"He's not right in the head!" Odessa had cried that day outside of the bank, having put herself between one seething Arthur of Caermad and the deranged Duke of Cathalon, who'd both brandished their impressive weapons.
"You like pickin' on helpless women, do ye'?" Arthur sneered, advancing ever so slightly for Helton, shoving Odessa to his side for what he believed would be for her protection. Just then, the trio became surrounded by various members of the ISA, the arch-chancellor, and Helton's erstwhile beloved, Grace Romstun.
Swiftly, the beast slayer and the kin slayer were separated, Odessa and Arthur being taken to the palace for questioning while Helton belligerently and desperately screeched insults in an attempt to degrade the hexer's credibility.
Several days later, Helton and Arthur bumped into each other once again, though their exchange was much more amicable, and ended in a mutual understanding. Arthur had told Odessa to expect an apology from the duke in the coming days, one which would never come.
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"Helton's dead," the Princess Amelia had told Odessa and a very drunk Joseph Azor, who had both been sat on the floor in the pantry of the imperial quarters, discussing troubling life matters just before the interruption by Amelia. "He's dead," she wept, talking through sobbing hiccups. "It's all my fault..."
"Wh..." Odessa was shocked, to say the least. The things she'd been through with Helton as her most trusted confidant, and the evenings they'd spent together mulling over one another's woes so that they might be able to carry on just another day, a bit lighter.
However, following the events in Helton's own life, it's of no surprise that he went as mad and became as demented as he did. Odessa understood his illness; she'd seen hundreds of soldiers return from battles with that thousand yard stare, tortured shells of the men they once were. It was for this very reason that, that day outside of the bank, she'd refused so furiously for Arthur to duel Helton. The tricks his mind played on him were not his fault, but that didn't stop the panic that grew in her chest upon each time they'd met since that day he'd held her at his dirk's point.
Odessa remained there for several moments longer on the floor, motionless and holding her head in her hands while the princess and archchancellor butted heads.
"He wouldn't want us to fight!" Amelia had pleaded with the archchancellor, who'd just received word that the forces were rallying at the front gates. Joseph looked as though he had something to say to the princess, but instead bid both of his friends ado to avenge his the Duke of Cathalon's death.
The woman sat there alone for some time after, and mulled over the last memories she had of the Helvetti nobleman: Odessa, locked and cowering in her bakery, while Helton skulked about the palace grounds. That last day she had seen him on the other side of the bakery's gate, she wanted so badly to make amends with him and talk through their difference. But, she was scared; this was the very place he'd held her at knifepoint. and what with how volatile he'd been in the last handful of years of his life, Odessa knew she couldn't trust him. Not while she was alone and helpless. To her eventual regret, she remained hidden from her now-dead pal, and would wish forevermore that she'd had the courage to help her friend through the toughest time in his life.
"Damn it," Odessa whimpered, hanging her head in shame, and sobbing into her hands without any restraint, alone on the floor in the pantry of the imperial quarters.