Chapter Six

Mistake

Maxine

As I hadn’t had a tour of the house, I got lost

trying to find the drawing room.

But considering there were a bevy of servants around, I

startled one by coming on him as he was rushing to do something. He stared in

shock at my cheek (which should have shared how bad it was, but I was so out of

it, I didn’t take this in) as I asked him to point me to the drawing room. He

did as I asked.

It’d take me a minute to realize, in my daze, I was making a

huge mistake.

In my defense, I had, as yet, not given myself time to

process all that had happened to me, to Mom, seeing a me who was not me, but

was ill, having a father who proved what I’d known all my life, but had

struggled against, he was inherently vile, learning I had another father who

was worse.

And so on…

I also had not been around Lord Remington or the Duke of

Dalton very long. I didn’t know what made their character (but spoiler, I was

about to find out).

Last, I had never been struck.

The pain was subsiding, though it lingered and there was a

tightness so I knew it was swelling. That said, I was in a state of shock that

any human being, much less one who looked like my dad, would take his hands to

me.

So, I had an excuse when I did what I should not and glided

in my gorgeous gown into the drawing room.

Edgar was the first to see me.

He turned, paled immediately, only for big splashes of angry

red to suffuse his cheeks, and he hurried my way.

“Daughter,” he bit impatiently, even if he was trying to

make it sound concerned, “You’re to be abed. It’s lovely, you wish to keep us

company, but let’s get you back to your chamber.”

He was crowding me, pushing me backwards, hiding me from the

others with his body, and I was still partially in a daze, not to mention a

little freaked at seeing him.

I was backing up.

“It’s my understanding,” I heard Loren drawl, “that the

countess doesn’t like to be backed somewhere she doesn’t wish to be.”

His voice was coming around our sides.

I turned my head that way.

And stopped dead.

This was because, if I felt his anger singe my skin in the

stables, his fury now was burning me alive.

“What’s this?” he whispered sinisterly, his attention locked

to my cheek.

His father came up to his side, got a look at me, and his

face turned to stone.

Edgar took hold of my upper arm and started jostling me

toward the door.

“I’ll return after I see my Maxine to bed,” he said, trying

again to hide me with his frame.

“You’ll take your hand off her, or mark me, Derryman, you’ll

find it difficult to use after I crush every bone in it,” Loren threatened.

Edgar’s eyes narrowed on me, and he hissed under his breath,

“Punished.”

And poof, my daze cleared.

Shit, what had I done?

He turned to the men, holding me at his side, and in an

ingratiating tone, lied, “Maxine took a bit of a tumble. I didn’t want to say.

It’s embarrassing to her. She can be quite awkward.”

“She didn’t take a godsdamned

tumble,” Loren gritted.

Edgar made a frustrated noise.

I belatedly started freaking out.

“I think we can all agree she needs to be resting with a

compress,” Edgar rejoined.

“I think you need to step away from your daughter,

Derryman,” Ansley stated flatly.

His fingers on my arm tightened.

I winced.

“If you gentleme—” Edgar began.

He didn’t finish because he, and I (he took me with him

because he didn’t let go), reeled back.

Though it was only he who was slammed against the wall with

Loren’s hand wrapped around his throat, and Loren in his face.

“Release your daughter, sir,” he clipped.

Edgar let me go.

“Father,” Loren prompted, not moving from Edgar.

I felt my elbow taken with gentle fingers and I was

carefully pulled away.

“Was it spending time with me in the stables? Or how she

spoke to you before then? Or both?” Loren demanded.

Edgar made low choking noises.

“Loren, my son, step back,” Ansley called.

Loren didn’t step back.

“Have you hurt her before?” he pushed.

“Loren,” Ansley persisted.

“Answer!” Loren thundered.

“Loren! Now!” Ansley commanded.

I held my breath.

Loren didn’t move.

Edgar kept choking.

Loren pushed off and stepped back.

After he did, instantly, he turned to me, and tenderly

ordered, “Come here.”

I had no idea why (that’s a lie, I did, that tone in his

lovely, rich voice was mesmerizing), but I went right there.

When I did, he took my hand, lifted it, tucked it against

the side of his chest and led us several feet farther from Edgar.

“We shall call your valet, Derryman,” Ansley announced.

“You’re leaving tonight.”

No!

I tensed.

I felt his regard as Loren looked down at me.

“Your daughter will remain,” Ansley finished.

Oh God. Oh shit. Oh no.

“I did. I d-did. I t-tumbled,” I lied (poorly).

“Countess,” Loren murmured.

I looked up at him, feeling my eyes were huge, and

desperately kept at it. “I did. I’m clumsy that way.”

Loren’s intelligent brown gaze roamed my face.

He then lifted it to his father.

“He goes, she stays,” he decreed.

Damn it, he knew I was lying.

“Lord Remington, may I speak to you?” I asked urgently.

“Good, Eaton, you’re here,” Ansley said, and I whipped my

head around to see him addressing a man who had a slightly more important

outfit than the other servants. “Find the Count’s valet. He and his staff will

be leaving this eve. His daughter and her maid will remain.”

Eaton nodded smartly and left the room.

Ansley looked to Edgar and delivered the final blow.

“It will be up to your daughter and my son if they should

make their own union, but Derryman, you and I, the House of Dalton and the

House of Derryman, will have no such public alliance. Consider this the cut

direct, sir, and please do me the favor of never corresponding with me in any

way again.”

My gaze swung to Edgar, who was staring death at me.

Fix this, he mouthed.

Frantically, I turned full body into Loren, pressing into

him.

“Please, your grace, I need to speak to you.”

Loren looked down at me.

“Please,” I begged. “Privately.”

He glanced at his father, then back to me and nodded.

Okay.

All right.

A start.

He began to draw me from the room as I thought, Now what

did I do?

I caught Edgar’s eyes, he narrowed his at me warningly, and

I started to breathe funny.

I didn’t know what I was going to do, but I was going to

have to come up with something.

Loren didn’t take me to the yellow, cream and green sitting

room. He took me to a room that could only be described as a kind of this-world

family room. It had warm, deep colors and comfortable-looking furniture, but

was still stately and refined.

He closed the door behind us.

And as it would seem was his way, he got there first.

“Countess, you’re safe here. I can well imagine what your

life has been like with that man, and I’m now realizing the answers to a number

of questions, including why you remained in Fleuridia

as long as you did. But there are laws against this type of behavior. This

isn’t your mother’s times. We have a new king. And you have my promise, we will

see what is to come between us, but my father and I both will be certain you

are seen to in the manner to which you’re accustomed.”

“You can’t make him leave,” I blurted.

“My lady—”

I tugged my hand from his, wrapped both around the sides of

his neck, pulled him down to me, got up on my toes, met him nose to nose, and

whispered, “Loren, you cannot make him leave. We must mend this. Now.”

He stared into my eyes and said not a word.

“I can’t explain it, just, I beg of you, play nice.

Go back to that room, share with your father that I’m a klutz—”

“A klutz?”

“Clumsy. Awkward. Two left feet. Whatever…just—”

“I don’t know what hold he has on you, my lady,” he said

gently. “But you shall understand freedom. He will be sent from here, but we

will be calling the royal inspectors immediately to investigate this. He’ll be

jailed, he’ll be fined, and he won’t be able to get to you again.”

Oh my God!

It was getting worse.

If Edgar was jailed, I’d never find Mom.

And even worse, he might do something to her

beforehand, or if he wasn’t around at least to pay whoever was giving her

gruel, she’d starve to death.

And the same would befall Maxine.

“Lor…your grace, don’t.” I squeezed his neck.

“Honestly, it’s not that I fear him, or I’ve known nothing but this so I expect

it, or anything like that. I just…Dad and I have a weird—”

He lifted his hands to wrap his fingers around my wrists,

and he carefully pried away my hold.

“You must know, seeing what we’ve seen, it’s our duty to

attend to you, sweeting,” he said gently.

Shit, shit, shit!

Why did this guy have to be a good guy? Tall and strong and

interesting and tender and principled.

Fuck!

“Stay here,” he bid. “It’ll all be resolved shortly. I’ll

come to get you, we’ll have dinner. In the meantime, I’ll send someone to pour

you a sherry so you can calm yourself, and bring you a cold compress, to

perhaps contain some of the swelling.”

With that, he gave my wrists a squeeze then let go.

He started walking away.

Goddamn it.

There was nothing for it.

“He’s holding my mother and sister captive until I marry

you,” I said to his back.

Loren froze, statue still, his back to me.

I sounded like a lunatic.

I had no choice.

“I know it sounds insane, because it is, because he’s a huge

di…I mean, uh, cad, but it’s true. I didn’t want to…didn’t want

to…come home. From Fleuridia. Because, obviously,

he’s awful. And my sister, she’s…not right. She needs to be somewhere where

they can look after her. And…and…and…”

I trailed off because he’d been turning, slowly, as I spoke,

and now he was facing me with a carefully blank look on his face that was

scaring the beads off me.

“I know I sound mad,” I said quietly. “But it’s true. And I

was playing his game until I could discover where they were, rescue them,

spirit them away, and then…um, I don’t know. I was making it up as I went

along. But then he hit me, and it hurt a lot…”

I got off that tangent fast when his mood started heating my

skin again.

“And I was dazed and made a mistake and now we have to go in

there and pretend it’s all right and…uh…your grace?”

I called after him in the end because he’d turned on his

shiny, black evening boot and was prowling out of the room.

Uh-oh.

“I think I just made mistake two, goddamn it,” I snapped to

myself.

And then, with no other choice, I gripped silk and crystals

and beads in my fingers and flew after him.

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