I like a man with a big ... vocabulary.
Gender: Female
Location: Made in England (More Tea, Vicar?)
Rank: Ace Attorney
Joined: Tue Aug 21, 2007 12:20 pm
Posts: 1193
Summary: In the wake of Lana Skye's trial, Miles Edgeworth finds that sometimes, you can only face your demons by running away. This story deals with the period when he was in self-imposed exile between AA 1:5 and JFA 2:4
Warnings: Character Death (eventually, not Ch 2), Slash, Swearing
Spoilers: PW:AA (All Chapters) PW:JFA (Chapters 3-5) PW:T&T 3:4 (Chapter 3)
This is Part Two of Five.
Part Two: All You Leave Behind (Paris and Hanover, February)
“Let the sin go
For all you leave behind...
Let the sin go.”
- PARADISE LOST
It was dark and raining when the cab pulled up outside the old apartment building in the 6e Arrondissement. Slick sidewalks reflected the light from the lamps and the street was devoid of pedestrians. A small canopy shielded the front door of the building, so Miles took shelter from the downpour while he fumbled through his pockets to find the right keys. Few of the apartments showed any light; most of them were holiday rentals, and at this time of the year, they often stood empty. The Von Karmas had maintained a studio apartment there for years, as Manfred preferred to avoid hotels when travelling. It was a familiar bolthole for Miles, too - he had stayed here during his final year at university, using it as a convenient retreat for study outside of term time.
He finally found the pair of keys that he needed and let himself into the lobby, leaving wet footprints on the black and white tiles. The building seemed deserted, and as he climbed the stairs to the second floor, he hoped that the housekeeper had picked up his telephone message from yesterday.
The short note pinned beneath the brass apartment number confirmed that she had, and he crumpled it into his pocket as he unlocked the door and pushed it open, feeling along the wall for the light switch that he remembered should be there.
Once inside, Miles let the door shut behind him and glanced around. The apartment was much as he remembered it; the main living space dominated by French windows which afforded a clear view across the neighbourhood to the Jardin du Luxembourg. The furnishings were sparse but expensive, in keeping with the usual Von Karma style, and the law books he had left behind seven years ago still filled the shelf above the desk.
He threw his bag onto the large iron bed, removed his coat, and flopped gracelessly onto the sofa with a sigh. Rubbing the bridge of his nose in an attempt to alleviate the throbbing in his head, Miles wondered if there were any painkillers in the bathroom. He supposed not, since they were unlikely to feature on the list of essentials that the housekeeper generally provided –
normal people come here to relax, not to be stressed. Miles had never really become accustomed to travelling, which, on reflection, was ironic, considering how much of it he had done in his life. But it didn’t seem to matter how frequently he used them; metros, trains and aeroplanes caused him a faint sense of discomfort that showed no sign of receding. He supposed it was a mild form of claustrophobia, combined with his aversion to being in the close, physical proximity of strangers. It was always impossible for him to relax, and he was never able to find distraction in the mediocre entertainment on offer. He usually passed the hours working, or staring with unseeing eyes out of the windows, wilfully lost in his own thoughts.
Until last year, that had presented no problems - he’d always been reliving a trial, a victory, a new addition to his record of perfection - and these usually made the journey pass quickly. But now, his thoughts were far less comfortable, and infinitely more tiring.
He closed his eyes, put his head back, and willed his mind to a blank, just for a moment. The apartment‘s location in a relatively quiet neighbourhood on the outskirts of the Latin Quarter made it conducive to study, but at the same time, it had always afforded him more personal freedom than the family home in Hanover. There had been an unspoken rule during his year at Cambridge. Any vices he cared to indulge in were to have no impact on the Von Karma name or the family honour, so this had been his destination for a large portion of his vacation time. He still remembered with some fondness his evenings spent here, sitting by the window, listening to the sounds of the city, and studying into the early hours; sometimes alone, sometimes not.
The faint sounds of traffic outside broke the silence, and he wondered if this would be where he could rediscover his purpose. In the past, Paris had always been a city of promise, a place that he had regarded as an oasis where he could relax and enjoy some measure of freedom. He was sure now that any freedom he recalled had merely been an illusion granted by Von Karma for his own purpose, but it had felt real enough at the time. For the first time since the beginning of Lana Skye’s trial, he allowed himself to hope that he might make peace with himself again. But even as the thought surfaced, another voice mocked him at the back of his mind.
“Von Karmas do not hope or dream. They simply achieve.”--
Two days after his acquittal, Miles had returned to the Prosecutor’s Office. Two days of constant self-examination and brooding had finally driven him from his apartment and towards the only distraction that he could think of: his work. It was all he had left.
It had been too early in the morning to encounter anyone else in the building at that time of year, and he was grateful for it. Walking down the long, wood-panelled corridors from the stairwell to his office, he had no choice but to pass Manfred’s door. The dark mahogany and the brass fittings were now obscured by crime scene tape, in a stark reminder of how much Miles’ life had changed in a few scant days. He forced himself to walk past without flinching, without hesitating, even though there was no one to see.
If I can do it once, it’ll be easier next time.Eyes fixed firmly on the plush carpeting, knuckles tight and gripping his briefcase, he had done it. But when he reached his own office, he had to pause for a moment, forehead resting on the heavy wood until his hands were steady enough to unlock the door. Still, he felt a small sense of achievement that he would have deemed pathetic in any other circumstances. Today, it felt as if he’d walked through fire.
He had locked the door behind him, taken off his jacket, and placed it with his briefcase on the sofa. The neatly stacked files on his desk were exactly as they had been a week ago. The chess pieces were in their same positions, the sofa cushions still in slight disarray from the nap he’d taken before going to meet with Robert Hammond. Even the red morning light that bathed the office reminded him of the sunset the last time he’d been here. He felt an odd sense of disconnection - it was as if he had stepped back in time and the previous few days had been just a bad dream.
Switching on the stereo, he made himself a cup of tea, gazing out at the reassuringly familiar view across the city as the strains of Mahler’s 6th Symphony quietly filled the office. Then he seated himself at his desk and pulled down a file from the array in front of him. It was a simple case - an attempted armed robbery due for trial in the New Year. He already knew the notes inside out, but settled down to read them again anyway, determined to reestablish some direction, some sense of normality to his life.
He wasn’t sure how long he’d been sitting there when he heard the voice.
“Miles.”He recognised it immediately, but it was simply… impossible. He froze at his desk, eyes on the papers in front of him, unable to look up. He felt his pulse spiralling out of control and his breath catch in his throat.
“Look at me, Miles.”“You’re not here,” he responded, but in his ears, his own voice was barely more than a whisper.
The chuckle that greeted that remark was light, with an undercurrent of genuine amusement that he had once welcomed whenever he managed to elicit it. He didn’t even need to look to picture the accompanying smirk.
“Don’t be foolish, Miles. Listen to yourself. It has only been a week, and you are already talking nonsense.”The voice had changed position, was slightly behind him, and he felt a trickle of ice down his spine.
He’s looking out of the window, Miles thought, irrationally.
“This isn’t real. Leave me alone.”There was a long pause. Miles dared to breathe.
“I devoted fifteen years of my life to your education. I taught you everything you know.” Suddenly, the voice moved closer. “I wonder… will you forget me as eagerly as you forgot your father… Prosecutor
Edgeworth?” He could feel cool breath against his ear. It revolted him, but he couldn’t move.
“I will never leave you alone, Miles. You know that.” He knew what was coming, because this was a dream, and part of him wanted to feel it, more than anything in the world. He shut his eyes slowly with a soft sigh as those long fingers closed on his shoulder. But even as they did, another part of his mind recoiled in horror and he woke up, jerked to his feet, hands flat on the desk, heart hammering wildly. When he finally forced himself to look over his shoulder, there was no one there. The office door was still locked, and the morning sun had flooded the room with light.
The suit hanging on the wall caught his eye, and half-memories crackled through his head in a crescendo of white noise until, in one angry, frustrated gesture, he swept the contents of his desk to the floor. Papers fluttered wildly, the china teacup smashed into pieces. He stared at the suit for a while longer, then sank back down into his chair with his head in his hands.
It had been fifteen years since he had felt so completely alone.
--
Over the next two days, Miles deliberately forced himself to relax, reacquainting himself with Paris and taking leisurely brunches at Ladurée. Being in a new city and having some kind of plan seemed to have given him room to breathe. The only thing that had really changed was his physical location, but the sense of claustrophobia he had been running from felt less keen, less desperate than it had a few days ago.
He realised now that it had only been sheer force of will that had kept him working and living with a semblance of normality for the two months after his trial – he'd just been too stubborn to accept that his life was rapidly spinning out of control. The day of his release, he and Wright had visited his father’s grave – the memory was still a raw one, tinged with guilt and regret. After that, the defence attorney had cornered him in the Courthouse and backed him into sharing a drink once or twice, but apart from those occasions, he had barely spoken to anyone outside the Prosecutor’s Office. The only thing he’d been able to do to keep focussed was to bury himself in work, taking on Manfred’s outstanding caseload in addition to his own, and spending longer and longer in the office. He’d been an accident waiting to happen, but the only person who had noticed was Damon Gant.
--
On his third night in Paris, Miles dreamed of Franziska. It began like all his other nightmares – the flickering light, the feeling of the walls closing in, and the desperate gasping for breath. Nothing that he was aware of had triggered it, but it came all the same. When he awoke, it was into another dream - he was back in Hanover, in his childhood bed, with his sister firmly holding him until his night terrors passed, murmuring to him in German and scolding him for his foolishness. The second time he woke, he bolted upright with a start, heart pounding, disoriented temporarily by the unfamiliar bed and the distant sounds of the city. A photograph of his sister taken the day she passed her bar exam at age thirteen smiled down at him triumphantly from the wall opposite.
He didn’t try to go back to sleep. Experience had taught him that it was a vain endeavour in the wake of his nightmares. He made coffee, and settled on the sofa with one of his German legal books from the shelf above the desk.
After breakfast, he called the Von Karma family attorney. His father’s belongings were still in storage somewhere, and he knew that there were investments made on his behalf by Von Karma from the proceeds of his father’s will and the sale of his childhood home in Los Angeles. All the paperwork was in Hanover. He had not intended to deal with this until much later, if at all, but since he’d woken from his dream the previous night, his sister had occupied his thoughts.
Miles knew, even as he made the call to the airline, that it was probably a stupid idea; that she was unlikely to welcome him, might not even be there. But he did it anyway. He just needed to see her, one more time.
--
It felt comfortable to be back in Germany. After so many years and Franziska’s ruthlessly childish insistence, Miles spoke the language like a native and understood its customs and manners perfectly. Stepping into the bustle of the airport terminal in Hanover felt like coming home.
Often in the past two months, he had wondered why he’d ever left, but in his heart, he already knew the answer – there had never been a choice. It was clear to Miles now why his sister had been allowed to build a career as a prosecuting prodigy in Hamburg, while he’d been taken to the USA. Manfred Von Karma would never have let him stay in Germany after so carefully preparing the stage in Los Angeles for the final act of his revenge.
He hired a car at the airport and drove into town. As he’d expected, the family attorney was as efficient as usual, and their business was concluded in under an hour. Acquiring the details of the investments and the keys to a storage facility near LA, where the contents of his father’s house and office were located, was merely a formality. But then, it wasn’t really why he had come here.
The tree-lined roads between Hanover and the Von Karma estate passed by in a blur of familiarity, the late frost on the bare branches sparkling in the bright winter sunshine. Now, it felt as if he had never been away, but that sense of homecoming contrasted sharply with his memories of the first time he’d made this journey fifteen years ago.
It had been full summer, then. He was ten years old, sitting silently in the rear of the big black car, fists tightly clenched on his knees, staring indifferently out of the windows at a world tinted grey. Still traumatised by the death of his father, he was consumed by doubts about his new life and homesick for something that he could no longer put a name to, but that still caught at the back of his memory and would not go away.
--
His recollection of the first two or three weeks after being rescued from the dark was hazy, even now.
A strange bed; the smell of antiseptic and floor polish; ceiling tiles with swirling patterns of punched holes. He had started counting the holes in the tile directly above him many times, but never recalled finishing. Snatches of concerned conversation drifted in from the edges of his consciousness
“Poor little soul.” “He’s never asked for his dad. Do you think he knows?” “There’s a great aunt, somewhere, but she’s infirm.”Later, they had sent in a kind but nervous young woman, who played with her hair and couldn’t look him in the eyes, to tell him about his father. By then, though, he already knew that his father was dead. The averted eyes, the half-finished sentences and the hushed voices were all familiar to him.
“It’s alright to cry,” she said. But he didn’t.
Police and prosecutors had filed in with appropriate words of condolence, hoping that he could give them more information than what they already knew, and confusing him with questions about a missing bullet. But his memory failed him and all he could tell them was about the earthquake, the flickering lights, the darkness, and an argument half-remembered. The rest was a blank.
His father had lost the case that day, and it had been a tough one. The defence attorney worked late into every night during the second half of December, and Miles was mostly left to his own devices. He spent several evenings at Phoenix’s house, and many more sitting in his room playing with action figures and reading books while his father remained locked in his study.
Miles was sure that his father’s guilt about being busy over the Christmas holidays was the reason they had attended the trial together on the 28th. The usual sitter who came by to watch him during school vacations was away visiting a relative. Phoenix’s mother made it clear that he was always welcome there, but Miles desperately wanted to watch his father in court. He begged on Christmas Day to be allowed, as an extra present, and his father reluctantly agreed.
As they had stepped into the elevator after the trial, the last to leave, Gregory Edgeworth had put his hand on his son’s shoulder and squeezed it gently. It was a gesture that never failed to make Miles’ heart swell, knowing that for a moment, he was the object of his father’s attention and approval. His father’s smile was weary, and Miles did his best to respond with a happier one to cheer him up. That was the last clear recollection he had of his father - tired, worn, and defeated - but still with a smile that sparked in his eyes to reassure his son that all was well. It was an image that had remained burned into his memory ever since.
--
Miles stopped the car outside the huge iron gates that guarded the entrance to the Von Karma estate. He identified himself to the security cameras and was surprised when he heard the gate mechanism grind into motion a few moments later.
He had half-expected Franziska to order the staff to lock him out should he try to visit.
It would be just like her. But perhaps she was not at home – he knew that she kept an apartment in Hamburg and spent the bulk of her time there to be close to her office. He wondered if she had changed, in the six years that they had been apart. He wondered how much
he had changed since he had last seen her face, watching him impassively from an upstairs window as he left for a new life on another continent.
--
It had been much later - months after the man accused of killing his father was acquitted - that Miles met Gregory Edgeworth’s last courtroom opponent. Miles was still at the hospital, sitting at the table in the playroom, reading one of the law books that someone had brought him from his father’s house. He had been kept in for evaluation and monitoring, but after six months, they didn’t seem to know what to do with him. He soon learned the correct things to say to the counsellors so that they left him alone. Away from their sessions, he withdrew into his books and into his own head. He had nowhere to go, no one who could visit. And then Manfred Von Karma came.
Miles recognised him immediately, of course – he was impossible to forget – tall, gaunt, with an old-fashioned style of attire and piercing blue eyes. Miles had only seen him once before - at the trial on the day his father died. The two attorneys had argued across the courtroom, and he could recall anger, violence and raised voices. But like almost everything else from that day, it was vague, sketchy, and the words spoken were indistinct, as if being heard underwater.
Miles stood up, shyly, to acknowledge his visitor. Von Karma introduced himself with a slight bow of the head, clicking his heels in a very formal way. Then he seated himself in a chair opposite, manicured hands resting openly on the table. Those piercing eyes scanned Miles, then the book he was reading, and Miles thought he saw a twitch of approval.
“Criminal Law? Excellent choice of reading matter. But I would expect no less from the son of Gregory Edgeworth. I only wish your father had been a prosecutor, so that we might have been colleagues instead of enemies.”It was the first time that anyone apart from his counsellors and the police had spoken to him directly about his father. Everyone else avoided the subject, letting their sentences end in silent embarrassment. But this man was different. He looked straight at Miles when he spoke. He didn’t treat him like a child or an invalid. For the first time in months, Miles felt a spark of interest in something other than his books, as his eyes took in the turquoise tiepin, the stern eyebrows, and the faint scar that curved down one cheek.
“I wanted to extend my condolences to you, on the death of your father. And I wanted to apologise on behalf of the Prosecutor’s Office for that unforgivable sham of a trial.”Miles’ eyes dropped back to his book.
“I… still don’t really understand what happened,” he said in a small voice.
“What happened is that a guilty man will remain unpunished because a defence attorney was allowed to spout a pack of lies in court,” Von Karma spat the words.
“I would never have allowed that to happen. The prosecutor deserves to be fired. Your father deserved better, don’t you agree?”There was a pause, and when Miles looked up again, the man was still watching him, impassively. He felt himself blushing at the scrutiny.
“Y-yes. Of course.”Von Karma inclined his head, very slightly, seeming satisfied with the answer.
--
The long driveway curved away out of sight, dusted with half-frozen snow and lined with leafless trees. Miles rolled the car forward, easing it up the icy slope until the front of the building came into view. He still found the Von Karma house an imposing sight, just as he had that first time, fifteen years ago. Built centuries ago as a hunting lodge, the house had looked enormous to him when he was a child. Today, it didn’t look quite so daunting, but it was still impressive; the wintry dressing of ice and frost giving the building a slightly fairytale appearance, as if it belonged on a greeting card or in a holiday brochure.
He exhaled shakily, realising that he had been holding his breath. Irrationally, he half-expected to see Manfred standing on the porch - coat billowing in the breeze, leaning on his cane and surrounded by his hunting dogs - just as he always had when Miles arrived back from Cambridge or Paris. Miles had never known, until he stepped out of the car, whether he would be greeted with approbation or disapproval. Those long seconds of suspense before Von Karma either acknowledged him or turned away were as vivid to him now as ever, along with the memory of how desperately he had hoped for the former, and dreaded the latter.
Manfred Von Karma had been completely different to his father in temperament - stricter, harsher, often aloof and distant. But he had provided a home, education, and support for over a decade, in which Miles had struggled daily to emulate his mentor’s confidence and had aspired to his strength of will. Even since his trial, where it had been made abundantly clear that Von Karma’s motives had never been altruistic, Miles could not help but think of this house as his home. Now, however, that thought brought a rush of shame on its heels as he wondered how he could ever have been so completely deceived.
--
Von Karma had finally looked away, inspecting the room and noting every detail. But now he turned his eyes once more onto Miles’ face.
“I have been speaking to your great aunt. I understand that she is unable to offer you a home, but is unwilling for you to be placed in the care of the state. I agree with her. I have reviewed your academic record, and I can see that your father spent a lot of time teaching you about the law.” He tapped the book in front of Miles with a long forefinger.
“It would be an offence to his memory to allow that education to be squandered.”Miles just stared back, uncomprehendingly.
“I can help you to become a great lawyer like your father. Your great aunt has given me permission to ask you if you would like to come and live in my house, in Germany. It would be a new start, away from the bad memories. I will teach you everything I know. All I ask for in return is that you devote yourself to your studies without question.”Miles’ eyes widened.
“But – aren’t you a prosecutor?”“Yes.” Von Karma’s eyes did not flicker. They pinned Miles where he sat, looked at him and through him.
“I will teach you to be the best prosecuting attorney in the world. One day, your father’s case will be reopened. Then, it will be up to you to ensure that justice is served.”“But… I want to be a defence attorney…” “A worthy ambition for a child. But you are no longer a child, Miles Edgeworth. You are your father’s only son, and as such, you have a duty to his memory above all else. And that duty is to equip yourself to seek justice for his murder, not to defend the kind of men that committed this crime.”
Von Karma rose from his chair with the casual air of someone who had merely stated what should be obvious to anyone. He walked over to the window, calmly observing the view outside, hands clasped behind his back.
Miles sat there, slightly bewildered, eyes downcast, unsure what to do. Germany seemed like a million miles away, and even as numbed as he was, a twinge of uncertainty nagged him at the prospect of abandoning the idea of following in his father’s footsteps. But perhaps this man – this lawyer – was right. Perhaps he did have a greater duty now.
“Will you – help me to do that, sir?” He asked, without raising his eyes from the book in front of him.
Unexpectedly, Miles felt the gentle pressure of a hand on his shoulder, and when he glanced up, surprised, Manfred Von Karma was looking down at him with a half-smile and a nod. For a moment, Miles’ last memory of his father flashed through his mind, and that familiar gesture of approval that he had always sought and never thought he would feel again brought an equally familiar and almost painful response from his heart.
“I accept, sir. Thank you.”“Excellent. We will leave for Germany at the end of the week. I will make arrangements with your aunt.”--
Miles waited in the car for a while, scrutinising the house. He could see no one at the windows, and not a flicker of life in the grounds. Finally, he made the decision, stepping out of the car and striding towards the front door with more confidence than he felt.
Fifteen years ago, his feet had sunk awkwardly into the deep gravel as he’d tried to manoeuvre his too-large suitcase from the back seat, gaping up at the impossibly steep frontage of the house. A servant had stepped forward to try and help him, but he stubbornly refused to relinquish his hold. The case was old and battered, but it contained everything he owned, and his fear of losing those last few connections to his old home, his old life, his father, was keen. To Miles, then, the suitcase was the only tangible thing he had left to cling on to as he found himself adrift and sinking outside this strange house, in a foreign country.
Now, Miles pulled the iron chain beside the heavy wooden door and heard the bell ring inside the house. While he waited, he removed his leather gloves and shoved them into his coat pockets.
Eventually, a butler that he didn't recognise opened the door. There had always been a high turnover of staff at the Von Karma house, so he was never surprised to find new servants in residence. Unfortunately, very few of those employed ever reached the demanded standards of perfection, and so he remembered a constant parade of housekeepers, butlers, cooks, gardeners and maids throughout his childhood and teenage years. This butler clearly knew Miles, though, greeting him formally with a half bow and a stiff nod of the head.
“Herr Edgeworth. Kommen Sie bitte herein.”
Miles shrugged off his coat and handed it to the butler without a backward glance as he entered. The vast entrance hall was as intimidating as ever – a vaulted ceiling that soared to the full height of the house, bare stone floors, and dark panelled walls. Portraits depicting generations of ancestors stared down forbiddingly, interspersed with the mounted heads of a variety of animals that had been unfortunate enough to encounter them, and watercolour views of old Hanover that proudly illustrated the Von Karma family heritage. Very little had changed in the fifteen years since he’d first stood here, lost and alone with no one to guide him.
Back then he had halted, open-mouthed, just inside the door, forgetting for a moment to keep a tight grip on his suitcase. Even in his state of confusion, the room impressed him with its grandeur. The Von Karma house was not opulent, but everything in it looked old, expensive and oversized. His father’s house had been small, cosy and homely, by contrast. This was like a castle in one of the old horror movies that his father liked to watch on cable sometimes. Miles imagined a fanged and caped figure might be standing on the gallery and his eyes involuntarily followed that thought to look upwards. The grandiose sweep of the staircase made him feel smaller and even more insignificant, and right at the top, he caught sight of a white-haired toddler peeping out from behind the dark grey skirts of a forbidding nanny. This brought even more confusion, as Von Karma had not mentioned any other children when they had spoken at the hospital.
Miles had thought she was a dream for many days until he encountered her again on his way to the library for his first lesson with Von Karma. Their eyes met with shared curiosity as they passed in the hallway, but he didn’t dare to speak, as the nanny was in attendance and fixed him with an ominous glare.
Today, the gallery was empty, and the butler returned, breaking into his thoughts.
“Fräulein Von Karma is in the study. Please wait here.”
So she is at home. I suppose I should be grateful that she didn’t tell them to set the dogs on me. A fire was burning in the large hearth and he walked over to it to warm himself, placing his hands on the carved stone mantel.
He was doubly impressed now that he had managed to get this far, but still wondered what kind of a reception he could expect from his sister. Miles dared to hope that her allowing him into the house might be a good sign, but he was keenly aware of how many things had changed in both their lives since they had last been together.
In those earliest days, she had just been someone he would glimpse from time to time on the back stairs, always looking like a perfectly dressed doll, always in the company of the nanny. She harangued him in her childish, precise German, but he never understood; just stared, blushed and hurried on by.
But as the years passed and she began to show early signs of the prodigy that she would become, they started to share the lessons that he previously took alone. In a short space of time, they grew close, thrown together in this isolated house, often unattended except for the servants. Manfred Von Karma still undertook work as a prosecutor in Los Angeles and so he was often away, leaving Miles and Franziska with strict regimes of study to be completed in his absence. A private tutor was employed to watch over them and to ensure they each received sufficient instruction in the few other subjects that Von Karma deemed useful to their education. When he was in Germany, he supervised them personally and tested their knowledge daily. When he was not, they tested each other, both keen to win his approval when the next report from their tutor was sent to Los Angeles.
Miles caught sight of his reflection in the mirror above the fire.
Not exactly the circumstances in which I had envisaged returning to Hanover. He and Franziska’s endless sibling rivalry had cultivated in both of them a desire to outdo each other in courtroom theatrics and in him the will to return home one day with a dazzling record of perfection from his native country. But that had been six years ago, when they both believed that they could be Von Karma’s successor, that they would both be entrusted with his legacy of perfection. When Miles had still hoped that one day, he would be as self-assured and as awe-inspiring as his mentor. Memories from the last day of his trial surfaced, unprompted.
So much for that - and I look as if I haven’t slept for a month.Uncomfortable at meeting his own eyes, he looked around the room. Two schlagers hung from black and white braids next to the fireplace – the fencing swords that he and Von Karma had used when he still lived in Germany. On impulse, he reached out and ran his fingertip lightly along the blade of the nearest one. It was still scalpel-sharp, and left a mark as fine as a paper cut on his skin, bringing back a tangle of memories – the smell of surgical spirit, blood, and stale beer; the metallic taste of sweat, a nauseating echo of panic and aggression.
He had been fourteen when Von Karma called him to his study and introduced him to Viktor, the dour, scar-faced fencing master who was to become a part of his daily education for the rest of his years in Germany. Miles had never shown any prowess at sport when he was in grade school, and his nervousness of horses had already exasperated Franziska beyond reason as she attempted and failed to teach her little brother to ride.
“I expect you to pay as close attention to this as you do to the law. Consider it as training for the day that you stand up in court and face your enemy. You will practice for an hour every day and you will pay the same regard to your fencing master’s words as you do to me and to your tutor.”
With that, Von Karma had picked up his quill and returned his attention to the stack of legal papers on his desk. Miles knew well enough after four years that this was a tacit dismissal, but still he hesitated, looking down at his feet.
“Was there something you wanted to say, Miles?” Von Karma had not even looked up from his desk – Miles could still hear the scratching of quill on paper.
“I… I don’t think I’ll be very good at it, sir,” he said, almost in a whisper.
The scratching stopped. There was silence for a moment, and when he ventured a look upwards to his mentor, that pale blue gaze pierced him with its intensity.
“Of course you will, Miles. You live as a Von Karma now, and academic fencing is a centuries-old tradition in my family. As a man in this household, it is your duty to uphold it, and I expect you to carry out that duty to the best of your ability. Do not disappoint me.”And that had been the end of it. The lessons became as much a part of his life as the stacks of law books in his room, and he was admitted to that locked room with the concrete floor in the basement, a target nailed to the wall and the iron-cornered foot lockers full of odd-looking armour. Sometimes, Von Karma came to observe the lessons, standing quietly by the door, arms crossed, never interrupting. Sometimes he would spar with Viktor, both fully masked and only three feet apart, while Miles watched, fascinated by the constant motion of the blades. It was a new dimension to his mentor that awed him in much the same way that watching him in court did.
Miles began to understand its application to his career. He learned how to face an opponent without flinching; how to exercise self-control and to employ misdirection even in the face of bodily fear; and always, always to attack. To his surprise, he found that after a few weeks, he enjoyed it, even had a flair for it, once he learned that most duels were won and lost in the mind before the swords were even raised.
When Miles was accepted into Hanover University at fifteen, Von Karma had insisted that he join a duelling Corps. It was unusual for someone so young to be admitted, but as a powerful, wealthy and lifelong member, Von Karma had a lot of influence. Miles hadn’t protested at the time – the compulsory mensur duels he fought in his first year were a small price to pay for the strings he would be able to pull in later life, particularly since he was victorious in all three. He escaped with no scars to tell the tale, the university administration none the wiser, and as a lifelong member of an elite group. Now, he wondered if Von Karma’s insistence on the son of an avowed enemy following such a strong family tradition had simply been an expedient method of further isolating him. Miles attended the university as a day student, and the Corps was exclusively male. He had little chance to encounter girls or to experience much outside the confines of the lecture hall, his restricted acquaintance among the Corps, and their rigidly disciplined timetable.
Today, a smile curved across his lips as he considered the irony of that, if it were true, because it had been in the wake of his last mensur that he first confronted the reality of his own sexuality. His memory of it was indistinct – ragged breath that fogged in the cold air of the garden, furtive whispers, awkward kisses, and an urgent need that was anxiously consummated, leaving him breathless and trembling on his knees in the frosted grass.
He didn’t remember the boy’s name, or if he ever knew it – just an impression of his face and the scent of his cologne. But he remembered the shame that had driven him to confess his sin to Von Karma, standing ramrod-straight in the study, waiting for a condemnation that never came. Instead, there had been silence for a time, agonising seconds of guilt. When his mentor eventually spoke, he was reassuring, regretful, and completely practical. That day marked the first of many lectures Miles received on the subject of duty and sacrifice; on guarding against scandal and blackmail. It was also the first of many talks with Manfred that taught him sex was a commodity to be bought or taken, not shared; that for him, it should only ever be a means of physical gratification, that if friends made you weak, then lovers made you vulnerable – especially if they were of the same gender.
He’d believed it all. Then, he had no reason to question it – an automatic acceptance of Von Karma’s advice was ingrained too deeply. Once in Los Angeles, he’d had no time to reconsider it, his personal life diminishing to nothing in the face of his workload and the constant monitoring of his progress by his mentor. Now, he recognised those lessons for what they were, but doubted if he would ever be able to put them aside. Somehow, that doubt brought with it a sense of loss and emptiness that had never troubled him before, although he could not say why or what had triggered it.
High heels clacking on the stone floors broke into his thoughts and he turned away from the schlagers as the slight but always commanding figure of his sister appeared from the hallway. She looked haughty and angry - but then she always did. She was carrying her whip, and Miles could see that her knuckles were white from gripping the handle.
Rarely a good sign.
“So you are alive still, little brother.” Her voice was cold, with an edge of sarcasm, but he was unable to read anything more from her expression. Franziska was younger than him, considerably so. But she had always regarded herself as his older sister, and in many ways, she was. She had always been there – to teach him German, to instruct him in perfection and to wake him from his nightmares. Most of his memories of living here were shared with her. Secretly studying in the middle of the night. Exploring the darkest recesses of the house and daring each other to peek into dusty rooms and empty corners. Playing games of strategy and one-upmanship between study sessions. Sneaking into the library behind their tutor’s back and alternately scaring or amusing each other with gothic horrors and tragedies read out loud. He’d always admired her indomitable spirit and had not been in the least surprised when she’d exceeded his own academic success to pass her bar exam at thirteen years of age. But that shared life had ended six years ago, and since her father’s conviction for murder, she had refused all attempts at contact. His sense of loss at their estrangement was partly what had brought him to Hanover, but now that he was here, he found himself unsure of what to say.
Miles took a deep breath. “You look well, Franziska”. He took a step forward to greet her, but she remained where she was, mouth set in a thin line of disgust.
“How dare you set foot in this house? You have disgraced this family and everything it stands for.” She cracked the whip, eyes flashing with a rage as sudden as it was powerful.
Miles understood now why Franziska had let him into the house. She wanted a confrontation, but as tired as he was, he simply didn’t have the will or the energy for their usual games.
I made a mistake, coming here so soon. He sighed, running a hand through his hair.
“You haven’t changed, Franziska,” he said. “Always quick to judge, before you’ve seen the evidence or heard the testimony.”
“You should be begging for my forgiveness, Miles Edgeworth.” Her voice was filled with a bitterness that belied her anger. “But that’s not why you’re here, is it? You’ve come here to make excuses, to ease your conscience. You say that I ‘look well’. Does that make you feel better? And how do you suppose
I feel?”
“I don’t know, Franziska,” he said honestly. “I tried to call. Many times. I wanted to explain. After what happened… I was… confused. I couldn’t begin to guess how much worse--“
“Why would
I be confused, little brother?” Franziska snapped. “On the contrary, your betrayal of this family has made things perfectly clear: the very sight of you disgusts me.”
He looked away. She was far angrier than he’d ever seen her before; the silent whip showed that.
“At this point in time, I disgust
myself, Franziska. But if anyone has betrayed this family, then it is your own father.”
“Enough!” Franziska shouted at him. “Don’t you
dare try and shift the blame onto Papa--“
“Surely you’re not trying to deny his guilt?” Miles could hear the anger in his own voice now. He knew his self-control was slipping, as his exhaustion took hold. “Franziska, he
murd--“
“I know what he did!” She took a step forward in anger. “But you… you helped that
fool, that
nobody, to humiliate my father in court. You betrayed the honour of this family and threw away your reputation for –
that man. That… Phoenix Wright.” She spat the words.
Miles looked at her in surprise, confused by the abrupt redirection of her ire. “Don’t be ridiculous, Franziska. Wright is not to blame for what happened to your father.”
For a second, he thought she was going to laugh, but instead, she gave him a look of complete contempt. “You still don’t understand. Do you think I don’t remember your little friend, with his little letters?”
--
“What… is that?” Outraged. Early to collect him for lessons, Franziska had caught him reading one of Wright’s letters. He’d tried to hide it, tried to shove the treasure box back under his bed before she saw it, but her quick eyes had taken in the scene before his reflexes could respond. She'd wrestled the folded, lined notepaper from his grip and read it, eyes widening as they progressed down the page. He’d averted his own, blushing at being caught out in what he supposed was a weakness.
Her eyes had narrowed into a rage that he could see was coming, even though he didn’t understand why. She'd ripped the note in half before his eyes and kicked the treasure box so hard that it hit the wall, its contents scattering across the floor. All that day, he was afraid that she would tell her father. But she didn’t. She chose to ignore it, to ignore him. It had been a week before they spoke again – a week of mutual loneliness and hurt. He’d picked up all the letters and put them back in the box, running his fingernail along the fresh new scratch, not really understanding, then.
--
Now, he knew it was betrayal that she had felt. From a few lines of writing and a name, on a piece of paper. He knew that it was betrayal she felt now, all these years later.
“I can’t be trusted anymore,” he said plainly, turning to look out of the window. “By you, or anyone else.”
“Don’t be ignorant,” Franziska scoffed. “I never trusted you. A Von Karma trusts no one.”
Miles shook his head at the irony of it, looking at her over his shoulder. “Does your family name really mean that much to you, even now, Franziska?”
“Does yours, Miles Edgeworth?” A piercing stare accompanied her words, and he had no answer for either.
“The American police called. They told me you’d left a suicide note.” This time she did laugh. “You melodramatic fool.”
“I did mean it, Franziska. One way or another. I lost my way as a prosecutor – and as a man.”
Her eyes hardened again. “Then go. And die. You are a failure – it's all you deserve. You’ve sacrificed everything for someone you claimed meant nothing to you.
I will restore the reputation of the Von Karma name. You… you’re no longer worthy of being my little brother.”
“Franziska, I didn’t come here to fight with you – that wasn’t my intention.”
“Then why are you
here?” She demanded.
“I wanted to see you. That’s all.” It sounded foolish to his own ears now, but it was the truth.
“And why should you imagine that I want to see you, Miles Edgeworth, after you ruined my father and shamed yourself by running away? Look at yourself – you’re a mess.” Her sharp eyes raked him from head to foot. “How
dare you come here dressed like a beggar and talking like a fool? You’ve thrown away everything that made you who you are. Do you expect me to tell you that
I forgive
you, that it’s all a dream, that everything will be alright, just like I did when we were children?”
Miles looked away from her again and crossed his arms.
“I expect nothing from you, Franziska. I never have. I’m the one who has lost my way, and only I can find it again. I have taken work in Paris, and I will be using the apartment there for the foreseeable future. I trust you have no objection. I would prefer it if you did not tell anyone I am there.”
“Do whatever you want – it is of no importance to me. I can think of no occasion that I would need to discuss you with anyone. You are nobody: a fool and a coward. Go to Paris. Hide yourself away or throw yourself in the Seine. I no longer care.
“After today, you will no longer be admitted to this house. Show yourself out.” She stalked away before he could answer, her heels echoing loudly in the empty corridor.
Miles did not attempt to follow her, although he turned to watch her as she walked out of the room. They had often fought as children, but they had also clung together in this house. Years of seclusion, surrounded by books of law and reminders of the legacy of the Von Karmas - yards of perfection measured in portraits along the walls and framed certificates of law. There was little they had not shared, but now there was a gulf between them that he did not know how to cross.
No one else that he encountered at the house wanted to meet his eyes. He didn’t blame them. Some regarded him as the reason Von Karma was now on death row, a ruined man. Others were kept silent by the knowledge that their patron had murdered his father. Either way, Miles was glad to leave.
As he stood in the driveway of the mansion, he looked up at the small window on the second floor. Franziska had always stood there, watching him leave. First, when he started at university as a day pupil. Then, when he went abroad to Cambridge or to Paris. And finally, the last time, when he’d gone to Los Angeles. Today, although he stared up at the window for some time, it remained empty.
In the aftermath of the encounter with his sister, the fatigue he had been fighting against all day had returned, bringing with it emptiness and a renewed sense of loss that he had not felt so keenly since the night after his trial. It was as if he looked at the building in front of him with new eyes. As familiar as the house and its occupants were, it no longer felt like his home.
It almost feels like a dream. It’s as if I slept for fifteen years, and only really awoke that day in court, when I heard that scream again. Maybe it would have been better if I had stayed asleep. Sometimes, even knowing what I know, I would trade what I have now for what I had then - the security of it, the certainty. That was what he offered me, and what I held on to for all those years. It was the only way out of my nightmares, the only way to atone for what I had done.
And now? Who will absolve me now?Turning away from the house for the last time, he drove directly to the airport and returned immediately to Paris.
--
Franziska remained on his mind for the next few days. Whenever he looked at her picture on the wall of the apartment, he no longer saw the triumphant, flawless prodigy of six years ago. Now, all he recalled was anger and the look of betrayal in her eyes when she turned away from him for the last time. He remembered that day when she had caught him with the letter in his hand, and he remembered another piece of paper with burgundy edges he had left in a manila envelope on his desk at the Prosecutor’s Office.
--
A couple of days before he was due to take up his new job, he called into the office to fill in paperwork and meet his new colleagues. Marceau, Defès et Associés was situated off Boulevard St-Germain in the Latin Quarter, not far from Île de la Cité and within easy walking distance of the apartment. He was relieved to find that it proved to be as quiet and modest a law practice as he’d been told.
A small, neat man of indeterminate middle age, grey-haired and wearing a grey suit, greeted him in the lobby. “Heureux de faire votre connaissance, Monsieur Von Karma. My name is Jean St-Juste – I will be acting as your legal secretary while you are here. Please ask me for anything you need.”
They shook hands. The legal secretary’s manner was a calm mixture of sincerity and reserve. He exhibited no apparent curiosity about this new lawyer who had appeared unexpectedly and Miles had a distinct sense that perhaps the man knew more than he might have liked already. But if that was so, he gave no outward indication of it, and his air of neutrality was oddly reassuring. St-Juste’s expression didn't allow him to divine what impressions he was forming in return, but inexplicably, that in itself was enough for Miles to warm to the man.
It transpired that the two senior partners were rarely in the office themselves, preferring to conduct most of their business remotely from their homes outside the city. The small team that did work there consisted mainly of legal secretaries and administrators, and Miles learned that the work mostly entailed legal and contract law for foreign businesses with interests in France. Consequently, clients rarely came to the office, and the majority of correspondence was carried out by post, telephone and email.
The office that had been assigned to him was on the upper floor, behind the area that was occupied by St-Juste and the receptionist. The room was small, its walls lined with bookshelves, and the large antique desk that dominated the space was placed at right angles to the window. Miles could make out the rooftops of the surrounding buildings, and in the distance, he could see the unmistakable turrets of the Palais de Justice. He looked away quickly, unconsciously gripping his left arm.
St-Juste had noticed the gesture and tilted his head. “Is everything all right, Monsieur? We can rearrange the furniture if you would prefer not to be seated near the window.”
Miles recovered himself and directed his attention to a law book on the desk in front of him. He opened it and traced his finger down the contents page.
“Actually - there is one thing, St-Juste.”
“Yes, Monsieur Von Karma?”
Miles hesitated, keeping his eyes on the book and carefully considering his words. His sister’s unanswered question from a few days before still troubled him. “That is my... adopted name. I would prefer to use my family name. Please call me Edgeworth.”
The secretary nodded, one eyebrow slightly raised, but otherwise unperturbed. “Very well, Monsieur Edgeworth. I will advise the other staff accordingly.”
“Thank you. And please leave the desk where it is. The view towards the Palais is… very striking.” Miles raised his gaze to the window again, and this time, he didn’t look away.
It will serve as a reminder of why I’m here.
"Independence is my happiness, and I view things as they are, without regard to place or person; my country is the world, and my religion is to do good". - Thomas Paine
Last edited by KingMobUK on Sun Dec 23, 2007 3:51 pm, edited 1 time in total.