Title: countdown
Fandom: The Arcana
Pairing: Asra/MC
Rating: SFW
Words: 4,147
Summary: A countdown from beginning (end?) to the end (beginning)
Also on: AO3
Author’s Note: Remember that thing I said I was writing? Well here it is, 4,000+ words later. This was originally not meant to be longer than like 2,000 words but [shrug emoji]. Also there is a direct quote from the game in here. And please keep in mind a lot of this was just me pulling stuff out of my ass to fill in blanks.
x.
(This is how it ends starts.)
She stumbles into his life. Literally.
An offer to help right the rickety display she’s knocked over is on her lips before she’s even righted herself and the cacophonous roar of the crowd outside his booth falls away as she turns.
“I’m so sorry! Some princess arrived in the city today; between that and the Masquerade everyone is so excited they’re paying attention to hardly a thing else!” She stops rambling as she’s picking up one of the trinkets he’s made: “Ohh, this is pretty, did you make this! How much? The least I can do is buy something since I tried to wreck the place!”
Her smile cleaves open Asra’s chest, soothes that sudden violence by filling the space between his lungs and heart with sunlight, and creeping vines of blooming flowers wrap around the caging of his ribs. Something deep whispers that he’s already lost a battle Asra didn’t realize he was fighting; caught in the thundercloud color of her eyes.
Rosettes blush beneath the constellations he’s already started charting of her freckles. The realization that he’s been staring hits Asra hard as a smack across the face.
“Your name,” he blurts (too) loudly, awkwardly, sloppily. He takes a breath, tries again. “It’s yours for your name.”
“That’s an awfully steep asking price – names have power, you know.” There’s amusement lurking in the corners of her cheshire cat smile.
She’s not playing fair. It’s hard to catch his breath with how light his chest feels, suffocating on that sunshine she’s stuffed inside of him. “What do you think is a fair price, then?”
Asra spends the next year lingering on thoughts of her smile, the warmth of her breath on his cheek; the kiss she’d used as currency and the taste of his regret when he let her say goodbye without telling him her name.
ix.
A strange illness begins to spread through Vesuiva in the three years since Asra first meets Kaelle. Slowly at first, a handful of people here and there – Kaelle’s aunt is, sadly, one of the first to succumb. Her death brings Kaelle back to the city to settle her aunt’s affairs… and to sell the shop. She’s meeting with a potential buyer in the morning, she tells him, and then she’s heading ba c k... h o m e... t o…
Her words fade as the news clangs through Asra like a bell’s toll, reverberates along his bones almost painfully. The idea that Asra may never see her again is a poison in his veins.
“Why don’t you run the shop?”
She laughs in his face. “Me? Oh no, I don’t think so.”
“I’m serious, I’ll help you!”
“You just don’t want me to leave.”
Maybe Kaelle expects him to laugh off the playful accusation, but he can’t. He can’t because she doesn’t know, Asra’s never told her, hasn’t been brave enough because it was always enough to spend a few moments caught in her orbit. He’s never told Kaelle about the sunshine in his chest and flowers hanging on his ribs and the way he aches when she smiles at him.
“Yes,” Asra admits, and it feels like his heart tumbles from the tip of his tongue as he does.
Kaelle lets him walk her back to the shop, lets him kiss her at the front door when he asks – something to remember him by. It’s supposed to be gentle, the lingering brush of his lips against hers, barely there because he doesn’t trust himself, and it is, at first until Kaelle makes a soft sound in the back of her throat that destroys him.
And Asra kisses her again, stronger, tries to fill his lungs with the taste of her because if this, yesyesyes, if this is the last he has of her, thisthisthis is what he wants to remember. This is what he wants, always, until the ocean tides rise and wash everything away, until the stars burn out of the sky and the sun collapses on itself. He didn’t know it was possible to want something so desperately and they don’t have enough - hoursdaysyears - time.
He comes back to himself long enough to catch his breath. His fingers slide into her hair until he’s holding the back of her neck; the blush of her cheek is searing beneath the pad of his thumb.
“Invite me in,” he rasps into the air between them. “Please, Kaelle.”
She does. Into the shop where the boxes tell him that Kaelle’s been in the city for weeks before he chanced upon her in the tavern tonight (and that she hadn’t intended to say goodbye). Into her bed where Asra spends the hours learning the taste of her skin, and falling in love with the way she breathes and sighs his name. He doesn’t dare close his eyes for a moment, desperate to commit it perfectly to memory down to the stinging pain of Kaelle’s fingernails on his shoulder blades.
In the morning light Asra wakes, weary, heart heavy with a yawning hollow already forming in the pit of his stomach. Until he feels gentle fingers carding through his hair. He rolls, finds Kaelle already dressed and perched on the edge of the bed, her eyes shining.
“I told the buyer the shop’s not for sale.”
viii.
Asra’s a little surprised when he receives a summons to the palace, is even more surprised when Count Lucio asks demands his help. He’s fallen ill with the same sickness that’s been sweeping through the city for the past several years – The Red Plague they’re calling it because of the ghastly color that overtakes the whites of the victim’s eyes. People die everyday by the dozens now, and there’s no telling who it will take, there’s no discernible pattern to the disease’s spread. And no way so far to stem its deadly tide.
He’s seen the people suffering first hand, in the customers that come into Kaelle’s shop and beg for any relief she or Asra can offer. Word must have spread to Lucio about the draught she brews that ease the symptoms for a time, but must not know she’s actually the one who makes it otherwise she would be there as well.
The Count offers wealth and fame, a title even, anything Asra desires is within Lucio’s power to give.
But Asra thinks of the coliseum, hears the roar of a crowd calling for a kill so loudly it carries through the streets. He thinks of the district that flooded last week, how the displaced residents asked for aid from the palace and none ever came. He hears the carts rolling through the streets, the steady ring of the undertaker’s bell and calling -
Bring out your dead!
“No.” The thought of helping Lucio is enough to turn his stomach – let him suffer the way the people have suffered because before he had fallen ill, Lucio didn’t care about the devastation the plague wrought. “My magic isn’t for sale.”
He expects Lucio to throw a fit, but Asra is alarmingly surprised when the Count’s eyes, not yet that glaring red, light up with amusement. “Isn’t it? I thought that was the purpose of that tacky shop you have.”
The casual mention of the shop is enough to freeze Asra’s blood because it’s too close too close to Kaelle. And something must shift just enough in his expression, or the way he holds himself because a feral grin splits Lucio’s face – he’s scented Asra’s blood in the water. There’s something there that Lucio can leverage against him, he just doesn’t know what it is.
“I should have made my meaning clearer,” Asra says despite the panic clawing its way up his spine, “my magic isn’t for sale to you.”
Asra turns sharply on his heel despite not being formally dismissed and the guards stop him in the doorway. “Mark my words, magician, you will help me, eventually.”
Asra never did like the way Lucio said it.
vii.
A city-wide call goes out.
The Count and Countess are opening the palace doors and making available their near limitless resources to anyone willing to devote their minds and skills to curing the Red Plague. To whoever cures the plague goes wealth, renown, and the unending gratitude of all Vesuvia.
Kaelle finds Asra in the middle of furiously packing. “Asra, what in the world are you doing?”
“We’re leaving, getting as far away from Vesuvia as we can,” he tells her. “Somewhere we’ll be safe.”
“I’m not going anywhere, and I don’t think you should either.”
The conversation devolves quickly into an argument. Kaelle wants to help find a cure for the plague, to help the people suffering and dying. She won’t listen to Asra telling her that it’s a farce, Lucio doesn’t care about the people, if anyone finds a cure it may never even make it to those who so desperately need it. It may be a farce, she argues, but if she helps then she knows the cure will make it to the people even if she has to personally see to it.
And he hateshateshates how calm she is in the face of his distress.
“What if you get sick trying to find the cure!?” Asra shouts, though it comes out choked with emotion. He blinks and the whites of her eyes are red, her lips cracked and pale. Blinks again and the vision’s gone but his stomach turns over itself, the floor sways beneath his feet.
“People risk their lives everyday, and for much less than a plague cure,” she replies. Only Kaelle would find nobility in such an agonizing death. “This is bigger than you or me, Asra.”
It is, but Asra can’t admit how terrified he is, can’t swallow down the acrid taste of it in the back of his throat. He doesn’t want to leave without her, but he can’t stay – it’s tearing him a p a r t.
Three steps out the back door Asra wants to turn around, but he doesn’t.
vi.
The desert is lovely, bright, and vast. When the sun is at its highest Asra can see for miles in every direction until the heat warps the distant horizon. At night the moon soothes and comforts what the day scorched and he counts the stars until sleep overtakes him. It would be peaceful, beautiful, but even out here he can see the distant red clouds over Vesuvia, the towering plumes of smoke from the Lazaret and the furnaces that burn all day and night and reach up, up, up, like a skeletal hand trying to pull the sky down, down, down.
Letters from Kaelle find their way to him at their desert sanctuary, though he’s not surprised – he hadn’t exactly made it a secret where he was going. The letters arrive once a week and they ease his heart at least a little, though the days in between he’s a tangled knot of anxiety and agony.
She tells him how she is (still healthy and proud of the work she’s doing); about the doctor she’s working under (Dr. Devorak); how the city smells of smoke constantly (from the crematorium); that this winter’s snow was black (polluted by soot and ash); and that she checks on Muriel frequently (I still don’t think he likes me very much).
After a few weeks the letters stop asking Asra to come home, but she finishes each one the same:
I love you.
My heart misses yours.
I’ll see you soon.
In his letters Asra tells her that he spends his time doing little jobs for the nearby village, patching a roof here, healing someone there (I helped deliver a baby, can you believe it?); how he was invited to their annual festival (I wish I could have danced with you); and keeps her updated on the status of her beloved succulents (still alive and thriving).
He does not stop asking her to leave the city to join him and ends all of his letters the same:
I love, love, love you.
I miss you terribly.
Keep yourself safe.
It happens during one of the days between letters. He startles awake, his body so overwhelming hot all over that he twists and vomits over the side of the bed. There’s a cloying sickly-sweet smell permeating the air that he recognizes as the scent of dead and dying things. All he can taste is blood between his teeth and every struggling inhale burns like he’s swallowed hot coals. Something is... deeply, deeply wrong.
I’m… sorry, Asra.
He summons a ball of light and looks around only to find every one of Kaelle’s succulents, thriving only hours ago, has withered and died.
v.
The shop is dark and cold when Asra returns. It is also immaculately clean and there’s a letter sitting on the counter with his name on it.
My Dear Asra,
If you’re reading this then it means you’ve come home and I cannot tell you how happy that makes me, unfortunately, I’m not there to welcome you back and for that I’m sorry. I began suspecting I was sick the day I sent my last letter and began writing this one; after I finish it and clean the shop I’m taking myself to the Lazaret – I can’t bear the thought of getting anyone else sick.
I want you to have the shop, it was always more yours than mine anyway since you’re the one who wanted me to run it in the first place. But I have a request to make of you – the last request of a dying woman – find Julian… Dr. Devorak and help him. Something is terribly wrong in Vesuvia, and I don’t believe it’s entirely because of the plague. And please, try not to hate Julian, he’s a good man and I didn’t tell him I wasn’t feeling well. He’s going to torture himself enough as it is when he finds out.
I’m sorry, Asra, that I’m leaving you but I don’t regret staying even now.
I love you so very dearly. Everything I am will burn to ash save for that and if that love is all I’ve left behind… I think I’ll be alright with that. Don’t let me haunt you, I don’t want to be a ghost of regret that you carry in the dark corners of your soul.
I love, love, love you.
I will wait for you in the next life.
Kaelle
Asra only knows the blackened bones he finds are Kaelle’s because he can still feel the last vestiges of her magic desperately clinging to the marrow. The sun that she’d lit in his chest all those years ago goes supernova, collapses on itself and leaves nothing but a heavy, endless black that settles like silt in the bottom of his lungs and kicks up with every gasping, wailing breath. The flowers that she’d woven around his ribs wilt and wither and die, rot away to compost at the base of his spine.
He’s certain that he shatters, sharp, glittering edges catching in the light. He wants to bury her twofoursix feet deeper, crawl into that grave and make it theirs and when, a thousand years from now, someone digs them up will find his bones wrapped around hers and think he must have loved her like a tragedy because they knew nothing of the before; but his heart refuses to stop beat-beat-beating behind the prison of his breastbone.
Instead he picks up his pieces and puts them back together wrong.
(It will take Asra years more to understand that breaking and being broken are not the same thing.)
iv.
There’s a spellbook in the shop that Asra has never opened, one that had belonged to Kaelle’s aunt and lives in a locked, protected cabinet. Kaelle never told him how her aunt came to be in possession of it, and truthfully she may not have even known.
What Asra does know is that the book is unlike any he has ever seen before and that the spells, the rituals, are powerful. He has only seen Kaelle use the book twice in the years he’s known her and each time after working the spell, she slept for two days.
If Kaelle were alive here, he knows exactly what she would say to see him unlocking the cabinet.
(Don’t let me haunt you, her letter had said. But how can he not when the silence of the shop echoes with her absence, when the air is still perfumed with the scent of her hair and he turns toward every shifting shadow in the vain hope that it will be her.)
But Kaelle is dead not here, and Asra is just desperate enough.
It takes surprisingly little to convince Lucio of the ritual – a not entirely untrue lie about only helping the Count to help himself. Lucio never suspects Asra’s duplicity because he believes that everyone is just as self-centered and self-serving as he is.
iii.
He wishes, deeply, that Kaelle had been wrong about Julian… Ilya. He is a good man, ridiculous, dramatic, flamboyant but good and maybe that’s why Asra finds it so difficult to truly hate the man the way he wants.
Ilya talks about her sometimes, his brilliant apprentice, because he doesn’t know what she was to Asra, doesn’t know they even knew one another. He can never make himself stay and listen. He doesn’t want to share her memory with anyone, and Ilya remembers her wrong. So Asra leaves Ilya to his pacing, goes to the tree where he carved her name – to remember why he’s come to the palace in the first place. He closes his eyes and pretends the wind rustling the leaves is Kaelle’s whisper in his ear, the breeze through his hair is her gentle fingers.
But Ilya is too curious for his own good, asks too many questions and yearns. It’s easy enough to distract him.
Ilya tastes like desperation, like the last swig of whiskey in the bottom of a glass, all burn and none of the warmth. Asra wants him to realize it’s a mistake to want him, that there’s something inside of him that rose from the graveyard in his chest with cracked skin and a snarling voice that cannotcannotcannot give Ilya what he wants. But he takes everything Asra gives him and still asks for more!yes!harder! until Asra’s heart-sick, grieving pain is bruised, scratched, and bitten into Ilya’s skin.
The next morning Asra heals the marks, hands softer, gentler than the night before – he ignores the warmth in Ilya’s eyes, the hope in the corner of his smile. In another life Asra could have loved Ilya the way he wants…
… but not this one.
ii.
The voice comes from everywhere and nowhere all at once. He hears it in his head, feels it in his bones, in the goosebumps that rise on his arms. There’s someone – something, moving around him, assessing.
What will you give me, I wonder? Is there even a price you won’t pay?
“Anything.” Everything, he doesn’t say.
… That’s an awfully dangerous offer. You have no idea what I could demand as payment.
He’s willing to pay any price. Pleasepleaseplease. Take the breath in his lungs, the blood in his veins –
The beat of your heart? Now there’s an idea… Are you certain?
“Anything,” Asra repeats, steady. Certain.
As you wish. Asra blinks, feels the weight of a dagger in his hand. The blade is as long as his hand and wickedly sharp. A heart willingly given, for a soul returned.
“You can’t just take it?” he asks.
That’s not how it works. It’s a bargain, both parties must be willing.
“… Will I feel it?” he wonders. Because they are somewhere between real and not, neither here nor there.
It will be the most painful thing you have ever experienced.
“I doubt that.”
But Asra is wrong. So very, very wrong – it’s simply a different kind of pain. At the first bite of the dagger’s blade against his chest, Asra sucks in his breath against the sharp pain. The warmth of his blood blooms through his shirt, runs in rivulets down his skin, to the waist of his pants. There’s sweat at his hairline, his knees thump to the ground; he nearly loses his grip on the dagger.
Someone is screaming, it rackets around Asra’s skull and down his spine.
He can’t get the blade past his breastbone, falls forward into his hands, panting, slip-sliding in the pool of his blood so thick he can see his wrecked reflection.
Somewhere, the voice sighs and there’s the phantom sensation of a comforting hand on his shoulder, soothing down his back. It’s alright, that’s enough now.
No!
Asra rears up onto his knees, grips the hilt with both hands and lets loose a scream that tastes like copper as he uses all his strength to force the blade past his breast until it gives with an alarming crack! He can’t see through the tears in his eyes and the way his vision is beginning to tunnel. But he starts to carve with jerky, imprecise movements.
He half expects the thing he pulls out of his chest to be withered and black, but it’s warm and dripping red, fluttering like a baby bird in the palm of his hand.
The bargain is struck.
i.
Asra wakes abruptly as if from a nightmare, gasping, sweat cooling on his brow. He’s in the shop, but he can’t remember how he got here from the palace – wasn’t he just in Lucio’s private dining room?
As he swings his legs over the side of the bed a sudden, lancing pain in his chest stops him with a groan. It’s sharp and white, almost blinding in its intensity and steals his breath. He feels heartbeat beneath his palm, but it stutters, skips like a stone over water.
A crash from downstairs startles Asra to his feet, and there’s another once he reaches the bottom of the stairs.
When he pulls back the curtain to the backroom, Asra stops in his tracks.
“… Kaelle?”
He’s not thinking as he crosses the room in three strides, drops to where she’s crowded into the corner and pulls her to him. His eyes are burning as he tucks his face into the crook of her neck, breathes in the scent of her skin – feels her heart beatingbeatingbeating against his. Asra never wants to let Kaelle go, he wants to climb inside of her, live inside her skin and make a home out of her bones, fuse his soul to hers.
And for one beautiful, blissful moment Asra is the happiest he has ever been. The sun in begins to rise in his chest, blushing sunrise colors fill his veins and coax those long dead flowering vines back to life around his ribs.
He pulls back, confused, when she doesn’t return the embrace – the look on her face is afraid and there are tears threatening to spill over her cheeks. A low, keening moan sounds from the back of her throat.
“Kaelle? It’s alright, you’re home.”
She doesn’t seem to understand him, doesn’t seem to be able to do much of anything, and then –
The bargain is struck.
Asra remembers why his heart is skipping, why it feels like he was stabbed in the chest. Be cause he was, because he had carved out his heart to bring Kaelle back to him. He looks at her more closely now and sees nothing of the Kaelle he knew. There are no scars, no blemishes, none of the imperfections he had known so well. But it is her, it feels like her so why –
A heart willingly given, for a soul returned.
… Only her soul had returned. Not her memories.
Asra pushes himself to his feet, backs away from Kaelle, out of the back room and into the shop proper. His thoughts begin to spiral just as she begins to wail – a high, distressed sound – asking for help in the only way she knows how right now. This wasn’t supposed to happen. She was supposed to return to him alive and whole – why hadn’t it worked?
Dismally, it occurs to Asra that he should have offered more. He should have carved his whole heart out of his chest, reached beyond that and tore his very soul out of himself.
But it’s too late now. So Asra takes a calming breath, wipes the wetness from his lashes and returns to where Kaelle is hiccuping and sobbing in the corner. She stops when she notices he’s come back, but still curls into herself tighter when he crouches in front of her.
“My name is Asra, I’m going to help you, Kaelle.”
(This is how it ends starts.)
Thanks for reading, I know it was long! Reblogs are welcome!
Kaelle - Darkening skies and howling wind, forest floors blanketed in autumn leaves, record players constantly on your favourite song, old diners and the softest ice-cream you’ve ever had, tied flannel shirts and ripped denim shorts, jewelry boxes full of forgotten love letters, the soft babble of brooks and streams, flickering fairy lights on the back porch.
Ahhhh... finally managed to start the Asra/Apprentice thing I was trying to write. It’s going to take place before the start of the game so it’s gonna be... pretty angsty. Have a look...
“You've been awfully quiet,” Asra says, reaching to brush his fingers against hers. “What are you thinking about?”
If he’s startled her, Kaelle doesn't show it, but her grey eyes dart up from where she's been absently stirring her untouched soup to cold, blinking at him as though she's just remembered he's there. Kaelle draws in a breath to answer him, but when she opens her mouth nothing comes out except a few stilted, half-formed sounds, like she doesn't know where to start.
Dread knots itself in his stomach, makes his heart suddenly beat in a panicked cadence against his ribs, though he's careful to not to let it show on his face. Kaelle is rarely at a loss for words which is why he knows that whatever she has to say is not going to be pleasant. But still, Asra links his fingers with hers as a silent encouragement to continue and a gentle reminder that he's there no matter what.
Kaelle's gaze drifts to their linked fingers, her mouth turning down in the corners at the sight and Asra knows that despite his best effort that she's felt his distress by the guilty way she looks back up at him. This time when she takes a breath to speak, Kaelle squares herself, tightens her hold on his hand and with no preamble tells him, “I'm going to the Lazaret.”
Some wip i'm making for my facebook page , those are others oc's or themselves ( and friends of mine ) I would love to do the same here if someone want ... But after this one I 've got kinda lots of people there ...
An Archive of Our Own, a project of the
Organization for Transformative Works
It had been a week since Kaeya had visited the area that was popular among the now absent boars. Eula’s reconnaissance company and Amber’s tracking skills hadn’t found anything unusual about the area that wasn’t unusual about the rest of the canyon. Kaeya hadn’t found anything either, but “hunting” wasn’t his specialty in the same way it was theirs. Yet maybe a more desperate eye would let him discern something new.
The air wasn’t as thick as it was at the start of this “curse”, as it was now called in concerned discussions within the city. The Knights neither confirmed or denied this description, which only added fuel to the smoldering fear. Kaeya wanted it to be a curse, something they could heal with a task or object, but the alchemists were sure this event was caused by someone.
Kaeya kicked a few rocks at the edges of the clearing. Maybe I’ll find another bottle. Acting on the assumption that there’d be another was his only lead in finding a trail. It was a calling sign left by a serial criminal. The pond in Springvale didn’t have a bottle like the original pond in Brightcrown did, but it also took the knights longer to find the new pond. Meaning someone could have easily taken it before he got a chance.
Only Noelle had been there before him. He had found her alone by the water, to both their surprise, and immediately escorted her away. If someone had followed either of them, then in the period he was gone, they could have found and removed the bottle.
There was a windless rustle among the leaves behind him, too noisy to be from a left behind animal. Kaeya shifted his weight and rested a hand on his sword. The rustling slowed and moved away from him, but it should have moved faster.
In a moment, a jagged ice prison was created. Kaeya looked inside the prison and found a very cold witch.
“Miss Mona Megistus, how can I help you?”
Mona’s legs were ice, having still been liquid when her trapped her, but she held her arms tight as she shivered. “If I have to answer that, then maybe he is right about the knights being useless,” she retorted through clattering teeth.
“Melting isn’t my specialty,” Kaeya said. “This area’s been off limits for over a month, so what are you doing here?”
“My job.” The witch glared at him. Part of Kaeya wanted to interrogate her until she thawed out, but he felt no unreasonable animosity from her. He took a potion from his pouch and poured it over her legs.
“Two things are going to happen. One: You will tell me everything you know. Two: We’ll go visit your employer together. The order in which those happen is not of much concern, but if they don’t happen,” Kaeya paused, shaking out the last few drops of the potion, “Mondstadt will become a very inhospitable place for you.”
Since the death in Springvale three days prior, Kaeya had avoided Angel’s Share, but to get the information he needed, the was no way could avoid the winery. Mona walked ahead of him, a surprising show of trust given what happened a short while ago. When they arrived at Dawn Winery, the witch entered the manor with the confidence of someone who had been there dozens of times, swiftly exchanging pleasantries with the staff before opening the door to Diluc’s office.
There was a glint of warmth in the sitting merchant’s eyes before he noticed Kaeya behind Mona. The smell of burnt paper and wood filled the room as Diluc slammed his hands on his desk. Heat visibly swirled around him.
“I thought the Knights of Favonius had the situation under control,” Diluc began, “I believed you when you said so.”
“Now Diluc,” Kaeya said stepping past Mona, “there’s uninvolved people in this room. If you’d like we can go somewhere else where –”
“I won’t go anywhere with you.” Diluc glanced past Kaeya with a searching look, and when he received it, he shifted his eyes back to the knight. “You only come when you want something.”
Kaeya used his vision to cool the room. “A few things actually, but I’ll start with cooperation. I’m asking you to share any information you have.”
“So the knights can do more of nothing? Absolutely not.”
“It’d actually be helpful,” Mona interjected, “Even though I’m an astrologist of renown, there are still aspects of the abyss that I struggle with. If I were able to combine my findings with the Favonius alchemists, both our groups would make progress.”
Kaeya’s breath hitched. “You know it’s the abyss? Diluc, that changes things. If you know, they know.”
Diluc shook his head and began dusting the ashes of his papers into a bin. “Without a Harbinger, most of the Fatui are just powerful idiots. And stop trying to freeze us.”
“If only someone hadn’t attempted to set the building on fire. . .”
“Ahem,” Mona cut in again, “Is it possible at some, or even one of the non-idiots could cause this ‘curse’?”
“It’s not a curse,” Kaeya said, “it’s a type of liquified and condensed abyssal energy. Even without a Harbinger, anyone could follow the simple instruction of ‘pour’.”
Mona quirked an eyebrow. “Liquified and condensed abyssal energy? That might explain the ‘curse’, but not the hilichurl and animal disappearances. After analyzing the past stars, I can say that those started far before the ponds.”
“You’re a better scout than I thought if you know about those.”
“Did you think I’d hire someone incompetent?” Diluc said.
“Oh, why does everything have to be about you?” Kaeya countered. The two were on the verge of another argument when Mona moved between them, thrusting out her arms. The entire room filled with images of beautiful constellations, though ones poised to attack.
“Can we please stay on task!” She glared at them like their tutor used to, and Kaeya struggled to keep a corner of his mouth from lifting up. Mona straightened, and the room returned to normal. “I believe the disappearances are connected but not a result of the ‘curse’. The animals remain present in Springvale, yes?”
Kaeya nodded. “Not as many, but they’re still there. Still, the question is why Brightcrown?”
“Outside of Knights and Adventurers,” Diluc said, “there’s no people. No villages or hamlets, just animals and monsters. A perfect place to hide.”
He was a knight once, thought Kaeya. He brought his hand to his chin. “That’s comforting. Now we can adjust our efforts and –”
BOOM! Mona jumped, but Kaeya simply cocked his head in Diluc’s direction. “Comforting? Someone died, Kaeya,”
“I know. I saw the body. I’m the one who’s been investigating since the first day.” Kaeya worked to keep his cool, but it was the knights that were putting their bodies, their minds¸ on the line.”
“Then it’s your failure,” Diluc said unconceding, “Besides, what more can the knights do to stop this? Throw another ball and consort with the enemy? Turned out fine for you last time.”
In three quick steps, before even Kaeya registered what he was doing, his fist connected with Diluc’s face. Diluc fell against a wall, wide eyes quickly angling as he touched his face.
“How low your anger has made you, Diluc,” Kaeya said. His fist still balled, shaking with the need to lash out again. “Even you entertain a drink or two with distasteful sorts if it suits your aims.”
The man on the floor sunk his head, stood for a moment, then returned to his desk. Mona’s eyes darted between the two, obvious unsurety keeping her from speaking. The grating of Diluc’s chair against the hardwood broke the silence.
Mona focused on Kaeya. “Captain Kaeya, if it’s possible I’d like to meet with Sir Albedo and Miss Sucrose.”
“Of course. And if you discover anything else,” Kaeya said, “don’t be afraid to pass it along.” Kaeya didn’t wait to receive a red eyed glare as he left the office. He did his best to say his goodbyes to the staff amicably, but it evident their argument had been well paid attention to. It didn’t matter to him though, after all his brother was right. Former brother. His only family left. Hopefully. Hopefully.
Kaeya touched his eyepatch lightly, like one would a pot on a stove. Of course, if it was hot, it would have already burned his face. A scar for the outside, to match the ones inside. The thought made Kaeya chuckle aloud and alone in the path on the way back to Mondstadt, and before he realized he was on his knees, curled over in an uncontrollable fit of laughter.
Despite needing to return back to headquarters, Kaeya avoided the building. He needed a few moments of calm, but he wanted to avoid the stables. He stalked all the way up to the cathedral courtyard and stood at the railing so he could overlook the city. It didn’t take him long to spot the familiar maid’s dress. Even though she tried to hide, her distinct armored dress always made her stand out. Kaeya would have smiled if he hadn’t seen who she was with.
Noelle stood with the Fatui man a little aways from the door to Goth Grand Hotel. The duo looked deep in a conspiracy from the way they checked over their shoulders.
She’s allowed her friends. He thought. If it were a knight or a citizen, there’d be less of an issue, but he was the one who said to support her decisions. The duo moved closer to another, and Kaeya clenched his jaw. When she smiled at the other man, Kaeya had to stop himself from gliding down and interrupting them. But that action would only make things worse between them.
He was sure Noelle resented him now. Since that day in Springvale, Kaeya hadn’t been able keep his promise to work the stables with her and the few times they’d crossed paths, she avoided him. Occasionally, Kaeya would peek into the infirmary during her shift and as she attended to the patients, hiding just out of sight in the shadows where he belonged.
Bit by bit, he lost those he cared about. One day, maybe I’ll lose myself. The nightmarish image of a blazing Mondstadt overlayed the city before him and he gritted his teeth. “No, I refute that ending.”
“What ending?”
The question was asked by a clear melodic voice, like chimes on wind.
“Venti.”
The traveling bard sat on the stone railing and strummed his lyre. His clear green eyes seemed to bore into Kaeya. “It’d be terrible if this story were to end so soon. It’s sure to be my most popular song yet.”
“What song?” Kaeya crossed his arms, ready to appease his sometimes-drinking buddy’s current whim.
“One of a hard-working knight and a sad princess,” Venti strummed his lyre again and looked towards Noelle. “I’m desperate for it to have a happy ending, ya’know for Windblume next year, but I can make a tragedy work.”
His tone was gentle, but the warning was clear. They both watched Noelle until her conversation finished and she began to walk in the direction of Favonius headquarters. Her Fatui friend watched her until she disappeared behind a building as well.
Then he swiveled his head to where the two observers were perched. Kaeya fought the urge to flinch, and he could sense the other man’s glare from behind his mask. The Fatui slightly bowed to them before going inside the hotel.
Through clenched teeth, Kaeya spoke. “Venti, could you keep your ear to the ground for me?”
The bard dryly chuckled. “You know my price.”
In his office, Kaeya leaned back, closing his eyes in a surface level attempt at rest. He had no intention, nor belief, that he’d get any now that he’d have to thoroughly scour Brightcrown for any evidence. He still hadn’t received news from Lisa’s contacts in Sumeru about the origin of the bottle. The sketch Albedo made was incredibly accurate, so maybe the scholars were as stumped as he was.
On his desk was the response from the perfumier he wrote to in Liyue, but they didn’t recognize the bottle in the sketch either. Always questions, never answers. There was a knocking on his door.
“Come in,” he said arranging himself. He was surprised to see icy blue hair enter with a letter in her hand. “Eula.”
“Kaeya.” Her normal tone never held warmth, but the way she said his name was concerning. “The Fatui have contacted us about the ‘curse’. Apparently, their members have been getting sick about as long as our knights.”
“And why are they asking about it now?”
Eula shook her head and gave him the paper. “They aren’t asking anything, they’re demanding answers we don’t have. Not to mention their members have been disappearing more than usual.”
He finished scanning the letter. It was full of demands and accusations, par the course for Mond’s favorite guests. “I’ll pen a response, but there isn’t anything we can do about this.”
“Then what about Noelle and her ‘friend’? We can do something about that.”
“We said we’d trust her.”
“You said that. Her friendship is a liability.” Eula was rarely calm, but was able to have her worst moods quell by two people, neither of which were here now.
“This conversation has already played out. If there’s nothing else,” Kaeya motioned to the door, which only infuriated Eula more. She slammed her hands on his desk.
“I think you’ve been blinded. Ever since the ball, you’ve been softer on her.”
“First, no need to be rude,” Kaeya said, “Second, Noelle is our trusted maid and friend, so if being softer helps her, then that’s what we should do.”
She glared at him, but then straightened. “Then all your venturing into the Brightcrown has made you sick. There’s one more thing. One of their squad leaders has been missing since the ball.”
Kaeya’s eyebrows shot up. “What happened?”
“Don’t avoid this, Kaeya, we know you had something to do with that night. Chunks of ice were found on the balcony. You’re the type whose disappearance goes noticed,” Eula said.
The Calvary Captain exhaled a heavy breath. “You don’t believe me when I tell the truth, so why should I expect you to do so when I lie.”
“Why did you fight him?”
Noelle’s tearful face surfaced clear in his memory as if she stood in front of him. He clenched and unclenched his fist. “I can’t tell you, so at least accept that I had good reason to harm that man. To my regret, I did leave him alive.”
“To your regret? Ugh,” Eula pushed her hair out of her eyes, “Well, now you’re the person they blame.”
“I went to the bar after I left. Ask the owner.”
Eula sighed. “Even if you didn’t kidnap him, you still fought him and the Fatui want answers. He’s some Snezhnayan heir.”
“Not answers, Eula, they want punishment,” Kaeya said as he curled the fist in his lap. “We don’t have time to deal with this, but if they’d like, I’ll gladly speak to each and every last one of them. One on one or all at once, it doesn’t matter. Maybe then this ordeal will end.”
Eula’s gaze was cold, but not confrontational as it normally was. “Hearing you speak your true feelings is rare and couldn’t have come at a worse time.”