How about a sleepy hug for wee!Alistair?
I am choosing to interpret wee!Alistair as kidistair, and um... ouch. Thank you for the pain I MEAN PROMPT, Cele. <3
Stupid Arlessa with her stupid rules. How could she possibly expect him to remember to take his muddy boots off before he came inside when he could smell supper from all the way in the kennels. So what if he trailed mud all through the castle? So what if he smelled? He had been so hungry he thought his stomach might eat itself, and he’d just forgotten. It was just mud. They were just boots.
He he’d looked at Arl Eamon, pleading with his eyes, as Isolde scolded him, her shrill voice grating in his ears. Usually he thought Orlesian accents were pretty, but it was hard to feel that way about hers when the only time he heard it was when he’d done something bad. He was always messing up.
He pleaded to Eamon with his eyes even harder when Isolde demanded that he be sent to bed early, and without supper. The only reason he’d gotten in trouble in the first place was because he was too hungry to wait, and now he wouldn’t even get to eat? He wasn’t even sleepy.
Thankfully, the arl had been kind enough to send him to his room with some stale bread and cheese. It wasn’t really a room, more of a loft in the stables with a bedroll. At least if he got scared at night he could go talk to the horses. He’d not figured out how to ride horses yet, but sometimes he imagined saddling one up and riding it away from Redcliffe, away from Isolde and her words that hit him like rocks. He wondered if King Maric would take him in. Maybe he could sleep inside again.
As he exited the castle, now barefoot, toes cold against the cool night air, the sun had just begun to set. He couldn’t go to sleep. It was hard enought to make his mind turn off when it was dark outside. He shook his head, and made his way back to the kennels, bread and cheese in hand.
Alistair crawled into the pin with his favorite of the bunch, a young mabari that had already reached full-size, but still acted more or less like a puppy. She didn’t have a name yet. He couldn’t name her, or else he’d get too attached. He’d done that before, and it had been really hard to not cry when the hound had been sold. Never again. He sat back against the back wall, nibbling on his food and tearing off hunks to share with the mabari. It would have been rude to come into her home and not share, after all.
“You know, you’re really lucky,” he said, handing her another bit of bread. She tilted her head at him curiously, ears twitching. “Someone is going to want you someday.”
He sat with the dog for a long while, telling her about all of his hopes and dreams, complaining about the arlessa and imitating her voice. She was even a better listener than the horses. So much so that he sat with her until all of the bread and cheese were gone, and until the last of the sun’s rays vanished. His eyelids began to droop, and he leaned over against the her for warmth, wrapping his arms around her body, fingers raking through her fur. She shifted, curling up, too. His breathing slowed, and he drifted off to sleep.
Tomorrow, he’d remember to take off his boots.










