Page 59 of Earth's End


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“Do you think me simple?” He scowled.

“Aldrik, why are you so upset?” Vhalla frowned.

“Why must you continue to bring up such things?” he exclaimed.

“Why do they bother you so?” Vhalla stood straighter, matching the prince toe-to-toe.

“I told you, I told you not to probe. It’s bad enough that any night you could dream and invade my memories,” Aldrik spat.

Vhalla deflated. She hadn’t even thought about that for weeks; since their Joining, her dreams would sometimes hold the prince’s memories.

“How dare you use that against me,” she whispered.

Aldrik pinched the bridge of his nose and sighed. “Vhalla, I am tired. Just go for a while.”

She obliged him with a pointed glare and a huff, departing the room with a not-quite-gentle closing of the door. The Emperor was thankfully absent from the main hall. Majors came and went as they always did, most nodded in acknowledgment, but none bothered her or stopped what they were doing to strike a conversation.

Vhalla sat in the far corner, picking listlessly at some food. The constant Projection and not leaving the camp palace because of Aldrik’s concerns for her wellbeing all combined to make her mood rather foul. She was going to go crazy before the war was over, and wondering what the prince insisted on hiding from her wasn’t helping.

If only shecouldsleep and dream of the memory he wanted so badly to keep from her.

Elecia sat next to Vhalla, seeming to materialize out of nowhere. She was often in the camp palace; being the cousin of the crown prince and a noble earned her unquestioned entry. But she was always busy with the clerics, and Vhalla hadn’t had much time to talk with her other than in passing. Often, the woman seemed to only appear to slip Vhalla a vial containing a certain awful-tasting potion without a word.

“You’re not eating enough,” Elecia observed.

“I’m fine.” Vhalla rolled her eyes.

“You’ve been eating less and less. Why?”

Vhalla cursed the woman’s clerical attention. “Bugger off.”

“If you’re going to be a lady, you should at least learn some better insults.” Elecia hummed, “It’s likely this food.”

“It’s not—”

“You should eat something fresh off a campfire—much better.” Elecia stood. “Cleric’s orders.”

Vhalla stared up at the other woman in surprise. She slowly stood, swinging her legs over the bench. Elecia started for the door.

The night air hit Vhalla’s lungs and filled her with life once more.The camp palace was so stale, Vhalla realized. Leaving with her Projected form hadn’t been enough. She needed the wind.

“My cousin can be foolish.” Elecia started in a familiar direction. “He means well—we both know that. But he isn’t graceful when he deals with the things he wants having their own needs and desires.”

Vhalla was forced to sigh in agreement. “You sound like you speak from experience.”

“I am his most favorite cousin,” Elecia declared. “But he’s never quite had the desire or opportunity to consume my attention and time like he can yours.”

Vhalla curled and uncurled her fingers as Elecia spoke, enjoying the wind.

“He doesn’t know he’s smothering you.” Elecia blinked her eyes at Vhalla.

Elecia was checking her Channels, Vhalla realized.

“Your magic already looks better now that you’re outside.” Elecia turned forward again, satisfied. “Now, there’s someone who’s been chewing my ear off to see you.”

Fritz nearly tackled Vhalla the moment he saw her. Vhalla squeezed him as tightly as he did her. It felt surprisingly good to hold someone other than her prince, she realized.

“I was beginning to think that Aldrik really had conjured you from the wind, and you’d just been my imagination before.” Fritz linked arms with Vhalla.