Earned the honor. He flat-out refused to analyze that. To imagine. It was too dangerous. But he could do nothing about his body’s frenzied tumble into nervous anticipation, want, longing. It hurt, wanting something he couldn’t have like this, an ache that gripped and burned like his marsh fever.
He’d finally managed to collect himself when Erik said, right behind him, “Oliver, are you coming in?”
Gods. “No. No, I think I’ll stay a moment longer. The stars are coming out.”
“Hm. So they are.” He heard a rustling, felt a rush of air – and then something heavy fell across his shoulders. It was warm, and smelled of horses and forest, and fur tickled his jaw. It was Erik’s cloak. Erik had draped his cloak over him. “Don’t stay too long. It gets cold up here.”
Oliver squeezed his eyes shut and listened to the king depart with his guards. He stayed like that a long moment, clutching the cloak tighter around his throat, breathing in the smell of it – of Erik – and the only stars he saw were the ones blooming behind his screwed-shut eyelids.
18
Erik dreamed of eyes the blue of deep water. His own were pale, glacial, the blue gleam of sunlight on snow. But these were the boundless sapphire of a lake in winter, evidence of the life that still teemed down beneath the ice. Water that looked cool and inviting, but would kill you if you let it.
There were worse deaths.
He dreamed of firelight dancing in copper curls, grown longer over the last weeks, soft and slippery as Southern watered silk through his fingers. Beneath his fingertips, the fragile shape of a skull, the heat of skin he wanted to follow down, and down, and down. A longing like a spear through his chest, an unexpected wound whose pain was sharp and breathless.
There were worse wounds.
But none yet had left him so restless.
Erik rolled over on his feather mattress, skin prickling and over-hot as the dream faded out, and his eyes opened on his dark bedchamber. Every time he managed to fall asleep, Oliver was there, sometimes peacefully sleeping in the chair in the study – sometimes naked and pink in the bath, winding one of Erik’s braids around his finger and talking of staying.
It was still night beyond his window, the sky lit only by a sliver of moon. With an impatient huff, he threw back the covers and got to his feet. Dragged a fur across his shoulders and ventured out into the common room in search of distraction.
It seemed he wasn’t the only one who couldn’t sleep. Leif sat before a built-up fire, the light from the flames flickering over a thoughtful – and not at all happy – countenance. He held a cup loosely between both hands, rolling it absently between his palms. His head didn’t turn, but Erik saw the flicker of his lashes and a firelight-bathed flash of blue as he glanced toward him.
“Can’t sleep?” Erik asked, softly, and crossed to pour a cup of his own.
“Up early,” Leif countered.
Erik took the chair across from him, and a sip of wine; it was a pale, Veniscalli white, nearly clear in the right light, and tasted faintly of apples, beneath the tang of the grapes. He rolled the wine across his tongue, savoring it – tomorrow night, at the feast, he would drink dark red, and then ale, perhaps a shot of mistress when his men toasted him. But here in private, with his family, he could own up to his taste for the soft dessert wines his mother had brought from her homeland, once upon a time.
Across from him, Leif stared into the flames, his unbraided hair wavy and gilded against his cheeks, his brows notched together.
“What’s troubling you?” Erik asked. He realized, with something of a start, that he couldn’t remember the last time he’d been alone with his heir like this, and felt like a neglectful sod for it. Leif had no shortage of tutelage and training, and his brother was his constant companion and best friend – but Erik intended the boy to rule this nation some day, and he’d failed, lately, in providing any sort of direct counsel.
Leif shrugged. “Do you think Ragnar will come?”
“When has he ever missed a chance to drink our ale?”
The corner of Leif’s mouth twitched upward in a fleeting smile. “That’s true.” He sobered. “He will be angry that we’ve strengthened ties with the South.”
“Then I will explain to him that we’ve strengthened ties with Drakewell – that we’ve conquered it – and not the entire South. That’s language he can understand.”
Leif offered a wry grin, finally glancing toward him. “He’s still sore you wouldn’t marry his sister.”
“And he will continue to be sore, I imagine.” Erik had never offered either of the boys in his stead, as he had with Tessa Drake. He liked to think that he was a stern uncle, but not a cruel one.
Leif seemed relieved. He sipped at his wine and settled back in his chair. Glanced toward the table that had become a holding place for the things Revna had set aside for Tessa and Oliver for tomorrow’s feast. “I saw what Mother set out for Oliver,” he said, tone careful now.
Erik’s belly tightened, fractionally, with sudden nerves. He kept his tone light: “Blue to match his cousin.”
“Our blue.” Leif’s gaze cut over, keener than Erik gave him credit for being, most times. “And the sapphires for his hair. And the beads.”
“Tessa will be wearing beads.”
“Tessa is my fiancée.”
Erik took a measured breath – and a long swallow of wine. “Oliver will not be the first man to wear that sort of bead in Aeretoll.”
“No,” Leif agreed, brows lifting. “But he’ll be the first man you’ve put them on. The first person you’ve put them on.”
Erik frowned – but Leif was undeterred, staring at him with open curiosity. “What of it?” He levered a warning into his voice. Leave it.
It didn’t work. “Uncle,” Leif said, wondrous, “you like him.”
“Of course I like him.”
“No, but you care for him. Uncle.” He sat forward, eager, delighted. “Those are lover’s beads. You don’t braid them into someone’s hair unless you–”
“Yes, I know what lover means, thank you.”
Leif grinned. Chuckled – the brat. “So, have you and he–”
“That’s none of your business.”
He stopped laughing, but his eyes danced, just like his mother’s did when she was deeply amused about something – in a loving way. “I think he likes you back.”
Erik glared at him…mostly in an effort to disguise the way his stomach flipped. He was like a stupid, moony-eyed little boy again, pulse fluttering at the thought of being liked in return by the object of his affection.
“When we have our meetings in the study, and I’m ready to fall asleep from how boring it is, I’ve seen him look at you. When your head’s down, and you can’t see, he looks at you like–”
“Leif.”
“Don’t you want to know?”
Desperately. “No.”
“Will you make him consort?”
The question didn’t shock him, because, no matter how remote, fanciful, and unlikely, it was a scenario that he had entertained. Several generations ago, the Lord of Wolf Point had taken a man for his consort, creating a mild scandal amongst the rest of the Aeretollean nobility. But a scandal that fizzled out quickly. The consort was a great warrior, with a head for strategy and leadership; he offered his lord and lover wise counsel, endeared himself to his people, and the lord’s nephew inherited, eventually.
Erik had envisioned Oliver wrapped in furs, his hair long, braided, glittering with gemstones and beads, rings winking on his fingers, standing beside the throne when Erik listened to petitioners. He was beautiful already, fine-featured, and soft-skinned, and big-eyed, with a temper like a cornered badger that Erik found impossibly endearing – but robed all in finery, there would be no question to whom he belonged.
“Uncle?”
He’d been silent too long, lost in reverie. In fantasy, because he knew it would never happen. “I doubt very much that he wants that.”
“Yo
u’ll never know if you don’t ask,” Leif said, sagely.
Erik glared at him again.
Leif grinned. “Bed him first and then see what he says. I promise he wants that.”
Erik arched a brow at him, and hoped he could play off the blush that heated his face as a result of the fire. “I would expect talk of ‘bedding’ from your brother, but not you. I hope you’re behaving honorably with Tessa.”
Leif’s grin vanished. He hitched up straighter in his chair. “Of course.” Then he frowned, and glanced toward the fire again.
“What?”
“She doesn’t love me.”
And here was what had pulled Leif out of bed at such an hour and into this glum mood.
“Ah,” Erik said. “I see.”
Leif’s darted glance seemed to say, do you?
“Lad, I wouldn’t expect her to love you yet. You’ve not known each other that long. It takes time for affection and interest to settle into love.”
Leif snorted. “Says you, braiding lover’s beads into a pretty boy’s hair.”
Erik sent him a warning look – one met with shoulders ducked in contrition – but he wasn’t angry. “I do not love Oliver.” An inward squirming left him feeling as if he’d lied.
“But you could.”
“And I suspect the same can be said of Tessa.” He inclined his head in question. “I don’t think you are exactly in love, either, Leif.”
“I want to be.”
“So. You and Tessa are on the same page, then. Many happy, loving marriages have been built upon less.”
“Yes.” He hesitated. “But.”
Erik waited.
Leif heaved a deep sigh. “She prefers Rune.”
Erik had feared the same. But he said, “Tessa is young – they are closer in age, and Rune is very…forcefully cheerful.”
Leif snorted again, though his expression was sad. “It’s more than that.”
“Perhaps. But. Fancying someone, finding him handsome – Tessa’s a smart girl. She knows that cheer and charm don’t necessarily make for a good husband.”
Leif’s gaze sharpened. “Rune would make anyone a fine husband.”
Erik tried to mask his amusement. “Noble of you to defend your brother.”
“No, it’s right. If Tessa wants Rune instead, then, so be it. I won’t stand in the way of their happiness.” His jaw set, after his declaration, and his shoulders pushed back in a determined way.
Erik couldn’t keep the fond smile from his face. “You are a good brother. And a good nephew. Someday you will make a good king…and a good husband.”
Leif sighed.
“Try not to worry too much. Things will turn out as they should.”
“Hmph.”
“Spoken like a true son of our line,” Erik said, toasting him with a quick lift of his cup.
Leif smiled, though it looked reluctant. “I do like her. But I won’t force her into a marriage if she doesn’t want it – just as you wouldn’t.”
Erik nodded. “That is honorable.”
Beyond the windows, the night had begun to pale; the sky shone a faint, pearlescent gray, the hint of a sunrise to come. It was to be a busy day, full of the bustle of arriving nobles, and the last preparations for the feast. Erik would be pulled into hugs, into huddles, into meetings, into long conversations about the state of his kingdom.
For now, though, he had these last moments of quiet with his nephew.
He set his cup aside. “Do you have ties and beads for your hair?”
Leif lifted his head, looking almost startled, then nodded, and reached into the inside pocket of his unfastened tunic. “Yes.”
Erik spread his legs and patted his knee. “Come here, my heir, and I shall make you ready to meet our people.”
Leif smiled at him – a small, warm smile brimming over with emotion – then he stood and moved to sit on the rug at Erik’s feet, between his spread knees, his back to him. Over his shoulder, he offered leather laces and beads on an outstretched palm.
Erik took them from him, and set them on the table. Then he raked his fingers through his nephew’s hair, gathering it into bunches, and began a series of intricate plaits that he knew well, by now. The plaits of a prince; of an heir; of a beloved son of a beloved sister.
When dawn broke pink and bright through the window glass, the horn at the gate sounded.
19
Oliver leaned his elbows on the ledge of the open window and gazed down at the road, shivering against the early morning breeze that funneled in around him. Feast guests were arriving by the dozens, in caravans of horse-drawn carriages and, mostly, reindeer-drawn sleighs. Horses whinnied, reindeer snorted, and harness bells jingled – so many, and so loudly that it sounded like a chorus of angelic voices. The lords of Aeretoll had arrived for the Yuletide Feast.
Shivering against the cold, Oliver stepped back and drew the window closed. Tomorrow night, he would dress in finery, put beads and sapphires in his hair, and join the king at his high table, as his special guest.
Today seemed like a good day to lose himself in books.
He managed, for the most part, listening to the palace grow steadily louder and louder beneath him, a cacophony not previously heard as guests filled the great hall, exclaimed in wonder at the décor, and were shown to their rooms. He skipped meals, despite the ever-growing hunger, his stomach too tight with nerves to manage eating. He knew that Revna was keeping Tessa busy with preparations all day, and so his plan was to sneak down at supper, grab a plate, and retreat to his rooms.
But then…
“Oliver!”
He glanced up from the book he had only been half-reading and found Magnus in the doorway. It took him a moment to realize the guardsman was dressed in a casual tunic, trousers, and boots, rather than his usual crimson and blue uniform. He carried a basket under his arm, and shot Oliver a wide grin.
“Hiding, are we?”
“No.”
Magnus chuckled. “I don’t blame you one bit. It’s mad down there. Lady Kenningar doesn’t want to room next to Lady Hylli, and the Lady Revna’s trying to get them sorted, and Lady Kenningar’s wean is squalling something fierce.” He tapped his ear with a wince. “It’s a miracle we can’t hear it up here.”
People moved past him in the hallway, a cluster of hurried voices, a flash of fur and fine gems. Oliver had heard the foot traffic all day.
“I think I might skip supper,” Oliver said, though his stomach was already growling a protest. It was bad enough he would sit at the high table tomorrow; interacting with all the guests beforehand sounded like the quickest way to damp palms and indigestion.
“No need for that.” Magnus patted the basket he carried with his free hand. “I’ve got food enough for plenty, and strict orders from Lady Revna to make sure you go down and have a proper bath before tomorrow.”
To his credit, Magnus didn’t turn the statement at all suggestive. But Oliver felt a low thrum like a plucked chord in his belly. Save for when he was sick, he’d never appeared about the palace in a less-than-clean state. He could make himself perfectly presentable with a little hot water from the ewer, or, if he was lucky, a copper tub.
But the idea of Revna ordering him to have a proper bath…That spoke of things to come. Of certain expectations for him.
Or, more likely, it spoke of Revna wanting him to appear at his absolute best when he joined the family before all the lords and ladies of Aeretoll.
He took a careful breath. “If you’ll recall, the last time I went down to the baths, it didn’t go so well.”
“Aye, well, you’re not feverish this time, right?”
“Right.”
“You’ll do fine. Give ‘em another chance – get back up on the horse and all that. And.” He lowered his voice, gaze turning mischievous. “I don’t think it turned out all bad, do you?” He winked before Oliver could stutter a protest. “Come along, then. Go and fetch your dressing gown and we’ll be off.”
His dressing gown, which he gathered up in his arms and stood holding a long moment, in the privacy of his chamber, was the one he’d been wearing ever since the night they’d ridden out to find Tessa and the boys. Which meant that it was, or had been, Erik’s dressing gown. The velvet was worn smooth in places from its years of use, and the hem and sleeves were still much too long. He’d not requested another, though; if Revna was going to so much trouble to outfit him for the feast, he knew he only need ask and he’d be given a brand-new gown of his own. But he hadn’t, and he didn’t want it altered, either. His own gown – silk, and too thin by half for this cold, stone palace – stayed packed away in his trunk. At night, he wrapped this one around himself instead, snuggled deep into its folds, and imagined impossible things, grateful for the knowledge that the velvet had once lain against Erik’s skin, as it now laid against his.
With a shaky exhale, he bundled the gown up in his arms, and went to follow Magnus.
Mad was an apt word for what was happening in the great hall. Guests had been arriving all day, along with deliveries of everything from wine, to food, to extra feather mattresses packed in sleighs. A few trestles had been set up, and people were eating at them, but most of the hall had been given over to the coming and going of servants toting chests, trunks, trays, and laden baskets.
Revna stood on a wooden chair, overseeing it all and directing servants and nobles alike. Tessa stood beside her, Hilda – her ankle much improved – behind her, and she was greeting highborn ladies with her usual quiet grace.
Confident that she was both capable and in capable hands, Oliver ducked down the hallway toward the baths after Magnus.
The first thing Oliver noticed, when they reached the warm, humid tunnel that led to the baths, was the noise. The swell and tumult of many voices that had been absent on his last trip here.
Oliver hesitated, and clutched the dressing gown tighter to his chest.
After a moment, Magnus paused, and turned back to look at him, expression questioning in the flickering light of the cressets.
Heart of Winter (The Drake Chronicles Book 1) Page 21