Caspian X (
the_seafarer) wrote2023-02-11 10:26 pm
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[au] Narnia and the North
There's a chill bite to the air, these days. The horses have been growing out their winter coats, and they look shaggy and plump as Caspian turns them out into the paddocks. Behind the stables, in the makeshift woodshop he'd cobbled together, the sleigh from his drawings is starting to come together.
He hopes he'll have it finished by Christmas. With a little luck, and maybe some assistance, he thinks it should be possible. The tack, he's largely left up to Susan's devices, though he'd commission Gimli the dwarf for the various buckles and other metal pieces they'll need.
Once the horses are turned out, he gets to his other morning chores with a will, whistling cheerfully as he does. The stable stays strangely quiet around him. It takes him the better part of an hour to realize the strangeness is because he's become accustomed to Susan's cheerful presence working alongside him, talking or humming or simply working in companionable silence.
Caspian pauses in his task – refilling the grain chest – and looks around. Susan's nowhere to be seen, and when he later wanders through the stables, checking each stall and outside, he can't find her there, either.
He hopes he'll have it finished by Christmas. With a little luck, and maybe some assistance, he thinks it should be possible. The tack, he's largely left up to Susan's devices, though he'd commission Gimli the dwarf for the various buckles and other metal pieces they'll need.
Once the horses are turned out, he gets to his other morning chores with a will, whistling cheerfully as he does. The stable stays strangely quiet around him. It takes him the better part of an hour to realize the strangeness is because he's become accustomed to Susan's cheerful presence working alongside him, talking or humming or simply working in companionable silence.
Caspian pauses in his task – refilling the grain chest – and looks around. Susan's nowhere to be seen, and when he later wanders through the stables, checking each stall and outside, he can't find her there, either.
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(there's blood on my hands)
One by one, and with devoted concentration, he kisses each finger, as if by doing so he might purify the stain she still sees. Last of all, he turns each hand and presses a kiss to each palm. Only when he's finished does he speak, looking at his own fingers curled gently around hers.
"I'm sorry," he murmurs. "It's a hard thing, to take a life. Especially when you'd have no quarrel with the one you're fighting, if not for only one or two differences in the world, or in timing. I'm sorry you were forced to such a thing."
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"If you deserve it, Su, so do I," he murmurs. "And Cuthbert, and Alain. Even Reepicheep. We none of us have clean hands, I expect, but I believe we all acted in the name of right and goodness. And you did, too. I'm sorry for the sheriff's man, but the greater sin was what forced you into that position to begin with."
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"Thee doesn't," she says, just as quiet, and oh, she's very, very sure. "Nor do they. None of thee ever could."
Susan gives a very small shrug. "I did what had to be done, I ken that too. And as I've said, I made my choice, and I would again. I just wish Dave - and sai Olive. That they'd not been caught up in it all."
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The wind she calls ka cares little for the lives it blows apart. "We can mourn them and remember them tonight, too."
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Susan raises her hand to cradle his cheek and gives him a gentle, lingering kiss, then pulls back and straightens. "Come on. Let's see to things. We've enough time to pack what thee might need as well, and brush the straw from yer hair."
There's a hint of mischief in her smile - small, but still there. "We don't need to give Kiseki any more ideas."
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She gives him a quick, slightly rueful smile. "I expect Alain and 'Bert have been planning everything else already."
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"Go on and fetch yer things," she coaxes. "I'll tend to my hair while thee do, and be waiting here for thee when you return."
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"A few moments," he promises, and kisses her gently. "I'll return shortly."
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A few moments. That's all he'll need. So thinking, he refuses to glance back, fighting back the sudden certainty that this will be the last time he sees her, and heads into the hall.
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Busy hands, that's what she needs. By the time he comes back, she'll be ready.
And he will come back. She doesn't let herself believe otherwise, not for a second. He will.
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A change of clothes. As it's turned colder, he's taken to dressing more like Peter and Edmund, who can layer their shirts with jumpers. He hasn't quite come around to the blue jeans Susan and the gunslingers and many of the other patrons wear, but he puts on a pair of trousers Peter had recommended and tugs a warm jumper over a clean shirt. Thus warmly bundled, he takes down his coat and scarf and slings them over his arm.
It's enough. He checks the looking-glass to make sure all the straw is out of his hair, and is swinging back out of his room and towards Susan's before five minutes have passed.
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Susan shuts the window and makes sure it's firmly latched, then brushes out her hair and starts braiding it over again - this time in a more complex four-strand braid than her usual preference, one she can coil at the nape of her neck. She's trying to do just that when she hears footsteps outside the door.
"It's open," she calls, peering in the mirror hung inside her wardrobe door.
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"I don't think I've ever seen you wear your hair all the way up," he remarks.
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He comes to sit on the sofa and watches her with interest. "Well, it looks lovely any way you dress it. And I suppose this way you won't need to concern yourself with tangles."
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"I do. But then, I don't think there's much of anything not to like where you're concerned."
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"Thee very dear," she murmurs.
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"Do you have all you need, Su?"
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"Alain said we'd want to be far gone before - before the fair-day events start, and I'd not argue that."
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He lifts her hands away from his shoulders so he can stand, then reaches to take both her rucksack and his coat. Neither Cuthbert nor Alain have made any noises about him not coming along, but he supposes he'll see soon enough if they've given it up as a bad job.
For now, he offers her his free hand with a smile.
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