Lord Azriel’s words were neither loud nor sharp. Yet they prompted quiet snickers along the table with guests relishing the joke at Ruelle’s expense.
Hearing the lord address her as a gardener, Ruelle’s fingers froze around her fork. Heat crept up her neck as she felt the eyes along the table, which were polite, curious and cruel. Of all the people sitting here, the Slater family had reason to despise her kind as the lord’s wife had been killed by human hands. Still, she hadn’t expected it.
“It seems you are collecting job offers tonight, Ruelle. First a cobbler, now a gardener,” Dane drawled with a grin. He then turned to his father and asked, “Though I’m curious, Father. When did you witness Ruelle’s talent of gardening?”
“She looks far too lovely to muddy her hands,” Lady Maxine stated with a chuckle, who sat beside Ruelle.
Lord Azriel, who took a sip of the blood wine responded, “I could have sworn I heard a different name earlier this evening.”
Ruelle’s eyes widened with realisation. He had caught her pouring his expensive wine into one of his plant pots. “I—didn’t mean to do that,” she tried to explain and attempted a smile that only wavered at the edges.
“You shouldn’t pour things when you do not know,” came Lord Azriel’s curt response as he set his glass down. Some of the guests wondered what he meant. “In gardens and in rooms, a misplaced pour ruins more than it feeds.”
When Ruelle’s eyes turned to Lucian, his eyes were already on hers. At the same time, he picked up his knife and fork, the metal catching the chandelier’s light. She looked away before her gaze dropped to her reflection trembling in the water she raised to her lips.
“With respect, Father,” Dane said at last, perfectly unbothered, “she’s here as my guest.”
“Guests from Sexton come with bonds,” Azriel replied, his tone still mild. “Bringing her here today, do you intend to redeem her for yourself?”
Ruelle coughed, the water burning her throat. She dabbed at her lips with a napkin.
“Tempting,” Dane murmured thoughtfully. “Some of my cousins enjoy their attachments. But my hands are rather full this season.” His eyes flicked before him. “The opposite chair, however, looks bare. Perhaps my brother’s evenings are freer than mine.”
Lucian’s knife halted mid-stroke. “Keep your amusements to yourself,” he replied, not looking up. The blade resumed its work, though his knuckles had whitened against the handle. “Guests are not merchandise.”
“Of course not,” Dane said amused, turning his glass lazily in his fingers before meeting his brother’s eyes. “You wound me, Lucian. I don’t collar guests.”
But by his tone and the glint in his eyes, it was hard for anyone to believe that. A ripple of chuckles was heard from the table.
“She’s here under her own will. I only offered a seat not a chain. Isn’t that right, Ruelle?” Dane stated as he turned to glance at Ruelle, while his smile softened.
“Yes, Mr. S,” she managed a smile. As the laughter resumed, she felt like she was being watched through glass.
Beside her, Lady Maxine asked Lucian, “How are the preparations coming for your council seat? Howard said the date has been set.”
Lucian looked up, a flicker of attention softening his expression. “It is,” he replied. “It’s going well.”
The vampiress smiled, pleased.
“I cannot wait for him to join the council,” Minister Gaile said not far from where they sat. “Lucian has already helped me with plenty of cases in the past two years even though he’s yet to join officially.”
“You are generous, Minister Gaile. I merely lent some help where I could. The credit as always belongs to the experienced ones who have carried the weight of the council far longer than I have,” Lucian responded with a small smile.
“He is too modest,” Minister Gaile chuckled, saying it to the people sitting around him.
Ruelle found herself studying Lucian, remembering last weekend, when he sat with a thick book in the dining room. She doubted the other elite students worked with such quiet resolve. Her gaze drifted to Sawyer, who was laughing at something one of the guests had said.
“You must be at ease, Lord Azriel,” commented a gentleman farther down the table. “Considering both your sons have never given you cause for worry. It is certain they will one day surpass the legacy the Slaters have built.”
“They have been responsible and independent,” Lord Azriel replied, his words laced with quiet pride.
“It is good to have two sons,” an older vampire nodded his head slowly. “One who will step into the council and another who will inherit the title of lordship. Both are needed to keep the walls steady. Though I had thought the eldest might have benefited more from joining the council first. But an instructor at Sexton…especially teaching humans,” he shook his head as if he found it absurd.
“One learns better at the ground level than from a high chair where much is too easily overlooked, Mr. Ackerley,” Lord Azriel answered in a composed tone. It was clear that in his eyes, his sons were his finest accomplishment.
A lord might have regarded his son’s position as an instructor as a step beneath his rank, yet Lord Azriel did not seem to think so, Ruelle observed from her seat.
“Lord Slater is right,” agreed one of the middle-aged vampiresses, her eyes bright with curiosity. “Dane will inherit the estate and he must learn its reins. But will there be news of an addition to the family soon, Lord Slater? Dane has long since come of age and now Lucian as well.”
Dane turned amused by the vampiress’s intrigue. He grinned, “I think I am still too young to think of wedding bells. And alas, there aren’t many like you, Lady Carlatine.”
The lady laughed while waving her hand. She went on, “But one needs a partner to bear and continue the lineage.” Then her eyebrows furrowed in thought before she commented, “Weren’t you once betrothed? Or was it Lucian?”
The question caught most guests’ attention at the table. Most of them looked unaware about it, while there were a few who had already heard it as if it were one of the rumours.
“It was Lucian,” Lord Azriel’s voice was calm as he answered.
For a moment, the sound of the silverware dulled.
At the lord’s words, Ruelle’s hand faltered halfway to her glass when she was about to pick it. Lucian was betrothed? Her eyes darted to Lucian, finding it strange to imagine him promised to someone. The same pureblooded vampire whose icy glare could freeze anyone. What kind of woman had been meant for him? One of their kind, no doubt. A woman of power, grace and old family lineage, Ruelle thought.
But Lucian didn’t seem pleased with the intruding question about the Slater family’s personal affairs. Ruelle noticed the faintest tightness near his jaw, which only one who had closely watched would have noticed as it disappeared the next second.
“It was a long while ago,” Lucian broke the silence that was hiding surprise and curiosity of the guests. He continued, “Things like marriage should be thought about carefully,” his voice was edged with a quiet warning against further probing on the subject.
“Lucian is right. There’s no need to be hasty about it,” Lord Azriel agreed.
“Of course,” Lady Carlatine murmured with a smile, dropping the subject.
The guests slipped back into their own conversations while Ruelle quietly ate her meal. She wondered what caused the betrothal to fall apart. But soon her thoughts drifted to what time it was and her eyes moved across the room in search of a clock. Instead, they met Lady Maxine’s dark red eyes, who offered her a smile.
“Has Ruelle’s room been prepared?” Lady Maxine inquired.
“Oh, that’s right,” Dane mused lightly, waving his hand to a maid as if to set things in motion.
“That’s alright!” Ruelle insisted quickly. “I should head home.”
Dane frowned and responded, “But it’s already late. And sending a fair maiden with no chaperone would not only be impolite but unsafe. You should stay the night. I promise that no one will dare bite you while you are asleep.”
Ruelle forced a small smile, unsure whether to take his jest lightly or not. She had only intended to stay for the celebration and then return home afterwards. But asking for a chaperone would be rude…
What was she going to do?
Her uncertainty lingered as her gaze found Lucian’s. The look in his eyes was unmistakable, as if saying this was why she should have thought twice before agreeing to Dane’s invitation.
Lady Maxine noticed the silent exchange between Ruelle and Lucian. She said thoughtfully, “Dane is right. It’s unsafe to travel alone at this hour, especially with the recent deaths ghosting about the lands.”
Sawyer was quick to agree. He urged, “You should stay, Ruelle. It’s only one more day. We can ride back to Sexton together.”
“See?” Dane drawled cheerfully. “Everyone wants you to stay. Let the maid prepare a room for you.”
“Ruelle can share mine,” Lady Maxine offered with a polite smile. Ruelle’s eyes widened and she shook her head. The vampiress continued, “My husband and daughter aren’t here. And I would welcome the company.”
There was warmth in Lady Maxine’s smile, but something about it made Ruelle hesitate.
When most of the conversation had quietened along with the dinner almost complete, a servant bent close to Lord Azriel and whispered something in his ear. The lord gave a brief nod and rose from his chair.
“Unfortunately, duty calls. I trust the rest of you will enjoy the evening,” he announced calmly.
“Thank you, Lord Azriel,” several voices chimed together.
“Safe journey, Uncle Azriel!” Sawyer called after him, and the lord’s lips curved faintly in acknowledgement.
For Ruelle, it was the first time she had ever seen a lord this close and she couldn’t help but follow him with her gaze until he stepped away from the dining room. It seemed people at higher positions had their hands full with responsibilities, she thought to herself.
Some of the elderly guests began to rise from their seats, bidding polite farewells. The younger ones leaned back in their seats, laughter swelling and spilling through the hall.
Ruelle saw one of the guests reach out to the nearest human servant, pulling the woman onto his lap. In less than two seconds, his fangs sank into the woman’s throat, followed by a soft gasp that melted into the hum of music.
“I see you haven’t chained your pet, Angelina,” remarked a vampiress with lips painted the shade of blood. “Is he on a free pass tonight?”
Ruelle caught the vampiress’s eyes to be on Oliver, who unlike her now stood near the wall and behind where his mistress was seated.
Angelina’s lips twitched without looking back and she asked, “What do you think?”
Someone raised their glass and said, “To tomorrow’s hunt. It’s always the finest at the Slater estate.”
“The Slaters never disappoint,” another agreed.
“But don’t you tire of chasing the same animals?” a young vampire asked, lounging in his chair. “Perhaps it is time we made the sport more… entertaining.”
Dane arched a brow, amusement glinting in his eyes. “And how do you propose we do that, Renard?” he asked.
“By changing the prey, of course. Instead of animals, why not humans?” Renard suggested with a smirk.
A few at the table laughed. Sawyer rolled his eyes before saying, “That’s hardly new. The royal court do it every other season.”
“Ah, but we haven’t,” Renard countered smoothly. “And we have enough humans of our own to make a fine game of it. It is simple. Each of us sends our chosen human into the forest tomorrow morning. The rule: no killing. A single wound marks a point and is considered down and the human is then of no use. The hunter with the most marks wins.”
A murmur of excitement filled the dining room. Some of them began to question who would be taking part in tomorrow’s hunt. But before more could be spoken, Lucian who had set his cutlery on the table, flatly remarked,
“It is going to be a waste of everyone’s amusement and time.” His words had everyone’s heads turn in his direction. He pointed out, “Humans are slow. Clumsy. They would be caught before they even had a chance to run. You might as well drag them by a leash through the mud and call it a game.”
A few guests laughed, knowing fully well of Lucian’s contempt towards humans.
“This is where we make it interesting. The humans will ride on horses while we will hunt on foot,” Renard’s smirk widened. “Makes it fairer… and far more thrilling.”
“Now that does sound tempting,” murmured someone, their eyes gleaming as their primal nature came forth.
“Lucian, it will be your kind of sport,” a vampiress tried to appease him.
“Sometimes it is knocking fangs out,” Lucian said under his breath with a roll of his eyes.
“So we agree, then? Shall we pick the humans then?” Renard looked pleased as everyone was on board. “First, it would be Oliver from Lady Angelina’s side.”
For a moment Ruelle thought that Angelina would have drawn out of the hunt, but instead the vampiress challenged, “The one with the least points will be made to serve the one with the highest points.”
“The stakes have been raised!”
“Then it’s settled,” Renard said, pleased with himself. “Each brings their own human. Tomorrow, the forest will be lively.”
A few nodded in agreement.
“Lucian is uninterested as the hunt has humans this time,” someone remarked, “What about you, Dane? None of the servants in the Slater mansion are human.”
The question drew curious eyes from around the table. Dane’s smile lifted slowly as he lifted his glass. “That is true,” he admitted. “Which means I’ll have to borrow one of yours.”
A vampiress leaned forward, her crimson lips curling. She offered, “I would be more than willing to sit this one out and offer you mine, Master Dane.”
“How generous,” Dane replied, amusement lacing his tone. “But I wouldn’t dream of robbing you of your hunt, Lady Barbara.”
“I have two humans with me. You can take one,” another guest offered.
Before Dane could answer, Renard’s voice sliced through the hum of conversation. He said with a smug smile, “Why look elsewhere when Dane already has a capable human sitting beside him?”
It took a second for Ruelle to realise what he meant and she froze. She murmured,
“Perhaps my family is waiting for me. I should leave now.” And though her words were calm, beneath the tablecloth her fingers dug into her palm.
It was better than getting injured or stabbed by a vampire here! But the vampire chose to ignore her words.
“It only makes sense that the humans we bring are the ones we vouch for,” Renard continued. “Otherwise, what’s the thrill? Surely she must know the Sexton’s little games like hunt and stake.”
“You seem to have a poor memory, Renard,” Dane replied smoothly with a pleasant smile, though his eyes narrowed ever so slightly. “She’s a guest.”
Renard looked unconcerned. His lips curved and he said, “A guest yes, but she’s a human. I imagine she must have some survival instincts. Unless you’re saying she’s a fawn who wouldn’t last a minute.”
Lucian, who was about to leave the table, snapped his eyes at Renard, his expression unreadable.
Renard’s gaze lingered on Ruelle, his curiosity unhidden. He couldn’t help but wonder why his second cousin Lucian Slater hadn’t raised hell over a human seated so close to the head of the table. Was she here for entertainment… or did Dane simply bring her here because she was pleasing to look at?
“Insulting my guest has repercussions,” Dane stated, as the smile on his lips thinned. “Ruelle isn’t a fawn to be mocked. She’s far more capable than you assume.”
Wait, Mr. S! Don’t defend me like that! Ruelle screamed in her mind while looking at him. Because this only would spur the vampire on further!
“You must be bluffing, Dane. She looks quite fragile,” huffed an envious vampiress, unhappy with the attention Ruelle was gaining.
“Then we must surely see how capable she is, depending on how long she will last in the woods,” Renard echoed. “What do you say, Ruelle? Will you help in keeping the family’s head high with pride as it is now? Or put it to shame by forfeiting?”
All eyes fell on Ruelle, and her stomach turned at the undivided attention she received. The vampire’s words hung in the air, waiting for her response. She could feel her heartbeat in her throat now.
If she refused, would it cast shame upon the Slaters? Would they think Dane’s words hollow as he had spoken for her? A human. Her chest tightened. Under the table, her toes curled inside the new shoes she had received thanks to his ride to the cobbler’s shop, as if gripping the weight of the favour she now owed.
Her eyes met Lucian’s for an instant, enough to catch the faint furrow between his brows and his lips set in a thin line. Then Dane’s voice broke through the silence, firm yet protective.
“You don’t have to do it, Ruelle.” He then turned to Renard, his tone cool. “She came here to celebrate.”
The other vampire snickered, “Going back on your word because she’s a weak h—”
“I will take part in it,” Ruelle interrupted, her words slipping out before reason could stop them.
“You heard her! She wants to be part of it,” Renard declared, clapping his hands. “That’s the spirit.”
Ruelle’s fingers tightened around her skirt. Inside, her thoughts whispered what her lips could not. God help me, what have I just done?
Source: Webnovel.com, updated by NovelKeep
Chapters
- Chapter 166: Conditions Of The Treaty
- Chapter 165: A Mother’s Mistake
- Chapter 164: The Quiet Arrangement
- Chapter 163: Before the End
- Chapter 162: Fall Of The Youngest
- Chapter 161: Marked and Sold
- Chapter 160: A Collar for a Stray
- Chapter 159: The King’s Amusement
- Chapter 158: Claim Made at Midnight
- Chapter 157: The Mist Is Everywhere
- Chapter 156: Eyes Upon the Groundlings
- Chapter 155: Nothing Without Consequences
- Chapter 154: Chain Between Them
- Chapter 153: The Illusion of Control
- Chapter 152: Weight Of Absence
- Chapter 151: After Three Toes
- Chapter 150: The King’s Word
- Chapter 149: What Is Given Cannot Be Refused
- Chapter 148: The Summon
- Chapter 147: Caught!
- Chapter 146: Trap At The Fair
- Chapter 145: Fortune Teller’s Cards
- Chapter 144: An Ill Omen
- Chapter 143: Box That Passed Through Daughters
- Chapter 142: Heirloom of the Dead
- Chapter 141: Debts That Wait
- Chapter 140: We Meet Again
- Chapter 139: He knows
- Chapter 138: Forgetting To Behave
- Chapter 137: Lessons Before the Auction
- Chapter 136: Within reach
- Chapter 135: Term of Twenty
- Chapter 134: Crossing lines
- Chapter 133: A Moment Too Close
- Chapter 132: The Ride Back
- Chapter 131: When Pride Breaks
- Chapter 130: All of Them
- Chapter 129: A Warning to All
- Chapter 128: Price of Insolence
- Chapter 127: The Arrival
- Chapter 126: A Den of Wolves
- Chapter 125: Elite’s Invitation
- Chapter 124: The Prince’s Temper
- Chapter 123: What cannot be bought
- Chapter 122: The Veiled Subject
- Chapter 121: He Who Waits
- Chapter 120: Cost of a Ribbon
- Chapter 119: Sound of a Ticking Heart
- Chapter 118: Memories of winter
- Chapter 117: The Girl in the Snow
- Chapter 116: Under His Roof
- Chapter 115: Under Whose Protection
- Chapter 114: What I Touch, I Keep
- Chapter 113: An Innocent Misunderstanding
- Chapter 112: The Edge of Control
- Chapter 111: Static Before Lightning
- Chapter 110: The Rearrangement
- Chapter 109: Errands Before the Ball
- Chapter 108: The Smell of Soap
- Chapter 107: Seven Days Before the Ball
- Chapter 106: Charcoal and Rose
- Chapter 105: A Thing You Can Do for Me
- Chapter 104: There Is No ‘We’
- Chapter 103: Before the Apple Ripens
- Chapter 102: Logs That Burned All Night
- Chapter 101: Clipped Wings
- Chapter 100: Table of Fortunes
- Chapter 99: Hand that Held her
- Chapter 98: Half the Way to Sexton
- Chapter 97: A Case Without a Head
- Chapter 96: The Door That Closed
- Chapter 95: Ruelle’s realisation
- Chapter 94: The Favoured and the Obedient
- Chapter 93: Cost of Coming Home
- Chapter 92: What she leaves behind
- Chapter 91 91: Held too close
- Chapter 90 90: What is buried beneath
- Chapter 89: A door knocked too early
- Chapter 88: Be a smart cookie!
- Chapter 87: Decision sent to the King
- Chapter 86: Twenty days
- Chapter 85: A hand extended
- Chapter 84: Prince Edward's chaos
- Chapter 83: Where It Begins
- Chapter 82: In her corner
- Chapter 81: A Step Forward, and Back Again
- Chapter 80: Where mercy ends and begins
- Chapter 79: In search of safe company
- Chapter 78: Between them
- Chapter 77: Way to have clean hands
- Chapter 76: Debts in blood
- Chapter 75: The House and the Barn
- Chapter 74: Hunt that no one played fair
- Chapter 73: Five minutes of mercy
- Chapter 72: Before the hunt
- Chapter 71: A Seat Among Predators
- Chapter 70: Two Inches More
- Chapter 69: A Clasp Beneath the Toast
- Chapter 68: Other routes to the same goal
- Chapter 67: A strange companion
- Chapter 66: The Quill’s Price
- Chapter 65: Where the floor runs red
- Chapter 64: Sting of the flower
- Chapter 63: At the edge of the room
- Chapter 62: Mouthfuls and Missteps
- Chapter 61: A Vampire’s Mercy
- Chapter 60: When Eyes Turned to Her
- Chapter 59: Crimson Bloom
- Chapter 58: The Box and the Blow
- Chapter 57: When Porcelain Breaks
- Chapter 56: The Weight of Small Things
- Chapter 55: Not so gentle
- Chapter 54: A Pinprick of Fear
- Chapter 53: Thief among us
- Chapter 52: The Accusation
- Chapter 51: Climbing without threads
- Chapter 50: A Path Crossed Twice
- Chapter 49: When Chaos steps in
- Chapter 48: Masquerade Mishaps
- Chapter 47: Perfume, Pretence, and Peril
- Chapter 46: Scent of forgotten shadows
- Chapter 45: Closed windows
- Chapter 44: Clearance of assumption
- Chapter 43: The missing Groundling
- Chapter 42: Alone and abandoned
- Chapter 41: Suspicion on her
- Chapter 40: The mix to run and prey
- Chapter 39: Fractured glass of the past
- Chapter 38: Cold stares of my roommate
- Chapter 37: Queen removing the Bishop
- Chapter 36: The weekend
- Chapter 35: Plotting her humiliation
- Chapter 34: Is this a gift?
- Chapter 33: Under The Same Roof As Him
- Chapter 32: Wildfire at the tables
- Chapter 31: Collision of Worlds
- Chapter 30: It is official
- Chapter 29: Roommate Options
- Chapter 28: The One Person
- Chapter 27: Respect the scarf!
- Chapter 26: Hardwork lost
- Chapter 25: The caring brother-in-law
- Chapter 24: One failed subject
- Chapter 23: Chased by awkwardness
- Chapter 22: Following me
- Chapter 21: Riding with Elites
- Chapter 20: Tension in the room
- Chapter 19: Kiss the bride
- Chapter 18: Wedding at the church
- Chapter 17: Late evening note
- Chapter 16: You don’t know me
- Chapter 15: Manipulative intentions
- Chapter 14: What was left behind
- Chapter 13: Veils of Deceit
- Chapter 12: Scars of love
- Chapter 11: Fire in the mountain—Run!
- Chapter 10: Owned by it
- Chapter 9: A price to pay
- Chapter 8: Few meters away
- Chapter 7: Late to the first class
- Chapter 6: Misunderstanding blow up!
- Chapter 5: Social classes in Sexton
- Chapter 4: Invitation to attend the privileged
- Chapter 3: Conflict of interest
- Chapter 2: Stumbling into debt
- Chapter 1: Excerpt