Author's note: This particular chapter involves no actual sex. If you want something with more immediate gratification, I recommend any of the other chapters.
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Magnus led the way through the camp, now clad in a suit of pristine Praetorian armor, more ceremonial than his usual attire. Whereas the original was sleek and refined in its simplicity, this one was crafted to a more imposing form. Large pauldrons adorned with dark gold filigree bestowed a regal, commanding presence, while the breastplate molded his chest into a vision of unyielding strength. A blood-scarlet cape hung from his shoulders, held in place by crests etched with his personal sigil—a twining ouroboros.
Lilah trailed some paces behind him, with Daegon at her back and Saphir at her side. The chain linking her shackles jingled as she moved.
Imperial soldiers around them were at work pitching tents and putting the camp back into order. Seeing the progress they had made over the course of barely three days gave Lilah a sinking feeling in her chest— a deep sense of how futile the escape effort had been.
The men watched Magnus pass with weary and respectful expressions, but when their gazes moved over to Lilah, she could feel the tone of their attention shift. After Saphir cleaned her up, he had dressed her in a loose, gauzy black robe which offered only the thinnest veneer of modesty. She might have been anxious in the face of these leering, hungered expressions at one point, but now her senses felt dull, her body sore and relaxed from Magnus' attention.
They reached a tent Lilah hadn't seen before, larger and more rectangular than the rest, off-white in color where the others were red. A pair of guards lifted the curtain for them to walk through. Lilah bit the inside of her cheek, hard enough to distract herself from worrying about what lay ahead.
On the other side was cacophony.
An array of imperials stood in a loose semi-circle around the center of the tent, where guards were struggling with a captive in the throes of violent resistance.
"—The bitch bit me!" one of the soldiers was shouting, gripping his hand.
Lilah was not surprised to see Elspeth behind him with a feral expression, spitting fury at everyone and everything around her and fighting against no fewer than five guards who fought to wrestle a gag into her mouth.
The Legatus turned and acknowledged them. "Magnus!" he said, spreading his arms and speaking loudly over the racket. As he moved forward to greet Magnus warmly, Lilah took in the sight of the others in the tent. The three Praetors apart from Magnus were there, each dressed in a slight variation of the armor he wore, and each of them returned her glance. There was Cato, with his mocking green eyes, golden hair and light bronze skin. Across from him stood Ajax, taller than the rest, umber-skinned, and with a stern thoughtfulness in his repose. But the one that drew Lilah's attention the most was the woman. Ariadne, pale-skin and raven-haired, and somehow even more stoic than Magnus—a winter goddess, so striking that she was the only one Lilah didn't tear her eyes away from on instinct. And indeed Ariadne was the one who looked away first, addressing the guards who held Elspeth.
"Take her to the processing tent," she instructed, before lowering her hand toward something at her side. Only then did Lilah notice the panther tucked behind the woman's legs, shifting and licking its paw. "Keep her apart from the other captives. If I hear of her harming any of them, I shall hold you accountable."
They obeyed, doing what they could to contain the prisoner as they led her toward the opening of the tent. But the moment Elspeth noticed Saphir as she passed by, her struggles grew threefold and she threw herself at him, abandoned from any consideration for her bindings or captors. Nonetheless, they held.
"I take it she hasn't given us anything useful?" Magnus asked Ariadne, watching them haul Elspeth by even as she turned her face to snarl at him as well.
"Not unless you have a use for mindless belligerence," Ariadne replied, her voice almost void of inflection.
"...Not any more," said Magnus, with a sideways glance at Saphir. This seemed to infuriate Elspeth more, but Magnus only stared back, unflinching until they finished dragging Elspeth out of the tent. The small crowd that remained went quiet.
Hesiod turned his attention back to Magnus. "I owe you an apology, my friend. You warned me not to have the party." He put his hand on Magnus' back and led him near to a table close by. Lilah noticed, even amidst the oppressive crowding of the soldiers around her, that he had brought Magnus slightly further away from her than the other Praetors stood.
"And it seems that we also owe you for the capture of MacCrannach's regiment," Hesiod added, his voice turning brisk.
"—But not MacCrannach himself," injected Cato, standing with his arms crossed on the other side of the tent, his green eyes glinting as they moved from Magnus to Lilah. "I understand you failed to retrieve him. Foiled by your own pleasure slave, Magnus?" He tutted, the closest to openly mocking Magnus that Lilah had ever seen from anyone. Something about it made her even more anxious than before.
"It is curious," said Hesiod, his mild tone defusing some of the crackling tension Cato's barbs had introduced into the atmosphere of the tent. He looked Lilah over intently. "I was rather surprised to hear of your desperate gambit, my dear. Is this a product of war, or had there always been a rogue behind those starflower eyes?"
Lilah had no response for this, but Hesiod didn't wait for one. He motioned for Daegon to push her toward the center of the tent, before he moved to face her again.
"Tell me," he said, his voice lowering to a near whisper, "Why did you kill your commander?"
She swallowed quietly before answering. Every other time she had been the center of focus among imperials, her skin had felt electric with tension and fear. Now she only felt the slightest static. Even that much surprised her—before leaving Magnus' sky-ship she wouldn't have believed that she had nerves left to test.
"He had intelligence that could have been used against Illythiel if it fell into your hands," she said simply. "If
he
fell into your hands."
"One man, for the fate of a million?" Hesiod inquired with an artificially mild expression, searching her face. "Such cold arithmetic!"
"Isn't that expected, in war?" Lilah asked.
"For ones such as these, perhaps," Hesiod returned, gesturing to indicate the military officers that surrounded them. "But much less so from the lovely nurse they tell romantic stories about."
Lilah shrugged. "They would tell the stories less if they didn't idealize appearances."
He tilted his head curiously. "Is that what you think your renown comes from?" he inquired. "You being pretty?"
She lowered her head, a slight and solemn gesture, and looked at the plain black carpet beneath her feet. "There are other medics who do as much as I do and don't get nearly as much credit. It's how I look to them, I suppose, and the stories they like to tell," she said, her voice weary.
"Ah, yes. I've heard one or two in passing. Tales of romance, of adventure, of salvation, and friendship, and sex. I imagine very little if any of it is true. And yet they keep telling those stories. Do you ever wonder why?"
"Soldiers need inspiring stories to keep them fighting."
"To keep them killing. And remind them of what they're killing for..." Hesiod's eyes glinted with renewed intent. "Political considerations and logistics can put a weapon in a man's hands, but it's the story you tell him that will compel him to use it. So tell me, Miss Claremont, what story did you kill for?"
A shudder danced along her skin, and her throat felt tight as she tried to answer, "I...,"
"—Look at me, Miss Claremont," he interrupted, but his voice was strangely gentle, and when she obeyed, his expression was appreciative, as though he was pleased by her acquiescence.
"From now on, I want you to look at me whenever you speak."