Thara could feel his eyes boring twin holes into her forehead as she sat by the empty hearth. It was unnerving. The last time someone had stared at her with such intensity was when she was thirteen and unknowingly ripped the seat of her pants while playing boats with her brothers at the lake. Her brothers hadn't let on (at her expense), and she couldn't figure out why some of the lads kept staring at her in a way that suggested they couldn't help themselves.
She wished she could feel as merry and vibrant as Regina was at dinner in her colorful, plumed dress. But despite having been "rescued," as Ardon had called it, and brought to a wonderful city, despite being told her mother had done very well for herself and her family, and that she would no longer have to scrape a living working the streets as a maid or shopgirl, Thara felt she had been given another short stick.
It wasn't as though she had dreams of being someone. She didn't really know what she wanted to do yet. Her mama had always told her she was a bricky girl and would sort things out in time. But until then, she had at least imagined herself settling in a nice town somewhere and buying a house, maybe opening up a shop. A bookshop, perhaps. She'd always liked to read. She had also imagined having a husband and two children to share that house and shop with. That picture, of her sitting around a table at Christmas with her imaginary family laughing over a meal of roast fowl, had pasted itself into her mind as she bounced from employ to employ.
But now it could never be. Because she was here, in Aldochor City, engaged to a man who would take her mother's wealth and confine her to a life of embroidery and party planning. A life of cursed frilly skirts and silly hairstyles. And
no pants.
Well, sod that. Maybe she would run away again and become an actress like Regina. She seemed happy and free and independent
.
Her
husband hadn't barred her from the stage after they married. She had Horace wrapped around her little finger.
A shrew
, Thara thought, but not in a mean way.
Irritated to see that Ardon was now staring at the lace hem of her petticoat, which had ridden up slightly because she was slouched in her chair, she shot him a look of pure loathing and got up to peruse the bookshelf. She didn't know why she was angry with him, and suspected it was a mixture of frustration at her own horrible situation and his apparent lack of empathy over dinner.
The bookcase housed several encyclopedias and a smattering of plays, philosophical treaties, and fictional works. Thara flipped through some of them and moved further along the shelf, forgetting about the others in the room.
"You look upset." His deep voice startled her and she jumped, feeling goosebumps erupting down her arms. Ardon had joined her, and now stood towering over her left shoulder reading the title of the book in her hand. "
A Study of Botany.
How interesting." His tone suggested the exact opposite.
He had no right to look the way he did, Thara thought, her eyes taking a quick peek before turning back around to studiously ignore him. His chest was wider than her shoulders, enveloping her back with a warmth she could feel right through the silk. It reminded her of their night ride to the train station, galloping down the road with nothing but the moon above their heads and her back pressed tightly to that hard wall of muscle.
"It's
quite
interesting, actually." Thara ignored his thrust because she didn't want to get into another argument tonight. She opened the book and pretended to be engrossed in the illustration of a sprig of cow parsley. "Not many people realize how useful weeds can be. Medicinally, I mean."
"I'm sorry if I upset you over dinner." He was whispering so that the others wouldn't hear, but they were too busy playing dominos to notice. "I was only jesting."
"It's easy to jest when you aren't being led to shackles as I am." Thara snapped the book closed and set it back in its place.
"You're aren't being led to shackles. You can choose to leave and take the money you already have."
Thara huffed. "As much as I'd love to, I can't. This company is all I have left of my family." She watched Horace whoop from across the room as he won a round, before turning around to look properly at Ardon, and was yet again struck by how blue his eyes were, like the color of the sky on a hot summer day, clear and cloudless.
"I've seen women who wear dresses like this." Thara looked down at herself. Ardon did the same, although from a much different vantage pointβone that gave him a generous view of her dΓ©colletage. "They sit around all day eating cookies and complaining about how their dresses don't match their bonnets." She spat out the last word like it was a curse. "I don't want to be like them."
"I believe you just insulted my sister." Ardon grinned.
"I don't care," Thara said bitterly. "She obviously doesn't like me, and for the stupidest reasons." Before he could ask what those reasons were, she began to list them on her fingers. "I offended her by arriving in my night dress, which by the way was your fault, I shouted at her, I wore her clothes and I don't cut up my breakfast sausages. I'm sure there's more, but I can't remember at the moment."
"You don't cut up your breakfast sausages." He was looking at her like he had outside
The Rosey Bush.
Like she had two heads.
"
Manners.
" Thara said patiently. "I don't have manners." When he continued to look blankly at her, she offered, "I'm a pig in a dress."