Riona & Wulfric Part 2
TLDR for the flashback: Jonathanâs birthday party goes on, and the children end up playing football. Lacking a referee, the game devolves into a free-for-all brawl towards the end. As the adults are informed, the fight is broken up. However, Wulfric happens upon the parents arguing soon after. Then, Lord Desmond Dantès speaks to him. The prince is impressed, but unfortunately has to leave. On the way home he saw Lord Dantès holding hands with the castleâs royal gardener, Gardner Haywood. Lady Dantès was holding hands with two other adults he didnât recognize.
âFake?â Wulfric mused half-absentmindedly as mostly forgotten memories had been partially reawakened, and now sluggishly gathered at the forefront of his mind. âI resent that,â he noted, though he sounded almostâ tickled, if meriness could ever be ascribed to the crown prince. âHowever, yes. It is I, Prince Wulfric. What aâŚthoroughly unexpected surprise.â It was largely a pleasant one, he thought, even if he and the Lady Dantès had never got along the one time theyâd met. Recalling her name had also reminded him of the - sadly - deceased Lord Desmond Dantès. Yet another man who had been too good to die so early, to have been slain so horrendously.
âQuite.â Riona said, her tone brazen though her heart thundered in her chest. âNo wonder I found you so irritating.â Truth be told, half of her wanted nothing more than to turn on her heel and flee, putting as much distance between herself and the Heir Apparent as possible. Why in the hells was Prince Wulfric here? Did he recognize the maidservant she had become too? No. After all these years working in that castle, he never so much as spared her a glance (not that she gave him a chance to, either). So he couldnât have. Then why now? With a gods damn mask on no less? Was it the expensive dress? âItâs⌠been a while.â No, it hasnât. âWhat are you doing here being a creepy crow when you should be⌠socializing with your prospective wives?â
âAn evocative costume, is it not?â he agreed. To demonstrate, he swept an arm to the side in a dramatic gesture, feathers rustling in a riotous swirl of black, chains rattling against each other. âHmm, well,â he smirked as she questioned him on his prospects. Notably, Lady Dantès had rescinded her decision to depart. Was it nostalgia, or was she trying to find out something specific now that she knew who he was? âIt would be in bad taste if, immediately after Shehzadi Mayetâs departure, I would begin pursuing her sister.â
So his sights were set on Shehzadi Nahir or Shehzadi Layla? Interesting. Either would make a very powerful alliance if it came to fruition. All the more reason to find the evidence as soon as possible and expose them.
⌠Or else thereâd only be one thing left to do.
âBesides,â a hint of slyness crept into his tone, âwho is to say I am not socializing with a prospective wife at this very moment?â He laughed at the absurdity of the idea, longer than was strictly polite. After a moment, he cut off with a sigh.
Her body reactedâfeet stepping a few steps back, arms wrapping around her to shield herself from the Princeâs very presenceâbefore the familiar triad flared hot and bright. Anger. Repulsion. Hate. They seared through her veins.
She pierced him with eyes flint cold while he laughed at a joke that only he found funny. âYouâd gain little from such an arrangement,â she said, âI have nothing left for you to take from me.â
âNothing left for you to takeâ was a peculiar manner of phrasing on the ladyâs part. Her reaction, too, had been worrying. It gave him pause, frankly. It was a reflexive loathing on her part - but what had caused it, exactly? While he chose not to comment on it, he had certainly noticed. âAnd yourself? What have you been up to?â he asked eventually.
âDo you care?â she repeated the question little Lady Dantès asked years back.
âYes.â It was a simple assurance, but truthful. He wanted to know the cause of her abhorrence, of her hatred. He had to know. If his family had been involved in any way - if his past suspicions were more than just that - he ought to know.
A handful of breaths slipped by before Riona finally shaped the words. âWhat have I been up to? For fourteen years, Iâve endured a waking nightmare. One where the man and woman who slaughtered my home go unchallenged, unpunished.â Her fingers knotted in the fabric of her dress. âDid you know thereâs no record left of the town or House Dantès? Theyâve erased it all. Redacted from history. Convenient, right? Itâs only a matter of time before weâll be forgotten altogether as if we never existed at allâŚâ Her knuckles become pale against the orange color. âThose monsters grow fat on the spoils of their atrocities.â She hissed, âJust as you reap the rewards sown at the expense of others, False Prince.â
âI seeâŚâ Well, he did in part. âI have noticed the suspicious lack of records,â he affirmed. In fact, it was that which had led him to believe that something other than âa bandit attackâ had been at play. But how could he have confirmed, when the king and queen never acknowledged such inconsistencies? There were several other instances where a lack of evidence was the only evidence. âI remember,â he informed her. âIf only the two of you.â
She rolled her eyes. Not enough to recognize her as a maid. âHow much of that memory surfaced only because we bumped into each other?â
âA fair amount,â he acknowledged, tone even. But the memories he spoke of were not merely the result of this happenstance. Why did she think heâd noticed the erasure of her family from official records in the first place? âHowever, Lord Desmond Dantès is not the sort of man I would simply forget about.â
The way Lady Dantès spoke of her family membersâ deaths, it was as if the Danroses had had something to gain by killing them. He had always thought his parentsâ reasons to be preventative in nature; to eliminate danger - or rather, suspected danger, or political inconveniences, as the case may be. âDo you know what happened there, exactly?â
Revulsion clawed its way up her throat. âYou want the details of how everyone was butchered? GodsâŚâ Riona shook her head. âNo, why am I surprised? You were always like this...â
Wulfric blinked at her slowly, once, twice. âNo, of course not.â That had been certainly unusually careless phrasing on his part. âI meant, why were they killed?â
âWhy? You should know better than anyone why those monsters do the things they do.â
She wasnât far off the mark; he knew his parents well. And yet⌠âI do not see what we could have gained by killing your family.â He said âweâ rather than âtheyâ; he wasnât that naive. âWere they â what, determined to be dissidents?â he questioned, highly doubtful. Even if they had been, that would never merit slaughtering a whole town, like sheâd implied had been done.
ââDetermined to be dissidentsâ?â she half spat, half scoffed, the sentence out. âPerhaps you donât remember much of Lord Dantès as you claim.â Of everyone, he had fought hardest against any whisper of conflict with the Danroses.
The Lord accepted every insult, every cutting barb from the preening Caesonian aristocrats, believing this self-abasement would keep their town safe, preserve the peace across the country. The naive fool even dreamed that one day, their kind might exist without living in fear. How disastrously wrong he had been. He underestimated the bottomless greed of those monsters and what fear could do to them.
âThen what?â Wulfric bit out, finally showing some of his own frustration.
âIâm âjust some stupid lying girl.â You wonât believe a thing I say because itâll tarnish your familyâs reputation and shatter every illusion youâve had of yourself.â
âHave I not demonstrated that I am inclined to believe, or at the very least, to listen to your assertions?â he pointed out. âI am not someone who would cling to illusions, no matter how fanciful or entrenched.â He knew very well that reputation was a construct of lies, hopeful beliefs, and the occasional sprinkle of truth to tie it all in.
Rionaâs defensive posture relaxed slightly. âIf you do care⌠swear to me.â
âSwear what?â He inquired a tad cautiously. âI can swear that I care, because I do not wish to mistake convenience for necessity.â The difference between the two was something he had been mulling over lately. But he had no idea what Lady Dantès actually wanted or expected. All that was clear was that she hated him.
âIf you actually care, find out for yourself.â She straightened up and faced Prince Wulfric properly. âAnd when you do, swear to me youâd publicly reveal what your family has done in order to stay in power. Every last one.â
âOh, I shall most certainly find out.â He shook his head though he did not immediately deny the second part of her request. âIn order to stay in powerâŚâ he ruminated on her words. How much of it was ruling through fear, how much a force of habit? Did she mean any and all executed criminals as well? He could believe there had been unjust killings, but equally, he was convinced that some deaths were necessary.
However, seeking out and rectifying those which had not been necessary, those which had been unjust was agreeable. Yet, it was very much a matter of finesse in how such a thing was to be done. âTotal transparency with the hope that it would bring about appropriate accountability?â He had to wonder what results she wished for. Given her hostility, vengeance was easily believable. Perhaps she plotted for his familyâs downfall, or for another to take the Danrosesâ place. âYou have a surprisingly naive and optimistic outlook of humanity. We are prone to excusing the unforgivable, and to turning a blind eye to the unjust.â
There were two âworst caseâ scenarios he could foresee coming from her request. One, the complete disintegration of trust in the government followed by years of unquenchable rebellions and violent social unrest. Two, he or other parties could present all that had been done as if it had been inevitable - as regrettable yet crucial sacrifices. If the latter happened, then nothing would change, or worse yet, ever greater atrocities could be committed.
Personally, he wished for neither of those; it was a matter of finding a third path, then. âVery well. You ought to keep in mind, however, that I shall do it on my own terms.â Even if it was doing âthe right thingâ, he would certainly do it in a manner that would benefit him, if not necessarily his parents. âToo, if I ever come across something too dangerous to reveal,â such as magic, âit will be my prerogative whether I do, in fact, reveal it. Believe it or not, there are truths the general public is not ready for â not at the present time, and perhaps, not until many years in the future.â
Riona stood motionless, catching every syllable, reading between each carefully crafted line. It was a roundabout way of saying things, but clearly the answer was no. Never, to be exact. Because in the end, all of Danrosesâ crimes were exactly that, âtoo dangerous to reveal.â The truth was a threat to their reign. And a Danrose would never act against their own interests. Nothing would change. Not under this âPrince.â
When the abominationâs spawn finished mimicking human speech, there was silence. Strangely, the lack of a face made it easier to see the thing for what it really was. âGreed and fear,â she murmured.
âGood to know you intend to follow in your parentsâ footsteps, Edin the Second.â She wouldâve used a different name that suited it better, but she knew that its sireâs name would cut deepest. âThey must be proud. How many of your own people will you kill to âmaintain orderâ? Was tormenting that servant at age seven âfor the greater goodâ too? Ah! But of course!â She threw her hands up. Her words dripped with caustic sarcasm. âYouâre protecting the people from the monstrosities that are yourselves. How very noble! ⌠Too bad youâre doing a gods awful job at it.â
Her hands dropped to her sides. âIs that âthe truth the general public is not ready for?â... Huh. I wonder why anyone would find any of that upsetting.â
Despite the anger, she was surprisingly composed. Maybe because the thing confirmed what sheâd already known, strengthening her resolve. âWe have nothing more to discuss. Thank you for reaffirming that talking to you is and always will be a colossal waste of time.â
Rather than turn on her heel, Riona stepped into the thingâs space, thrusting the stupid crow mask up high enough to meet its gaze directly. âI pray your reign shall never come. But if it must, may we be fortunate that it is mercifully brief.â Her eyes blazed with a hatred that could choke the breath out of anyone. She held that smoldering look a beat longer before shoving the mask back into place.
Even as she raged and stormed, however, he stood there still and silent, as unaffected as a cliffside weathering a tempest, as calm as the proverbial eye of a hurricane he happened to find himself in the middle of. Even as she ever so rudely removed his mask, he faced her unflinchingly, his lack of expression only reinforcing the impression of featureless, insensate stone. Their gazes met, and if hers was an inextinguishable wildfire, then his was as inexorably, hauntingly serene and inscrutable as an ocean whose surface was wrapped in heavily lingering mists.
âHow unfortunate.â It was a flat, toneless utterance, as uncaring to her pain as the universe was to them all.
Brimming with all that barely contained wrath, overfilled with it to the point of bursting, Lady Dantès was incapable of nuance. She wanted an immediate resolution, she expected a clear-cut outcome. Her desire for justice â for vengeance - would not be satisfied until he and his family were all six feet under. Her volatile nature would not stop at mere prayers and wishes for his death, would it?
How unfortunate then, that the last Dantès would have to be slain at the hands of yet another Danrose.
Just or unjust, good or evil, fair or not â what did it matter in the face of pure survival?
He watched her leave without another word. If you must be an enemy, then so be it.