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#half of that edit time was spent on forma t ting yeeHAW i got so carried away
advernia · 4 years
Text
fic: you make home sound like a distant memory
— the pieces fray around the edges, and the center has lost its warmth. - pre-game: a somber tale about a family with crimson blood.
1: draft turned fic turned welp, looks like i'm not writing anything else till this is done oh my god, what is this hot mess even - 2: dear @ikerev-appreciation pls forgive me but uhh does it still count as a jonah week entry even if jonah shares the spotlight with his family ksjksjd;;
o n e .
"... I wish we didn't look so alike."
"But we don't! I may look fantastic, but rest assured - I pale in comp arison to your delicate, angelic features!"
His birth is a celebration, not much of the congratulations on the safe delivery of your firstborn child kind, but more of the congratulations on giving birth to a boy kind of celebration. He's a plump babe swaddled within layers of fine cotton with little hair on his head and no teeth to speak of, but people stare at him with the intensity of the summer sun and smiles painted on their faces, as if he were the grandest being they had ever laid their eyes on.
Every feature of his, no matter how tiny and yet to be developed, comes out drizzled in honey from many mouths: the fullness of his cheeks (it's not fat, how dare you, it's a sign of good health), the curves of his little lips (they're as red as rogue, how adorable), the hue of his eyes (they have the beauty of pure molten gold), and the descriptive list gets longer and longer.
The only word everyone seems to have in common is heir.
He's barely two days old and he doesn't understand what that means at all, so he starts crying.
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Two years and long grueling hours later, in comes another swaddled babe: he was born at the very moment the reds and golds disappeared from the sky, and the darkness of night enfolded everyone in its embrace. In fact, that's the color soft wisps of hair on his head seem to have taken - in total, he's a bundle of full cheeks, curved reddish lips, and dark-colored hair.
The celebration that follows after his birth is a small affair limited within the walls of his home, and the only ones who take hold of him with such warmth are his grandfather and a boy with silver hair. The former smiles at the sight of a small black dot set under his right eye and mumbles something about the mark of a Clemence, while the latter just stares at him in complete awe, stars bursting forth from eyes that were wide open.
Behind the old man and the child went hushed whispers, the word insurance hanging heavy in the air.
He's barely two days old and he doesn't understand what that means at all, so he starts crying.
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"You'll have nothing to fear now, for I'm accompanying you! Aren't you glad we're going together?"
"What's there to be glad about when I'm going to be stuck with you?"
Children will be children like boys will be boys.
Come spring they run around a grand forest, chasing butterflies and gathering all sorts of things like little explorers lost in an expedition. They make sure to steer and hide away from any obstacles that come their way, like those terrible women in long black skirts who shout out their names and try to lure them out with the prospect of food. The biggest evil though is the great wizard: he's super thin, has graying hair, puts a super shiny monocle under his left eye, grows a bushy mustache with its tips pointing perfectly upwards, and worst of all knows how to use two dangerous words to complete his magic spell - the names of their parents.
Summer is too hot for exploring and the heat outside makes everything sweaty and sticky and it feels gross. So instead, they link their hands together to embark in a thorough search for their grandfather within the large halls and grand rooms of the mansion - he's always in the library though, sitting by the couch near the window and reading some book. When they come in, grandfather urges them to sit and off the three of them go as a tale is brought to life in words: they emerge in battlefields, countries, and in mystical places that a man called the Queen of Hearts had all stepped on once upon a time. Uninterrupted, they venture well until lunchtime.
Fall is boring because they can't go out and under the command of their parents, the great wizard has summoned his disciples to keep them apart - they're made to practice all sorts of things, read a lot of thick books, listen well to whatever's being taught, and the disciples don't take no for an answer even if they cry and beg. It's really, really boring and sometimes when they look out the window, they think about how much better it was to spend time being an explorer or listening to grandfather's stories instead.
Winter's a bit better because even if they still go through their very boring lessons, their grandfather saves the half of the day by leading both of them by the hand to go into his room. In there they can do whatever they want, and grandfather just watches over them with his wrinkly eyes. He coughs often and spends most of the time in bed though, so before doing anything else the both of them make sure that their grandfather's all warm and cozy and has a glass of warm water ready by his bedside table.
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The old man smiles warmly at them - he smiles at the young child with silver hair, whose hands were always open for a smaller one to slip in and hold onto. He smiles at the little boy with dark hair, whose hands were always searching for a larger hand to hold on to.
Slowly he closes his tired eyes and focuses on the sound of boyish laughter, filling the four corners of the room.
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By the end of winter, any trace of joy that laughter has left in the mansion, in the library, and in their grandfather's room, has promptly flown away.
The young child and the little boy huddle close to each other as they stood over clumps of snow, mittened hands tightly linked together as they stared at a headstone bearing their grandfather's name.
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"Why are you here? Go away, go back, go home, and don't ever think about visiting me again!"
"Your shyness is adorable as always! But you don't need to hold back for my sake - now, give me a hug!"
Things in the mansion change a lot shortly after their grandfather had gone into a deep, deep sleep.
They're pulled away from each other like how their rooms are now on separate floors. Everyday they're seated far apart from each other on the dining table, strictly forbidden to sit beside each other. The disciples increase in number and strange people visit often, eyes set on their every move and mouths always having something to say about them both. Their parents forbade them from going out unless necessary, that order becoming something sharp and biting and absolute. But the most horrible thing of all is that they're no longer allowed to spend their days in each other's company.
No more exploring together, no more searching for four-leaf clovers together. No more sneaking into each other's rooms late at night, no more reading books together under the covers. No more creeping into the kitchen to get their favorite snacks, no more midday or afternoon teatime together. No more shopping together, no more walking around town together.
No more, no more.
No more together.
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The young child tries, though. He tries his best to find a way out, to slip past the great wizard and his disciples and all those strange people and their parents' rules. He especially tries his very best at night. He tries to find the best time to slip out of his room unnoticed and run across the hallway to the stairs leading to the first floor, to go down those steps and head towards the left wing, to pass through many, many doors until he reaches that one door.
The little boy needs him. He's sure that no one in the mansion know about the nightmares the little boy has, about how lonely he can get in the middle of the night. No one knows of that one doll he likes to hold at night. He bets that no one, not even their parents, know about the lullaby too; from the words to the tune and up to how to sing it properly. He's the only one who can do it. He's the only one.
He has to keep trying. He'll handle any punishment, any lecture, any scolding, any added hours of study and practice, any confinement; he'll handle anything, if only, if only, if only -
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The young child's efforts eventually pay off but sadly only at nighttime, but he figures that's a start. And so he develops a habit of sneaking out of his room come midnight just to sing to the little boy until every tear has dried, until the little boy's eyes were firmly closed shut and breathing takes on its steady rhythm.
When he turns around to leave, a small hand subconsciously reaches out to him like a lifeline; tugging at his sleeve or clinging to his fingers.
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The young child takes hold of the little boy's small hand and squeezes it gently.
It feels like a lifeline, too.
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"You don't need to stand there! Come on, there's an empty seat right beside me!"
"Ugh, no way. I'd rather stand for five hours straight rather than to be seen sitting beside you."
The day when the young child turned eight and the little boy was six served as the universe's way of pointedly reminding them of who and what they were; of what their own family and perhaps the whole country saw them to be.
It was certainly a birthday to be remembered.
Seated at the head of a grand table and surrounded by all the grandeur money could possibly offer to an eight-year-old, there sat no young child with tears streaming down his face but there was only Jonah Clemence, the firstborn son and heir of the Clemence family's proud crimson bloodline and the future Queen of Hearts of the Red Army.
And although it was never planned for someone to sit there in the first place, seated by the very foot of the grand table was a little boy and his name was Luka.
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Heir.
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Insurance.
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Ah -
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- so that's what the word meant.
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t w o .
"Remember that I'm always waiting to welcome you back home with open arms."
"... You don't need to do that any longer. I'm never going back."
Because Jonah Clemence realized that he was no longer a young child the same way Luka had accepted that he was no longer a little boy, the world and the society around them began to change, too.
Those women in long black skirts are simply maids, the great wizard and his disciples are the head butler and their tutors, respectively. People who claim to work out of respect and reverence to the Clemence family's name, but all those claims pale in comparison to the lovely clink of a coin.
The strange people who come in and out of the mansion and continue to do so were a toss of either their relatives or nobles of lower standing. Over time, there was no need to differenciate both, simply because there was no lesser evil between two parties that wore masks for a living and wagged tongues painted a shimmering silver.
The library is left untouched but the couch that their grandfather used to sit on has been replaced for something finer, something that doesn't smell of youthful adventure and heroic romances. It's gone and so is their grandfather's bedroom, the sanctuary where they tasted freedom once upon a time.
Lessons take broader shapes and extensions, demanding more attention and a sharper mind. The hilt and weight of a sword has made itself known to them as well, introduced to them by no one else but by the Queen of Hearts himself, their father.
What they used to call the grand forest was in truth the mansion's spacious gardens - the cobblestone pathways and the secret clearings they used to run through back and forth for days become unfamiliar when they stand at the center of it all and it's filled with tables and silverware, with guests sipping away at exquisite tea and specially made cakes laid out for their choosing.
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The chill of winter has long left every hallway and it's already the middle of summer, but the mansion and everything else in it never grew any warmer.
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"I don't want your help. I didn't ask for your help. Now leave me alone."
"Hush! Do you honestly think I would do something so heartless when I can see you suffering!?"
It was impossible for Luka to stand in the same limelight where Jonah Clemence stood, and that was alright.
Jonah Clemence was the heir after all, and he was to be the Queen of Hearts someday. He's young for now but once he grew up, he was going to be an upstanding noble and a honorable soldier, and everyone else would look up to him. He'd do all sorts of good deeds, go to places far away, win lots and lots of battles with his trusty sword at his side, and would do anything to protect anyone from evil.
But that was Jonah Clemence.
Everyone only saw Jonah Clemence but Luka could also see someone else - that's because before Jonah Clemence became the Jonah Clemence, he was first and foremost Luka's one and only big brother: he was brave for still sneaking into Luka's room at night, smart and quick whenever he would help Luka study without anyone knowing. He paid close attention to whatever Luka had to say, he was kind enough to guide Luka into reading the music notes for a violin piece. He was also patient and understanding to boot - he never got mad at Luka, ever.
But the best thing about Luka's big brother was that he didn't force himself to be perfect like Jonah Clemence was.
Luka's big brother allows himself to cry because he's so tired, allows himself to get frustrated and complain about all those adults and those tea party invitations. He allows himself to be sad because he hasn't been able to see Luka around much, allows himself to get angry because father had been very strict during sword practice. And even though he's older than Luka, he can also act so childish and lazy.
Sometimes Luka wished that everyone else could see his big brother in Jonah Clemence, too.
Because while Jonah Clemence was Luka's hero, Luka's big brother was the person Luka loved the most.
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Being second son meant not bearing any of the responsibilities that came with being the Clemence heir and for Jonah, that was a relief.
The heir had to show the best of himself at all times, presenting no sign of weakness but only strength. He was someone no one could look down upon, someone who could command respect by people hearing the sound of his name. Emotions should never get in the way of the heir's judgement because once he lets just a shred of that in, people will start doubting his power and will take advantage of him immediately.
And that was just being heir.
Being the Queen of Hearts on the other hand was a legacy engraved in the heir's blood, a distinction of glory and the very purpose why he has been brought into the world. The Queen is the paragon of a steadfast loyalty to the King of Hearts, and the Queen is the only one worthy of being called the King's second-in-command. The Queen was second best to the King, but that didn't make him any lesser: he is incredibly strong, righteous, and if ever the King were to be led astray; the Queen would be the first one who would lead the King back into the right path.
Jonah wouldn't - couldn't, shouldn't - allow Luka to shoulder those burdens.
Every responsibility weighed too much, expected too much. And Luka - his sweet, oh-so-sweet little brother with the warmest smile in the world and a heart of shining gold - doesn't deserve to experience any of that. Those small ears don't need to hear constant criticism, flowery words with knives underneath, or stinging whispers. Those kind eyes don't need to see cold faces and fake smiles. That gentle voice shouldn't speak words that people expect to hear. That tiny body didn't need to feel itself breaking from the pain of all those slaps, kicks, fists, bruises and scars.
And that beautiful heart certainly didn't need to break and turn to stone from the pressure, from all the difficult things the heir and the future Queen of Hearts had to go through.
Being the Clemence heir and taking on the mantle of the Queen of Hearts are the very pillars of Jonah's life, but -
- being the older brother who would do anything to protect the world's most precious little brother was important to him too.
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"Trust me - I would do anything to protect you."
"... Why are you always like this?"
Winter wasn't the best season for them, simply because it was the season when their grandfather died. When he passed away with that soft smile on his thin lips, whatever scraps of freedom they were able to savor went along with him as well; carefully placed in an ornate casket and buried six feet under the ground, nestled around a protective magic barrier for good measure.
And now their parents were giving them another reason to dislike winter.
In the dead of the night and under the light of the full moon, Luka lets out a valley of tears that stream down his cheeks and fall onto his silk bedsheets - the drops fall to the pace of skip counting, going one, three, eight, fifteen, twenty-three, and Jonah can't stop all that with just the long sleeves of his shirt. Luka's cries are hiccupped sobs; broken little pieces, strangled wails of sorrow, warbled watery pleas of don't go, don't go, please don't leave me here alone, please oh please, don't go.
Each sob is as soft as the winds that blow against the windows of the room, but each sound resonates loudly through Jonah's being - it echoes and deafens the ears, slips past all his defenses just to repeatedly stab at his skin and to seep onto every open pore, barges inside just to punch both his lungs and constrict the heart in a vice-grip that leaves him breathless.
It hurts. It really does.
When he's rendered useless, there's nothing much left to do but wrap his arms around his little brother with the hope that whatever strength he had left would keep them both steady.
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But it doesn't.
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When both their eyes have finally run dry, Jonah raises one of his calloused pinkies to link with one of Luka's own.
He solemnly promises that on his honor as Jonah Clemence, heir to the Clemence family and the future Queen of Hearts, he would write a letter every day to his one and only little brother Luka Clemence; no matter how busy or tired he would be by the end of the day. Whenever the opportunity presents itself and if he is also permitted to do so, Jonah Clemence would go back home just to visit Luka Clemence. Also, if Jonah Clemence would find anything interesting, just anything at all; he would make sure to bring it home so he could show it to Luka Clemence.
It's the first and the longest vow that Jonah has ever spoken. His throat is all tingly and his voice doesn't just come out right but Luka heard every last word, down to that last hiccup.
Luka squeezed that one calloused pinky firmly as he possibly could.
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Jonah Clemence wasn't a liar.
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Luka's big brother wasn't a liar.
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So he would definitely keep his promise.
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t  w  o .
There's this young boy surrounded by cold adults in a big mansion, but each morning
he does his best to wake and rise early to look out past the mansion's windows,
because he was going to wait for a letter to arrive.
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The young boy knows he's being a bit silly because,
the letter wouldn't arrive that early!
Still, he wanted to wait.
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And the young boy did wait, until the sun had fully risen up to hang in the sky -
while waiting, he went through the motions of his typical every day,
but this time, he looked out the window more often.
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Someone important to him had gone away, you see -
but before that person left,
they made a promise.
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Now that the young boy thought about it, that person -
he never said how exactly would he have
his letters delivered.
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All the young boy knew was that after reading a letter and writing a reply,
he would secretly deliver his reply to that person,
by making use of some magic.
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But perhaps thinking about how a letter would arrive in the mansion didn't matter!
That person's letter would definitely come in time,
because they made a promise.
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What the young boy didn't know though, was that before that person left -
that person also made a promise with their parents,
and it was about those letters.
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That person made their parents swear on their honor that the letters he would
send daily to the mansion, they would personally deliver to the rightful
recipient, who would be the young boy.
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That person thought that if he would make his parents swear on their honor,
they would never dare break their word because they were
 of proud crimson blood like he was.
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So the young boy waited and waited,
day turned noon then night,
but he still waited.
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A day passed by, then two, then three, then four -
but the young boy didn't lose hope,
he had to be patient.
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But again, what the young boy didn't know was that his crimson blood parents
thought differently of the vow the both of them made with that person.
They valued something else more than a promise on their honor.
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What they valued the most was that their firstborn son would do his best at the academy,
shape himself into a fine man without anything distracting him,
be it his own brother, the young boy.
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The crimson blood parents, no matter how rigid they became, kept on holding onto the thought that
what they were doing, and everything they had done in the past were all
in the best interests of the family and their two children.
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But even before he passed away, the children's paternal grandfather scoffed in response to seeing such methods -
he was disappointed as he said: as parents you're simply tearing two children apart,
but the crimson blood parents still didn't change their hearts.
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So what became of the young boy who kept on waiting and waiting for a letter,
of the firstborn son who was sent to do his best at the academy,
and of their crimson blood parents?
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For now,
let's just say that,
over time of waiting, waiting, and much more waiting -
people eventually realize that they have grown much, much older and that
they are now at least a little bit wiser enough not to wait for letters that would never come.
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t h r e e .
    "One day you're going to grow old and forget about me."
"Preposterous - how could I possibly bring myself to forget my one and only little brother?"
... And where exactly do you think you're going at this hour?
His fingers twitch, just inches away from the golden door handle. They're made of oak, these doors right in front of him, just like any other door in this mansion that presented itself as a home. Question, though: would a home have rooms, exits, or entrances that have such imposing doors, all tall and dark and heavy? Would a home constantly keep such doors closed, with handles that would never open because the lock had been secured and the key had been kept away? Would a home just have a door for show, and when you open it you suddenly realize that it actually leads to nowhere; presenting you no option of entry or exit?
He wouldn't know. Would she know? She always spoke in a clear-cut manner, voice having the melody of summer but words coated in the frost of winter: heat to the ears, chills to the heart. But surely enough summer and winter have turned into spring and fall - seasons change like how time flew like water, and that meant every person in the world weren't getting any younger.
He and her included.
He got it from her, the dark shade of his hair that resembles the night. But more than the night itself, time has dictated that her hair be turned into the night sky instead; a canvas of black spread with dashes of silver stars. He wished that he got the color of her eyes too: brown like the earth, brown like a piece of dark chocolate. Maybe if he had her eyes, he wouldn't be reminding people of someone else.
His fingers wrap around the door handle.
I asked you where you're going...!
Ah, winter had become fall - somehow that elevated pitch and sharp volume had less bite to it, now merely a bitter wind blowing at his back and unable to pierce any deeper. His skin, his lungs, and his heart were fine; no chilling over, what a relief. Was she already that old, or was it simply his desensitization that lessened the impact?
Whatever the case, he wasn't going to stay any longer just to find out.
He pulls the door open, and he's greeted by a rush of a cool night's breeze along with the light of the full moon.
Luka...!
He takes a few steps forward, only to close the door behind him shut. Firmly now, firmly. So that the sound would make itself known in the grand foyer, whoosh through the many steps of a carpeted staircase to reach all the way to the pretty landing; slicing through the silence like a voiceless, wordless slap to the face. Bang. Echo, echo. Did that sound like a satisfying ending to your sharply pointed ears, mother?
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From that point on, Luka Clemence didn't dare to look back.
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The last time he stepped into this mansion of proud marble and golden paint was in celebration of him finally taking on the name that was rightfully his. Smiles were plastered onto faces like a fine template made specifically for the occasion, the word congratulations thrown about back and forth as verbal confetti. Champagne went spinning round, resembling the skirts of the many women twirling by the ballroom floors, heels going click clack in time to the orchestra's uplifting compositions.
It was a mediocre celebration, if he would say so himself. His special guest wasn't in attendance and that made everything else less enjoyable... including the already sorry excuse of a strawberry mille-feuille.
Now, he returned for one reason, and one reason alone - he passed through the foyer, headed right, passed through a couple of rooms until he found himself standing by the entrance of the dining room. Shiny crystal chandelier, polished floors. Tasteful curtains and tapestries, carefully made carpets. A wide and stretching ornate table, chairs of finely carved mahogany with plush cushions.
Only two chairs were occupied. As he approached the table, one of the occupants turn around to the sound of his footsteps. Eyes narrow, a voice comes out unsure.
... Jonah?
Two pairs of eyes are on him now - surprise faintly wrinkles his father's brow, his mother holds a gaze that could be classified as listless. Caused by a lack of sleep, maybe?
Good morning, father, mother. Is Luka yet to wake up?
The silence that follows his question is pregnant - it's the kind that just dances around your very being, frolicking without care along your legs and atop your finely shined shoes. It giggles around constantly like a happy child until you get irritated, try to chase it, but only to miserably fail. For the love of all that's good and holy, you just want to know why it's giggling so much. Was it so hard to capture silence? Was it so hard to find the words that would stop it from frolicking around like it owned the place?
It lasts for a good two minutes before his father exhales slowly, rising from his seat.
... We'll take this discussion elsewhere.
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... Your mother tried stopping him.
Something boils uncomfortably in his blood, reaching down to the very pits of his stomach as he stared at his father. It brings to mind the image of water that bubbles, rises, and threatens to spill out from its kettle prison, leaving a scalding mess its wake.
Jonah's palms land down on his father's desk, impact loud and fingernails digging at the wood.
Tried? he spits the word out with an impressive amount of venom, lips snarling at the ends, Perhaps you didn't try hard enough! You should've informed me of this matter immediately!
A growl rears its head from the back of the throat - low, booming, intimidating. Strangely enough, it's nostalgic in a most amusing manner, but -
Ah, that's right, how could Jonah forget?
Former authority figures didn't take kindly to accusations of incompetence.
Jonah Clemence, compose yourself! Is that how the Queen of Hearts should speak!?
Something in Jonah's expression twists as a crack broke his voice.
I returned here simply as an older brother happy to celebrate his little brother's graduation, not as the Queen of Hearts!
Silver mirroring silver, gold mirroring gold. Fiery tempers contesting one another, sparks flying about in the four corners of the room. Perhaps if they tried hard enough they could set the whole room alight until flames lap and lick at every surface there is to burn, breaking everything down until nothing is left but trails of ash and wisps of smoke.
And as if her figure couldn't look any more delicate than it already was, his mother appeared much smaller as she sat by the very end of the couch, a lost look in her eyes and a plain notebook resting nicely on her lap.
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When she closes her eyes and lowers her head, wisps of her dark hair shield her face from the rest of the world.
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It's already that very moment in time where the reds and golds disappeared from the sky, and the darkness of night enfolded everyone in its embrace.
Jonah Clemence looked up to stare at that very sky, his back facing a mansion of proud marble and golden paint. There he stands straight and tall, all alone in a secret clearing discovered by two brave explorers, once upon a time.
Carefully gripped in his right hand is an object made of cotton, pieces of it well-worn: white clothes were predominantly stained with tints of an aging yellow, two buttons of the coat about to fall loose, stitches here and there showing signs of fraying.
The only parts of it that remained presentable were the strands of dark-colored yarn on top, and a pair of golden dots for eyes.
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I'll find you.
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He moves his arm to clutch the doll to his chest, head still held up high.
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I promise.
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