Of Promises and Contracts pt.3
After hours of futile twisting and turning in the half-empty inn-bed, Elam had got up. Â
Now he was sitting on top of his harnessed guar, starting out into the grassy hills. Asking directions to the Dwemer ruin in the middle of the night had proved quite the task. Â
Fortunately, he remembered seeing some landmarks and signs along the road they had traveled to the town. All he had to do was trace back and find the right way. Â
The full moon was lighting his path. Â
After a while he reached a crumbled tower, Dwemer in its design. Following past it, the ancient minesite unfolded.
He dismounted and approached.
There were two lonely tents standing a distance away from the entrance. A guar and a horse were pasturing next to it. Â
The tents were decorated with a strange insignia. The roof of the other was starting to dilapitate, but the structures were still intact.
Elam pushed away the flap to peek into the longer one. Not much remained inside â some boxes, a desk with drawers and papers splayed on top of it. A modest wooden field bed in the corner. Some grass had started to grow on the trodden ground. Â
He sat on the bed, suddenly feeling anxious and out of place. The lining of the mattress was coming apart, he traced the escaped threads with his fingers.
Fen had told him to stay. Commanded him, so resolutely. He who usually was more than docile with him. Â
He began to understand why he had wanted to avoid Maeri. She seemed to totally function on motives of self-interest. He couldnât quite understand the bond they shared. Â
How could Fen expect him to stay away? To go on without worry? The only thing keeping him from barging into the ruins was fact he didnât really want more interaction with Maeri.
Elam curled up his fists and pushed them into the mattress He had never felt quite the anger burn inside him. It seemed to smoulder all the way up to his heart. Mixed with worry, it felt overbearing.
He wouldnât let Maeri treat Fen that way anymore. And he would stop Fen from letting Maeri play her games on him. Â
Knock him out if he must.
It gnawed at him to know Fen only wanted to protect him all the same by keeping them apart. There was no use feeling jilted. But he didnât have to act so coldly. Â
Startling awake from his thoughts, he heard a sliding noise, like rock being dragged on rock. He hurried to the tent opening and gazed across the field.
Had they returned? Nighttime would still last for hours. Â
He took cautious steps forward. Â
First, he saw their shapes, huddled on the ground beside the door. Maeri was crouching. The lit torch lay on the ground and made their shadows huge against the ruin.
Maeri was pressing Fen against the door. His head kept drooping as she worked something around his chest. Â
âCome on, you slouch. Hold it together.â
Fen looked up at her, his eyes groggy, unseeing. A trail of blood escaped between his cracked lips.
Numbing emptiness consumed his body. Breath got stuck in his throat. All sense in his mind disappeared.
He dashed, stumbling on the grass.
Maeri flinched like a stratled cat as he heard his approach and shot her eyes to him.
The sprint ravaged at his lungs when he collapsed next to them. Â
All over his chest, clothes, her hands and back.
Elam breathed rapid. He crawled to him. Maeri gave him space and grunted as she moved backwards.
The fresh bandage around Fenâs chest was already soaking in red. Elam could barely run his hand on it, ghosting around it. Â
He looked at his face, his eyes, not focusing on anything. He felt his own lips quiver. Cold grasp of panic raised in his throat.
Fen coughed feebly, and blood splattered out. Specks of it flew and stained Elamâs collar. He blinked, shocked.
âDamn it. Heâs on the edge of conciousness. Heavy bastard. I might pass out, too.â
She was bleeding, a continuous drip from the back of her left bicep. Â
Maeriâs voice jolted him to action. Â
Fen needed to be laid down. He needed to see the wound. The real damage, the depth, the width. What he could heal, and not.
âThe tent, the bedâŠ. Help me.â He mumbled.
Elam slid his arm under Fenâs armpit and turned to make him prop on his back. He nudged, tried out, lifted him a little. Â
Fen cried out in pain, incoherently.
Maeri got the clue and hurried to prop his other side. Together, they heaved him up. Elam felt his legs shake. Maeri was struggling. But they got his limp body moving somehow.
Elam panted, they hasted. Â
Inside the tent, they laid him quickly on the rickety bed. It creaked and complained under his weight. He seemed to have finally passed out.
Before Elam had thought of it, Maeri took a knife from her belt and cut up the straps of his armor and through his shirt and the makeshift bandages, then ripped them open too uncover the cut. Â
Elam stepped up to him right away, brushing past her. The wound seemed to extend all the way from his right armpit to left shoulder. He touched the edges, the raw skin, the clotted blood around it. It was a laceration, but quite cleanly cut.
âWhat happened...?â Voice in hoarse whisper, he asked even though he knew what to expect.
Maeri slumped to the ground, leaning to the side of the tent. She grimaced, holding her arm, stripping the cloth around it.
âA nasty trap, what else? If he wouldnât have been whining...â
With no time to waste, Elam leaned close to his still body.
He checked his pulse and breathing, relieved to find both of them there and calming down.
He rubbed his palms together to warm them up and closed his eyes.
He recalled an image of his mother, her nimble, long fingers weaving patterns in the air. Particles, warm and bright dancing on the tips. The essence gathering into mending energy. He recalled and repeated. Â
The power pulsed as he laid his hands on his chest, it scattered into the wound, filling it, covering it. He pushed his essence forward to stitch skin and muscle. To heal and renew.
It took time and precision, but finally he felt he had connected eveything. The skin on the surface was the hardest to recover. It would scar but he could make it fainter in time. Â
He could not replace the lost blood. He prayed for all the divine mercy it would be enough. And not too late.
Exhausted, his hands tainted red, he sat on the edge of the bed. Cursed the fact that he was out of practice, out of his usual element to help him more. Â
But Fen was stable. Stable and alive.
He stroked the skin on his arm, traced the tattoo of a feather on it.
A weight still pressed on his heart. He had been right to have a bad feeling from the start. He should have guessed, and not let him go. Insisted on coming along. Sheâ
âI carried him all the way. It mustâve stretched my wound further.â She grunted from where she was sitting down, only wearing a torn undershirt now, the ripped parts of it wrapped around her arm. âAny chance you could send some of those sparkles my way?â
Elam felt cold fury raising in the pit of his stomach like never before. Â
He stood up and faced her, absolute despisingly. âHavenât you caused enough!?â
Maeri looked at him, the corners of her mouth twisting up. She grunted and managed to get up from the ground. She patted her dusty clothes off, patiently.
âHe knew what he was signing up for. Itâs right there on the contract. Do you think he hasnât taken risks before?â Â
âLeave him alone... leave us alone, you fiend. He wonât conform to you anymore!â He yelled. Â
Snappily, she approached until her face was close to Elamâs. In the shadows of the tent her eyes looked bottomlessly black. Â
âNow listen here, shortie. I have no interest in stealing or bedding him. I merely required him for business. So you can stop acting like a soggy, heated bitch about it.â
Her tone was low and articulated. Â
Elam clenched his fists and spat back at her.
âYou just almost got him killed. Iâm beyond beingââ Â
âAre you that insecure about your standing?â Maeri let out and it made Elam stumble in his thoughts. Â
âOr maybe youâre pissed that I know him better than you ever will.â Â
She continued, getting more into his space. She was tall enough to look down at him without a problem. Her eyes squinted as she stared him down, like a snake its prey.
It made Elam instinctively back out.
âWhat do you even know? His favorite colour? How he likes his cock sucked?â Â
She chuckled, voice full of malice and shook her head at his aghast face.
âNothing of how he resorts in substances to douse his flaring trauma of being abused in prison, in the guard house of Vivec... All the fucked up shit he was willing to do and try... How he feels about being an abandoned, unwanted, dirty bastard.â
Every word she said felt like an arrow through his heart. He grimaced and turned away from her, trying to swallow the sob that was rising to his throat. Â
So vile, he felt so vile. She was so vile. Â
All these things. All these things about Fen he hadnât known. They werenât hers to tell. He didnât want to hear them from her. Â
At the same time his heart broke at them. All of it hit his chest like a sledgehammer. Â
âOuch...â She went on spitefully, pouting her lip. âSeems like that hurt.â Â
All he could do was to just glare at her. He had no words. Â
Unbothered by the damage that unraveled at her wake, she turned around. At the opening, holding the flap of the tent, she looked at Elam once more. Â
âDo you even know itâs dangerous for him to have any Telvanni contact... Dangerous for you, I mean.â
She scoffed at his questioning face. She reached to release something from her belt and let it fall on the ground. The document, the contract.
âToken of my good will. Until next time, sweetie.â
With a rustle of canvas, she was gone. Elam didnât move until he heard the hooves of her mount in the far distance. He ducked to rip the damned paper to pieces.
Elam slept leaning to his knees on the ground. His slumber was light, he kept flinching awake everytime Fen shifted. Â
The morning sun shone its light through the canvas walls. He got up, feeling his legs stiff. Leaning over, he checked Fenâs temperature and vitals. He was clearly getting warmer. Elam hoped his skills had been enough to avoid an infection from an eons old blade. Â
Fen needed a more throughout check-up from a medic. Â
His hands were still stained in his blood. The little he could see of the front of his shirt too. Â
While he was holding his hand on his forehead, Fen flinched awake. Elam let out a sigh of relief.
The first thing the lying mer did was bring his hand to his chest in panic. He seemed surprised to find it smooth, the scar on it only discolored. Disoriented, he glanced around until he saw Elam. Â
âI felt it... it was warm.â
Adjusting to his awoken state, he leaned back on the mattress and exhaled deeply.
Recalling, he suddenly scanned around the room.
Elam didnât need to answer. Â
âHopefully for good.â
He cursed silently and felt around his chest. Â
âIâve proven myself a fool once again.â Â
He traced along the wound with his finger. âI hate ruins. I hate ruins even more with her.â
âHow can a person be so.... nasty? To force you to do such things... Threatening, bullying. To what end?... She claimed I was in danger with you.â
âDonât pay mind to what she said... Itâs all just to please her need to meddle. A fucking masterplan to screw everyone over.â
Elam could see that. Being the way she was, she had a lonely life ahead. Maybe behind, too. But she didnât deserve any pity, not from him. Â
Fen cursed again, this time louder. Â
âI hate how she makes me become. Itâs like I have to be tough for her to not reach me. But she still does. Every single damn time.â
He covered his eyes with the back of his hand, his voice weak and hoarse. Behind the shadow of his hand, Elam saw he was gritting his teeth.
âI could have died and I didnât even... â He trailed off.
âYou didnât even listen to me. You disregarded me.â
Elam finished, hurt apparent in his voice, to let him know the extent of it. Fen seemed to awknowledge it judging by his guilty expression.
Looking at him, Elam couldnât hold it up for long. He was too relieved everything had turned out alright in the end.
He reached to take his hand. He needed to hold it, to ground him, to support him.
âYou know you donât need to be tough when youâre with me.â
Elam huffed melancholically. He thought about all of the things Maeri had said. Tried to make sense of how much he mustâve suffered. How much of it he was hiding when he didnât need to. He didnât want to force him to confront it all, to lay it all out, no. A time would come when heâd tell, and he would be there. Â
âIâm sorry for what you have been throughâŠwith her and⊠otherwise.â
Fen was silent. He had lifted the hand covering his face, now gazing at the plain ceiling of the tent, deep in thought. Maybe it was slight fever haze, but he seemed to relax. His brows came unfurrowed, he breathed evenly. Â
âEver since Iâve been with you, it all feels less⊠present.â Â
He turned to him showing a tender, hazy smile.
âMakes me think Iâm doing something right.â
Like flowers on a dewy hill at dawn, Elamâs affection bloomed and filled his heart. It overflowed, pushed tears out of his eyes. He had to squeeze them shut to take it all in. It was threatening to burst him.
âI love you.â Elam blurted out, squeezed his hand into his own shaking ones, brought it against his forehead. Â
âThe idea of losing you scared me numb. Please, donât ever do something stupid like this again. Please.â
For an agonising moment, Fen was just quiet. Elam didnât dear to look at him. The sobs came out of him uncontrollably. His wild heart beat like that of a humminbird. Â
Fen tapped his forehead gently until he looked at him. He chuckled at his teary face. Slid his hand to cup his cheek. Waited patiently for his hiccups to calm down. Â
âIâve loved you for a long time.â
â...Maybe since you first waited up the night for me to come back safely. No one has ever done that for me.â
He reached his hand further, brushed through his brown curls.
âIâll try. Iâll try to deserve someone like you. Iâll try so hard. Please be patient.â
Elam couldnât hold in his sniffles, he nodded and nodded, leaned into his hand.
âNow, youâll have to reach down to kiss me, since my body wonât let me come up.â
Sniffling and laughing, he fell forward, careful of his chest and rested against his warm forehead. Close up, his eyes closed, Fen whispered, Â
âThank you for saving it, though. My body and life.â
THAS IT BABEY. WOAH. fastest project of my life. My love for our sons is an unstoppable force. Lelam is @siiliprinssi âs