The foreign bard bowed as he had been instructed by Cithæra's tutor of Solunarian etiquette, surprised that he managed to lose himself in the music even here, but so it was. He recovered quickly. He followed the choreography provided and took up his place beside one of the Sentinels, though he wasn't wearing black himself, not today. He stood beside Cithæra's camerarius, Leukus Val'Sorokys Kyrin—Arvælyn's ostensible father. His symphony was familiar, as he had heard it often, and yet unfamiliar for he had never truly made a connection with the stiff-lipped man.
There were other songs in the surrounding music. Some he recognized, like the powerful tone and timbre of Talon—or Dæmon in Solunarium; others he didn't, like the jangle of Cetus' nerves nearby.
"I don't know if Arvælyn has brought it up," he said quietly, voice pitched for Kyrin's knife-shaped ears alone, "but you are the spitting image of Deus Aværys."
His eyes were on the pageantry, Cithæra leading her family's procession toward the Queen, but his "ear" was on the elf beside him. He didn't really know what he was asking, what he was expecting, but it was a detail that had struck him back on Kaladon. It was entirely possible that the blood of his forebear merely sang strong in his veins, but with Moritasi involved—and a Draegir in attendance now—coincidence seemed unlikely.
Finn was weary of knowing too little too late, of being a pawn on the chessboard. Aværys had crowned him, apparently upon the advice of Varvara. In some ways, it felt like Varvara's chains in his blood.
Did his brow burn when Thalya revealed the identity of Raithen's one-time lover or was that his imagination. He didn't rub at it, but maintained his posture, the golden lyre framed in his arms to catch the light. Presentation was so important in Solunarium.
"Well, fuck," he murmured.
There were other songs in the surrounding music. Some he recognized, like the powerful tone and timbre of Talon—or Dæmon in Solunarium; others he didn't, like the jangle of Cetus' nerves nearby.
"I don't know if Arvælyn has brought it up," he said quietly, voice pitched for Kyrin's knife-shaped ears alone, "but you are the spitting image of Deus Aværys."
His eyes were on the pageantry, Cithæra leading her family's procession toward the Queen, but his "ear" was on the elf beside him. He didn't really know what he was asking, what he was expecting, but it was a detail that had struck him back on Kaladon. It was entirely possible that the blood of his forebear merely sang strong in his veins, but with Moritasi involved—and a Draegir in attendance now—coincidence seemed unlikely.
Finn was weary of knowing too little too late, of being a pawn on the chessboard. Aværys had crowned him, apparently upon the advice of Varvara. In some ways, it felt like Varvara's chains in his blood.
Did his brow burn when Thalya revealed the identity of Raithen's one-time lover or was that his imagination. He didn't rub at it, but maintained his posture, the golden lyre framed in his arms to catch the light. Presentation was so important in Solunarium.
"Well, fuck," he murmured.