《The Brotherhood Archive:Crossroads(Revised)》Chapter 25
Advertisement
Yes, even after all this talk, I still avoid talking about what he had done. Even my father didn’t enjoy talking about my uncle. It was a good way to make him silent, and he was not a quiet man. Anyway, tomorrow, we can go into the details. We’ve been at this for hours now. I need a fresh mind for that. Anyway, to answer your question, yes, I did share the details to Soletus. It was on my 28th birthday over a campfire. We were more prepared, him to listen and me to talk. Telling him was terrifying and freeing at the same time. Though in the end, it just turned him into a pastry, having to hug and hold. But I could feel his taunt muscles and the anger in his voice.
Soletus understood what the second bed was for now. It was Mien’s. He went directly to it despite calming down over the course of the trip to the inn. He claimed he didn’t sleep or eat the night before. Brother Hickory gave him a sedative while Lady Lass and Nerva settled down on the couch. Soletus took one of the armchairs to the side. Both mother and daughter poured themselves a glass of wine from the bottle left on the bar. They offered a glass to both Soletus and Hickory. The priest accepted his and sat in the armchair across from Soletus.
It surprised Soletus that he was allowed to drink. He never had any before. He dipped his tongue in before taking a sip. It was bitter and burned like vinegar as he swallowed. It wasn’t something he liked and ended up just holding the glass while as Lady Lass spoke.
“Both my children are now away from me,” said Lady Lass. She wore a bittersweet smile. “It’s all for the best.”
“And yet you are still troubled,” said Brother Hickory.
“His reaction to Hugh was…disconcerting. When you wrote to me he was anxious, I thought a little bit of nerves. Then when he started shaking and sobbing, I don’t know what to think.”
“Cousin, you need to understand he’s a timbre sensitive chanter. It compounds his nervous nature.”
“I’ve no idea what that means.”
“It means sounds whether normal or magical affect his other senses. I have a hunch he’s empathic as well. So, hearing Hugh speak today evoked a strong sense of fear in him. That’s what you saw today.”
Soletus stared at his glass and thought aloud. “I want to know what Lord Hugh did to cause such a deep-sated fear in him.”
Lady Lass didn’t look as if she had the answer.
Nerva spoke up and talked into her glass. “Uncle Hugh did do something terrible, but I promised not to share the details,” she said solemnly, with her hand over her heart.
Lady Lass’s eyes grew wide and snapped. “Why didn’t you tell me?”
“It wasn’t my place,” she said.
Brother Hickory scowled. “You could have prevented a lot by telling either of us. Mostly me months ago when you visited your brother.
Soletus felt the same. However, she was playing the enigma for a reason. She was trying to protect her brother.
Nerva shook her head. “Theodoric is a lot like Father. His love is fierce, and has his pride. He shielded me all the way to the point I left. If I told anything, he would’ve felt betrayed.”
“His safety is worth more than his pride,” said Brother Hickory.
The girl placed her wine glass down and wrapped her arms around her middle like her brother. Only difference was she had no problem with eye contact. Though her gaze fixed on Soletus, not her mother.
Advertisement
“You assume that talking about it doesn’t hurt me as well? He has to want to tell it to you,” she said.
Lady Lass looked between Brother Hickory and Soletus. “Didn’t you get him to tell you everything about what Hugh did behind my back?”
Brother Hickory swayed his head. “It was difficult to get him to say anything. Everything I know, he told Soletus first.”
Lady Lass gaze settled on Soletus.
“I’m sorry, Lady Lass,” he said. “Your son only to told me one incident and you know about that one. He trusts me, but it’s hard for him to tell things.”
“We’ve a lot of work ahead of us,” said Hickory somberly. “Today made it clear he cannot be around Hugh. I’m not sure when he’ll be able to.”
The woman looked hopeful. “Maybe by the time he’s an adult, he’ll see Hugh can’t harm him. He’s just an easy target because he’s such a small lad.”
“Even when he’s an adult, that may be unlikely. I’ve helped someone who shares a few traits with him. Even with his mistreatment decades old, it’s hard for him to let go. Now he suffered longer, but don’t expect your son home at twenty-eight.”
“I would like to have him home so I can have him properly socialized and get him into matching.”
“I wouldn’t treat him like a normal heir,” warned Hickory.
Lass’s face became tired. “That goes without saying, given his social status is ruined.”
“It’s more than that. He’s a timbre sensitive chanter, Lass,” said Hickory with an earnest rise in his voice. “You can’t just choose the first girl who is willing and desperate for a rise in status. They’re going to have to know how to handle him.”
“That’s your own personal experience talking. He isn’t neth like you.”
Brother Hickory leaned to the side on his arm rest to massage his forehead. “Since you went there, yes. My experience is talking. You know I’m an advocate of choice because arranged marriages only work if you consider the children and not just the benefits to each house.”
Lady Lass put her hands on her hips. “And I’m not your parents who force you to marry.”
The wine glass nearly slipped out of Soletus's fingers when he heard that. “You’re married?”
“Divorced. And a story for another time,” he said, still rubbing his eyes.
“This conversation is for another time,” said Lass, standing up and walking behind Hickory’s chair and started rubbing his shoulders. “When was the last time you went out for a nice roasted quail?”
“I don’t like quail,” he muttered.
“How about venison rib stew full of root vegetable severed with a warm loaf of fennel bread? And for dessert, an apple tart served with the side of custard.”
Hickory turned his head up to her. “You’re making my warder over there salivate.”
Soletus's breakfast comprised tea, stewed apples, and a slice of bread. That was hours ago. Nobles might eat light, but he couldn’t.
“Don’t deny you aren’t. I’m trying to pay you back and I’m inviting both of you to share a table with me. I know a lovely place in town that serves enough for Brotherhood appetites.”
They left Mien to rest. However, Hickory wrote a note they were going out and encouraged him to order something to eat. Soletus had a large lunch followed by Nerva giving him a tour Arbortown. When he came back that evening, he found Mien stretched out on the couch with two spinning light globes over his head. On the floor was an empty platter that held three empty plates.
Advertisement
“You can do two at a time now,” said Soletus, impressed.
“I just figured it out. You have fun,” he said absently.
“Yeah, but I felt bad leaving you here.”
“This is my hometown, so I missed nothing,” he said, concentrating on orbiting the light orbs around each other.
Soletus shut the door. He undid his sash and shrugged off the jacket. He felt like he could finally breathe again.
“Can I ask you a question,” he asked.
“Certainly.”
“Why does everyone call you Theoderic?”
The two orbs winked out of existence.
“That’s what my family calls me. Well, those who are living.” Mien rolled his head to him. “I introduced myself as Mien because that’s what my father called me. After he died, no one called me that anymore. I was just Theoderic, and I thought maybe if I could be Mien again, everything would be better and that I would be alive again.”
“You know you aren’t two different people,” said Soletus.
“You sure about that? Can’t a person be completely different from who they were in the past?”
“Yes, but is that really how you think about yourself being two different people?”
“Sometimes,” he said. He eased himself up until he had his back to the armrest. Soletus threw all his extra clothes over the back of the couch and sat on the other end. “I think maybe I think a little different from normal people.”
“Or maybe you think too much,” returned Soletus.
“True,” said Mien, searching around the room and then his attention fixed itself to the half drunken wine bottle in the room. “I want to put this all behind me.” He rolled to his feet and took the bottle from the table it sat on. Soletus watched him dig under a counter and produced two wine glasses. “A celebration is in order.”
“I don’t think that’s a good idea.”
The boy flashed his teeth at him as he poured himself a glassful to the rim and Soletus one as well, who took it tentatively. He wasn’t sure what to make of the boy’s show of mischievousness.
“I don’t see the draw to this stuff,” Soletus told him.
“You get used to it,” said Mien as he raised his glass. “A toast to having a future.”
Soletus raised glass. “To having a future.”
Soletus just held his glass as he did the first time and watched the boy drain half of his in one gulp.
“You know what’s nice? Not having to worry about dying,” he said, bright eyed.
“You look as if you a boulder rolled off your back,”
“It feels that way too,” he said. “I’m probably the only boy in existence who is happy to live the life of a priest.”
“Seriously, you lose all of this,” gestured Soletus.
Mien gave him a dismissive wave of his hand. “I’ve done fine without it so far.”
The boy was in a comfortable, jolly mood. He put his wine glass to his lips, taking a short sip before placing the cup down on floor. He snuggled back into the corner of the couch.
Soletus then tried another question. He was sure it would sour the celebration, but he had to put his mind to rest. It was what Nerva had said, as well as what he witnessed. He thought about it a little as he walked around earlier. All the things Mien seemed to be afraid of and uncomfortable with. He only recounted the detail of one of his uncle’s acts, though. That act seemed to breach boundaries and wondered if he breached a more disturbing one.
“I’ve one more question. It’s about your uncle.”
The corners of Mien’s mouth fell. “What about him?”
“What did he do to you to make you so afraid of him?”
Soletus felt it was better to ask him now that everything was over, and his uncle had no way to get to him. However, part of him was afraid that Mien would go into another anxious fit.
Mien swallowed hard and run a hand through his hair, thinking the question over before saying, “It’s not one thing. And maybe one day, I’ll tell you some of them, but not tonight,” he stated with a bit of finality in his voice. He wanted the subject dropped.
Soletus took a small sip from his glass and pushed forward. “I think I know.”
Mien tilted his head with his eyebrow arched dubiously. “No, you just think you do. Brother Hickory thought the same thing.”
“And that is,” prompted Soletus. He felt uneasy about broaching the subject, let alone even saying it. He just wanted to know because he thought that Mien had moved beyond that sort of reaction and earlier it was clear he didn’t. His mind couldn’t help but think the worse.
That vulnerable childlikeness that Mien always displayed vanished. “No.” His chanter’s lilt became heavy in his voice. “If he had done that kind of violation, I would’ve killed myself. If he had done that to my sister, I would’ve killed him so that everyone would see me do it.”
Soletus felt those words in his mind. He meant those words.
Mien then added. “And he wouldn’t do that. He’s too much pride to risk being castrated and burned.”
“You can’t have too much pride to hurt another person the way he hurt you.”
“Some people have their own personal codes on what is beneath them. That’s below him. Pissing on the floor and making me clean it up before locking me in the cellar wasn’t below him,” he said, touching his hair. “That’s why I cut my hair short. His piss dried in my hair, and I couldn’t wash the smell out. Now every time it gets long, I can still smell it. I still feel that humiliation. If I could be bald, I would.”
Discomfort became heavy in Soletus’s chest. “You don’t have to tell me anything else.”
A manic light shined in Mien’s eye. “But you and everyone else want to know everything so bad. None of you even considered I don’t want to talk about it because I don’t want people to look at me the way you are now.”
How am I supposed to control the way I react after hearing something like that?
“To answer your question about my being hit on, he rarely did. The few times he did, it was with a broom handle. He stopped because my mother made me take off my shirt one day and saw the bruises. Dias only knows what she did to him, but it didn’t stop him from going on to other things less noticeable.” Mien picked up the glass of wine. His hands were shaking as he took a sip, but he managed not to spill any of it. He continued talking. His voice started to crack. “I preferred him hitting me. It was quicker than being left out in the rain naked all night when my mother was away or being afraid to eat anything for nearly a week because he threatened to poison my food. If he just hit me, then that meant he wasn’t trying to kill me.”
After that revelation, his entire body quaked. Again, he used his arms to hold himself together while his head drooped.
Soletus struggled to find a response. By the time he found his voice again, all he could muster was, “I’m sorry.” He looked down at his hands. He felt stupid for bringing it up.
He glanced at Mien just in time to see him drawing his knees to his chest. “I can get Brother Hickory if you want.”
Mien shook his head.
“Do you want me to leave?”
Soletus expected him to nod, but it swayed instead.
“You probably want me to stop talking, don’t you?”
He gave the same response.
“Do you want me to do anything?”
“No,” said Mien. He reached down and tilted his head back, consuming the rest of the wine in his glass. Soletus took a sip of his and put it away after sticking his tongue out in disgusts. He felt Mien watching him. He had something to say but was probably working out on saying it. That vulnerability didn’t return. Mien let out a sigh, sat still enough time for the tremors to abate, and then he spoke.
“I shouldn’t have told you that. Any of it. I really don’t want your sympathy. No, that’s not right. I don’t want you to feel like I’m always, you know, this, a sissy who’s completely out of his mind.”
“I don’t think of you like that. The only person I see, is someone who is hurt. And that’s why I react the way I do. I don’t like it. I like it even less when I put my foot in my mouth. It feels like I punch you in the gut.”
Mien grinned and let out a brief chuckle. Soleus couldn’t say that he heard him laugh since they met. “I keep waiting for the moment when you aren’t sincere,” he said. “I don’t think you know how to be anything other than honest.”
Soletus searched Mien’s face for a reason he found it amusing. “I don’t see any other way to be.”
“Of course you wouldn’t,” he said, still grinning, and let out a giggle.
Soletus glanced at the wine bottle.
“I might’ve drunk a little too much,” the boy admitted.
Soletus gave him an exasperated look.
“I won’t get anymore,” promised Mien with another toothy grin.
Well, that’s a smile I can’t trust. Though one he welcomed. Soletus took it as a sign that those vivid scars that Kiao described could be healed.
Advertisement
- In Serial82 Chapters
My Isekai
For those not familiar with the isekai genera, this story is about a man waking up in an unknown world. The story follows his journey and life in this world, which does not only look different on the surface, but the common norms and values of this world are very alien to the modern western mindset. How will this average western person respond to such a world, and how will it change him. For those familiar with isekai, this is a western take on a predominantly Japanese story format. It draws a lot of inspiration from Japanese isekai, but it also tries to tackle a lot of tropes that might be annoying to the western mindset. The story is not written for young boys as the story tries to take a mature take on some typical clichés and assumptions made by both the typical writer and reader of the genera.
8 109 - In Serial45 Chapters
Hope
There were 2 options: Fight the same war for countless more aeons. Shatter the Betrayer's undead legions time and time again until all was ground to dust. Because the endless legions truly never end. A hair's breath of ground in a century is enough if the war takes all of eternity. Or to choose Hope. To cast away his memories, his power, his very life. To wager everything on a chance to prevent their eventual end or to perish trying. Because if he were to return it would be with the power necessary to finally slay what remains of the Betrayer. Of the last Aspect. Only then would all things be right. And so, he chose the latter. Expect:Weak to strong quick-ish.Powerful MC reincarnates, gradually starts regaining memories.MC that is an actual character not a plot device.My original unique magic system discovered along with the MC.My original setting with mythos that have both been living rent free in my head for actual years.Opening arc will be less fast than the following story. Good writing (I think) and grammar. Upload schedulle: 2 chapters a week of 3-4k words each. I want to upscale to 3 in the future. Meant to be read in RR dark mode. For those coming here from my other stories, this is indeed a reimagining of my older story, CotM. I say reimagining because I have changed so much it cannot be called just a rewrite. Among the major changes, MC is fundamentally different in personality and background, I have actually planned the story out and changed it almost completely and I have adjusted my mythos so it no longer has as many holes as swiss cheese.
8 207 - In Serial37 Chapters
Unwanted Company
Welcome to the System.Initiation in progress. Time remaining: 3425678 units. Converting. 96 local minutes.Please use this time to complete your Identity Sheet. This is how Chuck's life change A loner by choice and upbringing, Chuck is torn between the lessons his father taught him and the advice his mother gave him as he finds himself dealing with figuring out how this new world works while being stuck with more people than he's had to deal with in all his life
8 172 - In Serial19 Chapters
Nico di Angelo x Reader Part 1
Y/n was like any other child of Athena, but with deep ties that remain unbroken she is faced with the very disaster that leaves her in shambles. Will the help of new friends be enough to save her mother? Or will death only do its part?Disclaimer: All PJO characters belong to Rick Roridan
8 207 - In Serial24 Chapters
My American Boyfriend (Bakudeku)
Who would have thought that Bakugo would be in a relationship?How would the class react when they first meet Bakugo's lover?How will they react to America ?•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
8 171 - In Serial79 Chapters
Give Light to Dark Thoughts
When the heart bleeds and nothing can heal it, the only thing left to do is write. Thoughts are volatile, sometimes they are cruel and other times are kind, nevertheless both are needed. If the pain didn't exist no one would know what happiness feels like. This book of poems is the moments when just for a second dark is all that it is, so why not share and give it light, hopefully someone will feel identify with at least one poem.Not all the poem will be in a negative connotation, and the images I put will be from Pinterest.
8 182

