Prompt 8: Tepid
The very first time he ever stepped into that room, Esredes was just a little bit happy to be there. He had even dressed in a red sweater instead of his more common outfits to accommodate the cozy tone the social club was surely going to take on.
And for a couple meetings, it was as he expected. People he knew and people he didn't know gathered on couches to discuss an unconventional, but shared subject, and Esredes was able to let off some of his usual weight and relax.
Yes, the premise for this club to even exist was stupid, and Esredes had thought that from the very beginning. It was just Elouan being cute and having another one of his naive ideas, how harmless, right? He didn't have the heart to tell his freckled puppy turned into a human of a close friend that it was a stupid idea.
And then all of a sudden, it actually existed.
And then less of a sudden, a fight broke out during one of the meetings, and everyone was shocked.
And then it happened again... and then injuries happened by accident... and countless arguments and emotional breakdowns happened almost every time they met.
Esredes made plenty of new therapy clients out of the social club, but even then, nothing seemed to improve or change about its atmosphere, as if it were trapped in a constant, unchanging bubble of time, in which no one could truly put aside what ailed them long enough to last one meeting.
And that,
was Bee Club.
Perhaps one of the most difficult to explain and yet consistencies about Esredes life since it started. Did he have much better things to do than attend each and every meeting? Absolutely. For a majority of the time, he didn't even get anything out of it, and even supporting Elouan or trying to use it as a people study didn't really make it all that worth going. A lot of the time, he just stayed too long to deal with the aftermath of all the emotional breakdowns, and by the next time, it felt as if nothing had truly happened.
Bee Club was hopeless, and emotionally, he had long given up on it. He was open about not believing in their mission- while they had managed to get an apiary going in Dravania in hopes of someday bringing bees back to Ishgard, Esredes knew this goal was impossible. The Club couldn't even take a trip out to the apiary without people getting injured and having breakdowns- there was no way a misfit group of societal rejects trying and failing to find acceptance could do this. And that was his professional opinion, as the master of having to turn rejects into an army against Eorzea's best military. Bee Club, was never going to achieve its mission, and that was simply a fact.
Then, Esredes met someone... mildly interesting.
He was at a gathering for people of the Ishgardian military. Temple, House, Dragoon, and their partners, all there. Was it a bad idea for him to go in the first place? Absolutely. Did he do it anyway? Absolutely. And he almost went the whole night without detection- up until the very end, when one man he tried to say hello to glared at him and wrote in a notebook for him to stay away from the people the man came with.
Esredes had frowned at it, but said nothing and let the man take his leave with the others. It was hardly the worst aggression he experienced in public, and one much worse happened immediately after, so it was easy to let go.
...And then the man reappeared at the Inquisition while Esredes was doing his counseling work with a prisoner, having set up the entire meeting for his own purposes and revealing to Esredes that he had recruited the man's girlfriend into his movement, and it was a more personal anger directed towards him than what he expected. Even better. Still, Esredes tried to let it go despite his hostile demeanor. And then days later he was added into his High Inquisitor employers' team.
Just great. Absolutely wonderful. To make it even more fun, the man seemed to work on a similar timeless way as Bee Club itself. Every time he encountered him it was a roulette wheel spin between hostility, watching the man have a vulnerable moment and feeling compelled to try and help ever so slightly, or the man seemingly being in a civil state of being. And then eventually the roulette wheel got stuck on the vulnerable and civil part, fixing the man more consistently in that state of being. When he stopped being hostile and trying to use Esredes, he was almost like talking to a full grown dog. Capable of bite, but still a dog who wanted to be petted.
One moment they had been distant. The next, they found each other grieving the same woman, and Esredes had opted to bridge the gap, and the man was opening up to him about their relationship, and even gifted him a copy of an orchestrion recording of a duet between himself and her- one of the only memories Esredes could have to remember his fallen comrade by. And even invited him out to a restaurant- and like he often did, Esredes suddenly didn't know what was happening.
What he did learn, besides half of the man's life story it felt like at this point- was the man hated honey. A throat injury at the Steps of Faith meant he had to take it with everything to soothe the chronic throat pain, yet he hated the taste of it.
"Have you always tried the same kind of honey?" He asked the Inquisitor, only to get a confused look back. "I'm no expert in honey, but it's not all made the same, right? Maybe there's some form out there that's more tolerable you just haven't discovered." The man seemed to think this over. Whenever he was thinking over something deeply, it was very clear on his face. Maybe as a result of losing one's voice. 'Perhaps.’ He wrote on the notebook. 'Honey is such an expensive import, however, that I do not oft get chance to try different sellers.' "Do you ever get the chance to travel?" And now he looked puzzled. 'No, nor have I ever been too inclined to do so.' "Really? Huh. Because the other practical idea is to at least travel a little to sample it more cheaply at the source. See if there is in fact no perfect medium between cost and taste." He shook his head lightly. 'Still not practical, I cannot spare the time nor the funds to be gone for months chasing honey.' "I wasn't suggesting months. The Shroud's a day trip worth of effort." 'Yet there is honey in Uldah, Limsa is a trade hub ordering from even Old Sharlayan, and that is only Eorzea, not all of the star.' Sometimes Esredes felt a little bit like he was talking to a five year old. "...Bit more of an effort than the Shroud, yes." He shrugged. "Well. It's an idea, take or leave it." Another shake of the head. 'The idea is a good one, but I've not the time nor liberty of it to go galavanting off.' Perhaps it was karma, meeting someone just as stubborn as him. Needless to say, he didn't win that one, but now, something in his heart tugged for the mute Inquisitor, the benevolence voicing itself over the blackened parts filled with hatred that did not so easily forgive a past, and for the first time since Bee Club had been formed, his head came over with thoughts of honey- completely independent of the club itself.
It hadn't occurred to Esredes before that someone might actually need honey from the apiary. It was closer than importing elsewhere, and just as the hives were getting closer to production, Elouan was getting more serious about how Bee Club had to be a business now.
And suddenly Esredes found himself bursting into Seraphiaux's shop to ask about honey- who knew his brother did beekeeping? Certainly not him before that moment- and then of course, to Elouan, whose gloomy mood at the latest Bee Club resulting in the garden being set on fire by accident lifted a little when Esredes told him there was a use for the bees and the honey.
In the discussion that unfolded, the two of them agreed that the club had to be more serious. If it was to become a business, after all, businesses were very serious, and an unserious business was doomed to fail. Elouan by himself was incapable of running a business, he barely knew how to use money- but perhaps with the few members of the club who actually had competent skills, he'd learn enough in time, with help.
Even with all this, Esredes still believed Bee Club could never bring the bees back to Ishgard. That was ridiculous, and definitely not something that could be realistically accomplished.
But perhaps, if at least one person might benefit from what it could produce... maybe even Bee Club had a little bit of purpose to it, after all.











