The little box on my desk is buried beneath piles of stained parchment.
I hide it there whenever I get the urge to think too long on my decision. The decision that Calum assured me was the right one. Though, reminding me of my fatherโs threeย Bโs to becoming a great king did help convince me further.
My fingers drum against the wooden desk, the sound hollow and harsh.
Thereโs a quick knock, knuckles on the door that echo my fingertips on the desk.
โCome in.โ
Hinges groan before a masked Imperial peeks his head into the room. โYour Majesty. Excuse my interruption, but you informed me toโโ
โSo no sight of him?โ
I hear the Imperial swallow. โNo, Your Majesty. None of his men, either.โ
โAnd her?โ
โNothing, Your Majesty.โ
He should be back by now. Itโs been over two weeks, and he should be back by now. He should have brought her to me. Or maybe he brought her somewhere else. Maybe he never intended to bring her back. Maybe he ran away with her. Maybe they are running away from meโtogether. Because he should be back by now. Becauseโ
โMy Enforcer should be back by now.โ
โYes.โ The man nods fervently. โHe should be, Your Majesty.โ
โKeep searching the edge of the city.โ
โYes, Your Highness.โ He looks sidelong at the door, practically begging to be dismissed.
โGo.โ
With a curt nod, he ducks out the door before closing it softly behind him.
I run an ink-stained hand down my face.
He always completed his missions. Well, he always completed his missions for Father. But Iโm not him, am I? He reminded me of that every day. And then heโd spend the rest of that day training my future Enforcer. The one who should be back by now. The one who is running away with her. Or from me. Or his life.
I tear at the parchment littering my desk, digging until my fingers find that small box I buried beneath.
I look at it like I do every day.
The kingdom thinks Iโve gone mad.
I think Iโve gone somewhere. A darker place, maybe.
I hear servants whispering as they step past my door, watch Imperials eye me when I happen to walk the halls.
They think Iโm mad with grief over a man who felt little more than disappointment and obligation for me.
How absurd.
How absurd to grieve a man who loved power more than his sons. How absurd to grieve a man who offered me no praise. How absurd to grieve a man who could never be pleased.
How unfair to grieve such a man.
So, I wonโt any longer. Iโm done with it. Truly.
I miss who I was before finding him with a dagger buried in his neck. I miss the brother I was to Kai and Jax, miss sweaty days in the training ring. I miss running away from balls to drink until sunrise. I miss running from responsibility in general.
Kai and I were good. Especially so after Ava. We became impossibly closer with every night he spent fighting tears in my bedroom. I remember stealing alcohol from the cellar for the first time after it all, remember spitting out the first sip.
How odd that some of the fondest memories now were anything but in the moment.
Though I doubt Iโll grow fond of the life Iโm now living anytime soon. I may not even live long enough to look back and miss the days I hated.
My fingers brush the top of the box, feeling the significance of it with each swipe. I donโt want to hate every day. Maybe I wonโt have to hate every day. Maybe this is for the bestโฆ.
I roll my shoulders, the ones now carrying the crushing weight of this kingdom.
And then I manage to find a relatively clean sheet of parchment.
This letter is for him.
For the man Iโm sick of mourning.
This letter is addressed to the grief heโs left me to grapple with.
The grief he doesnโt deserve to make me feel.
The next letter is to her.
They usually are.
She makes for quite the muse.
Or maybe sheโs just easy to think about, easy to translate into words.
I pour my thoughts onto the page.
She should be back by now.
Another smudge of ink.
She should be back by now.
The paper tears beneath my pressing hand.
She should be back by now.
I add the parchment to the pile.