Hey EveryoneβSo, as I've said, this story is plot-heavy, character-driven, and it's going to take time to work up to things. The chapter after this one heats up, as it were, and in the one after that one, things get naughtier all around.
I've left little clues, if you are beginning to guess what the supernatural element to the story might be. I'm curious if anyone will guess. I'll give a hint, if it interests anyoneβCats really don't like Kane.
Thanks to all of you who have left comments. This was the first novel in a series of Luterian world novels and I've sat on it for over a year now, going back and forth, wondering, not knowing if it was something readers on Lit would enjoy or not. I finally consulted an expert, and she said it was worth a try.
-Harp
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Chapter Four
Kane woke at dawn. Light was coming into the room. He looked. The Corsaire was asleep next to him, turned toward him, one hand under her cheek, the other limp in front of her. He got out of bed, dressing. She didn't stir. He looked at her again. She was awake, tension in her face that hadn't been there before. She just wasn't acknowledging him.
He went for a walk. The air was fresh, clean, low fog and pretty glens, damp. By the time he returned, Jaime was available for breakfast. It was stilted and tense, Jaime asking about the Corsaire, Kane giving him clipped answers.
He went back upstairs, opening the door without knocking. The Corsaire was dressed in the blue dress, sitting, looking out the window. He looked at the books.
"You are finished with these?"
"Yes, Lord Tavishi."
Her voice was polite, neutral. He picked them up. She didn't look at him, didn't ask to get more books. He would have refused anyway. He would need to buy her passage, need to get her some kind of warm cover. The months of delay until they returned to Luteri were now making him impatient.
For the next three days, the Corsaire didn't vary in her manner. She dressed in the morning, always the blue dress. He never knocked, but whenever he came in, which wasn't often, she was sitting by the window, staring out of it. He came to the bed after she was asleep, rose before she woke.
Once she wasn't in the room, but it was only because she was in the accommodations. She came back in and sat at the window. She took her meals there. She didn't look at him. She answered if he spoke to her, which was also not often.
Two more days passed. Then a full week. The next night, he went with Jaime to see a play in Ogden and Jaime had a dinner visit from a tiresome lord who stayed for drinks after.
In the second week, Kane went to Versace for four days for gifts he still wanted to get for his family. When he returned to Jaime's estate, Jaime said the Corsaire hadn't emerged and was taking her meals in her room.
A third week passed. Kane refused when Jaime invited him to Pietre to visit Jaime's sister again. The woman was sweet but her head was as empty as a hollowed gourd. If she'd ever had any native intelligence, Alveria had encouraged it out of her. Kane would never say so to Jaime, of course, who was devoted to her.
A week later, Kane got up and dressed at dawn and went for his walk, returning to have breakfast with Jaime. They talked in Jaime's study. Kane went and read in the library, a little bored, and then decided he would go riding. He went to the room to get his cloak.
The Corsaire was, as always, sitting at the table looking out of the window. She never looked at him, never spoke. He reached for the door, about to leave, but her hand caught his eye, resting on the table. Her wrist looked fragile. She was delicate, but she had never looked fragile before.
Kane came and stood, looking at her. She didn't look at him. He sat across from her, his eyes on her face. She was pale, dark circles under her eyes.
"What are you looking at out there," he said irritably.
"Nothing, Lord Tavishi," she said, her voice quiet, dull.
Anger flicked through him. Sulking. He came to stand over her. She didn't look up. Her passive manner suddenly made him angry. He reached down and grasped her arms at her shoulders, gripping her, raising her to her feet, turning her toward him. She stood when he did it.
"What game are you playing?" he demanded, his hands tightening.
"I am not playing at anything, Lord Tavishi."
He studied her face. She didn't look defiant. She wasn't cold to him. She looked tired, as if all the fire had been stolen from her. He remembered her face in the stables, comparing it to her face now, all the vibrant flush of life faded. He released her and she slowly sat, her hands rubbing her arms where he had gripped her. She turned her head, looking out of the window again.
"Get up," he said.
She rose to her feet, standing, her hands clasped in front of her. Waiting. He looked her over. The bones in her wrists stood out. Her jaw looked fragile, her shoulders. Her face was thinner, her eyes too large. Her color was poor. Was she not eating? She would not starve herself for spite. He opened the door.
"Go downstairs. We are having lunch with Lord Shetlan."
She passed through it. He followed her downstairs and into the dining room. Jaime looked up and then rose, staring at her. Jaime's gaze flickered to him, his face tightening. Blaming him because the Corsaire was having some sort of fit. A servant pulled a chair out for her and she sat. They joined her.
"How are you feeling, Emma?" Jaime asked her.
"I'm well, Lord Shetlan," she said. "Thank you."
"Are you enjoying the books?"
"Yes," she said.
"Did you finish them? Would you like to come to the library and choose others to read?"
"No, thank you, Lord Shetlan."
A servant came and placed food in front of them. Kane watched as she picked at her food, eating a little.
"You will finish everything on that plate, Corsaire," he ordered.
He watched as she did. She swallowed repeatedly, but she didn't stop until the plate was empty. The servant came and took it.
"The pups are getting older," Jaime said, his eyes searching her face. "They are larger and getting into everything."
The silence was awkward. She must have sensed it. She looked at him.
"I'm sure they are, Lord Shetlan."