• August 24, 2012 /  Memories

    Camille woke in one of the quiet, timeless hours between dusk and dawn, when Maman returned and laid down on their pallet beside him.

    It was nothing new; he always woke at any little sound. It had been that way ever since she had told him that soon she couldn’t come home at sundark anymore, and he would need to be very careful at night because he’d be alone. So he practiced sleeping up in the hollows of roofs and the branches of trees, practiced sleeping around loud noises and in bright spaces. At last he could doze with his mind skittering around watchful just below the surface of sleep, like a rat running around inside a wall waiting til the coast was clear.

    The first night she came in late, he was ready. He sprung up at the creak of the door, clutching a big stick he’d sharpened up good. He was sure he could stab the bad guy before he took any of their things; he’d hidden them all in the corner under the blanket. But it was only her familiar shadow that fell over him, tense with surprise in the doorway.

    She laid him back down and hugged him close, whispering “My little Knight” into his hair. He wriggled in her arms at the odd feeling of hot tears on his scalp, wondering why she was crying when he’d done so good. But that had been a whole year ago. He’d been just a baby then; he hadn’t understood -anything-.

    Since then it had been like this every night. She would come and join him on their pallet, and her long ropey arms would wrap around him just so, her lips descending on his forehead for a soft wet kiss. Then he would fall asleep again, not even minding how warm it was with her hugging him so tight. In the short, clammy winter, it’d been wonderful and he’d drift off at once.

    Tonight, though, he kept himself awake. He held his breath to listen to his Maman’s, to see if she was going right to sleep or if he could ask her his question. His heartbeat pounded loud against his skull, and colorless patterns flashed and swam on the inside of the eyelids he held so tightly closed. No, he had to ask it or it would just explode right out of him.

    Her breathing didn’t slow, her hand skating over his hair. The caress seemed heavy with the words he was holding in, and he shivered.

    “Maman?” he whispered.

    “Yes, my Camille?”

    His throat tightened, his stomach twisted. He used to love his name and how she said it, the syllables taking flight from her lips. He didn’t know anybody named anything as fancy as Camille. But that was the problem now, wasn’t it? Now he hated how weird it was, and he didn’t want to hate his own name.

    “Do I have to… can I… -not- go to school anymore?”

    She tensed all around him, limbs taut and hard as iron. His Maman was so strong, bigger and stronger than anybody, even other people’s dads. “Camille, why do you ask that?”

    “I don’t like it,” he miserably told her, hoping against hope there wouldn’t be questions. But it was wrong, what he’d just said; he didn’t dislike it. He hated it. She didn’t seem to catch a lot of things he didn’t say, he thought, but she would catch that.

    “Don’t you want to learn?” Her hand stilled, hovering at his temple, and he had to swallow past the lump in his throat. He loved learning. If it had been just him, alone, with the books and maybe Mistress Halleah, it would have been fine. She never treated him any different from any of the others, and she had a pretty smile when he answered questions correctly, so he answered as many as he could.

    “I want to,” he mumbled, “But I…” The words choked him.

    “You can tell me, little sweet boy.” His eyes were tight but he could hear the smile in her voice as she cupped his cheek in her hard hand. But she didn’t sound happy, not for real. More like she was trying to be, to hide it from him. He had known he shouldn’t have said a thing.

    He shouldn’t have. But he had to. Helpless anger rose in his throat, and suddenly he heard himself speaking. “They laugh at me, Maman! They make fun of me for my name and my raggedy clothes and how I smell all the time and how little I am and how I speak! They make fun of me when I don’t know the answer and they make fun of me when I do know the answer! I hate them, all of them, and I don’t want to go back there!”

    She sighed, just a rush of breath that ruffled his hair. “They hate you because you’re special, Camille. Because you’re a gentry and they’re just commoners.”

    It’s gentry, Maman, he thought. Gentry, not a gentry. He had just learned that the other day in Tubori class, and learned that gentry didn’t speak the way they did. Every time he opened his mouth he gave it away. Not that it needed to when he hadn’t had a bath in months. Some of the kids at school probably bathed every -week-.

    “I’m not, Maman,” he told her at last, dread coiling heavily in his stomach. “I’m not gentry. Papan was, but he’s dead. To be gentry you need to have money and we don’t have money. It’s not like nobles where your parents are nobles and that’s enough.”

    Her fingers tightened on his cheek, so sharp and forceful his eyes watered. “You -are- a gentry, Camille! Just like your father. You are an Orban!” she cried. “One day the old man will accept you and you will come into your own. And because of that, you go to school. You will keep going to school. Just remember what you are!”

    “Maman,” he whispered, voice trembling like a little kid’s, “Maman, you’re hurting me.”

    She released him at once, her eyes widening. He could hear the breath hitch in her throat, see the bright dampness well up below her lashes. “Oh my sweet boy, I’m so sorry.” Her arms pulled him in, head cradled up against her, and her lips fell on his cheeks and forehead to kiss again and again. He squirmed in her arms, uncomfortably aware that this was a little kid thing too, being kissed so much by your Maman. But he did kind of like it, so he slid his arms around her in return and clung on tight.

    “I’ll keep going to school,” he promised her quietly, because anything was better than making Maman cry.

    —–

    The next day dawned brutally bright, and he tried his best to cling to his promise. He hadn’t gone back to sleep even after Maman had started to softly snore – by now he had learned to ignore that sound, but he couldn’t stop thinking. What was he going to do? Things couldn’t stay the way they were. That’s why he’d told her in the first place.

    Finally he’d decided that he would be quiet, quiet and invisible, and not give anybody a reason to notice or care about him. He was good at being invisible, when he heard fighting nearby or when he’d snuck something off a street cart and had to get away. You just became part of the scenery… maybe part of the shadows, or part of the mud. There weren’t as many shadows or as much mud at school as there was at the docks, but there was the other, harder kind of cover: people. If there were enough people around, you could fit in even when you didn’t.

    Maman had packed him a lunch, when she only did on special days; peeking inside, he found fresh bread and cheese. Every time somebody shouted something at him, he thought of the bread, still a little soft. How sweet and rich it was without that funny barf taste it got when you had to buy it moldy. And the cheese… a whole slab, crumbly and strong and sharp in his mouth.

    His stomach rumbled hollowly, even wrenched at him as the day got later, but anybody knew food mattered more than words and if he was thinking about lunch nothing could make him upset. Part of the background, he thought. You don’t need to talk to rocks or trees or wagons, and you wouldn’t need to talk to him. And the longer he stayed quiet and ignored them, the fewer jabs they bothered to send his way.

    Mistress Halleah looked sad, he thought, when he didn’t answer any questions in Tubori language class. And he didn’t like that. But it was better this way, being somebody everybody overlooked. Had Maman been wrong all this time, saying he should always, always, always remember he was special? Then he remembered he wasn’t gentry, so of course she had been wrong because he wasn’t special in the first place. Tears smarted in his eyes at that, but he quickly looked down at his desk before anyone could see them.

    It didn’t matter; nobody was watching, since he wasn’t playing along with them anymore. By lunchtime, he could be glad about that again. A wave of students scurried out under the blue sky, and he went with them. Inside, the schoolhouse was stifling; the long wooden lunch-tables in the open air at least had a breeze. Normally he tried to sit with everyone else, but today he broke away to climb the biggest tree in the schoolyard, sack in his mouth. He was drooling all over it, he noticed with disgust, thinking about his bread and cheese.

    One foot up in a junction of branches, the other leg lifting to join it – and fingers closed around his ankle, pulling. His foot slipped and slid; he opened his mouth to shout. The lunchsack fell and so did he, barely twisting out of the way in time to avoid squashing it.

    The sun was in his eyes, but the shadow lurking over him was unmistakable. Jolen Amarant stood there smirking down at him. He was just a little bit older than Camille but twice as big, round and red-faced and his clothes only had a couple little holes, so tiny you could barely even see them. Nothing about him was fair at all. Everybody hated Jolen, even all the people who made fun of Camille too, and Jolen hated them all right back. But for some reason Jolen hated Camille more than he hated anybody else.

    “Has fancy Camille got a fancy lunch?” he cooed, looking over at the damp sack.

    Camille didn’t know what was happening. He’d been quiet. He hadn’t let a single thing they said get to him. If being smart didn’t work, and being silent didn’t work… what was he supposed to do? He had been so sure this was it, the way out, but Jolen would never, ever, ever leave him alone even if he never said another word. The tears welled up again, and all his panic just seemed to make them worse. Such a good lunch must have cost his Maman so much of their food money, if Jolen took it away before he could eat it…

    “Well? Rat got your tongue, young Master Orban?” Jolen bent down, reaching. His fist closed around the neck of the burlap bag and lifted it, letting it dangle from his fingers.

    Camille could only stare, flat on his back, the treebark rough on his neck. All those wrinkles in Jolen’s flabby pink hand, where it folded in and on and over itself. A thought wormed its way into his head, a thought he’d never had before.

    I bet he’s never robbed a cart and had to run away. I bet he’s never climbed a tree fast as he can and jumped back down to do it all over again. I bet he wouldn’t have any idea how to stab a bad guy if they broke into his house at night. I bet he’d pee his pants and start crying.

    Jolen’s bigger than me… but he’s all soft and wobbly and… pink…

    “Oink oink.” Camille was -good- at pig calls; sometimes he fed the pigs for a silver a day, when the keepers needed an extra hand. His nose could crinkle up and push out a long stuttery snort just like a real snout. Even Jolen wasn’t dumb enough to not know what that sound was, and a blush pooled in his cheeks as he stared slack-jawed down at Camille. The lunchsack fell from a slack hand, forgotten.

    “What’d you just…”

    “You must be pretty hungry to steal -my- lunch, Jolen. Hungry like a big fat pink pig.” Camille oinked louder this time, snorted in a breath from deep down at the bottom of his lungs. Giggles sounded all around him, and he saw heads turn to watch them just out of the corner of his eye. Good. Fine. If being invisible didn’t help, he’d be just every bit as visible as he wanted. It didn’t matter if he was a gentry or not. All that mattered was nobody was going to take away his bread and cheese and -especially- not Jolen Amarant.

    “You… you…” Jolen couldn’t even come up with a reply, he noticed in utter satisfaction. He just stood there gawping, as red as a Lithmorran who’d been out in the sun. But Camille knew he had to watch, and wait, and so he saw the moment when the bigger boy lunged his way with hands clenched in fists. He darted low and ducked, wriggling right between Jolen’s big hammy legs – and snatching up his lunchsack on the way.

    He couldn’t spare time to look behind him. He just took off running. He heard an enraged bellow, and footsteps, and people cheering – cheering? Were they cheering for him? No time to check. There was a smaller tree in the opposite corner of the schoolyard, one that would never bear Jolen’s weight. But it would bear him, and it did as he vaulted right up into it, scrambling up narrow branches that sagged beneath him. His heart thudded painfully in his throat, but he wasn’t even all that scared; he was angry too, and excited, and maybe even a little bit happy. It felt like his quick breaths were singing.

    He hit the last branches that he was sure could take him and turned around, pressing his back up against the trunk. Jolen was standing below, hopping up and down. “Come down! Come down here and I’ll make you sorry! I’m not a pig, I’m not a pig!” he yelled, only it was more like a shriek, and suddenly Camille wanted to giggle. How had he ever been scared?

    He could see the smiles now and the grins, the cheers, and they were all directed toward him. It was like the tree was his legs and he was ten feet tall, invincible. They all hated Jolen and because of that, right now they loved him. Nothing had ever been so good. Now he knew why his Maman wanted him to feel special, if feeling special in everybody’s eyes was just like this. He wanted to feel it for the rest of his life.

    Just as he’d hoped, he saw a teacher running closer – and even better, it was Mistress Halleah with her long braid bouncing. Everybody knew Jolen was a big stupid bully, but nobody ever dared to tell on him. Now he was caught well and good and nobody could say Camille’d done anything wrong.

    Camille opened his lunchsack, pulled out his bread and cheese, and took a great big bite. Nothing had ever tasted better. He leaned down, let his mouth hang open so just a few crumbs would fall on Jolen, and let loose the biggest, loudest oink of them all.

    Mistress Halleah got there just in time to watch Jolen hurl himself up into branches that snapped like twigs under his weight, collapsing in the dirt below the tree. “Camille, are you alright?” she gasped up at him, without sparing much attention for the other boy. He chewed and swallowed, reluctant to say goodbye to that first bite, and nodded.

    “I’m okay, Mistress Halleah. But, um, it was really scary.” He widened his eyes just a little, the same way he did whenever somebody caught him doing something wrong. He wished she wouldn’t call him Camille, though. That wasn’t him. Fancy special gentry boys were good boys. They didn’t do things like this, with tricks and lies.

    Mentally he went through all his names. Camille Ariel Frances Ira Orban. None of them were very good. Ira was maybe okay but it really sounded like a girl’s name even more than Camille, and so did Frances. Ariel… Ariel was very fancy… maybe if it was just a little shorter…

    “…I’m okay, but could you, maybe… could you maybe call me Ari from here on out?”

    ——-

    When Maman came home the next night, he rolled across the pallet to her, still half-asleep. “Maman? Maman, I don’t want to be a knight anymore. Now I want to be a bard.”

    Dimly, as if in a dream, he felt her hand pass over his brow. “My little Camille, you can be anything you want to be, because you are special.”

  • August 21, 2012 /  Art


    Two pictures in one day! I’m lucky! This is a commission I won some time back courtesy of the lovely Jaeela, who did a random draw among all players who had updated their blog in a certain week. It’s just now done and I’m happy with it! His hair should be longer, but that’s my bad.

  • August 20, 2012 /  Art

    So, I like to draw, but I’m very sporadic about doing so – being simultaneously a perfectionist and someone who makes a lot of mistakes. This is my first reasonably successful attempt at drawing Ari, so I thought I’d post it. He’s wearing a simplified (lol) version of one of his existing outfits. I may or may not do more with this later!

  • August 13, 2012 /  Entries

    3/30/355

    Almost Aprilis already. Soon I’ll be 23, four years since I came to Lithmore. How’s that happened?

    And I haven’t written a bloody thing in here in nigh on four months. Aye, the problem at the Group distracted me, but that’s still pretty astonishing.

    I look back on this winter as one surreal exhausting nightmare, from which I’ve finally passed into spring. There are many problems still dogging my heels, but at least my head is clear and my heart calm, and I have options to move ahead.

    The Hillbeast. The Defiler. The Strangler. Villains, and dangerous ones. But ultimately, they are all but mortal men, and what is mortal can always be killed.

    Now I just hope someone who’s actually bloody authorized to do something about it will take the information we’ve amassed and make a plan. This isn’t my area, this isn’t my field, and it won’t be my men who do anything about it. Sure, I intend to fight, but I don’t intend to lead them unless I absolutely have to. If I have to… well. We’ll burn that bridge when we get to it.

    Speaking of burning bridges, I wince at my last entry here. How could I have been so stupid? Well, I know how. I’ve been betrayed so many times. So many people I trusted turned out to be enemies. Madilaire, Julea, Bryne… still, it doesn’t excuse jumping to conclusions. I’ve got to get a better hold on my temper. I can only count myself lucky that Romana forgave me for my hasty words and assumptions.

    Almost got some good news the other day. Almost. I still don’t entirely know how to feel about it. I know that hope should be dominant, hope and gratitude that it’s still within my reach. But to know it was going to happen, months ago, and then it didn’t… it makes my heart clench.

    By and large I’m a happy man. I have my trials and my tribulations, but they always pass. There’s just this one thing that I still don’t have, this one thing that I want alone in the whole world.

    Please, Lord. Don’t let me screw it up again.

  • July 13, 2012 /  Entries

    (This entry is written in a wild, angry hand.)

    At times I wonder how much more betrayal I can take.

    I have been the Order’s faithful servant for years. With subterfuge, strategems and even outright lies I have advanced the goal of sending all of Lithmore’s mages to the pyre as far as practically anyone else who lives in this city.

    But why should I hold back my quill, shy from details? The Manus knows now, that much is confirmed. Let them find my journal; let them read it if they can break my cipers. Let them know.

    Yes, Rubeus. Yes, I sent Madilaire to her grave (and I mourn it; she should have had the pyre). I sent Chance, and Arvin. I told them of Eriit, then told them again and induced others to report when better evidence was provided to me. Julea reported on Leto Bharani to get back into my good graces. I told Bryne if he suspected Setina how he could best ferret out the truth, and that strategy succeeded. I helped to arrest Qadriyya ab Harkness once, saved her life for them so she could be questioned, then assembled the evidence needed for her second warrant when all others dismissed it. I stopped Florense ab Flewelling in full plate armor until the Inquisitors could arrive. I impressed it on… her, that Magnus Alaric must be turned in.

    I have played informant at great lengths and great difficulty. I have been imprisoned, tortured, scorned. I have bled, bruised, suffered. My tongue and my blade and my very body have been laid on His altar to do His work.

    And they spy on me. After assurances of perfect faith, perfect trust? They spy on me. To think that I was such a fool to assume that my service would afford me some true honor and respect.

    Lord, I love you with all my heart and soul, but your servants begin to tax me. Two corrupt Cardinals, one who abdicated his office, and now one whose judgment is so fatally flawed she wastes a spy on a man who has ever been on her side.

    Part of me wants to say no more. Not abandoning my faith – but no longer trying so hard on their behalf. Why should I aid them when she lies to my face? Why should I try to protect people that continually backstab me? I can name my true friends on the fingers of one hand.

    But I know I can’t just pretend this fight has nothing to do with me. This is who I am, and this is everyone’s battle. If mages die uncleansed, they are lost forever, wandering in the darkness. And in the time they do live on this Urth, they can do uncountable damage. Laraxis and the Great Flood testify to that. Elowyn was so powerful; what evils did I prevent by bringing her down?

    No; I have lost all respect for and trust in Her Holiness, but that does not make the mission itself less valid. It only means I will be very careful before relying on her judgment… and I must be cautious about the Rubeus’s attack on me. I wasn’t concerned when he tried it on Lien, because of course Lien knows I’m not a mage and Her Holiness promised me she wouldn’t believe it. But if she put a spy in my own household… then it is possible his words are what inspired it.

    Ugh. It’s such a transparent strategem. The Rubeus can’t take me down directly so he tries to get the Order to do it for him. That I should have to fight it at all angers me. But I have been beset before by enemies; I will not let my name be blackened.

    And I will continue to fight the good fight, should every last person in this city oppose me.

  • June 25, 2012 /  Entries

    In Savir now.

    I actually rather love it. Noticeably warmer than Lithmore, even if it’s not a tremendous change. Rolling plains with hills and valleys on the mountainous side, picturesque country.

    The people are partially Farin-blooded, and so I don’t at all look amiss here; indeed, I look almost more like them than I look like other Tubori, with the darkness of my skin. I could have easily been born here, at least at a glance.

    I speak enough Farin so as not to be caught out when they casually throw a word of it into their speech, too, though I can’t follow the street children’s pidgin chatter yet. I intend to take the time to learn.

    And there are more things I don’t feel it’s safe to talk about in detail, not even here. You never know who might manage to steal your journal and break your elaborate, frequently-altered cipher, huh? So tired of hiding the best part of my life. Very soon now it will have been a year since I was raised to nobility. Isn’t that long enough? Ugh, let it go, Ari. You’re happy, even if you have to keep your happiness quiet.

    Enough of that. Were I here at a better time, I might be loving every moment of it. But the events happening back in Lithmore preoccupy me, weighing so heavily on my heart.

    Such misery and misfortune for Lien – it isn’t fair. I feel the weight of my obligations, the cost of my title, more than ever. I have to acquaint myself with the area and its business, speak to all of my stewards, put Castle Torem to rights; I can’t just run back to comfort her.

    But my work here is drawing to a close, as I’ve packed it all into as little time as I could manage. I think very soon now we can set off on our way back to Lithmore City.

    Part of me is angry that I can’t even get a month’s vacation without things going wrong. (Angry at the world in general, not Lien.) But it is outweighed by the part of me that is worried about her, that wishes to make it right.

    Perhaps I’ve grown up a little. Can’t say I’ve grown up all the way until I finally get over having to keep my secrets.

  • June 17, 2012 /  Entries

    I’ve been too busy to write lately – too much happening, good and bad.

    No, to be truthful. It wasn’t just business – it was also a persistent exhaustion, a sort of malaise that lingered. The fight with Florense, the attack on Lien… everything just weighed on me. I spent a while just lingering around the house sleeping too much.

    But now that’s over, after I spent a lovely evening just talking to Marisa. It was if the clouds hovering over me somehow parted after just a brief time in her company. She and I will soon be traveling; I’ll get to see Savir for the first time. I’m unaccountably nervous, truth be told. Will they see me as an interloper, a foreigner who doesn’t understand anything about their land and their people?

    The moment I was given Savir as my domain, I started dreaming of turning it into a little paradise. Improving trade to enrich the area; then with the money, spreading education, reducing poverty, bolstering health, opposing crime… but what do I know about these things?

    I have ideas, it’s true, but my education is a patchwork that more allows me to pose as a gentleman than be thoroughly schooled in any given subject. I’ve done what I can to rectify those gaps, but I never can find the hours in the day. Maybe it’s just foolish ego making me think I could sweep into Savir and improve anything at all.

    Then again, perhaps I shouldn’t be so doubtful. The Group has done well since I’ve taken over. The shipping arm in particular has won several highly lucrative contracts. I can’t take much of the credit for that, I just installed brokers and let them do their jobs – but there’s a wisdom in knowing which decisions you ought to make and which you ought to delegate, right? If I just make sure all of the stewards in Savir are as solid as the Group’s brokers, I think I can be quite confident in its future.

    On a different note, I’m worried about Lien. She has been behaving better since her encounter with the bandits, but she has seemed subdued and withdrawn, lacking her usual spirits. I think she feels sadly neglected by Jei and perhaps afflicted by a similar malaise to my own, haunted by all the darkness that has dogged Lithmore in recent months.

    Perhaps her birthday gift will cheer her to some extent, or just some time in quiet celebration… I owe it to her to try.

  • May 31, 2012 /  Entries

    I need to stop writing entries in my diary when piss drunk.

    That last one is a cringeworthy overreaction. Maybe I don’t know if this guardian thing is working out; maybe we need another solution. Maybe she said something thoughtless and it hurt me. That doesn’t mean it’s some kind of betrayal, or that she’s terrible, or that things are hopeless.

    There are times I solely wish I was calmer… times I would trade the absolute bliss I feel sometimes, in order to moderate the pain. If one does not rise as high, the fall is not so long.

    But I am who I am, and I know of no way to change such a thing. So dwelling is pointless; drinking less might be a good start, though.

    I’ll figure out what to do about Lien when she returns.

    Right now I’m just lying in bed coming down off the mandrake. Broken nose, fractured cheekbone, a multitude of small bruises… not enough to keep me bedridden, but enough to ensure everything hurts. The doctors are hopeful my cheekbone will heal in the right position; I did not tell them I hardly care. I think about what I told Flewelling… I don’t mean it as much as I once did, but I wouldn’t mind losing a little of my looks.

    Flewelling… that is a horror that is going to haunt me for a while. Fresh off finally beginning to forget the corpsefires; my life has good timing. Her words were… sad and insane and incorrect. I was surprised by how little her castigations hurt me, perhaps because I’ve largely healed, perhaps because she’d clearly lost all touch with reality. But it is never a -pleasant- thing to watch somebody take a blade to themselves. And none of it had to be this way.

    I screwed up. I really did this time. Where was my usual cool? I should have been able to act more normal, to call in the Knights without raising her suspicion. But the armor, and the ship and everything… I didn’t want to believe it.

    What madness and pain rises from these things. What heresy from love. At times like this it is easy to see nothing but the darkness of the world, with even beautiful things being twisted. But some people stay strong, and it’s for them that I choose to keep fighting.

  • May 27, 2012 /  Entries

    *the handwriting of this entry is so shaky as to be almost illegible*

    You say -I- never saw the good in -you-. That’s a laugh. Except I’m not laughing.

    It’s not like I ever said I was proud of you, that I thought you were a good person, that I was happy about the progress you’d made, that I loved you. It’s not like the vast majority of the things I said to you were pleasant, it’s not like I only called you out when I had to and let countless lies, misdeeds and misbehaviors slide. It’s not like I covered for you time and time again, not just your reputation but even from the law. It’s not like I only tried to hold you to some basic standards of acceptable behavior -for your own sake-.

    It’s not like I opened my life and my heart for you. And it’s not like you always assumed the worst of me even when you chided me for assuming the worst of you.

    Is it? Not in your eyes. No, all I ever was was a patronizing lecturer who wanted you to behave solely in order to safeguard my own reputation and who wanted to keep you away from all your true friends.

    I don’t even care. I give up. I just give up. Arien take you, I hope you never come back.

     

  • May 24, 2012 /  Entries

    I do so love fools who think they are smart. I consider them somewhat along the lines of metaphorical hors d’oeuvres: tasty, plentiful and only requiring a single bite. I would rather relish a chance to cast a look their way and say, “You will be devoured.”

    But that’s not how these games are played – not if you want to win, at least.

    So I will behave myself like a good boy. Which I am, really, you know. If not always in my methods, ultimately in my ends. I don’t play for myself. I wonder how many people doubt that? Probably just about everyone, honestly. Oh, perhaps not Lien or Marisa… but I think everyone else in this city who’s aware of such things wonders what I have up my sleeve. Yet if I showed them, I doubt they’d believe me.

    Such is life, hmm? Well, I’ve no hesitation in drinking the cup it’s poured out for me. There have been hard times, mistakes and betrayals, but there have been beauties and joys as well. Fortune is mixed; that’s just the way it is. I have my friends, my family, and most of the time they’re quite the consolation for any ills that might befall me.

    How’d I write it before?

    Let all the world oppose me
    In a single hateful throng;
    The lone sweet voice that knows me
    Is a healing balm in song.

    But it’s more than one voice now, even if hers is ever the most comforting. I’m a lucky man.

    Anyway, things proceed well. I’ve made my donation to the reconstruction efforts, and the picture is much more rosy than I’d expected, in terms of funding. We may really be able to put much of the city back on its feet again.

    My medical studies are continuing haltingly, as time permits; my current focus is pregnancy and childbearing. Not very appropriate for a man, but I don’t ever want to be stuck delivering another baby without any idea of what to do. And if something goes wrong for Cellan, like it almost did the other day… I want to be able to -help- this time. I don’t intend to make myself a full midwife (midhusband?) or anything. I just… don’t want to be helpless. Ever again.