Chapter 9: You are a degenerate
I sat there on the low stool, knees almost brushing the hem of Gran Rosalinda’s skirts, and let her words settle over
like cold ash.
The fire popped again, sending a brief flare of light across her face. She looked every inch the stern matriarch, back straight, hands folded, eyes gleaming with that ancient, calculated hate.
For a long mont, I said nothing.
I let the silence stretch, tasting the venom she had just poured between us.
My pulse thudded heavily in my throat.
Part of
wanted to laugh.
Another, darker part wanted to reach across the space and see how far that clever tongue of hers could really go.
Then I leaned forward slowly, elbows on my knees, and t her gaze without blinking.
"Leave?" I echoed, voice low and rough, almost amused.
"You want
to slip out like a thief in the night, Gran? Take my silver and vanish so your precious daughter can pretend she’s still so untouched woman who never spread her legs for the boy she raised?"
I watched the muscle twitch at the corner of her mouth.
Good, she felt that.
I smiled, small and ugly.
"You think I don’t know what this is really about? You’ve hated
since the day Chelsea took
in. I was never your blood, never your grandson, just the dirty little weight that kept her from marrying so decent man who could’ve given you proper grandchildren. You sacrificed your own marriage, your own cunt, so she could play mother to . And now it eats at you that I’m the one who’s been fucking her now. Not so respectable farr or rchant. , the degenerate, she couldn’t keep her hands off."
My voice dropped lower, intimate, almost confiding.
"You know the worst part, Gran? She moans my na when I’m buried inside her. She claws at my back and bites her lip bloody, so you won’t hear. And every ti she cos, she looks guilty as sin... but she never tells
to stop. Never once."
I let that hang in the air between us, watching her composed face fracture just a fraction. The hate in her eyes burned hotter, but there was sothing else there now, sothing raw and unwilling.
I straightened a little but didn’t break eye contact.
"So no. I’m not leaving quietly. I’m not taking your bribe of land or gold or so fucking letter of marque. What I want—"
I leaned in closer, close enough that I could sll the lavender on her wrists, "—is to keep what’s mine. Chelsea is mine. She has been since the first ti she let
slide my hand under her skirts. You can sit there with your clever sches and your righteous anger all you like, but you’ll never take her from . Not with words. Not with silver. Not with anything."
I paused, letting my gaze drift deliberately down the line of her throat, then back up to her eyes.
A slow, mocking smile curved my lips.
"Unless, of course... you think you can offer sothing better than what your daughter gives ?"
The words landed like a slap.
The fire crackled loudly in the sudden, choking silence.
Gran Rosalinda’s hands tightened on the arms of her chair until the knuckles went white. Her breathing stayed asured, but I could see the storm gathering behind her eyes, the clever woman calculating, weighing, hating.
I held her stare, heart pounding, the thrill of defiance mixing with sothing darker, more dangerous.
"Your move, Gran," I said softly.
"Hate
all you want. But I’m not going anywhere."
*
The fire had burned down to embers by the ti my last words faded, but the heat in the room had nothing to do with the hearth.
Gran Rosalinda sat perfectly still, the only movent the faint rise and fall of her chest beneath the dark wool of her gown. Her hands remained folded in her lap, knuckles no longer white but relaxed now, as if my filth had washed over her and left her cleaner for it. She studied
the way a spider studies the fly already tangled in silk - patient, almost pitying.
A long minute passed.
The wind outside moaned through the eaves. Sowhere upstairs, a floorboard creaked once, then stilled. Chelsea, perhaps, is turning in her sleep. The sound seed to decide sothing in Gran.
She exhaled through her nose, a soft, almost amused sound, and when she spoke, her voice was velvet over iron.
"Bold words, little boy. From a man who still slls of my daughter’s bed."
Her eyes flicked down to my hands—still faintly marked with the day’s gri and, I knew, the faint scent of Chelsea that no amount of cold stew could erase—then back to my face.
"You think this is the first ti I have heard a man bare his teeth at ? You think your little confession shocks ?"
She leaned forward a fraction, elbows on the arms of the chair, and the firelight carved new shadows under her cheekbones. The hate was still there, banked but alive, yet sothing else moved beneath it now: the quiet satisfaction of a player who had already seen three moves ahead.
"I have known since the first stolen night," she said.
"Do you rember last sumr? The night the roof leaked and Chelsea made you sleep in the loft? I heard the ladder creak at two bells. I heard her door open. I heard the sounds a mother should never hear from her own child. I sat in this very chair until dawn, counting every gasp, every muffled cry. And I began to plan."
Her smile was small, almost kind, and all the more terrible for it.
"You believe you own her. You believe your sickness is a secret. But I have spent weeks weaving a web you never noticed. While you rutted and drank and played at being a man with that brute Eskar, I spoke with him—quietly, over many cups of my best elderflower wine. He is fond of Chelsea. More than fond. He has already sworn to
that if you ever raise a hand to her in anger, or if you vanish under suspicious circumstances, he will see to it that your body is never found. Twelve silver today? He gives
reports for free."
She let that sink in, watching my face with those clever, unblinking eyes.
"And the silver you carry? Half of it ca from my own purse, funneled through him so you would never suspect. I have been paying for your ’dangerous work’ for two years now, Jake. Keeping you away from the house. Keeping you busy. Every late night, every bruise on my daughter’s thighs, every lie you told her about where you had been—I catalogued them all. I have letters. Dates. Nas of the tavern girls and the rchant’s wife in the next village. Enough to make Chelsea see you for the dented beast you are, should I ever choose to show her."
"Right after you beca eighteen, you went on a spree with all the won you ca across."
Gran tilted her head, the fire painting gold along the silver threads in her braid.
"But exposure is crude. I prefer elegance. I have already spoken with the reeve. A quiet word, a small gift of land I still hold in my own na from before I gave everything to raise you. One signature and you could be pressed into the king’s levy for the border wars—honorable service, they call it. Far from here. Far from her. Or, if you insist on staying..."
Her gaze drifted deliberately to the stairs, then back to .
"I have prepared sothing sweeter. Chelsea believes Eskar has asked for her hand. He has not yet. But he will the mont I tell him the ti is right. She is still young enough. Still beautiful enough. And she is tired, Jake. Tired in ways you have never bothered to see. I have been reminding her, gently, night after night, of what a steady man could offer. What a life without your shadow would feel like."
She paused, letting the words settle like dust after a battle.
"So you see, boy, I do not need to bribe you with gold or land tonight. I have already bought the future. I have already turned your own lust against you. Every ti you touch her now, you are only tightening the noose I have spent years knotting around your neck. You can defy . You can sneer and boast and tell yourself she will never leave you. But I know her heart better than you ever will. I raised it."
Gran Rosalinda sat back again, the chair creaking once beneath her.
The cold smile returned, sharper now, almost inviting.
"Tell , Jake. Does knowing all this change your answer? Or do you still wish to play the ga I have already won?"
The embers sighed and collapsed in the grate.
The room felt smaller than ever, the walls pressing in with the weight of every secret she had hoarded like a dragon with its gold. My heart hamred against my ribs, but this ti the thrill was edged with sothing colder—regard, maybe. Or the first faint taste of fear.
She waited, composed as ever, the cleverest woman I had ever known and the only one who had ever truly frightened .
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