I did not think it possible for a storm to settle inside a person, but here I am. My heart and stomach raging and howling inside of me, untempered and out of control.
The feast is long over. The candles have burned low. The plates were cleared, all but Tomaso’s. Nephele barked that it remained until he showed up. The other glasses were polished and returned to their place amongst our luggage. The tavern felt quiet though it was filled with the joy of new and old people from Runeheim alike.
Tomaso did not come.
Nephele arranged everything precisely. Ten settings, my good silver, the goblets I forged myself. I selected the wine carefully, one I had been saving, the bottle that deserved an occasion worthy of it, one such as my birthday of course. I had dusted it twice and realigned the label before packing it in our luggage to bring to town. I even rehearsed the moment I would hand it to him, some remark about his atrocious timing and my unparalleled generosity.
Still, he did not come.
At first, I told myself it was maybe the cold winter. The roads are treacherous and the winds are unkind. Perhaps he was delayed at his last crossing before coming to town. Maybe he would arrive late, breathless and apologetic, with some extravagant explanation and a gift too heavy to be practical.
I kept glancing at the door, but it remained closed. All I could see was Graham lingering in the window, sulking, as we awaited our food to be served. Good.
Nephele noticed, of course. She notices everything. She tried to distract me with conversation, with praise for the feastware, with gentle commentary about how beautiful the table looked adorned in my feastware, the meal I prepared “so delicious and satisfying”, I did not acknowledge it. She even tried to have everyone sing happy birthday to me, but my ears were too preoccupied trying to listen for the sound of my brother to hear everyone celebrate me.
Our crew tried to fill up the space that was missing, but all I could bear to feel was my blood boiling progressively hotter with each passing moment that Tomaso did not walk through the door.
They were nice.
They were not my brother.
I took a brief moment of pride shortly after our food was served and I heard that Graham was curled in a ball under a tree sobbing. I hope it was because he realized he is a traitorous little shit and felt bad after I revoked his invitation to my birthday feast. He deserves to cry. Maybe if he cries, I won’t need to.
I had saved Tomaso a seat on my right hand side. It remained empty.
I have always told myself that I am above sentimentality. That I am composed of finer materials than simple longing. I am Aurelia. I host, I dazzle, I command rooms, I craft masterful things at my forge, I am the embodiment of luxury and refinement.
And yet tonight, when I finally returned the unopened bottle to its shelf, I felt like something dangerously close to insignificant. Horrific. A nightmare that became true.
He has never missed my birthday. Ever.
Not when we were children and the cakes were uneven and the ribbons cheap. Not when we were older and the celebrations grew more elaborate. He has always appeared; sometimes late, sometimes smug, sometimes with an excuse already prepared, but he was always there no matter the distance it took him to travel to find me.
I do not know whether to be angry or afraid.
Anger is easier, it has edges, I can mold it, bend it like the steel at my forge. I can decide it was an insult, a lapse in judgment, a failure to prioritize the most important day of the year.
Fear is softer. It slips through my fingertips. What if he takes more after our mother than I had thought? What if, deep down, I’m not his favorite after all? What if he doesn’t love me?
I despise that my mind goes there. I reassure myself that he has no reason to have missed my day but that, when he arrives, it will be something stupid. It feels less impossible and painful to swallow.
Nephele tried to reassure me without saying too much. She placed a steady hand at my back as the guests departed. She did not offer false certainty, she simply said she would look into it.
That is how she loves; quietly, efficiently, without spectacle. Today I hate her for it. I am left here as a spectacle regardless and full of silent rage. I want her to scream and storm the room, publically shame Tomaso for insulting me on my birthday, I want her to make a scene because I have been so deeply and personally wronged. I want to feel justified in my anger. I want her to share my anger.
The feast was flawless. The wine, obviously exquisite – though the bottle intended specifically for Tomaso and myself sat untouched. The table was radiant and the laughter sincere. Yet the seat at my right hand felt like a sore in my mouth that I could not stop tonguing, each time I made contact with it only encouraged it to grow and sting more.
I tell myself he will appear tomorrow with apologies and some absurd story about a washed-out bridge or a stubborn horse. I tell myself I will scold him dramatically and then forgive him magnanimously. But tonight, the tavern feels too large. It feels empty, even while I’m surrounded by new friends.
Though the storm has passed outside, it festers and lingers within me. I am inconsolable.
