mayest: (๐ŸŽ๐Ÿ‘๐Ÿ” โ€”)
แด„แดษดsแด›แด€ษดแด›ษชษด โ€” แด‹ษชษดษข แดา“ แดส€ษดแด‡า“สŸแดœแด‡ส€. ([personal profile] mayest) wrote in [community profile] ornefluer2024-04-11 10:40 pm
altogether: (pic#17747377)

[personal profile] altogether 2025-04-09 03:54 am (UTC)(link)
[ Fortunately, Enger isnโ€™t one to take dismissal poorly. She dips her chin and returns inside ahead of the group, quietly eager to be out of the cold. Tsera and her scowl are only just behind.

But a royal entourage takes time to greet, and even more time to settle. Enger stays out of the way a-purpose, joining Madame Thorhauge in her parlour for mid-morning tea and conversation—language lessons, by way of conversational practice, although the madame is kind enough not to call it that—before retiring back to her rooms once the flurry has abated. (Princess and retainer both remain sensitive to every sound, every muffled voice and footfall.)

At the appropriate hour, a servant hand delivers a written message to Constantinโ€™s rooms. Itโ€™s sealed with a wax stamp depicting three stylised cresting waves and seven stars dotted in the space above, but written on borrowed stationery. The Thorhauge watermark is a bit unsightly, yes, but it can hardly be helped. The message itself is concise, bordering on austere, and painstakingly written in crisp calligraphy. While Engerโ€™s spoken Orneord might be a touch fumbling in places, the only accusation one can make of her written Orneord is an uncanny, careful formality. Perfection, but alien.

In it, she requests sitting down for a conversation. Perhaps over lunch or tea, although she understands that heโ€™s quite busy and will endeavour not to take up too much of his valuable time. Signed, Enger Khanal. No title; no national identifier to cling like burrs to a hemline.

If the seal is broken upon delivery, it will not be Engerโ€™s doing. But sheโ€™s purposeful in writing nothing curious, nothing that wandering eyes could find fault or opportunity in. It would be far odder for her to ignore him, after all.

Besides, if he declines to reply, thereโ€™s always dinner that evening, and however many extra plates the Governor will be accommodating. ]
altogether: (pic#17808566)

[personal profile] altogether 2025-04-27 03:03 am (UTC)(link)
[ The theatrics of dinner with a sitting king nearly catch her off guard, compared to the previous nights. Tsera being banished to eat with the servants isnโ€™t terribly new, but it does make Enger even more acutely aware of the lack of spacing between words of casual speed and that Ornefluer custom uses twice as many utensils as sheโ€™s used to.

Servants shuffle around, removing warming dishes and delivery refills of bread and butter, popping corks on bottles. When one takes the liberty of setting a fine cloth napkin on Engerโ€™s lap, she nearly flinches.

The first course passes by. Smiling beatifically between dainty bites, Enger spends much of it in her own head.

For example:
Donโ€™t reach over people. No, donโ€™t reach for things at all. Let the servants curate your meal.
Pull your sleeve up, Mistress Thorhauge already called your blackwork barbaric.
This fork, not that one. No, that one.
Itโ€™s just oil made of olives. Yes, itโ€™s delicious. Calm down. You donโ€™t want a repeat of the butter incident.
But not a drop is spilled, not a hair turned nor fumble made into a fracas. The conversation proceeds without much interest in her for the first little while; and sheโ€™s rather relieved by it, particularly when her hands stop growing clammy at every unseen entrance over her shoulder or footsteps behind her back. In fact, the only other person who doesnโ€™t seem to regard the staff as pleasantly invisible is the minister of intelligence. More than once, she notes his eyes seem to be everywhere at once with nary an untoward flicker of an eyelash.

It is only when the entree is served that sheโ€™s drawn into the conversation. And by drawn into, we mean made the focal point of.

Evidently, they had been talking about religion. Several words and even more references escaped her, but when the Bishop of Fluer inquires about sending apostles to Iskander to help spread the library of God, she inclines her head calmly. ]


I am sure there are many back home who would greatly appreciate a sharing of ideas, your Excellency. But, Iskanderโ€™s situation being what it is, I could not in good conscience accept your apostles when I cannot guarantee their safety in the crossing.

[ Itโ€™s even true. Regardless of the Bishopโ€™s inquiry making her teeth feel sore with its benign presumptions.

He seems to accept that response, and proceeds to describe how he would be happy to send a trunk full of literature—Bibles, he calls them—for her to have distributed among her countrymen.

She smiles like he and she are the best friends in the world. ]


I am honoured you trust me to escort something so dear to you, your Excellency.

[ Anyway, whatโ€™s the rest of the table doing? ]
Edited 2025-04-27 03:04 (UTC)