Chapter 18: You Are Safe
Alina was walking from the library to her room, carrying a book, when Lord Fenton, a drunkard noble, known for his loose character, blocked her way.
He was so drunk that he couldn’t even stand properly.
"The duke’s little warr," he slurred, looking her up and down. "Out for a stroll?"
"None of your business," she said.
He looked at the books in her hands and a crooked smile appeared on his face.
"Reading?" He scoffed. "That’s what won do when they can’t do anything useful."
"Lord Fenton," she said, calmly. "How is your estate? I hear the creditors visited again last month. That makes it the third ti this year, doesn’t it?"
His smile disappeared.
"And Lady Thornton must be very generous," she continued. "Entertaining you every Thursday while your wife waits at ho."
His expression hardened.
She had learned this gossip from Lord Ashby and Lady Talbot. She had been listening to every whisper and every rumour carefully since she had arrived at Ravenmoor. Information was the only currency she possessed.
"You little..."
His hand shot out and grabbed her wrist. The books slipped from her hands. His fingers dug into her skin, tight enough to hurt.
"You think you can talk to
like that?" He snapped. "You think because the duke keeps you warm at night, you can..."
"If you don’t let go of , I will walk into the great hall tonight and tell everyone exactly where you spend your Thursdays."
Suddenly, his hand dropped and he stepped back. Alina picked up her book and stood up slowly.
"Don’t touch
again," she said. "Don’t even co in front of
again. And think carefully, Lord Fenton, what will happen if the duke hears soone like you thought he could put his hands on his woman?"
The little confidence he had also faded away.
"We’ll see," she added. "whose position here is more precarious. Yours or mine."
He stepped aside without any other word. Alina walked past him with her head high despite her throbbing wrist and pounding heart.
At dinner, Fenton sat far down the table, drinking more than usual, and avoiding her gaze as if he didn’t know her.
Alina barely touched her food. The incident stayed with her, silent but impossible to ignore. Cruel words were still tolerable, but physical humiliation was too much for her to bear.
Later that night, as she walked towards Austin’s room, Lady Talbot called her.
"Alina."
Alina stopped and turned.
"I heard." She said.
"Heard what?"
"What Fenton did in the west corridor." Lady Talbot stepped closer, lowering her voice. "My maid heard it from a kitchen boy. Lord Fenton...has already begun telling his version of the story."
"What version?" She asked, curious.
"That you tried to seduce him," Lady Talbot replied. "And he put you in your place."
The words felt absurd, yet plausible.
"That’s ridiculous," she said, clenching her hands at her sides.
"I handled him," Alina said. "I made sure he wouldn’t co near
again."
"You handled the mont," Lady Talbot said gently. "But Fenton is spreading rumours which make you a... "
Lady Talbot was right. The truth didn’t matter. The story that was spreading did. The story where she seduced n in the castle despite belonging to the duke.
"Tell the duke," Lady Talbot said. "Before he gets to know from soone else. If you don’t correct the story now, it will beco the truth."
Alina nodded.
"Be careful," she said and left.
That night, Alina lay in bed, thinking about whether to tell him or not.
If she told him, she would be asking for his help and she didn’t want to need him. She didn’t want to depend on him.
I won’t ask him. I’ll handle Fenton myself.
Austin entered, and he lay on his side, like always.
"Fenton." He said, suddenly.
Alina almost stopped breathing.
"I heard," he said. "About what happened in the west corridor this afternoon."
She turned to him.
"Who told you?"
"It doesn’t matter. He has been reassigned to the northern garrison. He will leave at dawn."
She sat up.
"I didn’t ask for that."
"You didn’t need to."
"I handled the situation. I used his own secrets against him and walked away."
"I know." He replied, softly.
"Then why are you reassigning him?"
He looked at her.
"Because by morning, everyone would know my bed warr tried to seduce my drunkard lord and he put her in her place."
She froze.
"This narrative will make you a target for every trash man in this castle. He isn’t being reassigned because you couldn’t handle him. He is being reassigned because his version of the story needed to be stopped." He paused. "And the only way to end a story is to remove the storyteller."
Oh! So he isn’t protecting . He is protecting the narrative.
"Give
your hand," he said.
She didn’t move.
"Alina. Give
your hand."
Slowly, she extended her arm across the space between them. His fingers closed around her wrist and she held her breath.
He turned her hand slightly, looking at the bruise under her sleeve. He brushed his thumb over it three tis. For a mont, he looked angry, but then regained his composure.
He released her hand. She pulled her hand back quickly, pressing it against her chest, as if to hold onto the warmth he had left behind.
"Go to sleep."
That’s all?? What are you expecting, Alina?? Control yourself.
At dawn, the sound of horses stirred her sleep. Austin’s side of the bed was empty. He was gone, earlier than his usual ti. She lay still for a mont, listening to the murmur of voices from below.
She stood, walked to the window, and looked down into the courtyard.
Lord Fenton sat stiffly on a horse at the gate. His face was flushed, his shoulders hunched, and his eyes fixed on the ground. He looked humiliated and embarrassed.
A servant stood beside him holding a bag. Within a few monts, the gates opened and he left.
When he was gone, Alina saw Austin standing at the edge of the courtyard, his arms crossed, watching Fenton’s departure as if making sure he had really left.
Then he looked straight at her window. Their eyes t across the courtyard. Even from a distance, she could read his expression, which said:
You don’t need to worry now. You’re safe.
Reviews
All reviews (0)