52nd Glade 4619
Hakon was hard-pressed to think of a time he'd ever felt happier. Sure, his mission had in some ways been a failure and he would almost certainly be subjected to a lecture or a flogging, but he was unconcerned about that at present. He'd found Ajax, and any such punishment would be worth it.
They'd stayed in the cabin until he could walk with minimal assistance, which had taken two days. Ajax had helped him the entire time, cooking for him, letting the warrior lean on him to get to the stream so he could bathe, and even doing his laundry. When they weren't talking, they were kissing, or doings far more explicit. Ajax seemed to enjoy doing those early and often, and Hakon was only too happy to comply, though at this point his thighs were a bit sore from their activities.
When they reached the Tower, Ajax dismounted from his place behind Hakon and then helped him down.
"Appreciate the help, Squire," Hakon said with a grin.
It was a joke, but it really was a bit necessary, still. His ankle needed to be seen by a healer. It was taking far too long to heal, and the initial period of tenderness and swelling had not improved much past the first day he'd had the injury. He could walk ably and manage a shaky run for short distances, but then his ankle would swell up and he had to rest. Doing any of the more athletic maneuvers that were customary for him was out of the question at this time. In that way, he would have been relieved that Ajax had stuck by him even if the lad didn't make his heart fill with music.
Hakon handed off the reins to the stable boy.
"Welcome to Vesterhal," he said to Ajax with a little smile. He didn't know much of the world, but he was quite fond of the tower.
To him, it was one of the best places in the world. The tower, stark and severe on the outside with its barred windows and fortified walls, contained a sharp, ascetic beauty that he appreciated. He wondered if Ajax would see it that way. This was a boy who was used to Lord's tables and the finer things. It occurred to Hakon that the plain garments and threadbare blankets he favored may not be very impressive to such a boy. Hopefully, their mutual regard for one another would allow Ajax to overlook such things.
With their horse boarded and being properly taken care of for the first time since Hakon had gotten seriously injured, the mage explained what had to happen next to his young charge: "I need to bathe, change, and then provide a report to the Warden. He will be disappointed that I did not return with a Sunderscrap, but heartened that I rescued you. My hope is that on balance, he is pleased and I am not punished in an overly harsh matter."
Hakon had been practicing the lies that he was going to tell. In truth, he had sundered Alecto, but at some point during being injured, it must have become separated from his Sundering kit. He and Ajax had looked everywhere for it, but hadn't found it. After they'd spent the better part of the morning doing so, Ajax had recommended that they give up in deference to Hakon's hurt ankle, and Hakon had agreed. It was so strange, and not at all like him to lose such an important possession. It was also not at all like him to lie about its existence to his superiors, but Ajax had a point: why tell the truth and get punished for losing something when he could simply tell a modified version of the truth: he had prioritized saving Ajax over Sundering. It was true, he had done that; it would have been easier to just kill everyone than it had been to save Ajax from his kidnappers and pick them off one by one, but that would have been barbaric and had gone against his core orders, besides. So rather than reporting that he lost Alecto's sunderscrap, Hakon would simply report that in order to keep Ajax safe, there wasn't time to Sunder anyone.
The idea of telling a lie like this, even a harmless one, made his heart hammer in his chest, but it made sense when Ajax had proposed it, and part of Hakon was darkly fascinated by the prospect of lying to his superior. He wondered how often people attempted to cover up their mistakes this way. It had never occurred to him to do so before. Ajax was teaching him all kinds of new things. He looked at the lad fondly, and gave him a clap on the shoulder before heading toward his chambers with Ajax in tow.