Another Victim of the Pyre

They assume that we claim Dunland, and that inherent pride in our ancestral home gives shape to our hatred of Xavier Renett. While it’s easier to let them believe that, nothing could be further from the truth.

━⊱༒︎⊰━

The fact that the Renett household sources servants from our isle is well-known, and our orphanage particularly infamous within that network. But we weren’t aware then how aptly-named The Lion’s Den Home for Orphaned Boys truly was, as the house was nothing more than a pipeline to usher impressionable youths into lifelong servitude.

We were still in single digits when House Renett’s representative came, doling out contracts with the promise of a brighter future to await us across the perilous Strait of Edges. Nowadays our image of Dunland is more often informed by shanties and song attesting to her verdant hills and sun-soaked skies, but back then the dank interior and peeling walls of our orphanage were all we had off which to base our impression.

We didn’t know what we were giving up– we likely never will. And we blame him for it.

━⊱༒︎⊰━

Befreckled and auburn-haired, you’d have to be blind to mistake us for anything other than Duns; however, our alignment with the culture has always been lacking. We would grow up in Rogalia, ever-estranged from our homeland. Our fellow Dunnick servants helped to initially raise us, imparting the language, a healthy dose of superstition, and an even healthier appetite for hard liquor– but there’s only so much to be done to shape an impressionable youth during the few years we spent terrorizing Renett’s halls.

While our list of assigned chores was long, we always made time in the day to act a proper menace. We were decidedly taken off tending to changing the sheets when we once scattered fermented berries atop them and left the window strategically ajar. It was quite the hilarious find for our lord to happen upon a great flock of birds that had weaseled their way inside, by then having grown fat and drunk as they shed feathers and filth throughout Lord Renett’s bedchambers. We servants had to clean it up, of course, but it was worth it for the look on our lord’s face….

Nor can we forget the masquerades hosted in his honor. Feasts made for a time of great stress among the servants– it was the least we could do to share with our inner circle that we had taken tongs to secretly stuff the dining chair seats full of poison ivy leaves. Rogalians are a vainglorious lot, venturing to incredible lengths to maintain decorum– even as the itch of fresh hives flushed angrily across their backsides. The servants all took bets on which of those self-important peacocks would be the first to break, and could not have been more shocked to see how they mutually playacted through their agony until the bitter end (albeit with many a private moment reserved for violent itching). We supposed that maybe the masks helped to shield their discomfort. Just so, the evening did end early, leaving plenty of time for our lord to vent his fury thereafter.

We were taken off tea duty as well after we intercepted our lord’s negotiations with a brimming cup for his guest that was more lemon than leaf. We were gleeful to still be in the room when they took their first sip, our frame plastered dutifully to the wall as our lord’s guest spit the sour concoction across the table and utterly decimated our lord’s fine silk jabot. Arrogantly, our victim accused Lord Renett of meaning to deliberately slight him. Between honeyed words of apology our lord met our lingering gaze; the daggers in his eyes cut deep– sharp and savage in a way we’ve not beheld since.

We’re not sure what we cost him that day– nor did we care. It was enough to know what a thorn we were in his side, and to anticipate the hard-won smiles that our tale would bring to our circle’s lips. We couldn’t have known then that this was the final straw when, comparatively, we thought it only a minor transgression among many…/many/ more impressive examples.

By the terms of our contract we had expected to follow in the footsteps of the Dun servants before us, and to serve until death under Renett’s roof. But within a month of our last mischievous act (that we were caught for, anyhow), we were informed that our contract had been bought and sold. However patient and protective our community of redhead servants was, they couldn’t safeguard us from what was to come.

We don’t remember much from the moment that our contract was ceded to House Drake, nor of the transition to Torchgutter to follow. We expect that we blocked the worst of it out– but it was in short order that the intensity of isolation set in, as the friendly faces of our countrymen were supplanted by the loathsome sneers of our new overlords. The sting of sparks shorn from the pyre and the odor of festering bodies– some unlucky bastards still living– left staked in the sun to waste became an ever-present element that dominated our life, thick as the curtain of terror and hysteria that came to suffocate us in the night when all else had grown quiet.

He did this to us.

Animosity towards Xavier Renett clung to the spare corners of our mind and filled us with malice. Any sense of spirit or resistance slipped away under the mounting strain of the day-to-day horrors– every day more atrocities beyond imagination…more bodies to the pyre. At that time it was all we could do to survive– and to spite.

Dunland be damned– I’m no renegade or freedom fighter. If it weren’t for what he took from us…everything would be different.

How do we thank you? (House Drake call-out post)

Dear Dina,

The quill froze. We tried this yesterday…and the day before– but what do we say to the person who saved our life?

By all rights, our warlord should have sent us back to Torchgutter– if not in the instant that she announced her retirement, then at least in the breath thereafter. She had no authority to excuse us from our contract of servitude (surely only Count Drake could do that), but Dina dismissed us just the same.

She gave us a place to go, far from the Dragon’s Maw and the symphony of screams the pyre swallows daily– out from the smoke, into streets unencumbered by the overflow of charred corpses and the suffocating blanket of fear and dread that they elicit. She must have hoped that, in Runeheim, we could finally escape the horrors we had both endured and committed in the past two decades under their authority.

She’ll had to have invented a cover story for our absence that House Drake would believe. Perhaps she reported back that O’shea died– gloriously on the Rogalian warfront…or unceremoniously, brought early to the Thicket by a particularly heinous batch of moldy berries.

Or perhaps she simply said that we ran away– violated the terms of our contract and fled in the night. We look so different now; perhaps she thought it a safe enough half-truth to tell. There was wisdom behind not lying to fire mages– much less to House Drake.

….Maybe they’ll come looking for us? Maybe they’ve forgotten that we exist. We’re only a number to them, surely, whether that number was a negligible solo casualty on the battlefield– or the identification number House Renett had assigned to us when we received our writ of permission to live (or, more accurately, to serve) outside of Dunland all those years ago…

Stop there– don’t dwell on it.

That train of thought is interrupted before the scant thought of House Renett buds from resentment to malice. We don’t stoke that fire; we strive to swallow it down.

Vengeance and cruelty was House Drake’s way. Anything gained under their rule is accomplished through fire and blood. Aggress, escalate, immolate your enemies. We have to leave it behind if we are to survive.

But we’d been on the warfront under their gruesome flag for so long…I don’t know how to live out from their shadow.

–We. I meant we.

Right…?

The quill rests, and the page remains empty. Maybe tomorrow we’ll find the words to thank her.

How do we thank you? (House Drake call-out post)

Dear Dina,

The quill froze. We tried this yesterday…and the day before– but what do we say to the person who saved our life?

By all rights, our warlord should have sent us back to Torchgutter– if not in the instant that she announced her retirement, then at least in the breath thereafter. She had no authority to excuse us from our contract of servitude (surely only Count Drake could do that), but Dina dismissed us just the same.

She gave us a place to go, far from the Dragon’s Maw and the symphony of screams the pyre swallows daily– out from the smoke, into streets unencumbered by the overflow of charred corpses and the suffocating blanket of fear and dread that they elicit. She must have hoped that, in Runeheim, we could finally escape the horrors we had both endured and committed in the past two decades under their authority.

She’ll had to have invented a cover story for our absence that House Drake would believe. Perhaps she reported back that O’shea died– gloriously on the Rogalian warfront…or unceremoniously, brought early to the Thicket by a particularly heinous batch of moldy berries.

Or perhaps she simply said that we ran away– violated the terms of our contract and fled in the night. We look so different now; perhaps she thought it a safe enough half-truth to tell. There was wisdom behind not lying to fire mages– much less to House Drake.

….Maybe they’ll come looking for us? Maybe they’ve forgotten that we exist. We’re only a number to them, surely, whether that number was a negligible solo casualty on the battlefield– or the identification number House Renett had assigned to us when we received our writ of permission to live (or, more accurately, to serve) outside of Dunland all those years ago…

Stop there– don’t dwell on it.

That train of thought is interrupted before the scant thought of House Renett buds from resentment to malice. We don’t stoke that fire; we strive to swallow it down.

Vengeance and cruelty was House Drake’s way. Anything gained under their rule is accomplished through fire and blood. Aggress, escalate, immolate your enemies. We have to leave it behind if we are to survive.

But we’d been on the warfront under their gruesome flag for so long…I don’t know how to live out from their shadow.

–We.

I meant we.

The quill rests, and the page remains empty. Maybe tomorrow we’ll find the words to thank her.

Start again [Letter to Sheamus]

[A letter from Ianthe Jovienne to Shaemus, a Dunnick trader from the caravan that visited Luisant last market. A continuation of “Absentee”]

Sheamus,

How are you, darling? Valko and I do hope your caravan is fairing well, and that the roads and trading merchants have treated you most handsomely.

I find lately that I cannot stop dwelling on the breadth of the world beyond our little town. I’m sure I’ve walked the length of Dunland’s coast in restless circles around Luisant; I’ve cataloged every tombstone, wild rose, and corbel. The sights are all the same– beautiful though they may be, they begin to bore. It would be a tragedy to die without know more than this.

To be frank, the state of Luisant has grown rather tumultuous since last we spoke. This market is poised to be the most well-attended in some time. It will be an opportune occasion to say our goodbyes.

Following this market Valko and I plan to explore the world; however, we would feel much more at ease provided your caravan’s guidance and numbers. There may be others likewise intrigued by our venture. We hope that you might have them too. Of course, we’ve no desire to stunt the speed of your journey. We would be glad to receive correspondence designating a place to meet you at an appointed date and time. We will do our best to be punctual. However, if this is to be our last correspondence, we wish you a warm farewell.

With love,
Ianthe

She signed and sealed it, daring to hope that they might convince others to join them. If all went well, and they escaped Chiropoler alive, this letter might be enough to ensure their future.

It wasn’t too late for them to start again.

Absentee

In spite of it all– the endless ventures into Chiropoler (parts known and unknown), rituals gone wrong, and conflicts beyond count– there had been no moment more terrifying than when Ianthe had witnessed the distinct absence in the Prosecutor’s eyes.

Ianthe had always made her way through the power of keen observation. In the same way Cole could dredge up remnants of the past from the barest shred of evidence, Ianthe could decode one’s desires and drives through the ease of conversation between individuals, the crux of the tension in their body– even the luster of an old ring or the lacking tan line beneath it told a story.

Gerard adorns his devotion in the form of dazzling silver– a shield between the people of Luisant and the enemies determined to dethrone them.

Sofie’s commitment to the good to be found in others is unwavering, evidenced so often by the grace given to her actions.

Cadence’s burden is more tangible– her blade an occasional source of strife that nevertheless compels her to shoulder the load for Luisant, even to her own detriment.

Fabron is dedicated, and he never fails to notice another’s hard work. Milo’s care for others goes beyond blood. Pascal’s faith in our priests is unshakeable. Teles misses his wife…

She couldn’t help but to be captivated by people, driven to learn what they care about, what makes them tick. Some would call it nosiness– which it was– but this affinity had been more helpful than not to help change and mold the minds of others in her favor…excepting the Prosecutor.

(Ianthe to Prosecutor Jean) Remove the Belief: Always do as the Inquisition tells me.

There is an absence in his eyes, which appear dark and empty. Your words ring hollow.
He has been so thoroughly conditioned by the Inquisition…there is nothing to be done.

Unsettling could not begin to describe it. Terrifying? Piteous…?

To have your mind so sundered that you could take on no bonds nor beliefs unrelated to your present loyalty to the Inquisition…his eyes were as haunting as they were heart-rending, made worse still by the unearthed knowledge that he had once been a Vecatran himself. Was this the fate that would await those who stayed? Ianthe couldn’t bear to imagine that hollowness belonging to Colibri, Lunette, Valko…

“We should leave,” Valko had agreed. “We should all leave.”

This thought floated to the surface again. It had been a subject of much discussion (and contention) in the final hours of last market. Many had seemed on board with the idea of exploring the world that had been newly-opened to them. Other Vecatrans had found a way to survive by moving around, trading– so Sheamus had confided. Perhaps they could learn.

This thought drove Ianthe to rise from her bed, already a twisted mess following a fitful night’s sleep. She needed to write while her hand was still given the motivation, and the wisdom of omission and etiquette had not yet given way to desperation, as there was another thing that she had observed for certain:

Prosecutor Jean will never allow a Vecatran to deny converting without dying.

cont. in Start Again [Letter to Sheamus]