Disorder Ch. 09
Unholy Consort
âHuh... Weird.â
Charles turned over the wooden board in his hands, frowning at the numbers and letters spaced out around the exterior, a little triangle of leather, supposedly so that some manner of communication could be channelled through it, rested in the middle, laid over smooth wood to give it shape. He splayed his fingers out along it, following the grain, while Soren was otherwise engaged with picking up something for his mother or something. Whereas Charles thought that it must have been nice to have someone that he actually cared enough for to make a special trip and a special purchase for, heâd never had the same feeling in his gut, he could not say. Family was...tentative and tenuous at best those days.
And it was fair enough that it was, even though he had not really actually addressed just why his guts twisted and his breath came short at times, imagining that something more was coming. Perhaps none of the three brothers were the healthiest individuals but Charles found himself more and more restless after Johnâs death, right up from the very moment that that breaking, crackling call came through from Donnie, the one that had changed everything forever. Nothing would ever be the same, even though he had not been all that close with John. In all actuality, he had done his best to keep him out of his home, although heâd moved to another district of the city, somewhere closer to the circles that he could push into, all for his own entertainment. There was only so much boredom he could take, after all, only âearningâ through illicit means what he needed to get by, although much of that was stealing. Donnie had made sure he didnât need to do much after everything, to be fair, but that just left him with more and more time to think, keeping odd hours up late into the night and sleeping erratically.
Still, admitting to something being off was hardly his style and he got a free pass on the family front. Soren, however, was not one who could or would so easily let his strange behaviour pass by, as distant as they had become. Their relationship -- friendship, what it was -- came and went and Charles could not have honestly have said that the only one that he had satisfied his needs with was Soren, though there was something of an understanding between them as he went out and got wasted and dragged himself near enough home some decrepit nights.
Maybe the understanding was one-sided at the end of the day but heâd keep on going and doing what he was doing until things cracked on to a point where he needed to address them. With how evasive Soren was, slipping away as he ascended the career ladder, finally making his big break, there wasnât much of a need to really get into the nitty-gritty crappy detail of things. And Soren had more friends, new friends, extreme sports that he could only really undertake because of how hard and fast Charles had pushed him when they had been younger. Maybe it was his fault that everyone was drifting away but he had enough going on to fill in the hopes, or so he thought.
âWhat?â
Curious, Soren paused, a bag in hand, something that seemed too small and too dainty for his size. Charles rolled his eyes. Just what could be of anyoneâs fucking interest in an antique shop anyway? Something for those who had nothing better to do with their time than to look back, although perhaps that was a little more vehement a thought than it strictly needed to be as he did not want to look back. An Ouija board sat in Charlesâ hands, however, and he could not have said, honestly, that his curiosity was not perked at least a little by it, something about the sensation of the smooth wood against his fingertips and his palms soothing, slowing him down like nothing else did anymore.
âThat is weird,â Soren acquiesced, leaning in for a better look. âIâve never seen anything like that in here before. Mom had a friend who thought she was a psychic a long time ago.â
âWas she?â
âNo, got done for fraud.â
Even Charles had to scoff a short, abrasive laugh at that, drawing the attention of the store owner who frowned and peered at him over his sharp spectacles, perfectly deigned for an elderly, wizened face. He didnât want the likes of Charles in his shop no more than Charles wanted to be there and Charlesâ passing fancy proved as fleeting as his attention, the painted, black letters glaring out at him like the eyes of some kind of demon straight out of hellâs abyss itself.
But that idea hit a little too close to home. He pulled away, sucking in a breath that did nothing to at all alleviate the burning in his gut, writhing guilt like a myriad of serpents, all hissing and fighting to claw their way up from his stomach to his throat.
Not today.
âCan you believe some dicks actually think this shit is real?â He scoffed, tossing it back on the shelf. âYou got what you came for yet?â
But Soren had, apparently, forgotten all about that as he took the Ouija board in lieu of his friend, studying it carefully.
âYou know, it looks like a collectorâs item,â he said offhandedly. âThese go for a lot of money if you want to make a quick buck.â
Ah, just how far the tables had turned to put Soren in a place where he was giving Charles ideas on how to make money! Yet it was a legal one, if not one that he may just have to put a little bit of legwork in on. And, even in hindsight, Charles could not have quite said just what it was that drove him to roll his eyes, snatch the board rudely back off Soren and storm up to the desk, digging bills out of pocket. Maybe he was bored, maybe he was curious or maybe even he just wanted to think that there was hope of something more.
Who was to say?
*
Donnie glared at the Ouija board, which was, admittedly, far from innocent, with as much suspicion as Charles had expected him to. With his feet kicked up onto an ottoman that heâd had placed in Donnieâs home without too much backlash or snide, muttered comments (the best he could honestly hope for in that kind of situation), Charles shrugged and leaned back, appearing as nonchalant about as he looked. Which, in all due respect, was not very nonchalant at all.
âWhat? Thought it was interesting. Soren got it.â
Well, that was a lie but a lie that came with a hint of truth and the revelation of more information. Donnie raised an eyebrow but made no outward comment, softening his expression just a little. It had taken Charles a long time to say anything about, well, anything in his life and that was one area where Johnâs death had brought them, at least a little, closer together. They could sit back and have a drink (or ten) and talk about more than things that lay on the surface of life, introspection delving far more than skin-deep as they learned just who the other person had become.
âAnd just...what...â He started thickly, words moving sluggishly up from his throat as he cleared it. âWhat do you intend to do with it?â
âSo formal, brother!â
Ah, there was the old spark of Charles lighting up in the backs of his eyes, a laugh on his lips and a glass in his hand. Strangely for him, heâd gone for whisky but it was hardly as if Donnieâs supplies of liquor were low in the slightest: a regular delivery kept those well-stocked, as needed, even though he didnât drink as much as he had in the time immediately after the event that had changed everything. There was plenty to go around.
âLook, just a thing I bought,â he said, clearing the air of tension, although the broken nature of his speech, gruff on lips that it was not entirely suited for. âThought youâd like to see, you know...â
And yet he trailed off awkwardly with a sigh that reverberated through the room, sliding his eyes away. Heâd never much been one for making eye contact when something was going on and Donnie frowned at him once more, wary.
âI didnât think youâd believe in all that crap.â
âWell, Small Donnie, someone would laugh to see us try.â
Donnie stiffened, sucking in a breath, eyes wide. The change in him was instantaneous and Charles knew that heâd made a mistake, stilling all of a sudden, watching his brother with the wary eye of a hunter who was being stalked by the cougar, the tables turned at the very moment where they were the most important to keep level.
âNever call me that.â
âWhatever, jeez...â
Charles rolled his eyes but the damage was done, tension crackling in the air between them, a palatable wall of static electricity throwing up a formidable barrier. Donnieâs heart pounded. Sometimes their voices were so similar that he almost couldnât catch himself in time... But, no. Just a joke, a stupid fucking joke that a stupid fucking younger brother would make. Charles left the room briefly, just at the right moment to allow Donnie the space he needed, slumping forward with his head in his hands. His stomach turned over and he willed it, stubbornly, to stay put, although he wanted nothing more than to jab a needle in his arm at that very moment. It had usually been John that had stuck him, only using drugs recreationally before. Now, he was a pro at finding a vein.