Vienna, 1774.
Once his carriage safely rolled to a stop, Austria stepped out of it and stretched. While even he could not deny the beauty of Paris, nothing pleased the heart quite like home. Servants rushed about him, ushering in his extensive luggage. Sidestepping away from them, he gazed up at the early-morning sky and allowed himself the luxury of taking it all in. The fading purple of night, the sun shyly poking its face out through his hedges, and the birds singing their daily hymns. Truly, there was nowhere quite like home.
Feeling sufficiently uplifted, he entered the home and mindlessly made his way up the stairs. He froze once his hand hovered above the doorknob to his bedroom. He had been burned once before doing this and while, thankfully, all other parties had been asleep, the event had caused him enough mental anguish to power him through another three decades. Still, the desire to change out of his travel clothes was nigh impossible to dismiss. Leaning an ear against the door, his decision was made for him when he heard something like a moan come from Erzsébet. Changing could wait.
All remnants of his good mood dissipated as he silently grumbled to himself about their guest. While it certainly came as no surprise – Erzsébet did this every time he was out of town and, honestly, Roderich had grown to expect it – but hearing them was different. Sure, he was no fool and they made no effort to pretend but having indisputable proof of their trysts was another. Roderich was cursed to have found a spouse and enemy full of cunning. He noted that, if the two of them ever put their powers to good use, he'd have to compliment them for it. For now, while he was their target, any appreciation was out of the question.
He felt his body yearning for caffeine and knew what the next item on his agenda must be. Still lost in his thoughts, he was completely caught off guard at the sight of a bare-chested Gilbert standing over the kitchen counter. It was comical, really, watching such a brutish man delicately pour cream into two dainty mugs, mentally measuring out the right amounts. Roderich stood back and watched the whole performance in domesticity, studying the man before him as he never had before. The way his back and shoulder muscles shifted with each movement; how he never slouched even when it would be far more comfortable to; how the whole time, he never stopped humming marches to himself.
This scene felt too intimate and Roderich understood that he was not its intended audience. What he needed most from his rival now was hostility and not misguided fantasies of marital bliss. He cleared his throat and stepped into Gilbert's line of sight. "For me? How sweet of you." He snatched the mug closest to him and added in his usual five spoonsful of sugar. He held up a finger when he felt Gilbert gearing up to protest. "She's still asleep. Besides, no one likes waking up to cold coffee. It sets such a tone for the day."
They settled into a tense silence, neither one wanting to acknowledge the other. It was childish, Roderich understood, but failing to will the other out of his existence was better than devolving into petty insults or a physical altercation. And, if he ignored all rational thoughts, he didn't even care. When around each other, what else were they but ancient children? There was no reason for them to speak, why invent one?
"Paris again? How many times have you been there over the last three months?" There almost appeared to be a hint of affectionate teasing in Gilbert's words.
Roderich turned to face him and was surprised to find Gilbert already observing him with mild interest. What a strange morning, one he wished he could find some escape in by returning to bed but felt certain would provide him with no real escape. If anything, the pair would wake him up and demand he leave his own damn bed for another room, that's how selfish they were. Against his will, he felt himself noticing the strength in Gilbert's body, all broad shoulders and muscle, the physique of the ideal warrior. All suddenly clicked on why Roderich always found himself flat on his ass whenever they'd begin to trade blows. His arrogance had blinded him to the fact that imperial power mattered little when they weren't trying to kill each other on the battlefield. With biceps like that, his only chance to get the upper hand would be a swift kick to the groin, which even at his worst he was too principled to resort to.
He was brought back to reality when Gilbert began snapping his fingers in his face. "Jesus, has anyone ever told you how creepy that staring thing you do is? Like you were trying to undress me with your eyes." He straightened up and shivered. "Commission a portrait, it'll last longer."
"Please, don't be so crass. This," Roderich flippantly pointed to Gilbert's outfit, "is already enough. If I imagined you in any less, I'd be ill for at least a month."
Gilbert smirked as he took a sip. "Funny, most people have the opposite reaction." He leaned his hips back against the counter and crossed his arms over his chest. "Now, how much more stalling can you do? What's kept you in Paris so much? I don't recall most treaties taking that much time to…hammer out." He bit his lip, trying to suppress his snickering.
"It's rude to talk work at breakfast." Austria couldn't be bothered to mask his irritation. Things such as 'politeness' and 'civility' always seemed to go to waste on Prussia. "And, if you're fishing for what's in our agreement, you'll have no such luck from me. You're wasting your time."
"You think I give a damn about what's on a fucking piece of paper? As if I'd be wasting my time on that. I don't know who blabs more for the right price, your officials or France's." Gilbert's demeanor was too casual. "Most of the time, we don't have to go to those damn meetings anyways. We're little more than decorations, the bureaucrats have everything written before they even breathe a word to us. We know that, they know that. There are always ulterior motives for our little business trips. Whenever I come here, I tell my current minder I'll be off doing a diplomatic something-or-other in Vienna for a week, don't wait up. They buy it even though they know the real reason I come to this shrine of gaudy antiques."
"Your point, Gilbert?"
"My point is that you're no different. Sure, you tell everyone that you're renegotiating this or that little detail and maybe your officials believe it. And you tell it to Erzsi, and she believes it since it's easier than thinking the husband she loathes so much is just as miserable as her. And maybe you believe it too because you have to lie to yourself first to lie to everyone else. But you can't fool me."
The whole time he spoke, Roderich was staring down into the contents of his mug. When all was quiet between them was when he finally looked up, laughing. "You must be desperate if you're begging to get a morsel of gossip on me from me."
Gilbert scoffed. "I'm not fishing for gossip. If I was, I would've gone through your letters while you were gone. And, before you ask, I've never done that. Not for lack of trying, I'm just not good at picking locks."
The vein behind Roderich's left eye began pulsating. He rubbed his temple gingerly, wincing. "I think I prefer it when you act like you can't stand to be in the same room with me. Why the annoying younger brother schtick?"
"Maybe I'm making up for lost time." For added emphasis, Gilbert made sure to loudly schlurp down a sip. Roderich's wince at such a noise caused him to snort some coffee out his nose. Wiping it away, he grinned. "Or maybe I just want you to stop thinking you're any better than me. Get you when you're unguarded."
"There's a glaring hole in your plan. You've forgotten that I would never allow myself to be so vulnerable around you, no matter what time of day it is." He mockingly shook his head, tutting. "I understand that, for now, we're officially getting along just fine, but don't mistake that for camaraderie. The first chance either of us gets, we'll be back to stabbing each other in the back for sport. It's who we are."
"Well, aren't you a pessimist."
"Hardly. I simply know our natures too well," Roderich sighed, growing weary at this line of conversation. "So, if this is only temporary, why should I feign tolerance towards you? Quite honestly, you're not important enough to me for that sort of performance. Even if you were, you would see right through it. No, my energy is better spent on nobler pursuits."
Gilbert had set his mug down, now drumming his fingers on the countertop. "I'm not asking for friendship; I'm asking for honesty." He rolled his eyes with the temperament of a teenager. "Whatever. You got me sidetracked. It's pointless anyways; you're too delusional."
"Excuse me?" That was quite the accusation from an unusual source. "At this point, you may as well come right out and say it."
"If you insist," Gilbert's tone lilted up, songlike and jeering. "What you won't admit is what I started this whole conversation with. All these trips to Paris, they're not about work or diplomacy or any of your other shitty excuses. I know and you know that the only purpose is to blow a load in Francis' ass and get away from your miserable life."
Roderich set his mug down gently. There was no need for it to spill, to make a mess all over the clean marble. "For a moment, I'm going to ignore the vulgar insinuation you've made about my relationship with Francis." He looked up, not breaking eye contact with Gilbert. "You know nothing about my life and my contentment with it. I understand that you are a deeply unhappy and wretched creature and why shouldn't you be? There is nothing for you to go home and boast about, no shining accomplishments of yours not bathed in the blood of an innocent people, but do not project your misery onto me. For all your crowing to the contrary, we have never been, nor will we ever be, the same."
Gilbert scoffed. "And everything you've ever done, there was only glory to be found there? All the princes you absorbed into your own lands, they were willing? The Bohemians, the Hungarians, they love your rulers? Are you pretending that only Russia and I invaded Poland because I remember seeing you at the table, carving out portions for yourself."
"I'm not so naïve to believe I haven't picked up the sword before. And, if necessary, I would again. You'd be wise to remember that." Roderich straightened up, pulling his shoulders back. "But I've achieved just as much without force as with. The home we're currently standing is a monument to such."
"Please. It's a monument to other people's power and what it can get you. We don't impact change, we just ride the waves of it," Gilbert sneered. "This house is a prison for all who come in it. A golden cage is still a cage, Roderich, even for the largest bird."
Roderich sighed with a roll of his eyes. "Mixing your metaphors doesn't make you sound wiser, I've told you this before." Needing caffeine for his growing headache, he took a sip. "I assume you're including yourself among the captives."
"To a degree. I can leave whenever I want – as you love to point out, I do have my own house – but where would one of us be without the other two? We are the protagonists of our own tragedy."
"I sincerely regret that old king of yours got you into theater. Next you'll be telling me how all the world's a stage and we are but merely players." When Gilbert opened his mouth to comment on that, Roderich held up his hand. "That wasn't an invitation for your Shakespearean theories!" He rubbed the bridge between his nose, his prior weariness intensifying. "Why does it matter to you so much? Why must I parade my discontent as you and Erzsébet do? If you make your life's purpose revenge against an unjust world – there you go! I admit it's unjust! – you are sure to become more miserable than ever before. Perhaps you should learn that before it destroys you like one of your dear tragedies."
"It matters because you act like you're superior to us in every way when, really, you're no different. And I don't think I'll ever understand that," Gilbert's voice softened with something akin to regret.
Something in his tone of voice, in his posturing, lit a fire within Roderich. His eyes hardened and he pressed his lips into a scowl. "Understanding is what you want? If it'll get the defiling power of your pity off me, then so be it! I am better than you in every conceivable way. If I am to you but a mirror, peer close and you'll realize it too. Where you feel trapped by the circumstances life has thrown us in, with a life that can never truly be our own, I've taken what you've failed to grasp. While you were slaughtering pagan Easterners in your little bog, I was here, accumulating wealth and power you've only fantasized about. I am the seat of an empire that you only have access to through Brandenburg.
"But those are meaningless things, aren't they? Because here's what really matters to you – the only thing, isn't it? I've seen how you stare; I know that look – I've got what a childhood spent pining among the monks prevented you from getting. Did you ever mention it to them? How young love made that vow of celibacy torturous? How close did you come to breaking it? How many Hail Mary's did they make you perform for every impure thought? Do you wonder what they'd think of you now, going through all this because you're in love with your brother's wife? Phrased just so, they would burn you at the stake again. Ah, but the hellfire is familiar, isn't it?" Roderich glanced at the clock hanging behind Gilbert's shoulder. "Erzsébet should be waking now. Go play domestic and bring my wife some coffee."
Roderich forced himself away from Gilbert, who was left crestfallen with his wide eyes and gaping mouth. He had said enough, gloating would be overkill. He entered his study and locked the door. If there would be consequences for his monologue, let them come later.
The day was still new. Roderich stared out the window. Despite checking the clock, his adrenaline had made him forget the time. He approximated it was no more than nine. He began pouring himself a glass of brandy, but stopped, preferring to drink from the bottle. He gazed around the vast emptiness of the room beyond its sole occupant. He raised the bottle for a toast:
"To the prison of my own making. There is no place quite like home."
