Pain; that was all that Marius Wiles remembered from his childhood. The pain of realizing that his younger brother was now gone, missing. The pain of the police ignoring him and not accepting his help with the case. They would pick nine-year-old Marius up and place him on the kitchen stool, telling him that everything was going to be okay, not to worry and that he wasn’t going to understand any of it. That was the problem, it wasn’t okay, and he did understand what was going on. But that was the past. Marius learned to let go of that past and accept what was going on in the present. From that point on, Marius Wiles’ life had been rather dull; with his parents working throughout his childhood, left in the care …show more content…
He always hated his older brother Monroe for being the more intelligent one in the family, but deep down, he knew he loved him. His sister, Alana, he never spoke to, she would always greet him then go straight into solitary. He always longed for an eventful life; with his phenomenal intelligence, every situation that came forth was a bore to him. At 19 years old and attending the University of Miami, he had been praised as many things by his fellow peers and professors. Incredible, even deemed a child prodigy when he was a young student. As the son of a store clerk and an interior designer, he was expected to not get far into the field of psychology and biology, but he managed through it. In fact, the only thing that was extremely difficult for him was having to hold the urge to argue with his professors. He had a bad habit of snapping back to his teachers since he was young and was claimed as a troubled child in school. Ever since the disappearance of his younger brother Raoul, Marius had been deeply interested in deductions and psychology; there was something about pulling a person part by part, then drawing a …show more content…
Actually, most people that knew him, knew that most of the time he was terrible. He never openly expressed any forms of emotion; the only time he would was when he was with his roommate Connor. Connor was safe to say, his only friend in his university that actually listened to him and could talk to him normally. Most of the time, he enjoyed being by himself and disliked making conversation. This led to the point where he completely stopped using social media. He thought the media was both pointless and annoying; the media caused unnecessary drama and little problems that little children cared far too much about to the point that they were straying away from the bigger problems in life. He had the same views on romance. He saw it as pointless and never touched on the idea of falling for someone. If there was something else he hated more than social media, it was when people insulted his intelligence. It was infuriating to him when people questioned him or tried to prove him wrong. What was the point of wasting their time when he was going to be right? This mentality also gave him the shame and embarrassment when he was wrong on a topic; his face would flush deep red and he would often be in loss of words. He dealt with this, perhaps not the best way. Marius would typically snap back at the person or resort to insulting them. Even