As Leon went ahead and Merlin hung back, Gwaine began to feel uncomfortable that they had become separated in the group of Druids. It felt vaguely like a prison escort, though that was of course ridiculous, not least because he could probably, in a pinch, take on the whole fleet of pacifistic pansies by himself.
Well, except there was the magic.
Gwaine didn't care one way or the other about magic--after all, Merlin was about as magic as you got and was as sweet as pie--but Gwaine had seen enough of the world to know that magic was one of those powers that got abused often enough to make him generally uncomfortable with those who wielded it.
That wasn't to say, of course, that he didn't have the ability to surmount his discomfort. Especially for a face like that.
He fell into step with her, and quickly made his move:
"So, you rescue knights from killer gnomes often?"
She looked at him sideways with a shy, and somehow very knowing, smile. She was silent just long enough for Gwaine to get uncomfortable enough to start thinking up a back-up chat-up line, when she replied with another question, "You are Strength, are you not?"
"Em..." Of all the possible responses, Gwaine had not expected that one. "Huh?"
"Grettir the Gatekeeper spoke of you."
Gwaine blinked. "Again, I've got nothing. You must have mistaken me for someone else. I look like a lot of people. Do you know I was even once mistaken for Cenred of Essetir--"
She laughed a sparkling, high laugh. Gwaine liked it when ladies found him amusing, but he usually preferred to say something funny before they laughed at him. "It is said many resist their destiny."
Now it was Gwaine's turn to laugh, and he looked around to see if Merlin and Leon were getting told the same rubbish and were buying it, but they were no where to be seen. "I don't believe in destiny, thanks. I'm a free-will-over-fate kind of guy. I don't like people telling me what to do, and I sure as hell don't hold with people telling me what I am going to do."
"Whether you want it or not, Strength," she said, smiling softly and walking on, "your destiny is greater than you want to believe." Gwaine wrinkled up his nose in distaste, but in spite of the setback, he kept pace with her. Before he could figure out what to say next, "That pendant you wear. It is special to you."
"Uhh." Gwaine tripped up again, and his hand went instinctively to clutch at the emblem, but he quickly rallied. "No, not especially." The pendant was all he had left of his family, but he sure as hell wasn't telling her that. What was with this girl and her probing questions? She was making him uncomfortable.
"I do not wish to discomfit you, Sir Gwaine," she said, and he relaxed a hair.
"So you do know my actual name?" Gwaine beamed at this victory. "My reputation precedes me, as usual."
"You are known by many names, to those who hear. You are the Strength which completes Magic and Courage, and you are Magic's Champion." She stopped, peering at him intently, and he stopped, mouth flapping. "But beware, for when you defend Magic, you will lose much."
"Oh, I will, will I?" Gwaine laughed as scornfully as he could manage, halting all thoughts of warming his bed with a druid girl tonight. He was actually kind of turned off at this point. No girl was worth this much introspection. He wouldn't ever be that desperate. "Well, thanks for the soothsaying and oracle...ing stuff, and thanks for saving us and all, but--" they were in sight of the castle, now, its lit ramparts sparkling over the line of trees, "but, well, here we are." He had actually never been so happy to see Camelot, and he marveled a bit at the fairly novel feeling of truly coming home. "So, you know, sorry to cut this short, but I think we can take it from here," he said quickly, painfully aware of the travesty that was him not asking her to his chambers.
Now she looked at him sadly, and stopped. For the first time, Gwaine felt a little remorseful for his quick words and closed mind, and, not for the first time, began to reconsider inviting her up to his chambers. For some reason he did not like the idea of leaving her alone here in the woods--which was ridiculous, because she was probably better equipped for survival out here than he could ever hope to be--yet he still felt oddly protective of her, even having only known her for half an hour.
Gwaine sighed dramatically and stalked back to where she stood. "On second thought, I've behaved appallingly. If you know me as well as you claim to, you'll know that's no surprise. I would--we all would--appreciate it if you would be our guests in Camelot tonight. We don't even need to mention that you're Druids, Arthur's frightfully thick when it comes right down to it, and--"
Now, quick as lightning, she grabbed his arm. Her eyes glowed gold, the sign of magic, and when she spoke, her voice was different: hoarse, deep, and foreboding, like the universe and everything in it was speaking through her. "Heed the prophecies. Your destiny is Strength, your choice is exile. Your blood is both your greatest downfall and your greatest triumph."
Gwaine tried to pull away, but her grip was inhumanly strong. He was just beginning to panic when the gold faded and she stumbled, looking dazed. "Hey, hey! Are you all right?" he asked, steadying her.
She looked confused. "Uh. Yeah. What? What did you say?"
"What did I say?" Gwaine repeated. "What did you say? You went all goldy-eyed and weird there for a minute."
"Oh," she said, straightening shakily. "That happens sometimes. What did I say?"
"I don't know! Something about my blood being my downfall and triumph. What was that?"
"I am a Seer," she explained. "Normally the messages are not that powerful. I apologize if I worried you. You said you can take it from here? I may need to just rest a moment." She reached out, touched a tree, and slowly slid down it until she was resting on the ground, her back against the trunk, her knees clutched against her chest.
"I'll stay with you," Gwaine offered gallantly, and looked around. "Is there a shelter nearby? Somewhere I can take you?" Also, where have the others gone?
Now she giggled. "Sir Gwaine, I am a Druid. I am sheltered everywhere."
"Must be nice," Gwaine said, hankering down next to her.
The silence was quickly awkward.
"That last bit you said," Gwaine tried, "not that I'm ready to believe it, but if I did--what does that even mean? My blood being my own problem or whatever. 'My blood,' does that mean me? Or my, em--" he paused, "I don't really have any family."
"I cannot interpret," she said with a shrug. "It could mean either. Or both."
Gwaine nodded.
The silence was awkward again. Apparently aside from prophetic mumbo-jumbo, Druids weren't great conversationalists.
"So...Anything we can do to pass the time?" he asked, actually quite innocently, but when he looked up at her, the sparkle in her eyes was anything but innocent. He licked his lips, equal parts hungry and nervous.
"I can think of one or two," she replied, leaning forward to capture his mouth in a kiss.
Well, except there was the magic.
Gwaine didn't care one way or the other about magic--after all, Merlin was about as magic as you got and was as sweet as pie--but Gwaine had seen enough of the world to know that magic was one of those powers that got abused often enough to make him generally uncomfortable with those who wielded it.
That wasn't to say, of course, that he didn't have the ability to surmount his discomfort. Especially for a face like that.
He fell into step with her, and quickly made his move:
"So, you rescue knights from killer gnomes often?"
She looked at him sideways with a shy, and somehow very knowing, smile. She was silent just long enough for Gwaine to get uncomfortable enough to start thinking up a back-up chat-up line, when she replied with another question, "You are Strength, are you not?"
"Em..." Of all the possible responses, Gwaine had not expected that one. "Huh?"
"Grettir the Gatekeeper spoke of you."
Gwaine blinked. "Again, I've got nothing. You must have mistaken me for someone else. I look like a lot of people. Do you know I was even once mistaken for Cenred of Essetir--"
She laughed a sparkling, high laugh. Gwaine liked it when ladies found him amusing, but he usually preferred to say something funny before they laughed at him. "It is said many resist their destiny."
Now it was Gwaine's turn to laugh, and he looked around to see if Merlin and Leon were getting told the same rubbish and were buying it, but they were no where to be seen. "I don't believe in destiny, thanks. I'm a free-will-over-fate kind of guy. I don't like people telling me what to do, and I sure as hell don't hold with people telling me what I am going to do."
"Whether you want it or not, Strength," she said, smiling softly and walking on, "your destiny is greater than you want to believe." Gwaine wrinkled up his nose in distaste, but in spite of the setback, he kept pace with her. Before he could figure out what to say next, "That pendant you wear. It is special to you."
"Uhh." Gwaine tripped up again, and his hand went instinctively to clutch at the emblem, but he quickly rallied. "No, not especially." The pendant was all he had left of his family, but he sure as hell wasn't telling her that. What was with this girl and her probing questions? She was making him uncomfortable.
"I do not wish to discomfit you, Sir Gwaine," she said, and he relaxed a hair.
"So you do know my actual name?" Gwaine beamed at this victory. "My reputation precedes me, as usual."
"You are known by many names, to those who hear. You are the Strength which completes Magic and Courage, and you are Magic's Champion." She stopped, peering at him intently, and he stopped, mouth flapping. "But beware, for when you defend Magic, you will lose much."
"Oh, I will, will I?" Gwaine laughed as scornfully as he could manage, halting all thoughts of warming his bed with a druid girl tonight. He was actually kind of turned off at this point. No girl was worth this much introspection. He wouldn't ever be that desperate. "Well, thanks for the soothsaying and oracle...ing stuff, and thanks for saving us and all, but--" they were in sight of the castle, now, its lit ramparts sparkling over the line of trees, "but, well, here we are." He had actually never been so happy to see Camelot, and he marveled a bit at the fairly novel feeling of truly coming home. "So, you know, sorry to cut this short, but I think we can take it from here," he said quickly, painfully aware of the travesty that was him not asking her to his chambers.
Now she looked at him sadly, and stopped. For the first time, Gwaine felt a little remorseful for his quick words and closed mind, and, not for the first time, began to reconsider inviting her up to his chambers. For some reason he did not like the idea of leaving her alone here in the woods--which was ridiculous, because she was probably better equipped for survival out here than he could ever hope to be--yet he still felt oddly protective of her, even having only known her for half an hour.
Gwaine sighed dramatically and stalked back to where she stood. "On second thought, I've behaved appallingly. If you know me as well as you claim to, you'll know that's no surprise. I would--we all would--appreciate it if you would be our guests in Camelot tonight. We don't even need to mention that you're Druids, Arthur's frightfully thick when it comes right down to it, and--"
Now, quick as lightning, she grabbed his arm. Her eyes glowed gold, the sign of magic, and when she spoke, her voice was different: hoarse, deep, and foreboding, like the universe and everything in it was speaking through her. "Heed the prophecies. Your destiny is Strength, your choice is exile. Your blood is both your greatest downfall and your greatest triumph."
Gwaine tried to pull away, but her grip was inhumanly strong. He was just beginning to panic when the gold faded and she stumbled, looking dazed. "Hey, hey! Are you all right?" he asked, steadying her.
She looked confused. "Uh. Yeah. What? What did you say?"
"What did I say?" Gwaine repeated. "What did you say? You went all goldy-eyed and weird there for a minute."
"Oh," she said, straightening shakily. "That happens sometimes. What did I say?"
"I don't know! Something about my blood being my downfall and triumph. What was that?"
"I am a Seer," she explained. "Normally the messages are not that powerful. I apologize if I worried you. You said you can take it from here? I may need to just rest a moment." She reached out, touched a tree, and slowly slid down it until she was resting on the ground, her back against the trunk, her knees clutched against her chest.
"I'll stay with you," Gwaine offered gallantly, and looked around. "Is there a shelter nearby? Somewhere I can take you?" Also, where have the others gone?
Now she giggled. "Sir Gwaine, I am a Druid. I am sheltered everywhere."
"Must be nice," Gwaine said, hankering down next to her.
The silence was quickly awkward.
"That last bit you said," Gwaine tried, "not that I'm ready to believe it, but if I did--what does that even mean? My blood being my own problem or whatever. 'My blood,' does that mean me? Or my, em--" he paused, "I don't really have any family."
"I cannot interpret," she said with a shrug. "It could mean either. Or both."
Gwaine nodded.
The silence was awkward again. Apparently aside from prophetic mumbo-jumbo, Druids weren't great conversationalists.
"So...Anything we can do to pass the time?" he asked, actually quite innocently, but when he looked up at her, the sparkle in her eyes was anything but innocent. He licked his lips, equal parts hungry and nervous.
"I can think of one or two," she replied, leaning forward to capture his mouth in a kiss.