《Shadow's Fall (Discontinued)》Chapter 8: An Invitation to Dance
Advertisement
“I heard an interesting rumor last night.”
Dere opened one lazy eye, a multicolored canvas of grey and black, and observed the silver haired woman sitting across from him. She wore a lovely red dress, adorned with pretty yet elegant frills and modest silver jewelry, which accentuated her hair and light blue eyes. “Do tell.” He didn’t sit up from his prone position on the bench across from Arlette, where he’d been napping moments before, choosing instead to leave the option of returning to slumber open.
“Oh, you know how rumors can be, so outlandish.” Dere raised an eyebrow. Arlette, who sat on the bench in perfect posture, met him with an elegant smile. “This particular one claimed that a man, of all things, broke into the small shrine to Glemoa in the Red district and actually ordered the daughters to leave. You wouldn’t happen to know anything about that?”
Dere’s other eye opened and he sat himself up, careful not to rumple his fine clothes or to knock his head on the cramped interior of the carriage. “Outlandish indeed. But, as you said, these rumors can oftentimes be so absurd. Were I to believe everything I’ve heard, I’d walk around the streets like a madman, claiming that faceless men walk the same ground we do.”
She hit him with another perfect smile. If he annoyed her, she didn’t show it. “Yes, that would truly be an outlandish claim.”
“My thoughts exactly.”
Her smile remained unmarred. “Though, I do find that our world can be quite peculiar, so much so that the things we dismiss as outlandish can prove to be totally correct.” She put particular emphasis on the final word. “And I do find it to be such a bizarre coincidence that, a few days after you ask about a temple to Glenmoa, a man strides into such a spot unannounced.”
He met her with his own smile, the complete opposite of hers. It made no attempt to hide intent or truth, but rather reveled in them. “That’s a bold claim you seem to be making. If I didn’t know better, I’d say you didn’t trust me.”
Light blue eyes tried to pierce through his but failed to find anything through the shadowy grey. “Ah, now you understand. I don’t trust you in the slightest.” Nothing about her posture or overall demeanor shifted but the conversation had changed.
Dere stretched off his grogginess and yawned. “Yet, here you are, across from me.”
A slight shrug of her shoulders served as perhaps the most genuine response she had yet given. “Unfortunately, my trust remains irrelevant. Marcella trusts you, for now.”
Dere leaned back in the seat, legs splayed out on the bench. “Which is peculiar, I admit. I’m not even sure I trust me.”
Her expression remained as statuesque as ever, but Dere thought he saw a flicker of amusement pass through her eye. “Well then, you are a wiser man than I thought.” She took a second, considering what to say next. “Like me, Marcella thinks you’re useful, almost necessary. Unlike me, Marcella thinks she understands you, at least enough to trust you.”
“Does she now?” Dere’s eyes twinkled.
“Don’t mistake me, I think it's a foolish notion. But Marcella has always had an eye for people, an understanding of how they work. She can find the humanity in anyone, and she’s seldom wrong.”
“Finding the humanity in me would be… difficult.”
Arlette gifted him with a polite laugh. “I don’t doubt it. Perhaps Marcella trusts her talents too much. She has always leaned on her own intelligence, especially since her channeling has always been weak by her families’ standards.”
Advertisement
Dere narrowed his eyes, unsure why Arlette chose to divulge that particular information. Arlette pretended to not notice his suspicion. “I’ve known Marcy since she was a child. Always out to prove why she was the brightest of the family, and, indeed, she usually was. I think her sisters would normally have resented her for it, but they always had a closer bond with Reyn. Marcy just never had that same talent.” Arlette looked out the window as she talked. “Made her a good Queen candidate for Erdrick, of course. Still had the Blessed bloodline to maintain her pedigree and the intelligence to help manage the kingdom, but she lacked the actual strength to challenge his throne. Sad really, in the past, Erdrick would never have had to worry about such things. A straight descendant of the Fire King, yet age and old wounds catch up to even the most powerful Blessed. We may play at being immortal, but we are not.” The way she ended the sentence varied from the start. Dere could hear the cold edge in her voice.
The atmosphere in the carriage had shifted. Dere sat, still leaning back, trying to read Arlette. For her part, she ignored him, continuing to stare out the window at the lovely countryside of Clovin. “I tend to find,” Dere muttered, after a time. “That those best equipped to use power, are those who would manage just fine without it. I suppose that’s a point in Marcella’s favor.”
Arlette turned to him and gifted him with her most dazzling smile yet, so lovely it could make even the coldest man’s heart melt. Shame, really, that it was fake.
---------------
Dere helped Arlette down from the carriage and turned to face the manor. Every inch of the stone and marble oozed wealth. Vines, trimmed daily, tumbled down the walls. Beautiful windows, decorated with images of fire, let sunlight into all four stories. A garden, maintained by a small army of staff, led them to the front door, which itself was inlaid with precious stones and carved of expensive dark wood from the Western Continent. Impressive for a mortal, Dere had to admit.
He and Arlette walked arm in arm through the front door. The guard, a portly bored looking man in fine chainmail, nodded at Dere’s invitation and gestured them on through.
The inside somehow flaunted its wealth even more than the exterior. Crystal chandeliers imported from Coln, artwork painted by Aria’s Blessed, architecture of Vandrian style. Dere and Arlette strode through it all, looking as impressed as Clovish custom allowed.
Together, they entered the central courtyard, where they found the focus of the party. The greats of Clovin, many of them Blessed, mingled amongst each other here, exchanging false pleasantries and sugared lies. A server passed them as they stood by the entranceway, carrying a silver platter with goblets of wine. Dere snatched up two glasses and handed Arlette the other. He took a swig of wine and raised his brows in appreciation before taking another sip.
Arlette looked at him and his glass, slight dismay curling her lip. Dere gave her a little wink. “Just blending in, that’s all.” He finished the remainder of the cup, as fast as etiquette would allow, and replaced it with another from the tray. Trying not to sigh, Arlette took a delicate sip from her own glass, hardly consuming any of the wine at all. She then led Dere away, before he could summon the bright idea of grabbing a third drink.
It took surprising grace to weave between the various guests, but they each managed it well enough. Dere picked up bits of the conversation as he flowed between the groups of people. The usual pleasantries and pointless topics appeared, but, every so often, he’d catch a worried whisper of Duval, Besson, or the faceless men. Arlette led him to a corner where they had a good view of the full courtyard and all its many guests. On the way, Dere finished his glass of wine and deposited it onto another tray. Arlette stopped him before he could grab another.
Advertisement
“So…” Dere began, until the sudden blaring of music from the orchestra at the center of the courtyard interrupted his thought. The guests laughed and walked over to nearby partners, outreached hands extending a silent invitation. The ones who received an affirmative answer moved around the center of the room, preparing to dance.
“I don’t suppose you know how to dance?” Arlette asked.
“If it's old, stuffy, and traditional, almost assuredly. If not…”
“Well I have good news then,” She said, giggling just a little. “Old , stuffy, and traditional is the only way Clovin knows how to do things.”
Dere’s laugh echoed around the room, intermingling with dozens of others. He proffered a hand to Arlette, bowing mockingly as he did. She shook her head and accepted the hand before leading him off to the center once more. Dere did indeed recognize the dance. He had learned it two thousand years before and could still recall the movements. He and Arlette moved through them together, his natural dexterity making up for his occasional misstep. “So,” He said, as they danced in rhythm. “Mind pointing out the important guests here?”
Arlette scanned the room a little and considered. “You’ll need to know the Highlords.” They extended out at arms reach and came back together. “Duval, Besson, and, of course, Lucroy you already know.”
Dere tried his best not to look confused when she mentioned Lucroy, a name he hadn’t heard. He scanned his memory and landed on a tall red-haired man with commanding blue eyes, whom he’d met back at the manor. “Ah,” He said. “I didn’t know he was a Highlord.”
Arlette gave him an incredulous glance but seemed unwilling to delve further into it. He whirled her in a circle. “Other than those three, there’s Sylvian, Highlord of the Eastern Plains.” She nodded her head in the direction of an old, formal looking man, with a well groomed moustache. “He was Erdrick’s cousin, a loyalist, and a good man, for a Highlord. Over there is Highlord Christopher. He remained loyal to Erdrick.” She grimaced when she saw the next man. “That’s Highlord Frederic and his son Dylan.” Dere followed her glance and saw two men standing side by side chatting. They looked much alike: average height, blond hair, handsome.
Arlette continued to glare at them as she talked and danced. “Frederic was one of Duval’s earliest allies, as much a scoundrel as you’ll ever find. His son, if at all possible, is worse. They and Sylvian have been at each other's throats for nearing on three decades.” Dere thought he saw the boy look in their direction, but he couldn’t be sure.
She pointed out many more of Clovin’s elite- Evrard, Albert, Nathaniel, Gustave, Isaac- some loyal, others not. A few were missing. Those who had not yet been culled in by Duval’s might: Maurius, Manuel, and Adam. They fought on, but their defeat was an apparent inevitability.
Arlette continued describing, in more detail, the political intricacies and relationships between the Highlords, but Dere’s eyes glazed over and his ears picked up next to nothing. The next thing he knew, Arlette was staring straight into his eyes. “Are you even listening?”
Dere broke out of his revery. “Of course, Isaac and Manuel were… childhood friends?”
“Longtime rivals, actually.” Her usually calm demeanor slipped a little.
“Same thing, to my ears.”
It seemed like Arlette wanted to chastise him, but the music stopped before she could. Dere separated from her and went to grab some wine, promising to return in a minute. Arlette watched him as he walked away then shook her head, too annoyed to offer much complaint.
Dere slipped between the crowd towards the nearest server and reached for another drink. As he did, another hand picked up one of the other cups. Dere grabbed his own and looked upwards at the chiseled face of Highlord Sylvain, the only one Arlette seemed to like. He nodded at Dere and dipped back into the crowd. On a hunch, Dere followed at a distance.
Sylvian exchanged pleasantries with a few of the guests, but he moved with a clear destination in mind, never loitering for more than half a minute. He made it through the worst of the crowd and ended up at the Easternmost wall where he met another figure, this one tall and lean with stark black hair. Dere leaned against a nearby column and sipped his wine, ears straining to pick up anything they might be saying.
“I hate parties.” The black haired man murmured, bitterness lacing his tone.
“I hate parties that celebrate my defeat.” Responded Sylvian with a guffaw.
The black haired man shook his head and Sylvian laughed and patted him on the back. “Always so negative, Florian.”
Florian rolled his eyes but otherwise maintained a clear level of respect to his apparent superior. “Have you heard,” He said, after Sylvian’s laugh had died down. “The Highlords are calling a meeting?”
Dere’s ears perked up. He took another casual sip of wine and pretended to look away from the two men. Sylvian’s voice lost some of its good-humor. “I’ve heard. Worried about Duval, are they? Little late for that.”
“This could be an opportunity to get the Highlords in line, form a united front against Duval and his monsters.” Florian muttered the words out so quiet that Dere had to strain to catch them.
“United Highlords?” Sylvian’s laugh carried across the party and through the room, temporarily interrupting some of the nearby conversations. Sylvian waved politely and everyone returned to their idle talk. Then, more quietly, he continued. “That’s funny, Florian, that’s really funny.”
“I know it’s naive, sir, but we should try.”
Sylvian started to speak and stopped himself. He gave it another moment's thought, then, spoke again. “No, you’re right. We’ll never unite, but this might be a chance to plant a seed in their mind, to try and sow some discontent.”
Florian betrayed no reaction, positive or negative, to his lord's change of mind. “The meeting will be in an hour, in Besson’s personal residence.” Sylvian only nodded.The two of them broke up after that. Sylvian slapped Florian on the back as he walked away, telling him to go and enjoy himself.
Dere finished his wine, mind buzzing. He needed to get into that meeting, but how? He looked around for Arlette and saw her conversing with some of the party guests. A few dozen feet away from her, a man approached, Frederic’s son Dylan, walking right up to her with a clear purpose. Dere connected the dots. They knew each other well, very well. He had an idea.
Advertisement
- In Serial39 Chapters
Triple Threat Mage And The Three Masters
Draken Crowe is a pickpocket working the mean streets of Gold Seal City. He runs a small but loyal crew working under his young but ambitious uncle. It's a hard but uncomplicated life until one night he unlocks a terrible power. Weeks later the memory still haunts him when he chases down a bully, following him into the line for the annual open magician apprenticeship trials. Yet not even the master mages are prepared to deal with the power he holds. Unique in all of history he is a triple threat mage and has the potential to master all three mystic arts. The only problem , Draken still thinks of himself as a thief and he's looking to use his new magic to pull off the biggest score of his life.
8 226 - In Serial22 Chapters
Re-Re:Hammer
Your average Reborn Game System story, similar to The Gamer and Solo Leveling. Written for fun rather than novilization like the others, so it is smaller and less intense. It is set in an AU Warhammer based on a slightly modified version of Warhammer Fantasy's End Times.. So you might notice names and events but don't expect it all to go the same way. And the Main Character is not the only Player in this game~ I'm kind of a catastrophe when it comes to ethic and drive. So don't be alarmed if there isnt an update for a week or three. Or if there is three updates at once. It's a rewrite of the Rehammer that is around, which means the start is mostly the same with some small changes. Chapter 15 is the first fully new chapter of the book. though Chapter 14 has a large addition. You effectively can skip to that and not missing anything major if you read the old one, if you don't wanna rewrite.
8 90 - In Serial6 Chapters
Mountain Calling
On Samuel Meller’s eighteenth birthday, Hitler invades Poland, and his family’s barn goes up in a blaze of fireworks and misplaced war fever. His poor vision keeps him from Western Front, and Samuel finds himself in the Smoky Mountains, a fire lookout for the forest service. In addition to raging fires, he is forced to confront his youthful foolishness, his own mortality, and the guilt of a survivor.
8 428 - In Serial15 Chapters
Helix: a technothriller
Olesya is a spy hunter. In a high-tech world of programmed assassins, betrayal and far-reaching conspiracies, Olesya and her team are the last line of defense against a covert organization that will stop at nothing to control the world. But a new, deadlier enemy is rising. And they have Olesya in their crosshairs... If you love conspiracies and covert ops, this book is for you.
8 516 - In Serial28 Chapters
The Devil that None Knows
Born as a Hunter of the distant Piercing Moon Tribe, part of the Eleven Demona Tribes, everything Wolf Under Stars know of is to be a Hunter. But as luck would have it, he was also born with a Surge. Magus training was added to his training menu.Then, he lost his Surge in an attempted Surge Awakening. Just as he had desired, he was left with only the role of becoming a Hunter along with his Brothers. Sometimes, it is the role that shapes us and not us who do the shaping. Join him as Wolf Under Stars learns more about becoming a Hunter, a role to which he was born to, not a role he chose of his own making. And as he grows older, he notices more and more of the darker undercurrents of his tribe, and its past history, which will force him to reconsider the turns of his life.And out on the eastern horizons, beyond the Eastern Grasslands, the Dreads are starting to move. A Dread Lord has come, and with him, he will bring an army down from the Dread Mountains, breaking the stalemate that was just beginning to see its third century.And Commander Kai Bloodseeker of the Third Frontal Garrison, feared as the White Reaper, will be the first to shed blood.
8 382 - In Serial28 Chapters
[Archive] Legend of the Nameless Hero
A WhiteSamurai original Web Novel There are always the mysterious tales of heroes, those who fight against the Demons, who fight for justice and those who head mighty quests against tyranny. Heroes that are born to destiny, Heroes that are forged through tragedy, and Heroes that are brought to the world in times of great peril and strife. Not all true Heroes are wanted or beloved, but all life understands, that throughout all time and space, for those who truly stand as Heroes, they never need to be called one. The sands of time are the only true judge for those who journey upon the true path, the only one they will ever need. This is the tale, no, the Legend, the Legend of the one who throughout all time, would forever be, the First Hero. This is Their story, a story of true hardship, of a sorrow greater than any other that would stand as a symbol of inspiration no matter the test of time. A tale of darkness, a true curse, an impending evil hidden beyond the horizons that threatened the very future of existence. This is the tale, of one of the few great figures, who, in the face of true evil, continued to stand. . . . _______________________________________________________________ :Disclaimer: _______________________________________________________________ . . . All Chapters are subject to sudden revision, scrapping, or complete removal from the canonical storyline. The author of "Legend of the Nameless Hero" uses RoyalRoad as a method of experimentation with genre's and writing styles for Fantasy-style works for the sake of eventual publication. The end result isn't to release perfect chapters on RoyalRoadl, but eventually develop the story as intended using the best material to produce the highest quality work. The best mentality when reading works from WhiteSamurai is to see it as the ability to read and review pre-release transcripts or "Rough Copies" before publication. Viewer discretion and maturity are both requested and required. . . . _______________________________________________________________ :About: _______________________________________________________________ . . . This story follows direct character point of views along with an intentional third person narrative to explain to the readers what the characters won't. (I don't use my characters to go give extensive explanations for every last thing like EVERYTHING DOES) This tale shall encompass the life of the Hero from the moment she is summoned into the Kingdom of Kremor, to the Legendary Final Clash. This isn't your run of the mill hack and slash raise an army and conquer, I don't follow that bandwagon. Real life holds politics, intrigue, economics, structure, populations, civil opinions, history, psychology, heart, suffering, wonder, advancement, curiosity, ambition, and so many more things that would lead to me hitting some character limit. I refuse to take the same route that others use by simply ignoring these factors, my worlds, my stories, are as real as they get. There's no plot armor here, if someone screws up, they've screwed up and there's no magical sword in a well for them. I write in 'Seasons' not 'Books' as many often do, these are generally, not always, hundreds of chapters long, though as I have yet to finish a season, the average length is in the air. I go by an ideal of what I call 'Universal Lore' which includes the policy that things that exist within the story don't follow the rule where the Protagonist needs to be there so that it will happen. There will be some things that will happen, and the hero, and sometimes the reader, won't know happened until they enter a place, or news gets to them. A person needs to be in the right place at the right time, I hate plot holes and meta characters above all else... For my works, comments are practically demanded as reactions, thoughts, and various viewpoints are like sweet fuel to my writing spirit. Reviews are highly accepted and appreciated, BUT ONLY IF THEY ARE EDUCATED AND THOROUGHLY EXPLAINED. Those that throw down a low rating ARE HIGHLY REQUESTED to extensively detail and explain their viewpoints on the work. They should also be willing to come back to the work at a later date if messaged by the Author, Me, due to issues they mentioned being taken care of. I'm never against scrapping a chapter or rewriting several paragraphs if there are character or story discrepancies. I want the highest quality work possible, and every comment, every review, are tools for me to use to further that goal. . . . Enjoy the work. ~White Status: (Ongoing)
8 70

