Adam Parrish (
hondoyota) wrote in
marlowemuses2018-08-12 11:18 am
Entry tags:
A cruel reality when you've had too much to dream
On most days, Adam thought he knew all there was to know about himself. He had studied his skin and the capabilities of his muscles. He had interrogated every thought inside his own mind. He knew the depth of his capacity for exhaustion, and how much he could do on how little sleep.
He did not know, on the afternoon of the prince's eighteenth birthday, that over the course of the day things had been learned about him, through spell and revelation, that he did not know about himself.
Adam knew that there were celebrations throughout the kingdom for the prince, but Adam had no time for them. He had the day off of work at the shipyards, but that only meant that he had time to catch up on his chores at home, which would allow him some time to catch up on his studies. He knew that the royal family was magic. A fairy king and his family, and the middle son, the magic son, who would inherit everything. He knew, esoterically, that the fairy-dreamer kings of their realm took magic consorts who aided and increased their power.
Adam had no interest in any of it. This was mostly due to self-preservation for his pride and his heart. He knew he was not magic and did not belong in that world. Nothing he could do would ever produce an aptitude for that kind of magic. So he forbade himself from wanting it.
And if, in the months since his own birthday, he'd found lost things easier and broken things were more swiftly fixed by his hands, he attributed it only to his own intelligence and aptitude. If the weather suited itself to his mood and the flowers grew around his parents' house in a riotous profusion that he'd never seen before, Adam thought little of any of it. All these things had logical explanations, or they were mere coincidences.
He did not know that the king had cast a spell for his son, and his face had appeared in a basin of water, and a map had glowed to mark his home and the back field where Adam was hard at work repairing a broken fence.

no subject
He looked at Adam. "Are you coming?" It was a simple question: no pressure, no judgement-- at least so far. And one thing was clear. Ronan was doing this with or without him.
no subject
The catch was that he didn't know how he was coming. As he watched Ronan fit his horse with equipment, Adam tried to learn, but he couldn't quite make sense of it. He didn't have any idea how to start putting a saddle on a horse, if a horse would even let him.
no subject
"Can you ride?"
He couldn't imagine anyone not knowing. He thought back to when he first met Adam: dirty, sweaty, and apparently as poor as he'd looked.
no subject
"No," he admitted at last, stiffly defensive. His hands clenched, shoulders hunched, because he couldn't see a way forward that didn't involve asking for help in some capacity, so Adam's pride prickled up and got ready to dig his heels in.
no subject
He adjusted his position so Adam had enough room to sit behind him. "Alright, you can ride with me. I think the horse can take it."
no subject
He hooked his foot into the stirrup, accepting Ronan's arm to help him swing his weight up. He settled close behind Ronan, thighs on either side of Ronan's hips and hands very lightly on Ronan's sides. Then he let Ronan have the stirrup back, tucking his heels close against the horse's sides. He'd never been this close to anyone, though he did his best to keep their contact as minimal as possible, not wanting to press too close against Ronan's body.
no subject
He looked over his shoulder. "You're going to have to hold onto me unless you want to fall off and break your neck."
no subject
no subject
"Don't. You're supposed to hold me like that. Remember what I said. Don't fall off." He lightly kicked the horse's sides and he bolted. This wasn't the first time he'd rode this horse before and it seemed he remembered the prince's preference. Nice and fast.
no subject
Wincing his eyes shut, Adam clung to him, doing everything he could to stifle the waves of panic as the horse galloped down the road.
no subject
Now that they'd stopped, he looked at Adam. "You survived."
no subject
He lifted his head when they stopped, warily assessing their surroundings and the distance to the ground. His hands were shaking badly as he unclenched them from Ronan. He felt in no way stable enough to get himself down, but there was no choice.
As carefully as he could, Adam swung his leg around and slid down the side of the horse. He landed on his feet, but his knees failed to hold him and he crumpled to the ground.
The humiliation of it was crushing as he took a moment to try to gather himself, but he was deeply shaky, and none of his muscles would cooperate. He tried to remember when he had last eaten--yesterday? He wasn't sure.
no subject
Ronan didn't have anything more to add. He wasn't in the mood to tease him any further and they were in too much of a hurry for him to even consider trying to force any kind of bonding experience that came from a shared horse ride.
no subject
Standing, he still felt shaky, but at least he was upright. He was all the more grateful for it a moment later, as people appeared from one of the cottages and came forward, recognizing Ronan and beginning to explain the situation. Adam stayed by his side, glad that he knew where he belonged and that people recognized and respected it.
no subject
"Don't worry," he said. "We'll take care of it."
Uncomfortable with everyone crowding around him, he quickly excused them. Leaving the horse in their hands, headed off in the direction the people spoke of. This time he did check to make sure Adam was following.
"Shouldn't be too far. Then we can ride back and you can tell everyone you killed a demon on your first day."
no subject
no subject
Honestly, he had very little idea what he was doing. He just knew that he needed to act now and with Adam by his side, he stood a much better chance at killing the demon than he would on his own. But he was the prince. He was of age. He had magic and, theoretically, knew what to do. It'd be fine.
Yeah. Yeah. He was the prince. He'd beat it.
Having successfully
lied toconvinced himself, he gave Adam an encouraging grin.no subject
As they came around the corner of a house, Adam stopped short in surprise, mind struggling to process what he was seeing. It was nothing, in an awful sort of way that was the acute absence of anything. It was a slick blackness that seemed to absorb light and anything else it touched, until there was just a depthless black seeping up from the ground.
Instinctual horror lurched up in Adam's throat, but he advanced again, more carefully now and a little closer by Ronan's side. "You've dealt with things like this before?"
no subject
Ronan swallowed. He kept staring at it and then slowly stepped forward. "First time for everything," he said quietly.
He stopped closer to the demon this time. It wasn't moving quickly, just as they'd said.
"So if you-- stand close to me, I guess." They hadn't figured out how to work together yet. Ronan only knew that the connection was supposed to be instinctive, at least start with. He also knew that physical touch helped, especially at first, but he wasn't about to ask for Adam to hold his hand... even if he wanted him to.
no subject
"I'll stay close," Adam murmured, and he did, close enough that their shoulders brushed. He stayed a little bit behind Ronan, since he didn't know what they were doing and hoped Ronan had some idea of a plan.
Nerves roiled in his belly, and he wanted very earnestly to press Ronan on the topic, but Adam didn't have anywhere near enough information to make a plan for him, and Ronan's lack of certainty worried him. Especially since Adam still had no confidence whatever in his own magical abilities, even if he was just here to support or amplify Ronan.
"What are you going to do?" he asked, keeping his voice quiet because he didn't want any of the villagers to realize how clueless the two of them were.
no subject
Actually, it looked like maybe it was a bit too powerful to outright kill. When the villagers described it, it sounded terrible but smaller. This had grown.
All the more reason not to wait before a sacrifice was needed.
He folded his hands together and focused on the small sliver of space between them. He filled that space with a crackling energy until he had to spread his hands to make more room for it.
no subject
But he couln't resist the chance to test it. If his presence helped strengthen Ronan, if he had even that much magic, that might be enough.
Adam curled his hand around Ronan's arm, ignoring the way his cheeks heated at the feeling of warm skin and strong muscles beneath his palm.
no subject
Any time he'd done this before, it had been a struggle to maintain. But this? This was easy. He pulled one hand away and balanced it so it hovered over one hand. This time he'd shaped it as a ball of lightning but it no longer felt right. It changed into pure light. Magic often reflected one's mental state and he could think of no better way to kill a demon than with... the way he felt. Which he promptly denied to himself once again.
"Wow," he said, still smiling. "I don't know what you did but keep it up."
no subject
Ronan's laugh made something in Adam's belly flutter. He slid his hand down Ronan's arm, palm against the back of his hand and then fingers woven through Ronan's so that he could feel the energy of it pulsing against his fingertips.
"Now what?" he murmured against Ronan's ear, close enough that his breath stirred Ronan's hair.
no subject
Then Adam spoke and Ronan remembered why they were here.
"Now, we throw this at it. Light it up." He turned his head in Adam's direction. At this angle, he couldn't see his eyes, but it did bring their faces closer, almost cheek to cheek. "Ready? he asked.
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)