Chapter 21
The night before the tournament final, Lethe comes to prepare Zazyrus for his fight and stays to give him everything else.
The mood in the cage is taut. Electric. The air feels different, charged with the knowledge that everything changes tomorrow, that the plan either works or it doesn’t and there is no version of failure that leaves either of them alive.
Lethe can feel it humming in the stone beneath his knees and in the space between their bodies and in the precise, deliberate way his hands move over Zazyrus’s wounds, checking, cleaning, wrapping, performing the work for what might be the last time.
He works in silence.
No narration tonight. No chatter about Soot or the weather or the garden he’d plant by the sea. The words feel insufficient, too small for the space they’d have to fill, and the silence is better. The silence holds everything the words can’t.
He finishes. Ties off the last bandage. Packs his satchel.
He does not leave.
He sets the satchel aside and sits against the wall beside Zazyrus, close enough that their arms touch.
The contact is grounding. Warm. Zazyrus is solid beside him, the heat of his body radiating through the thin fabric of Lethe’s shirt, and Lethe leans into it and breathes and the breathing is unsteady.
"I was sixteen," Lethe says.
The words come out quiet. Not the clinical detachment he uses for medical assessments or the careful steadiness he deploys in dangerous situations. This is something rawer. Something that costs.
"A village in the south. Three days’ walk from the nearest port. My mother was a healer. She taught me. I was her apprentice and I wasn’t very good yet but I was learning. I could set a bone by the time I was twelve. I could stitch a wound by thirteen. She said I had gentle hands."
Zazyrus is silent. The listening silence, dense and total, the full weight of his attention turned on Lethe.
"Men came through. Traders, they called themselves.
They took things. Grain. Livestock. People, if the people had skills they could sell.
I had skills." His voice doesn’t waver. He has told himself this story so many times, in the quiet room behind his eyes, that the telling has worn smooth.
But he has never told it out loud. Never said the words to another person.
The words have lived inside him for six years, sealed behind the same walls that keep him safe, and saying them now is an act of demolition.
"They brought me here. Sold me to Demos.
Demos saw a healer and saw something else and decided he wanted both. "
A long pause. Lethe’s hands are in his lap, still and steady.
"I learned to go away. Inside my head. I built a room there, a place where the things that happened to my body didn’t reach.
I was sixteen when I built it and I’ve lived in it ever since.
When he comes to my door. When the three knocks come.
I go to the room and I close the door and I wait until it’s over and I come back and I wash and I go to work. "
His voice is thin now. Stretched. The telling is costing him more than he expected and he can feel the walls of the quiet room shaking, not from assault but from the voluntary act of opening the door and letting someone see inside.
"I thought that was all I was. A body people used.
A healer they kept alive because I was useful and a body they used because they could and the two things were the entirety of my existence and I made peace with that.
I made peace with it because the alternative was not making peace with it and the alternative would have killed me. "
His hand finds Zazyrus’s on the stone between them. His fingers thread between the clawed fingers and hold.
"You ruined that."
Zazyrus’s hand tightens on his.
"You sat in this cage and you held still while I stitched you and you didn’t hurt me.
You looked at me and you saw me. Not a lamb.
Not a body. Me. And I couldn’t make peace with the alternative anymore because the alternative had a face and a voice and it asked me about a kitten when it could have taken everything it wanted. "
He turns his head and looks at Zazyrus. The dark eyes are on him, steady and burning, and the expression in them is something Lethe has no name for. Something vast and fierce and aching.
"You were the first person to see me as human," Lethe says. "And it cost me everything I’d built to survive. Every wall. Every room. Every piece of the architecture that kept me alive. You dismantled it by being kind and I should hate you for that because the walls were keeping me safe and now they’re gone and I’m exposed and it’s terrifying. "
He squeezes Zazyrus’s hand.
Zazyrus listens without a sound. He listens the way he does everything when Lethe is near: with total, focused, devastating attention.
And when Lethe is finished, when the words are out and the walls are down and the boy is sitting beside him with his story laid bare on the cold stone between them, Zazyrus pulls him into his lap.
Easy. As though Lethe weighs nothing. One arm hooks around his back, the other slides beneath his legs, and Lethe is lifted and gathered and resettled in the cradle of Zazyrus’s lap with a gentleness that belies the strength behind it.
Lethe lets himself be gathered. He curls against the broad chest and Zazyrus’s arms close around him and his tail wraps Lethe’s thigh, warm and firm, and the hold is complete.
Zazyrus presses his face into Lethe’s neck and breathes him in.
The inhale is long and slow and shaking.
Lethe feels it against his skin, the expansion of Zazyrus’s chest, the warm rush of air, and the exhale that follows is unsteady and the arms around him tighten.
Zazyrus breathes him in the way a man breathes after surfacing from deep water, desperate and grateful and unable to get enough.
Lethe’s hand comes up to the back of Zazyrus’s head. His fingers find the short hair at his nape, the warm skin, and he holds.
He turns in Zazyrus’s arms.
The movement is slow. Deliberate. Lethe shifts in the broad lap, rotating, bringing his knees to either side of Zazyrus’s hips so they face each other.
His hands come up and he takes Zazyrus’s face in both palms. His thumbs rest against the sharp jaw.
His fingers curve around the back of his skull. He tilts the beast’s face up.
He studies him.
This enormous, scarred, furious creature who learned gentleness for Lethe’s sake.
Who held still while Lethe stitched him and spoke when Lethe needed to hear a voice and bared his teeth at a door and kissed a wrist and asked about a kitten and said you are a wolf with the conviction of someone stating a law of nature.
Who is looking up at Lethe right now with an expression that is open and raw and undefended and more vulnerable than anything Lethe has seen on a face that was built for war.
Lethe leans in.
He presses his mouth to the corner of Zazyrus’s jaw.
A choice. A claiming. His lips find the hard edge of bone where jaw meets ear and the kiss is firm and deliberate and Lethe feels the body beneath him go rigid, every muscle locking, a full-body tremor running through Zazyrus that vibrates against Lethe’s chest and thighs.
Zazyrus makes a sound.
It is the sound of something tearing open. Low and rough and wrenched from somewhere deep, somewhere primal, somewhere that Zazyrus has kept locked and sealed and guarded for as long as Lethe has kept his quiet room. The sound fills the cage and Zazyrus tilts his head and his mouth finds Lethe’s.
Their first kiss.
It is slow and ruinous.
Zazyrus’s mouth is warm and firm and his lips move against Lethe’s with a care that is agonizing, each press tentative, each angle tested, as though the beast who tears men apart in arenas is terrified of breaking the boy in his lap with the pressure of a kiss.
His hand comes up to the back of Lethe’s head, cradling, his clawed fingers threaded through Lethe’s hair with every point angled away from skin.
Lethe’s hands slide up.
From Zazyrus’s jaw to his temples. From his temples to his hair. From his hair to the base of his horns.
He grips.
Zazyrus breaks from the kiss gasping. His whole body jerks, his back arching off the wall, his claws pricking Lethe’s hips through the fabric of his pants, his tail constricting around Lethe’s thigh with a force that is just short of pain.
His eyes are half-shut and his mouth is open and the sound coming out of him is continuous, a low, shattered groan that has no beginning and no end.
Lethe holds on.
He watches Zazyrus’s face. The raw, wrecked, undone expression of someone being touched where they are most vulnerable by the person they trust most in the world.
The beast’s composure is gone. The controlled stillness, the predatory patience, the compression of fury into manageable shapes.
Gone. What’s left is naked and shaking and devastating and Lethe watches it with the calm, steady attention of a healer who knows exactly what he’s doing.
He kisses Zazyrus again. Softer this time. A press of his lips, gentle and warm, and his thumbs trace along the ridges of the horns, following the texture from base to curve, and Zazyrus shakes apart against him.
His forehead drops to Lethe’s collarbone.
His breathing is ragged, torn, each exhale a sound.
His arms are locked around Lethe’s back and his tail is coiled around his thigh and his entire body is trembling with the sustained effort of being undone and the sustained effort of not shattering completely.
Lethe holds him. His thumbs keep moving, slow and deliberate, tracing the sensitive ridges, and each pass draws another shudder, another broken breath, another fragment of the sound that keeps spilling out of Zazyrus as though a dam has collapsed and everything behind it is pouring through.