~Chapter 33~Ā
āHow could he do that to you? My lady, you were so, so worried about him. You came all the way to this distant, unfamiliar North just for himā¦ā
āIām okay. I came because I chose to. It canāt be helped.ā
āI really thought he would put his fiancĆ©e first.ā
This wasnāt the first time Eileen had fought with Cedric.
And it likely wouldnāt be the last.
Thatās why she calmed down fairly quickly.
āLike I said before, weāre really not a good match.ā
They were bound to break up anyway.
Maybe it was better to grow so distant that they couldnāt even stand the sight of each other.
If she could stop caring about what happened to him in the future, maybe that would be better.
āSo Iām fine.ā
Eileen forced herself to stay composed.
What she needed more than anything was time to think and a quiet place.
She rubbed her forehead and sighed, her mind overflowing with thoughts.
Finally, she stopped walking when she reached the entrance of an empty, desolate garden.
āMary, wait here.ā
āBut, my ladyā¦ā
āThereās no one here.ā
The vast area looked like it had been abandoned for years.
It mustāve once been a beautiful garden.
But because the lady of the house had been absent for so long, everything was overgrown and neglected.
Without waiting for Maryās reply, Eileen began walking forward.
āI can finally breathe.ā
Just for a few hours, she wanted to be alone without seeing anyone.
Being around others meant sheād have to talkāand right now, talking was the last thing she wanted.
āWhy wonāt Cedric just listen to me?ā
She muttered, annoyed, as she passed a nearly dried-up, ugly pond.
Then she heard a rustling noise nearby.
āā¦Whoās there?ā
At first, the word āassassinā flashed through her mind, but she quickly dismissed it.
What kind of assassin makes that much noise?
She glanced around as she walkedāthen her foot slipped.
āPull yourself together, Eileen!ā
She cried out internally.
As she instinctively reached out to grab something, someone grabbed her arm and pulled her back forcefully.
Eileen let out a breath of relief and finally looked at the person beside her.
āAre you alright?ā
It was a calm and polite voiceāclearly someone of noble status.
Realizing that, Eileen immediately straightened her posture.
She let go of his hand as she regained her balance, and the man stepped back.
He was wearing a leather gloveābut only on one hand.
āAre you hurt anywhere?ā
Since Eileen didnāt answer right away, the man asked again in a composed voice.
He seemed very calm and collected.
But Eileenās silence wasnāt because she couldnāt speak.
It was because of what she saw when she finally looked up and met his eyes.
They were a light bluish-gray, like a winter skyācold and mysterious.
āYouāreā¦ā
Eileen had a good idea of who he was.
***
Maybe he took her hesitation as confusion about his identity.
The man stepped back politely and introduced himself.
āForgive the late greeting. I am Theorn of Arwyn.ā
His voice was quiet and steady.
Hearing that, Eileen also regained her composure.
āYouāre Prince Theorn of Arwyn. Iām Eileen Cassier.ā
āYou know who I am?ā
He seemed mildly interested now that the conversation was flowing smoothly.
āIt would be more troubling if I didnāt. Iām soon to become a member of the Lowell family. Not knowing about Arwynāa kingdom weāve long exchanged withāwould be careless.ā
Of course, that wasnāt really why she knew him.
In truth, Eileen had been startled for a different reason.
If things had gone the way they were supposed to, Theorn shouldnāt be here yet.
He was supposed to come laterāpart of a royal envoy to congratulate Cedric on inheriting the dukedom.
Not appeared here alone and suddenly, as if he had come out of nowhere.
āThatās not wrong. Butā¦ā
His eyes were hard to read. Cold, bluish-gray, emotionless.
After pausing, he continued.
āItās just⦠Itās been a long time since someone treated me so casually, even after knowing who I am.ā
Ah, so that was the issue.
But now it would be awkward to suddenly act scared or wary.
āItās wrong to show fear when thereās no reason. Itās also disrespectful to the other person.ā
āMost people in the Empire seem to think differently.ā
He rubbed the back of his gloved hand with his bare oneāa habit, probably unaware of it himself.
Eileen pretended not to notice.
There was a reason Theorn brought this up.
The Kingdom of Arwyn was named after the goddess Arwyn, and not just in name.
The so-called āblessing of the goddessā was real.
While magic didnāt exist in this world, people from Arwyn were known to use something like magic.
But from Eileenās point of view, their abilities were quite limitedāand only worked within their own land.
āIgnorance is the root of fear.ā
She met his eyes directly as she said it, and for the first time, Theorn gave a faint smile.
āAs someone who occasionally benefits from that fear, I agree.ā
People always feared the unknown.
There were still rumors about how the Empireās first emperor had sent an army into Arwyn, and not a single soldier returned. All had vanished without a trace.
No survivors. No bodies. Nothing.
It was still debated whether it was true.
What was certain was that the goddessās blessing became useless once they left their land.
Thatās why Arwyn remained extremely closed off from the outside world.
Only Arwynās royal family, born with the goddessās mark, could use some of that power outside their homeland.
āSo, what brings you to Lowell this time?ā
The Empire couldnāt afford to go to war with Arwyn, so they used the northern Lowell family to keep relations peaceful.
āI came to expand trade with the Empire. The Lowell family kindly agreed to act as mediators for the negotiations.ā
āā¦Cedric?ā
āYes. Your fiancĆ©.ā
Theorn stared at her directly, like he had known who she was from the beginning.
The more they talked, the more Eileen felt like she was walking through fog, trying to find a path.
He was the complete opposite of Cedric.
āThen⦠why are you here, in this abandoned place? Itās not like theyād treat an important guest poorly.ā
āI heard the Duke of Lowell was away, so Iāve been looking around while I wait. I didnāt want to make a big deal out of my visit or receive loud, formal welcomes.ā
āI see.ā
Eileen fell silent.
She knew Cedricās absence was her fault.
So she ended up saying something she normally wouldnāt choose.
āThen⦠could we talk for a while? Iām curious about Arwyn.ā
Once again, the future she knew had changed.
Which meant she couldnāt rely on the āoriginal storyā anymore.
She would have to learn and predict things for herself from now on.
And now that the opportunity had comeāshe wanted to learn as much as she could about the original male lead.