50 Fall 522
The first sign, when he looks back, that something was going to be off about this day was that when he entered the house his stepfather did not greet him with an insult.
In fact it’s quite the opposite. Zhassel – the Kelvic Hound who has held the title of stepmother for about a decade – is the one who opens the door, and she’s got the strangest look on her face. Like she’d just been kicked a moment ago – not out of the realm of possibility – for saying something snide. And the comment had been particularly acerbic, and the retribution may have been quite seriously hard.
“He’s in the dining room,” is all Zhassel says, with enough of her customary ruefulness that Caspian can rest assured that she’s not, say, terribly and terminally ill. Speaking of, though – he almost double-takes, notices that the gray streaks in her hair are undeniable in the light, that patches are missing from her scalp. And the wrinkles around her eyes –
How long are Hounds meant to live?
He had been assuming, since his return to Sunberth, that her reduced animosity towards him had come from a place of – well, not respect, but begrudging acknowledgment that he’s approaching 30 years old and can’t be demeaned the same way she’d done when he was much younger. Part of him had been hoping that she did appreciate, at the very least, that he’d struck out on his own, without their help or guidance.
But perhaps that vitriol was still there, muffled underneath that sagging skin and behind the sallowing eyes, tempered with passing time. One day she might become too old and tired to feel the need to bite at all.
All of this could be reflected on later. Now he’s stepping into the dining room, where his stepfather Taaldros waits, seated at the head of the table.
Taaldros gestures at the empty chair nearest him. Caspian glances it up and down – what is he expecting, for the seat to be lined with spikes? But he can’t help the reflex – before settling into it.
“You hungry?” Taaldros asks in his deep-dark baritone, and Caspian blinks and has to process the sentence backwards and forwards a couple times to make sure he’s heard right.
Despite how he might have answered, Zhassel reappears, plunking down two plates of bread and cold cuts, and hunks of cheese.
Instinct has Caspian waiting warily again, watching his stepfather dig in first, before trying his own.
“Is this from Smily’s?” Caspian asks. The good butcher, from his teenage memories. The more expensive one, least likely in their radius to mix rat entrails in with the ground meat. And subsequently the one they went to very infrequently, and only on special occasions.
His stepfather grunts in affirmation. “You still remember?”
“There’s plenty I can’t forget.”
But this weird, very unusual, noticeably off – why was a red carpet practically rolled out for him the moment he came in?
The lack of answers dulls his appetite, and he drops the roll of bread he’d been picking at back onto his plate. “Is there something I can do for you?”
Taaldros takes his time, taking a large bite and swallowing before replying, “I’ve got a job for you.”
Caspian leans back in his chair, crosses his arms. “Ahuh.”
“And it’s not in Daggerhand territory.”
Where they’d have, through Taaldros, some sense of security and protection.
Nope, of course it isn’t.