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Chapter 8: Leave my daughter

Chelsea looked at

with the eyes of a woman who could read, compose,polish, and extract from them everything I wasn’t saying. She had been doing this my entire life. It remained extrely inconvenient.

"Mm," she said.

"Mm," said Gran Rosalinda, from the chair, at exactly the sa pitch and with exactly twice the amusent.

"I’m going to eat sothing," I said, standing.

"If there’s anything left."

"There is," Chelsea said.

"The kitchen. And Jake—"

I stopped at the doorway.

Her expression had settled — not soft, exactly; Chelsea didn’t really do soft as a default—but the particular shape her face made when the actual feeling got through the composed surface. The thing underneath the crossed arms and the quiet anger.

The thing that had been sitting with a cold dinner, watching the hour get later, doing the arithtic that mothers and the people who served as mothers did, the arithtic where late plus dangerous work plus no word equaled an expanding weight of worry.

"Next ti," she said, "send word if you’ll be late."

"I know," I said.

"I’m sorry. I should have."

She looked at

for a mont. Then she nodded once, the matter put away.

"There’s stew," she said.

"And bread from this morning. It’s still good."

I went to the kitchen.

Behind , I heard Gran Rosalinda say, very quietly, to Chelsea: "Twelve silver, and he ca ho safe. That Eskar looks after him."

Gran had been pushing Auntie to think about Eskar. I really need to do sothing about Gran; otherwise, she will take away my Auntie.

And Chelsea’s response, quieter still, with the precise tone of soone who knew they were being watched and was choosing their words carefully: "He’s reliable. I said that."

Hmmm, you are mine, Auntie; nobody can take you from .

Gran Rosalinda made a sound that, across the generational gap, was remarkably similar to the sound Eskar made around .

I sat in the kitchen and ate my cold stew and thought about a pair of composed dark eyes and a corner of a mouth that had moved, just slightly, like a candle fla behind glass.

Twelve silver coins.

An uneventful road.

A late dinner.

Not a bad day, all considered.

*

I scraped the last of the stew from the bowl with the heel of my bread, the cold fat congealing at the edges like old candle wax.

I even had to lick my fingers clean, savoring the remnants of the stews. My Auntie cooks really well, so good that I could eat ten tis a day.

The kitchen fire had burned low, nothing but a sullen red glow behind the grate, and the house had gone quiet in that way houses do when everyone is pretending to sleep but no one really is. My belly was full enough, but the weight in my chest hadn’t eased. Twelve silver coins still clinked in the pouch at my belt, Eskar’s quiet paynt for another day of keeping my neck unbroken.

I thought of Chelsea’s eyes again—those dark, composed eyes that had tracked

since I was small enough to hide behind her skirts and felt the familiar twist low in my gut, not guilt. Sothing hungrier.

I pushed the stool back, the legs scraping loudly against the stone floor, and then I washed my hands.

I stepped out into the main room, and as soon as I did, I saw a figure sitting in the main room, watching .

Gran Rosalinda.

She sat in the high-backed chair by the hearth as if she had never moved, though I knew she had. The firelight painted half her face in shifting orange, the other half lost in shadow. Her hands rested on the arms of the chair like a queen on her throne, knuckles still strong despite the years. She was watching the doorway when I erged, eyes steady, unblinking. The sa eyes Chelsea had inherited, only older, sharper, and carrying none of the softening that ti had tried to press into her daughter.

"Jake," she said. Her voice was low, almost gentle, almost.

"Co. Sit before ."

I paused halfway across the room.

The air felt thicker here, heavier with the sll of cold ashes and dried rosemary from the rafters. I could feel the weight of her stare like a hand on my throat.

Gran had never been warm to . Not once in all the years she had helped Chelsea drag

up from a scrawny, fatherless whelp into... whatever I was now. She had given up her own chances at marriage, she liked to remind people when the wine flowed. Dedicated herself to her daughter’s burden, to .

The boy who wasn’t blood. The boy who had made Chelsea’s life difficult.

I crossed the last few steps slowly and lowered myself onto the low stool she indicated, knees almost brushing hers. Close enough to sll the faint lavender she still rubbed into her wrists. Close enough to see the fine lines at the corners of her mouth tighten.

For a long mont, she said nothing. Just looked at . The fire popped once, sending a spark spiraling up the chimney.

"You ate," she said at last.

"I did."

Another silence.

She tilted her head a fraction, studying

the way a butcher studies a side of at, deciding where the knife should go in.

"I have watched you grow, boy. Watched you take and take and never quite give back what was owed. Chelsea gave you everything. Her youth, na and future. I gave her the space to do it, and in doing so, I gave up my own. Do you understand what that cost?"

Her voice stayed quiet, but the edge was there now, honed like a fresh blade. I felt my pulse kick against my collarbone. My mind flickered unbidden to Chelsea upstairs, how her hair had looked last night spread across the pillow, how she had bitten her own wrist to keep from crying out when I—

Gran’s eyes narrowed, as if she could see the thought crawl across my face.

"I know," she said.

Two words - Flat and final.

Eh!

My stomach did sothing unpleasant. I kept my face still, but my hands wanted to clench. "Know what, Gran?"

She leaned forward a fraction, firelight catching in her eyes.

"Do not play the fool with , Jake. I have wiped your arse and buried your secrets since you were seven. I know what you are. Pervert and a degenerate. I know you have been rutting my daughter like a dog in heat under my own roof."

The word hung between us, ugly and exact. Heat flooded my neck. Part sha, part sothing darker—thrill at being nad so plainly. I opened my mouth, but she lifted one finger, and the words died.

"I have held my tongue long enough. Because she loves you in her way. Because she chose this ruin for herself. But I am done watching her carry the weight of you. The late nights. The bruises she thinks I do not see. The way her eyes go hollow when you disappear for days and co back slling of other won and cheap wine."

Her voice had dropped to a whisper now, but it filled the room like smoke.

Hate sat there between us, old and thick and well-fed.

I could taste it.

"Leave," she said.

The single word landed like a stone in still water.

"Leave quietly. Tonight, if you have the spine for it. Take the silver you earned today and whatever else you can carry from the stores. Go north, go south, I do not care. Just leave her be. Let her have one chance at a life that is not bent around your sickness."

She paused.

The fire crackled again.

Outside, wind rattled the shutters.

Then her mouth curved - just the smallest, coldest smile I had ever seen on her face. The hate did not vanish. It sharpened, turned, and beca sothing else.

"Or," she said, soft as a confession, "tell

what you want. Na your price. Land. Gold. A horse and a blade and a letter of marque from so distant lord who does not know what manner of creature you are. Whatever it takes for you to walk out that door and never lay your filthy hands on my daughter again."

She sat back, hands folding neatly in her lap once more, but her eyes never left mine. Clever eyes. Patient eyes. The eyes of a woman who had spent decades waiting for this exact mont.

"Choose, boy. Hate

if you like.

But choose."

The room was suddenly too small.

The stool beneath

felt like it might tip. I could hear my own heart hamring against my ribs, loud enough that I wondered if she could hear it too. Twelve silver coins suddenly felt very light in my pouch.

Gran Rosalinda waited.

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