Building The Strongest Family

Chapter 400: A Quiet Counsel



Chapter 400: A Quiet Counsel



The atmosphere in the library was calm, with the only sounds being the quiet ticking of a wall clock and the soft crackling of the fire.


Rows of old books filled the shelves, their spines carrying the aromas of age and dust.


Gentle, thoughtful lighting illuminated the room; an antique lamp on a side table and another by the window cast a cozy golden hue over the leather chairs.


Arthur sat in one of the chairs, holding his posture straight, a glass of wine untouched at his side.


Julian entered silently, hands folded in his pockets, his pace relaxed. He had traded his usual sharp suit for a cardigan and dark pants, a rare look for someone who approached even breakfast as if it were a business meeting.


He paused at the entrance, observing Arthur’s profile before breaking the stillness.


"Every time I walk in here," Julian said softly, "it feels less like a library and more like a courtroom."


Arthur looked up, a slight smile appearing. "Then who’s on trial tonight?"


Julian stepped further inside and took a seat across from him. "You," he answered as he settled in. "Though I suspect you’ll manage to acquit yourself as always."


Arthur took a moment, staring at the book-laden shelves. The silence stretched between them until they heard the soft patter of rain against the window.


Julian poured himself some tea from a nearby tray, his movements careful and almost ceremonial, as if giving himself time to gather his thoughts.


"So...," he started thoughtfully, "the cure for cancer. It exists. It’s been tested and confirmed."


Arthur nodded, his voice steady. "ONCURA has stabilized the world. This will change everything."


Julian peered at him over his teacup, concern etched on his face. "What troubles me is the way you said ’reshape,’ rather than ’heal.’"


Arthur’s eyes briefly flickered away from Julian’s to the shelves again. "You view words as symbols; I see them as instruments. Healing is temporary; reshaping is lasting."


Julian let out a quiet sigh, leaning back in his chair. "You’re starting to sound just like your father."


Arthur narrowed his eyes slightly, not in anger but in contemplation. "My father envisioned control without the means to enforce it; I’m determined to avoid that pitfall."


Julian set his cup down with a light clink. "And in trying to avoid that, you might be making another mistake."


For several moments, the rhythmic sound of the rain filled the room until Julian spoke softly once more.


"I lost a friend once; his name was Callen Durei. We grew up in Neo-Luminara together."


He paused for a beat before continuing, "He was diagnosed with marrow cancer before he turned thirty."


Arthur turned to look at him. Personal reflections were a rarity for Julian.


"The end wasn’t swift for him," Julian’s voice was steady but weighed down by the memories. "He lingered. The treatments were brutal. His family sold their home just to buy him a few extra months, and in the end, the doctors called it progress, saying he lasted longer than expected."


Julian’s gaze drifted into the flames, his eyes lost in a distant memory. "That was fifteen years ago. I can still recall the hospital smell. I remember thinking that anyone who could end such suffering would be revered."


Arthur remained quiet.


Julian turned back to him, his eyes intense. "Now, you hold that power, yet instead of seeking reverence, you aim to inspire fear."


Arthur met his gaze without flinching. "Worship is fleeting. Fear lasts."


Julian leaned forward, his voice sharper. "Do you hear what you’re saying? You’ve cured the deadliest disease on the planet, and your first thought is to weaponize it."


Arthur held his ground. "And what do you propose I do? Give it away for free? Let governments destroy it? Allow corporations to perpetuate the same cycle of greed under a new name?"


Julian hesitated for a moment before replying. "There’s always a balance."


A subtle smile appeared on Arthur’s lips as he replied, "Balance is an illusion created by those unable to tip the scale."


The tension in the library thickens as Julian rises to his feet, pacing back and forth with his hands folded behind his back.


"You know," he begins, reflecting deeply, "I used to envy you. The way you approach everything with such precision and discipline. You view life as a series of systems, and that works well for you. But somewhere along the way, I think you’ve lost sight of the fact that people aren’t just systems."


Arthur leans in, resting his elbows on his knees. "And what are they, then? Predictable in their panic, fragile in chaos, blind in their faith? Answer me this: what do you call a species that keeps repeating its own destruction while holding onto it like it’s hope?"


Julian halts mid-pace. "You seem exhausted."


Arthur’s eyes flicker up to Julian,sharp but tired. "I’m just being realistic."


"No," Julian replies softly, "what you really are is afraid."


Arthur’s expression shifts at that word "Afraid?"


Julian nods firmly. "Afraid of losing control; afraid of being vulnerable. Everything you create and every plan you set up,it’s protective armor masquerading as strategy, but at its core lies fear."


For the first time, Arthur looks away.


The silence that follows is heavy with unspoken truths neither man wants to face.


Taking a seat again, Julian pours himself another cup of tea; the steam rises between them, almost alive.


"Arthur," he says gently, "you’ve changed so much since your father passed,since you withdrew back to Neo-Luminara."


Arthur’s eyes drift as he exhales slowly, a faint smile barely touching his face. "People change, Uncle. No one stays the same forever."


Julian remains quiet for a moment, studying Arthur’s expression before releasing a deep sigh.


"Legacy is about more than just surviving," Julian states. "It’s what endures in memory, not simply exercising control."


Arthur tilts his head slightly. "And memory eventually fades."


"Only if you give people a reason to forget."


Arthur’s gaze softens. "Do you believe I’ve done that?"


Julian’s tone turns tender. "Not yet. But you’re getting close."


An extended silence follows as Arthur absorbs this. He looks around the shelves filled with old portraits and books bearing the names of individuals who once thought they were immortal. When he finally speaks, his voice is quieter.


"I don’t want to lose everything we’ve built. If the world turns on us, it won’t just be business at stake; it’ll be family,everyone who carries our name."


Julian nods in understanding. "That’s a heavy burden to carry. But it doesn’t need to consume you."


Arthur glances down at his hands. "I’m not afraid of losing wealth, Uncle. It’s losing control that frightens me, because that control is what has kept us safe."


Leaning in closer, Julian’s tone grows even softer. "Learn to wield power without choking it. If you hold the power to heal, you also need to learn how to be gentle."


Arthur meets Julian’s gaze; there’s a sincerity in those eyes that’s hard to overlook.


"You don’t have to rescue everyone," Julian continues gently. "But don’t sacrifice your own humanity along the way. Fear might keep you alive, Arthur, but it will never let you truly live."


The gravity of those words hangs heavily between them. Although Arthur doesn’t shift his expression, something within him stirs, subtle yet profound, like the initial crack appearing on a frozen lake.


As Julian stands and smooths down his sleeves, he adds softly, "You remind me so much of your mother; she had that same burning spirit but knew how to let it warm rather than consume."


Arthur watches as he approaches the door.


Just before exiting, Julian stops with a hand resting on the frame and says thoughtfully, "I know I can’t change your mind right now, but keep this in mind: The line between humanity and monstrosity lies in your compassion."


Arthur doesn’t reply verbally; instead, a whirlwind of thoughts plays out in his eyes.


With a small nod from Julian, he steps out into the quiet hallway.


The library returns to silence once more, illuminated only by the lamp on Arthur’s desk, casting a narrow gleam of gold light halfway across the floor.


Arthur remained motionless, staring blankly at the emptiness left by Julian’s exit. His face showed no emotion for a fleeting moment.


Then, with deliberate slowness, he tightened his hand into a fist against the armrest, holding it there before gradually releasing the tension.


Leaning back, he exhaled a long, soft breath. "Gentle," he murmured, as if reflecting deeply on the meaning of the word.


Outside, the world was wrapped in tranquility, but inside Dominion Sanctum, an electric tension was palpable.


Its master was torn between who he had been and the myth he was beginning to embody. The lamp flickered briefly before the room fell silent once again.



Tip: You can use left, right, A and D keyboard keys to browse between chapters.