Chapter 454: Change of Heart
There was a lot to be said about Marix BlueIce for the simple fact that her cousin, Kato Ka’BlueIce, was still alive. Even in a society like the Alraxian Empire, which was generally weaponless and not at all militant, what she and Faban Sunrunner had done years before would have easily warranted their deaths. Faban Sunrunner was in exile, with his clan on the other side of Alraxia, and constantly watched by a well armed contingent of Knights.
Kato, though, had remained in the Palace. She couldn’t help but think that she was alive still simply because it would cause more pain and anger than simply having killed her years before. Knowing Marix like Kato did...that wouldn’t have surprised her at all. The damned woman didn’t deserve anything she had...not her life, her position as Empress, and especially not her mate. Of course, Jyren was also just as angering to Kato, though she still felt strangely drawn to him...likely due to the temporary and weak link they had shared for a short time.
But what was the most infuriating of it all was those damned noises! She could hear them now, outside her window and down in one of the Palace’s many courtyards. She’d heard it for years in various forms...and it had only gotten worse.
It was laughing...the children laughing. Those two little jai who looked just like their parents and seemed to be everywhere in the Palace that Kato turned as a constant reminder! Kato didn’t hate the children...their parentage was not their fault, but she hated that they were always there. Always so...so damned happy! They were silver-eyed freaks just like their mother and shouldn’t have been anywhere near any of them...and yet...and yet somehow that didn’t matter to anyone anymore! The Tam’Day’U were all over the Palace now! They were the guards, even! Killers as guards!! As the Empress! Her children!
Kato growled and resisted the urge to kick the wall.
[Thank you.] the Palace, which was, as always, bored with the usual dutires of being...well...the Palace, was obviously paying attention to her.
But the violet-haired Alraxian woman just waved her hand at the wall and sat back on her bed. There would be four guards outside. There always were. And, of course, they all had the silver eyes. That was obviously on purpose. The only place she could be alone was in this small room that had been her’s for as long as she could remember. She didn’t get a new room with more space...but she didn’t need one. She was alone, and likely would remain that way for the rest of her life. Attempting to steal another Alraxian’s mate was a very scandalous act, and the fact that it had been a very popular soon-to-be Emperor that had been Kato’s target...well...not many in the Palace gave her anymore than a scowl even a decade later. That is, if they bothered to look at her.
But now...now something was bothering her more than the sounds of two happy children. In the pocket of the loose-fitting tunic she currently wore, was a small note she’d received not an hour earlier. It was on a kind of film-paper used by the Jendari, but the writing was Alraxian. It was a message that she didn’t want. It was a message from someone she didn’t ever want anything to do with again. And yet...somehow it brought a distant hope back. A hope that she could return to a position of at least slight respect...but...
But it was something like she’d seen before. Perhaps that was why it was so...unnerving. Times were changing, she knew that much. But they weren’t changing the way some wanted them to, or the way anyone expected. Truthfully, this was exactly the climate that would have been needed for it to work years ago. But that was...long ago. Kato, despite any other delusions, knew that this wasn’t possible anymore. The chance was gone. And yet...
Kato sighed.
She had two options. One was using the frequency that was written on that note and doing as it was asked. Well, not asked. Told. That was another problem. He always talked like he was in charge and yet he never did anything right. He needed her more than she needed him, especially now...and he was still a bastard. It was his fault it all went wrong in the first place. He wouldn’t just kill her. Noooo. That was too easy. Besides, she was too ‘important’ to just kill! Idiot.
Of course, Kato’s other option was equally annoying. She could give the note to someone who could do something about it. She could rat that manipulative little animal out. She could get revenge on him instead of trying to get it on Marix a second time. She could also, possibly, redeem herself at least a small amount and not be guarded every hour of every day. But...
* * * *
Navik Keros was enjoying another day with his grandchildren. Nights were difficult. Neither wanted to go to sleep, hoping for their mother or, worse, their father to tell them a story before they went to bed. It had even reached the point of asking for Tobias. Not to mention that they seemed to both wake up a great many times in the night wailing at the top of their little lungs. Their strength in the Force didn’t help, as it usually meant things were broken, too.
But days...during the day, all of that seemed to go away. Saaran and Andrea became the happy little children that they always were, playing with anything and anyone. Due to the fact that they’d been in Blackflame territory at his home for a few weeks, they were enjoying the Palace as if it was a brand new place again. The Palace, too, seemed to be enjoying the attention, shifting the outside walls in the courtyard into different shapes for the two little jai to jump around on and climb.
Navik sat under one of the large trees that was in the courtyard, smiling as he watched the two jumping and clawing their way up the random shapes the Palace was providing for them. They looked to be playing an intricate game of tag, but was slowly developing into ‘I can grab your tail before you grab mine’, and that meant he’d have to step in soon and put a stop to it before someone starting screaming. Usually it was Saaran, but that was because Andrea was...well...sneaky. Navik assumed she got that from her mother.
“Um...excuse me...”
The voice from behind him sounded both female and very timid. When Navik turned his head to see who it was, he was shocked at the latter observation. It was Kato Ka’BlueIce, who he knew only through the stories that Marix and Jyren had told him, none of which were positive. She was standing a couple of meters behind the tree, hands behind her back and shuffling her feet in the grass. Unlike the usual descriptions of her, she was not wearing a flowing dress or with a haughty expression on her face, nor was her hair in some odd, supposedly beautiful style. The latter part was Jyren’s addition in the description of her.
Instead, she wore a simple looking, loose green and blue tunic with a matching pair of trousers. Her violet hair simply hung behind her in no real style at all, and her tail was down, hovering just above the grass. But it was the look on her face that caught his attention...well, that and the four guards standing right behind her, all armed and watching her. She looked as the voice had sounded...timid...nervous, even.
Slowly, and with a slight groan, Navik managed to get to his feet. He gave another glance to the twins behind him, decided they’d survive without his eyes on them for a bit, and then turned back to Kato, “Yes?”
With great care, Kato reached into her pocket and retrieved an object. She did it slowly because the guards were watching for any sudden moves, and looked ready to simply kill her right there if she tried anything against the children or their current guardian. But what she retrieved was a small piece of film-paper and she handed it to Navik.
He raised an eyebrow, but took it and unfolded it a couple of times to the point where it was readable. It only took a moment before his eyes went wide and he looked back to her, “Who sent this?”
“Faban Sunrunner,” her answer was short, precise, and in the tone of voice that made it sound like it took a great deal of work to say it.
Biting his lower lip, Navik glanced at the note again, then realized there was an important question, “Why are you giving this to me?”
Kato had not yet worked this out. She’d spent the entire walk down to their courtyard trying to understand why she was doing it. Every time her answer was something about lessening the guards on her, getting back at least a little trust with her people, or something similar...but all of that felt...wrong. For some reason she didn’t want to lie because she truly wanted to know why.
And now, truly confronted with the question, she found herself speaking before the answer right away.
“Because it is the right thing to do.”