Lapis of Nicodem by Kwyn Marie | World Anvil Manuscripts | World Anvil

Chapter 20: Cheers and Tears

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Junperrijer Street bustled with activity despite the late hour; finely dressed people with glittering jewelry and overwhelming perfume wandered the pristine, cobbled streets, laughing gaily and loudly. Some staggered about, already drunk, and Lapis did not envy their friends and significant others, who would need to drag their sorry butts home after they passed out in whatever establishment they patronized.

Most side-stepped her and Ciaran, no care or concern. Hooded figures must zip up and down the street so often, residents ignored them. Even the Grey Streets cast her the odd glance or stare when she wore her black hood, and some people hustled away after they realized a chaser walked near them.

The Swan was a posh wooden building stained a deep brown with soft pinkish-white trim crisscrossing the walls. After their successful invasion, Dentheria constructed many similar structures, designating them as the temporary housing of loyal elite before they secured land for their mansions. Lapis stared up at the generous eaves and pondered how they might reach the fifth floor. No stairwell marred the exterior, and she dreaded entering the front because security for the place would immediately and suspiciously ask questions. Having no other option, she firmed her backbone and opened the wide, pinkish-white door.

The foyer was tall, reaching up to the third story. Four more pinkish-white doors with numbers etched into gold plaques above them spanned the whitewashed walls, without a smudge marring them. A larger brown door opposite the entrance led to a clear-windowed office. Men in rough grey uniforms sat inside, cards in hand, and, after a glance, paid them no heed. Bright, fruit-scented lamps marked the stairwell, so she took that way, Ciaran behind her.

“Interesting security,” he murmured as they proceeded up.

“Are you going to complain?”

“No.”

At least they knew they needed to climb to the top.

White sconces brightly lit the stairway, a contrast to the dim interiors of the Grey Streets. They illuminated dark-stained wooden stairs, the banister elegantly carved with flower designs, the shimmery gold caps atop the posts. The air felt cool, crisp, much like the sharp sound of their footsteps on the treads, creating a forlorn atmosphere.

Large gold plaques with numbers marked the two doorways leading from each landing, and cabinets with gold nametags stood between them, awaiting mail. They had no keyholes, and Lapis wondered how the residents opened them, or if the owners placed them as decorational items, a way to add elegance to an otherwise plain space.

At the top, someone had propped open the single door with a delicate gold jamb. Just inside, a bored guard with crossed arms and legs stared blankly at the blue wall opposite him. He wore a simple brown shirt and pants, which Lapis thought odd; normally sentries in richer abodes sported stuffy uniforms to differentiate themselves from the riff-raff. He studied them as they halted a few steps onto the scruffy blue runner.

“We’re here to see Varr,” Lapis said.

He pushed from the wall. “Are y’ now?”

He sounded like a Stone Streets guttershank who wormed his way into a decent job. Good for him. “Yes, thank you.”

He shuffled down the short hall and to the dark-stained double doors at the end. He pounded on one. “Summun t’ see Varr,” he shouted. She winced; too loud, for the hallway and the time of day. She did not understand the muffled reply, but the doors swung open and a man wearing Lord Adrastos’s rose guard uniform with gold trim rose from a desk placed just to the side of the entry. Pages littered it, and the scattering of pens indicated he had other work to do.

“And who shall I say is calling?” he asked in a monotone voice.

“Melanthe and Ciaran.”

She thought she saw the flicker of recognition at Ciaran’s name, and he hustled away.

“Y’know Varr?” the first guard asked idly, staring after the other one before slowly regarding them again.

“We’ve met,” Lapis said. Her chest twinged in nervous fear; what would he do, when he saw her? Would he stare in shock? Would he even recognize her? He might yell. Varr yelling was a sight to behold; muscular man towering over the target of his displeasure, his deep, booming voice as potent as his enormous fist. He intimidated with his height and build, and his no-nonsense air, coupled with black hair and beard and intense greyish-brown eyes, proved too menacing for most.

For most, but not her. Calanthe and Tiege had feared him, but Lapis always considered him gentle and kind, an uncle who read her stories when he visited. She made certain to watch him practice his martial techniques when he and Midir stayed at Nicodem. She sat on the top of the wooden fence that surrounded the dusty ring and stared, rapt, at his movements. He, as much as Patch, influenced her decision to become a chaser, however unintentional.

She tipped her hood back and fluffed at her hair, the nervousness riding her, hard. Why had Faelan decided he only trusted her? Brander and Sherridan would have made the trip as easily. He must want her to meet with Varr and Midir again, though she had no idea why he pushed. Did he not realize her emotional difficulties? Did he not realize that, sooner rather than later, she would break?

 The sound of heavy boots striking a wooden floor whose carpet could not muffle the sound echoed to them. She fought not to throw up as he walked into view, as confident and stern as she remembered.

He wore stiff brown leather pants and a teal tunic that reached his thighs, a belt haphazardly tied below his belly that threaded through a thick longsword sheath, and a long brown leather vest with several pockets and one stout button that held it together. As a child, she had investigated those pockets thoroughly and delighted in the strange devices she discovered. He had laughed at her inquisitiveness and even shown her how some of the items worked. Most were common things, but the small bits of wondrous tech that flashed, or beeped, or grew warm at her touch, always attracted her.

The odd, concerned frown darkening his face completely disappeared when he focused on her. He stopped and stared, startling the two guards, his mouth falling open in shock.

“Melanthe,” he whispered.

She had not planned to cry, but she did. She had not expected him to cry, and by the flabbergasted stares of the guards, neither had they. She wrapped her arms as far around him as they could go and buried herself into his chest as she had as a child, finding a warm comfort there when childish fears overcame her sense. He clutched her too tight, and she gasped for air hard enough he loosened his hold—slightly.

“Melanthe.” His voice broke.

“I’m sorry, I’m sorry,” she whispered. She could think of nothing else.

He pushed back and settled his large palm against her cheek. “You lived?”

“Yes.” She swallowed. “Only Lady Ailis knew.”

He bowed his head as more tears came. “If . . . if I had known . . .”

“You and Midir aren’t exactly easy to track down.”

He huffed with sad laughter. “No.” He set his hands on her shoulders and squeezed. “Does your brother and uncle know?”

“Faelan found out a couple of days ago. I don’t think Ulfrik’s here yet.”

“We’ve a message from Faelan to Midir,” Ciaran said quietly. Varr snuffled and straightened to his full height; despite having grown, she only reached to the middle of his chest.

“Come,” he said, waving his hand backwards.

They left the stunned guards behind. Hopefully they regained their senses before someone else showed up.

Varr guided them to the end of the hallway and through a couple of rooms before reaching a grand reception area. It contained plush sunset-blue furniture and carpets, vine-decorated wooden tables, end tables and chairs, all stained a dark walnut. Gold flakes and ornamental blue flowers marched down the deep brown wallpaper. The gold-flecked brown marble fireplace matched the animal-themed statuary and the floor vases holding long-stemmed, blue and purple blooms. Landscapes in outrageously brilliant hues, especially compared to the rest of the room, filled the upper walls.

Patch.

He sat in one of the couches, his feet planted on the coffee table and shedding dirt upon the surface, glaring moodily at the tips of his boots and holding a flask.

Patch. When her brother told her he escorted rebels to Jiy, she never anticipated he meant Midir.

She jumped to the table just as he took a drink and slammed her hands, palm down, onto the surface.

“Hey, AETHON!”

The ass, he spit the drink all over his boots, the table, her. Pissed, she reared back, hands out, looked at the splatter, and rounded her leg up, planning to ram her foot into his upper arm. He caught her boot as he hacked, which, she supposed, she should have anticipated, but it threw her off and she windmilled her arms to keep her balance.

Varr helpfully steadied her as Ciaran laughed.

Patch let her go and staggered up, heading towards a hallway lit by oil sconces, coughing. Standing just to the side, eyes only for her, was Midir.

She remembered his extravagant clothing the most, and it startled her, he wore a simple but soft, long-sleeved cobalt shirt with plain black cuffs, black pants and comfy shoes. No elaborately embroidered designs in gold thread, no tooled boots, no jeweled coat, no rings and necklaces. Even his black hair reflected a plainer man, being bound back in a loose tail rather than styled with palmfuls of goopy product. His green eyes, sharp and intense in a thinner face, remained the same.

“Melanthe.” He smiled, and the tears shocked her. She swallowed as Varr set her upright and bowed; he immediately waved his hand and walked to her, shaking his head.

“After your family died, I decided the pomp no longer reflected me,” he told her. “I think I’m happier for it.” He settled a hand on her shoulder, his eyes roaming her face, her hair. “I’d say you look like your mother, but truthfully, you look like Melanthe.”

She wiped at her face before she hugged him. He held her far tighter than she anticipated, and she hoped she did not bring too many terrible memories to the surface. Just her presence would remind him about how her family died, and on her best days, she never wished to think on it.

“I’m so happy you survived,” he whispered. “Does your brother and uncle know?”

“Faelan does, Ulfrik isn’t here yet.”

He pushed gently away, then placed a hand to her too-hot cheek, as Varr had. “I’ve two children now,” he told her. “My little girl is a lot like you, getting into trouble with every breath.”

The bodyguard laughed and she felt oddly morose.

Midir jerked his head to the hallway Patch took. “There’s a bathroom you can use to wash up,” he told her.

“Thank you,” she whispered before she scurried away.

Patch was wiping his face with a thick towel as she entered the spacious, brown-tiled room with a ceramic tub large enough for Varr, a flushable toilet, running water, and a clean, crisp soap scent. He looked at her with his one intense sky-blue eye, then flipped his pale golden locks from his face with a sharp jerk of his head. He wore tight, mottled black pants and a sleeveless shirt with a high collar, an outfit that warned the House he was in a mood and to leave him be.

“Aethon?” he whispered, his deep voice harsh, but she detected the shock. He shook his head and tossed her the towel; she dowsed it under the faucet and wiped at the wet spots. “Lapis?”

“Faelan told me after Lord Adrastos met with us.”

“You met with Lord Adrastos?” Patch eyed her skeptically. She supposed it should not surprise her he knew the man.

“He sort of introduced himself after I helped Sir Armarandos beat off a hit job by Guard Superior Nevid—”

“You helped Armarandos against Nevid?”

“Yep. And Lord Adrastos got the message to me the next day about being staked by the underground because I’m supposed to be partners with someone named Aethon. I didn’t know who that was, and the guard thinks the underground’s made a mistake. Lord Adrastos said he’s going to meet with the underbosses about it.”

Patch jerked a hand through his bangs, bewildered. “That’s . . . I haven’t been gone that long.”

“Oh, there’s more.”

He settled his hands over hers and she stopped trying to drive the towel into her shirt. She paused and watched the thin fingers, struggling to push the rush of helpless dread down into the pit of her emotions, where it belonged. “More?”

She snuffled before she sternly firmed her reaction to the night, the last few days, her life. He wrapped her in a tight and warm embrace, his hand slipping through her hair and laying against the back of her head. He settled his lips against her forehead and did not move, the solid rock she craved to steady her legs and her feelings. She clung to him because he never turned from her, and while it might embarrass him to have her so needy before Varr and Midir and whichever servants and guards were there, he would swallow it and comfort her.

“You’ve reunited with Faelan.”

“He told me he guessed.” She sounded raw; too much crying. “And since you knew—”

“Lapis—”

She shook her head, digging her cheek into his shoulder. “You should have told me.”

“I should have,” he admitted. “But I couldn’t. Not after listening to you relive the raid night after night in your nightmares. I didn’t want you to keep remembering once the sun rose and feel obliged to discuss it with me. I wanted to give you a safe time, when you didn’t have to think about it.”

She dug her hands into the towel. She had not thought much about why he kept the secret because she did not want to know the answer. That he recognized her need, one she never voiced but desperately needed, soothed and enraged her simultaneously. Why could she not rattle her emotions like dice in a cup, throw, and pick the most appropriate ones? But no, she had to smash them all together and wade through the remains, uncertain, searching, despairing.

“Drinks ‘r up!” Varr called.

She looked at Patch; he did not seem as annoyed as she might anticipate. “You know Varr and Midir, too.”

“I trained with Varr,” he told her. She poorly covered her surprise. “Before . . . well, before. I had met Midir. He basically went into hiding after Gall killed your family, and while Faelan gave me a note or two to take to him, we didn’t interact much. He knows me though, and Varr vouched for me, so I got called up to escort them into Jiy.” He shrugged. “It was a boring exercise of staying least-in-sight on a busy street.”

That sounded very much like Patch, underplaying the danger. Lapis settled the towel over the hook with exaggerated care and headed back to the room. He trailed her, his hand on her waist, a warm, steady, comforting touch. Had he realized how much she needed it?

The men sat around the table Patch had used as a footrest, holding short, fat glasses with ice and a dark brown drink. A woman had joined them; she had a soft smile, full cheeks and twinkling eyes, one light blue, one light brown. Pins held her dark bun in place, with wispy strands tangling in her small ear hoops. She wore a traditional seneschal robe with wide hems and cuffs in Midir’s family colors, deep crimson and gold.

“Lapis, I’d like you to meet Neassa,” Midir said, motioning to her. “She’s my assistant, and keeps me where I need to be, when I need to be.”

Lapis put a hand to her breast and bowed her head. “Well met,” she said softly.

“I’m happy to meet you,” she replied. She seemed sincere, and Lapis wondered what the royal had told her. Even before her family fell to Kale’s men, he preferred to keep his movements and his friendly contact secret, and she must wonder at the woman who he immediately trusted.

Lapis shrugged out of the pack and sat on the couch with Varr, and Patch plopped down next to her. Sitting between the two produced an aura of warmth and safety, something she had precious little of in the last few days. She withdrew the letter and held it over the table to Midir. He took it, broke the seal, glanced at the contents, and smiled with a nod.

“I take it the House is full of excitement, with the Council there.”

Lapis rolled her eyes. “I suppose.”

“Meinrad found out about your visit,” Ciaran said, leaning on his knees and dangling a glass between his fingers. “We’re not certain how he discovered it. It might be as simple as a misdelivered letter—which we’ve already experienced.”

“It’s the simplest explanation, and in line with what I’ve learned about the House,” Midir said in a heavy tone.

Lapis glanced at Patch, then at Midir. “I told Faelan to use Whitley. If you send runners, make certain they give him what they have, if they can’t find my brother.”

“And how are you taking their presence?”

Her mind whirled, and she thought about brushing aside her anxiety and fear, but if she wished to rebuild any type of relationship with Varr and Midir, she needed to speak the truth. “Not well.”

Patch sighed and placed a hand on her back. “Not well?” he asked, resigned. She thought she had sounded truthful but reserved. Apparently more emotion leaked into her tone than she wanted.

“I’m hiding as best I can from Perben,” she said. “It’s not enough. Relaine’s snuggled up to him because she thinks he’s important enough to raise her status. She showed him about, made certain I saw them together because she thought it’d be impressive that a Blue Council member let her latch onto him. She showed him the all escape routes because he said Meinrad and Rambart had security concerns.”

Patch blew his breath out between his teeth.

“When we tried to leave, we discovered someone had nailed the ones Baldur uses shut,” Ciaran said.

Both Varr and Midir grimly darkened at the words. Neassa’s twinkle diminished, though she did not appear surprised at the news.

“I showed Faelan the secret ways,” Lapis said. “Anyone he trusts needs to know where they are. If you are planning on visiting the House, you need to know, too, Midir.”

“Maybe we should forsake the visit,” Varr said, his deep voice rumbling through the room.

“There are reasons for me to meet with the Council,” Midir reminded him. “Lady Ailis asked it, and I will support her. You know as well as I do, that her evidence against Perben will play poorly with Meinrad and Rambart and those who consider them important voices in the rebellion. They will try to use Lapis against Faelan, but they can’t do that with me.”

Lapis dropped her gaze. Of course they would. Noble power plays never favored those they considered less and using her as a ram against her brother and his Leadership would please far too many who assumed they held the answers to the rebellion’s success.

“I planned to have you help here,” Patch said quietly. “You still can.”

She shook her head. “Faelan needs someone local he can trust, and that’s me.”

“And do you trust him?” Midir asked. He had always seemed too perceptive when it came to her emotions, and she greatly resented it as a child. She had reminded him, on more than one occasion, that he was Faelan’s godfather, not hers, so his nose should point in that direction if he wanted to snuffle about. He chuckled at her exasperation and continued to pry when it suited him.

“I wouldn’t, if Tearlach hadn’t told me about his rope scars.” She glanced at her wrists, the tanned skin, smooth, unblemished, mostly hidden by gauntlets. “But he tried to return to Nicodem. He tried, but the rebels tied him up and he couldn’t break free. I thought everyone had abandoned me, that I wasn’t important enough to even try to save.” The tears came, and she did her best to ruthlessly suppress them. “He didn’t leave me to die.”

“He didn’t,” Patch confirmed. “I don’t think he’s ever going to forgive himself for failing, especially since you survived.”

“I didn’t hear about the massacre until far too late to help.” Midir’s voice was heavy with sadness and unmitigated anger. “Varr and I thought that if anyone escaped, they would have made it to Coriy and informed the House there. We mourned, and we renewed vows to eliminate Gall and find the traitor. There didn’t seem to be anything else to do.”

Well, everything devolved into depressing real quick.

Patch patted her back. “What took you so long with that stake, anyway? He was a bit shank, hiding by himself in the countryside.”

Her partner, attempting to dispel the mood? She could help with that.

“Well, he had a visitor.”

“A visitor.”

She could not stop her smile. “The Alchemist.”

A brick dropping on his head would have been less shocking. “The Alchemist?” he asked, concerned and flabbergasted.

“The Alchemist?” Varr raised a thick brow.

“He’s a shank who works for a local underboss called Hoyt,” Lapis glanced at the bodyguard. “He likes to sell snake oil, and his last attempt killed a lot of people. Someone staked him, but chasers knew he had a tech weapon, so didn’t bother with him. He was visiting my stake because Hoyt told him to hide in the country for a while. My stake didn’t want him around, even told him to scram. He got pissed and used his tech to take him out. He broke it, though. He shook it all around and tried to use it again, but no luck. I waited ‘til he went to sleep, stuck a cloth filled with this special sleeping oil under his nose, and drug his fat ass to a cart.” She made a face and hunched her shoulders. “I could barely haul him over the tailgate. At least I didn’t drop him like I did the shank.” She looked guiltily at Patch. “I think he lost a tooth or two when his chin nailed the gate.”

Everyone winced except for Neassa, who laughed into her palm, then choked when she realized she had become the center of attention.

“I was running late and tried for the city gate, but four of Hoyt’s guards had stopped traffic so one of them could beat some poor farmer. That annoyed me, so I took the attacker’s crop away from him, and the farmers helped with the others. Piled two of them in the cart, too. One farmer went with me to the Kells Gate Guardhouse, and Sir Armarandos was there—and he’s not one to rip off hard-working chasers on high-payout stakes.”

Patch closed his eye, ran a hand through his bangs, then laughed. “I thought you were going to have another Cimis story.”

“I think this one was just fine,” Lapis muttered, offended. “The Alchemist even had a guard roster on him I got extra silver for. That’s much better than rolling a drugged-up drunk to the nearest guardhouse.”

“Drugged-up drunk?” Ciaran asked, his eyes sparkling.

“Cimis was Hoyt’s enforcer. He was a nasty, nasty man with a nasty, nasty temper, and he did whatever he wanted whenever he wanted. I discovered him at the Shank while looking for another stake. He had passed out in his own vomit, and by the looks of him, he had drunk enough to fell Mama Poison and added drugs on top of it. I rolled him to the guardhouse. Literally. He had a round tummy that sort of worked like a wheel. It was ro-o-o-ll-thump, ro-o-o-ll-thump all the way there.”

Varr’s red face and lips smashed together proved he thought she told amusing tales.

“That’s a lot of money to hide in the room,” Patch cautioned.

“That’s why I gave some of it to Rinan so he could bargain Dachs for a room.”

Her partner’s expression softened at that. “Which room?”

“The suite.” She sounded as put out as she felt over that. “It has a tub! A tub! I want a tub!” She glared at him. “And some Dentherion stuck her nose into the bargaining and bet against Rin because she said he couldn’t ‘win’, which wasn’t the point, and so the regulars bet on him and of course Dachs ‘lost’ and they cleaned her out. Rin added that to his bargaining pile.”

“Who’s Rin?” Midir asked.

“A street rat. He’s part of my reading circle. He’s the reason I started it in the first place. He and the other rats deserve a chance at a better life and knowing how to read can provide that edge.” Patch sat back, and she glanced over her shoulder at him. “Brander said he’s heard of him. Is Rin that well-known?”

“Yes. He has quite the reputation outside the Lells. If you ever pried, I’m certain he would proudly tell you about it. He, Lykas and Scand cause all sorts of mischief.”

She pressed her lips together. “That’ll stop after I get through with them,” she grumbled, remembering their ill-thought adventure to Orinder’s home. She grabbed her waiting glass, then paused as the rest of them raised theirs. Patch hurriedly snagged his flask, and she lifted hers with him.

“To Lapis and a renewal of ties. May luck favor us further,” Midir said before they drank.

Lapis never used the ancient phrase. She depleted the goodwill of the Four Stars of Chance escaping from Kale’s soldiers, and she had no illusions about so-called karma. In myth and fairy tales, justice never seemed much on the minds of the gods when they turned their attention to mortals. Well, the Seven Gods and their various Star retainers, anyway. While they had their terrible sides, Jilvayna’s old gods brought goodness to their followers, unlike the Dentherion pantheon, whose members’ schizophrenic behaviors often ended in merciless death and destruction.

She supposed, they reflected the empire that served them.

The room shook, enough to rattle glass. Lapis glanced at Patch, who raised an eyebrow but settled his hand between her shoulder blades. She hated the small, intermittent earthquakes because she always anticipated a stronger one striking and obliterating all she cared for. He never turned away from holding her when they struck and he was near, and she now had the answer for his concern.

Another shake, accompanied by what sounded like an explosion.

The second guard raced into the room, distraught, with a black-haired, dark-eyed woman in dark rose and gold; another of Lord Adrastos’s guard. Midir stood, his pleasantness destroyed.

“Lord Midir, we were attacked on our way here,” the woman said, saluting smartly. “They have tech, so Lord Adrastos sent me ahead to warn you.”

“Is he alright?”

“Last I saw. The attackers seem to be guttershanks, but it’s hard to tell. My lord doubts it’s a local Kells effort because the enemy isn’t careful about what buildings they hit.”

Everyone levered themselves off their seats.


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