Wulfric, Callum & Auguste
Once Callum entered Wulfricâs office, the latter looked up from scribbling something into a notebook. He appeared to have been about to say something â likely an invitation to come in, which the younger prince hadnât bothered waiting for. An unimpressed look, and a pointedly arched eyebrow was the only response to his uninvited entry, however.
When asked whether heâd wanted to see his brother, Wulfric replied,
âYes, I did.â It was a simple, no-nonsense admission, one which entirely disregarded that Callumâs question had been sarcastic. But almost immediately afterwards, an expression of extreme annoyance flashed across his face.
âThe door?â he questioned indignantly, for it had been left open on purpose.
He stared at it for a moment, as if waiting for someone to close it. But because he rarely had someone on standby in or around his office, no one did. Frowning heavily, Wulfric produced a very audible,
âTsk.âBefore taking care of that, he first tidied his desk; capped his fountain pen, put it in an engraved wooden holder, used an ink blotter to dry off his recent writing, and stored his notebook into a drawer. As he did so, his expression smoothed out; perhaps, the small exercise was a meditative one for him. Just as possibly, he had decided he would
not let himself be irritated that easily.
âWhat about the door?â Callum asked with mock confusion. He didnât bother to move or go back and close the door. He only waited and stared up at the ceiling as his brother took his time organizing his desk. Fair enough; Cal had taken his time coming up here, heâd made Wulfric wait around for him first.
Wulfric stood up from his desk, languidly stretched, and ambled towards the doorway. Contrary to Callumâs assertion, he acted as if he could, in fact, spend the whole day there.
âTo not give the time of day to my darling little brother?â he acted mock surprised, and affected the obnoxious kind of sweetness for the term of endearment.
âPerish the thought,â he then added dryly, and sent a smirk Callumâs way.
In the meanwhile, the youth had clearly more than made himself at home. That piercing blue-gray gaze scanned over the figure, and seemed to see all. Or, at least, thatâs what his haughtily knowing countenance relayed at the moment. Then, Wulfric tilted his head, as if to consider the scene from a new angle.
âAll you need now is to start eating grapes to complete that image of hedonism,â he remarked idly. It was unclear if he was joking, trying to make a point, or something else. But there were actually refreshments on the coffee table set out.
Wulfric, who had decided to pass by his brother, trailed one hand along the length of the backrest Callum was lying against. Looking down upon him, he was very briefly tempted to roll him off the couch. Instead, however, he simply took ahold of his calves, and dropped his booted feet onto the floor. Then, he strolled the rest of the way to the still opened doors to close them.
Despite Callumâs attempts to provoke a reaction, Wulfric kept his detached demeanor and Cal took this as a good sign. If Wulfric was angry heâd expected his brother wouldâve shown it by now, especially with the added provocation. So this probably wasnât about the onion and Cal was almost certain there was nothing else heâd done between their last conversation and right now that couldâve caught Wulfricâs attention. Callum gnawed at his already chewed-up fingernails as he tried to figure out why he was there. But by the time Wulfric dropped Callum's feet from the couch to the floor heâd already given up on trying to figure it out. Trying to figure out what Wulfric wanted would only give him a worse headache than the one that crept back whenever he tried to think about last night.
âSo glad to hear youâve finally come âround and accepted what an absolute delight I am.â Callum matched his brotherâs sarcastic tone before giving in to Wulfricâs suggestion and grabbing a bunch of grapes. He leaned back against the couch, letting his head drop back and dangling the grapes above him as he open-mouth chewed bites off the bunch.
Auguste's head popped into the door frame before Wulfric could close it.
â...My, whatâs this? An impromptu meeting between brothers without inviting me?â A half-smile crept onto his face, amused by his own musings. He stayed by the door-frame, waiting to be invited in.
âLured in by the mystery of an unusually opened room?â Wulfric commented dryly, then motioned his brother in.
âYou might as well join us.â Once Auguste entered, he did finally close the door.
âOf course, an empty room becomes infinitely more interesting when my brothers step into one.â Auguste replied with a smile as he let himself in. He found his favoured seat in Wulfricâs office, in front of a small, circular table where he and his brother had often shared a drink.
As Auguste peeked his head in through the open door, Callum had quickly tried to correct his posture and cease his antagonistic actions but only ended up nearly choking on a grape. He managed to cough it back into his hand and then finished chewing it, now with his mouth closed, before speaking.
âWelcome to the meeting of exceptional minds, Aug.â Wulfric followed Auguste back in, eyeing Callumâs reaction with thoughtful interest. He stopped by the coffee table, and prepared two cups of coffee, one to his own liking, and one to Augusteâs. He left the former on the table, and brought the latter over to his middle brother. Then, he returned to his table to pick up his own. Cup in hand, he settled into one of the remaining two couches. As he sat all the way back, comfortably leaning against the backrest, he let one arm settle onto the armrest. He crossed one leg over the other, and used his knee as a perch for the saucer, cup, and teaspoon.
Though he was in a position where he could easily look at either brother, he angled his head towards Callum.
âSo.â He took a slow sip of his coffee.
âWhat was your line of thinking with that whole onion bit?â His whole demeanour was quite casual, and his tone genuinely curious, though he by no means found the action in question agreeable.
Damn. Callum thought.
This was about the onion. But the conversation didnât feel like he was in trouble, not like the one this morning. Callum shrugged, immediately deciding that Wulfric wouldnât understand. Edin
liked Wulfric, and his brother didnât know what it was like to bear the brunt of the kingâs malice. But Edinâs ire was inescapable for Cal, it had become part of his identity, and he wasnât going to let that ire fall down on anyone else, it was his. His action hadnât been fueled by thoughts, it had been instinct.
âFor attention, obviously. And it successfully caught the eye of Ar-, Lady Edwards did it not?â Callum knew his eldest brother too easily saw through outright lies, so he spun what little truth he offered into something more agreeable.
âHow were your dates? You both seem popular with our Alidasht guests.â Callum did his best to lead the conversation away from the onion. He tossed what remained of the bunch of grapes back onto the table.
Wulfric gave a noncommittal hum.
âAnd here I thought it was some particularly impulsive, inefficient, and bizzare act of trying to âhelpâ that commoner,â he pondered, side-eying Callumâs reaction.
âThough help with what or how â nevermind why â rather escapes my understanding,â he snarked. He closed his eyes for a long sip of coffee.
âWell, I had supposed it was either that, or your usual inability not to oppose or provoke father in the most senseless of waysâŚâ He seemed strangely
placid, almost as if he were willing to let this topic rest â however, he by no means grabbed onto the next conversational hook.
âYeah, Iâm sure anything that doesnât revolve around this family escapes your understanding, brother.â Callum muttered back as he shook his head and gritted his teeth at the rest of what Wulfric said. His anxious fidgeting stopped. The sarcasm and theatrical antics ceased as coldness and spite replaced them. He looked at Wulfric much in the same way he glared at his father as his eldest brother plucked at a raw nerve.
âDid you really ask me here to point out how stupid my every action is or to chastise me for eating a vegetable? Neither of which affected you or our familyâs relationship with our guests. Right? I didnât interfere with anything. I cooperated with that idiotic event. What more do you want? Got a list of things Iâm allowed to put in my mouth now? I donât need a third, unwanted, parent, Wulfy.â He spat his words out, not raising his voice, but allowing his contempt to coat them as he spoke.
âIt is because I know how clever you are that-â he started with offended incredulity, setting his cup and saucer down with more force than strictly necessary. But before he could say any more, Callum continued.
âWell, want it or not, I swear by the gods: I will do all I can to stick around,â Wulfric growled out, anger sparking his gaze.
âSo, unless you are inclined to actually do something about that you will have to settle for being one in the long line of many who hope I will spontaneously drop dead!âNaturally, Auguste had quickly grasped Callumâs intent with hisâŚrather unorthodox, albeit well-intentioned, and conspicuous display. His brother had wanted to draw their fatherâs attention from the girl to himself. It was why he, too, assisted in defusing the situation.
Auguste was no stranger to his brothersâ frequent spats. Although it made him uncomfortable, he had grown more than accustomed to their arguments. It seemed the two just grated each other to their witsâ end. It did not help that the two tended to speak in coded language and bitter sarcasm. Not difficult to translate but the sub-text plucked at his own heart.
âCalmer tones, brothers.â Auguste interjected lightly, although he would still take a relative backseat to their conversation as this needed to be hashed out between the two.
âAnd please, actually speak towards each other, not with veiled jabs nor rhetorical retorts. For meâŚplease?ââNow whoâs the parental one,â Wulfric scoffed, but even though he was clearly still angry, he settled down some.
âOh, the irony of a peacemaker who is most himself when wielding a sword.â Calâs glare shot toward Auguste and regret followed soon afterward. It wasnât something heâd meant to say out loud. But that was Callum; lashing out at whoever was around at the slightest provocation. He leaned his head over the back of the couch and stared at the ceiling.
âSorry, Auguste, itâs just been a long day. I didnât mean it.â He added, softening his tone.
Auguste simply waved off Wulfricâs, and then Callumâs, words with a weary smile. Their words did ring some truth to them; it wasnât the first time he had been called âparent-likeâ... And in times of stress he does reach for his hip - often grasping at empty air as he did not always carry his blade.
âItâs alright, Callum, no need to apologize.â The prince took a small swig of coffee and let out a breath he didnât know he was holding.
âAnd I donât wish for you to drop dead.â He mumbled out a response to Wulfric, not an apology, but it was close to saying something nice.
âThereâs a couple people Iâm saving those wishes for already.â He added, half joking, but smiling some as he continued to look up at the ceiling.
âWell, good,â Wulfric huffed, still somewhat disgruntled as he frowned at Callum. After a long,
long moment of deliberation, he said,
âI would rather you remain alive, as well.â While he spoke clearly, if quietly, and though looking directly at Callum, this was said with some reservation. It was quite the awkward profession to make, after all.
Sighing audibly, Wulfric picked up his previously abandoned cup of coffee, and drank the rest. While a part of him considered asking who his brother wanted dead, and if he by any chance wanted active help realizing those wishes, he eventually decided against it. Instead, he addressed what he felt was the overarching issue.
âTo answer your questionâŚWhat I really want to know.â Wulfric took a moment to think about how to phrase this, or rather, phrase it with the least possible amount of sarcasm and frustration, as had been requested.
âDo you not see or care at all how each and every action,â he paused briefly.
âEach action which makes you seem like a fool or madmanâŚReduces the influence with which you could do something better?ââMaybe I am just a fool and a madman. Everyone else sees the same things I do, and most of them can just look away. But I canât. And that makes me feel crazy.â He tore his gaze away from the ceiling and looked at Wulfric.
âThey would have killed Darryn today, for no other reason than to spill blood. That is what our parents are, they will not change. Whatever distance I can get from that, the better.â Callum wasnât sure if heâd shared too much but he doubted Wulfric would relent until he got something resembling an answer.
âSo I can cooperate with your summer plans, smile and play nice, and keep from dragging the Alidasht into anything unsavory, but I canât pretend that I am okay with what goes on here.â Cal added with a shrug. That was the most he could offer, too much compromise and he risked losing himself.
Wulfric gazed at Callum intently, turned fully towards him, and took his time pondering all heâd said.
âI seeâŚâ he said slowly, and he was clearly at least trying to.
âBelieve it or not, I am not trying to change your values, so that is fine.â Yet he was still frowning mildly, and had more to say to that.
âBut my point was that the more you do things like you did in relation to that strange commoner girl â things which reduce your political respectability, and the favour you could have, that is â the less you can do to aid in more critical situations, like Fletcherâs was.âHe silently sighed
âI think you at least partially understand my meaning, because you knew that you had to use my influence to get what you wanted,â he added neutrally.
âWhat I would like you to consider is how you might be able to do more of the same. No need to cooperate with our parents directly, if you detest them so muchâŚâ Wulfric shook his head at that, because he thought it fairly nonsensical to limit your own options for the sake of pure principle.
âBut you could work more with me, or with him,â at this, he gestured to Auguste,
âor hell, with whoever else that you can at this point, really.ââThat strange commoner girl was not only very kind but she also offered me a very thoughtful gift. Maybe thatâs whatâs wrong with this place, no one wants to see anything beyond titles. You will be king one day, and you already speak of your people like you donât even like them. Planning to rule as Edin does? Treating your people like a nuisance who exist only for tax revenue?â Callumâs anger flared back up even as he tried to stay civil. Wulfricâs point wasnât entirely wrong, it just wouldnât work for him for reasons that could not be voiced around anyone who shared his surname. He took a moment, and a deep breath, to recompose himself.
âI will not-â Wulfric began indignantly, but cut himself off to stop another outburst. But he did think to himself rather sourly,
Why would I have to like them to rule differently?Callum shook his head at Wulfricâs reply, he wasnât surprised but it was something he hadnât hoped to hear.
âEvery deal with a devil comes with a price. How much of my soul can I bargain away before there's nothing left? But, yes, Iâd rather owe a debt to you than let a man die for mine, and Anaâs, mistake. I chose the lesser of two evils then because there was little time for anything else. Can either of you honestly look me in the eyes and say that working with them, standing by every horrible thing our parents have done, hasnât torn something from you?" He looked from Wulfric to Auguste, not sure what heâd hear from either brother.
A look of uncertainty crossed Augusteâs face that was soon replaced with his usual confidence.
â...How did that saying go; âEvil is evil. Lesser, greater, middling, it matters little.â Choosing between âtwo evilsâ is always a difficult choice, Cal⌠er- not to say that I think that working with dear Wulfric is evil, far from it.â Auguste replied,
âWhile we are privileged, our âjobâ is difficult⌠Soon, we will be the ones faced with choosing between impossible choices. If itâs any consolation, I believe you chose correctly.â He nodded, tacitly agreeing that idly standing by their familyâs misdeeds had indeed taken a toll on him. Although Wulfric also did have a point, to make radical changes you need to rise to a higher position. Changes without power is akin to screaming at a brick wall.
Callum smiled and nodded at Auguste, there was a lot of hope in knowing that Auguste wasnât rotten. It didnât have to keep spreading down the family tree. But Auguste was loyal, he wouldnât turn on their family. Callum couldnât blame someone for that.
The last of Callumâs words had Wulfricâs fists clenching, and he stared into the off-distance stonily.
âHow I wish I could honestly say that nothing has ever been torn away from me,â he said lowly, expression twisting momentarily with all kinds of deeply unpleasant emotions. However, it was gone too soon to pinpoint his exact feelings. Though it wasnât quite for the reasons Callum had mentioned, he did have his own for the utter loathing that heâd just had to learn to live with.
âBut so what?â he scoffed, tossing his head to the side in irritation.
âIt changes nothing,â he hissed, facing Callum.
âNot that the best way for me to become a ruler is via legitimate successionâŚand certainly not my beliefs,â he sneered.
Then, a familiar, comforting coldness overtook him, one that was at once sharp yet dampening. A strange smile graced his features as he chuckled darkly.
âIt seems that leaves us at an impasseâŚFor now.âCallum glimpsed a familiar darkness in Wulfric, the same that lurked behind his motherâs eyes. Everything was clearer; there could be no more deals or alliances with Wulfric. Callum only stared off at nothing until his eyes became unfocused as his brother spoke. Wulfric would only ever care about power, only the ends, never the means. His eldest brother was lost. Heâd thought it before, but even still he felt unready to really know it. He hated that Wulfric had said it so clearly. He hated what his brother had become, but he could bring himself to hate his brother. He wished he hadnât woken up this morning.
âYeah, an impasse. Iâve got nothing more to say.â He stood up to leave but it seemed Wulfric had more to add.
âWell, then, Callum. There is something else - nothing long, arduous, or philosophical, not to worry,â he barked a non-amused laugh.
âAs part of your cooperative efforts,â he flashed a razor-sharp smile.
âFor one...Whenever you leave the castle henceforth, you will take at least two guards with you - your pick as to who.â Wulfric waited a beat to gauge Callumâs reaction.
âFor another, I would like you to give it your best in learning how to moderate your alcohol intake.âCal rolled his eyes at his brotherâs attempt to exert control over him. The guards would be a nuisance. But then Wulfric brought up lessening his drinking, and he only snorted.
âMy best efforts are infamously disappointing. But sure, have your armed nannies follow me about.â But still his brother wasnât finished, Wulfric had one last devastating utterance left.
âAh, and not to forgetâŚBy absolutely no means are you to establish contact with Marek Delronzo.â By the glint in his eyes, this had been a card Wulfric had kept up his sleeve until the opportune moment.
How could he know that name? There was really only one way. No one else at that party knew Marek. Just him and Ana. And Cal knew he hadnât caved.
Gods-damnit, Ana. So he couldnât trust Ana either.
âAs agreed.â He muttered. Marek, at least, had the ways and means to protect himself.
âHave a good day, Auguste,â was all Cal added before he left. Once again, Callum left the door wide open.
âYou too, Callum.â Auguste managed to get in before he left.
When Callum made to get up, Wulfric shifted as if he were about to try and do the same, feeling oddly inclined to go after him, and do...something. But in the end, he only resettled back into in his seat.
âWhat a terrible mistake this wasâŚâBut what was the mistake? Being too honest with his brother, or not being honest enough? That he was ready to make necessary sacrifices? That he may have been wrong about the necessity of some of them? Because in retrospectâŚlining up FletcherâŚmight have indeed been pointless.
And now, Callum had left before Wulfric could have a proper conversation about Marek. He turned to look at Auguste, but his gaze was so distant, it was questionable whether he was seeing his sibling at all.
âYou ought to knowâŚâ he began, words slower than usual due to his preoccupation.
âMarek DelronzoâŚthat is the name of the partyâs hostâŚallegedly.âCallumâs reaction had tacitly confirmed that this was true, but it still wasnât as much of a certainty as Wulfric would prefer. He should have known that prodding Callum wouldnât amount to much. (Should he have even been trying to gain information from
his brother in such a way?)
Sighing, he continued his one-sided conversation with Auguste.
âThat name was relayed to me by a certain Count Hendrix,â he noted.
âQuite suspiciousâŚBut then again, what is another man playing at politics, looking to use what there is to use?â he mused wryly.
His thoughts returned to Callum.
âI meant toâŚâ he trailed off. What he had wanted was to reach some sort of an understanding with him. Yet his words and actions had been anything but conducive to that. He had the uncomfortable suspicion that the only thing he managed to achieve was to hurt Callum.
âHim and IâŚâ he shook his head sadly, regretfully.
A long inhale and exhale followed. Feeling suddenly weary, Wulfric leaned his head against the backrest, and closed his eyes.
âLeave me be now, brother.â