Episode 3 ā Lotteās Gift
āItād be nice to hire a proper guard, but skilled people cost too much. And with the state of our fundsā¦ā
Elaine trailed off, and Celeia pressed her lips together.
All the money from the divorce settlement⦠I spent it all on Cheringen these past five years.
Clearing the land, buying expensive fertilizerājust to make it possible to grow potatoes.
Every bit of it had drained their coffers.
Now, almost nothing was left.
āOh, right. This came for you.ā
As if sheād nearly forgotten, Elaine handed over a letter.
Celeia glanced at the sender and gave a wry smile.
āSir Benian is nothing if not persistent.ā
āWell, it is nice that he always checks on you.ā
āItās not just checking ināthatās the problem.ā
Elaineās dry remark made Celeia smirk with a faint grimace instead of answering.
āMom!ā
A familiar voice came from the doorway. Both women turned their heads at once.
āLotte.ā
At her motherās call, a little face peeked through the crack in the door.
With short pink hair tied into two little pigtails, round rosy cheeks, and wide green eyes shining brightly, she was the picture of loveliness.
āCan I come in?ā
āOf course, my sweet girl.ā
Celeia pushed the letter aside and spread her arms.
The child dashed across the room on short legs and jumped into her embrace.
Lotte might act mature for her age, but Celeia knew she still loved cuddles.
āWhat were you up to, Lotte?ā Celeia asked warmly, smoothing her daughterās messy curls.
Just like her mother, her hair was stubbornly curly and quickly tangled.
A faint milky sweetness clung to her scent.
āI ate the sandwich Vera made, and read a book.ā
āOh? What book?ā
āThe Age of Revolution: The Livius Wars and Decline.ā
āā¦R-right?ā Celeia stammered slightly, darting a glance at Elaine, who only shrugged helplessly as if to say, Donāt look at me, I have no idea who gave her that one either.
āWasnāt it too difficult?ā
āNot really. It was annoying, though. The whole thing was way too biased toward Hilbrante, the winnerās side.ā
āā¦I see.ā
Lotte blinked her big, clear eyes.
Esperote Kastin Bertan.
That was the full name of the little girl Celeia had named with all her hopes.
She had been unusual from the start.
Even as a newborn, she barely cried, always staring around with alert, intelligent eyes.
She spoke earlier than other children, learned to read earlier, and grew so quickly that everyone who met her called her a genius.
But still⦠a five-year-old reading scholarsā history books?
The real change had come a few months ago.
Despite being told countless times not to walk while reading, Lotte had been doing exactly that, tripped over a rock, and fell.
āWhen she got back up,ā Vera, the head maid, explained, āthe young lady suddenly asked how old she was. When I said five, she muttered she couldnāt believe it, then started patting herself all over. And then she ran straight to you, Lady Celeia.ā
They had all been worriedāshe had never acted so strangely before.
But Lotte had brushed it off with a calm face, saying she mustāve just had a weird dream.
Odd as her explanation was, since nothing else seemed unusual after that, Celeia decided to let it go.
āMom?ā
Lotte tugged on her hand, snapping her out of thought.
āYes, dear?ā
āI want to give Maximilian a retirement gift.ā
āSir Devonshire?ā Celeia blinked.
Maximilian Devonshire had been their protector and captain of Cheringenās guard.
Originally a knight serving the old lord, heād planned to retire after his lord died.
But when the new ālordā had arrivedāa woman carrying a newborn childāhe had volunteered to stay, protecting them for five years.
āYes. Next week he wonāt be here anymore.ā
āBut he promised heād still visit sometimes, even after retiring.ā
āYeah, well, promises are promisesā¦ā
Lotteās vague mutter made Celeia pause, but she quickly shook off her unease.
āStill, itās a good idea. I was thinking the same thing.ā
Recently, Maximilian had finally agreed to retire.
After years of overwork, his body was worn down, and a stubborn gout diagnosis had sealed it.
Even so, he had worried, if I quit, who would protect my lady and the little one?
But Celeia had insistedāshe couldnāt bear to see him push his body further.
āThen maybe we should visit the market today, buy him something nice?ā Celeia suggested.
Lotteās green eyes sparkled, but instead of answering, she reached across the desk, where a newspaper always sat.
Celeia picked it up automatically, then froze.
Waitāthe front page articleā¦!
She didnāt want her daughter to see it.
Lotte might not know yet that her biological father was the emperorābut still, Celeia didnāt want her seeing an article about him fathering a child with another woman.
But before she could hide it, Lotteās little hands flipped the page herself.
āLetās seeā¦ā
To Celeiaās relief, Lotte didnāt even glance at the front-page news.
Instead, she turned to the next page, scanning the article about a Teian Kingdom envoy visiting the empire tomorrow for trade talks.
But the way Lotte studied the pageāfrowning seriously, staring intentlyālooked like she was poring over something far more important than it was.
Then she looked up suddenly.
āMom, letās not go today. Letās go tomorrow.ā
Something in her small face looked⦠deliberate, almost planned.
Celeia, relieved enough that sheād ignored the front page, nodded.
āAlright. Tomorrow it is.ā
āYes!ā
Lotte beamed.
Her lips curled into a grin she couldnāt hide, cheeks puffing, eyes turning into crescents.
Does she even realize how easy she is to read when she smiles like that?
Usually so adult-like, but moments like this reminded Celeia she was still just five.
She couldnāt help smiling back.
āAre you excited, young lady?ā Elaine teased.
āUh-huh. Really, really excited,ā Lotte nodded firmly.
Because Iāve got a special surprise in mind.
Her green eyes glimmered with secret intent, but neither Celeia nor Elaine noticed.
The next morning dawned bright and clear.
Cheringen might be barren, but it wasnāt lacking in sunlight.
The perfect day. My daughter picked well.
Celeia felt a little proud as she walked down the old castleās halls.
But her steps slowed when she spotted the broad-shouldered figure waiting by the entrance.
Though sheād barely made a sound, the knightās senses picked her up, and he turned at once.
āYouāre here.ā
āSir Elden.ā
Hayder Elden, one of the Bertan imperial knights.
At her call, he turned back with his usual blank expression.
Almost like he was hiding something.
Celeia told herself it was just her imagination.
āThe carriage is ready.ā
Theyād lived under the same roof for years, but their relationship was still stiff and formal.
Celeia let out a tiny, hidden breath of relief.
I did ask him to come along to the market, but I thought heād refuse.
Unlike Maximilian, Hayder wasnāt bound to obey herāhe was officially an imperial knight.
She rarely asked him for favors.
āUm⦠thank you.ā
At her quiet gratitude, Hayder looked back at her again.
Those deep navy eyes, gazing down at a woman so much smaller than himself, were impossible to read.