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Chapter 79: Chapter 79: I’m your brother

"Not yet."

Kamal coughed once into his fist.

It might have been a warning.

It might have been laughter attempting a dignified death.

Olivier’s green eyes flicked toward him, then back to Goliath. "I came to speak privately."

"You entered through a guarded gallery, ignored my staff, brought witnesses, and announced yourself on my terrace."

"I dismissed the witnesses."

"You failed."

Olivier’s expression tightened.

Goliath leaned back against the cushions, his robe still untouched beside him, rings catching the morning light as he rested one hand lazily over the arm of the divan. He knew exactly what picture he made. Half-awake, barely dressed, and still more sovereign than Olivier could become with three crowns and a choir behind him.

"What do you want?"

Olivier’s smile returned, thinner now. "Is that any way to greet family?"

"No."

A pause.

Goliath tilted his head. "It is, however, how I greet you."

Kamal’s gaze lowered again.

The saint’s breath stirred in the breeze, sweet and pale and strangely warm. For one fleeting second, Goliath caught that other note beneath the flowers again, something softer, something that did not belong to this terrace or this morning.

His fingers flexed once against the divan.

Olivier’s eyes followed the movement.

Then they narrowed faintly at the rings.

"You look well," Olivier said.

"How unfortunate for you."

"Brother."

"You have said that already."

"I came because the council is uneasy."

"The council is always uneasy. It is their natural state."

"They were left waiting."

"And yet the empire remains standing."

Olivier’s mouth tightened, and this time he did not hide it quickly enough.

"The empire stands," Olivier said carefully, "because some of us keep working while others indulge themselves."

The temperature on the terrace did not change.

The sunlight did not dim, but every servant in the room became utterly still.

Kamal’s face emptied.

Goliath looked at his brother for a long, quiet moment.

Then he smiled.

"Olivier," he said softly, "did you wake up today intending to be stupid, or was this an accident?"

Olivier’s cheeks colored.

The guards behind him looked as if they wished the floor would open and claim them as tribute.

"I am trying," Olivier said, voice tightening, "to warn you."

"No. You are trying to make one missed council session sound like imperial collapse so your presence here feels necessary."

"My presence is necessary."

"No."

Goliath reached for the folded robe at last and stood. The movement was unhurried, but power unfolded with him anyway, quiet and absolute. Sunlight slid across the gold embroidery as he pulled the deep purple robe over his shoulders, and the ether lines beneath the palace answered before he called them.

Olivier took one small step back.

Goliath noticed.

So did everyone else.

"You sit on the High Council of Priests and Temples," Goliath said, fastening one clasp at his throat. "You oversee ceremonial petitions, festival allocations, blessing schedules, and all those little sacred arguments priests pretend are not about money."

Olivier’s jaw flexed.

"You make that sound meaningless."

"No. You make it meaningless by treating it as an insult."

"It is an insult," Olivier snapped. "You buried me in incense and hymn ledgers."

"I gave you a position with funding, visibility, palace access, and enough prestige that other men would have murdered their cousins for it."

"I am your brother."

"Yes," Goliath said. "That is why you received it."

Then he turned away as if Olivier had already become furniture.

"Kamal. Prepare a bath and breakfast."

"At once, Your Majesty."

Only then did Goliath look back at the creature called brother.

The sunlight made Olivier’s golden hair glow almost like his own, but the resemblance had always offended Goliath more than it softened him. The same shade of gold, perhaps. The same mother’s blood, certainly. But not the same father.

"The only reason you are alive," Goliath said, his voice calm enough to make the servants go still again, "is because my mother asked for you to be alive and treated well. Without that promise on her deathbed, you would have been dismissed from court years ago."

Olivier’s eyes widened in shock.

"You would speak of Mother like that?" Olivier asked, voice tight.

"No," Goliath said. "I am speaking of you."

Olivier took half a step forward before one of the guards behind him remembered his purpose and shifted sharply.

Goliath did not move.

"You think blood makes you entitled to me," he continued. "It does not. You think sharing a mother obligates me to pretend affection where there is none. It does not. We had different fathers, Olivier, and yours had the rare wisdom to understand his own uselessness."

Olivier went pale.

Kamal’s expression did not change, but something in his eyes sharpened with interest.

Goliath adjusted the cuff of his robe, gold thread glinting under the sun.

"Alen was vain, selfish, and an insult to every room he entered, but even he possessed enough awareness to retire to a small village and live quietly on palace money. He understood the arrangement. He accepted comfort in exchange for silence. A surprisingly civilized outcome for a man of his category."

Olivier’s hands curled at his sides.

"My father is—"

"Your father is fortunate," Goliath cut in. "It’s fortunate my mother had loved him once. Fortunate I had no appetite for punishing the harmless merely for being unpleasant. Fortunate he knew when to leave."

The words struck with soft precision.

The saint’s breath stirred along the terrace railings, pale flowers trembling in the breeze. Their sweetness floated between them, too delicate for the ugliness unfolding beneath it.

Olivier’s green eyes burned.

"You despised him."

"Yes."

"And me."

Goliath looked at him for a long, quiet second.

Then he smiled faintly.

"There. You are capable of accurate conclusions."

The terrace froze around them.

Olivier’s breath caught as if the words had landed physically.

Goliath felt no satisfaction in it.

Only a familiar, tired contempt.

"I do not like you," he said. "I have never liked you. As a child, you were cruel when you thought no one important was watching and charming only when a reward was near. As a man, you have refined those qualities into politics and convinced yourself that makes them virtues."

Olivier swallowed.

Goliath stepped closer, and the ether beneath the marble gave a low, almost inaudible pulse.

"You are not kept here because I trust you. You are kept here because a dying woman asked me not to cast out her son. That is all. Do not dress mercy as brotherhood."

Olivier’s expression twisted.

"You are monstrous."

"No," Goliath said. "I am only honest, and you can’t take it."

Olivier’s voice dropped. "One day, you will need family."

"I have an empire."

"That is not family."

"No," Goliath agreed. "But it is useful."

Olivier stared at him, hatred finally showing through the polished white-gold mask.

"You think no one sees how alone you are."

It should not have mattered.

But the saint’s breath drifted through the terrace again, warm and sweet, and for one strange heartbeat Goliath felt the empty chair beside him like a missing limb.

A presence that should have been there.

A scent beneath the flowers that belonged to someone he did not know.

Then the moment passed.

"If I am alone," Goliath said softly, "it is still preferable to being surrounded by men like you."

Olivier’s face hardened.

"Kamal," Goliath said. "Escort Lord Olivier out."

Olivier laughed once, bitter and ugly.

"At least I will outlive you."

The terrace went still.

Goliath slowly turned his head.

Olivier stood beneath the archway, golden hair bright in the sun, green eyes sharp with sudden satisfaction.

"What did you say?"

Olivier smiled.

"I said, at least I will be alive longer than you."

Saint’s breath flooded the air.

The sunlight fractured.

Goliath reached for the ether, but the terrace bent at the edges. The curtains swelled inward. Kamal’s voice faded into the distance.

"Your Majesty?"

The scent deepened and the world broke.

Arik woke with a sharp inhale.

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