Chapter 41
The sailorâs mention of the âsick noblemanâ could only mean one personâLuke.
A sense of foreboding prickled at me, and I frowned.
âSomethingâs wrong with Luke?â
First, I drew back some of the spiritâs power I had been using to propel the ship.
Maintaining that level of focus made it hard to hold a conversation.
Besides, the ship had already gained enough speed that it didnât need as much force as before.
Then, I pressed the sailor for details.
âThe nobleman you mentionedâŠ?â
âI saw him when I brought his meal earlier. The one whoâs supposed to become the next Dukeâhe was burning up with fever.â
So Luke had fallen ill.
He had seemed fine yesterday, but leaving severe wounds untreated must have taken its toll.
âYou should probably check on him.â
The sailor fidgeted anxiously, clearly worried about the trouble a death on board would cause.
His pleading gaze locked onto meâprobably because heâd seen me treat the soldiersâ itching the other day and assumed I could heal Luke too.
âWhat a useless relative he turned out to beâŠâ
If I tended to him, I wouldnât be able to focus fully on steering the ship, delaying our arrival.
But I couldnât ignore a dying man either, so I went to check on Luke.
The moment I stepped into his cabin, the sickly-sweet stench of decay hit me.
Bloodied rags were strewn carelessly in the corner, and the bedding⊠well, it was best not to look too closely.
Honestly, it was no surprise his condition had worsened.
âWas he only lively yesterday because of painkillers?â
He must have been numb enough to move around, but the damage to his body was clearly severe.
I checked his temperature first.
âHigh feverâŠâ
Thanks to my in-game experience with various professions, I knew a lot about herbsâbut I wasnât a real doctor.
So, relying on common sense from my past life, I started by disinfecting his wounds.
Luckily, most were bruises, so only a few needed proper cleaningâhis forehead, lips, and the bridge of his nose.
Then, I mixed herbs to help with pain, inflammation, and fever and forced them down his throat.
âUghâŠâ
After a while, his eyes fluttered open.
âClaudiaâŠâ
My name rasped from his cracked lips.
Even though Luke was usually insufferable, seeing him like thisâbarely alive, weakly calling my nameâmade me pity him a little.
âWhy did you act so recklessly when you couldnât even resist His Highness anyway?â
ââŠâŠâ
âI heard you lied and said I slipped off the cliff on my own, then got beaten for it. Did you really think heâd just laugh it off? Heâs not as soft as I am.â
His breathing was labored.
Then, his lips moved as if trying to speak.
His voice was too faint to hear, but I could guess from the shape of his mouth.
âSorry?â
Thatâs what it looked like. But I couldnât be sure.
I considered asking him to repeat himself but decided against it.
A sick man wouldnât give me a coherent answer anyway.
âJust rest.â
Then, I started to rise from the chair.
Iâd done all I couldânow, I needed to get back to steering the ship.
ââŠâŠ?â
Before I could fully stand, his hand shot out and grabbed my wrist.
I had no choice but to sit back down.
âDoes he not want me to leave?â
Shaking off his weak grip wouldâve been easy.
But I couldnât bring myself to do it.
The thought of leaving him alone in this state made me hesitate.
ââŠIâll stay five more minutes. But I have to get back to the ship after that. Or I can call Nayla for you instead.â
âNoâŠâ
I assumed heâd prefer Naylaâs company over mine.
But when he shook his head firmly, I knew something was off.
Had he misheard me? Or had I misheard him?
âYou want me to call Nayla?â
âDonât⊠call her.â
I hadnât misheard.
This time, his refusal was clear.
âWhy?â
âShe doesnât want to come. She hasnât visited once since that dayâŠâ
After being exposed as a liar, she must have been too ashamed to face him.
I could understand that.
âSo he needs a substitute for Nayla, huh?â
Typical Luke.
When he grabbed me and told me not to call Nayla, I thought the fever had messed with his head.
But noâhe was still the same selfish man.
Then, he said something that stunned me.
âAnd⊠right now, Iâd rather have you here than Nayla.â
This time, I was certain.
Something was definitely wrong with Lukeâs brain.
In his right mind, heâd never say he wanted me by his side.
Iâd heard people act strangely when death loomed, but this was extreme.
âWhatâs wrong with youâŠ? Be your usual self.â
His uncharacteristic behavior was more unsettling than scary.
But he didnât snap back to normal.
âAbout those herbs⊠you were right. Nayla did use them wrong. I thought you were just making it up to humiliate her, butâŠâ
âYeah.â
âAnd you really did find the spirit⊠That wasnât a lie either.â
âRight.â
âThe painkillers⊠they really were from you, not Nayla.â
ââŠWhatâs your point?â
I cut straight to the chase as he listed his mistakes one by one.
His answer came quickly.
âI think⊠Iâve misunderstood you all this time.â
ââŠâŠâ
âI thought you were jealous of Nayla. Every move you made seemed like an attempt to frame her⊠But you kept proving me wrong.â
Seeing him regret it now didnât soften meâit just made me angrier.
âYou thought I was jealous of Nayla?â
A dry laugh escaped me before I continued.
âI have no idea why youâd delude yourself into believing something so ridiculous, but I have zero reason to envy anyone.â
Even if it was a contractual relationship, I had a handsome, devoted fiancé.
And my status wasnât something to scoff at eitherâI was the true daughter of Duke Ruberlissis.
No, actually, it was more than that.
With the Empress and my mother gone, I was currently the highest-ranking noblewoman in the Belkinus Empire.
So why the hell would I be jealous of Nayla?
I had half a mind to grab him by the collar and demand an answer.
âDonât ever make that disgusting assumption again. And my five minutes are upâI have to go.â
ââŠAlright. Sorry.â
Before I left, he lay back, covering his eyes with his armâalmost as if hiding tears.
It made leaving harder, but I had work to do.
With effort, I forced myself to walk away.
Thanks to my focus, the captain soon delivered good news: land was near.
If I pushed the speed, weâd arrive awkwardly in the middle of the night, so I stopped manipulating the currents.
That left me with free time.
And of course, I knew exactly how to spend it.
In bed with Nathan, rediscovering each other.
âYou have no idea how long Iâve waited for this.â
Time apart had left him parched.
He made up for it by devouring meâstarting from my toes, working his way to the deepest, most secret places, leaving no inch untouched.
By the dim moonlight, we relearned each otherâs bodies, only parting as dawn approached.
Afterward, we lay in a pleasant haze of exhaustion.
âHaaâŠâ
I exhaled deeply, burying my face in his chest.
The emptiness that followed always needed to be chased away with shared warmth.
He held me tightly in his arms, refusing to let go.
For a while, the only sound in the cabin was our steady breathing.
Then, I broke the silence.
ââŠBy the way, I have a favor to ask.â
âA favor? Name it. Unless itâs pardoning your brotherâs crimesâthen no.â
ââŠYou guessed? That was what I was going to ask.â
âI had a feeling.â
Was I really that predictable? A small pout formed on my lips.
Meanwhile, he asked,
âDo you pity him?â
ââŠHe apologized to me while he was half-dead. Seeing someone so arrogant brought low just⊠got to me.â
He sighed.
Hearing that, I hesitated before asking,
âDoes that⊠disappoint you?â