Author's note - This is a historical fiction with slight supernatural undertones. The tale revolves around six royal siblings, all begotten by an inherent curse that promises death at or before the age of forty. It will contain patient romance, an unhealthy amount of incest, and quite frankly, some weird shit eventually. The chapters on this site will be heavily edited to follow Literotica's guidelines.
*****
It is said that long before there was a king, there was a man. A man of a face of no consequence. A man who coveted beyond his pocket and thus journeyed the path of darkness. A darkness that forevermore did preside over his children, and his children's children. While it was, indeed, his pockets came to know no depth, so too did his years become numbered. Forty.
Forty; may no Misseldon-born breathe life beyond the span.
*****
Misseldon Household
~ 1520 ~
PRINCE ETHAN
In the midst of the dining hall, where sound had the tendency to draw on for eons, sunlight palpitating through the rose stained windows above and falling in iridescent patterns over the shared midday meal, Prince Ethan's fork clashed with his sister's, staying it over the steamed fresh potato slices. His eyes were the color of stormy teal seas as they narrowed.
"Have you never heard before, princesses should eat in moderation?"
Eleanor's eyes had previously remained as lively as one could imagine as she dug into potato after potato. How many she had devoured, it was impossible to say, though the clash of fine silver caused her grey gaze to harden. Her brother was offered a glare that suggested he may as well have moved to strike her with a blade, a clash of swords rather than forks.
"Have you heard..." She gulped down the chunk of potato that seemed likely to fly across the table in the direction of their older sister if no attempt to devour was made. "Have you heard... that I don't care?" The fork was abandoned, clattering against the porcelain with no regard for its fineness.
The Prince sat back, a perfectly written scowl across his lips. No sooner, it shifted into a characteristic deign, a fleck of bigoted arrogance slithering in.
He was dressed as fine as he always was, clothed from head to toe in wool darker than obsidian rock, fleurs de lis woven down the breast vesture, over the clasp joining the tunic to the tight fit of the slender frame. His fork deviated away from Eleanor's, mindful of the hazardous proximity she brought on. Instead, the three-toothed utensil was directed towards Astrid.
"Perhaps you should strive to be more like our eldest bore of a sister. Sit straight and look impeccably ignorant along the way. What say you, Astrid?"
Unlike her sister, Astrid tended to each piece of potato carefully. A thin sliver, never too big a chunk, a delicate slip off the fork and into her soft, pink lips. Everything carefully chewed, a dab of the napkin here and there. The sisters had something in common, and that was the glance of annoyance towards the brother who dared interrupt them. The icy look met Ethan's briefly before it slid to the fork, bringing forth the glare of disapproval.
"You are old enough to know that it is quite rude to point." The voice was prissy and sharp, for she was the perfect example of perfect manners, or at least that was how she perceived herself. "Though I do think that Eleanor ought to take better care in her dining habits."
"What's the point of taking your time if it's going to get cold?"
"Perhaps consider smaller portions."
The girl scoffed and offered a laugh which then suggested she knew the contents of a sore subject for the eldest princess.
But Ethan cared not one way or the other about what Astrid did. She could starve herself to the point of a sickly, sinuous bride which foreign princes pined after—so long as she did not influence Eleanor the same. He wanted his younger sister to dine properly, yes, but never to underfeed herself to the extent of bad health.
After all, someday he and Eleanor would wed and appearances would be everything. He opened his mouth to say as much, but words never succeeded beyond a puff of breath before A'zur interrupted.
Their eldest brother was not one easily forgotten. His presence did not fade into the background as might Edgar or young Alan's. It was a grueling, irksome force that pervaded and ruined meals.
"Maybe silence is the tone we ought all take, for we are but days before a sacrifice that will lie down in history itself." Bronze curls infiltrated nothing, for it was styled back and tucked vigilantly behind his ears. It allowed the cool grey stones to bore into each of them, except Astrid.
Ethan huffed—then dropped his fork all together. "Great, you ruined my meal."
"Good," was all the male said before he continued his own.
Prince Ethan looked between his two eldest siblings. A'zur and Astrid, they did not share features quite as distinctly as the younger four children. But by their stoic nature and ever-living decency, they may as well have been the same person. In an unsettling way, it reminded him of his father and mother, the King and Queen of Thellemere.