"I fetched him from the war camp this night. "
Darius glanced over at his brother. "Indeed? Where was his sire?"
"Betwixt the legs of a maiden. "
Darius cursed under his breath. Verily, the Brother was of brutish constitution in spite of his breeding and courtesy of his base instincts, he had sons aplenty, which may have explained though certainly not excused his thoughtlessness. Of course, his other sons were not eligible for the Brotherhood because their mothers were not of Chosen blood.
However, Hharm appeared to be unconcerned.
As the poor boy stood so separate, Darius remembered well his own first night in the field: how he'd been tied to no one. . . how he'd feared facing the enemy with nothing but his wits and what little training he'd had to fortify his courage. It wasn't that the Brothers had cared naught how he fared. But they had had to watch after themselves and he'd had to prove he could hold his own.
This young male clearly was in the same predicament--it was just that he had a father who should have eased his way.
"Be well, Darius," Ahgony said as the royals went in among the Brothers, clasping palms and preparing to take their leave. "I am escorting the king and the prince. "
"Be well, my brother. " The two embraced quickly and then Ahgony joined the Wraths and went with them out of the cave.
As Tohrture stepped up and began apportioning territories for the night, pairs started to form and Darius looked through the heads at Hharm's son. The boy had faded back against the wall and was standing stiffly, still with those hands behind his back. Hharm seemed uninterested in anything other than trading hyperbole with the others.
Tohrture put two fingers up to his mouth and whistled. "My brothers! Attention!" The cave went stone silent. " Thank you. Are we clear on territories?"
There was a collective affirmation and the Brothers started to leave-- and Hharm didn't even look back at his son. He just went for the exit.
In the wake, the boy brought his hands forward and rubbed them one into the other. Stepping forward, he said his father's name once. . . twice.
The Brother turned back, his expression like that of one confronted by an unwelcome obligation. "Well, come on, then--"
"If I may," Darius said, stepping between them. "It would be my pleasure to have him aid me in my duty. If it would not offend. "
Truth was, he cared naught if it offended. The boy needed more than his father would give him and Darius was not the kind to sit aside while a wrong unfolded.
"You think I cannae take care of my blood?" Hharm snapped.
Darius turned to the male and went nose-to-nose with him. He preferred peaceful negotiation when it came to conflict, but with Hharm, there was no reasoning. And Darius was well endowed to meet force with force.
As the Brotherhood froze around them, Darius dropped his voice even though all assembled would hear every word. "Give me the boy and I will deliver him whole unto the dawn. "
Hharm growled, the sound like that of a wolf amid fresh blood. "As shall I, brother. "
Darius leaned in closer. "If you take him out to fight, and he dies, you shall carry that shame upon your lineage fore'ermore. " Although for truth it was hard to know whether the male's conscience would be affected. "Give him to me and I will save you that burden. "
"I never liked you, Darius. "
"And yet back in camp you were more than willing to service those I bested. " Darius flashed his fangs. "Given how much you enjoyed that, I should think you'd hold me in kinder regard. And know this--if you do not allow me to o'ersee the boy, I shall take you down to this floor at our feet and beat you until you relent unto me. "
Hharm broke eye contact, lifting his gaze above Darius's shoulder as the past sucked the Brother down. Darius knew the moment that he had been drawn into. It was the night when Darius had won against him back at the camp--and as Darius had refused to redress the deficiency, the Bloodletter had. Brutal was a pale word to describe that session, and though Darius was loath to bring it up, the boy's safety was a worthy end for the unworthy means.
Hharm knew who would win in a contest of fists.
"Take him," the male said flatly. "And do what you will with him. I hereby renounce him as my son. "
The Brother pivoted, strode out. . . .
And took all the air from the cave with him.
The warriors watched him go, their silence louder than the war cry had been. To disavow offspring was antithetical to the race, as much as daylight would be to a family meal: it was ruination.
Darius went over to the young male. That face. . . Dearest Virgin Scribe. The boy's frozen gray face wasn't sad. Wasn't heartbroken. Wasn't even ashamed.