A Little More Than Duty
Relationship(s): Dain Aetos/female!Riorson!reader
Summary: After you miss morning formation, your squad leader Dain sets out to reprimand you, but as it turns out, you're actually sick — and cuter than any rider has a right to be.
Warnings: Some awkwardness and Dain being sus of the marked ones, reader is implied to be rather girly. Set during Fourth Wing.
My first ever Dain fic, written for @empyreanevents's Dain Week Day 3: Leadership.
AO3
As Dain marches to your room on the first-year's floor, he's already planning the lecture he'll give you for missing morning formation. If you think you can get away with slacking just because your brother is the wingleader, you're sorely mistaken. And if you're not in your room, if you're skipping formation not out of laziness but because you're up to something, then Dain is determined to find out what it is. He's sick and tired of the secrets everyone seems to have around here.
He gives only a perfunctory knock and opens your door without waiting for a reply, too pissed off to care about manners.
All thoughts of berating you disappear at the sight that greets him, however. A glance is all it takes to tell you're unwell — buried under a heap of blankets, your complexion is wan, the eyes that flutter open at his entrance glassy with fever. Used tissues are strewn around the bed.
Dain immediately feels bad for having assumed you skipped formation on purpose. Aside from the relic on your arm marking you as a traitor's child, you've given him no reason to think badly of you. You're always punctual, good about following the rules, and unlike some people in his squad, you never interrupt him or give him the feeling of not being taken seriously when he's giving orders.
You should have reported in sick when you realized you wouldn't be able to attend class today, but Dain can't really blame you for failing to do so. Your arms tremble with effort as you struggle into a sitting position at the sight of him, and the cough that shakes your body doesn't sound good at all. If you tried to get out of bed, you would probably collapse on the spot.
Dain stands awkwardly in the doorway, grasping for something to say. He'd been so caught up in his suspicions that he hadn't planned for the possibility of finding you sick.
"You missed formation," he finally says. The statement comes out flat, but to Dain's ears, it still sounds accusing somehow. Quickly, he adds, "I just wanted to know why. I'll note you down as sick."
You just nod, bleary-eyed and barely awake.
Dain isn't sure you actually comprehended a single word of what he said. It feels strangely intimate to see you so vulnerable, and he can't help but think he's probably one of the last people you'd want to have around while you're in this state.
He should go, maybe tell one of your friends to check in on you when he sees them. It wouldn't be right to leave without making sure you'll be okay on your own in the meantime, though.
A step forward brings him fully into your room, the door creaking shut behind him.
He looks around, feeling like an intruder. The dorms in the quadrant all look pretty much the same, the only real difference being that some have windows and others don't, but in the few months since Threshing, you've made the space your own in a way Dain never thought to do with his own.
You have a window looking out over the ravine, and wooden butterflies of various colors and sizes decorate the curtain rod above it. A bundle of dried lavender sticks out of an empty glass bottle on top of the dresser, sharing the space with neatly lined up daggers and a black stone covered in decorative runes. Above the bed, a few simple but colorful drawings are pinned to the wall. Dain wonders if you made them yourself or received them from a friend.
A rattling cough draws his attention back to you.
Sitting up with a pillow at your back, your blankets — Dain counts at least three — have pooled in your lap, and he can see that the shirt you're wearing is much too big on you, clearly having come from someone else's wardrobe. An uncalled-for surge of jealousy washes over Dain as he contemplates whose it might be. Do you have a partner he doesn't know about? Then his eye catches on the wingleader emblem, and he feels incredibly stupid. Of course it's your brother's. From what he's seen, Riorson and Durran are much too overprotective of you to let you go out with anyone. It wouldn't surprise Dain at all if they secretly disposed of anyone who so much as hints at being interested in you.
It's on the tip of his tongue to point out that you shouldn't wear clothes displaying a rank you don't have, but he stops himself. You're sick and using the shirt as a pajama, not wearing it out and about. Who is he to berate you for that? Squad leader or not, it's none of his business what you wear in private.
Besides, he's still not sure how bad your fever is, whether you're even lucid enough to hold a conversation.
He thinks about feeling your temperature, but immediately dismisses the idea. His signet is supposed to be a secret, but Dain is pretty sure your brother knows what it is, and he doesn't want Riorson to get the wrong idea if you tell him about this encounter. And Dain is curious; if he touched you, he might dive into your memories without even meaning to. He might learn something about what the older marked ones are hiding that way (and he's sure they're hiding something), but it's not worth the risk. Better to keep his hands to himself than to lose them.
"Do you want to go to the healers?" he asks instead.
In Dain's opinion, you definitely should, but you shake your head. Maybe you don't think you need a healer, or you feel too weak to get up even if he helps you, or maybe you don't trust him enough to let him take you to the infirmary. Dain doesn't know, because you still don't say anything.
"Is there anything I can get you? Medicine? More tissues?"
Dain tries to tell himself he's only asking because it's part of his leadership duties to make sure the members of his squad are at their best, but deep down, he knows that's not true. He's worried about you because, against his better judgement, he's drawn to you.
When you were placed in his squad, Dain had expected you to be a little Xaden-clone who would make his life difficult on purpose. And you do make it difficult, just not in the way he'd thought. Everything about you intrigues him. You're reserved, eloquent, and skilled in combat just like your brother, but also entirely unlike him — friendly and polite where he is broody, humble where he is cocky; brave, yet softer than anyone else Dain has met in the Quadrant. Your bright smiles are reserved for a select handful of people only, Dain decidedly not among them, but he gets butterflies at the sight every time nonetheless. He can't get you out of his head, and it's driving him insane.
"I'm fine," you reply. "But thanks."
Dain doesn't think you're fine — your voice is a rasp, the words coming out like someone dragged them over glass and clearly hurting your throat. He should get you some cough drops, at the very least. Would he be overstepping if he did that?
You perk up, seeming to think of something he can do for you after all. "Can you—" You cough again, and yeah, he's definitely getting you something to help with that, regardless of whether or not you ask him to. "Can you not tell Xay I'm sick, please?"
Dain blinks at the nickname. He wouldn't have thought Riorson the type to allow anyone to call him by a nickname, let alone something cute sounding like that, but then, he supposes that as his sister, you're privy to sides of him no one else — certainly not Dain — ever sees.
You seem to interpret his stunned silence as hesitation. Before he can decide whether he should point out that he and Xaden don't exactly speak to each other unless their leadership duties require it, you continue, "Please! He'd get all worried, and he really has enough to worry about as it is."
"Like Violet?"
The question slips out before he can think better of it. He knows it's not right to take advantage of your state to gain information, but despite Violet's claims that Xaden won't hurt her, Dain can't believe it. That man is plotting something, he's sure, and if his best friend is in danger, he wants to know. If you happen to reveal something in your feverish state that you otherwise wouldn't have said in answer to a harmless question, well, then that's not the same as if he went digging through your memories, is it?
No, he doesn't think so, but it still isn't nice. Despite his worries about Violet and how she's chained to Xaden thanks to their dragons, Dain is kind of relieved when you completely misunderstand his question.
"Mhm, I like her. She's totally badass. And sooo smart!"
"That's not what—" Dain shakes his head. No information gained, no harm done. "Nevermind."
"Huh?"
"Nothing. You should rest."
And he should get out of here before he can ask any more questions he doesn't really want you to answer.
Your face scrunches in confusion. "Yeah, that's why 'm in bed."
"Right." Dain clears his throat and inches back toward the door. "Of course. Then I'll just leave you b—"
"Wait!" You sit up as if to stop him, and a stuffed animal tumbles to the floor, dislodged from its place at your side by the sudden movement. "You didn't say if you'll tell Xa— Oh."
Realizing your stuffed animal fell down, you shift closer to the edge of the bed to pick it up. Your movements are slow and careful, as though you're dizzy or nauseous. Dain can barely stand to watch you, fearing you'll fall from the bed if you lean far enough over the edge to reach the stuffie.
"Lie down," he says, crossing the room with a few big steps, "I'll get it."
You sink back into the pillows with a frustrated sigh.
Dain can't tell if your dismay is aimed at your own helplessness or the fact that it's him helping you, but chooses to believe it's the former. Despite the mutual distrust between him and the marked ones, he never got the impression you dislike him.
Crouching beside the bed, he picks up your stuffed animal. It's a bunny, light brown and so worn you must have had and loved it for a long time. Not wanting to embarrass you, he keeps his thoughts about how recklessly impractical and cute it is that you brought it across the parapet and into the quadrant with you to himself. Wordlessly, he brushes off any dust that might have gotten on it from the floor, and hands it back to you.
You close your hand around its floppy ear with a mumbled thanks, and the bunny disappears between the folds of your many blankets.
Where did you even get all of those? The standard is one duvet and one wool blanket, and Dain doesn't think any of the professors would hand out extras — certainly nothing as pink and fluffy as the blanket that peeks out beneath the regular black one. He decides not to question it.
"I won't tell Xaden you're sick unless he directly asks me," he continues the conversation like nothing happened. "Which I doubt he will. But I can't guarantee he won't find out on his own."
You grimace. "Yeah, he always finds out when I try to hide something. But hopefully not 'till I'm better."
"Like I said, I won't tell him. I doubt he would approve of me being here."
To Dain's astonishment, you giggle. Once the coughing fit it triggers is over, you croak, "No, definitely not. He'd kill you if he walked in right now, no questions asked."
Dain, unable to share your amusement, reflexively glances at the door, as if the mere talk of the wingleader might summon him.
Gods, what is he even doing here? He should have left as soon as he saw you had a valid reason for missing formation, shouldn't have even set foot into the room. The fact that Riorson will likely kill Dain if he finds out he was alone with you in your room aside, he should be on his way to class, not chatting with a sick subordinate. Which reminds him—
"Do you have anyone who'll take notes for you in class?"
"Dunno. I'll figure it out when I feel better. Can't be that much I'll miss in a single day."
Dain shakes his head. He has no idea if you have the flu or just a common cold, but it doesn't take a healer to know you won't be getting over whatever it is in one day. Chances are you'll need to stay in bed for the rest of the week. If you show up to class still sick, Dain will drag you back to your room himself. No way will he let you spread your germs to everyone and get the whole squad sick.
"I'll ask one of the other first-years," he offers.
Probably Violet. Dain doesn't like how involved she's getting with the marked ones, but nothing he can do will change the fact that you two are slowly becoming friends, and her notes will certainly be the most comprehensible. His own friendship with Violet has been strained lately, thanks to his — apparently uncalled for — attempts of protecting her and the thing with Amber, but as her squad leader, she can't avoid him completely. She'll probably be happy enough to help, once she hears it's you she'll be doing a favor.
The fact that his lifelong best friend is suddenly closer with the children of the man who killed her brother than with him is depressing, so Dain turns his thoughts back to more practical matters.
Getting you cough drops and tissues is added to his mental to-do list, but will have to wait until he has time for it. He can bring you the things during lunch, along with something to eat. It's not like there's anyone else who might bring you food, if Dain is the only one aware that you're sick. In agreeing to keep it to himself, he's made himself responsible for taking care of you.
Noticing you don't have anything to drink in reach, Dain fetches you a bottle of water.
"I'll come check on you during lunchtime," he says as he hands it to you, "and I want this to be empty by then."
"Is that an order, squad leader?"
It's hard to tell with how raspy your voice is, but Dain is pretty sure you're teasing.
"Yes. Staying hydrated is especially important while you're sick." He might not be an expert, but he knows that much. "If you feel worse or need anything, just have your dragon tell Cath, okay?"
"Okay. Thank you."
All out of excuses to stay, Dain suggests you get some more sleep, and leaves, only realizing he's late for Battle Brief when he sees how empty the halls are.











