WEARING: This
WEAPONS: Ferrum Solus |
Blodmåne |
Strømafbryder
SHIP: Vigfjall
TAG:
Naedira Darcrath
|
Revna Marr
|
Varin Mortifer
|
Irina Jesart
|
Lysander von Ascania
|
Hasuras Na-Gerra
|
Darth Prazutis
|
OPEN
Life was made for the living, and those who celebrated the breath which still filled their lungs had been given cause to cling to it. Even as scenes of war and victory played out across towering holoprojectors suspended above the feast hall, those gathered beneath them drew deep of the one lesson every warrior eventually learned.
Living was everything.
Legionnaires packed long banquet tables overflowing with roasted meats, black bread, and spiced drink while veterans shouted old war songs across the hall. Younger soldiers tried and failed to match them drink for drink as servants moved between the gathered warriors carrying fresh platters from the kitchens deeper within the Spire. Sith nobility mixed freely with officers still carrying fresh scars from recent campaigns while the distant storm over Jutrand rolled against the tower around them.
Survival was not the goal. That was a minimal standard, a lazy approach to the spoils of war, success, and domination. Those gathered embraced the wonder of living each moment. Every second they walked among the plane of the living was a gift. They all knew the harsh truth that death would claim them one day. They would fall in battle, succumb to disease, or old age would slowly suffocate them.
Gerwald smiled when Naedira took his hand. His fingers closed around hers immediately while his thumb brushed once across the back of her hand as though reassuring himself she truly stood beside him. His wolf stirred as she neared once more. It clawed at the guilt the warrior felt with every departure and every extended absence.
“For now.”
The words drew a faint exhale from him. Gerwald lowered his head briefly until his brow rested against her temple for the space of a single breath before his eyes closed.
He felt the sting, but even he could not deny the truth. It was a sword that cut far too often. Duty would make its demands, and he would answer. The Dread Wolf had it drilled into him that duty was the most important thing. The voice reminding him had always been hers.
She had demanded he end his pursuit many times because the Confederacy was greater.
Each time he found a veil in the nether to bring her back, she pushed him away. The Devourer had her then. Finding a way for her to cross back over had never been the issue, not as long as the ring her soul had been bound to was around his neck. It anchored her to his world. He was that anchor now. The Jewel around the neck which carried his essence kept her wolf from tearing her apart from the inside.
“Fyrirgef mér.”
The apology was quiet. Honest.
His fingers tightened slightly around hers before he finally released a slow breath.
Srina Talon
would call, and Gerwald would answer. It had been that way since she ensured he recovered from the damage done to him at the hand of
Darth Prazutis
the Mountain. His presence was not wanted in this abode, and yet he was present. He was close.
Death was present.
The circle around them continued to shift beneath the noise of the feast. Revna stood poised beside her apprentice while Irina settled subtly into readiness near Gerwald’s flank, the adjustment in her stance slight enough to pass as elegance to most eyes. Nearby legionnaires pretended not to watch while watching all the same. Veterans of the Dreadborne tracked the Mountain carefully over raised cups and half finished conversations while younger wolves fell quiet beneath the tension settling into the space around him.
Yet the celebration stubbornly endured around them.
Music still rolled through the Spire beneath the storm dark skyline beyond the glass walls. Servants crossed between banquet tables carrying fresh platters and bottles while laughter burst from one of the lower halls where another drinking contest had apparently gone poorly for someone involved. The city of Jutrand burned endlessly beyond the towering windows while old ghosts circled one another beneath the feast of the living.
The Dread Wolf acknowledged the way his mate interacted with each and gave her the space to do so. She was not a jewel to adorn his side. Naedira was a warrior in her own right. The Endless Knight graced the room and amplified her mate. She could have his seat if she wished it, and none would protest.
Gerwald was happy for her to meet Revna, however the introductions were cut short. As he turned to introduce
Irina Jesart
properly, the Shadow of the Mountain moved within their orbit.
Naedira became tense. Her grip tightened subtly against Gerwald’s arm. The reaction pulled the wolf to the surface instantly. One of his hands closed over hers where it rested against him while the other settled firmly against the small of her back as the Mountain approached. A low growl escaped Gerwald’s throat before he could fully suppress it.
He could feel the memories rush forward. Regret settled heavily inside him once more. He had not been at Naedira’s side on Eshan, though she insisted she was glad he had been spared from witnessing it. There had been no excuse for his absence aboard the Fortessa beyond the one word he had come to despise most.
Duty.
Naedira was right that he would always answer, and he hated himself for it.
She diffused the situation with her words. Gerwald glanced toward her briefly as she spoke, some mixture of admiration and restrained violence settling behind his golden gaze. Naedira always had been better with words than he was. Her talent for politics reached farther than his ever would. Where Gerwald had struggled to learn diplomacy, it came naturally to her. That did not diminish the ferocity behind her stare or the violence lurking beneath her skin.
Prazutis was bold, but Naedira had made Gerwald promise he would not go near the man. This meeting could not be helped. War forced them into the same circles, but as far as he could control, the Dread Wolf had kept his oath.
For the sake of their son, he would restrain himself further still. He could not control what Aerik chose to do, nor the path his son intended to walk, but Gerwald would watch carefully. The Dread Wolf swallowed his hatred and buried the anger threatening to rise within him.
Instead something else settled into its place.
Pride.
For all his power and boasting, Naedira lived, Gerwald had survived, and the Mountain had failed.
His gaze turned briefly back toward
Revna Marr
.
“This is indeed my apprentice,
Irina Jesart
.”
His hand remained steady at Naedira’s back as golden eyes settled once more upon the Mountain.
“You always did know how to make an impression.”
The corner of Gerwald’s mouth turned upward faintly, though no warmth ever reached his eyes. Around them the feast slowly reclaimed its rhythm. Music rose once more beneath the vaulted ceilings while conversations returned cautiously to nearby tables. Somewhere deeper in the hall laughter erupted again as though death itself had not briefly stepped into their orbit.