Title: My Fair Lord: a Story of Steel, Steam and Silk: Act One
Part: 1 of 3
Keywords: furry, mm, steam punk, culture clash
Universe: Shattered Tears
Author: just_lurking
Summary: The tale of two young males.  Faolan, the crown prince of the Wolven Empire, and Nettle, a shy waiter from the rabbit lands, meet on the island city Gleipnir.

The Pride of Lyngvi's powerful, steam-engine chugged and groaned as
her crew guided her to berth.  She was a ship of war--her engine was
not designed to run efficiently at low speeds.  Even so, the ship cut
through the windy, midnight rain of Gleipnir's docks easily.

The Pride of Lyngvi was one of the most recent additions to the Wolven
fleet, and one of only a handful of steel-hulled ships in existence.
She represented the state-of-the-art in metallurgy, engineering and above
all military design.  Everything about her was bleeding edge--indeed
some aspects of her design were dangerously experimental.

But for all its fearsome, elegant design, the Pride of Lyngvi was not the
flag ship of the fleet.  That honour was reserved for the Conqueror--an
older, larger, vessel.  So it was that the Pride of Lyngvi's (almost)
unannounced arrival, in the dead of night, generated little in the way
of interest among the general populous.

That lack of interest, however, was exactly what the ship's most senior
passenger was hoping for.  Given the current political situation His
Imperial Majesty, The Emperor Conall Lyall was eager to keep his travel
arrangements as quiet as possible.

The sailors and dock crew working in tandem soon had the ship tethered
securely and a gangway erected.

The ruler of the Wolven Empire stepped out of the wheel room, onto the
top deck of the ship and into the heavy rain and cold wind.

He was dressed in rich but austere clothes as befitted one of his station.
His suit was black as the night.  The high collared shirt he wore under
his buttoned jacket was white, with only the lightest suggestion of,
near-invisible, golden thread-work adorning the trims.  A gold chain
and watch in his breast-pocket was a more prominent display of the
Emperor's wealth.  His boots were of a military design.

The Emperor himself was grey wolf of around forty years with a well built
body rippling with powerful muscles.  His hard green eyes were always
fixed straight ahead--after all, the Emperor of half the Shattered
Tears did not step out of the way of other fursons.  He strode towards
the gangway, his goal, directly and with brisk steps, never showing a
moments hesitation or indecision--such qualities were not to be found
in either the Empire or His Imperial Majesty.

He was flanked by two fursons who walked exactly one step behind.

On his right was a tall, thin, bespectacled wolf in a navy-blue
great-coat.  Almost half the Emperor's age, he had a serious, studious
look to him.  Even so, his hard jaw line and the thick, luxurious fur
around his jowls, lent the young wolf an aura of cultured, refined
determination.

His coat was made of heavy wool which was dyed a navy blue so dark it was
almost black.  Gold rope work trimmed every seam.  It had a tall rigid
collar which ended just below the jaw.  The coat was tailored so that
it tightly adhered to the contours of his body when it was buttoned up.

He was holding a large umbrella over both himself and His Majesty.

Walking behind the Emperor on his left was a shorter figure shrouded in
a heavily-hooded, black rain-cape.  It was impossible to make out the
figure's sex or species under the folds of the heavy garment.

The trio stepped onto the gangway and disembarked the ship.

Waiting for them, on the dock at the foot of the ramp, was a rather
worried looking wolf in ermine robes.  He snapped to attention as he
saw the Emperor approach.

"Your Majesty. Lord Lycaon."  The ermine-clad wolf acknowledged both
his sovereign and the tall wolf behind him, "Welcome to Gleipnir. We
thank you for honouring us with your visit to your island."

"Thank you Governor." Emperor Conall replied simply.

The governor fidget visibly.  Meeting the ruler of the Empire at the
dark of night, without a ceremony, official welcome or honour guard,
obviously upset him.

"I've arranged transport to the Beach Palace," He indicated a
number of waiting carriages, "if it pleases Your Majesty."

The leader of the wolven territories indicated that it did indeed meet
with his approval with a simple: "It does."

The four figures started towards the transport.

In the background, dock hands had wheeled over a steam powered winch and
were busy unloading cargo from the Pride of Lyngvi's hold.  The Emperor
paid them no mind, their baggage would be transferred to the Beach Palace
almost as swiftly as he would--indeed it would probably arrive in his
chambers before he did.

The other members of the royal entourage--servants, butlers, valets,
secretaries--began to disembark.  There were around twenty attendants
all told--far fewer than the staff the Emperor normally travelled with.

The governor held the door open for the Emperor and his companions.
No invitation was issued for him to join them so he didn't.

The driver cracked his whip and the horse-drawn conveyance set off.

The trio sat inside the carriage--the Emperor on one side and Lord
Lycaon and the hooded figure on the opposite.

"Llou," the Emperor said addressing Lord Lycaon, "are the
preparations for our tour of the warships ready?"

Lord Lycaon nodded "I believe so Your Majesty. As planned the orders
weren't issued until very late in the day, but I believe they have
been carried out. I'll know for certain once we reach the Beach
Palace. I've arranged for my correspondence to be sent there."

"Hmm," the Emperor made a thoughtful growl, "let me know immediately
if there is any change of plan."

Lycaon nodded again, smartly, in acknowledgement of his orders.

Throughout the conversation the hooded figure sat, looking out of the
window at the dark streets as they passed by.  The figure's bearing
was one of extreme ennui and disinterest.

"Faolan!" The Emperor snapped, "You will not sulk the entire
trip!"

The figure started and then threw back it's hood to reveal a seventeen
year-old wolven youth.

"Why did you have to drag me along?" Faolan protested, "Lycaon
is the Keeper of the Engines not me!"

"You are my son and you are almost an adult," the Emperor said
between clenched teeth, "it is high time you learnt the etiquette
involved with dealing with the lower classes. It is more involved than
you think. Besides meeting the Crown Prince will gratify them."

"Couldn't we have done that in Lyngvi?" Faolan whined, "Gleipnir
is such an unfashionable city. There's no culture here at all."

"Culture!? I know what you young lords mean when you say
'culture'." The Emperor spat, "Gleipnir is one of the last
strongholds of traditionalism and respectability. It was good enough for
our fathers and our grandfathers, and it is good enough for you! Besides
we are here on business Faolan, not for your entertainment, do not
forget that."

Conversation in the carriage lapsed into an uncomfortable silence
after that.  Outside the rain began to ease off.

  ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Nettle watched the stage with rapt attention.

His seat, the cheapest in the theatre, was at the very back of the
stalls so he couldn't see the action clearly or hear the actors'
singing well.  It didn't help that, as a rabbit, he was a good head
shorter than the other, wolven, patrons.

Still, he loved melodramas with a passion, so he followed the plot as
best he could.

The play was winding up.  The hero, a handsome dog in military attire,
was about to rescue his sweetheart, a beautiful bitch in a pale pink
dress, from the clutches of the nefarious villain, a tod in a black cape
and top hat. The plot was the same simplistic, patriotic, romance that
they recycled every week.

Despite knowing that it was coming, Nettle always looked forward to
the climatic scene in which the villain was defeated, the damsel was
rescued, the heroes lived happily ever after and the world was set to
rights. Nettle was almost squealing in delight as the last scenes played
out on stage. When the actors took their bows, Nettle was on his feet
clapping with heart-felt enthusiasm.

Then he had to fight his way through the press of wolves on his way out
of the theatre.

Once out on the street he turned southwards and started to make his way
'home'.  The pre-dawn air outside was brisk and chilling--especially
after the heat of the packed theatre.

Nettle felt his exuberance melt away.  He was no longer in that fantasy
world of good and evil, action and adventure.  He was, once again,
back in reality and back on the cold streets of Gleipnir.

Nettle kicked a pebble up the empty, cobbled streets as he walked.
Had anyone been there to see him they would have seen a downcast,
sixteen year-old, lop-eared buck with pure white fur, wearing a green
silk blouse and white cotton trousers which tucked into his boots.

Not more than quarter of an hour after leaving the theatre, the
disillusioned boy crossed the threshold of the restaurant that doubled
as his 'home' in this foreign land.

Across the room, in the kitchen doorway, an old, portly, tan-furred
rabbit in a stained apron stood glaring at him, arms crossed.

Nettle sighed and crossed the busy restaurant floor.

"You're late." The elder rabbit said.

"I'm on time uncle Ginger." Nettle protested, "You said one
o'clock and it's one o'clock now." He gestured at a time piece
on the wall.

"Hurh." Ginger grunted and chucked a towel at his nephew, who caught
it deftly, "That clock's slow. Don't waste any more time, there
are customers waiting."

  ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Dawn was threatening as Prince Faolan walked into the bedroom of his
apartments at the Beach Palace.

A bathroom and a walk-in wardrobe adjoined the bedroom.  Several bags
containing his luggage, most of them open, were strewn about the room.

A wolf about the same age as Faolan entered from the wardrobe, "I'm
sorry for the mess sir, we haven't finished unpacking your luggage
yet." He spoke.

"That's all right, Tristram." Faolan assured his valet as he
shrugged the cloak from his shoulders.

Tristram caught the garment as it slipped down his master's arms.
He folded it neatly over his right arm while he brushed a few spots
from the shirt Faolan had been wearing beneath it.  Satisfied that his
master's clothes were presentable, he took the cloak and hung it in
the wardrobe.

"Let the unpacking be for tonight. I'm tired." The Prince announced,
"You can finish it in the morning."

"Very good sir. Is there anything else?" Tristram asked.

"Yes, fetch me a glass of red. I'm thirsty." Faolan said as he
wearily sat down on the edge of his bed.

"Yes sir."

Tristram was gone for only a moment so the larder must have already
been unpacked.  He handed the glass to his master who drank it eagerly.

"Thank you Tristram." Faolan looked out of the bedroom's arched
picture windows at the city beyond, "So this is Gleipnir. I wonder
what there is to do for fun?"

"Ah, I have already made inquiries as to that sir." Tristram said.

"I thought you might have." Faolan smiled wickedly at his most
trusted servant, "So tell me: what is there to do?"

"Well, there is a part of the city, they call it Rabbit Town..."
Tristram began.

"A slum?" Faolan asked.

"Yes sir." Tristram replied, "When I asked the palace staff about
it most described it as a 'colourful' place."

"Mmm, 'colourful'." Faolan scratched his chin, "I like the
sound of that."

"I thought you might sir." Tristram said knowingly.

"Very well then. Tomorrow night: roughing it in Rabbit Town." Faolan
declared, "But for now I'm going to try and get some sleep before
I have to get up again. Good night Tristram and thank you."

"Good night sir." Tristram bowed his head as he left the room.

  ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Later that morning--though not as much later as Faolan would have
liked--His Imperial Highness Conall Lyall, accompanied by Crown Prince
Faolan Lyall and Lord Llou Lycaon, Keeper of His Majesty's Engines,
visited the docks and make an inspection of the newest additions to
the fleet.

Faolan managed to embarrass his sire twice during the tour once by
forgetting the dock master's name, and then again later on by zoning
out during a particularly dull monologue by the captain of the Vengeance.
Intellectually Faolan understood the importance of the tour, it was
just that he was exhausted from lack of sleep.

Assembled in the dock yards, in secret, were the cream of the Empire's
sea-going, technological marvels.  Seven of the world's most powerful
warships were currently at rest in Gleipnir's docks.

The ships weren't mere extravagances either--political unrest among
the Tears meant it was very likely that these ships would soon be need.

As Keeper of His Majesty's Engines and head of the Imperial Engineers,
it was Lord Lycaon's duty to make sure that these highly-experimental
steam vessels were in top operational form.

Just a generation previously Lycaon's family had been peasants, but
with technological change came social change.  Now, thanks to the social
upheaval, Llou Lycaon was one of the most powerful figures (perhaps even
the most powerful after the Emperor himself) in the Empire.  The new
meritocracy had swept a visionary from the fields into the Emperor's
favour over the heads of the established aristocracy.

Of course, the aristocrats were jealous, scornful and more than a little
worried by the Empire's new, more-effective elite classes, but it was
undeniable that the Empire was made stronger by the service of patriots
like Llou Lycaon so they could take no action against them--at least
no direct action.

Faolan and many of the younger lords, by contrast, welcomed the new
meritocratic system--setting out to prove themselves worthy of the titles
they had been born to by merit of their minds rather than their muscles,
as their ancestors had.

This, of course, was fine in the eyes of their elders.  It was a another,
different, less-obvious consequence of the new system that caused so much
disapproval among the more traditional lords: The younger generation were
inclined to think that members of the lower classes might be their equals.

It was a transgression against one of the most sacred tenets of the
aristocracy, and to the elder lords there could be no greater heresy.

  ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

It was evening when Faolan, Prince of aristocratic heretics, slipped
silently from the Beach Palace, and made his way towards the rougher
areas of Gleipnir.

He was wearing black trousers, a black waistcoat, a white, silk,
high-collared, sleeveless-shirt and a handsome red silk cravat.  In an act
of defiance against polite society he went out dining without a coat or a
hat--an act which was certain to cause scandal if it was ever found out.

Faolan had only the vaguest of ideas where in the city Rabbit Town was,
but he had no schedule to keep and was content to meander around until
he found it.

The sun was setting and the lamp-lights were out.  The lamp-lights
were pups employed by the city to go up and down the streets, in pairs,
lighting the gas lamps every evening.  They were paid one silver penny
every night for performing the duty.

Faolan stopped a giggling duo, as they walked from lamp to lamp, to
ask for directions.  At first they warned him off going to Rabbit Town,
but when he told them he had an appointment there--which was only half
a lie since he fully intended to have supper when he arrived--they
relented and pointed him in the right direction.

A short while later he was standing on the corner of Casking Street.
The text which read 'City of Gleipnir' on the white street sign had
been obliterated and the legend: 'Hlienes Nayltil' had been written
over it.

He scanned up and down the street.  Businesses of all descriptions
littered the road, all of them busy and bustling.  There was hardly
another wolf in sight, the small enclave was packed with rabbits.
Most ignored him--a few eyed him with suspicion.

Faolan smiled--enjoying the novelty--and started towards an
establishment which billed itself as 'Ginger's Restaurant' in both
Wolven and, in what Faolan assumed was, Rabbit.

Ginger's was quite a large establishment which opened to the street.
At the back of the restaurant there was a bar which was unattended,
and beyond that was a door which led to the kitchen.  The room was lit
by colourful paper lanterns that hung from every available joust and
every free nook.  Round wooden tables littered the floor.

The building itself was made of wood and was two stories tall, but only
the ground floor seemed to be open to customers.  The top floor presumably
belonged to 'Ginger'.

The place must have been doing good business because the tables were
packed and rabbits bearing hot food and drink were flitting about
constantly.  Most of the patrons were rabbits, although Faolan did spot
one or two disreputable looking wolves.

He found a table that was free and sat down.

After a minute or so a white rabbit in a brown silk top with a rolled
collar came to take his order.

"What can I get for you?" The waiter asked with a smile.

Faolan couldn't help smiling in return, "I'm not sure, I don't
know what you serve. Do you have soup?"

The rabbit smiled wider, "Yes, we do soup. Any particular type?"

"Is there any type that is particularly good?" Faolan jousted.

The rabbit considered for a moment, "Mmm, the chicken soup is quite
good."

"Then I'll have a bowl of the chicken soup to start with."
Faolan said.

He watched the cute rabbit as he weaved in between tables on his way
to the kitchen.  The rabbit quickly returned with the soup--there was
probably a port of it simmering in the back room.

"Here you go." He said as he set it down.

"Thank you." Faolan said.

"My pleasure..." The rabbit began, "...My Lordship."

Faolan jumped, "Oh...I'm that obvious am I?" He said, a little
hurt.

"The silk gives it away." The rabbit explained, "That's high
quality silk you're wearing. A wolf might not have noticed it, but
every rabbit knows their silk. The rabbit-lands are the cradle of the
silk routes you know."

"But the silk you're wearing has to be at least as good as mine."
Faolan protested.

"True." The rabbit conceded, "But I'm a rabbit. We'd never
charge a fellow rabbit full price. Not this far from home. It would
be impolite. But you're a wolf which means you'd have to be either
a silk dealer or nobility to wear such expensive silks." The rabbit
paused and then shrugged, "You just don't come across as a dealer
to me. Lucky guess."

"Damn." Faolan breathed, "I guess I'm rumbled."

"Don't worry about it too much. We get lots of nobility 'roughing
it'." The rabbit reassured him, "It's a lot more common than
you think."

Faolan looked at the rabbit, "What's your name?" He asked.

The rabbit was a little taken aback at the question, but answered,
"Nettle. Nettle son of Cinnamon."

"Mmm. Nettle." Faolan tried the name out, "That's a very pretty
name for such a smart, observant rabbit."

Nettle was slightly unbalanced by the sudden change of direction the
conversation had taken, "Umm, thanks." He stammered.

He was about to say more but a voice, shouting across the room, cut
him off.

"Nettle! Stop chatting with the customers and get back to work!"

Nettle cringed and looked towards the kitchen door where Ginger was
standing.

"Uthowa! Uthowa!" Nettle shouted back in Rabbit, throwing his hands
up in equal parts pacification and exasperation.

It seemed to work, Ginger ducked back into the kitchen.

"Slave driver." Nettle muttered under his breath before turning to
address Faolan once more, "Sorry, I have to get back to work. Enjoy
your meal."

Faolan tucked into his meal, which he found to be quite tasty.  Soon he
was finished.  He hoped that it would be Nettle who came to collect his
bowl and settle the bill.  He wasn't disappointed.

"Did you enjoy your soup?" Nettle asked when he returned.

"Very much so." Faolan replied.

They settled the bill quickly.

"Nettle, when do you get off?" Faolan asked.

Nettle glanced at the clock, "Not long, quarter of an hour from now."

"Will you meet me then?" Faolan asked.

Nettle thought about it and then answered "Meet me around the back in
fifteen minutes, we can talk there."

Then he ran off to take the orders of the other customers.

It took Faolan a while to find the ally that ran behind Casking Street,
but he did so with five minutes to spare.  The ally wasn't as well lit
as the street was, and there were no signs of other life save for the
rats.  The sun had long since set, and it was a clear, cloudless night.
The full moon dominated the night sky.

A well-tower--a steam engine which pumped as well as purified well
water--was located near the rear of the restaurant. Chugging away to
itself unceasingly, as it worked to fill the cistern at its base with
droplets of clean, condensed water, drip by drip.

Faolan heard a door open behind him.  Nettle was silhouetted in the
light from the kitchen.  His heart leapt into his throat.  Nettle closed
the door and walked towards Faolan, his hands clasped in front.He looked
as nervous as Faolan did.

"I never did get your name." Nettle said.

"It's Faolan." Faolan said.

"Glad to meet you Faolan." Nettle said warmly, "So how long have
you been slumming around Hlienes Nayltil? I don't recognise you so it
can't have been too long."

"I just arrived in Gleipnir yesterday morning." Faolan admitted,
"How about you? What's a pretty buck like you doing in a city like
Gleipnir?"

Nettle grinned at the compliment, "Not much of a story, really. Gleipnir
is a port city, and where you have ports you eventually get shanties
like this." His voice became distant and wistful as he reminisced,
"Rabbits have always traded among the Tears. There were enough of us
in the city that my uncle decided to open a restaurant here seven years
ago. 'A home from home for weary, homesick rabbits' he calls it. My
family came across with a trader to help him run it."

"A family business then? Nice." Faolan said leaning back against
the rear wall of the restaurant.

"Most rabbit businesses are." Nettle agreed, "There's always
work in Rabbit Town for rabbits, of course, but family is family."

"I can see that." Faolan agreed.

There was a moment of silence, where neither was quite certain what to
say to the other.

"You see that well-tower?" Nettle asked out of the blue.

"Yes."

"The city is supposed to keep that well running," Nettle said, "but
they don't. My cousin is the one who keeps it going. That well provides
the water for the entire town. Everybody knows my cousin is the one who
keeps it going."

"What are you trying to say Nettle?" Faolan asked.

"I guess what I'm trying to say is that we're thick as thieves,
here in rabbit town." Nettle made the appropriate gesture, "We're
all alone--tharn--in a strange land and we can't rely on anyone but
each other."

"Surely it can't be that bad." Faolan protested, "I have to
admit I'm not in love with the city, but there must be some things
you enjoy. Living in Gleipnir can't be all doom and gloom."

"Well..." Nettle began.

"Well?" Faolan pressed.

"You'll think it's silly." Nettle hung his head.

"Try me." Faolan challenged the bashful rabbit.

"Melodramas." Nettle said, "I like melodramas." The insides of
his ears went bright red.

"That's nice." Faolan smiled.  He reached across to gently stroke
Nettle's long, soft ears with two fingers.

"Y-you don't think that's silly?" Nettle stammered.

"No." Faolan replied, "In fact, I was just wondering if you'd
let me take you out to a melodrama?"

"Liar." Nettle smiled bashfully, "We're too late to catch the
ten o'clock performance now. How about tomorrow? Say quarter to ten?"

"How about nine?" Faolan asked, "Then I can take you out for a
meal beforehand."

"I'd like that." Nettle agreed.

"I'll meet you here--beneath the tower." Faolan said exuberantly.

"Until tomorrow, Faolan." Nettle said in parting.

"Until then, Nettle." Faolan reached to take Nettle's hand but
the rabbit had already slipped away.

  ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Nettle was confused and scared by his feelings for Faolan.  True, he
had known Faolan for less than an half-an-hour, so they were mostly
feelings about Faolan's physique, but they still worried him.

So Nettle was doing what he always did when he was scared and
confused--trying to find his cousin Lemon.  Often getting Lemon involved
made matters worse, but despite being only a year older than Nettle he
was much more out going and had a lot more life-experience.

Nettle entered the kitchen where he expected to find his cousin.
He found Lemon's lower half protruding from underneath a gas oven.

"Lemon, cuz, I need your advice." Nettle admitted, "You've got
experience of this 'boyfriend' stuff right?"

A grunt in the affirmative came from under the oven.

"I've just met this wolf," Nettle began, "and I think I like
him. I mean really like him. And he's asked me out on a date and
I've said I'll go, but I'm having second feelings. I'm not sure
I should go."

Lemon pushed himself out from under the kitchen appliance.

Like his cousin he was a lop-eared rabbit. His tan fur was covered in
black grease. He wore a silk shirt which might have been white at some
point a dozen stains and spills earlier. Over that he wore a pair of denim
dungarees, onto which he had sewn numerous pockets which were stuffed
to bursting with tools and rags and papers and other paraphernalia.
He held a spanner in one hand and a screwdriver in his maw.

"Why not?" He asked removing the screwdriver beforehand.

"Well, I barely know him," Nettle ticked off the points on his
fingers, "he's a different species to me, he's a different class,
he's male..."

They were interrupted by a sudden squealing, whistling noise from
the oven.  Nettle--wisely--stepped back.

"Damn! I thought I fixed that." Lemon cursed as he jumped back into
the guts of the offending kitchenware.

Nettle waited patiently while Lemon tinkered with the innards of the oven.
Finally Lemon extracted himself again.

"I think you should go." He announced.

"What?" Nettle often found himself resorting to the word in
conversations with his cousin.

"Why not?" Lemon asked, "If nothing else it'll be an adventure."

"He's a wolf!" Nettle protested.

"Mmm, they're good." Lemon assured him, "I speak from personal
experience. Just make sure you always have a clear path to the door in
case you have to make a break for it."

"What?" Nettle asked incredulously.

"Experience!" Lemon reminded him, "Why don't you tell me more
about about your wolf?"

So Nettle did, and Lemon didn't fail to notice the dreamy tone that
crept into his cousin's voice--he didn't fail to mention it to
Nettle either.

The two had quite a conversation.  Lemon answered all of Nettle's
questions about the actual mechanics of sex frankly and mostly accurately.
He also shared his tips for a successful date, which Nettle duly and
wisely disregarded.  They arranged to meet before midnight so that Lemon
knew his cousin was safe, and they further arranged that Lemon would
make himself scarce after doing so, so that the couple could have some
time to themselves in Nettle's bed.

Finally Nettle ran out of questions.

That was Lemon's cue to grab Nettle's hand and drag him upstairs,
"Come on we need to give you an enema!"

"What!?" Nettle squealed.

  ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

It was almost half-eleven by the time Faolan returned to the Beach
Palace.

He needed advice.  He was confused and scared about his reaction to
Nettle.  In less than half an hour, the timid, intelligent, sweet rabbit
had made a profound impression on him, and turned his world upside down.
Faolan chastised himself for being quickly and easily influenced--a
serious pair of faults for a prince to have, certainly--but that did
nothing to alter his feelings.

He couldn't speak to his sire about this.  So instead stalked the
corridors intent on finding the one wolf who's advice he knew to be
sound and trustworthy.

He found Llou Lycaon in his study.

The room was dark except for the large desk at the far end of the room.
A pair of candles sat on either side of the desk, spilling an oblong of
flickering, dancing light across it.

The curtains were drawn in front of the tall arching windows.  There was
no reason for the room to be as dark as it was. There were many lamps
and candelabra about the room, but Llou Lycaon was quite a pernickety
worker--he claimed that the bustle of the staff working in the background
distracted him from his work--he often chased the staff out of his
rooms when he was engaged in an important project.  Obviously, he had
done so again tonight, and none of the household had dared return to
light the lamps.

In any case, the lack of light didn't seem to bother Llou.  He was
hunched over the desk engrossed in work.

Faolan tapped on the door, "Are you free, Llou?" He asked, "I
wanted to talk to you."

Llou looked over his shoulder. His blue great-coat--the uniform and
symbol of his office--was unbuttoned, the fur of his face was unkempt
and matted, and there were bags beneath his eyes. He looked exhausted,
but there was a sharpness in his eyes, which showed his mind was still
awake even if his body was not.

"Of course, Your Highness." Llou said with genuine friendship,
"I'm always free to talk to you."

Faolan crossed the large room.  Floor-to-ceiling bookshelves, packed
haphazardly with technical works--some leather bound tomes, others
sheaves of paper--ran along the gloomy walls either side of the chamber.

"What are you working on?" Faolan asked as he pulled up a chair.

Llou's work always fascinated him, not least because, as the most
trusted of the Imperial Engineers, he was always given interesting things
to work on.

"This." Lycaon, held a small, gleaming, brass contraption in the palm
of his hand.  It was roughly cube shaped, with its mechanisms exposed
to the world. It was mounted on a square of dark-stained wood along with
a bobbin of red thread.

"What is it?" Faolan asked intrigued.

"Let me show you." Llou said as he wound the device.

The clock work device chattered and clicked to itself as it worked,
pulling thread from the now-spinning bobbin.  Inside the main workings of
the device arms flew back and fourth.  Faolan couldn't make out the
function of the minuscule machine until he saw a length of red ribbon
being extruded from one side of the cube.

"It's a weaving machine!" He said.

"Mmm." Llou agreed, "It's just a toy. Useless for any practical
application. But imagine if we could marry the accuracy of a clock work
construct like this to the power of a steam engine."

Faolan nodded his interest.

"Steam engines are powerful, but very..." Llou searched for the
right word, "abrupt. You can use them to move a ship, or a train, or
to run a mine, or to plough a field, but they are no good at delicate
operations. They are absolutely useless for weaving anything finer
than cotton, and even that is unreliable." He picked up speed as he
continued, speaking more passionately now, "What we need is better
machining, lighter, more accurate movements. That will allow us to weave
with steam. To shape metal more efficiently." His voice took a slightly
darker tone, "Or bore a more accurate pistol."

"Is it possible?" Faolan asked.

"Yes, I think so." Llou said, "Certainly the foxes think
so. They're centring a lot of their research on it, and we can't
let the vulps beat us to the punch."

"No, we can't have that." Faolan smiled.

Llou touched his hand to a bottle of wine which sat on his desk, "Would
you care for a drink?"

"I would." Faolan assented.

Llou poured two glasses.  There was a short silence as the pair drank
from their glasses in the circle of dim candle-light.

"Llou, I want your advice." Faolan said.

"I am always happy to give it." The engineer answered.

"I met someone in town this evening..." Faolan began.

"You were slumming?" Llou asked wearily, "You know your sire does
not approve of that.".

"Someone I liked, I mean really liked, but I'm not sure if I should
be associating with them." Faolan admitted.

"Lower class?" Llou asked.

"And a rabbit." Faolan admitted.

Llou's eyebrows shot up.

"And a male." Faolan finished.

Llou exhaled, "Well..." He began and trailed off.

"I really like them." Faolan emphasised.

"Well, there's nothing illegal about the relationship," Llou said
after a moment's consideration, "but you realise that if you were
caught it would be a major scandal, and it couldn't last forever. You
have the duty to marry a bitch and sire an heir once you become Emperor,
if not before."

"I know." Faolan said sadly.

"You're really smitten by this buck aren't you?" Llou asked.

Faolan nodded shamefacedly.

"As I said, there is nothing actually illegal about the relationship. If
you are discreet, and you understand that it must eventually come to
an end, then I don't see how anyone can stop you. You are the Crown
Prince after all." Llou said.

"Thank you, Llou." Faolan said.

"Of course, it goes without saying that I advise you against this most
strenuously." Lycaon said with a sad smile, "But you are going to
go ahead with it anyway aren't you?"

"Yes, I think I am." Faolan nodded.

  ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Nettle lay on his side, naked, behind a screen in the bedroom he shared
with Lemon.  A thin, woven mat lay beneath him--protecting him from
the wooden floor boards and splinters.  A cushion lay beneath his head.
The pure white fur of his side rose and fell in time with his breath

In his his hand he held a funnel attached to a length of pipe.  Beside him
lay a chamber pot.  He was eyeing both suspiciously.

Lemon walked in the door carrying a bucket of water.

"Here we are cuz." He spoke, "Hot water, fresh from the well. Best
let it cool a bit--you don't want to scald your insides."

"Lemon are you certain you know about this 'boyfriend' stuff?"
Nettle asked sceptically.

"Of course I do." Lemon replied as he set the bucket down beside
the screen, "Don't you trust me?"

"Lemon, no one's trusted you since the stew incident."

"That was not my fault! And dad got the gelatin out of his fur
eventually." Lemon protested, "Besides, clean insides can only be
a good thing when you two are getting it on, right?"

"Lemon!" Nettle said, scandalised.

"What?" Lemon asked, "That is the reason you're going through
with this, isn't it?"

"Well, yes." Nettle conceded, "But I don't want you thinking
about it."

"Too late." Lemon snorted, "Are you okay back there or do you need
a hand?"

"I'm fine!" Nettle hastily reassured him, "You stay on your side
of the screen!"

"As you wish cuz." Lemon said agreeably. Nettle could almost hear
the smirk plastered across his muzzle.

  ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

A day later, at ten to nine, Faolan stood beneath the well-tower,
in the ally behind Ginger's Restaurant.

Dusk was threatening, but there was still plenty of light left in the sky.

Tonight, unlike last night, he was on his best behaviour with a coat,
hat and a full shirt.  He wouldn't embarrass Nettle by his daring
dress or his outrageous manner.  Tonight he was going to be the perfect
gentle-wolf.

He was resisting the urge to pace, knowing that it would make him look
impatient.  He had his hands thrust into his pockets, because otherwise
he would be wringing them and that would make him look nervous.

Faolan was, in fact, extremely anxious.

He had, as Crown Prince, had no trouble courting various suitors over
the years, but they had all been with children of various courtiers and
nobility--and on one occasion a cat princess.  They had all been to one
extent or another been choreographed affairs with the etiquette of the
situation well understood by both parties.  They were political dances
rather than romantic ones.

This was the first time he would be courting as just plain Faolan, and
to make matters worse it was also the first time he actually, really,
cared about the outcome of the night.  He had--gently--fallen for soft,
shy Nettle from almost the moment he set eyes on him, and because of
that he dreaded seeing him again.

None of his previous companions had ever pointed out any of his
flaws--one did not tell the Crown Prince such things--and Faolan
found that he really had no idea if he was a good lover.  The realisation
twisted his stomach in tight knots.

Still, he was determined to go ahead in the face of his fear and
uncertainty.  He was the child of Conall Lyall, after all, and the
Emperor of Steel had watched, like a hawk, for any signs of weakness in
his son.  The Emperor had never had any trouble identifying any flaw in
his progeny's courage, wisdom, strength or resolve--and there had
been many such flaws over the years.  From the moment he could walk
Faolan had found himself living under the magnifying glass.

He didn't realise it, but although he often felt the pressure of trying
to meet his sire's lofty expectations bearing down on his very soul,
it was as a result of his life-long struggle that, even though he might
dreaded it, Faolan Lyall was not afraid to meet the truth tonight.

He just hoped that the truth involved Nettle liking him.

The sound of a door, behind him, caused Faolan to wheel about.

Nettle stood in the ally facing him, hands clasped together demurely.
He was wearing his green silk blouse and a white cotton trousers. He
had a wool scarf wrapped around his neck.

"Nettle." Faolan gasped and then recovered himself, "You look
lovely," He crooked his arm in invitation, "would you give me the
honour of your company?"

Nettle smiled as he put his arm in Faolan's, "Gladly, good sir."

"Then we're off!" Faolan said as they set off arm in arm, "I've
heard good things about a restaurant a few streets from here. We can
get a meal there and still be in good time to catch the play."

The restaurant Faolan took Nettle to was one which Tristram had
recommended after spending the morning discreetly interrogating the
Beach Palace staff on the matter.

It was in a good part of the city, but not too far from Rabbit Town.
It was slightly more up-market than Ginger's, but not so much so that
Faolan could expect to be recognised by another patron.  It served
good food at a reasonable price--not that price mattered to Faolan.
It was also the kind of place that a wolf could take his rabbit boyfriend
and not get stared at, which was important.

They were quickly seated and served, and as the meal progressed and the
ice was broken Faolan found that he wasn't as socially inept as he
fear he might be.  He and Nettle quickly developed an easy repartee,
and they were soon talking like old friends.

For almost an hour they talked about anything and everything--large or
small--from their hopes and dreams to bad jokes they had heard recently.

They finished their meal, and Faolan settled the bill--Nettle conceded
that the food had been quite good, although he was adamant that it was
nowhere near as good as Ginger's cooking.

They then proceeded to the theatre where they thoroughly enjoyed two
hours of badly-acted, out-of-tune nonsense posing as drama.  Faolan,
despite being a little outside his field of experience, soon got into
the spirit of the occasion, and Nettle was delighted to have a companion
to share his secret vice with.

As the night progressed the couple had let their guards down a trifle,
and come to trust each other more.  Nettle in particular became much
less shy and reserved around Faolan as he became less of a stranger
to him, and gave him a running, passionate and animated critique of the
performance as it progressed.

Finally the play had to come to an end, and so did the couple's
night out.

Faolan escorted Nettle back to Ginger's, which, judging by the sounds
which emanated from it was still doing good business.

They were met at the kitchen door, in the ally, by Lemon.

Lemon was reclined against the wall next to the door.  He was idly
chewing on a kava-stick--a drug-laced stick of gum which was popular
among both cats and rabbits.  He stopped when he saw the his cousin and
his wolf approaching.

"Hello, cuz." He greeted, "Did you have a good night?"

Nettle knew this was thinly veiled code for: 'are you okay?'  He
was fairly certain Faolan realised that too.  Lemon never seemed to
make any attempt at subtlety--he seemed to regard it as a form of deceit.

Nettle gripped Faolan's arm tighter in reassurance, "We had a lovely
night. Faolan is so sweet."

Lemon turned to address Faolan, "So you're the wolf who's stolen
my cuz's heart then?"

"Well, I don't know about that..." Faolan began.

"Oh, but I do." Nettle interrupted, examining Faolan critically.

Faolan straightened his back under Lemon's gaze, uncertain what to
make of the rabbit who seemed to be Nettle's protector.  They stood
in silence for a few moments while the rabbit appraised the wolf.

Then Lemon resumed chewing on his stick, "Well, you two have a good
night," He picked himself up and stretched, "I'm off to play stones
with Lavender. He already owes me half his shop. I'm going to go see if
I can't win the other half. I'll be back sometime in the morning."

And with that he walked off, leaving Faolan knowing that he had just
passed a test but unsure of exactly which one.

"He seems to care about you a lot." Faolan remarked about the
departing rabbit.

"He can be a tad overprotective some times, but I love him for it."
Nettle replied, "Come upstairs." He tugged Faolan's arm gently
in the direction of the restaurant.

Faolan resisted, "Are you sure?" He asked, "It was a lovely night,
but you've known me for less than a day. Don't you think that we
should wait a bit longer?"

Nettle was genuinely surprised by Faolan's reluctance, "Don't
you like me?" He asked, hurt, "I like you...I thought we were...
good." He trailed off.

Faolan was surprised to recognise some of the same anxieties he had
been feeling earlier that night in Nettle's eyes.  He felt a pang of
guilt for provoking those feelings in his snow-furred companion.  A small
part of Faolan was actually flattered by Nettle's reaction--he had
harboured lingering doubts about his adequacy all night--now he saw
Nettle was as afraid of his rejection as he was of his.

"No, no. We were good." Faolan hastily reassured, "Better than
good. It's just I don't want you to feel...I dunno... obligated...or
anything. I...wouldn't want you to think I was just after a night in
your bed."

Nettle looked at him through sincere eyes, "I didn't think that. I...
I've really fallen for you Faolan. I can't see anything but..."
Nettle cut himself off, "...I trust you. Please come upstairs." He
asked, not quite begging.

Faolan took Nettle's cheek tenderly in the palm of one hand, and
guided him into a kiss.  It started gently enough, but quickly became
more passionate. Faolan wrapped his free arm around Nettle and pulled
him close.

"Umgh!" Nettle groaned around Faolan's muzzle, "Love...Love,"
He disengaged himself from the kiss, "We should do this upstairs,
love." He explained slightly breathless.

"Upstairs." Faolan agreed, slightly dazed on an endorphin high.

The two made their way upstairs to the room Nettle shared with his cousin,
narrowly avoiding Ginger in the kitchen.

Nettle darted to the window and shuttered it, as he crossed the threshold
of the room. He looked back over his shoulder at Faolan, who closed
the door behind him softly and leaned, gently, back on it. They were
alone now.

The only light in the room came, through the shutter's slats, from
the moon and the establishment across the road.

Nettle's entire posture spoke of timid-but-welcome anticipation.
He pulled his blouse up over his head and threw it onto Lemon's bed.

Faolan admired the toned torso of his slight lover.  His eyes roamed
over Nettle's form, from the balls of his shoulders, over his chest
and nipples, down to his belly button (he was an innie).  The fur on
his belly was as white as it was on the rest of his body, but it was
shorter and softer looking.

In a trance, Faolan took off his coat and advanced on Nettle like
a starved wolf.  He planted a kiss on the smaller male's forehead
without stooping, as he undid the belt of Nettle's trousers.

Nettle stepped out of the cloth pooled at his feet and into the wolf's
embrace.  He wore no underwear so he was now completely naked.

Faolan held Nettle's puff-tailed behind delicately and nuzzled between
his long, heavy, lop ears, licking at them and breathing deeply.  He felt
a tug at his neck. He looked down to see a mischievously grinning buck
pulling at his cravat.

It took longer to get Faolan undressed--simply because he was wearing
more layers--but eventually they were both naked and in Nettle's bed.

There was some wrestling, touching, feeling, kissing, disagreements about
position and a lot of panting.  The pair of hormone-driven teenagers
explored each other passionately and in detail, beneath the slatted
shafts of moonlight.

Eventually they ended up with Faolan on his back, with Nettle straddling
him, the base of their erections touching.

"Do you have..." Faolan began to ask before Nettle cut him off by
leaning in for a kiss. A kiss which Faolan was happy to provide.

He felt Nettle pressing something into his hand.  When he was free to look
he saw that it was a small jar of light-blue-bordering-on-white cream.

He scooped a fingers worth from the jar and began rubbing it into Nettle.
As he did so, he felt the buck involuntarily tighten up around his
fingers.  He realised that the size and experience difference meant that
he would have to be very slow to start off with.

He spread a healthy helping of the lubricant on himself.

As one they moved to meet.  Nettle pressing back down onto Faolan's
length as the wolf raised his hips.  Faolan was gratified to find
Nettle's rose first time.

He pressed forward gently and slowly sank the tip of his erection into
his lover.  Having got that out of the way, he lay back and let Nettle
decide how fast he wanted to proceed, contenting himself with stroking his
sweetheart's soft white thighs. Nettle looked slightly pained at first,
but he slowly adjusted to Faolan, and after a minute or two continued
pushing down.

Despite being quite experienced for seventeen, Faolan came as the head of
his maleness passed Nettle's ring.  He actually felt quite embarrassed
about his sudden lack of endurance.  Faolan wasn't sure what it was
but there was something about Nettle that made him boil with lust.

Fortunately, that same something prevented him from losing his hardness
for even a moment, and Nettle showed little awareness of Faolan's
'accident'.  He decided that taking the edge off his passion was
probably a good thing and decided to concentrate on lasting longer the
second time.

As he came, Faolan had--despite his best intentions--raised his hips
slightly, and he was now buried almost half way in Nettle.  Faolan felt
a wave of guilt at the gasp he had heard and the grimace on Nettle's
sweet features.  His heart leapt into his throat.  In that moment, if
he had seriously thought it would have pleased Nettle, he would have
done the only honourable thing and committed ritual suicide to remove
the cause of Nettle's suffering.

Fortunately, Nettle's pain was brief, and he seemed not to be deterred.
He continued pressing down, slowly--but slightly faster towards the
end--until, finally, he sat with his ring resting on top of Faolan's
knot.

They stayed like that for a moment, then Nettle bent forward to plant
a kiss on the tip of Faolan's muzzle.

"Thank you." He gasped. His voice carried so many different
emotions--exhaustion, satisfaction and love, were just a few of them.

Faolan didn't answer, but kissed him in return.

They started a slow, steady rhythm of short strokes, which gave way to
faster, longer, more passionate strokes as Nettle grew more adventurous.

The lovers shared several orgasms over the course of the night, and--when
they were finally exhausted--they shared each others embrace as they
slept in the sweat-soaked sheets.

It was the bells of a clock tower striking four, which roused Faolan.

"Oh creator!" He exclaimed as he went from sleeping to wide awake
in an instant.

He jumped out of bed and began scrabbling for his clothes, which, of
course, woke Nettle.

"I thought you said you didn't just want a night in my bed?"
He asked.

Faolan froze, realising how he must look to his partner.  He turned to
face the sweet rabbit, and felt suitably mortified when he saw the shame
written in the buck's features and the tears rolling down his cheeks.
He was sobbing silently.

"I'm sorry Nettle, I really am. But I have to go now." He said
lamely, "It's four o'clock. I'm late. I'll be missed."

"Stay with me," Nettle pleaded, "please."

Faolan felt wretched for reducing Nettle to begging, especially since
he couldn't capitulate.

"I can't," He tried to explain, "Dawn will be soon. I'll be
missed. I have important things to attend to."

"So I'm not important to you?" Nettle asked in an accusatory tone,
visibly hurt, "Or was I only important to you last night?"

He broke down crying.

Faolan sat down on the bed and tried to wrap an arm around the crying
buck.  Nettle shrugged him off.

"I loved you." He sobbed, "I re-really did. I know I d-didn't
really know you. But I loved you."

"Nettle," Faolan said, "I do love you."

"L-liar!" Nettle breathed, as his hurt began to turn to anger.

"I do. Honestly and truly, I do." Faolan pecked the rabbit on
his cheek, "But I have duties. I'm sorry. I should have told you
I couldn't spend the whole night with you. It's just I wasn't
expecting to spend any of the night with you and then...we were busy."

"You're right, you should have mentioned that. What sort of
duties? What sort are so important that you can just dump me after you
made love to me last night?" Nettle asked.

"Really important ones." Faolan assured him, trying to hedge the
question.

"Like what!" Nettle almost shouted.

"Like Crown Prince!" Faolan snapped back--cornered and unable to
avoid giving a direct answer any longer.

Nettle stared at him, gob smacked. There was an uncomfortable silence
for a while. Then Nettle spoke again.

"Y-y-you're Fao-Faolan Lyall?" He asked, "The Emperor's son?"

"Yes." Faolan admitted.

"Y-yo-you..." Nettle had begun to shake and stammer.

"Look I have to go Nettle. If I don't get back to the Beach Palace
soon they'll realise that I'm gone and start searching for me."
Faolan explained, "I do love you Nettle. You are sweet and smart and
kind and I really want to see you again. I understand if you don't
want to see me, but if you'll let me I'll move hell and high water
to make sure we can be together."

Faolan gathered up his clothes as he waited for Nettle to reply, but
the young rabbit was too shocked to say anything.

In the end Faolan left discreetly, after promising Nettle that he would
return later that day.

  ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Faolan paced back and forth in front of the picture window in the lobby
of the royal apartments.  Tristram had long since given up suggesting that
his master should relax, or sit down, or have a glass of something to calm
his nerves, and was uneasily watching him from one corner of the room.

Faolan was determined to find a way to bring Nettle to the Beach
Palace without incurring his sire's disapproval or causing a scandal.
Unfortunately, determination alone was not sufficient.  He needed a plan,
and after pacing for most of the morning he still didn't have one.

Faolan was his sire's son though.  The word impossible was not in
his vocabulary.  He was certain that he would find a solution if only
he considered the problem for long enough.

He was, of course, wrong--not all problems have a solution--but his
current problem did indeed have an answer.  An answer that came crashing
through the double doors, in the form of an extremely outraged Conall
Lyall.

"Faolan." He acknowledged his son in a voice that was more than
half a growl.

"Sire." Faolan said, instantly aware of, and cautious of the elder
wolf's mood.

"The foxes know! Damn their hides!" The Emperor cursed.

"They know? How?" Faolan asked.

"I'm moving the court to the Beach Palace." Conall said ignoring
his son's questions, "We'll say that it was always the purpose
of our visit. We've only been here a few days. It won't fool them,
but they can't call us liars to our face."

He pointed a finger at Faolan--claw expressed--his whole arm shook
with repressed rage and tension.

"You are not to mention the real reason for our visit. Not a hint
about it. Not even a slip of the tongue." He growled, "The inspection
never happened, do you understand?"

"Of course." Faolan said clam and levelly, "Not a word."

"Good..." Some of the anger and tension drained from Conall--perhaps
realising, in the face of his son's stoic attitude, how angry he truly
was, "I must go make arrangements." He continued in a calmer voice
which better suited his august position, "There is a spy among us
Faolan, be careful of your speech."

The Emperor turned and strode out of the anti-chamber.

Faolan waited until he was certain that the Emperor was out of ear shot,
then he closed the door and turned to address his valet.

"Tristram, today I am blessed. The Creator, Wolf and Rabbit Gods are
smiling on me." There was something dangerous in his eyes.

"Sir?" Tristram, asked uncertainly.

"I have a job for you."