"My lord husband knows well what Byerly has been to me, and what there is in my heart that has remained." She tilts her head, huffs a tiny laugh through her nose. "I cannot say he is fond of him; he is, on the whole, rather exasperated, but my lord knows himself irreplaceable to me, knows my love for him to be unwavering, and has been incredulous of my worries of his jealousy."
Murmured to the tea, again: "But it would not make Byerly happy, to live the life that would make me happy. Even if it would, he is not free to pursue it. If hearts and duties are to be ranked, he has made a first choice as well. We cannot have forever, he will not take now, and so we have nothing."
It takes Colin a moment to process that. His eyes widen slightly at her words, but nothing else about his expression changes.
"That's incredibly..." He veers around the insulting word and tries again. "All we have is now. I sort of wonder if it's not the permanence that bothers him, so much as the happiness."
"He is cruel to himself and it makes him believe he would be cruel to me," she says softly, closing her eyes in the steam again, breathing it in slowly.
"I wonder sometimes how much it was I taught him. About what he can expect of happiness."
"We all hold onto the wrong things," Colin murmurs. "Lexie, Byerly is cruel to you. That's not a hypothetical, it's a self-fulfilling prophecy. I couldn't even get a response from you just now. That's not normal."
She lifts a shoulder slightly. "It is not normal to spend eight years with a wound you bury and refuse to name, learn again to name it just as it again appears in your life, yearn for it for two more years whilst believing if you touched it as you wished to the world would break, learn this is not so, and it also yearns for you—" Her breath falters slightly again. "—Hold it once in your arms, and—" It catches. "—and be told you cannot do so again."
A moment again, with the tea, until she has calmed enough to speak levelly again.
"But yes. This is cruel too. I to him, he to me, ourselves to ourselves. It seems we cannot but hurt one another." Softer, then: "Perhaps I should leave, for a time."
There's a pause of several moments. Colin shifts forward, sets his elbows on his knees, thinks. Of course he wants to beg her to stay, but that's an old habit born of fear of abandonment. His best friend is miserable and asking for his advice. He takes a deep breath in through his nose, closes his eyes, and nods.
"You should. Especially if you can be with your husband for that time."
But she shakes her head. "To Antiva, to connect with a contact, I—" and Alexandrie bites her lip, breathes out.
"Colin, I do not know where he is," she says, soft and urgent. Her hands shift against each other; Loki's nervous habit, now hers. "His last letter came from near Marnas Pell, but that was two weeks ago and when he flies as the raven does it is as the raven." She thins her lips worriedly, then breathes slowly out as if she could remove her thoughts through it. "I trust that whatever it is he gets into he is well able to retrieve himself from. Perhaps I shall get a letter tomorrow. Perhaps he shall arrive tomorrow and pull me into his arms and chuckle fondly at my worries and kiss me until I laugh too." For that, an adoring smile. Which fades.
"But today I have a love somewhere who would hold me if he could, and one here who can and will not.
"And so I," she looks up and manages another real smile— small and warm because it is for Colin— "shall ask if I might go to Antiva and drink wine with a nervous man until he is no longer nervous, and write you fond letters and bring you whatever it is you wish."
A soft smile. Two years ago, he would already be bracing himself to lose her. That's what would have happened in the Circle, he supposes. This isn't the Circle, and Lexie will never find him easy to discard.
"I wish I could go with you. I've only seen Antiva in passing, when I was a ship's purser. My mother talked about it all the time."
She sets the tea aside and holds her hand out, an ask for his.
"Ah, mon chou. I should ask if I might take you with me, then, save that..." There is a sheen in her eyes again, a little tremble in her smile. "Is it selfish of me? To wish for a little while to be in a town where none have seen me cry?"
She leans to kiss his hand, squeezing it once again before she lets go. "Yes."
But when she sits up again something in her skirts crinkles, and her gaze drops to the floor. Hands return to her lap. "I will... sit here a while longer. I think. Until it is dark." A pause, and then "Will that disturb you?"
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Murmured to the tea, again:
"But it would not make Byerly happy, to live the life that would make me happy. Even if it would, he is not free to pursue it. If hearts and duties are to be ranked, he has made a first choice as well. We cannot have forever, he will not take now, and so we have nothing."
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Wow.
It takes Colin a moment to process that. His eyes widen slightly at her words, but nothing else about his expression changes.
"That's incredibly..." He veers around the insulting word and tries again. "All we have is now. I sort of wonder if it's not the permanence that bothers him, so much as the happiness."
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"I wonder sometimes how much it was I taught him. About what he can expect of happiness."
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A moment again, with the tea, until she has calmed enough to speak levelly again.
"But yes. This is cruel too. I to him, he to me, ourselves to ourselves. It seems we cannot but hurt one another." Softer, then: "Perhaps I should leave, for a time."
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"You should. Especially if you can be with your husband for that time."
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"Colin, I do not know where he is," she says, soft and urgent. Her hands shift against each other; Loki's nervous habit, now hers. "His last letter came from near Marnas Pell, but that was two weeks ago and when he flies as the raven does it is as the raven." She thins her lips worriedly, then breathes slowly out as if she could remove her thoughts through it. "I trust that whatever it is he gets into he is well able to retrieve himself from. Perhaps I shall get a letter tomorrow. Perhaps he shall arrive tomorrow and pull me into his arms and chuckle fondly at my worries and kiss me until I laugh too." For that, an adoring smile. Which fades.
"But today I have a love somewhere who would hold me if he could, and one here who can and will not.
"And so I," she looks up and manages another real smile— small and warm because it is for Colin— "shall ask if I might go to Antiva and drink wine with a nervous man until he is no longer nervous, and write you fond letters and bring you whatever it is you wish."
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"I wish I could go with you. I've only seen Antiva in passing, when I was a ship's purser. My mother talked about it all the time."
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"Ah, mon chou. I should ask if I might take you with me, then, save that..." There is a sheen in her eyes again, a little tremble in her smile. "Is it selfish of me? To wish for a little while to be in a town where none have seen me cry?"
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“And I’m the only spirit healer here. I doubt I’d be spared. Maybe after the war, we’ll travel there together.”
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But when she sits up again something in her skirts crinkles, and her gaze drops to the floor. Hands return to her lap. "I will... sit here a while longer. I think. Until it is dark." A pause, and then "Will that disturb you?"
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“So long as you don’t mind me cooking enough for you to eat, too. Just in case you’re hungry.”
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For a moment she looks at him with a genuine softness, murmurs "Thank you."
And then she looks at the sea.