"Such a weak-minded woman shouldn't be here by herself, especially after what you've done to this family."
Reyna bit back nothing less than a snarl as she stepped in front of her daughter. The protective stance was a very clear sign of the mother's love, something that wasn't shown on the battlefield, but often shown in moments of distress. Of all the moments that a ghost from her daughter's past could come back, this would be the worst case scenario. There were too many questions and not enough time to explain them if she was here.
"Who said I was alone? I'm simply waiting for my company to arrive. This is our house now, after all."
Aseria didn't move an inch as she heard the women in front of her banter back and forth. Frozen in a state of rage and fear, she didn't know what to say. She would never know how to react to the very source of her pain coming back with such a bright smile.
"I didn't know a dead woman walking could speak so clearly."
Reyna glared and stepped towards the smaller woman, assuming by the noises outside that the company she spoke of earlier had arrived. If she was going to make a move, now was the time.
"I didn't know the little brat didn't give up after the first battle."
Reyna, who was typically slow to anger, was quick to lash out as the five foot seven woman in front of her shrank back in haste with a small smirk gracing her features, knowing that she struck a nerve. As assumed, the door opened and four more people piled in the room, decorated in black armor stained with blood. The tallest one spoke with annoyance laced in their modulated voice.
"Marisol, that's enough."
The woman let out a harsh laugh as she watched Aseria pathetically reach out to grab her mother's arm in an attempt to hold her back from making a worse choice than the ones that she had already made. Reyna allows her daughter to keep her hold, steady yet firm, but still enough to let go if needed.
"You know my daughter more than anyone, calling her a brat is a very bold choice in your words."
"Weak would've caused a riot, I'm sure."
As the conversation turned more hostile, the company Marisol invited began to move in, no words were said, no weapons were pulled, but the tension in the room was all that needed to be felt. Glancing around, Reyna took in the appearances of the people around her. The first was a tall, dark skinned woman that was menacing in stature. She had dark hair with blonde streaks in it, almost like lightning. The tattoos that adorned her skin could be described as a tapestry of the battles that she had witnessed in her lifetime.
The second member was a little shorter than the woman in front of him. He looked nervous, like it was his first time confronting someone. With his shaggy brown hair and scuffed chin, he almost looked like a scared teenager.
Dark eyes met with pale skin and bright red hair belonged to the next noticeable person in the room. She didn't stand nearly as tall as the other's, but the weapons she held made her just as intimidating.
The last person in the room was the one that held the most harsh energy. He didn't blink, didn't move, and stood stiff as a board. With tanned skin and a scarred face, he stood close to 6'3. He held a commanding air around him without even trying.Finally breaking the silence, Reyna dropped her shoulders.
"You of all people should know she is the strongest woman you have ever had the pleasure of meeting, you had the honor of being engaged to her too, but left our forces for his."
Aseria's eyes widened at her mother's words. No one spoke of her divorse with Marisol, it was a sensitive subject for everyone involved. From the day Marisol left to the moment she was found on the other side of the battle field, she was considered dead to the family.
"It was for the greater good."
"The greater good was right in front of you the whole time and you forced it past your fingers with no hesitation."
The others in the room began to change their stances, ready to follow with action at the signs of an altercation. Aseria turned her back to her mother's, getting ready to grab her weapons if needed. If there was one thing the duo knew how to do, it was fight back to back.
Reyna didn't want to fight. Even as talented of a soldier as she is, she would never actively seek out a fight. She finds herself avoiding every useless fight, especially now, when she wanted answers and had one of the people that could give them up so easily right in the palm of her hand. The ambience of the room became more tense than before as Reyna decided to stall just a little longer.
"You could've gotten married. You had the whole world to create together."
"I don't want to create the world, I want to burn it down, now if we are finished talking, I have business to attend to, and you have a little meeting with my friends here."
Marisol began shifting on her heels, clearly uncomfortable with the conversation and with Aseria's silence. There was nothing more to say and there was nothing more that could come out of the ruins of the relationship, so why were they here, talking? Marisol only had one thing on her mind, the anklet in the basement. Her only mission was to get the anklet and get out. Motioning with her head for her crew to advance, she turned her heel, only stopping at Reyna's next sentence.
"You knew she would've helped you."
Deep down, she was right. Aseria would set the world on fire and choke on the ash with her if it meant spending forever by Marisol's side.
"I suppose we never know how toxic something truly is until we take a breath of fresher air, so thank you for showing your true colors, Marisol."
Green eyes shift across the room, landing on Aseria for the first time. Her dirty hair, shaking frame and white-knuckle grip almost pulled her heart strings too tightly.
"I suppose so."
Without another word, Marisol threw something to the floor and made a run for the door, sparing one glance to the love that she lost disappearing in the smoke, losing her one last time.
YOU ARE READING
Not Your Hero
FantasyThere are plenty of words a mother could use to describe her son. Dashing, witty, handsome or strong. If someone were to ask Ximena Armstrong, however, only one of her boys would be introduced in such a proud light. If they asked about the other one...