Ratonhnhaké:ton (
lifescratched) wrote in
candybox2013-12-17 11:40 pm
Templar AU - for Mako
Ratonhnhaké:ton -- or Edward, as his European name was, so named after his long-departed grandfather -- lead a dual life. He had lived a peaceful childhood in the village, playing and exploring and learning as any child did. But when he turned ten, his father had taken over raising him, and it was from that point he taught him everything he knew. Of the Order, their ideals, how to think, how to fight, how to navigate in the world of the colonists and to understand it as they did. Edward had not wanted to be parted from his village, from his mother, but from all that Haytham taught him, it soon became apparent that the Templars had the means to protect their home more effectively than he or his mother ever could alone. The colonists were ever more hungry for land, and the power and influence of the Order could quell that, seize power, fight back.
It was a philosophy of absolute control, with no margin for uncertainty or disappointment. It appealed to Edward, although more often than not his father treated him with a certain cold distance, sending him away to instead work and learn from William Johnson. Johnson was liked and trusted by the Kanien'kehá:ka. Edward, now seventeen, had grown to respect the man, but towards the end of his instruction, he had begun to insist more and more that Edward would need to adopt Christianity, if he wished to truly become a full-fledged Templar. The result was an explosive argument between the two.
After that, Edward took his belongings and left the Mohawk Valley, making back for his father's estate in Virginia alone. Of course, when he arrived, his father was nowhere to be found, away on business elsewhere in the colonies.
Always away on business. Only there to instruct him, to give him guidance. And yet the fatherly gestures Haytham sometimes displayed -- those made Edward stay. Those, and the promise he would have the power to protect his people.
The days trickled by. He wrote to his father, to no reply as of yet. He read. He studied. He helped on the plantation and he practised his swordplay. But he was becoming restless, and one morning, when he was poring over a news article (some nonsense about a Tea Act causing unrest in the colonies), a servant barged into the room, breathless.
"Many apologies for interrupting you, Master Kenway, but there's a woman approaching the estate on horseback."
Edward looked up, eyes flashing impatiently. "Well? Who is it?"
"I don't know, sir, but I think it might be your mother."
What was she doing here? Already in a foul mood, he rose, abandoning the paper to go to meet her. He couldn't imagine why she would come all this way to see him, but he didn't doubt it would end badly.
It was a philosophy of absolute control, with no margin for uncertainty or disappointment. It appealed to Edward, although more often than not his father treated him with a certain cold distance, sending him away to instead work and learn from William Johnson. Johnson was liked and trusted by the Kanien'kehá:ka. Edward, now seventeen, had grown to respect the man, but towards the end of his instruction, he had begun to insist more and more that Edward would need to adopt Christianity, if he wished to truly become a full-fledged Templar. The result was an explosive argument between the two.
After that, Edward took his belongings and left the Mohawk Valley, making back for his father's estate in Virginia alone. Of course, when he arrived, his father was nowhere to be found, away on business elsewhere in the colonies.
Always away on business. Only there to instruct him, to give him guidance. And yet the fatherly gestures Haytham sometimes displayed -- those made Edward stay. Those, and the promise he would have the power to protect his people.
The days trickled by. He wrote to his father, to no reply as of yet. He read. He studied. He helped on the plantation and he practised his swordplay. But he was becoming restless, and one morning, when he was poring over a news article (some nonsense about a Tea Act causing unrest in the colonies), a servant barged into the room, breathless.
"Many apologies for interrupting you, Master Kenway, but there's a woman approaching the estate on horseback."
Edward looked up, eyes flashing impatiently. "Well? Who is it?"
"I don't know, sir, but I think it might be your mother."
What was she doing here? Already in a foul mood, he rose, abandoning the paper to go to meet her. He couldn't imagine why she would come all this way to see him, but he didn't doubt it would end badly.

no subject
He didn't break pace until he spied what was undoubtedly his mother approaching on the path through the plantations and up to the manor. He always wondered how unfamiliar he must look to her in his colonial garb, waistcoats and lace ruffs and brass-buttoned overcoats, and a tricorn hat gifted to him from his father. If Edward was aware of just how intensely Haytham wished to fashion his son in his own image, he said little about it.
Once he was close enough he slowed his horse to a halt, his jaw tightening as he regarded her. "Mother." The word was flat, a blank statement of fact, but his eyes told a different story, hurt and frustration behind them. Why was she here? What did she want?
"If it is Father you wish to speak with, he is not here right now."
no subject
Reins of her horse in hand, her pacing slowed when he approached her. She didn't miss the sword or how he seemed to sit so prim and proper. Did he think himself above her? She couldn't believe that. She didn't want to, and she hoped he didn't. But she didn't dare say it, at least not until his respect (or lack thereof) was truly called into question.
"I am not here to see your father," she replied to him directly. "I came to see you. Do you think I think of you not at all?" Her eyebrows knit together and she shook her head, as if she couldn't understand where he'd get such an idea. Except actions. She could not fault him for his father's questionable motives. He was only doing what he was taught.
no subject
"We'll speak inside," he said, wheeling his horse around and leading the way back to the manor, hands tightening on the reins as he wondered how to deal with this unexpected visit. Part of him thought he should send a messenger to alert Haytham straight away that she was here, but what was the use? He still had no response from his last letter. He might even be angry with him about the argument with Sir William. So he rode on, and, as they approached the manor, barked out orders to the waiting servants to prepare sleeping quarters for his mother and a stable for her horse.
He was angry. An emotion he'd become well-acquainted with as of late. But who or what he was angry at now, he wasn't wholly sure.
no subject
Was his composure more like hers or his father's? Ziio was almost always collected. Almost. But there was an invisible line that she never solidly defined and when it crossed, she could have been that which the colonists frequently thought of the natives- a savage. Edward's protection was one of those things she couldn't negotiate on. She would have fought tooth and nail for his protection, and would have done so like a wolf after her pups.
"Of course," she consented as she followed after on horseback, not nearly as 'gallant' as he, but nowhere near in the haste she had been to see him. For even if he was not happy to see her, she was very happy to see him.
no subject
Haytham's manor was nothing too grand or opulent -- he spent so much time travelling that it was barely necessary. Nonetheless it was an adequately handsome structure, Edward supposed, but perhaps that was some of the leftover childish awe he'd first had at being brought to a building made of stone, bigger than any of the longhouses, filled with things he'd never seen before. That felt like a lifetime ago now.
He paused in the hall, and turned to address her again, stiffly: "How long will you be staying for?"
no subject
Ziio trailed after him, though her pace was a bit slower and not half as rigid as Edward's. There wasn't necessarily always something new to look at, but she so infrequently visited that it might as well have been an entirely new and different world. It didn't stop her from looking, though, or being slightly curious about it. It wasn't her life, after all, and it was a lie to say it wasn't the slightest bit intriguing.
He garnered her attention immediately and when she looked back to him, she paused abruptly. "A day or two. More perhaps, unless the thought of that bothers you. It is no short trip here. I could some days to recover before I make the journey again."
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"How is everyone in the village?"
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"They are as they ever have been," she reassured him. "They're well. They ask me of you often. You should visit them, and me from time to time. Otherwise they'll worry." Otherwise she'd worry, which she already did, but she tried not to let that expose too much of itself in her tone.
"How is your father? It appears he's not here."
no subject
Ziio, on the other hand, would take more convincing than most. So he would wait.
"Father is fine. Busy." As ever. And, as ever, finding more time for Charles Lee, his preferred right-hand man, than to his own son. If Edward sounded bitter, it was because he was. "I suspect he will return here once he has finished his business."
no subject
And part of her wondered if she should inquire as to the Templar business, but she knew better than to put her son in that position. Did he have any allegiances to his father? Whether he did or didn't seemed less the issue and more that she didn't want to set him specifically between them.
But she found her eyebrows knitting together with some consideration, "You say you will come in short time. Of your own accord?" Because she had thought more or less he kept his distance by his own choice, so that he would come voluntarily puzzled her. Or perhaps she had misread the situation from the beginning.