Blood

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The wind outside carried the smell of rain and distant horses, rolling in from the yard below where squires shouted and steel rang against steel.

Inside the hall, everything felt too still.

She stood near the long table, fingers resting lightly against the carved wood as lords argued in low voices around her. None addressed her directly,they rarely did, but their eyes drifted toward her often enough to remind her that she was the reason half of them had gathered at all.

Aerion's twin.

A match to be considered.

A problem to be solved.

She kept her expression calm, the way she had learned to do since childhood.

Across the room, Aerion watched her.

He leaned against a stone pillar with the careless posture of a man pretending not to listen, though she knew better. His gaze followed every movement near her and every knight who stepped too close, every lord who smiled too long.

Protective, some would say.

Possessive, others whispered.

The doors opened.

Conversation faltered just enough for her to notice.

Valarr entered quietly, travel cloak still dusted from the road, his expression unreadable as he crossed the hall. He offered the proper courtesies to those above him, but his eyes flicked toward her almost immediately.

Aerion straightened.

She felt the tension before either man spoke.

Valarr stopped at the table across from her. "My apologies for the delay," he said, voice steady. "The roads were slow with rain."

One of the older lords waved the apology away, but the air had already changed.

Aerion pushed off the pillar.

"You always arrive late," he said lightly, though there was no humor beneath it.

Valarr met his gaze. "And you always notice."

The exchange was polite enough that no one could object, but sharp enough that she felt it settle like a blade between them.

She spoke before it could grow worse.

"You've traveled far," she said to Valarr. "You must be tired."

His expression softened, just slightly. "Not enough to miss this."

Aerion's jaw tightened.

She felt it happen again, the same silent rivalry that had been growing for months, each encounter a little sharper than the last.

They were cousins. Raised together. Trained together.

But something had shifted.

And she stood at the center of it.

Later, the hall emptied.

She slipped outside into the courtyard, breathing easier beneath the open sky. The noise of the feast faded behind her, replaced by the quiet scrape of boots on gravel.

She didn't turn.

"A little crowded for you?" Aerion asked.

She smiled faintly. "You know me too well."

He stepped beside her, arms folded. The moonlight softened him, made him look younger — closer to the boy who used to sneak pastries from the kitchens and insist she take half.

"I don't trust him," he said abruptly.

She sighed. "You don't trust anyone."

"That's not true."

She glanced at him. "Then why Valarr?"

Aerion hesitated which was rare for him.

"Because he looks at you like he's already decided something," he said quietly. "And I don't like not knowing what it is."

Before she could answer, another voice joined them.

"I could ask the same of you."

Valarr emerged from the shadows near the archway, no anger in his tone, only calm certainty.

Aerion stiffened.

She swallowed a sigh.

"You two find each other too easily," she murmured.

Valarr's gaze stayed on Aerion. "He makes it easy."

The courtyard felt suddenly too small.

Aerion stepped forward slightly. "If you have something to say, cousin, say it."

Valarr met his stare without flinching. "Only that she doesn't belong to you."

The words landed hard.

Aerion's voice dropped. "She's my sister."

"And she's not a child."

Silence stretched between them.

She stepped forward, forcing herself into their line of sight.

"I am standing right here," she said quietly.

Both men looked at her at once.

Aerion's anger softened into concern. Valarr's calm turned unreadable again.

For a moment, no one spoke.

Then Aerion exhaled slowly. "You should get some rest."

It wasn't really a suggestion.

She hesitated but nodded, sensing the argument waiting to happen once she left.

As she turned away, she heard Valarr speak softly behind her.

"You can't guard her forever."

Aerion's reply came colder than she had ever heard it.

"I don't intend to."

That night, sleep didn't come easily.

She lay awake thinking about the way they looked at each other, cousins bound by blood, but separated by something far more dangerous.

Choice.

She had grown up believing family was simple.

Now she understood it wasn't.

And somewhere beneath the quiet stone roof, two young men were beginning to realize that whatever stood between them... was her.

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