Chapter 64
The moment Marsha stepped down from the carriage, the sight before her nearly made her dizzy.
The dukeās estate in Delua was beyond comparison to the villa in Sedem.Ā
Just the servants lined up neatly to greet their master numbered more than fifty.Ā
Considering the staff working in the kitchens, laundry, and other areas, the household must employ over a hundred people.
āYour Grace. Youāve returned.ā
An elderly butler bowed deeply, and the servants bent their backs in unison.
āYes. You received my letter, I assume.ā
āOf course, Your Grace. And this must be the daughter of Viscount Railford?ā
The butler fixed his eyes on Marsha, and her lips trembled under the weight of his gaze.
I still canāt get used to that titleā¦
For the time being, Marsha had become the Viscountās daughter.
The Railford family was a modest house settled on the northern edge of the March of Severia.Ā
Even during the summer season, when nobles flocked to Delua, the family never traveled to the capital.Ā
The viscount was frail, uninterested in power or in the noblesā endless diversions.
The viscountās daughter had inherited her fatherās weakness.Ā
While resting in Sedem, she happened to stumble upon an injured Claudio in the woods.Ā
Not knowing who he was, she had treated his wounds.Ā
In return, Claudio invited her to his estate in Delua.
Thus was spun the taleāhalf-truth, half-fabricationāthat explained why the āViscountās daughterā had arrived in Delua at Claudioās side.
āI will serve you with utmost devotion.ā
āYouād better. She is the savior of my life, after all.ā
Claudio bent and pressed his lips to the back of Marshaās hand.Ā
The old butlerās face flickered with startled confusion.
W-what on earth is he doing!Ā
Does he really need to put on such a show in front of all these people�
Marshaās cheeks burned crimson.Ā
She longed to pull her hand away and protest, but no viscountās daughter would dare refuse the duke so openly.Ā
She had no choice but to endure it.
***
When they had arrived at the Gloria villa in Sedem, Marsha had been nervous and exhausted, yet still found herself stealing glances at the magnificent building.
But here, in the ducal seat of Delua, she could not even manage that.
āWhewā¦!ā
At last, in Claudioās study, she released the breath she had been holding.
āWhy are you so tense? You look more like a noble lady than anyone else, you know.ā
No conversation was needed to tell a true noblewoman from a pretender.Ā
Those raised and educated among the aristocracy carried an effortless grace, even standing still.Ā
Just like Marsha now.
āHow could I not be nervous? Iām lying.ā
It was unnerving enough to deceive a handful of peopleāhow much worse to deceive an entire household?Ā
Her mouth was parched, her insides aflame with anxiety.
āThereās no need to be so tense inside the estate. The staff are discreet. Even if you act strangely, nothing will leak outside.ā
Claudio tapped the stack of invitations piled high on his desk, sending them spilling across the surface.
āThe real concern is the parties. Do you remember why I asked you to take on this tiresome role?ā
āā¦ā
Having signed the contract, Marsha had no choice but to comply.Ā
Only a few days earlier, Claudio had explained in detail why he needed her.
āYou said⦠āThe future queen is behaving in a way that could cause scandal.āā Marsha replied curtly. Handsome as he was, sheād assumed plenty of women chased him. But to hear that even the kingās fiancĆ©e had fallen under his spell? It sounded like something out of a foreign tale, where a manās beauty could topple nations. And Claudio certainly seemed capable of it.
āYour expression makes it look as though I seduced her. Iāve told you time and againāI despise that woman.ā
Claudio had no wish to speak of Beatrice to Marsha.Ā
He had brought her here precisely to guard against that woman, and yet.Ā
Better to explain clearly from the start than let it fester in secrecy.
āAnd it isnāt just about her. More than anything, I need to show the man who hurt me that I am alive and well.ā
āI see⦠Youāre right.ā
Marsha nodded gravely, face taut with tension.Ā
Claudio gestured toward the scattered invitations.
āSo. Which gathering shall we attend first?ā
āI wouldnāt know. I suppose Iāll just follow wherever Your Grace decidesā¦ā
Claudio narrowed his eyes.Ā
Marsha flinched.
āWhat now? Whatās displeasing you this time?ā
āEven when itās only us, you insist on calling me āYour Grace.āā
Her head ached at his constant complaint.Ā
Was it truly so wrong to call a duke by his title?
If I get used to calling him by name, and then slip up in front of othersāthat would be a disaster!
Even in the Duchy of Domique, it was rare for an unmarried man and woman to address each other by name.
Among the nobles of Stravine, the taboo was stricter still.Ā
And he wasnāt just any manāhe was a duke.Ā
Even if Claudio didnāt mind, society would erupt in scandal.
āSo, you donāt want to choose a party?ā
āItās not that I donāt want to. I simply donāt know enough to make a choiceā¦ā
āWell, if thatās the case, thereās nothing for it.ā
He gave a half-smile, lifting one corner of his lips.Ā
Marshaās stomach knotted.Ā
Perhaps she should have just picked one at random.
***
News of Claudioās return spread swiftly through Delua.
Since pledging his support to the king, he had spent every summer season in the capital.
āBut last year, he only came at the height of the season, and left earlier than anyone. Why return so soon this year? Could it be he intends to join society this time?ā
āOh, if only he would grace our familyās party⦠it would be the greatest honor!ā
The ladies of fashion found Claudio intimidating and forbidding.Ā
Few dared speak to him, and none expected to.Ā
Yet they still longed for his presence at their gatheringsāfor the prestige of it, if nothing else.
āBut inviting the duke means we canāt invite her.ā
āAh⦠that young ladyā¦ā
The name none dared speak aloud, lest someone overhear and spread gossip: the Marquess of Hemesās daughter.
The kingās betrothedāyet she brazenly pursued Claudio, leaving a trail of scandal.Ā
Invite her, and Claudio would never come.
But it would be unthinkable not to invite her.
She was destined to be queen.Ā
To snub her would be political suicide.
As the ladies fretted, the gentlemen pondered in their lounges.
āThe dukeās distaste for women is well known.ā
āHe doesnāt seem overly fond of men either.ā
āBe that as it may, he must secure an heir someday. Until now, āthat young ladyā has been the obstacleā¦ā
One cleared his throat, lowered his voice, and glanced around.
āBut in time, she will be queen. Then the duke will marry, surely.ā
āAnd?ā
āI was thinking⦠perhaps I could introduce my daughter to him this seasonā¦ā
āHa! Keep dreaming. How could a countās daughter ever become the duchess? The late dukeās wife was a princess of Molt.ā
āAre you saying only foreign royalty could be his bride?ā
āWell⦠unless she is exceptionally beautiful. Like my daughter.ā
āHa!ā
The older nobles all longed to see their daughters by the dukeās side.Ā
Those without daughters watched instead for any chance to tie themselves to Claudioās thriving ventures.
Then, into both the ladiesā salons and the gentlemenās lounges, a shocking rumor spread.
āWhat? The duke himself is hosting a party? Impossible!ā
āItās true. The most famous salon designers in the capitalāall of them marched into the ducal estate carrying catalogs of unreleased work!ā
Unbelievable.Ā
The Duke of Gloria, who held only the occasional gathering for his vassals in Gloem, the duchyās capital?
āBut why salon designers? He already has a personal tailor, and salons only handle dressesā¦ā
āWell, word is⦠he brought back a young lady from his holiday. And this party is being prepared for her.ā
āNo! Truly? Who is she? What family does she belong to?ā
āThey say⦠itās complicated.ā
And so the tale of the impoverished Viscountās daughter who saved the Duke of Gloria spread like wildfire through Delua.Ā
Inevitably, it reached Beatriceās ears.
What on earth is happening?
In the shadowed chamber, curtains drawn, she sat unmoving, her thoughts in disarray.
Why? Why is this happening?
Her fist clenched tight.Ā
Her nails dug into her palm until blood welled.
A knock broke the silence.
āMy lady. There is⦠a visitor waiting in the stables.ā
The maidās voice quavered with fear.