Lucien was, either, the odd one out of all the people Dayan ever had had the (mis)fortune of knowing, or he himself was the odd one out, the person that didn't want to saddle himself, or anyone, with unecessary feelings or the likes thereof. It seemed almost as if the redhead he'd been saddled with was from a different world, to say the least; bossing around servants or asking for enormous amounts of help from them had never been his call to make, even if he had been - in name only - a prince and subsequently the kings son, yet not the rightful heir to anything. "You like shooing people around? How come you haven't bossed me around yet, then?", he inquired, simply feeling his stomach turn whenever Lucien managed to sneak ina remark about how big and pompous his coronation would be eventually. Did he do that on purpose? Hardly, there wasn't anything he'd gain from that, or at least there was nothing Dayan could think of, at least for now - what a pain. "The warmth is nice and all, but I can't stand either all that much. I'm better at composing myself when it comes to the cold, yes, but that's just about anything I can offer up." Besides, a bit of heat wouldn't melt him, not like it seemingly did to his father or even partially Caelan, but ... Dayan prefered Myriads climate, if he was honest, though, maybe Alsters was better for him, or even Fhaergus'; not that he could just freely pick where he wanted his palace to be, though. "I hope this will be a rather short chapter in my life, actually. I'd much prefer it if Richard came back and picked up the crown."
Dayan felt uneasy to say the least - it wasn't that he didn't have any love for his country or his people, or even the traditions that came with his upbringing, no - quite the opposite actually. However, it also felt as if he'd been handed the most precious and fragile gemstone of all, to keep close and hide away from the public eye, lest someone else coveted it and let that kingdom of his crumble to fine dust. If he were to be honest none of all those things were what he ever thought he'd be doing, let alone what he wanted to be doing, which was why he grimaced at his fellow noble at best, almost apologetically for his original shortcomings. "Fine, fine - if you're dying to have some work on your hands and you keep asking, I can hardly keep denying you, can I now? You may do as you please starting tomorrow morning.", he voiced, sounding a bit exasperated and not all that convinced of his own words, though, he just handed over the reins to Lucien, somewhat happy that all the weight wasn't resting on his shoulders anymore; he'd not die anytime soon, which was a plus to begin with. "Just a roundtrip, then? I'm fine with that, as long as you don't insist we take a carriage." Those were no fun and you always had someone eavesdropping involuntarily, not to mention that they got stuffy rather quick - if anything, Dayan prefered to be out and about on his own or with Richard, who very much counted as his better half in a lot of things. Eventually, though, he stopped in his tracks, right in front of Luciens room - there was no need to intrude and he'd much prefer some alone time after an exhausting day like this; a laughable statement, especially for the person that Dayan used to be. "I do have to start somewhere, rather sooner than later after shunning my duties, don't I? I'm quite the shitty pick for a king.", he grumbled and pinched the bridge of his nose, closing his eyes for a second. "Forget that, I haven't done anything wrong so for ... and I probably should bid you a good night. However, it also goes without saying that I'm grateful for your help." And if Dayan was terribly honest, Luciens presence was - albeit strangely - comforting. It made the castle less vast and empty, didn't it?
Dayan felt uneasy to say the least - it wasn't that he didn't have any love for his country or his people, or even the traditions that came with his upbringing, no - quite the opposite actually. However, it also felt as if he'd been handed the most precious and fragile gemstone of all, to keep close and hide away from the public eye, lest someone else coveted it and let that kingdom of his crumble to fine dust. If he were to be honest none of all those things were what he ever thought he'd be doing, let alone what he wanted to be doing, which was why he grimaced at his fellow noble at best, almost apologetically for his original shortcomings. "Fine, fine - if you're dying to have some work on your hands and you keep asking, I can hardly keep denying you, can I now? You may do as you please starting tomorrow morning.", he voiced, sounding a bit exasperated and not all that convinced of his own words, though, he just handed over the reins to Lucien, somewhat happy that all the weight wasn't resting on his shoulders anymore; he'd not die anytime soon, which was a plus to begin with. "Just a roundtrip, then? I'm fine with that, as long as you don't insist we take a carriage." Those were no fun and you always had someone eavesdropping involuntarily, not to mention that they got stuffy rather quick - if anything, Dayan prefered to be out and about on his own or with Richard, who very much counted as his better half in a lot of things. Eventually, though, he stopped in his tracks, right in front of Luciens room - there was no need to intrude and he'd much prefer some alone time after an exhausting day like this; a laughable statement, especially for the person that Dayan used to be. "I do have to start somewhere, rather sooner than later after shunning my duties, don't I? I'm quite the shitty pick for a king.", he grumbled and pinched the bridge of his nose, closing his eyes for a second. "Forget that, I haven't done anything wrong so for ... and I probably should bid you a good night. However, it also goes without saying that I'm grateful for your help." And if Dayan was terribly honest, Luciens presence was - albeit strangely - comforting. It made the castle less vast and empty, didn't it?
Looking back, it maybe is like the toy carts you rode when you were a kid. But those toy carts could never go beyond the walls of the lawn. We want to follow the rugged concrete road beyond the wall. As we've grown, we've decided to leave behind the toy cart.