75th Searing, 124
The conversations hadn't gone as badly as the First Minister had feared they might. Despite the lateness of his return, or perhaps specifically because of it, it had been noticed. Though neither his wife nor Deinerin had spoken to him about it, they had conspired to let him sleep in. They had planned such before but it rarely worked because Stefan's body rarely let him rest past sunrise. While he had never been an idle man, before the disaster his body had known how to rest. Since the day his world had come apart it felt like there was never a moment he might not be needed. Half the time, when he closed his eyes, however exhausted he was, he saw the maelstrom rotating over the Presidium, or the waves of mist twisted creatures rising up in waves, or Eitan laying corpse-still as he teetered between life and death after warding the Windworks. Even when the memories of what had been lost didn't interfere, did not invade his dreams, his body wouldn't stay under for more than a few hours at a time.
So when he woke, the morning igniting a spark of life into his brother's remains, and the early afternoon sun was pouring in through tall windows of his bedroom, in which he was very much alone, it was a shock. He lay still, waiting to hear screaming or shattering glass or the howls of inhuman creatures. None of these came, the only sounds were the tick of the mantle clock and the footsteps and voices of two maidservants going about their work. Until the door thrust itself open, causing Stefan to jump half out of his own skin.
Deinerin stood in the doorway, tray in hand, looking as immaculate as ever in his precise suit. Stefan sat up straighter in bed, clutching slightly at the sheet in an attempt to pretend, to himself, that he hadn't been startled by the timely entrance of his own body man. He had long ago stopped questioning Deinerin's ability to always be where he was needed when he was. If he hadn't had absolute faith in the man he might have suspected magic was involved. Without any acknowledgement of the fact that he had just watched his master jump like a spooked kitten Dienerin swooped over and laid the tray over Stefan's lap. Tea and toast with jam and two eggs in their cups.
While he used the minuscule spoon to crack the eggs open and dip the toast into them Deinerin began heating water at the fireplace and whipping together a bowl of shaving cream. It was so normal, so old-world normal; feeling rested, eating food without worrying that Zaichaeri were hungry, without the guilt of worrying that he was needed elsewhere. His mind wandered back to crawling into bed in the wee hours and falling into exhausted sleep curled around his wife's warmth. The only thing he remembered of falling or dreaming was the image of the red-eyed gaze of the activated remains. Instead of instilling fear, even then, awake in the sunshine, it brought a sense of calm.
Once he had been shaved, dressed, and been informed that his appointments had been rescheduled for later in the week, Stefan had used the unexpected freedom to return to his laboratory, but only briefly. Collecting his notes from the night before, and the weeks before that, he had returned to his own office in the Windworks. Showing his face felt important, it let everyone know that, despite missing the morning, he was in good health and fully in control of government. No rumors would be started about a missing First Minister.
The afternoon was spent gathering himself and his notes into a cohesive explanation of his research and the results. Only after he and his notes were logical and collected did he go to Eitan, in his Order office to present his findings. He presented each of the experiments in order, along with his reasoning, up to the last. Eitan had known that he was experimenting with the remains, but little about the nature of those experiments until then. Stefan remained calm, up until the end, when some of his excitement came through. It had been years since Eitan had seen this type of excitement on his brother in law, the kind that had used to come over him when he revealed a new ship design or invention. Even when he had introduced the powered armor, it had been in sorrow because they had been designed for Brenner and Eitan.
When the information was laid out, including that he had not returned to check on the experiment because he wanted Eitan there for both safety and confirmation, then waited for whatever response might be coming.
The conversations hadn't gone as badly as the First Minister had feared they might. Despite the lateness of his return, or perhaps specifically because of it, it had been noticed. Though neither his wife nor Deinerin had spoken to him about it, they had conspired to let him sleep in. They had planned such before but it rarely worked because Stefan's body rarely let him rest past sunrise. While he had never been an idle man, before the disaster his body had known how to rest. Since the day his world had come apart it felt like there was never a moment he might not be needed. Half the time, when he closed his eyes, however exhausted he was, he saw the maelstrom rotating over the Presidium, or the waves of mist twisted creatures rising up in waves, or Eitan laying corpse-still as he teetered between life and death after warding the Windworks. Even when the memories of what had been lost didn't interfere, did not invade his dreams, his body wouldn't stay under for more than a few hours at a time.
So when he woke, the morning igniting a spark of life into his brother's remains, and the early afternoon sun was pouring in through tall windows of his bedroom, in which he was very much alone, it was a shock. He lay still, waiting to hear screaming or shattering glass or the howls of inhuman creatures. None of these came, the only sounds were the tick of the mantle clock and the footsteps and voices of two maidservants going about their work. Until the door thrust itself open, causing Stefan to jump half out of his own skin.
Deinerin stood in the doorway, tray in hand, looking as immaculate as ever in his precise suit. Stefan sat up straighter in bed, clutching slightly at the sheet in an attempt to pretend, to himself, that he hadn't been startled by the timely entrance of his own body man. He had long ago stopped questioning Deinerin's ability to always be where he was needed when he was. If he hadn't had absolute faith in the man he might have suspected magic was involved. Without any acknowledgement of the fact that he had just watched his master jump like a spooked kitten Dienerin swooped over and laid the tray over Stefan's lap. Tea and toast with jam and two eggs in their cups.
While he used the minuscule spoon to crack the eggs open and dip the toast into them Deinerin began heating water at the fireplace and whipping together a bowl of shaving cream. It was so normal, so old-world normal; feeling rested, eating food without worrying that Zaichaeri were hungry, without the guilt of worrying that he was needed elsewhere. His mind wandered back to crawling into bed in the wee hours and falling into exhausted sleep curled around his wife's warmth. The only thing he remembered of falling or dreaming was the image of the red-eyed gaze of the activated remains. Instead of instilling fear, even then, awake in the sunshine, it brought a sense of calm.
Once he had been shaved, dressed, and been informed that his appointments had been rescheduled for later in the week, Stefan had used the unexpected freedom to return to his laboratory, but only briefly. Collecting his notes from the night before, and the weeks before that, he had returned to his own office in the Windworks. Showing his face felt important, it let everyone know that, despite missing the morning, he was in good health and fully in control of government. No rumors would be started about a missing First Minister.
The afternoon was spent gathering himself and his notes into a cohesive explanation of his research and the results. Only after he and his notes were logical and collected did he go to Eitan, in his Order office to present his findings. He presented each of the experiments in order, along with his reasoning, up to the last. Eitan had known that he was experimenting with the remains, but little about the nature of those experiments until then. Stefan remained calm, up until the end, when some of his excitement came through. It had been years since Eitan had seen this type of excitement on his brother in law, the kind that had used to come over him when he revealed a new ship design or invention. Even when he had introduced the powered armor, it had been in sorrow because they had been designed for Brenner and Eitan.
When the information was laid out, including that he had not returned to check on the experiment because he wanted Eitan there for both safety and confirmation, then waited for whatever response might be coming.