( @f-ortuity submitted — Rudolf)
{ ooc. I apologise if this is iffy-}
They were gracious enough to allow him this—to kneel before his headstone. Not a single word escapes from the emperor’s form, and almost as though the world wishes to grant him one last act of mercy, time slows dangerously close to a halt. Yet it is not peaceful—already, he can feel his form, stripped of all armour, growing numb from the cold. Already, his heart aches in a manner so painful that it cannot be described properly; the sort of pain that festers in the heart, and spreads through every vessel, worsening with each passing second.
The sky grows dull, with dark clouds looking more like thick layers of smoke, and even as a few, stray drops of water fall from them, Rudolf knows that those nearby shall not grant him the permission to shed a single tear. A father should be allowed to mourn for his son, and yet, when those opposing him cannot believe his words, all rights to do seem to vanish. What cruelty—even now, his son must be looking down upon with confusion and disdain; now never to know the truth. He will not meet him after this—how could a man with his hands stained with blood so many times over ever possibly dream of such a thing–, and those who revered the boy grant him no chance to understand what transpired in his final moments. Growing tears can only be pushed back by tightly squeezing lifeless eyes shut.
In the brief moments they close, the flashes of painful memories—complete, but also hazy—seize his vision. Abandoning his steed. Falling to the ground. Then, cradling the boy’s form. The look of confusion and anger in his eyes. Apologies that slipped from Rudolf’s, and prayers for his son to rest peacefully. The light fading from eyes that would not close. Then, being torn away from him by opposing soldiers draped in blue.
The howling of bitter winds forces his attention back to the world before him, each gust sounding more akin to a mournful hymn than their usual, hollow tone. The wrong name is carved upon the gravestone, but he cannot blame them. Cold fingers twitch, wanting to reach out, at place themselves upon the resting place of his child, and yet, he knows that doing so would cut what precious moments he has left so painfully short. The back of his throat clamps shut, and instead, both hands lose what little energy was keeping them resting upon his thighs, falling to his sides—falling and brushing against the petals of flowers.
Red and white. He knows not the name of the flora instantly, but recalls a tale told to him by a woman much like Alm. A woman, with a smile so warm and gentle. A woman enamoured with all that he brushed aside, but loved with all his heart. Someone who, too, was taken from the world far too soon. Yes, he remembers now—anemones. The tips of his fingers move to grace over red petals, and only then does the man realise now those left untrampled by his kneeling twist and climb up the sides of his legs as though they, themselves, might be aware of the situation at hand. Should he stay here any longer, surely they would grow and drag him to the depths of the darkest hell.
He looks back—to the soldiers draped in blue standing but a short distance away, hands at the hilts of their swords. Their shadows loom, disfigured by the terrain, with the ends of each projection threatening to touch his form, almost clawing close enough to consume him whole. His gaze lowers—to the anemones, red and white, once again. Should he fall here, they shall all shall match that crimson shade, and the sheer coincidence of it all forces Rudolf to suppress a hollow, miserable laugh. He was never one for the myths and superstitions that plagued the lands of Rigel, but it seems as though fate has a weakness for poetic endings.
A jagged breath escapes from the emperor’s lips, and his head turns back around so that tired, swollen eyes might look upon the headstone of his only son. If Rudolf could not fall before him then, he can now.
He dies confused, angry and regretful — for duties left undone, for a friend he couldn’t even say or see once more (even if he, at least, got to apologize), for a man whom he had to kill that claimed himself his father as he faded from this world to the next.
The Deliverance loses its leader, and in their anger and sorrow the Emperor’s words come as a farce. Some sort of sick joke to have an excuse to take the young man’s corpse as some sort of trophy.
Of course they don’t let him.
Yet the wind howls as if in sorrow for the man who could not express it himself, who tried to contain his grief, for he was not allowed to mourn. Not for his son, not for the loss, and not even able to properly say goodbye.
Hatred born of a simple lie, a lie uttered for protection and fostered as hope — with it’s web now deeply entrenched into the hearts of many, it takes everything with him as its living embodiment dies unfulfilled.