Chapter 11 #2
Of course he noticed. Vaike notices everything, seems to track Evran's movements even across a crowded room. The knowledge sends warmth flooding through Evran's chest even as it terrifies him.
"I'm fine," Evran assures him. "Just a bit overwhelmed. I'm not used to being celebrated."
Vaike stops a few feet away, close enough to talk comfortably but maintaining a respectful distance. "You deserve to be celebrated. What you did took real courage."
They've had this conversation before, in Evran's room two days ago, but hearing it again still makes his throat tight with emotion. "You've already told me that."
"Doesn't make it less true." Vaike leans against the stone railing, his profile sharp in the moonlight. "I meant what I said, Evran. About you proving yourself worthy of being Drakarri."
"I know." And he does know, believes it in a way he never would have thought possible two weeks ago. But that knowledge doesn't help with the other feelings churning in his chest, the ones he can't name and can't control.
The silence stretches between them, not uncomfortable but weighted with something Evran can't identify. He watches Vaike stare out at the valley, the moonlight catching on the silver in his hair and at his throat, and something in Evran's chest cracks open.
He wants this man. Wants him with an intensity that terrifies and exhilarates in equal measure.
Wants to close the distance between them, to touch those strong hands, to know if Vaike's lips are as soft as they look.
Wants to be held and valued and seen by this person who has shown him more kindness than anyone in his life.
The realization crashes over him like a wave, undeniable and overwhelming. This isn't just gratitude or respect or even simple attraction. This is something deeper, more complicated, more dangerous than anything he's ever felt.
He's falling in love with Vaike. Might have already fallen, if he's honest with himself.
The knowledge makes him feel like he's standing on the edge of a precipice, like one wrong move will send him tumbling into an abyss he'll never climb out of.
"Evran?" Vaike turns to look at him, concern crossing his features. "You're shaking."
He is. His whole body is trembling with the force of his realization, with the weight of feelings he can't express and doesn't know how to handle. He wraps his arms around himself, trying to hold it all in.
"I'm just cold," he lies. "The night air."
Vaike looks like he doesn't believe him, but before he can say anything, there's a burst of laughter from inside the hall. The sound seems to break whatever spell had settled over them, and Vaike straightens, stepping back from the railing.
"You should go back inside," the Warlord says, and his voice has gone neutral again, professional. "Warm up. You're still healing—you shouldn't be out in the cold for too long."
The words feel like a dismissal, gentle but final. Whatever moment they'd shared—if they'd shared anything at all—is over. Vaike is pulling back, creating distance, and Evran understands what that means.
The Warlord is kind to him because he's a good leader, because he cares about all his people. The concern, the praise, the gentle touches when checking his injuries—those were all just Vaike being thorough, being responsible, being everything a good leader should be.
They didn't mean what Evran desperately wanted them to mean.
Of course they didn't. Why would someone like Vaike—strong, capable, commanding respect from everyone around him—be interested in someone like Evran?
A failed noble son who couldn't even defend himself from his own father, who needed to be rescued and given sanctuary because he had nowhere else to go.
Evran is useful now, has proven he can contribute, but that doesn't make him equal to someone like Vaike. The distance between them is still vast—Warlord and ward, leader and refugee, someone worthy and someone who will never be quite enough.
"Of course," Evran says, and is proud that his voice doesn't shake even though his hands are. "Thank you for checking on me, my lord."
"Vaike," the Warlord corrects automatically, but there's something in his expression that Evran can't read. Something that might be regret or might just be the shadows playing tricks in the moonlight.
"Vaike," Evran repeats, though the name feels like goodbye on his tongue.
They stand there for another moment, the silence heavy between them, and Evran wants to say something.
Wants to be brave enough to close the distance, to ask if there's any possibility that what he feels might be returned.
But fear holds him paralyzed—fear of rejection, fear of losing the acceptance he's fought so hard to earn, fear of making everything awkward and ruining what little he has.
"I should go back in," Vaike says finally, and the words feel like a nail in a coffin. "People will be looking for me. Are you coming?"
"In a moment," Evran manages. "I'll just... catch my breath."
Vaike nods, and for a heartbeat Evran thinks he might say something else. His mouth opens slightly, his hand lifts as if he might reach out. But then he stops himself, pulls back, and whatever he was going to say remains unspoken.
"Don't stay out too long," is all he says, and then he's gone, slipping back through the doors into the warmth and noise of the gathering, leaving Evran alone on the balcony with his breaking heart and the cold mountain wind.
Evran stands frozen for a long moment after the doors close, staring at the space where Vaike stood. The night suddenly feels colder, emptier, like something essential has been pulled away.
Slowly, he sinks down to sit on the stone floor with his back against the railing, wrapping his arms around his knees. His ribs protest the position but he doesn't care. The physical pain is nothing compared to the ache in his chest, the hollow feeling that's opened up where hope used to live.
He'd been stupid to hope. Stupid to think that kindness meant anything more than kindness, that concern was something deeper than duty.
Vaike is a good man, a good leader—of course he cares about those under his protection.
That's all Evran is to him. Someone to be protected and guided, not someone to be wanted.
The music from the gathering drifts through the closed doors, muffled but still audible.
People are probably dancing still, celebrating the harvest and the community they've built together.
Evran should go back in, should show his face, should be grateful for all he's been given instead of mourning what he can never have.
But he can't. Can't face the crowd with this rawness in his chest, can't paste on a smile and pretend his world hasn't just tilted irrevocably. Can't risk seeing Vaike dancing with someone else, laughing with someone else, his attention on anyone but the fool who's gone and fallen in love with him.
After what feels like hours but is probably only minutes, Evran forces himself to stand.
His legs are unsteady and his ribs ache from sitting in such an awkward position, but he manages.
Rather than returning to the gathering, he takes a different door—one that leads to a side corridor that will let him reach his quarters without going through the great hall.
He's a coward. He knows it. But tonight, he doesn't have the strength to be anything else.
His room, when he reaches it, feels too quiet after the noise of the gathering. He lights a single lamp and sits on the edge of his bed, still wearing his fine new clothes, and stares at nothing.
He should be grateful. He has so much more than he did two weeks ago—a place to live, work that matters, people who value his contributions.
He's been accepted into a community, praised for his courage, given opportunities he never thought he'd have.
By any measure, he's better off than he's been in years.
But somehow, none of that is enough to fill the hollow ache in his chest. The knowledge that Vaike will never look at him the way Evran wants to be looked at. That those brief moments of connection were all in his imagination, wishful thinking from someone desperate to be wanted.
He lies back on the bed without bothering to undress, staring up at the ceiling and trying to sort through the tangled mess of his feelings.
He needs to accept this. Needs to be satisfied with what he has rather than yearning for the impossible.
Vaike has given him so much already—shelter, acceptance, purpose. Wanting more is greedy and foolish.
But knowing that doesn't stop his heart from aching. Doesn't stop him from replaying every interaction, every touch, every word, searching for signs that his feelings might be returned and finding only his own desperate hope reflected back at him.
Outside his window, the moon climbs higher and the sounds of celebration continue in the distance.
People are happy, together, enjoying the fruits of their labor and the bonds of community.
And Evran lies alone in his room, nursing a broken heart he has no right to have and wishing he could be satisfied with what he's been given instead of yearning for what he knows he'll never deserve.
Tomorrow, he tells himself. Tomorrow he'll pull himself together, put on a brave face, go back to work in the gardens and focus on earning his place through action rather than impossible dreams. Tomorrow he'll be grateful for what he has instead of mourning what he can't have.
But tonight, he allows himself to hurt. To feel the full weight of his feelings and the certainty of their futility. To mourn the possibility he'd allowed himself to hope for, even knowing hope was dangerous.
Outside, the celebration continues without him. And inside, Evran curls on his side, closes his eyes against the burning behind them, and tries to convince his heart to stop wanting things it can never have.