Chapter 14
Youngest Lady in Contract
Does this little child Elisabeth, who stands before him now, know that sheâs looking up at him with a puzzled look?
Do you have any idea how dangerous he was?
And how much I worried about youâ¦
âIf this happens again, I might not be able to protect you.â
The thought made my heart burst.
âIâm sorry I almost got caught by Tyce Orell today.â
It wasnât long before the little girl said cautiously.
There was a little bit of sadness in her tiny voice, which made Dylan snap again.
âWhat are you sorry for?â
So Dylan unknowingly raised his voice.
âTyce Orell, that impudent bastard came into your room as he pleased.â
ââ¦.â
âIf heâd touched you, I wouldnât have let him go!â
Elisabethâs eyes shook.
âWhy are you soâ¦.â
Youâre getting angry. Youâre not annoyed, but really angry.
âNo way, for meâ¦?â
Something hot spread through Elisabethâs heart as she looked at the distorted face of Dylan.
âBut Iâm still sorry.â
âI told you, donât say youâre sorry.â
âI wonât leave you if you say that, Iâm sorry.â
Dylanâs face, distorted by Elisabethâs blunt words, was blank.
âSorry, Dylan.â
Dylanâs face soon hardened cold. However, his feelings were not as intense as before. It was like âI knew it.â
âI hate it. That youâre my sister.â
Then he vented out, grumpily.
âWhy?â
âYou keep bothering and bothering me.â
ââ¦..â
I had nothing to say.
She said she would try, but her existence itself bothered him.
âThose bastards, they donât pay attention. But I thought I was going crazy because it kept bothering me today. Iâm afraid theyâll come near you, Iâm afraid theyâll do something.â
ââ¦..â
âIf I were you, I would have said Iâd leave first, even if I were scared. But youâre also you.â
It was so true that Elisabeth had nothing more to say. Still, when she refused to say she would leave stubbornly, Dylan frowned his forehead as he was frustrated.
âYou think Iâm going to keep protecting you just because you do, because youâre still here? Do you think Iâll help you when youâre in danger? Are you always looking at me and expecting me to magically show up when you need me?â
Dylan spewed out his words like a shotgun.
There was a lot of inconsistency in the words of the person who magically appeared and rescued her when she was in danger.
âI, I donât expect that.â
Elisabeth panicked and stuttered in her speech.
âI wonât expect that, so please donât hate me.â
Elisabeth sincerely added the words. I should be more careful from now on. So I shouldnât bother Dylan.
At that moment, Dylan turned pale.
âYou, I donât hate you!â
Then he shouted. He rushed to Elisabeth and grabbed her by the shoulder.
âWhatâs wrong with you?â
Dylan sighed as he agonized over what to do.
âI donât hate you. Understand?â
He looked seriously troubled. He seemed to have misunderstood that Elisabeth was deeply hurt by his hatred. When she saw that, it made Elisabeth playful.
âI donât know.â
Dylan was restless when Elisabeth bowed as she pretended to be hurt.
âAh really, whatâs wrong with you. What am I supposed to do?â
Dylan turned back, looked back, came here and there, and did not know what to do.
âYouâre embarrassed for someone who told me to get out easily like eating?â
Elisabeth swallowed the laughter that was about to come out.
Then Dylan, who came back and forth and came to Elisabethâs face again, holding her in his arms as if he had made up his mind.
âOhâ¦?â
Elisabeth looked up in surprise.
He is very careful and hugs his little sister, who is heartbroken. Dylanâs hand patted Elisabethâs shoulder gently.
It was strange.
âItâs as comfortable as Victoireâs. Is it because they have the same blood?â
At that moment Dylan bowed his head. Elisabeth quickly rubbed her face on Dylanâs chest. It was so that we didnât make eye contact, but Dylan smelled good.
âI donât hate you. Itâs just that I didnât want us to meet like this.â
Dylan said. It was quite a grown-up remark, so my heart was moved.
âSixteen is old enough to say this.â
Twelve-year-old Elisabeth looked up again at sixteen-year-old Dylan.
âI donât hate you either.â
Elisabeth whispered in her heart.
Dylan, I think heâs a better boy than I thought.
***
Until late at night, Elisabeth could not sleep.
In Dylanâs arms, she behaved like a baby.
He would have hugged her to soothe her, but she pretended to be heartbroken, and tears really came out.
âDylanâs clothes were wet with my tears.â
I didnât know why I cried.
âBut I felt like I could cry a little bit.â
She learned that tears should be endured. Thatâs because her father always said she was a princess. So when Emilie fell down and cried, her father kept her in a room as punishment instead of soothing her. I remember crouching in the dark room and hearing the laughter of my father and Polia coming from outside.
âI was so forced to be a princess that I didnât seem like a child.â
Perhaps Elisabeth was being rewarded for it now.
âElisabeth.â
I could hear the door open in the dark and I could hear the voice of Victoire. Elisabeth, who was sitting on the bed, was startled. Victoire lit a candle that had been extinguished and walked to Elisabeth.
âYour Grace.â
âYouâre doing well in a dark room alone.â
âIâm not afraid of darkness.â
Elisabeth said with a grin.
âItâs not like a child.â
Victoire seemed rather worried.
âOh, youâre not happy.â
That was unexpected. I thought everyone liked a mature child.
Daughtry seemed to prefer the immature young child. They were strange people.
âWhat brings you here, Your Grace?â
Elisabeth changed the subject.
âToday, I heard from Dylan.â
âWhich one are you talking about?â
Tyceâs doing?
Or the one with me being a baby in Dylanâs arms?
âI donât like the second one. Itâs embarrassing.â
Victoire stroked the head of the nervous Elisabeth.
âYouâre very surprised by Sir Tyce, arenât you?â
Itâs the first one. Thatâs a relief.
âDylan saved me.â
Elisabeth said with a big smile.
âBut why are your eyes swollen?â
Asked Victoire. Elisabeth gave a moment of âhukâ. It was only a peek, but I thought it was so obvious.
âElisabeth.â
âYes.â
âYou wonât be in danger again.â
Victoireâs voice was serious. Somehow it seemed bitter.
âYou brought me here to put me in danger.â
In Elisabethâs head there was a string of murmur of words that could not be said.
I donât know why you want to keep my own blood and say things like that as if youâre being sincere.
âIf my soul hadnât been eighteen, I would have been deceived.â
Elisabeth in her previous life was a young girl thirsty for affection.
She pretended to be tired because she didnât want to feel any more strange feelings in her chest.
âOh, I interrupted your sleep.â
Victoire said, embarrassed. Elisabeth did not say no, but mimicked the tired look.
âIâll leave you alone. Sweet dreams.â
âYes. Your Grace too.â
Victoire didnât get up right away and hesitated. When Elisabeth looked at him with question marks in her eyes, he left the room quietly.
***
Carefully closing Elisabethâs door, Victoire said to Marian:
âWhen Elisabeth tosses and turns in her sleep, light up the incense I gave her. Itâs a scent that makes you sleep well.â
âYes.â
âIf she has a nightmare, wake her up right away and comfort her.â
âI understand.â
âGive her warm milk when you put her to sleep again. Itâll warm her stomach and make her feel drowsy.â
âMaster.â
Marian softly called Victoire. The stiff face of Victoire was loosened up by the voice.
âIâll keep those in mind. Have a good nightâs rest.â
Marian smiled at such a master. As if not to worry.
âThen Iâll believe Mrs. Marian.â
Victoire patted Marian on the shoulder with relief and went back.
Marian stared at the tightly closed door of Elisabeth, looking at the back of the changed Victoire.
The master seemed to be gradually becoming a father.
***
âWhat? Dylan will teach me?â
The next day, Elisabeth heard the shocking news. Damon laughed, as if he knew I would be surprised.
âIâve decided to pretend. Thereâs nothing Dylan can do to bother you.â
Then he admonished her affectionately, and suddenly Elisabeth thought that if she smiled with that face, there would be no woman or man who wouldnât come over.
âPretending to be?â
But for now, Elisabeth did not fall for it. Because the contents of what Damon said was absurd.
âDylanâs young, and itâs weird to teach me, and itâs weird to say itâs teaching, but itâs not really true.â
Of course, Sir Dylan, the one who Polia fell in love with in her previous life, was a well-versed young man in swordsmanship as well as learning. The young ladies followed the young man and wanted to be taught.
âSir Dylan, whoâs the most arrogant, beat them all.â
Among those who wanted to be taught by Dylan in their previous lives was Polia. Of course she was rejected.
The Duke of Cabezo threatened like this, but nothing happened because of Polia, who was afraid of being hated by Dylan.
Anyway, thatâs what happened in my previous life.
âIf he decides to teach, he really has to teach me. This is foul play.â
Elisabeth said, giving her eyes strength. Damon tilted his head in surprise.
âDonât you get tired when youâre with a bad-tempered kid like Dylan?â
âAh, thatâsâ¦!â
Damonâs relentless criticism left Elisabeth speechless.
âBut Iâm not tired though.â
âYou admit his personality is bad.â
Damon smiled as if he had met a comrade.
âElisabeth, you already excel without learning. Maybe you should teach Dylan.â
Damonâs words included the premise that Elisabeth, a âCabezo Princess,â had already been taught enough as a princess.
However, Elisabeth did not like the remark, which touched the dead girl, Emilie.