Chapter 14
Knock, knock.
Someone knocks on his office door again. Buried in his sheets, Noctum slowly opens his eyes.
He groans and sits up in bed.
He thinks he had a strange dream.
āA long-haired meā¦?ā
Like a play shown in pieces, he vaguely remembers a small girl and a long-haired version of himself.
There was also a painting⦠maybe in the annex?
āI donāt get it.ā
He could just call it a silly dream and forget it, but his head keeps replaying it.
āYour Grace?ā
The thought breaks. Teiās voice comes from outside.
āCome in,ā Noctum says with a small sigh.
Tei sees him rubbing his eyes and shuts his mouth, nervousāhe must have woken the duke. He keeps peeking to check if Noctum is angry, but Noctum only looks dazed, like heās still half asleep.
Tei quickly reports that a morning meeting is set with Baron Hansen.
āOkay,ā Noctum answers, voice lower than usual.
A chill runs over Tei. He turns fast toward the door. This is thin iceātime to leave.
āTei.ā
His hand on the door stops. Noctumās voice sounds even lower.
āYes?ā
āIs there⦠a painting in the annex? No, forget it.ā
The question dies. Tei tilts his head.
āThe annex is used as an armory now. There are no paintings there, Your Grace.ā
āI know.ā
Then why ask?
Tei wonders if this is some new way to mess with a subordinate, but he only slips out and closes the door.
āHaaā¦ā
Noctum sighs heavily. He splashes his face and drops back onto the bed.
Even while Tei talked, the dream kept floating around his mind.
āIām sure the lady was in itā¦ā
He remembers a gentle voice heād never used, calling āCharlotte, Charlotte,ā and speaking about her like she was holy.
āAm I⦠losing it?ā
It makes no sense to be this taken with a woman he barely metāplus these tender feelings in his chest.
He stares at the ceiling and decides:
āI should ignore the lady for a while.ā
A week. No, a month.
He wonāt see her until these weird feelings fade.
But that resolve breaks the very next day.
After meeting Baron Hansen, he stops by yesterdayās field to clear his headāand sees Charlotte again.
And thereās a surprise guest.
āWhy is Kai there?ā
Kai, the fox heās raised for fourteen years, is curled in Charlotteās arms, tail wagging hard.
***
Earlier that morning
Charlotte wakes early and reads the gossip paper Anna brought.
Then she starts sorting the piles of luxury items still filling her room.
She must have spent a huge amount over twenty years; even after sending one batch of jewels to Adrian, thereās still a lot left.
She looks over the things sheās organized these past weeks.
āEven a third of this would feed me for life.ā
Good for her now: after she said she would āleave,ā the duke slashed her allowance, so cash has been tight.
She does the math for a house and living costs, then splits the jewels in half:
One half is for living. The other half will buy mana stones and mana paper.
She wonāt need those if she really moves south for a quiet life.
But sheās buying a lot anyway becauseā
āEven if I didnāt choose those sins, I should atone a little. And I can wipe out the dukeās secret funds at the same time.ā
On the way south, she plans to steal the dukeās illegal slush money and hand it all out to the peopleāher last, satisfying revenge.
Thinking of the future makes her work fast.
She canāt move everything in one go, so she bags a quarter and takes it to Adrian.
He converts the jewels to cash cleanly, leaving no trace. She returns home.
That ends her morning.
She doesnāt feel hungry, so she almost skips lunch. Then a thought comes, and she tells Anna to prepare a picnic meal.
āGoing out? Shall I choose a dress?ā Anna asksābolder now that the lady has been quiet for a month.
āNo. Iāll eat here. Just pack it like a picnic, in a basket.ā
āā¦Yes, my lady.ā
Annaās courage vanishes. She hurries out, thinking the lady is even stranger than a month ago.
Charlotte knows what Anna thinks but says nothing.
In under thirty minutes Anna brings the basket, bows quickly, and fleesāas if staying longer would be dangerous.
Charlotteās mood dips, but she calms herself.
āIāll leave soon anyway. Getting close will only hurt Anna.ā
She turns to the wall and opens the secret passage.
Cool air brushes her skin. She rubs her arm and walks to the end.
She pushes the basket up through the ground first, then plants both hands and jumps.
Her body pops out of a hollow in an old tree.
She dusts her dress and smiles at the fieldāstill beautiful.
She leans against the tree. Itās always quiet here, untouched by people.
Animal sounds echo here and there. She looks toward the spot where Noctumās āgraveā would be.
Should she go? Yesterdayās weeds gave her a rash, and she might meet the duke again.
āItās fine to go in a few days.ā
She silently apologizes to Noctum, then takes out sandwiches and fruit.
Rustleāsomething small moves through the grass.
A rabbit? She looksāand freezes.
āKyuu⦠kiiing!ā
āā¦Kai?ā
Itās Kai, the fox she saved at age six in her other life.
Charlotte stares, stunned. Kai yelps happily and rushes into her arms, tail spinning like heās greeting an old friend.
āUhā¦ā
He hops into her lap, panting with a grin. Charlotte is still dazed.
āDoes he know me? Howā¦?ā
In this world, Charlotte never came here and never saved him. She knows that from the vivid twenty years of the āother Charlotteāsā memories.
āKiiingā¦ā
He whines when she doesnāt pet him. She slips him a piece of fruit and rubs his face.
He makes a pleased sound.
Charlotte looks down, sure now.
āYou⦠remember me, donāt you?ā
āYip!ā
He answers like he understands. She laughs through filling tears.
āItās really been a long time, Kai.ā
Itās been four or five years. In her last life, Kai lived about two years longer than a foxās usual fifteen, then diedāat the grand dukeās estate.
āNoctum was very thoughtful then,ā she recalls. He somehow knew she had saved a fox and told her about Kai right after the wedding. She was amazed.
She never regretted it, but like any pet owner, she wished he could have stayed forever. When he died, she cried in Noctumās arms.
āAhā¦ā
The memory stings; tears gather. She wipes them away with her thumb, strokes Kaiās head, and whispers:
āIām glad we can meet again like this.ā
Even if sheāll see him die again and grieve again, seeing him now is a gift.
She smiles at him. A cool breeze blows. She tucks her fluttering hair behind an ear.
Kai bats at the golden strands with his paw.
āWoof!ā
He catches a lock of hair and tilts his head. Charlotte bursts out laughing.
Her clear laughter spreads over the fieldāthe first carefree laugh in a long time.
The birds donāt fly away; they draw closer.
She feeds Kai an apple slice and watches him play for a long while.
Rustleāthis time a larger animal moves.
Maybe a deer smelling fruit? She looks around but sees nothing.
Maybe she misheard. She looks back down at the fox tugging her skirt.
That was her mistake.
From a spot she didnāt check well, a human shadow watches.
The wind tosses his silver hair. Noctum stands like a statue, unable to leave at the sight of her first true smile.
āShe really is impossible to read.ā
How does she know the name āKaiā? And what is this feelingā¦?
A strange warmth spreads in his chest; the back of his neck grows hot.
He keeps staring at the place she sat until evening, when she slips into the treeās hollow and disappears.
Animals are always the best compared to moody humans