Chapter 21
“Just cast me out of the family, then.”
āIs Lu… Is Luciane going to be okay? Itās been over an hourāwhy hasnāt a doctor arrived yet?ā
Penelopeās voice broke through as she wept beside her, snapping Mercian back to reality.
What on earth had happened?
āMother…ā
āLuciane, are you conscious? I was terrified something terrible had happened to you. Listen, Luciane, thereās no reason for you to stay here any longer. Weāre going home.ā
Penelopeās words made Mercianās face flash with surprise.
She quickly grabbed Penelopeās hand and urged,
āMother, the tea gathering hasnāt even started yet.ā
But Penelope shook off her hand and snapped,
āThatās enough! Seeing you dressed like this alone shows me exactly how well youāre living in this marquisate. Thereās no need to see any more. Iām leaving. Luciane almost died because of youādoes that stupid tea gathering matter that much?ā
That careless gathering for tea?
And now I’m to blame for my sister’s injury?
Mercian spoke angrily, glaring at Penelope as though she were to blame for Luciane’s refusal to heed her warnings and for grabbing the door.
āMother, it was Luciane who insisted yesterday that we must hold the tea gathering. I rushed to prepare everything. Luciane fainted because she ignored my warning, so why am I being blamed?ā
āNo. It is entirely your fault that Luciane fainted.
Penelope checked that no one else was around before leaning in and whispering harshly.
āYou are ungrateful. After all weāve done for you, this is how you repay us?ā
āUngrateful?ā
āYes. Didnāt your sister say last time that your husband is plotting a rebellion? She asked His Royal Highness the Crown Prince to arrest the marquis at your wedding, and thatās why the ceremony went ahead as planned. If you knew all this, shouldnāt you at least be grateful to your sister? At least you avoided public disgrace.ā
Yeah, that sounds exactly like the mother I know.
Mercian fought back a bitter laugh at Penelopeās reproachful tone, so different from when she first arrived at the marquisate, and answered firmly,
āMother, I did send a gift to thank my sister for her warning. That dress she wanted so badly.ā
āHah! Just three dresses?ā
āThree dresses? Mother, the cost of those three dresses could support me for six months while I lived at the viscountās estate.ā
āMercian, you foolish girl. You think wearing those expensive dresses and being praised as the marquisās wife means you really are the marquisās wife? Wake up. Youāre only a marquisās wife for six monthsāafter that, when the marquis dies, youāll be nothing!ā
āMother, Iāve never mistaken myself for the marquisās wife.ā
āThen if you think so, open the marquisās door right now, while no oneās here.ā
Penelope pointed sharply toward Ruanās room, and Mercianās expression hardened.
āMother, I canāt open that door. Like I said before, Ruan placed a magic ward on the room and the study.ā
āYouāre so stupid. If Luciane warned you the marquis was plotting rebellion, you should have prepared in advance!ā
Penelopeās anxiety boiled over, desperate because if she left empty-handed today, she feared the opportunity would never come again.
She snapped sharply at Mercian.
āMercian! If you truly cared about your sister and our family, you should have found and prepared that evidence long ago. You foolish girl! Donāt you understand that if the marquis stages a rebellion and fails, not only you but our entire family will be at risk? You shouldāve had the sense to prepare!ā
Do they really believe Ruan will start a rebellion?
What kind of man, who is about to die, tries to fight back?
Mercian looked at Penelope with weary frustration and spoke calmly but firmly.
āMother, Iām sorry, but for any reason, I have no intention of giving you, my sister, or His Highness the Crown Prince any evidence of Ruanās rebellion.ā
āWhat? What do you mean by that? Do you want your husband to betray us and for our family to be branded traitors and executed?ā
āThen just cast me out of the family. That would be easier. Disown me, and tell the Crown Prince I abandoned you and my sister to side with the marquis. If, despite that, he still chooses to meet Luciane, then maybe he truly cares for her. But if not, then he doesnāt love herāheās just using her…ā
SLAM!
Before Mercian could finish, her face snapped to the left.
āYou ungrateful wretch! Just you wait! I will become Crown Princess and then Empress. Evidence of the marquis? I donāt need any of that. From now on, youāre no longer my sister. Iāll make sure youāre banished from our family forever, just like you wanted. Mother, letās go. I refuse to have a foolish, ignorant girl like her as my sister!ā
Luciane, finally regaining her composure, couldnāt hold back any longer.
She jumped up and slapped Mercian across the face, shouting,
āLuciane, are you okay? Do you know how frightened I was? What are you doing? Mercian, apologize to your sisterāright now!ā
Mother, Iām the one who got slapped here.
You and my sister barged in, demanding nonexistent evidence just because of the Crown Princeās words. Shouldnāt you be apologizing to me?
Mercian wanted to shout this, but she held back, not wanting to cause a bigger scene.
āMercian, apologize to Luciane immediately!ā
Mercian lifted her head and met her motherās gaze steadily.
āIām sorry, Mother, but Iāve done nothing wrong. Itās Luciane who should apologize for trying to break into my husbandās room despite my warnings. Donāt you think so, sister?ā
āMercian!ā
Penelope, who had never experienced Mercianās stubbornness, was at a loss, nervously fidgeting.Ā
Luciane, knowing this, got up and left the marquisās estate.
āMother, Iāll speak with His Highness the Crown Prince myself. Please donāt worry. Letās go.ā
āLuciane, butāā
āMother, wait.ā
Mercian hurried after them.Ā
As much as she wanted to cut ties, she didnāt want anything truly terrible to happen to them.
Lucianne glanced back at Penelope like she was granting charity.
āIāll wait in the carriage. Mother, come say your final goodbyes.ā
āMercian,ā Penelope said, turning back to her.
āWhat happened to you? You may be the marquisās wife now, but that title only lasts five more months. If your sister becomes the Empressāā
Mercian grasped her motherās hands tightly, her expression earnest.
āMother. Please listen to me. This is the first and last thing Iāll ever say to you from my heartānot for Lucianne, but because you raised me. Please… be careful with the Crown Prince.ā
āWhat?ā
āHeās not a good man. I overheard Ruan speaking with someone who said the Crown Prince brings women to spend the nightāand sometimes, those women donāt wake up. Please, keep your distance from him.ā
āThatās nonsense!ā
āI mean, donāt believe everything the Crown Prince says. Think about itāwhy would he go out of his way to pursue a minor family like ours and approach my sister?ā
Penelope frowned, her voice sharp.
āAre you so jealous that your sister might become Crown Princess? You know youāre only living as the marquisās wife because of her, and yetāā
Despite Mercianās heartfelt warning, Penelope only believed Lucianeās words.
Mercian had nothing more to say.
I never expected you to believe me anyway.
āIāve done all I needed to do. The rest is up to the two of you.ā
Mercian looked Penelope squarely in the eye and said,
āSigh, Iāve made myself clear. Whatever happens later, donāt hold it against me.ā
āMercian, I understand your jealousy of LucianeāI truly do. But just this once, help your sister. Bring me evidence of your husbandās treason. This is a motherās first and last request.ā
Penelopeās words tried to soothe, but Mercian pulled her hand away firmly.
āMother, Iām sorry. Like you said, in five months Iāll be leaving both the marquisās estate and the viscountās. I donāt want to get involved in this.ā
Seeing Mercianās unwavering refusal, Penelopeās anger flared.
āFine. I thought you might come with me and agree to find the proof, but no. What else could I have expected from you?ā
The carriage door swung open, and Luciane shot a cold glance at Mercian.
āMother, itās time to go. Sheās no longer part of our affairs.ā
āMercian, if you change your mind tomorrow, contact me. Listen wellāyour sister will become Crown Princess. Donāt regret it later.ā
Lucianeās words hung in the air as Penelope turned toward the carriage, but not before delivering one last plea to Mercian to bring back proof.
Then they climbed in, and the carriage rolled away.
At first, Mercian had considered giving up the evidence just as Tablo suggested.
Ruan had deliberately left evidence in the study.Ā
Luciane so desperately wanted to become the Crown Princess.Ā
How hard could it be to hand over a single piece of proof?
But after hearing what Tablo said about the Crown Prince, her thoughts deepened.
If he truly was as cold as Ruan describedābringing women to his bed and killing those he dislikedāwould it end with just this once?
No, it wouldnāt.Ā
Once she started handing over evidence, theyād demand more and more.
Better to give nothing at all.
Even if it meant taking all the blame herselfā¦
Even if it meant severing ties with her mother and sisterāno matter how bad that would beā
Because once she started down that road, sheād never be able to stop being dragged along.
That was the conclusion Mercian reached after a sleepless night of agonising over her decision.
***
In the early dawn, Mercian hurried to Edward and asked him to find defensive magic tools.
She then casts protective wards on Ruanās room and the study.
She knew Luciane would never trust that the wards were her doing.
What she hadnāt expected was that the magic was stronger than she thoughtāLuciane had been unconscious for over an hour.
Maybe that was why things ended up easier than expectedā¦
Mercian touched her swollen cheek and gave a bittersweet smile.
Honestly, she hadnāt planned to say anything about the Crown Prince until the very end.
But watching Penelope walk away, she couldnāt help but feel worried and ran after her to share what she knewā¦
And yet, to think they would accuse her of slandering the Crown Prince out of jealousy toward Lucianeā¦
Well, even though Luciane said sheād throw Mercian out of the family, Penelope never once agreed to it.
Instead, all she did was worry about her sisterās health.
Those two seem to be very familiar to them.
How perfectly everything fits into the plan without a single hitchā¦
Mercian felt less joy at the success of her plan and more sadness that everything had gone so flawlessly.
Knowing Lucianeās nature, she was certain her sister would indeed kick her out of the family.
And now, sheād probably start searching for a way to erase Mercian from their lives without attracting blame.
Yes, this is it.
This is truly the end of our ties.
From now on, Iām completely alone.
Five months remain.
I just need to stay quiet during that time and then retreat to the countryside.
Staring at the carriage disappearing into the distance, Mercian rubbed her aching cheek and murmured,
āTomorrow, this swelling will be even worse. Maybe I should have asked Charles to bring me an ice pack after allā¦ā
Horrible, horrible, toxic people, you are better off without them Mer.