Leonaâs cold, downward gazeâher golden eyesâflashed like those of a predator.
She looked ready to tear them apart at any moment.
âI-Iâll do it.â
âMotherâŠâ
Liriel shook her head, but Greta judged that they had to back down here.
Greta called a maid.
âOpen the locked room. Thereâare you satisfied now?â
âNo. Iâve changed my mind. Prepare a room larger than the one I used before. Furnish it with new furniture.â
âYour greed is excessive.â
âI consider it a fair request. Besides, I didnât ask for expensive pieces. Or shall I keep going here?â
ââŠVery well. I will do as you ask.â
Greta ordered the maid to prepare a new room with new furniture.
âAre you satisfied now?â
Leona smirked.
âLetâs avoid giving each other reasons to get heated from now on.â
âDonât think this is over. I will surelyââ
âRepay it?â
Leona cut her off, and Gretaâs eyes widened.
Leona continued,
âThat lineâvillains always say it. And villains always get whatâs coming to them.â
Greta was so taken aback she forgot what to say.
Leona tossed the sword in her hand onto the floor and sauntered out of Lirielâs room.
As the door closed, Lirielâs shriek burst from within.
Leona dug at one ear with her pinky as she walked away.
âSo noisy. Did she boil and eat a pigâs heart?â
After that exorcism of a scene, she had a spacious new room and new furniture.
A satisfying result.
After a brief rest, Leona went to see Viscount Loim.
He was working in the vassalsâ private office within the countâs estate.
Leona arrived there.
Knock, knock.
When she knocked at the door, a polite voice from inside said, âPlease, come in.â
Leona opened the door and entered.
âHello, Viscount Loim.â
At her visit, a glint came into Loimâs eyes.
He adjusted his monocle, rose, and offered her a seat.
âPlease sit.â
Leona took the seat he indicated, and he sat across from her.
âWill you take tea?â
âNo. You seem busy, so Iâll stick to my business.â
âPlease, go ahead.â
His tone was very businesslike.
âI came to ask that you liquidate the inheritance my mother left me.â
âYou mean the former countessâs estate?â
âYes. Iâm an adult now and can exercise my rights concerning the inheritance, canât I?â
âThat is true, butââ
âPlease liquidate it. As quickly as possible.â
âMay I ask the reason?â
Leona answered as if it were obvious.
âIâm going independent. Thereâs no point staying at the countâs house when Iâm not treated like a person. Better to live on my own, donât you think?â
At Leonaâs blunt words, Viscount Loim wore a bitter look.
âUnderstood. I will do as you wish.â
âThank you, Viscount. Iâll take my leave, then.â
After she left the office, Viscount Loim sighed and stared into space.
Just as Leona had said, staying in the countâs household would only further diminish her.
So, as she said, it was better to become independent.
Returning to his desk, Viscount Loim sought out and reviewed the documents concerning the estate left by Leonaâs mother.
She had asked for a quick liquidationâhe intended to oblige.
Early in the morning, Leona washed up and confidently headed to the dining hall.
When she opened the door and entered, there was no one there but the staff.
Leona looked over the places already set and sat where she liked.
She didnât know whose seat it was; she simply chose one of the prepared places.
The staff looked at her in surpriseâ
Because the place she chose was Lirielâs seat.
One of the staff stepped forward to inform her.
âM-my lady. That is Lady Lirielâs seat. Weâll bring your meal over, so perhaps you could stand andââ
âI said Iâll be dining in the hall, too. Didnât you hear?â
They hadâjust hadnât expected her to actually come.
And soon the count and his family would arrive.
They had to move Leona before the count grew angry.
âIf you stay, the count will be displeased.â
Leonaâs lip curled.
âSo Fatherâs anger is frightening, but mine isnât, is that it?â
âP-pardon?â
âWhy should I avoid Father and eat separately?â
âTh-that isâŠâ
âEnough talk. Bring the food. Theyâll be here any moment.â
The maid bit her lip hard and withdrew.
Right then, the dining hall doors opened and Greta, Liriel, and Count Caliban entered.
All three fixed their eyes on Leona.
Leona greeted them with a bright smile.
âGood morning.â
âYou.â
âWhat are you doing here first thing in the morningâ!â
Greta and Liriel glanced at the count, flustered.
âLeona, what do you think youâre doing.â
Count Caliban looked at Leona with a cold faceâlike he was seeing something very displeasing.
Leona studied the father who had sired her.
Pomaded reddish-brown hair, sharp eyes, stubborn lips. Neither tall nor short, with a solid buildâhe exuded the dignity of the head of a countâs house.
In the past, whenever she looked at him, Leona had always shrunk, unable to speak properly.
Especially his cold gaze had terrified her.
But that was the old Leona. The reborn Leona could meet that cold gaze and smile.
âI came to dine together as well.â
âWho told you to eat in the dining hall?â
Even at his cold rebuke, Leona answered with a smile.
âLetâs not discriminate over something like that.â
âWhat?â
âPetty discrimination over foodâitâs childish, isnât it? Iâm tired of eating what you, Madam, and Liriel leave behind, every time.â
âWhat do you mean by that?â
Count Calibanâs gaze shifted to the staff. Their faces turned white.
âOhâso you didnât know.â
Leona continued smoothly, smiling.
âIâm glad you know now. Iâm the countâs eldest daughter in name, and if people hear I grew up eating othersâ leftovers, what will they think of you, Father? Donât you agree?â
âYouâŠâ
âAre you going to stand there forever? Iâm hungry.â
Count Caliban frowned, then went to his seat and sat.
Greta, giving Leona a displeased look, sat beside him.
And Lirielâ
âThatâs my seat.â
She stood pointing at the place where Leona sat.
âI came first. Sit somewhere else. There are plenty of chairs.â
Along the long table were twenty chairs.
âHah!â
âLiriel, stop making a fuss and sit.â
At the countâs words, Liriel swallowed her anger and took another seat.
The maids quickly set the place for her there.
Soon, the meal arrived.
Salad topped with thin slices of salmon, corn cream soup, sirloin steak with roasted vegetables.
All freshly prepared, steaming hotâand all of it went into Leonaâs stomach.
âBring dessert. Iâd like something sweetâmango pudding.â
âTh-thatâŠâ
Mango pudding was Lirielâs favorite dessert.
âYouâre not about to say thereâs only one because Liriel will eat it, are you?â
âW-wellâŠâ
âWow, seriously?â
âI-Iâll bring something else.â
âWhat else? Stale garlic bread?â
Whenever Leona asked for a snack, the staff had brought her hard garlic bread.
Leona had been grateful even for thatâbut no longer.
âI want mango pudding. Bring it to me.â
âThatâs mine.â
Unable to bear it, Liriel spoke up, and Leonaâs mouth twisted into a crooked smile.
âI asked for it first. So you can eat something else.â
âWhat did you say?â
âWell? Why arenât you bringing it?â
The staff looked to the count.
Count Caliban regarded Leona with a cold face.
âLeona, mind your manners. The mango pudding is Lirielâs.â
A clear line drawnâas if to say she was not allowed what she wanted.
It was laughable.
Leona barely suppressed a chuckle.
Wasnât this ridiculous behavior?
Before the mango pudding being served could land on Lirielâs plate, Leona rose, snatched the dessertâ
âand dropped it to the floor.
âOh, my mistake. My hand slipped.â
âYou did that on purpose!â
Liriel exploded.
Count Caliban knit his brows.
Leonaâs lip curled.
âLeona, such rudenessâwhat do you think youâre doing.â
âEating should be fair. Some getting to eat while others donâtâthatâs not right.â
âLeona!â
Count Caliban snapped.
âPlease donât lose your temper. Iâm barely holding mine.â
âWhat?â
âYou seem to think only you get to be angry. I can get angry, too.â
Count Caliban stared at her in disbelief.
âYouâve clearly taken leave of your senses.â
âThatâs why Iâm sayingâdonât discriminate over food. Then none of us would have reasons to be angry like this.â
âYou have no manners.â
âItâs natural I have none. I never received proper instruction.â
Nextâ