Hadand Algara-Vayir (
deheldegarthe) wrote in
triangularity2015-02-05 11:06 pm
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AUs of our AUs: A timeline diverges, and a would-be queen leaves her kingdom behind.
Hadand knew he was here. She waited in the throne room, dressed in her family's green rather than the royal crimson, a black sash at her waist. Cama stood by in Shield Arm position, having had both the faith in Hadand and Evred and the air of authority necessary to take over the Guard and back Hadand's orders. When Evred finally reached the throne room, his arrival heralded as much by the people's gasps and murmurs as by any formal announcement, she saluted, fist to heart.
Everything blurred together after that. Evred got her alone at first opportunity, taking Hadand by the hands once they were safely shut into the royal nursery where they had grown up together. "You held the kingdom. There's nothing greater anyone could ask."
It struck her suddenly, how tall and straight he'd grown. Only his expressions distinguished him from his late father. There were new lines around his eyes since last she'd seen him. Even at twenty, he was old enough and wise enough that Hadand could easily trust him with a kingdom. She would trust Evred with anything, herself included. He could never care for her romantically, of course, and she stamped out any faint tendrils of attraction before they could take root and grow strong.
"Sponge--" she started, cutting herself off at use of the childhood nickname. "Evred, I know you have far more than your share of worries right now, but could I ask you to take on one more?" At his nod of assent, an unspoken 'of course' implied in the look that accompanied it, she continued. "There are whispers in the palace. Eyes follow me, and people stop speaking when I enter a room. I've no wish to burden you, but things changed after my father went home to Choread Elgaer. I fear it may mean more trouble coming."
He squeezed her hands briefly before releasing them. "Hadand," and he paused here to consider his words, "you know that I trust you completely, and know you too well to believe any testimony against you." The one bit of broken trust between them had been long-since forgiven, though never forgotten. Evred loved her like a sister. He had always trusted and looked up to her, in a way he never had his own sibling.
"That means there is false testimony," Hadand concluded, as he'd known she would. "Lies to further muddy the waters, as if things weren't bad enough. What do they say?"
Evred's mouth twisted. "You were implicated in my brother's assassination." At her look of outrage, he continued, "I doubt they can get you executed for it, but they will almost certainly have you imprisoned in the numbers they are amassing to back their story.
"Hadand, I want you to go. Like Inda." He never mentioned Inda aloud anymore, but Hadand knew her youngest brother was always in Evred's thoughts. The name alone was proof of his seriousness. "I want you out of reach of this, and there will be no honorable return to Iasca Leror. It is all I can do for you. You deserve to be Hadand-Gunvaer, and hailed as Deheldegarthe by the people. You earned that place. You defended the throne with your own two hands, and I had thought to ask..."
He trails off momentarily, before shaking his head. "Go to Lindeth Harbor. Sail on the ship with least ties to home."
Hadand had remained stoic throughout the speech, but that last word, home, broke her facade. Evred could see how lost she felt now, rather than just surmising it. She knew nothing of space travel. When Barend came home to speak of his time aboard ships, it sounded like nonsense to her. And Iasca Leror was, of course, her home. Hadand could recall no time when she had not known that she would be its queen one day. Her life was here. Her family, what little of it remained to her, was here.
Her family.
With Hadand gone, that would leave not a single one of her parents' children alive and within the kingdom. Her mother would be left with the two girls she'd raised to wed the two sons now lost to her, and not even any letters from a daughter in the royal city as consolation.
That was unacceptable. "If I go," she said quietly, "I need a promise from you. As my friend, my family, and my king."
"Anything," he promised, "if it is within my power to do."
Hadand breathed deep before she spoke again, chin jutting out stubbornly. "Bring my brother home. Swear it to me, and swear it to my mother. Write to my mother from time to time. Tell her I escaped safely. Pass along my love, if you can manage it." She reached out, very lightly touching Evred's arm. Her voice was very soft. "Inda's situation was nothing like mine. He refused a whipping after contrived boyhood dishonor, not because he was afraid but because he did not deserve it. Find a way to set it aside. The revelation of your uncle's other treachery should help. Find Inda, and set things right."
He said he would, and so, she left.
As luck would have it, Hadand found the most foreign ship of all, one whose ties were in an entirely different part of the galaxy. Hadand pled her case with Captain Janeway of the Voyager and was allowed aboard. It pained her to leave Iasca Leror and know that there would truly be no return, but at least now there can be no second guessing.
Hadand can never go home.
She tries to settle into her new life aboard ship, the greenest of new recruits but willing to learn. Hadand cautiously works her way into the crew trying to find a place and a purpose after losing the only ones she'd known.
Everything blurred together after that. Evred got her alone at first opportunity, taking Hadand by the hands once they were safely shut into the royal nursery where they had grown up together. "You held the kingdom. There's nothing greater anyone could ask."
It struck her suddenly, how tall and straight he'd grown. Only his expressions distinguished him from his late father. There were new lines around his eyes since last she'd seen him. Even at twenty, he was old enough and wise enough that Hadand could easily trust him with a kingdom. She would trust Evred with anything, herself included. He could never care for her romantically, of course, and she stamped out any faint tendrils of attraction before they could take root and grow strong.
"Sponge--" she started, cutting herself off at use of the childhood nickname. "Evred, I know you have far more than your share of worries right now, but could I ask you to take on one more?" At his nod of assent, an unspoken 'of course' implied in the look that accompanied it, she continued. "There are whispers in the palace. Eyes follow me, and people stop speaking when I enter a room. I've no wish to burden you, but things changed after my father went home to Choread Elgaer. I fear it may mean more trouble coming."
He squeezed her hands briefly before releasing them. "Hadand," and he paused here to consider his words, "you know that I trust you completely, and know you too well to believe any testimony against you." The one bit of broken trust between them had been long-since forgiven, though never forgotten. Evred loved her like a sister. He had always trusted and looked up to her, in a way he never had his own sibling.
"That means there is false testimony," Hadand concluded, as he'd known she would. "Lies to further muddy the waters, as if things weren't bad enough. What do they say?"
Evred's mouth twisted. "You were implicated in my brother's assassination." At her look of outrage, he continued, "I doubt they can get you executed for it, but they will almost certainly have you imprisoned in the numbers they are amassing to back their story.
"Hadand, I want you to go. Like Inda." He never mentioned Inda aloud anymore, but Hadand knew her youngest brother was always in Evred's thoughts. The name alone was proof of his seriousness. "I want you out of reach of this, and there will be no honorable return to Iasca Leror. It is all I can do for you. You deserve to be Hadand-Gunvaer, and hailed as Deheldegarthe by the people. You earned that place. You defended the throne with your own two hands, and I had thought to ask..."
He trails off momentarily, before shaking his head. "Go to Lindeth Harbor. Sail on the ship with least ties to home."
Hadand had remained stoic throughout the speech, but that last word, home, broke her facade. Evred could see how lost she felt now, rather than just surmising it. She knew nothing of space travel. When Barend came home to speak of his time aboard ships, it sounded like nonsense to her. And Iasca Leror was, of course, her home. Hadand could recall no time when she had not known that she would be its queen one day. Her life was here. Her family, what little of it remained to her, was here.
Her family.
With Hadand gone, that would leave not a single one of her parents' children alive and within the kingdom. Her mother would be left with the two girls she'd raised to wed the two sons now lost to her, and not even any letters from a daughter in the royal city as consolation.
That was unacceptable. "If I go," she said quietly, "I need a promise from you. As my friend, my family, and my king."
"Anything," he promised, "if it is within my power to do."
Hadand breathed deep before she spoke again, chin jutting out stubbornly. "Bring my brother home. Swear it to me, and swear it to my mother. Write to my mother from time to time. Tell her I escaped safely. Pass along my love, if you can manage it." She reached out, very lightly touching Evred's arm. Her voice was very soft. "Inda's situation was nothing like mine. He refused a whipping after contrived boyhood dishonor, not because he was afraid but because he did not deserve it. Find a way to set it aside. The revelation of your uncle's other treachery should help. Find Inda, and set things right."
He said he would, and so, she left.
As luck would have it, Hadand found the most foreign ship of all, one whose ties were in an entirely different part of the galaxy. Hadand pled her case with Captain Janeway of the Voyager and was allowed aboard. It pained her to leave Iasca Leror and know that there would truly be no return, but at least now there can be no second guessing.
Hadand can never go home.
She tries to settle into her new life aboard ship, the greenest of new recruits but willing to learn. Hadand cautiously works her way into the crew trying to find a place and a purpose after losing the only ones she'd known.
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"Is Paris giving you a hard time?" he jokes, though a note of concern lies underneath his tone. Harry is a good person to have around to curb some of Paris' more... eccentric qualities. The Harry Kim: Bullshit MeterTM is the best accessory for dealing with Tom Paris. "Just don't get him started on things like Captain Proton."
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Years of bearing other people's expectations haven't fostered much willingness to ask for help. Hadand is stubbornly self-sufficient because she always needed to be, and she copes with whatever she faces. The fact that Chakotay offers more than she's used to in every respect, not just romantically, will take some adjustment. She'll probably always insist on handling her own problems unless she's already tried and failed.
"Besides, how much trouble could Tom get me into, when a single look at Harry's face is nearly always enough to give away his stings?" Sting is Marlovan slang for pranks and practical jokes, so commonplace that Hadand doesn't stop to think about whether she's used the term before with Chakotay, or whether it might need explanation.
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Her question makes him laugh lightly before he tilts his head a little but. He can guess at what she means, he thinks, but this sounds like something he will want clarification with. "Stings?"
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"Stings are... jokes, but more often through actions rather than words. Like little boys putting eggs in the shoes of all the guards and then making sure an alarm is sounded. Or putting something in the food that dyes everyone's teeth green temporarily. Tom sticks with words, though I'll be in trouble if I act on the wrong ones." Nothing dangerous, just very embarrassing.
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"So would what Paris does be more like barbs?" he asks jokingly. Ensign Kim will undoubtedly prevent any terrible mishaps and if not, Chakotay will have them both up for the most unpleasant duty on the ship for a full week as a deterrent for future transgressions.
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"I fit in better since you spoke to Lieutenant Tuvok on my behalf. And all the time you've spent with me helped." She's grateful the Voyager is the sort of ship that expects everyone to contribute according to their own strengths. Hadand wouldn't know what to do with herself otherwise.
Grinning, she counters, "Pinpricks, maybe. No real harm in them."
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Who knew he was such a secret softy?
"Good. Wouldn't want them to actually hurt." And he's glad that she fits in better now, glad that the crew seems to be giving her a fair shake. That's all he can ask right now. "Now that that's out of the way, we should think about what we want to do for dinner. And the rest of the evening."
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If Chakotay wants to wait a little longer, postponing that until the two of them have had a little more time to settle into the new relationship between them, she won't fault him for it. Hadand is sure that gossip has already spread through the ship like a brushfire, of course. It's just a matter of publicly displaying their feelings in front of the rest of the crew. Both she and Chakotay are clearly affectionate enough that it will be obvious to anyone with eyes. She expects plenty of good-natured teasing the next time the two of them share a meal in the mess hall.
Squeezing his hand, Hadand smiles reassuringly. She would be happy with another night to themselves or one shared with friends. Whatever Chakotay chooses, his company is already exactly what she was hoping for.
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"I think, in the effort of quelling more gossip than has already been spread, we should probably think about taking dinner in the mess hall tonight," he suggests reluctantly. "I would much rather have you here all to myself, but I know Tom Paris will have wild ideas if we don't show up."
Wild ideas indeed.
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She'll see about making some of those wild ideas realities once he does.
Drawing back, Hadand slips a hand back into Chakotay's. The gesture isn't second nature to her, at least not in public. It's partly the fact that no one can draw knives with her hands occupied, and partly that she could never be seen depending on anyone. If he wants to keep her hand when they leave her quarters, Chakotay will have to hold onto it.
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"I look forward to it," he says simply, leaning down to kiss her one last time before they head off to indulge the gossips. He isn't used to public displays, either, so he will let her drop his hand once they leave.
When they enter the mess hall, they find a celebration already in progress. Hawaiian-themed to keep it PG for Naomi Wildman. But the message is clear to Chakotay as soon as they step in. Tom Paris walks up and casually adorns each of them with leis.
"Congratulations," he says simply in that tone that always spells trouble. "Hope you enjoy the party."
Chakotay groans.
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She expected teasing. She did not expect a party. Hadand bursts out laughing when Tom approaches to congratulate them. With a look around the party, she asks innocently, "Are the flowers another human custom I ought to know about?"
Hadand has a feeling those are a joke on Tom's part, nothing to do with a more widespread custom. She'll play along for a minute, though, the smile she's stifling evident around her eyes.
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"Ask Harry," Chakotay says, eyeing B'Elanna as she sidles up to him. He has a feeling he's about to get bombarded by his best friend and he would really rather not have B'Elanna ask him things like why he didn't tell her first with Hadand nearby to tease him red in the face.
This is going to be the longest dinner hour ever.
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"Are you trying to get rid of me, Chakotay?" she starts, seeing right through his real goal. Merriment is obvious in her face and voice as she nods a greeting to B'Elanna. "I would never begrudge you time to yourself with a friend, so that almost seems like a diversionary tactic."
In case Harry could hear, Hadand grins his way and waves hello to assure him it wasn't a slight. She'll be happy to stop by and check in on the second-most dismayed guest at this party in a little while, if he doesn't come over first.
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"Like you told me when you and Paris started making out in the maintenance shafts?" he shoots back.
"That was different," she retorts.
"Right, because we were all being pushed around by invisible aliens performing experiments on us."
It sounds utterly ridiculous, more so because they know it's true, and neither of them can keep a straight face after that. B'Elanna leans in so both Chakotay and Handand can hear. "At least you two didn't get lectured by the captain while she'd had a week-long migraine."
Chakotay snickers in spite of himself, grinning at Hadand. None of this answers her question but maybe it'll give him a little bit of a headstart in dealing with how to answer. Hopefully before B'Elanna takes over.
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She lets them wind down and then lets Chakotay off the hook to actually answer. He may wish she had kept her attention on him soon enough. Instead, she turns to B'Elanna and tells her, "In his defense, he didn't have much chance to tell you. I caught him off guard last night."
She doesn't intend to put on a show for the whole crew gathered to laugh at them, but Hadand won't avoid contact with Chakotay either. A light, affectionate touch to his arm punctuates her soft teasing, "I thought kissing him the only reasonable response to a love story, but Chakotay seemed very surprised by it."
Very pleasantly surprised, if his response was anything to go by. Then everything that came after the kissing... it felt inevitable. There was no separating Hadand from Chakotay if he was willing to have her.
One other thing caught her attention in that exchange, and Hadand suppresses a grin. "Ours wasn't the first lecture Captain Janeway has given, then?"
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"Oh, you gave her one of your stories?" she chides. "And you didn't expect anything to happen?"
"I didn't want to assume!" he protests, feeling childish.
"So selfless, Chakotay. It's a good thing one of you takes charge."
A smirk meets his groan.
"That's what the party's about, you know," B'Elanna continues, leaning towards Hadand despite any attempt Chakotay gives to stop her. "It's an Earth custom from a place called Hawaii. These flower necklaces are called leis. What you two did last night has a similar name."
"B'Elanna..."
It's no use and he knows it. Her smirk widens.
"Congratulations, you two. You got laid."
Chakotay lifts a hand to his face. What he wouldn't give for the ability to tunnel his way out of here.
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Hadand's mouth quirks in amusement at Chakotay's protests, silent and otherwise, and when B'Elanna offers her that bit of Earth slang, she bursts out laughing.
The sight of Chakotay in much the same posture as Harry was when they came in does nothing to dampen her humor.
"Thank you, B'Elanna," she says, completely unembarrassed. "I think the occasion is worth celebrating, I just didn't expect the whole crew to agree with me."
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Chakotay had known they were getting Naomi in on things. He had just known.
"I think I'll leave you two to your gossip," he mutters, deciding that he and Harry Kim have a lot more in common right now. It might be better to let B'Elanna and Hadand talk out of his earshot.
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"I'd like to get to know Naomi," Hadand says thoughtfully. "I am fond of children, and if she's so supportive while I'm still a near stranger, I ought to thank her."
Don't worry, she won't scandalize the little girl with the kinds of jokes she'd tell B'Elanna.
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“Don’t worry about him. By tomorrow, he’ll be laughing at this whole thing.” He will. She has no doubts that he will.
“Naomi is here. Her mom couldn’t convince her to stay away.” B’Elanna smirks, glancing through the crowd. “There she is. Over by Tom.”
Naomi is currently standing on one of the couches in the corner of the Mess Hall, talking animatedly with Tom and a couple other crew members. Looking back to Hadand, B’Elanna smirks. “Want to meet her now or should I arrange a chance meeting?”
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Hence her utter lack of embarrassment.
She grins. "Now is as good a time as any."
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"Naomi, this is Hadand."
"I remember seeing you," Naomi comments, offering a hand to shake. "I'm Naomi Wildman, Captain's Assistant. You're Commander Chakotay's special someone."
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Hadand and Chakotay hadn't gotten around to discussion of terminology, and she takes Naomi's hand firmly in her own warm and calloused one. With an amused smile down at the girl, she replies, "I suppose so. Is that the preferred term for it?"
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Naomi is almost the picture of innocence. Almost. If that mischievous smirk weren't on her face, it might work better. "That's all they let me call you," she clarifies, knowing well that there are other adult terms everyone else uses. "He loves you. Anyone can tell. The important question is, do you love him?"
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