Ficool

Chapter 6 - Chapter 6 Mending Family Bonds

After lunch, I took my little sister out for a walk. We played games, and I told her funny stories and jokes from Earth. Without even realizing it, I had accumulated a mountain of Affection Points.

Only when a maid reminded us that evening was approaching did we decide to part ways and return to our rooms. Before she left, I hugged Rena and kissed her forehead. She squeaked, blushed, and ran away in embarrassment.

Four days passed since that first lunch together. During that time, I kept playing with her whenever I could.

Thanks to that, her affection soared.

Name: Rena Fernandez

Age: 8

Talent: 9/10

Title: None

Affection: 90% (Familial Love)

Description: Wants to be close to her big brother but doesn't know how. Slightly looks down on you for your weakness. (Wants to play with her brother.)

Difficulty: B+ – She's a child. If you play your cards right, she's yours.

Rumors began to spread through the mansion that I had started to change. After hearing them, Mother visited me. I showed her my most innocent side.

With teary eyes and a tremble of anger in my voice, I said,

"Mother, don't worry about me. I'm more worried about you. You haven't slept well in a long time, and your stress is piling up."

"You don't need to worry about me. I've decided to change for the better. I don't want to be a burden to you."

"I'll do my best to be someone who can help you."

I threw myself into the role of a boy still naïve but genuinely determined to improve — a son who wanted to support his mother.

I must have done it well, because the result was a mother crying with relief as she pulled me into an embrace, as if I were the most precious thing in the world.

Later, I sat in the library, reading and planning how to grow stronger — laying out the steps I needed to take for the future.

The void of space cracked, and I was suddenly standing in a desert littered with corpses.

"What… happened? Where am I?"

I spun around, searching for any clue.

"You are in the Desert of Death."

A voice materialized from the empty air. The atmosphere shuddered, and an old man appeared — clad in black armor, a black sword sheathed at his waist.

"Who are you?" I asked, wary.

He didn't answer. In the blink of an eye, he stood right before me.

He drew his sword and stabbed my abdomen.

"Zeref. Remember this: if you don't become strong, you will die."

The void cracked again — and I was back in the library, drenched in cold sweat, heart hammering wildly.

The pain in my stomach lingered as if it were real, yet there was no wound when I checked.

Fifteen minutes later, I finally calmed myself. I had no idea who that old man was or why he stabbed me. Questions swirled with no answers.

I sighed helplessly, rubbed my temples, and sipped the tea Tania had brought.

"Young master," Tania's voice broke my daze, "the eldest young lady, Miss Invidia, requests your presence."

I asked Tania to lead the way.

When I entered the room, I found my older sister enjoying her tea. Sunlight streamed over her, casting a poised, mysterious glow.

She looked up as I stepped in. The old Zeref would have flinched and averted his gaze.

I didn't. I met her eyes and walked in confidently.

She'd heard the rumors about me and wanted to see for herself whether I had truly changed.

So the rumors were true, Invidia thought.

I sat beside her and took the cup Tania offered. For a moment, silence pressed on the servants like a weight. Invidia finally spoke first.

"How is your body? Are you alright now?"

"Yes. I've recovered. I'm fine."

"That's good."

Silence again. Before the tension rose any further, I suggested,

"How about a game of chess?"

She blinked, surprised, then nodded after a moment's thought.

"Very well. I have time — no lessons this afternoon."

Before long, the maids had arranged the board, and our game began.

I'm not trying to brag, but as a former top university student, I'm decent at chess.

As we played, I spoke.

"Sis, I know you think I'm responsible for Father's death — and because of that, you resent me."

I moved my first piece as I spoke. She stiffened at my words.

"You don't need to deny it. It might be true that I was there, but that doesn't mean you can judge everything about me. You weren't there in my shoes, you didn't see what I saw… and don't worry — I don't blame you."

THUNK.

Another move.

"After Father died, I ran away and hid like a coward. I wasn't there to support you. That's my fault. I only realize it now — but from this moment, I will change."

THUNK.

She answered with her own move. The calm mask on her face cracked.

"Sis, I know Father's death broke you. I know you've been hiding your pain behind that composed exterior."

THUNK.

I advanced again. She struggled to keep her expression steady.

"So let me shoulder some of that burden. I promise I'll be by your side — someone you can lean on. You can cry, Sis. You can be yourself with me."

THUNK.

Her hand trembled as she moved.

"I'm your little brother, and I know you feel it's your duty to stay strong. But right now, I want to see the real you — the sister who's hurting, yet still hiding it."

THUNK.

Her whole body shook.

"Let it all out, Sis. Don't hide anymore. Everyone here is with you. We all love you. I love you."

THUNK.

She made another move, barely holding herself together.

I placed my final piece.

"Checkmate."

I stood, walked to her side, and pulled her into my arms.

Though I was shorter, she was seated — her face pressed against my chest, and then the dam burst.

She clutched my clothes and sobbed — raw, ragged, and loud — her body trembling as everything she had bottled up finally spilled free.

Her pain.

Her grief.

Her anger.

Her unwillingness.

All of it flowed out in tears.

I stood there, holding her, waiting patiently until the storm passed and her breathing steadied.

+30,000 Affection Points

More Chapters