An ordinary person might pause to be surprised at their even-tempered, mature, almost impossibly permissive spouse suddenly turning to passive aggression. Cardan, who is a person with inordinately terrible impulses, skips right past astonishment and straight onto aggression.
The hot little flare of irritation is almost welcome. He had been too tired to indulge in much of anything for the past little while.
His own smile is sharp with predatory delight. ]
Oh? Am I to be the villain in this?
[ He doesn't really understand why, but it doesn't matter, does it. Sooner or later, he was bound to fit the role. ]
Come, then. Surely you can accuse me of worse than mere hypocrisy.
[Liem should have controlled his irritation better. He knows perfectly well that Cardan cannot resist the urge to push back against a challenge; expressing his frustration to his husband cannot result in anything but a fight.
It's just that he seems to be the only one of the two of them who has actually been concerned about any of this. He doesn't know how Cardan, who has now become unwell enough to suspect poison, can faint in the middle of his office and still find the obstinacy to resist every attempt Liem makes to help him become well.]
I don't want you to be the villain, [Liem says, scowling. Not now: not about this.] I want you to stop being difficult when I am trying to help you.
[Is that such a terrible, onerous thing to expect from his own spouse?]
[ Cardan's lip curls. It is no longer really a smile. ]
Then you ought to have wed someone tame.
[ That's unfair. He well knows it's unfair. Liem is only worried, probably -- and even if he weren't, it's not like he had a choice in whom he married. But Cardan cannot help the indignant fear that rises in him at the prospect of being treated like an obstinate child with worthless opinions. He had spent too much time away from his kin, had gotten too used to his new freedom.
That Liem not only trusts the doctor's judgment, but seems to have decided Cardan is being wholly unreasonable -- it stings worse than he'd thought it would. He had not realized how much he had started to count on his husband's regard.
He ought to treat it like something he doesn't care about. He ought to pretend it doesn't matter. What's Liem going to do, force him to remain in his sickbed?
...would he? It's a cowardly thought to have, and so he bares his teeth to that, too. ]
How incapable you must think me, to take some mortal's word over mine.
[Frustration colours his voice, deepening the furrow between his brows. Never mind that Dr. Samari is hardly just “some mortal.” Liem may have more confidence in her medical knowledge than in his husband’s, but that’s not the issue that so frustrates him.]
For months I let you persuade me not to worry about your wellness, and that saw you passed out on my office floor.
[And that is frustrating. Because he had wanted to trust Cardan when he told him not to trouble himself over him. He had wanted to believe that if Cardan wasn’t concerned, he didn’t need to be either.
But he can’t help but be concerned when he has to gather his prideful, defiant husband off the floor like a limp doll. And he is now realizing — he should have been concerned long before now.]
When you suggested you might let me drink you to death, I did not think you were being serious.
[ He would point out that he is incapable of being anything other than serious with his meaning ever, but he prefers most people don't remember this about him -- Liem included.
Regardless, that's not the point. The point is that he has never lied, and Liem acting like he's been somehow deceived is not even accurate, because -- for once -- Cardan has never particularly set out to deceive him. ]
I do not understand why you're so worried now.
[ Sure, he feels terrible, but he's not unused to that. And if Liem's precious Dr. Samari is to be believed, he's not anywhere close to dying. No ailment that can be fixed by mere sleep and food can possibly be that serious. ]
How do you expect me to help you fell Dain, if you think some-- some thinness of the blood [ his dismissive hand gesture makes the teacup wobble dangerously, though it does not spill ] is liable to take me down?
[Perhaps the mention of Dain should make some things more clear to Liem. After all, Cardan explained his brother’s desire for his death in a manner just as unconcerned as he seems now, sneering at Liem from his elegant sprawl on the couch. To him the threat of accidental death by exsanguination is very likely not so different from the same threat of death he’s been living with for years, presumably trying not to think too hard about.
Liem is not so incapable of understanding this. The problem is that he does not want to understand. He cannot accept that these two dangers are the same, because one of them is a danger that he should rightly have been able to prevent.]
Prince Dain is not the one responsible for your present ailment, [he says. Unless he has been poisoning Cardan far longer and more subtly than either of them have had cause to suspect. But if he had the means to poison his younger brother, surely he would not have taken so long to kill him. No; the conclusion is obvious.] I am.
[How stupid. How senseless. And yet, how terribly ironic that Liem would keep his husband safe from everyone but himself. He hardly has a good track record with such things.]
I do not care if you think anemia is acceptable to live with as long as you aren’t killed. My aspirations as a husband rise slightly above preying on my own spouse until he is a pallid husk.
[ Cardan's jaw tightens; slowly, carefully, he sets the teacup down on the ornate tray of refreshments. He should probably have been happy; in all of his life, he cannot remember anyone caring this much about something so trivial as his health. Except that he isn't: he's furious, and, for once, Liem seems as unwilling to back down as Cardan himself.
This can only go badly, he imagines, but he has very little idea of how to get them out of the path of this fight, and no desire to do so anyhow. ]
How generous of you, husband, [ he drawls, ] to take the burden of my own choices from me.
[ So what if he had guessed wrong? So what if the strangely intense mortal doctor were right? Is that not his right, to make stupid choices? Of all the consequences of his actions, the idea that Liem would assign himself blame for a circumstance Cardan had forced him into is the most absurd. ]
I had thought that my own heart's blood might be mine to dispense with as I please. How foolish of me.
[Liem cannot remember the last time he was angry like this: so aggravated that ire draws all his muscles tight and makes him feel twitchy with the need to bite something. After Cardan's mean prank in the bath, he had mostly just been humiliated; during his encounter with Dain, he had forced himself to shove his indignation down. But this time is different, because he and his husband are completely alone—and because he hadn't expected to be involved in this way in his husband's self-destruction.]
I won't stop you from seeking another vampire to empty your veins, if you are so eager to spite me.
[He says it coolly, almost like he's inviting Cardan to do just that. Almost like he wouldn't turn around and beg his husband to reconsider if he actually called Liem's bluff.
Cardan's resentment at being robbed of his own choices fills the room, thick like smoke, but the irony is that Liem would never have let things get this far if he had not been so ignorant of what he was doing. As he stares down at his husband, his manicured nails bite thin crescents into the flesh of his palms.]
You never asked me if I wished to take your blood under these circumstances—and I do not. That I have to fight you to defend my refusal in this matter is galling.
[He shouldn't be hurt by this, but he is. Maybe Cardan cares little for his own health, but he hadn't thought his husband would expect him to feel the same.]
You cannot goad me into treating you with such irreverence. I will not be complicit in this.
[ Cardan's huffed exhale is disbelieving. He wants to call Liem on his lie -- because even he can tell it's a lie. No one would invest so much of their efforts into keeping him alive only to see him get murdered. Least of all a man as possessive as his husband.
Besides, Liem must know that the thought of getting fed on by anyone else is vile.
But none of that is the matter of foremost concern. ]
And what does that make me, Liem?
[ He had meant to keep calm, but as it turns out, he cannot; his lip curls up over his teeth with the question, much closer to a snarl than he had intended. ]
How complicit am I in your desire to offer yourself up to danger? To work yourself ragged? To die by the next assassin's blade?
[ Quite, he imagines. After all, if it weren't for his weakness, they would never have ended up here in the first place; and still, he cannot get himself to regret it.
It is a shame that he does not trust himself to rise, still, without falling back over. He is so used to relying on his height in these situations. It is hard to loom over someone when you are sprawled over a couch beneath their gaze.
He remains steadfast in his efforts, nonetheless. ]
I am not sorry for seeking out your bite. I have never been less sorry for anything in my life.
[For a moment, surprise slows the momentum of Liem’s anger as he’s confronted with this new direction for Cardan’s aggression. Just then, he can only feel incredulous: surely he does not really believe these things to be equivalent. Liem shouldn’t need to explain why drinking his husband’s blood until he’s ill is different from defending him from a hired killer, or working long hours to put together a plot beneath his father’s nose.
Those things aren’t the same—will never be the same, unless the next time Liem gets between his husband and an assassin, Cardan picks up a blade to help her finish the job.]
I don’t need you to be sorry for that.
[Now that he’s lost his grip on the furious heat that had been driving him, he can’t quite seem to grasp it again; very quickly, the effort of maintaining his outrage begins to feel like pushing a boulder uphill. Unfortunately, if he stops, he's liable to be crushed.]
And I don’t need you to take pleasure in my dedication to keeping you safe. [He spits this out, not letting himself linger on it.] But I hope you don’t expect me to desire your blood in the same way if I must always wonder if you can actually afford what you are giving me.
[ Cardan narrows his eyes, and-- says nothing. His gaze slides away from Liem and past him, half-lidded. It might have looked relaxed if not for the tension radiating from him otherwise.
Maybe he had expected it. Maybe he had wanted Liem to want him unconditionally, heedlessly and unreasonably. He can admit that it's a greedy thing to want, an impossible thing to ask for-- it is hardly like his husband can force himself to crave something he doesn't.
But wanting the unattainable has never made anyone less ravenous. ]
I see, [ is what he finally says. When his gaze returns to Liem, it is with all the coolness he can muster. ] To sum up: my fainting fit has rendered me undesirable, and so I ought to seek out intimacy elsewhere. Is that all?
[ It is a close enough paraphrase to keep him truthful, albeit barely. It's also a terrible question to be asking -- he regrets posing it immediately. He doesn't want to know the answer. This is not the way he expected things to go askew. ]
[The stretch of seconds before Cardan finally looks at him again, finally deigns to reply to the words flung his way, drags on miserably. Liem waits in unhappy silence, and when his husband finally aims his gaze his way again, he tries to harden himself against the chill in that look.
But he cannot prepare himself for Cardan's reply. He feels colour rise in his cheeks to accompany the furious stare he aims down at him. Liem would not have imagined that such a comprehensive twisting of his words could even be considered true enough to pass his husband's lips.]
With listening skills like yours, I doubt there's any point in me even telling you.
[He suddenly doesn't see the point in any of this; all he seems to be doing is providing Cardan with fuel to add to the blaze that has sprung up where a workable marriage previously was. Abandoning his tense regard of his spouse, he turns away to sit once more at his desk, frowning at the paperwork on it like he's attempting to burn a hole through it.]
[ There is sick satisfaction in watching that lilac tint flood Liem's face -- in knowing he's hit on a nerve. Cardan doesn't know if he's ever seen his husband this incensed, and some ugly part of him will never not feed on it.
But he is too greedy about this, too. ]
Oh, don't be a coward, [ he sneers, reflexively. ] You're the one who started the fight. So go on, tell me why you're angry with me.
[ He suspects Liem thinks that he already has -- but whatever it is, it is so far beyond Cardan's comprehension that it might as well rest at the bottom of the Undersea.
And he is, admittedly, flagging a little bit; all the hot irritation in his veins seems to be intent on translating to jitters, which is not a condition he encounters often. Perhaps abandoning the teacup was a poor decision after all. He only knows that he needs this to reach some kind of conclusion, and soon, as the frustrating mystery of Liem's grievance is only going to torture him otherwise. ]
...Because I cannot fathom what it is that you wanted me to have done.
[Perhaps Liem is cowardly for turning his back on Cardan, for refusing to meet that disdainful look any longer. The familiar, unthreatening stretch of his desk before him does seem a little bit like a refuge; he’d even rather deal with Gusairne’s joyless, nitpicky input again than continue to argue with his own lover and companion. Even if Cardan is right, and he started this fight to begin with, he has neither the desire nor the fortitude to continue it.
For a little while he just shuffles through his papers, reacquainting himself with the duties that the past hour had so thoroughly wiped from his mind. It seems as though he might just ignore Cardan entirely—another jab at him, something he knows his husband cannot stand, to repay him for his cruelty. This is, after all, more feasible to do with Cardan recuperating halfway across the room.
But he does not wish to fight with him in this way, either.]
I don’t want to be the instrument through which you harm yourself, [he says.] What I need is for you to understand this, and not offer me your blood if you already feel unwell.
[ He is starting to think Liem has decided to ignore him entirely, which is -- admittedly -- the single most effective tactic he could have employed in regards to winning the argument. Cardan already knows that his husband is endlessly patient; he would not be entirely confident that he could win a standoff in which Liem refused to engage him.
It's just that he will never be able to leave well enough alone.
But just as he is about to follow his question up with something awful and poisonous, Liem speaks. Immediately, his frown deepens, partially in an effort to hide his surprise. When put like that, it sounds eminently reasonable a request. A little fussy, maybe, but he had known this about Liem already. ]
You say that like I did it on purpose, [ he will complain eventually, though his tone has lost some of its acidic spite. He reaches for the teacup again -- glad, at least, that Liem has decided to not look his way, because his hands are shakier than he wants them to be. It just means he won't bother with the saucer. ]
Surely you don't think I planned for this to happen.
[No, Liem doesn't look back at Cardan just yet. He isn't yet confident that that tinge of violet has left his face, and the prospect of marshalling his composure to look at his husband steadily again is yet a little daunting. He had not intended to let his emotions run away with him the way they did; he doesn't want to give them purchase again.]
No… I don't think you planned it.
[He will concede here; Cardan's naked scepticism in the face of the doctor's diagnosis made it clear enough he hadn't imagined Liem's blood-drinking might be behind his faintness and fatigue. He does not really believe that Cardan got to this point simply because he didn't care.
But he also isn't convinced that Cardan does care.]
You might have said something earlier, though. And you didn't have to fight me about not biting you for a while.
[Those aren't the actions of a man who is overly conscious of his health—and in the moment, it had seemed to Liem that Cardan wasn't willing to care about it at all, even though Liem obviously did.]
[ The tea is lukewarm now. Cardan drinks it down in one long swallow, then sets the cup in his lap and tips his head over the back of the couch. His eyes slide closed.
It is strange to be furious and then not, like all the fire were drained from his veins. He refuses to let it make him tentative. ]
Yes, I did. Weeks is puritan and unnecessary, lest your purpose is punishment.
[ He pauses, then opens his eyes to the beautifully moulded ceiling. ]
And I did not wish to needlessly alarm you.
[ It's the truth, which is why he can say it. He's exceptionally shameless, which is why he says it with a straight face.
He could probably pretend he didn't know. He has enough practice in deception -- inward-facing and otherwise -- to spin a web of plausible deniability. But in the end, he knows the truth of the matter: something had been wrong for weeks, and he had pushed past it because he knew with absolute certainty that his husband would make an enormous fuss if he didn't. Better to hold on to his secrets until he could puzzle out their meaning on his own.
Besides, mere dizziness had not seemed so perilous then. ]
[Finally, Liem lifts his gaze from his papers, turning in his seat to watch his husband tip his head back toward the ceiling. The distance between them strikes him as lonely, but he knows it’s just his own longing for comfort that’s to blame.
He doesn’t think punishment is the doctor’s intent in warning him away from biting her patient, but it’s possible that it is Liem’s intent in doing as she wants. Who he might be punishing, though, he couldn’t quite say.]
You’ve alarmed me regardless of your wishes.
[He observes the white line of his husband's throat, and has to admit to himself that there is no amount of anger that would truly goad him into permitting another’s fangs to touch it. The alarm the thought stirs in him rivals that which had spiked down his spine when he’d seen Cardan collapse in the first place. Even though his ire has passed, worry keeps his expression stern.]
I’d prefer if you permitted me the chance to help you sooner rather than later. Did you think I wouldn’t find out?
Naturally. [ He says it like the question is too obvious for the asking. Why would he engage in unsuccessful charades? That would be embarrassing -- it's embarrassing now, or would be, if he let it.
Though he will admit that it was unwise to have no endgame in mind for a problem that only seemed to be escalating.
He tilts his face to the side so that he can look at Liem. Cardan cannot tell whether his husband is still angry; certainly the fact the is still at his desk suggests so. He thinks, with a pang of strange longing, of the gentle lips at his brow just an hour ago, when Liem hadn't yet thought him a villain in this affair.
But he supposes asking him to come over would only show Liem that he is truly unwell. ]
Do you expect me to believe you would not have done the same?
[ He recalls too well the journey across the ocean and the way his husband had withheld his weakness to water from him until they were about to embark on their flight. Surely Liem cannot claim that he is forthcoming when it comes to his own private troubles. ]
[Liem isn’t sure how to feel about the idea that he was never supposed to find out that Cardan had been unwell. Had he hoped the illness would pass, or simply avoided thinking about it, assuming he’d cross that bridge when it became necessary? Would he have sought a cure to his ailment in secret too, if he could? Liem is not used to feeling like his husband is actively keeping things from him, at least not important things, and he finds himself disliking this new experience immensely.
Then his husband asks a question that Liem, abruptly, realizes he doesn’t have an answer for. He would like to argue that slowly coming down with a mystery ailment is different from planning a trip across the sea, but perhaps Cardan would not have thought it worthwhile to bring Liem along if he’d known the whole time how dangerous the journey might be for him. He can’t truthfully say his reticence was of no consequence at all.
For a long moment, he simply frowns at his husband, trying to figure out something to say that isn’t just No, of course I wouldn’t have said anything—but it doesn’t matter if I’m unwell.]
If I am more forthcoming about my [private, irrelevant] troubles, will that convince you to trouble me with yours?
[ Cardan frowns. It's kind of a shitty offer -- "more forthcoming" is about as vague as one can get, and he's fairly certain that Liem would just deem most of his problems as not-bad-enough to be considered troubles and go on exactly as he had. It's not like he can specify a quota of difficulties Liem is to bring to him each fortnight.
On the other hand, it's become abundantly clear that unless he wants a repeat of this fight -- or, worse, have his husband simply clam up and refuse to admit he's unhappy -- something will have to change. If another illness or problem befell him, would he be able to keep it from Liem completely? He might, but it seems risky. Something tells him that Liem would take a second time as a far more grave betrayal.
...which is, in the end, the problem, is it not: he wants Liem to trust him, even if Cardan doesn't quite trust him, at least not about this. ]
That would depend, [ is what he says, ] on what you actually tell me, husband.
[Liem regards his husband for another moment, his frown softening by degrees. That reply is not the kind of ironclad guarantee that Liem would have preferred—but he knows that such agreements come more dearly to Cardan than to him, or indeed anyone else he knows. Even if he wishes his husband would be more open with him, he cannot find it in him to be cross about this, particularly on the heels of an argument he’s eager to leave behind them.]
You may always ask after my troubles yourself, Cardan. But I will endeavour to be more convincing in future.
[Whatever that entails. Cardan is probably right to be skeptical of how forthright Liem actually will be about his own concerns, because there are very few of his private worries he can think of that aren’t either completely trivial or dire enough that he’s loath to speak them aloud to anyone.
But that is a problem for another time. For now, Liem gathers up some reports sitting further down the pile of papers, to be read later, and takes them with him as he crosses the room to perch on the couch next to his husband.]
[ He's a little surprised to find Liem moving towards him -- surprised, because it's easier to admit to than the relief that flutters against the inside of his chest, just underneath his collarbones. It's stupid, to want the physical comfort of Liem's touch when he'd just made a big show of how tough he was. That doesn't, of course, stop him from wanting.
At Liem's question, he casts his eye to the tray with its teapot and assorted finger foods, largely untouched save for the teacup in his lap and the crushed bit of croissant he had, at some point, dropped from his grasp. ]
Someone distracted me, [ he'll point out. He's not, actually, tremendously hungry -- the same jittery unease that has gripped him for some time now has settled oddly in his stomach. But even Cardan is sensible enough to know that he should eat, if only as a show of good faith.
He'll lean forward to set the cup down on its saucer, then pour more tea into it -- valiantly ignoring the fact that his husband is right there, and for some reason still not touching him. Then he plucks a tea sandwich from the beautifully arranged platter and gets to work.
Though not before glancing over at Liem to ask, ] And what are your troubles, then?
[ He's not expecting to glean anything important -- not tonight. But Liem surely couldn't expect him to leave the bait alone. ]
[Liem raises his eyebrows ever so slightly when Cardan pounces immediately on his suggestion. His husband is ever greedy for his secrets, even as he jealously hoards his own. This, at least, is familiar enough to be a little comforting.]
Foremost at the moment is the quantity of work keeping me from enjoying my husband's company as I would wish.
[Technically, the doctor's orders are also keeping him from doing this, at least if he wants to do anything that might make Cardan excited. But he has not had such a wealth of leisure time to spend with his husband that they have previously had much of it left outside of sexual escapades, and he finds the prospect of stealing Cardan's company for himself for chaste reasons is only made more appealing because of its continued impossibility.
He glances down at the papers on his lap, which stare balefully up at him. They are, unfortunately, only one part of a pile of duties that all need prompt tending to.]
Also, I suppose I will need to source my blood elsewhere until you have fully recovered your vigour.
[ Cardan can't help the way his eyes narrow at the suggestion that Liem drink from anyone else. He wants to protest -- Liem had made a promise, and not one Cardan had released him from.
Unfortunately, even Cardan understands that convincing Liem to drink from him anytime soon will be a lost cause. Even if he were willing to risk Cardan's (apparently oh-so-fragile) health, Cardan has to assume he is not going to risk the doctor's wrath. The little interlude from earlier has made it painfully clear that out of all of them, the one holding the room's reins was she.
He's going to find out how and why, but that's a riddle for a later time. Right now, he lets himself frown as he balances the teacup once more against his own lap. ]
And where is that, Liem?
[ He can't help sounding sullen about it, though, even as he turns his attention to the business of eating. If it helps convince Liem that he's recuperating, so be it: he will eat and drink and nap himself to oblivion. ]
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An ordinary person might pause to be surprised at their even-tempered, mature, almost impossibly permissive spouse suddenly turning to passive aggression. Cardan, who is a person with inordinately terrible impulses, skips right past astonishment and straight onto aggression.
The hot little flare of irritation is almost welcome. He had been too tired to indulge in much of anything for the past little while.
His own smile is sharp with predatory delight. ]
Oh? Am I to be the villain in this?
[ He doesn't really understand why, but it doesn't matter, does it. Sooner or later, he was bound to fit the role. ]
Come, then. Surely you can accuse me of worse than mere hypocrisy.
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It's just that he seems to be the only one of the two of them who has actually been concerned about any of this. He doesn't know how Cardan, who has now become unwell enough to suspect poison, can faint in the middle of his office and still find the obstinacy to resist every attempt Liem makes to help him become well.]
I don't want you to be the villain, [Liem says, scowling. Not now: not about this.] I want you to stop being difficult when I am trying to help you.
[Is that such a terrible, onerous thing to expect from his own spouse?]
Especially as you are so loath to help yourself.
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Then you ought to have wed someone tame.
[ That's unfair. He well knows it's unfair. Liem is only worried, probably -- and even if he weren't, it's not like he had a choice in whom he married. But Cardan cannot help the indignant fear that rises in him at the prospect of being treated like an obstinate child with worthless opinions. He had spent too much time away from his kin, had gotten too used to his new freedom.
That Liem not only trusts the doctor's judgment, but seems to have decided Cardan is being wholly unreasonable -- it stings worse than he'd thought it would. He had not realized how much he had started to count on his husband's regard.
He ought to treat it like something he doesn't care about. He ought to pretend it doesn't matter. What's Liem going to do, force him to remain in his sickbed?
...would he? It's a cowardly thought to have, and so he bares his teeth to that, too. ]
How incapable you must think me, to take some mortal's word over mine.
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[Frustration colours his voice, deepening the furrow between his brows. Never mind that Dr. Samari is hardly just “some mortal.” Liem may have more confidence in her medical knowledge than in his husband’s, but that’s not the issue that so frustrates him.]
For months I let you persuade me not to worry about your wellness, and that saw you passed out on my office floor.
[And that is frustrating. Because he had wanted to trust Cardan when he told him not to trouble himself over him. He had wanted to believe that if Cardan wasn’t concerned, he didn’t need to be either.
But he can’t help but be concerned when he has to gather his prideful, defiant husband off the floor like a limp doll. And he is now realizing — he should have been concerned long before now.]
When you suggested you might let me drink you to death, I did not think you were being serious.
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Regardless, that's not the point. The point is that he has never lied, and Liem acting like he's been somehow deceived is not even accurate, because -- for once -- Cardan has never particularly set out to deceive him. ]
I do not understand why you're so worried now.
[ Sure, he feels terrible, but he's not unused to that. And if Liem's precious Dr. Samari is to be believed, he's not anywhere close to dying. No ailment that can be fixed by mere sleep and food can possibly be that serious. ]
How do you expect me to help you fell Dain, if you think some-- some thinness of the blood [ his dismissive hand gesture makes the teacup wobble dangerously, though it does not spill ] is liable to take me down?
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Liem is not so incapable of understanding this. The problem is that he does not want to understand. He cannot accept that these two dangers are the same, because one of them is a danger that he should rightly have been able to prevent.]
Prince Dain is not the one responsible for your present ailment, [he says. Unless he has been poisoning Cardan far longer and more subtly than either of them have had cause to suspect. But if he had the means to poison his younger brother, surely he would not have taken so long to kill him. No; the conclusion is obvious.] I am.
[How stupid. How senseless. And yet, how terribly ironic that Liem would keep his husband safe from everyone but himself. He hardly has a good track record with such things.]
I do not care if you think anemia is acceptable to live with as long as you aren’t killed. My aspirations as a husband rise slightly above preying on my own spouse until he is a pallid husk.
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This can only go badly, he imagines, but he has very little idea of how to get them out of the path of this fight, and no desire to do so anyhow. ]
How generous of you, husband, [ he drawls, ] to take the burden of my own choices from me.
[ So what if he had guessed wrong? So what if the strangely intense mortal doctor were right? Is that not his right, to make stupid choices? Of all the consequences of his actions, the idea that Liem would assign himself blame for a circumstance Cardan had forced him into is the most absurd. ]
I had thought that my own heart's blood might be mine to dispense with as I please. How foolish of me.
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I won't stop you from seeking another vampire to empty your veins, if you are so eager to spite me.
[He says it coolly, almost like he's inviting Cardan to do just that. Almost like he wouldn't turn around and beg his husband to reconsider if he actually called Liem's bluff.
Cardan's resentment at being robbed of his own choices fills the room, thick like smoke, but the irony is that Liem would never have let things get this far if he had not been so ignorant of what he was doing. As he stares down at his husband, his manicured nails bite thin crescents into the flesh of his palms.]
You never asked me if I wished to take your blood under these circumstances—and I do not. That I have to fight you to defend my refusal in this matter is galling.
[He shouldn't be hurt by this, but he is. Maybe Cardan cares little for his own health, but he hadn't thought his husband would expect him to feel the same.]
You cannot goad me into treating you with such irreverence. I will not be complicit in this.
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Besides, Liem must know that the thought of getting fed on by anyone else is vile.
But none of that is the matter of foremost concern. ]
And what does that make me, Liem?
[ He had meant to keep calm, but as it turns out, he cannot; his lip curls up over his teeth with the question, much closer to a snarl than he had intended. ]
How complicit am I in your desire to offer yourself up to danger? To work yourself ragged? To die by the next assassin's blade?
[ Quite, he imagines. After all, if it weren't for his weakness, they would never have ended up here in the first place; and still, he cannot get himself to regret it.
It is a shame that he does not trust himself to rise, still, without falling back over. He is so used to relying on his height in these situations. It is hard to loom over someone when you are sprawled over a couch beneath their gaze.
He remains steadfast in his efforts, nonetheless. ]
I am not sorry for seeking out your bite. I have never been less sorry for anything in my life.
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Those things aren’t the same—will never be the same, unless the next time Liem gets between his husband and an assassin, Cardan picks up a blade to help her finish the job.]
I don’t need you to be sorry for that.
[Now that he’s lost his grip on the furious heat that had been driving him, he can’t quite seem to grasp it again; very quickly, the effort of maintaining his outrage begins to feel like pushing a boulder uphill. Unfortunately, if he stops, he's liable to be crushed.]
And I don’t need you to take pleasure in my dedication to keeping you safe. [He spits this out, not letting himself linger on it.] But I hope you don’t expect me to desire your blood in the same way if I must always wonder if you can actually afford what you are giving me.
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Maybe he had expected it. Maybe he had wanted Liem to want him unconditionally, heedlessly and unreasonably. He can admit that it's a greedy thing to want, an impossible thing to ask for-- it is hardly like his husband can force himself to crave something he doesn't.
But wanting the unattainable has never made anyone less ravenous. ]
I see, [ is what he finally says. When his gaze returns to Liem, it is with all the coolness he can muster. ] To sum up: my fainting fit has rendered me undesirable, and so I ought to seek out intimacy elsewhere. Is that all?
[ It is a close enough paraphrase to keep him truthful, albeit barely. It's also a terrible question to be asking -- he regrets posing it immediately. He doesn't want to know the answer. This is not the way he expected things to go askew. ]
What do you need from me, then?
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But he cannot prepare himself for Cardan's reply. He feels colour rise in his cheeks to accompany the furious stare he aims down at him. Liem would not have imagined that such a comprehensive twisting of his words could even be considered true enough to pass his husband's lips.]
With listening skills like yours, I doubt there's any point in me even telling you.
[He suddenly doesn't see the point in any of this; all he seems to be doing is providing Cardan with fuel to add to the blaze that has sprung up where a workable marriage previously was. Abandoning his tense regard of his spouse, he turns away to sit once more at his desk, frowning at the paperwork on it like he's attempting to burn a hole through it.]
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But he is too greedy about this, too. ]
Oh, don't be a coward, [ he sneers, reflexively. ] You're the one who started the fight. So go on, tell me why you're angry with me.
[ He suspects Liem thinks that he already has -- but whatever it is, it is so far beyond Cardan's comprehension that it might as well rest at the bottom of the Undersea.
And he is, admittedly, flagging a little bit; all the hot irritation in his veins seems to be intent on translating to jitters, which is not a condition he encounters often. Perhaps abandoning the teacup was a poor decision after all. He only knows that he needs this to reach some kind of conclusion, and soon, as the frustrating mystery of Liem's grievance is only going to torture him otherwise. ]
...Because I cannot fathom what it is that you wanted me to have done.
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For a little while he just shuffles through his papers, reacquainting himself with the duties that the past hour had so thoroughly wiped from his mind. It seems as though he might just ignore Cardan entirely—another jab at him, something he knows his husband cannot stand, to repay him for his cruelty. This is, after all, more feasible to do with Cardan recuperating halfway across the room.
But he does not wish to fight with him in this way, either.]
I don’t want to be the instrument through which you harm yourself, [he says.] What I need is for you to understand this, and not offer me your blood if you already feel unwell.
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It's just that he will never be able to leave well enough alone.
But just as he is about to follow his question up with something awful and poisonous, Liem speaks. Immediately, his frown deepens, partially in an effort to hide his surprise. When put like that, it sounds eminently reasonable a request. A little fussy, maybe, but he had known this about Liem already. ]
You say that like I did it on purpose, [ he will complain eventually, though his tone has lost some of its acidic spite. He reaches for the teacup again -- glad, at least, that Liem has decided to not look his way, because his hands are shakier than he wants them to be. It just means he won't bother with the saucer. ]
Surely you don't think I planned for this to happen.
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No… I don't think you planned it.
[He will concede here; Cardan's naked scepticism in the face of the doctor's diagnosis made it clear enough he hadn't imagined Liem's blood-drinking might be behind his faintness and fatigue. He does not really believe that Cardan got to this point simply because he didn't care.
But he also isn't convinced that Cardan does care.]
You might have said something earlier, though. And you didn't have to fight me about not biting you for a while.
[Those aren't the actions of a man who is overly conscious of his health—and in the moment, it had seemed to Liem that Cardan wasn't willing to care about it at all, even though Liem obviously did.]
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It is strange to be furious and then not, like all the fire were drained from his veins. He refuses to let it make him tentative. ]
Yes, I did. Weeks is puritan and unnecessary, lest your purpose is punishment.
[ He pauses, then opens his eyes to the beautifully moulded ceiling. ]
And I did not wish to needlessly alarm you.
[ It's the truth, which is why he can say it. He's exceptionally shameless, which is why he says it with a straight face.
He could probably pretend he didn't know. He has enough practice in deception -- inward-facing and otherwise -- to spin a web of plausible deniability. But in the end, he knows the truth of the matter: something had been wrong for weeks, and he had pushed past it because he knew with absolute certainty that his husband would make an enormous fuss if he didn't. Better to hold on to his secrets until he could puzzle out their meaning on his own.
Besides, mere dizziness had not seemed so perilous then. ]
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He doesn’t think punishment is the doctor’s intent in warning him away from biting her patient, but it’s possible that it is Liem’s intent in doing as she wants. Who he might be punishing, though, he couldn’t quite say.]
You’ve alarmed me regardless of your wishes.
[He observes the white line of his husband's throat, and has to admit to himself that there is no amount of anger that would truly goad him into permitting another’s fangs to touch it. The alarm the thought stirs in him rivals that which had spiked down his spine when he’d seen Cardan collapse in the first place. Even though his ire has passed, worry keeps his expression stern.]
I’d prefer if you permitted me the chance to help you sooner rather than later. Did you think I wouldn’t find out?
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Though he will admit that it was unwise to have no endgame in mind for a problem that only seemed to be escalating.
He tilts his face to the side so that he can look at Liem. Cardan cannot tell whether his husband is still angry; certainly the fact the is still at his desk suggests so. He thinks, with a pang of strange longing, of the gentle lips at his brow just an hour ago, when Liem hadn't yet thought him a villain in this affair.
But he supposes asking him to come over would only show Liem that he is truly unwell. ]
Do you expect me to believe you would not have done the same?
[ He recalls too well the journey across the ocean and the way his husband had withheld his weakness to water from him until they were about to embark on their flight. Surely Liem cannot claim that he is forthcoming when it comes to his own private troubles. ]
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Then his husband asks a question that Liem, abruptly, realizes he doesn’t have an answer for. He would like to argue that slowly coming down with a mystery ailment is different from planning a trip across the sea, but perhaps Cardan would not have thought it worthwhile to bring Liem along if he’d known the whole time how dangerous the journey might be for him. He can’t truthfully say his reticence was of no consequence at all.
For a long moment, he simply frowns at his husband, trying to figure out something to say that isn’t just No, of course I wouldn’t have said anything—but it doesn’t matter if I’m unwell.]
If I am more forthcoming about my [private, irrelevant] troubles, will that convince you to trouble me with yours?
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On the other hand, it's become abundantly clear that unless he wants a repeat of this fight -- or, worse, have his husband simply clam up and refuse to admit he's unhappy -- something will have to change. If another illness or problem befell him, would he be able to keep it from Liem completely? He might, but it seems risky. Something tells him that Liem would take a second time as a far more grave betrayal.
...which is, in the end, the problem, is it not: he wants Liem to trust him, even if Cardan doesn't quite trust him, at least not about this. ]
That would depend, [ is what he says, ] on what you actually tell me, husband.
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You may always ask after my troubles yourself, Cardan. But I will endeavour to be more convincing in future.
[Whatever that entails. Cardan is probably right to be skeptical of how forthright Liem actually will be about his own concerns, because there are very few of his private worries he can think of that aren’t either completely trivial or dire enough that he’s loath to speak them aloud to anyone.
But that is a problem for another time. For now, Liem gathers up some reports sitting further down the pile of papers, to be read later, and takes them with him as he crosses the room to perch on the couch next to his husband.]
How are the refreshments treating you?
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At Liem's question, he casts his eye to the tray with its teapot and assorted finger foods, largely untouched save for the teacup in his lap and the crushed bit of croissant he had, at some point, dropped from his grasp. ]
Someone distracted me, [ he'll point out. He's not, actually, tremendously hungry -- the same jittery unease that has gripped him for some time now has settled oddly in his stomach. But even Cardan is sensible enough to know that he should eat, if only as a show of good faith.
He'll lean forward to set the cup down on its saucer, then pour more tea into it -- valiantly ignoring the fact that his husband is right there, and for some reason still not touching him. Then he plucks a tea sandwich from the beautifully arranged platter and gets to work.
Though not before glancing over at Liem to ask, ] And what are your troubles, then?
[ He's not expecting to glean anything important -- not tonight. But Liem surely couldn't expect him to leave the bait alone. ]
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Foremost at the moment is the quantity of work keeping me from enjoying my husband's company as I would wish.
[Technically, the doctor's orders are also keeping him from doing this, at least if he wants to do anything that might make Cardan excited. But he has not had such a wealth of leisure time to spend with his husband that they have previously had much of it left outside of sexual escapades, and he finds the prospect of stealing Cardan's company for himself for chaste reasons is only made more appealing because of its continued impossibility.
He glances down at the papers on his lap, which stare balefully up at him. They are, unfortunately, only one part of a pile of duties that all need prompt tending to.]
Also, I suppose I will need to source my blood elsewhere until you have fully recovered your vigour.
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Unfortunately, even Cardan understands that convincing Liem to drink from him anytime soon will be a lost cause. Even if he were willing to risk Cardan's (apparently oh-so-fragile) health, Cardan has to assume he is not going to risk the doctor's wrath. The little interlude from earlier has made it painfully clear that out of all of them, the one holding the room's reins was she.
He's going to find out how and why, but that's a riddle for a later time. Right now, he lets himself frown as he balances the teacup once more against his own lap. ]
And where is that, Liem?
[ He can't help sounding sullen about it, though, even as he turns his attention to the business of eating. If it helps convince Liem that he's recuperating, so be it: he will eat and drink and nap himself to oblivion. ]
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