The corners of his lips ticked upward.
“I’m sorry,” she said. “That was—”
“No. You’re right.” He rubbed at his chin as his other hand tapped one finger against his knee. “I can’t simply say that I want a governance that shares power while the lords remain the only ones with meaningful say. But how do we build that without power being stretched so thin that it collapses in on itself?”
Vera waited for Arthur to continue. He didn’t.
“Sorry, are you wanting me to answer?” she asked.
“Yes.”
“Arthur, I’m not—” She huffed a laugh. “The entire purpose of my existence is recovering Guinevere’s memories. If you don’t need them, the best I can do until the kingdom can break the curse on its own is to not cause any more harm. I’m not anybody. I’m a vessel for a woman who is … gone.” They were words she’d said before. Words she believed. She’d never said them to Arthur, though. It felt a little more like a recitation and less like the truth than it once had.
His face had gone rigid as she spoke. Vera tensed at the thought that he might go distant from her again. But he got up and knelt on the bed next to her, looking her squarely in the eyes. “You don’t see it, do you?”
“See what?”
“We are better because you are here. You don’t have to be Guinevere to matter. You, Vera, matter very much to this kingdom.”
She dropped her chin to her chest and squeezed her eyes shut. “Yes, I have brought it to the brink of war—”
She felt his hand on her shoulder and the other gently lifting her chin. His lips were so close to hers. She yearned to close the gap. “You matter to me. I don’t want to do this without you. I want to know what you think.”
She wished she could have fallen into him. Instead, she scooted over to make room for him to properly sit next to her. They wouldn’t solve all the kingdom’s problems that night, but it was the beginning of something. The weight they each bore, with no secrets left between them, became a shared burden.
And with a quiet voice in Vera whispering that perhaps she could do something good here—something good with him—they put ruling to bed for the night to finish the final chapter of The Hobbit.
“It’s a wonderful story, isn’t it?” Arthur laid the book aside. “Going on a life-changing adventure and then coming back home? Maybe you’ll have your own There and Back Again to write soon.”
“Maybe,” she said, hoping he couldn’t hear her uncertainty. It was only January, after all. The end of spring was a long way off. There was no sense in worrying about that now. “This book is actually the story’s beginning.”
“Really? Does Bilbo have more adventures?”
Vera listed her head to the side. “Hm, not exactly. It’s more about the ring he found. It turns out to be, like, the most powerful thing in Middle Earth made by this dark lord Sauron to rule the world or what-have-you.” She sat up more in her excitement. “Anyway, Bilbo’s nephew has to go on a quest to destroy it. That one’s a trilogy called The Lord of the Rings. It’s amazing. They even made them into these fantastic films.”
Arthur’s smile warmed as he listened. “Do you know them well enough to tell me the story?”
“No!” Vera said, scandalized. “I mean, yes, I know them well enough, but I can’t do that. I don’t want to spoil them for you!”
He laughed. “How would it—” His expression softened. “Vera, I’m never going to read those books in my lifetime. And I’m certainly never going to watch those films.”
He was right, of course. She knew that, but still. “I can’t,” she insisted. “What if we can convince Merlin to bring them back …”
When he takes me home.
She couldn’t finish the sentence. She didn’t need to. Arthur understood.
“I’d like that,” he said, his eyes glinting. He seemed happy. Vera wished she could join in his joy. Arthur belonged in another world, and there were some things—many things—they would never share. It didn’t matter that her feelings for him were magic’s fabrication; she decided she would not waste a moment of it.
He stood to leave, as he always did when they finished reading.
“Will you stay?” Vera asked before she had time to change her mind.
When he hesitated and looked back at her with a flicker of longing, it urged her on.
“I know you slept in the chair a few nights. And that you come in during the night to make sure I’m all right.” She’d been awake a few of the times, though she pretended not to be. “You’re running a young country that’s in a bit of a shitstorm. Good sleep is the least of what you need right now.” She tried to smile reassuringly, but it did nothing to unknit the furrow of his brow.
“I don’t want you to feel …”
“I feel safe with you,” she said.
Vera saw it again: a flicker of shame as brief as a spark’s life. “All right,” he said.
She scooted to the side that she’d been sleeping on, and Arthur settled in on the other side.
They did not touch that night, but he never went back to sleeping in the chair or even the other chamber, and it was not long before the guise of sleep became a refuge for what they would not allow in the light of day.
Under the cover of unconsciousness, Vera and Arthur’s arms found one another. It started innocently when she rolled over in the space inches before sleep, and her hand landed on his chest. A reflex from a love that was gone—it was how she’d slept with Vincent almost nightly, but she froze as she realized where she was and who her arm was draped across. His eyes didn’t open, but his breathing changed. He was awake. He didn’t pull away. He covered her hand with his and held it.
But she always instigated it. One night, when she was determined not to indulge her need for his touch, Vera lay on her side facing away from Arthur. It surprised her when he rolled close behind her, slid his arm around her torso, and held her, gently rubbing his thumb back and forth across her collarbone.
It elated and frightened her in equal measure to realize that, in his arms, Vera felt like she was home.
Her nights with Arthur had them staying up late, reading and dreaming. And, come morning, Vera didn’t want to get out of bed when he was next to her. She felt a little guilty because she and Lancelot were running markedly less, though he hadn’t seemed to mind. Vera suspected there’d been something else—someone else—occupying his hours. Perhaps the lady he’d snuck off with in Glastonbury was a Camelot local?
He didn’t pry about the status of her and Arthur’s … whatever this was, so she abided by the same courtesy. And he’d found quite a friend in Gawain, of all people. Their pairing actually worked astoundingly well. Lancelot acted as Gawain’s social interpreter as the mage got to know the gifted of the town and started training them.
Vera and Arthur arrived at the stables one morning to fetch their horses and found Grady seated with Gawain in the grass outside, a single log hovering between them, rotating slowly. Grady’s forehead crinkled in concentration, though Vera had seen him juggle about eight sticks of wood at a time, all far larger than this one that hung low in the air. Sweat beaded on his brow despite the ground beneath him harboring a silvery kiss of frost.
“That’s it,” Gawain said. “Very good, Grady!” It was a low bar, but Vera felt a surge of affection for the mage at the kindness in his voice and for the simple fact that he used Grady’s name.
“Do you know what he’s doing?” Arthur murmured to Vera, but the noise was enough to draw Grady’s attention. The log froze in midair before it tumbled to the ground.