OUT OF LUX discussion

7 views
— VOXTHAIN MEMORY LOGS — > • Eadric’s Log

Comments Showing 1-3 of 3 (3 new)    post a comment »
dateUp arrow    newest »

message 1: by ellie (last edited Mar 20, 2025 11:37AM) (new)

ellie (rebelkitten12) | 3586 comments

⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀
⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀𝑬𝒂𝒅𝒓𝒊𝒄 𝑪𝒂𝒍𝒊𝒄𝒐

age 31: finding out his sister is dead

Calico Estate

Eadric's fingers twitched on the glass of wine he delicately held between them. It wasn't enough to get him drunk, but enough to nevertheless set his head to spinning a little, and it was dinnertime, anyway, so paired with food, it was better. He knew he had once had a bit of a problem with it, but he had been trying hard to regulate his intake, and as far as he was concerned, he was doing well. Now, he sat in his office, working away at high-quality steak and creamy mashed potatoes with steamed carrots, a small, fresh salad on the side.

He should have been with his family at dinner--with Elara and Alianna, but having a three-year-old was exhausting, and sometimes, he needed peace. Alianna was a constant shot of energy and extremely loud, and he had business matters to take care of. Now, Eadric flipped through some of the files from his gems mines, looking through--a heavy knock jerked through the quiet of the room, and he startled, dropping the papers and very nearly shattering the glass of wine.

"Good grief, have some respect!" He yelled out. It was probably his butler, but the man knew not to disturb him during dinner unless it was an emergency, and so help him, he would be making his wrath known.

"Eadric, open the door. Now."

His stomach plummeted, and shock ignited through his system at the strong female voice outside the door, mixed with a hint of impatience and something he found himself on edge around. Something in her voice was too shrill. A chill swept through Eadric as he stood up, pulse pounding in his ears, and walked to the office door. Quickly, he waved his hands before the door, undoing his arcane lock spell, and then pushed the door open.

Without waiting for an invitation, Lady Katarina Hayden slipped inside the room and shut the door. She had been in here before, of course--she was his oldest friend, and was the better part of him and all his siblings, practically a sister to him. But now, she didn't give him a hug, didn't give him shit for keeping his blinds drawn, nor for the open alcohol cabinet behind his desk. Instead, she stared at him, her blue eyes bloodshot, as if she had been crying. Not just bloodshot, he realized with a jolt of fear, but her dark hair was disheveled, her chest was heaving, breaths rattling, her hands shook--and she was wobbling on a crutch.

"Katarina, what the--what the hell happened?" He choked out, worry rushing through him as he lurched towards her and pushed a chair at her. "Sit down. Sit--your leg--what--you weren't even due back from Fareûn for another week."

As if strings had been cut, Katarina collapsed into the chair, dropping the crutch and dropping her head, breathing hard. The fear inside his gut spread, lancing icy tendrils through his blood and veins, through his arms and into his heart. Never before had he seen the strongest person he knew in all of Voxthain so...spooked. Defeated, upset. He had watched her keep her head high when her mother had always gone at her about some nit-picky thing; he had seen her disgust with her husband; he had seen her horror at the way some people in Voxthain were treated; seen her close to tears after a hard day at work. But this? A haunted look behind red-rimmed eyes, a prosthetic, he saw now with a gape at the metallic sheen peeking through the bottom of her pants leg...something had happened, something horrific, and a lurch seemed to overtake Eadric's stomach.

She had been in Fareûn visiting Aarlyn. Something horrible had happened. She had been spooked, traumatized, if the look in her eyes was anything to go by. Commander Hayden, in charge of the militia in Voxthain, was before him, collapsed and shaking with a missing leg. And Aarlyn wasn't here.

"Kat, where's my sister? What happened in Fareǔn?"

She said nothing. Eadric's blood roared in his ears, and he bit his tongue to stop himself from screaming in her face. "Katarina--"

"Dead, Eadric."

Dead. Dead--what, no. No, no--dead-- As the force of her words struck like a blow, she raised her head to meet his gaze. Tears tracked their way down her pale cheeks, catching hauntingly on the glistening magic chandeliers in his office.

"What?" He echoed, one word breathy, on the precipice of a cliff.

"Killed, and I--" She threw a filthy, shaking hand over her mouth. Good grief, had she come right from Fareûn? Had she had someone with her who had found a fast way to teleport them out, or had they driven for days and not stopped to eat or shower once? His mind spun, working fifteen miles a minute in circles. "I tried to save her, and it nearly had me, too, it--it nearly--" She broke, collapsing in an onslaught of tears that had Eadric staggering back from her, his own pulse beginning to drown out every single word she saw, her crying, as he stared at her as if a gauze separated them.

Killed, dead--Aarlyn. His baby sister, dead?! How? How was that even possible? How had she--she had been--

"It's possible!" The accusation, the shout, the thread of desperation, denial, exploded out of him. "You--you're lying, you're mistaken, you--"

"The shadowfog killed her! Why the fuck would I lie, you oaf?" Katarina's venom struck just as hard as his as her blue eyes blazed. "A big black cloud of shadows, encroaching Fareûn, it kills every single living thing it can, drains of magic everything it touches." Her voice shook as she choked on tears, on memories that probably tangled her up inside, squeezing the life from her body. "I-I have an affinity for manipulating darkness, shadows, but I couldn't--I couldn't manipulate it, couldn't stop it, it was on my heels and that's hiow I lost my leg, it--it touched me and--and Aarlyn--I told her not to touch it, Eadric, I told her--but she--I should have pulled her away bodily, I'm sorry, you know how curious she gets and I--I should have pulled her away--" The poison in her voice broke as Katarina caved inwards, a sense of guilt dragging her down as Eadric could only look on in rising horror, confusion, and rage, his chest heaving as red flickered in and out of his vision.

"How dare you?" He whispered. Silence echoed in the office, but in his head, it was as if the world had thundered, the clouds had gathered, holding rain and lightning poised to strike. "You should have saved her, you should have pulled her back! You disgusting traitor, you killer!"

Her eyes burned. "You think I did this on purpose?! I made a mistake, none of us knew what it would do until she stuck her damn hand into it--I'm sorry, Eadric, I'm sorry, I know. I know--" The resolve seemed to crumble from her as she dropped her head, pressing trembling hands against her eyes. "It's my fault. And it's coming, it's coming this way, I-I don't know how long it will take but there's--someone has to stop it, I don't--oh, gods. Aarlyn," she choked.

How? How was this right, that his sister had died and Katarina had survived? How the hell had she not acted on years of impulse driven and beaten into her from the militia? To save people, to pull them from danger? Red blazed across his chest, and he straightened to his full height, grief mixing with rage as he half-processed everything, much too fast for his brain to fully catch up. All he knew was spitting sparks, both figuratively and literally as they danced off his hands, his affinity for evocation, for fire magic, and knowledge of it getting out of control. "Get out of my house," he spat.

Katarina stared, freezing, before she lowered her hands. "Eadric, please--"

"Get. Out!" His roar shook the floorboards, but maybe that was just his stalking towards her. He wanted to grab her throat and squeeze. How dare she not grab Aarlyn. How dare she not--

"Get ahold of yourself, you moron!" A blast of icy air slammed into Eadric's chest, the force knocking the breath from his lungs and sending him staggering back wards until he tripped over the end of a lush carpet and went down, hard, bruising his hip on the edge of his desk. "I grabbed her after she stuck her hand in it! But it was too late, I reacted too late and we had no idea what was going to happen! I am sorry my instincts failed me, but you know as well as I do that you do not take Aarlyn away from what she wanted to do. And if it makes you feel better, I paid the price for my idiocy. She was my sister too, my best friend. We were closer than you two ever were, and I lost my leg. Are you fucking happy?"

He lay there, mind spinning, breath gaping, the world turning above him as his chest throbbed from Katarina's blow, hip smarting and back aching. Staring up at the guilded gold ceiling of his office, he found the tears starting, pricking at the base of his eyes before the ceiling blurred. Aarlyn-- Oh, his smart, adventurous sister, always with a witty comeback and sly grin, her blue eyes bright as she yearned for adventure, slinging an arm around him and Katarina and goading them into doing something entirely stupid. A skilled mage, a bit of a brat sometimes, but his little sister. Oh, gods, he'd have to tell Esmeralda, and already she hated both him and Katarina for not marrying when they had the chance--he squeezed his eyes shut.

Grief, that swirl of heavy darkness, devastation, rage--a weight of helplessness--it was too much. Wine. Wine was all he could do to drown this, to make this not hurt so badly. His head spun as he sat up, and Eadric crawled pathetically towards the alcohol cabinet, a shining gold sun.

"No." Katarina appeared before him, leaning unsteady on her crutches, and then used them to kneel before him. "No, Eadric. No wine."

He stared at her, finding the urge to throttle her had been blown away when she hit him with the icy air she had pulled from around her. Instead, they stared at one another, broken masses who had just lost the sunshine holding them together, the sister they had loved so dearly. Tears leaked from her eyes, and he could see the guilt strewn across her face, the darkness in her eyes that hadn't even been there the day she had married James Laughlin against her will. She was broken, and guilt he had blamed her blossomed up inside him.

"Eadie, I'm sorry," she whispered.

"Me, too," he choked out. "I-I-she--"

"I know." Katarina collapsed, burying her head in her hands. "I know."

Eadric fell back, the silence in the office almost deafening now. He pulled his hands over his own eyes, darkness swallowing him whole. He needed that wine, he needed it as soon as Katarina left. His anger still churned, his grief and shock mixed in with bursts of lightning, striking his heart repeatedly. Aarlyn had been the sunshine of the Calicos. The best of his found family between him and Katarina.

And just like that, she was gone.

He was coming apart inside, and he didn't know how to fix it. If he ever even could.




message 2: by ellie (last edited May 14, 2025 01:09PM) (new)

ellie (rebelkitten12) | 3586 comments

   
   
❝   𝓔𝓪𝓭𝓻𝓲𝓬 𝓒𝓪𝓵𝓲𝓬𝓸   ❞    
   



Six Years Ago

Eadric Calico was a man of pride. He prided himself, in fact, on not bowing to anyone, on remaining as powerful and upright and strong--as in control--as he possibly could, at all times, no matter what. Only certain people were allowed to see into the dark, swirling recesses of his mind, and ever since he had begun to lose people left and right, since his father had gotten stricter, he had shut more and more people away.

Asking for help was not Eadric's forte, nor was it a concept he was familiar with at all, right up there with a sore lack of stellar communication skills. And yet, here he was, panic clawing at his throat for the first time, truly, since Aarlyn had died. The last time he had felt despair well like sharpened claws of a hawk, sinking into him and never letting go had been when Katarina had returned from Fareûn with pure grief in her eyes.

He'd known then, before she even said a word, that his life had changed forever. Just as now, the second the front door to the estate slammed shut, only feet before Eadric, his life had taken yet another change....and that he was going to have to suck up that pride and ask for help. For a week, he had held out, watching the door constantly, slouched in his chair in his office, one hand wrapped loosely around a bottle of wine. That despair had dug deeper, and so to numb it, he had been tasting all the wines he hadn't quite gotten to yet--that red, a pinot, he and Elissa had picked up last year when they'd gone wine tasting; and a chardonnay from a few years before that. It had helped, but only temporarily. The door had never opened, a servant had not come knocking to tell him she was back.

So Eadric had taken a breath. Shoved the wines away, dawned a fresh coat, brushes his hair and pulled it back, and stepped out of his office for the first time in days. He had walked out of the estate and all the way into the city square, with one destination in mind. Behind the anxiety churning about what had happened to Alianna lay the anxiety about asking for help--although, pride he damned, he would get on his knees and beg if he had to.

His firstborn had been his pride and joy. Alianna was his little flame, his angel, with her clever mind and sharp whit, her perfect manners and her skill with wielding fire, just like him. Poised, intelligent, and elegant, his flame had been his heir. Eadric's heart twisted inside him; how many memories did he have of the two of them together, pouring over his letters, his numbers from the mine, his ledgers? Teaching her so much, about his business and Voxthain and her value as the heir to the wealthiest family there was in both cities? How many times had he taught her magic, had they sat and laughed at some of the passing commoners together?

Not even a letter had come.

Could grief hit you, if one was still alive, but somewhere off the face of the moon anyway? Because this certainly felt like that, and as Eadric halted at his destination, at the foot of the stone steps leading up to the imposing building before him, he closed his eyes and took a deep breath. For her. For Allie.

Opening his eyes, he took one more breath before forcing his legs to move, but each step matched the heavy beating of his heart, which he realized he could suddenly hear quite clearly. Good Lantas, how long had it been since he had come into this building? Always polished and formidable, made of imposing, smooth marble, pure white with streaks of gold. He avoided it, if he could, but right now, his only hope lay beyond those double doors.

His stomach tightened as he neared them. Would she even help him? Or would she take one look at him and send him away with a flick of her fingers? And he did he even trust her to properly do so? Something tight pinched at Eadric's chest, and he blew a breath out, rubbing one hand between his eyes, at an ache that had started in his forehead. Guilt. Frustration. Always. toss-up, when it came to her now. And longing, he knew, deep down, but refused to say aloud, refused to acknowledge for more than a passing wave.

But right now, desperation buzzed in his mind, a hove of bees. prominent and overtaking all his misgivings, and Eadric strode the rest of the way up the steps of the militia headquarters. Past two soldiers guarding the door, past the flagpole out front, a green-and-gold flag atop it flapping madly in the breeze of the crisp morning air.

His hands shook as he pushed open the doors. Inside, one of the foot soldiers looked up from a receptionist desk. The man stared, blinking once, and then spoke, his words hesitant. "Lord Calico? Are you here to see Commander Hayden?"

"Yes," Eadric snapped once. His stomach knotted, blood going hot at the implication behind the young man's stare--thanks to the Seavey papers, it had not been any secret when the relationship between the Calicos and the Haydens had broken beyond any hope of repair. Maybe their relations had always been slipping, ever since he and Katarina had gotten into disagreements at Cogworks over the value of a life, over the worth of a noble versus someone without that blood. Eadric had been raised a proper Voxthain noble--classist, and proud of it. Nobility commanded respect because they essentially ran the city. But Katarina had never seen it that way, and when they had both been on Council, their relationship had fractured their houses.

Arguing endlessly. Fighting. Some days, it had been hard to even believe they'd once been so close. Cogworks had been the breeding ground for their differences, and Eadric had almost choked on his tea the first day he saw Katarina with that Altan girl, walking and laughing with her as an equal. Eadric had never hated Selene, but he had never viewed her as worth Kat's time, either. But since then, they'd divulged, and Eadric knew he had made things irreversible when he had let slip nasty, classist remarks after Aarlyn had died. No, he had not been in the best headspace--who would have been?--but to see Katarina come back with news of a deceased sister (the only sibling he really had left) and yet, with a child? Somehow, it had sparked flames, and he had said things he wished he could have taken back.

She had never forgiven him, and their Council fights had proved that. Maybe one day, Eadric would realize Katarina had always been the better one, Honorable, fighting for the people, whereas Eadric mainly had had the rights of nobility in his mind, but they had hardly spoken since they'd left Council. Rather, since Eadric had left Council. Kat was stepping down at the end of the week...the entire reason he was here in the first place, technically speaking.

"You can go in." The soldier's words broke through Eadric's thoughts, and he turned from where he had been staring at the dark wood floors, the weapons mounted on the walls, the plaques, the dark green banners edged in gold. Everything was so precise, so orderly, so...Katarina...that it both made Eadric want to hit something and smile at the same time. He had not been here in years, and somehow, being in a building Kat owned was both like coming home, and stepping into the den of a viper.

He blew out a breath, biting his tongue keep from snapping, but good grief he was losing patience. Ever since the announcement had come out, that Alianna had lost the Council election, Eadric had not been showing his face, and for more than just his depression over Allie fleeing. A Calico had always been on Council, save for when Eadric had stepped down. None of his kids had been old enough to run, and truly, he had been too unstable to stay on it. But they were supposed to go back to that seat of power. This whole situation was not supposed to have happened--and he did not want pity, he wanted answers.

Both on the election and on his daughter.

But right now, about to speak to Katarina directly for the first time in awhile, more than just a passing nod or small talk, he had to remind himself to keep that indignant irritation at bay. He was here to demand help. Not accuse her.

Without thanking the man, Eadric turned on his heel and stalked past the reception desk, following signs mounted on the wall for the Commander's office. Turning down the hallway and around a corner, he came to a stop outside a door of polished, dark wood. "Commander K. Hayden" glimmered on a gold plaque in black lettering, and he closed his eyes briefly, once, and knocked.

He shifted. Fidgeted. Tugged at his sleeves. Eadric's nerves jumped, nothing a bottle couldn't soothe, take the edges out, and come to think of it, was the headache stress or was he fucking hungover? Who was to say, really? He--

"Come in."

His stomach tight and mouth dry, Eadric pushed the door open with one hand, the handle cold beneath his palm. Stepping inside the office, he shut the door behind him and immediately found himself face to face with Katarina Hayden. Dressed impeccably in a militia uniform of green and gold, her black hair braided back, she was every inch the commander and not one inch the noble so many had tried to force her to become. A brief, unexpected swell of pride in her choked the air from his lungs and words from his mouth, and he could only stare before the sound of someone shouting from down the hallway broke him from it.

Eadric licked his lips once. "You look well."

Her lips parted, blue eyes widening, before she masked whatever she was feeling within half a second, gesturing at the chair. "What do you need, Lord Calico?"

Shit. It stung. Barbed wire under his skin, slap to the face, Eadric numbly sat in the chair already half pulled out away from her desk. No. This is what's best. This is what you want. He rested his hands atop the desk and inhaled once, sharply, forcing himself to stay focused as she sat across from him, arms folded, dark eyebrow raised expectantly.

"Alianna ran away from home a week ago. Morning of the election results for Council."

Something in Katarina's gaze sharpened before it went darker.

"And she hasn't returned. No letter, nothing. I was hoping--" The words stuck. Like a net had been placed around his vocal box and his heart, they stayed there, rooted in his head, unable to make their way out. Just say it, ask for help, it's Kata. But was it? This was not his Kata. This was a militia commander who hated him.

For good reason, really.




message 3: by ellie (last edited May 14, 2025 01:24PM) (new)

ellie (rebelkitten12) | 3586 comments



Eadric ran a hand down the side of his face, averting his eyes from the intensity of Katarina's. Those blue eyes of hers had always been sharp, intelligent, but with the compassion that lived in her heart just behind the rest. Truly, she was the best person he knew, and he had no right to ask for her help after all he had done, fighting her on every turn on Council, shaming her for her adoptions, pushing her grief aside when Aarlyn had been lost to both of them.

But he was at a fucking loss.

"I need help," he whispered. "I was hoping--you could send investigators out, or yourself, or...or just--someone to find her, get on her trail, bring her home. Please. Please, Kata." Desperation swelled, writhing down Eadric's spine as he leaned against the table as if it was all that keeping him upright. Distantly, he processed he had accidentally slipped her childhood nickname into that, only when she stiffened slightly. Ah, crap. Apparently, twenty years of friendship died hard.

His Alianna had been his everything, and now, she was gone. A world without her was a world without light--she was the flame, and the world had gone cold without her warmth.

It was silent--too silent--for a long moment as Katarina simply stared at him, tapping one of her hands against the top of her desk. Finally, just as Eadric feared he was about to burst from the panic, she spoke.

"Why?" She asked, direct, her gaze cutting as if her eyes were made of ice. "You mock me, you reject me, you judge me. Your daughter ran away and I don't see how she's in danger, Lord Calico. Alianna has been nothing but a vain, spoiled heiress since the day she was born, harming people different than her since she was five. She lost a fair election because the people know what you've always pretended not to--that she's sadistic and would do more harm than she's worth. She ran on purpose, a petty child unused to not getting what she wanted. I don't think she wants to be found."

Eadric stared, mouth gaping, shock warring with fury as he stared at Katarina, who stood there, as calm as the eye of a hurricane. "I--why? Because I-I love her, and she's not--she's not--"

"Not what, Eadric? She is a terrible person whether or not you choose to acknowledge that."

"It's your job," he burst. And I knew there was a chance she'd say no, but not on the basis of Allie! He had known that Katarina was upset with him, but to refuse to help on basis of his daughter instead of him? "I get you're mad at me, and I am--so sorry for so much of what I've done, but this is my daughter. You wouldn't understand that loss--" As soon as he spoke, he froze. Color drained from his face as his blood turned to chips of ice, fear tightening in his stomach as a heavy silence descended over the room.

"I didn't--I didn't mean--"

"Yes. You did." Katarina pointed a finger at her door, her eyes having gone almost grey, like the steel coating her spine. She stood up straighter, her eyes flashed, and metal hardened every inch of her voice. "Get out."

"Katarina--"

"It's Commander Hayden, and get out of my office before I send in my daughter to remove you. She won't be gentle, and this is the last warning I'm giving. This is an order from me, the militia commander, and from me, the Councilor. Get out of here, Calico, and if you want help so badly, maybe next time consider thinking before you speak. I understand that's hard for you, with how you were raised, thinking everything comes to you on gold plates, because a lot of it has. But Voxthain, despite what nobles believe, is more than just about those in power. Your Alianna was a sadistic bully, and I am done with your classist attitudes about my life and my children. My daughter is more mine than yours ever was yours, anyway, apparently. Get your ass out of here. Immediately."

Tears burned, humiliating, in Eadric's eyes, and he swallowed hard, breaths wheezing out of him as panic clawed at his throat. She had once been his best friend, and he had wrecked that, nailing the final coffin because she was right and he didn't think, she was right and he was born to luxury and a family of nobles who believed blood mattered more than love and adoration. Maybe it was wrong, and deep down he knew that, but he balked still at the idea of admitting the Hayden heir was a foreign, common-born woman who uttered swear words every other sentence and balked at Voxthain's nobles' traditions. Okay, Eadric should have watched his words, but he had been begging, he was panicking, and apparently there was now ay to save himself now.

"Fine," he whispered. "But just know if a human being dies because your militia won't search for her--"

"Oh, Eadie, you have so many other kids. You uppity nobles are so concerned with heirs, just choose another, what's one kid lost? You have multiple, one noble kid's the same as the next, eh?" Katarina stated with a sickly-sweet smile, words syrupy, her eyes lethal slits. "And you so love to make more kids with any woman who lets you within a ten foot radius, so I don't see the concern about your missing child. Go find someone to make a new baby with."

And it cut. A deep blow that had Eadric's mouth hanging open in utter shock she just said that. But before he could get past the sinking feeling in his stomach and the ringing in his ears, she spoke again.

"Calico, I will send one search party for your twisted excuse of a daughter. One, and only because it is, indeed, my job, and because Sergeant Hayden is convinced she's also a murderer of two students at Cogworks, and if this is true, I would like to see her brought to justice. Now out."

"Murderer--no--how dare you? How dare your pathetic--"

"We have evidence stacked up."

"You raided my estate?"

Katarina smiled, and it sent Eadric's hair standing up along the back of his neck. "No. I wrote Sergeant Hayden a search warrant for your estate about two weeks ago. We had evidence from the murder victims, and she's been working that case ever since that poor girl was killed a few years back. Something about the death never sat right, and we finally have enough evidence to convict Alianna of murdering that girl and her boyfriend a few weeks ago."

Fury blossomed through Eadric's chest, heat spreading up from his toes through his arms. "How fucking dare you accuse her of this? This is an abuse of power, Katarina, and I--"

"Abuse of power?" She stepped forward, almost eye-to-eye with him, sharp cheekbones enunciated and hair swept back in a severe, braided knot. Briefly, the image of the woman's terrifying mother came to mind, and he pushed it aside, but chills broke out across his shoulder blades. "You want to talk about that? Okay. Your mines. We also have had reports about unfair treatment of workers, and I have been beginning to look into that. The Seaveys. Unfair abuse of power, manipulating people with their journalism. I am simply exercising my right to keep people safe in Voxthain, and by people, I mean the citizens, not nobles with their heads up their asses like you. I sent you a message saying I was sending an investigative team with a warrant into your estate, Eadric. As I am on Council and a commander, I can do that on basis of actual evidence and a case I'm working. You were apparently too busy screwing women or ripping off your workers to actually read your messages."

"How dare you--"

"How dare I what? Take care of people, catch a murderer, adopt a kid that loves me more than your biological ones ever will? Anyway, we're done here."

The ringing in Eadric's ears turned to a roar, and he could barely hear anything, see where he was going, and he turned on his heel and stormed from her office, slamming the door so hard behind him it shook the frame. Red hazed across Eadric's vision, chest so tight he could barely breathe, finding each inhale shaking and short, a wheezing sound escaping his lips.

How dare she? Fear and frustration, anger, the need to somehow get back at her warred within him. The audacity of accusing his daughter of murder, the audacity of calling out, what, his faults? Of searching his estate and--good Lantas, he missed her. He missed his friend, back when they had grown up together, had laughed together and loved their sister together, and he had messed that up between them.

But would it ever have even worked out, to stay friends with Katarina, when she had always believed in truth and justice and equality, and when Eadric had always shuddered at that thought? Nobles were nobles for a reason, he had believed, and he had stuck by that enough to drive a painful wedge that could never be healed between himself and Katarina.

Perfect, good, terrifying Katarina, who adopted children and loved them fully and endlessly, who befriended a woman of common birth and stuck by her like glue in a way that had Eadric almost jealous.

He'd lost his best friend, and he knew, clearer than the rest of his emotions, that it was his fault. And the worst part was, he didn't know if he could even compromise his own twisted beliefs to even try and make it right again. He knew he owed Elara better, and maybe Alex and Artemisia, especially Alex. He knew some of what he was believing was unfair. But his Allie, she had accused her--she had--

He couldn't think. He should have asked to see the evidence, which maybe he could still, but Katarina had gotten one up on him in there, and for the next few days, there was no way he was going back. After all...he was, indeed, a prideful man.

To a fault.

And he needed a drink, something strong. The urge gripped him, to knock back a vodka, forget about everything plaguing him--Alianna, the murders she was accused of, her running away, the loss of a Calico staple on Council--fucking Caledonia Hayden taking that place instead, of all awful people--his own guilt over how he had treated Katarina, missing her, all of it. Only a cold vodka could solve that problem, and then a bottle of spiced wine.

Because darkness had closed in, and he saw no way out but blackness. At least until his Allie was home. He could cross that bridge when he came to it, and then go to the Seaveys and demand, what, the smear Hayden's name? Somehow force her to drop out of Council before she even got in there in a week? Ask the woman herself if she rigged it?

Why would anyone vote for that bad-tempered bitch instead of his Allie? Distantly, he knew maybe it was because of the nugget of truth Kat had said--that Alianna was sadistic, classist, and hurt the people to the point where they didn't want her in charge. And he knew Hayden worked with women, she worked with the kids, she cared, she shared their blood.

But it didn't mean Eadric wasn't furious.

And right now, all he could do was drink away his anger.




back to top