I couldnât look in Muinâs direction. He sat next to me on the couch while Verdi and Liza recounted their trip to his parents.
âItâs a beautiful city, Capsi,â Liza was saying. âWisteria will always have my heart, of course, but Wisteria has a rustic aesthetic whereas Capsi is more modern. Bigger buildings, bigger food, bigger everything. Even the baths were huge.â She laughed, looking rather haughty.
Verdi nodded and said, âA normal bath is big enough to swim in. Not that we have baths in Wisteria. We really should.â
âI know,â Liza said. âItâs so much better than a standing shower. Soaking in warm water is good for the body and soul. The Dukes Nin gave us such a beautiful welcome and catered to us during our stay so well youâd think they ran in hospitality not politics.â
âYour parents were so nice. Hard to imagine ever wanting to leave there,â Verdi said. She looked like she was searching for a reaction from Muin, but he was still. Heâd been still since this morning, not murmuring more than a few words when he was spoken to.
His face was unreadable. A stoic mask of polite disinterest as my sisters talked on and on about the place he grew up. If not for the fact that I could feel how tense he was, I wouldnât have known he was angry.
I wasnât much better, though I wasnât angry. My anxiety was spiraling out of control, but that was at least something I was used to. Anytime I was with my sisters my stomach twisted as I tried to guess if they were being sincere or if they were messing with meâand Iâd had years of practice to fake it.
The only thing that threatened me now were the tears I was fighting back.
I could only imagine how it looked from his perspective. Heâd done something so kind, so thoughtful, so wonderful, and I just ran off into the arms of another man right in front of him. Even if heâd just talked to Putra, it still wouldnât feel good to see.
After Putra walked me inside, all I could offer up was a pitiful, âIâm sorry,â before Putra all but carried me to my room. Thankfully Jurek had shooed my sisters out of my room so it was just me and Putra while I cried as quietly as I could, gripping his shirt so hard it nearly ripped.
It didnât help that, alongside Anhelina and Jurek, Putra was lurking in the corner.
It was stupid to let my emotions get the better of me. I knew better. I was trained better. All I had to do was find somewhere else to put my emotions and focus on the present. On the little things that added up to make the whole.
Like now, I put my anxiety aside, ignoring the pit in my stomach, and asked, âWas there anything there you think we should implement here? Weâre rather out of the way, so I think it would be nice to know what else is going on in the region.â
âOh, come on,â Liza said. âItâs your birthday, we donât want to talk about work right now.â
âExactly,â Verdi said. âWe need to play some games. My lord?â Muin hardly moved, just slid his eyes in her direction. âWill you join us for a game of cards?â
There was a pause as we waited for his response. I expected him to say no and continue to sit on the couch, but his yes wasnât just surprising to me. Lizaâs browâs shot up, but her smile remained.
âIâll get a table set up,â Jurek said.
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âThis one will work just fine,â Verdi said, sliding to the floor. âUnless Lord Muin doesnât want to get his pants dirty on the floor?â
He was tense for a moment before relaxing and saying, âThis table will be fine.â
Jurek nodded and left to go get playing cards, returning in less than half a minute with a deck of cards.
Liza took the stack and started to shuffle them, looking around the table with a sharp smile. âWhat should we play? Old maid? Greed? Poker?â
âWhat would be bet?â Verdi asked, perking up at the mention of poker. âIâm sure we all have enough money to trade around, but what fun would that be?â
âToo true,â Liza said. She leaned forward staring us down. âHow about we start easy and bet nothing? Just pretend and get a feel for the game.â
âWorks for me,â I said, taking my hand as Liza passed out the cards.
âBe sure to play fair this time,â Liza said, looking pointedly at me. âI know you arenât good at enough at these games to play otherwise, but give everyone a shot, huh?â
âIâve never cheated but I guess.â I could count cards easily but typically didnât. There was no reason to when everyone else was usually bad at the game. My look of perpetual confusion always threw them off, but that wasnât my fault.
âYou find your ways,â Verdi said, drumming her fingers on the table.
âAnd you find yours, so letâs all keep it above board, okay?â She shot me a glare over her cards that I happily returned. âYouâll be dealer, Liza?â
âAlways,â she said.
Muin and I placed fake bets first, being on her left to start the pot. Verdi called it and we moved back to me. Liza set down the three community cards and I bet more. Muin checked and Verdi called. The turn continued and I raised my bet. Muin raised his and Verdi checked.
The last round came, and I stared at the five cards in front of us. It must have been fate to give me such a good hand.
Muin looked at his cards and the community cards before setting them down and saying, âI fold.â
Verdi chuckled and set down her hand. âStraight flush, Hyran.â She smirked, quirking her brow. âGot anything to say to that?â
I laid down my cards. âRoyal flush, Verdi.â
She looked shocked to see it, looking from me to the cards before she said, âWe agreed to not cheat.â
âI didnât.â
âYou did.â
I rolled my eyes. âHow could I have cheated?â
âTheyâre your cards.â
âIâve never played with them until now. Youâre the one who always plays poker, not me.â
âYou count cards. I know you do.â
âWouldnât be able to do that on the first round even if I was counting cards. Which I wasnât.â
âMiss Notti.â Everyone stopped, looking at Muin as his voice cut off Verdiâs reply. Even when heâd checked and folded earlier, his voice had been soft, almost inaudible. His volume hadnât changed, but his tone commanded the attention of everyone. âI would appreciate it if you didnât disparage my wife.â He looked at her like she was the mud on his boots. âEspecially in front of me.â
She opened and closed her mouth like she was trying to find something to say but eventually sat back like a scolded child. I looked at him out of the corner of my eyes, but he wasnât looking at me. He was looking at Liza who was staring him down in a silent showdown of wills.
After a minute, Liza scoffed and said, âIâm done with this. Verdi, letâs get ready for lunch.â
They stood and made their way out of the room, though the tensions didnât fade as Muin gathered the cards together. The silence felt like it was strangling me. Something needed to break it.
âIââ
âI wonât be joining you for lunch or dinner,â he said, moving to stand. âI have something to take care of.â
âLord Muin.â I went to grab his hand, but stopped short, letting my hands fall in my lap. âIâm sorry. About this morning.â
He was quiet and I could almost feel him reeling in his emotions. His voice was gentle as he said, âItâs alright. You have nothing to apologize for. I was justâ¦mistaken.â
I stayed at the table, back straight until I was sure he was gone, and then I slumped like a puppet with their strings cut, letting my tears fall.
âMy lady?â Anhelina came to my side, kneeling beside me. Her brows were so close together she looked like she had a unibrow. âIs there anything I can do?â
âNo.â I tried to wipe my tears as Putra stood next to me, but failed as more came to replace them. âI just need some time.â