31 Frost XX AoK
Caelin sat beside her husband, Pavoo, who took his place at the head of the table. She touched his thigh just above the knee, below the tablecloth out of sight, and looked at him sidelong, her smile tempered and cautious. Their son had invited a guest to join them for dinner and it had taken Caelin all of three questions to place where she had seen him before.
“Ah the duke’s little brother,” she said, her tone higher than usual, causing Edmund to glance across the table at her.
The look he gave her was scolding, as if to beg the woman to keep her usual distasteful remarks to herself. Owen, however, didn’t seem to notice and was his usual smiling self.
“He came to visit us last Frost,” she added. “Pity our daughter chose to ignore his letters. Ah well, I suppose that’s what you get for playing with a young woman’s heart. What will be, will be, and that match simply was not to be.”
It was Pavoo’s turn then, to squeeze his wife’s leg. “We can’t know that for sure,” he said, leaving it at that.
“Perhaps we should not discuss my sister while she is not in the room,” Edmund coached, sure Elyna would join them any moment if the letter he had received from her a few days prior was anything to go by. Edmund had informed his father that the woman had returned from Nejem and expected to join them tonight. Caelin, on the other hand, was none the wiser.
“I had no idea,” Owen remarked, his charming smile cleverly masking the small white lie he had told. “I’m sure Elyna had her reasons,” he added, ever pleasant.
Of course he knew Malcolm had been to visit to request the baron reconsider the terminated proposal. It was all they had spoken about the following spring back at Mayce. Malcolm had been quietly devastated when Caelin had sent her rejection letter, and none of the duke's letters had been returned by Elyna herself. None of them had realised the skyrider had traveled to Nejem, until Edmund had made Owen aware upon her return.
“How did the two of you meet?” Caelin asked.
“Owen introduced me to lady Andaris,” Edmund explained, “this Harvest gone, at the ball in the capital.”
“That doesn’t explain how the two of you met,” Caelin said.
“In a brothel,” Owen piped up.
“Owen!” Edmund spoke over him in haste, before he could elaborate.
Pavoo smirked behind his hand as he closed his lips around the piece of chicken he had just sliced away from the bone on his plate. Caelin looked as if she were about to breathe fire.
“He’s joking, mother.”
Owen certainly was not joking, but he wasn’t about to drop his friend in it a second time. “Indeed I am, lady Burhan, forgive me. Edmund and I were introduced through a mutual friend.”
“Dare I ask who this friend is?” Caelin inquired.
“No one you know, mother.”
Caelin pinned her son with a questioning look. “You might be surprised, there are few who escape my notice.”
Nothing ever said was closer to the truth than that, Edmund thought to himself. “One of the duke’s crew, who decided to join us on the boats.”
“Oh, I heard about that,” Pavoo interrupted. “Thomas Yilmaz? The son of that captain who escaped capture while they were deporting him back to Nejem last Frost?”
“He is his son, but he does not go by that name, father,” Edmund confirmed.
“Will you be joining the navy too, Owen?” Pavoo asked.
“I’ve been tempted, my lord, but my brother needs me back home.”
Caelin set down her fork each time she spoke. “Such a disgrace that Yvan Yilmaz. And to think, we trusted him with our daughter. This is exactly why I will have her discontinue her service for the Iron Hand. She has gallivanted about the countryside far too long. It’s time she was engaged to be married, like our Edmund is.”
Edmund smiled, still pinching himself regarding the match that had been struck between him and lady Andaris.
Owen was quiet, only now putting together that Elyna had disappeared from Renmere the same time Yvan had escaped custody. Perhaps, he thought, she was the reason he had been able to get away and stay hidden for so long…
“And how long will you be staying, Owen?” Pavoo asked, a shameful attempt to change the subject.
Owen smiled, pulled once again from the depths of his wild imagination. “Two days. I’ve rented a room down at the port while we work on helping Edmund’s crew repair the dock.”
“Nonsense, you simply must stay here, I insist,” Pavoo said. “It’s far too cold at the port this time of year.”
“That’s very kind of you, my lord, but I’ve already paid for my lodgings, so I might as well use them.”
“Think of it as an upgrade at no extra cost then,” Pavoo told him.
Edmund smiled. Owen did too. Caelin merely stared, unspeaking. She would give her husband a piece of her mind later. How dare he, she thought, invite a commoner to live under their roof, even if it was only for a short time.
“Will you be returning to Mayce after that, Owen?” Caelin asked.
“Indeed, my lady. I would hate to miss the dance my brother hosts each year.”
“The same dance we attended last year?” Caelin inquired.
“The very one,” Owen confirmed.
“That will be what that letter is,” she said, turning to her husband. “The one closed with the wolf in black wax.”
“I am yet to open it,” Pavoo told her.
“You must tell your brother to expect us all this time,” Caelin said, looking at Owen now, “Edmund included.”
“I’m sure he will be glad to hear it.” Owen smiled.
Pavoo said nothing, but smiled also. It seemed he was used to Caelin making the decisions, sure she was bound to change her mind just as easily should he interject.
“Will Penelope be there?” Caelin asked her son. “I am yet to meet her, though I have always admired her from afar.”
The daughter his mother had always wanted, Edmund thought, a lady who had no desire for trudging through the mud and snow, or flying from place to place on some temperamental beast. “I believe so, mother.”
“Oh I do wish your sister would return soon so that she can join us.”
“Be careful what you wish for,” Edmund warned, teasing the woman.