5 Winter 522
The wine in Caspian’s cup is cool and sweet against his lips. It’s a harder swallow than his usual. For some reason it takes more effort to get it down his throat, and the noise his body makes seems sacrilegiously loud in this otherwise very quiet room.
It’s his room, or more accurately, was his, once. The evidence is still there – the stick figures he’d etched along the wainscoting near the floor, the dent in the plaster where Taaldros had once hurled a kettle helm that very narrowly missed his eye. The small chest in the corner most likely still full of tattered smocks and cracked marbles and perhaps the posters he’d been very enamored with, at age 14, advertising a traveling entertainer skilled in sleight of hand.
The infant in the moonlit crib before him doesn’t know any of this, the history of this room, of this house, of the things that have come to pass within its walls. She doesn’t know what goes on in the streets below them, or on the next block over. And she certainly doesn’t know that Caspian is her brother.
Half-brother, he internally corrects himself, with the same immediacy with which he has to remind himself that Taaldros is his step-father and not his biological one.
As if born from the shadows – speaking of family – Taalviel materializes beside him. There’s a mug in her hand, and even from here Caspian can smell alcohol stinging off it, dark and sickly sweet. More wine.
“You said her mother was a weasel, right?” he says, speaking in a hushed undertone. The baby is asleep, and no one in this house possesses the adequate parental instinct to deal with crying. “I’m realizing now that perhaps you weren’t insulting the woman’s personality, but meant she was an actual Weasel. As in Kelvic.”
Just like Taalviel; just like their birth mother Kharis. Just like their stepmother Zhassel who was likely gnawing chicken bones in the corner of the kitchen on the floor below.
Taalviel takes a sip, purses her lips. The wine isn’t the best quality, but for Sunberth standards it does the job just fine. “Correct, Tarima wasn’t exactly human.”
And he’d almost slept with her, as a means of distracting her while they kidnapped her child. Thinking back, there were certain physical features in her human form that should have tipped him off. A certain sharpness to her face, the willowy bend to her limbs. Even her voice had a bit of a shrill to it.
If Tarima is a Weasel – what does that make their infant sister?
Caspian just hasn’t seen her shift yet. Unlike Taalviel and essentially everyone else in this house, he’s been kept wildly misinformed and notably out of the loop.
And by virtue of his having a question, no one is particularly interested in expending the energy to answer it.
“Why didn’t Dad tell me sooner?” Caspian asks. “That Tarima exists, that Ricca does?”
Taalviel crosses her arms, turns away from the crib. Bored already. “I think he was worried that if you were given too much time to think about it all, you’d have second thoughts.”
“Second thoughts about kidnapping a baby away from her biological mother? Right, because that would be completely out of line of me to do.”
Even though it’s dark, Caspian can tell she’s rolling her eyes.
“Come on,” she says. “Dad wants to talk to you. He says he has another assignment.”