Chapter Thirty-Nine: Choices
With Wynne, Morrigan, and Zevran all exhausted and Leliana still asleep, we decided to delay travel for another day to allow for recovery. I climbed into our tent, grimacing at the two new holes in the canvas. Aedan, Alistair, Sten, and Shale set up some sort of watch schedule, and after a few minutes to fix trampled tents and settle in, every quieted down and slept. I cuddled into my bedroll and was asleep in moments despite being alone in the tent.
When I woke, the sun was shining fully down on the canvas, and the air inside the tent was stiflingly warm. Sitting up and scooping my tangled brown hair into a quick pony tail, I crawled out of the tent in my night dress, too worried to care who saw me. Alistair was sitting right outside, and he smiled sweetly at me as I emerged. A quick look around showed Morrigan sitting by the fire making poultices, Aedan and Zevran leaning casually back against a fallen tree trunk talking quietly, and Sten and Shale, still vigilant, watching the woods suspiciously. The mage was awake, huddled in a ball near Morrigan, with Prince still staring at him balefully. Of Leliana and Wynne, there was no sign.
I plopped down beside Alistair, leaning in to rest my head on his shoulder. He handed me a hunk each of bread and jerky, and I took them gratefully.
"You okay? You look tired. You should have woken me."
"I'm fine, love. Just sick of worrying. We need to figure out what to do with him." He nodded in the direction of the young elf cowering by the fire. "You should have seen his face when he realised both of us were templars. I thought he'd soil himself."
I allowed myself a brief moment of satisfaction, and almost immediately felt guilty. I shrugged and changed the subject.
"Wynne? Leli?"
"Wynne was out a few minutes ago. She told me she's keeping Leliana asleep to help her recover. She went back in there just before you came out."
I sighed with relief. "Thank God. If she...if we hadn't..." I was unable to voice the terrible thought of a world without Leliana. Alistair wrapped his arm around me and squeezed slightly.
"I know. We all love her too. But she's going to be fine. And by the way, that thing you did last night was amazing. I'm impressed."
I heard a rustle, and Aedan and Zevran appeared, settling in beside us. Aedan squeezed my hand. "Me too, little sister. You're amazing."
I blushed crimson, stuttering, trying to demur. "I didn't...it's not...Look, any of us would have done it if they knew how."
"Yep. But no one else did, did they? I'm assuming that's how you saved Theron and Tomas?" Aedan squeezed again.
I nodded, and Alistair kissed the top of my head. The blush just wouldn't go away. I was embarrassed by their praise, embarrassed to be embarrassed, which just made it worse. I ducked my head and tried to interrupt the vicious cycle of blushiness.
Zevran spoke up. "How did you even know we were under attack, cara mia? Even our lovely Orlesian Bard did not realise until it was too late."
I giggled. "It's your fault, really, Zev. I woke up and had this itchy feeling down my spine...sort of like when Aedan makes you follow me, or when you try to play pranks on me while I'm meditating. Apparently living with a Crow has given me a sixth sense about these things."
I grinned as Zevran puffed out his chest. "Excellent! Then I shall claim the victory as my own, yes? Without me, you never would have known what that sensation was."
We all laughed, but I could see the underlying insecurity in Zev's smile. He was feeling responsible for Leliana's injury, thinking that as an assassin, he should have known we were about to be ambushed. I wanted to hug him and tell him it wasn't his fault, but I knew acknowledging it would only make things worse. Alistair, in his own endearing fashion, solved the dilemma for me. He held his hand out to Zevran, and when the surprised assassin took it, Alistair pumped it enthusiastically.
"You can claim any victory you want. Last night you saved Leliana's life and nearly ran yourself to death doing it. You have our gratitude, and my respect. Thank you, Zev. Truly."
The shock on Zevran's face was priceless, and I wished I had a camera. Aedan grinned at Alistair, pleased, and I chuckled softly, nuzzling my face into the brawny shoulder of the man I loved. I was impressed; in the game, it hadn't seemed like Alistair had the maturity to recognise Zevran's worth underneath all the Antivan's bluster, and I was amazed at this more confident Alistair. Duncan's death damaged him so deeply -- I didn't realise exactly how deeply until now. I shuffled to my knees, leaning over to draw Alistair into a soft, loving kiss, then pulling away and climbing to my feet.
"I'm going to go check on Wynne and Leli."
The three men smiled and nodded, and I padded over to the tent the two women shared. Passing Morrigan, I smiled brightly at her and she nodded back, a small smile of her own looking so uncomfortable on her serious face. I called out quietly, and then entered when Wynne invited me in. Leliana was still asleep in her bedroll, but she'd recovered her colour and looked comfortably normal. I smiled at Wynne and sat beside her; the mage returned my smile. When she spoke, it was soft, but she didn't whisper, and I inferred that we wouldn't disturb Leli with a conversation.
"How is she?"
"She is fine, actually. I was just thinking about dispelling the sleep spell. She should be fully recovered, though she'll need a bit of extra rest for the next few days."
I nodded. "How are you feeling?"