Magic pen? Jochi mouths from somewhere behind Verso, eyebrows arched in scandalized disbelief. Jasnah ignores him entirely, gaze fixed on Verso as she calmly reasserts: "Not magic. Fabrial technology."
Hook, line, sinker. Her brow creases with a flicker of irritation as she rises to his bait.
But then she moves on, adjusting her posture with a muted grunt and edging herself closer to the front of the divan. A careful accounting of pain and leverage. Her eyes track to the chouta in assessment. She starts by tearing off a piece of flatbread soaked in sauce, quietly pleased to find it spiced and savoury.
Behind them, Jochi clears his throat. He produces a jug of water from the kitchenette, sets it within reach, and offers a shallow bow that lands somewhere between courtesy and comedy. Then he begins excusing himself — kitchens to clean, tills to count, apprentices to scold — already halfway gone before the list is finished.
Before he disappears entirely, he adds, "Fresh clothes are on the chair," and, as an afterthought that is absolutely not an afterthought, "And a copy of On the Epistemic Limits of Vorin Determinism if you get bored."
The door closes. The apartment settles.
When they are alone again, Jasnah picks up the loose threads of the conversation as if she never dropped them. "Maybe it's a good thing if we don't hear back. With any luck, the attack was isolated. Directed at me. Nothing that should ripple back to Urithiru." Her gaze drifts somewhere past Verso's shoulder, toward the city beyond the walls.
When she glances back, it's sidelong rather than direct.
"Not the most enjoyable way to spend a couple days in Thaylen City," she allows, starting to imagine the timeline of her recovery without stormlight to speed it. Her mouth draws into a tight line. Worry over Ivory flooding her all over again.
Verso shrugs. "I've had worse weekends." And he has; despite everything, Jasnah is still alive, and he's spending her time recuperating indoors with her rather than out in the wilderness, cold and uncomfortable. Yeah, he's definitely had worse weekends.
He makes his way back to the table so that he might eat his chouta, too. The lentils taste a little different than the Le Puy lentils he's used to, but not bad. A bit spicy, but not enough to upset the stomach. Jochi was right: a good meal for someone recovering from a wound.
"Jochi said you were sending a message to your mother," he ventures, carefully not mentioning that it's because Jochi said Navani might be reading her correspondences. "She'd probably be expecting you back, wouldn't she? Or at least to hear from you?"
Thoughtfully, Jasnah chews. Her appetite has finally found its way home and the first mouthful draws a small, needy grumble from her stomach. She has her mouth full when Verso asks about Navani, so it takes her a moment to finish chewing and swallow before she answers.
She does, however, send a sharp glance toward the stairway where Jochi disappeared back into the bakery. Hmm.
"It isn't unusual for me to take extended research trips to Kharbranth," she says at last. "Give it a few days and she'll begin to wonder. Once I'm...a bit steadier on my feet, we can approach the Merchant Council here in the city. Thaylenah is part of the Coalition of Monarchs. They're allies."
There is a pause, a subtle hitch in her cadence that betrays caution. She is not eager to move too quickly, too publicly. Not yet. She wants to be able to manage the stairs under her own strength before testing her luck further.
But, Jasnah knows, too long and her mother will worry. She has done this to her before. Vanished. Presumed dead. Left Navani to mourn.
Changing the subject — in a way she assumes is not at all conspicuous — she points a finger at the card deck sitting off to the side. "You've kept yourself busy."
It's conspicuous, because it's the same thing Verso does when he wants to avoid a subject. Wow, is it always that obvious when he does it? He can't believe no one ever called him out on it. Then again, he notes Jasnah doing it and says nothing, so maybe he's part of the problem.
He wants to pry further, wants to ask about her mother going through her private letters and the people she fears Jasnah would 'invent', but he doesn't. Can't. It's already obvious how that would end, and it isn't with Verso getting answers. So, he locks the knowledge away until a time at which it can actually be of use.
"Not much else to do here," he answers, shrugging. "Save for read On the Epistemic Limits of Vorin Determinism, and... I figured I should start with Vorin Determinism for Dummies first."
Another bite of chouta. She is, Jasnah notes with faint surprise, making remarkably short work of the meal. A good sign. Or perhaps she simply prefers this to the pastries from earlier. Much like with the stew aboard Torreth's ship, the evidence continues to mount that she is poorly equipped to notice, consider, or source her own meals, yet performs admirably when food is placed directly in front of her. Blind to hunger until it is solved for her. An inelegant system, but an effective one.
Even so, she does not quite finish the wrap. Not because she is full, exactly, but because something else more interesting steals her focus. She leaves it only half-eaten, brushes her fingers clean, and reaches for the deck of cards. She winces at the movement — sharp, localized pain — but it is not enough to deter her. She wants a closer look at the newer card backs.
While she inspects them, her attention lifts only briefly toward Verso.
"Do you need me," she asks lightly, "to define determinism for you?"
If the question offends him, then good. It is a deliberate pivot — a clean, decisive step away from discussing when, why, or how Navani might receive that spanreed message.
The question does offend him! Just lightly, but all the same. His eyebrow twitches, but his scoff is closer to affectionate exasperation than true upset.
"Didn't I tell you that I was the top of my class?" He did, to which she said that meant nothing without knowing the details of his classmates. Whatever. Hopefully she won't remember that. "I know what determinism is."
To prove it: "It's the belief that everything is fixed to happen a certain way." Which is probably very much a Determinism for Dummies description, but hey. He's a musician, not a philosopher. "It's the Vorin part I know less about."
She turns an ace over in her hands. The care in it is unmistakable. The patience in each line, the tiny deviations that only show themselves if you're looking for them. At first glance, they're identical. On closer inspection, each one carries its own small insistence on being different. She finds that...pleasing.
Her gaze flicks briefly toward the book Jochi left behind. "That one was supposedly written during the Hierocracy," she says, more conversational than professorial. "When the priesthood ruled everything worth knowing."
She taps the edge of the card against her thumb as she speaks. "They restricted scholarship. Claimed exclusive authority over scripture and prophecy. That's when all the fuss about masculine and feminine arts really calcified. Knowledge parceled out, roles assigned, and free will became a clerical inconvenience."
She turns to the next card, tracing one of the curlicues with her bare left finger. Deliberate, faintly defiant.
"That book argues against it. Or claims to. I suspect it's apocryphal, but the sentiment is sound: the idea that a life can be reduced to a prescribed outcome is intellectually lazy. Jochi wants to convinced me it's a foundational part of priesthood's undoing, but I suspect it wasn't actually published until well after."
Another small turn of the card. "The irony, of course, is that when the Hierocracy fell, the priesthood lost their freedom. No land. No property. Bound to light-eyed houses as advisors — slaves, really."
Yeah, he knew he should have stuck to Vorin Determinism for Dummies.
He does listen, though, because he enjoys when Jasnah starts going off on a lecture about something most people wouldn't even think about for more than a minute. There's not a lot he actually gleans from it, but that's because it's a lot of information to take in at once. He leaves with the faint idea of a Hierocracy, at least, and that being 'light-eyed' means something. Hm. He'll have to ask Jasnah about that one later.
For now, though, he just says, "You're really into this history stuff, huh?"
Unfortunately, he's way more interested in the person sitting in the room with him at present than anything that's happened in the past. It's not that he minds history, exactly, but when you've been a part of history for the better part of your life, it tends to lose a little bit of its luster.
"When did that start?" The history buff thing. Sorry, he's asking about her again instead of engaging with her in a philosophical discussion.
She echoes the phrasing back at him, a thin edge of strain riding it. Not anger — something closer to weary correction, softened by a trace of fondness she doesn't bother to hide. It occurs to her that he can't be faulted for the mistake. He arrived in a world where Jasnah Kholin already existed as a monarch, fully formed. He never saw the long stretch of years before that title settled on her shoulders.
"I'm a historian by profession, Verso," she corrects him, evenly. "I wasn't always a queen. And I was never meant to be one."
She turns one more card, then sets aside the whole deck. "When I came of age, I actually trained under a specific order of historians. That's how Jochi and I began corresponding."
Jasnah pauses for a moment, then, quieter. Precise.
"I hate to be pedantic," he says even though he doesn't, "but you didn't answer my question."
'History came first' is not an answer. Sure, 'before I became a queen' is a time period, but it's not a very specific one. Besides, he's not asking about when she picked up history as a profession; he's asking about when the passion started.
"Unless you came out of the womb citing history texts," he adds with a wry smile, because he wouldn't be surprised. "What made you interested in history in the first place?"
— She'd find his pedantry appealing if it wasn't currently and incisively directed at her. How tiresome, because she doesn't have the words to explain how sifting through the fact and fiction in historical texts and legends was a natural direction after doing the same within her mind. That there is a kind of control to be found in searching, finding, unraveling, and pinning down the things that are true.
Well. Maybe she has some words to explain it.
"One year, when our fathers were on campaign, my little brother and cousins made me read them this one story almost every night. I got so familiar with it. I figured...maybe some of its characters and events could be corroborated — it's about a king and a ship and a strange island. Sure enough, the king was a real king. But I could never find any evidence of a real ship. Or the strange island."
Elhokar and Adolin and Renarin had fallen upon their fixation with Wandersail shortly after Jasnah's illness. So much of her frustration and helplessness got sewn into that story and investigating its authenticity. Maybe if she could prove it was true, she could...
Satisfied. At least for now. He enjoys learning these little tidbits about Jasnah, personal things that let him imagine a young, perhaps more wide-eyed version of her, struck with the desire to make something in a favored story true. It's an almost childlike thing, the hope there, the belief that something amazing could really have happened.
"Yeah," he says with a nod, "I always wanted the stuff in the stories I read to be real, too."
The person who actually made those memories did, anyway. Verso had been made without the knowledge of the Canvas, had to be brutally informed of it, but he wonders if that's how it first came to be: a little boy's desire to live in his stories. "You'll have to lend me the book when we return."
Hers is a slow, deliberate nod. Privately, Jasnah suspects Verso would not much care for Derethil and Wandersail. At its core, it is a bleak meditation on personal responsibility. Hardly suitable bedtime fare for children, which was, of course, precisely why her younger relatives had begged her to read it. An workaround for parental discretion. Not that their parents had been especially present to begin with. Either too occupied conquering Alethkar — or, in Evi's case, too occupied being dead.
Her fingers worry at the wraparound hem of her havah, flaking dried blood from the violet fabric. She is a patchwork of grime and makeshift bandages, and the awareness needles at her. It would be nice, she thinks, to feel like herself again. Or at least closer to it.
Slowly — decisively — she plants her palms on the table and tries to stand. It does not go well.
She doesn't fall, exactly, but the effort ends with her sinking back onto the divan in a sharp, frustrated grunt. A breath in. A breath out. Control reasserted by increments. When she looks up at Verso, the curse she doesn't voice is written plainly across her face.
After a beat, Jasnah extends a hand. Her right, of course — she isn't that bold. Not yet. The gesture is quiet, unadorned. A request verging on a command to help her to her feet. She is tired of her world being reduced to the narrow, plush boundaries of a divan.
What's the magic word? he might say under different circumstances, but Verso isn't the type to abuse his advantages. It's difficult enough, he's sure, for her to need help at all. It doesn't bother him, besides. He likes feeling useful.
So, he polishes off the last bit of his chouta before standing and holding out his own hand, clasping her palm and tugging gently. Idly, he notes that her hand is colder than it was on the ship as he reaches out to steady her with his free hand on her shoulder. All the blood loss, probably.
"I don't know if the doctor would approve of you walking around right now," he says, despite the fact that he just helped her up.
A steadying breath. A careful, imperfect rise. Jasnah's eyes squint shut as she borrows his momentum and makes it her own. She doesn't let go of his hand. Instead, she treats it with the same ruthless pragmatism she afforded it in the street: as a stabilizing fact, a lifeline that has already proven its reliability.
He's right. This is unwise. The damage makes itself known immediately. Muscles protesting and nerves flaring hot and sharp beneath her skin. She catalogues it and tries to move on.
"Almost certainly not," she agrees, voice level despite the strain. "But I'm tired of seeing my own blood every time I look down."
Her intention is not a tour of the room. It's a change of clothing. Clean fabric. A return, however partial, to herself. Her gaze tracks to the folded skirt and blouse Jochi left across the room.
She turns her head back to Verso. "Help me over there," she says.
Verso throws a glance over his shoulder at the folded clothes (hey, why didn't Jochi get him any clothes?), then turns his attention back to Jasnah. The hand on her shoulder employs just a little bit of pressure, an urging back down. She could hurt herself walking over there; agency denied! "I'll just go get them for you."
For ten seconds that feel nearly a minute in length, Jasnah looks at Verso like she might refuse. Her tongue rolls against the inside of her cheek — like an underwater creature, just waiting to breach and be defiant. It's a battle of wills. Not between the two of them, but rather between her desire to function independently pitched against her usually sound, rational judgement.
In the end, the agony in her gut wins. It takes a long moment of her fighting with herself but eventually she lower. Delicately, gingerly, she folds herself back into a stiff sitting position on the sofa. One hand curled into a firm fist on her thigh, the other...still holding onto his fingers — tight until the last possible moment, when letting go of him feels a little bit like letting go of freedom. Despite the pain, she'd been so happily on her feet for those few moments.
"Sorry," he has the good sense to say, although it sounds more like sorry, this is for your own good. Unfortunately, he likes Jasnah enough that he's begun slotting her into the category of people who he should make decisions for; it's the Dessendre way to believe that he knows what's best for someone else, after all.
He returns with the clothing after a moment, setting it down beside her and then turning politely around before voicing the previous thought in his head:
Curious, she shakes out the folded garments. A blouse, a skirt, a vest. Thaylen cut. Practical. Layered. Entirely unlike the neck-to-toe Alethi havah, and — she concedes — far better suited to surviving a gut wound without turning dressing into a prolonged act of martyrdom.
"How should I know?" she snaps, still bristling at having her agency curtailed, temper flaring where pain has left her raw. "Ask him yourself."
Speaking of prolonged acts of martyrdom. The edge drains out of her voice a heartbeat later, replaced by a sharp, involuntary, pained groan. She reaches for the topmost havah button near her left shoulder and discovers, with immediate irritation, that lifting her arms that high is a battle in its own right. She manages the first button. Then the second.
"He likes you better," is Verso's argument for not asking Jochi. He'd be more likely to give Verso things if Jasnah were the one to ask! Although perhaps he shouldn't ask at all; no offense to Jochi, of course, but he's a bit more full-figured than Verso is. If he borrows Jochi's clothes, he's liable to look ridiculous.
Maybe he can slip away and purchase some new clothing while Jasnah is resting. This outfit has really outlived its usefulness, after so many days at sea. That's what he's thinking about as she lets out that sound of pain; he turns to look over his shoulder, and then immediately looks away. Mannerly.
Jasnah exhales through her nose, a thin, controlled sound that is doing a great deal of work.
"Define okay." Then, more honestly, and without looking at him, "I am not in danger of collapsing. I am, however, discovering that buttons require more ambition than I currently possess."
A pause. Her jaw tightens, not from pride exactly, but irritation at her own limits. She's working herself up to asking for help. Hold, please. This may take a while.
Here's the thing: it feels deeply inappropriate to offer to undress Jasnah when that's the very thing he'd like to do under much more favorable circumstances. By this point, it's obvious that it's a desire that isn't returned, and that any 'spark' he had felt was the result of misinterpreting clever repartee. Which is fine, really, but it would be wrong to take advantage of her weakened state to have an excuse to be physically close to her.
So:
"Well, I've been told I'm really good moral support."
Two more buttons give way. Like any good Vorin anything, there are ten in total — six still marching stubbornly down the left side of the bodice. Reaching them now requires a twist she cannot quite manage without setting her nerves alight. The pain spikes, sharp and immediate.
Jasnah assesses the situation with brisk clarity. He has already seen her safehand. Already held her upright while she bled. Already pressed bandages into place with far more intimacy than this. Surely. Whatever line propriety once drew has been thoroughly trampled and left behind on the cobblestones.
She stares at his back. Expression flinty and patience worn thin.
"I don’t require encouragement," she says, curt and irritable and just this side of absurd. "Nor reassurance."
A beat.
"I require your hands."
Well. So much for Verso's careful plan to remain an appropriately distant, moral ally in her time of need.
"Oh," Verso says, trying not to sound like he feels any type of way about this. He shouldn't. There's nothing intimate about this, nothing besides the incredibly platonic gesture of one not-quite-friend helping another friend in need. Jasnah had sounded incredibly businesslike as she'd asked, so he should provide that same energy back.
He turns over his shoulder, arms crossed. "Okay." He swallows, mouth a little dry despite all of his best efforts to recontextualize this. No part of him has ever been hesitant about undressing a woman, but he feels hesitant now, the circumstances so wildly different than any other in which he's had his hands on the buttons of a woman's clothes.
Slowly, he reaches out, warning in as professional a tone as he can muster, "I'm just going to help with your buttons, then." Not to brag, but he feels like he's usually pretty deft at this. Nimble fingers from all of the piano-playing. He feels uncharacteristically clumsy as he fights with her fifth button, though, eyes downcast so as not to look at her face. Maybe he shouldn't be looking at her at all, but blindly groping at her feels even less appropriate. So, eyes strictly on the button as he finally gets it undone.
Jasnah braces her palms against the curved edge of the divan. In a faintly absurd attempt at courtesy, she turns her head away from the off-centre line of buttons. As though fixing her gaze on some neutral middle distance might civilize the moment for both of them.
He is no closer than he was when they fled through the streets. There is simply less to distract from it now. No urgency. No motion. And while there is no physical spark, no crackle of anticipation, Jasnah does experience a bone-deep vulnerability as the collar loosens. The sensation is exciting in its own way. Like baring one's throat to an axehound. Trust, warm and unfamiliar, moves through her blood. She does not mind him so near. That surprises her.
"Ten," she agrees quietly and does not elaborate. The number's supposed holiness dies on her tongue. Nothing makes one interrogate the stubborn remnants of a faith one doesn't believe in quite like attempting to justify it aloud to an outsider. She leaves it there.
She exhales and goes very still, an almost preternatural stillness that cannot possibly be comfortable. But it feels necessary.
"Just the buttons," she says, after a swallow. "I can manage the rest."
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Hook, line, sinker. Her brow creases with a flicker of irritation as she rises to his bait.
But then she moves on, adjusting her posture with a muted grunt and edging herself closer to the front of the divan. A careful accounting of pain and leverage. Her eyes track to the chouta in assessment. She starts by tearing off a piece of flatbread soaked in sauce, quietly pleased to find it spiced and savoury.
Behind them, Jochi clears his throat. He produces a jug of water from the kitchenette, sets it within reach, and offers a shallow bow that lands somewhere between courtesy and comedy. Then he begins excusing himself — kitchens to clean, tills to count, apprentices to scold — already halfway gone before the list is finished.
Before he disappears entirely, he adds, "Fresh clothes are on the chair," and, as an afterthought that is absolutely not an afterthought, "And a copy of On the Epistemic Limits of Vorin Determinism if you get bored."
The door closes. The apartment settles.
When they are alone again, Jasnah picks up the loose threads of the conversation as if she never dropped them. "Maybe it's a good thing if we don't hear back. With any luck, the attack was isolated. Directed at me. Nothing that should ripple back to Urithiru." Her gaze drifts somewhere past Verso's shoulder, toward the city beyond the walls.
When she glances back, it's sidelong rather than direct.
"Not the most enjoyable way to spend a couple days in Thaylen City," she allows, starting to imagine the timeline of her recovery without stormlight to speed it. Her mouth draws into a tight line. Worry over Ivory flooding her all over again.
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He makes his way back to the table so that he might eat his chouta, too. The lentils taste a little different than the Le Puy lentils he's used to, but not bad. A bit spicy, but not enough to upset the stomach. Jochi was right: a good meal for someone recovering from a wound.
"Jochi said you were sending a message to your mother," he ventures, carefully not mentioning that it's because Jochi said Navani might be reading her correspondences. "She'd probably be expecting you back, wouldn't she? Or at least to hear from you?"
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She does, however, send a sharp glance toward the stairway where Jochi disappeared back into the bakery. Hmm.
"It isn't unusual for me to take extended research trips to Kharbranth," she says at last. "Give it a few days and she'll begin to wonder. Once I'm...a bit steadier on my feet, we can approach the Merchant Council here in the city. Thaylenah is part of the Coalition of Monarchs. They're allies."
There is a pause, a subtle hitch in her cadence that betrays caution. She is not eager to move too quickly, too publicly. Not yet. She wants to be able to manage the stairs under her own strength before testing her luck further.
But, Jasnah knows, too long and her mother will worry. She has done this to her before. Vanished. Presumed dead. Left Navani to mourn.
Changing the subject — in a way she assumes is not at all conspicuous — she points a finger at the card deck sitting off to the side. "You've kept yourself busy."
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He wants to pry further, wants to ask about her mother going through her private letters and the people she fears Jasnah would 'invent', but he doesn't. Can't. It's already obvious how that would end, and it isn't with Verso getting answers. So, he locks the knowledge away until a time at which it can actually be of use.
"Not much else to do here," he answers, shrugging. "Save for read On the Epistemic Limits of Vorin Determinism, and... I figured I should start with Vorin Determinism for Dummies first."
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Even so, she does not quite finish the wrap. Not because she is full, exactly, but because something else more interesting steals her focus. She leaves it only half-eaten, brushes her fingers clean, and reaches for the deck of cards. She winces at the movement — sharp, localized pain — but it is not enough to deter her. She wants a closer look at the newer card backs.
While she inspects them, her attention lifts only briefly toward Verso.
"Do you need me," she asks lightly, "to define determinism for you?"
If the question offends him, then good. It is a deliberate pivot — a clean, decisive step away from discussing when, why, or how Navani might receive that spanreed message.
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"Didn't I tell you that I was the top of my class?" He did, to which she said that meant nothing without knowing the details of his classmates. Whatever. Hopefully she won't remember that. "I know what determinism is."
To prove it: "It's the belief that everything is fixed to happen a certain way." Which is probably very much a Determinism for Dummies description, but hey. He's a musician, not a philosopher. "It's the Vorin part I know less about."
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Her gaze flicks briefly toward the book Jochi left behind. "That one was supposedly written during the Hierocracy," she says, more conversational than professorial. "When the priesthood ruled everything worth knowing."
She taps the edge of the card against her thumb as she speaks. "They restricted scholarship. Claimed exclusive authority over scripture and prophecy. That's when all the fuss about masculine and feminine arts really calcified. Knowledge parceled out, roles assigned, and free will became a clerical inconvenience."
She turns to the next card, tracing one of the curlicues with her bare left finger. Deliberate, faintly defiant.
"That book argues against it. Or claims to. I suspect it's apocryphal, but the sentiment is sound: the idea that a life can be reduced to a prescribed outcome is intellectually lazy. Jochi wants to convinced me it's a foundational part of priesthood's undoing, but I suspect it wasn't actually published until well after."
Another small turn of the card. "The irony, of course, is that when the Hierocracy fell, the priesthood lost their freedom. No land. No property. Bound to light-eyed houses as advisors — slaves, really."
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He does listen, though, because he enjoys when Jasnah starts going off on a lecture about something most people wouldn't even think about for more than a minute. There's not a lot he actually gleans from it, but that's because it's a lot of information to take in at once. He leaves with the faint idea of a Hierocracy, at least, and that being 'light-eyed' means something. Hm. He'll have to ask Jasnah about that one later.
For now, though, he just says, "You're really into this history stuff, huh?"
Unfortunately, he's way more interested in the person sitting in the room with him at present than anything that's happened in the past. It's not that he minds history, exactly, but when you've been a part of history for the better part of your life, it tends to lose a little bit of its luster.
"When did that start?" The history buff thing. Sorry, he's asking about her again instead of engaging with her in a philosophical discussion.
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She echoes the phrasing back at him, a thin edge of strain riding it. Not anger — something closer to weary correction, softened by a trace of fondness she doesn't bother to hide. It occurs to her that he can't be faulted for the mistake. He arrived in a world where Jasnah Kholin already existed as a monarch, fully formed. He never saw the long stretch of years before that title settled on her shoulders.
"I'm a historian by profession, Verso," she corrects him, evenly. "I wasn't always a queen. And I was never meant to be one."
She turns one more card, then sets aside the whole deck. "When I came of age, I actually trained under a specific order of historians. That's how Jochi and I began corresponding."
Jasnah pauses for a moment, then, quieter. Precise.
"History came first."
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'History came first' is not an answer. Sure, 'before I became a queen' is a time period, but it's not a very specific one. Besides, he's not asking about when she picked up history as a profession; he's asking about when the passion started.
"Unless you came out of the womb citing history texts," he adds with a wry smile, because he wouldn't be surprised. "What made you interested in history in the first place?"
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Well. Maybe she has some words to explain it.
"One year, when our fathers were on campaign, my little brother and cousins made me read them this one story almost every night. I got so familiar with it. I figured...maybe some of its characters and events could be corroborated — it's about a king and a ship and a strange island. Sure enough, the king was a real king. But I could never find any evidence of a real ship. Or the strange island."
Elhokar and Adolin and Renarin had fallen upon their fixation with Wandersail shortly after Jasnah's illness. So much of her frustration and helplessness got sewn into that story and investigating its authenticity. Maybe if she could prove it was true, she could...
"Bit of a slippery slope from there."
Satisfied, Verso?
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"Yeah," he says with a nod, "I always wanted the stuff in the stories I read to be real, too."
The person who actually made those memories did, anyway. Verso had been made without the knowledge of the Canvas, had to be brutally informed of it, but he wonders if that's how it first came to be: a little boy's desire to live in his stories. "You'll have to lend me the book when we return."
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Her fingers worry at the wraparound hem of her havah, flaking dried blood from the violet fabric. She is a patchwork of grime and makeshift bandages, and the awareness needles at her. It would be nice, she thinks, to feel like herself again. Or at least closer to it.
Slowly — decisively — she plants her palms on the table and tries to stand. It does not go well.
She doesn't fall, exactly, but the effort ends with her sinking back onto the divan in a sharp, frustrated grunt. A breath in. A breath out. Control reasserted by increments. When she looks up at Verso, the curse she doesn't voice is written plainly across her face.
After a beat, Jasnah extends a hand. Her right, of course — she isn't that bold. Not yet. The gesture is quiet, unadorned. A request verging on a command to help her to her feet. She is tired of her world being reduced to the narrow, plush boundaries of a divan.
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So, he polishes off the last bit of his chouta before standing and holding out his own hand, clasping her palm and tugging gently. Idly, he notes that her hand is colder than it was on the ship as he reaches out to steady her with his free hand on her shoulder. All the blood loss, probably.
"I don't know if the doctor would approve of you walking around right now," he says, despite the fact that he just helped her up.
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He's right. This is unwise. The damage makes itself known immediately. Muscles protesting and nerves flaring hot and sharp beneath her skin. She catalogues it and tries to move on.
"Almost certainly not," she agrees, voice level despite the strain. "But I'm tired of seeing my own blood every time I look down."
Her intention is not a tour of the room. It's a change of clothing. Clean fabric. A return, however partial, to herself. Her gaze tracks to the folded skirt and blouse Jochi left across the room.
She turns her head back to Verso. "Help me over there," she says.
An instruction. Not a request.
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In the end, the agony in her gut wins. It takes a long moment of her fighting with herself but eventually she lower. Delicately, gingerly, she folds herself back into a stiff sitting position on the sofa. One hand curled into a firm fist on her thigh, the other...still holding onto his fingers — tight until the last possible moment, when letting go of him feels a little bit like letting go of freedom. Despite the pain, she'd been so happily on her feet for those few moments.
"—Fine."
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He returns with the clothing after a moment, setting it down beside her and then turning politely around before voicing the previous thought in his head:
"Why didn't Jochi get me any clothes?"
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"How should I know?" she snaps, still bristling at having her agency curtailed, temper flaring where pain has left her raw. "Ask him yourself."
Speaking of prolonged acts of martyrdom. The edge drains out of her voice a heartbeat later, replaced by a sharp, involuntary, pained groan. She reaches for the topmost havah button near her left shoulder and discovers, with immediate irritation, that lifting her arms that high is a battle in its own right. She manages the first button. Then the second.
Then she has to stop.
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Maybe he can slip away and purchase some new clothing while Jasnah is resting. This outfit has really outlived its usefulness, after so many days at sea. That's what he's thinking about as she lets out that sound of pain; he turns to look over his shoulder, and then immediately looks away. Mannerly.
"Are you okay?"
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"Define okay." Then, more honestly, and without looking at him, "I am not in danger of collapsing. I am, however, discovering that buttons require more ambition than I currently possess."
A pause. Her jaw tightens, not from pride exactly, but irritation at her own limits. She's working herself up to asking for help. Hold, please. This may take a while.
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Here's the thing: it feels deeply inappropriate to offer to undress Jasnah when that's the very thing he'd like to do under much more favorable circumstances. By this point, it's obvious that it's a desire that isn't returned, and that any 'spark' he had felt was the result of misinterpreting clever repartee. Which is fine, really, but it would be wrong to take advantage of her weakened state to have an excuse to be physically close to her.
So:
"Well, I've been told I'm really good moral support."
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Jasnah assesses the situation with brisk clarity. He has already seen her safehand. Already held her upright while she bled. Already pressed bandages into place with far more intimacy than this. Surely. Whatever line propriety once drew has been thoroughly trampled and left behind on the cobblestones.
She stares at his back. Expression flinty and patience worn thin.
"I don’t require encouragement," she says, curt and irritable and just this side of absurd. "Nor reassurance."
A beat.
"I require your hands."
Well. So much for Verso's careful plan to remain an appropriately distant, moral ally in her time of need.
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He turns over his shoulder, arms crossed. "Okay." He swallows, mouth a little dry despite all of his best efforts to recontextualize this. No part of him has ever been hesitant about undressing a woman, but he feels hesitant now, the circumstances so wildly different than any other in which he's had his hands on the buttons of a woman's clothes.
Slowly, he reaches out, warning in as professional a tone as he can muster, "I'm just going to help with your buttons, then." Not to brag, but he feels like he's usually pretty deft at this. Nimble fingers from all of the piano-playing. He feels uncharacteristically clumsy as he fights with her fifth button, though, eyes downcast so as not to look at her face. Maybe he shouldn't be looking at her at all, but blindly groping at her feels even less appropriate. So, eyes strictly on the button as he finally gets it undone.
"...Lot of buttons," he comments.
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He is no closer than he was when they fled through the streets. There is simply less to distract from it now. No urgency. No motion. And while there is no physical spark, no crackle of anticipation, Jasnah does experience a bone-deep vulnerability as the collar loosens. The sensation is exciting in its own way. Like baring one's throat to an axehound. Trust, warm and unfamiliar, moves through her blood. She does not mind him so near. That surprises her.
"Ten," she agrees quietly and does not elaborate. The number's supposed holiness dies on her tongue. Nothing makes one interrogate the stubborn remnants of a faith one doesn't believe in quite like attempting to justify it aloud to an outsider. She leaves it there.
She exhales and goes very still, an almost preternatural stillness that cannot possibly be comfortable. But it feels necessary.
"Just the buttons," she says, after a swallow. "I can manage the rest."
Ambitious. Perhaps overly so.
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congrats on receiving my 1,000th comment in this post
throwing a party!!
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