Aubrelle folded her hands neatly over her lap, posture straight, expression calm. But inside, a soft sigh unfurled.
âHe sounds polite enough... but Pipin is uneasy. And he usually isnât wrong.â
The elf stepped a little closerâcarefully, respectfully, but with a confidence Aubrelle could feel even without sight. His aura flickered with practiced elegance, like someone used to being admired.
"My apologies," he said with a graceful tilt of the head. "I should introduce myself properly. I am Lorian of the Moonweave family."
Moonweave.
Illusionists.
Elegant, cultured, and dangerously charming when they wanted to be.
Aubrelle inclined her head. "Aubrelle au Rosenthal. A pleasure."
"The pleasure," Lorian saidâwarm, smoothâ "is entirely mine."
Pipinâs feathers fluffed in irritation, a quiet warning only Aubrelle could sense.
âHeâs... trying too hard. This isnât a diplomatic greeting. Itâs something else.â
She kept her voice gentle. "How may I assist you tonight, Lorian?"
He smiledâshe couldnât see it, but she could hear it in the tone of his breath. "You already assist us merely by being here. Your reputation as a summoner is known across the world... as is your grace."
Aubrelleâs fingers tightened slightly on her cane.
âAh. So it is that kind of conversation.â
Still, she kept her tone composed. "You flatter me, but I assure you, I am merely one representative of my family."
"Even so," he said, taking a small step closer, "your presence stands out."
Pipinâs claws gently tapped her shoulderâannoyed, alert.
Aubrelle offered a polite smile, though inside she was already bracing herself.
âThis might take longer than I hoped.â
"Iâve long admired the Rosenthal approach to summoning," he continued smoothly. "Your bond with your familiar... it is said to be exceptional."
Pipin let out a soft trrk, feathers bristling as if to say back off.
Aubrelle lifted her chin slightly. "Pipin is very loyal. He has guided me since I was young."
Lorian stepped to the side, just enough to face her more directly. "Loyal, intelligent... and protective. A rare combination. Much like their summoner."
She breathed out a quiet laughâpolite, distant. "You speak generously."
He smiled again. She heard it.
"Itâs not generosity. Only honesty."
Pipin ruffled loudly this timeâunapologeticâand Aubrelle gently touched his wing to calm him.
Lorian pressed on. "I also wished to speak because... well, the times are dangerous. And forging stronger bonds between families is important. Especially between people of similar age and... potential."
Aubrelle tilted her head. "Are you suggesting an alliance?"
"An alliance," he echoed softly, "or perhaps... something more personal."
Her heartbeat skipped onceâbut not for the reason he hoped.
âOh... no...â
She steadied her voice. "I understand your intention, Lorian. But these matters are not decided so lightly."
"Of course not," he replied quickly. "I meant no disrespect. Only that... your presence has a certain aura. One that draws admiration."
Aubrelle smiled politely, though it didnât reach her chest.
"Admiration is flattering," she said gently, "but you barely know me."
"That," Lorian replied, confidence sharpening, "is something I hope to change."
Pipinâs eyes narrowedâAubrelle could feel the irritation buzzing against her neck.
She exhaled quietly, preparing to answerâ
But Lorian leaned in just slightly, the shift so subtle most would miss it.
"But tell me, Lady Aubrelle," he interrupted smoothly, "how do you truly feel about all this?"
She paused.
"My... apologies?" she asked softly.
"The war," he clarified, though his tone suggested he meant far more than that. "Being pulled from the academy. Being placed so close to the front. Surely someone like you carries worries... or fears."
Aubrelleâs smile didnât waver, but Pipinâs feathers stood up in a full flareâeyes glowing faintly red.
âCalm... Pipin, calm. He doesnât mean harm.â
"I believe everyone carries some fear in times like these," she said. "But we endure. That is our duty."
Lorian hummed thoughtfully, stepping closer again, his confidence thinly veiled behind courtesy.
"And what of your future?" he pressed. "Your ambitions? Surely youâve thought about what comes after the war. Your position in Rosenthal... or perhaps your prospects outside it?"
Aubrelleâs fingers tightened on her cane.
"That is a private matter."
"Yes, of course," he said, smilingâcompletely missing the cue. "But you must understand: among allied families, such things matter. Talent. Legacy. Bloodlines. You are... uniquely gifted."
A flicker of discomfortânot fear, not shame, just a quiet tightening in her chestâpassed through her.
She stayed composed.
"I appreciate your interest, truly. But these are decisions my family and I makeâ"
He stepped in her path, not aggressively, but insistently.
"And marriage?" he asked gently. "Surely a summoner of your caliber would consider an elven partner. Someone who could help you rise even higher."
Pipin shriekedâa sharp, crystalline soundâand hopped down her arm in warning mode.
Aubrelleâs polite exterior cracked just slightly.
"Lord Lorian," she said, voice soft but edged, "you are speaking too familiarly."
He blinked, taken aback, but only for a moment. Thenâanother step closer, his voice dropping. "Forgive me. I simply thought... since your eyesâ"
Aubrelle froze.
Pipinâs wings snapped open.
But she kept her chin lifted.
"My blindness," she said quietly, "is not an invitation for pity. Nor presumption."
Lorian swallowed, realizing he had crossed a lineâbut still tried to salvage it.
"I meant no pity. Only that... someone like me couldâ"
"Help me?" she finished for him.
His breath caught.
Aubrelleâs smile returnedâgentle, but final.
"I do not need help to stand," she said. "Nor to choose my future."
Pipin hopped back to her shoulder, glaring.
Lorianâs confidence faltered.
Aubrelle inclined her head, preparing to end the exchange with grace before it spiraled further.
But inside, beneath the calm exterior, a faint tremor of offense stirred.
He had pushed too farâtoo quicklyâand she had tolerated enough.
"Excuse me," she said softly. "I believe I need some air."
She turned to leave, step steady, posture controlled.
Pipin stayed fixed on Lorian, feathers rigid with distaste.
But Lorian... couldnât handle rejection.
Especially not from someone he assumed would be grateful for his attention.
"Tch," he muttered under his breath, shifting his footâjust enough.
Aubrelle didnât see it.
Pipinâs focus was still locked on Lorianâs face, not the floor.
Her cane tapped forwardâ
Then caught.
Her momentum pitched, her grip tightenedâbut she stumbled before she could catch herself.
The impact was soft but sharp enough to shock her.
And her blindfoldâher white bandeau wrapped with careâslipped loose.
It fell in a flutter beside her cheek.
Gasps scattered around the hall.
Pipin shrieked in alarm, wings flaring, and dove instantlyâgrabbing the fallen cloth in his beak before anyone else could touch it. He hopped to her hand, depositing it there with frantic insistence.
Aubrelleâs fingers trembled as she closed around it.
Lorian stared.
For the first time that night, his mask cracked completelyâdisgust curling across his face.
"So thatâs what you look like..." he whispered. "Tch. I was wasting my time."
Her sightless crimson eyes, marked by a pale scar across each, reflected in Pipinâs perceptionâbut she did not flinch.
Aubrelle inhaled slowly.
She rose, steady despite the tremor of the fall, and retied the blindfold in one composed motion.
Not a single word left her lips.
She simply turnedâcane tapping, hair brushing over her shoulderâand walked away with Pipin perched protectively against her neck.
She didnât stop until the doors of the hall shut behind her, sealing the murmurs and stares inside.
Only then, in the quiet corridor beyond, did she exhale.
Soldiers from allied houses stood posted along the wallsâarmor polished, weapons sheathed, aura tense from the ongoing war.
They straightened instinctively when she passed, eyes flicking respectfully toward the blindfolded girl with the pale-feathered spirit perched on her shoulder.
But Aubrelle did not slow.
Her cane tapped softlyâtok... tok... tok...âas she moved farther away, seeking a quieter corner of the estate. Eventually she found it: a small alcove near an open terrace.
Pipin fluttered down from her shoulder onto her arm, letting out a soft, worried trill.
Aubrelle lifted her free hand and gently stroked his head.
"Iâm fine, Pipin," she whispered. "It was only a fall."
The bird let out a disgruntled chirp, absolutely unconvinced.
Aubrelle softly laughedâbut it faded quickly. Her fingers tightened around her cane, the weight of the evening pressing on her chest. Lorianâs contemptuous whisper still lingered in her ears.
"Tch. I was wasting my time."
Pipin nudged her cheek, offering comfort.
"...Everythingâs alright," she murmured, though her voice betrayed a tremor.
She leaned against the cold stone wall, letting her breath steadyâwhen a different memory surfaced. Unexpected and embarrassing for her.
From almost a year ago.
The Council of the Eight.
She had never seen Trafalgar collapseâshe only knew a messenger rushed her to a quiet treatment room afterward. He lay on a bed, unconscious but alive, and the healer tended to him while she waited nearby.
They spoke normally once Trafalgar wokeâslow, groggy, confused. She had reassured him, asked how he felt.
But then he tried to push himself upright.
Too fast. Too weak.
He stumbledâfalling forward.
Straight into her.
The weight toppled her back, Pipin squawking, her blindfold slipping free.
Her scarred crimson eyes were completely exposed.
She froze.
Even Pipin froze.
But Trafalgar... didnât.
His breath caught, but not in horror. His expression softenedâgenuine, almost awed.
He whispered something she had replayed in her mind far too many times:
"Youâre... beautiful."
Not a flinch. Not pity. Not disgust.
Aubrelleâs cheeks flushed now just as fiercely as they had that day. She remembered scrambling to retie the blindfold, mumbling a farewell before slipping out of the roomâher heart pounding like an animal in her chest.
Pipin chirped teasingly.
"...No," she muttered, embarrassed. "Donât start."
The bird chirped louderâabsolutely starting.
Aubrelle pressed a hand over her blindfold, swallowing the memoryâs warmth.
"I never asked for this scar..." she whispered softly. "...but at least onceâsomeone wasnât afraid of it."