Six Realms: Chapter Thirty-Eight
Author: Ashleigh
Format: AU - on-going
Rating: Mature
Pairings: Blair & Klauen
Genre(s): Fantasy, Adventure
Description: Set in mock-medieval times. Two different breeds of elves co-exist within the Six Realms – Evanians are the descendants of the Old Ones and the Five Fathers, blessed with magery (the control of magic drawn from specific elements) – Devonians are the physically superior and mentally equal warriors that serve in the private armies and security of Evanian Highlords. Aurel, the heir to copious wealth following his father’s, the Highlord of one of the most prosperous Great Mage families, passing – the only condition is that in order to attain legitimacy and gain control of the family and its wealth, he must abide by his deceased father’s wishes and wed a Highborn lady. His only problem? He’s in love with another girl. Will their forbidden love triumph, or will they been torn apart by the forces at hand?
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Blair found the highlord perched on one of the spires rooftops, one leg dangling over the edge into empty air. He was halfway void of his armour, his fingers tugging inattentively on a knot binding his shoulder guard to his limb.
The Stahlborn’s gaze assessed the decline of the roof, the likelihood of his boots sliding on the tiles, and questioned whether he really ought to get that close to a sheer drop. Klauen’s shoulder rolled, his fingers pinching between the metal, and he withdrew them sharply.
The lowlord took pity on him, crossing the slightly slanted rooftop to drop down beside him. Klauen started at his unannounced appearance, leaning into Blair’s touch as he picked at the bindings, threading leather through leather.
The Ether Realm spread below them, the towers of the palace undulating beneath their dangling legs. The streets rolled down in golden tiled waves to the unrelenting wall that enclosed the citadel. Beyond that, Blair could distinguish the fresh green hills of the Wasser Realm, degrading to indiscernible miniscule fields on the horizon. The dirt was torn and shredded to mud in the nearest plain of grass around the road through the Wasser Gate, and Blair pictured thousands of horses draped in Wasserste blue stampeding across it.
“So she killed him?” he asked, breaking the monotonous silence.
“No, I killed him,” Klauen responded quietly. “She just gave the order. Heike’s appointing me as her unofficial executioner. She had me execute the commander of the highguard for desertion.”
His tone was flat, empty. Blair glanced over at him, noting the ashen resigned expression on his features. The highlord’s fingers trembled where they curled in his lap, and Blair recognised it as a need for movement, to have digits laced around a dagger’s handle. He wanted to kill, to feel the warmth of blood running over his fingers and see flesh cleaved apart by a sheer silver blade. His gaze tracked across Klauen’s hips, void of his usual dagger belt.
“Where are your daggers?” Blair asked as he guided the shoulder guard from Klauen’s arm. He had never seen Klauen without his dagger belt; it was his most efficient weapon, his pride and joy, his protection and his instrument.
Klauen’s gaze didn’t waver from the fields. “You’re getting married,” he murmured quietly, and Blair misheard him at first.
“What are you talking about?” His fingers brushed over Klauen’s hip. “Where did you leave them?”
“In the spine of a highguard mage,” he responded, and Blair’s hand came to a halt on his waist. His gaze rose to the unmoving highlord, concern tugging strings behind his navel, bunching them up in an iron fist inside his chest. “You’re getting married to a lowlady,” Klauen continued. “Heike’s decreed that marriages are in order, and she’s arranged state marriages amongst almost all the noble families.”
Blair didn’t move for a few seconds, before a grin tugged at his lips. “Well at least I’ll have you on the side,” he teased. Klauen didn’t smile.
“I’m not letting you get married.”
Blair’s grin trickled away, a frown etching into his features. “Klauen…”
“She can’t fucking have you,” he snarled quietly, glaring at his hands. The heel of his boot struck the wall beneath the eave they lounged on. “She doesn’t get to lay a single hand on you.”
“Are you talking about Heike or my fiancé?”
“Don’t call her that!” Klauen ordered vehemently, finally meeting his gaze. Blair hadn’t seen his emotions this raw and frayed since he had found Gebiss run through on a tree branch halfway into the forests. He had shot down nearly a whole herd of deer, and Blair had watched his fingers tremble on the sharp strings.
“Klauen, you can’t challenge Heike,” Blair reasoned in a rare moment of cold rationale. Klauen was usually the cautious one, the counterweight to Blair’s extraverted passion.
“I’ve become acting Great Mage,” he said flatly, harshly, though his anger was not directed at the lowlord. “Heike can’t hold the position as High Empress, and as the next legitimate heir, I have all the authority of the Realm. And I’m telling you that you’re not getting married to some Feuer woman.”
“Have you even met her?”
“I don’t care,” Klauen muttered, and his nails lacerated the back of his hand as he enclosed it in the other. “I need you more than she does.”
Blair smiled at that, leaning into the highlord. He glanced over the edge of the eave, and shifted back a few inches. “I still don’t understand your fascination with heights,” he muttered, and Klauen almost snickered, but the humour faded quickly in the silence.
“The Wasserste commander fled,” Klauen reported heavily. “Heike has sent out men to find him, and to collect his sister. She thinks Melior sent her to their home. She wants to control everything.”
His tone was bitter. Blair didn’t particularly care for the fate of the Wasserste heirs. Heike always seemed to get her way; it was only a matter of time before they dragged Tylion Wasserste from wherever he was hiding and set him up as her next figurehead. Just as she had done with Klauen.
The thought sent a pang of anger and sadness through the lowlord. “Fuck Heike,” Blair said, and Klauen glanced at him, a smile tugging at his lips. Blair sucked in a lungful of air, wrapping fingers tightly around the edge of the rooftop until they turned white. “FUCK HEIKE!” he screamed to the spires of the Ether palace, and Klauen leapt at him in a panic, tackling him back onto the tiles.
“Blair!” he shouted, one hand flat against the pane of his shoulder beside his neck, the other at Blair’s ear, holding him above the lying lowlord. Blair was grinning wildly, and he reached up, seizing the collar of Klauen’s shirt, tugging him down to kiss.
The muscles of Klauen’s back rolled as he caved down, and Blair ran revelling fingertips over it before the highlord relaxed into the kiss, settling his weight atop the lowlord. He pulled back, his gaze obscured from the other man’s view.
“You can’t do things like that,” he murmured into Blair’s throat, his forehead lightly brushing lips. “We aren’t kids anymore, Blair, we can’t–”
“Who says we’re not?” Blair teased, nipping at Klauen’s earlobe. “If we wanna live like we did when we were kids, we can. If we wanna kiss like we did when we were fourteen, we can. If we wanna fuck like we did when we were sixteen, we can.” At Klauen’s sharp inhale, his grin broadened. “We can do whatever the fuck we want. And fuck Heike. Fuck the consequences.”
Klauen’s fingers were still around his shoulder, the tremors fading from the digits. “I don’t want you to get hurt.”
“It’s not your fault if I get hurt,” Blair pledged. His fingers laced through Klauen’s hair, raising his gaze to meet the lowlord’s. “It’s not your fault, Klauen. I can take care of myself. I know this is dangerous, and I know I’m fucking done with heights–” Klauen snorted, glancing aside with mirth in his gaze. “–but I can deal with it, alright? I’m not leaving you. And if you don’t want me to marry this Feuer lowlady, then I won’t. You can annul it.”
They lay on the rooftop for almost an hour, until the heat became unbearable, and Blair scrambled away from the ledge with a speed that was dizzying. Klauen followed after him, his fingers clenched in the material of the lowlord’s shirt as if the only thing that could separate them was death itself.












