Chapter 04
[Clause: âExcept for official occasions, if there are three unnecessary physical contacts or conversations, 100 million talans will be fined.â]
What! Three touches or conversations equal 100 million?
âHa! As if I even want to touch you!â
âWhat a trashy regret male lead,â I snorted and turned to the next clause.
The largest penalty amounts were the two I had already heard about:
Terminating the contract without proper reason â 5 billion talans.
Breaking confidentiality â 5 billion talans.
But those werenât the only ones. There were other clauses with penalties of 2 billion, 1 billion, even 500 million talansâpacked tightly throughout the document.
At first glance, the contract looked fair.
If either side violated the terms, the one who broke the rule would pay compensation and could be divorced by the other party.
It even stated that the spouse at fault must pay the highest penalty amount among the violated clauses.
âLooks fair on paper,â I thought.
But in reality, it wasnât fair at all.
Just the fact that the Duke was âParty Aâ and I was âParty Bâ said everything about who had the power.
The contract was clearly written 100% in the Dukeâs favor.
After all, he was paying off Marquis Houreâs debt for meâthat was the price of my acceptance.
If the Duke broke the contract, I could demand compensation and divorce him.
But if I broke it, that was impossibleâbecause I had no money to pay any penalty.
So that meant one thing:
I absolutely could not violate any clause.
If I did, Iâd end up in even deeper debt than before.
âWait a second⌠right!â
âAn eye for an eye, a tooth for a tooth.â
If everything in this marriage was bound by money, maybe I could use that to my advantage.
I carefully began to reread the entire contract line by line.
The penalties tied me downâbut at the same time, if I could find a clause that he violated, I could claim divorce and a nice pile of money.
So the question wasâwhich clause would work best?
As I scanned the document with hawk-like focus, my eyes stopped on the fifth clause from the bottom.
[Clause on Infidelity]
âBingo!â
Finally, I had found the perfect way to end this ridiculous marriage profitably.
ââCheaterâ and âDuke Ricardisââthose two words practically mean the same thing!â
It was practically a guaranteed violation.
[If a spouse commits adultery, the other party may demand divorce and 2 billion talans in compensation.]
Two billion?
Wow. Perfect!
âWhy on earth didnât the original Rena Palles ever use this clause?â I wondered.
âWith that much money, she couldâve bought a small house in the countryside and lived peacefully. Itâs not a fortune, but itâs enough.â
Even if she loved him, why didnât she just take the money and go?
The Dukeâs infidelity was the main reason everyone despised him.
That manâimpotent as he wasâstill cheated.
Rena even knew about his constant meetings with another woman, a famous socialite he had been seeing before and after their marriage.
He kept the relationship going without shame.
Rena didnât know about his impotence, so to her, it was a complete affairâheart and body both.
But even knowing that, she endured it silently.
Maybe it wasnât a physical affair in the full sense, but emotionally? Completely.
Still, the Duke met that woman often enough for everyone to know.
That was what made Rena suffer so much.
And what made readers rage.
Me included.
She kept hoping, thinking, âHe said he doesnât love anyone⌠maybe itâs not love. Maybe heâll change.â
What a fool.
And the Duke? He didnât even care how much she suffered.
âYeah,â I thought, âhe probably didnât care at all.â
His perspective only appeared much later in the novel, but one thing was clearâhe kept cheating the whole time.
Did he think emotional affairs didnât count? Or that if Rena asked for divorce, heâd just let her go? Who knows.
Either way, to me, he was pure trash.
He had an official mistress yet still added a no-adultery clauseâobviously to control Rena.
So that she couldnât cheat, even while he did.
Shameless. Selfish. Despicable.
The original Rena had loved him, so she never dared confront him about it.
Even though she knew, she kept silentâbecause at least they were tied as husband and wife, legally if not emotionally.
But I wasnât her.
I didnât love this man, and I definitely wasnât going to endure his nonsense like some saint.
Once the mandatory marriage period was over, Iâd take my compensation and divorce him immediately.
No waiting three years for him to âregretâ anything.
The sooner, the better.
âAlright then⌠letâs help him along.â
I decided to encourage the Dukeâs cheating.
If he was already having an emotional affair, Iâd just push it into a physical one.
After all, he was doing it anyway.
Might as well make sure itâs complete.
That way, I could secure my compensationâ
for me and for my future financial freedom.
âBut⌠how do I help someone cheat when heâs hiding it so carefully?â
I was still thinking about that whenâ
Knock, knock.
Someone knocked on the door.
âWho is it?â
âThis is the butler and the head maid, madam. We have something to discuss.â
âOh! Please, come in.â
I rose from the sofa.
Ever since Rena first moved into this mansion, the servants hadnât treated her warmly.
They didnât think she was a suitable Duchess, so they only acted polite on the surface.
But honestly, I didnât care.
It wasnât like I planned to stay here forever.
Why waste effort on people Iâd barely know for a few months?
âMadam, allow me to introduce myself. I am Bart, the butler.â
âAnd I am Nancy, the head maid.â
Both bowed politely.
âYes, nice to meet you. Iâll be counting on you.â
In this world, nobles usually spoke down to servants, but they both looked at least thirty years older than me. I just couldnât bring myself to talk so rudely.
âThe madamâs personal maid will be chosen after we, the staff, hold a meeting,â Nancy explained. âWeâll assign her to you shortly.â
âA meeting? Thatâs fine, but canât I choose her myself? Iâd like to meet the maids first. No rushâit can be done tomorrow afternoon.â
âWell, thatâs possible, but since you donât yet know the household staff, perhaps it would beââ
The head maid tried to object.
âNancy, youâre right,â I cut in smoothly. âBut I prefer judging by impression. I can usually tell who Iâll get along with just by looking at their face. So Iâll choose personally. Is that a problem?â
âAh⌠no, madam! As you wish.â
Nancyâs face reddened slightly.
Even if she was the real authority in the mansion, she couldnât openly oppose the Duchess.
Of course, Iâd already decided who I wantedâ
a smart and kind maid named Ruth, who also knew herbs well.
Ruth wasnât here yet, though.
In the novel, she arrived at the mansion the day after Rena did.
Thatâs why Iâd asked to choose tomorrow afternoon.
âWas that all? I donât need a maid for tonight, so if thereâs nothing else, you may go. Oh, waitâwhere should I have dinner?â
âThatâs actually why we came,â Bart replied. âThe Duke has requested to dine with you this evening. Dinner will be served in the second-floor dining room in one hour. Will that be alright?â
In the original story, they also had dinner together on the first nightâ
to look like a normal married couple.
âAlright,â I said.
âThen weâll see you at dinner, madam.â
With that, they left the room.
—
One hour later.
The Duke and I were eating in silence. Not a single word exchanged.
Seriously?
Treating your wife like airâdid he think this looked like a normal marriage?
The butler stood beside him the entire time, refilling his tea every time it dropped below half.
So attentive. Tch.
âWhy are you looking at me like that? Youâre not even eating,â the Duke suddenly said.
âAh!â
âOops, did he notice me staring?â