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moosejuice) wrote in
bakerstreet2016-07-07 08:34 pm
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Companion to Royalty

There's one truth you must know of royalty: though power may lay in their hands, the crown is a cage. Whether you've always been noble, came into this position recently by complete surprise, or a simple person caught in the fray, you're realizing that leaders actually lead very little - even down to choosing who they spend their most intimate moments with. From eternal bonds of matrimonies to the distractions provided by courtesans, the people behind the throne make the rules. They cannot risk losing control of their most elevated and strategically placed pawn with a match gone wrong, which could create a domino effect and doom possibly thousands.
So, what part do you play in this game?
- Lifetime Royal: This is what you've been raised to do.
- Sudden Royal: You just learned of your position, which has been secret from you your entire life, or you unexpectedly inherited the job.
- Spouse: You're to be married to nobility.
- Concubine or Courtesan: For the royal, you're to be a sexual diversion.
- Unaffiliated: You're either a lower-ranking noble or a peasant, but you're free from all the machinations of the shadowy cabal...for now.
How willing are you?
- Completely Willing: Either you love the person you know you'll be matched with, or you're excited about the possibilities.
- Wary: There's no choice in the matter for you, so you may as well approach this situation cautiously.
- Unwilling: You didn't want to be matched up with someone. At all. Ever.
What path will you follow, once you're set upon it (there is, after all, little choice for the chosen ones)?
- Prepared for This: Either you're a royal and have been one since birth, or you knew you'd marry or sexually entertain one.
- Make Up for Lost Time: This life wasn't the one you lived until now, but times change. You're important or will be a companion to a very important person, like it or not.
- A Sacrificial Token: Somewhere along the line, your people royally pissed off someone in a key position. So, in an attempt to smooth out relations, you've been given away as a gift to the highest power, either as a spouse for a political alliance or as a concubine or courtesan.
- Pomp and Circumstance: All proper, this arrangement. You're to be married, as you've been promised to each other by your respective families. Consummation on the wedding night is key. Perhaps it's encouraged that the two of you act as if this is really a love match, to add insult to injury.
- Genuine Love: Speaking of love matches, congratulations! You're one of the incredible few who gets to marry for love, so your lovemaking should be all the more enthused.
- Only a Plaything: Heavy is the head who wears the crown, so you're expected to take on some side entertainment even if that's not your preference. Or you could be the courtesan...such a pretty, perfumed word for what the role really is...
- Volunteered: You wanted this position, either of spouse or concubine. Your reasons are your own.
- Cruel: You're powerful. You can do what you want to this person, a mere ant in comparison to you.
- Forbidden: Even the most powerful can't have everything they want, such as someone who's promised to or with another; taking them for your own would create strife and destroy alliances, even to the point of tempting war.
- Work Your Way Up: There's always a right tool for the job and you find no shame in using your own special tools to better your life.
- Give Me an Heir: Whether you're legitimate or a concubine used as a surrogate, you must help in continuing the royal line.
- Mutual Benefit: Both of you are comfortable with this arrangement because you're either compatible or it takes the pressure off of you otherwise.
- Want to be More: Though you've been relegated to courtesan, you want to be there one and only spouse...no matter if that role is already filled or not.
- Growing Affection: It may have started as all puppet strings and power plays, but now, you lo- care for them.
- Loved Before: Before you became so important and powerful, before you became the focus of all the world, it seems, they were there with you. They were with you then, and you want them to be with you now. They ground you and they care about you for you.
- Because You're Normal: They're outside of all the court's nonsense, and that's appealing to you. It's like a breath of fresh air.
- WILDCARD
How to Play
- Comment with your character, preference, preferred role, and any other information.
- Reply to others.
- RNG or choose your options.
no subject
He did notice, however, how Laurent had claimed one of the books. Which was fine with him—in fact, it was a rather enchanting image. A handsome youth with a book held to his chest. An image any bibliophile could appreciate.
"We have chess," he said, gesturing toward the chairs and the fireplace where a nice, warm fire was now going in full. There was a small table with the game set up on it already.
"Though," he continued, glancing from the fireplace back to Lauren, "I would like to get to know you better. Perhaps a question game?" Not exactly competitive but certainly something to help them become better acquainted.
"We each are allowed to ask any five, or ten if you'd like a longer game, questions of the other we want. Each person is allowed one pass, should there be something they don't want to disclose." Though truthfully, if he asked something Laurent would not want to answer, he would hardly push the issue. Not that he was planning on asking anything cruel. Such a thing didn't even cross his mind.
"Whatever you prefer."
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"Five, then," he agreed, turning away from Gansey and walking over to the table. Leaning over the back of one of the chairs instead of bothering to sit, he moved one of the white pawns forward.
The smile had disappeared again, replaced with sharp interest. His safeguards had gone back up in anticipation of whatever questions Gansey might choose, but Laurent was prepared to give Gansey what he'd asked for. Honesty, even if the answers hurt.
"You ask first."
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While Laurent stood, Gansey sat, allowing the other man to have the point of leverage. His mother always said that the higher person had higher ground. It was why she always made sure to choose the highest point when addressing the public or even a few guests. He thought, perhaps, it might make Laurent more comfortable. Another habit, overthinking even the smallest of things.
So he preferred white. Very well. Black suited Gansey perfectly fine. He mirrored the action, moving one of his own pawns.
"Very well." He could easily launch into something personal and heavy. But he did not want to. Rather, he decided to toss something completely odd, "If you were to keep a pet, what animal would you choose? Assuming you could choose any you wanted regardless of what was acceptable."
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"A large cat, I suppose," Laurent said, continuing to keep his eyes on the game. "Lazy, beautiful, powerful. With such an animal at my side, I would hope, lecherous courtiers might be a little more circumspect about how they treat me. Or my own horse back again."
He set down a piece a little too sharply, and the waves of bitter pain in his tone were almost palpable. "To spare you that particular question: she was poisoned."
Tightening his jaw, Laurent took a seat in the chair. He sprawled, with one knee bent and the other stretched out, looking very much like the cat he had described: indolent and dangerous. His eyes stayed on the board, not wanting to see Gansey's reaction, and seized a piece--a little too ruthless, and a very risky choice for the efficacy of the trap he had intended to set, but Laurent's strategy very quickly became impaired when his pride was hurt or his temper was pricked.
He turned the captured piece over between his fingers as he considered a question of his own. His instinct was to lash out and ask some barbed question, but he had five questions remaining and Laurent, even with his hackles up, was too subtle a person to reach straight for the daggers. "If you could travel anywhere in the world, where would you go?"
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While he was fairly pure and goodhearted, he knew well enough to understand why someone might poison a horse. Such tactics were effective and cruel. Many nobles and kings of the past had used them; he'd studied such things, read about them, and knew strongly that they were things he would never resort to. But not everyone shared his views.
The only reaction he really afforded was the crease in his brow. It became more prominent. But he did not look up from the board or give Laurent a pitying look. Yes, it was a terrible thing, but he did not think his pity would help.
A cat, however. That he could see. There was a feline sort of quality about his intended. It amused him a bit, given that he'd always considered himself more of a dog person. Not that he would turn down holding a cat in his lap while he read a book. It seemed a pleasant thing.
He did glance up, briefly, when Laurent asked his question. The loss of his captured piece didn't seem to perturb him whatsoever. He merely swiftly moved his horse out its base and moved it elsewhere. Even his plays were seemingly passive.
"Ah. Everywhere, truthfully. I love to travel. Not in a coach or with guards though. Perhaps with only one or two other people, on horseback, seeing the wilds and forests up close. I've always been fond of such things. Of discovering. Guards always weigh me down."
Not that he didn't understand their purpose. In some ways, he envied the common folk; they could simply live. Enjoy things like strolling through a thick wood or dancing at town celebrations. Not that he didn't want to be a king; he was meant to be, and felt that in his bones.
"What is your favorite flower?"
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Which was when Laurent preferred to slip his own guards and go discovering, but he didn't mention that quite yet. This game was a challenge and a duel, and Laurent felt very sharp-edged. "Are you a virgin?" he asked, tone mild, just as he moved a piece forward to spring one of his traps. He expected Gansey to slip the trap easily, but it ought to either drive him into a deeper trap, or cost him several key pieces. Laurent had timed the question to unsettle him at a moment of key strategy.
no subject
The flowers sounded lovely. Not a thing he had in the garden at the moment, but he made a mental note to arrange fetching some seeds. Hopefully it would not be terribly difficult. That way, he could bring at least a little piece of Laurent's home to the Raven Kingdom. Old ruins struck him as very interesting as well. Not enough to waste a question on, no, but he would remember to ask about them later.
Despite the question, Gansey isn't unsettled. His eyebrows do raise a bit and he resists the urge to laugh. What a clever man. But as he looked at the board, he knew that their traps would end up tangled together. He sacrificed a pawn, leading into the simple trap so that he might sweep his white bishop across the board, never having moved it or suggested he was thinking of it before, to snap up a piece of his own.
"No," he replied, also mildly, rolling the stolen piece in his fingers. He could elaborate but decides to be purposefully short, offering Laurent a small smile.
"Have you ever been in love?"
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He made no comment about the response, eyes returning to the board and smile fading back into the expression of sharp calculation he had worn over the course of the game.
"No," he answered, just as simply.
He trusted that Gansey would know enough about Laurent's culture to know of their horror of bastard children. Homosexual relations were so encouraged as to be the norm in all levels of society. Heterosexual relationships were allowed only within the strictures of marriage. Dalliances were expected, but they were strictly homosexual. For a married person of either gender to break their marriage vows with a member of the opposite sex would reap the most severe social and economic punishments. It could be assumed that any sexual experience Laurent might have would have been homosexual, or else that he would have risked extreme social stigma and the loss of his title: royal bastards could lead to civil war, and Vere would tolerate no risk of that from its royal family.
"What's your taste in sexual partners?" Laurent asked, not planning on lowering the stakes in their game. Doing so, in his opinion, would be defeat.
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Laurent assumed correctly. He knew enough to piece together, figure out, what was probably the case.
Gansey studied the board as well, not willing to weaken his game just because he was interested in the other man. The new question he posed was a bit more difficult for him to answer. He was quiet for a long moment, threading his fingers together as he looked for what might be traps left by his opponent. Studying his game. Laurent, to Gansey's delight, was also quite good.
"I don't have a strong leaning one way or the other," he finally said, speaking slowly, as though trying to find the best way to say what he felt.
"I think what is important, for me, is..."
He paused again, feeling a little foolish, but it wasn't a question he was unwilling to answer. "Romantic feelings," he finally finished, rubbing his thumb against his lip. "Otherwise, I find it difficult. I'm sure that seems—laughable." He leaned back in the chair, "Not that I've been in love before either. For that, it could happily go either way." That ended up being more verbose than he intended; it was not as simple as finding someone physically attractive, for him.
What did he have, one more question left? Two?
"What do you think of me?"
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Cheeks flushing again, obvious against his pale skin, Laurent glanced away. It was an incredibly difficult question to answer honestly, especially when he wasn't yet certain of his feelings toward Gansey.
"I think you're intelligent," Laurent said, eyes on the game in front of him. "You clearly have a mind for tactics," he gestured briefly to the board between them, "though I have yet to see how well you translate the skill to diplomacy and military defense."
He made his move, eyes still on the board as he turned the newly captured piece between his fingers. "You're driven to improve yourself, and to be the best king that your circumstances allow." Without glancing over, Laurent tapped his knuckle against the book with Gansey's notes which he'd commandeered and set on the edge of the table while they played. "You're determined to be kind and friendly to me, even when I'm being difficult, and you're charismatic enough that I genuinely cannot tell how much of your demeanor is diplomacy, how much is earnest, and how much is naiveté."
His tone was honest but with a slightly scathing edge, and he suspected that the truth was a mixture of all three. It wasn't necessarily a criticism. Laurent realized that it made them all the more well-suited. Laurent tended toward distrust and bitterness. If they faced problems together, Laurent wouldn't allow anyone to take advantage of Gansey's good nature, and Gansey wouldn't allow Laurent's temper and bitterness to damage alliances and prospects.
"I think being around you is going to teach me to be jealous," Laurent said, not explaining what he expected to be jealous about.
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"Thank you for your honesty," he said, opening his eyes again to look straight at Laurent rather than the game in front of them. True, their word game was about honesty, but that did not mean one couldn't find a different way to spin it. He could have pulled back and complimented his looks; often that's what people did when he asked for their opinion on them. It was as though that was all they saw sometimes. The political, royal smile and his fine features.
It was also an answer that told him a great deal about its giver.
How he had been right about Laurent's eyes being sharp, for one. His honesty about being difficult himself. Even the edge to his tone was honest. Not necessarily bad but it was wholly rare for anyone to take any sort of tone with him but far too pleasant. His mother would probably be shocked if she knew his best friends were the two boys that spoke the most harshly to him. Laurent would probably fit in with them nicely.
Gansey moved another piece, stealing one of Laurent's pawns and moving another trap into place. One aimed to take out his Queen, hopefully. "I hope you don't think this too bold... but I'm pleased to hear that your first impression isn't that I'm terribly foolish." Maybe he was foolish, heart fluttering like a little bird in his chest; he had noticed the way Laurent had flushed and glanced away before. He smiled, the crinkle forming under his eye again.
"Do you have another question for me?"
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"Shall we raise the stakes?" Laurent asked, blue eyes dark with challenge. Gansey only had one question left, but Laurent didn't quite feel finished with the game. "No limit to the number of questions, but the first person to pass loses."
It would put Laurent at a disadvantage: there were plenty of question he would refuse to answer, if Gansey could find them. Meanwhile, he expected that wholesome, good-natured Gansey had very few true secrets, which meant that Laurent would have to maneuver him into a question that Gansey couldn't or wouldn't answer for fear of giving insult. Easy if Laurent were to dip into the vulgarity that he'd learned around the Veretian barracks. Considerably more difficult if he restrained himself to princely decorum, which made it an interesting challenge.
More interesting, he wanted to see if Gansey's kindness or competitiveness would win out. Unless Gansey lucked onto a sore spot, he'd have to ask riskier questions and chance pricking Laurent's obviously sensitive pride.
The chess game delighted him, but it was the risk and challenge of their questions game that really had Laurent's interest.
"Allowing that neither of us shall be penalized for passing on an answer which would betray anyone else's secrets or honor," he added. This was their game, and Laurent--however corrupt and selfish he considered himself to be--would not allow anyone else to be at risk.
He didn't add any stipulations about honesty. Laurent didn't even consider the possibility that either of them might cheat, even though it would be incredibly easy to do so.
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But this was his fiance. Much as he was thinking of Laurent as a friend, when his mind drifted toward how they were to be wed, he could feel the back of his neck heat up just ever so slightly. This was the person who would know him the best, be by his side for the longest, assuming the marriage was passed by both their families and nothing went awry before the set date. Such intimacy, in Gansey's opinion, was important between them.
"All right," he agreed, intrigued by Laurent's desire to switch things up. "I agree on that allowance, too. The secrets must be ours to share. No need to drag others into this." Fair enough. Besides, he had no interest in anyone else's secrets, and would never want to compromise someone's honor. Laurent was the only one he was interested in.
The fire crackled beside them. The hour was growing late, but Gansey hardly noticed, or cared. The game was much too entertaining and Laurent much too compelling. This was a game that the rest of Gansey's family would never want to play. He loved that Laurent did. And he was a little bit in love with the competitive sparkle on the other man's eye. It was so refreshing. Any one else of their court would have allowed him to win the chess game and word game both ages ago for fear of creating any unpleasantness.
"I say we apply the new rules immediately." Crossing his legs, he took a break from studying the board to relax back while he watched Laurent. Chess was a slow game anyway; there was no need to rush through it.
"Go ahead. Ask." It was still Laurent's turn; asking if he wanted to raise the stakes did not count as a question.
no subject
How could he resist, when they matched each other, play for play, coming up with new ways to raise the stakes and thrilling at the challenge? Gansey was his, now, and Laurent was no longer playing the part of the willing fiance merely out of duty. He was hopelessly entranced.
"What's the worst thing you've ever done?" Laurent asked, ready with the question. It had been on the tip of his tongue before, when he'd thought, instead, of raising the stakes.
He didn't expect that Gansey's answer would be able to give him any significant shock. Laurent felt confident that whatever Gansey considered 'worst' would barely qualify as a hiccup in Veretian court.
no subject
Gansey clicked his tongue. Laurent was playing to win. Yes, decidedly refreshing, when most of the royal court in the Raven Kingdom did not enjoy playing games at all because they found them too stressful.
He paused to give the question fair consideration. There was something he thought of instantly that probably qualified but he had to make sure he hadn't done something worse before. No... when it came to court, when he even attended, he was much too polished to offend. Otherwise he spent most of his time with his books or searching for interesting things on the outskirts of the land. Altogether too trained to make some sort of faux pas on a courtly level.
"The worst... well. I hope it doesn't make you think less of me." He's not proud of it. Even so, he doesn't regret it either. "You see, I have a friend—his name is Ronan. He's a hothead. The sort of person that someone might cut themselves on. His... father was murdered several years ago, and he's been struggling with it ever since." He felt it necessary to give a little it of context. Some things simply needed it.
"He managed to get into some serious trouble with one of the lords. I won't disclose what he did, it's better left unsaid, but regardless, the consequences would have been ... great." He rubbed his hand over his mouth, "I say would have because I bribed the lord into forgetting about it. 30,000 sovereigns and far more flattery than he deserved. It was my own money but it wasn't something I should have done and I know it. A future king shouldn't help exempt anyone from the law. My parents don't know I did that. If they found out, they would be furious."
He sighed, pushing his back into the chair. "I don't regret it."
After a moment he lifted his eyebrows at Laurent, "My turn, yes? What's the most embarrassing thing that's ever happened to you?"
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"You are so genuinely good that it is maddening," Laurent groaned, finally letting go of his sharp defenses again and relaxing into Gansey's company. "Do you drink? I feel that the two of us should really be drinking if we're going to go on like this."
Leaving the chess game briefly, even though it was his turn, Laurent stood, pacing a few steps. The game would wait. The question required an answer. "Let me think."
Embarrassing. Gansey would want a sweet answer. Something funny. Not the most humiliating thing that had happened to him, though Laurent could think of a few of those. He didn't often feel embarrassment--Laurent was careful with his plans, careful not to leave himself emotionally vulnerable, and he didn't feel embarrassment over his own mistakes, only frustration. "I don't know. I suppose... when I was young, thirteen or fourteen, there was a stable groom. He was..." Blushing and staring at the floor, Laurent cleared his throat. "All muscle. It took me weeks to get up the courage to speak to him. I don't even recall what I said. And my brother came in--he's the golden son, always has been. He's confident, brave, kind. All the things I've only ever faked, and he never even thinks about. And he teases me about my crush on the stable groom. In front of him. As though I were a child. I suppose, at the time, I was, and the groom was an adult. I don't even know what happened to him. I didn't show my face in the stables for weeks. I would just send a servant when I wanted my horse."
Laurent clenched his fist, one hand on the back of his chair as he stared into the fire, hating the weakness and embarrassment of the situation even years later. "Is that a good enough answer?"
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"I do," he agreed, standing so that he might find someone wandering the halls to grab them a bottle of wine. While Laurent considered his answer he poked his head out the doors and flagged down one of the maids, politely asking for a bottle. She was pleased to assist; Gansey so rarely asked for anything. So she hurried off and he looked back at Laurent while he started speaking.
The story made him smile. It was cute. The typical response of a young boy with a crush—and a fair one. Who wouldn't have been hopelessly distracted by a handsome older man with muscles? Gansey might have responded the same. Though, he was not usually embarrassed by being teased like that. He might have even laughed and embraced the comments. Such was the Richard Gansey way, even when he was young.
"Of course," he answered, wearing an amused smile. If that was what Laurent considered his most embarrassing moment, of course it was good enough. "Siblings can really be the worst, can't they?" Helen had pulled similar actions on him before, as well as they often got along.
On another note, he thought idly, Laurent looked quite good sporting a blush.
The maid returned promptly and handed him a basket. He thanked her and closed the door again, stepping over to one of the unused wooden tables to pull out the bottle. Only, she'd brought them more than just that. Soft bread, cheese, fruit slices. Two glasses and a bottle. And a box. He lifted it up and examined it.
"Oh—do you like sweets? Looks like we imported some dark chocolate from the east. Helen's got a sweet tooth, must have been her. I've heard it's quite good."
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Laurent smiled, as they spoke of siblings, letting go of the embarrassment and wandering over to see what had been brought. He took the bottle and the bottle opener, working on removing the stopper and pouring for them both. "My brother has always been my dearest friend. Often the only person I can trust as a friend, but I suppose that's the nature of royalty. You're a little bit like him. You both have that sort of golden cheerfulness that makes you so charismatic."
His eyes widened as Gansey lifted out the box, immediately drawn to it as Gansey said 'chocolate'. "Yes. Very much so."
Laurent wasn't in the habit of indulging himself, but the truth was that he loved indulgence. Sweets, wine, luxury. But he never felt as though he deserved them, and there were always so many available, so he denied himself everything and ate like an ascetic until his pain and bitterness rose high enough that he began to drink again.
There were reasons for that, but Laurent hid his problems, and his drinking. He had some distance from the things in his life that had hurt him, and here, in this new court, he ought to be utterly untouchable.
Taking one of the chocolates from the box, Laurent nibbled delicately at it, savoring the chocolate and sipping at his wine. "Do you want to have children?" he asked at last, getting back to their game.
no subject
Gansey joined Laurent in helping himself to one of the chocolates. It was rich. The moment it touched his tongue he could tell Helen had probably been in a mood when she'd sent the order for them. She was the kind that needed rich, decadent things when she was trying to unwind. It was delicious, as expected of Helen, always one for the finer things in life. Gansey was less inclined toward rich things himself but could certainly enjoy them when the mood called for it. It paired excellently with the wine. He wet his lips with it, savoring the taste.
"Mm?" He looked at Laurent from over the rim of his glass. Children? He swallowed the chocolate and licked his lips.
"I think... I would not mind, one day," he admitted, giving it some thought. "But not anytime soon." He shrugged a little, leaning his hip against the table while resting a hand on it, pinching an apple slice between his fingers. "There's a lot I want to do before that."
Biting the slice, he glanced up. That wasn't a very direct answer, was it? So he swallowed again. "Yes. To put it simply. " But he'd probably also be willing to accept a fleet of dogs in the absence of children.
"What do you think about the idea of fate? Do you think some things are meant to be?"
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Laurent was relieved to hear that Gansey wasn't too set on the idea of children. "I don't want children, so you know," he said, tightening his jaw and meeting Gansey's eyes briefly, then dropping his gaze into the wine. "Certainly not my own. I don't ever wish to..." Blushing again, he cleared his throat. "I suppose I wouldn't mind adopting. There are so many orphans and abandoned children in the world." Even in Vere, which was prosperous enough to make certain that the poorest members of the populace were all housed and fed. "Some days I allow myself the fancy of perhaps... starting a sort of school, for orphans."
Shaking his head, Laurent reached for another piece of chocolate. "I despise the idea of fate. Vere is not, you should know, particularly religious. We discarded most of the old gods as superstitions centuries ago. The idea of fate galls me. Not for my own sake, but for some of the evils I have seen in the world. To imagine that whatever god or fate has designed such suffering, and has fated... for awful things to happen to people, to children... I cannot accept that. If such a force existed in the world, I imagine I'd dedicate quite a portion of my time to tracking it down and extinguishing it, for all the crimes it has committed against innocents." Laurent wrinkled his nose. It was an absurd statement, that he would try to kill god or fate, but he didn't believe in either, so it was irrelevant. "I find it quite a bit more comforting to imagine that the world is arbitrary. Then anything we do is only our own fault, and it is our own responsibility to try to improve ourselves and our world."
Laurent licked at his fingertips, pulling a face again. "It's my turn to ask a question again, isn't it? I don't think you're trying very hard to win, you know." He shot Gansey a reprimanding look, which was undercut by his smile.
no subject
While not the must cutting question, the answer was certainly interesting. He knew that the Raven Kingdom was more religious than Vere; not the most religious by far, but they held onto their faith fairly well. It was also fascinating to learn that Laurent had such steadfast, intense ideals. Strong feelings. As absurd it might sound it was also very compelling.
There were points where he certainly agreed. He fully believed that it was their responsibility to improve themselves and the world. To write it off for a higher power... that was something he could not do.
"Perhaps not," he agreed, perking up out of his look of adoration, hoping it had not been too obvious. "But it's the perfect time to learn a bit about you. I don't want it to end quickly." He took another sip of wine, a heavier drink than his earlier sips.
"I happen to find you very... interesting."
Before he could say anything else, he stuffed one of the bread rolls into his mouth.
no subject
They were still standing close by the food, and Laurent watched him for a moment, then reached out to hook his arm around Gansey's waist, pulling him closer and pressing a soft, very sweet kiss to his cheek before letting him go again. He was smiling, cheeks completely flushed, and he picked up his glass quickly, embarrassed by his own gesture.
Trying to think of a question, Laurent rubbed his thumb around the rim of his glass, smudging the faint film of wine that lingered from where he'd sipped. "Have you ever hated anyone?"
no subject
Laurent might be embarrassed but Gansey was smiling like a downright goof. Definitely an infatuation, built not on his lovely looks (though he certainly had those) but everything that Gansey's learned about him. What a marvelous creature. He couldn't even remain bitter at his mother about this whole ordeal; not when she brought such a lovely person into his life.
Right. Questions. Focus. Anything sweet was a certain distraction for him.
Stroking his thumb against his lower lip, he considered the new question. "Hated anyone, hm?" It was something he really had to think about. "Mm... yes." Pausing, he stripped off his doublet, draping it on the back on one of the chairs and leaving him in his loose linen undershirt. Much better. "There's one guy. He messes with the friend I mentioned earlier—though it's not my place to... get in the way of that. I'm hoping he'll realize that the guy's bad news soon."
Picking up his glass again, he headed back to his chair to lounge. With no jacket and a glass of wine it was much more comfortable.
"I don't know. I suppose that I'm not so easily riled up."
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Returning to the table and taking the chocolates and wine with him, Laurent returned to their game. He hated plenty of people, but he'd been given plenty of reason to do so. It was a relief that Gansey hated someone. Laurent was starting to like all the little flaws and pettiness in otherwise perfect, golden Gansey. It made him feel better, and like Gansey better, because it made the goodness and kindness of him seem manageable. Touchable. Kissable, even.
Frowning at the board as he considered his own unraveling traps and both of their dwindling pieces, Laurent made a move, more focused on Gansey now than winning the game they'd almost finished. "Your turn for a question. Go on, take a risk."
no subject
A risk. He considered what he might ask that would be considered risky. His lips parted in a question, "Have you..." but then stopped. Closed them again and pressed them together, a crease forming in his brow once more. Gently squeezing the head of the pawn he was moving, he reconsidered.
After a moment he placed his pawn down and chose something else, "What do you fear?"
It could be a risk to ask such a thing. Royalty had a lot to fear. It wasn't phrased as a yes or no question, either. He glanced back up at Laurent, watching as the hues from the fire, reds and oranges, stretched across the man's handsome face.
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