The slave's eyes widened, her ice blonde hair
marking her as a prisoner from the island of
Brunia. She did not lower her gaze as she was
supposed to, and Cassia felt something like
respect stir in her heart.
She smiled and beckoned for the woman
to follow. "I need your assistance with
something."
The slave nodded, bobbing into a brief curtsy,
and followed Cassia back to her rooms. She
led her to the bathing room and the Brunian's
eyes widened at the soaked sheets resting on
the bottom.
"Can you get these dried and returned to my
bed today?" Cassia asked.
The female all of sudden smirked and tilted
her head towards the bedchamber, moving
her hips suggestively under her simple
shift-dress. Her boldness startled Cassia.
"What's your name?" she asked, strangely
intrigued.
She blinked, the smirk slipping into a frown
before the Brunian hopped down into the pool,
gathering the sheets in her arms.
"Please," Cassia said. "It's not... I do not favor to
get you in trouble. I just...want to know your
name."
She stared at Cassia for a long, long time,
then began speakme in rapid-fire Brunian.
Cassia was once barely able to choose out even one
or two words. She held up her hands, shaking
her head in bewilderment.
The female sighed and became her attention
back to the sheets.
"Your...name?" Cassia tried again uncertainly.
She was once solely rewarded with a blank look.
Cassia sighed-the lady should have been
captured and sold these days if she didn't have
any draw close of the language.
Not that she definitely blamed the girl for not
caring to research her captors' tongue, however slaves
who couldn't recognize orders didn't last
long.
Cassia extended her hand to assist the slave
from the pool. She only hesitated a moment
before permitting the princess to pull her out of
the pool.
The Brunian girl clutched the moist sheets
to her chest, light blue eyes scrutinizing
Cassia before she became and left the rooms
without some other word, head held excessive and
proud. Cassia didn't say whatever as she went.
There was once no point.
She sighed, flopping down into a chair with the aid of the
window, staring throughout the inexperienced garden of the
outer courtyard.
Cassia blinked slowly, watching as the king
and one of her brothers mounted glossy horses, searching organized for a hunt.
She scowled. Her father had in no way allowed
her to hunt. Never allowed her to choose up a
weapon, which was once ridiculous when he knew
that weak point ought to very properly get her killed.
Then again, possibly it's what he had in
mind. She tossed her head angrily.
Something glinted on the flooring of her
bedchamber, catching her eye.
Slowly, she crossed the room and located that
one of Julianus' medals had fallen from his
coat. Picking it up, she stared down at the red
ribbon with its laurel wreath-a unit citation-
and commenced to smile.
Perhaps Lord Julianus ought to offer her more
than a scandalous affair.
Breathing deeply in an attempt to control his
temper, he removed the general's cloak from
his shoulder and held it out in front of him.
The expensive wool was finely woven, dyed a
bloody shade that would hide the severity of
most wounds. The clasps were not silver, but
rather brightly shined steel, treated to resist
the corrosion of rain, sweat and blood.
It was something he had once longed for.
His temper snapped. He threw the cloak
across the room with a roar, watching it come
to rest on the dark stone before the empty
fireplace.
Everything in him wanted to burn it.
A whore. He was no better than a common
whore, bought and paid for.
That cloak had not been earned. He had
just begun his long climb to that rank last
winter, when Arcturus had come into his tent
grinning, holding a letter that declared him a
centurion after the skirmish at Verna.
Calix jerked himself away from the memory
and shed his coat, placing it carefully over the
back of a nearby chair. His fingers brushed
over the newest addition, his heart darkening.
Sound filled his head first, as it often did. The
clatter of steel against steel. The screams of
men and horses. The squelch and suck of the
mud under his boots. The raven's caw of his own hoarse voice as he called out orders.
Grana had not been a single-handed charge.
Fifty good men had gone with him into hell.
Much to his horror, he and four others were
the only ones to emerge again from those
cursed river caves.
But they were common men, so their lives
had meant nothing to the other commanders,
to his father, to the king. Only Arcturus had
understood why he'd broken down crying, on
his knees in the freezing mud and stinging
rain when he'd heard the news. Only Arcturus
had been brave enough to dare approach him
when his sorrow had turned to rage and he'd
begun screaming, cursing the gods and their
cruelty.
Calix quickly shed the rest of his clothes
and went into the bathing room. Sitting on
the low bench running along the edge of the
pool, he let the sound of rushing water hitting
red marble fill the spaces in his mind. The
spaces prone to horrific memory and worse
imaginings.
The burning water lapped at his feet, then his
ankles. Only when the pool was filled nearly
to overflowing did he turn off the faucets.
He leaned his head back against the hard
stone, letting the water soak in-imagining the
roiling darkness always so present within him
seeping from his skin and staining the water.
The princess had helped-in more ways than
she knew.
Two days in the castle with nothing to occupy
him had left him feeling close to madness.
She had been the first engaging thing he'd
seen since arriving in the capital.
Not to dismiss the simple fact that he hadn't
seen a woman in nearly six months, much
less touched one. The swell of her breasts
and the graceful curve of her neck had all but
made his mouth water. Then she'd opened
her mouth to reveal a sharp mind and a clever
tongue.
Beautiful, and soft, she had a core of steel he
wanted badly to test.
All it had taken was a smoldering glance from
beneath those long lashes after the dining
room had cleared out and he'd let her pull him
up to her rooms like a dog on a leash.
She had been so deliciously willing too, even
after he'd told her why he had been happy to
warm her bed. Calix smiled at the memory of
the wicked delight on her face when he'd told
her why he didn't mind being used, and he'd
been just as pleased to realize she wanted
something ridiculously similar to his own
desires.
Disobedience. To be as frustratingly
disobedient as possible.
He let his fingers trail through the water. The
king and his father had left him thoroughly
fucked, it only seemed right that he return the
favor via the king's daughter. His smile fell.
"They will hate me," Calix murmured to no one,
then was ashamed by the tears that stung his
eyes.
They would hate him, and he would be unable
to blame them.
All the work he had put in to the company
his father had chucked him into nearly ten
years ago, gone. The hours spent spilling
blood, sweat and tears with men who had at
first thought him little more than a pampered
bitch, gone.
The men of the Seventh Legion would see him
as one despicable thing.
A fraud. The rich son of a richer father. An
arrogant lord. A boy playing soldier.
A whore-selling away his hard work and
scarred skin for a rank not earned, but
bought.
Calix ducked under the water and screamed
until his throat was raw and he was a breath
away from drowning himself. How dare his
father take those men away from him! How
dare he rip him from the front lines and force
him into this self-important cage of a castle.
He surged back to the surface of the pool,
gasping in a great breath, water pouring down
his face and getting caught in his eyelashes.
It blurred his vision. He shook his head, spraying water droplets, then surged out of
the water, snatching up a towel and drying off.
Action. Movement. He wanted a distraction.
He needed a way to work off the rage roiling
in his blood.
His new sword, the solely excellent thing to come
of this whole disaster, was sitting on a low
table between two cozy chairs in
front of a hearth flanked via leaded-glass
windows. He went into the dressing room off
his bedchamber to discover his matters had been
already neatly stored, his armor placed on a
cross in the far corner.
Calix did not assume that would be necessary,
instead pulling on a pair of worn leather
trousers. He stamped into boots that still
had mud and blood in the creases of the
leather and in the laces. He tucked the ends
of his trousers into the boots and laced them
tightly. Finally, he observed a belt-he was still
attempting to get better from those closing two
months of fighting with only quarter rations.
He would have been glad to go away like that,
but did not prefer to scandalize some poor
serving woman, or provide any of the courtroom ladies
something to giggle and blush over every
time they noticed him. So he dragged a loose
white shirt over his head and snatched up the
sword.
It wanted a desirable breaking in.