Chapter 58: Sky Symbol
The Vampire’s Templar
The hands that held that pot of water trembled as Anne tried to keep her composure. Her heart threatened to jump out of her mouth. Despite her efforts, she still almost wanted to drop the pot and run into the campsite and hug Fleur. Fleur was going to accept her feelings!
She didnât know what had caused her to hide behind that tree and eavesdrop instead of just walking in when she saw Fleur and Camilla talking, but now she was glad she did. If she had interrupted their talk, who knows what would have happened. At the very least, Fleur probably wouldnât have decided to give her a chance.
Perhapsâ¦Camilla wasnât so bad after all. She had been too harsh and rude to herâ¦sheâll have to apologize later.
Anne wetted her dry lips and mouth as she calmed herself down, trying to act like she had beforeâa sulky expression that scarcely matched how she felt. But she had no choice; she couldnât show any signs that she had overheard their conversation.
After an appropriately long amount of time, Anne walked into the campsite from the forest, deliberately stepped on some branches to announce her presence. Fleur jumped a little and turned around to look at her.
âWâwelcome back.â
Anne had to bite her lips to stop herself from making a huge smile. The pain and her resulted in a rather twisted expression that made Fleurâs brows furrow.
âAre you okay, Anne?â Fleur asked.
Yes! Yes! âYesâ¦um, whereâs Camilla?â Anne asked. She already knew that Camilla left, but she had to pretend she didnât. She really didnât know why Camilla left, though. Her departure had been rather sudden and inexplicable.
Fleur shrugged. âI donât know. I kind of asked her what kind of person she liked, and afterwards, she kind of lost her composure and left. Ahâ¦by the way, Iâ¦â
Anne clutched the handles of the pot in anticipation. But what she expected never came, as Fleur seemed to deflate when she was on the cusp of spitting out the words she was holding in.
But although Anne was a bit disappointed that she didnât hear the words that she wanted to hear, she didnât mind. She could afford to wait. She had patience to spare, since sheâd already waited for so long, especially since she already knew what Fleurâs reply was.
She set the pot of water down on the rack over the fire before she took a small knife from the supplies and began to cut up the rabbit meat. Despite her desire to hide her happiness, she couldnât stop herself from humming as she worked.
As an orphan taken in by the Church, the only songs she knew were hymns and other songs of ceremony, and soon, she found herself quietly singing little parts of a certain song.
ââ¦the door to my heartâ¦a blessing in my lifeâ¦to paradise we both goâ¦never do us partâ¦â
The song was quite long, and itâs been so long since she had done any real ceremonial work that she had forgotten most of the lyrics, yet she still remembered bits and pieces of it, and combined with the tune in her mind, it was enough to make even the monotonous and tedious task of carefully carving up the rabbit something to be joyful about.
As she raised her knife to start another cut, she suddenly heard Fleurâs voice by her ear.
âWhat are you humming?â
âYaah!â She jumped, and then pain burned in a line on her finger as she drew her hand across the knife. Blood poured from the wound and fighting back her tears, Anne moved her hand away from the chopping board so the blood didnât fall into her meat. Fleur gasped in horror.
âAnne! IâIâm sorry, I didnât mean toâ¦â
âNo, no, itâs fine! Itâs just a cut. Something like this is easyâ¦â
Although wounds on the hand looked scary since they bleed so much, that was only because there were a lot of blood vessels on the hand. Behind all that blood was usually just a small cutâ¦Fleur should know this. Fleur was panicking because of herâ¦
She shouldnât be happy because of this.
Fleur grabbed her hand, and in seconds, her clean hand was covered in red. But Fleur ignored the blood and soon, Anne felt the pain throbbing in her hand disappearing as a warm, golden glow that felt like sunshine on a pleasant day covered her hand. She could almost hear the birds calling.
When the glow disappeared, Anneâs hand felt empty.
âSorry, Anne,â Fleur repeated, grabbing a water skin and began to clumsily uncap the container with one hand, getting blood all over. Anne couldnât watch anymore and took the container.
âItâs fine. Hold out your hand, Fleur. Ah, I meanâ¦please hold out your hand,â she said, correcting her attitude, hoping that Fleur didnât notice. Fleur held out her hand and Anne put her own under it after opening the container. Cool water poured onto their hands, splashing onto the ground.
Feeling emboldened by her knowledge, Anne grabbed Fleurâs hand, ignoring the girlâs flinch, and rubbed all over it. Fleur soon reciprocated. The motion, combined with the pouring water, washed their hands clean of blood. Fleur used the last of the water to clean off the outside of the waterskin itself, leaving them with a wet patch of dirt and an empty waterskin.
Their eyes met for a moment, seemingly for whole minutes yet at the same time less than a second, before Fleur broke eye contact. She took the empty waterskin from Anneâs hands and ran to put it away, leaving Anne standing alone.
Anne rubbed the hand that had touched Fleur before going back to the chopping board, wielding the knife with renewed vigour. Since Camillaâalthough she should probably call her Lady Camilla now out of respect since sheâs not as close to her as Fleur wasâstill wasnât back by the time she finished, Anne decided to just cook the meat too since the water was already boiling.
The reason why Lady Camilla woke them up so early was probably to speed up their pace. Anne guessed that as a former templar commander, there was no way that Lady Camilla wasnât disciplined.
Since Lady Camilla wants to up the pace, then the meal has to be prepared ahead of time. Thatâs how it was at the outpost, with the cooks waking up the earliest of them all.
But that wasnât the only reason why Anne decided to cook. It was because the stew that Lady Camilla made wasâ¦edible. A lot more edible than the bread from the outpost, but that was the extent of the compliments she felt comfortable giving.
âYou can cook?â Fleur asked, walking up to stand beside her. This time, she approached from the front where Anne could clearly see her, which made sense, since if an accident happened this time, the consequences would be a lot worse than a mere cut.
âI help out at the cafeteria a lot.â
âEhâ¦?â Fleur looked at her, full of doubt. âBut the food there is a littleâ¦â
âI think itâs amazing they made something edible out of what they had to work with,â Anne replied with a serious face, and she wasnât kidding. Fleur paled, and Anne left the details to Fleurâs imagination.
When Lady Camilla finally came back again, Anne and Fleur had already finished eating, and even packed up the tents and secured them to their cargo horse. They were sitting around the extinguished campfire when Lady Camilla came out of the trees. Her hair was laden with water, as if she had just washed it.
Why would an undead need to wash their hair? Although since Lady Camilla was formerly a human, and now a girl, it was understandable that she paid attention to her hygiene even if it wasnât strictly necessary.
Anne also just noticed that what Lady Camilla wore was not the plain black dress she had been wearing, but rather the elaborately made dress plated with exquisite armorâthe very same set that the lady had worn into battle that night.
So her guess was right, and Lady Camilla really was about to increase their pace. Her change from a civilianâs attire to something more suitable for battle surely marked that change in mindset. Anne wondered if Fleur noticed. n/ô/vel/b//in dot c//om
When she looked over to check Fleurâs expression, expecting Fleur to be looking at Lady Camilla, her heart skipped a beat when she saw that Fleurâs gaze was fixed on her instead. She quickly looked away and stood up.
Sheâ¦she still wasnât used to the reality that Fleur was willing to look at her. It was all too sudden, and she hadnât adjusted yet. Swallowed, she made her way toward her horse.
Without a word, Lady Camilla walked past her at a brisk pace and swung up onto her horse, the very image of a military woman.
After Anne helped Fleur onto her horse, she climbed onto her own, and they resumed their journey along the narrow path.
Unlike the first day, Lady Camilla began to ride on further ahead to act as a scout for possible danger, only coming back now and then.
Although itâs already been Lady Camillaâs third time back and she still hasnât spotted anything even remotely dangerous, she insisted on continuing. Anne couldnât help but be impressed by her vigilance. Despite Lady Camillaâs suspicions, however, the journey remained uneventful.
Hours ticked by in mostly silence, usually broken when Fleur spotted something interesting and tried to get Anne to look as well. This deep in the forest, there were different birds that neither of them had ever seen before.
Other times, Fleur would look up at the sky and spot shapes in the clouds, and that seemed to be endlessly entertaining for her. And since Fleur shared her excitement and happiness, Anne was happy as well.
âHey Anne, Anne. What does that look like?â Fleur suddenly piped up again, pointing up at the sky.
Anne nudged her horse closer to Fleurâs to better follow Fleurâs pointing and looked up, trying to find what Fleur was looking at. They were playing a guessing game where they alternated guessing each otherâs interpretation of the cloudsâ shape, and it was currently her turn to guess.
After sweeping the general area of the sky that Fleur was pointed at, Anneâs eyes locked onto the most conspicuous of the shapes, and her heart that had managed to calm down from the excitement that morning sped up again. The anticipation that she had suppressed came back with a vengeance.
Amazingly, floating in the sky high above, drifting among its peers was a cloud in the shape of a heart. Anne found it hard to breathe, and her throat was dry. Even swallowing was difficult, and it didnât help.
Suddenly, the wind picked up, and the cloud began to lose its shape. She was helpless to stop it and could only watch, when Fleurâs cry startled her out of her trance.
âWhat is it? Anne, say it!â
Anne looked down to see Fleur staring at her, a flame within her eyes. She took a deep breath. âHeartâ¦itâs a heart. Fleur, I love you.â
At her answer, Fleur sat, stunned and unmoving. Despite already knowing how Fleur felt, Anne couldnât suppress the twinge of worry that she might be wrong. But before her very eyes, a tear dropped out of the corner of Fleurâs eyes as she nodded. âI love you too.â