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Are Things Still Burning?

Summary:

Arabella is orphaned at the siege of la Valette castle, and while this means she can marry who she desires, it also is a downhill descent into war and grief.

Notes:

These chapters are going to be pretty chonky because I am writing this to be Arabella's canon story to round out Gilded Cage's au and... There's a lot to cover. Despite being an AU I'm going to keep this pretty canon compliant except for a couple major things.
1) Radovid's appearance — See my Radovid Rework on Nexus I redesigned him I can't its not happening none of my Radovid content uses his canon design
2) Stennis's appearance — CDPR has two separate appearances for Stennis canonically there. There's an entirely separate comic cutscene appearance, and I hate both his actual character model (bald) and his cutscene appearance WITH hair so I redesigned him.
3) Stennis's personality — CDPR contradicts themselves WILDLY on Stennis I've already mentioned the wildly different appearances depending on character model or cutscene but they ALSO can't decide who the fuck Stennis is and give him three half baked personalities instead of a solid character so I control Stennis's canon. That's it. End Credits.
4) Reason of State. I loathe it. I WILL be rewriting it. Its my fix it <3

Chapter 1: Regicide

Chapter Text

At this point the existence of bastard children surprised no one. In actuality the most surprising child of King Foltest of Temeria, son of Medell, was not the accused younger la Valettes. Nor was it Adda, even with her status as a former striga, and though Alva was not part of the court anymore a half elf daughter was also nothing of note. No, the most surprising child of Foltest with his copper spun curls, soft cheeks, and charming smile was the daughter of his late wife and twin sister of Henselt of Kaedwen.

Princess Arabella had never been one to shy away from the more masculine roles of what would be expected of her once she became Queen and at thirteen was now accompanying her father to the battlefield. Ballistae and catapults line the area as they siege the la Valette castle. Her hands are jittery, but she shakes it off. The Witcher had not left his tent which was also occupied by Triss and though she owed her leg to the sorceress Arabella had become wary of mages.

There were orders being shouted, the weaponry itself was loud, and everything was overwhelming. The sensory experience however did not stop her from catching a conversation. She turned to see her father and a Nilfgaardian ambassador. Her father smiled when he saw her.

"Rhenawedd! How's everything holding up?" He asks.

"The soldiers are fraught, but that shouldn't be too much of an issue. The siege tower is prepared for the assault today." She does not smile back, it is unneeded. She does, however, look at the Nilfgaardian ambassador. It does not add much to her nerves.

The witcher, late to the party, arrives and her father glances back to him. “Finally! Traitors of the realm boil tar on the walls while you dally with the royal advisor!”

“How may I assist you sire?” says the Witcher.

“We mount an assault today,” Her father informs. “And you’ll be at my side. Follow me gentlemen, let's not keep the traitors waiting.”

There is a large crash to the side of them but Arabella does not flinch, neither does her father. The Nilfgaardian however almost falls over.

"Sire, you said we were out of range,” the Nilfgaardian exclaims.

"That was a ballista, excellency. Its arm strengthened with bronze plates and strung with horsehair. It can propel heavy bolts up to a mile away. A deadly and very costly weapon," her father explains. "An experienced crew can cock and release two bolts each minute! Yet it has one flaw."

"Your Grace, please take cover!" The ambassador pleads.

"The recoil of the arms is so strong upon firing…" her father continues as if he had not heard the man. Their own ballistae releases a bolt. "That the weapon shifts. It simply cannot hit the same spot twice."

"I had no idea your grace was a learned military engineer." The Nilfgaardian says as he stands and the three of them continue on.

Arabella stays put for a moment but her father motions for her to follow. It takes a moment for her to catch up but she walks at his side proudly.

"I'm not, I gave the baroness those ballistae two years ago for her birthday," her father says coldly.

She snorts, "You know, I much prefer trebuchets, they're more effective against walls which are the main issue when it comes to sieging castles such as the traitor's. Historically the trebuchet used manpower to swing the arm, those were smaller to accommodate such. The trebuchets we are using follow a similar but less labour intensive model by using a counterweight to swing the arm, it serves a different purpose all together. The traction trebuchet, the smaller one using manpower, is used to disperse and kill infantry behind the armoured lines. Our trebuchets are for walls."

The ambassador blinks at her. "And where does her highness come about such knowledge?"

She smiled, "among my studies, unlike my father, military engineering is a fascinating subject to me and I spent some time with my uncle in Kaedwen learning about them firsthand."

Arabella notices behind her the Nilfgaardian slow to walk with Geralt and drop his voice to converse. She does not turn to look at them but slows to keep within earshot. Her father keeps going unbothered.

He walks up to the soldier, as he is prone to do, and announces himself with, "what do they call you soldier? Wait! You served with me at Brenna and our foray into the Pontar valley! Norman Sador, still an arbalist?"

"Yes sire! Fate has not been kind to me."

"Ha! Norman Sador, for your years of faithful service to the crown I appoint you decurion of the arbalists." He pats his shoulder and turns, motioning to the other two in his party. "Onwards gentlemen! No reason to dawdle."

Her father was always one to keep close attention on his surroundings, Arabella knew. She bounced on her heels lightly.

"Say father," she says as she walks next to him.

"Hmn?"

"I was thinking, you know, since I'm almost fourteen. Have you considered who I was to marry?"

Her father clasps his hands behind his back. "rhenawedd we've discussed this."

"I think an alliance with Redania would be mutually beneficial is all! After all…" she glances back to the Nilfgaardian ambassador.

"Not now Bells," he mutters.

The ambassador speaks up, "forgive my candour your majesty, but uh, I must ask: What fate awaits the royal bastards when…." He trails off.

Arabella flinches.

"They're my children," Foltest hisses, very characteristically lacking the patience for the implications. "If I hear ‘bastard’ one more time, someone's going to die. Painfully."

"Your Grace, forgive me, but the laws of succession are irrefutably clear."

"Excuse me? You would strip me of my right to the throne?" Arabella interjects before her father gets the chance to lose his temper.

"It's just…"

"Just what? I will be Queen and my siblings will lead lives where they don't have to suffer at the hands of a woman who means to use them as pawns on the board when they are deserving of more, what could you possibly have against that?" She smiles venomously.

"You're not married."

"And she's far too young for such considerations now. That is a future consideration, ambassador." Her father says bitingly. "Must I remind you that my grandmother, Bienvenu la Louve of Temeria, was Queen in her own right, not consort?"

"I still think-" Arabella says, trying to circle back to the conversation of marriage.

"You know my answer." He dismisses.

"But we could-"

For the first time in the conversation his tone to her goes sharp, "Don't argue with me Bells. I've made up my mind."

She sighs. "If you say so."

"Your Grace, might I request your permission to leave?" The ambassador asks.

Foltest smiles, "you have it."

Once the ambassador is out of earshot her father turns to Geralt. "Black ones in my camp before a battle? What has the world come to. Nothing would make me happier than returning his shrivelled head to Emhyr in a sack. But Triss Merigold insisted I be patient and courteous. Was I?"

Arabella bounces on her heels idly. "You lost it a little there at the end, father."

He glances over at her and scrunches his nose up at her teasingly. "Do you find yourself amusing?"

"Certainly!" She beams.

"Some days it feels like I am raising a royal jester and not the future Queen of Temeria," he rolls his eyes.

"A jester on the throne wouldn't be much different from now, oh I can hear it. Arabella of Temeria just like her father. Or not, we'll see how my scandal tally adds up."

He looks back at Geralt, "teenagers… you should feel lucky. Gah, buggar what folks say, they talk about Adda no end."

Arabella gave a pained smile. "Ah, Temerian rumours and gossip. If I were to change one thing, it'd be that."

"Not even Arabella is safe from it! Can you believe that? Her mother died in childbirth and she's the spitting image of me there's no denying it and still they talk and question." Foltest seethed.

"It's alright father, it's not that bad."

He frowns and shakes his head. "It's what it is, now for the battle. I want you at my side today, then you may go where you please."

"Thank you sire," says the Witcher.

He turns, "where are you aiming, imbecile?! Soldier! Spyglass."

Arabella sighs, "here we go again."

“What is going on up there? The gods! Count Etcheverry! Catch Bells.” He tosses the spyglass and Arabella catches it with ease. “Aim for the rogue with the red plume, not six months ago he swore eternal friendship to me!”

“Ah the joys of Temerian court,” the Princess mutters, looking through the spyglass.

“Quickly! How much higher?” Her father asks.

Arabella sighs, “one and a half degrees father.” She watches through the spyglass as the ballista bolt is launched and collides into it.

“Did we hit the bastard?” Foltest asks.

“You have so little faith in me? Even after my time in Kaedwen?” Arabella raises an eyebrow, “Of course we did father.”

“Ha! One less traitor! Time to attack. Follow me witcher.” He announces, not bothering to specify his daughter was to run after him. It was a given.

As they ascend the tower Foltest and the witcher discuss the Baroness’s fate. Her father was prepared to forgive the Baroness, it made Arabella’s blood boil. ‘They have tricked her, she doesn’t know what she’s doing and has been turned against me.’ It was almost desperate. She knew her father loved Maria Louisa, as much as that man could love anyone else. It was foolish. The words out of his mouth next however set her off the edge.

“Children need a mother.”

“I think I’m doing perfectly fine, as is Adda.” Arabella spits.

Foltest glances down at her, “perfectly fine? You wish to marry the King of Redania. Your mother would’ve had my head at such a notion.”

“You wished to marry your sister. I think you have no room to talk!” She does not shout, but the anger does bubble through in her voice. Her father just sighs.

They flood the walls. It causes blood to rush to Arabella’s ears, but she follows her father as ever.

“Lord Seuxen, you shall push for the centre isle and bring down that gate!” Her father orders.

“It's a good day to kill your majesty! Follow me, gentleman, for Temeria!” He cheers.

“Lord Swann, you and your men shall follow me. We must capture or otherwise deal with Aryan la Valette in order to break the defenders’ morale!” He announces.

Arabella watches, anxiously. Looming dread setting in with the battle.

 

 

Triss Merigold and the Witcher are standing next to her, Arabella realises. Something settles uncomfortably in her chest as she remembers promises made and forgotten by the Royal Advisor. The conversation between the Witcher and the Mage makes her roll her eyes and wish she was back home, tucked away in her study with books on monsters or archery.

“What of the Baron?” Yells one of the soldiers.

Her father pleas, the special forces shove the man over the side and lower the drawbridge. Out walks Vernon Roche, giving his report. It is all terribly trivial to the Princess. She just wants this siege to be done, to go home and nap in her bed with her down stuffed pillows and frog plushies.

Rhythmic flapping turns her attention away from her thoughts of soft feather beds and stuffed frogs that convene as a council to decide the fate of traitors—death obviously—and to a large beast.

“MOTHER MELITELE!” She shrieks.

Her father, knowing her fear and seeing the large monster himself, gives an order. “Cross! Quickly!”

“Protect the King!” Shouts Vernon, as if it needed to be said.

Arabella breaks out into a sprint. When she turns back the soldiers behind them have been squished and charred. She blinks. “I thought dragons were extinct…”

“Dragon! Take cover!” Orders a soldier.

“Before the brute turns my army to cinders!” Adds her father. In any other circumstance she’d roll her eyes and remark on how he was a drama queen, or well, King. But the Princess takes off in a sprint through the fighting and under cover to avoid the dragon.

“To the tower!” Orders Triss. “Back up! I’ll open the gate.”

She blasts a hole in it, Arabella makes the mistake of looking back. The sight of the dragon seizes her in fear and she runs after her father. The fear is not unwarranted, chunks of the tower fall around her, and she fears for a moment she will be squished but Triss nullifies the threat.

“The bridge is burning! Quickly this way!” Shouts Vernon. She doesn’t need to be told twice and takes off sprinting again. The dragon however sets itself in front of them. She grabs her fathers arm.

“Dad…”

Soldiers with ballistae fire at the dragon, missing but distracting it.

“Dad if we die here, I just want you to know I love you,” she says quietly.

Her father steadies her, “We’re not going to die.”

She’s not so sure.

 

 

Anaïs's auburn hair was pin-straight and browner than red but it was still red Arabella knew as she ran her fingers through it. She held the child to her chest shielding her from the pooling blood matting copper spun curls and empty ice blue eyes that had looked at her fondly moments earlier. Blood rushed in her ears, pulsing and making it hard to hear. The Witcher's hand set itself on her shoulder overtop a scar hidden from the world from the last time something like this had happened.

Guards flooded into the room, looking to the Dauphine for answers.

"Your Majesty, what happened?"

She blinked slowly.

"Your majesty-"

Oh, they were talking to her. "Arrest him."

The Witcher did not struggle, but betrayal flashed through his eyes for a split second. She remembered vividly the letter she'd gotten after the Redanian coronation with its description of empty steel grey eyes permanently stuck in betrayal and horror, crimson ichor matting raven hair. Blood pooled around the corpse, flashes of Adda’s hands stained red made her feel dizzy. I couldn’t tell where the blood stopped and my silk brocade began, said the letter. She blinked slowly, where did the blood stop and his heraldry begin?

She could taste bile in her mouth, but she choked it back. Anaïs and her brother needed someone strong. Temeria needed someone strong.

Her fingers stopped brushing through Anaïs's hair. "Keep Boussy out." She ordered sharply. "Anaïs look at me."

Her sister looked up at her. She had dark brown eyes that she heartbreakingly recognised as similar to Dove's. Dull and empty and filled with tragedy. She held her face in her hands, "I'm going to walk you out of the room, okay? Do me a favour and don't look back."

"Please don't make me go with her," She croaked out with a shaky voice.

Arabella brushed her fingers over her cheekbones. They were Adda's cheeks, they were her cheeks and their father's. "You're not going back to Maria Lousia, Rhenawedd. You're safe with me. How about this, I'm going to carry you. Do you want to be carried?"

"You would?"

"I will if you let me."

The child hesitated for a moment, then wrapped her arms around her shoulders and Arabella lifted her up into her arms. Her leg threatened to buckle under her weight and shoulder ached. She shifted her weight onto her good side and carried her out of the room. Guards closed the door after her.

Taking the castle itself was easy. Shoulders squared, she looked to her left, then her right. The witcher would be interrogated, the traitors eliminated, then she would go home and—

Her shoulders shake, she cannot be in this castle longer. She retreats back to camp, and wakes to the smell of smoke and ash.

 

 

A summit in Loc Muinne had been called with the recent news of not one, but two assassinations. Arabella did not mourn the loss of Demavend, not that she could have if she gave any sort of a damn about the slimy worm of a man with the crippling numbness that had plagued her in the weeks following the siege.

Red and grey streaked curls and stern blue eyes looked back at her in the mirror, shooing off Emmelyla with a sharp lecture before the handmaid could even dare to bring a brush to her hair which perfectly imitated her father's.

Her grandmother fluffed her curls softly and started parting her hair to braid. She had a firm grip, but not the stranglehold Emmelyla would've put on her scalp. "Loc Muinne, you know they will discuss regency."

She blinks slowly, "a mistake if you ask me."

"Why so?" Her grandmother hums. "You're only thirteen.

"I'm almost fourteen. By the time I am crowned I will be fourteen. It would be…"

"It would be in your best interest."

"So says you," she breathes. She does not wince with the tug of her curls that her father had been so careful about making sure she never had to endure because that would be weakness.

"I know this is hard for you, but you mustn't have such an attitude. Have you thought about—"

"Radovid," she cuts in sharply. "I am to marry Radovid."

"Stennis would—"

"I am going to marry Radovid. Stennis, Melitele bless him, is not prepared to be King of Aedirn let alone Temeria. Radovid is."

"He is Redanian. What about a nice noble boy from Kaedwen, it would really cement your place there." Her grandmother offers.

"I am not having this argument, the decision is final and I will not cave to you like father."

"Your father was a disaster when he inherited the throne. I did what was best for him and Temeria." She bites back at the implications.

"I'm sure you did, but I am not my father. Anaïs will be married off to a Kaedweni should the time come but I will not." Arabella says, exhaling slowly.

"I just don't think you've thought through the consequences of putting a Redanian on the throne," her grandmother chastises.

She toys idly with a statement ring of two frogs kissing in Novigradian jade. "Is this because of the old families?"

"Yes, it is."

She extends her hand looking at the rings that cover her fingers, a ruby ring next to the jade which is next to an emerald ring. "Ah, I see. You are a coward. It is simple, they will accept Radovid, or they accept the subjugation of the black ones. Stennis is overwhelmed as it is."

"And where do you hear that?" Her grandmother's hands do not falter, but she sees her tense.

"I have my sources," Arabella says as she examines her cuticles.

"And what do these little birds say, ma petite reine?" She asks, finally looking up from the braid to her eyes in the mirror.

She spares the reflection a glance, then flicks back to her nails. "Now that Demavend is gone, well…"

"Ah," she takes a deep breath. "You're right, you're not your father."

"Meaning?"

"Your father wanted to make mistakes and cause scandals and did so with habitual pleasure as you know."

"And me?"

"Bienvenu would've been proud of such a political mind."

"And you?" She prods.

"I worry, reinette." The dowager Queen brushes her fingers over her freckled cheeks for a moment.

"What for?" Arabella asks, leaning into her uncalloused hand for a moment before it retreats back to her braids.

"Radovid is a particular kind of boy. I worry about the influence that might have on you."

"You did not worry about my mother and how she may influence dad."

Her shoulders dropped, "I was lucky to get someone willing to marry him after the scandal with your sister."

"You don't trust him," she observes.

"He is…" Sancia trails off and ties off the first braid moving on to the next section. "Violent."

She cannot stop herself from laughing, "violent?"

"You would say he's not?" Her grandmother raises an eyebrow.

"I think of him as violent by necessity. It is a mask he wears like father's airheaded persona. It is inherently political in nature. No, my uncle is a violent man, Radovid is just a King."

Sancia sighs, "we shall see. For your sake I'll hope you are correct. We are heading to Flotsam, yes?"

"Yes. Where is Adda?" Arabella asks shakily.

"She will meet us in Flotsam. Why?" There is sudden suspicion in her voice.

"I cannot lose another sister."

Her grandmother finishes off the second braid and drapes them over her shoulders like a child. Arabella stares at the twin braids and auburn curls framing her face then takes a white ribbon and pulls them up taping them through securely. Her grandmother does not protest but her eyes that look just like her father's look at her sadly.

Chapter 2: Come Rip Up The Flesh Of My Fear

Summary:

In the wake of Foltest's death, Arabella finds herself dealing with two poisonings, a whole lot of drama, and a revolting man in Flotsam.

Chapter Text

Rewind. Three days after the siege of la Valette castle and all Arabella had to show for it was Geralt in custody and a tension headache so bad she felt as though she were about to keel over. Baron Kimbolt and Count Maravel were at each other’s throats. Arabella rubbed her temples and with a mighty swing of a sword that had, only moments earlier, been resting on her right hip holstered, split the table in half startling the nobility gathered around the field near the la Valette estate. 

“For the last time, Kimbolt, I will be Queen as my birth demands it or You will lose your head.” Her emerald eyes snapped to a moving figure by the crowd and locked on a sorceress. Short blond hair bounced as Keira pushed her way past the other nobility. 

"Let's not get too hasty, some of the lesser barons have already duelled and—" the sound of choking cuts her off. 

Arabella glances over to an ally of Etcheverry's choking on his own spit and poison. "That makes two… by the Gods." 

The Sorceress smiles, "but! Even though I was so very unpleasantly not invited, I brought a guest I'm sure everyone will love." 

Her grandmother, dressed in white, set her hand on Arabella's shoulder. "We will talk later." She said softly, then cleared her throat.

The crowd did not stop arguing. She glanced over to Keira who bowed and used a spell to cause a booming silence to fall over the gaggle of nobility. 

"As you are all aware," began the dowager Queen. "My son, Foltest of Temeria, is dead. This will not be a tasteless grab for the throne plucking his crown from his dead body. Especially not when the rightful heir to the Temerian throne is right here."

"She's a child!" Cried Kimbolt. 

"That does not negate her claim to the throne, now." Sancia spread her hands. "I will be acting as regent until further notice. I presume that won’t be an issue?” 

The nobility look around at each other. “There is much discussion that needs to be made.”

“Perhaps, but someone must represent us at Loc Muinne, no?” 

Chatter arises in the field. No one had been informed of a summit. 


“But Loc Muinne is in Aedirn, Sire,” says Hereward the Second nervously.

Arabella’s eyes pan over to the Prince of Ellander and Sancia nudges her slightly. She rolls her eyes. Sure, the Prince is of decent stature, with a symmetrical unobtrusive face. But she had long since decided who she was to marry. 

Sancia smiles, “Yes, Temeria is not the only country that has gone through a recent suspicious death of their King and as such we must represent ourselves on the world stage. Henselt of Kaedwen, and …”

“Radovid the Fifth of Redania will be there,” finishes Arabella confidently. 

“Perhaps even Meve of Lyria, as well. The way I see it, this useless squabbling will not help us on the world stage. Do you want to project weakness?” 

The crowd is silent. 

“Then it is settled, yes?” 

“Only until the conclusion of the summit,” says Kimbolt. 

Arabella found herself wishing that he had died during these proceedings. 

 

 

Adda ran over to her sister, scooping her up into a bear hug. The younger la Valettes watched on as the adult woman peppered kisses across her cheeks and forehead, fretting over if she was hurt. 

Arabella's chest ached, it had since she'd woken up the morning after the siege. Her small hands gripped onto her sister's dress, wrinkling the forest green fabric. 

Her voice is shaky, "he's dead, Adda." 

Her sister, square shouldered, held her tight. "I heard." 

Ice blue flick to the kids standing on either side of their grandmother. She sets down the Queen of Temeria, and motions them over slowly. Anaïs is the first to come, and with her comes Boussy. 

"Have you secured a meeting with the commandant?" Asks Arabella. 

The former striga bares her teeth in a pained smile. "Ah, yes. Him. I did! And I secured housing. Something something Scoia'tael commando."

"But you confirmed our objective, yes?" Asks the teenager. 

"Of course, what kind of princess would I be if I couldn't hunt my prey?" 

"If I find that slimy worm of a man has been harbouring a fugitive…" Arabella sighs. 

"Oh he most certainly has. I heard that Emhyr var Emries the spice merchant has come to town." 

Arabella blinks. So does Sancia. She looks to her grandmother, "do you think that's a fireable offence?" 

"He let the prisoner escape…" says her grandmother. "He was at a fireable offence three weeks ago." 

 

The chair in Loredo’s office was as one would expect from someone of his class. Arabella kicked her feet up on the desk and crossed her hands over her stomach, looking him in the eyes. He was tragically smooth, horrifically ugly, with a short stature, and belly from over indulgences. He looked in all like the sort of lord of the manner Arabella’s father would hold her hand tightly around, most especially in Kaedwen. When he spoke he sounded like her uncle, horrifically racist, misogynistic, and downright nasty. Still, she was Queen and he was her subject, and she needed to instil in this small border outpost fear of the law, which he seemed to believe was him, not her. 

“Hello boy.” She drawls. 

Loredo gives her a pained smile, “Hello, is there anything I can do for you.”

“I heard one, Emhyr var Emreis, spice merchant, came to town. Along with him, a man and a woman with a hefty bounty on their head.” 

“Oh I assure you. They’re not here, if they were they’d be on the barge.”

“The barge?” She raises an eyebrow. 

“Carrying prisoners. It’ll sail down the Pontar.”

“To the Temerian prison camp I hope, yes?”

 

 


“You fucking what?” Radovid says, arms crossed so tight they might be losing circulation. 

“I cut a deal with one of the lads at the border town. No big deal.” Dismisses the older King. 

He pinches the bridge of his nose, “So let me get this straight, yeah? You made a deal. With a peasant nobody in Temeria, sending prisoners down the Pontar to your frankly cheap imitation of Drakenborg, instead of conducting diplomacy like a normal King?”

“What’s there to wax poetic about? Temeria’s in shambles, clear as day now that the oaf’s gone.” 

“And your niece, the Queen of Temeria, she means nothing to you?” 

Henselt shrugged, “She’s not been coronated.” 

The audacity was making his head spin and ears ring so loud he couldn’t help but laugh. “Oh but Stennis; Stennis is King enough to go to war with?” 

“Are you insinuating something?”  

A vein in his forehead looked like it was about to burst, which brought amusement to the young king. “Insinuating? No. Never.” He smiled. “You will be at the summit, though, yes?”

“Should the time permit it, I shall.” 

“And at the summit we are to discuss what shall happen to Temeria, so if you would be an ally of Redania, Redania in turn could provide favour?” 

“And what do you want in aid?” 

“For Loromark, one might think…” He paused to choose his words, “that Temeria is beginning to resemble it. I simply desire Temeria…” 

The beady eyes of the robber baron king flashed brilliantly. 

 

 


Arabella leaned forwards, toying idly with a small wooden toy on Loredo’s desk. “I ought to have your head put on a spike and paraded through town, but I am a merciful Queen, you see. And I will give you a chance, even with this disloyalty, to rectify your error. My men are going to be looking for the witcher, and you are not to interfere. Should you interfere, I will draw and quarter you, but should the witcher come to you willingly, and you bring him to me, you will be awarded a proper title for this…” She looked around. “Land.” 

The commandant suddenly perked up, “A title?” 

“Nobility and all. Well shall make this outpost one of the finest in temeria. Why, it borders three countries! Surely you are a hidden genius and see potential in this town when my father didn’t?” 

The commandant nodded slowly. “You’re right, what kind of title might I get, sire?”

“Marquis. It fits with your former line of work.” She rests her hand on her cheek. “But only if you cooperate and give me the witcher and sorceress. Yes?”

“Of course sire! Anything else I could be of assistance?” 

“And I will be surveying your prison barge. I want to see what you’re blessing my uncle with.” She did not leave this up to interpretation. 

 

 

“What a bitch,” Keira said as she walked with Arabella and Adda to the barge. 

“Which one?” Asked Arabella, hands clasped behind her back.

“Yes,” Keira smiled at her. 

If she were ten maybe she would have smiled back, but Keira showing up after Merigold disappeared made her wary. “Mh,” she hums.

Adda mirrors the tenseness in Arabella’s shoulders. The sorceress is only there because their grandmother thought that a court sorceress would do them good. She’s not so sure. The girls enter. Adda does all the talking. The barge is indeed headed for the Gaevynel Prison camp, which is only a left turn through one of the tributaries of the Pontar into Kaedwen. 

It smells like death. It smells like death and desperation and tragedy. Her chest hurts, her head's spinning, and her ears are ringing. 

Hands set themselves on her, instinct and fear takes over but before she can do anything Adda's dagger and sharp claws are pressed against the throat of a soldier. 

"Don't. Touch her." Her sister seethes. 

"I just-" stammers the soldier.

"Just what?" Asks Adda. 

She exits the barge quickly. The smell of death lingers. She squeezes her eyes tight to try and stop from crying, the flashes of slick red blood and matted curls are all that greets her. 

"Arabella-" says Keira. "Arabella look at me." 

The sorceress's hands are on her shoulders when she opens her eyes. 

"Breathe. In, out, breathe. I know it's scary-"

It's all overwhelming. Her skin crawls there's nowhere to go, no escape. She screams. "Stop it! Stop it, stop touching me!" 

"Arabella-" 

She thrashes, "let me go! Let me go, stop it!" 

She hits the sorceress in her struggle, she stumbles back and falls. Before Keira can grab her she takes off running. 

She doesn't want to be here. She just wants to go home. Tears fall down her cheeks, she wants to scream again. To tear her hair out, anything. Everything else becomes overwhelming with her back pressed against a tree. Her ears are ringing, she wants her dad. Her dad always knew how to handle these outbursts. She screams again, her screams turn to sobs and hiccups by the time Adda finds her. Slick red blood covering her hands from where she scratched herself raw.

Chapter 3: When All The Light Burns Out My Pyre

Summary:

After a meltdown Arabella needs to take time to recover, but she can't leave Flotsam due to a Kayran. Her dreams keep haunting her though.

Chapter Text

Sleep has been fitful for the Princess turned Queen. Sleep has not been kind. Arabella finds herself with copper spun curls matting in blood. Nausea settles in the pit of her stomach. She is tiny, she feels.

The floor drops out from under her, she is falling. Falling. Falling.

And then she wakes, there is the soft supple skin of a maiden whose tanned skin sparkles with the beauty of the Temerian swamps and curls bounce as she moves her head.

She looks familiar, yet not. Dark green makeup paints her face that looks surprisingly like Adda. It is not Adda.

“Oh this plague… this pestilence… the war and famine,” the maiden mutters, not seeming to notice her wake. She sits up, the woman looks at her. “Oh, good. You're safe here.”

Solemnly she looks over the horizon to the Pontar. Arabella can always recognize the Pontar.

“It's such a fickle game we play… and he…” she sighs. “I'm sorry you're suffering so young. You are a blessing on this world.”

“My father is dead,” Arabella says as she stands. She is stripped of all the clothes denoting royalty. A dress, pinned at the shoulders and fastened at the waist with a cord, coloured teal is all she is wearing. She goes to her tiptoes to try and look over the Pontar. “Redania…”

“What of Redania?”

“I must meet with him, our union will secure peace in the region. Everyday we step closer and closer to war… soon it will engulf Temeria.”

The maiden looks at her perplexed. “You are a youth, no?”

Arabella furrows her brow, “I am thirteen. Almost fourteen.”

“A youth.” The maiden repeats.

There is light, then a woman with a visage impeccably mirroring the marble of her mother. Except everything Arabella's ever read said she had straight hair… this woman does not.

“Not a mother.” The woman corrects. “Yet still you grasp for the wisdom of age beyond your years.”

“These are trying times. Who… are you?”

“I am known by many names… many faces… across many planes. You may call me Melitele.” The woman smiles.

Arabella's breath catches in her throat. “Mother Melitele…”

She kneels, not sure what else to do. The woman kneels in front of her, taking her hands in her own soft ones. They are warm like her father's. “I can see what you're afraid of, but you mustn't worry. My daughter, you have my guidance.”

“Why?” Is all the Queen can think to ask.

The woman’s eyes soften with sadness. “There are things you'll come to learn with time, my child. Rest your weary head. The road along is troublesome.”

 

 

Arabella wakes with bandages wrapped around her hands and her sister carrying her.

“Okay?” Adda asks when she noticed her stir, lifting her head off her shoulder.

Arabella shakes her head. Her sister runs her fingers through her hair, softly scratching her scalp in gentle affection. She feels tears well up in her eyes. Gods… she's tired.

“Where are we headed?” She asks softly in Elder.

“Flotsam outskirts.”

“What happened?”

“Kikimora.”

“Are you okay?” asks Arabella softly.

Adda grins, “kikimora? Me? Pssht. Easy.”

“What about the Scoia'tael?”

“Shhh… they are here Sor'ca. They are watching. Kikimora kept at bay… now?”

Arabella understands what her sister is playing at. The older woman carries her into the outskirts and to an elf, by the medicinal smell and tattoos on her arms she's likely a medic.

“I require payment,” Says the elf.

Adda nods, shifting Arabella's weight and drops her pocket full of orens in front of her. “Cover?”

“What happened to her?”

“Kikimora.”

It is not a lie, per say, just not what actually harmed Arabella. She does not dare to speak up, her mouth is viscous.

“Why were you in kikimora territory?” The elf furrows her brows.

Adda bears her teeth. “Unimportant.”

“Of course… but… why not go inside the walls?”

“Unimportant.” Adda repeats.

Arabella is on the verge of tears. “No, no… stay here.”

“You heard the girl, she wants to stay here.” Adda pushes the pocket of orens towards the woman. “Much money. Stop asking questions.”

She nods in agreement and takes the child from her.

Sleep takes her.

 

 

She is back at the plateau overlooking the Pontar. The woman she now knows as Melitele is sitting at a fire muttering to herself. Her eyes scan the horizon, still she is stripped of her regalia. Before the goddess she is humbled, before her she is small. She steps forwards and sits herself next to the woman worriedly weaving together moss coloured yarn.

“What is the matter?” Asks Arabella softly.

The goddess looks over at her. “Seek Nenneke, the priestess can explain your place in the wider tapestry.”

Arabella furrows her brows in confusion. Then she is falling… falling… falling. Fire burns around her, the light is almost blinding. She had heard that the Cult of the Eternal Fire had begun spreading out into the wider Redanian lands and Radovid was at his wits end trying to quell the spread. But here she is in her regalia. There is a man. She coughs to get his attention.

“SWEET MOTHER PONTAR— In all that is good and holy what the DEVILS are you doing here?” Asks the man by the fire

“Who are you?” Arabella retorts sassily.

“I’m a god you’re just a… cheap imitation of a queen.” He looks her up and down.

She raises a singular eyebrow, “Oh pardon me your majesty, that my regalia and bloodline are not sufficient enough for you. It is truly my greatest mistake that I cannot attain the approval of a false idol. How ever are you to forgive me for my transgressions? Orphan me? Oh wait.”

“Barbed tongue you have, little fool,” He smiles.

She curtsies, “Truly! It is my greatest skill, false idol. Give me a name to work with lest I grow tired of your banter and hunt you down.”

“You cannot, I am Redanian.”

Arabella smiles, it is dripping with contempt. “My my, you have not heard the news have you? I am to be Redania’s Queen, little idol. I am Arabella Aubrey Jacqueline Julianna Jadwiga of the House of Bourbon. You may call me Her Majesty the Queen. ”

He furrows his eyebrows, “Surely not, Redania and Temeria have terrible relations since Foltest refused Dalimira’s hand in marriage.”

“True but Foltest of Temeria is dead as is Demavend the Third of Aedirn, the summit at Loc Muinne will officialise it.”

“Truly? And Radovid did not tell me or the rest of his court? He just said we were heading to Kaedwen…” He narrows his eyes at the Queen.

Arabella sits herself next to him smoothing out her skirts, “Dove didn’t tell you? Hm… fascinating. Some days I wonder what is going through his head. These days I am finding it more clear to me than ever before. If you are a god, of which I still do not have a name for, then can you show me him? What does he look like now?”

“You are a very odd child.” Says the Godling with a strange glint in his golden brown eyes. “Very well, Arabella. I am Pyr, God of Fire, child of Pontar. I shall show you your fledgling. Watch the flames.”

Arabella watches the flames, and true to his word an image shows itself in the dancing tendrils before fizzling out in smoke. Radovid is sitting in front of a chess board, brunette hair now reaching his shoulders. It is loose and messy, unstyled after a long day. She hums softly. “How can I trust you?”

“What do you mean? Is that not sufficient? Scepticism is the bane of faith.” He rolls his eyes.

“I was not raised religious.” Arabella says dully.

Pyr stares at her. “Odd child indeed. Yet you are of Temerian stock, no?”

“Correct, father did not see it as important. It was quite the scandal to the priests in his employ.” She clasps her hands together.

“And how are you here?”

“You did not bring me here yourself?” She asks.

“No? Why would I want a bratty child in my dreams? One is enough as is.”

“I don’t know how I ended up here. I am tired, Pyr. I am exhausted. I just want to rest.”

His eyes soften a touch. He takes off his coat and wraps it around her shoulders. It is a lot bigger than her. Has he always been so large?

“The fire is warm, child. Rest your eyes a while. No one will hurt you here.”

She rests her head against him. He is warm, she realises. She finally gets a good night’s sleep, dreamless and fulfilling.