The world had shifted, like the sun moving across the sky while you nap under it's rays. When you wake, there is confusion, everything is brighter, or colder; not as it was when you drifted in comfort. Raithen's life, while it was complicated by the standards of some had been, for him, quite a simple thing. Then, all at once, almost everything he'd know had changed.
The slumbering Gods had awoken, the fate of the throne and its heir were no longer certain, his own family now contained people he didn't know, and people he'd only thought he had. His own life had been altered so significantly it was as though a giant hand had reached down and moved the path of a river, altering the entire landscape.
His mother still loved him, but their simple, easy relationship was not as it had always been. He was still devoted to The Twins but each of Them had, in Their own significant way, looked down upon him and take his fate into Their will. His time was no longer his own, his job, even who he was allowed to associate with and how were not things that he really understood the rules to anymore.
That was the rub, Raithen didn't understand the rules to his reality any longer. It was not a comfortable place to be.
He had spoken to his mother some, though not specifically stating his problem, because he didn't entirely understand his problem, but she was much busier than she had been in his childhood and young adulthood, and what she was dealing with was significantly more important. It was the culmination of her plans and that was important, so Raithen tried to stay out of her way.
The only other person he'd ever gone to in moments of discomfort had been his older brother, a proposition that was, admittedly hit or miss. It was late, and he had been given a day in which he had nothing to do, which was far worse than a busy one for his troubled mind. As the evening drew on into the night the Avialae found his feet taking him down the familiar halls that led to Phocion's study. It was a place he had been told he was not allowed into when he'd been younger and that prohibition had never, technically, been lifted, so it always felt a bit like invading a sacred place when he did venture within.
This time he pressed the door open only enough to allow him to see within, and then, after a moment's hesitation, to press his slim body beyond. Standing by the door he watched his brother for a long moment. The other man knew he was there, but, as was not unusual, was concentrating on something of likely monumental importance. Taking a step closer, then, slower, a second, he said, quietly,
"Raven?"
The slumbering Gods had awoken, the fate of the throne and its heir were no longer certain, his own family now contained people he didn't know, and people he'd only thought he had. His own life had been altered so significantly it was as though a giant hand had reached down and moved the path of a river, altering the entire landscape.
His mother still loved him, but their simple, easy relationship was not as it had always been. He was still devoted to The Twins but each of Them had, in Their own significant way, looked down upon him and take his fate into Their will. His time was no longer his own, his job, even who he was allowed to associate with and how were not things that he really understood the rules to anymore.
That was the rub, Raithen didn't understand the rules to his reality any longer. It was not a comfortable place to be.
He had spoken to his mother some, though not specifically stating his problem, because he didn't entirely understand his problem, but she was much busier than she had been in his childhood and young adulthood, and what she was dealing with was significantly more important. It was the culmination of her plans and that was important, so Raithen tried to stay out of her way.
The only other person he'd ever gone to in moments of discomfort had been his older brother, a proposition that was, admittedly hit or miss. It was late, and he had been given a day in which he had nothing to do, which was far worse than a busy one for his troubled mind. As the evening drew on into the night the Avialae found his feet taking him down the familiar halls that led to Phocion's study. It was a place he had been told he was not allowed into when he'd been younger and that prohibition had never, technically, been lifted, so it always felt a bit like invading a sacred place when he did venture within.
This time he pressed the door open only enough to allow him to see within, and then, after a moment's hesitation, to press his slim body beyond. Standing by the door he watched his brother for a long moment. The other man knew he was there, but, as was not unusual, was concentrating on something of likely monumental importance. Taking a step closer, then, slower, a second, he said, quietly,
"Raven?"