Page 33 of Oath

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“No,” Aerion said again, and this time the word was a softer thing—rawer, less triumphant, almost pleading. “You don’t have to.”

Clyde lifted his head. For a breath his guard dropped, and Aerion saw the man unvarnished, no soldier’s polish, no blade-spark. “I want to,” Clyde said. “Because your safety is bought by distance. And I can’t protect you from this side of the wall.”

“You’d rather die than disobey,” Aerion choked.

“No,” Clyde answered. “I’d rather die than let them think you need anyone else.”

Those words landed as if the roof had fallen in. The chamber’s murmurs returned like surf—the old men’s talk about levies and rations, the envoy clarifying contingencies—but Aerion could no longer pick out any detail. He watched instead the small, decisive movements: the envoy setting a date, a captain tapping a ledge on the map, a steward noting supplies. He heard the syllables—muster, envoy, legions—but they swam behind a membrane. In his head the only clear count was the thin, unbelieving echo of Clyde’s last sentence.

“Fine,” he breathed at last. It was not the sharp refusal he’d intended. It came out as a surrender drawn close to the bone.

Clyde rose. He bowed without flourish, then stepped back to the envoy’s side as the commanders resumed their work. The room took up the cadence of war again: who would ride when, how the keeps would provision, what banners would be mustered at dawn. A captain tossed dates like stones: “We depart at first light in five days. Musters at two points—Ravencross and Highbarrow. Provisions stowed by dusk on the fourth.” Another man spoke of remounting and relay points, of scouts to run the ridge. Words, plans, timetables; the practical scaffolding of violence.

Aerion heard none of it in anything but a fog. He caught fragments: “five days,” “Ravencross,” “provisions.” For the rest he floated, stripped of the usual armour of sarcasm and showmanship. The map became a smear of parchment; pinheads glinted like a constellation he could no longer name.

When at last the council broke, the lords filing out in their embroidered cloaks and clinking boots, Aerion remained. He sat very still, fingers pressing into the carved edge of the table until his knuckles burned. Clyde passed him on the way out; the knight’s eyes brushed the lord’s face once, quick and unreadable. There was a small, almost imperceptible tightening in Clyde’s jaw, preparation, Aerion thought. Duty having been accepted.

Aerion’s whole body felt oddly empty, as if some vital thing had been lifted along with Clyde’s departure. He could not account for the hollowness—would not, perhaps—so instead he rose clumsily and left the council chamber, the echo of boots and cloak in the corridor a drumbeat that matched the hole in his chest.

Outside, the air was cold, washed of the storm’s salt. Servants hurried, whispers following Clyde’s heels:He rides with the King; the Hound leads the western flank; five days.The words stung less than the shape of absence. Aerion found he could not look away as Clyde walked toward the stables, each step steady, each knot of the bandage at his side a visible promise.

He did not call him back. He could not unmake what was done. Instead, he stood in the archway until the man became a silhouette against the keep’s greying yard, then staggered away, every map line, every muster date, dissolving into the fog ofnames and numbers he could no longer hear through the sound of his own blood.

The keep lay hushed under the weight of war’s approach. Torches hissed in the rain-dark corridors, and the wind moaned faintly through arrow slits. Servants spoke in whispers, their footsteps quick, the air already charged with departure.

Aerion sat in his chamber, alone. A single lamp burned on the desk beside him, pooling gold across scattered scrolls. He hadn’t read a word in hours. He only traced the edge of Clyde’s bloodstained sash with his fingers, back and forth, until the fabric felt like skin.

When the door opened, he startled.

Clyde stepped inside.

He wore no armour now, only a plain tunic and the weight of what tomorrow demanded. His face was unreadable, but his presence was a tide filling the room.

Aerion surged to his feet, cloak spilling from his shoulders. “You dare leave without coming here first?” His voice cracked like glass. He clenched his fists to hide the tremor. “You will come back to me. Do you hear me? I command it.”

Clyde closed the door behind him, slow and deliberate. His gaze met Aerion’s, steady and calm. “My lord. It is better this way.”

Aerion blinked, stunned. “Better?” His laugh was sharp, brittle. “You think itbetterto abandon me?”

“Not abandonment,” Clyde said quietly. “Necessity. My judgment is clouded. By you.”

The words lodged in Aerion’s chest, deeper than any blade. For a heartbeat he forgot to breathe. Then he scoffed, forcinghis mask back on, though it wavered. “Clouded? Is that what you call it?” He stepped closer, eyes bright with defiance and something more fragile beneath. “Then uncloud it. One night. Here. With me.”

The suggestion struck the air like lightning.

Clyde’s jaw tightened. His hands flexed at his sides. For a moment, the silence between them was a taut rope, ready to snap.

Then, slowly, with infinite control, he shook his head.

“No.”

The word was quiet, but it cut clean.

Aerion’s breath caught, his composure slipping. “You’d refuse me?” he whispered, half outrage, half plea.

“I’d protect you,” Clyde said. His voice was iron. “And I can’t do that if I let myself want what you ask. In five days I ride because of you. Tonight—I refuse because of you.”

Aerion swayed, as though the ground itself had shifted. His throat tightened around a dozen retorts, but none came. Only silence, thick and unbearable.