the fight for equality, George. We don't want them to suffer, but we want their respect. Man to man, as equals.")
There was a fire that burned in Georgeâs heart, one vastly different from the kind of heat that filled him on the riverbank a few weeks prior but no less intense. It was anger, anger stemmed from unfairness and the desire to chase justice. He knew he was not as brave as Lando, he could not outwardly storm into cities to demand change, but at the same time, he felt so helpless. Helplessness and anger fueled him strongly, craving to set things right in society but also in his own life. If he were seen as an equal, perhaps Guinevere could be betrothed to him.
George looked to Lando with sureness in his gaze, âWhat can a man like me truly do?â ("What can someone like me even do?")
Lando gave Georgeâs shoulder a squeeze and then leaned closer, an elbow on the table and his hand falling to the back of the chair on which George sat. He spoke in a whisper tinged with hope, with blind sureness, âI am yet among bands of rebels who labour to uncover the deceit of the rich, but we lack proof to lay before the Kingâs court. Perchance thou mightst gain access to thy masterâs ledgers and transcribe some of the entriesânames of nobles, false taxes, bribes, aught and everything that might serve to condemn them and reveal the wrongful sharing of wealth.â ("I am still part of some groups of rebels who work to uncover the lies of the rich but we don't have proof to show the King. Maybe you can steal some of your master's ledgers and copy out the entries-names of nobles, false taxes, bribes, anything and everything that might help to reveal their hogging of wealth.")
The first thing that came to Georgeâs mind was Guinevere and her meticulous keeping of the books for her fatherâs shop; her careful penmanship, her organized lines and ledgers, watching her scribe by candlelight. It would be betrayal to her and her family to steal her ledgers and hand them over to the rebels, but what choice did George have? Did he have a choice? Where did he want to lay his loyalties? With his people or with the woman he fantasized about but could never have?
âThink on it well,â Lando said, breaking through Georgeâs restless thoughts, âShouldst thou choose to aid us, I shall await thee by the blacksmith on London Bridge in a fortnight, after the sun hath set. Bring with thee copies of all thou canst find that may serve our cause.â ("Think about it. If you want to help us, I will wait for you by the blacksmith on London Bridge in two weeks, after the sun has set. Bring copies of all you can find that might help our cause.")
George nodded mutely and raised his cup to his lips for a measured sip.
Lando had made sure that George knew that he was not pressuring him to partake in this act of defiance which was appreciated but it only made George more unsure of what he should do. For a few days after they had met in the alehouse, he was plagued by the decision he was to make. He had always been one to follow the rules as laid out by society he was born unto and committing an act of utter defiance felt utterly wrong. He had known of the Peasants Revolt that Lando had partaken in the year prior and it was nationally known that the rebels did not succeed in achieving their demands they had fought for. So what would some measly papers from a carpenterâs shop do to make a difference?Â
Lying in his bed one night, George gazed upon the wooden beams of the attic where the apprentices slept, his mind thick with uncertainty. From the bed beside his, Alexander snored softly in the pale bath of moonlight streaming through the two small dormer windows above, and across the uneven floor, Oliver and Andrea had long since fallen into their own slumber. George tossed and turned, plagued by the weighty choice he was forced to make and how his decision would affect everyone he knew in different ways.
His troubled mind was broken by the creaking of the round staircase at the far end of the cramped attic, and George lifted his head from his pillow to gaze in that direction. In the darkened space, he could faintly make out a figure climbing the staircase and emerging into this chamber. He could recognize Guinevereâs silhouette anywhere.Â
She tiptoed across the floor to his bedside in the corner, and George cast a glance toward his fellow apprentices to be certain they still slept and would bear no witness to the masterâs daughter coming to see him after dark. He drew back the thin sheet and bade her welcome, sharing daring smiles in the pale moonlight as she joined him. The straw and feather mattress rustled softly beneath her as she settled close beside him, tucked in the narrow space, face to face.
âWhat art thou doing here at this hour?â George whispered. ("What are you doing here so late?")
âI could not find rest,â Guinevere confessed just as softly, âI missed thee.â ("I couldn't sleep. I missed you.")
He smiled warmly, âI missed thee even more.â ("I missed you more.")
âImpossible,â she murmured with a playful tut, then leaned in to press her lips upon his before he could utter another word.
It was certainly one way to distract his mind from its internal noise and indecision, focusing instead on pouring his emotion into her kiss and the feel of her body against his. She grasped the back of his neck while his arms wrapped around her figure, melting into her touch and their familiar dance of lips. In only her chemise, Guinevere was so easy to touch, to feel the warmth of her skin through the linen, and to encourage him to bunch up the fabric a little more to get his hands on her properly.Â
He touched her everywhere he could beneath the thin sheet of his narrow bed, roaming her waist and hips and buttocks, bodies pressed chest to chest, until he guided her thigh closer to entangle her with him. His thigh went between hers like second nature and she pulled herself against it with a secure grasp around his shoulders, smearing wetness across the hem of his linen shift. Georgeâs breath shuddered at the feeling and he pushed his mouth upon hers with unrelenting intensity as if he were willing himself to be pulled into her very soul.
The rustle of the straw mattress beneath them sounded like thunder in the silent attic, dipping and shifting beneath the faint ministrations of Guienevereâs hips. George could not stop touching her as if his hands were sewn to her body, addicted to the feeling of her bare, wet cunt against his thigh. He drew back from her lips to, instead, trail kisses down her neck and she tilted her head back to permit him wherever he pleased.
âWert thou thinking of me in thy bedchamber?â George asked in a breath against her throat. ("Were you thinking of me when you were in bed?")
âAye,â she near purred as quietly as she could muster, threading her fingers through the back of his hair to guide his head into the crook of her neck, her eyes fluttering shut at the feel of his lips and breath upon her skin, âand thy fair formâŚand all thou canst do with it.â ("Yes, and your body and everything you can do with it.")
���Mm, I can feel itâhow wet thou art.â ("Mm, I can feel it. How wet you are.")
The words had barely passed his lips before she was pulling his mouth back to hers and swallowing up the lewd praises he spoke to her. In an instant, George shifted them under the sheet so she was laying beneath him, mouth to mouth, trapped between him and his bed in the attic of her fatherâs house. Her fingers tugged gently at the roots of his hair, as though to keep their lips joined and their limbs entwined beneath the sheets, until neither could tell where he ended and she began.
George could feel that unmistakable burning tension swelling within him again, the kind that only rose when Guinevere was near and when he had her like this: pliant and at his mercy. She did not complain and oftenâas was this very nightâshe was the one to be initiating such illustrious scandal between them. He would never deny her such pleasures, nor would he deny himself.Â
Their breaths fell shallow between fervent kisses, and they tried in earnest to keep silent, for the sake of the three other apprentices slumbering in the beds nearby. But their need was far too great to deny, and the mattress whispered beneath them as he drew her chemise up about her middle. He pulled his shift over his head in a smooth tug, desperate to rid himself of the suffocating linen, and she parted her legs for him while her hands caressed down his chest and he settled himself between her thighs. Without a word, he guided the head of his cock between her plump lips before finally easing himself within her with a trembling breath.
Guinevere stared up at him in the moonlight, her arms nestled beneath his, hands splayed across his shoulder blades, and a soft gasp escaped her lips as he sheathed himself within her. He held her gaze as he filled her wholly, their bodies, their very souls, joined once more. It was different this time, with him above her, than it had been by the banks of the Thames those weeks past. There was a tenderness in it, a deeper heat, and George felt his heart quicken in his breast at the way she clung to him and at the way she gazed at him from beneath her lashes.
As though drawn by some transcendent force, George began to roll his hips against hers in slow, measured thrusts and the flutter of her lashes and the catch in her breath at each movement sent a thrill of pride down his arms. He cradled her there upon the linen-lined mattress and kissed her with all the fervour in his heart.Â
When breath was needed, they parted only so far as to rest their brows together, remaining close as he ground into her with slow, tantalising thrusts. Though they strove to remain quiet, Guinevere could not help the soft sounds that slipped from her lipsâangelic ahs and gentle mms in time with each deep thrust as he filled her fullyâand he had not the heart to bid her silence. He merely hushed her softly to remind her the importance of their discretion; they were not alone.Â
Even still, his hand slipped down between them, finding its way to where they were joined, and he pressed his fingers firmly to the rise of her flesh. Her breath caught in her throat, as though the touch alone pleased her so greatly it took her by surprise, and her hands clutched tighter onto him as he began to rub her generously. George near thanked Heaven for all the raunchy alehouse chatter and the talk among men of how women much delight in being rubbed between their legs, for the way such a simple thing made her clutch at him and writhe against his bed was unlike nothing else he had ever known.
She was warm and wondrously tight around him, and yet as he kept his hand moving in time with the slow and consistent press of his hips, she only seemed to grow tighter still. His breath grew ragged, his control slipping fast, for it was growing ever harder to keep on as the pleasure began to crest within him like a wave nearing its break; inevitable. George bit his lip so hard he almost drew blood, desperate to keep himself quiet no matter how intense it all felt.Â
Regardless, Guinevere let a soft cry break from her throat as her head tipped back against the bed and her nails bit into the flesh of his back. George muttered a curse beneath his breath and swiftly pressed his palm to her mouth, striving to smother her whimpers and heavy breaths, to not risk waking his fellow apprentices. Her snug, quickened heartbeat throbbed between her thighs, drawing him swift into the height of his pleasure, and he sank his teeth gently into the flesh of her shoulder to muffle his own sounds.
They shared a quiet moment of respite, catching their breath and letting the silence linger, that the slumber of the three young men across the attic be not disturbed. After but a moment, George withdrew from her and turned onto his back beside her, and without a word, she nestled at his side like a contented cat.
George did not wish to let her return to her chamber now that he held her beneath his arm. For a while, they felt unburdened and trueâher head upon his chest, his fingers idly combing through her silken hair, their breasts rising and falling in timeâfree to be as one. Beneath the hush of moonlight, in the dust-laden attic, and with the quiet that came from the slumber of his fellow apprentices, they were not wholly alone, yet it was the nearest they had come to solitude in many weeks.Â
Guinevere seemed in no rush to return to her bed either as she relaxed in his arms and traced shapes over his bare chest with her fingertips, tracing the faint dusting of hair between his pecs and swirling circles around his nipples. Her touch felt so gentle, so right, and George could have laid there for years, just holding her and being touched by her. His mind was empty apart from thoughts of her and only her.Â
To silently seal his devotion, he turned his head upon his pillow and placed a lingering kiss to her flushed forehead. He could feel her cheek turn up with her smile against his chest.Â
âI shall need brew an herb-tea come the morrow,â Guinevere said softly, breaking their quiet contentment. ("I'll need to brew a herbal tea tomorrow.")
They both knew well the risk they had taken by meeting their peaks in unison; risking conception of a child out of wedlock. The only safeguard lay in a certain concoction of tea passed down through generations of women. Many ladies had sworn by its power, and George had heard whispers of it in the towns and along the city streets.
âMm, perhaps I shall take a cup with thee,â he murmured into her hair. ("Mm, maybe I will have a cup with you.")
Her quiet laugh was as sweet as honey on the tongue.
âI adore thee,â she breathed, as though the words were a vow, âI would lie with thee for a thousand summers more and couple so sweetly it would stir envy in all of England.â ("I adore you. I would lay here with you for a thousand more summers and make such passionate love that all of England would be jealous.")
George chuckled faintly into her golden hair, whispering in reply, âHow that would please me greatly, my fair one.â ("I would love that, my darling.")
Guinevere tilted her head back upon his shoulder so as to be able to admire his face in the darkened attic, sharing in his content smile before she stole it with a kiss. His arm tightened around her, drawing her nearer, pacifying her with his lips until she was satisfied. They stared into each otherâs eyes, tangled beneath his sheet, before his hand found hers and he intertwined their fingers.Â
âThou wouldst make a lovely bride,â George confessed. ("You would make a lovely bride.")
It was a thought barely more than a whisper, almost unheard if she had not been watching his lips move.
âThou wouldst make a lovely husband,â she echoed, as though she knew just what he yearned to hear to quiet his thoughts, âMore than any noble who might seek to woo me with gold or silver.â ("You would make a lovely husband. More than any noble who would try to win me over with gold or silver.")
âDost thou mean it?â asked George. It was almost embarrassing to him how timid his voice sounded, so unsure. ("Do you mean it?")
Guinevere gave his hand a squeeze in hers, âCertainly.â
He knew it was perilous to speak such words to herâto utter a vow that would bind them as man and wife, had there been a witness to avouch itâbut the truth of his heart spilled from his lips, âI will take thee as my wife.â
There was a moment of silence as if Guinevere was allowing his words to settle, to war with herself whether she dare risk the response. She did not take her eyes away from his gaze as she replied, âI will take thee as my husband.â
Georgeâs heart was racing within his breast and he pulled their joined hands to his mouth to rest a kiss upon her knuckles before leaning in to take her lips with his. Her arm wrapped around his shoulders to draw him nearer and they sealed their declarations of marital bliss with a passionate kiss. George meant what he said, he really did, and although society was trying to will them apart, he would have broken a hundred laws just to keep her heart in his hands.Â
Guinevere had to return to her bedchamber a while later, needing to sneak out before the household would rise at sunup. George chased her lips as she stood from the bed as if not wanting to bid her leave and she smiled into his kiss and pacified him every time. With one more squeeze of hands, he watched her tiptoe back to the curling staircase and disappear below.
With a sigh, George laid back upon his pillow and folded his hands across his chest, feeling the racing of his heart beneath his palm. His cheeks felt warm from smiling, from sharing such lovely words, and from holding his beloved near. He would do anything for her; and if that meant bringing down the strict rules of their society to do it, then so be it.Â
From a few paces away, the mattress beside him rustled and George held his breath to feign slumber. But Alexander, who had turned to gaze upon him from across the moon-bathed floorboards, was already long awake. He tucked his hands beneath his cheek, housing an amused smirk.
âWell, lad,â spoke Alexander, startling George greatly, âthou playest a bold game indeed.â ("Well, mate, you're playing a dangerous game.")
George stiffened, the realization of being found out sending a chill down his spine and he dare not speak in fear of incriminating himself farther. He had always gotten on well with Alexander but would he be one to trust with such a secret?
âPrithee, tell no soul of this,â George pleaded in a rushed hush. The last thing he needed was for Oliver and Andrea to rouse from across the attic and lend their ears to the matter. ("Please, don't tell anyone about this.")
Alexander played with him a little more, as if enjoying watching George squirm, âHast thou taken leave of thy senses?â ("Have you lost your mind?")
George propped himself upon one elbow on the mattress, turning to Alexander in desperation. âNay, we are drawn together with such forceâas though the Lord Himself hath ordained it. It meaneth no harm. Speak of this to no soul, I beg thee, Alexander.â ("No, we are drawn together as if God made us for each other. There's no harm. Don't tell anyone, I'm begging, Alexander.")
âLying with our masterâs daughter outside of wedlock? âTis a sin, George; a sin against God, and a sin upon this house.â Alexanderâs tone was serious but not angry, as if he were an elder offering sound life advice. ("Sleeping with our master's daughter outside of wedlock? It is a sin George; a sin against God and a sin upon this house.")
âWe have yet to find a remedy, but we shall,â George said softly, âIn time, we hope to wed.â ("We haven't decided what we're going to do but we hope one day to get married.")
Alexander tutted but his small smirk gave him away, amused by the sneaky goings-on of his friend, and as he rolled back over to return to his slumber, he assured him teasingly, âThy secret shall stay with me, yet I fear for thee bothâand for thee most of all. Tread carefully, else our master shall have thee hanged in the square.â ("Your secret is safe with me, but I'm worried for both of you...and you most of all. Be careful or els eour master will have you hanged in the square.")
True to his word, Alexander spoke not a word of what he had seen and heard that night in the attic to anyone in the household. In an unspoken way, the secret seemed to draw the two young men closer, and they came to lean on one another more often between the long hours in the workshop and the quiet evenings above. And, because of Alexanderâs honest warnings of what a sin George was committing, George felt even stronger about punching holes in the upper echelon of society that was risking to take his beloved from him forever.Â
No more than a week later, George found himself, once more, awake in the middle of the night. Yet it was not restlessness that kept him from slumber, but rather the stirring anticipation of what was soon to transpire. Once he was certain the household slept soundly, he rose from his bed, padded softly across the creaking attic floor, and descended the staircase to the main level of the homestead. By grace or fortune, he was not intercepted.Â
The study was just as it always was: neatly tidied after the end of the day. George knew he must be cautious of what items he took and exactly how he would put them back to avoid suspicions in the morning. So, he took one leger at a time, opened it upon the writing desk in the moonlight alongside a fresh piece of parchment, and readied the quill. George repeated this routine nightly, copying one page at a time from ledgers or business books or anything else he could find in the study that could help the cause, and then hid his copied parchment beneath his mattress.Â
It felt like a whole new world now that he could make sense of words; being able to open pages and understand the things he was seeing. Despite Guinevereâs generous tutelage, he wasnât quite yet completely literate and fluent but he copied everything anyway; even making sure the words he did not know were copied in shape and form. He wondered if Landoâwho had come from means worse than heâcould even read what he would be giving him or if he had a whole group of people who could read it for them.Â
A fortnight since he had come across Lando in the alehouse, George readied himself for his journey to meet at their scheduled time and location. Having been permitted to excuse himself from the family dinner with the reasoning that he had a desire to go for a stroll instead, George was upstairs in the attic while the family dined. Guinevereâs concerned gaze had followed him out of the room.
George packed his satchel with the copied parchment, tied in a roll with twine, and made certain it would not slip free from his belt during his journey. With quiet haste, he slipped out to the guild stables, where his steed had been kept and the stablehand helped him ready the horse. Once he had mounted, George rode off toward London Bridge without so much as a backward glance. He dared not dwell upon the weight of what he bore at his belt. Part of him prayed there was worth in those pages for Lando and his companyâand yet another part clung to the hope that his master was as innocent as he had always believed.
As assured, Lando was waiting outside of the blacksmithâs shop on the bustling bridge when George approached. Lando housed a smile as he pushed himself away from the wall to greet George as he dismounted, âI had not thought thou wouldst come.â ("I didn't think you'd come.")
âNor had I,â George confessed. ("Neither did I.")
He took the reins of his steed in hand and followed Lando down the narrow alleyway between the two buildings until they were shadowed by the structures. Once they were out of view from the public, George unfastened his satchel from his belt and drew forth the rolled parchment, placing it into Landoâs outstretched hand.
His friend pulled at the twine and unrolled his offering to give the context a brief glance. With a furrowed expression of concentration, Lando read a few lines before his face began to mould into a proper smile. He rolled the parchment once more and tucked it hastily into the satchel at his side, âThis is wondrous, George. I thank thee.â ("This is great, Goerge, thanks.")
âThere is more,â George confessed softly, casting a glance about in case any ears lingered near, âIf thou hast need of it.â ("There's more, if you need it.")
âAye,â Lando replied with ease, âAnything thou hast for me.â ("Yes, anything you have for me.")
George nodded once.Â
âShall we meet here once more in a fortnightâs time?â Lando asked. ("We'll meet again here in two weeks?")
George gave another nod, as though his tongue had forsaken him, his thoughts instead held captive by the words Guinevere had once whispered to him in the stillness of night. It had been told to him that this cause was meant for the greater good of the common folkâbut in his soul, it felt anything but right. Lando did not seem to notice his hesitation and, instead, his eagerness to leave was fueled by the gift now tucked within his satchel. He bade George take his leave and promised to meet again for another delivery before he disappeared into the darkened city and the crowds that filled its streets.
The family had already gone to bed by the time George returned home, settled his steed, and slipped quietly upstairs to the attic. He remembered not the journey home nor the climbing of the staircases, nor even the saying of his nightly prayers before resting upon his narrow mattress. Additionally, he scarcely recalled the following day in the workshop, as the hours blurred between carving and whittling and idle talk with his fellow apprentices, his mind torn and at war within itself over the choice he had made.
Even still, he found himself copying more ledgers by the moonlight in the office that following night, his hand moving as if by its own nature, and easy routine. The words no longer made sense, the numbers were useless to him, and his mind shut him out of the process entirely. If there was no connection to his task, perhaps he would feel less guilty.Â
âGeorge?â
The ink smudged across the parchment with how strongly George startled and his head turned briskly to look over his shoulder towards the passageway to the office. There, with a candelabrum in hand, stood barefoot Guinevere in only her linen chemise, her soft face furrowed in confusion. George felt as though he had been dunked in the river in the dead of winter. He sat there, frozen.
Guinevere took a step into the room, her voice tentative but firm, âWhat art thou doing?â ("What are you donig?")
George glanced back at the writing desk where he sat, parchments strewn before the open ledger from which he had been copying. The quill was still clutched, guilt-ridden, in his hand. He parted his lips to speak, but no words cameâonly the rustle of trembling fingers as he began to shove the papers beneath the book, as though to hide them from sight.
By then, Guinevere stood at his side, already peering over his shoulder.
âI, uh,â George stammered, âI am practicing our lessons.â
âNay, thou art copying my books whilst the house slumbers.â ("No, you are copying my books while everyone is asleep.")
She reached past him to grab one of the half-filled parchments he was trying to work on and he dare not stop her. Instead, he hung his head, guilty, as she read the lines he had copied in his messy penmanship. After a moment, she tossed the parchment back onto the writing desk.
âWhy art thou copying our ledgers?â she demanded, her voice firm, unwavering. ("Why are you copying our ledgers?")
âMiss Guinevere,â George faltered, words tangled on his tongue as he looked up at her, âIâI did not meanââ
âSpeak not a lie to me,â she cut in sharply, her gaze burning into his, candlelight flickering across her face, âI would sooner hear the cruelest truth from thy lips than suffer a falsehood.â ("Don't lie to me. I would rather hear the cruelest truth from you than have you lie to me.")
George drew a steadying breath before he spoke, his voice low with the weight of confession, âA lad I met upon my journey to London...he hath ties to the rebels who still fight in the wake of last summerâs Revolt. He seeks to bring to light the wrongs done unto the common folkâburied beneath coin and title and the unpaid labour of apprentices, bound to their masters. He asked me for copies of the ledgers, to aid him in his cause against such mistreatment.â ("A man I met on my journey to London, he has ties to the rebels who still fight in the wake of last summer's Revolt. He wants to bring awareness to the wrongdoings done to the commoners; buried beneath riches and title and the unpaid labour of the apprentices who are tied to their masters. He asked me for copies of the ledgers to help him fight against this mistreatment.")
âMistreatment?â Guinevere echoed, âMistreatment unto whom? My father was generous enough to take thee in without asking a penny in returnâand this is how thou dost repay him?â ("Mistreatment? Mistreatment of who? My father was generous enough to take you in without demanding a penny in return and this is how you repay him?")
âIt is not about thy father, it is about the exchange of money in all of England, the nobles and the wealthy guilds who take from us as commoners.â ("It's not about your father, it's about the exchange of money in all of England; the nobles and the wealthy guilds who take from us a commoners.")
âAnd what of me?â she continued, âI entrusted thee with my body, my heart, my very soulâand behind my back, thou takest all I have given thee, even the learning I shared with thee, and use it to strike at my family? To wound the very house that sheltered thee?â ("And what about me? I trusted you with me body, my heart, my very soul, and you went behind my back to take all that i have given you, all that I had taught you, and you use it to go against my family? To hurt the family that cared for you?")
âNay, Miss Guinevere,â George turned upon his stool to face her, taking her hand gently in his own, âThou art most dear to me, and all that I spoke to thee the other nightâI still mean it, deeply and truly.â ("No, Miss Guinevere, you are the most important thing to me and all I that I said to you the other night I still mean, deeply and truly.")
She drew her hand away from his with a force that felt as though she had struck him. George recoiled slightly, staring up at her firm expression in the darkened study by the light of the candle in her grasp. Perhaps this was all a dream and he would wake up to the ceiling of the attic above him rather than the heartbreak etched into every line of his beloved Guinevereâs features by his own hand, his own choice.Â
Steady and chilling, she spoke down unto him. âHow canst thou claim to speak truth when thou hast gone behind my back in such disgraceful manner? Our shop survived the fires of last yearâs rebellion, and now thou wouldst set them alight anew within our very walls.â ("How can you tell me you spoke the truth when you have gone behind me back in such horrible ways? Our shop managed to survive the fires of last year's rebellion and now you want to light them again from the inside?")
âThey take everything from us!â George cried, his voice edged with desperation, pleading with her to see his side while cautious not to raise his voice enough to rouse the rest of the household, âOur livelihood, our coinâŚour love. Thy father swears to betroth thee to some nobleâone of those men thou canst hardly standâfor the sake of business. But what of us, Guinevere? Why can I not live for mine own sake? Why canst not thou?â ("They take everything from us! Our livelihood, our money, our love. Your father promises to marry you off to some noble-one of those men you can hardly stand-for the sake of business. But what about us, Guinevere? Why can't I make my own life? Why can't you?")
âIt is not that easy, George,â Guinevere sighed heavily.Â
âThen make it so!â
As if snapping under his pressure, Guinevere replied sharply, âI cannot! I am a woman!âÂ
George shut his mouth, staring at her flushed cheeks in the candlelight, the fierceness in her gaze staring upon him like glass. The study fell into a silence broken by nothing but their emotional breaths.
Guinevere took a cleansing inhale before continuing, softer, âOur fellow commonfolkâthy fellow peasantsâmay indeed have little say beside the nobles, this is true. But I? My fate is not mine to shape; âtis scribed by my father, my elder brothers, and one day, my husband. I cannot even dream of saddling my steed and venturing across England to start anew, for I am bound to men. I cannot refuse my father when he chooses whom I shall wed, not when he sees good fortune in the match. I do not wish it so...but it is.â ("Our fellow commoners-your fellow peasants-might have little power against the nobles, yes. But me? I have no say in my life. It is chosen by my father, my elder brothers, and, one day, my husband. I can't even dream of getting on a horse and traveling across England to start fresh because I am bound to men. I can't refuse my father's decisions when he chooses who I am going to marry, not when he sees good fortune in the match. I don't like it, but it is what it is.")
George bowed his head at her explanation, his heart aching in his chest at their reality; their reality that he could try so hard to change but he was powerless to do just that.Â
She continued, âI am fortunate that my father hath been generous in his matchmakings, and I have thus far been allowed to decline the men he hath chosen. But I know not how long such grace shall last before he begins to insist. I wish to spend what time I may with theeâfervently, whollyâbefore that hour comes. But I beg of thee, do not make it harder than it must be. Pray, do not.â ("I am lucky that my father has been generous with my matches and he's allowed me to decline some of the men he has chosen. But I don't know how long he will allow me to keep declining before he starts to insist. I want to spend what time I have left with you before that time comes. But I beg you, don't make it harder than it has to be. Please, don't.")
Tears burned at his eyes, heavy and unyielding, and George shut them tight, willing them not to fall. His heart ached for her as if she were slipping through his fingers in that very moment, how everything he had thought was right to keep her had failed. Was she giving up on him? Giving up on a possibility of a future with him like they had whispered about in his bed that one night? He could not bear it.Â
âPrithee, George, commit not such a betrayal,â Guinevere pleaded when he did not speak in turn, her voice trembling with hurt, âI swear unto thee, my father doth run an honest tradeâI know it well, for I keep his books with mine own hand. He giveth fairly to the Church and lends aid to those in need. Do not lay his head upon the block for false cause, I beg thee, or I will have no choice but to turn thee in.â ("Please, George, don't commit such a betrayal. I swear to you, my father runs an honest business. I know this because I keep his books myself. He donates to the church and those in need. Don't put a target on his back for no reason, please, or I will have no choice but to turn you in.")
George gazed up at her with pleading in his shimmering eyes, âI know thy father to be kind and justâI know him to be a good man. I expect no foul harm to come to him, nor to thee.â ("I know your father is kind. I expect nothing bad to come to him or to you.")
But Guinevere was firm and unrelenting in her request, âSwear to me that thou wilt not continue to copy the ledgers nor provide them unto the rebels.â ("Promise me that you will not continue to copy the ledgers to give them to the rebels.")
George hung his head, his hands still clutching hers. The ache in his chest spoke to his guilt of deceiving her so and it reminded him of the unsettled feeling that stirred within his breast once he had passed over the first sets of parchment to Lando.Â
His silence cast doubt in her, and she spoke cautiously, âGeorgeâŚdidst thou already pass word unto the rebels?â ("George...did you already pass information to the rebels?")
He nodded, still holding her hand in his, pressing it to his forehead as though in penance, head bowed low with shame. She lowered herself before him, that she might meet his gaze in the severity of the conversation. The candle she held cast a warm glow upon his face, lighting the tears that welled in his eyes.
âThou didst not scribe thy name or our family name within those pagesâŚdidst thou?â she asked him seriously. ("You didn't write your name or our family name on those pages, did you?")
George shook his head.
Guinevere let out a sigh of relief, âGood. So they cannot trace the betrayal back unto thee.â ("Good. So they can't trace it back to you.")
âI meant thee no harm, Miss Guinevere. I only did what I believed to be right; but I see now I was mistaken.â George whispered earnestly as he met her eyes. ("I meant no harm, Miss Guinevere. I only was doing what I thought was right. I now see I was wrong.")
She slipped her hand from his to cradle his cheek with her warm palm, âI know. Only, I cannot bear to lose thee, George. Thou must tread with care, do not be swayed by the speak of the rebels. Thou art in good hands with us, I swear it upon my soul.â ("I know. I just can't imagine losing you, George. You have to be careful, don't be tempted by the talk of the rebels. You are in good hands with us, I promise.")
âForgive me, my fair one. I cherish thee more than words can tell.â ("Forgive me, my darling. I cherish you more than I can explain.")
Guinevere leaned in and pressed her lips to his, sealing his apology with a kiss. George breathed her in, a mixture of relief and adoration flooding his chest, and he framed her fair face with his callused hands, as if to hold the moment still. He lingered in the silence of her mercy, unmoving, until she drew away first.Â
He watched as she rose to her feet and reached for the parchment upon which he had been writing. Without a word, she held its corner to the flame in her hand and, together, they watched as the fire took itâcurling its edges, blackening ink and fibreâuntil it vanished to ash and fell upon the floorboards at their feet, leaving not a trace of the scribe behind. Even that simple action left a flicker of ease over Georgeâs spirit, as if she had destroyed his betrayal and was allowing them to start afresh.Â
âI shall never betray thee again, so long as I draw breath,â George swore earnestly, wrapping his arms around her waist and pulling her gently to stand between his knees. He looked up at her, chin against her chest, eyes glassy with promise, and she reached down to brush her thumb across his cheek. ("I will never betray you again as long as I'm living.")
âI know,â she whispered.
The Sunday sun blessed the city of London, drawing George and his fellow apprentices from the confines of their abode to the cobblestone streets on their day of rest. The four young menâwith their limited meansâmeandered through the depths of the city and explored the various market stalls that were dotted throughout the various clearings and squares between winding streets.Â
George had felt more at peace since Guinevere had discovered his secret and they had a moment to share in the moonlight where he had promised her that he would never again lift his quill against her fatherâs name and business. She had not spoken a word of his betrayal to her father, and she had made it plain to George that so long as he kept his word and refrained from further scribing, the matter would remain between them. Additionally, in the week since, he had thought often of Lando and had resolved that he would still meet him at their agreed-upon timeâthough only to tell him that he could no longer provide what was being asked of him. The last thing he wanted was to wrong Lando too and, above all, his friend deserved the truth. George knew he would understand.Â
If anything, the venture to the city square offered a well deserved break for George and his fellow apprentices from their weekly toil in the carpentry shop after morning mass. As they walked through the stalls, George looked out for something to buy for Guinevere as a kind token of his appreciation and, between the two of them, of his apology and his admiration. A booth of freshly cut flowers caught his eye and he paused to offer the gardener a courteous greeting before stooping to smell their colourful blossoms.Â
âGeorge!â
The call from Alexander pulled George from his momentary reverie and he looked up to where his friend was walking briskly over to him.
âThere was an execution this morning,â Alexander told him hurriedly once he approached, his voice disconcerned, âthe criminals have been left to hang in the middle of the square with a note from King Richard.â
âKing Richard?â Georgeâs eyes widened and he peered past Alexander as if to try and see what he was speaking about. Without another word, he rose from the cobblestones and followed his friend farther into the main square of London.Â
It wasnât often that criminals were captured and so when they were, public execution was used as a way to deter the public from committing the same crimes or else they would risk facing the same fate. George had never seen a real execution before nor the results of one and so his curiosity was piqued to see the results that were heinous enough to require written warnings from the King himself.Â
Oliver and Andrea were already amongst the thin crowd gathered in front of the wooden gallows, staring up at the three deceased men who were suspended by ropes around their necks. Their ankles were tied together and their wrists were bound behind their backs, heads bowed as if facing God with their penance and all of their garments were frayed and faded as if they were, too, peasants. George barely fell to a stop beside his friends before his gaze fell upon the ill-fated young man on the right of the trio of criminals, his head of unruly curls lolled forwards with the break of his neck. From where the sun cast its rays upon his pale face, Georgeâs suspicions were sealed.Â
Lando.
Without thought, George pushed his way through the crowd towards the gallows to read the parchment tacked to the platform by hand of the king. In formal penmanship, it read:

He tore his gaze from the note and lifted his eyes to the three men strung up before him, his stare drawnâunwillingly, painfullyâto the one on the right: the friend he had known for only a fleeting moment in time. Part of him wanted to slice the rope and pull him down from the gallows and breathe life back into him but he dare not be questioned as an accomplice. And that was exactly what he was: an accomplice. He had provided Lando with the documentation that held the intention to go against society, against the Crown. It could have been him up there, hanged beside him, lifeless eyes staring into the Sunday crowds of the city square.Â
Guinevereâs words echoed in his mind, asking him if he had written his name within the pages he had passed on to Lando. He knew he had not, but the thought of what it might have meant for him if he had sent a chill down his spine. George stared into Landoâs unblinking hazel eyes, so devoid of the impish glee they once held. A man might believe himself invincible until the moment the reminder of death looked him in the eye.Â
A hand came down heavily upon his shoulder and George startled just as Alexanderâs voice cut through the midday silence, echoing in his ears, âGeorge? What is the matter?â
George could barely manage a reply, his tongue betraying him, no words seeming to be suitable for the circumstance. He had not realized how much he had risked by joining Landoâs team and suddenly, despite his desire to fight back against the nobility and their ability to take everything from Georgeâs hands without remorse, nothing felt worth it. Yes, he would give his life up for Guinevere, but this was not the way. It was a startling reminder of where his loyalties lay.Â
âDidst thou know him?â asked Alexander, now flanked on either side by the concerned Oliver and Andrea. ("Did you know him?")
Swallowing back the bile in his throat upon his final glance of his deceased friend, George turned on his heel and pushed past his fellow apprentices, and broke into a run back towards the homestead without a look back.Â
London brushed past him in a blur of stone and timber and nothing but the sound of his boots hitting the cobblestones filled his ears in steady time with the rapid beating of his heart. George felt like he was suffocating, like his loose linen outerwear was squeezing his throat by the hand of God. It could have been him hanged there in the square for all to see. Maybe it should have been him. The thought kept repeating in his mind over and over like a hymn.Â
The courtyard of the carpenterâs guild felt like an oasis the moment he crossed beneath the stone archway into his shadowed gardens. Panting and flushed, George pressed a palm against his breast, feeling the thud of his heart against his ribs as if trying to break through, and he steadied himself with his other hand against the trunk of a tree. His eyes were narrowed into eery tunnel vision as he stared down at the cobblestone path and trimmed foliage of the gardens by his feet, the city spinning around him and stealing every breath from his body.Â
He could not get Landoâs lifeless stare out of his mind.Â
In fact, he was so shaken that he had not even noticed that he was not alone in the courtyard. Across the gardens, upon one of the wooden benches handcarved by the guild, sat Guinevere with her most recent suitorâthe same gentleman in red as George had seen with her previouslyâand both of them were eyeing him in concern. When she called his name through the summer breeze, he did not hear her.Â
Instead, his body lurched forward and he bent at the waist as he emptied his stomach into the flower bush at his feet. George spat loudly into the soil to rid his tongue of the bitter taste left behind and he wiped his mouth with the back of his trembling hand.Â
âGeorge!â
The sound of Guinevereâs voice rang loudly in his ears and the hurry of her feet across the path followed soon after. He could not manage to raise his head, keeping himself bowed in shame against the tree that kept him rooted in place.Â
Guinevere rested a hand upon his back, her other grasping onto his bicep, her touch a relief after the sickening shock the day had brought, her voice soft as silk, âWhat aileth thee? Art thou unwell?â ("What is the matter? Are you ill?")
âNay,â George rasped as he stood once more, not wanting to worry her, âI am well enough.â
âSurely something ails thee, to make thee cast up thy breakfast upon the roses,â Guinevere said, concern laced in her voice. Her hand held firmly to Georgeâs arm as he stood as if to offer him balance, unbothered by the watchful eye of her nobel suitor standing just a pace beyond. ("There most be something wrong to make you vomit in the rose bush.")
Yet, the man held an expression of equal concern as hers, and he offered, âMight I fetch my doctor? Perhaps some bloodletting or leeching might be of help to restore thee to full health?â ("Should I get my doctor? Maybe some bloodletting or leeching might help restore you to full health.")
âNay. Nayâpray, leave me be,â George murmured as he stumbled past them, his hand pressing gently to the manâs chest to guide him aside, âI am well enough. I ask only for rest.â ("No. No, please, leave me alone. I am fine. I just need rest.")
âGeorgeââ Guinevere called helplessly as she watched him hurry himself towards the house on ungraceful feet and he disappeared inside but a moment later.Â
George dreamt of Lando from the moment his head was laid to rest upon his pillow that afternoon. He had not been around his friend much since their first meeting but the grief still lingered and weighed upon him like lead on his heart. It was not a fair way to go; not for a young man who meant so well, who only wanted to aid the populace. He had met a cruel fate and one that George could not stomach.Â
No one bothered George the rest of that Sunday, leaving him to rest, alone, in the attic. Guinevere likely had told the family of his ailments and, the generous people they were, did not protest his slumber. Instead, by sun down, as the brightened attic faded into orange and pinks through the light from the small windows, the stairs finally creaked.Â
George turned his head to see who was coming, only to see Guinevere emerging with a bowl cradled carefully in her hands. He could not help the eased smile that grazed his solemn lips at the mere sight of her. When she saw that he was awake, she, too, shared in his moment of contentment with that soft smile of hers that could light up his days.Â
âI have brought thee supper,â she said gently.
He sat upright as she perched upon the edge of his bed, reaching out for the bowl of steaming stew she offered. The scent alone reminded him how long it had been since he last ate, and he let out a soft groan of relief, âThank thee, my fair one.â
She watched him raise the bowl to his lips and take a gracious sip before she said, âAlexander hath told me thou and the others did see an execution in the square today. Was it that which unsettled thee so? My heart was heavy with worry.â ("Alexander told me that you and the others saw an execution in the square today. Was that what made you so unsettled? I was worried about you.")
George kept his gaze downcast into his bowl as he struggled to find the words to affirm her suspicions but, finally, he offered a nod. He raised his gaze to her sweet face, dusted pink by the fading sunset, and he spoke, âAye, the lad I met upon my journeyâthe one I told thee of the other nightâwas hanged for treason. For conspiring against the CrownâŚand the nobility.â ("Yes, the man I met on my journey-the one I told you about the other night-was hanged for treason. For conspiring against the Crown...and the nobility.")
âAh,â Guinevere hung her head, her eyes closed for a moment as if letting the heaviness of his words wash over her. When she lifted again, she said, âAnd thou didst think it might have been thee?â ("Ah. And you thought it might have been you?")
George could only nod and he hid his emotion behind another sip of his soup.Â
Guinevere continued, ââTis why I bade thee cease all dealings with him. I would not have thee suffer a fate so tragic.â ("That's why I told you to stop the deals with him. I don't want you to have the same thing happen to you.")
ââTis not fair,â George choked out as he clutched his bowl in his hands and stared down at the warm broth within. âHe was no wicked man.â
âI do believe that he was not,â Guinevere assured him as she reached over to wrap her slim fingers around his forearm, her thumb caressing the tender skin there.Â
The two sat in silence for a moment as if sharing the grief that lingered between them. Even her company alone eased the weight in Georgeâs chest and he appreciated even the faintest of her touches to ground him back in steady reality, staring down at how her thumb stroked the dip of his elbow so kindly.Â
And then, as if he had not heard enough on that day, Guinevere spoke plainly, âCharles wishes to wed.â
George looked upon her with slight confusion, not recalling the name she had spoken.
âThe suitor from today,â she told him in a breath, her voice faint and her face void of any strong emotion as if to leave him to reckon the weight of her words, âHe has been visiting me often and he declared that he wishes to wed and father now insists that I may not decline his offer.â
âNay,â George exhaled in disbelief and moved suddenly to place his bowl upon the small table beside his bed, allowing him both hands to clutch hers, âHast thou agreed?â ("No...have you agreed?")
Guinevere stared at his hands holding desperately onto hers as if never wanting to let her draw away and she replied softly, âNay, not yet. Not formally, at the least.â
âBut wilt thou?â
âI must.â
âThou must not,â pleaded George. He took his hands out of her to grasp her face instead, swiping his thumbs over the apples of her cheeks in the quickly fading light of the dusty attic in which they sat, staring into her eyes as if to catch any hesitation in her diamond irises. âPrithee, my fair one, give not thy heart to another.â ("You must not. Please, my darling, don't give your heart to another man.")
âMy heart hath ever belonged to thee, my beloved,â she murmured and grasped his wrists as he framed her face. ("My heart has only ever belonged to you, my beloved.")
They leaned in together until their foreheads touched, and they shut their eyes tightly, silently willing the world, their circumstancesâeverythingâto be less cruel than it was. After but a moment, George closed the space between them, pushing his lips onto hers in a tearful kiss and she clung onto him with all the passion she could muster. Fingers pulled at clothing, skin, hair, anything to will their lover impossibly closer, wanting to accept each other as one being for the rest of time. They had bound themselves together in lust, in sin, and now were being torn apart by the cruelness of their society.
Had George not loved God so, he would have cursed Him for cursing him to a life such as this.
George knew that no words he could offer would be enough to sway societyâs order or win him Guinevereâs hand. He had come perilously close to sharing the same fate as Lando, and ever since, his mind had been a storm of thoughtsâdesperate schemes to turn everything around for the sake of the woman he loved. Nothing felt quite right, everything fell short. It was easy to doubt your worth when you had nothing compared to the grandeur of a nobleman.Â
So, as life returned to some semblance of painstaking normalcy, George threw himself back into his work, spending long hours in the shop and toiling along with his fellow apprentices. Besides, the labour was a welcome distraction from his heartbreakâor at least, it was, until his hands, moving on their own accord, continued to craft gifts for Guinevere. He carved her figurines of all her favourite things, each one a quiet confession he had been silenced from speaking aloud. They were proof of his heartbreak that came with the reality that they would never be truly able to be together. It was a realization that George knew he had to accept, no matter how painful.Â
But soon his workman's hands were whittling something far more precious than any figurine, moving as if by the guidance of God, carving and sanding and polishing to perfection. Within two days, a small wooden ring was polished in the palm of his hand, engraved with hand-made carvings of branches of a willow tree and, on the inside, etched with his name. Just a glance at his creation had his heart thudding within his breast as he sat at the workbench, surrounded by his fellow apprenticesâeach as clueless as the next to the tempest stirring within him.
Alexander was focused on the piece of furniture he was constructing at the opposite table, Oliver and Andrea talking amongst themselves about how to achieve a design they had been working on together at the tool bench, and George knew that in that very moment, Guinevere was about to leave to house to be betrothed to a man that was not him. The realization hit him like a strike of lighting and the speed at which George stood from his stool sent it toppling over with a crash. The other apprentices looked over at him just as he rushed to the staircase and hurried down them.
George knew that without anything to his name, it was unlikely her father was to be swayed, but, even still, he would not back away without a proper fight. If it ended with him banished back to Norfolk then it must be Godâs will.
Guinevere and her father were in the reception room, preparing to leave, when George emerged from the shop with such haste that both of them looked over in surprise at the interruption. Now that he was there, face to face with the both of them, George froze. He had not thought this out, not written talking points or arguments or anything he knew he wanted to say and should say. Instead, all he had was the wooden ring clutched in his palm and all the love in his heart that he wanted to pour out to the woman before him.Â
His master spoke first, âIs something amiss, lad?â ("Is something wrong, son?")
âThou canst not go,â George said earnestly. ("You can't go.")
Guinevere stood at her fatherâs side with a gentle expression on her face, staring at George almost as if she could anticipate what he was about to do and, yet, being equally as terrified for what he was about to do and what its outcome would be. Although George was there to face her father, he could not take his eyes off of her, drowning in the seafoam eyes that he had fallen for so strongly. He could not bear to let her walk out that door to be betrothed to another man. He would not be able to live with himself had he not tried; he would sooner be strung up in the city square.
Looking between them, his master asked, âWe cannot go? And why ever not?â ("We can't go? And why not?")
George took a steeling breath and turned his focus to the gentleman to whom he owed everything and to whom he now risked bringing great dishonour. Squaring his shoulders, hands clasped behind his back, he began, âSir, thou hast been most kind and gracious to me since mine arrival at thy threshold last season, and I hold myself ever in thy debt for such generosity. The courage with which I did knock upon thy door that day hath granted me the honour of labouring in thy esteemed shop beneath thy wise instruction, and so it is with that same resolve that I come now to stand before thee.â ("Sir, you have been so kind to me since I came to your home last season and I consider myself forever in your debt for such generosity. The courage it took to knock on your door that day allowed me the honour of working in your shop, under your wise instruction, and so it's with that same courage that I come now to stand before you.")
âVery well, lad. Speak thy mindâbut be swift about it.â the master replied as if his own mind were already half out the door and in the details of the impending betrothal. ("Okay, son. Speak, but make it quick.")
There was no turning back.
âSir, I am in love with thy daughter and it would be my greatest honour in life if thee would allow us to wed.â
Guinevere, although partially expecting such a declaration upon his brash entrance into the reception room, still let out a soft gasp of surprise. Immediately, her gaze flicked to her father.
George did not back down as he watched the way his masterâs expression changed from calm and casual to something uneasy, something almost unreadable. Despite the racing of his heart and the churning of his gut, he held the manâs gaze still, unmoved, though the silence between them throbbed like a festival drum within his ears. For a moment, George might have believed the man to strike him by the way his countenance furrowed into that of distaste and he shifted his weight almost menacingly.Â
Not wasting a moment wherein the gentleman might speak him down, George pressed on, âI have naught to offer but mine heart and mine hands, this well I know. In all manner, I am unworthy of thy precious blood. I am but naught when set beside the noblemen thou wouldst see her wed unto and I cannot promise a life of riches nor title.â ("I have nothing to offer but my heart and my worker's hands, I know. Because of this, I know I am not worthy of your family. I am nothing compared to the noblemen that you would rather marry her off to and I can't promise a life of riches or title.")
His masterâs voice was firm, âGeorgeââ
âNay, sir, I pray thee,â George broke in, desperation trembling in each word as he presented unto them the modest wooden ring he had carved and engraved that week in the shop, âI have naught to offer, yet I vow before thee and the Lord that I shall love her until He calleth me home. I shall love her with all that is in me; I shall labour without cease that she be fed and kept in comfort. She shall be the greatest blessing of my days, if thou wouldst grant me the honour of thy consent.â ("No, sir, please. I have nothing to offer but I promise before you and God that I will love her until I die. I will love her with everything in me. I will work tirelessly so that she is fed and comfortable. She will be the greatest blessing of my life, if you will give me the honour of your consent.")
Guinevere gazed upon the ring in his hands as though he was presenting to her the Holy Grail itself. Yet in truth, it was but a humble piece of carved woodâthe edges still jagged in proof of his unskilled handâand yet, the weight it bore far outweighed any royal jewel or sacred relic. He saw in her eyes that she had not foreseen his declaration, as though she had resigned herself to their secret love being forever put to rest, but the faintest curl of a smile upon her supple lips eased the tempest within his breast.
By then, their seclusion in the reception chamber of the city house was broken as Guinevereâs six siblings peered from around corners and from the chambers above, eager to catch word of the commotion. Even Alexander, Oliver, and Andrea had drawn near from the shop, lingering at the threshold of the study to lend their ears. Despite the gathering crowd, Georgeâs focus remained on his master as he stood his ground, ring outstretched between quivering fingers, watching how his lips were drawn tight with mounting emotion.Â
Then, the gentleman took a step closer to George and in a voice low and firm, with a demand to be heard and understood, he spoke, âI took a chance on thee when thou didst beg for apprenticeship, and I gave up much that thou mightst stay and learn beneath this roof. I have permitted thee to consort with my children, to wander the streets at thy leisure, and to share both meals and mass with this family. I have granted thee far more than a man of thy lowly station could ever have dreamed, and yet here thou standest before me, to declare that it is still not enough?â ("I took a chance on you when you begged me for an apprenticeship and I gave up a lot so that you can stay here and learn. I allowed you to interact with my children, to wander the streets whenever you pleased, and to share meals and mass with my family. I have given you far more than any man of your means could have ever dreamed and yet you stand here and tell me that it's not enough?")
George swallowed, forcing out, ââTis more than enough, sir, I do not wishââ ("It is more than enough, sir, I don't wish-")
âThen speak not!â his master scolded.Â
His sudden raise of voice caused George to flinch, though he did not shrink away. Rather, he held himself firm and upright as though he were a knight bound for battle, unyielding in his presentation of his gift. Even as his master stepped forth again, pressing into his space, George did not step aside.
The gentleman stared George right in the eyes as he warned him with a voice like venom, âThou hast no right to meddle in the affairs of our house, nor to dictate what we should or should not do. To betroth my daughter to a nobleman is a fortune few of our standing do attain. I shall not allow a lowly serf to thwart such a worthy match.â ("You have no right to meddle in the affairs of our house or tell me what we should or shouldn't do. To marry my daughter to a nobleman is a fortune that families such as ours would be lucky to have. I will not allow a stupid slave to ruin such an important opportunity.")
Despite the blow his words did cast upon Georgeâs breast, he could only turn his gaze upon his lover with pleading desperation in his eyes, âGuinevereââ
âNay! Speak not unto her!â his master cut in once more, his voice loud and echoing through the timber-trimmed homestead, âShe is thy masterâs daughter, and thou shalt address her with due honour!â ("No! Don't speak to her! She is your master's daughter and you will address her with respect!")
A pace or two behind her father, Guinevere could only bow her head, her eyes shutting tightly as if to will this moment to be over. She knew her place well; in society and in her home. She had everything to lose. Despite this, George had nothing to lose and he did not lower the hand in which he held the wooden ring, presenting it, still, towards the chest of his master.Â
George did not avert his gaze, neither from Guinevere nor from her father, and when he spoke, his voice was low but unwavering, âWith all the honour in my soul do I address her, sir. For she is not merely thy daughter, she is the keeper of my heart. I seek not to shame thy house nor rob her of fortune, but to offer her a love that no title nor gold could weigh against.â ("I address her with all the respect in my soul, sir. She's not just your daughter but she is the keeper of my heart. I don't want to shame your house or steal her from a life of fortune, but I want to offer her a love that no title or money could compare to.")
âThou showest no honour unto my daughter, nor unto this house,â his master rebuked with a sneer, ââTis plain I have been too kind to theeâŚtreating thee as a son, placing trust where none was due. I did strive to turn mine eyes from it, but thou hast brought shame upon me and the kindness I did extend and thou still beg for more.â ("You show no respect to my daughter, or to this house. It is clear that I've been too kind to you, treating you like a son, trusting you where I shouldn't. I tried to ignore it, but you have brought shame to me and my kindness I gave you and you still beg for more.")
The papers his master then drew from the satchel at his belt made George step back in shock. There, within the gentlemanâs grasp, were the parchments upon which he had copied the ledgers, the very same he had entrusted to Lando but days before his execution. The papers were tossed to the floor at Georgeâs feet. Guinevere made almost a pained sound, as if she could not bear to witness this any longer.Â
The master declared loudly, âThe mayor hath returned these copies unto their rightful owner once the traitors were taken; I would not believe there dwelt another within my very walls. I defended thy name and kept thee under my roof despite this. I should have handed thee over, let them string thee up in the market square!â ("The mayor returned these copies to their rightful owner once the traitors were taken. I couldn't believe that there was another traitor within my walls. I defended your name and kept you in my home despite this. I should have handed you over and had them hang you in the square!")
âI made a grievous mistake, and I shall bear its burden unto my dying breath, sir,â George replied, his voice both loud and laden with earnest plea, âYet, though my past be stained, my heart is true and steadfast. I beseech thee, grant me to wed thy daughter so that I may honor her all my days and prove my worth by my love and service.â ("I made a horrible mistake and I will face that until my last breath, sir. But although I have made this mistake, my hart is true. I plead with you, allow me to marry your daughter so I can honour her for the rest of my life and prove my worth through my love and devotion.")
George had scarce let the final words escape his lips when the gentleman stuck him across the cheek with such might that his head was forced to turn. The sound echoed through the homestead and George paused but a moment before raising his fingers to touch his reddened cheek.
The words his master spoke echoed in his ears as he nursed his stinging cheek, âThou hast brought shame upon my household. Thou shalt return to Norfolk at once and never speak of this family again, or else I shall see to it that thou meetest the same fate as thy friend.â ("You have brought shame onto my household. You will return to Norfolk at once and never speak of my family again or else I will make sure you meet the same fate as your friend.")
âFather!â Guinevere all but sobbed over his show of anger, clutching onto his arm as if to physically restrain him from laying another hand upon the young man before him.Â
George raised his eyes unto his beloved, and in their meeting gaze, it was as though both did grasp their fate in that very moment. It had all gone far too wrong; there would be no salvaging themselves from the wreckage. Not like this.Â
âSir.â
The sound of Alexanderâs voice cutting through the tension was an unexpected reprieve.Â
As the eldest and most seasoned of the apprentices within the household, Alexander bore his position with solemn pride, never once daring a misstep that might tarnish his standing. Yet now, as he stepped forth from the study where he and the others had lent their ears, the confidence that often marked his countenance gave way to a grave and weighty seriousness. He spared George but the briefest of glances.
âI would not overstep mine own place, sir, yet I find myself in a trial of conscience and must speak a truth I do knowâone that may well alter thy judgement in this matter.â ("I don't want to overstep, sir, but I find myself needing to speak the truth as something I know might change you mind.")
The masterâstill red in the face with furyâeased but the slightest to hear him out, âSpeak, lad.â
Alexander cast a fleeting glance unto Guinevere, then another to George, as though measuring the weight of the moment, as though pondering whether they had any knowledge of that which he had long kept to himself and, if by hope, what he said was going to help them in their pleas. George, overcome and laid bare by sorrow, could summon no thought as to what his companion did now allude to.
So Alexander spoke, âUpon a night wherein I found no rest, I did bear witness to thy daughter stealing into the attic, where she and George did exchange those sacred words meant only for the sacrament of marriage. By making myself a witness thereto, I am afraid to say, good sir, that by law and holy rite, these two are already wed.â ("One night when I couldn't sleep, I witnessed your daughter sneaking into the attic where she and George exchanged those specific words meant only for marriage. Because I witnessed this, I am afraid to say, sir, that by law and by God, these two are already married.")
The masterâs face stiffened, his brow furrowing and countenance darkening as the truth of Alexanderâs words took hold. His gaze darted between Alexander, his daughter, and the man he had all but cast out.
In a word, low and laced with near fury, he echoed simply, âWed?â
No one dared to speak as the man processed this revelation. George and Guinevere exchanged a silent glance as if waiting for the axe to fall, Alexander right with them in fierce duty to protect. He knew full well what it was to have one he loved torn from his grasp. Though it were under other cause, he dared not allow such a thing to befall another.
The master turned to Guinevere then, the betrayal in his eyes sharper than steel, âDidst thou think thy father's roof so low that it might shelter deceit? That thy heart was thine alone to give, without heed to name or duty?â ("Did you think so poorly of this household that you thought you could lie? That your heart was yours to give without thinking about your name or your duty to this family?")
âFather, pritheeââ Guinevere started. ("Father, please.")
But the man was not finished. He then turned upon George, who stood as if awaiting his judgement, âAnd thou, who camest to me with nothingâI gave thee place, labour, and shelter. And in thanks, thou dost not only share my ledgers with rebels, but takest my daughter as well; without my word, without my blessing?â ("And you, who came to me with nothing. I gave you purpose, work, and shelter, and in thanks, you not only share my ledgers with rebels but you take my daughter as well without my blessing?")
George rushed out his reply, âI meant no harm, sir. I love thy daughter more than life itselfââ
âThou will speak of this to no one,â the master cut in, his voice demanding, speaking to those in the room and those who were lending their ears from around corners and up staircases, âEveryone in this family will take this to their graves. And theeââ ("You will tell no one about this. Everyone in this family will take this to their graves. And you.")
He turned upon George then once more, pointing a furious finger at him.
âThou wouldst do well to say thy prayers, for I shall turn thee over to the authoritiesâand thou shalt hang as a traitorâŚa thief to this house.â ("You better say your prayers because I will be turning you over to the police and you will be hanged as a traitor and a thief to this house.")
George thought another strike might have wounded him less as the agony his masterâs threat thrust through his heart was unbearable. He staggered back a pace, and Alexander, powerless to defend for he held no moral high ground against their shared master, laid a hand upon his back to steady him. Hath this been the end to which it hath come? Hath George journeyed all the way to London to meet his early fate? He would have given his life for Guinevere, though never had he thought it would come so soon.
âFather!â Guinevere all but shrieked, putting herself between the master of the house and the man she loved. âThou canst not!â ("Father, you cannot!")
He was unmoving, brushing her off with a cold, âStep aside, Guinevere, thou art in no place to speak on this matter. Thou hast shamed me and sullied the name of this house. Consider thyself lucky if Charles still doth wish to wed thee given the hysteria with which thou hast composed thyself.â ("Step aside, Guinevere, you cannot speak to this matter. You have shamed me and tainted the name of this house. Consider yourself lucky if Charles still wants to marry you given the hysteria you have composed yourself with.")
Guinevere was not one to be told off easily, not in matters she held dear to her heart and Goerge had learned that quickly about her over the months they had spent together. Instead, she raised her voice louder, raising her voice to her father, âI will speak to this matter! Thou shalt not send George to his executionâI forbid it!â
There was a pause as the intensity of her words settled upon the household.Â
Her fatherâs eyebrows raised in disbelief at her tone and his reply was like fire, low and collected but laced with bitter poison, âOh? Thou forbid it? What madness hath seized thee that thou thinkâst to speak this way to thy father?â ("Oh? You forbid it? What madness has come over you that you think you can speak to your father this way?")
âLove, Father! Love hath seized me! I love him just as muchâif not moreâthan thou didst love Mother all those years ago, when thou didst fight for her!â Guinevere thudded her hands upon her fatherâs chest in desperation, fingers curling within the fabric of his cloak, ââTis not right to be so cruel to him now, not when he hath been so brave to come forth and face thee.â ("Love, father! Love has taken me! I love him just as much, if not more, than you loved mother all those years ago when you fought for her. It is not right to be so cruel to him now when he has been so brave to confront you.")
His response was immediate, âBring not thy Mother into thisâGod rest her soul. She would be ashamed of the way thou hast behaved.â ("Don't bring your mother into this-God rest her soul. She would be ashamed of how you are behaving.")
âNo, she would not! Mother loved thee! She loved love itself, and she often spoke to me of how I must find someone I love to wed as she had done. I do not love Charles. He is a fine man, a kind man, but I do not love him!â ("No, she wouldn't! Mother loved you! She loved love and she told me often how I must find someone I love to marry like she did. I do not love Charles. he is a fine man and kind but I don't love him!")
Her father grabbed her wrists in his hands, pulling hers away from his chest and the way she had tugged upon his garments, âAnd thou hast gone behind my back to utter wedding vows to a man without my blessing. Thou knowest full well the weight of such words, and yet thou didst it regardless.â ("And you have gone behind my back to share wedding vows with a man without my blessing. You knew the weight of those words and you said them regardless.")
âAye!â Guinevere pressed on, her voice near hysteria, fanning the flames, not backing down for even a moment, âI spoke vows to him, I took it upon myself to kiss him in shadowed corners and couple with him in secrecy, and I knew he copied the ledgers and kept silent. I am as guilty as he. If thou must have him hanged, then hang me with him!â ("Yes! I shared vows with him, I kissed him when no one was looking, and I had sex with him in secrecy! I knew he copied the ledgers and I kept silent! I am just as guilty as he is. if you must have him hanged, then hang me with him!")
Her father's face drained of colour, as though her words had struck him across the chest. For a moment, George might have thought his master would fall unconscious as Guinevere laid everything out for him to bear witness to.
âGod aboveâŚâ her father breathed, near staggered, âDost thou even hear thyself, child? Hast all sense left thee? Thou wouldst cast away thy name, thy station, thy very soulâfor him? Thou speakest of coupling in shadows and swearing secret vows as though it were naught but sport. Hast thou no shame? No honour? Thou gave away thy maidenhead to a man to whom ye were not betrothed? Under my roof? I raised thee better than this, Guinevere. I raised thee as a woman of God, of respectability. ("Good Lord...do you even hear yourself, child? Have you lost your mind? You would throw away your name, your standing, your soul, for him? You speak of sex and vows as though it were just some game. You gave away your virginity to a man you were not married to? Under my roof? I raised you better than this, Guinevere. I raised you as a woman of God, of respectability.")
âWere I to do justice, as I ought, I would have thee locked away for thy disgrace. But I shall not hang thee, daughterânot for his sake. Nay...he shall bear the weight of what thou both have wrought, what he hath stolen from thee and from this family. Perchance I shall find mercy enough to spare his life, but he is no longer welcome beneath this roof. I shall cast him out at once, to return to Lynn with haste, before my mercy wavers. ("Were I willing to do what I should given the circumstances, I would have you locked away for disgrace. But I will not have you hanged, daughter, for for his sake. No, he will carry the weight of you both have done, what he has stolen from you and from this family. Maybe I will find mercy to save his life but he is no longer welcome under his roof. I will send him back to Lynn as soon as possible before I change my mind.")
âAs for thee? By week's end, thou shalt be sent to the priory, there to worship no man but God, and to reap thy penance for thy sins and thy shame. The sisters shall see to it thy life is set upon a holier path.â ("And as for you? By the end of the week, you will be sent to the priory where you will worship no man but God, to reap penance for your sins and your shame. The nuns will make sure your life is set on a holier path.")
âThe priory? Father, I would rather be hanged!â Guinevere shrieked.Â
âEnough!â the man boomed, âNot a word more from thee, child!â
Guinevere, finally, held her tongue. She turned then upon George with a countenance of sorrow, tears in her diamond eyes, and he felt his heart ache at their reality. Neither spoke a word more.Â
His master closed the conversation with a firm demand of his newest apprentice, âGeorge, I shall spare thy life for the sake of my daughter and her madness. Yet thou shalt depart at once. Gather thy things and be gone before the hour is out.â ("Goerge, I will spare your life because of my daughter and her madness. But you will leave at once. Gather your things and be gone within the hour.")
âAye, sir,â George bent at the waist in a feeble bow before turning on his heel and brushing past a stunned Alexander towards the staircase. The younger siblings were hidden around the corner at the top, having listened in, but George did not spare them a glance on his way by, his head hung in agony and shame.Â
No one joined George within the attic as he packed his satchel, not even his fellow apprentices. Instead, he stood at his bedside alone, wood shavings still clinging to the material of his tunic as he clutched the wooden ring in his hand and stared down upon its delicate engravings. Never before had he felt such pain as this, such agony in his breast as if his heart had been stabbed. His life might have been spared by Guinevereâs pleas to her father but perhaps death might have eased the pain with which he was plagued.Â
The sound of footsteps creaking upon the stair had George frantically tucking the ring into his satchel, and he called over his shoulder, âI make haste!â ("I'm hurrying!")
ââTis but I,â said Guinevere, her voice so meek it scarcely sounded her own. ("It's just me.")
George turned at the sound of her voice, gazing upon her as she drifted cautiously over the floorboards towards him. He longed to reach out, to draw her near for one final farewell, yet he dared not, lest he provoke her father further. Instead, he spoke softly, âThou shouldst not be here, alone with me.â ("You should not be here alone with me.")
âMy sisters keep watch for me,â Guinevere whispered, âFather hath gone to speak with Charlesâto call off the betrothal.â ("My sisters are keeping watch for me. Father has gone to speak with Charles, to call off the betrothal.")
âI am sorry,â George exhaled, bowing his head, âI should not have made such a reckless declaration. I hath ruined thy life.â
âNay,â Guinevereâs hands framed his face, her touch warm, familiar, and she guided his head up to meet her gaze, âThou didst no such thing. There is naught more romantic in all of England.â ("No, you did no such thing. There is nothing more romantic in all of England.")
George scarce could summon a smile at her gentle words, gazing deep into her eyes as his hand took hold of one of her wrists, his calloused thumb soft upon her tender skin.
âI mean it,â he spoke, âI love thee. More than all things in Godâs fair land do I love thee.â
âI love thee too,â Guinevere echoed, drawing his face close, that she might steal a kiss from his supple lips.
When they drew apart after but a moment, they pressed their brows together, eyes closed, as though striving to hold fast the memory of their loverâs touch.
Guinevere spoke once more, âTake me with thee.â
George drew back with a timid smile at her bold plea, his hands falling to clasp hers between them, âI would not stir thy fatherâs wrath further.â ("I do not want to make your father more upset.")
âI cannot bear to live without thee,â Guinevere begged, her voice steady and sure, âNor can I endure to spend my days as a nun, now that I have tasted the blessing of thy body. I need thee, my belovedâprithee, take me with thee.â ("I can't bear to live without you. And I can't bear to spend the rest of my life as a nun, now that I know what it is to experience the pleasure of your body. I need you, my beloved, please, take me with you.")
âTake thee with me back to Lynn? And then what?â George questioned. It was a fair thought in theory, but how might reality bear it? To bring her home to be a farmerâs wife, when she had been raised with such generous means in London?
âI know not, nor do I care,â Guinevere insisted, wrenching her hands free to cast her arms about his shoulders, drawing his body close to hers, âI care not where we go nor what we do. I want nothing but theeâall of theeâin any manner.â ("I don't know and I don't care. I don't care where we go or what we do. I only want you -all of you - in any way.")
Georgeâs mind spun with ideas of how to make sense of this, how they were to make a life for themselves from this. He had not even completed a year of his apprenticeship, although he had learned much in the months he had been present, and she was literate and a great bookkeeper. Nothing felt sure, nothing felt easy.
âI hear Lynn is a prosperous tradestown,â she continued, dreams and hope bright in her voice, which George ached to grasp, âOr Norwich? âTis almost as great as London. We could go anywhere, Georgeâprithee, say we shall.â ("I hear Lynn is a prosperous tradestown. Or Norwich? It is almost as great as London. We could go anywhere, George. Please, say we can.")
With his arms around her waist, hands splayed across her back, he asked in a breath, âIs it true that we are wed?â ("Is it true that we are married?")
âWe spoke the sacred words to one another. Those words do bind man and wife, no matter the place or circumstance. And though we might have been pretending, with Alexander as our witness, there is no doubt.â ("We spoke the sacred words to each other. Those words bind man and wife, no matter the place or circumstances. And we might have been pretending but with Alexander overhearing, there is no pretending anymore.")
George���s eyes traveled all over her soft face, taking in every freckle across her nose and cheeks, the shine of her eyes, the colour of her lips. His wife.Â
He drew away and turned toward his satchel, then drew forth the wooden ring he had carved for her. Without bidding, she held out her hand, and he slipped upon her finger the token of his love, before closing her fingers about it and drawing them to his lips to place a kiss upon them. With the ring upon her hand, their matrimony was sealed in that dusty attic in the sweltering summer heat of London.Â
âI want to make a good life for us,â he confessed earnestly, âI want to make right by thee.â
âThou shall. I know it.â Guinevere assured with ease.Â
âWilt thou give up all for a life with me?â ("Will you give up everything for a life with me?")
âMy father hath already forced me to give it up. I would rather have only thee than naught at all.â ("My father had already forced me to give it up. I would rather have only you than nothing at all.")
And so he kissed her again with every ounce of passion and life in his veins.
When they parted, she hurried off to her chamber to pack her own bag, leaving George to finish his. Despite the pain of ending his apprenticeship early on such soured terms, his heart raced in his breast with the thrill of what was to come; to spend a life with his beloved.Â
They met once more in the reception room where her siblings and the other apprentices waited, her sisters standing watch by the front window to spy their fatherâs return. As if all were on their side, well-wishes were exchanged and tearful goodbyes shared. George and Alexander embraced longer than was common, and even Guinevereâs eldest brothersâwho had taken time to warm to Georgeâs unexpected presence in their shopâbade him farewell with kindness.
The steed was readied by the stablehand and George mounted it before he lent a hand to raise Guinevere behind him upon the saddle. Alexander, the only one who had joined them outside, passed up Georgeâs bow and his quiver of arrows and helped get him sorted for their journey. And, as if that were not enough, he then held forth his small satchel of silver coins as a parting gift.
âAlexander, I must not,â George declined politely, knowing full well how little apprentices earned.
âPrithee, George, I insist,â Alexander pressed kindly, âSo that thou mayst live the life I could not.â ("Please, George, so that you can live the life I could not.")
George relented and accepted the coin and Guinevere helped him fasten the satchel to his belt as he thanked him with a soft, âThy kindness and friendship are much obliged.â ("I appreciate your kindness and friendship.")
âGod bless thee,â Alexander smiled, stepping back from their steed to grant them leave in haste.
With a final glance back at the homestead where their paths had first crossed, George and Guinevere set forth upon the London streets, their course aimed toward their new life beyond. They carried with them nothing but the necessities: coin, some bread and lavender, a change of garments, and, of course, safely tucked within Guinevereâs own satchel, the collection of tokens and figurines George had made for her.
The greenery of rural England welcomed them from the stone confines of the city walls, breaking out into rolling hills and lust forests beneath stunningly blue sky. Despite the tumultuous afternoon they had experienced, a sense of peace settled over them, putting distance between them and the people who threatened to rip their love apart. George could only trot onwards.Â
Guinevereâs arms were around his waist, holding tightly onto him as they rode through the countryside, wooden ring on her hand and her head resting against his shoulder. He could feel the warmth of her body against his, the gentleness of her embrace, and the protective swell in his breast gave him purpose. He truly would give it all up for herâand he didâand what a lovely thing to know that she would do the same in return.
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love mirage

â§ pair: benjicot "davos" blackwood (fancast) x freader!secret-lover-betrothed-to-a-bracken
â§ theme/warning(s): slight/implied smut, angst, forbidden romance, star-crossed lovers. â (all characters mentioned are of age!) 18+
â§ word count: 1.8k
â§ author's note: hello! this is my first writing! this one-shot was spontaneously written as it was meant more for self-indulgence but i thought why not share it to others who also has a current obsession with the rising blackwood character, right? :-) anyways, reading fics under the benji tags manifested many scenarios in my head, and gave me inspiration to write something. lastly, forgive me for any possible grammatical errors, i still am an amateur in fictional writing. enjoy!!!
It was the dead of night. The sky had been painted in its darkest hue, the moon stood nearly at its peak, offering its gentle glow along the riverbank. The distant chatter that could be heard during a long day's labor was no longer present, replaced by the solemn silence of nature's symphoniesâthe flowing river, the rustling of leaves as they danced in breaths of wind, and the lullabies of insects as they clicked and buzzed.
The forest was no stranger to you; befriending the woodland for the passing moons. You often wondered if anyone would, or had, grown an inkling of your periodic disappearance following the hours of supperâwhat others would think of your fatherâs only daughter growing a rather sudden interest beyond the walls of your family's stronghold. You always made your way out stealthily, though his words echoed in your mind,
âYou are our only hope, daughter. Do not fail us.â A stark reminder of your duty, which would soon bring honor to your family's name.
If it means anything, you knew it was wrong from the start. You had never intended anything as such to happen. For the name of a nobleman was bound to yours, yet your lips would chant whispers of another.
Time became irrelevant right before you met him on this cool summer night. There the young man stood, one hand steady on the hilt of his dagger, ever vigilant should danger lurk in the tranquil embrace of the silent woods; his tense body relaxing upon the sight of your cloaked figure before himâa beacon of familiarity. You had planned to tell him about your betrothal tonight.
Although it was not much longer that you would find yourself a whimpering mess under the Blackwood boy. Your sighs mingled with the saccharine words Benjicot spoke, adding harmonies of moans and gasps of pleasure in the serenity of the haven you both made. You often feared getting caught but Benji assured you in these remote lands, he doubted anyone would be near enough to witness anythingâ not even the treacherous act you both selfishly indulged in. You still pray to the Gods that they grant you both the favor that no eye spies this clandestine meeting; and the many before.
You never really questioned yourself on why you couldn't confide in your father about your betrothal; had you already envisioned the conversationâmayhem would ensue. It was simple, it was the decision he madeâsecuring your family's position through a marriage pact, a political alliance they called it. Duty, you thought yet again.
You didn't know what, or whom, to shift the blame onâor maybe it was the complexities of guilt. your guilt. You knew the inevitable, yet your selfishness, your greed, your immature desire for love; tainting your rationale. Or that maybe you should feel resentment that your father and the Lord of Stone Hedge, Humfrey Bracken regarded their relationship as close as to being kin. Maybe then you would have the strength to ignore your obligations, this once.
You cursed yourself for thinking the way you did, and you cursed the Gods for the decades-old rivarly between the ancient housesâa hatred and feud born long before either of you were born; beyond your father's time, and his father's before him, yet its roots grew, multiplying the petty divide among those that followed after them.
It made you question what started the war between the two in the first place, as sin begets sin begets sin; however, unwavering was the tryst between you and Benjicotâuntouched by the strife and grudges.
He knew. You were aware of his knowledge with the woven webs you had with the Brackens; about your father's bond with the red stallion lord. Your thoughts do not come to a plausible explanation as they endlessly spun in your mind.
And all it took was Benjicot's hips to lower into yours, silencing these whirling thoughts.
Your cloak drapes over you, offering its warmth from the breaths of wind, coming from the riverbank. It spared the watchful eyes of the forest spirits from your unneeded bareness. At your side, Benjicot lays as he adjusts his breeches.
âThereâs a war soon to come,â he says as he stares at the sky, hands behind his head, âAnd I ought for you to know that given the growing wars, you have not left my mind since.â he nervously confessed.
You hum in response, the weight of his words settling heavily in the quiet of the forest. "I fear what lies ahead, Ben" you whisper, your voice barely above a murmur, filled with both longing and apprehension.
He turns to you then, his gaze searching yours with an intensity that spoke of unspoken promises and uncertainties. "No matter what comes, my love for you will endure." he vows, his fingers gently tracing the contour of your cheek.
You turn your head and sit up, feeling around for your discarded garments to dress.
"Did I say something wrong?" he asks, sitting up, his expression betraying confusion at your abrupt reaction.Â
"No, it's not that." you breathed out, your back faced to him. It was this very moment you had feared since the first: the inevitable.
"Well, did you not finish as I had?" he ventured in jest, a playful side of him that you loved. "Or is it because I professed my love for you?", hoping his declaration had not caused you to pull away. "Trust me, I will make sure there's nothingâ"
"My betrothal..." you did not let him finish, "it's to Aeron Bracken." you said, still facing away from him as you rose from the ground. You picked on your fingers picked in nervousness of his next response. The weight of your confession hung heavy in the air.
At first he thought he had not heard you clearly, as if the world had gotten awfully quiet. It was when you repeated once more, realizing his ears did not fail him as his blood got hotâof you saying the name whom ignited an unexplainable fury in him.
"Aeron Bracken," Benjicot repeated in disbelief of your sudden confession, "The Bracken twat, eh?" â the very same Bracken he encountered in fresh conflict, near the mill's boundary stones. Although he did not show it, the tension in the air was strong enough to burn and linger its flames; his knuckles turning pale as he clenched his fists at his side.
"A craven false king follower... is bound to your name, to you." he chuckles incredulously.Â
He paced in the clearing, his footsteps heavy as he turned to you. "And what are you to do about it?" He posed the question, pain plain upon his face, though hope bled through the mask of his composure. Deep down, he already knew the answer. He could scare tell if asking you such question was to self-inflict torment, or just a desperate need to face the harsh reality of your confessionâ not a difference between the two really.
You finally turned to meet his gaze, "It's my father's decision," you explained softly. "I... I cannot defy it." You stood before him, as your tears glisten in the faint light. Torn between love and duty.
"Ben," you pleaded, your voice shaking. "You know the stakes. Itâs my duty. My family's honorââÂ
"Fuck honor!" he interrupted, his voice thundering through the forest. He strides towards you, "It was long gone the very moment we first metâ" he huffed out. He knew in his heart that despite the love he developed towards you, the tangled web of your kinship with the Brackens would soon unravel the bond you sharedâ still, he gambled with the odds, just as you had.
He had ever hoped that the old Gods would bestow the blessing of his fervent wishesâthat it would be you, not some other maiden, whom he would take to wife. He often dreamed of you bearing the heirs of his house, growing gray together, and watch as your blood flow through the veins that would carry on his legacy. Yet, it was only ever a distant dream.
You reached out to him, to calm the storm raging within him, but he jerked away. "Tell me, then," he challenged, stepping closer with fire in his eyes. "Where do your loyalties lie, beyond this," he motioned between the two of you. "Are you suggesting that your father, and even yourself, are to declare for the usurper cunt of a King?" he whisper-yells to you. âOr is this some sort of arrangement with those Bracken fucks, to get back at us Blackwoods, simply just using me as a pawn, 'cus you know I'm now Lord?" His words spitting at you like venom;
âOh, you know where my loyalties lie," you spat, your voice filled with heartache, "But I won't stand for you questioning my integrity nor my family's honor to secure a future." You glared at him as your heart stung with hurt, "And to accuse me... I would not dare to commit something so heinous even if i could; I'm not cruel, Benji."
Benjicot's jaw clenched, shaking his head as he stood facing the river, incomprehensible words muttered under his breath.
"I never asked for this," you whispered, tears welling in your eyes. "But I have responsibilities. We both do." you sniffled, swallowing the tension of your throat away, "And I know you know..." you wiped your tears, "we know... that this was bound to occur, sooner or later, Ben." your voice was barely audible, even with the deafening silence the forest came to be. "There's a war coming."
The silence hung heavy in the air, thick with unspoken words and the weight of impossible choices.
Benjicot stood before you, his expression torn between love and anguish. His hands trembled as he gathered his scattered belongings, his movements reflecting the turmoil in his heart. You mirrored his actions, silently picking the remnants of what you felt is to be your last fleeting moment of happiness.
"I swear it," he finally spoke, "would that we were not bound by the enmity between our folks, I would have already vowed myself to you. Long before your father would have you promised to another."
His words pierced your heart with longing and regret, the bitter truth of your circumstances hanging between you like a veil of sorrow. âAnd I would have gladly accepted it,â you replied with a heavy sigh. "âmy Lord."
The Blackwood male nodded, his gaze fixed on yours, filled with a depth of emotion that mirrored your own. With a heavy heart, you both silently acknowledged the futility of your love.
Benjicot turned away first. The distance between you both grew; and his silhouette became one with the dark forest.
You knew that somewhere, amidst the pain and heartache, you would find a way to carry onâa life of uncertainty but fraught with duty. As you walked away from the happiness and love that the forest had given you, the ache in your chest spoke of a love that was lost but will never be forgotten. It would be a bittersweet reminder of what once was, and what could never be again.
#hotd x reader#benjicot blackwood#benjicot blackwood x reader#bloody ben#davos blackwood#davos blackwood x reader#forbidden romance#star crossed lovers#hotd angst#i love me some angst#mmm mmm mmmmmmmm#i hope you guys like itttt!!!#kieran burton fancast#hotd fanfic#hotd
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Time Will Tell - Chapter 1.01
In honor of season 3 being released today, here is the first chapter of my full on fanfic of our beautiful boy <3
My Time Will Tell Masterlist
My Cha Hyun-su Masterlist
My Navigation and Masterlist
The Time Will Tell Glossary
Warnings: N/A, just fluff Word Count: 1,250
current | next
While some of the people you knew would be embarrassed at moving back in with their parents at 18, you didnât feel that way. Living in the university dorms was not the most fun experience you had and you wished you would have just stayed at home in the first place. Your roommate was messy and rude, always leaving her things on your side of the dorm; the water from your shared bathroom never got over 70°; the floor you lived on was gender-neutral - which you usually wouldnât have a problem with if the boys on your floor werenât creeps; and the food at the food court was nowhere near the quality and taste of the homemade or even store-bought food you always ate at home with your family.Â
All those reasons are why you were there now, standing in front of the entrance to the Green Home Apartment Complex with a suitcase in each hand and an overly packed bag slung diagonally over your shoulders. You walked towards the entrance and sighed in relief when a man on the phone on his way out held it open for you.Â
âThank you,â you mouthed your gratitude with a smile he halfheartedly returned.
He barely waited for you to fully be inside the building before letting go of the door and walking off.Â
It was as you were walking away that you heard him. âI might be late, I need to buy some sunscreen for my face to keep me pretty,â he said into his phone and you laughed under your breath.
You greeted the security guard once you got close enough and realized he looked on the verge of passing out. You walked past his desk towards the elevators but were surprised when you heard him snap up, nearly giving himself whiplash, and call out to you. âStop there!â You turned to face him and tilted your head in a confused manner. âI havenât seen you through here before, what is your business here?â
You nearly scoffed, firstly at his attempt to be intimidating and secondly, at the fact that he would just do that to the first unfamiliar face he would see. âIâm the eldest daughter of the Kim family in 1210. My business is that Iâm moving back in with my dad and siblings,â you heard the sound of the apartment complexâs elevator doors opening behind you but paid it no mind as you continued to spell out your reasoning for being there to this man who you personally thought had no need to know. âNow, would you like to see my birth certificate, or am I free to go see my family now?â He seemed taken aback by your boldness but motioned for you to continue on with a slightly shocked face. You plastered a bright smile on your face and winked at him. âThanks, sweetie.â
The moment you turned around, you rolled your eyes and the smile fell from your face. You were surprised to find a boy with shaggy overgrown hair wearing a black hoodie staring at you, noticing the interaction between the two of you and watching it all as it happened. Although his face was blank, you could see the surprised and impressed look in his eyes. As soon as he noticed you looking at him looking at you, he looked away with a light blush on his cheeks, seemingly waiting for his turn to talk to the security guard. You let out a soft chuckle before walking past him towards the elevators. Your laugh gathered his attention again and you gave him a flirty wink while walking, much different from the one you just gave the security guard. You could feel the eyes of the boy on your back before the security guard called his attention again. âSir?â
âYeah, my delivery guy said he left a package for me.â
âOkay, what is your name?â
âCha Hyun-su.â
âCha Hyun-su,â you thought with a small smile. âCute.â
The wheels on your suitcase sounded quietly across the lobbyâs tiled floors as you approached the elevators and pressed the button. It didnât take too much time waiting for the elevator to get to the lobby floor and you entered it immediately. It was when you got in fully that you saw the boy, Hyun-su, walking towards the elevators as well, this time with a package in his hands. You held your hand out to stop the elevator doors from closing and he looked somewhat shocked by your act of kindness. He walked in, albeit a bit hesitant, and quickly said a soft thank you.Â
âWhat floor?â You asked him. He looked confused for a moment before softly answering.
â14.â
You smiled in response, clicking the button to the 12th and 14th floor as the doors finally shut and the freight started its journey up towards your destination. You could feel him actively avoiding looking at you so you werenât scared to shoot a quick glance over at the boy beside you. The box he held told you one thing about him.Â
âHe likes Ramen,â you thought with a hidden smile.
âI love that brand,â you expressed quietly and he snapped his head over to you, seeming confused about why you were talking to him. âI ate it all the time when I was staying in the university dorms, though that wasnât for a very long time.â
He nodded hesitantly and looked down at the box in his hands. It was almost like he was scared to say anything in case you would hold it against him. âYeah, itâs my favorite.âÂ
You nodded back at him before rather awkwardly turning back to face the front and look at the small screen displaying what level you were on.Â
7.
You got the impression he wasnât the most sociable person so you didnât want to bother him anymore, so it surprised you to hear him continue the conversation.Â
âSpicy or Regular?â
âHuh?â You questioned but understood the moment he opened his mouth to clarify.
âWhich do you prefer?â
âOh! I usually prefer the spicy ramen,â you answered. You saw his lips tilt into a smile for a split second before returning to their resting position.Â
âMe too.â
He spoke so softly, half the time it was like he was whispering.Â
You smiled at him just as the elevator doors started to open and you reached the twelfth floor.Â
âWell, it was nice meeting you. Iâll see you around,â you bid him goodbye and gathered your luggage, starting to walk out and being only halfway through the doors before he spoke again.
âWait!â He spoke louder than youâd heard throughout all of the past five minutes of knowing him before going straight back to his normal soft tone. âDo you⌠need any help?â
He nodded to the luggage you were slightly struggling to haul behind you and you laughed appreciatively. âYouâre very kind but no thank you,â you turned down. âLooks like you have your hands full already, I wouldnât want to add on to that.â
He looked both relieved and disappointed by your words and you didnât know whether to feel good or bad about rejecting his offer. âOkay.â
You smiled at him once more in goodbye before turning around and heading toward where you knew your familyâs apartment to be.Â
You didnât hear the soft, âI wouldnât mind,â Hyun-su said as the elevator doors started to close behind you.Â
You also didnât know you would share many more experiences with the messy-haired ramen boy.
#Time Will Tell đ quack-quack-snacks#sweet home#cha hyun su#cha hyunsu#cha hyun su x reader#Cha hyunsu x reader#cha hyunsoo x reader#cha hyun soo x reader#sweet home x reader
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"At the risk of stating the obvious, no woman can mate with a bull and produce a child. Recognizing this simple scientific fact, I am led to a somewhat interesting suspicion: King Minos did not build the labyrinth to imprison a monster but to conceal a deformed child, his child.
While the Minotaur has often been depicted as a creature with the body of a bull but the torso of a man, centaur-like, the myth describes the minotaur as simply having the head of a bull and the body of a man, or in other words, a man with a deformed face. I believe pride would not allow Minos to accept that the heir to the throne had a horrendous appearance.
Consequently, he dissolved the right of ascension by publicly accusing his wife Pasiphae of fornicating with a male bovine.
Having enough conscience to keep from murdering his own flesh and blood, Minos had a labyrinth constructed, complicated enough to keep his son from ever escaping but without bars to suggest a prison. (It is interesting to note how the myth states most of the Athenian youth "fed" to the Minotaur actually starved to death in the Labyrinth, thus indicating their deaths had more to do with the complexity of the maze and less to do with the presumed ferocity of the Minotaur.)
I am convinced Minos' maze really serves as a trope for repression. My published thoughts on this subject (see "Birth Defects in Knossos"Sonny Won't Wait Flyer, Santa Cruz, 1968) inspired the playwright Taggert Chielitz to author a play called *The Minotaur* for The Seattle Repertory Company. As only eight people, including the doorman, got a chance to see the production, I produce here a brief summary:
Chielitz begins his play with Minos entering the labyrinth late one evening to speak to his son. As it turns out, the Minotaur is a gentle and misunderstood creature, while the so-called Athenian youth are convicted criminals who were already sentenced to death back in Greece. Usually King Minos has them secretly executed and then publicly claims their deaths were caused by the terrifying Minotaur thus ensuring that the residents of Knossos will never get too close to the labyrinth. Unfortunately this time, one of the criminals had escaped into the maze, encountered Mint (as Chielitz refers to the Minotaur) and nearly murdered him. Had Minos himself not rushed in and killed the criminal, his son would have perished. Suffice it to say Minos is furious. He has caught himself caring for his son and the resulting guilt and sorrow ineeses him to no end. As the play progresses, the King slowly sees past his son's deformities, eventually discovering an elegiae spirit, an artistie sentiment and most importantly a visionary understanding of the world. Soon a deep paternal love grows in the King's heart and he begins to conceive of a way to reintroduce the Minotaur back into society. Sadly, the stories the King has spread throughout the world concerning this terrifying beast prove the seeds of tragedy. Soon enough, a bruiser named Theseus arrives (Chielitz describes him as a drunken, virtually retarded, frat boy) who without a second thought hacks the Minotaur into little pieces. In one of the play's most moving scenes, King Minos, with tears streaming down his face, publicly commends Theseus' courage. The crowd believes the tears are a sign of gratitude while we the audience understand they are tears of loss. The King's heart breaks and while he will go on to be an extremely just ruler, it is a justice forever informed by the deepest kind of agony."
House of Leaves by Mark Z. Danielewski
pg. 110-111
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HIDDEN
TERRY RICHMOND x BLACK FEM READER
WARNINGS / TRIGGERS: NSFW; minors do not interact; mentions of domestic violence; self hate; angst; Terry is hard to read in the beginning.
SUMMARY: Youâre running away from an abusive ex when you meet Terry working in one of his clubs.
TROPES: grumpy x sunshine ; âtouch her and dieâ; slow burn;Â
AUTHORâS NOTE: I took this idea and kind of ran with it. Let me know if you guys like it! I want this to be a series but only if you guys like it. Iâm going to try switching POVâs; let me know if you guys like it or if itâs hard to follow.
WORD COUNT: 2.8k
*Please do not plagiarize, repost, or steal my work. This doesnât count for re-blogs!*
âFuck, fuck, fuck,â I whisper out. That fucking asshole shredded my passport. My expired ID will have to do for now. Iâm running around the house trying to be as quiet as possible so I wouldnât wake the sleeping monster whoâs my soon to be ex. My phone vibrates in my back pocket,Â
LEXI: Parked a block down, lights off.
ME: Give me 3 minutes.
I liked the message and continued to pack, I couldnât believe I was doing this. Iâd been with Rafa (ex boyfriend) for about a year before the motherfucker put his hands on me. I believed him when he said it was an accident. I looked at his tear stained face and heard the crack in his voice and thought âhe loves me he wonât hurt me againâ. Here I am two weeks later with a black eye, split lip, and Iâm pretty sure some broken ribs
Slipping my phone back into my pocket, I peek behind me making sure Rafa is still asleep. When I saw that he was, I let out a breath I was holding. I may or may not have slipped some crushed sleeping pills into Rafaâs evening whiskey, ensuring I wouldnât be interrupted fleeing from his ass. Reaching under the bed, I grab my suitcase thatâs pre-packed with everything I need (besides my passport) and head towards the door.Â
Before my hand reaches the door handle, I look behind me at Rafa. His features relaxed in this state he doesnât look nearly as menacing as he did two hours ago when he was beating the brakes off me. Freedom was right in front of me yet, here I was close to tears dying to crawl back in bed with him. I shook my head and took a deep breath. Turning away from Rafa, my trembling hand reached forward to grab the door.Â
âJust do it Daphne,â I whisper to myself. With another breath I pulled the door open to what used to be our bedroom and walked out. Iâm doing this for me, saving my life. As dramatic as it sounds I have to get out of this relationship before it kills me.Â
âGirl, itâs about time you got in this car! I thought I was going to have to come in that bitch swinging,â my half-sister Lexi said. I threw my bags in the backseat before getting in the passenger side and buckling up. (Lexi's cast pic)
âI got stage fright all of sudden. I didnât think Iâd be able to go through with it, actually leaving him. I uprooted my whole life to be with him and here I am back where I started.â I said on the verge of tears.Â
Lexi took a deep breath before turning to me, â Look Daph, I know what itâs like to be so in love with the potential of a man youâre blinded by who he really is. Rafa didnât give a fuck about you, he proved that when he put his hands on you. Look in the mirror Daph! I love you sis, and Iâm going to support you no matter what, but believe me when I say this. You took your life back today.â My eyes blur with tears as I reach across the center console to pull my sister into a hug.Â
âOh stop it before I start crying,â Lexi lets out a watery laugh before letting me go. We release our embrace and Lexi starts her SUV up, and we drive away. I donât glance back, ready to leave this life behind me.
2 Hours LaterâŚ
âWelcome to your new home!â Lexi sings as we pull up to her apartment complex. I chuckle as we grab my things and head up to her place.Â
âThe second bedroom has a bathroom right across the hall. I cleaned both of them out so you can make room for all your things. I got you a key fob from the front desk and I already added your name on the lease, but donât worry about the rent,â Lexi says as she shows me around her spacious luxury apartment.Â
I spin, crushing my sister in a bear hug, âI canât thank you enough for this Lex, Iâll start looking for a job first thing tomorrow. I have enough money saved up to get me through the next few months, so I can help with rent if you need me to.â
Lexi playfully rolls her eyes, âDaphne I love you but please shut up. Youâd do this for me in a heartbeat. Youâve always taken care of me, now let me return the favor. Plus I already found you a job.â Lexi and I found each out about each other in middle school and weâve been inseparable ever since.Â
I let out a deep sigh before nodding, âI love you too Lex. Now whereâs this so-called job?â I ask, raising a brow.Â
Lexi makes her way towards my room, motioning for me to follow her, âYouâll work at the club with me. One of the servers got fired and weâre really short. I put in a good word with my boss Terry, he just wants to meet you first.â
Lexi works at a high end gentlemen's club named âFuseâ. When she told me about it I was a bit apprehensive but, beggars canât be choosers. I figured I can work there, save up for my own place and then go from there.
âLexi, how am I supposed to meet your boss looking like this? Iâll scare his ass off,â I say motioning to my face.Â
âDonât you think I thought about that? Heâs coming here, think of it as an impromptu interview. Heâs discreet and wonât ask questions. Sis if you donât want to do thisâŚ,â Lexi trails off.Â
I shake my head, âNo, No, itâs fine Iâm sorry. What time should I be ready?âÂ
Lexi squeals before jumping into my arms, âI know youâre nervous but Terryâs assured me that weâre working the exact same schedule until you get your footing. If you decide at any time that the club isnât for you, you can leave.â
I hug my sister back, enduring the sharp pain that comes from my rib cage. the weight of today is finally taking its toll on me, âI think Iâm going to freshen up and lay down,â I say, detaching myself from our embrace. Lexi nods before showing me where the towels and things are, and then she leaves me to it. Taking a deep breath I cut the bathroom light on and looked in the mirror.
I gasp out a sob as I take in my features. My bright brown eyes look dull and lifeless, well the one that opens anyway. My lip looks worse than what it is. Thereâs a slight bruise on my right cheek. The worst is yet to come when I lift my shirt taking a look at my torso.Â
âOh my god,â I sob. Iâm a nurse by trade so bruises, cuts, and blood donât really affect me. But, seeing them on me is doing something crazy to my mind. I deal with cases like this all the time, vowing Iâll never be that woman. And here I am, that woman. I get in the shower on auto pilot. Not enjoying the art of getting clean like I usually do but just trying to get everything done. Once clean I moisturize and make my way into my new room. I donât know how long I lay there and wait for sleep to take me.Â
My alarm startles me awake, I groan and roll over reaching for my phone. Pressing the silence button, I begin to rub my eyes. I groan and roll into a sitting position, my face feeling even more sore than it did yesterday. Making my way to the bathroom, I flip the lights and turn the shower on. My mind reels as it tries to process the last 24 hours.Â
Rafa hasnât tried to contact me, not that he could. I blocked him on everything but, still the silence is alarming. I never told him where Lexi lives, so thereâs no way he could know that Iâm here. Pushing all thoughts of Rafa out of my mind for now, I start getting ready for my day. After doing my extensive body and skincare routine I threw on a hoodie and leggings. I decided not to cover up my bruises for the moment. Now that itâs the next day everything just looks ugly and swollen anyway.Â
After finishing my morning routine I head out to the living room to find Lexi. I can hear her talking quietly to someone, I assume sheâs just on the phone. When I round the corner at the end of the hallway I stop in my tracks. Thereâs a literal adonis manspreading on our sofa. Well over six feet this man is sitting on our sofa looking almost too big for it. God he was fine, Iâm in no space to get involved right now but I can appreciate a fine ass man. Hearing my entrance, his eyes shot towards me stopping in my tracks.
âOh! Daphne youâre awake! Perfect,â Lexi said from somewhere in the kitchen. Seconds go by and I see her appear with a tray with three cups of coffee on it.
âThis is Terry, remember I told you about him yesterday?â Lexi says with a nervous smile on her face. I nod looking back and forth between the two. My gaze lingers a little longer than necessary on Terry. Heâs looking up at me with a curious frown on his face like heâs trying to figure me out, and Iâm doing the same thing.

I push my shoulders back and walk towards him outstretching my hand, âHi Terry, Iâm Daphne sorry, if Iâd known you were here I would have made myself look a little more presentable.â
Terryâs shaking his head before I can finish my sentence, âItâs all good, I was in the area and figured Iâd just pop by and meet my new bartender.Â
My eyes widen, âJust like that? Iâve got the job? Whatâs the catch?âÂ
Terry chuckles before crossing one leg over the other, âLexiâs right, nothing gets past you. She told me you used to be a flight nurse, so I was hoping you could help me out from time to time.â
My brow furrows, âIâm not going to have to do anything illegal am I?â
Terry takes a deep breath leaning back, his gorgeous eyes assessing me, âWeâll keep that need to know. I wonât knowingly compromise your position or have you do anything that will put your license in jeopardy.â
I go over the details in my head. Could I really do something like this? It was clear to me that Terry was some sort of crime boss. Heâs sitting so comfortably in our home like he owns the place (I wouldnât be surprised if he did). Heâs got money but doesnât want to show it, based on the Rolex and Prada shoes heâs sporting.
âWhat if I say no?â I say, crossing my arms.Â
Terry chuckles and leans forward, âThen I guess youâll need to go job hunting sweetheart.â
I roll my eyes and look over to Lexi, she mouths âsay yesâ. I contemplate in my mind, Iâve always played it safe until now. I went to nursing school because my mom wanted me to have a âstable incomeâ. I went out with Rafa because he was a âsafeâ choice yeah, that worked out real nice. Iâve always gone with the safest option, not wanting to disappoint anyone. With recent events plaguing my brain I nod my head.Â
âSure, what the hell. Iâll do what I can within reason,â I say to Terry.Â
Terry nods before standing, âGreat, Iâll see you both next week, and Daphne all my bartenders wear black. Cover up the bruises but keep the makeup to a minimum.â I nod mindlessly at the things he said. Standing at his full stature, Terry is muscular, a few tattoos here and there and a face to die for. I was getting starstruck by my damn boss, which cannot happen. He exudes power, commanding each room he walks into, his height and size have nothing to do with it. Itâs his aura he just gives off the vibe that he doesnât take any shit.Â
Terry nods to both of us, âLadies,â he said, and then he was out the door.Â
I sigh deeply and lean against the doorway, âJeez Lexi you didnât tell me your boss was finer than baby hair.â
Lexi laughs heartily, âGirl, it wouldnât have mattered. Terryâs like a forcefield, he lets no one in.â I chuckle lightly and roll my eyes, making my way towards the sofa. I plop down and grab the coffee Lexi made.Â
âSo tell me about the club. What should I expect?â I ask while sipping my coffee.
Lexi settles in next to me, cutting on the TV, âItâs a high end strip club / gentlemen's lounge, so we have lots of politicians, upper level business men, basically anyone who can afford the fifteen hundred dollar membership fee. You and I will work the bar, as long as you show a little cleavage and laugh at their shitty jokes theyâll tip you well and leave you alone for the most part. You donât have to worry about guys getting handsy, Terry used to be a Marine, so a few of his buddies from back in the day are working security.â
I nod following along, âDoes Terry usually show up a lot?â I ask.
âWell, it is his club. So yeah heâs there most of the time in his office. He usually only comes out if thereâs a problem,â Lexi said.Â
âHmm,â I reply with a nod. This was definitely going to be an interesting experience.
A WEEK LATER
âDaph! Come on! Weâre going to be late!â Lexi yells upstairs. I sighed looking over at myself in the mirror, a simple black activewear jacket and leggings (link). My eye is almost healed, nothing a little concealer can't fix. Iâm still favoring my right side because my ribs are still pretty sore. I spray myself with my sparkling lychee perfume, grab my tote and head downstairs to meet my bratty ass sister.Â
âKeep your panties on Lex Iâm coming!â I shout as I look for my asics. Once I finally find them I meet Lexi at the door plastering on a fake smile.
âIâm sorry. Are you ready to go now?â,I ask with fake enthusiasm. Lexi just rolls her eyes and opens the door to lead us out. We head to her SUV and make our way to Terryâs club.
âOkay, so what should I expect?â I ask Lexi.
âWell itâs a Thursday night so it wonât be too busy but itâs a good thing you wore those shoes. Weâll be paired together so Iâll make drinks and youâll take them out. Table one starts to the right of the door, and then theyâre numbered clockwise,â Lexi said, adjusting the heat settings in the car.Â
âI mean it sounds easy enough. I just havenât worked in a club since nursing school. I might be a little rusty,â I say, getting self conscious. Lexi reassures me as we begin heading towards downtown.Â
TERRY
This canât be the sister Lexi was talking about, this is going to be a problem. Sheâs beautiful, fucking astonishing. I canât even see the bruises, probably makeup which she doesnât need. She exudes a softness that has no business being involved with me and my business. I sweep my eyes over her before landing on hers. Lexi told me her piece of dickhead boyfriend beat the shit out of her. She doesnât look bad, but her limp tells me otherwise. A part of me wants to find the sorry motherfucker and break his knees, but Iâm acting too irrational over a woman I just met.
Iâve been watching Lexi show her the ropes from my loft office. She seems to know what sheâs doing catching on pretty quickly. I adjust myself for the second time as she bends down to pick up something.Â
âAss fat as fuck,â I mumble watching it sway in her leggings. She drops off a tray of drinks at the police commissionerâs table and I watch as every set of eyes drop to her ass as she turns and walks away. She might be a problem
THE END
AUTHORâS NOTE: Ok I didnât want to get too deep in this in case yâall donât like it. So please please like and comment if you want more. Iâm so grateful for you guys I hope you all have a happy holiday season! Stay safe bookies <3
Until next time,Â
TEE <3
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Lavender for Royalty; Sage for Wisdom (Book 1) Chapter Twenty-Five
Kyoya Ootori x Reader
Chapter Twenty-Five: Red Carnation for Deep Love
Summary: (Y/N) and Haruhi get kidnapped by the Zuka Club. Kyoya is displeased.
Mouse Note: Thank you all for joining me for Book 1! It's been so incredible to hear all of your thoughts and see so much love for Kyoya and MC! Book 2 will not be out for a while, I have some other projects to work on, but it will be in the works! I've got it on my list, and I shall return to it soon. But for now, please feel free to check out any of my other series, and know that I am so thankful for all the support! I love you all!
           âWhereâs (Y/N), Kyo-chan?â said Honey as the limousine pulled up outside of Haruhiâs apartment complex.
           âYeah, you always pick them up before the rest of us,â said Kaoru.
           âBecause theyâre his favorite,â snickered Hikaru.
           Mori nodded solemnly at the comment.
           âThey were planning on going out for coffee with Haruhi this morning,â said Kyoya. Was he a bit jealous that they had chosen to spend the morning with Haruhi instead of him? Yes. (Of course, they spent plenty of time with him in classes and all the accidental âI had to do some business errands in town and happened to drive by to pick you upâ momentsânot accidentsâbut nothing was ever enough for Kyoya). âBut they know Tamaki was planning on catching us allââ
           âThis will be fun!â said Tamaki.
           ââso they should be back by now,â said Kyoya.
           âGood!â said Tamaki as he got out of the limo. He grabbed box of cake theyâd brought again and headed up the stairs.
           âHaruhi! (Y/N)! Come play!â sang Hikaru, Kaoru, Tamaki, and Honey.
           âHuh?â An extremely sleepy-looking man with his five oâclock shadow still present opened the door.
           âExcuse us, wrong apartment,â said the boys turning away.
           âNot so fast.â Rankaâjust without his makeupâgrabbed Tamakiâs collar. âDonât give me that âIâve seen the forbiddenâa drag queen in his natural stateâ look. I just got up. Of course I havenât shaved yet.â
           âRanka!â said Tamaki, trying to make a good impression again. âYou seem in good humor today!â
           âHello, long time no see!â said Ranka to the others hosts. He pointedly ignored Tamaki as usual. âHow are you all?â
           âWeâre doing well,â said Kyoya, smiling.
           âWe came here to pick up Haruhi and (Y/N)!â said Honey.
           âHaruhi and (Y/N) arenât here, though,â said Ranka. â(Y/N) came by to go out with her for coffee, but then they got picked up by some friends this morning. I thought it was just (Y/N) she was going out withâtheyâre such a dear, arenât they?âbut it looks like Haruhi has made plenty of friends!â
           âOhâŚof course she would go out with her friends from junior high or somethingâŚand (Y/N) is too amiable to not be invited alongâŚâ sighed Tamaki, Hikaru, and Kaoru in disappointment.
           Kyoya frowned. That meant he wouldnât spend any time with (Y/N). That was frustrating.
           âHm? These girls werenât from her junior high days,â said Ranka. He shrugged. âWell, I never knew she or (Y/N) had friends at the famous Lobelia Womenâs Institute. Though my daughter rarely tells me these thingsâŚâ
           The Host Club froze. Tamaki, Kaoru, Hikaru, and even Kyoya whipped their heads around to look at Ranka.
           âDid you say Lobelia?!â
           Now Kyoya was truly irritated.
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           Across the city in a club room of Lobelia Womenâs Institute, (Y/N) frowned. They didnât claim to have a sixth sense, but they felt a disturbance in the Host Club all of a sudden.
           âSenpai, do you have idea why we were kidnapped?â sighed Haruhi, smoothing down the skirt she had been stuck into. The one day she had gotten to dress casually and go out with a non-bothersome friend, she had been pushed into a car and dressed in another school uniform.
           âI have two theories,â said (Y/N), putting their hands on their hips. They too had been put into the Lobelia uniform. âEither Benibara just wants to frustrate the Host Club or sheâs trying to get closer to us again. Honestly, it could be the two together.â
           â(Y/N)-senpai, I think she just wants to get closer to you,â said Haruhi, a sweat-drop appearing on her head. (Y/N) was oblivious at times, werenât they? âI mean, she obviously has a crush on you.â
           âShe does? I thought she just flirted with anyone who wasnât a man,â said (Y/N).
           âMy dear carnation, rose,â said Benibara, entering the room. âHow are the uniforms?â
           She, Suzuran, and Hinagikuâs eyes widened as they saw the pair. Instantly, they hugged the two with giant smilesâthey were more similar to the Host Club than they realized.
           âOh, my! You look so cute!â said Suzuran.
           âItâs so lovely! Itâs as if the uniforms were made for you!â said Benibara.
           âYou might as well transfer to our school!â said Hinagiku.
           âHold on! Tell us whatâs happening!â said Haruhi, freeing herself and pulling (Y/N) out of the giant hug. âYou brought us here claiming you had a sincere request, but youâre acting just like the Host Club. I missed out on coffee this morningâŚâ
           âOur friends are going to be annoyed,â sighed (Y/N).
           âOh, Iâm so sorry.â Benibara took (Y/N)âs hands, and they felt no reaction like they did when Kyoya held them. âItâs natural for you to be upset. Truthfully, we didnât intend toâŚbring your friend with you, but we decided to rescue her, as well.â
           âI think youâre misconstruing ârescueâ with âabduct,â â said (Y/N).
           âBut our request relates to what weâve discussed before,â said Benibara. âWe put on concerts and plays to supplement our daily studies. This is our clubâs main activity.â
           âLately weâve been putting in extra effortâeven on the holidaysâsince thereâs only week left before Nadeshiko Day,â said Suzuran. âNadeshiko Day is the birthday of Nadeshiko Hanamine, the found of Zuka Club.â
           âUnfortunately, our lead actress met with an accident and canât perform,â explained Hinagiku. âThat puts us in a bind. Our understudies couldnât handle the pressureâthey all wound up with ulcers. That leaves us with very few options.â
            Oh, no, this is going in the direction I think it is, isnât it? groaned (Y/N).
           âWe hereby request, my dear carnation,â said Benibara. âThat you become our new starââ
           âNo, thank you,â said (Y/N), smiling with their eyes closed.
            That looks exactly like Kyoyaâs smile, thought Haruhi. They really are becoming more and more similarâŚThatâs scary.
           âThey were our only hope!â said Benibara, and her sidekick caught her as she draped herself dramatically on them. âWeâll have to cancel the show.â
           âMy deepest apologies,â said (Y/N), bowing and grabbing the door handle. âCome on, Haruhi. Weâll let ourselves out.â
            (Y/N)-senpai can be brutal, thought Haruhi, though she was thankful to escape.
           As soon as they opened the door, they found hundreds of girls wearing Benibara Fan shirts glaring at them. The dark aura was terrifying.
           âUm, senpai?â said Haruhi, sweat-dropping doubtfully about trying to leave with the evil way they were being stared out.
           ââŚI have a feeling the Host Club is going to go into conniptions if they find out about this,â said (Y/N), sighing.
            Kyoya for sure, thought Haruhi. She didnât really want to see what the Shadow King was capable of when the Lobelia Womenâs Institute interfered with (Y/N)âs life.
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           Outside of Lobelia, Kyoya narrowed his eyes. His already-sour temper suddenly felt even more angry.
           âBoss, crouch down so we can get over the high walls,â said Hikaru and Kaoru, shoving Tamaki over and getting on his back.
           âAck! Not both of you together!â said Tamaki.
           âHold it right there, you!â said Ranka, hands on his hips. âThis is no time to be fooling around! If you donât take the Zuka Club seriously, you will get hurt. I didnât even have time to change clothes because I know this is serious. Listen, the Zuka Club like the nectar of diabolic flowers. Once youâre hooked, you canât get out, even if ruins you.â
           âHaruhi and (Y/N) donât strike me as the types to get addicted,â said Kyoya.
           âHow do you know so much about the Zuka Club?â asked Honey.
           âWellâŚâ Ranka sighed. âKotoko was a tough woman. Nothing could ruffle her feathers.â
           âKotoko?â repeated the twins.
      ��    âHaruhiâs mother,â said Tamaki.
           âBut one day when I was cleaningâŚI discovered that Kotoko had a huge Zuka Club collection!â said Ranka.
           âAh! If her blood runs in Haruhiââ began Hikaru.
           ââHaruhi will end up bankrupt!â finished Kaoru.
           âHaruhi canât afford bankruptcy!â exclaimed Honey.
           âAnd (Y/N) likes girls and boys!â said Kaoru.
           âWhat if they start to get the attention they want from Benibara?!â said Hikaru.
           âKyoya hasnât been making enough moves!â said Honey.
           An irk mark appeared on Kyoyaâs forehead. âExcuse me?â For one thing, he didnât know Honey knew about his feelings. And for another thing, he had been attempting to confess to (Y/N) in the last chapter.
           âWe need to get in there immediately! Kyoya, order Lobelia uniforms! Weâll disguise ourselvesâAck!â Tamaki was kicked over by Ranka.
           âIdea rejected!â declared Ranka. âItâs revolting to see a man that has no idea of the dedication is takes a proper queen to dress herself dress as a woman. You would make a fool of my career.â
           âBut weâre always getting these sorts of requestsâŚâ pouted Tamaki.
           Ranka scoffed. âIf you want to get Haruhi and (Y/N) back, follow my lead. I have a plan.â
           Kyoya just opened his phone to make a call. He would ensure he had his own plan in the works. He refused to let (Y/N) be dragged into anything Benibara was planning. She didnât deserve (Y/N) at all.
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           âOh, Marianne,â said Benibara dramatically. âHow many thousands of nights did I curse our separation? Society frowns on usâŚI despise the obstacles that try to block our love.â
           âOh, FredericâŚâ said (Y/N), trying to put some emotion into it.
           âUhâŚâ Benibara âfainted.â
           âFrederic!â said (Y/N), catching her.
           âThe lingering bite of that pelletâŚmy death approaches.â Benibara lay in (Y/N)âs arms. âYetâŚMarianne, how strange. For I am at peace. In your arms I find my every exertion vanishes.â Benibara sighed and began to continue her speech. âYou are an angel. Your nurturing visageâŚThe blanket of your gazeâŚâ
            How long until I can escape? thought (Y/N).
           âYourâŚYour!â Benibara began to sing.
            So Iâm really stuck.
           âBenibara, itâs time to move into the auditorium for rehearsal,â said Suzuran.
           âWeâll get the Carnation into costume,â said Hinagiku, grabbing (Y/N).
           âWaitââ said (Y/N).
           âTheyâll look beautiful!â said Suzuran, grabbing their other arm.
           âHaruhi, help!â said (Y/N) as they were pulled away.
            Oh, Kyoya is going to destroy these girls, thought Haruhi worriedly as she jogged to keep up.
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           âTheyâve got a full-scale facility here,â said Kaoru and Hikaru, looking around the theatre.
           âThatâs where the orchestra goes,â said Honey, looking down.
           âHey, how long do we have to wear these stupid Benibara t-shirts?â said Hikaru.
           âWhere did Kyoya go?â said Ranka.
           âCome to think of it, I havenât seen him for a while,â said Tamaki.
           âWhat an honor to have a son of the Ootori family!â
           The Hosts and Ranka looked over to see Kyoya getting a tour from an administrator of Lobelia.
           âPlease, take any seat youâd like. And please feel free to use these opera glasses.â She handed them to Kyoya and left.
           âLook, Haruhi, and (Y/N) are down there,â said Hikaru.
           âThey look so cute in those dresses,â said Tamaki.
           Kyoya narrowed his eyes. (Y/N) and Benibara stood on a dais, and he disliked very much how close Benibara stood to them.
           âAt long last, the kiss scene!â squealed some of the Benibara fan club.
           Kyoya froze. All of the Hosts paused. Ranka tilted his head in confusion.
           âThe deep, passionate embrace between forbidden lovers during their all-too-brief tryst!â said another girl.
           The hosts ran for the stage. Kyoyaâs eyes narrowed darkly, and he opened his phone as he went. No one was getting (Y/N)âs first kiss on his watch. Kyoya was an unapologetically jealous man.
      Onstage, Haruhiâs eyes widened as she saw Benibara pull (Y/N) close. Kyoyaâs going to make this entire institute go bankrupt if Benibara kisses (Y/N).
           â(YN)! Haruhi!â Tamaki and the other hosts ran out onstage.
           âTamaki?!â said Haruhi in shock.
           On top of the dais, (Y/N) looked down in shock as they heard Tamakiâs voice. However, as soon as they looked down, Benibara held their chin and tilted it up.
           âAnd now, my carnation, we finish the performance!â said Benibara, smiling at them.
           (Y/N)âs eyes widened in alarm. âWait a minute!â They pushed Benibara. âNo thanks!â
           âMy carnation!â cried Benibara dramatically.
           The lights flashed violently, and Benibara blinked against the light in shock. (Y/N) stumbled back.
           â(Y/N).â Kyoya stood below them and extended his arms. He had made the call to the sound booth, and now all that was left was to rescue (Y/N).
           They smiled, and as Benibara reached out, (Y/N) didnât even look back. They jumped. Kyoya caught them, holding them close by the waist as (Y/N) steadied themself before their knees buckled too much.
           âMy dear carnation!â said Benibara. âZuka Club, stop the Host Club!â
           âRight!â said Hinagiku and Suzuran.
           âMy apologies.â Kyoya didnât look sorry in the slightest. âBut (Y/N) wonât be spending any further time with the Zuka Club.â He scooped (Y/N) up into his arms and ran for the exit. The rest of the Host Club whooped excitedly and followed. (Y/N) let out a laugh, and their arms wound around Kyoyaâs neck as they ran. This felt right.
l
           âThank you so much for the rescue,â said (Y/N), smiling as they slid into the car with Kyoya (he had abandoned the others to figure out their way homeâplus Tamaki was fawning over Haruhi).
           âI was hardly going to leave you to those idiots,â said Kyoya.
           (Y/N) sighed. âI had no idea she was going to do that. I mean, it was one thing for her fangirls to scare me into performing, but she hadnât included the kiss in the script. I wouldâve escaped with Haruhi if Iâd known.â
           An irk mark of jealousy appeared on Kyoyaâs forehead. Benibara had written the kiss in for her own gain. Of course she had.
           âHey.â (Y/N) reached out and took Kyoyaâs hand as they saw his expression. âDonât worry. I wasnât too uncomfortable. And you saved me.â They smiled. âIâm alright.â
           âI should have intervened earlier,â said Kyoya. âI let it go on for far too long.â
           âKyoya, Iâm serious. Itâs alright. Donât put the burden of overlooking everything on your shoulders,â said (Y/N).
           âI donât overlook everything,â said Kyoya. His hand took theirs firmly. âI look after you.â
           (Y/N)âs heart skipped a beat. âYou look after me?â
           âDo you think I would have interfered so dramatically for anyone else?â said Kyoya.
           âYouâre protective of the people you care about,â said (Y/N). âMore than people think.â
           âPerhaps,â said Kyoya. âBut you are still who I watch over the most. You meanâŚquite a bit to me. And I couldnât let someone like Benibara approach you in such a manner.â
           âPeople will flirt with me,â said (Y/N). âIt happens. But you donât have to worry. Iâm not interested in them.â Iâm in love with you.
           âAnd yet I do worry.â Kyoya moved closer, his hand still holding theirs. âI worry incessantly. You never leave my mind.â
           âIâŚYou donât leave mine,â said (Y/N).
           âGood,â said Kyoya, his other hand rising to stroke their cheek. âI couldnât stand another in your thoughts.â He tsked. âI couldnât let anyone be your first kiss. In fact, I donât want anyone to kiss you at all.â
           âWhy?â (Y/N)âs heart was pounding. They could feel the answer thrumming like blood in their heart and veins, but they wanted to hear it. They needed to.
           âBecause I want to,â said Kyoya softly, his eyes going to their lips and returning to meet their gaze. âAnd I am a selfish man.â
           (Y/N) raised their hand to cover the one on their cheek. They tilted their head to kiss the palm. They gazed at him with blazing, serious eyes. âThen kiss me.â They smiled so warmly that Kyoyaâs love nearly spilt from his chest. âI want you to.â
           Kyoya surged forward and kissed them. His hand on their cheek cradled them close as he kissed them lips deeply and passionately. (Y/N) tilted their head to deepen the kiss, and their hand in his pulled him close while the other one wound up into his hair. Kyoyaâs other hand went to their waist to pull them to him even from their seat, but his lips never left theirs for a moment. (Y/N)âs now-free hand went to the collar of his shirt to pull him in, smiling against his lips.
           âI love you,â they whispered against his lips, pulling back just for a second to look into his eyes. âI love you, Kyoya.â
           Kyoyaâs dark gaze lifted into one of pure adoration. âI love you, (Y/N). You must know how ardently I admire and love you.â
           (Y/N) let out a light laugh of joy before pulling him back in to kiss him again. Kyoya gladly moved forward to meet their lips again. They loved one another. Really and truly.
Taglist:
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@nanaloverz
@mellowdiplomattrashpsychic
#lavender for royalty; sage for wisdom#x reader#gn reader#x gn reader#nb reader#x nb reader#kyoya ootori x reader#kyoya x reader#ouran kyoya#kyoya ootori#ohshc kyoya#kyoya ohshc#ohshc haruhi#ohshc mori#ohshc kaoru#ohshc tamaki#ohshc x reader#ohshc#ohshc hikaru#ohshc honey#ouran koukou host club#ouran high school host club
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Partners in crime
Stanxeno x GN Reader
Synopsis: They did the unthinkable and need your help to hide everything.
Disclaimers: murder, hiding a body, blood, description of murder.
This will not follow the original story.
I'm almost done with all I had prepared, I think? There is still some drafts I have that are gathering dust but it's just quick ideas so I need to work on them.
I'll probably start re-reading all I have written, I'm sure there is a lot of errors that I have to correct.
Anyways, I am absolutely not familiar with those kind of dark stories but it goes so well with them.
You know I'm rushing if you read my other stuffs, I'll try to slow down in this.
Enjoy!

It had been almost three hours since the plan was accomplished. Stanley had break the bones one by one once he got his hands on the victim. His eyes went all over the place he was in. It was empty if we don't count the only table where tools were scattered. The walls were just greyish cement. And the only color that painted the floor was the dark red that was coming out of the body.
He had done his job without complaining. The white haired man had already done the biggest part.
¡âââââââ¡
It wasn't a good moment for Xeno. He had just gotten out of a messy divorce. His ex wife gone, he had felt an ease at the idea of being alone again. Even if that witch of a woman was not gonna let him live in peace. And it was this mixture of well-being and unhappiness that pushed him to the worst.
Xeno wasn't happy, it wasn't something nobody knew. He was never for the marriage. But that wasn't his unhappiness. Xeno was a complex man. His ideals were never the same as those of others. But he never cared. He never once thought he could be the problem. It was the others that had gone wrong somewhere, not him.
But this arranged marriage had break his bubble. For once he couldn't do like he wanted. He was a member of a rich family. But it never was enjoyable to him. He saw nothing appealing in the things his brothers and sisters done all day. He was never part of family gatherings. Nor did he participates in the family business. He never cared and do did his family. There was no hatred. Just disinterest. Family was only a word, a qualification. But this marriage broke it all.
And now he had spent his worth part of life. Five years stuck with a crazy monkey that kept yelling at him. He never cared for her and never did he understood why she did. Was yelling at him a part of her meditation? Or was she really angry at him for not buying her a bag she had already in another color? He never understood and never did he cared.
Stanley, on the other hand, worked as a police officer. His life wasn't that good too. He has seen his best friend getting more and more sombre. He had to work with incompetent everyday but couldn't say a word because of his rank. He was pretty sure that all he had done could've gotten him much higher but his superior was a dick.
Xeno would always text him sometimes and he would do his best to extract information from him. They would see eachother when Stanley could, it was never for to long because this crazy wife of Xeno wouldn't understand that the police officer was a man. Stanley could have been flattered, but he didn't appreciate this superficial woman calling him the "fucking redone blonde on the other end of the phone". How dare she?
And lately Xeno wouldn't respond to his text message. He read some but won't reply. If the blonde didn't know him that well, he would've been angry or worried, maybe both. But he knew that the man was just focused on one of his schemes and he will soon or later be involved.
And he was so right.
He had waited days for Xeno to call him back and wasn't disappointed when one day the rich man did.
"Stanley, it would be really elegant of you if you could pull out the weeds." He had to replay the sentence before his skin grew cold. "Can you?" Can he? Obviously. But did he had to? Of course.
"I can" Never would he disappoint his best friend.
"Wonderful. I'll call you." And he hung up.
¡âââââââ¡
Here he was in front of the said weed. Xeno was nowhere to be seen. He had taken his time to break correctly the bones.
Honestly, what was the most shocking between the fact that Xeno had just killed someone and asked him to remove the bones after breaking them or the fact that Stanley had already done that before, and it wasn't because of his job.
He was gonna start the second step when a higher-pitched voice stopped him.
"Please do not."
His eyes went wide. He hadn't needed to turn around to know who it was.
What were you doing here?? Xeno couldn't have made a mistake so your part of this, right? Right?
But it don't makes sense. What the fuck was the medical examiner doing here? You should be in the lab, not in this basement?!
"Relax, Blondie. Xeno called me." You walked a few step to him. "I'm here to help."
"Why did he call you. I thought I had to do all the cleaning."
"What? Are you scared to split the bill?" Stanley deadpanned at your joke. "Come on, don't look at me like that. I kind of ran into him while he was packing my stuff, you know?"
"Your stuff?" He looked quickly at the tools on the single furniture. "He really- What is he doing..."
"You should've ask that before you started breaking the bones. Dumbass." He will not take up the insult. "Anyways. I hope you broke those like last time or we have more work to do."
"I'm a pro at this sadly."
"Yeah I know."
The silence comes back. You examine his work, touching the corpse with your gloves hands.
You both pack the body in the body bag you bring and exited the place. It wasn't suspicious to see a police officer and a medical examiner pack a big black bag in a car.
The road was only an hour but Stanley thought it was close to a whole day.
"So," You break the silence. "Why are you helping him."
"For the same reason as you, probably." His eyes are not quitting the road.
"What does that mean?"
"I see your eyes eating him up." He smirk.
"You're one to talk. Are you thinking you are discreet?" You were flabbergasted.
"I don't need to be."
"Oh, so, you and Xeno are ready a thing, uh?" He almost let out a laugh.
"Always been, what do you mean."
"Yeah make me jealous, fake ass friend"
"Yeah I was here first sorry. But you can continue watching him, I don't mind." His fucking smirk was getting on your nerves.
"Oh, because he knows who he belongs to?" He laugh hard at your words, but not replying. Like the answer was obvious. "But don't worry his not the only person I look at." He stopped laughing and waited for you to continue. His hands tightening on the car steering wheel. "You got nice fucking legs you know?" He choked and accidentally turned the wheel on the left. "OH MY GOD! Geez! Don't kill us man!" He don't say a word, trying real hard to stop his face from heating up.
"What-" He stopped himself "My legs?"
"Yeah. I mean I like watching them walk. You know when you stand on one leg your as-"
"OKAY! OKAY! STOP!" Now he couldn't stop his face turning a deep red. He sighed. "So who do like?"
"What?"
"Me or Xeno?"
"What? What are you talking about man."
"I fucking made a bet with him on who you like!"
"Okay, you both what?? Motherfuckers?! Hello?!"
"Don't play the fausse shocking face. I don't wanna lose."
"Fair. So what did you bet?"
"I bet you like him and he bet you like me"
"Oh nice. So you both win, it's great right?"
"..."
"What."
¡âââââââ¡
Xeno was sitting on his desk, the back turned to the door. He was reading some paper he had in one hand while the other hand was clenched on the wooden desk.
The door opened and two figures went in.
"It took you less time than I thought. Very elegant."
"Would've been faster if Blondie didn't crashed us."
"Whatever." Xeno took a good look at the both of you. Stanley's lipstick was smudged. The collar of your blouse was wrinkled as if someone had pulled on it. He could even see a purple smudge on the corner of your lips, which must have been poorly wiped. Is it him or the back of Stanley's hair or disheveled?
"Oh." He stand up from his desk and take a couple of steps closer to you two. "Does that mean I have win then?" A smile formed slightly on his face.
"Yeah." Stanley smirked. Xeno looked at it and his brows furrowed. "But actually we both did." Xeno turned to you and was surprised to see you that close to him. When did you get here? He was about to question Stanley but your lips cut him off. It was a short kiss but it left him baffled. You passed past him. Then it was Stanley turn to cut him off with a kiss.
"Yeah, so, we did a pretty good job disposing of the body. It should be alright if you can stop yourself from killing someone for a while." You balanced yourself against the desk. Stanley joined you once his kiss was over. Xeno turned to both of you, still stunned by what happened.
"But don't worry, we're here to distract you if needed"
Damn, Xeno thought.

Okay. I was actually going for something dark in the first place but my goofiness got the best of me.
Anyways.
See you soon !
#dr stone x reader#stanley snyder#xeno wingfield#gn reader#stanxeno#stanxeno x reader#stanley snyder x reader#dr xeno#xeno wingfield x reader
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am i complex to you prt two ~ joost klein fanfic
READ PART ONE HERE // part three here
My masterlist here â¨đ
Pairing: Joost Klein x female!reader
Description:Â From first meeting the blonde musician to sharing headphones and very intense eye contact, this was not how you anticipated your evening at your friend's party panning out.Â
Word Count:Â 2.4k
A/N: Due to high demand here is part two (yes there will be a part three as well, I'm typing it as we speak). If you like it please show your support by reblogging âŁď¸
I accept Joost requests btw! [do's: female!reader, smut; don'ts: established relationship, toxic relationships]
Warnings:Â 18+ only, not proofread



As you stepped outside the cool air of the night hit your nostrils. Joost's hand was loosely attached to your hip as you waved over to your parked bike.
"Oh, I didn't come by bike," Joost said.
"Oh," you laughed. "We could try having you ride on my carrier," you suggested. "I'm really not that athletic though, it's ten minutes to my flat."
"We'll try," Joost said as you unlocked your bicycle. After you got on the bike, Joost got on behind you.
"Hold on tight," you said and Joost wrapped his arms around your torso, his chin resting on top of your shoulder. Your stomach fluttered and both you and Joost couldn't contain your grins as you caught the other looking at each other.
"Let's go," you said as you pushed your feet off the ground and started pedalling the bike. "Jesus fucking Christ," you exclaimed laughing as you noticed quickly how hard it was for you to ride the bike with the both of you on it. Between the alcohol in your bloodstream, the nerves and excitement of feeling Joost's body pressed to your back and your poor condition, this was sure to be a failed mission pretty soon.
"So, are gonna make it in ten minutes then?", Joost giggled beside you.
"Oh shut up," you huffed out as you were slowly making progress, the bike riding slalom instead of in a straight line. "You give it a try then," you said.
"Alright, if you insist," Joost shrugged and easily got off the bike as you weren't going that fast anyway. As Joost sat down on the seat you realised that your bike was way too small for the tall man and you giggled at the sight of his overly bent knees. "Now you shut up," Joost laughed and for the first time, you were eye to eye as you stood beside the bike.
You took one step closer to Joost, your upper thigh just barely touching his knee. With your hand, you grabbed Joost's chin and leaned forward to kiss him. His hand let go of the bike handles and they found your hips, bringing you closer to him. You wished you were home already as you were losing yourself in Joost's lips - so soft, so perfect on your lips. Joost let out a frustrated groan between his lips and his grip tightened on your hip.
"Fuck," he mumbled as he broke the kiss. "Now get on with it," he gestured with his head to the bicycle carrier.
This time it was your turn to wrap your arms around Joost's body and you would be lying if you didn't seize the opportunity to subtly feel his abs and stomach through the fabric of his t-shirt as best as you could. As Joost started pedalling you were definitely going faster than before but you were still going excruciatingly slow as you were slowly losing your mind at the thought of finally feeling Joost closer to you when you'll get home.
"Now turn left," you said after you had been on the road for 15 minutes already. "... and here we are," you said when you finally reached the front of your apartment complex.
Quickly you locked your bike up and rushed through the front door of your apartment complex. As you pushed the button for the elevator, Joost was coming up behind you, his hand resting on the side of your waist. The elevator door opened and before you could even register to push the button to your floor you were backed against the wall. Your hands instinctively found the back of Joost's head as your lips crashed into each other again. Lips moving in sync you softly moaned into the kiss and you could feel the arousal in your pants. You pushed your chest towards Joost as he sloppily left kisses down the side of your face until he buried his face in your neck. Your fingers quickly found the button of your floor and the elevator started moving upwards. The tips of Joost's fingers grazed the skin of your exposed stomach after he slowly pushed the hem of your top up. With a soft ping, the elevator came to a halt and the doors opened.  Â
You grabbed Joost's hand and dragged him out of the elevator to the door of your flat. As you were scrambling for your keys in your purse, Joost stood behind you, his front pressed to your back and his hands at your hips. With one hand he carefully pushed your hair aside to expose the soft skin of your neck. Slowly he pressed one kiss after another to your neck, goosebumps running up your spine as your fingers nervously trembled, still searching for your keys.
"Fuck," you cursed.
"Hm," Joost murmured against your skin.
"I can't find my keys," you mumbled.
"Hm," Joost replied concerned this time.
Hot flashes went through your body, maybe caused by Joost's soft lips against your skin, maybe because the memory from earlier this evening came back to you. You recalled how you proudly dangled your keys in front of Mila's face.
"Look at this!" you had exclaimed as you pointed to the small teddy bear, showing off your new key chain to your friend. As you recalled the memory, you also realised that you never put your keys back into your purse after Mila had inspected the bear.
"I left them at the party," you realised and turned around, the palm of your hand planted on your forehead. Your heart was beating incredibly fast.
"You're joking," Joost said softly laughing.
"I swear I'm not," you said and you could see how Joost was grabbling at the seriousness of the situation. Before he could say anything else you were already dialing Mila's number who picked up immediately.
"(Y/N)!" she exclaimed over the loud sounds of the music.
"Mila, I need you to grab my keys, they should be by the couch at the back of the bar."
"Yeah, sure, did you go home?" she asked.
"Yes."
"But you can't get in?" she asked.
"Yes. I'll have to get back," you sighed.
"You can stay at mine, so you won't have to make the trip again," Mila suggested.
"Thanks, just hold on to my keys for now, I'll text you later, okay? Love you," you said.
"Sure thing! Love you too," Mila replied before you ended the call.
"So?" Joost was leaning against the wall, a concerned look on his face.
"Well, I'll have to get back to get my keys," you groaned. "I'm so sorry, this is not how I envisioned this to go down."
"Me neither," he said and paused for a second before he continued. "You could also stay at my place," Joost suggested.
"Are you sure?" you asked as you didn't want to be a bother. You didn't usually do one night stands so you weren't really familiar with the etiquette. What if he wanted to leave your place after the deed anyway? What if he didn't want you to stay the whole night and wake up next to you in the morning?
"Yeah, of course, I live like ten minutes from here," he reassured you.
"Alright, let's go then," you said and pressed the elevator button again.
Silence ensued between you when you entered the elevator, the key incident apparently sobered the both of you up just a bit. You were still longing for Joost's touch but more than anything you felt awkward and like a burden to him right now.
"Are you okay?" Joost asked you softly as he noticed your change in demeanour.
"Yeah," you mumbled. "I'm sorry, I just feel really stupid," you admitted. Joost's hand softly grazed yours and he looked into your eyes.
"No, really, (Y/N), it's fine," he said. "If anything, this is really funny actually," he tried to lighten the mood and a small grin crept onto your face. "There we are!" Joost said happily, his left hand cupping your cheek softly and for a moment you expected him to plant a quick peck on your lips like a loving boyfriend would, but before anything could happen, the elevator door opened again and Joost dropped his hand from your face.
As you were walking side by side, the night quiet and the stars distantly visible above you, there was a long pondering silence between you.
"You know I don't usually do this," Joost said eventually.
"Taking girls home?" you asked.
"Yeah well yes,-" Joost said. "Or having them take me home," he paused. "I'm not really the player type or whatever."
"Me neither," you admitted and you both looked at each other, grins visible on each other faces. "So this is a new experience for the both of us?"
"I suppose," Joost chuckled.
"How's it going so far?" you asked.
"Well, if everything would've gone right we probably would be doing something different right now," Joost said and the thought of that certain something gave you flashes running up your body. You bit your lip, eyeing Joost up and down as you wanted nothing more than to kiss him again. But you knew that it would only mean that you would get to his place even later if you did it right now. So the sexual tension between you two had to persist.
"We're here," Joost announced.
"Oh, finally," you laughed and Joost grinned as he unlocked the front door and held it open for you.
Another excruciatingly long elevator ride where your sides were just barely touching and you two were grinning like two horny teenagers and you finally reached the door to Joost's flat. You nervously fiddled with your fingers as he opened the door and motioned for you to get inside.
"Welcome to my crib," he said and you giggled.
After you stepped inside and turned around Joost had already swiftly closed the door and was standing directly in front of you.
"Hi," you whispered, looking up to him.
"Hi," he said grinning before his lips crashed into yours again.
Soon you were pressed against the wall, Joost's body close to yours and you continued exactly where you left off earlier. You removed Joost's stupid hat and rummaged your hands through his hair which lured a moan from him. Joost softly bit down on your bottom lip which made your back arch. His hands were trailing down your body until they rested on top of your ass, squeezing lightly. Your hands were tugging on Joost's jacket, desperate to finally get his clothes off the man. Without ever breaking the kiss, Joost took off his jacket and discarded it to the side before also removing your jacket. Your hands touched the bare skin on his arms, grabbing at his upper arms as your tongues met in an open-mouthed kiss. Joost hummed into your lips as his fingers slowly felt the soft skin above your ribcage as he sneaked his hands underneath your top, slowly trailing up your body.
"Where's - your - bedroom?" you asked breathily and in between kisses.
Joost moaned against your lips and took your hand into his before he led you down the corridor. Before you could register much of the room you found yourself on top of Joost who was laid on his back on the bed as you were straddling his hips. With your elbows resting beside Joost's head you leaned down to kiss him again. His hands immediately found your hips as you slowly started grinding down into Joost, already feeling his hard groin pressing against your body. You broke the kiss and looked at Joost for a second before you said what you had to say.
"I'm so sorry, I really hate to do this," you started and you could already see the concern and confusion growing on Joost's face. "But I really have to pee," you said with a frown and Joost laughed.
"Yeah, sure, the bathroom is just opposite this one," he said.
"Alright," you said as you got up reluctantly.
"But don't leave me waiting here for too long," Joost said as you looked back at him before leaving his room and you giggled.
You quickly found the bathroom and used the toilet, cursing your bladder for the unfortunate timing. Taking a look in the mirror you fixed your hair and quickly did some sexy poses to boost your confidence.
As you got back into Joost's bedroom just a few minutes later you saw him sprayed out on the bed on his back. He had taken off his pants and was only covered in his t-shirt and boxers, his arms crossed behind his head. As you stepped closer you realised that his eyes were closed and his breathing was steady and slow.
"Joost?" you softly whispered.
No response.
You sat down on the side of the bed and laid your hand on his chest.
"Joost, are you awake?"
No response again.
You let out a soft laugh. You couldn't believe it. After all that went wrong tonight already you finally had made it to Joost's bed and now he was asleep. It was kind of comical actually. You couldn't be mad with the man. It was 4 am already after all and the both of you took a quiet long route home. You grabbed your phone to text Mila.
Did you get my keys? you typed.
Yep, when are you coming? she answered.
It's fine, I'll get them tomorrow. I'm staying at Joost's.
???? Mila replied. Who the fuck is Joost??? she asked in a separate text.
Wait. Joost as in Stuntje's friend?? Mila texted back after a pause.
Yes, you replied.
Stay safe bb, Mila texted.
Dw, he fell asleep already, you typed.
LOL.
You set your phone aside and watched Joost's peaceful face for a minute. It would be very sweet actually if there wasn't this deep arousal in your panties. You sighed as you accepted your fate and went back to the bathroom. Carefully you looked through Joost's bathroom cabinet to find something to get rid of your makeup. Back in his room, you pondered for a second before stripping down to your underwear. You would have taken your clothes off and slept in his bed anyway, right? Without disturbing the sleeping man beside you too much you slipped under the covers. You tucked Joost also in carefully. As you watched his face with his mouth slightly agape, you laughed softly before you turned to the bedside table to turn the light off.
"Goodnight Joost."
Final A/N: I'm such a tease I'm so sorry, there will be a part three very soon! Part three here
#joost#mine#joost klein#joost fanfiction#joost klein x reader#joost klein fanfiction#joost x reader#joost x you#joost klein x you
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Absorb and adore
Nika MĂźhl x football Reader
Warnings; mention of injuries, this shit is a bit emotional but nothing else i think..
A/N; this is kinda short i know but who will say no to a Nika fluff? Anyways I am just trying to write as quick as i can cause ain't no way i haven't posted in so long. Anyways I'll see y'all hopefully soon. Hope you enjoy!
Sweat dripping down. My head was pounding like crazy. Lights blinding me as i drove in to get the ball from Alisha. I made a swerve dodging a player trying to tackle me. I jumped up and received the ball heading for a touchdown. I could hear my heart in my ears. As i run down the field i managed to achieve the touchdown before falling down as i had just given us the win.
"YEAH MAN" i heard Alisha shout as i opened my eyes. We had done it. We won. "WE WON?!" I shouted in disbelief. "YEAH BABY. YOU SCORED US THE FINAL POINT MAN" She shouted helping me up. I laughed not believing this as she hugged me tightly. I took off my helmet to get some fresh air and looked out at the stands. Only to find her eyes staring at me with a huge smile. A grin made it's way to my face as she mouthed at me an 'i love you' making me blush a bit.
My team swarmed in circling me celebrating the win with all of our hearts. We laughed and danced together. We got the cup and took many pictures with it before shaking hands with my teammates. They picked me up and chanted all together since i had given us the winner. I laughed and told them to put me down before we all hugged eachother.
"So Anna tell us how do you think this game rolled out?" A journalist pulled me aside and asked. "Well this was a really tough game. The other team were all beasts on the field. I really am thankful that my team and i have a connection and understand what each one of us is going to do. Practically i think the reason we won is because of the special communication we all have" i said as the girl nodded. "Is there someone who you're willing to dedicate this win to?" She asked again and at that moment i looked at the stands. A smile made it's way to my face before replying "yeah. I don't need to say a name. She already knows who she is" dhe nodded once more and thanked me for my time before letting me go.
I looked at my team and all of them seemed like baby kids in a candy store. I chuckled at the sight. Everything seemed great but i wasn't at a place where i could celebrate on my full. Somewhere in the game i hurt my leg leaving me now limping my way to the locker room.
I got in and sat down before resting my head on my hands letting out a deep breath i was holding for a while. We had won and i was extremely happy about it. But my leg was hurting a lot and regret filled my mind as i thought it would've been better if i had told my coach.
My thoughts were soon interrupted as someone entered the room. I looked up and saw her standing next to the door. She was looking sympathetically at me. A proud smile on her face with a worried expression could be seen on her face.
With the same eyes i had fallen in love with she was now searching for clues. "Nika I-" i went to speak but she just shushed me and brought me in a tight hug. Her scent filled my nostrils as her grip tightened around my neck. "I know baby. I saw it" she whispered in my ear making me tear up a bit.
"I just wanna go back to the dorms. Please" i said and she nodded before helping me pack my things and headed to her car. We got in and drove to the dorm complex. She held my hand tightly every now and then caressing it with her thumb. It was something we did when we wanted to tell eachother that we love them silently. I smiled at the gesture before i kissed it softly and rested my head for a sec against it.
Soon we were on our floor opening the door to our dorm. I had showered in the lockers after the game so now all we had to do was sleep. I left my things on the floor near the bed before sitting down to take a deep breath. Nika soon came into the room sitting in front of me holding my hands. To be honest it hurt pretty bad. But I didn't know if it was a good idea to tell Nika that.
"Does it hurt that bad?" She asked worriedly. I nodded hesitantly in response. Truth is it wasn't just the pain that was killing me now. It was the fact that i couldn't celebrate freely with my teammates due to a stupid call i made.
A small smile appeared on my face at her reassuring words and I nodded agreeing with her. "Good. You want me to rub your shoulders? Help you relax a bit?" She asked as she smiled at me. "No no. I just want some soft scratches on the back. Just to put me to sleep" i answered and that's exactly what she did.
"It hurts pretty bad. But it's nothing serious. I'm probably just overreacting" i answered and looked at her in the eyes. A sign of worry was shown on her face trying to find something in my eyes. The naked truth i was afraid to say. Although almost immediately she understood why i was acting like this.
"They'll understand honey. You'll explain and they will understand. They love you. I love you. There's nothing to worry about here other than your health. You're their captain for fuck's sake" she said taking a hold of my hand.
She lied down and made me lay on top of her. She took of my shirt and softly started caressing my back with her nails. Soft hums left my lips as i enjoyed too much what was going on. A soft smile was plastered on her face as she stayed up untill i was off to deep sleep.
Nika always knew how to calm me down. How to reassure me. She was always there for me and she loved me for who i was. I was trouble but she loved that about me. And i loved everything about her. If i didn't mary this woman i would probably never mary at all.
#ncaa wbb#nika muhl#paige buckets#caitlin clark#ncaa womenâs basketball#azzi fudd#nika#nika x reader#paige bueckers x reader#uconn#uconn wbb#uconnwbb#paige bueckers uconn#uconn huskies#wlw#wlw post
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The Prefect and The Draconia
A short overview of the Ramshackle prefect and their strange (but kind) horned fellow friend: as seen through the eyes of outsiders.
(A/N: #Malleyuu notes with an OC but feel free to project. We're all delulu here âŽâ (â .â  â ââ  â á´â  â ââ .â )â â )

His Henchman is crazy.
Or at least, that's what Grim thinks when he's woken up at sunrise to Yue's bizarre ramblings. Something about the time being 1 AM, then fireflies at night, and a tall, horned figure â is what he takes from their babble amidst his own groans and pleas to return to sleep. He'd think them delirious from slumber, mumbling about another dream, if it weren't for the way Yue's eyes sparkled with genuine interest. Grim yields, in the end, for one of the many things he's learned about his reliable servant is that they can be awfully enthusiastic when it comes to this world's curiosities.
âHe told me to call him whatever I want,â Yue continues, ruffling Grim's fur dry with a clean rag. Before he could insert magnificent ideas of his own, they beat him to it with a soft smile on their lips.
âI'm thinking of naming him Nyx: the personification of the night. What do you think?â
âWhat? Because he only shows up at night?â Like some wacky cryptid.
âYup.â
He hears his henchman forgo the brush, letting it clatter loudly against the table.
âHm... Nyx, huh...â Grim falls into thought, testing the name on his tongue like premium quality tuna. He doesn't even notice how Yue ties the striped ribbon around his neck. Triumphant, he turns to them with a grin.
âThat's not half-bad, Henchman! It's cool and mysterious. Not as cool and mysterious as me, of course, but I'd say it's a close second!â
âNaturally. I wouldn't dare bestow a name mightier than the Great Grim's.â
Despite the stream of praise his henchman delivers (which he pleasantly basks in), Yue eventually derails, returning to speak of the horned man yet again. What Grim's superior brain gathers is this: One, this Nyx guy is super weird. Two, Yue's interest has been piqued like no other before.
He'll demand some omurice as payment for his counsel later on.
. . .
Malleus has made a friend.
The news was dropped onto Lilia's lap rather unceremoniously when one night, the Young Lordâhaving just returned from another evening excursion, went to sit with him in the Diasomnia lounge. This time, however, the quaintest of smiles adorned his face... It was an unusual sight but certainly not unwelcome. And much like any doting parent, his curiosity led him to ask.
Malleus had replied with a question of his own.
"Lilia, do you know of the Prefect that resides in Ramshackle Dorm?"
"Yue? Why yes, of course. I've spoken to them once or twice. They made quite a show during the Ceremony."
Yueâ Lilia soon comes to learnâ is completely unaware of Malleus's identity as a prince and a figure of authority, of power. As such, they bear no fear for him, even going so far as to bestow him a pet name, of all things.
(âNyx? As in the night spirit? How fitting.")
Thus began the pattern of Lilia covering for Malleus's nighttime absence, not daring to ask nor scold when the prince would return in strange and stranger states.
When he would return to the dormitory partially caked with dirt and mud (a consequence of helping the prefect with their little garden of life.) Or when he would return with a box of homemade cake, a pretty stone from their walks, a drawing of him supposedly made by the prefect's beast, and with inquiries of the complexities of human nature.
Sometimes, Lilia can't help but feel a bit guilty, constantly boring witness to Silver and Sebek's searches into the night.
Yet that sliver of guilt fades, in the end, when Malleus smiles more often than before, when he approaches Lilia in the winter with the request of delivering a Holiday Card.
As he watches the magicless human rush into their abode, card in hand, ghosts and Grim awaiting their entrance...
he has never felt prouder and more grateful for fate.
. . .
From a distance, Vil watches.
He watches as the feared Briar Prince lets a small, feeble human talk his ear off, calm and unresisting, a hand on his chin as he ponders along Yue's barrage of words. He gives the prefect full reign of the conversation. He lets himself be taken away by their stories and details. He lets them speak, which they do.
Just after the horrors, highs, lows, and thrills of the VDC, the two chat as if nothing even happened. The onslaught of it all feels like a fever dream to Vil. First, the mental toll of overblotting, then their loss to RSA's nursery rhyme performance, and now the shocking reveal of Yue (innocent, bold, mundane little Yue) and Malleus Draconia's relationship.
He isn't even sure what to make of it. They're clearly friends, yet Vil can't bring himself to chalk it up to just that. His years and years of showbiz cinema has taught him the ins and outs of body language. He watches. He sees:
There's the smiles on both their faces; cheeks raised taut, dimples carved with genuine laughter. There's that glimmer in Yue's eyes and the odd tenderness of Malleus's own, both gazes locked onto one another with an undisturbed focus. There's the fact that Yue had given him an invitation to the VDC, or that Malleus had fixed the stage partially to show off to the magicless human, or that their hands are currently mere centimeters away from each other.
In the end, Vil averts his gaze, weariness crashing into him all at once and he feels a pair of hands grasp onto his shoulders, keeping him standing. Rook smiles, gentle, knowing, annoying. Vil resigns to his whims and lets his Huntsman guide him back to the Pomefiore Dorm, the chatter of Yue and Malleus and everyone else fading away.
#theyre so silly#so pookie#theyre so wholesome in my mind<3#dont you love it when its mainly platonic but maybe something more?#yue-lorren#idk im just having fun#twst#twisted wonderland#yuu twisted wonderland#vil schoenheit#lilia vanrouge#grim twisted wonderland#malleus draconia#rlly not a good time tho#the diasomnia chapter is WRECKING ME#i might write something for it soon enough#the-night-and-the-moon#inkless-printer#twst x oc#malleyuu#yuusona
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