Thank you so much for all the support for far!
For those of you just joining us, I recommend reading from the beginning. The full novel is already published but will be posted here in installments. Copyright © 2021 Emma Xin
Quick recap: Spoiled heiress gets herself arrested on the wrong side of the island and sent to the rival plantation as a penal slave. The future viscount doesn't know that he has his family's greatest enemy in the palm of his hand, but he's decided that his new toy is better as a house slave.
Whatever could go wrong?
Chapter 7: Parley-Voo - Rafael's Perspective
"Is there nothing you can do for him?" I ask.
Doctor Guevara struggles to keep pace as we move swiftly through the corridor. He is an excellent physician. I only wish he would adopt my pace of life.
"We can try everything modern medicine has to offer. For an illness like your father's, that isn't not much."
My father is quickly deteriorating. Soon, even more responsibilities will fall to me. As confident as I am in my plan to reclaim this island, it requires twice the overhead. The old way of doing things is simple, yet ineffective. Instead of frivolous romps with the maids, luncheons with incredibly dull people occupy my afternoons. My wrists are sore from signing off on so many documents. I thank God that I have señor Velasquez to manage the details.
A double door at the end of the hallway has been cracked open. I pity the fool who finds himself in my way today.
"If you'll excuse me, doctor."
I put my hand on the old man's shoulder. This barrage of bad news will have to wait for some other time.
He nods.
I approach the familiar corner, rooms built for the pleasure of swordplay.
When I was young, I used to train with private tutors for hours on end. Village boys from San Miguel even came indoors for matches. Truly, great fun. I occasionally got the snot kicked out of me. It only grew my love for victory. That singular moment of fear as you commit to a target, the warm taste of forcing a surrender from a worthy opponent. As I got older and better, fewer boys came around to challenge me. Even when they did, they weren't always incentivized to win. The viscounty is no game. Women prove a more interesting sport, anyway.
That does not explain why someone is in my armory. If Isabel has sent one of her minions to turn the place upside down, I'll have them whipped for listening to her.
***
Upon entering the armory, I am stricken by the sight of a certain wild-haired penal slave. She has already torn many of my weapons from their carefully organized holsters.
"I'll assume that my sister is to blame for this."
The girl is tucked in the corner of the armory. The vast space required for proper dueling swallows her whole.
"Yes, Your Excellency," she says. "How the two of you are related, I'll never know."
My title still seems to be a great source of contention for her. I move closer to the workbench. Though disrupted, nothing appears to be broken.
"Is she not as devilishly handsome?"
"On the contrary. She is an improvement in all ways and a much gentler spirit."
She examines one of the masks, squinting into the metal mesh. I notice that she has not refuted my claim of dashing looks.
"Oh, I can be very gentle. Do you see how you're not being beaten for disturbing my property?"
"You needn't be so dramatic. It isn't as if I'm going to break anything. Despite your low opinion of me, I am quite knowledgeable about these instruments."
"And why do you have this knowledge, slave?"
Thick leg irons still confine her ankles. If she aims to fight her way out of my estate, she won't get very far.
She bites her lip. "Before this life of crime, I was the lady's maid for a respectable woman."
"Unlikely."
I drop the subject without further discussion. A lie if I've ever heard one, but it will keep her on her toes to keep a story going. The truth will come out soon enough.
Absentmindedly, I start pulling weapons off the rack and setting them aside to be polished. The armory is dustier than I remember it. Over the years, I've amassed quite a collection of small swords and rapiers, even newfangled épées. Each artifact holds a vibrant memory. My father used to bring them home for me on his travels. Occasionally, we would acquire them together, never bothering to haggle too much for the price.
To hold a freshly forged blade in your hand is a thing of wonderment, truly worth its weight in gold. I would even enter competitions on the other islands. Traveling to places where my family was less known was my only way to find true challengers. I haven't had time for that in years.
It wouldn't be so bad if everything gets a cleaning. That is what she's here for, after all.
I catch myself glancing over at my prideful attendant from time to time. She thoughtfully considers each piece before persuading the dust off in beleaguered streaks. While she is as piss-poor at cleaning as one might expect, she does seem to be comfortable handling the equipment and gripping the weapons appropriately. I'll have to teach her proper maintenance.
What strange worlds my pretty shrew has inhabited. She's much more comfortable with swords than any lady's maid ought to be. Women aren't usually taught swordsmanship, however, a wealthy family does as they please. Was she a rich gentleman's mistress? All that pride has to come from somewhere. Even Helen of Troy had to offer something to launch Greece's ships.
The thought of Ana in another man's bed boils my blood. It will be disappointing if she must first unlearn another man's tricks. I should be the one to coax those lips open for the first time.
We lock eyes, a moment too long.
"Why is your uniform wrinkled?" I say, scrambling for an appropriate complaint.
Ana slams my rapier down on the table.
She pulls her skirt taut, and a parade of holes dance down the hem of the fabric. "You give me rags and then lament their condition."
"So ungrateful. Have you truly not learned your lesson?"
"You have already mutilated me with your family's disgusting crest. What worse can you do to me?"
"Trust me, Ana, that is not a conversation you wish to begin."
Sensing a protracted battle, she turns her angry gaze back to her work, scrubbing with vigor and without an ounce of concern. Under her grip, the bell guard slams repeatedly on the table. I could wring her neck for being so careless with my property. Though quality weapons should not snap from the wrath of a tiny hellcat.
If I didn't have so many meetings to attend, I would stay longer to puzzle. When not so enraged, Ana trains her eyes on the equipment with feverish intent. As she pours oil across the rusty blades, she looks at my father's weapons with something other than hatred. Her hazel eyes sparkle. She happens to be quite fetching when not arguing about how the Earth, in fact, circles the sun.
"You can stay," I declare.