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#Phillip Starrick
nemo-in-wonderland · 7 months
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THE TEMPLARS ARE HEEEEEEEEERE.
Almost.
Hiyoooo everyone <3
Just passing by really quick to share a small WIP of an artwork that I have been working on and off when I was not busy writing Chapter 5 of my Syndicate Story! :)
Since that chapter will be focusing more on the Templar's side and I actually have some difficulties in working when I don't have a clear idea of how the characters look, here you have my WIP with Byron and Phillip (and Dorothea too, although she is mostly there so that I can have a reference in terms of height). I also sketched Ambrose, Marcus and Mr. Sterling himself, but they are in such a sketch stage that I cannot show them yet.😅😅
Also, if you know me, you know I would never say no to designing uniforms for my beloved brainchildren (gods you have no idea how much I love them. All of them. I kiss them on their brows each day.).
I truly cannot wait to share this chapter :)
Now, if you will excuse me, I need to dive down into writing again!
*takes a dive and swim away*
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In The Heat of the Moment Chapter 5 - Awakening of the Hunter
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Ch.1, Ch.2, Ch.3, Ch.4,
Words Count: 12077
Warning: Mention of Suicide; Physical Violence;
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BYRON January 1868, London The wind blew in the forest around him, a subtle whisper that carried the promise of a gelid night. The gloomy penumbra of the early sunset permeated the air around him, and if not for the blanket of snow that covered all that surrounded him, he would have not been able to see anything as clearly as he did. Keeping his rifle in his hand, his grip sure and steady, despite the thick gloves around his hands, Byron Harrison let his gaze wander around with slow attention, deliberately scanning his surroundings with a precision that came from habit. Not even the crystal of snow covering his auburn lashes like lace were enough to impede his search. Thick puffs of vapor came out of his mouth, as the chilly air pricked on his cheeks mercilessly, giving them a painful red tint that had nothing to do with bashfulness or strenuous effort. Yet, nothing, not even the torpor in his arms and legs, could sway him from his task. He cared not about discomfort. He cared not about pain. All he cared about was the forest in front of him, and the prey that was hiding in it, the elusive trophy that would finally bring an end to his continuous searching. “Come out, you fucking bastard,” he whispered, turning around to get a wider visual, the crunch of the snow under his boot filling the stillness around him. “I know you are here,”
Ears were keen on capturing any sign, any hint, anything that might show him where that arsehole was hiding. His breathing was controlled, his heart steady in its beating as he slowly turned his eyes toward a silvery bush ahead of him. A low rough laughter raised from somewhere on his right. Byron raised his rifle and shot, the deafening sound breaking the surreal silence. He waited until the echo died down, as stillness had found lease once more among the trees. But he knew it was not peace. There would be no peace. Not until he had shot every single one of the bullets he was carrying with him. Not until those bullets had found their way through that bastard’s heart. Byron tensed his ears again, eyes searching with the same careful attention, waiting for a signal that he knew would come. The laughter continued, reverberating all around him. Mocking him. Deriding him. He blinked rapidly, to clear his eyes from the tears swelling up. “Show your bloody mug, you son of a fucking dog!” he growled, a sound that had nothing of human and all of the beast he was trying with all his strength to restrain. ”Show yourself!” And as always, like clockwork, the man showed himself.
His pristine blue eyes were twinkling in the dark, and what can only be described as a devilish smile was plastered on the man’s face a face crowned by dark hair, disheveled hair, hidden under a dark beaked hood. With the heavy cape of the Assassins weighing on his shoulders, the man stood between the trees, the snow crunching under his feet as he got closer to the Master Templar. Byron reloaded the rifle with quick, precise hands, took aim again, and shot. And shot. And shot. And shot. One bullet after the other flew in the darkness of the night, each of them landing straight through the heart of the mocking Assassin. The man laughed again, unfazed, and with each shot his laughter grew in intensity, to the point of sounding almost hysterical by the time Byron had finished his bullets. “You cannot kill what’s already dead, Leviathan” The words were as derisive as the tone was scornful, cutting through him like the sharpest of blades. Fury pervading every single fiber of his body, Byron took out his revolver and kept shooting and shooting in his rage, until the chamber clicked empty, and no more bullets were left. The low laughter rang all around him, echoing from every hidden corner of that godforsaken forest, reverberating through all that he was, deafening in its intensity. It got interrupted only by another deafening shot. One that Byron didn’t shoot. Straight through his heart, from the revolver that the Assassin was holding, the bullet had passed right through him. His face jerked back, just in time for his desperate eyes to see the bullet hitting its true target: ghosts, holding each other desperately, almost unrecognizable for how deformed they were in the silent scream that was leaving their mangled mouths. But Byron knew them. His soul recognized them before his eyes did.
The scream of agony that left Byron’s mouth was primal in its pain, obscene in its rawness, a wounded animal screaming his curse to the sky in its misery. A scream that followed him in the waking world, and his eyes flashed open, as he tried to grasp for air. Beads of sweat that had nothing to do with heat were running down his brow, as he tried to readjust his view through the dark of the room. But he couldn’t. Everything appeared nebulous in front of him and, he soon realized, it was because his eyes were filled with tears. “You cannot kill what’s already dead,” He heard that voice in his ears again, a hazy memory now, still taunting him. His brow furrowed as he covered his eyes with a callous hand, trying to drown the lump of anguish that had tightened his throat to the point of making breathing torture. His whole chest felt as if hot iron pokes were nabbing at him, piercing him like merciless arrows, in a grotesque imitation of the martyrdom of Saint Sebastian. Pain was tearing him apart. Taking a long breath, he rose from his bed, oblivious to the hiemal air around him or the freezing floor underneath his bare feet. He felt nothing. Nothing at all, aside from the stupor caused by those goddamned nightmares that chased after him like rabid dogs. He headed for the drawer where a small basin sat, already filled with water, and dipped his rough hands in it splashing his face, uncaring about the gelid droplets that ran down his neck and damped his wool shirt. It felt good. It was good. Real. Almost a self-inflicted slap back to reality. Taking another deep breath, Byron allowed himself a moment longer of leniency for his soul, his mind fighting its way out of the merciless tides of dreams and memories, to anchor himself to the world, to make port where his heart could finally acquiesce once more. It came to him in the form of a silvery laughter and curious eyes and freckled cheeks. An image of gentle peace, a small flickering light in darkness: the harbinger of a warm dawn after a long hyperborean night. Despite having found his port, when he raised his gaze to look into the mirror hanging over his basin, the man looking back at him had none of his usual composed certitude.
The man in the mirror looked more like a madman: sunken eyes, dark in the soft penumbra of the room, an ocean where a perennial storm never ceased to be, dangerous waters just beneath the sea green surface; all over his face the heaviness of the years had started to show, in those wrinkles that torment and pain had chiseled mercilessly into his features. His head full of auburn hair still kept wavy and long - a quirk he carried over from his years in the Navy- had started to go gray here and there; on his beard and moustache too, time had started to make its presence known. He felt older than he looked, as if he had lived more years than the ones he had actually been granted by fate. Another deep breath. He splashed more water on his face, hoping to erase the fatigue coming from sleep. “Sleep,” he scoffed. He hadn’t been able to have a restful night of sleep in years. His eyes trained automatically toward the only photo sitting on his desk - the only personal touch in his otherwise bare bedroom- and his heart sank in his chest. He took the memento as gently as his callous rough hands allowed -careful, as he always was with anything connected to it - and caressed the small, precious faces looking back at him. He wished, with all his heart, he could see those smiles again. Hear that laughter again, smell their perfume in his nostrils, feel the solid weight of their bodies against his for one last embrace. Feeling the pain throbbing in his chest with every single beat of his tired heart - how many nights he had prayed that it would stop beating altogether, to find some respite from that life - he put the frame back to its place, hiding it from view, trying to suppress the yearning that, he knew, was the greatest enemies in the war that forever raged in his heart whenever he was awake. “You cannot kill what’s already dead, Levathian,” The voice echoed again in his ears, as it always did. Taunting him. Ridiculing his pain. “I cannot,” Byron growled, gritting his teeth as his eyes turned dark. “But I can take away your future. I can destroy your legacy, all which you held dear, just as you have done with me.”
A sudden knock on the door tore him away from his thoughts. “Yes?” he spoke, his tone curt. “My Lord? Do I have your leave to enter? Victor Dorianr’s warm voice - now a gentle murmur rather than the booming toll of a bell, as it always was - immediately put him at ease. “Come, Victor,” he allowed, as he moved away from his desk to greet the man. The door opened, and the Master Templar entered, candid fresh snow on his black hair and heavy fur-lined coat. Fastened at the high collar was his Templar cross, the metal shining even in the darkness. Byron’s eyes narrowed, tensing: Victor was there on Official Order business. He looked as the Frenchman closed the door carefully behind himself before turning to face Byron, his dark eyes inquisitive. “Forgive me for interrupting your slumber, My Lord-” “No need for apologies, Victor. You are always welcome here…and I was already awake, anyway. What’s the reason for this urgency?” “Forgive me for the late hour, but I got a telegram. From Crawley. Our wait has been fruitful. We captured two Assassins that came to the house, just as you predicted,” Byron felt his blood chill in his veins. For the first time since waking up, Byron allowed himself to smile. But there was none of the warmth that came from pleasure. “Do we know if they are the ones responsible for the explosion of Brewster’s laboratories?” The Frenchman shook his head. “Non, Monsieur, no one has started to interrogate them. Master Barclay was the one duty when the Assassins had broken into the house, and he is now holding them captive and awaiting your orders.” Byron took a deep breath, rubbing his eyes with callous fingers. Markus Barclay, the thorn in his back ever since the young man joined their ranks. He knew why the Grand Master had seen reasons to assign him under his attendance, and he knew he was the only man for the job. Still, had he had the chance to decline that obligation, he would have done so in a heartbeat, and passed instead the “honour” to Ambrose. ”Wake the rest of the men and then wait for me without. Have my carriage ready. We need to leave at once if we want to reach Crawley before sunrise,” “Very well, Monsieur,” he said, holding up for a second. “Is there something else, Victor?” “Nothing urgent or pertaining to our current mission, and you know, God forbid if I dare not pry into your privacy, Monsieur, but if I may be so impertinent, you look…harrowed,” he murmured, his voice turning as soft as the light in his eyes. “Lack of sleep, Victor,” Byron answered curtly, clearing his voice, with all the intention to not explain himself. “Nothing that laudanum cannot help with, and nothing you need to worry about. Now,do as I ordered. We mustn’t waste a minute. We need to run against the dawn.”
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The journey to Crawley took longer than Byron cared for, but with the weather playing against them, he knew they would have been delayed anyway. At least, he thought, it had proceeded smoothly, and with Victor’s low chatter to fill the time, he was inclined to find it even pleasant. The Frenchman always managed, with his quick wit and gentle voice - almost lulling when it wasn’t so loud, it could be heard a whole town away - to distract him from his ghosts, at least for a little while. However, the moment the carriage had stopped and he had been able set foot out of it, he welcomed the cold winter air of the night against his face and the soft snow falling in big flakes all around them. Nothing like the freezing chill of darkness nipping at one’s cheeks to keep one’s senses awake and alert. His favourite hunting weather. As much as it resembled the one he always saw in his nightmare, he felt none of the helplessness that derived from the inevitable, the unchangeable. Instead, he felt all the empowerment from being awake, and in control of everything that was around him. As he walked down the empty street, the fresh snow crunching under his boots, his eyes immediately found the house - a one-floor old cottage, its red bricks appearing black in the dark of the night, the roof torn down here and there, weighting on the structure in a way that it reminded Byron of an old man carrying a basket, his back curved by life and time. All the windows were black, empty sockets on what could only be described as a dismal facade, with no sign of lanterns or candles anywhere. No one had lived there in a little while. Byron turned to look around, his eyes scouring the surroundings of the small neighbourhood, a habit he never lost since his travels in the Arctic. He saw nothing, aside from a whole line of old houses not so different from the one in front of him, nothing that would cause him to be on alert. But something in his guts - an instinct, almost an extra sense that he couldn’t explain into words - told him that there was something just staring at them, waiting in the darkness, standing as still as waters in a tranquil pond. It was a fickle feeling, almost air shimmering in a faint glow, a whisper in his ear. None of the other Templars following him gave him a sign of having felt it as well. But he could sense it all the same. “Victor,” Byron murmured, his gravelly voice echoing in the empty street.
The Frenchman was at his side at once, ready to comply with his order. “Make sure to keep the place restricted. Do not let anyone get closer to the house - no passerby, no nosy neighbours, no one. If trouble should arise, if anyone were to show their face around here-” he added, eyes cold and void as the sky above. “-you know what to do,” Victor nodded with solemnity, swallowing hard. “Oui, Monsieur,” While hearing his subordinate relay his orders to the rest of the squadron, Byron turned his attention to the house once more, hatred seeping in his chest the longer he stared at its weathered walls, as puffs of condensed breath raised from his lips with each breath he took. The place where Ethan Frye and his broods lived. His attention was soon caught by the Master Templar responsible for sending him the message, emerging from the dark door like a magpie peaking from inside its nest. “They are inside, My Lord. We were awaiting for your arrival,” said Markus Barclay, straightening his back and tilting his chin up, as he came out to welcome the older man while giving him a cocky smile. Byron answered the smile with a long impenetrable look as he walked across the threshold of the small house without a single word of greeting. Complete darkness enveloped him immediately, despite the door still being open behind him. “Light,” he whispered, and before he had the time to add anything else, two candles had been lit by the young Master Templar. The feeble trembling light brightened the small corridor, allowing Byron to get a better look at his surroundings. As nondescript as it was from the outside, the house was just as unremarkable on the inside: old walls once covered in what could only be assumed to be quaint patterns were now presenting stains from mildew, peeling off here and there to show the bare bricks; cobwebs were hanging at the corners against the ceilings, and the wind, slipping through the decaying timber of the doors, carried with it a mournful moan, almost a messenger of what was about to come. A ghostly sentinel for a family that was no more. The boards of the floor protested with each step he took, creaking as he moved toward the quarters where the two Assassins were kept prisoners. He caught a glimpse of a frame where an old small ambrotype hung: a man, not much younger than Byron himself, was sitting on an armchair, a small smirk - barely perceptible -plastered on his lips, beard unkempt and eyes twinkling with what could only be interpreted as pride. Byron’s jaw tensed, teeth grinding as he contained the ever-growing fury coursing through his veins each time he saw that smirk, the very same that taunted each night in his nightmares. He welcomed the fury, and allowed it to warm him like a blazing fire: it was a never-ending flame that kept him going ahead.
Next to the man in the hanging picture were two children, no older than twelve years of age: the girl standing straight, shoulder squared, looking ahead of herself with the same proud eyes as the man sitting beside her, her dark hair hanging in long braids at the either side of her head; the boy facing away from the girl and the man, brows knitted in a despondent gaze, mouth turned downward in a rebellious grimace, the same dark unruly hair as his father, hidden just beneath an old worn-out paperboy hat. Both children’s faces were riddled with freckles, while none appeared on the man’s sullen face. He perused those small faces with meticulous attention, almost dissecting every single detail he deemed essential, etching them in his memory. Then, he forced himself to continue walking down the barely illuminated hall, until he reached where the two Assassins had been kept captive. When Byron entered the room, his gaze was immediately trained toward the two tied-up figures sitting on the floor. He studied them intently, their tied bodies forming a stark, dire contrast against the innocence of the children’s room where they were being held. Both Assassins were in their mid-thirties and, he noticed, were donning the dark robe of their Brotherhood, the hoods lowered on their shoulders to show hard faces and cold stares in their anonymous faces. They were docile. Far too docile, for his taste. “What happened to their blades?” he asked, gazing just above his shoulder toward Markus. “Confiscated and secured downstairs, My Lord, along with all their pieces of equipment. I personally saw to that.” Byron nodded, turning to face the two captives, eyes narrowed in an attentive, silent gaze as he studied the two captives: no scratches, cuts, hematomas, or ecchymoses could be found anywhere on their person; no sign of struggle. No sign of a fight. He stared at Markus for a long moment, his face painted in a mask of wariness before redirecting his attention toward the Assassins once more. “You know who I am?” Byron’s gravelly voice was low, a whisper cutting right through the chillness of the air around him. Nothing transpired from his face, the candle in his hands painting deep shadows all across his face. The woman in front glared at him, defiant of him, but Byron could see, even in the flickering light of the candles, fear was creeping into her eyes, dancing with the rabid hatred she had each time she looked at the iron cross hanging at his neck, her attention fixated on the symbol etched at the center of it. “You are the bloody Leviathan,” she seethed, vomiting his moniker as if it were a curse underneath her breath.
Byron's lips stretched in a chilling smirk. “Then you know why I am here.”
The woman spat on the ground, the spittle just inches away from Byron’s shoes. The other Assassin, captive as well, tied next to her, shook his head at his companion, eyes silently pleading with her to stop and stay quiet. Byron’s eyes twinkled for a moment, his face impassible, calm as ever. “We know. Like we both know that you won’t let us get out of here alive. You Templars know no honour, no compassion, no clemency, not even for the one you declare to protect! All you bastards know is greed and lust for power! And you, Leviathan…you are the worst of them all. No one has ever survived an encounter with you. So why would I cooperate with you, you bastard?” Byron stood silent, untouched by those words that found no retort. But deep within, he felt his guts turning and twisting with barely suppressed rage at the sight of the two Assassins, a rage that churned like the bubbling waters of the oceans during those bleak winter storms that always stole hope from the sailors unlucky enough to find themselves at sea. His rage has nothing to do with them, but all to do with the symbol they had hanging at their belts. “It is not my… proclivity to offer mercy to your kind. It is indeed true. But-” he murmured, a smile appearing on his lips, that didn’t reach his eyes. “-I bear no ill will to either of you. All I want is a piece of information. Just one small piece of information, and you will walk away from here with all your limbs attached together. I am offering you the possibility of leaving this place alive…if you tell me all you know about the whereabouts of Ethan Frye and his offspring.” The woman spat again, gritting her teeth in ire. “Do you think me dense or soft in the head? There is no promise you can spew that I would believe, no word you say that I would trust! We will not talk! In no way in Hell, we will ever betray the Creed! You won’t know anything about Ethan Frye or his children! Never! You can torture us, cut us, and dice us to pieces, we’ll never talk, you bastard son of a who-“ The booming sound of a revolver going off shattered the air of the room, its deafening blast echoing against the worn-out walls, gunpowder filling the nostrils with its acrid smell. Byron’s steely gaze never left the eyes of the Assassin still alive, his hand still holding the smoking gun pointed toward the dead woman, now a lifeless husk, a hole the size of an orange marking her forehead where the bullet had entered, with bits of flaccid pale brain matters, blood, and splintered bones had flown all around.
Byron moved the mouth of the revolver toward the other Assassin, his face impassible in front of the spectacle of gore lying in front of him, unfazed by the blood that had sprayed against the hem of his leather coat. He barely wrinkled his nose when he felt the pungent foul odour coming from the still-bound man who, had soiled himself. Blood, gore, shit and gunpowder. A side of his life he had come to accept as normal, regrettably so. “Now…let’s try this again, shall we?” Byron asked again, his voice dropping again to a chilling murmur. “Where are Ethan Frye and his offspring?” The bounded man whimpered, his whole body encompassed by a tremor as the realization of what just happened pushed through his veins like ice. He lowered his head, keeping his eyes completely shut, keeping his breathing steady, but failing altogether. “Th-they are hiding in London,” he blabbered, the words pouring out like a river. “Ethan reached out to us yesterday and sent words about a plan to assassinate John Elliotson as the initiation for his son and daughter-” At the name of the Assassin, Byron narrowed his eyes, nostrils flaring at those words, bile burning the back of his throat. His fist clenched out of reflex, his grip growing tighter with each passing second. “How does he plan to do this?” he growled. The Assassin whimpered, eyes fixed on the mouth of the gun still pointed in between his eyebrows. “God forgive me... Oh God, forgive me,” he muttered, between one sob and the other. “We-we have an insider at Lambeth, acting as an informant. A nurse.” “Who?” Byron pressed, with steely determination in his voice. The Assassin hanged his head in shame, biting his lip until he tasted the metallic tangy taste of his own blood. “Emily Millburn,” he sobbed, wringling in the tight rope tied around him. “I beg you, do not hurt her! She is a widow, and only has her little boy as her family! Please, I beg of you! She has nothing to do with Ethan!” Byron took a deep breath, nodding as he allowed the information to settle in his mind. “We are done here,” he murmured, turning toward Markus, who was still standing there, silent witness to the whole scene, as he tried, with all his might, to make himself as small as a rat and just as unnoticeable.
Without a single word uttered, Byron handed him his revolver, his order clear in its silence. Markus’ dark eyes widened, his lips quivering as he tried to focus his attention on Byron. “Lord Harrison, I.. I don’t understand. He-He has told us what we wanted to know-” Byron stared at him longer, eyes unblinking, piercing through his resolve like a needle in the canvas.
“This is a lesson I want to partake with you, Master Barclay. A lesson about honour and loyalty,” he whispered, each word laced with indignant contempt. “I appreciate qualities like loyalty, I find it to be the very base upon which all is created. And this man, despite his questionable judgment in terms of alliances, despite being nothing more than a vermin of insignificant consequence…this man has loyalty aplenty. For. His. Creed. So much so that he had no qualms in lying, straight to my face, about a dead man’s whereabouts-” At those words, Byron saw the Assassin’s eyes go wide with inconceivable terror. “-knowing fully what the consequences would be. Knowing fully well that while loyalty has a price, defiance has an even greater cost,” Byron pushed the revolver into Markus’ hand once more. “Now, kill him, Master Barclay. I won’t ask it another time.” Markus swallowed hard as his whole face transformed, skin turning the colour of curdled milk, his body reacting almost against his will, weighting like lead. He made the mistake of looking for one moment into the eyes of the Assassin sitting on the floor. The silent plea of mercy was there, written in watery dark eyes. Markus took a deep breath, hands pervaded by an uncontrollable tremor. The gun went off again, the bullet finding its way through the skull of the remaining Assassin.
Byron looked once more to the desolated rest of the two Assassins, his face not letting transpire a single emotion. If anyone were to look upon him, one would have thought him bored by the whole ordeal. But this would have been the furthest from the truth. He turned toward Markus, whose face was covered in sweat, mouth puckered in a grimace, about to either retch or pass out. Byron narrowed his eyes as he walked just by him, his footsteps heavy, deliberate, implacable. He stood by the Master Templar without so much as to deign him of a glance and when he spoke, Markus flinched as if slapped in the face. “I do not take insubordination leniently, nor do I condone it. Question my orders one more time and I will make sure that no one will ever find you ever again. You have taken an oath. The Grand Master has seen fit to give you a second chance and by his ordinance, I will comply with his wishes and make sure that you follow through with it; I will see you abide by it by any means necessary, or I swear on what I hold most dear in this life, I will make you regret the very day you have set foot inside the Manor. Understood?” Markus turned to look toward the man who was towering over him, his voice a squawk that died in his chest before it could even find the strength to pass through his lips. A shaky nod was all that he could muster.
Unimpressed with the response, Byron walked past him, never turning to face either the Master Templar or the slaughter of the room. As he found his way out of the small house, the silence that surrounded him was deafening. Not a single one of the Templars that had accompanied him to the small house in Crawley dared to speak or even look him straight in the eyes. As he walked in the corridor, he noticed again the ambrotype that had welcomed him inside. It took it with a swift hand and hid it in the internal pocket of his jacket. Another memento. Another step further down that path that called him each day and each night of his life. He quickly went down the corridor, and crossed the threshold, breathing in the cold air of the night with gratitude, letting it feel his lungs with its purity. Raising his face to the sky - now starting to brighten with the colours of dawn at the horizon - he closed his eyes, allowing the soft snow to fall all over him, gently caressing his skin. It was incredibly welcomed, after all that had just happened.
He let his mind clear itself, trying, as it always happened whenever violence permeated his thoughts and hung to him like a tick to a dog’s coat, to find a moment of light amidst all that darkness. To find his port again. Keeping his eyes closed, he heard Victor walk towards him, recognizing him distinctly by the sound of the man’s step, light and fluid against the snow-covered pathway. “Did you find what were you seeking, Monsieur?”
Byron shook his head, lowering his head and opening his eyes to look at the Frenchman. “Not entirely, I am afraid. Those Assassins are willing to lie even in the face of death and go to the grave to protect the whereabouts of a dead man. But the liars always weaves their best stories with truth, and we got something that the Grand Master will find useful,” “Then, a successful mission indeed, if I may be so bold,” Victor cheered, without daring to ask any details that couldn’t be shared with him. Byron appreciated his discretion, the deferential respect he had for the rules and hierarchy within the Order, his unwavering loyalty to what the Tenets of the Order prescribed, and also his penchant for brutal honesty. While most would find the lack of edulcoration in his words disagreeable, Byron was particularly grateful for it. He wished he had more men with such moral strength working for him. “A partial success, yes,” he conceded. “Nevertheless, I will return to London immediately to inform the Grand Master of the current situation and after that, God Willing, I will be able to rest,” And then, if nothing more were to happen, I will finally see her again, he thought. “Very well, Monsieur. Your commands for us here?”
Byron’s shoulders tensed once more, as he stood pensive for a moment. “Finish to search the house and find any manner of evidence that might be connected to the Assassins’ plans. Frye surely had information that would be useful to us. Keep Markus with you, Victor, and keep a close eye on him: I trust no one else but you with this particular task. And once you are done, before you head back to London-“ Byron turned to look at the small house, hatred seeping into all his being like a poison spreading in his veins with every heartbeat. "- Burn this whole shack to the ground and then spread salt upon the soil. I want to see this place erased from the face of the Earth.”
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“This is not what I signed up for, Brudenell, bloody hell,” Ambrose Harrison thought, as he rubbed his eyes trying to chase away his drowsiness, absolutely disgruntled. Again, he cursed under his breath the man who had sponsored him when he had first been offered a spot in the Templars, taking a cigarette out of his pocket and tapping the filter against the tin box before lighting it up. The first taste of tobacco felt good against his tongue, but not enough to brighten his mood. The day had yet to start properly - the sun was barely rising upon the horizon - and he was yet to have a cup of strong coffee to chase the excess of the night before away. But that hadn’t stopped the news from arriving sooner than he liked. And he had liked that news even less once he got to White Chapel to witness them in person. He still couldn’t believe it. Kaylock had been taken down by a couple of miserable ratbags with more brawns than brains, half his gang was dead against the track of the train station, and the other half scattered the Devil only knew where. He knew he would be in for a long day.
He let out a low growly sound of displeasure as his gaze embraced the corpses of all the members of the gang that had been slaughtered during the gang fight, while his men were busy shouting away curious passersby and bribing away any “peeler” that might have come snooping around to report to Whitehall Place. Not that it would matter, considering the amount of officers that were already on the Grand Master’s own payroll. Still, he thought, a few more quid spent on those blokes -with more mouth to feed than hair on their balls- were a good way to ensure absolute silence and discretion. That or a gun against their head. He was open to either solution indistinctly. A flash of brilliant red at the corner of his eyes caught his attention. Blighters. Splendid. 'Old Man’ Roth had sent some of his dupes to help with the works. “Oi! Lads!” He shouted to the group of newcomers. “Chop-chop, we don’t have the whole mornin’! Start lookin’ around and see if you find anythin’ - ANYTHIN’- that might lead us to understand how the bloody fuck we ended up like this!”
“My my, such reprehensible language, Master Harrison,” Ambrose heard a low husked voice reprimanding him. “I do wonder what your brother would think of such…crude display of uncouthness,” It took Ambrose every smidgen of patience to not roll his eyes to the sky at the sound of that voice. Instead, he straightened his back and turned around to face Phillip Starrick, all wrapped in a heavy wool coat lined with slick black fur, his golden cross hanging from the bandeau around his neck. Despite being incredibly early in the morning, the young man appeared to be as fresh as a rose, and -Ambrose couldn’t stop himself from thinking it - just as pretty. “I’m here to bring results, Lord Starrick, not playin’ the elegant Lord,” he grumbled, turning to blow the smoke of the cigarette away from the young aristocrat. “What are you even doin' here? Don’t you “My Lords” usually wake up after the cock has sung its tune?” “Why, Master Harrison, you offend me with your words. I am a most diligent worker, and when the news reached the Manor, the Gran Master saw me fit to oversee the operations alongside you. Consider these Blighters I brought with me as a gesture of goodwill toward a fruitful partnership in discovering what happened here,” he murmured, giving the older man a long look before turning toward the gruesome spectacle in front of them. “Do we have any lead about who caused all of this?” Ambrose shook his head, returning the younger man's look. “Not yet, M’lord. My men are workin' on interrogatin' whoever witnessed the whole fight. We tried to circumscribe the Station, but we arrived too late and whoever caused this mayhem had already left,” Phillip listened intently, his periwinkle eyes gazing with attention around him.
“My Lord! My Lord!” Ambrose heard his name being called from the other side of the railway. One of his own -Bradley, judging from the booming voice - was running toward him, his usually good-natured face now a mask of barely contained stress. “What is it, lad?” “My Lord, you need to come at once,” he gasped, between one breath and the other. “We-We have found it. Kaylock’s body. It’s…It’s-” Ambrose stood silent for a moment, taking a deep breath, and clenching his jaw in frustration. “Show him to me,” he murmured. Then he turned toward Phillip. “I advise you stay here, M’lord. It might be a gruesome affair, the lot of it,” The young Aristocrats waved his hand as if to dismiss his concern. “Fret not, Master Harrison, I am not a delicate daisy that cannot hold the sight of a corpse,” he murmured, shaking his golden curls with a pretentious look etched on his oval face. “It wouldn’t be my first,” Once again Ambrose fought the impulse to roll his eyes to the sky, and answer him with a mordant remark; instead, he refocused his attention on the young lad and followed him to the location where Kaylock’s body had been found, his thoughts redirecting toward the gang leader. So the man had indeed been killed after all.
For a brief moment, Ambrose had hoped not: their differences notwithstanding, Rexford Kaylock had been a good friend of his, always ready for a brawl down at the pits, always up for a wager and he was yet to meet a man that could hold his beer like he did. But despite the man’s cunning, Ambrose knew that his penchant for playing with his food before eating it would have been his ruin, sooner or later. Once in front of the corpse of the man who had once been his friend, Ambrose said nothing, his face almost impassible if not for the furrowing of his thick brows. Now he understood the distress on Bradley’s face. Kaylock hadn’t been just killed: he had been slaughtered. Nose was broken with such strength the bone was showing from the skin; slashes all over his upper body, and open wounds showing the shiny sinew and the bundle of muscles, in some places so deep that you could see the indentation of the weapon even on the bone. He couldn’t determine if it had been a butcher knife or a smaller blade to cause all that. All he could see was that the stroke had been deliberate, unforgiving, inexorable. Ambrose turned toward Bradley and took him aside, bringing him closer enough to preserve the secrecy of his words. “Take away his body and see that he’s buried properly,” his voice was just high enough to be heard by the man. Ambrose took two pouches filled with money and gave it to him. “Give this to his widow and this one to the undertaker, and make sure to have some of my men guardin' his grave after the burial, at least until we figure out who in the fuckin' hell has done this." “Understood, My Lord,” Bradley nodded, lips thin in a grimace of distress as he left to do as he had been ordered. Ambrose growled, taking out another cigarette and lighting it up, hoping to calm his annoyance down.
He didn’t want to be there. He didn’t want to be there at all, playing nanny to the young Blighters who had still to make their bones in the field, and, on top of that, counting the dead after whatever the hell had occurred in the night. A disaster, in his opinion, more than avoidable, had that stupid man listened and stood put, as he had been ordered, instead of getting more and more tangled up with whatever bollocks he had found himself into. Bloody affair, the lots of it. The sound of cold wind blowing did nothing to soothe his spirit or cover the shouting of the people busy working on the site - all myrmidons from his own regime - to bring away the corpses and, in a miraculous turn of faith, find someone still alive with the answers they sought. Ambrose stood a moment longer to oversee the young Blighter when he heard the rustling of a heavy cloak just beside him. When he turned, he found Phillip gazing intently toward the group of men who were carrying Kaylock’s corpse away. “Quite the gruesome spectacle, judging from how the leader of this borough has been rendered.” The aristocrat murmured, his periwinkle eyes observing without fear. “Kaylock wasn’t killed by a dabbler. The pisspot that did this knows how to wield a knife,” “Any theories?” “Not as many as I wished. My money is on a showdown, maybe a settlement of scores between Kaylock’s men and some goddamn Clinkers. They’ve been a pain in the arse lately, so I wouldn’t rule out an escalation. Anyway, until we figure this out, I gave the order to have Keylock’s body to be guarded after his burial.” “I didn't know that corpse snatchers were still residing in the East End of our fair city?” “They don't," Ambrose retorted, putting out his cigarette with his shoe. " No, what I fear is that people might take revenge against him. I don’t put it above them to desecrate a corpse. At this point, I can’t exclude anything. What about your voices, Master of Secrets? Any hint?” Phillip smirked at that name, shaking his golden ringlets. Ambrose couldn’t help but notice how they resembled the colour of ripe wheat in summer. “Forgive me, m’lords,” they both heard a voice behind them.
Ambrose turned and saw young Zachary Handerson approaching them, a small bowler hat in his hands in deferential respect, his fresh face crossed in distress. Ambrose shook his head, almost imperceptibly. The young boy couldn’t be a day over twelve. He knew he had joined the Blighters out of necessity and need for money, and after a talk with Old Man Roth, he had been assigned to Kaylock’s men. But Ambrose could see that the lad had a gentle heart, and was not accustomed to all that violence. He had no place among them, and yet, here he was, doing the job of a man when in truth, he was no more than a child. “What do you need, lad?” Ambrose enquired, his voice much softer than usual. “Forgive me, M’lord,” Zachary fumbled in his words. “I- I was the one that gave the alarm when the whole chaos happened. I was here when the fight started,” Ambrose’s brows raised in surprise, as he turned fully to face the young man, his attention entirely devoted to the young urchin. “Did you see what happened?” “Aye, sir,” the child murmured, raising his eyes but immediately turning them down when they met Phillip’s haughty gaze. Through some gentle nudging from Ambrose, the youngling was able to recount all that he had seen, all that had happened.
Both men listened intently, keeping whatever comments they had for themselves. “It was a bloodbath,“ Zachary ended his tale, cheeks pale from having to remember everything his young eyes had seen. “And those who didn’t die, become turncoats! They all rallied behind the young Rook, sir!” "The Young Rook, you say?” asked Ambrose, his bushy eyebrows frowning. “Aye, sir! That’’s what they called themselves - the chap and the missy- Rooks! Bloody furies, the two of them were! They swooped in with their men and even sized Keylock’s old train!” the young lad said, his face animated at the memories. Ambrose exchanged a look with Phillip, their expressions a mirror. “I assume it would be too much to ask the direction the train has taken?” said Phillip, his words tinged with frustration. When no answer came from the boy, Ambrose gently dismissed him with a few golden coins for his help and looked as he quickly retreated into the bustling crowd, the shock of the recent events still etched on his face. “It appears we have a new player in this war of gangs,” murmured Phillip. “Nothin' to be concerned about. I'll regroup as many Masters as I can and have them surveillin' each of London’s main stations. A train can't vanish out of thin air like that. They’re bound to resurface again.” “- assuming that those miscreants are still well within the city borders. We must find out who is controlling these “Rooks” and what their intentions are. We need to ascertain if this was a single instance or if it is part of something much greater,” Ambrose stared at the young aristocrat at the younger man. “You think this could be connected to the Assassins,” Phillip kept his silence, turning to look toward the trains that were still parked in the station. “I have my theories, yes,” he murmured, as his eyes scanned the surrounding before turning and walking toward the entrance of the train station, Ambrose walking at his side. “Lift the circumscription and see that your men bring order around here as fast as they can. We have already attracted far too much attention than what the Grand Master would have liked.”
“What about you, Master Starrick?” “I will need to have a word with Roth regarding his men,” murmured Phillip, as he walked toward the carriage parked just outside the station, awaiting for him. “We need to find a replacement for Kaylock, and if it is true that these peons have turned coats and joined these “Rooks”, we will need more discipline as well,” With a subtle movement, Ambrose grabbed the young aristocratic’s wrist, slowing him down in his walk. “Phillip, wait," he whispered. “We need to talk,” Phillip turned to look at him with indignation burning in his light eyes. Yet, Ambrose noticed the blushing appearing on the younger man’s cheeks, as it always did whenever he called him by his first name. "It's “Lord Starrick” for you, Master Harrison," he hissed, as he looked around to make sure that no one saw them. "And no, we don't need to talk. Not now. Not ever!" The older man smirked underneath the bushy mustache, lowering his eyelids with a look that said everything and yet nothing. “We do, Phillip. You and I have unfinished business,” Phillip yanked his arm away from the other man’s grasp. Their eyes met for a moment too long: forest green against periwinkle blue. For a moment, Ambrose felt as if he was looking at the immensity of the sky on a clear sunny day. “No we do not, Master Harrison! We have nothing unfinished! Now, if you will excuse me-“ “I can’t let you get back to Roth, Phillip. The man is off his chump.” Phillip’s nostrils flared in disdain at those words.
“I would mind your words, Master Harrison. You are not the Grand Master, to dispense tasks and commands as it pleases you, nor your are my superior in rank. Maxwell Roth has been a trusted associate of the Order, long before your tenure, and I will not have you disrespecting him or question the Grand Master’s decision." Phillip shot back, his voice filled with aggravation. Ambrose sighed, frustration building up in his chest. The Young Lord could be as stubborn as he was cunning, whenever it came to the man responsible for training all the Templars’ underlings. And he never knew how he felt about that stubbornness, what motivated it. And he wasn't sure he wanted to know, lest he was not to like the answer. "Very well, “Master Starrick",” he blurted, his voice tinged with mockery. “Go back to all your affairs! But don't let your pride blind you! Do not trust Roth! His loyalty may be as wavering as that of the men that today have sworn fielty to the Rook, and mark my word, we will all pay the price if that loyalty will fail." Phillip's expression shifted to one of contemplation, and for a moment, Ambrose saw a flicker of doubt in those usually steadfast eyes. But it was quickly replaced by determination, a brand new flame burning bright. "I'll handle my responsibilities, Master Harrison," Phillip replied, a steely resolve in his voice. "As you should handle yours. Good day to you," As Phillip walked away, Ambrose watched him go without following him any further. He took out another cigarette, and lit it up, hoping that tobacco -the sweet poison he couldn’t go without - would also help tainting the swirling feelings that Ambrose always kept sealed and well hidden behind the guise of authority and duty.
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Byron felt nervous. He had been to Starrick Manor innumerable times throughout the years - certain times with such regularity, the Grand Master oftentimes jested that he should consider taking up residency directly inside the Manor; and yet, that time, it felt different. Uneasiness stirred within his chest as he clutched the small package he was holding with attentive carefulness in his hand— a collection of rare tomes of her favourite tales—and he took a moment to gather his thoughts. Three years. It had been three years since he had last seen her. Three years of letters, three years of incertitude in not knowing how she was in fact faring, if she was safe and sound, protected, loved as she had been loved within those walls. Three long years since his protégé had to flee the country because the danger in London had stricken too close for comfort. He gritted his teeth at the memory, his hand closing in a tight fist. Never the Assassins had been so bold. Never so foolish as to try something that most would have thought to be a suicide. A reckless move for which he had made sure they would pay. In full. But not enough. Not enough.
Byron relaxed his jaw and shoulders, as he tried to relinquish the raging energy that always pervaded him each time he thought about that night. He took a deep breath and allowed himself to focus once more on what was ahead of him, as he resumed his walk toward the doors of the library. He allowed himself to take a quick glance in the mirror and adjusted a small lock of hair that had fallen out of place, before turning toward the library once more. The closer he got to that room -one of his favorite places in the whole Manor- the more he could hear the soft melodious voice of a violin coming from behind the wooden panels. A distant melody, a gentle one, beckoning him like a siren, inviting him to leave all that worried him behind. “Angels We Heard on High”. Byron allowed himself the indulgence for a tiny smile: a little out of season, considering that Christmas had passed already, but he knew that, if it was for her, she would be playing Christmas songs and carols all year round. He knew that, if it was up to her, she would have all the lands constantly covered in a soft blanket of gentle powdery snow, protecting everything from the bitter frost, as flora and fauna alike would wait until the warm kiss of Spring came to wake them all up again. He opened the door, ever so slightly, and felt his heart leaping in his chest at the sight of the young woman who was playing the violin, eyes closed as always to let herself be entirely transported away in the land of arpeggios and symphonic poems, the melody coming straight out of her soul, as if she was indeed singing the praise of this life to the Angels above. His dear Dorothea.
After the immense tragedy that had burned his heart and rendered it just ashes, she had been one of the reasons why he hadn’t lost his path, why he hadn’t lost his way amidst desperation and discomfort. His Morning Star, the herald of Dawn after the long cold winter night that was his grief. A purpose, after all that had been lost. Sitting on the sofa, just opposite the young woman, was her cousin Phillip, his whole attention focused on her as a good-natured smile made his sharp face much more amiable than what he usually presented to the world. A gentle grin, ever so sweet in nature, appeared on Byron’s lips, before he even realized it; but he had no intention of stopping that smile from growing larger. Because in truth, what he saw in front of him were the echoes of a moment long gone: a memory of two young children who would sit on that sofa together as they read for hours through Byron’s old journals of his time in the Arctic, bombarding him with questions after questions, their curiosity insatiable. It was a familiar sight, the comfort of a long lost home and family finally found again, of peace sought after a long journey across the whole sea that was his life. Odysseus finally returning to Ithaca, prepared to find peace for his tired heart.
Careful now in opening the door as quietly as possible, he put a finger in front of his lips when he saw Phillip turning to look at him. The young man smirked and nodded, keeping his silence. Byron took his hat off with respect and placed the small package as he awaited for the young woman to finish her song, her fingers dancing along the strings with the easiness that came from practice. Such a soothing sight, it was. As the last notes flew in the air, he finally spoke. “This sound was incredibly missed, Princess,” he murmured, his gravelly voice just loud enough so that she would hear him without startling her. “Byron!” Dorothea turned to look at him, eyes wide in surprise as her whole face seemed to be lit up by his mere presence. Without hesitation, Dorothea left her violin and bow on the nearby table and ran to the Master Templar. With careful attention- as gentle as his own strength allowed - Byron took the young woman's hands in his and brought them to his lips, softly placing a long kiss on her knuckles. “Oh, how I missed you! My eyes see with joy! My heart sees with joy!” she murmured, eyes twinkling with barely contained tears of unbounded happiness at the sight of her mentor, after so many years far away from one another. “As do mine, darling child. As do mine.” he whispered back, feeling a small lump forming in his throat at the sound of her voice, his heart swelling in his chest. “Thank you for bringing her home safe and sound,” he whispered to Phillip, his voice filled with a gratitude he couldn’t contain, his eyes not leaving Dorothea’s silvery ones for a single moment. The young man raised his brows in surprise at the gentle tone and responded with a small bow of his head. “I just did what every devoted man would do for his beloved family,” He chuckled, before turning to look at his cousin. ”Well, Dora dearest, I thank you for gracing me of your time and company this evening, but it is high time I return to my duties and shall take my leave." “Oh, cousin, please! Do not leave just yet!” she pleaded. “No no, I do insist, dearest. Besides, I believe you and Master Harrison will have a lot to discuss, after three years away. But-“ and he turned to refer to the older man, his periwinkle eyes piercing the Master Templar’s sea-green eyes. “If you were to spare a few moments for me afterward, I have something to discuss with you regarding our latest endeavors,” Byron’s jaw tightened, his teeth grinding together. Despite the placid calm of his voice, the urgency in the young man’s gaze couldn’t be denied nor ignored. “As you wish, Lord Starrick.” He conceded. “Splendid! I shall await you then. I have a few details to discuss with Aunt Annette before - we truly should take into consideration renovating the library in Dover,” he turned to face Dorothea once more and kissed her hand amiably, before smiling one last time. “Sleep well, darling Cousin. I will call you soon,”
Then, nodding to Byron, he took his leave, closing the door behind him. Byron’s eyes immediately found Dorothea’s again, and he felt warmth once more spreading from his chest to the rest of his whole body. “I have missed you, Byron,” She giggled, daring to engulf him in the tightest embrace her arms allowed. “These halls were empty without your laughter to fill them, Princess,” he murmured, returning the embrace in full. He dared to lay a small kiss on the braid on the crown of her silvery blond hair, resting his lips against her hair a moment longer. With eyes closed, he allowed himself to be completely enveloped by her presence, to stop time and thoughts from running around in his mind, to live in that small moment of warm joyous innocence. To feel her breathing, healthy, alive, safe, and sound. Cradling her face in his hands, he examined her thoroughly, his stormy sea green eyes piercing straight into his protégé’s as he looked at every small wrinkle, every freckle, every single detail of her face with almost punctilious attention. A frown appeared on his heavy brows when he found the small scar under her eye, white and healed after so long. He blocked the memories from returning to him before she could read them all over his face. “You look thin, Dora. Have you not been fed while in Sturefors?” he murmured instead, his voice sounding more like a growl than a whisper, as his gaze fixed on her cheeks, not as round as he remembered them to be. Dorothea shook her head, with a sad smile. “I have been, Byron. My family at Sturefors has taken the greatest care of me during my sojourn there. But the Famine hit us. It hit us all. The last two winters were the most cruel I had ever had the misfortune to experience, but we were lucky. The food was less than what we had when I first arrived, but we still had food.” She paused for one moment, lips trembling at the memories that came flooding her of all the people she had seen dead on the side of the street, starvation, and the unforgiving winter cold the cruel executioners of their fate. “So many others didn’t.”
Byron pursed his lips in a grimace of utter displeasure at the news, the grip around her tightening almost out of instinct. He had always been against her departure from London, three years prior, believing that with him around, no hurt could ever come to her. But he had been powerless in front of the Grand Master’s will, his hands bound as he himself had to put her on a ship and send her to hide deep in the forest of the North. And now, he wasn’t happy to see her return less than she had been before. “Why didn’t you write to me about this?” he whispered, his voice stern in his question. “To what end? Not even you and your strength of will could ever stop the turn of the Seasons, or Nature and her whims, my dearest mentor,” she jested, hoping to see the deep frown on his brow disappear altogether. “I could have arranged for your return, Dora. You know that all I needed was one word from you - one command - and I would have come and brought you back home myself. The Baltic Sea, with all its maelstroms and currents, would have not stopped me. You know that.” “I know,” she acquiesced with a nod, a bashful grin appearing on her face. “I know, Byron. No woman on this Earth could ask for a better Mentor and Guardian; No woman could ask for a most formidable Bulwark. But I could never ask that of you. You had duties here that were far more important than having to personally come and collect me. How could I ever deprive the Grand Master of his Right Hand?” Byron took a deep sigh, before returning her grin with a lenient smile of his own. He gently patted her cheek with his hand - large enough to cover her whole face - in a reassuring gesture. Had it been to comfort her or himself, he didn’t know. “You are wise, young one. And stubborn, if I do say so myself,” he added, eliciting a silvery laughter in Dorothea. “ But yes. You here now, and I will personally see that we shall bring you back to good health,” “You sound exactly like Father now,” she giggled, her laughter returned by a small, tired smile. He saw her looking up at him and saw a sad light appear on her face, as her eyes looked at his face with attentive care, mirroring the way he had been gazing at her a moment earlier. He knew what she was seeing because he saw the same thing each time he gazed into a mirror: the deep black shadows that had appeared underneath his eyes; the wrinkles on his forehead that didn’t disappear when his face wasn’t frowning; the scar on his cheek and nose, a memento of the fight that should have brought him peace, but did not. “Time hasn’t been kind to you as well, Byron. What happened to you?” she asked, bringing her small hands to his face in a comforting gesture. “The last three years have weighed on me like the Sky on Atlas’ shoulders,” he thought, stopping his words from reaching his lips. He sighed, slumping his shoulders ever so lightly and shaking his head. “We both have faced our deal of misery during your absence, Dora,” he just murmured, covering her hands with his and pressing them against his cheeks, as he tried to grasp all the comfort from that gentle touch, a balm for his restless soul. He didn’t dare to add anything, not wanting to let his burden become hers.
Not yet. Not just yet. He wanted, for a moment longer, to preserve that sweetness of temper and innocence of spirit that had already been taken away from her, three years prior. He wanted, for a moment longer, to feel as if the world was a hopeful place, untouched by sufferance, immaculate in its candor: a pristine dawn, with the promise of a glorious day ahead. When he saw her eyes turning sad and her lips pouting, he gave her a small smile and patted her cheek. “Do not be troubled for me, dearest child. Such is life.” he whispered, daring to give her a small kiss on her forehead. “But now, no more talk of sorrow or sadness. these rooms have been left bereft of your voice for far too long. So, if you would be so kind as to entertain a request from your old Mentor, and fill these ears with joyous chatter and a peaceful melody, you would make me immensely happy.” Dorothea pursed her lips, eyebrows frowning in apprehension. “But I do not wish to keep you from your business with Phillip, By-“ but the old man brought a finger to her lips, gently silencing her. “Whatever he has to say, it can wait. This cannot, my Princess.” He murmured with a warm smile. "Not after three years." Dorothea’s frown transformed and her round face lit up with sweet, uncontrollable mirth. Without even waiting for him to sit down, she quickly picked back up her violin and bow, ready to comply to Byron’s wishes. Gracing him with another smile, eyes and nose crinkling in her joy, and taking a small bow, Dorothea started her melody, one that was dear to both their hearts. A lullaby of the North.
A lullaby about cold winds and chilling waters, of rocky mountains and green forests that met the slate-blue churning sea…of memories and answers so deeply hidden, one would need to get lost before being able to find them. Byron took place on the small couch, letting himself sink in the cushion, feeling as if all that was weighing him down was suddenly being lifted up from his shoulders by those notes that had started to fly like birds in Spring. He couldn’t remember when it had been the last time he had sat and just listened to music, without shunning it from his heart. It almost felt as if a lifetime had passed, a whole horizon away. But after so long, he felt as if he could finally be able to fully breathe once more, to breach through the waves and stop fighting that tide that was always there, in each of his thoughts, ready to swallow him whole and drag him in open dark waters. His low baritone voice found its way out of his throat, humming at first, then louder, accompanying her violin with a song, a soft smile appearing on both their lips. "Yes," he thought, looking at her with soft eyes filled with a sentiment that he thought was long buried under the snow of his grief. "The Harbinger of Dawn indeed."
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Time had passed far too swiftly. After almost two hours of complete bliss, entrapped as he had been between her tales of her adventure in the North and reading together the books he had brought her, Byron had bid Dorothea goodnight. He had promised her that they would travel together to Dover soon, for a small outing at sea together, just like how they used to when she had been but a young child, all cooped up in the halls of that Manor that faced the sea. After so many promises he had to uphold for duty, he was finally content to keep a promise that didn’t involve hunting down those bloody Assassins or finding a way to set his business in order. The moment he closed the door of the library behind himself, however, he felt the darkness of the hall fall on him the same way rain poured during that gloomy autumn afternoon, when the sun would not show itself at all and would set over the horizon far too soon. He wished for a moment to not have granted Young Lord Starrick his time, if anything, to preserve that moment of peace a little longer. But his word was binding, for better or worse. When he raised his eyes, he immediately found the young man waiting at the end of the hallway, standing against the stained glass window that faced the inner garden, where the orangery stood, a lit cigarette in hand. At the sound of rustling robes, Phillip raised his face, and looked intendedly toward Byron, as he approached him: despite having seen forty-five springs already Byron Harrison still stood tall and powerful as he had done in youth, even more so after the years spent at sea had chiseled him into a man of exceptional hardness of spirit, one that rivaled the strength of his character and the potency of his body. Eyes like the storms, and fiery auburn hair, wavy like the ocean on a windy day, it always felt as if Poseidon had deigned to walk the Earth, bringing with him the full strength of the Oceans. Phillip couldn’t help but look at him with eyes filled with reverential respect. He had no trouble imagining why people whispered his name with either deference or terror laced in their voices: Byron Harrison was someone that one would always want on their side, for good or for worse, and if by misfortune, his favour was to be lost, to pray to God for a quick painless deliverance, instead. “Thank you for acquiescing to my request for a small interview, Lord Harrison, I know how much it would cost to cut your time with Dorothea short,” Phillip murmured, keeping his voice low as he offered him a cigarette.
Byron shook his head, refusing the offer. “What do you seek of me, Lord Starrick?” he muttered. “I assume your brother has informed you about what happened today?” Byron shook his head, eyes narrowing as his shoulders tensed. “Kaylock is dead. The Blighters that reported to him had all but disappeared and according to witnesses, they have joined side with someone called “The Rook”. Not only this, but from what my sources have related to me, there had been chaos in the factories and we have lost our stronghold, Spitalfield. It appears we-“ he cleared his throat, uncomfortable. “-we no longer have control over White Chapel." Byron listened intently, unblinking, as Phillip reported to him all that had happened. A whole borough lost. “Has the Grand Master been informed about this?” It was Phillip’s time to shake his head. “While the severity of our loss is considerable, we are still evaluating if this “Rook” and his gang are just miscreants trying to cause mayhem in White Chapel alone as a borough, or if this is indeed the Assassins trying to officially strike and breach into the city.” Byron turned pensive, and brought his large hand to his chin, stroking his auburn beard. First Croydon, with Ferris and Brewster killed, and the Piece of Eden lost. Now Kaylock and White Chapel. While not the most important of the boroughs under their control, Byron could see trouble brewing. “We need to recover all the men we have lost,” he murmured, after a long moment of silence. “We cannot let our numbers dwindle. Speak with Roth. Have him send out scouters to pick up more men and intensify the training of the lads that will join the Blighters from now on. We will need to raise their wages as well,” Phillip’s lips curled in a grimace of abhorrence. “Why paying them more? They are just scum, Master Harrison. Parasites that would sell their own mothers and wives and daughters, if they can get a profit from it. Why giving them more resources that we can instead reinvest in something more fruitful?” Byron looked at the man with eyes void of any light, chilling in their gaze.
“Your disdain for them clouds your judgment if you think of them as nothing more than fleas on the coat of a dog, an annoyance. Disposable. Unimportant. Never forget that these men are paid to do our bidding, but there is no loyalty to us if not the one our purse can buy. And they have numbers on their side, and this, combined with their desperation is their greatest strength, whether they realize it or not, and it can prove to be the cause of a whole pandemonium, if not controlled.“ He took a deep breath, before talking again. “Never underestimate what desperation could make a man do. As for this “Rook”…I assume you have already sent out your “ghosts” around the city to gather more information?” Phillip nodded, a light of solemnity painted on his sharp features. “Good. I will speak with the Grand Master at the earliest and discuss a proper strategy.” "I will ensure to keep you informed of any new information that may come to my attention." "Very well," he murmured, and with a small bow, he took his leave, making way toward the stairs that would lead to the ground floor. But he stopped before he could descend, clenching his fist. “Lord Starrick.” “Yes, Master Harrison?” “Not a word to Dorothea,” he murmured, his tone one that didn’t allow the possibility of compromise. After the young man nodded in agreement, Byron finally took his leave, his heart heavy. Not yet, he thought, looking above his shoulder, toward the library. Not just yet.
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[PREVIOUS CHAPTER - Homeward Bound ]
[NEXT CHAPTER - "A Touch of West" ]
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*pokes head out of the borrow*
OMG I AM FINALLY DONE. I AM FINALLY DONE.
It was so LONG overdue, but allow me to finally present the latest chapter!!
Ngl, I am so happy to be done with this, and I am so happy with how it turned out!! And I am so happy to finally start to introduce my Templar Squad! I don't know how to explain, but it makes me feel like the story is truly starting rolling! :)
Dear gods, this is truly one of the longest chapters I have ever written! It started as a small chapter, I was envisioning maybe 6k words. I DIDN'T EXPECT TO END UP WITH DOUBLE THAT NUMBER.
good gods, i feel like my brain is mush lolol
But anyway, I truly hope you will like reading it as much as I loved writing it!
--Nemo
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imnotadogiswear · 4 years
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Twopenny: How dumb do they think we are?
Lord Cardigan: Sometimes Starrick leaves me pictures of politicians instead of a their names.
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In The Heat of the Moment Chapter 4 - Homeward Bound
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Ch.1, Ch.2, Ch.3
Words Count: 7981
Warning: None
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Dorothea
January 1868, London
The first thing that hit Dorothea was the smell: abhorrent, a stinging stench, almost choking in its miasmic pungency.
Phillip had warned her that it would have been a shockful amalgamation of foul odors, but at first, the young woman had deemed her cousin, with his penchant for the dramatic, exaggerated in his assertion.
Now, as she wrinkled her nose with barely masked revulsion painted on her otherwise delicate features, she found herself thinking that, mayhaps, her cousin hadn’t been dramatic at all.
Her sensitive nose had grown so accustomed to the fresh clean air of the surrounding forest of Sturefors, in Sweden -her mother’s ancestral home- that breathing the less-than-salubre air of London felt like a slap to her face and an execrable invasion of her nostrils.
Making sure no one would hear her, Dorothea allowed herself to let out a sigh, barely audible, yet lingering like haze in the cold winter air.
She had known she would miss Sturefors Slott the moment she had set foot in the carriage her mother’s family had prepared for her to bring her to the southern part of the country, where she had taken the ship that had brought her back to London.
Sturefors Slott -despite its name- wasn’t truly a castle as they intended them back in her beloved England, with their towering stone walls and turrets, built during the early middle age to protect the Lords and their people from the barbaric invasion; rather, it was a Hall, elegant and refined if modest in its appearance, nestled within the soft embrace of an endless vastness of evergreens and a clear lake, just outside the door.
Closing her eyes, she wished she could fool herself that it was not smog what she was breathing, but the fresh tingly scent of crushed pine needles and musk and balmy resin.
As she allowed herself to glide through her most recent memories, all she could see was the residence’s walls painted in a soft pale shade of yellow and white, in a way that made them resemble one of those Austrian pastries her father had always been fond of ever since she could remember; she could see the small artificial pond, sitting right in the middle of the small baroque garden, where waterlilies grew aplenty and birds would come and swim at their leisure; the orangery and hothouse, where she had spent countless afternoons reading during those chill summers, surrounded as she was by the delicate perfume of the flowers in bloom.
The complete peace that place provided was one of the reason why it was always guaranteed that she would be found there; but alongside that motive, also the fickle hope that, somehow, being surrounded by all those familiar scents might help quell the melancholy and yearning, she oftentimes felt in her young heart, to see her family soon.
As she raised her eyes to glance at a ferry passing by them- one belonging to her father’s commercial fleet, judging by the men clad in red that shouted on the decks, and the wolf painted on the funnel spewing out a dark, choking smoke- she wondered at what price that melancholy was finally about to be abated.
In Sturefors, she had known a freedom she never felt while in London, with her mother’s protective wings always looming over her and her father’s ever watchful gaze constantly following her, even while not being physically there; like Eva with the Apple in the Garden of Eden, she had tasted the fruit of a far greater independence she had ever dared to dream, a complete sovereignty of her own self she had never experienced ever since she had memory.
“Those days are long over, Dora. You are back home, now,” she thought to herself, sighing again, before straightening her back and tilting her chin up, as she gazed upon the industrial city opening up in front of her, studying at it with uncertain eyes.
Her home.
London, the Centre of the World.
The city had changed ever since she had left it in 1865, almost three years prior: cluster upon cluster of new factories had been built in the industrial neighbours, and even from the river she could see the enormous luminous signs bearing her family’s name or her father’s own wolf crest black on the walls of red bricks, the eyeless predator towering over the buildings that faced the Thames, its watchful gaze the same her sire’s.
So many changes.
So much to get used to once again.
As she let her eyes wander, she felt a small leap of reassurance in her heart when she caught a glimpse of the city’s historical landmarks, the towering height of Big Ben, his belfry raising high against the late afternoon sky, a familiar sight amidst all that chaotic maze of buildings veiled by a haze of smog.
This was indeed her home.
“And yet,” she thought, calling upon all her considerable will not to let the tears that prickled her eyes run free on her cheeks, “It does not feel like it any longer.”
With a subtle gesture of her hand, she tried to brush away the tears away, before anyone could notice, and trying to compose herself, she let her gaze wander around some more and touch the buildings at the side of the river.
She looked at the tiles and doors and windows, bringing her eyes up where the roofs and chimneys sat and let out their nauseous smoke that rendered the air impossible to breathe.
All of sudden, she stopped in her wandering, feeling that her gaze had been returned.
And it had been.
Someone - at that distance a mere silhouette- had moved with switf movement from behind the cover of red bricks, and without hesitation, had jumped from a chimney to the other, graceful and secure in their movement like a cat.
She narrowed her eyes, bringing one gloved hand to her forehead to shield herself from the last rays of setting sun, trying to make sense of what she thought she saw.
Could it have been a trick of the light or the fatigue of the journey that was finally starting to take over her mind?
No.
She was sure of that.
“Ditte, vad hände? Det ser nästan ut som om du har sett ett spöke!”(Ditte, what happened?It almost looks as if you have seen a ghost!)
Dorothea kept looking up the roofs, half hearing what the woman that was approaching her was saying.
“Sassa, såg du det?”(Sassa, did you see that?) she blurted out, pointing with her finger.
“Vad såg du, min kära?”(What did you see, my dear?) Astrid, a cousin from her mother’s family, that had took upon herself to chaperone Dorothea safe and sound to London, looked intently and raised an eyebrow when she saw nothing.
Dorothea looked again, but whoever was jumping around like a miscreant was clearly gone.
“Någon... som hoppade runt? Jag svär, jag vet vad jag såg, eller så heter jag inte Dorothea Marianne Starrick!”(Someone...who jumped around the roof? I swear, I know what I saw, or my name is not Dorothea Marianne Starrick!)
The woman gave her a long look, her lips pursed together in a thin, austere line.
“Herre Gud, Ditte, det är inte så en ung dam i din ställning ska tala! Jag visste att Minna var benägen till fantasiflygningar, men jag trodde aldrig att du också var det!” (Dear God, Ditte, this is not how a young lady in your position should speak! I knew Minna was prone to flights of fancy, but I never thought you were too!”)
“But I know..what I saw…” she murmured back in English, lowering her head in shame at her cousin’s words.
“Där, där, min kära, ta dig samman! Denna smutsiga luft måste ha spelat dina ögon ett spratt.”(There, there, my dear, pull yourself together! The dirty air must have played a trick on your eyes) The woman said with a condescending tone, caressing a wayward strand of silvery blond hair away from Dorothea’s cheek. Then, she turned to look at the houses built parallel to the river with barely contained disdain. “Säg, Ditte, hur kan man bo på ett sånt här ställe undrar jag?”(Say, Dora, how can you live in a place like this, I wonder?)
Shaking her silvery blond ringlets, Dorothea tried with all her might not to sigh in exasperation, her jaw tensing as she turned to look away from the woman that had just spoken to her.
There was no use trying to reason with her.
But she knew what she saw.
“I can live in a place like this because I was born here, min kära. But pray tell me: what happened to all the good propositions of speaking only English from the moment we left Gothenburg?” she answered, putting an emphasis on the English name of the city.
Astrid brought her perfumed handkerchief to her nose, as her periwinkle eyes filled with tears from the disgust the vile air was causing to her poor nose. She stared at Dorothea for a moment longer than necessary, a wrinkle appearing on her brow, as if she was fighting the natural impulse to rebuke in her native language out of spite.
“Very well, Ditte,” she finally conceded, switching to an heavily accented English. “I am going to be here only for a few weeks anyway, I can afford to do that. For your sake, if anything else,”
“Your effort is oh so deeply appreciated, Sassa,” Dorothea pursed her lips, trying to drown her annoyance in a sweet, if tense, smile of gratitude.
However, much as ever, she had to contain the impulse to roll her eyes at Astrid’s tone and words; if caught, it would have earned her a reprimand and a tirade once in front of Mother and Father, and the last thing Dorothea desired was to have her return to London being soured by the constant complaining and nitpicking her older cousin was known for.
Deciding that she had given the woman far more attention than she deserved, Dorothea took a few step away from Astrid, leaning against the handrail that faced the side of the city where the Clock Tower was and tried to distract herself by looking at the busy stream of ferries in front of her.
But melancholy crept again into her heart. If only Minna, Astrid’s own younger sister and Dorothea’s closest companion in Sturefors, had been the one to be allowed to accompany her back home, maybe the journey would have been less grievous, if anything because she could have retained with her some of the happiness she had felt in Sweden.
“My my, isn’t Astrid a charming choice for a chaperone? Are my ears deceiving me or is the Lady Ankarcrona complaining yet again, Dora?” she heard a young gentleman addressing her thoughts, as if on an invisible cue.
The tone was conspiratorial, yet affable in cadence, and the velvety quality of his timber did nothing to hide the sharpness of his silver tongue.
“With extreme passion, I dare say,” she giggled, for the first time since leaving Sturefors.
Dorothea turned to to face the tall, handsome blond man that was approaching her with an imperious gait that well suited his authoritative appearance.
Philip Edmund Starrick, her first cousin on her father’s side, older than her by only a handful of years, was doing nothing to hide the condescension from beaming in his deep eyes, but when he turned to look at Dorothea, his gaze melted into a mischievous look, as a warm smile stretched on his lips.
Dorothea reciprocated with an impish smirk of her own.
“If you were to ask me,” he said, doing nothing to lower his voice,”If she applied all that passionate effort into something other than making everyone else’s ears miserable with her constant twaddling, her husband would not go looking for a nicer company among the valets of the house,”
Gaping in disbelief, Dorothea leaned over to glance behind his shoulder, to make sure that Astrid hadn’t heard his words.
“Mind your words, Pip! How could you possibly even know about that?” she muttered.
He winked at her, his smirk widening even more.
“It is my job to know what is going on around me,”
“In London, maybe,” she chuckled, poking his ribs with her elbow. “But not in Sweden,”
“Sometimes it is indeed hard not to perform one’s job, especially if that someone is considerable remarkable at doing it ,” he chuckled, leaning in so that he would be able to whisper without anyone hearing them.
“Ever the paragon of humbleness, I see,”
“False modesty is for mingling peons and the church ministers who have time at their hands. I have little patience for it, and much more interest in the fruits my job brings; Speaking of, my darling cousin, I couldn’t help but hear voices about how eager young Master Daae was to instruct you in the art of the violin, during your sojourn in that desolated farm they dare to call a Hall. “
Dorothea gaped once more, opening and closing her mouth as a look of profound abashment found its way on her face. She wished she could stop the blushing that prickled her cheeks at the insinuation Philip had purposely left hanging in the air, founding herself unable to.
She gave him a piercing gaze, tilting her chin up in a silent challenge of wills.
“ I haven’t even set foot in London, and you are already enquiring about businesses that are none of yours. Gustave was my teacher, and nothing more than that,” she whispered, glaring at him. “And you might insinuate all you wish, but my conscience is at peace. My conduct at Sturefors has been nothing less than impeccable.”
Phillip raised an eyebrow, giving her a look that spoke aplenty.
“Not even for a moment has the thought crossed my mind. I am well aware you are a paragon of virtue, cousin dearest. He did fancy you, however, or so I had been told,” he added. “He indeed had the insolence to send you letters with flowers, as well as paying constant calls to you, and invited you for frequent walk together, sometime…unchaperoned?”
Dorothea narrowed her eyes, not liking for a moment that last insinuation.
A realization came to her mind, and irritation found a way in her voice.
“I have nothing to hide nor to apologize for. Who spied on me while I was at Sturefors, Phillip? Was it Father that told you to follow my every step? Or Mother, Heaven forbids?”
Chuckling, he took a step closer, leaning against the railing.
“No need to fret or get yourself into a state, cousin. Neither Uncle Crawford nor the Countess had their hands in this. I am at liberty to say it was in fact my own doing.”
“What for, may I ask? Do you think me so inept that I am incapable of properly take care of myself?” She furrowed her eyebrows and  gave him a stern look, crossing her arms against her chest.
The young man gave her a long look, as silence hung between them, a silence Dorothea couldn’t truly decipher. All it did was rendering her more aggravated with each passing moment. Wasn’t she at liberty to have companionship but the one approved by her family?
“As your spies have most likely already reported to you, my good flibbertigibbet, all that Gustave sent me -all he ever did - was to politely express his respect and devotion toward a friend and fellow connoisseur of the art of the violin and singing. It was done in perfect accordance to all rules of propriety and decency, as my Lady Mother has instructed me to,” Composing herself, she wrinkled her nose as her face morphed into a mask or haughty disdain. “As for what you refer as “fancying me”, Mr. Daaé fancied my competence in playing and composing melodies, and in my voice when I found appropriate to accompany his violin. I assure you, he did not want-“ She faltered for a moment, a sting in her chest where her heart was. She cleared her throat from the lump that had formed there, before regaining her word.“-whatever interest he might have shown toward me, it was not personal at all, but merely connected to all that I had to offer as an artist in my own right.”
Phillip didn’t answer immediately, keeping his thoughts to himself as he observed his cousin with an intense look in his eyes.
“Do I hear a certain vein of disappointment in your voice, Dora? Did you wish for him to acknowledge you in a more,how to say…womanly fashion?”
“I-“ the young woman’s face flushed, her cheeks turning a scalding hue of red that could rival the one of the garment she was wearing. “This is not the place nor time to discuss such matters, Phillip. On my word, your boldness had grown bigger than your ego, and that in itself is an accomplishment. I have no idea what you are insinuating, and I surely hope you did not report a single words of this postulation of yours to Mother and Father? Because I shall not accept any besmirching of my own reputation from no one, yourself included, cousin,”
Dorothea felt her heart thundering against her chest, where contempt and mortification took turn in mocking her.
When she saw him still standing, still observing her with those piercing eyes that had nothing to envy to the winter tundra in the North, with no intention to utter a single word, Dorothea felt dejected.
“It matters not,” she murmured, turning again to face the river. “Not now, not ever, because nothing more than friendship dwelled in Gustave’s heart. He did not know who I was -what I am- and even if he had, nothing would have changed. At all.”
How to explain that the companionship Gustave had offered her had proved to be both the greatest of comfort and the bitterest of yearning, and not reciprocated in the slightest? Her young heart knew all to well what her fate was, where it lead her.
A nightingale in a golden cage, that’s how she felt.
Unable to soar against the dark vaults of the sky, forever locked in the maze that was her reality.
“I could very well have hoped to have Brave Lancelot coming at my window and whisk me away to Camelot, and my chances to find a companion worthy of Mother and Father’s approval would have been the same,”
Phillip let out a small chuckle.
“Now now, you are being rather unjust toward our Mr. Daae. Sir Lancelot would always have an unfair advantage compared to any suitor that might end up asking for your hand. He can very well be considered family at this point,”
Dorothea allowed herself to let out a giggle, her aggravation slowly subduing, as it always did with Phillip.
“I might have driven my father out of his mind with all my jibber-jabbering about the Knights of the Round Table and their quest.”
“Him and everyone else in the Order. All the letters you had the Old Bear write for you, asking noble Lancelot to come and rescue us all from the dragons that were threatening your Father,”
He chuckled at the memory, before speaking again, this time, reciting some verses.
“His broad clear brow in sunlight glow'd;
On burnish'd hooves his war-horse trode;
From underneath his helmet flow'd
His coal-black curls as on he rode,
As he rode down from Camelot.
From the bank and from the river
He flash'd into the crystal mirror,
'Tirra lirra, tirra lirra:' by the river
Sang Sir Lancelot.”
“The Lady of Shalott,” Dorothea murmured, her smile growing wider. “Have you perchance seen reason and read the poem, finally giving our good Lord Tennyson the praise he deserves ?”
Phillip adverted his eyes, his mustache quivering as he held back a contemptuous snort.
“Well?”
“Mayhaps.”He conceded.
She kept her eyes fixated on him, cocking an eyebrow as her smirk widened the more he avoided her gaze.
“Fine. I’ll admit to it, you impertinent pest! This past winter, Cip and I might have spent the evenings perusing some of your books because we missed hearing your voice reading story to us, and Charlie was adamant we went through “The Lady Of Shalott” at least once per week because he knew it’s your favourite. I swear to all the Heavens, he was more punctual about this reading than he was to attend Mass,”
“Let us always be thankful for Charlie and his sensitive decisions. If we wereto be left to your devices, you would have us read something that would make my father’s hair turn white and my mother’s poor heart fail,”
Phillip rolled his eyes, but cannot hid his smile. “Preposterous. I do not know where you get all these ideas.”
Then, all of sudden, Dorothea felt Phillip taking her hand in his in a gentle gesture, and brought her palm against his cheek. Gone was that quick moment of mirth, to leave place to a far somberer one. The calculating light had all but disappeared from the young man’s eyes, leaving place for a warm compassion she had not seen in many years.
“Forgive me for my actions and words earlier, cousin dearest. I..might have been in the wrong with my own conjectures. I did not mean to bring any harms nor sullying to your conduct while away.”
Dorothea gave him a small smile that did nothing to hide the sadness in her eyes.
“Did Charlie agree with your vision? Did he support this decision? And be honest with me, Phillip: I cannot abide any falsehood to be thrown to my face. Not from you.”
The young man shook his head with a smile.
“Cip was adamantly against me intervening. He knew you would have not approved, and that I had no right to do something like this without you being in the known,”
“At least someone in our family still retains some trust in me and my endevours, I am glad to see,”
And yet she knew in her bones that, if Charlie was aware of Phillip’s intentions, so would her father. She knew that Phillip alone couldn’t have the authority to order her to be followed in Sweden. Not without the giveaway of someone higher than him in authority.
And only two people had that kind of prerogative within the Order.
But which of them, she could not fathom.
“Do I have your forgiveness, cousin? I cannot bear to know you are aggravated with me,” She heard Phillip ask her, his voice now warmer.
She raised her eyes to look at him, and saw the same honest glint he always had as a child when he knew one of his prank had taken things too far and he would be in trouble.
She let out a sigh, giving him a tiny smile.
“ I cannot bear to be mad at you for too long either, you know that, Pip,”
“All I did, I did with the best intention and your well being in mind. I was worried about you,” He continued. “The Swedish Rite does not act as your father would, as the British Rite would, and it was only concern that had moved my hand to extend my authority in Sturefors. And after all that happened at the Manor that year, I-”
Dorothea brought her fingers to his lips, in a delicate but firm gesture, her gray eyes silently pleading.
“Say no more, I beg of you, Phillip. For the love you say to bear me, do not open this door. Let me keep the peace I found in Sturefors for just a little longer.”
The man did as he was told, and stopped talking, not without feeling his own heart growing heavy at the seriousness painted all over her face. So much had changed since the day she had been sent away, loaded on that ship, away from her family, alone in the darkness of the north. 
And he couldn’t help to think that, while having changed in appeareance, while having become even comelier than she was when she sailed away, Dorothea had not regained any of the innocence that she had lost that godforsaken night. Where once warmth and good cheer dwelt in her silvery eyes, now an hollowness remained, a desolation that made his blood boil.
The spectre of fear still lingered all over her, attached to her like a tick to the coat of one of his hunting dogs, sucking away at all the joy she once had as a child.
His heart broke at the memories of what once was, but kept his silence, as promised.
“There you were, you two,” a squeaky voice took them away from their conversation, and both cousins turned to look at Astrid, strutting toward them with small, rapid steps.
“I dare say, Mr. Starrick, is this the way to welcome a foreigner in this country? I was under the impression that the Starrick were amiable people, from what I gathered from my cousin here and her behaviour, but now I have to assume that it was my Aunt’s teaching to her daughter rather than the staple of her father’s family education.”
Dorothea had to silence the chuckle raising in her throat at the sight of her cousin rolling his eyes so much, she was sure he could see the back of his own head.
Not much could faze Phillip or break his composure, for he was known to be one of the most bewitching men, but being around Astrid had been proving quite the trial on his nerves ever since they had crossed the border where the Thames met the North Sea.
Nevertheless, the Master Templar’s expression morphed from aggravated in a mask of charming gallantry, with an easiness that came from constant practice. He took a few steps away from Dorothea and reached for the Swedish woman, looking straight into her violet eyes.
“Why, dear Astrid, you hurt my heart with your unjust words. What can I do to prove to your genteel spirit the extent of my family’s “amiability”?” he said, taking her hand in his with delicate touch, allowing his thumb to caress the back of her gloved hand. Astrid held her breath, too stunned by the young man’s boldness. “I assure you, us Starricks can be most…cordial, when given the chance,”his voice now a sultry husked murmur, almost a caress to the ears. “Just say the word, My Lady, and I will make sure to show you to what great extent us Starricks know how to make a respectable woman such as yourself feel…welcomed”
Dorothea’s eyes bulged as she silently put a greater distance from them, reaching the opposite side of the deck and making sure not to be within earshot.
She had heard enough, and she had no intention to bear witness to her cousin’s own trifling, even less so with that trifling being directed to Astrid. She was not one to admire demonstration of affection in public, preferring to read about it in her books: if one were to look upon two lovers exchanging their deeds of love, she would find herself blushing and wishing to be as visible as a spectre. Modesty and propriety lead her actions, and while being a young woman yearning to find love of her own - or, affection at the very least - she dreaded the idea of showing that love to anyone but her proper husband.
How could Phillip behave in such manner with so little concern of who might be bearing witness to his action, she could never understand.
Trying to distance herself from that lingering feeling of uneasiness, she raised her eyes once more, hoping to be able to see again a glimpse of the jumping figure she had seen earlier.
She knew what she saw.
Byron, so dear to her heart, oftentimes praised her for her grounded intellect and her propensity to not let her emotions drive her best judgment.
She allowed herself to gather strength from that, when she decided that she had indeed saw a figure looking back at her, before disappearing in front of her very eyes.
But what was it?
Or rather.
Who?
**************
The moment the ferry’s gangplank touched the dock, was the moment that truly marked the end of Dorothea’s journey from the North.
But all melancholy and sadness at the lost liberty seemed to melt away, like snow in summer, the moment her eyes found the blond man that was awaiting for her close to the pier, his face almost a mirror of her own.
Charles Magnus Starrick was standing tall and straight as an arrow, waiting for her, his round playful face just as amiable as she remembered, and his smile as warm as the gentle summer sun. She couldn’t help but think how much it contrasted with the much soberer faces of the flock of Templar agents surrounding him.  He had always looked out of place among the Templars, almost as if he did not belong, and yet, his authority, while not as great as Phillip’s, was never disputed.
“Charlie! Charlie!” she called at high voice, waving her hand at her cousin.
“Ditte, show a little restraint! This is not how a Lady should behave,” she heard Astrid’s reproach in her ear.
Dorothea tried as much as she could to maintain the elegant composure of her usual pace, but the child-like joy at seeing her cousin’s sweet kindhearted smile was so great, she couldn’t help herself from hasten and almost fly in her cousin’s open arms and hug him as tight as her own strength allowed.
“Darling Dora, welcome back home,” Charles whispered against her hair, reciprocating the tight embrace.
“I missed you so much, Cip!” she whispered back as  joyful warmth spread in her whole chest. “All your letters kept me so much company in those long winter nights where I could not be with you and Pip!”
“You were equally missed, Dora, I assure you! Oh, but do I dare say: did you become taller since the last time we saw one another? Or maybe my darling cousin has been lured by the Erlking and the one in front of me is but one of his elven vassals? Wait! Let me see for myself, I have an infallible method to know if it is indeed my darling Dora!”
Dorothea giggled, shaking her ringlets as Charlie started to count the freckles on her cheeks.
“Ah,Yes! They are all there! It is indeed you, cousin dearest!” and before she could answer, she was wrapped in another bear hug.
She had to call upon all her strength not to shed tears of joy at the relief that she felt back in arms that had hold her ever since she was a toddler.
She was home.
She was truly home now.
“Here she is, brother of mine. Delivered safe and sound, as I promised, “ they heard Phillip’s voice come from behind them, as he strutted down the gangplank while carrying one of Astrid’s luggage.
Charles took a timepiece out of his pocket, and cocked an eyebrow, as a smile appeared on his face.
“And with only fifteen minutes of delay from the advised time. I daresay I am almost impressed by your efficiency, Pip, albeit your delay cost me a whole round of beers with the men.”
“The nerves you got there, brother! I thought that by now you knew that when I say something, I deliver my promise. And it is not as if I had a way to make that godforsaken piece of scraped metal go any faster, even if I wanted to,”
“I wouldn’t have been surprised if you decided to commandeer it and cause mayhem across the Thames. You surely would have made it on the evening papers, I can already hear the titles echoing in the streets: “Gentleman of dubious background causes an halt to the viability of the river to deliver precious cargo unscathed,”
“Do not even jest on this, brother: the Old Bear and Uncle Crawford would have had me hanging by my breeches, if I dared doing such mischief,”
“Oh, to be sure. But I have a feeling that our Dora here would have had her fun,” he said, winking at the young woman and causing her to giggle.
She was ready to answer with a jape of her own, but once she felt the gaze of the small flock of Master Templars on herself, she quickly tried to regain her natural decorum.
She would never forgive herself if she were to stain her father’s reputation with a less than impeccable conduct, especially in front of all his subordinates.
All of them were wearing dark garments in the finest cut and on their short capelets, the red Templar Cross stood almost flamboyant against white fabric.
Even Charles, not one to showcase his appurtenance to the Order, was sporting the formal attire, and Dorothea could have not felt more honoured to know that he had done so just to welcome her.
She brought a hand to the cross tied around her neck by a silken red sash, caressing the engraved enamel with tender affection. It had been the last gift her father had given to her before she left.
She thanked her forethought for having decided to wear it during her journey back home: what kind of impression would have she given to the other Master Templars, if she, the Grand Master’s own daughter, were not to wear the symbol of the Order itself?
But, despite all intention of propriety being on her side, she couldn’t stop herself from tiptoeing to have a better look around her, trying to find other familiar faces among the much soberer ones that were standing guard around them.
“Where is Father? And Byron?” Dorothea asked, her lips forming a small pout of disappointment when she couldn’t catch a glimpse of Byron’s caring eyes or her father’s solemn face.
“The Grand Master and Lord Harrison have been….held up by an unexpected nuisance that needed to be dealt at once, I am afraid,” said Charles, sharing a knowledgeable glance with Phillip.
Dorothea’s own features turned to ashen, all colour leaving her face when looked in her eldest cousin’s eyes.
Even without a word being said, she knew precisely what the nuisance was.
“Assassins? In our dear London?” she whispered in disbelief . “Has our beloved City of Light become an abode of chaos and ruffians in the three years I have been away?”
“You needn’t to concern yourself, Dora.” she heard Phillip murmur, his lips twisted in a disgusted grimace.
She narrowed her eyes, not entirely reassured by Phillip’s word, before turning to face Charles.
“Is it true?” she asked, a tinge of authority in her normally soft voice.
He hesitated for a moment, his eyes running from her face to his brother’s, and more than ever, he looked like a tiny mouse trapped between affection and duty.
"I am afraid…I am afraid to admit that in the last few months there might have been more…”chaos” than foreseen,"
Dorothea shook her silvery ringlets, a look of incredulity on her face.
“Impossible. Father has held the reins of London since before I was born, and no assassins has ever dared to even cross the threshold of the city. He never mentioned anything in his letters to me. Byron never did, either.”
“I told you already, Dorothea: you needn’t concern yourself with this. It is being taken care of.” Phillip said, his tone final as he shared another glance with his brother, a silent command written all over his hardened face.
Dorothea felt her heart sink, just for a moment, before determination found a way through her bones.
“Be as it may, Pip. Keep your secrets and I will keep mine. Two can play this game. But I swear they won’t be yours much longer,” she thought, letting her features to settle back in an expression of neutral calm.
“Very well, cousin. I shall probe no longer. I will not lie that I am saddened in not finding my sire and Byron here,” she murmured with polite courtesy, folding her hands together. “But if it is true that disruption has reached our fair city, I am most reassured that the Grand Master is taking the due steps to ensure that no Assassin will dare to ruin his work.”
Charles let out a nervous laughter of relief as Dorothea stirred the conversation.
“Cousin dearest, allow me to say that none is more disappointed than them in being unable to welcome you in person after your long absence. Nevertheless, they wanted to be sure that their presence would be with you, despite everything.”
With a small nod of his head, Charles beckoned one of the henchmen standing behind them to come forward.
Dorothea turned and exchanged a glance with him, and for a moment she found herself wondering where she had seen him before.
His face seemed familiar, with the neatly stilled whiskers and short trimmed beard framing his face and a lock of dark, unruly hair brushing over one of his temples.
He was very pleasant to the sight, to be sure, but what caught Dorothea's attention was the subtle glint of mischievousness in his grey eyes, hidden just beneath an apparent playfulness.
Before she could ask any questions, the man did as he had been told and produced a small box and a bouquet of pink soft roses.
She smiled to herself at the sight of those gifts: she knew the flowers were from her mother’s own hothouse and the small box was from Byron himself. With a small thank you, she took them with gentle hand, promising herself to open the box once alone in the privacy of her own rooms.
"I took upon myself to make sure they were to be delivered to you in person, Lady Starrick"
Dorothea raised an eyebrow.
"That is very kind of you, Mister..."
"Markus Barclay, My Lady," he murmured with a bow. “I work underneath Lord Harrison the Eldest himself, and I was given order to attend to all your needs in his absence. I am yours to command,”
Squaring her shoulder and straightening her back, she nodded with solemnity.
“Very well, Markus. I want you to oversee that the Lady Astrid Ankarcrona is to be brought safely to the Grand Master’s residence and that she is settled in the most comfortable of the rooms within the Manor. She is an esteemed guest, and she will be treated with all the honours due to her station.”
“Consider it done, My Lady,” he answered, raising his face and looking straight at her without hiding the smirk that touched his lips.
Something about his demeanor caused an uneasiness to stir within Dorothea’s chest and this, along her inability to focalize why she thought she had seen him before, left her in complete diquiet.
When the Master Templar left to do as he was ordered, Dorothea turned to face Charles, a tired smile on her face.
“Will you accompany me home, Cip?” she asked, trying to hide a small yawn. “I think the journey might have taken its toll on me, afterall,”
Charles took her hand in his and brought it his lips with gentleness.
“It will be my honour to pick up from where Pip has left off,” and with a swift gesture, he beckoned for the other Master Templars to take care of Dorothea and help her to her carriage.
Waiting for his cousin to be far enough from where he stood, Charles approached Phillip, careful to lower his voice.
“Have you told her anything about what Uncle Crawford has in plan for her?”
Phillip shook his head at his brother, as they both stayed behind, looking as Dorothea was giving directions to the ones helping her.
“No. I-“ He hold his silence just a moment longer than necessary, weighting the word he was about to say. “I didn’t have the heart to see her smile wane. She had found some peace while in Sturefors. I let her keep it. But I will not lie to you, Charles: I wish I could offer her the same peace here,” he murmured.
Charles raised an eyebrow.
“Now I undestand your need for secrecy. But I never thought you as a sentimental, brother,”
Phillip shook his head with impatience.
“This has nothing to do with me being sentimental. But after all that happened that night, I was afraid she would not smile ever again,”
“The Assassins have paid aplenty for that,”
Phillip cocked his eyebrow, his face now severe, a quiet question in his eyes.
His brother return his question with a smile so cold, so devoid of any of his usual kind warmth, it left Phillip with a feeling of uneasiness in the pit of his stomach.
“Frye is dead.”
“The perpetrator?”
“The Leviathan, of course. He has left nothing in his wake, not even a body for his children to cry on,” Charles said, his voice grave.
Phillip stood silent for a moment, with the loud chattering of people filling his ears. But nothing could deafen the thumping of his accelerated heartbeat.
Finally, he spoke.
“That’s not enough,“ murmured Phillip. “Not nearly enough. Not after what he had done. The ripples of that bastard’s actions have left more than one broken. His death alone is not enough. Is the Leviathan satisfied and his revenge finally accomplished?”
Charles let a small smile appear again on his lips, just as cold as the one before.
“No.”
At that answer, Phillip's own lips stretched in a vindictive smile, a reflection of his own brother’s.
“Good. Then we know what to do next.”
“Pip! Cip! It is time we go!” Charles and Phillip turned their head as they heard their cousin calling them from the carriage window. “ Are you are not coming with us, Pip?”
“I wish I could, cousin dearest, but alas, we need to part ways here, for my services are needed elsewhere.” He smiled, as he approached the carriage and took his cousin’s hand in his, bringing it to his lips in a parting gesture.
“Will you be attending to the Lady Astrid, cousin?” she teased.
Phillip rolled his eyes, shaking his golden ringlets.
“God forbids I have to spend another minute with that woman. If I wanted to hear someone nagging in my ear all day, I would have asked Father for his services. He has years of experience and a disdain that rivals no other’s. No, dearest, I am bound toward other purposes. Duty calls, as it always does for me,”
Dorothea’s smile couldn’t be but a melancholic one at those words.
“So soon? The time has flown much faster than I wanted to. What will I do without your pestering chatters, I wonder?”
Phillip’s face turned into a mask of disdained, but his eyes were smiling at her.
“Preposterous. I daresay, you have grown far too bold for your own good, cousin dearest. No, you will have to do with Cip’s own chattering, I am afraid. But,” he added, as he smiled to both her brother and Dorothea, “ I leave you in good hands,”
“Oh, I know. The best hands indeed,” she replied, returning the smile and holding Charles’ hand in hers.
“Now go, before your Lady Mother starts worrying for your late return. I shall call on you tomorrow, first thing in the morning,”
“ I count on that, cousin,” she murmured, not truly wanting to let go of his hand.
Not after three years without her family.
He squeezed her hand three times, a silent gesture she understood immediately.
A promise.
And Phillip had never failed to keep his promises.
**************
The pub was loud, messy, chaotic with its patrons busy gulping down pints after pints of what could be considered the foulest beer available on the market.
And yet, its despicable taste seemed to do nothing on the one gurgling it down as if it was water, as the rowdiest of songs accompanied their time sitting at those squalid tables.
Among those people, two men sat in front of one another, barely looking at each other in the eyes. The oldest one, built like an ox, with a sour face and brutish hands that could snap an arm in two without any effort, was busying himself with the food served in front of him, while the youngest one, leaner in his figure and more elegant in his demeanor, could barely keep his own meal down.
“The little Countess has returned, at long last” he murmured, trying to distract himself from the queasiness in his stomach.
“So it seems, my friend. Ain’t so little anymore, though, I’ve been told. All grown up.”
The youngest of the two pursed his lips, an uncomfortable light in his eyes.
He didn't want to be there. At all.
“Come on, eat somethin’, will ya? You look like you’re goin’ to faint, if you so much dare to stand up. Eat. It’s on me, this time.”
“No, thank you,” the youngest murmured through gritted teeth.”This...grub does not sit well on my stomach,”
“What a sissy. Well, suits yourself, mollycoddle. I, for once, have never been one to love wasting a good meal,” and without ceremonies, he took the plate sitting in front of the youngest man and started to scarf it down as if it was his last meal.
“Hasn’t anyone taught you any manners?”said the young man, barely concealing the disgust on his face.
“Aye, me mom. She tried when I was a younglin’. Didn’t quite work out, my brother was much better material for her to work with. But what good are manners anyway? No need for them durin’ a brawl in the street.”
“If you say so…”
“Let’s talk about more important things, shall we? Is the Grand Master still set on his plan? Is she to succeed him, when the time comes?”
“How should I know? I am not in Starrick’s mind.”
“Indulge me, lad,”
The young man sighed, crossing his arms against his chest.
“There might be this possibility, yes. Nothing has been decided as of yet.”
“Bollocks.” said the other, curling his lips in disgust.
“Facts.”
The oldest of the two spit on the ground.
“Don’t fuck around with me, you ninny. I can’t believe Crawford Starrick would do somethin’ so stupid. He has enough foresight to know that it would be a catastrophe for the Order.”
“He might be in possess of knowledge about her that we cannot foresee. When he comes to his daughter, the Grand Master is most secretive,”
“Horse’s shite!” he said, slamming his hand on the table. A few people turned to look at them but hastily ignored them when the older one glared at them, his mouth the snarl of a bulldog.
“Would you care to lower your bloody voice?” said the youngest one."Mind my words, you are the paragon of discretion. It's a miracle all of London did not hear you!"
The young man grabbed the pint in front of him, and chugged down the alcohol, hoping it would wash away his nervousness. His eyes darted all across the room, hoping to not meet anyone familiar. The trouble he would be in, if he were to be found in such company, would be beyond repair.
“That’s an absolute pile of shite right there! “See somethin’ in her”? There is nothin’ to see there! All I’m seein’ is a father too blinded by his love for his child and his own desire to create a dynasty through her!”
“Maybe so. But you forget her father has personally overseen her initiation in the Templars ever since she was but a babe in arms and her mentor is none other than the Leviathan himself. She is a Starrick. I would not do the mistake to discount her on the account of her sex. And young she might be, but she resembles her sire more than you can imagine: there is steel hiding underneath that silk. Do not let yourself be fooled by anything else.”
The other grinded his teeth as he leaned closer to the young man, his face splotched by red stains of seething rage.
“Bah! All you have are conjectures and hyphothesis, nothing more than that! It can’t happen. The Order won’t accept her, just because she's his daughter. She's a woman! She belongs to the house, opening her legs for her husband as he sees fits and whelping as many little bastards as possible. She can’t be made anything else than what she is! We need someone strong at the helm of this ship.”
The younger one looked at the elder man, an inquisitive look in his cat-like eyes.
“And what do you propose we do to stop this? Kill her? Kill HIM?”
The brute hesitated, long enough for the younger man to know that, even blinded by rage, he would not act in haste. They needed a valid reason to justify any action taken, lest they were to become a target like the one they were set to control.
“That’s what I thought,” the youngest one finally said, after the long pause. “You will find that patience, my friend, is a virtue not to be discarded in favour of a hasty approach. We shall wait in the shadow, as we have always done, and seize the moment when the right window of opportunity opens. London is already in chaos as it is, with the Assassins rearing those bloody heads of theirs and causing ruckus all around the city. Those blasted Frye twins are an annoyance we need to take care of now, before this annoyance starts veering into dangerous territories.”
“Ethan Frye's bastards?” said the eldest one. “Had they learned nothing from their father’s death? Are they trying to meet the same end he did?”
“Mayhaps.”
“Wasn’t aware those assassins were a family of suicidals,”
“More like children playing with fire. But a fire that need to be quelled at all costs, nevertheless,”
"The challenge is that they’re unorganized. Chaotic. There's no plan or pattern behind their action and this makes them dangerous. Rumors have it that the Frye lad’ve been fightin' at the pits: the lad packs a mean punch.”
“Nothing that will worry you, I assume?”
“Are you jokin’,? Me and my brother will make a pulp of him, as soon as our paths cross. And trust me on this, ninny, they will cross. Wish I could do the same with the Starrick girl. Hell, I’m a gentleman myself, and would be gentle with the little poppet,” he murmured, leaving the promise hanging between the two of them. “That little neck of hers can’t be too hard to snap. A twig in my hands.”
The younger man’s mouth curled in an expression of disgust.
“You will do nothing of this sort. We have to let the Grand Master take care of this, before striking." The young man took the moment before speaking again, weightung his words with moderation. "Kill the young lady, and you will kill Crawford too, in spirit if not in body, and we do not want that. Not now, anyway. The assassins need to be dealt with first, and for that, we need the Grand Master. We need to destroy the Brotherhood, or what remains of it. Then, we shall take care of Crawford Starrick and his daughter."
The eldest one gulped down his entire pint of beer, slamming it against the table once done. He smiled, but there was no warmth in his light eyes.
"What are we waiting for then?"
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[PREVIOUS CHAPTER -  “Confrontation”]
[NEXT CHAPTER -  “Awakening of the Hunter” ]
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omg, could it be true??? THE 4TH CHAPTER IS FINALLY DONE AND UP??
Seriously, I don’t know what possessed me to finish this, but I just sort of did?
I missed working with my Starrick family, and so I started to read again the chapter, and before you knew it, I basically added 3k words to it today, and just finished it.
Well, as said in the previous chapter, we are finally back in 1868, so finally we have the chance to move around through London with Dorothea :D
I hope you will like this, I know I will be needing a long nap lol
also, a huge thanks to my dear @susann- noir for being my beta reader and helping me through! you have been immensely kind, I appreciated your help so much <3.
Hope you will like it!
--Nemo
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nemo-in-wonderland · 1 year
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Evening Evening, everyone!
So, after finishing the 4th Chapter of my story and finally properly introducing my impish Starrick Triplets, I HAD to draw them as children (at least for the time being. Now I want to draw them all as adults), and omg, I actually had so much fun. I am particularly happy with how I managed to render their personalities a little bit (and omg Charlie, please, you cannot be even more of a cinnamon roll than you already are, you adorable dork who gets all awkward for pictures lolol).
I wish they could have stayed this young and happy forever. 😭😭
Well, time for me to go to sleep now!
Hope you will like this!
--Nemo
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||“In the Heat of the Moment”|| Characters Masterlist -The Templars (pt.2)||
THE TEMPLARS OF THE BRITISH RITE -1868
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Name: Phillip Edmund Starrick
Faceclaim: Dan Stevens
Date and Place of Birth: 23rd July 1847, London.
Height: 1.83 m
MBTI: ESTP
Temperamental Ensemble: Sanguigne
Main Colour: Burgundy, Gold and Black
Theme Song: “Become the Beast” by Karliene
Bio: Youngest son of Alfred Starrick, Crawford Starrick’s oldest brother, Phillip Edmund was the rightful heir to the part of the Starrick’s Empire that his own grandfather Robert had left as his legacy. With his imposing figure, hypnotic blue eyes and silver tongue, Phillip was a man of notable handsomeness, charisma and charm, able to get away with many things just through his words and look alone. Notorious casanova, he wasn’t shy to entertain relationships with men and women alike it they could serve to his scope; this, however, was something he kept secret from everyone, even his brother and cousin, for as much as he was willing to do whatever it took to reach his goals, he didn’t want the two people he loved the most in the world to think ill of him. Ambitious, highly intelligent, meticulous in all that he did and extremely well read, Phillip had always looked up to his uncle Crawford Starrick for the way he had wielded power -unrelenting, incredibly unyielding, and yet capable to keep the ranks under check with relative easiness-  and aspired, one day, to become exactly like him, much to his own father’s chagrin. Phillip, infact, had an extremely strained relationship with his Alfred who, even though he was able to see his potential and his skills, was never nurturing enough to actually allow that potential to blossom fully, something that Phillip had to find a way on his own, in order to accomplish all his ambitions, Anything that Phillip had ever accomplished, anything that he had ever done was always met by his sire with a lukewarm reaction at best or a reproach at worst, something that had shaped up Phillip to be a man that is unable to do something without aiming for perfection; He strove for excellence in all aspects of life and more often than not managed to achieve it through cold blood, careful planning, his own intelligence and a ruthlessness that no one would predict from his pleasant appearance and charming mannerism. If ambition is not driving him, the joy to spite his father and show to his face that he will be better than him is what made him get out of bed each day. Phillip operated with spies around London, and was unofficially referred to as the “Master of Secrets”, a title he never truly embraced but one that suited him perfectly. Due to his flamboyant attitude and penchant for the dramatic, he had been known to work closely with Maximilian Roth, with whom he had an “intense relationship”: of what nature this relationship was, it’s up to anyone to guess, and something that was probably known only by the Grand Master himself. Although Phillip presented himself as a strong, confident man, that was but a facade that he projected to the world in order to survive both the brutal environment created by the Grand Master within the Order, where weakness of character wasn’t allowed in any form, and as a way to hide his own insecurities. However, he always had a confidant in his cousin Dorothea and his eldest brother Charles, the two people he loved the most in the entire world. The three of them resembled each other so much in appearance that people often mistook them for siblings rather than cousins, a situation that sometimes they took advantage of, be it to mess around with people or to achieve something. It wasn’t uncommon for the Master Templars of the Rite to refer to them as the “Starricks Triplets”.
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Name: Countess Annette Ingrid Margareta Starrick (Née Bielke)
Faceclaim: MyAnna Buring
Date and Place of Birth: 22nd September 1830, Sturefors, Sweden
Height: 1.67 m
MBTI: ENTJ
Temperamental Ensemble: Choleric
Main Colour: Teal, Purple and White
Theme Song: “Only Us” by Miracle of Sound ft. Karliene
Bio: Countess Annette Starrick was born in Sturefors, Sweden, in 1830. The youngest daughter of the Bielkes, one of the oldest noble families in Sweden one affiliated with the Swedish Rite for over three centuries, Annette grew up, much like her daughter after her, surrounded by Templars and their tenets. A woman of sharp intelligence and great observance, she grew up in an environment of relative freedom, especially compared to her eldest siblings, who instead  were favored to create powerful allegiances within the Swedish Rite and with the ruling Royal Family of Sweden. Because of this, she was educated in drawing, painting, music and dancing, all disciplines that suited her rank as lady, but because of her fiery temper and stubbornness, she would often forsake her lessons in favour of following her father around, much preferring to dwell in politics rather than something boring as the arts. Her father, Nils Bielke the Eldest, holding an incredible soft spot for his youngest child, allowed her to attend meetings of the council from the age of 14, and would often discuss all that happened with his daughter, albeit not with the intent of preparing her to become part of the Rite. Infact, despite her keen interest in joining the Templars, Nils never truly wanted his daughter to entangle herself into the Order’s politics, preferring for her a much quieter life; but his desire never found the light, for Annette, ever stubborn, ever willful, would play into her father’s favoritism for her, and obtained precisely what she wanted. At the young age of 16, she was inducted in the Swedish Rite alongside her younger brother. It was on that occasion that she met Crawford Starrick, her future husband, come to Stockholm on Templars’ related business, and between the two was attraction at first sight. Despite the best effort of her family to marry Annette off the son of the Natt och Dag family, Annette knew that her heart belonged solely to Crawford. And after a period of long distance courtship that lasted until Annette’s father’s passed, the two married when Annette was sent to London by her own mother, as a way to create a solid allegiance between the Swedish and the British Rite, an allegiance that was standing still true and strong in 1868. Annette was a caring and nurturing mother and a fiercefully devoted faithful wife to Crawford, standing by his side in all situations, for good or worse. Crawford, in return, adored his wife and despite the advice of his own brother Alfred, who never loved his sister-in-law’s influence over his brother, Crawford would often seek Annette’s counseling, wherever he found himself in a position of incertitude on how to pursue certain matters. She was the one that, with her example, moral standing and her constant caring, influenced Dorothea to become the wife and mother that she would eventually come to be. Becoming pregnant for the first time in early 1848 with hers and Crawford’s first baby, Annette delivered a son, Adam, that didn’t live past the first month due to a fever that took him away from his parents. This experience left her with a profound scar in her soul, and it led her to withdraw for a while from social life. Worried by her deep state of sadness, and unwilling to have her committed to an Asylum, Crawford hired the best doctors to help his wife recover, and did all that was in his power to be by her side, his duties as Master Templar notwithstanding. After recovering, she would soon find herself pregnant again, this time with twins. She gave birth to two baby girls in 1850, Dorothea and her sister Theodora, both born prematurely. Of the two babies, only Dorothea managed to survive, while Theodora died hours after birth. Distraught by having yet again lost another child, Annette wasn’t able to rise from her bed for days, leaving Dorothea in the hand of a wet nurse, at least in the beginning. Crawford stayed beside his wife, and tried to comfort her as much as he could, while also overseeing the care of his only living daughter. Thanks to intense care of the midwives and doctors and a good dose of luck, Dorothea managed to survive those first months. When Annette was strong enough, Crawford brought her their daughter, and the woman fell in love with the small bundle in her arms. From the moment forward, due to the tragedies of losing two children, Annette became extremely protective of her Dorothea and forbade anyone to come close to her, the only exception being her husband. However, losing Theodora had been the coup de grace for both parents, and together they decided that, were Dorothea to survive infancy, they would not have any other child. Due to the heartache she suffered to deliver her baby, Annette poured all the love she had on her child, and Dorothea became the light of her mother’s eyes, although, over time, Annette’s protectiveness over her only daughter would increase and become overbearing and somewhat smothering, even if she had all the good intentions of the world toward her.
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Name: Charles Magnus Starrick
Faceclaim: Tom Mison
Date and Place of Birth: 29th December 1843, London.
Height: 1.87 m
MBTI: INFP
Temperamental Ensemble: Phlegmatic-Melancholic
Main Colour: Dark Blue and Golden
Theme Song: “Numb” and “Castle of Glass” by Linkin Park
Bio: Eldest son of Alfred Starrick, Charles Magnus was the first born of a new generation of Starricks, and because of this, the greatest expectations had been put upon him by both his father and his grandsire, Robert Alaric Starrick. Ever since childhood, he was followed by the best tutors and given the best education, but after a few years, it was becoming increasingly evident that Charles, despite all his efforts and his will to make his relatives proud, was having an hard time keeping up with their strict education and discipline imparted to him by his Templars preceptors, something that became even more evident after Phillip was born: where Phillip was eager to drink from the fountain of knowledge their tutors provided, Charles was reluctant, questioning everything that was proposed to him. Even when faced with the strict evidence that Phillip, and not Charles, was Alfred’s true heir, in spirit if not in name, the patriarch of the family still believed that, as firstborn, Charles was to do as he was told to and his place of birth dictated, and kept him on the path that would make him, one day, prepared for a role of great importance within the Order. One of the most creative souls within the Starricks family with a knack for building small trinkets, a peculiarity this that he inherited from his own mother Amelia Starrick, Charles found delight from a very young age in the creation of small mechanical toys that he would often play with in the solitude of his rooms or, whenever he were to visit Dover, away from his father’s ever inquisitive presence, he would share them with his baby brother Phillip and baby cousin Dorothea, whom he adored. Seeing the happiness those small toys brought in the people he loved the most, he hoped, growing up, that he could somehow find a way to break free from the chains that fettered him to his own name, and pursue instead the path of invention and specialize in those clockwork toys that he had always been fascinated with ever since he was a small child. But despite being a brilliant young man, whose mind and hands could create the most beautiful, enchanting things, his personality was a gentle one, and thus considered weak. The lack of a strong will, his eagerness in wanting to please those around him and putting their wants before his own, and his rectitude were met with disdain by his father, for he saw the corruption of his own late wife’s principles into his eldest child, something that he made sure to correct in Phillip, who never benefited of Amelia’s gentle nature. Despite all this, Charles maintained an optimistic view of the world, to which he often looked at with almost childlike wonder and curiosity, never truly losing hope that better times would come and that all things would eventually pass. The few times he ever showed the short temper all the Starricks were famous for was when he stood up against his father Alfred whenever his sire would vent and berate Phillip for whatever motives or whatever things Phillip might have failed to do. Extremely protective of his younger brother, he couldn’t tolerate any besmirching of his name, not even from his own sire, and would not hesitate to intervene, despite Phillip’s own discomfort and embarrassment at being “babied” by his own eldest brother.
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Aaaand another round of bios is FINALLY COMPLETE. I actually had this file a long time in the making, but I always found myself dreading having to revise it and edit it (don’t ask me why, my brain doesn’t work properly, you know that by now). Anyway, here I present to you three more ocs that will have a big role in my story, “In The Heat Of The Moment”, aka THE STARRICKS. They will gradually appears in the next chapter (although some of them you might have already met in some of my one shots, albeit in a cameo role).
I am truly looking forward to write more about them in the chapters, and hopefully, you will love them all as much as I do.
--Nemo
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WIP WEDNESDAY
Hi everyone!! It's been SO LONG since I last shared a WIP from my story and since today is WIP Wednesday, I thought "WHY NOT TODAY"???
So, here you have, a short WIP of the 4th Chapter of "In The Heat Of The Moment"!!
You have no idea how excited I am to finally being in 1868, and finally starting to write and explore all the adventures of my precious babies!! So many new ocs coming in, so many so beloved by yours truly. I am truly excited!!😁😁😁😁😁
well, without further ado, here is the Wip!!
Hope you will enjoy it!!
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(....)
“Well, with Queen Charlotte’s ball approaching and your debut, you will have plenty of opportunities to find a gallant young man that shall take proper care of you,”
Dorothea pursed her lips at that, furrowing her brows. Being taken care of. As if she wasn't a young woman with a mind of her own, but a child needing constant guidance through all aspects of life. As if she was a doll, to be gifted away to some stranger just because that’s what she was born to do. She sighed, trying as much as she could not to let any of her aggravation transpire from her face.
“Mother has mentioned many changes, as soon as I returned home. In the last letter she wrote, she said Father had a few surprises for me. I wished she had been more precise about what these surprises relates to,”
Phillip pursed his lips, looking toward the city, the Big Ben finally in sight, standing high above the chaos of roofs and chimneys in front of them. When she saw that he didn’t answer, she turned to face him, and saw a twinkle in his blue eyes.
“You know something, Phillip, don’t you?” she asked.
“Who, me?” he said, feigning nonchalance. “I think you are mistaken. I would certainly recall if such information had been relied to me by Uncle Crawford?”
Dorothea smirked, crossing her arms against her chest. “I know that look, cousin dearest: you can fool your business partner at the Alhambra, but not me. It is your job to know what is going on around you,”
“Even if I concede that you do bring up a fair point, darling Dora, I cannot deny nor confirm any of your assumption," he answered, clicking his tongue in annoyance, and giving her a look of fake aggravation that soon melted in a warm smile. "Even as a child you were so pestiferously enquiring, always putting your nose where you shouldn't have and following me and Charlie around,”
Dorothea couldn’t help but giggle at that last sentence.
“I cannot take all the credit for myself, Phillip, for I found the greatest teacher in you: ’The Master of Secrets, the one that knows all that goes in London and who is consorting with whom’. You should be proud of your pupil,” she jested, poking his arm with her elbow.
The man scoffed, adjusting the Templar Cross hanging at his neck.
“I wouldn’t call myself a Master, just merely devoted to my profession,”
“Or maybe you just like being a nosy gossiper?”
Phillip brought a hand to his chest, feigning outrage, and Dorothea couldn’t help but muffle her laughter behind her hand.
“Why, my dear Madam, I assure you, I would never meddle with anyone’s business but my very own! What a preposterous insinuation, i dare say!”
Dorothea cocked an eyebrow, and smirked even wider.
"You have such a penchant for the dramatic you ought to be an actor, instead of a businessman,”
Dorothea saw the pained light flashing for one moment behind his bold face. When he spoke, his tone had lost all traces of facetiousness, and despite its neutrality, she could feel the sting of hurt lying underneath.
“If my father had not threatened to disown me -several times, infact, the last in a letter he deigned to send me just to remind me about the precariousness of my own inheritance- I’d probably done that,”
Dorothea pursed her lips in sadness, and without hesitancy, she took his hand once more, gently keeping it in hers, and gave it a small reassuring squeeze.
“Uncle Alfred could sometimes speak words of truth and wisdom, but those that concern you are the farthest from the truth. He does not know you, not at all.” She murmured with a sharp voice, looking at him straight in his eyes. He sighed, shaking his head.
“If only I were more like Charles-”
“Charles is Charles. You are you, and both me and your brother love you dearly for that exact reason. You know we wouldn’t want you to be any different than who you are,”
(....)
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--Nemo
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hello!! I wanted to play along with the Fanfiction Work-In-Progress Guessing Game! Does the word "bird" appear at all in your WIP?? <3
Hi Ani, my dear!! <3
welcome welcome! Let me get you some hot chocolate while I go and look for something in my WIP
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So! for this one, I actually have the world "bird" in my current WIP from "In The Heat of The Moment" (not the same chapter though)!
Philip took the pin in his hand. A rook. "That bloody woman again," he muttered under his breath. "You know what that is, Mylord?" Asked Ambrose. "A pesky bird that's not giving me respite nor truce of any kind," he murmured, looking around the room. His nose was picking up all kinds of scents and odours, much to his chagrin, but he was certain he could feel the faint trace of rosewater and...jasmine? He was a connoisseur of fragrances, and he was sure those didn't belong to Miss Lucy or Cousin Pearl. "They were not here," he finally said. But she was, he thought almost in awe, despite himself.
thank you, Ani <3 *tackle hug*
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Not me realizing that basically Baby Phillip, Baby Charles, and Baby Dorothea are the human equivalent of Huey, Dewey, and Louie 😂😂😂 (I will let you imagine who is who lolol).
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Sorry, I had to share this because it just came to my mind and it made me chuckle so much. I just love my Starrick Triplets too much lol.
(of course, Crawford Starrick would be Scrooge McDuck, like, it goes without saying.)
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WIP Ch.4- Homeward Bound
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“Is Astrid complaining as usual?” she heard a male voice saying behind her.
She turned to find a tall, handsome blond man approaching her.Philip Edmund Starrick, her first cousin, was looking at her imperiously, his light eyes twinkling with a teasing light.
“With extreme passion, I dare say,” she whispered, leaning toward him with a conspiratory gleam in her eyes, when he came to stand close to her.
“If only she were to apply that passion into something other than making everyone else’s life miserable, her husband would not go looking for a nicer company among the valets of the house,”
Gaping in disbelief, Dorothea glanced behind her shoulder, to make sure that her cousin didn’t hear.
“How do you know that, Pip?” she muttered.
He winked at her, his smirk only widening even more.
“It’s my job to know what’s going on around me,”
“In London, maybe,” she chuckled, poking his ribs with her elbow. “But not in Sweden,”
“True,” he chuckled, leaning in so that he would be able to whisper. “Although, I couldn’t help but notice how young Master Daae was so eager to instruct you in the violin, my darling cousin,”
Blushing, Dorothea recoiled, looking at him indignantly.
“Gustave was my teacher, and nothing more than that!” she whispered, looking around to make sure that no one else had heard them.
Phillip gave her a skeptical look.
“He did fancy you, or so I had been told,” he added, with a mischievous smile on his face. “And he has sent you letters and paid calls to you as well?”
“Polite expression of respect and devotion toward a friend, nothing more than that,” she said, composing herself, and wrinkling her nose in disdain. “As for fancying me, he fancied my skills in playing and composing and accompanying him with my voice, I assure you. Whatever interest he might have shown me, it was not personal at all, but merely artistically related,”
Suddenly, her cheeks turned as red as the gown she was wearing.
“You didn’t utter a single word to Father and Mother, did you? Because I swear on my honour that nothing happened,”
Chuckling, he gave her a long look before turning his face to look toward the city nearing them.
“It would not have necessarily been a negative thing, Dora,” he finally said. “ I do believe you deserve someone with the same artistic inclination you happen to possess,”
“As if Father would have ever allowed something like this to pass,” she said, suddenly sadness appearing on her face as she turned to look at the sky above her. The day had been particularly clear, and now, with the approaching nightfall, turning into the deepest of blue and burning oranges, kissing her skin.
It was January, and it was cold.
Yet, she felt all the warmth inside.
“What is the matter, Dora?” Phillip asked, his brows furrowing in concern. He took one of her hands in his, giving her two gentle squeezes. It was a gesture he had always done, ever since childhood, to encourage her: be it to climb a particularly steep rock or to run as fast as the wind whenever she, he and Charles were to race through the fields surrounding the Manor. It was a signal that always told her that she was safe to try whatever was on her mind.
Dorothea returned one squeeze, the one that told him that she wasn’t ready yet, shaking her silver ringlets.
The last thing she wanted was to be called a dreamer.
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So, here is a small WIP of Ch.4 of "In The Heat Of The Moment", my AC: Syndicate fanfic!
I KNOW THERE IS CHAPTER 3 THAT NEEDS TO BE RELEASED YET, BUT I AM SO CLOSE TO FINISHING IT I MIGHT AS WELL SHARE A WIP OF CHAPTER 4. Here you can find Ch.1 and Ch.2, if you want to catch up! :D
Besides, you know me by now. I do what I want anyway lol.
Anyway, once more thanks everyone for your constant support and love that you show toward me both as a writer and as an artist. It means the whole world to me!!
I hope you will like this small WIP! (there is a little nod to another fandom I am part of. I couldn't resist lol <3)
--Nemo
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Dark Waltz
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Dance me into the night
Underneath the moon shining so bright
Turning me into the light
Time dancers whirling past
I gaze through the looking glass
And feel just beyond my grasp is heaven
Sacred geometry
Where movement is poetry
Visions of you and me forever
“Dark Waltz” - Hayley Westenra
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Dorothea dared to let out a small sigh, as she looked upon her guests in the main hall, where all the dancing was taking place.
Guests were coming and going from the ballroom, their anonymity guaranteed by the colorful masks they all wore, and yet, in what could be considered only an ironic twist, her own secrecy was compromised.
As Hostess of the Ball, all the participants knew who she was on sight.
It didn’t help that her mother, the ever fashionable, ever forward Countess Annette Ingrid Bielke, had insisted that she was to wear a daring cascade of deep burgundy and wintery white satin, embroidered with silken roses and lilies, each of those exquisite marvels covered in small diamonds to mimic the sparkle of the morning dew on their petals.
"Du lyser som en stjärna, sötnos, en riktig diamond i skyn,” (You shine like a star, sweetling, a proper diamond in the sky) her mother had told her earlier that evening, while decorating her silvery blonde ringlets with real red and white roses, most certainly coming from her hothouse.
“Tack, Mamma.” Dorothea had answered, feigning an enthusiasm she didn’t feel. “Will there be many gentlemen?”
”Quite a few, but only the crème de la crème. I insisted with your father that even the Members of the Swedish Rite were to come to ask for your hand in marriage, and so many have answered! You will see, my darling: you will have the best time of your life tonight, and your father will have his own hands full, come morning!”
‘Considering the fortune and the status that would land in their pockets, once married into our family, I have no doubt about their eagerness. Too bad this whole charade is completely useless and will serve no one,’ she had thought, but she had let her words die before they could reach her mouth: no reason to sour her mother’s mood with her own sulking before the ball.
The state of her own spirit was something that she didn’t wish to pour on anyone, let alone her loving, devoted mother.
Even now, in the middle of the celebrations, as she twirled around with all those gentlemen asking her for a dance, her lips were painted with the most cordial smile she could muster; but her soul was as restless as the churning waves of the sea around Dover during that time of the year.
Her eyes kept looking at that crowd of people - so colorful and extravagant to rival in beauty with the exotic birds of the Amazonian forests across the Atlantic Ocean - and discard that whimsical parade entirely, searching instead for the dark robes of the Rook that had taken her heart and soul, looking for his mischievous grin and those playful hazel eyes that were her whole world.
‘I need to get out of here,’ Dorothea thought while gracefully curtsying in front of her suitor, as the second dance she had shared with him had come to an end.
All she wanted was a moment of quietness to soothe her yearning heart from the absence of the only man that could placate the storm she had inside.
Nodding toward her guests while trying to hide the haste she felt to escape that revelry, she made way through the crowd out of the ballroom. With the corner of her eyes, she saw Phillip Starrick, her cousin, trapped in a conversation with Brudenell and Twopenny, and she silently thanked the Heavens for that little miracle. He was so apt in prying into other people’s affairs, the last thing she wanted was for him to get whiff that she was looking for someone she wasn’t supposed to look for: a gang leader, an Assassin...a Bane of the Darkness.
Trying to pace herself, she reached the immense grand foyer, majestic with the family’s portraits decorating the walls, its twin staircases in marble and the precious burgundy carpets covering the steps, and the chandelier hanging above her head, sparkling with the soft light of the candles.
“You are leaving the celebration already, Mademoiselle Starrick?” Dorothea heard Victor Dorian’s booming voice echoing from the first floor of the foyer.
Sighing, she put on her face her most gracious smile as she stopped in her tracks: so much for trying to escape the ballroom without attracting any kind of undesired attention.
While waiting for him to descend the flight of stairs, she observed the imposing man she had known ever since she had been but a young child: even with a mask on, it would have been impossible not to recognize the French Templar. With his imposing height and build, he was one of the most extraordinaries myrmidons in her father���s regime, second only to her own mentor Byron; and yet, his eyes always twinkled with kindness and his disposition was one of the gentlest and most placid she had ever witnessed in a man, and his soul was among the most compassionate ones. If there was a Templar she trusted her life with, among the men that served under her father, that Templar was Victor Auguste Dorian.
“Are you feeling well, Mademoiselle?” he asked, furrowing his brow, his voice low and soothing as he bowed in front of her. “You look in distress,”
“I-I am quite alright,Victor,” she babbled, squaring her shoulders in order to compose herself. ”I am merely in need to breathe some fresh air. All that dancing can be extremely tiresome,”
“So I have been told,” he chuckled, before leaning down toward her and saying, with a conspiratory voice. “And I couldn’t help but notice that Monsieur Starling has been stomping around quite a lot, tonight, if I may be so bold to say,”
She was barely able to respress a snort. “That poor man, my dear Victor: he is as charming as he is handsome, but he was not graced with the skills required to dance around with a gentlelady. I dread the idea of having to entertain another dance with him: my poor feet would not be able to survive another waltz,”
Victor chuckled, as he offered her his left arm.
“Perhaps you might find yourself to be more inclined to dance with another gentleman...someone that knows you and how to move with the same grace of a wolf, I daresay,”
Dorothea smiled at that: indeed that would be exactly what her heart yearned for.
“Why, Monsieur: are you offering to be my partner for the next dance?” she jested.
“As much as I would be honoured to be the one leading you in the ballroom, I am afraid it is not my place, Mademoiselle; Monsieur Starrick has mandated that only the ones with the prospect of becoming your intended are to dance with you,”
Dorothea took a deep sigh and closed her eyes, grateful to be wearing a mask: if she had managed for a moment to forget the malaise of her soul, now the very thoughts that had caused it came back to her in full.
And all she could see, behind closed eyelids, was her gang leader as he smiled his sardonic, ferine smile, his deep voice filling her ears with his throaty laughter. All she wanted was to be in his arms.
“Mademoiselle...forgive me for being so forward, but you seem to be truly in disquiet, tonight,”
She shook her pale ringlets and forced herself to smile.
“It must be the moon, mon ami. I always feel more wistful whenever she is at her fullest,”
The imposing man nodded with understanding.
“Indeed, Mademoiselle. She does have a mesmerising allure on all of us that, well...happen to be blessed with her favour,”
Dorothea stared at the Master Templar with a knowing look: for a moment, the man’s dark eyes had sparkled of a golden, almost unnatural light.And she had seen that light only in the eyes of another man.
The very one her heart was yearning for.
Her Jacob.
“Victor, your eyes-” she warned, looking around to see if anyone had noticed anything. “If they were to discover you-”
“Ne vous inquiétez pas pour mes yeux, Mademoiselle la Comtesse,” he reassured her, his smile growing wider. “I know my secret is safe with you, just like yours is safe with me. Now, if you allow me, I shall escort you to a quiet place where, I am certain, you shall find comfort and peace for a little while,”
“But my father-”she started.
“Your father won’t know about this. You have my word as a Dorian,” he assured her.
Dorothea risked to glance once more inside the ballroom: she caught sight of her mother and father, twirling around on the dance floor as if the whole world had disappeared around them, engrossed as they were into each other’s eyes. Relieved that she would indeed be able to have a few moments of quiet solitude, Dorothea took his arm, as he let the man guide her through the rooms of the ground floor of the Manor. She looked around, nodding and curtsying whenever she met a member of the Legion.
When she had first seen the list her mother and father had compiled for her, she couldn’t believe them to be serious. Now, as she peeked into each room of her labyrinthic house, her gaze meeting that of all those warlords, she realized that her parents had indeed been deadly serious: not a single member of the Legion of the Dusk Executioners- the most ancient extant Organization of Hunters within the Templar Order- had been left out.
Dorothea knew why they were there: to participate in the ball,to be sure; but judging from the gleaming of the silver crosses and the weapons barely concealed underneath the garments, all those Hunters were there to keep the Banes of the Darkness - werewolves, vampires, ghouls, anything that was born from the Shadows- out of the Manor.
She also knew that her parents wanted her to marry someone within the Order. The Starrick had been Executioners for generations: her own father, before ascending to the role of Grand Master, had been the one to lead the Legion, alongside her mother.
Now, she thought, it’s expected of me as well: to marry an Executioner and give birth to the next generation of Hunters for the Legion.
A small smile appeared on her face, amidst the melancholy. ‘If they only knew where my heart lies and that such a thing shall never come to pass,’
Moments later, Dorothea and Victor stopped in front of a sumptuous tapestry, her favourite since childhood: it portrayed a time long lost, when unicorns and griffins and dragons still inhabited their lands. She knew that, behind that exquisite work of embroidery, a small hidden door stood.
She recognized immediately.
“Why this room, Victor?” she asked, turning to look at the man with a quizzical look in her eyes.
His lips thinned in a warm smile.
“I have been told that it’s the quietest place in the house. One most...private, if you will. One where it’s possible to gaze upon the Moon in all tranquillity,”
She looked at him for one moment longer, but before she could say anything, they heard Phillip’s ringing voice coming from the grand foyer.
“I think this is my hint to flee,” Dorothea jested. “And I can count on your discretion, even with my cousin?”
“Not a word shall leave my lips, Mademoiselle,” he said, mimicking the sealing of his lips with an imaginary key. He then leaned toward her, once more in a cospiratory tone.“Yours wouldn’t be the only saddened heart tonight, if anyone were to discover you,”
Her eyes widened. “Victor, what are you talking about?”
He glanced at her, smiling one last time.
“Enjoy your evening, Mademoiselle. Maybe, behind this door, you will not only find what you need, but also what you want. One might never know,”
Bowing flamboyantly, he took his leave and swiftly disappeared from her sight, before Dorothea had the chance to ask him anything.
She felt her heart galloping in her chest as she pondered about his words, but stopped herself before hope was to grow within her soul: the Moon was too close to be full for Jacob to actually be there. Victor was just messing around with her.
She disappeared behind the tapestries. As she closed the door behind herself, she leaned against it, resting the back of her head against the smooth wooden surface as she let out a sigh of both relief and yearning.
“If only, dear Monsieur. If only. The Heavens alone know how much I want him to be here with me,”
When she turned, she let her gaze wander: the darkness of the parlour was softened by the gleam of what seemed to be hundreds of candles, disposed on tall candelabras all around the place with meticulous order. Their flickering light, reflecting in the tall mirrors that hang on the walls, created an oneiric atmosphere, one taken directly from her many dreams. Even in the dim penumbra, she could see an edge of warm burgundy and glittering gold that came from the paint used on the wall.
As she expected, the room was completely empty, devoid of any furniture but the candelabras, her pianoforte and a few loveseats and chaise lounges against the walls, as per her father’s order.
With only the sound of her heels against the wooden floor to accompany her, Dorothea reached for the high windows that faced the maze in the back garden of the Manor and rested her hands on the windowsill. She raised her gaze and looked outside, staring with resignation at the winter sky that was so clear that night, the stars sparkling and twinkling in their silent splendour.
The Moon, so beautiful in her silvery light, was almost at its fullest: only a thin sliver was missing.
Her hand wandered to the old medallion that hung at her neck, in a gesture she often did without thinking: attached to the same silken ribbon, just beside the golden locket, was a small shilling, the most precious object she possessed together with the content of her medallion.
She caressed the cold surface of the old coin, feeling the filigree through the silken gloves she wore, and she pressed it against her lips, closing her eyes in a pained expression, hidden by the domino mask she wore.
Dorothea knew that Jacob couldn’t be among the participants, if not for the Warlords roaming around the Mansion, then because of the Moon shining above.
She still remembered that October night when she had been the involuntary witness of his transformation under those silvery beams: the pain on his face as all his body was pervaded by an incessant tremors, jaw clenched so tight she thought the muscles of his neck would snap in two; his raspy deep voice crawling out of his throat, transmuted into a senseless growl as he called for her to help him, all humanity leaving his warm eyes in place of a cold feral fury that no force on Earth could ever hope to restrain.
And yet, despite the gargantuan shape he had assumed, despite the sharpened claws and biting fangs, despite everything he had become, when she had looked deep into his gaze, she had still been able to see him, a silent plea not to be left alone.
He wasn’t the mindless beast her father had always wanted her to believe.
Jacob was still Jacob.
He was still there, whining on the ground, begging not to be hurt, so that he might not hurt any innocent soul in return.
All of sudden, the rustling of velvety curtains caught her attention and took her away from her thoughts.
Out of instinct, her hand went immediately to the small knife coated in silver that she always kept on her person. She had never had a reason to use it and she hated it, but her father had been adamant that she was to carry one nevertheless.
“Victor?” she called, ear tensed to hear her surroundings.
Maybe it had been someone passing just outside the room.
Maybe it had been Antoinette, her mother’s cat.
An amused chuckle came from the corner on her right, where her piano was located.
Heart in her throat, she let out a sigh of relief. She would recognize that chuckle anywhere.
“Goldilocks, lower the knife... It’s me,”
The gravelly husked voice was deeper than she remembered it being, raspier even; yet it still retained that sweet undertone he always had whenever he talked to her. It was so deep and warm, it sent chills of pleasure running down her spine, her skin prickling with warmth from her cheeks all the way to her neck.
As she lowered the weapon, Dorothea turned to look with anticipation to the corner where that voice had come, and despite the lack of illumination, she immediately saw him, her heart racing in her chest.
“You gave me a fright, Jacob!” she whispered, tossing the dagger as far away from them as possible without hesitation, before running straight into the man’s open arms.
“Sorry about that, love. It wasn’t my intention. And sorry for the delay...I had to find a way around those guard dogs that are patrollin’ the Manor and it took me longer than I expected,”
“Delay? I was not expecting you to be here at all, with the Moon almost at her fullest!”
Dorothea felt her heart leap in her chest, and when she saw him smiling, she knew he could feel it too. Her cheeks burned as she looked at him, studying his face with both longing and concern: his eyes were gleaming of a blazing golden light that would put any golden jewel to shame; his face, still raggedy handsome, didn’t conceal any of the wolfish shadows barely hidden underneath the mask of humanity he was presenting; his mutton chops were much thicker than normal,and even without his top hat, he stood at least a whole foot taller than normal: all signs that his transformation was imminent.
“Oh, my darling love, what are you doing here?” she whispered. “ It could be dangerous! The entire Legion has been invited! They could have seen you! I cannot bear to entertain even the thought that they might discover you and hurt you!”
He took her hand in his and brought it to his lips, kissing it with fervent reverence, but she saw his eyes turning sad.
“I couldn’t miss the opportunity to see you. You know what happens, each time the “beast” takes over. It could be days before I’m myself again,” he murmured, pulling her gently against himself. He kissed her temple, lingering as he always did.“We’re bound by secrecy, you and I, but I’ve missed you, Goldilocks. I had to see you. I..I needed to see you,”
Dorothea felt an edge in his voice, an echo of the melancholy she had seen in his gaze.
“This is not only about seeing me before the Full Moon, Jacob, am I right?”
He hesitated for one moment, his jaw clenching with ire. When he spoke again, he growled, flashing his fangs.
“Word’s out that your father has invited plenty of lechers to choose as your husband...I may have gotten a little territorial at the news,”
Unable to stop the flattered blush that spread on her face, she sighed, bringing her hand to caress his cheek, her thumbs running on the ridge where his scar was as she tried to bring him comfort.
“No need for that, my love. Officially, this is but a simple Masquerade, and unofficially...well, my parents are seeking to wed me off, that is true. I am of age, so it is expected of them,” she gave him a wicked grin. “But we both know, you and I, that no matter how many gentlemen I shall dance with, I will choose no one as my husband. No one can compare with the one I happen to fancy already,”
“Oh? So is that the reason, Goldilocks?” he murmured feigning ignorance, looking at her with a playful light in his ferine eyes.“Your heart’s already set on someone?”
“Possibly,” she giggled. “Someone extremely incautious-”
“I’d have said ‘particularly darin’ and extremely handsome’,”
She continued, rolling her eyes with a smile.“-charming, incautious and a proper rascal for wandering inside a Manor crawling with Executioners and this close to the full moon,”
“What can I say? I’m known for never shunnin’ a good ol’ Templar ball, especially when my wife is the Hostess,”he said, laughing, pressing another kiss to her temple.
At that comment, Dorothea blushed from pleasure.
“Must be the reason why I don’t hold as many as I should, with my husband so busy coming and disrupting them,”
“I distinctly remember not disruptin’ our own wedding, though,”
“That is indeed true. If anything, you have made it as close to a dream as humanly possible,” Dorothea chuckled, her hand shooting up to her shilling instinctively. His eyes followed the movement, and he couldn’t repress a low, unapologetic titter.
“You’re still wearin’ that? Not the first pick of jewelry I’d have chosen to go with your dress,” he joked.
“It was the only possible choice. Nothing is more precious to me than this,'' She defended the small piece of jewelry. “This is yours. You wore it around your neck for so many years, it was a part of you. And when you gave it to me to keep, on the day we married, it became a part of me as well. It’s all I have to keep you close to me, my charming, daring Wolfman,”
Jacob listened intently, tightening his grip around her small body. When he spoke, his voice was a deep rumbling growl.
“I can only imagine your parents’ happiness if they were to know about this, what with that whole assembly of Lords and nincompoops they want to marry you to, ”
“As if they ever had a say when it comes to the dictates of my heart,” she said, caressing his cheek to placate his disquiet. “Jacob...we have known each other for so many years. We have known each other ever since we were two adolescents, years before the curse took hold of you. I have loved you for so long, and by some miracle, you decided to love me in return, despite knowing who my family was. I could never love anyone but you. Not another man, and certainly not anyone belonging to the Legion,"
“We both took an enormous gamble with this love, Goldilocks,”
“One I would take each day of my life,” she asserted. But her voice cracked, when she spoke again. “Do you...do you regret this? Having married me?”
He pressed his forehead against hers, his large hands cradling her face as his thumbs brushed her jawline.A sweet tenderness found its way on his features, softening his expression.
“Not for one moment. I still dream about that day, y’ know, Goldilocks? When I become-” he hesitated, lowering his face almost in shame. “When the beast takes over, you becomin’ my wife is all I have to keep me grounded. You’re all the humanity that’s left in me,”
“Oh, Jacob, my own soul!” Words choked in her throat as she felt her heart tighten in her chest. Dorothea knew she could always bear her own ailments of spirit: she would just square her shoulders and chin up, ready to face the world. But seeing that lingering sadness in Jacob’s eyes, knowing, even for one moment, that melancholy and heartache and solitude dwelled in his heart...that was something that hurt her even more than her own pain.
“My love, you don’t know what I would give to be with you when the Moon is full, to be able to carry that burden alongside with you! I beg of you: allow me to! If you would only let me-”
He shook his head, caressing her cheeks, ever careful not to graze her with his sharp claws.
“The last thing I want is to pass this curse to you,” he said softly.
“I am not afraid of it,” she answered with an immovable voice. “I have never been afraid of it. I saw what happened to you that night: I was there and I saw it all. And I didn’t run. I still presented myself at the altar, vowing in front of God Himself to be your devoted wife, no matter what. And given the choice, you know I would do it over and over again.”
“I know, love...and you call me incautious,”He chuckled, his heart swelling with love for her.
“It takes one to know one,”
“You don’t look like it, but you’re one of the most stubborn women I’ve ever met, Lady Starrick”
She rolled her eyes with a smile, tiptoeing to press a kiss on his clavicle, finding that sweet spot where his pulse was, while wrapping her arms around his shoulders. He felt a pool of warmth in forming his loins at those kisses. Her determination and sweetness were something that always stirred the deepest of passion within his soul.
“It’s Mrs. Frye, my darling. And I know you love me for it” she whispered, smiling the crooked smile that made him weak.
“Of this, my love, you shall never doubt,” he growled, before giving in into his desire for her. He dove down to kiss her deeply while pulling her against himself and interlacing his fingers with hers as he pinned her hand against the wall behind her, scratching the paint with his claws. He lingered on her lips until both of them needed to breathe again.
When her mask grazed against his nose one time too many, he let out a growl of irritation.
“Let me get rid of this frippery here,” he murmured.“Let me see my wife’s face,”
Jacob let his fingers wander through her hair, his nails scraping against her nape as he tugged at the silken ribbon that kept the domino mask on her face, and a smile spread on his lips when he saw her lovely features in full.
“..And here’s where all your freckles were hidin’,” he purred, before leaning down and kissing her cheeks and the tip of her nose, in that adoring way that always made Dorothea’s heart flutter.
“Would you believe that my mother suggested I scrub them with lemon until they disappeared?”
He stopped in his trail and kept her face cradled in his large hands, his eyes suddenly burning with an indignation he didn’t even try to hide.
“Good thing you never listen to her.” He growled. He stared at her for a moment longer, sighing before resting his forehead against hers. “Don’t you dare do anythin’ to them. They are beautiful, Dottie,”
She smiled, before leaning in to kiss the tip of his nose.
“If anything, I would not touch them because you love them. But you are biased,”
Unable to resist her, more kisses followed with each word that came out of their mouth, as he wrapped his arms around her.
“I’m not biased, I’m in love with you,” he whispered against her lips, his voice a soft purr that drowned in their kiss.
“Doubly biased, then, husband,”
Suddenly Jacob’s head snapped to the side when he heard someone passing by the window outside, and Dorothea dragged him even more in the darkness.They both tensed their ears, when they heard a roar of excited voices coming from the main hall.
“What in the world is going on?” Dorothea whispered, keeping Jacob as close to herself as possible. She knew she wouldn’t be able to protect him in any way if anything were to happen; still, she couldn’t stop from worrying for him and do all that she could to keep him safe.
She waited for a few moments, expecting a thunderous stampede headed toward the hidden room. But the only sound that came was that of rumbling applause. Her eyes widened when a sudden realization hit her.
“Oh, High Heavens! This is surely Viola starting the sword dance with Victor! She will never forgive me if I were to miss it! She has spent weeks preparing for it!”
Jacob smiled as he kept her against his chest, his hands brushing against her arms in a comforting gesture.
“I think she won’t mind and she won’t be mad at you...she knows you're here with me,”
“But she doesn not know!”
Jacob smiled once more and she saw a mischievous glint in his eyes.
It was then that it dawned on her. “She knows I am here, because Victor knew you would be here,”
Jacob nodded, as he kissed her temple. “And the sword dance is her way of gathering all the guests in the main hall, distractin’ them so that we can have as much time alone here as we need,”
“And Viola never told me anything about this” she scoffed, shaking her ringlets with a smile of amused incredulity on her face.
“Don’t be crossed with her, love. She wanted this to be a surprise,”
“I could never be crossed with Viola nor Victor, with all they have done for us,” she chuckled, nuzzling against his chest. They stood against one another for a little while longer, ears still tensed to capture any sounds coming from their surroundings.
They noticed the applause and the shouts had started to subdue, and the music of a violin and a piano started to fill all the halls, reaching even their secluded parlor.
“Your father didn’t set you up for playin’ tonight? Why, I’m astonished! You would’ve ensnared those jackanapes that he so eagerly desires to be his sons-in-law much faster,”
Jacob sounded as if he was joking, but Dorothea could feel that edge of territoriality still present in his voice. Gently, she wrapped her arms around his shoulders to give him some comfort from her presence, tiptoeing again to kiss his neck, the only part of his skin that she could reach.
“No, my love. Tonight I was only to dance, and Father was adamant about it. ‘Time to find yourself a proper husband, pumpkin, and give me and your mother some grandchildren',” she said, puffing up her chest as she mimicked her father’s tone, hoping to cheer him up. “As if! He will grow bald before that is ever going to happen,”
Suddenly, a grin appeared on his face and he leaned down until his lips were a whisper away from hers.
“Maybe it won’t happen in the way he expects to...but just wait until the full moon has passed, Goldilocks, and you and I can start workin’ on it...” he slowly murmured with his deep, raucous voice, in that tone that always caused Dorothea’s knees to wobble, as his hand trailed over her womb. She felt her whole face become an intense shade of purple, her mouth dry, the grip on her stomach so intense all air left her chest.
All her thoughts immediately ran to the last time they had tumbled together in bed; his hands clasped on her wrists, pinning them against the mattress as he rocked into her, alternating slow teasing thrusts with powerful pushes, his mouth on hers to drown all her pleas for release and more pleasure, taking all that he gave her with eagerness and impatience, wrapped as they were in the deepest of embraces two lovers could share.
She felt her face grow even redder than before. She glanced at him, giggling nervously when she saw his mischievous smile. He knew exactly what she was thinking.
“Oh, do not give me that look,” she muttered. “I will find a way to make you blush, Jacob, or my name is not Dorothea Marianne Frye,”
He grinned even more. “I’ll wait for you to make me blush impatiently, Goldilocks, after the moon will start to wane. As for now, since your father’s so impatient for you to dance around with the man that’s to be your husband,” he chuckled, as he took a step back, performing a whimsical bow and offering her his hand.“My Lady Starrick, may I have the honour of this dance?”
Dorothea fluttered her eyelashes, laughing with pure delight.
“I thought you would never ask, my darling Wolfman,”
She took away her silken gloves, leaving them behind. She didn’t care about etiquette, she didn’t care about the rules, she didn’t fear his claws: she wanted to feel his warm skin against hers. She brought one hand on his shoulder, gently gripping on his coat, and she saw a smile open on Jacob’s face as he tilted his head to kiss the tips of her fingers, lingering as he always did. She then saw him wrap his hand, so big and warm, around hers, his grip firm as the other found its way on the small of her back, pulling her flush against him.
Dorothea felt her chest heave with anticipation, her heart beating as fast as a hummingbird's wings, precisely like the first time she had felt the comforting warmth of his arms as they engulfed her in the deepest of embraces.
When Jacob swayed on the side, staring straight into her eyes, in a moment of time that seemed eternal, she finally felt safe and sound.
After a moment of silence, a deep hum, born into his chest, found its way to his lips.
The light in Dorothea’s eyes grew softer, as she recognized the melody.
It was a waltz. Their waltz. The one she herself had composed for them years before, the very same that had accompanied them the night of their first kiss.
“The Dark Waltz,” Dorothea sighed, letting her husband lead her around, his steps sure and precise, graceful even.
“The only possible choice, love,” Jacob answered her, echoing her words, before resuming his humming for both of them, his deep voice reverberating through his throat.
With each twirl, Jacob would bring her hand to his lips, kissing it with immense love, never breaking eye contact with her, both blissfully oblivious of the time passing by as they completely closed off the world around them for those moments that were only theirs.
Nothing else mattered, but the beating of their hearts, their souls finally touching each time their eyes met, after so many days of forced separation that burdened their spirits with rueful sorrow.
In those moments as they swayed away, whirling and twirling together, their heartbeat the only other melody they followed, it was as if they were the only living souls in the world.
“I still think that it was hazardous of you to be out tonight...but I am so happy you came to me ,” she murmured, resting her head against his chest, feeling his strong heart against her cheek. “I missed you more than I can say,”
“I wouldn’t want to be anywhere else, Goldilocks,” he answered back, kissing her hair and resting his cheek on the top of her head as he led her around. “The moment Victor showed me the invitation, I knew I'd be here, no matter what. Tonight I ran as fast as I could. Not even the full Moon could stop me from being with you, at least for a little while,”
“Can we stay like this forever? You and I, dancing like this all night?” she asked, already knowing the answer.
“I wish,” he murmured. “But I wager someone would notice if you were to disappear all of sudden, love,”
She heard him chuckle, but when she raised her head, she saw sorrow painted on his face.
“What is it?” she asked, frowning with concern.
He sighed as he lowered his face to nuzzle his nose against her neck in hope to find some comfort from her proximity. But her perfume, that sweet scent of neroli and orange blossom that was hers and hers alone, caused an aching echo in his soul. Too many evenings he had spent alone, thinking of her, with only a handkerchief soaked with her perfume to remind him that she was somewhere in London, far away from him.
He looked up again, his golden eyes shimmering in the candle light.
“I don’t want to lose you,” he murmured, his heart aching in his chest to the point he thought it would break.”I can’t bear to think that your father will marry you off to some sod, renderin’ all that we have void,”
“My darling ...You are my husband, and nothing on Earth will ever annul this,” she said. “You will never lose me. Not now, not ever,”
“Only you and I are aware of this. Your father won’t stop organizing these balls until he has found a proper husband for you,”
“Then I shall be a spinster in the eyes of everyone, dancing my life away in rejection of all those buffoons. In due time, I might buy a cat or two as well, if Mops allows,” she chuckled, joking. But when she saw he wouldn’t smile, she turned serious as well. That issue was bothering him more than he would say, she could tell by the feral grimace on his pursed lips. Jacob had never been one to be too jealous or possessive, but ever since the curse took hold of him, his territoriality had multiplied tenfolds.
“There is one way for us to be together.” she suggested, hesitantly. “I...I could become like you,”
He shook his head again, frowning.
“No, Dorothea. I told you already, this is out of the question!”
“It would be my choice,” she tried to explain.
“You don’t know what you would find yourself int-”
“Don’t I?” she interrupted, squaring her shoulders and tilting her chin up. “Jacob, I participate in every assembly my father calls upon; I hear every report, every planned mission, every single thing that the Executioners do to the Banes of Darkness. I have to sit beside Father and endure a straight face, hoping that no one is ever to see even just a hint of all that I carry within me. I sit through all that praying with all that I am to never hear your name thumble from their lips, trying with all my might to drown my fears, lingering in the impossibility of reaching you to make sure that you are safe and sound!” She let out a shaky breath, before carrying on. “I spend every full Moon in terror that someone might hurt you, torture you, kill you, take you away from me! So, when I say that I want to become a Werewolf, do not think of me as senseless or as mindless as a child carried away by the heat of the moment. I know plenty well what I would find myself into, what it would mean. And I am still standing here, asking you to let me become as you are, so that we can fight this war together...so that we can be together, as husband and wife should. What good of a wife am I, if I cannot support you when you need me the most? I am no better than a doll left in her little house to be covered in dust!”
Jacob sighed, cradling her face in his hands, unable to stop the pride - the love - he felt in his heart at his wife’s words, as all her sentiments engulfed him like warm, summer rain on his skin.
His loyal, stubborn, impossibly adorable wife to whom he couldn’t refuse anything and that he loved more than life itself.
“I just want to keep you safe,” he murmured, daring to kiss her lips for a sweet moment.
“Don’t you think that I want the same for you? To be able to keep you as safe as I can?”
“I know you do. But now you’re safe here, as protected as you can be, even if it’s my enemies, the ones to protect you. If you were to become like me, if you were to become a Child of the Moon, a Bane of the Darkness, they’d hunt you down, regardless of who your father is. Do you hear me, Dorothea? They’d hunt you down, stopping at nothing until they brought your head back as a trophy! I-I don’t want this for you!”
Impassible, Dorothea took his hands in hers, letting her fingertips trail on his claws. Jacob froze in his spot, terrified that she might scratch herself on purpose, but released a huff of relief when he saw her trailing away toward his palms.
“I have evaluated everything that needed to be considered, my darling, exactly as I did when we became man and wife. I made my choice then. I am making my choice now. And I will find a way, Jacob; you know I always find a way to make things happen,”
Wrapping his hands around hers as he brushed his thumbs against her skin, he shook his head, letting out a small sigh.
“You are so impossibly stubborn-”
“I would have said ‘resilient’, ” she chuckled, echoing their exchange from before.
Jacob couldn’t help but smile with her.
“It would be a life in the shadows, love” he whispered with a softer tone. Dorothea saw something shifting within his eyes, and she knew she was winning.
“Better a life in the shadow with you, than an existence in the sun with them,” she answered, resolute, immovable as a mountain against the wind.
He sighed. “Will anythin’ I say change your mind?”
“Nothing whatsoever,” she brought his hand to her lips and kissed his palm, before pressing it against her cheek. “This is all I am asking of you, Jacob: to allow me to be one with you, mind and soul and heart bounded together by the Moon and her Song,”
He gave her a fond look, as he brushed away a wayward silvery lock of hair from her brow, not saying anything.
“It is either this or I shall ask Viola to turn me into a vampire, and I know she will not make such a great fuss about it,” she joked, poking his rib.
The outraged grimace on Jacob’s face almost made Dorothea burst into laughter.
“You wouldn’t dare,” he growled, wrapping his arms around her to keep her pressed against his body.
“Try me, Mr. Frye,” she smirked, smugly."You will find that there are not so many lines I am not willing to cross, if it means to finally be with you as God intended,"
“But...a vampire?”
She giggled, unable to resist in front of his indignant face.
“Yes, even a vampire,”
Jacob sighed. The Heavens only knew how much he wanted her to be with him properly, finally able to be together as they should have been from the moment they had become husband and wife, running together side by side, wings at their feet and freedom as their guide. Gazing down toward her, he couldn’t help but marvel at the strength of heart and will of iron Dorothea hid within herself. The thought that she was ready to dive head first willingly into constant danger, into a life of pain and suffering with him - for him - had him nearly drowning in all the love he felt for her.
“We’ll do this the next Full Moon, with Victor and the rest of the pack present, then” he finally agreed. “I can’t run the risk of havin’ a vampire for a wife. That’s Victor’s choice of life,” he added with a deep, growly chuckle, tightening his arms around her.
“You would have loved me even if I were a vampire, admit it,” Dorothea giggled, as a smile of pure joy appeared on her lips, her whole face brightening up as if the sun itself was shining upon her.
He quirked his mouth, pretending to think about it.
“I won’t deny nor confirm this preposterous insinuation,” Jacob grumbled, as he took her once more in his arms and started to sway again, spinning her around as gracefully as the ballerina on her music box, picking up the song that was playing in the distance.
“I will take that as a yes, then, oh husband of mine,” Dorothea chortled, her laughter bubbling up directly from the heart.
Jacob looked at her, fully basking in the warmth of her laugh, the sweetest sound to touch his heart. Making her a Werewolf was not what he had anticipated.
It was reckless.
It was dangerous.
It was a folly.
And yet, deep down, he knew that Dorothea was right. If they were to be together as they wished, she had to cross over to his world. Her world was forever lost to him the moment he had turned into a Bane of Darkness. But ever since stumbling into that endless night against his will, he had now found a small light to keep him afloat, filling him with hope, already alleviating the burden that came with his curse: his wife, his Dorothea, with her willingness to take his hand and follow him into that gloomy forest that was the future ahead of them.
He made her twirl one last time, before pulling her toward him, making her plop against his chest.
“On one thing you are right,though,” he murmured, smiling softly.
“Oh? And what is it, my darling?”
He leaned down to brush his lips against hers.”I would love you in any way, shape or form. Always had, always will,”
“For always, my darling?” she asked, her eyes twinkling with sentiment.
“For always, Dottie,” he answered, pushing his lips against hers in the deepest of kisses.
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*draws sigh of relief*
And here it is my latest fic, Dark Waltz, inspired by this ask that my dear friend @giuliettaluce sent me! The moment I saw the ask in my inbox, I knew I would have never been able to write only 5 sentences, because that ask SPOKE TO MY SOUL. The title itself is a reference to Miss Hayley Westerna's song, the very first song I listened to when I first started to created and brainstorms Dorothea for Jacob. It holds a dear place in my heart, and as far as I am concerned, that song, along with "Temple of Thought" are Jacob and Dottie's official themes, so to speak.
I had to do a little bit of worldbuilding for this story, so I basically created an AU for my own Moonlight Kissed!AU. So, in this case, Jacob is an Assassin, instead of a Templar, and Dorothea is still human instead of being born a Werewolves.
I truly hope you will like it. I had truly lots of fun writing it, and I got emotional a couple of time, but this is normal, considering how deep I went with my own emotions (and I went pretty deep, lemme tell you).
well, again, I hope you will like it!
--Nemo
You can read it also on AO3!!!!
Note: Viola Ivanovna belongs to my dear @lunavadash-creates
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*sneaks into the inbox* Hello, darling! 💕 Please tell us what does Dottie's typical day look like? Thank you!
SUSIE, DEAREST!! welcome in my inbox!!
You bring me such delightful question, and about my darling Dorothea too!! <3 I shall gladly answer it!
Buckle up, because it's going to be a long answer (alas, the Gods have not seen fit to bestow upon me the gift of synthesis)
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Let's take a day in the life of Dorothea while she lived in the Family Manor in London, in 1868!
For a start, Dorothea would most likely need to be awaken by her Governess. She usually sleeps until 8 in the morning,due to the fact that she goes to sleep late (she conducts a rather active social life, participating to various social events under impromptu of her parents that want to see her married well to a rather distinct gentleman as if).
Usually, she spends the first hour of her day taking care of her own personal toilette, dressing herself appropriately and then joining her mother Annette for breakfast. Most of the time her father Crawford has already left the house by the time she is up and about, but in the rare occasion he is home and not busy with Templar Business (or Business Business, since the man is still running a financial empire, alongside the Templar Rite), Dorothea has breakfast with them both.
After Dorothea is done with eating, she has a variety of activities she can choose from, but more often than not, she practices playing the violin for a few hours, devoting herself completely to maintain the proficiency she has reached throughout years and years of practice.
Alternatively, she would take care of her correspondance, and particularly after joining the British Rite, she would start taking upon herself to help her father, in order to both learn the trade directly from the Grand Master himself AND acknowledge the situation in London.
If needed, it wouldn't be unrealistic to say that she would take upon herself to oversee in person some of the Templar Operation around the city (although, in that case, she would most likely go accompanied by either her mentor Byron Harrison, or, if he is unavailable for whatever reason, either Markus Barklay (which she doesn't like one bit) or her own cousins Phillip and Charles. Crawford is still adamant that his only daughter is always escorted, especially if those pesky Frye twins are around sowing chaos *and Jacob is starting to sow those pesky pesky first seeds of the love that would later bloom with his dearest Dorothea ahem*)
Usually, after a quick lunch at her own house, she is out and about with her mother Annette, calling some family friends, or organizing small tea parties, where she entertains herself with some chitchat about the latest events in London. She doesn't particularly love these events, because she knows that the biggest reason her mother pushes her to organize them is partially to subtly parade her because she is of an age to be married and because she is training her to be the Mistress of the House, once she has found a husband. But Dorothea is a good daughter, and she loves her mama dearly, so she quietly acquiesces with grace to her mother's will, even if she would very much prefer reading her books, or writing her pieces for her violin.
The evenings in Dorothea's daily life are varied, depending on the season. If it's THE SEASON, she would very much be busy with as many dancing balls as her mother manages to make her participate, and she is generally chaperoned either by her mother or her cousin Pearl, if her mother is unavailable for whatever reasons (although, honestly speaking, she much prefers to be accompanied by Pearl than her mother, because Ms. Attaway is not as pushy as Lady Starrick, and she usually allows Dorothea to just sit somewhere and read one of the books she has sneakily taken from the house, instead of having to submit to the umpteenth dance with the umpteenth gentleman. Needless to say, Dorothea is not too eager to get married, especially not for duty).
However, on the nights when she doesn't need to participate in any social events, and both her parents are home, she gladly plays the violin to accompany her father as he plays the piano, and they sing together, much to Lady Starrick's delight. Alternatively, she enjoys reading out loud for both her parents and her mentor Byron, and this, needless to say, is her favorite way to spend the evenings.
After having bidden her parents goodnight, she would usually sneak out into her mother's hothouse and botanical garden for a little while, where she would find her favourite bush of lilies and with a heavy blanket and a lantern, she would sit by her favourite flowers, reading and daydreaming about the love of Guinevere and Lancelot, wondering when she will meet her own Lancelot.
After a little while, she would sneak back into her room, and fall asleep in her bed, usually with her sweet Mops and Ophelia snoring at the feet of her bed!
and this, my dear Susie, is an example of the daily life of Dorothea!
THANK YOU SO MUCH FOR THIS ASK, I ADORED WRITING ABOUT IT! <3
--Nemo
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Dude, you got an oc for Pirates of the Caribbean too??
Just, how many ocs do you have that you have never spoken about? O.O
Hi there, Nonnie!
Yes, I do have an oc for Potc!! 😁😁😁
as for how many ocs I have......
let me just say.
MANY.
A GARGANTUAN AMOUNT.
Now, you have to take into consideration I created my first oc for fandom when I was a wee bebe of 11 years of age, and it was the year when "Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets" had just come out, and I had just fallen HARD for Draco Malfoy. I still remember distinctly coming back from the cinema and start imagining all these scenes in my head, while listening to my walkman, and at a certain point, I just felt that imagining wasn't enough anymore. I needed to put all those ideas down into words AND pictures.
And since then, I have NEVER STOPPED creating ocs for any fandoms that had meant A LOT to me.
I have something like 22 years on my back of creating ocs, so, as you can imagine, I HAVE A LOT OF THEM.
But allow me just to list down the fandoms and the characters I created for them, for the sake of it!😂😂😂😂
brace yourself, this gonna be a long one! (and I will limit myself to the main characters, not to the secondary one I created around them, because otherwise we would be here until next Christmas);
So here you have it, in no particular order:
The Lost Boys - Robyn Irons
Resident Evil - Thalia Thériaud
Assassin's Creed - Lucia Barbarigo (AC2), Aura the Selkie (AC Rogue), Colette, Antoine and Mathias Beaumont (AC Unity), Dorothea Starrick, Byron Harrison, Phillip Starrick (AC Syndicate), Isinofret (AC Origins), Apollonia of Naxos (AC Odyssey)
The Wolf Among Us- Tatiana Volkov
StarDew Valley - Carlotta De Saint-Exupéry
The Arcana - Raniya Al-Yassin
The MCU - Grace and Veronica Caruso, twin sisters
Elfquest - Nimue of the Northern Tribes
FFVII - Ranian Pendragon-ShinRa, Lilirara of the Forgotten City
FFX - Kiani Ronso, of the Ronso Tribe
FFXII - Nabirye Leia Ondore, Niraj Halim Ondore, Fearchar Aetius Bunansa
The Chronicles of Narnia - Winter, Sovereign of the North
Disney Fairies - Boreas, The Fast-Flying Fairies
Kingdom Hearts - Suen of Twilight Town/ Nexus of The World that Never Was
LOTR - Elwen Anariel
Harry Potter - The Dumbledore Siblings (Stephanie, Samantha, Andrew, Maxwell)
Pirates of the Caribbean - Eleanor Josephine John Henry Morgan Silver
A Song of Ice and Fire - Briallen Baratheon
My Little Pony G4- Ice Crystal the Pegasus, Fleecy Snuggle the Earth Pony, Nurse BebeHeart the Unicorn
Sailor Moon - Sailor Artemis, Sailor Hera, Sailor Demeter, Sailor Aphrodite, Sailor Athena (also known as the Sailor Olympus Group)
Star Wars - Kuni Laikantaar
Miraculous Ladybug - Ophélie Duval, Aida De Luca
Naruto - Sayuri "Onitora" Kureaki, Yukaku "Onikarasu" Kureaki
Percy Jackson & the Olympians - Viktoria Katsumi Kimball, Child of Ares
Labyrinth - Loreena, the Unicorn Fairy
Monster High - Aisling Skellington, Bran Skellington, Albine DesRoches
Ever After High - Gwenhwyfar Swan
Ouran Host Club - Alexandra Margaret Seymour
FullMetal Alchemist - Arkady Armstrong
Tekken - Mizuya Mishima
Interview with the Vampire/VTM - Artemis "Cainsblood" Hargreaves
So, there you have it, Nonnie. A very summarized list of the majority of Ocs that I have created in the last two decades of life. This is what happens when you have 0 social life, you are an introvert and an hermit, and have ADHD a fervid imagination, and a passion for researching and coupling Canon Characters with OCs.😂😂😂😂
I think I have probably still forgotten some, especially the one that I have created during my teenhood, but eh, my memory is not the best, and those that I listed here are the ones that I cared the most about anyway!
thanks for the ask!!
--Nemo
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Headcanons, my dear Cricket!!!!
8, 11, 17.
For these two sweethearts: Jacob and Dottie.
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Hi there, my darling Giulietta, my dearest! <3
thank you so much for sending in these questions! <3
I will try my best to answer them!
And because you asked me about the two of them, I shall answer my headcanon for them in regards to each other as a couple, so within the context of my story.
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So,here are my answers.
11) Wardrobe headcanon
Dottie: Dorothea has a vast wardrobe. It bears repeating. VAST. GARGANTUAN. ENORMOUS. She adores garments and clothes, the more the better, and she can be considered a true fashionista in her own right. This stems from the influence that both her parents, her mama Countess Annette and her papa Crawford Starrick, had upon her while growing up. Her mother would always indulge in the latest fashion, her father would always dress impeccably, and Dorothea followed in their footsteps even there. Her taste is refined, never over the top, in line with her own reserved personality. However, most of her dresses are either in the most immaculate of whites or in the warm shades of burgundy, wine and garnet (or sometimes a mixing of those colours) along with golden accents all over.
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this is her signature dress, tho I truly need to redesign this gown for her, good gods above.
Also this one is a special dress because it's the one she wore the night Jacob kissed her for the first time, so it has a special place in their memories.
Jacob: I imagine Jacob having his usual clothes, the one we see him wearing in Syndicate; When he first met Dorothea, he was wearing his Simply Jacob outfit, and that's the one that made the biggest impression to her (although I think it was more connected to the ways of their meeting rather than the garment itself), but if we want to go with her favourite ones, I'd say they are the Outdoorsman outfit along with the one he wore in 1888 during the JTR DLC (mostly because she loves to just be completely engulfed in those enormous leather coat of his. She truly loves the feeling of wearing his coats). However, I imagine that at least once, in order to impress Dorothea, he would wear a proper suits with cape and his trademark top hat. This would have varying degree of success, because as much as Dorothea adores fashionable garment, she very much prefers Jacob to be his natural self, rather than someone he is not for her sake. This will prove not to be a huge problem, since she will gladly assist him in taking off those constricting clothes, *wink wonk*);
Soft spot headcanon
Dorothea: Dorothea's soft spots are children and her family. Because she was an only child, and her only companions were her cousins Phillip and Charlie when they went to visit her in Dover, she always yearned to have a larger family, more people around her to give all the love she felt in her heart. So, whenever she is visited by acquaintances with children, she puts herself in charge to keep them entertained and happy. She cannot bear to see any child suffer, be it sadness or malady or anything, she would do everything in all her power to prevent anything bad to happen to a child. She frequently visits the Orphanages around London, and brings toys, clothes, and warm blankets to the children, reading to them and entertaining them with her violin, first with her Lady Mother when she was a child herself, and then by herself once she reached an age when she was allowed to do as it pleased her. This is something that she has taught to all her children as well.
Sex Headcanon
Jacob: Jacob's soft spot. I'd say, it's his family, both of origins and the one he has created with Dorothea, and his "gained family" aka His Rooks. Jacob has one of the biggest hearts around, and once he takes someone under his wing, once that particular person finds a niche in his heart, he'd do anything to keep them safe and sound. I can imagine him actually knowing each and every one of the men and women that are in the gang, not because he has to, but because he wants to. They are the people that fight alongside him, so of course, he would know them all.
In regards of his family, he is a fiercely protective papa toward his six potatoes (lol, thanks @siofra3448 for this appellative for them!😂I adore it.), though he is a true Papa Wolf toward his sweet Robin, due to his disability and the fact that with his birth, he was losing both him and Dorothea. Due to this and all they went through together, he is fiercely protective of his Dorothea too, and a devoted and loving husband to her. Jacob is the kind of person that puts his heart on his sleeve, something that could be both a blessing and a curse, depending on the person who sees that heart, but he is the kind of person that loves without reservation. When he fell for Dorothea, he gave her all that he was, and luckily for him, he found in her someone willingly to cherish all that he had to offer while giving him all that she was in return, returning all his love in full.
Dorothea: Dorothea is composed and truly reserved, as it is proper of a girl her station. However, the moment the doors of her bedroom close behind her, she finds a sense of freedom in letting out all her sensuality and mischievousness in bed. Because she is too shy to tease Jacob while they are outside, and he is the one doing all the teasing, she awaits to be safe and sound in the privacy of their own rooms to unleash her sweet vengeance on her dear husband. More often than not, she is the one taking the initiative, and Jacob let her gladly be the one in charge. She adores to see Jacob come undone under her, but she knows that, when doing so, she is in for the sweetest payback possible from him. One of the things she loves the most is when Jacob picks her up and has his way with her against the wall OR when they are in bed and he is keeping her pinned at the bed by her wrists. Dorothea loves to be in control, but oh boy, she melts when Jacob is the one taking charge.
Jacob: Jacob,on the other hand, is a flirt. Doesn't matter he has been married with Dorothea for 1 month, 4 years, a decade: he will always fluster her and tease her until she is the same colour as her gowns. Just like Dorothea, the moment they are together behind closed doors is the moment he let his passion take charge, with Dorothea gladly indulging in all the amorous congress that would ensuite the continuous teasing. While usually he loves Dorothea to be the one in control (he adores when she whispers all kind of dirty thing to him and when she is the one setting the pace), when he is the one taking charge, he is in for a long passionate session with his wife, continuing his teasing attitude even in bed (substantially edging her to her limits, with the great pleasure that derives for both of them).
(and now I am going to hide away, because am shy when it comes to these things lol)
WELL, I AM DONE!!! I HOPE I MANAGED TO ANSWER IT PROPERLY!!
thank you for your ask, Giulietta!! <3
--Nemo
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Hello there Nemo!!! I hope you’re okay. Can you give us some info about Dorothea like her favorites, her likes and dislikes, favorite foods, favorite flowers, colors, books, any ailment she may have, things she can’t do (i can’t do math for life of me😂) and anything you can think of really. We would love to get to know Little Lady better🥰. Stay safe and healthy y’all.
Good day, my darling friend!!
I finally have the time to sit down properly and answer this ask you sent me! I am actually really happy to get this! I rarely have the chance to speak about the Trivias in regards of Dorothea, so this question truly tickles my brain!! :D
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So, without further ado, LET'S START WITH SOME TRIVIAAAA! :D
(this might be long, so more under the cut);
Dorothea's favourite animal are birds, in particular the Robin Redbreast and the European Great Tit (though I much prefer the Italian name of the latter bird - Cinciallegra).She absolutely loves them, and during her period in Sweden, she would spend the days sitting at her window, while redacting letters for her parents, her cousin and Byron, and looking at them playing in the branches covered in snow. Due to her great love for them, her father had an enormous aviary built for her in her mother's Botanical Garden. It's not unsual to see her spend several hours there, either reading writing her own journal. Even after becoming Grand Master, she would often seek the quietness and peace of that place, in order to sort out her feelings and find the answers she needs.
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Dorothea's favourite flower are lilies, without doubts. She adores roses as well, especially red and white one, but if she were to go for a flower, then the lily is her favourite one. She particularly love the Fire Lily, for its stunning beauty and for a memory connected to this type of flower: her mother had a whole patch of them in her Botanic Garden, and they happen to be the spot where Jacob and Dottie would meet and steal kisses from each other, in those brief encounters they had, in the months before her father's death. They are so dear to her heart that they are the reason she and Jacob named their first daughter Lily.
Dorothea doesn't particularly love food or eating in general, but she enjoys the rituals of breakfast the most, and she always look forward to it after waking up. She would be always be served Rose Tea with fresh seasonal fruits, eggs and porridge (she doesn't eat meat). Her favourite food would be Lemon Meringue Tart.
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Dorothea's favourite colours are Red (with particular love for the shades Ruby, Scarlet and Burgundy), Pristine White and Gold. These are also her trademark colours, and she always includes them into her robes.
Dorothea's favourite season is, without doubt, Winter. Growing up in Sweden for the first few years of her life, and then back to London, she had the chance to experience some magical winters there. She adores watching the snow falling, travelling around on a horse-drawn sleigh, playing out in the cold chilly air, building snow forts to play snowball fight with Charles and Phillip, her cousins. When she was in Sweden, one thing she adored to look was the Aurora Borealis, visible even from Sturefors Castle, the Bielkes's ancestral home. She would often write to Byron about it.
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Dottie is a humongous bookworm. Allow me to repeat this: HUMONGOUS BOOKWORM. The girl has something like thousands upon thousands of books, all jealously well kept in her three libraries in Starrick's Manor in Dover and in the two libraries of the Manor in London. She adores reading books over and over again, and enjoys collecting them as well. One of Dottie's favourite authors is Hans Christian Andersen, that she had the chance to meet briefly in summer 1867, when she travelled to Copenhagen with her maternal cousins. She fell in love with his work, and they kept a correspondance until his death. But the ones she adores the most are the Arthurian Legends, and she is absolutely in love with the figure of Lancelot (during the secret correspondence they had in the beginning of their relationship, she used to address to him as Lancelot, in order to maintain his identity a secret). Reading fairytales together is one of the things Jacob and Dottie love the most. Or rather, Dottie reads them out loud to him, and Jacob listens to her while playing with her hair. He is not particularly passionate about fairytales in general, but I just imagine that for him it's an occasion to spend sometime with Dottie away from the fuss of the outside world, and he adores the dreamy light that lit up in her eyes whenever she reads to him. She is always so serious that, whenever he sees her relaxing and smile, he absolutely adores it.
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She has an incredibly fine nose, which can be both a blessing and a curse (hence why she always insists Jacob takes a bath before going to bed, or so help her, she would bar the door of their bedroom!😂) and she loves fragrances, to the point that she is a bit of a collector. Her signature fragrance is mainly composed by orange blossoms and neroli, a perfume that she has to be made for her from a distinguised perfumiere in Italy. It's so peculiar that whenever Jacob feels it, he immediately associates it with her. The IRL counterpart of the perfume she has is Neroli Portofino by Tom Ford (a fragrance I happen to have and adore).
A particular quirk that she has is that, when she is deep in thoughts or need to concentrate, she would take her violin, but she would not play it. She would instead caress the strings, occasionally pinching them, to help her mind focus; Playing her violin, concentrating on the notes, feeling the cold, smooth wood underneath her fingertips is truly the best outlet for her whenever she gets too anxious or too upset.
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Dorothea suffers from extreme anxiety (or hysteria, as it was known in that period of time) and PTSD due to something that has happened in her past. I cannot go too much into detail, because it would be too spoilery for my own story, but there was a reason she was sent to Sweden for two years in 1866, despite neither her parents being too keen into having their only child that far away from them.
Dorothea is a huge fashionista. HUGE FASHIONISTA. And this partially derives from her mother, a fashionista herself. She adores wearing new garments all the time, and she is particularly in love with the Franch Fashion of the time. However, whenever she needs to renovate her wardrobe, she would never throw away her clothes, but instead, she would donate them to young girls like her who could never afford those gowns. Her mother was the one that taught her to do so, for she used to do the same growing up and, when Dorothea was a child, did the same with her daughter's baby clothes. Countess Anette exposed Dorothea from a young age to the fact that she was born into a priviledged family, and that she should always be thankful for all she had, for it was not due, but it was instead a gift, a lesson Dorothea learned well.
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Dorothea cannot sketch nor draw for the life of her. As much as she is talented in anything musical, she is unfortunately unable to draw or paint in any way. This never proved to be such a great nuissance for her, until she met Jacob. After meeting him, due to the nature of their relationship, she wished to be able to immortalize his face on paper so that she could have a memento of his appearance to keep with her whenever they couldn't meet for a period of time.
Dorothea has one hell of a marksmanship: with a rifle or a gun in her hands, she is a force to be reckoned with. She wasn't born with a good aim, though, not at all: she reached proficency in shooting with a different types of firearms after years of constant training under the tutelage of her mentor Byron Harrison. Despite Dorothea's mother, Countess Anette, being against her daughter leaning into such unladylike activity, her father gave his consent to Byron to train Dorothea, for he wanted his daughter to be able to actively defend herself once she was to take over his role.
Well, this is all for now!! If you have any more questions or curiosities, I will gladly answer them! Thank you so much for asking me this, my dear! <3
--Nemo
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