She busied herself doing what needed doing. All the small, insignificant tasks that meant they’d be comfortable here. She glanced up from her notes – Christine was buried deep in a score, nodding away to herself, her lips moving silently, her eyes scanning the music hungrily. Erica smiled slightly, vaguely reassured, and returned to writing her letter to the Harpy.
She wasn’t certain how well they would both be accepted. Christine, that was a given. Her beautiful, talented, wild and broken Christine, upon whom everyone doted, she would undoubtedly be accepted. Oh, she’d noticed how the Prince…Consul Maximus had listened to those dulcet tones. How the Toreador had gazed, entranced by the music, by the beauty. They always remembered Christine.
The candle flickered slightly and she paused in her writing. Yes, Christine was always accepted. As she had once been. When she was young and beautiful and talented. She could have been all that. She could have been the one making the Toreador beg for more, and lightening the Prin…Consul’s burden a little. She silently damned her sire for breaking her so thoroughly, killing her more than a thousand times over in so many different ways. And then she silently damned Christine for constantly reminding her of what she had once been.
And then, once she had damned the whole of her pathetic life, she returned to finishing the letter, before turning to her ward.
“You can sing that for me now, mon ortolan.”