you'll know for sure tonight
NEW STERANDEL
EARLY SPRING
EARLY SPRING
To the citizens of New Sterandel who went about their lives, commuting to work, doing their shopping, or otherwise minding their own business, they could have been anyone. Two old friends meeting in Sovereigns' Park -- she, waiflike and willowy, at once encapsulated in and tethered by the long camel coat she wore as an aegis against the early spring chill almost as effectively as she wore oversized sunglasses to shield against the intrusion of the midmorning sunlight; he, tall and handsome, well-dressed. Only those who looked up from their morning papers and morning coffees at just the right moment would recognize them for who they were: a right pair of Royal Highnesses, if you please.
Others might notice the handful of men in dark suits that followed the aforementioned 'he' at a distance that one might call respectful or not, depending on their preference. The pair -- the trio, if one counted the sleek whippet that trotted amiably at the feet of the 'she' -- approached from opposite ends of the park, meeting near a broad fountain in the middle where, predictably, the whippet began to sniff around the boots and trouser legs, then began to leap up, dancing hither and thither, threatening to loop the two humans up in his leash.
"Crackers," Reima admonished the dog. "Crackers, get down. Get -- hello you," she interjected to her brother as she embrace him at the arms, leaning forward to plant a kiss on first one cheek, then the other before resuming her heckling of the dog. "Get off," she said, giving the lead a tug so that the energetic puppy finally put all four paws on the gravel, its tail wagging merrily. It gave one last sniff of the sets of royal knees before trotting off to examine the fountain nearby, its charming grey eyes fixing the crowned head at the apex of the statue at the center of the fountain with a curious gaze before it turned and settled at Reima's feet.
"Sorry," Reima said to George, releasing his upper arms from her embrace. "He's -- well, he's just so adorable I can hardly stand to chastise him. Much the same problem Ben had with me, as I recall," she added with a cheeky smirk. Both of them would recall correctly that their nanny had not, in fact, had any such trouble disciplining Reima. "Thank you for coming to me this time. I just don't know how much Your Royal Highness-ing I can manage today. Oh hell, that reminds me," Reima added before dropping into a perfunctory curtsy.
The protocols had to be observed, after all.
She cast a glance toward the statue that Crackers had been studying a moment ago, as if to see whether her mother -- in whose likeness the statue was cast -- would approve. But the wrought iron didn't make any outward motions. "Want some coffee? Or breakfast? My hotel does it rather well." She glanced down at the whippet, silently willing the little pup to do its business, before returning her attention to her brother. "It's on me, of course."