Alistair rarely slept well anymore.
He missed the creaking and swaying of the ship. He missed the sounds of the crew, missed the distant sound of bells tolling and the comforting hum of the screws turning through the water. He had tried cracking the window, to allow the sounds of the city to wash over him, but it simply wasn't the same. Even worse than the silence was the loneliness of it all.
It was that loneliness that prompted him to leave his bed, padding through the house like a restless spirit until he found himself in front of Xiao's door. The man was somewhere between friend, lover, houseguest, and oddity, but he was also the only one in the house with whom Alistair could speak frankly. The servants could not offer the companionship he desired, after all.
But Xiao's bed was empty, and obviously unslept in. The duke had known the other was gone the night before, but he had assumed that the other would've returned by now. A bit miffed, and perhaps even a bit concerned, Alistair abandoned his plan and instead made his way to the study. Surely there was some book as yet unread; something to settle his mind and lull him back to sleep. The shelves were all too familiar, though, and his wandering fingers and eyes produced little of value for his purposes.
In the midst of his hunt, the distant sound of a door opening and closing echoed through the house. Eyebrows raised, Alistair left the study to peer down the stairwell to the main hallway below. The sight of Xiao gave him more relief than it probably should've, but he saw no reason to hide it. Hurrying down the stairs, mindful of the servants still sleeping, he cleared his throat and raised eyebrows in askance. "And what's this, then? Out until all hours, coming home looking like that. Tch, what will the neighbors think?" The gentle mocking in his voice aside, he really did wonder where the other man had been.
With his arms crossed over his broad chest, half disappearing into the dark with the rich blue of his dressing gown, catching the other coming in at something close to three in the morning, Alistair really was channeling his father's attitude more than he remotely realized.
He missed the creaking and swaying of the ship. He missed the sounds of the crew, missed the distant sound of bells tolling and the comforting hum of the screws turning through the water. He had tried cracking the window, to allow the sounds of the city to wash over him, but it simply wasn't the same. Even worse than the silence was the loneliness of it all.
It was that loneliness that prompted him to leave his bed, padding through the house like a restless spirit until he found himself in front of Xiao's door. The man was somewhere between friend, lover, houseguest, and oddity, but he was also the only one in the house with whom Alistair could speak frankly. The servants could not offer the companionship he desired, after all.
But Xiao's bed was empty, and obviously unslept in. The duke had known the other was gone the night before, but he had assumed that the other would've returned by now. A bit miffed, and perhaps even a bit concerned, Alistair abandoned his plan and instead made his way to the study. Surely there was some book as yet unread; something to settle his mind and lull him back to sleep. The shelves were all too familiar, though, and his wandering fingers and eyes produced little of value for his purposes.
In the midst of his hunt, the distant sound of a door opening and closing echoed through the house. Eyebrows raised, Alistair left the study to peer down the stairwell to the main hallway below. The sight of Xiao gave him more relief than it probably should've, but he saw no reason to hide it. Hurrying down the stairs, mindful of the servants still sleeping, he cleared his throat and raised eyebrows in askance. "And what's this, then? Out until all hours, coming home looking like that. Tch, what will the neighbors think?" The gentle mocking in his voice aside, he really did wonder where the other man had been.
With his arms crossed over his broad chest, half disappearing into the dark with the rich blue of his dressing gown, catching the other coming in at something close to three in the morning, Alistair really was channeling his father's attitude more than he remotely realized.
word count: 392
Alistair Campbell
His Grace, Duke of Argyll