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Language:
English
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Published:
2020-05-07
Updated:
2020-07-01
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3,556
Chapters:
2/?
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7
Kudos:
18
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Standing On This Precipice

Summary:

To a point of view where many different halfways meet.
 
Contemplating his own halfway, tiptoeing on precipices. It was a long way down.

Notes:

Hello! 🖤❤ I've loved AUs for the longest of times, especially historical eras, so here goes my first shot at one. Enjoy! 🧡

Chapter 1: Man In The Mind

Chapter Text

He did wish something had happened tonight, of all nights.

 

The night was not the chilliest, but still the icy drinking glass in his hand burnt against his skin, paleness illuminated further by the milky moonlight that streamed its witching rays through the window.

 

He pressed his palms on the ceiling-high iron bars, taking in the midnight desolation strewn vastly across the estate down below. Like most winter nights, all was still. Plumes of an inky sky, tinged purple at the ends of the earth. 

 

The cool curled its frosty hand through the glass, seeping onto his own outstretched palm, while he remained focused on the white light reflecting on the stubborn leaves that dotted the once sprightly deciduous in the middle of the green. 

 

He exhaled softly, the noise a thundering explosion against the silence that permeated the residence at such ungodly hours. 

 

Silence save for the tree that snapped off in the garden, swearing that he could hear the thud on the gravel drive as the twig dropped. 

 

Save for the whispering of past occupants, apparitions undoubtedly brushing past his legs every night, continually resenting him for replacing the dust gathered family portraits in his newly acquired bedroom with paintings of the abstract kind that had no immediate sense about them. 

 

In his defense, he didn’t know who those sullen people were, and anything of the centuries past had no fitting place in his dwellings. So as the Rhodeses gifted their son the larger room by the west wing for the turning of his eighteenth the previous month, refurbishment en masse came along with it. 

 

That was little comfort to him now, falling further into the melancholy in the moonlight, wishing to be swallowed away in the ground like how the wine was swallowed from the glass with clarity, down in his own throat. 

 

This window was always the retreat.

 

Eyes wide and burning chartreuse, peering out while they scanned for something more than leaves, a particular figure, in flesh and blood, out on this icy night. 

 

A figure that had moulded their way into his lonely moonlight reverie, dropping their mark on his thoughts. His lonely thoughts, painted out in the open only when there were no other prying eyes, or interjecting opinions. 

 

The mangled product of him being the only child, he attempted to explain to himself. 

 

But that was blether. It was far more than that. 

 

More wine, slipping gracefully down, ruby glinting in his poised hand.

 

Then he steadied himself and allowed himself the liberty of his thoughts straying to the unknowing invader of his mental cavern. Time and time again.

 

Simon.

 

That was his name. 

 

He was always there, in Nicholas’ periphery. 

 

Simon had been there, since he was a child, employed formally by his parents when Nicholas was just ten. A ruffled, jovial helper boy, with just four years on him. One of the youngest of the Le Bon line, the family of servants that made their place in the Rhodes manor for generations.

 

He could not fathom life without him, he knew he was erring on the dramatic side, but a silent nightmare was likely to have ensued. 

 

It wasn’t that his life was of great difficulty, per se, only insolence would make a lavish life like his difficult, but rather, that he found a haven in the man. Away from the world. An understanding shared. A real friend. 

 

Amongst the shrubbery they had ran together as children when no one else would. 

 

“Got ya!” he called, and Nicholas would speed off, yelling and carefree for moments. Here. There. And everywhere. In the lush gardens that framed the acreage.

 

The mark from when he skinned himself from such escapades still dotted his knee. When it happened, it had caused a frightful row with the elder Rhodeses, and all the accusations were almost placed on Simon for a supposed oversight in taking care of his master, before Nicholas had his stubborn way and kept him in the clear.

 

He couldn’t bear to see Simon blamed. 

 

All his life it was always regarded that the older boy was just a servant - no more, no less. Not a friend, not a companion, a servant.

 

But it never sat well with him, mulling over it in his mind.

 

Oftentimes while he was here at this window. 

 

Servant. He hated the word with passion, hands forming into white fists upon the wooden ledge.

 

The title that placed Nicholas on that pedestal and Simon underground. 

 

The snub on the boy, who at sixteen, would carefully explain out all the books Nicholas could not fully understand at the time.

 

An obligation, his parents believed, but kind acts of grace, to him. 

 

The boy, who got the gardener to shear their hedged trees into his favourite shapes, eccentric and abstract forms that even his parents didn’t understand.

 

Servant.

 

He’d humour any pursuits that Nicholas had, who through the years, didn’t really get along much with the other boys from the nearby estates, but seemed to feed off the solitude. 

 

Calling themselves regal but engaging in horrid horseplay. Full of mud, dirt and muck.

 

Nicholas much rathered being curled up on the divan in the study, poring over the multitude of books about art that filled a whole section of the towering shelves, than playing football. 

 

And brightly, Simon would come by and join him on the stray dining chair opposite, lost in their artistic sphere together. 

 

He always emitted a brightness about him, a effervescent spark that was so jarringly mismatched with the Rhodes Manor and everything that was involved with it. 

 

Simon was fascinating and Nicholas could never stop staring.

 

He stared and stared.

 

Servant, the word could be simply child’s talk as far he was concerned.

 

Finishing the final vestiges of the wine, the liquid swirled away and he himself swirled away into what his imagination drifted to.

 

With all the staring, his own thoughts were often not of the variety that was suitable for children’s talk. 

 

Or their ears, for that matter.

 

This. The part that set off the scuffle within him. 

 

Over the years, he’d heard about suggestive things from the other boys down their grove. Crudely, they often went about it. Curiosity piqued by the adolescent in him, he hung around to hear enough, to hear them talk about things they wanted to get up to with the girls.

 

Indecencies. Laid out bare. Word for word. Sordid mental images - a pleasurable treat passed around.

 

He had tried to imagine his own fairest lady later those nights in his bed, the girl of his dreams. Night and night again. A girl, with the smoothest of skins, rosy in hidden places just for him and vivid eyes of clear blue.

 

Clear blue…

 

Clear, cutting blue eyes looking back at him. A figure lean, lithe and larger in stature, after the sudden growth of the previous summer. Hair not flowing, but cut back, though sweeping. Beside him, dressed in the formal, crisp apparel as the Rhodeses had given him. A jesting smirk that always found a home in those lips… 

 

…Simon. 

 

Simon Le Bon. 

 

It vexed him the first night, leaving him longing for the touch of a lady to bring his thoughts to order, but finding that the other man was all his mind could conjure. All that something deep inside him sought for. 

 

Preposterous on any level there could have been, it perplexed him horribly, how it was all wrong. It was foolish. Idiocy.

 

Older than him. A twenty-two year old jumping ahead of him into life. 

 

Different people to him. A servant and the man who he had to serve. Swords would fly before the world would allow them to lay a single finger on one another. Or so much as breathe in each other’s direction.

 

Another man. Despicable. Vile. Surely all Hell would break loose, or come for him.

 

Anything and everything improper. 

 

Damned, his sadness now be justified. A trifecta mixed for pain, seeping there and back through his chest while he stared at the ornate cornice above the window.

 

Sighing.



A noise came from the knocker on the door and whipped his head around to see who decided to meddle in his escape at this time of the night.

 

Who?



With a creak, a head popped in. 

 

“Ahah! I knew you were still up!”

 

Of course. It was the centre of his labyrinth, the object setting off his turmoil. 

 

Simon Le Bon. 

 

“Nicholas,” he called informally as directed, rather than Sir whenever they weren’t in hearing range of his parents, “you’ll be delighted. Strawberry jam tarts, with warm milk!”

 

Strawberry, wonderful indeed. A favourite, really - crimson tidbits. The wines he had now polished, the strawberries set out for him. 

 

The man flashed a wink at him, barely visible, in the light of the candle on the table in the far corner of their space. 

 

He did not react, strings of attention played by an invisible hand.

 

Adulation spread across the other man’s face. 

 

“Nicholas?”


Closer. Closer.

 

“Sir?”


A caress in the dark. The forbidden union of their lips.

 

“Is everything alright, Nicholas? Pardon me, but you do seem a little under the weather.” The mild concern was evident in his visage, and it twisted something sharp in Nicholas’ heart. 

 

He jolted himself out of it, fingertips absent-mindedly brushing his lips.

 

“Oh no, nothing of the sort, Simon,” he afforded him a small smile of reassurance, “I do enjoy the view from here.” nodding out to the window.

 

His comfort, his glassy confidante, Simon knew. 

 

He smiled back, and if he was not convinced, did not indicate so. He paused for a second, about to say something, but decided against it, mouth shut and eyes studying Nicholas’ slender silhouette in the light of the window.

 

“Well, I shall be going then.” he waved his hand in similar fashion to tipping an imaginary hat, a gesture that had never failed to make Nicholas snicker since they were young boys, and certainly was no different now.

 

“Enjoy the biscuits, Nicholas, and tell me you’ll be in bed resting before the rooster crows tomorrow morning? And not sitting here waiting for the sun to tan you?” 

 

Nicholas laughed.

 

“Yes, I will. Now go off before Mother finds you disturbing me in the middle of the night and gives you a flipping earful.”

 

The man made a face of agreement, waving him goodnight as friendly as ever, to which he waved back.

 

And he turned towards the door to make his way to his own quarters. Nicholas watched those black shoes disappear out the hallway.

 

Leaving him alone again.

 

The candle glowed a gaping orange, moulding and stretching its light once again to adopt the role of a lover.