7th of Malden, 1025 N.E
The smell was the worst of it.The crypt was cold, the air thick with incense, but it couldn’t mask the scent entirely. Cold and sickly air mingling with the smell of too-sweet oil and spice, sweet yet musty. The embalmers had done their work, wrapped his father up in the colours of the crown, painted his face and set his jaw to look like something more than a limp corpse. It didn’t work, he still looked like a stranger.
Casimir had been coming here for three days. For three days he'd sauntered down the long, dark steps with his cat Quickpaw at his heels. He'd sat in silence, waiting, though he didn't know for what. His father, King Cato, had never been a patient man. He’d have told him to stop wallowing, to act, to stand up straight, to be a man.
Casimir stared at the body, trying to feel something. Anything.
He looked at his father’s hands, stiff and folded. He remembered those hands closing around his arm, picking him up by the scruff of his neck, dragging him away from a training yard after he'd gotten half his teeth knocked out. Cato had wanted a tough son, a boy with broad shoulders and a strong jaw. Casimir tried to remember the last time his father had looked at him with anything other than disappointment. Had he ever done him proud? It was too late to ask now.
Casimir sighed. The stone beneath him was cold, even through his clothes. He should leave. There were things to be done. The coronation. The lords, the court, the hundred thousand decisions waiting for him.
But he just sat there, unwilling and unable to move.
The door groaned open.