Please note that this story will be several Chapters long, with a focus on world-building and slow romance. If you are after a quick fix this is probably not for you, but if you would like to appreciate a detailed story then please read on. Enjoy!
Princess Caera dragged her gaze reluctantly upon the throng that gathered before her throne. As a few baleful eyes met her gaze, she realised with an unpleasant jolt that almost everybody in the room shared her disdain for the ceremony that would soon be upon her.
"The Swearing of the Oaths shall now commence!" screeched her elderly herald Berfard, as if he had sensed her hurry to get all of this over with. Caera supposed that Berfard thought himself in fine voice this morning, but sadly she knew the elderly servant's days of magnificent heralding had been behind him since before she was born, some twenty-three years ago.
"The Lords may now approach her ladyship!" warbled Berfard tremulously, his rotund belly wobbling along with every syllable.
"Nice of him to ask my permission," thought Caera sullenly, "not that it would change anything if he did."
Caera stole a quick glance around the crowded hall, inducing another pang of longing in her heart for the days when she was just a carefree Princess, and her Mother and Father were still alive. The hall had been brighter then, with countless candles sparking in every corner, where now only stubs sat feebly attempting to stay lit. The ladies of the court looked downcast, none were coyly trying to catch the eye of a young man, or gossiping to one another, but simply lurked statuesque. Lords and men who had gathered did not crowd around to slap one another on the back and guffaw at ribald jokes, but shuffled from foot to foot, with half an eye already looking to the stables for their ride home. When foreign raiders had stolen the lives of her parents, they not only robbed the castle of its monarchs, but the kingdom of its spirit.
Caera was shaken from her reverie by a pair of muddy boots troubling the floorboards before her.
"The Lord Hanley of Greenwater, my Lady," intoned Berfard, waving a hand in the vague direction of the boots' occupant.
"I swear to serve the crown this day, and to the end of my days," a stout voice growled.
Caera looked up into the weather-beaten face of Lord Hanley, and did her best to summon a smile. Lord Hanley had long been a friend to her parents, and she looked up to him as she might a kindly uncle. Lord Hanley leant forward to complete the official part of the ritual, taking her hand and placing a whiskery kiss upon it.
"I'm truly sorry for your loss, my Lady," squeezing her hand as he stood. Hanley stumped back towards the crowd to make way for the next supplicant, leaving Caera with a small reminder that not everything in the castle was as bleak as it might seem.
Despite the gesture of support from Lord Hanley, Caera's black mood persisted as she suffered the ceremony that was now hers to fulfil, despite the fact the Lords had not seen fit to officially make her queen. Countless lords tiptoed up to her and mumbled the dutiful words, then kissed the air around her knuckles before dashing back into the safety of the crowd. If any of these lords truly wanted to be there in her court, he had yet to reveal himself. Caera lifted her chin to scowl at the latest intruder on her dais, but her expression froze even before her brow could furrow.
A tall knight stood before her, a small smile playing across his lips. Caera thought he seemed familiar, but could not place where she might have met him. He couldn't be a regular visitor to the castle, she definitely would have taken notice if a man like this had crossed her path. She took in his nut-brown hair, gently framing a slender face, then was captured by the piercing gaze of his ice-grey eyes. They seemed to bore into her, as if he was drinking in the details of her appearance, almost unblinkingly evaluating her. She felt his eyes rove downwards from her face, to take in the rest of her body, which was currently slumped awkwardly to one side of the throne. The realisation that she had just come across perhaps the most strikingly handsome man she had ever met was enough to jolt her upwards into what she hoped was a more princess-like posture of understated poise.
Having reached her feet, the knight's gaze reversed its journey, tracing a lustful line up her slender legs, past her waist, and settling on her face after the merest of pauses upon her breasts. Caera felt her face flush, accompanied by a strange quivering in her belly. She had never been so brazenly appraised by such a striking man before, and it was inducing some very unfamiliar feelings within her.
"Sir Torven of Huntsmark, my Lady." Berfald had revealed the identity of the knight before her, but it took a moment before Caera heard his words. Huntsmark, but wasn't Lord Eston ruler of Huntsmark? Unless old Eston has passed away leaving...no, it couldn't be, surely it wasn't...
"Torvi?" The word slipped out of her mouth without her permission, but the effect on Torven was immediate. He beamed a great smile, and the granite marbles of his eyes lit up in an instant, no less piercing but infinitely warmer. A ripple of laughter at her outburst went almost completely unnoticed by Caera, transfixed as she was by the towering man before her.
"I was wondering when you might recognise me, my Lady." His voice was deep, and seemed to hum and resonate with every syllable. The flash of his smile had precipitated a fresh wave of redness in her cheeks, and more alarmingly, a brief pang from between her legs. Caera's mind whirled, as she recalled the time she had spent with Torven long ago.
They had been just children back then, running wild through the castle. Whilst the adults attended balls and banquets, Caera, Torven, and the other children of lords and ladies had played games in the fields, swum in the moat, stolen fruit from the kitchens, and any number of other mischievous things that bored children could think of to do when let loose upon a castle. Looking at him now, Torven was almost unrecognisable.