The chambers of High Keep were sparse and empty.
Thrayne I filled these halls with great feasts and sculptures from around all the known world, and Thrayne II would occasionally hold a great feast with the Lords of Dyraen, filling the halls with the beautiful music of Pare and of Central Valley.
Thrayne III was much less inclined for the matters of music and feasts. After the sudden death of his father, he ordered much of the Keep’s treasures either sold or returned to his homestead of Delta. As such, when Kiran roamed these halls in thought, his footfalls could be heard from hundreds of feet away.
Kiran was much more introspective now, more than ever.
He was, among many other things, a servant. For Kiran was a Stout, and the Stouts served the Thraynes for nearly a hundred years.
He remembered a time when Thrayne III was much younger than before; back when he was simply known as little Alvar, during a visit to Delta:
—
”Lord Stout?” Alvar had asked one day, as Kiran explained to the boy the lands under his father’s rule. “You said you were from Yulden Rise.”
“Yes, my child,” Kiran had answered simply.
“Why did you leave your home for Highcove?”
Kiran pursed his lips, unsure of how to explain such bloody history to a young child. After a moment, he came with his response: “Remember, child, how I told you that Dyraen was many countries in one, once?”
“Yes, my Lord.” Alvar responded.
“Many years ago, my grandfather was the ruler of one of those countries. That was Yulden Rise. He was good friends with your own grandfather, Thrayne I. And our grandfathers knew, that separate we were a weak people. The magical creatures of the land knew this. From the Tigan and Kulerians, to even the ancient Bachazar, they would soon sense our weakness. So we decided to join together, and unite the nations under our own.”
“So why must you live in Highcove?” Alvar asked again.
“Because of the unity,” Kiran explained, “Our families were joined together. The Thraynes are a family of strength and power, so they were the family that would rule the new nation. And the Stouts were powerful in material, industry, and wisdom, so they remained in Yulden Rise, and sent their firstborn to aide the king.”
“Do you want to aide my father?” Alvar asked. “Or was it because you had to?”
“It is a great honor to serve the King,” Kiran said. “I don’t take it lightly. I was bred for this position, just as you were bred to serve as King after your father.”
“I don’t want to be King,” Alvar had said. “I want to stay here, in Delta.”
“We do not get to choose our circumstances, dear Alvar,” Kiran explained. “Only what we do which the life we are given.”—
That was years ago. Now, Thrayne II was dead, and Alvar was now Thrayne III, King of Highcove and all Dyraen, sovereign Lord over All Men. And Kiran would serve him, as he served his father before him, and as his father served him before, and on it would go.
Perhaps one day Thrayne III would be ready for the full truth of the matter. How has grandfather and Kiran’s had actually not united the great nations, but crushed them and beat them into submission. Why it was dangerous for Ira of Irianson to be his wife.
For Ira was of Irianson, and how rebellious Irianson grew by the day.
There was much to fear and much to do, yet little work being done.
A sad time indeed. It was times like these that Kiran felt his age, his waning years approaching him. He would need to retire soon, and his son Ian would reign. The new generation learning from the past, crafting a better future.
Hopefully Kiran would leave behind a world worth living in.
Morning had come to Pare, and yet the storms over Pare remained.
A few leaks had sprung about in the brothel; causing Emara and Alren to loose sleep, placing buckets to catch the water before it rotted their wooden floor.
Once the last of their patrons had left their work and home, Emara and Alren emerged, taking stock, claiming their shares of the prostitute’s wages, and helping them clean up after the men who had laid with them the night before.
One of the wenches, Harlen, approached Emara, asking to speak with her alone. Typically, issues concerning patrons were sorted through Alren, but Emara agreed, and the two women closed the door to Harlen’s room, and sat on her working bed.
“The man I was servicing last night,” Harlen started, “he grew into a furious rage when he learned I had slept with a Lleylian.” Her red locks of hair shook in front of her face, and she seemed very near crying. A spot upon her face was still stained a crimson red. “He struck me hard across the face, and demanded a refund.”
“Alren told me,” Emara admitted. “I’m very sorry you had to experience that.”
“He went to another brothel without a refund, or so he told me,” Harlen admitted. “But he told me I would pay for having touch him with unclean hands. He threatened to bring his whole party back to beat me.”
Harlen let a tear fall down her face, and Emara held the young woman to her. Many of her prostitutes were experienced, hard women; still young in face but old in wisdom. But Harlen was a new recruit; her doe-like eyes and deep, red hair set her apart as a beauty, no doubt, but she had never spoken of her origins or her past.
“We’ll have the other girls buy your goods for you,” Emara said. “You don’t have to leave until you feel comfortable. And I’ll get Alren to find out who this man is for you. We’ll tell you when he leaves.”
“Thank you, Emara,” Harlen said, now more solemnly. She held Emara in a tight embrace, which worried her. Growing close relations to these girls was a dangerous game. Playing favorites could lead to accusations, or worse.
“Do not be ashamed to admit your fear,” Emara said. “You must embrace your fear if you wish to overcome it.”
Harlen nodded into Emara’s shoulder, letting out a shudder. She seemed little more than a girl.
“Is it true,” Emara asked. Her curiosity had gotten to the best of her. “You have been with a Lleylian.”
Harlen composed herself, sitting up and wiping her face clean. “It’s true,” she admitted. “I am from Lyrran, where the Yulerd Forest envelops our lands and the magic of the forest may sometimes escape. I was good friends with a Lleylian as a child. He was my best friend, and, in time, a lover of mine.”
“What came of this Lleylian?” Emara asked.
Harlen looked to her mistress with pained eyes. “He was killed by a man of Irianson. Over a matter of thirty gold.”
Ira tended not to be physical with Alvar, but that standard was easily broken when she seemed to want something.
She had ambushed Alvar easily in his chambers, as his servants helped dress him for his meeting with aides and Lords. It would be here he would decide what would be done with prostitution in their lands.
“Your grace!” She had exclaimed, shooing away his servants with no more than a motion of her hand. “It feels like it’s been so long long since I’ve seen you.”
Ira approached Alvar, and stroked the stubble upon his face. “You could grow a respectable beard if you wished, your grace. Like your fathers.”
Alvar winced at her words, but couldn’t deny her fully. Ira was a older woman, sure; her age showing in gentle wrinkles along her eyes and face. But she remained as sharp and beautiful and the Wretched Peaks. And just as scary, too.
“Perhaps when I’m older,” Alvar dismissed.
“You are nearly twenty, Thrayne III,” Ira announced. “You are rightfully of age to do as you please. Do not be swayed by those far older than you.”
It was an ironic statement, coming from her.
Alvar looked up to Ira, giving a gentle grin. “You think me as naive, my wife. I know you want my ruling to be in your favor.”
“Oh, let us not talk of rulings now,” Ira said, pulling her husband to her breast. “When is the last time we simply enjoyed each other?”
Alvar frowned, although he doubted Ira could see it. The number of times the two had made love since their marriage less than a year ago, Alvar was unsure of. But he was sure it seemed to coincide with various rulings, demands, and favors. Still…it was hard not to take advantage of the situation.
“Can we discuss this later?” Ira breathed out, her body motioning for the bed. Alvar sighed, but moved with her to the bed. Dressing himself would need to come later.
—
An hour has passed, and now Alvar found himself surrounded by many men with many titles. This was the Regency Room - a place where Alvar would decide matters of the nation.
He sat to the left of his wife, Ira, and Lord Stout, High Chancellor of Highcove and personal aide to the King. Two very different people to him, both far elder, and of highly different minds.
Ira, his wife, was of Irianson—stronghold of the east. Few ventured into the high walls of the castle city, and even fewer ventured out. She had been married to him in an effort to make amends for Thrayne II and his distaste for the Irianite people.
Lord Stout was another elder man, this one given to him by his late father. As a Stout has always served a Thrayne, Alvar took him on ceremoniously, but was growing to like his ideals. However, dealing with both of them took some dealing, and usually Alvar took to conceding to whoever seems the more arguable.
Also present in the room was the Chief Officer of the Dyraenian force, as well as the Heartspeaker— a representative of the “heart” of their nation, and specifically of Pare and of Lyrran. His position was creative to quell a strike on timber and textiles years prior.
“I urge you, your grace,” Ira continued from her earlier digression, “prostitution causes nothing but suffering for our people. It is a spreader of disease and of low class lust. Irianson has done long and prosperously without condoning such acts.”
“We’re well aware of Irianson’s laws, Queen Ira,” the Heartspeaker interjected. He knew Ira on a personal level, and loved to drop the ceremonious “your grace” in order to prove it. “You bring up such matters each time we convene here, in the Regency Room.”
“
Your grace” Ira muttered under her breath, cut off by the Chief Officer’s statement.
“You see,” the Chief Officer spoke, “Your grace’s military force is mostly unaffected by these matters. If crime moves from the brothels to the taverns, it will take the same prudent vigilance to remove it. However, I must concede it improves morale for our men.”
“Is that how you want to be remembered?” Queen Ira said, grasping at Alvar’s shoulder. “As the man who let his army lay with whores?”
“The removal of prostitution does not come freely,” Kiran finally spoke. His weathered tone rang fresh in the king’s ears. “Our cities such as Lyrran hold wealth in the matter. And Pare depends on it’s traveling guests. It will be of great cost to them to impose such a law.”
“Lord Stout is right, your grace,” the Heartspeaker said. “Our people need the money these travelers bring in, and slavery is not tolerated in our lands. Each worker is of their own free mind to do so. To bring prostitution to an end would spell doom for Pare.”
“Then let Pare suffer,” Ira said, her intonation taking her into the realm of screaming. “It is of no use to us. That center for sin and indulgence has been allowed free reign far too long. Not only does it harbor sin, but those against our own kind as well.”
“Might I remind you, my Queen,” Kiran spoke, “that those of all races are freely permitted in all cities. Even those who wish to enter Irianson.”
A deep silence entered the room, for it was common knowledge that only suffering would ever come to a nonhuman creature that entered Irianson—law or no law.
But again Ira spoke: “I speak not of other races but of deceitful creatures in other races. They nearly brought an end to Irianson. Let them not bring an end to the center of our country.”
“So now you fight for Pare?” the Heartspeaker asked. “I understand the history of Irianson is long and bloody. So is that of many of our cities that were once their own country. But we are united now, and we must remain so. The law must be uniform throughout all Dyraen. There must be no exception. If anything, Irianson’s ban on magic should be further discussed—not this talk of prostitution. Our draconian laws on magic are half the reason the people starve in the streets.”
Ira ventured to speak, but was silenced by Alvar’s hand, which raised quickly and demanded silence. The other hand ventured to his face, grasping the bridge of his nose.
He had heard enough.
“I must sleep on these matters,” he spoke. “I do not take these matters lightly. We reconvene here in the morning. You are all dismissed.”
Nodding, each member of this meeting rose, bowed, and exited. All except for Ira, who remained.
“Your grace, I—“
“You are dismissed, Ira,” Alvar cut off. “I do not wish to discuss this further.”
Ira froze at first, than delivered a cut nod, before excusing herself from the room. She might have been an Irianite at heart, but she new decorum, and she knew when Alvar as not pleased.
Alvar had once thought the crown meant bringing hope to his people. Yet he sat in a Regency Room, listening to the quarrels of elders, while his childhood friends fought in his army and indulged themselves in his city.
Above all, he felt rather wasted here. If the elders wanted to bicker about their future, perhaps he should simply give them what they wanted.
That was, if they could ever agree on anything.