CHAPTER TWO
Outside the window, the world
always seemed loud and pleasant. On a stony piece of land outside the walls of
the Orphanage, street kids would holler around with a ball in hand, bickering
over potential teams and points scored in the last match. Their basket was a
worn-out plastic bowl balanced on the edge of the wall, always withering, when
left empty, with the gusts of wind. Anyone standing on the inside could spot
about five different bowls scattered on the ground, having succumbed to the
fate of abandonment and the recipient of no human making retrieving attempts.
Isadora would stay at her
seat’s edge as the match would grow more intense by the second, everyone’s
homework on the line as loser’s weight to bear. The notes of Vivaldi’s winter
warmed the tension in the air, involuntarily breathless, Isadora would just
stare. The ball would dribble and be passed, sometimes a catch was missed,
sometimes a basket was scored. She would exclaim and swear with great mirth and
disappointment, mumbling to herself about all the ways she could have avoided
the other team’s defeat. Though, her fate was one of a great observer but never
an intervener, a helpless god overseeing the fate of people with great detail
but possessing no ability to undo it.
The best Isadora could do was
look away.
Her eyes fluttered open and
the extravagant jewels etched in the dome shaped ceiling caught her attention.
She swung up and the delicate engravings on the wall in front made her squirm
back, into the cushiest pillows to have ever touched her undeserving back.
“What in the…?” the words left her hoarse throat as her eyes scrutinized the
lavishness around. Gold walls, shiny blackwood furniture engraved with precious
stones, the mere spaciousness of a playground and overwhelming grandeur of
paintings staring down on her.
“Was I kidnapped again…? Sold
off to some rich sleazy bastard…? No, no, no, that would not be cannon
appropriate,” she mumbled to herself; the words came out raspy, owing to her
parched throat, yet skipping the covered glass of water placed on the bedside
table, she got up and wobbled over to the desk and chair placed in front of an
imperial window. The large table was littered with papers, documents and she
shuffled around until she spotted a seal placed over a bunch of manila
envelopes.
“Runa…me, I should have been
dead…did the,” she picked up the seal and turned it over to reveal the golden
crest of a sword with wings. “Fuck, did he really…” she grabbed the letters and
all of them were addressed to, ‘Arizel Delmore, the thirteenth of Isdarien.’
“Of all people…why him?” she
bit her lower lip as she pondered over the misfortune of the thirteenth prince,
“He’s the first to die…tsk.”
She placed the letters and the
seal back in the place and meandered around the room, only to stop in front of
the full-length mirror encased in gold engravings. It was her appearance that
caught her off guard and made her stand and stare. She used to be a simple girl
with dark hair and dark eyes, no distinguishing features to set her apart from
the common populace but here…here she was Runa Don Russet, petite and pale with
curly ringlets of burgundy hair flowing to her waist and eyes as clear as
morning dew. Though out of all miracles, the fact that she had hands was the
most blessed one. She raised her hands in front of the mirror and gazed at them
with much love. They were pale and slender attached to dainty wrists and long
fingers, certainly made for a character who wasn’t a survivor. Nonetheless, her
heart swelled with gratefulness.
“Woah…” she touched her small
face and felt her dainty features, “It couldn’t get more fictional, could it?”
she snorted as she tugged at her hair and genuinely felt the sensation in her
scalp. Then, she realised that she was clad in a loose silk shirt and lacey
shorts – did someone change her clothes? Of course, they would have gotten rid
of her bloody dress but…her line of thought was interrupted by a sudden thud.
She flinched and instinctively
turned to face the sound. On the window, perched like a wounded bird, was the
thirteenth prince staring at her with an amused smile. His dark hair flowed
with the wind, freely, a stark contrast to the bloodied white shirt stuck to
his torso. Was it his blood or hers?
“Oh! You’re up, I could get
used to this,” he smiled as he jumped inside the room and instantly started
unbuttoning his shirt.
“Woah, woah woah, what do you
think you’re doing?” she uttered, nostrils flared and brows scrunched with
exasperation.
The man stopped
mid-unbuttoning and looked up with a smirk, “Commonly, in a situation like
this, someone would wail, ‘who are you?! Where am I?! what do you want with
me?!’ but you said none of that!”
She frowned.
His dark eyes held her light
ones, piercing with interest. All the while his nimble fingers worked their way
through the buttons. He got rid of the sticky shirt and it was cue enough for
her to yelp and turn on her heel.
“Have some shame, you
pervert!” she gasped, only to realise that she was now facing a high-definition
mirror with him being perfectly reflected in it.
“So, it looks like you can see
far into the future but the immediate second, got it,” he chuckled as he caught
her eye again, through the mirror.
“Oh, for fuck’s sake,” she
gasped and looked away, “What are you yapping about?!”
“Ya-yapping? What is that?
Nonetheless, you do not have to be on guard with me, I know your secret and—”
“—Wait, what, how the heck?”
she cut him, brows afrown, as she turned to face him and immediately regretted
it. She placed her hand strategically ahead to over his muscular torso from her
vision.
“You did not even ask, ‘what
secret’ tsk…you’re suck a horrible liar.” As if to test her patience, he
walked towards her and with every step he took, his torso would get clearer in
her vision so she would bring her hand closer and closer to her eyes until the
only thing in her vision was the back of her hand.
“Wh-what secret do you kno—”
her words were cut off as she felt a hand gently caress her head. Her body
stiffened upon his touch and chilly words escaped her lips, “What do you think
you’re doing…?”
The man hesitated for a mere
second upon receiving the chill question, looked at her narrowed clear eyes and
immediately retreated his hand. “Why,” he scoffed awkwardly, “I was trying the
little witch to like me so that she can heal me, ha ha…”
“Heal you…?” she frowned.
“Ah-ha! So you accept that
you’re a witch!” the man exclaimed.
“What!? No! Oh holy—oh my, no,
I am not a witch dude, what the heck?!”
“Do not dude me, Lady, and do
not lie—” he stopped mid-sentence as he stared at the look of genuine confusion
on her face. Her wide eyes stared into his with equal scandal. “Oh,” he
uttered.
“Duh,” she replied, as if it
was the most obvious thing on the planet.
“Lady, I LITERALLY,” he turned
to expose his bruised and bloodied back in her face, “THREATENED MY LIFE AND
STATUS TO SAVE YOU!”
He turned back to face her.
She merely stared, stunned beyond speech.
“I am not trying to guilt-trip
you, obviously,” he seethed, “But you insinuated that you were a witch!”
“Accusations! I did not!” she
snapped.
“Holy Sael!” he exclaimed and
shoved his head in his hands while pacing back and forth.
“Were you always this
imaginative and gullible…?” she asked, partially amused, partially horrified
and wholly exasperated.
“Oh, you don’t know what I
have done,” he turned to face her, eyes blown wide and forehead bunched with
frowny stress, “You don’t know!”
She hesitated to ask, jaw
clenching, but the curious words escaped out of her mouth without permission
from thought or consideration, “What did you do…?”
“So,” he licked his lips and
pressed his hands over her small shoulders, as if to ground her in case she
would recoil upon hearing the news and jump off the open windows. The pervious
shyness of having his bare chest in such close proximity was veiled by the
uncertainty their future held. “You see, lady, I thought you were a witch and
you would get us out of the pinch, so, so I well, announced, claimed? No, no,
announced, ah-declared! In front of the entire family, oh did I mention that we
were royalty? Yes, I said that you will be my wife.”
There was a moment of silence
that rained down upon them like piercing swords.
“Are you even allowed to do
that?” she questioned, frowning.
“I got hit for it but
they—well, I got it to work somehow…” he gulped and removed his hands from her
shoulders to scratch his neck.
“There is no way you got the
entire royal family involved, dude—”
“—your royal highness,” he
corrected.
“—Does it really matter?! WHAT
DID YOU EVEN THINK I COULD DO?!”
“WELL, I DO NOT KNOW HOW
WITCHES WORK BUT A MEMORY ERASING SPELL WAS MY FIRST CONSIDERATION!”
“oh my,” whispered, holding
her head in her hands, “DID YOU NOT, FOR A MOMENT, CONSDIER THE FACT THAT IF I
WAS A NIFTY WITCH THEN WHY WAS I IN A PICKLE IN THE FIRST PLACE?! WOULDN’T I
HAVE SAVED MYSELF.”
The shouting forced her into a
violent coughing fit.
He paced across the room and
fetched her a glass of water from the bedside table. While she sat and drank
the water, crouched onto the floor, beside her feet and mumbled like a dejected
child, “Wow, I really did not think this through.”
“No shit, Sherlock,” she
snapped, voice hoarse again.
“It’s Arizel, that’s my name.”
“Mine’s Runa.”
“What now?” he looked up and
asked.
She shrugged before saying,
“Thank you though, you did save the world and your family by saving me. It was
a good decision so I hope you don’t—”
“You’re doing it again,” he
snapped, frowning.
“Doing what?!” she all but
cried.
“This enigmatic old wise witch
woman thing,” he snapped.
She rolled her eyes at that,
realising that she was, indeed to be partially blamed for this blunder.
“What now?” he asked again,
eyes narrowed at her.
From her height, she could see
the bruises on his back. They seemed deep and letting them remain open and
untreated for too long would encourage all sorts of infection. She shrugged
again, “I don’t know…let’s get you fixed first,” she sighed.
“You cannot fix it,” he
sighed.
“Why?”
“They’re poisoned blades. I
already feel my head growing foggy.”
“WHAT THE FUCK?! WHY THE FUCK
ARE YOU SITTING ON THE FLOOR, BEING SO CHILL ABOUT IT, YOU MADMAN?!”
He laughed at that.
“At first, I was hoping you
would save me – you know? I sort of wagered my survival against these so that
they would let you marry me. Dumb idea, is it not? It seemed brilliant then. Do
not worry though, m’lady, I was being poisoned way before this, I am quite
resilient…maybe I will make it. Don’t miss me too much though.”
Though, she knew, he wouldn’t
make it.
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