Tamryn shouldn't have bothered with the morning ritual. Fireheart, enchanted and edged with adamantine to boot, would no more require sharpening than Hano's fragment of Torm's own weapon did. But there was value in ritual; value in doing things the way they had been done before. And so upon awakening and making herself decent, Tamryn padded on bare feet over to the cabinet against the edge of the bunkroom. Her scabbarded greatsword leaned up against it, alongside her longbow and the quiver of arrows, half-emptied on Karthus and his Veritas allies.
Thoughts crowded in as the last fog of sleep cleared from her mind, but she fought them off with rote motion, trying to lose herself in the familiar.
Take the sword. Five paces back, two to the side, open the door and walk into the training ring.
It's happening again.
Four paces left, to the rack of weapons both steel and wood. Take the whetstone and the oil.
It's happening again, isn't it?
A thin layer of oil on the stone, just enough to make it shine in the light of candles and lamps. Nod to Balthasar as he went past, following his own morning ritual.
You're growing close to him. You want to grow closer still.
Unsheathe Fireheart and damp the flames with a thought, leaving the steel and adamantine of the blade naked. Inspect it for nicks and irregularities, though there were none. Fight down the loss, fight down the memory of Kaldaris giving the sword in the camp on the side of the Schild.
Kaldaris. It happened with him. When he asked you to court him, you'd been wishing for him to ask for a tenday. Jeshana. It happened with her. On the basis of half-remembered lies from an old life you made her a promise that you couldn't keep. And before...
Love made you a traitor, Tamryn. Tamara.
Lay the left edge of the sword on the stone, just an inch beyond the crossguards. Drag it from base to tip, a continuous stroke. Linear, following the pattern of the blade. Don't grind.
Kollotta was right, wasn't she? You love too quickly. You are too ready to devote yourself, too eager for someone to share in your burden. It hasn't changed. Why hasn't it, Tamara? Why do you still lust after that which may destroy you?
Eight strokes down the left edge front. Eight strokes to the right edge front. Flip the blade.
You're lonely, aren't you. After just two months of his absence, you're ready to take solace with someone else. It's too soon, and you know it or I wouldn't be telling you. But you still feel it. Why?
Focus on the strokes, keep them regular. Eight to each edge on each side, flip. Watch the fingers holding the stone.
It doesn't matter, and you know this. It cannot happen this time. With Hano, there is more at stake than your ragged, stained excuse for a soul. He's no Kaldaris to be pulled from deals with devils and deals with Stormlords. He is a paladin. The embodiment of what you should have been, but were too flawed to be.
Lift the blade to examine it after four cycles. Inspect the edge to make sure it's neither too dull nor too sharp. Lay it back down on the stone and continue.
He will fall, Tamara. If he takes you as his lover he will fall. Not by that act, but by the breaking of something that tells both of you it's wrong. Have you not learned from the past? Have you not recognized that the chain of command is there for a reason? He knows it -- do you?
Examine the blade a second time, nod slightly in satisfaction. Reach for the cloth near the rack, wipe the last traces of oil from the weapon. See it shine.
Better to seek comfort with Karthus, if you can stomach a traitor. He is alone. He might understand. But whatever else happens, Hano is not an option. Swear it, Tamara. Swear that you'll discourage him from anything beyond a sibling's love, if it comes up. It might not. He's better than you, Tamara. He knows his duty better than you do.
Put everything back into its proper place. Ignite the flames again, with a thought, then extinguish them and sheathe the sword. Buckle it across the back, distributing weight with the buckles and straps so that you only notice its absence as opposed to its presence.
Swear it, Tamara.
Walk towards the kitchens, for a breakfast surrounded by friends but eaten alone.
"...I swear..."
Thoughts crowded in as the last fog of sleep cleared from her mind, but she fought them off with rote motion, trying to lose herself in the familiar.
Take the sword. Five paces back, two to the side, open the door and walk into the training ring.
It's happening again.
Four paces left, to the rack of weapons both steel and wood. Take the whetstone and the oil.
It's happening again, isn't it?
A thin layer of oil on the stone, just enough to make it shine in the light of candles and lamps. Nod to Balthasar as he went past, following his own morning ritual.
You're growing close to him. You want to grow closer still.
Unsheathe Fireheart and damp the flames with a thought, leaving the steel and adamantine of the blade naked. Inspect it for nicks and irregularities, though there were none. Fight down the loss, fight down the memory of Kaldaris giving the sword in the camp on the side of the Schild.
Kaldaris. It happened with him. When he asked you to court him, you'd been wishing for him to ask for a tenday. Jeshana. It happened with her. On the basis of half-remembered lies from an old life you made her a promise that you couldn't keep. And before...
Love made you a traitor, Tamryn. Tamara.
Lay the left edge of the sword on the stone, just an inch beyond the crossguards. Drag it from base to tip, a continuous stroke. Linear, following the pattern of the blade. Don't grind.
Kollotta was right, wasn't she? You love too quickly. You are too ready to devote yourself, too eager for someone to share in your burden. It hasn't changed. Why hasn't it, Tamara? Why do you still lust after that which may destroy you?
Eight strokes down the left edge front. Eight strokes to the right edge front. Flip the blade.
You're lonely, aren't you. After just two months of his absence, you're ready to take solace with someone else. It's too soon, and you know it or I wouldn't be telling you. But you still feel it. Why?
Focus on the strokes, keep them regular. Eight to each edge on each side, flip. Watch the fingers holding the stone.
It doesn't matter, and you know this. It cannot happen this time. With Hano, there is more at stake than your ragged, stained excuse for a soul. He's no Kaldaris to be pulled from deals with devils and deals with Stormlords. He is a paladin. The embodiment of what you should have been, but were too flawed to be.
Lift the blade to examine it after four cycles. Inspect the edge to make sure it's neither too dull nor too sharp. Lay it back down on the stone and continue.
He will fall, Tamara. If he takes you as his lover he will fall. Not by that act, but by the breaking of something that tells both of you it's wrong. Have you not learned from the past? Have you not recognized that the chain of command is there for a reason? He knows it -- do you?
Examine the blade a second time, nod slightly in satisfaction. Reach for the cloth near the rack, wipe the last traces of oil from the weapon. See it shine.
Better to seek comfort with Karthus, if you can stomach a traitor. He is alone. He might understand. But whatever else happens, Hano is not an option. Swear it, Tamara. Swear that you'll discourage him from anything beyond a sibling's love, if it comes up. It might not. He's better than you, Tamara. He knows his duty better than you do.
Put everything back into its proper place. Ignite the flames again, with a thought, then extinguish them and sheathe the sword. Buckle it across the back, distributing weight with the buckles and straps so that you only notice its absence as opposed to its presence.
Swear it, Tamara.
Walk towards the kitchens, for a breakfast surrounded by friends but eaten alone.
"...I swear..."



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