Dorian could not have hurt him more in that moment even if he had turned and struck him. He barely even acknowledged his words, simply pulled away his hand and turned his back on him. As though Fenris was insignificant. As if he were nothing more than a slave.
It was not the first time that Dorian had spoken to him like this, for they had gone over their lines, practicing for hours in the privacy of Dorian’s estate, making certain that their act was a perfect thing; but it had always come with warning and preparation, with kisses and jokes to ease the memories that the both of them circled like wary strays. He had not until now seen the true face of Dorian’s mask, and the sight of it was a horrible thing indeed.
And Fenris should have expected it. He had already been prepared to remove his hand, knowing that their privacy would soon be interrupted, but perhaps he had been foolish to think that Dorian would be eager to cherish the last moments that they would have together, that he might have some comforting word or reassuring touch for him.
Foolish, he chided himself, even as his heart ached. He does not need you as you need him. And you thought you were strong enough for this.
He clenched his jaw, and drew in a fortifying breath through his nostrils. “Dominus,” he made himself reply as he followed, and it was a rebuke for the both of them; mostly for himself, to remind him of this terrible dance that they must make, but cold enough that he hoped it would strike Dorian as deeply as Dorian’s words had struck him. Let them both play this game, then, he thought, and let it devour them entirely.
Met and led into the beast’s lair by the house steward, they were soon announced to a room dim with the silver cast of incense and witchlight and, Fenris noted with some grim sense of satisfaction, all of the people he had guessed would be here. He might have been gone from Tevinter for two decades, but some things did not change. And there was Calvisius senior himself, resplendent in black and scarlet, approaching them both—no, he had eyes only for Dorian—and his smile was wide enough to swallow them both, his arms spreading out as though to welcome a brother.
“Lord Dorian,” he greeted, giving away no tells as to whether he approved of Dorian’s traditional dress or found his facade an amusing one. “Welcome. I cannot tell you how pleased I am that you accepted my invitation.”
That hurled Dominus struck Dorian like a knife, sliding between his ribs and seeking out his heart. He felt himself bleeding internally even as he strode onward, not allowing his step to check or his shoulders to curve. He could not flinch, could not take the time to lick at his wounds.
He’d had a lifetime’s practice at merely bearing them, and showing no signs of his pain. Or few, in any case; a childhood of acting out and an adolescence and young adulthood of self-destructive debauchery had not been merely for Dorian’s own enjoyment, after all. He’d known even then that it was an attempt to either salve the pain -- or end it.
But this wound was not mortal, in any case; he’d survive this as he had survived many others. He had to. For Fenris.
And so he only walked onward, following the steward through elegantly appointed hallways and across an open, colonnaded peristylum. Finally, they were shown into a small, intimate, but still quite luxurious salon of the sort reserved for gatherings of friends and close acquaintances only; there was a compliment implied in the mere fact of being issued into such a space, and Dorian was not incognizant of it. He was a master of this social game and its rules, little though he loved to play it.
Heavy incense curled silver through pierced lazurite censers and a less cloying but still thick, bitter scent mingled with it told Dorian that someone in the room was a smoker of kohl pipes. Lyrium glowstones shone silver-blue in sconces upon the walls; and witchlights danced in a hanging Serault-glass lantern low above the table upon which a deck of elaborately painted cards lay in rest, awaiting the players’ hands.
Dorian bowed for his host, a mage’s bow with right hand before him and left, grasping the shaft of his Staff of Abnegation, behind his back. Relimbering the staff into its baldric frogs, he smiled wide and wicked. “Lord Calvisius. I cannot tell you how pleased I was to receive the invitation.”
Calvisius Senior laughed with every evidence of good nature, but Dorian thought he detected something calculated in the sound. “Ah, but you must call me Martial!” He made a self-deprecating moue. “A bit of a school-boy nickname, certainly, but all those who are in regular attendance at these little games of mine do use it.”
Dorian smiled somewhat thinly; the false intimacy of this offer was not to be denied, of course. “Martial, then. And if so, I must be simply Dorian.”
“Ah, my boy, I doubt you are ever simply anything.” Martialis’s eyes were keen and sharp as a raptor’s behind the genial smile. “Come, allow me to make introductions to my other guests for the evening!”