15 Fall 522
As far as first dates go, one usually doesn’t envision that one’s sister is present.
But Caspian should have known better, as far as the things he wants and how often he actually achieves them. And specifically, when it comes to Taalviel - he sees now more than ever that his thinking he might experience this relationship without any interference was futile and unfounded.
Sitting directly on the barstool opposite from him, one leg crossed over the other, is said sister Taalviel; to her left is a dark-haired man Caspian has come to see as no more than a petty arsonist, and a pathetic one at that.
And to his right is Taroko, who Caspian had been under the impression was going to be meeting him at this tavern alone.
They’re somewhere down towards Baroque Bay, but a few streets inland, and the four of them are commandeering a space in the back, having turned their barstools away from the tables and arranged them in a makeshift circle. Caspian had not arrived first to this date – what he’s calling a date, had pictured it as such while he was fussing with his hair in the mirror today – but Taroko hadn’t either. No, technically the compulsive match striker had rolled up ahead of them all, and then Taalviel, and she had swooped in on Taroko the second he’d walked in. Which left Caspian last, out of the loop, and distinctly out of any good humor once he’d given the place one look and realized the way he’d envisioned the night going wasn’t anywhere near fruition.
Why would have been the natural first question. But in this case it’s just a resigned, gritted ”What is it now?” that he smears out.
And of course Taalviel says nothing, only stares pointedly at the one empty barstool beside them, which he sulkily takes.
Maybe his first mistake had been thinking, to begin with, that this outing with Taroko was going to be a romantic one. It wasn’t a designation he’d jumped to; meeting with Taroko again after all these years hadn’t been the most pleasant experience. Reuniting with one’s ex usually isn’t, to which anyone might attest. And in this case there are reasons, very specific ones, of the morbidly violent variety, all of which had never been discussed or resolved. But ever since they’d run into each other in the summer, they’d gone out looting a handful of times. And then Taroko, after the last hit-and-run, had caught him by the wrist just before they’d parted ways, and beneath the yellowing moon had asked him if he wanted to do something different next time; if he still liked amber ale and stewed chitlins and that dark bread with the thick crust and oats sprinkled on top.
So has he read the signs wrong? Did he take those words and the question and artificially paint them with a warmth from Taroko that wasn’t really there?
And if so – after everything terrible that had come between them all those years ago – why?
Caspian doesn’t miss him. Hadn’t, all this time. That’s what he tells himself. There’s been too much going on to dwell on someone who had revealed himself to be capable of terrible things, as easily as one might brush one’s teeth in the morning.
But seeing Taroko again, that day last summer – something had sparked in Caspian. Something had cracked. And curiosity had called.