Edgar laughed so hard that he fell from the chair. It was the answer he had been waiting for more than anything.
âYou cannot do it even if the woman wants it unless you are in love with each other.â
If his father had learned that earlier, such tragedy would have never happened. There was a small drop of tear hanging at the corner of his eye as he laughed.
***
In the meantime, Rubica, who huffed in anger outside for some time, realized what she had done and started to tremble in fear. She had slapped the dukeâs cheek and called him a bastard!
She couldnât believe she let herself lose her temper at the dukeâs provocation and spoke such rude words. It was the word she hated the most in the world. However, she wasnât brave enough to go back inside the carriage and apologize. She could only quietly curse at her foolishness.
âOh, Ms. Berner, have you had a good conversation with His Grace?â
Butler Carl, who had finished taking care of the people of the Berner Mansion, found her and spoke to her. However, his warm voice only put her down into even deeper sorrow. She just shook her head.
âDid he smile at you warmly?â
âNo.â
âHmm, then did he praise your beauty?â
âWhat? Of course not.â
Rubica answered, quite puzzled. Carl smiled warmly and said, âThen it must have been a very good conversation.â
âYes, it was a very good one.â
It wasnât Rubica who said that.
Edgar opened his carriageâs door wide and came down. There wasnât any trace of Rubicaâs slap on his smooth cheek. He smiled warmly and offered her his hand as if she had never hit him.
âAs we have finished talking alone, let us go to finish talking with your family.â
âOh my, I see Your Grace is extremely angry.â
Carl was about to give Rubica a piece of advice, but he had to shut his mouth and quickly back off at Edgarâs sharp gaze. Rubica had to let him take her hand and take her into the mansion.
It was deadly quiet inside. It had been very noisy when Rubica had snuck out, but now, they didnât even see a maid on their way to the drawing room.
Carl led them with ease as if he had been working there for many years. Mr. and Mrs. Berner were sitting in the room with their daughter. Mr. Berner was pale. When he saw Rubica, he jumped to his feet and smiled widely.
âRubica! Weâve been waiting for you. You must listen to me...â
Mr. Berner still hadnât realized his situation and called Rubica by her name, and it made Edgar feel uncomfortable. Carl read his expression and immediately warned Mr. Berner.
âPlease do not call the dukeâs fiancé by her name.â
âWhat, what the... I am Rubicaâs uncle. I took her in when she had nowhere to go!â
Mrs. Berner had met the duke at the main gate and had experienced how cold he was. She pulled her slow-witted husbandâs pants, but the optimistic Mr. Berner didnât care.
He didnât know how great the duke and his men were, but the person who was going to become the duchess was the Rubica who he had raised.
She had to at least know how big what he had graciously given her was. Moreover, the duke also had to clearly learn that without him, he couldnât have even dreamt of taking Rubica.
âIf I hadnât paid Rubicaâs parentsâ debt, she would have been taken away by the creditors to become a prostitute or...â
However, Mr. Berner couldnât continue talking about the kindness he had shown to Rubica. He, instead, had fallen on the floor, grabbing his bleeding, broken nose.
âFather!â
âMatin! How, how could you act like a savage?â
Rubica covered her mouth with her hands in surprise and looked at Carl. The butler, who looked like he would keep smiling even when stabbed by a needle, had punched Mr. Bernerâs nose.n/ô/vel/b//in dot c//om
âIf it had been someone else, it would have costed your neck, but as you are Lady Rubicaâs uncle, I punished you lightly.â
âHow... how, was what my husband said wrong? He was just trying to explain what he had done for Rubica.â
âYou donât know what is wrong? Then I will send someone to teach you how aristocrats should keep the ladiesâ honor here. At least your daughter should learn proper manners.â
Mrs. Berner couldnât speak anymore, and her jaw dropped.
Damn Claymore!
Mrs. Berner quickly changed her target and looked at Rubica, silently ordering her to scold the butler who was so rude to her and her husband. She couldnât dare to oppose the duke, but Rubica was easy prey. The Rubica she remembered was supposed to be scared by her glare and stop Carl.
However, Rubica didnât say anything at her gaze and Angelaâs silent plea to save her father. She was rather ashamed by the word âprostituteâ Martin Berner let out of his mouth so easily. Carl wasnât wrong at all.
Mr. Berner didnât speak like a nobleman. Edgar didnât want to waste more energy on that useless talk, so he sat down on the sofa and immediately began to talk.
âSir Berner, Iâve thought about what you requested for giving permission to our marriage.â
Mr. and Mrs. Bernersâ gaze immediately turned to that of a merchantâs. They were about to fool Duke Claymore and get paid well for raising Rubica.
âRubicaâs mother was sick for a long time. When she passed away six years ago, this familyâs financial status was in a mess. They had loaned such a huge sum of money with this mansion as collateral. My wife and I paid all that debt and barely managed to keep this mansion and baronet title. We have been feeding and raising Rubica ever since. To her, we are like her parents. No, we consider ourselves better patrons than her father who had a bad sense of economy.â
After Mr. Berner finished talking, silence filled the room. Edgar just coldly stared at him. Rubica didnât want to humiliate the family by arguing with Mr. Berner about what he had done to her in front of Edgar, so she kept her mouth shut. Eventually, Mrs. Berner couldnât handle the silence and spoke first.
âCompared to everything weâve done for her, 100 thousand Gold is quite cheap.â
Rubicaâs jaw dropped to hear the amount of money. According to her memories, her debt had been about 5000 Gold. They couldnât have spent more than a hundred Gold on Rubicaâs food and clothing during the 6 years. No, they had practically used her as a maid.
ââCheapâ... so you think of your niece as a good.â
Rubicaâs face turned red at Edgarâs low muttering. Mrs. Berner realized her mistake of speech and smiled awkwardly. However, she made it clear that they were not going to lower their price. Edgar could not afford to not marry Rubica just because he didnât like her price.
The king had already issued the special permission and they had realized it. They were determined to get at least 10 times the right amount of money from him. Edgar quietly listened to them, not inching a bit, and then stretched out his hand to Carl who put the document he had prepared on his hand.
Mr. and Mrs. Berner brightened up. They believed the document had to be the draft worth 100 thousand Gold or something similar to it. However, the document Edgar threw on the table was what they hadnât seen coming at all.
âI looked into the debts of Rubicaâs father. All of those creditors were linked to you, Martin Berner.â
Rubica picked it up with shaking hands. Ever since they had taken Rubica under their wing, they had been talking about how much they had sacrificed to keep the mansion and the title.
They always said Rubica couldnât pay back that debt even if she worked till she died.
âYour Grace, Mr. Martin Berner was the person who introduced the private moneylenders to Cedric Berner, Ms. Rubica Bernerâs father. Also, Iâve checked that the rate of interest written on the original contract was different from the contract that was delivered to Ms. Rubicaâs mother after her husbandâs death. It was kind of... fraud.â
âBecause of that, Martin Berner, you cannot claim to be Rubica Bernerâs patron.â
Then, he took Rubicaâs hand that was still shaking as she looked at the document. He smiled warmly as he looked at her.
âWhat do you want me to do with this?â
However, his eyes were cold, and those cold eyes woke her up. It wasnât the time to tremble in shock.
âUncle, aunt, leave this mansion.â
Rubica read the document and made up her mind. The last little bit of love for her kin she had toward them was now gone.
That debt... if there hadnât been that debt, she could have let her mother try various treatments. She had even fallen ill at first because of the worries she got from the huge debt.
âWhat do you mean? Rubica! Do you think your food and clothes have been free?â
âThe jewels and dresses you took from me were more than enough for it. And as I have worked for you for six years, Iâm the one who should be paid.â